Thursdoy, Jovember 1; 974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page-Three Thursday, November 21, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three 747 crashes in NAIROBI (Reuter) - More than half the number of people aboard a Boeing 747 which crashed here yesterday sur- vived the disaster, the first air tragedy to befall one of the huge jumbo jets since they entered service. The aircraft of the West Ger- man airline Lufthansa crashed and burst into flames at Em- bakasi Airport soon after take- off for Johannesburg this morn- ing with 140 passengers and 17 crew, according to the airline's latest figure. A possible 69 people died but another 96 escaped alive. "It was a near miracle that no more people were aboard the plane, which can carry 340, and that so many of those who were came out alive," a Lufthansa spokesperson said. The behavior of the crew-and particularly of American ste- ward Tom Scott of Los Angeles -helped a large number of pas- sengers to flee in the few sec- onds before the giant jet was enveloped by flames, airline officials said. By last night 55 bodies had been recovered and six people still were missing, most prob- ably dead. Twenty people were in Nairobi hospitals, but only two were in critical condition. Survivors said the plant ap- parently lost power almost as Group urges U.S. to fast today By The Associated Press Americans are being urged to fast today as a practical and symbolic gesture of concern over starvation that threatens to claim millions of lives this year. Oxfam-America, the U.S. branch of the British-based Oxford Famine Relief Committee, is sponsoring the fast. Spokespersons estimate that at least 200,000 persons will participate, limiting1 themselves to coffee, tea, fruit juice or broth for 24 hours and donating the money they normally would spend on food to an' Oxfam fund for the hungry. United Nations Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim said the fast "is a welcome example of how inlividuals have a chance to join together in creating awareness of alarming global food shortages and in sharing their resources with those in greater need." The U. N. Food and Agriculture Organization has estimated that more than 500 million persons face starvation in over 30 countries. Several representatives at the recent World Food Conference in Rome urged Americans to cut their food consumption. Some people have said that if each American gave up one ham- burger a week, there would be a saving of 10 million tons of grain that would not have to be fed to livestock. The grain would feed 25 million persons in poor countries. Church groups are sponsoring similar programs. Roman Catholic officials in New York urged one meatless day a week; Bishop Francis E. Kearns of the United Methodist Church in eastern Ohio is asking church members to forego one meal a week and give the money they save to a fund for Bangladesh and India; and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Stains1 has a regular program where all members are asked to fast on the first Sunday of the month and give the monetary saving to help the needy. The Oxfam fast gained support on several camouses. Food1 service officials at the University of Montana at Missoula said stulents may sign up to skip meals already paid for and the university will then donate the money to Oxfam which has its U.S. headquarters in Boston. At Tufts University in Boston, 1,334 students signed up to fast and will be reimbursed $2.03 each by the school for the food they don't eat. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is spon- soring a teach-in panel on the food problem and a mystery "hunger feast." The Daily Collegian, the campus newspaper at the Univer- sity of Massachusetts at Amherst urged students not to use their meal tickets. The university will pay 75 cents to Oxfam for each1 fasting student and individuals also are being asked to donate $1.1 Rhode Island Lt. Gov. Joseh Garrahy announced yesterday that he would particiate in the fast. Providence, R.I., Mayor Humphrey Donnelly signed a proclamation declaring today a fast day. Mitch Snyder, 31, and Mary Ellen Hombs, 23, two members of the Washington, D.C., Community for Nonviolent Action, got a head start on their fast. Thev began Nov. 16. the last day of the World Food Conference, and said they "will continue to follow this path until the develoned nations of the world begin to re- snond in a serious way to the plight of so many who have so little." T)ATT V OFF~TCTAT, RUTIT,TN Day Calendar Correirition Between Laboratory Thursday, November 21 sd Vehicle Measurements," 229 WUOM,: Panel discussion, "Poli- w. Eng., 4 pm. tics & the Media," with Nicholas Blo-engineering: Kechl Sagawa, Johnson, Sig Michelson, & David Johns Hopkins Med. Sch., "A Model Halberstam, 10 am. of Heart Muscle by Small Perturba- Pendleton Arts Information Ctr.: tion Signal," M3330 Med S. I, 4 open hearth, scenes from Musket's! pm. musical, "Jericho," Pendleton Ctr., Ctr. Near Eastern, N. African noon. Studies: Ziad Fabel, "Reflections on MHRI: David Margules, Temple the Philosophical Debate between U., "Brain Catecholamines, Narcotic a-Ghazali and Averroes," Com- Addiction, and Obesity," 1057 MHRI, mons Rm., Lane Hall, 4-6 pm. 3:45 pm. Int'l Night: Turkish food, League Civil Engineering: Hiroyuki Aoy- Cafeteria, 5-7:15 pm. ama, U. of Tokyo, "Non-linear Dy- CEW: "Refreshing Math Skills," namic Analysis of Reinforced Con- 2114 MLB, 7:30 pm. crete Structures Subject to Earth- Guild House: Poetry reading, Don- quake," 311 W. Eng., 4 pm. ad Hall, Rochelle Siegel, Larry Industrial, Operations Seminar: P. Russ, 802 Monroe, 7:30 pm. N. Blumberg, Ford Motor Co., "Use of Stimulation to Establish Corre- women's Studies Films: The lation Between Laboratory and Ve- Black Women; Fear Women, And. hicie Measurements," 229 w. Eng., C, Angell, 8 pm. 4 pm. Music school: Wi. Hunt, violin, Industrial, Operations seminar: Recital Hall; Humperdink's opera, P. N. Blumberg, Ford Motor Co., "Hansel and Gretel, "Mendelssohn; "Use of Simulation to Establish both events, 8 pm. Vivaldi, Bonacelli, Michaelangello,Marconi, ( Bernini, Caruso, Garibaldi, Machiavelli, Ferrari, Mussolini, DaVinci .. . ...-ALL ATE SPAGHETTI you should too at the Village Bell EVERY SUNDAYj Kenya soon as it was airborne and began to lost height when it was about 100 feet off the ground. The tail section hit a 15-foot- high road embankment about 600 yards beyond the end of the: runway, they said. The rear section broke off, the left wing tore into the ground and the plane spun round. Fire, which started in the left wing, engulfed the en- tire plane in about 30 seconds. "As the plane struck the ground with its left wing I saw a tremendous fireball covering the whole of the wing . . . right up against the windows," said Earl Moorhouse, 29, a passen- ger from Britain. He said plastic sheeting and luggage lockers tumbled round the passengers and filled the aisles. The light inside the wide- bodied plane also went out and made it impossible for the pas- sengers to see where they were going. With the entire left side of the plane aflame, 21-year-old Ger- man stewardess Eveline RehmI managed to get an emergency door on the right side of the fuselage open. She tried to help passengers down an emergency slide but was shoved down herself, leav- ing Tom Scott and passenger Jurgen Freud of Frankfurt to get as many people out as they could. Freud, his wife and two sons finally ran away from the flam- ing wreckage but Freud could still "see this steward helping_ people out right up to the last minute. "In fact I heard later that he had gone back inside the burn-t ing plane and managed to getF an elderly gentleman out who had been hit on the head in the row behind us," Freud added. Terry Partridge, an engineerE from Sheffield, England, said; he knew from the angle of take- off that "it was not on." "Then it'all happened. Every-f thing just fell in-the walls,c roof and the floor. A stewardess pulled me out of my seat and shoved me down the chute. Those girls were magnificent." In Frankfurt, headquarters of3 the airline, a Lufthansa spokes- person said the reasons for the crash were not yet known but sabotage was not suspected. Lufthansa press chief Karl Wingenrot said that radio con-; versations between the plane and Nairobi control tower had not indicated any trouble. The voice recorder and "black box" flight recorder had been retrieved intact. A team of West German crash experts, doctors and senior air- line officials left for Nairobi late last night. Officials of the West German Criminal Police and Civil Aviation Office were in the groupsandrwould take part in the crash probe. WASHINGTON (Reuter)-The United States yesterday insisted it had not recognized the Pales- tinian Liberation Organization (PLO) as a negotiating party for a Middle East peace settle- ment despite earlier indications of a possible policy change. "We have accorded no recog- nition of any kind," assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco said in a television interview, "our position remains unchang- ed." Sisco-and a state department spokesperson at a regular press briefing-sought to allay ques- tions raised by another TV interview the assistant secretary gave earlier this week in which he said "we regard the PLO as the overall umbrella organ- ization of the Palestinians." "We also believe, in order to achieve any durable kind of peace, the legitimate interests of the Palestinians have to be taken into account," he said in an interview with the U.S. In- formation Agency for showing' overseas. Appearing on the NBC "To- day" program, an interviewer said his comment about the umbrella organization seemed to go further than previously stated U.S. policy. "I think that was an unfor- tunate way to put it," Sisco re- plied. "Actually what I was trying to reflect was that the Arabs consider the PLO as the umbrella organization.." Diplomatic sources said the Israeli embassy had asked for a clarification of Sisco's re- mark and apparently was satis- fied with yesterday morning's explanation. However, it was not imme- diately clear whether the USIA interview would be edited be- fore being sent to U.S. em- bassies and informationi agen- cies overseas. In his "Today" show inter- view, Sisco, the senior -state department officer dealing with Middle East affairs, also said the speech last week at the United Nations by PLO leader Yasser Arafat showed no mod- erate approach towards a settle- ment. "There was no explicit or im- plicit implication of giving up terrorism as a matter of policy .." he said. U.S. will not recognize PLO as official party AP Photo Hooroo, a great horned owl, thinks people are a soft touch and is likely to perch on anyone's shoulder looking for a hand- out. Here he perches on Beth Blastingame of Fairbanks, Alaska. Although the bird is not in captivity, wildlife officials theorize that Hooroo was tamed by humans once and then released. r. ,I s I - f_ , f = 1 :r i tJ --1' f _, . f __ .--. i . .- 1 DON'T SPACE OUT, WASHINGTON = Is A Two Way Street SEE HANDMADE GOODS AT c 1ler~ '.'>+/ _ Vh aadraft1r THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXV, No. 67 Thursday, November 21, 1974 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor. Michigan 48106, Published d a iIly Tuesday through Sunday morning during the Univer- sity year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (campus area): $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states and foreign). Summer session published Tues- day through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area):; $6.00 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $6.50 non- local mail (other states and foreign) Join The Daily Siriten-d Egg No . Nice and Easy. *a Nw Stir 12 oz. Bacardi dark rum into 1 qt. chilled Borden Egg Nog. Delicious. BACARDI rum 21S - -- >. 769,*776O, Learn Now About the next CPA Exam. Becker CPA Review Course DETROIT 313-864-0128 'I MICHIGAN'S MOST COMPLETE HI-Fl& ELECTRONICS CENTERS (COURSES BEINt 4JUNE l st., Of 11 ist. ... STU Temple University A Commonwealth University R SPR Temple University's College of Liberal Arts offers excep- tional study opportunity at its campus in the heart of Rome. January 9 to May 9, 1975. Full credit courses taught by a distinguished faculty. 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