Page 2-Thursday, August 3, 1978-The Michigan Daily PRES. PINORHET: INDICTMENTS AREONLY ACCUSA TIONS House severs Chilean SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) - President delivered for trial. of antecedents, presumptions as Augusto Pinorhet said yesterday that RETIRED BRIG. Gen. Juan Manuel English say, in order to begir murder indictments in Washington Contreras Sepulveda, chief of the judgment," Pinochet told the report against three former Chilean security security unit known as the DINA until "Since the judges there in the Un officials are only accusations and its dissolution a year ago, was placed States cannot establish if they (the nobody will be extradited without proof under house arrest, with policemen and cused) are delinquents or not, they of guilt. a security guard posted outside his preventive detention as a f The president's comments at a suburban Santiago home. measure," he said. breakfast meeting with reporters ap- Lt. Col. Pedro Espinoza Bravo, for- PINOCHET SAID the arrest order parently were part of a government ef- mer director of DINA operations, was Contreras, Espinoza and Fernan fort to head off public alarm. placed under house arrest in the would be good for only two months. THEY WERE made before the U.S. southern city of Punta Arenas, where House of Representatives approved by he commands an infantry regiment. * voice vote a cutoff of all American ar- Capt. Armando Fernandez Larios, a N on airy ms shipments to Chile until the three former DINA agent, was said to be men are turned over to the United detained ins amilitary hospital. measure, the House, by a 243-166 vote, dered the assassination and thatmb reversed itself and decided not to use an Espinoza passed the order on to Fer- DETROIT (UPI) - State put arms cutoff to force extradition. nandez and Michael Townley, an ex- health officials reportedly are The Chilean government ordered the patriate American who worked for vestigating the possibility that sh arrest of the army men at the request of DINA. Townley was deported in March and other non-dairy farm anim the American Embassy a few hours af- at the request of the United States and throughout Michigan are contamina ter a grand jury in Washington issued cooperated with U.S. Justice Depar- by PBB, a toxic fire retardant chem indictments Tuesday in the 1976 murder tment officials preparing the case. mistakenly mixed with livestock f of exiled Chilean socialist Orlando THE INDICTMENT says Townley af- five years ago. Letelier. fixed the remote-control bomb to The Detroit News said it obtaine The U.S. Congress already has Letelier's car about two days before the copy of a memo, written by the State restricted arms shipments to Chile be- killing and that he had the help of four torney general's environmental pro cause of human rights violations, and Cuban exiles in putting the bomb tion chief after a July 24 meetingv yesterday's action was aimed at stop- together. The Cubans also were indic- aides to Gov. William Milliken, wI ping all U.S. arms shipments there. ted on the same charges as the three says that "thousands of sheep" may Several House members said that by Chileans. Townley is charged with con- involved and an unknown numbe cutting off the supply of arms, the spiracy.- other animals. United States would make it clear it is "I have the impression that the "I can't really be sure what serious about wanting the three United States has accumulated a series dimensions are," the News said s Young threatens to ire strikers DETROIT (UPI)-Mayor Coleman "Those City of Detroit emp(oyees ployees (AFSCME) representing m Young ordered the preparation of who continue to strike will be fired. It strikers were not available for c dismissal notices yesterday and could happen today or tomorrow. The ment immediately. threatened 3,500 striking sanitation and - mayor is serious. He means business." GRAHAM SAID police were guard bus maintenance workers with firing THE WALKOUT by sanitation truck five special yards opened to all unless they end their wildcat strike. crews and bus maintenance personnel residents to dump their own trash Young, backed by a return-to-work started early Tuesday, leaving the garbage. He said they would stay of court order, announced the ultimatum nation's sixth largest city without trash continuously until the strike ended. through Press Secretary James and garbage collection or city bus ser- There was no such relief for1 Graham. vice. 185,000 commuters left without a1 "THERE ARE STILL some locals Despite a Wayne County Circuit ride for a second straight day. Acc that have not been served with a copy of Court order late Tuesday to return to tance of the situation, if not its cau the court order," Graham said. "We work, more than 3,500 workers con- was growing. are making that service now with city tinued their protest Wednesday. The "I don't know what's causing police officers. chief grievance concerned mandatory this," said one commuter walking p "At the same time, department heads overtime for 650 sanitation workers, but a bus stop. "The garbage should are preparing discharge notices. We other locals participated to show sym- have anything to do with the buses." are identifying those people who are pathy and dramatize complaints of A POLICE spokesman said rush h picketing and those who have at least - their own. traffic was slightly heavier thann some responsibility for this illegal ac- Officials of the American Federation mal, although "people seem to be; tion. of State, County and Municipal Em- justing to the situation." irms aid the n a ers. ited ac- ask irst 'for dez U.S. officials plan to ask for' ex- tradition within a few weeks. The Chilean Supreme Court must then call hearings to consider the validity of the evidence within Chilean criminal law. If the court decides the evidence in- dicates guilt, it can order trial of the men here or allow their extradition. A number of informed sources and obser- vers think trial here is the most likely choice. farm animals ontaminated iblic in- eep als ated ical eed ed a e at- tec- with hich y be r of the late ' . .. JEANS $5.99 LARGE SELECTION OF DENIM AND CORD JEANS MEN'S AND WOMEN'S U SIZES nkesarcae SALE ENDS SATURDAY nost ,om- ling low and pen the bus ep- se, all past n't our or- ad- Health Director Maurice Reizen said. "But of course it is a concern." The memo cited 31 sheep sent to a west Michigan slaughterhouse recen- tly, most of them from a Fremont far- mer who is being paid more than $2,000 a day by the state to hold PBB-tainted cows at the same farm where he raises sheep, the newspaper said. TWENTY-NINE of the 31 sheep tested were found to have more than 20 parts per billion of PBB set by the Legislature as being a "safe" level for human consumption. The memo also said Department of Natural Resources officials are not sure the sheep were contaminated because they were on the same farm as the sick cows, the newspaper said. If these sheep were not contaminated through close contact with the sick cows, the News says the memo says, "the state may be faced with a much bigger PBB problem than ever was suspected." THE MEMO, written by Assistant At- torney General Stewart Freeman also said a burial pit constructed near Mio in Oscoda County "lacks sufficient capacity to handle all the animals, living and dead, now under DNR con- trol," the News said. State officials Tuesday night began burying carcasses of the PBB- contaminated animals at the clay-lined pit after receiving approval from the Michigan Supreme Court. Reizen theorized the new PBB con- tamination may be coming from the animals grazing on pasture that had been fertilized with the manure of previously exposed animals, the newspaper said. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vol LXXXVIII, No.57-S Thursday, August 3, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through saturday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April(2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published through Saturday mor- ning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; 17.50 by mailoutside Ann Arbor. The game that won't go away 011/ards at the I ,I«... ,:,-.4t .,..,r ,-..) *9,-..-.,..... fk r.. ..:_.. b. i..r.-,,. j 1111' !TV 1; -t ws s AL -I I Ai"1J,..I J-f 1 :,.V y:.IIm -I , P.v x_ ,'rI a,1 , lit