Saturday, September 11, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Saturday, September 11, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Five New York jet hijacked to Newfoundland Clericals rb I I C (Continued from Page 1) Paris. It wanted one-third of the text printed on those news- papers' front page. The communique was signed "Fighters for Free Croatia." Croatia, now part of Yugoslavia, has been an area of intense nationalistic feelings since long before World War L stringent security precautions. There were only scant details about events aboard the jet it- self. The hijackers communicat- ed with ground authorities through a computer printout, transmitted from the jet. Those instructions gave the number of the locker in Grand Central Station which the hi- jackers said contained a bomb. r a prime political tool overseas, they have fallen off in the United States in recent years because of elaborate security precautions. An airport official said that he understood the hijackers were "waiting for a message from New York" before they would announce further plans. An FAA spokesperson said in New York, "We believe there is one hijacker in the cockpit and five in the cabin. We be- lieve the man in the cockpit is wired with some kind of ex- plosives device, but we don't know." "The first thing we knew is that he the pilot came up on the hijacking code," the spokes- person said, referring to a spe- cially coded device which chang- es the plane's image on a ra- dar screen. The plane parked at the end of a darkened runway at Mira- bel, about two miles from the main passenger terminal. A police spokesperson said the' "usuale securityprocedures" were enacted. Reporters said', IN THE LAST few years, some Croat separatists have de- THE DRI manded complete independence was increa from Yugoslavia. that the pil But the ultimate goal of the is not rated 727 hijackers remained a mys- "However, tery early this morning. I'm sure h The incident was the first said a TWY hijacking of a commercial jet- gus McClur liner in the U.S. since April 25, McClure 1975, when a man unsuccessfully plane, whic attempted to order a plant to fly to Gand Cuba from Baltimore. as a swap Also a mystery was how the Thejet,1 hijackers successfully avoided je, detection by security checks, at, Emiesout New York's LaGuardia Airport. we south Security rules mandated by the when it w Federal Aviation Administration pTh require airport officials to x-ray THE PLC all luggage carried aboard air- sengers an craft and to screen passengers sene with metal - detection devices. The While a Canadian Defense to leave N Department official confirmed dia Airport that one of the hijackers was bit was del wired with explosives, they did taking off not know whether the others been a sch carried arms. arrived a The TWA spokesperson said Internation everyone aboard the lijacked p.m. CDT. 727 had passed through the Although r AMA of the hijacking ased with a report ot of the hijacked jet for overseas flights. if he has to land it, e will be able to," .A spokesperson, An- re. said the second TWA h was being fueled to er, would be offered in Newfoundland. Flight 355, was over .Y. - about 120 hwest of Montreal - as hijacked at 8:19 ANE carried 85 pas- d a crew of 7. ng 727 was scheduled ew York's La Gutar- t at 6:45 p.m. EDT1 ayed nearly an hour, at 7:43 p.m. Had it edule, it would have t Chicago's O'Hare al Airport at 8:03 skyjackings remain the aircraft was shrouded in darkness and ringed by securi- ty guards during the two-hour stopover at Montreal. Jetliner kills 177 (Continued from Page 1) countered any mechanical troubles or that it had been di- verted to Zagreb. He maintained the plane was in perfect condi- tion at the time. THE SPOKESPERSON said the DC-9 had received permis- (Continued from Page 1) BOTH JENSEN and Morehead agreed that . any new local should affiliate itself with the UAW. However, Jensen added that she would prefer first to establish an independent union i in the Graduate Employes' or- I ganization mold. "After a year, once we're strong as a local, we would affiliate with the in- ternational (UAW)," she said. According to Morehead most of the steps the University has taken since the union's dissolu- tion were "expected." wtry o future THANO'S EXTENDS A WARM WELCOME TO ALL U of M STUDENTS. SO STOP IN, MEET THANO'S AND TRY THE B E S T DEEP-DISH PIZZA THIS SIDE OF SICILY. COCKTAILS-7 Days 'Til 2a.m. THANO'S LAMPLIGHTER Politicos fall to strong media bats, 421 E. LIBERTY 665-7003 L a c I. ; t ,, !t I ;s is i a r 'c f 7 F ,f ,f , (Continued from Page 1) light deepened over the park - cold and piled high with clouds - two members of the media team were wounded i while warming up. And when the game began, the newspeo- ple (representing radio stations WAAM, WPAG, Cable E-TV and the Ann Arbor News) were swamped by a five-run City blitz in the first inning. ; "Well," a disgusted onlooker muttered, "I guess you don't get much exercise writing news stories." Encouraged, some excited members of the crowd began calling out to their favorite City players - screaming, "Strike' 'em out, Wheelie!" to Mayor Albert Wheeler and "Over the fence, Wendy!" to Council men-; ber Wendell Allen (R-First Ward.) BUT THE MEDIA types ral- lied in the fifth inning, inching their score up in a series of heart-pounding plays-includ- sion to climb to 35,000 feet short- ingttwo hometrn inthe sixth ly before the crash occurred. - to clinch the victory. This indicated that the Yugo- It was a fascinating sight, Sla dipaedmthate begn watching the fat jiggle and the slav plane may have been sweat bead up on those bureau- climbing when the colision oc cratic bodies, listening to a benchful of newspeople curse Eyewitnesses at the scene of} the umpire-15th District Court the crash said they saw bodies Judge George Alexander. falling from the sky as well as- When it was all over, and the the tail of the Yugoslav plane teams were shaking hands to and parts of the Trident. China mourns Mao the cheers and groans of the crowd, the media team admit- ted that they had been sure of victory all along. "WE KNEW WE'D WIN, sneered Ann Arbor News re- ported Glen Harris. "We al- ready had the type set; we just have to fill in the score." ' Conncil member Gerald Bell (R-Fifth Ward), captain of the City team, was unruffled byi the loss. "it was an awful lot of fun," he said. "And we raised over, 80 bucks, besides." The British Broadcasting Corp., in a report from Zagreb, said Yugoslav authorities took several air traffic controllers from the Zagreb tower for ques- tioning. It added this was a routine investigative procedure in Yugoslavia following air crashes. The worst previous airplane collision occurred over Japan in 1971 with 162 persons killed. The greatest loss of lifefrom a single plane crash was 345 dead when a Turkish jetliner went down near Paris in 1974. SOFT * SOFT * SOFT * SOFT * SOFT. SOFT. SOFT o SOFTROCK & ROLL IN TH E "MUSIC YOU CAN TALK OVER" BLACKJACK ROOM Featuring- FOXCROFT AT AT THST.-SOFT ROCK ATTITUDE ADJUSTMENT HOUR M-F 4"6 .m I- IN TMAIOT3600 PLYMOUTH RD.-769-9400 -n SOFT * SOFT * SOFT * SOFT * SOFT. SOFT. SOFT P OJECT COMMUNITY offers you a chance to learn skills and serve the community (Continued from Page 1) WANG and the bespeclacled, scholarly Chang are generally recognized as belonging with the radical camp. Both come from Shanghai and shot to promin- ! ence in the cultural revolution of the 1960's. Analysts think the leadership might consider other formulas to solve the succession problem. An elder statesman could be appointed as a caretaker figure- head or the post of chairman could be left vacant for a' period.' BLACK bordered newspapers' today carried slogans declaring: "Long live invincible Marxism- Leninism and Mao Tse-tung's thoughts." The people's daily published a huge portrait of Mao on the front page along with the offi- cial obiturary and funeral plans, Radio stations and street loud- speakers broadcast s o m b r e marches and the Internationale, the socialist anthem. hints today they may be allowedv to pay a brief tribute fn the Great Hall. t An aide to former U.S. Sec- retary of Defense James Schles-. inger, now in Peking on a pri- vate visit, said he understood Schlesinger may be invited to pay his respects on Monday. Following tradition, no for- eign statesmen are being invited to the funeral. A number of am- bassadors hurriedly returned to their posts here today, among them Soviet ambassador VasilyI Tolstikov. Some foreign reaction to Mao's death was highly critical of- him. The tican daily newspaper Os -re . Romano said he achie ed greatness "through op-' pression" and the Vatican radio commented, "It is necessary to keep in mind not only his suc- cess but also the methods andf means he adopted and the hu- man cost of it." In Taipei, Taiwan, capital of the rival Chinese Nationalists, HEWLETT-PACKA RD. DEMONSTRATION SEPT. 13th & 14th 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. DON STEVENSON, F a c t o r y Representative from Hewlett-Packard, will be at U I r i c h' s Bookstore to demonstrate and answer y a u r questions about. any Hewlett-Packard calcu- lators. UuiICirS BOOKSTORE 549 E. University, Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 662-4403 TRY DAILY CLASSIFIEDS if yOU see news happen call 76-DAILY CREDIT AVAILABLE SIGN UP NOW CONTACT US: 2204 Michigan Union 763-3548 Inmate Project-Innovative Tutorial Experience the daily China Post said, "The THERE HAS been no official" world is rid of an archdespot word whether foreigners here and criminal against civilization can attend any of the memorial whose misdeeds are truly un- ceremonies. But there were surpassed in modern history." } It no longer has to decide who is going to college. Your future no longer has to be in the hands of the al- mighty dollar-your dollars that is. Because an Air Force ROTC 4-year scholarship will pick up the bills. Tuition bills ...textbook and lab bills. Plus, it provides for a hundred dol- lar a month allowance for you to spend as you see fit. And at graduation, that Hewlett-Packard wrote the book on advanced pocket calculators. 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TEXTBOOKS are in the Union Ballroom, 2nd floor. PROFESSIONAL BOOKS are downstairs in the basement of the Union. MUSIC & ART BOOKS are at the U. CELLAR NORTH CAMPUS, located in the Commons. Open weekdays 9 -5:30, Saturdays9-1. L __ ONE THING AT the University of Michigan you don't have to wait in line for .. . 0 ,I 1 STOP BY TODAY. Avoid the Monday ) morning rush. We've got the course book lists to let you know what you need L M *' M L... ..Mr . . - l11. b /'/s R ni A AL ~ ,,, 1