The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 6, 1980-Page 11 Cuban sealift nearing last days; final boats could carry convicts KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) - The Cuban sealift that has brought more than 100,000 refugees to American shores appeared to be nearing an end yester- day, and officials said many of those coming in on the last wave appeared to be criminals. A Customs official, who asked not to be identified, said the late arriving boats carried many refugees with shaved heads, indicating they had recently been inmates of Cuban prisons. "IT LOOKS like that's what's coming in on the last wave,"he said. Radioed reports from the Cuban port of Mariel indicated as few as 22 American boats remained there waiting for refugees, and Radio Havana reported that the Peruvian Embassy - where the exodus of almost 110,000 Cubans began - was virtually empty. A Radio Havana report monitored in Miami said Cuban officials entered the Peruvian Embassy in Havana Wed- nesday and found only 33 persons remaining of the 10,800 who jammed in- Carter, Kennedy meet in Was,_D.C. (Continued from Page 1) views of the issues." KENNEDY ARRIVED about three minutes late for the 4:30 p.m. EDT meeting and was greeted by Frank Moore, Carter's congressional liaison chief. He entered the White House west wing without commenting to waiting reporters. Some of the president's staff peered from White House windows and others watched from balconies on the adjacent Old Executive Office Building as the Massachusetts senator's car drove up. In Boston yesterday morning, Ken- nedy told reporters he was standing by his assertion Tuesday night that he would continue to press his challenge to Carter's re-nomination, even though the president has amassed the delegate majority he will need to become the party's standard bearer. WHILE CARTER aides have been hoping Kennedy would abandon his challenge, Carter himself indicated he thought Kennedy would take his cam- paign all the way to the August Democratic convention. At a Wednesday night party for congressional supporters, Carter said, "My anticipation is he will carry his forces and his popularity and his strength and his delegates and his deep belief in issues to the convention. That's part of the democratic process, and need not cause us fear or concern or trepidation." Carter said he looked forward to a continuing contest with Kennedy, "if necessary." Nonetheless, the president has sought peace with his rival in recent days, of- fering to accommodate Kennedy's view in drafting a party platform,, to the walled courtyard seeking a way out of Cuba. THE REMAINING persons included the 25 who crashed through the wall around the embassy in a hijacked bus on Good Friday and set in motion the events that led to the sealift. Radio Havana reported that those 25 had been denied permission to leave Cuba. They were allowed to remain in custody of Peruvian embassy officials but were moved to another building, the radio station said. President Carter announced yester- day that the people responsible for the arrival of the Panamanian freighter Red Diamond with 731 refugees this week would be prosecuted "vigorously." THE CAPTAIN of the freighter, the Red Diamond, and those responsible for chartering her services have been charged under these statutes," Carter said. "I have instructed the Justice Department to prosecute these eases vigorously." "Any shipowner, captain or crew member agreeing to travel from U.S. or foreign ports to Cuba to take refugees to seized regardless of the nation of the U.S. in violation of American im- registry. Ship captains will face migration law will face the most severe criminal prosecutions and maximum penalties under the law," the statement civil fines. Those who charter boats for said. these purposes will also face criminal "Ships engaged in such efforts will be prosecution." g GARGOY LE FRIDAY, JUNE 6 7:10 &9:30 ROOM 100 HUTCHINS HALL (Law School) NORTH BY NORTHWEST FILMS INCORPORATED Subscribe to The Daily-Call 764-0558