Page Two HE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, February 271977 Page Two HE MICHIGAN DAILY I TAM A PERSQO4 pDNT QT BM, 5 TAPLE OR ILTET MEIN ANY WAY YES' OUR COMPUTER MAKES MISTAKES TOO! If you have any problems with your subscription give us a call. 10 to 4, 764-0558. D Cassifiods Get Results, YOU GOTTA HAVE HEART! and patience, energy, compassion,,commitnent and like kids. If you think you have some of these quati es and would like to work at a summer camp, we'd like to talk to you about working at CAMP TAMARACK. We have positions open for counselors, specialists and super- visors at our Michigan camps. Counselors' salaries range from $400-$700 and our supervisors start at $825. CAMP TAMARACK is operated by the Fresh Air Society, a non-profit agency of the Detroit Jewish Welfare Federation. For an application please see your summer placement office or call or write to Fresh Air Society, 6600 W. Maple Rd., W Bloomfield, Michigan 48033 Our Camp Directors will be at the SAB building on Monday, February 28 and on March 17. and 21. Systems Programmers Manufacturing Data Systems Inc., a rapidly growing Ann Arbor firm involved in the de- velopment, production, and marketing of high technology computer products and services for manufacturing applications, is looking for Sys- tems Programmers to work on the following projects:. Ugandan tells of prison horrors CHICAGO (UPI) - A survi- from Uganda last New Year's too muc vor of a Ugandan prison said he Eve. "Arour watched President Idi Amin's The man said when he first were be soldiers kill 200 prisoners a day was taken to the prison with with the for 45 straight days last year, a several other men, their arms the gua copyrighted dispatch in Sun- and legs were bound and they the roon day's editions of the Chicago were put in one room. The onto lor Tribune said. guards wduld return to the room "I BE The prison survivor, who with- every two hours to count heads. ings dro held his name, in his late thir- "From then on, every morn- men die ties, was in Israel briefly last ing, the guards would choose a days." week on what he termed "per- few prisoners, give them sledge-' The s sonal business," the' dispatch hammers and knives, and say, transfers said. He belongs to a family of 'Help us. We're tired and we Makindy wealthy, well-educated civil ser- don't have the ammunition to prisoner vants that flourished in Kam- waste. Kill yourselves'," the ears and pala before Amin seized power man said. ers. in 1971. "I KILLED three former po- The m THE UGANDAN said he was! lice officers who were prison- away to arresea oy Amin's solaiers in ers," the man said. "Those are intervene arreer 97 Ands soxpersnledthe ones I remember but I'm stayed h November 1975 and experienced sr hr eeohr."H atrocities at Makindye Prison! "I used a knife in theheart so with 126 until he was released and fled they would die quickly without ries to t ~-- - -r-~--,-,--o- h suffering," he said nd me, men's heads ing smashed to pieces' sledgehammers. Then rds made us clean op m and load the bodies ries," he said. CAME crazy. The kill- ve me mad. I saw 200 each day for 45 straight! survivor said he was us into the river," the man said. "I could see the crocodiles scramble off the opposite bank and come across the water. Then there were screams as the crocodiles tore Off their legs, and the water turned red. "Suddenly I saw a guard rais- ing his rifle and aiming at me, but another soldier bumped his arm, and the bullet grazed my head and knocked' me Into the O 0 e 0 PASCAL rOMPILER DATA MANAGEMENT SYSTEM INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS DESIGN SYSTEM N/C APPLICATIONS SYSTEM MRP SYSTEM PROCESS PLANNING SYSTEM I Applicants should have a 3.0 G.P.A. or better, programming experience, CCS 573, CCS 575, CCS 476 or equivalent. Those qualified and interested in a challenging growth oriented opportunity should sign up for a Monday, March 2 interview at the Engineering Place- ment Center.- s, red to another part of river." e prison where chosen s were forced to cut off d noses of other prison- nan said he was taken be killed but an official " * ed, saying Amin had CA i u-i is execution., NEXT day I was taken 'other prisoners in bor-! f he Kafu River, north of a. s e were handcuffed and or- jump into a part of the here the current was Ld where there were ii a ocodiles," the man said.! lard told us, 'If you can (Continued from Page 1) irselves, all right.' I pilots in Kampala, the Ugandan N THE soldiers, using capital. yonets, began prodding Amin has refused a U. S. request to clarify his detention order. "The President is not a per- son who changes his words like GIRLS a slave and is not going to re- SOMERSET FOR BIYL peat his words which were very COBBOSSEE FOR BOYS claImns pksa e BEAUTIFUL MAINE ored Am's spokesman re- ry, accommodations and bene perienced counselors with ex- AMIN HAS summoned the n any of the following Swim- Americans to meet with him in iS) Sailing, Canoeing Water Kampala at 11 a.m. Monday. cuba Diving Archery Rdelry The radio said the meeting will cs. Crafts & Woodworking deal with what the Americans cs Tripping. Photography have been doing in Uganda io Riding (English) Call or since Washington shut down its information R application Act embassy in Kampala three openings fill quicklyy 'mum Age Required 20 years ago. MP OFFICE, Dept. 30 The broadcast repeated state- E. 57 St. NY. NY 10022 ments that the Amerkians (212) 752-853 should "have no cause for alarm." An American nun working in a Ugandan hospital told the Hartford, Conn., Courant by telephone that she and other Americans were, not. "overly fearful" and that she "certain- ly" planned ito attend Monday's meeting with the Ugandan pres- ident. Amin's move against the M E R 77 Americans followed reports he had begun a massacre of Chris- MS tian tribesmen in his country ~flSand his announcement' earlier this week that he had uncovered a plot against him that would .E TIME have involved the landing of ADUATE paratroopers from the United States, Britain or Israel. re organization. Nairobi's Daily Nation news- in cooperation paper quoted a Ugandan refu- gee, Geoffrey Mugabi, who claimed that hundreds of Chris- tian Langi tribesmen were mas- sacred in a police barracks by Amin's troops earlier this week. Mugabi, who said he had been detained in the barracks and was released, wrote that the soldiers apparently strang- led their