' What's Important is where you do your bowling! NIoN LANES open J p.m. -today Page 2-Sunday, January 28, 1979-The Michigain Daily.- Police raid ends Japanese hank heist By AP and Reuter TOKYO - Fifty police stormed a bank in Osaka shortly after dawn yesterday and freed 25 hostages who had been held, 42 hours by a gunman demanding $250,000, authorities said. Police said the gunman, who shot and SUMlMER JOBS CMP T6 M6RfCK Brighton and Ortonville, Michigan Interviewing, January 31 Summer Placement Office Call 763-4117 for appointment killed two policemen and two bank clerks during the occupation, was critically wounded. Police said the gunman was un- dergoingsurgery. FIRST REPORTS said the remaining hostages were safe. Some were carried out on the backs of police and draped in blankets. A fleet of ambulances pulled up around the bank building, and some of the hostages were placed on stret- chers. The gunman, wearing a white mask and branishing a double-barreled shotgun, had charged into the bank shortly before closing time Friday, demanding that the money be put in a red knapsack strapped tohis-back. Police spokesman in Osaka said more than 50 officers, part of a 500-man force that had surrounded the bank since Friday, made their way into the building through entrances on the first and second floors of the three-story building. INITIAL REPORTS after the police assault said the gunman had been shot and killed, and a police spokesman in Osaka confirmed that account. Later, another police official in the south- western Japanese city said the man was not dead and had been arrested. The gunman, identified as 30-year-old Akiyoshi Umekawa, an unemployed resident of Osaka with a criminal record, had permitted police to remove the boides of four dead early yesterday. Umekawa, who was sent to prison for stabbing a woman to death when he was 15, killed two male bank employees when he entered the bank last Friday, police said. Two policemen who raced into the bank were also shot dead while three other male bank employees' were wounded by a blast from Umekawa's shotgun, police said. GM, UAW divided in Flint negotiations (conti'nued from Page 1) three sup'erintendents and reasigne( had to hire more workers. them to other GM plants in wake of th The union official said the secret events, but no upper level management device was installed to speed up officials have been implicated in the production to make up for lost time. ploy. Evans said that the union was "LET'S SAY THAT the line goes adamant in demanding the transferrec down because of a mechanical break- superintendents be relieved from their down. All the superintendent had to do jobs at the plant.' was to speed up the line to make up for EVANS ALSO said the event was the down 'time, and the lost produc- "unique," in as much as such device tion," he stated have never been encountered before i "'his was a complete covert any other plants. operation," Evans continued, "and we "I expect the international union wi suspect that plant management had full get in contact with other locals to be o knowledge of what was going on." -the watch fpr anything like this ha The auto company has suspended pening somewhere else," he noted. Chinese students may i HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATION FORMS FOR '1979-80 A CADE MIC YEAR Available Starting January 16, 1979 In Ms. Charlene Coady's Office, 1500 SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: Head Resident, Resident Director, Assistant Resident'Director, Resident Advisor, Head - Librarian, Resident Fellow, Minority Peer Advisors and Graduate Student Teaching Assistant Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1979 Winter Term for the Resident Fellows in Residential College, Resident Advisor and Minor- ity Peer Advisor positions: Graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistant in Pilot Program, Head Librarian, Head Resident and Resident Director positions. However, qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U..of M. student on the Ann Arbor Cam- pus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 credit hours by the end of the 1979 Winter term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at University level for at least one year.'(4) Undergraduate applicants must" have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average and graduate applicants must be in good academic standing at the end of the 1978 FalL'term in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Preference is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Applicants with children will not be con- sidered. (7) Proof of these qualifications may be required. Present staff and other individuals who have an 'application on file must come to the Housing Office to update their application form: DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION: Reapplying Staff-January 22, 1979 New Applicants-January 30, 1979 A NON-DISCRIMINATORY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER I (U.N.1 1V C E. 1 UJ (Continued from Page 1) will leave-Thursday for stops in Atlan- ta-where he will tour a Ford Motor Company plant-and Houston, where the vice premier will attend a Texas barbeque and rodeo. Teng will also visit Los Angeles and Seattle before retur- ning home. Officials.here are downplaying links between the Teng visit and U.S.-Soviet relations, but they are anxious to hear the vice premier's remarks on the up- coming SALT II agreements. "New .relationships. with China car generally contribute to wider gl ba stability," said one administration of ficial at a background briefing yester day morning at the State Department "It also signifies a new reality in Asia in which the United. States will hav good relations with all major countries in the Far East." The three wounded were some other hostages. freed with Early summer job hunt urged By JULIE BROWN Summer vacation may be three mon- ths away, but now is the time to start looking for that job to tide you over from May through August. According to Ann Cooper, coor- dinator of 'Summer Placement at Career Planning and Placement, the best way to find a summer job is to begin looking early. "IT DEPENDS on the student," Coop-er said. "Freshmen and sophomores should get serious right af- ter Christmas vacation." She noted there are a number of jobs available in camps and resorts for underclass students.' "We have interviews for camp and- resort jobs here at the office in January, February and Marc," Cooper said. She suggested contacting camp directors and'requesting applications as soon as possible. "For juniors, seniors and graduate students, there are some non-clerical government jobs in Washington,D.C.," Cooper pointed out. She added these are "highly specialized" and require specific qualifications. Students who want to find jobs near their parents' homes should begin looking during spring break, according to Cooper. "This is especially true for hospital jobs, which go very quickly," she said. Cooper explained that certain regions have more available jobs than others. "For camps and resorts, I'd say that Michigan, Wisconsin and the East are the best parts of the country. "There are also some jobs in the West." For students who choose to remain in Ann Arbor during the summer, there are other job possibilities. The Orien- tation Office, which runs orientation. seminars for incoming freshpeople, will be hiring some student employes. The office is located at 2530 Student Ac- tivities Building. According to Director Don Perigc the 20 summer orientation leaders hav already been chosen, but the office ha yet to hire leaders for the fall session. "A fall position is just a matter . working four days before school star ts," said Heidi Winick, Perigo' assistant. "So far, we've had about4 people apply.", Perigo als noted the University wi be hiring students for "dof-In-relate jobs and advising offices." Position would include kitchen and desk er ployes for the orientation dormitory, a well as student academic counselors. The Temporary Employment Offic also located 'in the Student Activitie Building, will have jobs available in th Ann Arbor area as well. Pam Gonzales, an office clerk, ac vised students to come to the offie sometime in April to check on summe jobs._; Students under the eye of FBI (Continued from Page 1) need not respond to questions.. "It is our legal advice that people would be better off not speaking with the FBI and refusing to cooperate with the FBI in any manner," said Reno. She explained that by answering questions, respondents could reveal information that might lead to the calling of a grand jury. s Reno said that in a grand jury in- vestigation "many of the protections of the Bill of Rights do not apply.'' Another of the group's objectives is to prevent the FBI from "spreading paranoia" among foreign students. "The FBI is definitely interested in isolating them (foreign students) so they won't seek help, so they won't go to attorneys," Rubin said. "If the harassment doesn't come today, you wonder what it's going to mean when one graduates and gets out, what it's going to mean having a file with the FBI," a student said. Reno and Kessler said they plan to "make themselves available to people who want to talk about this." The sources said they did not know if SundaV J_; etruazrr 11, 1979 ' , tit, -. \, fi '' t ? ''S ,t O , ' * r~/ & go m /te~ ~ ...s1 A ^"ni ..9ati &6~At~i3on he £~e3Iin 'l/ea't~# g/i3 P~o~orap~,, if/o a . 9ea &Jon i mon^a e ITS COMING! A SUPER SPECTACULAR EVENT. Sat., Feb. 10-8 pm-The Union To find out more call UAC: 763-1107 students or faculty members wer helping the FBI, but said they had t assume some University member might do so. As a result, they said, the would publicize the intelligence activit to discourage'people from speaking t the FBI. "We have no direct evidence of who feeding them informa tion o cooperation," said one student. "Bu I'm sure thee are individual student and faculty members who ar cooperating." "All we can do right now is encourag the professors who are against this ki of activity in an academic institution, t refuse to talk and to refuse to give i formation," another student said. *T'IHE MICHIGAN DAILY * Volume LXXXIX, No.99 Sunday, January 28. 1979 is edited and managed by students at the Universi of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second cla postage is paid at. Ann Arbor, Michigan 481 Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morni during the University year 'at 420 Maynard Stre Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $ September through April (2 semesters ); $13 byma outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday throu Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in A Arbor; $7,00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. ig * ********************~**** kk x *k******k********* * .* *. * * * ( t 1'Y' 1 * ke/reihmenli '* 7oor /§rizeJ * clmi.3sion . 1 - imifect ea. inu