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April 19, 1974 - Image 9

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1974-04-19

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riday, April 19, 1974

THE MICCH I GAN °t:)A°i LY

Page Nine

THE MCHIGA JAIY.Pag'Nin

Kennedy arrives in Moscow
to discuss Jewish emigration

MOSCOW, (Reuter) - Senator
Edward Kennedy arrived here
yesterday from Belgrade at the
start of a one-week tour of the
Soviet Union, and said he intend-
ed raise the issues of civil rights
and Jewish emigration with
Kremlin leaders.
Speaking to reporters, he did
not give any details of how he
intended to approach the matter
in his talks with Soviet officials.
But Kennedy is a supported of a
Congressional amendment to the
Nixon administration's trade bill
which would deny the Soviet
Union most favored nation status,
unless it granted the right of free
emigration.
KENNEDY IS also apparently
hoping to convince the Kremlin

that the drive to impeach Presi-
dent Nixon is not a plot to wreck
East-West detente.
The Democratic senator, whose
assassinated brother the late
PresidentJohn Kennedy is still
regarde with strong official
sympathy here, is expected to
put over the liberal viewpoint on
Watergate at a meeting with
Communist Party Chief Leonid
Brezhnev.
A session between Kennedy
and Brezhnev, who has based
his policy of improving relations
with Washington largely on the
survival of President Nixon, has
not been firmly set. But his aides
were confident it would take
take place.

BEFORE LEAVING Belgrade
earlier yesterday the Senator told
a press conference, the view that
the Watergate affair and its sub-
sequent ramifications were a plot
by the enemies of detente, could
not be further from the truth.
Although Soviet leaders have
not publicly proclaimed the
"plot" theory, official press com-
mentators here have frequently
hinted that they believed "reac-
tionaries and rotten liberals" in
the U.S. were seeking to over-
throw the President in order to
halt a further development of
ties with Moscow.
And even senior Soviet offic-
ials closely involved in working
out the Kremlin's policy towards
Washington' have declared pri-
vately that they feel Nixon's dif-
ficulties have been deliberately
created by anti-detente forces.
KENNEDY has been frequently
praised here for his liberal stand
on many foreign and home policy
issues, and this clearly boosts his
credibility as a genuine critic of
President Nixon.
At his press conference yes-
terday, the Senator said the over-
whelming majority of both ma-
jor parties in the U. S. favored
reducing East-West tension, and
this is a line he will certainly
pursue in Moscow.
The Senator will return to
Washington next Thursday.

E DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
.a .506+.. :...........
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Friday, April 19 with this office - applications are Anderson Vehicle Sales, Detroit, Sea.
wvail. .openings for mechanics for motor-!
Day Calendar IcTEVIEWING ON C A M P U S: es - also, over-the-counter selling.
I Details avail.
Hospital Commission f o r Wmn TEACHER CORPS. 2 Yr. Program forI
W10410 Hospital, noon. Lib. Arts Grads leading to a M's plus Sherwin williams, Detroit. Openings
Educational Med Ctr. A-v Ctr -TO. Spend i time in school & la factory work - various types. Salary
rut a eaA r'time in community. $90/Wk plus 15 range open cep. on work. Details avail.
North American Indian films, "Trea-foeahdpnetPhn:7445to PirCeclDvGoonCnn
ties Made, Treaties Broken" "How the frec eedn.Poe .4!46t fzr hmclDv rtn on
WetWk a .Hnr ot" L«make interview appt.: Opening for chemist with thorough
west wa won . . . Honor Lost;" "La m er e t knowledge in liquid chromatography
ment or the:Reservation," Schorling Summer Pc e t req. Details avail. Grad. stud.
Aud., SEB, 12:15 p.m. 3200, SAB 763-4217"q
Law School Honors Convocation: 100 Ford Motor Co., Dearborn, MI. Open- . John Deer Ins. Co. Ill. Openings for
Hutchins Hall, 4 p.m. ings for prod. Assembly jobs on Sat. student in Jun. yr. interest Admin.
Theoretical Seminar: D. Desai, Univ. nights. Details avail. field of Ins. Details avail.
of California, "Reggeon-Pomeron Cuts __
and Triple Regge Phenomena," 2038
Randall Lab., 4 p.m.
'U-M Dance Group: "An Evening of 1 / Jj E
Sacred Dance," Westminster Presby- W OM EN M EN
terian Church, 8 p.m.
Musical Society: Nikolais Dance.
Theatre: Power, 8p.m. Thinking about the next steps in your life
Classical Studies: The Seligson Plau-
tus Players in a Roman Comedy, "Cur- Come to Personal Planning W orkshops
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673

IN SAN FRANCISCO:
Action taken to halt
7ebra' shootings

culio' alias "The Weevil," the foyer of
Angell Hall, 8 p.m.
Music School: Suzie Tittle, piano, Re-
cital Hall, 8 p.m.
Career Planning and Placement
3200 SAB
THE VOICE OF AMERICA - Candi-
dates now being considered for East
Asia Pacific Broadcast Trainee pr~g.
writing ability and strong bkgd. In
Asian Studies req. Ck with this office
for complete details and application
instructions.
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY -
Positions in Washington & 'Baltimore
for people who have studied Slavic,
Mid-Eastern, Asian and other rarely
taught languages. Must have a primary
capability in the transcription of
spoken languages. Dec., May & Sum-
mer grads encouraged to apply. Ok

April 27-28 or May 1, 3, 4, 5
Call 761-2274. For more information
leave name and address

SAN FRANCISCO (A>) Police
officers swept through the streets
of San Francisco yesterday, con-
ducoting unprecedented searches
of black men in their search for
the killer or killers of 12 white
victinis.
One of the first to be stopped,
Robert Brooks, said: "I think
the mayor. is persecuting t h e
black community for the acts of
a few crazy dudes."
BUT POLICE officials reported
that although there was some
resentment, most persons s u b-
jected to searches understood the
reason and hoped it would un-
cover the man Mayor Joseph Al-
ioto described as a "mad killer."
Brooks, a 23-year-old security
guard, was stoped at a bus stop
only minutes after Alioto an-
nounced the stop-and-search pro-
cedure as an "extraordinary
measure."
"If the killings continue, some
other people are talking about
retaliation against blacks," said
Brooks, who wore a knit cap like
one shown in a police sketch of
the suspect. "That will be too
bad. The thing is bad enough
now.",
BROOKS SAID officers asked
him if he had any first-hand in-
formation about the case, code-
named "Zebra" after the police
radio channel used in the investi-
gation.
"I told them that all I knew
about the kiings was what I
read in the newspapers and saw
on television," he said.,
In announcing the tactic Wed-

nesday night, Alioto appealed to
the black community to cooper-
ate. He said the killings were
not a racialdissue and thatoff- i
cers simply would question per-
sons who resembled a composite
of a slender, black, mustachioed
man made from witnesses' de-
scriptions.
"WE HAVE A mad kiler loose
in the city, simply killing people
at random," Alioto said. "There
is no motive and no sense."
The latest victim was NelsonI
Shields, who was shot three times
in the back Tuesday night with-
out warning. _ Police Chief Don-j
ald Scotq said there are at least
two killers and possibly m o r e.
The random shootings began lastj
November and have left six1
persons also wounded, all of them
white.
Inspector Mortimer McInerney
said investigations told him one
man had been searched three
times. "He didn't resent t but
wondered if there was s o m e
way he could get a pass so he
wouldn't have to go through it
next time," Mclnerney said.

SATURDAY, APRIL 20,
8 p.m.
3 SHORT FILMS
by MARTHA HASLANGER
"Focus" "Your Home Is You" "J
AND A DANCE PROGRAM
"ENDANGERED SPECIES''
performed by the WOLVERINE DANCERS
Andrea Katz, Ruth Hurwitz, Barbara Smith,
Jean Morgan. Susan Feldstein
at the UNION GALLERY
1st floor, Michigan Union

Une
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5 .
BLACK COMEDY
& white liars
two plays by PETER SHAFFER
MENDELSSOHN THEATRE
APRIL 17-20, 1974
8:00 P.M. -
TICKETS: $2.50, $3.00
Box Office opens 10 a.m. daily
ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE
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UM AFSCME
MASS MEETING
Wednesday, April 24-7:00 p.m.
UNION BALLROOM
2nd floor, Michigan Union
All clericals, technicals
and LPN's welcome

No activity
means no service
charges while, you're
on vacation
If you're leaving at the end of the
spring term but will be returning in the fall,
there's no need to close out your special
or regular checking account to avoid service
charges during the summer.
Service charges will not be made
for any AABT checking account during
the time that there is no activity in your
account. "No activity" applies to deposits
as well as withdrawals.
If you leave your ccount open, you
save time and trouble when you return
because there's no need to wait in long, busy
lines to reopen the account. No need to
obtain a new Money Machine Card; your
present card will be valid in the fal
It isn't necessary to make application
for this vacation service. For details, ask
any teller in this office. They'll be glAd
to help you.
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