Page 2-Ftriday, April 16, 1982-The Michigan Daily Julian Bond to speak at, University teach-in IN BRIEF By BILL SPINDLE A campus teach-in on militarism this weekend will feature noted civil rights activist Julian Bond as the keynote speaker. Bond, a state senator from Georgia, will open the teach-in at 7:30 p.m., tonight at Rackham Hall, according to Bruce Kay, a member of the Military Awareness Coalition sponsoring the teach-in. OTHER SPEAKERS will include former UAW president and current University professor Leonard Wood- cock, state Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Arbor), and campus Guild House Director Ann Coleman. BULLARD WHO will speak on Satur- day during a teach-in workshop, said the teach-in is a part of a national movement protesting President Reagan's "remilitarization of America." Bullard is sponsoring a petition drive to place a nuclear freeze proposal on the State's November general election ballot. The drive needs 230,000 signatures by mid-May to be placed on the fall ballot. Michigan is one of 40 states in which freeze advocates currently are circulating anti-nuclear petitions. Kay said that he "doesn't think students are nearly as concerned (about military issues) as they should be," and that the teach-in is an educational event. Tomorrow Bond and Bullard will present a workshop on South Africa; Bret Eynon, a local historian, will speak on "Military Contracts on Cam- pus" and Raphael Ezekiel, University psychology professor and city council member, will conduct a workshop on nuclear disarmament. The film Hearts and Minds also will be shown. Compled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Haig flies to Buenos Aires Secretary of State Alexander Haig, renewing his intercontinental effort to avert war between Britain and Argentina over the Falkland Islands, left for Buenos Aires yesterday as Argentine warships were reported sailing south toward the British-declared war zone. Argentina's official Telam news agency said units of the Argentie navy sailed out of Puerto Belgrano heading "presumably to the south." British officials in London said earlier a task force of Argentina's 31-ship navy might try skirting the 200-mile war zone around the Falklands, which Britain had ruled since 1933 and Argentine forces seized April 2. Telam did not say how many ships sailed from Puerto Belgrano, the major naval base 425 miles south of Buenos Aires and 850 north of the Falklands, or give any indication they might try to challenge the British-declared zone. The Argentine vessels had been reported "ready to sail" Monday after the navy commander, Adm. Gorje Anaya, made a "farewell" address to the sailors. Bridge collapses, kills 12 .I Phony flyer declares curfew to curb crime (Continued from Page 1)o"originated somewhere from 'the Bur- resident assistant at West Quad, many sley area." of the students were "ready to fight. It Several students said the flyers treat was pretty messy for a while," Mc- the subject of rape too flippantly. "Ob- Millin said. "But after a while, pretty viously someone is taking the initiative much everyone realized it was a joke." and doing something (about the Officials said they do not know who is problem), but they should have handled responsible for the flyers, but Safety it differently," said LSA freshperson Director Stevens speculated that they Dave Juneau. EAST CHICAGO, Ind.- An unfinished highway bridge collapsed yester- day as construction crews poured concrete, killing 12 workers, injuring at least 16 and pinning others under shattered blocks and twisted steel girders. "All I remember was there was a loud noise and then it started coming down," said Robert Gilbert of Gary, who was working nearby when 'the ac-{ cident occurred at about 10:30 a.m. "People started to holler and then I ran."1 Lake County Coroner Dr. Albert Willardo said 12 men had died and "there may be others." There were conflicting reports as to the number of injured. Coroner's at- torny John Kouris said 16 others'were injured, including four critically. East Chicago Police Chief L.R. Stiglich earlier had said 32 were injured and were trapped in the debris. Four Palestinians wounded TEL AVIV, Israel- Four Arab youths were shot and wounded by Israeli soldiers yesterday during the fifth straight day of protests sparked by a shooting rampage on Jerusalem's Temple Mount. Soldiers fired on stone-throwing Arab youths during demonstrations in the Jabaliya and Shati refugee camps in Gaza, wounding four protesters, a military spokesman said. The military said Palestinians threw a hand grenade at an army truck in Gaza, but the explosive bounced off the vehicle before exploding. There were no injuries. Reliable sources in the Gaza said soldiers rounded up a large number of localArabs after the attack. A grenade attack near the same site last month killed an israeli soldier and injured six people. The most serious unrest following the Easter Sunday attack ona Moslem shrine atop the Temple Mount in Jerusalem has been in Gaza, where an 8- year-old Arab boy died and dozens of Arabs were wounded in clashes with Israeli troops. PBB contaminated nearly all Mich. residents, study says CHICAGO- Nearly all of Michigan's population was contaminated with the toxic chemical PBB five years after the nation's worst agricultural disaster, an American Medical Association report said yesterday. The estimated 97 percent contamination rate as of 1978 will pose serious health concerns for years to come and require constant monitoring, authors of the study said. PBB has been shown to cause liver cancer in laboratory rats. The Michigan Department of Public Health in late December reported essentially the same findings; which were based on studies by New York's Mount Sinai School of Medicine. The AMA researchers found measurable amounts of PBB in hundreds of tissue samples taken from adults in every section of Michigan. Subsequent calculations by the AMA journal's authors concluded 97 percent of the state's residents were contaminated. I UhEw lt-cdthgan 1atI Vol. XCII, No. 156 Friday, April 16, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. 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