Jordan tells Haig Israel is main threat to Mideast peace The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, April 8, 1981-Page 3 Pistol-packing Swoman nabs escapee RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) - Jor- danian leaders, unresponsive to U.S. warnings of a Soviet threat in the Mid- dle East, told Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. yesterday that "Israeli aggression" poses the prime danger in the region. Haig, who U.S. officials said hoped to build a "strategic consensus" in the area against Soviet intentions, was ex- pected to hear the same strong anti- Israeli message from officials in Saudi Arabia. THE SECRETARY of state flew here on the last leg of a four-nation Mideast tour after a 24-hour stop in Amman, Jordan, where he conferred with King Hussein. He leaves Riyadh for Western Europe on Wednesday. While in Amman, the Haig party issued an urgent new appeal for an end to the fighting in Lebanon between Syrian troops and Lebanese Christian militias. With Haig by his side at an airport departure ceremony in Amman; Jor- dan's foreign minister, Marwan al Kassem said the U.S. secretary of state had been told in "a clear, direct and amicable manner" that a Mideast peace depends on a total Israeli with- drawal from occupied Arab lands. THE JORDANIAN minister, whose king plans to visit Moscow next month, made no mention of a Soviet threat to the region. Kassem, reaffirming Jordan's rejec- tion of the U.S.-sponsored Camp David peace process, told Haig the United States should recognize the Palestine Liberation Organization as the representative of the Palestinian people, and said peace negotiations should be handled by the United Nations. ATLANTA-Once Stephanie Holmes made up her mind, it was only a matter of time before the pistol-packing ex-Marine nabbed her man-a prison fugitive whose big mistake was tangling with the gutsy prison guard's wife. Holmes, 28, drove her husband, Phillip, to the Metro Correctional Institute Monday so he could help search for the convicted armed rob- ber, Birdie Kent, 26, of Savannah. Then she decided to hunt for the fugitive herself. "ON THE WAY I asked my husband what I should do if I ran into the man, and he told me to go through the 'normal procedures,' " Holmes said yesterday. "But I knew he was not taking me seriously." After dropping her husband off at the medium-security prison, the laid-off auto worker said she "got some gas and made up my mind to go ahead and try to find the guy," thinking the effort might help her husband 'win a stripe or promotion.' Cruising alongside some railroad tracks that appeared a likely escape route, her husband's 9 mm automatic be her side, Holmes spot- ted a man in prison garb at a crossing. "SLOWING DOWN to go over the tracks, I gave him just enough time to get in front, and I threw the car in neutral, jumped out with the gun and shouted at him to halt," she said. "He though I was crazy and took off," Holmes said, "but I chased him 25 feet in my house shoes and he stopped." Holmes said she flagged down a passing car with two men inside and asked the passenger to hold the pistol on the man, whom she ordered to spread-eagle against the vehicle. "I TOLD THE passenger to shoot if he moved-just give me time to get out of the way. And I frisked him the way my husband told me." AP Photo. STEPHANIE HOLMES POSES with her husband's 9mm automatic after nabbing a prisoner who escaped from Atlanta's Metro Correctional In- stitute. Her husband is a prison guard at the Institute. -HAPPENINGS FILMS AAFC - The Go-Between, 7 p.m., Iortrait of the Artist as a Young Man, 9 p.m., Nat. Sci. Ad. Cinema Guild - The Invisible Man, 7 p.m., Mad Jove, 9 p.m., Lorch Hall Aud. Classic Film Theatre - Bed and Board, 4, 7, 9 p.m., Michigan Theatre. SPEAKERS WUOM / WVGR - Lewis Lappham, "The Shattered Mirror: The Nonexistence of Contemporary American Letters," 10:10 a.m. CREES - Prof. Alex Pravda, "Eastern Europe: Beyond Reformism?," noon, Lane Hall Commons. CHGD - Charlotte Mistretta, "Salt Taste Sensitivity: From Fetus of Old Age," noon, Victor Vaughn Conf. Rm. Communication - Dalton Lancaster, noon, 2040F LSA. Linguistics - A L. Becker, "Modern Philology," noon, 3520 Frieze Bldg. CAAS - Thomas Holt, "The Meaning of Freedom: Jamaica and the U.S. South After Slavery," 12:10 p.m., SEB Whitney Aud. ISR - Steve Viner, "OSIRIS IV RECODE Command (Pt. 3)," 1:30 p.m., 6050 ISR. RPM - John Cairns - Should Biologists be Certified?," 3 p.m., 2531 Dana Bldg. Social Work - Elaine Selo, "Inmate Misconduct in Juvenile Correctional Institutions, John Ferguson, "Giving More than a Damn: A Study of Household and Individual Charitable Contributions," 3 p.m., 2075 Frieze. Chemistry - David Hikade, "Chemiluminescent Detection of Metal Car- bonyle, 4 p.m., 1200 Chem., Tadashi Takahashi, "Asymmetric C-C Bond Formation Mediated by Transition Metal Complexes," 4 p.m., 1300 Chem. Engineering - Richard Phillips, "Etch-a-Sketch Grows UUP: Computer Graphics and the World Around Us," 4 p.m., 170 Dennison. Fluid Mechanics- William Sears, "Who was Theodore Von Karman?," 4 p.m., 325 W. Engin. , 'IOE - David Johnson, "Approximation Algorithms for Bin Packing Problems: A Survey," 4 p.m., 229 W. Engin. Macromolecular Research - Gerald Jannick; "Theory and Experiment in Polymer Science," 4 pm., Cooley White Aud. SPAM - Christopher D Rouse, "Is Rock a Terminal Case?," 7:30 p.m., 606 Burton Tower. School of Music - Jean Kacques Nattiez, "Wagner Androgyne: The 'Ring, as Metaphorical History of Music," 8 p.m., 2039 School of Music. MEETINGS Rackham Christian Form - noon, League Studio. Commission for Women,-noon, 2549 LSA. Sailing Team -3 p.m., 122 Tyler, E. Quad. LSA-SG - 6:15 p.m., 390 Union. Stilyagi Air Corps - 8p.m., Union Conf. Rms. Residence Hall Association - 9 p.m., 3909 Union. People's Anti-War Mobilization - 7:30 p.m., International Center. PERFORMANCES First Unitarian Church - Organist Martin Haselbock, 8 p.m., 1917 Washtenaw. Gilbert and Sullivan Society - "The Yeoman of the Guard," 8 p.m., Men- delssohn Theater. School of Music - Chamber choir, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. Ark - Hoot Night, open mike, 9 p.m., 1421 Hill. UAC - Laugh Track, 9 p.m., U. Club, Union. MISCELLANEOUS Hillel - "Blessing of the Sun" celebration, 3:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. Veterans Administration - Videotape on Agent Orange, 7:30 p.m., American Legion Home.. SYDA - Introduction to Siddha Meditation, 7:30 p.m., 1019 Baldwin. Hillel - Masada Television Series, 9 p.m., 1429 Hill. CULS - openHouse for students interested in medical or health-related careers, 7 p.m., Trotter House. Residence Hall Association - Dannon Yogurt Taste Test, 2 p.m., Betsy Barbour. Karma Thegsum Choling - Meditation, 7 p.m., 734 Fountain. Rec. Sports - Circuit training program for total fitness, 7:30 p.m., CCRB. Int. Folk Dance Club - Advanced teaching and dancing, 8 p.m., Bell Pool Mezz. PIRGIM - "What you can Do to Force Your Landlord to Insulate," 8 p.m., 4thfl. Union. WCBN - "People, Places, and Issues" Discussion and call-in, 6:30 p.m., 88.3 FM. To submit Items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of; Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI., 48109. CAMP TAMARACK POSITIONS BRIGHTON & ORTONVILLE, MICH. FINAL INTERVIEW DATE APRIL16, CALL 764-7456I ° Star, Wars Pentagon wants orbiting command center CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - U.S. defense specialists, anxious about the activities of Soviet military cosmonauts and killer satellites, are urging President Reagan to ask Congress to establish a Pentagon command center in permanent orbit above Earth. The Soviets have said they expect to establish a space station, for 12 to 14 persons, by 1985. Two cosmonauts presently orbiting in the Salyut space station are stark reminders of their aggressive pur- suit of this goal. REAGAN IS SAID to be receptive to the idea and military planners -are clos'ely monitoring the first space shuttle mission. The shuttle, crucial to military space ambitions, is scheduled for launch on Friday. Congressional space experts and Pentagon officials have told Reagan that the shuttle, used to full capacity, would block the Soviets from seizing con- trol of the ultimate "high ground.". Sen. Harrison Schmitt (D-N.M.), a former astronaut who heads the Senate space subcommittee, wants Reagan to commit the nation to develop a large permanent multiman command center in orbit, using the shuttle to ferry building materials, equipment and personnel. SCHMITT SAYS THAT THE shuttle is far superior to anything the Soviets are developing and that= a presidential declaration that it will be used to help build and maintain a military space station would demonstrate that "we're not going to allow the forces of oppression to dominate that new ocean." Military astronauts could keep track of troop, ship and aircraft movements; monitor missile deployment and testing; fly shuttle craft on tests or repair missions, and inspect potentially hostile satellites, destroying them if necessary. Strike forces f aniiiles to wait in line to bury dead. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Bodies are accumulating at funeral homes in San Francisco, where a 3-week-old cemetery workers' strike has forced families to take a num- ber and wait in line to bury their dead. The living "are the ones who are hurt the worst," said RobertMoore, manager of Halstead & Co., the-city's largest funeral home where 13 embalmed corpses are being stored. "THERE'S A GREAT deal of trauma associated with death anyway," he said. "But not being able to put them away and not knowing when you're going to be able to-that's very difficult." On March 18, 130 members of the Cemetery Workers and Green Attendants Local 265 struck over an impasse in con- tract talks with Associated Cemeteries. "Everybody seems to think we just dig a hole and walk away," Union Business Manager William Chapman said. "But when it gets right down to it, we do some ugly and gruesome work, and we're not paid enough for it." THE UNION WANTS a three-year contract with a first- year wage of $85 a day, an 11 percent increase over the $76 they earned under the last contract, plus an $8-a-day increase in the second and third years. Management offered a 10 per- cent raise over one year. Liberals open fight to extend voting rights WASHINGTON (AP) - A coalition of liberal House and Senate members opened a tough battle yesterday to keep alive key provisions of the 1965 Voting Rights Act designed to give minority voters easy access to the polls. Led by Sens. Edward Kennedy (D, Mass.) and Charles Mathias Jr. (R- Md.), supporters of extending the voting rights law conceded they face strong opposition in the conservative Congress, especially the Senate. AT THE TIME OF its passage, the 1965 law was hailed as a major civil rights landmark, and since then the number of minority voters has doubled. But the political climate has changed dramatically, and in the Senate, sup- porters of extension face the opposition of Sen. Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.) chairman of the Senate Judiciary Gommittee. At a news conference, Kennedy pledged to find other ways to get the legislation introduced Tuesday before the full Senate if Thurmond declines to permit "fair consideration" by the committee. THE MAJOR controversial issue cen- ters on a provision of the 1965 law which requires all of nine states and parts of 11 others to seek Justice Department or federal court approval whenever they HELP THEPA RALYZERSTOP Muggers, Molesters and Rapists ... YOU CANNOT PURCHASE A SAFER STRONGER, MORE EFFECTIVE TEAR GAS OR CHEMICAL DEVICE 9 The"PARALYZER"has Cbeen editorialized on NBC, CBS and ABC television, in national newspapers and maga nes.asaprecision potective instrument even a300 lb, man up to tenty minutes No permanent injury to assailant. Has twice the strength of competitiv ieswllnotclog. 5yearguarantee change the rules for voting in local, state or federal elections. Those states - most of them in the South - are included because in the past they have had poor voting records among blacks or Spanish-speaking residents. Some still do. Thurmond has said that provision of the law has outlived its usefulness, and if it is to be extended it should include all 50 states, not just the South, which he feels is being punished for past pat- terns of discrimination. Supporters deny any regional bias and say the Justice Department also now requires parts of many Northern and Western states to submit changes they make inelection rules. Join Edit Staff MICHIGAN MEN'S GLEE CLUB 'A4n Explosion of Sound" Seven Great Glee Clubs Two Nights of Song Apri dir Hill Auditorium 8 p.m. FRIDAY: Michigan State Ferris State Youngstown Michigan The Friars PG ..E ' U+ f, B, i" a SATURDAY: Notre Dame Ohio State Wayne State Michigan One Concert: $4.50, $3.00, $2.00 (Students) Series Discount Available Hill Box Office Opens April 6 Egg 25632625322 S...3... 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