Page 10-Sunday, April 2, 1978-The Michigan Daily Terrorist Haddad dead at 50 South University near Washtenaw * 769-1744 The Problem -PIRGIM found that 95 % of leases contain illegal clauses The. Solto -Outlaw misleading leases YES ON A&B BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP( - Dr. Wadi Haddad, reputed "godfather" of inter- national terrorism, was reported dead Saturday by Palestinian officials, but a mystery developed over the cause and place of death of this man who topped Israel's most-wanted list. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) issued a statement here saying the Marxist guerrilla leader and former pediatrician "acquired martyrdom" three days ago. THREE BEIRUT newspapers said Haddad, 50, died of an "incurable disease" at an East Berlin hospital, and some Palestinian sources said he had leukemia. But the PFLP, a radical group Had- dad helped found, said he died in an Arab country, which was not named. And the Arabic phrase for "acquired martyrdom" is seldom used to indicate death from illness. "I can only say he did not die in Beirut," said a PFLP spokesperson. "I can't say now where or why he died." AFTER FIRST saying Haddad would be buried in Beirut, the PFLP com- mand issued a later statement confir- ming an announcement in Baghdad that the body had been flown to the Iraqi capital Saturday and would be buried there Monday. Haddad was believed to have planned history's first mulfiple hijack in 1970, the massacre at Israel's Lod Airport in 1972, the abduction of Arab oil ministers in 1975 and the aircraft hijackings to Entebbe in 1976 and Mogadishu in 1977. The latter hijackings backfired. In 1967, Haddad formed the PFLP with his classmate at the American University of, Beirut, Dr. George Habash. HABASH WAS the political head and Haddad the chief of the foreign operations bureau of the PFLP, a fac- tion of the Palestinain guerrilla SUBJECTS WANTED: Earn $3 in one hour. Participate in nteresting research on human memory. Call Kim, 763-0444, bet. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. AL Poid for by the Coalition for Better Housing.' Ballot Question commttee movement that has been known to buck the control of the umbrella Palestine Liberation Organization and its chair- man, Yasser Arafat. Haddad and Habash split in 1976 in a dispute over what Habash regarded as "unsanctioned operations, but the PFLP yesterday still proclaimed Had- dad a "martyr and great struggler for Palestine's liberation." A chain of highly disciplined un- derground PFLP cells in Western Europe forged strong ties with West Germany's Baader-Meinhof gang during Haddad's time with the PFLP. He also commanded the allegiance of the Japanese Red Army. HE USED his European cells to stun the world with the timed hijack of four jetliners in September 1970. An American jumbo jet was comman- deered over Europe and blown up at Cairo airport. Three Western European planes were firebombed at a desert air- strip in Jordan. All passengers and crews were released before the ex- plosions. "Carlos," the notorious Venezuelan terrorist believed to have trained under Haddad, was said to have taken part in Haddad's cloak-and-dagger war with Mossad, the Israeli secret service. That conflict killed many agents in France, Belgium and Scandinavia in the early 1970s. Another spectacular operation at- tributed to Haddad's planning was Carlos' 1975 daylight abduction of oil ministers from a Vienna meeting of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. CARLOS AND cohorts stormed the conference hall, killed three guards and took the ministers on a transcontinental journey aboard a hijacked plane. He released them unharmed in Algiers and Tripoli. Haddad's clerkish appearance disguised one of the most cunning, militant brains of the Palestinian guerrilla movement. His precise hand was seen behind the 1972 hijack of a Lufthansa jetliner from India to Aden and the 1977 hijack of a Japan Air Lines plane to Algiers by Japanese Red Army guerrillas. Tenant campaign nears finish