Page 2--Tuesday, July 13, 1982-The Michigan Daily Queen's visitor stuns security, Scotland Yard LONDON (AP)- "A man was arrested in Buckingham Palace on Friday morning after entering the bedroom of Her Majesty the Queen," Home Secretary William Whitelaw said yesterday in an extraordinary House of Commons statement recalling earlier times when court intrigue put many a British monarch in peril. An unconfirmed report in the Daily Express said the intruder sat on the bed of Queen Elizabeth II around 3 a.m. Friday and the two talked quietly for 10 minutes until the monarch gained his confidence. The 56-year-old queen then summoned a footman on the pretense of getting the prowler a cigarette, and the servant hustled him away, the report said. WHITELAW promised an immediate inquiry, describing himself as "shocked and staggered" by the breach of royal security. He gave no details of the incident, but told the Commons "the House will admire the calm way in which Her Majesty responded to what occurred." Lawmakers and the press asked "How could it happen?," and the furor mounted when government spokesman Lord Elton told the House of Lords that the intruder was the same man charged Saturday with a June 7 palace break-in. In the first incident, Michael Fagan, 30, a drifter who entered the dock at Bow Street Magistrates' Court barefoot and in a dirty T-shirt and blue jeans, was accused of stealing a half-bottle of wine from the palace. Whitelaw said the state prosecutor was studying possible charges connec- Today The weather Nice is the code word today as temperatures stay in the mid 80s, with a minimum of humidity to boot. F Poetry course A COURSE offering on poetry that wasn't listed in the Universty course guide is still open to seniors and graduate students. English 578 or Education D508 (''Reading and Writing Poetry") will offer an in-depth ver- sion of the University's Poetry Workshop from 1-4:30 p.m., July 19 to July 30. The course is in its fifth year and features guest lectures from local writers. Those interested can CRISP for the course through July 19. Q Crime doesn 't advertise I F YOU WANT to be a stickup man, don't wear a T-shirt with your name on it. A man, carrying an automatic pistol and wearing a T-shirt with the name "James" printed on the back, and accompanied by a woman, recently robbed the Stadium Park West iarage in St. Louis of about $100. Three minutes after the holdup, a description of the robbers was broadcast over the police radio. Officer Gary Barta took a guess at the direction the robbers might be headed and as he drove down the street, he saw a couple fitting the description of the suspects headed toward him. Barta ordered the couple to halt and lie on the ground. As they did, Barta notice the man's shirt. On the back of the shirt was the name "James." Barta arrested the couple and recovered the money and the weapon. Q Happenings Films CFT - Only Angels Have Wings, 2 & 7 p.m., Sergeant York, 4:15 & 9:1S- p.m., Michigan Theater. Miscellaneous National Organization for Women - meeting, 7:30 p.m., Unitarian Chur- ch, 1917 Washtenaw. CEW - Informal Drop-in Hunt Club, noonHCenter Library. Ann Arbor Go CLub - meeting, 7 p.m., 1433 Mason. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, M. 48109. The Michigan Daily ... chatted with intruder ted with the Friday incident. SECURITY HAS been tightened at the palace since the incident, Whitelaw said, and Scotland Yard Assistant Commissioner John Dellow has begun an urgent inquiry into how the man got past armed soldiers, detec- tives, servants and electronic sur- veillance. Whitelaw, in charge of police as Home Secretary in Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's Cabinet, came in for ridicule when he said palance security had been tightened in the past 18 months after a series of royal scares. '.4 Chinese kibor program I re-educates PEKING (AP)- The Re-Education- through-Labor Band strikes up. The "hooligan" who plays the fiddle obediently raises his bow. Out come the cheerleader placards and out rolls the song with the toe-tapping Latin beat. "Oh, the party's policy of re- education through labor is good for us!" HUNDREDS OF hooligans, bicycle thieves, purse snatchers, gang fighters and sex offenders sing and sway or listen to the ideological music that is supposed to help save them. Black- boards warn against reactionary speeches and pornography. One black- board bears the words to a song they must learn: "Socialism is good, com- munism is sure towin." This show of compulsory inspiration and benevolent discipline was staged yesterday for foreign journalists who visited the Tuan He Re-Education- through-Labor Farm, a facility 12 miles from Peking that houses 2,410 offen- ders. It was the first time officials allowed. Western correspondents to see one of the farms, a key component of China's socialist disciplinary system. THE PROGRAM of re-education 'hooligans' through labor lies somewhere between a tough reform school and a stint in state prison. The offenders are serving one-to-four-year terms, but none has been tried: They were ordered to the suburbs by the city police and the municipal Labor Re-Education Com- mission. These farms, which have no bars, are not part of China's system of labor reform camps for convicted criminals and some political offenders. Most of Tuan He's inmates are young, and their offenses are not considered serious enough to warrant prosecution and im- prisonment. Two slogans written in red appear at the farm's entrance: "Repent and turn over a new leaf," and "Yours is a bright future." Director Sun Yi Bin said none of Tuan He's inmates, most of whom are under 25, is serving a term for a political of- fense. "Our ultimate aim," he said, "is to educate, reform and save these offen- ders through political, ideological, cultural studies and labor. They must love their motherland, love labor, ob- serve discipline and liw." Vol. XCII, No. 38-S Tuesday, July 13, 1982 The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The Univer- sity of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 49109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday mor- nings. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. 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