2 Tuesday, September 9, 1986 / University Daily Kansan News Briefs Four Pan Am hijackers charged with murder; death count at 19 KARACHI, Pakistan — Four Palestinians were charged with murder and hijacking in the 16-hour siege of Pan Am Flight 73, and another victim died yesterday, law enforcement sources said. The latest death placed the number killed at 19. More than 150 were injured. The four hijackers were seized by Pakistani commandos Friday after they hurled grenades and sprayed gunfire at 383 passengers who were kept inside the Pan Am jumbo jet for 16 hours. Federal investigative sources said the four men admitted during interrogation that they wanted to take the jet to Cyprus to exchange the hostages for the three Palestinian guerrillas charged with the Yom Kipper killings of three Israelis on a yacht in Larnaca. A Pakistani security source said the four suspects were charged Sunday with murder, illegal arms possession, hijacking and conspiracy. 'The source said the police seized two machine guns, two pistols and a number of grenades. Hospital sources identified the dead as 13 Indians, two Americans, two Pakistanis, a Mexican and an unidentified child thought to be about 10 years old. Bombings rock European cities Bomb attacks inflicted heavy damage in four cities across Europe and killed at least one person yesterday, police said. In West Germany, a remote-control car bomb blasted a hole in the facade of the headquarters of the country's equivalent of the FBI early yesterday, authorities said. One person was slightly hurt. Two rival terrorist groups said they were responsible. woman and injuring 18 others, including a 3-year-old girl, police said. A bomb in the Netherlands went off outside the offices of a civil engineering and construction firm, which peace activists say is a contractor for Dutch cruise missile installations. No injuries were reported. In Stockholm, a bomb damaged the Swedish offices of the African National Congress, South Africa's main terrorist stronghold. The Paris explosion came as Prime Minister Jacques Chirac was meeting with senior officials at the prime minister's offices to discuss ways to combat terrorism. Mr. Chirac said the Arab group to renew a bombing campaign in France. Israelis help Turks identify men ISTANBUL, Turkey — A nine-man Israeli intelligence team arrived yesterday to help police identify the gunmen who attacked 21 Jews in a synagogue and then killed themselves, police officials said. "The Israelis will cooperate with our officers in the investigation," officials said, adding that they had few clues about the two gunmen found dead inside the burning Neve Shalom Synagogue on Saturday morning. The terrorists fired machine guns and threw grenades on Sabbath worshippers, killing 21 Jews and wounding several others. The two men then blew themselves up with hand grenades. Jewish leaders said a funeral for the 21 worshippers would be tomorrow in the synagogue. It is the largest one in Turkey, a predominantly Muslim nation. The synagogue, a center for Turkey's thousands of Jews, had just reopened for the first Sabbath since extensive renovations. It was damaged by fire in the attack. Three Arab groups said they were responsible for the attack, including two unknown groups and the Islamic Jihad, which has claimed many recent terror attacks in the Middle East. Turkish officials have yet to say who they think was responsible. Forces arrest opposition in Chile SANTIAGO, Chile — Security forces, empowered with state-of-siege authority, yesterday arrested opposition leaders and priests, cracked down on the news media and surrounded the radical slums of Santiago. Interior Minister Ricardo Garcia declared a state of siege Sunday night after an attempt to assassinate him. "This is a war between Marxism and democracy." Pinochet said from the presidential palace in Santiago, where he returned yesterday after spending the night at a villa southeast of the capital. Sunday night, 15 suspected leftist rebels attacked Pinochet's motorcade with submachine gun and rocket fire. Five of Pinochet's guards were killed and 10 were wounded. Pinochet suffered a slight wound to his left hand. Police conducted house-to-house searches and arrested six Roman Catholic priests, including two U.S. and two French missionaries, church officials said. The government also banned the British news agency Reuters from dispatching news on Chile under the state-of-seige authority. A military edict ordered the agency to suspend its news services until further order. The new state of siege was the first in Chile since November 1984, when Pinochet declared a siege in a bid to quell severe anti-government rioting. It lasted seven months, and hundreds of opposition members were jailed. Soviet news calls Daniloff guilty MOSCOW — A government newspaper said yesterday that U.S. News & World Report correspondent Nicholas Danielloff was guilty of a string of spying acts, including attempts to gather secrets about Soviet military strength in Afghanistan. Meanwhile, a preliminary hearing for Soviet physicist Gennadi F. Zakharov was scheduled Tuesday in New York before a federal magistrate. Zakharov has yet to be indicted on expensive charges. Ruth Dailloff, wife of the detained reporter who was charged Sunday with espionage, dismissed as "preposterous" the Izvestia newspaper allegations that Dailloff passed on information to the CIA long before his arrest Aug. 30. After a 90-minute meeting at the U.S. Embassy, she also hinted that talks may be under way between the U.S. and Soviet governments to engineer an easing of the terms of confinement for Daniloff and Zakharov. In Washington, State Department officials said they had made no other proposals beyond the now-dead U.S. offer to Zakharov pending his trial if the case was deemed to be allowed to leave the Soviet Union with his family. Zakharov has been held without bail since his arrest in a subway station Aug. 23. Unless he is indicted Tuesday, "the government must present evidence that there's probable cause to continue holding him," said a spokesman for U.S. Attorney Andrew Maloney. The spokesman, Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Roche, said yesterday that under U.S. law, any defendant held without bail must be indicted within 10 days of his initial appearance before a magistrate or else granted a hearing. Tuesday would be the 10th day since Zakharov's first court appearance, but Roche would not comment on whether an indictment was pending. From Kansan wires Est.1969 McCall's Shoes 829 Massachusetts Downtown Lawrence Fashion, Selection and Sincere Service We Want To Be Your Shoe Store! 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