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April 11, 1988 - Image 2

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The Michigan Daily, 1988-04-11

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Page 2-The Michigan Daily-Monday, April 11, 1988

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City residents,

I

mayor walk for
March of Dimes

By THERESA LAI
Led by a bagpiper playing tradi-
tional Scottish tunes, walkers
adorned with yellow sashes took to
the streets of downtown Ann Arbor
last Friday.
The Third Annual Maize Mile
walk - a preview both to this
month's national fundraiser for the
March of Dimes and the national
Walk America drive - boasted
about 70 local business and political
leaders, including honorary co-chair-
persons Ann Arbor Mayor Gerald
Jernigan and State Sen. Lana Pollack
(D-Ann Arbor).
Walk America, the largest out-
door fundraiser in the country, is
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comprised of individual walks in
communities all over the country.
Ann Arbor's Walk America, which
will take place April 24, usually
draws between 500-700 people.
Jernigan said he was walking in
order to "bring attention to the cause
and also the research that the March
of Dimes does," including preven-
tion and treatment of birth defects.
Birth defects afflict 250,000 new-
born infants each year - one child
every two minutes.
"These statistics should encourage
anyone who is a parent or hopes to
be one to participate in the March of
Dimes' Walk America," said Elaine
Owsley, administrative assistant to
the tri-county March of Dimes.
Donald Shelton, chairperson of
the Maize Mile, said "it was an op-
portunity for the Ann Arbor com-
munity to set an example for others
to follow."
Although personal and company
contributions helped the Maize Mile
raise $6,000 last year, Jan Loader,
director of the tri-county March of
Dimes, estimates that only $2,000
was raised by the event this year.
"I think more people walked this
year than last, but donations are get-
ting smaller," she said..
Money raised from the Maize
Mile goes to national research, as
well as the Ann Arbor community.
The University Hospital currently
has a $350,000 grant to use in its
battle against birth defects like
Down's syndrome and spina bifida.
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IN BRIEF
Compiled from Associated Press reports
Pakistan blast kills over 60
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - A huge ammunition dump exploded
yesterday sending flames 500 feet into the air and grenades and anti-aircraft
missiles screaming in all directions. Officials said more than 60 people
were killed and almost 800 wounded.
The Pakistani capital looked like a city at war after the exploding
dump showered it and adjacent Rawalpindi with weapons of all shapes and
sizes.
"It's the worst disaster we've ever had in Islamabad," said an emer-
gency room doctor at the National Medical Institute as he directed ambu-
lances with a bullhorn.
Prime Minister Mohammad Khan Junejo ordered a high-level investi-
gation into the blast, which officials said was apparently caused by a fire.
Jackson says he won't meet
with Arafat if elected
NEW YORK - Jesse Jackson said that if elected president he would
not meet again with Yasser Arafat, the leader of the Palestine Liberation
Organization.
He said a meeting he had with Arafat several years ago was "for the
sole purpose of challenging him to change his posture and move toward a
mutual recognition policy with Israel."
That meeting with Arafat has been a focus of criticism of Jackson by
Jewish leaders in New York.
Jesse Jackson and Sen. Albert Gore Jr. sounded conciliatory notes
Sunday as they campaigned for support in New York's Democratic
presidential primary, a contest in which the active candidates often had to
compete for attention with non-candidate Mario Cuomo.
Nixon supports pardons for
North and Poindexter
WASHINGTON - Richard M. Nixon says President Reagan should
pardon former White House aides John M. Poindexter and Oliver L. North
if he believes they took part in the Iran-Contra affair to serve his
presidency.
The former president, who resigned in 1974 for this role in the
Watergate scandal, also said he should have pardoned his former aides
John D. Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman.
Nixon, in an interview taped Saturday and broadcast yesterday on NBC
TV's "Meet the Press," said Reagan, when considering pardons for
Poindexter and North, must ask himself: "Did these two men do what
they did, believing, whether mistakenly or not, that they had the approval
of the president, or were acting in order to serve his interests and would
get that approval?"
L.A. police arrest over 1,000
LOS ANGELES - More than 1,000 people were arrested in a
weekend police blitz against drug dealers and street gangs responsible for
waves of violence that have been claiming hundreds of lives a year in the
City of Angels.
A 1,000-officer task force flooded streets in gang areas Friday night,
and police chief Daryl Gates ordered the officers out again Saturday night.
Between Saturday evening and 1:30 a.m. Sunday, police reported 481
arrests, almost half of them on the gang-infested southside. About 190 of
the arrestees were suspected gang members, Officer Joe Mariani said.
Task force officers made 592 arrests Friday night and Saturday morning
during round one of the unprecedented crackdown on gangs in the nation's
second largest city.
EXTRAS

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Police station gnawed by
hungry kidnapped goat
HICKSVILLE, N.Y. - A goat that apparently was kid-napped and then
abandoned was taken to a police station, where it repaid its rescuers by
dining on a poster and several job application forms.
Nassau County police were called just before midnight last Wednesday by
residents who reported a goat tied to their front door.
The brown goat had the word "rerun" painted in white on each side, the
meaning of which is unknown.
Officer Gary Delaraba took Rerun to his stationhouse, where the goat
chewed up the papers before being taking to the Hempstead Animal Shelter.
Thursday morning, a goat was discovered missing at the veterinary
science department at the State University in Farmingdale.
Campus police notified authorities and were told the police had the
animal, said university spokesperson Domenick Graziani. He said the goat's
night out was believed to have been a prank.
Vol. XCVIII- No. 129
The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday
through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the
University of Michigan. Subscription rates for May through August
- $6 in Ann Arbor; $8 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a
member of The Associated Press and the National Student News
Service.

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