t rage --Tuesday, March 3, 1981--The Michigan Daily Detective suspended in parade shooting NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - A veteran police detective was suspended yester- day for firing into a Mardi Gras prarde honoring nine Marines held hostage in Iran and wounding a high school drum major and two spectators. The shooting Sunday night during the Bacchus parade, one of the most spec- tacular events leading up to today's Mardi Gras, sent thousands of screaming spectators running for cover on the edge of the French Quarter. Floats carrying the Marines were well ahead of the spot where the shooting occurred and were not en- dangered. THE OFFICER WHO did the shooting was identified as Detective John Walters of the Family Services Division, a 10-year police veteran. He was in plainclothes working on a "lost child" detail at the time. "The officer discharged his weapon in an unauthorized manner and was suspended this morning," said police spokesman Don Joly. Drum major Ray Johnson, 17, was shot in the neck and spectator John Barker, 20, of Plaquemine, La., was hit in the groin. Both were in stable con- dition at Charity Hospital. 0 Flocks follow farmers APrht Seagulls take advantage of one farmer's work in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, as they feast on worms uncovered by Amish plows. The farmers dislike the huge flocks, which appear every plowing season, because the worms help to aerate the soil. U.N. General Assembly votes to expel South Africa again -U- UNITED NATIONS (AP) - South Africa, twice before expelled from the U.N. General Assembly, was kicked out again yesterday. The world body voted 112-22 with six abstentions to accept a credentials committee's recommendation that South Africa not be seated because its white-minority government does not represent the majority of South African people. THE UNITED STATES voted in the credentials committee to accept the South African delegation, and voted against the committee recommen- dation on the floor. Costa Rica and Spain abstained in the committee and the other committee members - the Soviet Union, China, Angola, Kenya, Haiti and Singapore - voted not to seat. the delegation. The United States argued that U.N. rules say credentials must be propoerly signed by an official of the government sending the delegation, and South Africa had met that requirement. South African Ambassador Jacobus Adriaan Eksteen and his counsellor, David Steward, left the hall im- mediately after the assembly vote was announced. AFTER THE COMMITTEE action, South African Foreign Minister R.F. Botha said in Johannesburg the decision was "scandalous and revengeful." Esksteen and four colleagues entereco the assembly hall and took their assigned seats earlier Monday soon af- ter the assembly was called to order to consider the issue of the South West, which South Africa controls under a League of Nations mandate since removed by the United Nations. Martin Chungong Ayafor of Cameroon, chairman of the 51-nation African group, immediately deonoun- ced the South African delegation'. presence as illegal, prompting the assembly president, West German Ambassador Ruediger von Wechmar, to recess the session pending the credentials committee decision. MM YOUR FUTURE POINTS * II r NI-S AT HUGHES HELIGOPTERS ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS March 6, 1981 Because we're a mid-sized company on the verge of an exciting expansion phase, you'll have the opportunity to work on a variety of challenging projects. Projects that offer you a creative and stimulating environment conducive to rapid career growth. Right now, we're seeking graduates in: MECHANICAL ENGINEERING * AEROSPACE ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING * ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRIAL TECHNOLOGY * COMPUTER SCIENCE Come talk to us about your career plans. Hughes Helicopters, Inc. Where your future points up. Hughes Helicopters, Inc. 11940 West Jefferson Boulevard Culver City, California 90230 An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F " U.S. Citizenship Required SOUTH AFRICA WAS expelled from the assembly's 1974 regular session on grounds it was practicing race segregation at home and holding on to South-West Africa, known here a* Namibia, in violation of U.N. resolutions. The South African delegation retur- ned to the assembly at a resumed session on South-West Africa in June 1979, but on another African initiative, it-was etpelled again. Its reappearance in the assembly yesterday was the first since then. South Africa administered Namibia after seizing the territory from th4 Germans during World War I. The United Nations, successor to the League of Nations, ended the mandate in 1966 but South Africa has refused to withdraw and a guerrilla war continues to be waged by black independence- seekers belonging to the South-West African People's Organization; or SWAPO. The General Assembly is meeting too consider a resolution urging the U.N. Security Council to adopt new sanctions to force South Africa out of Namibia and grant it independence. U U I U SOME REASONS TO CALL LONG DISTANCE AND SAVE 50% I NOW YOU CAN SAVE 50% ON YOUR LONG DISTANCE CALLS IN MICHIGAN! Clip& Save i 01 MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT SUN 8am 8 am; FULL RATE 5pm- 5pm I EVENING DISCOUINT PERIODSEVNG *30% DISCOUNT .3OUN 11 pm 11 m p i :. . I f ' I ' '' I l I _.._ v....' .' .. .... THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE PHONE! w U __ I