Tuesday, September 24, 1974
Emergency teams
help Honduras
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Page Three
Kissinger says world economy
can't stand oil price increases
CHOLOMA, Honduras (A) -
Buzzards, dogs and thieves
preyed on Hondurans yesterday
as emergency teams, their faces
masked against the stench of
death, disposed of corpses from
Hurricane Fifi.
Officials estimated 5,000 to
6,000 bodies have been burned
or buried to prevent epidemics,
and they said the death toll
could doublemin one of Central
America's worst disasters.
Planeloads of emergency sup-
plies from Cuba, the United
States, Costa Rica, Mexico,
Venezuela, El Salvador and
Conference.
decries
Soviet
bigotry
LONDON (P) - An Israeli Su-
preme Court justice said yes-
terday that anti-Semitism is
rampant in the Soviet Union.
In the latest Moscow incident,
six women demonstrated yes-
terday for the right to emigrate
to Israel. They carried signs
saying "Israel is our home-
land" and "Visas to Israel."
THE JURIST, Haim Cohn,
led an international conference
on Soviet "exploitation of 'the
judicial process for political
purposes." The weekend meet-
ing was financed in part by U.
S. Jewish organizations.
"There is a new wave of
anti-Semitism in the Soviet
Union which is officially foster-
ed and propagated," Cohn told
newsmen. He said Jews have
been charged with treason, giv-
ing out anti-Soviet propaganda
and theft of government proper-
ty.
Cohn added: "Where a few
years ago there were Yiddish
schools, theaters and newspa-
pers, nothing of that remains."
COHN issued a statement
from the 43 jurists from 19 na-
tions who attended the confer-
enceD saying: "We are deeply
disturbed by certain' manifes-
tations of anti-Semitism in the
Soviet Union... there is over-
whelming evidence of a com-
plete lack or disregard of reg-
ulations and administrative pro-
cesses" by Soviet officials deal-
ing with applications by Jews
to emigrate.
"Furthermore, in trials of
Soviet Jews, from which neu-
tral observers hae been ex-
cluded, human rights have been
denied, Soviet law and proce-
dure infringed and unwarrant-
ed punishments inflicted," the
statement said.
One of the six women who
demonstrated in front of the
Moscow visa office said her hus-
band went to Israel two years
ago. Her two daughters were
with her.
ANOTHER said she wanted to
go to Israel to join her 84-year-
old father and sister, both ser-
iously ill and perhaps dying.
Guatemala were arriving for
more than 100,000 homeless
Hondurans.
Another 50,000 Hondurans
were isolated, many clinging to
trees and rooftops, but a short-
age of helicopters and fuel de-
layed their rescue, officials
said.
THE HONDURAN Emergency
Relief Committee said the hur-
ricane, which .struck Thursday
with heavy rains and winds up
to 130 miles an hour, caused
at least $1.8 billion in damage,
and destroyed 90 per cent of
the banana crops, the country's
chief export.
"It's an agonizing experience
to destroy your own country-
men, but it must be done,"
said Rigoberto Saldivar, 18, a
Red Cross volunteer in the hard-
est hit town of Choloma.
He had just pried a body
from the rubble of a house with
a huge machete and burned
it in front of 100 horrified on-
lookers.
Isabel Fernandez, 24, said the
Choloma River went right
through the middle of her
house, killing her 60-year-old
father, Santo, and dragging his
body about 300 yards.
"I RAN and escaped but he
was killed," she said. "When I
finally found him it took me a
long time to dig him out. I had
to do it alone because every-
body else here was looking for
their own family. And the buz-
zards and dogs kept trying, to
bite him and I kept fighting
them off."
Jose Santor Rivera, 25, a
packing house employe, said
many people were afraid to
leave their homes. After getting
his own family to safety, he
said he returned to tity and help
save others, but had to watch
helplessly while one family of
nine, "who were afraid to move,
died in each other's arms."
Daily Official Bulletin
Day Calendar
Tuesday, September 24
WUOM: Live coverage, Senate
Rules Com. hearings on confirma-
tion of Nelson Rockefeller a sV-P,
10 am.
ISMRRD: Julius S. Cohen, "Na-
tional Trends Regarding Litigation
for the Handicaped," Schporling
Aud., SEB, 3-5 pm.
Naval Arch., Marine Eng.: J. B.
Woodward, "Oily Shipboard Wastes
and Oil-Water Separation Technol-
ogy," 311 W. Eng., 3:10 pm.
English, Ext. Service: Marvin Bell,
poetry reading, Aud. 3, MLB, 4:10
pm.
Physics Theoretical Seminar: P.
Hoyer, Univ. of New York, "Reg-
geon-Particle Scattering," 2038 Ran-
dall Lab, 4:15 pm.
washtenaw Student Nurses As-
soc.: Barbara Hem, pres., Michigan
Nurses' Assoc., "Nursing Associa-
tions: What They Do for Nurses,"
Formal Commons, Furstenberg
Ctr., Med. Sd . II, 7:30 pm.
Music School: Symphony' Orches-
tra, Thep Alcantara, conductor, Hill
Aud., 8 pm.
General Notices
CEW: Evening program, The Uni-
ersity Libraries and How to Use
Them, at Undergrad. Library, Mon-
day, Sept. 30, 7:30-9:30 pm; for info
& registration, contact Center, 328-
330 Thompson, 764-6555 or 763-1353.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (M)
-In a blunt warning to Arab,
oil producers, Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger said to-
day a world poised on the brink
of general depression c a n n o t
afford current petroleum prices,
much less continuing increases.
The poorer nations, many of
them 'trying desperately to cope
with food shortages, could be
overwhelming in a never-ending
inflationary spiral, Kissinger
told the 29th session of the U.N.
General Assembly.
WHILE OIL producers are end
titled to "a just return" for
their diminishing resources,
Kissinger said, "it cannot be
in the interest of any nation to
magnify the despair of the least
developed who are uniquely vul-
nerable to exorbitant prices and
who have no recourse but to
pay."
His address was received in
quiet politeness, with applause
coming only at the end.
The speech followed President
Ford's own warning to the Gen-
eral Assembly last week t h a t
manipulation of the energy cris-
is could lead to counteraction
using food as a political a n d
economic weapon.
ARAB delegates who detected
a veiled ultimatum in that ad-
dress will be fine-combing Kis-
singer's speech for evidence of
a U.S. effort to turn sentiment,
particularly in Third W o r 1 d
countries, against initiators of
the fourfold increase in petrol-
eum prices this year.
Kissinger said the U n i t e d
States is ready to join with all
nations in a massive effort to
meet the world's needs for
doubling of food production by
the end of the century.
"We have an obligation to
strive for an adequate supply of
food to every man, woman and
child in the world," he said.
AT THE international food
conference in Rome on Nov. 5,
he said the United States will
present a number of specific
proposals to increase fertilizer
production, expand research
programs, and rebuild food re-
serves -against the vagaries of
weather.
"At a time of universal con-
cern for justice and in an age
of advanced technology, it is
intolerable that millions are
starving and hundreds of mil-
lions remain undernourished,"
Kissinger said..
In a gesture to the oil. pro-
ducers, Kissinger said the Unit-
ed States is prepared te accept
substantial investments of the
oil-price revenues and welcomes
a greater role for producers in
the management of internation-
al economic institutions.
The aim of the American As-
sociation of Blood Banks is to
improve the quality and safety
of human blood transfusions by
providing technical information,
encouraging r e s e a r c h and
promoting the voluntary concept
of blood donation.
BUT HE said there must be
a "new understanding" between
consumers and producers.
"The high cost of oil is not
the result of economic factors,
of an actual shortage of capa-
city, or of the free play of sup-
ply and demand," Kissinger
said.
"Rather it is caused by delib-
erate decisions to restrict pro-
duction and' maintain an arti-
ficial price level."
XISSINGER said the result 'is
an r"unprecedented 'attack" on
the: world's economic system,
poising it. "on the brink of a
return to the unrestrained eco-
nomic nationalism which a c -
companied the collapse of eco-
nomic order in the '30s."
On another subject, he made
an impasioned plea for control-
ling the spread of nuclear wea-
pons. He said the United States,
itself a chief supplier of tech-
nology, will soon propose new
safeguards on the use and the
transfer of nuclear materials.
"Whatever advantages seem
to accrue from the acquisition
of nuclear explosive technology
will prove to be ephemeral," he
said.
"WHEN Pandora's box h a s
been opened no country will be
the beneficiary and all mankind
will have lost."
AP Photo
AN UNIDENTIFIED MAN tries to clean mud from inside and around a minibus that was
half buried when hurricane waters inundated the northwest Honduras town of Choloma.
Almost 3,000 people are known to have been killed from Hurrican Fifi in the town.
FBI head Kelley links bond
proce dure with. more crime
lk
WASHINGTON (PM - Rising
crime stems in part from cur-
rent bail procedures, use of con-
current sentences and "unrea-
sonable plea bargaining" that
allows hard-core criminals to
remain free, FBI chief Clar-
ence Kelley says.i
In a speech prepared for de-
livery yesterday to the annual'
convention of the International
Association of Chiefs of Police,
Kelley said that when crime,
soars, law enforcement. person-
nel "often must unfairly bear
the brunt of criticism."
He said law enforcement's
problems are compounded by,
among other things, those who
are repeaters and youthful of-
fenders. Kelley said FBI sta-
tistics show that repeaters com-
mit about two-thirds of all
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Volume LXXXV, No. 17
Tuesday, September 24, 1974
is edited and managed by students
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phone 764-0562. Second class postage
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Published d a i 1y Tuesday through
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criminal acts.
"It means that in America
today there is a corps of har-
dened, experienced criminals
who have been arrested time
after time . . . and they keep
on committing crimes."
HE SAID part of the reason
they keep repeating crimes is
because of current bail proce-
dures that allows the repeater
to receive the same considera-
tions as the first offender.
He said the problem is, ag-
gravated by the wholesale use
of concurrent sentences and
unreasonable plea bargaining.
"The abuse of these two leg-
al processes produces the same
result: more recidivists are al-
lowed to roam the streets.
These two factors are beyond
the control of law enforcement,"
he said.
As for juvenile offenders, Kel-
ley said that about 75 per cent
of the persons arrested for
crimes are under the age of 25.
---
KELLEY said law enforce-
ment can do little to end ghet-
tos and poverty, and wrongdo-
ing "seems to be closely re-
lated . . . to contemporary cul-
tural trends which can shape,
distort, or redefine attitudes to-
ward the law."
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STEVE'S LUNCH
1313 SO. UNIVERSITY
Home Cooking Is Our Specialty
Breakfast All Ddy Specials This Week
3 eggs, Hash Browns, Beef Stroganoff
Chinese Pepper Steak
Toast & Jelly-$1.05 Home-made Beef Stew
Goulash
Ham or Bacon or Eq Rolls
Sausage with 3 eggs, Home-made Soups (Beef,
SausageBarley, Clam Chowder, etc.)
Hash Browns, Toast and Chili, Veqetable Tempura
jelly-$1.50 (served after 2p.m.)
Fried Rice with Sausages
3 egs, ib Eye Steak, and Vegetables
Hash Browns, Spaghetti in Wine Sauce
Toast &, Jely--$1.90 Beef Curry Rice
FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE
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III