Page 4-Thursday, July,9, 1981-The Michigan Daily Liverpool riots, ootigsprea 4 through From AP and UPi LONDON - Street violence spread from Liverpool to the neighboring in- dustrial center of Manchester yester- day and in a London suburb at least, four people were reported injured when hundreds of screaming youths attacked police. Authorities reported Liverpool was quiet after three nights of England's worst rioting in 200 years. They said a crowd of about 150 whites and blacks was dispersed without violence, but there were 26 arrests. FIVE DAYS OF rioting born of frustration over the nation's highest unemployment since the 1930's and the alienation of youths born to West In- dian, Pakistani or Indian parents have left hundreds injured and caused millions of dollars worth of damage. "They were going mad - shouting, breaking up everything they could," said Soul Liasi, manager of a plundered hamburger shop, ii London. "It was not racial, just pure hooliganism. They want excitement and they want to destroy things. They are not short of money." "CHILDREN ARE great copiers," England Liverpool police chief Kenneth Oxford said when he criticized parents for allowing children as young as eight to take part in rioting and looting. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was expected to address the problem in a nationally televised address scheduled for last night. Opposition members of Parliament have claimed her government helped cause the riots by cutting jobs and aid to cities. The worst of the latest violence was in Wood Green, a North London suburb not considered a blighted area but one with a large immigrant population. Scotland Yard said four people were in- jured, including one man whose throat was slashed, as hundreds of black youths, joined by some whites, hurled rocks, bricks, bottles and gasoline bombs at police. Police reported 50 arrests. In Manchester, 280 miles northwest of London, about 200 young blacks looted and burned buildings in the rundown Moss Side district yesterday. There were seven arrests but no reported in- juries. Manchester Chief Constable James Anderton stressed that the ram- page "was not a race riot." In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Carter breaks silence to criticize Reagan policies ATLANTA-Former President Carter has broken 5 months of silence on his successor, saying some of President Reagan's budget cuts are ill-advised and his "unwillingness " to negotiate arms control could be dangerous. The former president told his former Cabinet officers and senior White House aides that some of Reagan's proposed budget cuts "are compatible with our own policies." Others, said the letter, "are an abrupt departure from the commitment of our nation to a better and more productive life for Americans not strong enough or able enough to wi these opportunities for themselves." The reductions in federal spending will lead to an "inevitable increase in state and local taxes," Carter said. "... Someone will have to pay the bill for that portion of the programs which will survive because of public demand." Toxic shock can strike men LOS ANGELES-A Southern California public health expert says toxic shock syndrome-linked to the deaths of 87 women who used tampons-is turning up in men with common infections and is far more widespread than first believed. "Toxic shock is not just a vaginal disease and not just a female disease," said Dr. Shirley Fannin, chief of communicable diseases for the state Depar- tment of Health Services. Dr. Fannin said people of any age with such diverse conditions as an infec- ted toe or sore throat are now seen as possibly having different versions of toxic shock syndrome. The tampon connection is an accurate one, she said, but, it is not an ex- clusive requisite for toxic shock. Polish dockworkers protest and airline strike planned WARSAW, Poland-Thousands of dockworkers closed Baltic ports for an hour yesterday ina warning strike and Solidarity unionists at Polish airlines went ahead with plans to strike today. The dockworker strike-to protest working conditions-prompted some government officials to warn of a hard-line backlash at the crucial Com- munist Party Congress due to open next week. Following the protest, dock- workers threatened a "proper strike" would be set if the government did not meet their demands by next Wednesday. The new labor unrest is the first major worker protest here since March when millions of workers staged a four-hour, nationwide warning strike over the beating of three union members in Bydgoszcz, northwest Poland. Iran's border sealed to prevent Bani-Sadr's escape BEIRUT, Lebanon-Iran reinforced patrols along its closed western bor- der with Turkey yesterday to prevent the escape of former President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, who officials said is being sheltered by separatist Kurds. A spokesman for Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's revolutionary police command, known as the Kommiteh, told The Associated Press in Beirut by telephone that authorities were now certain Bani-Sadr is hiding in the nor- thwestern Iranian province of Kurdistan. The area is largely inhabitied by non-Persian Kurds, who are members of the minority Sunni Moslem sect and who are seeking autonomy for the region. The spokesman, who declined to be named, said Bani-Sadr had close relations with Abdul-Rahman Ghassemlou, head of the outlawed Kurdish Democratic Party, and Abd Massoud Rajavi, leader of the Islamic-Marxist underground Mujahedeen Khalq. The Mujahedeen group has 'engaged in an urban guerrilla war against Iran's ruling fundamentalist Moslem clergy since Parliament impeached Bani-Sadr June 21. He was removed from office the next by Khomeini. Calif. Gov. Brown's staff faces criminal investigation SACRAMENTO, Calif.-A state commission formally called for a criminal investigation of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s staff yesterday, ac- cusing his top aides of destroying and altering evidence in a political corrup- tion probe. The Democratic governor was not personally named as a target of the requested investigations by the Sacramento and Los Angeles county district attorneys, but at least a half-dozen top state and campaign aides were. Brown's press secretary, Cari Beauchamp, refused comment on the allegations. Neither Brown nor any other top aide was available to reporters or returning telephone calls. The commission's seven-month investigation stemmed from allegations in a Los Angeles Times story that Brown's top aides had used a computer paid for withstte fpnds to compile and maintain oiticalailing list . _ Y 4 i v a k i Y 9 t +