Page Two THE MI CHIGAN DAILY Saturday, May 28, 1977 Soviet jet crash kills 66 MEXICO CITY (AP) -- A Soviet jetliner crashed near Havana airport yesterday. The Cuban news agency Prensa Latina reported 66 persons were killed and two others injured.y A dispatch from Havana, monitored here, said 56 of the 58 passengers aboard the aircraft d i e d in the crash. The entire crew of 10 was also killed. Two passen- gers, a West German and a Russian, were critically in- jured. QUOTING C u b a n avia- tion authorities, Prensa La- tina said the aircraft crash- ed about 3,300 feet short of the runway as it was mak- ing its final approach to Havana's J o s e Marti air- port. Cuban auhllorities imme- diately set up a team to in- vestigate the c r a s h, the news agency said. The plane, an Ilyushin 62, was e n r o u t e to Havana from Moscow with stopovers in Frankfurt and Lisbon. A CANADIAN embassy spokesperson in H a v a n a said the plane had attempt- ed to make an emergency landing w i t h one engine afire when it crashed. The IL62, initially put in- to service by the Soviet air- line Aeroflot in 1967, is a jetliner with four turbofan engines mounted in hori- zontal pairs along each side of the rear fuselage. It ac- commodates up to 186 pas- sengers. Last June, 46 persons were killed when a Soviet TU154 crashed in Equato- rial Guinea on a flight from Angola to Moscow. THE MOST recent known plane disaster within the Soviet. U n i o n involved a crash Feb. 15 during a flight from Tashkent, Uz- bekistan, to the north Cau- casus resort of Mineralnyye Vody. A delayed newspaper Escaped Act TAMPA, Fla. (A') - A com- puter caught up with Emory Allen Belcher 26 years after he fled a convict work camp and settled down 100 miles away. ie's back behind bars while prosecutors decide whether to try him for escape. Belcher, 54, says that ever since his escape he had been using his own name, working as a cook and tile setter in Or- lando. "We have to make a decision whether, to file an escape mention of the crash said only the "three were vic- tims," w i't h o u t providing any further details. Last Nov. 28, a Soviet TU- 104 airliner crashed shortly after take off on a flight from Moscow to Leningrad. Western airline sources said 70 persons d i e d in that crash. On yesterday's c r a s h, Tass gave only a terse three-sentence it e m. The government - controlled So- viet news media generally shun reporting plane crash- es and other disasters, Dn caught 26 years late charge or drop the - whole thing," said Asst. Hillsborough County State Atty. Tom David- son. "We may decide to pro- secute him and then again, we may decide the hell with it." Belcher had served 1b months of an 18-month sentence for a $75 burglary when he fled the work camp in 1951. He was a passenger in a friend's car when they were stopped for a traffic violation en route to work in Orlando on Wednesday by D. L. Olson, a sharp-eyed Orange County dep- uty. Whlile officers were check- -) /1 fS/ Jtune 1-10 I. All Applications Taken from June 1 Through June 10, 1977 Will Receive Equal Consideration With Applications Taken April 4-11 for FALL BOOK RUSH. A Lottery System will be used for these applications to determine hiring order., II. The Cellar Will take applications at later times than indicated in (1); however, subse- quent applications will be placed in hiring order by Date of Application, and they will receive priority after those taken in (1). Ill. Former Rush Employees in good standing Need Not Reapply for FALL RUSH and will receive top priority over all other-applicants. IV. All applicants hired for FALL RUSH will be notified by phone or mail later in the summer. Rush employees hired to work in August should expect to work through and beyond registration. HOWEVER, all rush lobs are, unfortunately, only temporary. Starting pay is $2.70 per hour. V. Permanent positions which may open up after Rush will be filled by employees who worked FALL RUSH. Post-Rush hiring is done departmentally, on the basis of the employee's Rush performance and their availability for the unified hours. VI. After September 30, 1977, all unused applications will be thrown away. There- fore, applicants must reapply for each future rush that they wish to work. ABSO- LUTELY NO APPLICATIONS WILL BE UPDATED OR KEPT ON FILE FOR FUTURE RUSHES. UNFORTUNATELY, WE HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO JOBS AVAILABLE CUR- RENTLY OR FOR THE SUMMER. SORRY, THESE ARE RUSH JOB OPEN- INGS ONLY. Further Information and/or Applications may be obtained at the Info Desk in the Rear of the Cellar, in the Basement of the Michigan Union. Hours-Mon.-Fri. 9:30-5:30, Sat. 12-5, Closed Sundays ing the driver's license, Olson said he noticed Belcher was fidgety. "He seemed a little nervous," the policeman ex- plained yesterday. "So we ran a check on him and came up with a hit -- a 26-year-old war- rant . . . you never know what you're going to find these days." The warrant from Ilills borough County was dated Dec. 7, 1951, according to Circuit Court records. Belcher told investigators he had carved out a quiet life for himself - worked, married twice, and fathered several children who made him a grandfather. Belcher was brought to the Hillsborough County booking station Thursday and trans- ferred to the county jail yester- day. Detective Jack Whidden didn't use handcuffs when he escorted Belcher. "If he hadn't done anything wrong in 26 years, then chanc- es are he isn't going to try any- thing now," said Whidden. Lat- er on, he thanked me for not putting the cuffs on him." According to court records Belcher was arrested on Jan. 16, 1951, shortly after a $75 camera was stolen in a service station burglary. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Volume LXXXVII, No. 19-8 Saturday, May 28, 1977 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second clas postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 41109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday moning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor. Michigan 41109. Subscription rates: $1 Sept. thru Apeil (2emms- teri:;$13 by mrail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. sescription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; 87.50 by mail outside An Arbor. did-it-mysslf at Esgaframes and saved about 50%. They showed me how to make a frame t was last, fun and simple" Meqafromes also a f f e r s the finest selection of mouldings foer custom f r a m i n q of original qrohics. A large selection of framed and unframed posters can. also be found at Meqafromes, as well. as hundreds of ready - made frames. 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