Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, Febru©ry'22, 1973 TH MCIGA AL hrdy eray2,17 r Israeli jets shoot down Arab commercial jet liner in Sinai Lear jet plunges in psiaield Special to The Daily (Continued from Page 1) fault, said the agency, and "con- trary to all international rules, four Israeli fighters intercepted the plane and fired at it." Several survivors, had under- gone surgery and their 'condition did not permit newsmen to see them, a hospital spokesman said. The hospital sources added that several were having plastic sur- gery for burns. Representatives of the French embassy, the international com- mittee of the Red Cross and the United Nations have been in con- tact with the hospital and announc- ed they would visit the survivors tomorrow. A detailed inquiry has been ord- ered into the incident, informed sources said last night. A report on the incident was cabled to Knut Hammerskjoeld, secretary general of the Interna- tional Airlines Association (IATA), at his request, Israel radio re- ported. Israeli aviation authorities ex- pectedIATA headquarters insGe- neva to issue an official state- ment on the crash Thursday morn- ing, the radio added. Israeli forces unexpectedly alle ed Pa1estinian guerr1 (Continued from Page 1) ance movement is against a peace- reporters about the motive for the ful settlement, about which there unexpected Israeli attack, linked it is a lot of talk at the moment," with current moves for a peaceful he said. settlement in the Middle East. "This attack is a reply to the "This aggression is part of a stand of the Palestine resistance conspiracy as the Palestine resist- ( movement." world reaction: shoCt, bewilderment, sorrow (Continued from Page 1) normal commercial flight, Egypt had asked the International Civil Aviation Organization to take ur- gent measures to deal with Israel's action. It said that the Egyptian author- ities have in their possession a voice recording of the conversation between the captain of the Libyan Boeing 727 airliner and Cairo Air- port, and that the tape would be placed at the disposal of interna- tional organizations investigating the incident. Meguid's call on the secretary general was apparently scheduled late in the day and was not on Waldheim's published list of ap- pointments. Neither Egypt nor Libya has so far requested any Security Coun- cil action on the airliner incident. The U.N. delegates from non- aligned countries expressed "soli- darity with the countries which have been the victims of the Is- raeli aggression." They called upon "the international community to put an end to the policy of Is- rael." President Nixon sent a message to Libyan leader Muammar Kadafi and another to President Anwar Sadat of Egypt. A number of Egyp- tians were aboard the plane when it was fired upon and forced down in the Israeli-occupied Sinai Des- ert. Israel said its planes opened fire after the airliner refused to heed warnings that it was in a prohib- ited area. A statement issued by the Tunis- ian government said the inter- national community should take measures against "this new form of terrorism." President Houari Boumedienne of Algeria called the incident "a vio- lation of the most elementary hu- man principles." Cairo radio quoted an Egyptian government spokesperson as say- ing the downing was "willful, de- liberate m u r d e r of unarmed civilians, including women and children," Egypt sent a telegram to Wald- heim about what it called the "criminal incident." Details of the message were not given. All Cairo newspapers gave ban- ner headline treatment to the in- cident. "This barbaric crime offers to the whole world a new proof of who the terrorists are, and who made committing crimes against civilians an official policy, and who the pirates are who violate inter- national law and tradition," an editorial in Al Akhbar said. SYDNEY (R) - A Sydney cafe- teria has on the menu Irish stew, [talian style. raid la bases Foreign Minister Khalil Abu Hamad said the real aim of the attack was to cause internal fric- tion between the Lebanese people and the Palestinians living in thisJ country. Observers here said the raid came as a surprise because there had been no reports of any recent Palestinian commando a c t i o n against Israel which could be link- ed with Lebanon. Previous Israeli action against Lebanon has usually been accom- panied by announcements of guer- rilla activity in northern Israel or neighboring occupied Syrian ter- ritory.' The last Israeli raids were about four months ago and the Lebanese borders have been generally quiet since then. Apart from the timing, the meth- od of yesterday's attack was also; unexpected. Israeli forces have never before been in action on the ground north of Beirut. Similar raids have been mounted on several occasions in south Leb- anon, and in December 1968 Israeli commandos attacked Beirut air- port, but attacks in the north of the country had previously been confined to air strikes. WANTED: MARRIED COUPLES IN UNIVERSITY HOUSING: I'd like to interview you for a thesis on American life styles. If you are 21+, married 2 years+, call S u s a n B r a m, 764-6337 (Day) or 662-9407 (Eve.) You will be paid. YPSILANTI - The pilot and co- pilot of a twin engined Lear Jet; were killed yesterday attempting; to land their plane at the Univer- sity-owned Willow Run airport, 12 miles East of Ann Arbor. A pas- senger on the plane was unhurt. The jet, owned by Air Taxi Inc. of Kansas City, Kansas, was trans- porting auto-parts for the Ford Motor Company on a flight from Kansas City when the pilot ap- parently lost control and the plane plunged to the ground in a field near the end of the runway. Wayne County Sheriff William Lucas said it was a miracle the plane had not landed on the nearby Ecorse Rd., a busy highway. "The only thing that kept that plane from going on the highway was a ditch," Lucas told reporters: Investigators from the Wayne County sheriff's department listed the dead meneas pilot Al Israel, 36, of Independence, Mo., and co- pilot Larry Armstrong, 33, of Su- gar Creek, Mo. No cause for the accident was immediately known. Officials from the Federal Avia- tion Administration are scheduled to begin a full probe into the crash. Vir ginia Woolf v O BY List: 12.50 SALE 9.98 A SPECIAL FROM ( BORDERS BOOK SHOP 316 S. STATE ST. - Open Mon.-Sat. 8:45 a.m.-10 p.m. L=< =:<->o,=->o<--> 0 R m I WCBN-FM presents UAC-Future Worlds Lecture Series. Thursdays at 7:10 p.m. -THIS WEEK- PAOLO SOLRarchitect "Future of Aesthetics" WCBN-FM 89.5 stereo this broadcast will be uninterrupted, suitable for taping REMEMBER: Future Worlds Conference/Festival-Aprit 13, 14, 15 OPENING TOMORROW NITE- . U-M DANCERS AT POWER CENTER works by: DORIS HUMPHREY :. 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I I LSA COLLEGE LECTURE Professor Murry, Sachs Department of Romance Languages and Comparative Literature Brandeis Univ. 41 "Flaubert as a Comic Writer" 4:00 p.m. A 1 I :.