Page Fourteen FHE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 6, 19' Is women plea for end to violence (Continued from Page 3) McDonald said she thinks the. Peace Movement has alleviated the lack of communications be- tween the people, which she call- ed "our greatest drawback." She said her hopes for the future lie with both Catholic and Pro- testant youth. "In my hometown, tathcoole, the youth had a clean-up cam- paign with the youth of Catholic $auman community," she said. "And it's happening all over Northern Ireland." YOUTH COMMUNITY centers are one of the projects the movement has initiated to "cre- ate and build a peaceful society which we all want," McDonald said. Mini-buses where no public, transportation exists, rehabilita- tion centers for ex-prisoners, and houses for Ireland's battered wiver, are also part of the plan. Co-founder Williams explained that although she had planned to bring films of the violence in Northern Ireland "I'm not the type to take vapors (faint), but two and a half minutes of the film was all I could get through." "When I saw dead people brushed into plastic bags, I questioned 'Where is the quality of human life?' " Williams marched in the 1968 civil rights movement which created the old division between Catholics and Protestants. "I was for a united, Gaelic, and free Ireland. But you can't unite anything in blood," she said. THE "ELIMINATION of all nine armies, including British, Protestant and Catholic fighting groups, from Northern Ireland's streets is one of the peace move- ment's goals. "I believe that economics caused the violence," Williams added. "In my home(town) there are 8,000 families but no factories for employment or rec- reation areas for the children. "We've scratched the surface for a political vacuum that sees either United Ireland or British control," she said. "Until we unite the Northern Ireland peo- ple into one and stop the killing and hatred, can we start to build justice in all of Ireland." Williams also warned against sending money to Irish organi- zations. "You could be buying a bullet." "It may take 50, maybe 100 years, but I see friendships building. We reject the use of the bomb, bullet or other forms of violence. We must work with a our neighbors so that the trage- dies are bad memories," Wil- liams said. t BRITISH PRIME Minister James Callaghan greets President Carter durinJ arrival ceremonies at London's Heathrow Airport yesterday. Carter flew to London to attend the Economic Summit, his first foreign trip since he took office. Carter arrive in London SELF DEVELOPMENT TI{ROUGH THE ARTS at RUDOLF STEINER HOUSE, 1923 Geddes Avenue WATERCOLOR PAINTING, Mondays, 7:30-9:30 p.m., starting May 9. Fee: $35.00 for eight sessions. COLOR STUDIES BASED ON GOETHE'S THEORY OF COLOR, Wednesdays, 7:30-9:30 p.m., startinq May 11. Fee: $35.00 for ten ssesions. Teacher: Robert Logsdon. Telephone: 475-7155 SCULPTURE, Tuesdays, 7:30-9:30 p.m., starting May 10. Fee: $35.00 for eight sessions. Teacher: Michael Howard. Telephone: 761-7183 Sponsored by the Rudolf Steiner Institute of the Great Lakes Area n O t] C c n ti (Continued from Page 3) we shall be tracing in a cour- geous fashion the special prob- ems that affect human beings n the need for better educa- ion, jobs and inflation," he said. Callaghan referred to the eco- nomic issues facing the leaders of the summit"participants - he United States, Britain, West Germany, Japan, France, ttaly, ,anada and the European Cam- non Market. CARTER WAS asked in an in- :erview with reporters aboard Ar Force One en route to Lon- U-M Billiards1 This game is ready whevn ii re don if he would have new initia- tives for the summit. "We will have, yes," Carter responded. Carter, who did not elaborate on the initiatives, listed the aims of the summit'in remarks during a departure ceremony at the White House. AT THE summit and during private talks Carter said he will pursue "our long-range goals of world peace . . . nu- clear disarmament . . . and reducing the sale of convention- al arms." The President said he and for- eign leaders will discuss ener- gy, efforts to curb the spread of sensitive, nuclear know-how and pursue the "sharing of world trade." He told reporters en route to London that "loans and direct aid for less developed coun- tries" wason the agenda as well as "a mechanism to con- tinue these discussions" at a lower level and more regular- ly. CARTER SAID he was so well briefed and "so crammed with information and advice that it reminds me of the presidential debates." Carter predicted he would re. turn to the United States hav. ing made "a major step" for- ward and added: "I think when I come back we'll have had a successful trip." White House Press Cecretary Jody Powell cautioned against expecting announcements of "radical departures" at thk; summit. "He doesn't expect to solc all those problems," Powel said. Carter's foreign trade repre sentative, Ambassador Rober Strauss, said Carter "will be very strong" on trying to move international trade talks a Geneva off dead center. They have been stalled for two years A total of 129 million Ameri cans were licensed to drive m tor vehicles in 1975. The nation al leader was California, wit 13.5 million licensed drivers New York had 8.8 million an Texas 7.5 million holders d driver's licenses. Alaska has great rivers .l glacial ice, one as large as th entire state of Rhode Island. yv Michigan Union OPEN 11 A.M. 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