2 Monday, October 17, 1977 University Daily Kansan Hijackers kill captain in Somalia Bv United Press International German and Arab hijabiers holding 87 hostages aboard a West German airliner forced the plane to land in Somalia today and shot to death the plane's captain, the West German embassy in Mogadishu reported. An embassy spokesman said the four hijackers had issued a new deadline of 9 a.m. CDT today to blow up the plane and the remaining 88 hostages on board unless their captain was killed in 13狱警炸弹和 a $15.3 million ransom are met. The spokesman said the plane landed at Mogadishu's International Airport at 6:22 a.m. (10:22 p.m.) CDT yesterday and Somali soldiers immediately surrounded the aircraft on the runway. The hijackers allowed Somali police to come to the plane to remove the body of the captain, who was not identified. AFTER THE BODY was removed, the hijackers—West Germans and Arabs—broke off communications with the tower, where West German officials had gone to communicate with them. The embassy spokesman, reached by telephone from Nairobi, Kenya, said the *nj* jackets did not elaborate on the The hijackers, who commanded the Lufthansa jetliner last Thursday over the French Riviera, earlier morning took off from South Yemen. On Sunday, the hijackers forced the jet to fly from Dubai across the Arabian desert to Aden, South Yemen, where the plane landed on unpaved ground because officials had closed the airport. Aden authorities had refused to enter into negotiations with the four hijackers, demanding instead that they refuel the plane and leave the country, according to the Iraqi news agency. LUFTHANSA SAID it had no further details on the plane's landing in Somalia. Radio Baghdad said Yemeni commanders surrounded the jet, which was running dangerously low on fuel, immediately after its risky off-runway landing in the remote leftist state. A California woman with an ailing heart and her 5-year-old son were among the 82 passengers and five crew members held captive aboard the West German jet since midday Thursday. South Yemen's director of civil aviation said the airport was closed and the terrorists were ordered to stay away from its airfield. They opened the airport, but the gunmen made the pilot bring the twin-engine down anyway on a stretch of unpaved ground, the officials said. THE BOEING JET was flying at more than 110 miles per hour when it touched down in Aden, which is at the southern tip of Africa. South Yemeni authorities said they would refuel the plane only on the condition that it left the airport, according to the agency. South Yemen's Prime Minister All Mohammed Nasser reported came to the airport to negotiate with the Almost all communications between South Yemen and the outside world were cut off on Sunday. The French Foreign Ministry said at early evening that its embassy in Cairo had closed developments, indicating that the hostages were still alive. THE HJACKERS, allied to guerrillas in West Germany who kidnapped industrialist Hans-Martin Schlesinger slys a company in New York. The two men and two women terrorists declared a series of deadlines for German authorities to submit to their terms, threatening alternately to blow up the jet with plastic explosives or start shooting the hostages one by one. The terrorists took no action when officials refused to release any prisoners in German or Turkey, but declared: "We hold the German government as well as (Chancellor) Hewels the responsible for what will happen to the hostages." Schleyer, who authorities believe to be somewhere in Europe, faced the same death deadline as the jet attack. The hijackers blackmailed authorities at Dubai airport in the United Arab Emirates into giving them a full load of fuel to flight to South Yemen by threatening to kill hostages, and then declared they would begin shooting within 10 seconds. "WE HAVE no more time," the hijack commander, known as "Captain Mahnoud," screamed hoarse into his radio microphone. "We are going to our second destination and we are not going to wait one second after our deadline." Authorities had already refueled the plane, but an auxiliary power unit on the runway still blocked the jet's engines. The hiljacker's voice, speaking in Arabic-accented English, crackled over the radio: Officials in the sheikhdom said they had learned the hilackers had at least two pistols. "I'm putting a pistol at his head, okay? I give you 10 seconds. If you don't send permission to take away the ground power, I'm going to blow off his head. Did you get it?" Lufthansa's headquarters in Frankfurt reported the plane arrived in Aden after a 3-hour, 40-minute flight across the vast Arabian desert region known as the Empty Quarter. THE POWER UNIT was pulled back and the jet roared off across the blinding white sands of the surrounding desert at 1:31 p.m. (6:19 a.m. CDT). It steered first for the Sultanate of Oman, east of South Yemen, but the hijackers apparently were aware they were not welcome there and they turned west for Aden. Hans-Juergen Wischenski, the senior West German official in charge of Arab affairs, followed from Dubai on a second plane to continue bargaining with the terrorists. It was unclear whether he could expect any cooperation from other countries, however, since West Germany severed relations with country after it established use with East Germany. THE TERRORISTS said they wanted to go to Aden, Vietnam or Somalia, but officials in all three countries had previously declared they wanted nothing to do with the air pirates. Lufthansa appealed to other planes in the region to try to contact the hipped plane or the Aden control tower. The hijackers had threatened repeatedly to blow up the plane, but their last deadline at 7 a.m. CDT Sunday passed without incident while the twin-engine jet crossed the desert. Castro honored in Jamaica visit After arriving here on a controversial six- dale state visit boycotted by Jamaican op- nies. Fidel Castro position leaders, Castro was given the Order of Jamaica, the nation's highest award for foreigners. He delivered an emotional acceptance speech thanking the nation for its "sentiments of love, sympathy and solidarity." Castro praised Prime Minister Michael Manley, saying his visit would not have been possible "without the extraordinary effort of the United Nations to blockade and isolation of our homeland." Castro said he wanted "to work for the deepening bonds of solidarity between the United States and China." During the ceremony, Manley accused "agents of imperialism" of trying to erect barriers between the two island nations. He praised Castro's "heroic and extraordinary leadership" in the entire third world in the fight against colonialism, imperialism and neo-colonialism." CASTRO ARRIVED in Kingston during the afternoon for his first visit to Jamaica, greeting Manley with a warm bug bear hug after a training session of the Gabon Navy training ship, Jose Marti. Castro is touring Jamaica at the invitation of Manley, who visited Cuba in 1975. Manley called the opposition Jamaican Labor party's boycott an "insult to one of the greatest peoples of 20th century, who is to her by the people of the Third World of all political persuasions." THE STATEMENT called 'Castro' a man whose record was one of interference in the internal affairs of Jamaica and other Caribbean countries, but this hemisphere subversion and revolution." After a meeting of opposition leaders, Labor party executive Frank Phipps issued a statement calling the Castro visit "mistimed and ill-conceived." Jamaican opposition leaders had denounced Castro's visit, calling him a "Communist dictator" with imperialist designs on the Caribbean. THE OPPOSITION also said that President Samora Machel of Mozambique was there last week and Jamaicans were being asked to pay for a second state visit at a time 'when the government says it cannot legitimate claims of the Jamaican workers. "The handling of the visit was an insult to the democratic process and the people of Jamaica when it is well known that the majority of the people of Jamaica feel a deep abhorrence and a profound distrust of them in any form," the party statement said. Manley said plans for the visit were kept secret because of security. "Surely they, the opposition, must know that with our proximity to Miami-based Soviets say SALT accord near MOSCOW (UPI)—The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravada said yesterday that the Soviet Union and the United States had drawn closer on key issues and were "on the road" to a new Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT). At the same time, however, the official government daily Izvestia charged that the Carter administration's reorganization of the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) was an attempt to widen ideological and psychological warfare against the Soviet bloc. On the treaty talks, Pravda said: as a result of the Soviet-U.S. meeting in Washington the positions have recently drawn closer on a number of key issues of this most important problem. "It is possible to say that the two powers have embarked on the road leading to an enemy." "But they can be solved if we follow the road of peace and follow the principle of equal security of both countries," the Communist daily said. Carter as saying that there had been considerable progress in the SALT negotiations but that not all the problems had been solved. PRAVDA QUOTED President Jimmy It said the U.S. Senate Foreign Affairs Committee had approved a resolution supporting the administration's pledge to observe temporarily arms restrictions of the old SALT agreement while negotiations on a new treaty continued. "This is a positive step, but at the same time, it appears that under the pressure of enemies of detente they adopted some amendments including one which says the resolution does not restrict existing weapons systems or the designing of weapons systems already approved by Congress," Pravda said. "THE PROCESS of detente is not a smooth road. The forces of yesterday again and again attempt to build obstacles on that road. Reserve generators gradually restored power to the city section-by-section to avoid an overload and another blackout. A spokesman for City Public Service (CPS) Board said electricity was restored to the north side of the city at 8:37 p.m. - 90 minutes after power was lost—and other portions would be restored within two hours. Electricity fails in San Antonio SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)—A fire in a transmission line leading to an electric generating plant knocked out power to the city of San Antonio, having one million persons without electricity. "But they will not be able to halt detente," Pravda concluded. In its comments, Investia said plans for the reorganization "deals with increasing control not only over the activities of the U.S. propaganda service but also over all the cultural exchanges including various international meetings, visits of scientists, guest tours of actors, publication of periodicals, television and exhibitions." CPS officials said transmission problems caused the outage at the Calaveras power plant on city's south side but did not confine reports that an explosion accompanied the fire. However, residents near the plant reported the sky was lightened by an explosion. Police chief Emil E. Peters said there were reports of sporadic looting in the downtown area but no arrests had been made. "We have some looting but really nothing serious," he said. "We might get some calls in the morning. We'd like people to stay at home and not add to the problem." Lights went out at 7:05 p.m. — just before dusk in the metropolitan area and police urged residents to remain at home. Traffic was reported lighter than normal downstown, but freeways without lights were backed up with cautious drivers. CPS officials, at the time of the New York City blackouts in July, said the San Antonio area and its one million residents would not be affected because of its regional network arrangements. SMOKEHOUSE Hospitals were reported to be operating on auxiliary power supplies. SPECIAL Original Hickory Pit BBQ FIFTY CENTS OFF ANY PIT BBQ SANDWICH All our meats are Slow-Roasted over a Hickory-Fire to give you the finest in Deep Pit Barbeque Flavor. Offer Good With This Ad Only Open Mon.-Thurs. 11-9 Fri. & Sat. 11-11, Sun. noon to 9:00 p.m. Offer void on home game days *Coupon expires 10:31-77 719 Mass. 719 Mass. No coupon necessary This offer expires Oct. 19 Man dead of cancer after fight for Laetrile 841-4218 The 43-year-old man who gained national attention when he received legal permission to use the controversial drug Cocaine and sleep Saturday at Memorial Hospital. TOPEKA (UPI)—Harry Walker's painful battle with lung cancer is over. Due To The Cost Of Labor & Auto Expenses We Must Change Our Delivery Service He was given only two weeks to live after his doctor found evidence of the plant lung cancer tumor on the front of his chest and he lived three weeks longer than predicted. The former heavy equipment operator from Rossville wanted to take Laetrile after the tumor was not recessed by radiation or chemical therapy. and federal authorities from interfering with Walker's use of the drug. Six days later, Walker received a federal court order allowing him to continue the use of Lairtle, the extinct of apricot pits banned by the Food and Drug Administration. A federal judge granted a temporary restraining order Sept. 16 forbidding state "I believe something is helping me," he said shortly after the Laetrile treatment began. "I believe something is helping me tremendously. I don't know what it's, but it is physical, psychological or faith in the doctors or in the good Lord." FOR A WHILE Walker showed improvements. He regained enough strength at one point to abandon his car and use the motorcycle he experienced no ill-effects from the drug. 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