The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 14, 1981-Page 13 6 charged 'with arms smuggling HOUSTON (AP) - Bonds totaling $3.8 million were set yesterday for six men, described by a prosecutor as "international vagabonds," who were charged with illegally trying to export 1,486 firearms and ammunition to South Africa. The six were arrested Tuesday night by federal un- dercover agents who had purchased the military hardware in Connecticut and trucked it to Texas, as the million-dollar cargo was being prepared for loading on a jet bound for South Africa, officials said. TWO OF THE SUSPECTS, Peter Towers, 51, and John Parks, 43, both of Great Britain, were'"mid- dlemen who came to the United States to buy firear- ms," said senior Customs agent Norman Buselmeier. The other four were crewmen on the Boeing 707 jetliner, chartered from Montana Austria, a private airline based in Austria. The crated munitions were 1,146 fully automatic M-16 rifles and carbines, 100 grenade launchers, 111 .45-caliber pistols, 89 9mm pistols, 40 assorted smaller handguns, and 15,000 M-16 ammunition magazines, Buselmeier said. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mike Brown had asked for bonds of $5 million each for Tower and Parks, saying all six defendants "could be called interational vagabonds." He said that in previous cases involving alleged shipments to South Africa, that nation would "post bond in cash and the defendants are never seen again." THE SIX WERE ACCUSED OF conspiring to ex- port firearms without a proper State Department "end-use certificate" in violation of the U.S. Neutrality Act, punishable by fines of $100,000 and two years in prison. Customs officers said Parks and Towers ap- proached a firearms dealer - a former Border Patrol agent - who recognized their certificate as fradulent and tipped Customs to their plans about three weeks ago. They said the certificates said the weapons were bound for Sudan in eastern Africa. ........ .. .. .. ...... ... . . .. ... .. . .. If you have a $10,000 job waiting for you, you could have an American Express® Card right now. Trade the card you've been using every day for the Card you'll be using the rest of your life. You're about to leave schoolandenter awhole new world. You've got great expectations. So does American Express. For you. That's why American Express has created a special plan that reduces the usual application requirements - so you can get the Card before you finish school. All you need to apply is a $10,000 job or the promise of one. You'll use the Card the wealthy and the well- traveled use for business lunches, buying clothes for work, paying for vacations - for all sorts of after-school activities. One of the surest ways to establish yourself is to start out as if you were already established: And just having the Card gives you the chance to establish a solid credit rating. So trade up now. You'll find application forms on campus bulletin boards. Or call toll-free 800-528-8000 and ask for aSpecial Student Appli- cation. And set yourself up for next year before you finish this one. The American ExpressCard.Dnl Don't leave school without it..