Page 2-Sunday, January 8, 1978-The Michigan Daily HIS SIX CHILDREN ST ABBED TO DEA T H: a a a a a a a d a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a Announcing Winter Series The Howard R. Marsh Center for the Study of Journalistic Performance will again sponsor a series of Wednesday brown bag sessions to explore aspects of mass communication. All are open to the public. Each will be 12:10 to 1:10 p.m. in 2040 F, LSA Building. Jan.11 "The Italian Newsman and His Values," Pro- fessor William E. Porter, Department of Journalism Jan.25 "A Year Late and a Million Short: Case Study in Educational Television," James Ettema, doctoral student in mass communication program Feb. a "The Newspaper Ombudsman," Robert May- nard, former Washington Post ombudsman and visiting Marsh professor Feb. 22 "Problems of the Woman Journalist," Nancy Hicks, former Washington correspondent for the r New York Times and visiting Marsh professor Mar.15 "The Small Town Publisher and Community Standards," William Doolittle, NEH Fellow and publisher of Adirondack Daily Enterprise in Saranac Lake, N.Y. Mar.29 "Journalism and Urban History," Professor Marion T. Marzoff, Department of Journalism Father charged in ROCKFORD, Ill. (AP)-A 46-year-old father was death, Anderson said. charged yesterday with "silently and methodically" Neighbors reported hearing no sounds,E stabbing and beating his six sleeping children to said in describing the killings as "si] death with a hunting knife and rubber-headed mallet, methodical." One 15-year veteran police investigator called it He said a hunting knife and a large rubbe "the worst mass murder in the history of the city and mallet were found in the home and were co the most vicious murder I've ever seen, the death weapons. ROCKFORD POLICE broke into Simon Nelson's NEIGHBORS told police that Mrs. Nelso three-story stucco home here after Milwaukee police skating instructor, left Rockford severalc notified them that Nelson was arrested in that city and moved into a Milwaukee motel. They and charged with beating his estranged wife, Ann, 38. couple had had numerous arguments about Mrs. Nelson reported to Milwaukee police that her failure to get a job. Police said Nelson rece husband told her he had killed their chilfren, aged 3 to hired as a management counselor in Rockfor 12. the family lived for the past two years after Five-year-old Roseann Nelson and her 12-year-old from Beloit, Wis. sister Jennifer were found in their bed in a second- A Rockford police spokesman said the tin floor bedroom, their heads bludgeoned and their children's deaths had not been firmly establi bodies repeatedly stabbed. Their pet dog,ia it was believed they were slain within 24 dachshund, was in the bed, its throat slit, said police their discovery. Capt. Richard Anderson. The girls' four Anderson said six counts of murder wf brothers-Matthew, 7, Andrew, 9. Simon Jr., 10, and against Nelson, who was arrested in M David, 3-were found in their third-floor bedroom, about 6:30 a.m. yesterday after neighbors killed in a similar manner, Anderson said. Nelson's motel reported that she was being b ONE OF the boys' bodies was found halfway out of In Milwaukee yesterday afternoon, Nelson his bed, indicating he may have been the only one of extradition and tearfully told a Circuit Court the children who had any warning if impending police headquarters, "I want to go home." Ti killing spree asked if Nelson understood that he would face mur- Anderson der charges in Rockford, and Nelson replied that he lent and did. The judge asked if Nelson understood that convic- r-headed tion of murder in Illinois is punishable by death, and )nsidered Nelson asked to speak with an attorney. After con- ferring briefly with officials of the Milwaukee County n, an ice District Attorney's Office, Nelson reaffirmed his days ago desire to waive extradition. said the THE HEAVY-SET Nelson, wearing a T-shirt and Nelson's blue and white striped bib overalls, signed a ntly was statement agreeing to return to Rockford voluntarily. d, where Officials said he probably would be brought here r moving later in the day. Friends and neighbors of the Nelsons were shocked ne of the by the slayings. "Those sweet kids. It's just not be- shed, but lievable," said Arlo Kanter, father of one of Mrs. hours of Nelson's students. Kanter's 12-year-old daughter, Lisa, was one of Jennifer Nelson's best friends. ere filed Kanter said he paid frequent visits to the Nelson ilwaukee home. He remembered one day last summer when in Mrs. "we were all sitting out in the yard, Ann, the mother, eaten. was gone, and the father seemed to be acting n waived strangely. He was all wound up like a corkscrew. He judge at acted like he just couldn't cope, whatever it was he he judge was trying to cope with." SOCIAL WORKERS " TEACHERS * PSYCHOLOGISTS TIRED OF HEARING ABOUT'NO JOBS AND NO SATISFACTION IN YOUR CHOSEN PROFESSION? Well if you have o Hebrew background, we invite you to kiss that rut goodbye and soy hello to Israel. If you are a social worker (MSW, BSW), teacher or psychologist-or would like to be trained as a social worker, a most exciting and personally-rewarding career awaits you in the State of Israel. ' Interviews will be conducted in the United States. Contact us immediately for pre-interview information session. ISRAEL 25900 Greenfleid Rd., Suite 352 Oak Park, Mich. 48237 CENTER (313) 968-1044 There is much to be done by our generation in Israel. Let's stop talking and start doing. Energy policy limits blacks, says NAACP (Continued from Page 1) to whatever rung of the economic ladder they happen to be on. "That's OK if you're a highly educated 28-year-old making $50,000 a year as a presidential adviser," Wilson said. "It's utter disaster if you're unskilled, out of work and living in a ghetto." Wilson's criticism marked the first time the NAACP has linked its traditional concern for jobs with the Carter energy program, which calls for limiting the growth of energy consumption to two per cent a year = v READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS RAPHIC RTSlNT. YNION 289 ti 11 10 Y " 9 "r o Y9 c YQe t9 Yta si t o m dYao n ac cc QGo WELCOMES YOU TO ANN ARBOR'S FIRST UNION COPY SHOP The employees of Accu-Copy belong to G.A.I.U. local 289 and won their first union contract for job security on December 11, 1977. The union workers of Accu-Copy unanimously ratified their contract which contained the main objectives of the strike, job security and a union shop clause and are anxious to provide their expert services to you. Show the world you are in support of the betterment of M We'vebeen i since 189( haven't y( reading I less than half the average annual growth rate of the last 30 years. "We're not against conservation . . blacks have been turning down the thermostat and turning off lights out of economic necessity for years," Wilson said. "But the administration's plan to drastically limit the growth of the nation's energy supply at a time when unemployment among blacks runs 14 per cent is very disturbing." Wilson, a St. Louis attorney, said there is a strong correlation between energy growth and economic growth, ''and an annual growth rate of two per cent makes it unlikely that the current unemployment rate will drop much at all. "In fact," she said, "many econ- omists say that a growth rate that low jeopardizes the hard-won gains of many blacks and other minorities who managed to pull themselves up to' middle-income status during the la- decade or so." The NAACP, which supported Car- ter in his 1976 presidential bid, submitted its own energy proposal to the White House last month but has yet to get a response. Daily Official Bulletin SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200SAB _7634117 Yale University, Dept. Engr. and Applied Scien- ces: Announces their '78 Summer Research Program for College Juniors, engr. sciences, chemical, computer modeling, biomechanics, etc. Further details available. Apps. deadline Feb. 13. Nat. Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.: Announces '78 Internship Program. Positions are at the Civil Service, GS-5 level. Appointments effective June 19 to Sept: 1. Deadline for apps: Apr. 15. Brookhaven Nat. Labs., Long Island, New York: Summer Student Program, June 5 to Aug. 18. Must have completed Junior year, graduating seniors-biology, chemistry, engr., math., medicine, etc. Details available.'Deadline for acceptance of appts. Jan. 31. )- W4Y.A Jpt 1 'M 40 't r if m ;" 41 OM .., + M working people by REMEMBER TO -... supporting our local union shop. AND ASK FOR THE ANION IL7 ABEL 0 00 ' IgVERSITY 5fMUSICAL0OCIETY presenti G A r U c LCLJ LOCAL 289 a ACCU-COPY: 524 E. WILLIAM Street !!! You will receive the finest quality copies at low prices, reproduced by union workers who " have been in the photo-copy business longer than any employees at any other copy shop in Ann Arbor. Experience and the pride of union workers makes the difference in the good service you will receive at ACCU-COPY. For union made OFFSET printing KOLOSSOS printing at 310 E. Washington can serve your offset needs. ACC-U-COPY: phone 769-8338 !!! FOR QUESTIONS YOU MAY HAVE ON YOUR RIGHTS UNDER LABOR LAW TO ORGANIZE WITH YOUR FELLOW EMPLOYEES AND SECURE UNION REPRESENTATION; or for any other information you may need: CALL: G.A.I.U. local 289, Ph. 345-5965 (area 313) i e