4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 28, 1986 Plane crashes into school, killing 22 Gunman caught near Reagan BANGUI, Central African Republic (AP) - A French fighter plane crashed into a school yesterday, killing 22 people - many of them children - and touching off a violent anti-French demonstration in this former colony, officials said. Thirty people were injured when the jet crashed into the school in a heavily populated Moslem neighborhood. The fighter jet's pilot ejected safely. FRANCE which maintains an air base in Bangui, announced it would pay compensation to victims' families. - As rescue workers searched the debris of the Koranic school for trap- ped survivors, security forces moved to try to quell angry crowds who were throwing rocks at cars driven by Europeans. French Consul General Albert Couloud said several French people were slightly injured by rocks. "A violent anti-European movement is developing," he said of the two-hour- long protest. ABOUT 50 French people took refuge in the French Embassy, em- bassy officials said. There are 3,500 French residents of the Central African Republic and 1,600 French soldiers are based in the landlocked country. President Andre Kolingba appealed for calm in an address on state radio and called the victims "martyrs for peace." The radio read a message of condolence from French President Francois Mitterand and played religious music throughout the day. Kolingba declared Friday a day of national mourning. The radio called on the staff of the central medical hospital, where the survivors were taken, to report for work and intermittenly appealed for blood donors. In Paris, French Minister for cooperation Michel Aurillac announ- ced that France would compensate familites of the victims "as soon as possible and as completely as possible." He did not say how much money France would distribute. NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Secret Service agents yesterday arrested a man on charges of carrying a con- cealed pistol outside the hotel where President Reagan was to speak, police said. Spokesman John Marie said Ronald Wilson, 33 of Ferriday, was in custody on a charge of carrying a concealed weapon, a 25-caliber automatic. MARIE said Wilson told authorities he had permission to carry the pistol although he had no identification on him at the time. "He said he is a special deputy and ambulance driver with the Concordia (civil) Parish Sheriff's Department, and the department has confirmed that," Marie said. However, he said police had not determined whether Wilson's status included authorization to carry a gun. Wilson was arrested outside the downtown Hilton Hotel. "He asked some Secret Service agents if he could come in," Marie said. "They told him no and when he started walking away, they noticed the pistol inhis right rear pocket." Reagan came to New Orleans to help the campaign of Rep. Henson Moore (R-La.) who is running for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by retiring Sen. Russell Long. 4 4 Astrologers honor 'Challenger' crew Police arrest two French doctors in South Africa JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) - Two French doctors said Thursday they tried to stop the violence when police in a black homeland shot 11 people dead at a rally and wounded scores, but were peaten and thrown in jail. "When we tried to tell police we were from France, they refused to believe us and accused us of being rommunists and terrorists," Dr. Benedicte Chanut, 29, told reporters in Pretoria. Ms. Chanut said she and Or. Vincent Faucherre, 31, were held after Wednesday's shootings for 12 hours until French diplomats inter- vened. , SOUTH AFRICAN police said they tsed shotguns on a crowd in the Crossroads shantytown near Cape Town yesterday, killing two blacks and wounding two. That brought to 30 the number of blacks killed in anti- apartheid unrest since Tuesday, 27 by police and 3 in fighting among blacks. , The white-minority government ex- tended for another year a ban on out- door meetings in effect since the Soweto riots of 1976 and bans imposed last year on indoor meetings held to promote school boycotts and labor strikes. Education Minister Gerrit Viljoen issued a statement in Cape Town ac- cusing black militants of "abusing education for ulterior political pur- poses." He said there was "no reason why education should not resume normally at the beginning of the second term on April 2." The black National Education Crisis Committee has scheduled a meeting this weekend in Durban to consider possible renewal of student boycotts. As many as 200,000 of the 1.8 million urban black students stayed out of classes last year. Boycotts were suspended in January until the end of March so the government could act on political and educational demands. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) - Seven asteroids discovered since 1980 will be named for the astronauts killed in the explosion of the shuttle Challenger. The namings continue a tradition begun on the first day of the 19th cen- tury when an asteroid tracked from Sicily was named for the island's matron goddess Ceres. said Brain Marsden of the Minor Planet Center at Harvard University. THE ASTEROIDS named for the astronauts are notable for being tracked from one observatory, operated by Harvard in Flagstaff, Ariz., Marsden said yesterday. They are the first to be named for astronauts, he said. "All seven happened to be discovered at the observatory bet- ween 1980 and 1984," he said. "Seven in a row at the same place - that's hard to find." The International Astronomical Union of Paris handles the naming of celestial objects, sometimes through its Minor Planet Center in Cam- bridge, which is part of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. DANIEL W.E. GREEN of the cen- ter said the names become official with the publication fo the Minor Planet Circulars. The latest circulars were scheduled for Wednesday, "but we're running a little late." The asteroids are believed to be five to 10 miles in diameter and most orbit the sun in the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, Green said. Edward Bowell, director of the minor planet program at the Flagstaff observatory, discovered six of the asteroids; the seventh was discovered by his colleague, Norman G. Thomas. The decision to honor the astronauts who died in the Jan. 28 explosion was "something several of us thought would be fitting and proper,",Thomas said. The asteroids were numbered 3350 through 3356. To be numbered, asteroids must have calculated orbits. Associated Press hands out money to strangers in downtown An anonymous man Muskegon, MI. a gives away money MUSKEGON, Mich. (AP)-This factory town on Lake Michigan can't decide whether a man who pops up in public places and passes out greenbacks is the epitome of generosity or gim- mickry. The anonymous man, wearing a pin-striped suit and flashing a thick wad of cash, for the past week has turned up on city streets, in restaurants and in supermarkets to pass out various amounts of cash - mostly $5 and $10 bills - and pay food bills. A RADIO STA.TION widely suspec- ted to be behind the man's appearan- ces reported yesterday, in what it billed as "exclusive" coverage of his giveaway spree, that the man recen- tly was making random donations at local charities. Whover he is, Muskegonites aren't sure whether he's a well-heeled benefactor or merely the star of a publicity stunt that panders to people's greed. "I just thought he was a guy with a lot of money who wanted to do something nice," said Jackie Schrader as she shopped in a down- town mall. But her husband, Steve, disagreed. "I thought it was some kind of promotion," he said. "But if I see him and he wants to give me money, I might take it." 'U' Council continues work J RIGGIQGS "Our INFAMOUS" Backroom Clearance Sale all all all pants ..... shirts .... . sweaters .. .... ... .... . . 9.97 all sportcoats . . . ... 29.97 ..9.97 all suits ............89.97 ..9.97 alliTies ......... buy one, one FREE Ann Arbor, MI 48104 -"313/663-3106 Briarwood Mall ' .3 A J =.li &AIVERSTI( INFORMATION MEETING For students interested in attending the Hebrew Univeristy of Jerusalem next year or the year after. (Continued from Page 1) administrator would be able to take action to protect others from the ac- cused. For example, a student from a residence hall who is accused of set- ting a fire could be barred from the residence hall. BUT within 14 days, the University would be required either to hold a hearing to determine if the punish- ment should be extended. Under the council's recommen- dations, the hearing would be heard by a three-member board made up of one student, one faculty member, and one administrator. The student would be chosen ran- domly by the central cooridinator from a pool of students supplied by MSA, the faculty member from a pool suppled by the facult's Senate Ad- visory Committee on University Af- fairs, and the administrator from a pool given by the University president. THE HEARING board would then either dismiss the case or apply san- ctions ranging from barring the ac- cused from a person or a place to requiring counseling. At the request of Susan Eklund, associate dean of the law school and one of three administrators on the council, the council yesterday decided D Easter Dinner Buffet $9.95 Roast Beef - Ham - Shrimp Desserts and more!- 11:00 a.m. to 8 p.m. 996-9191 338 s. State Street to drop the possibility of forcing the student to pay fines. "I don't see how retribution has to do with protecting the community. I think this is a case where we get our- selves a lawyer and go to court for our money." she said. OPPONENTS of the code have argued that the University should deal with crimes through the criminal or civil courts, where the accused is guarded by constitutional rights. The board would have to issue a unanimous verdict to punish a student, council members agreed. One complaint against the council's draft has been the lack of any formal rules of evidence. But it would be im- possible to expect members of the hearing board to be trained in the ap- plication of these rules, said Suzanne Cohen, a law student and co-chair of the council. Instead, board membes would be taught - either through a pamphlet or a lecture - about the principles behind formal rules of evidence, councilmembers said. The accused would also have the right to an appeal. If the accused is found innocent, the victim would be able to appeal if new evidence is un- covered. 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