Friday, Odtbber 3, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Seven, Friday, October 3, 1975THE MICHIGAN DAILY Lon-don 4 gunmen release hostages LONDON 0A'-Three gunmen under siege in the basement storeroom of a London restau- rant for five days released their' six Italian hostages unharmed early today, Scotland' Yard 'an- nounced. The three gunmen surrender- ed. Their leader, a 28-yer-od N ig er i an ex-convict named' Franklyn Davis, shot himself in the' stonpah after he let the hostages go, a police sokes-{ man said. HIS CONDITION was not im- mediately determined, police re- ported. The other two gunmen were young Jamacians known oly as Bonzo and Wesley. They invaded the Sp ighetti Hoau se in the fashmable Knightsbridge district early last Sunday morning in a robbery1 attempt, but one of the nne Italian restauranteurs in the place at the time escaped -,nd called the ,police. A few hours before th siege ended, Sotland Yard anymced that an Italian and a German had been arrested and chrged with conspiring with l)avis in the atten'nted robbery. "Events are following the (9%"ssic tradition of a criminal kids-auing. Tha, cantors and their vctrni5 heap' now beeny tnqether sffiintlv lone, nnir'i for them to havye othlisl, aia dfree of rannort" London's Ttolkaeni-mmmn~zinner Sir lRobert Mark, told renorters. LONDON evening newspap- ers said gunmen and hostages were playing cards together.i Scotland Yard refused to con- firm the reports, but did say cards were passed in to the basement storeroom. Hostage Giovanni Scarno had shouted to Italian Consul-1 General Mario Manca that "things are getting very bor- ing in here." Manca, who has been :visiting the siege scene regularly to talk to the cap- tives, provided the cards. Police commander Christoph- er Payne, who had been nego- tiating with the gunmen by the exchange of shouts through a' brick wall, said:; "THlEY ALL seem in a re-E faxed and calm mood ... At the "noment we are content with the present situation as long as we are satisfied 'that' the hostages are safe. We will not give in to the gunmen's de- mands. What we are after is a surrender with no violence." They herded the hostages into the 12-by 14-foot storeroom af- ter police surprised them in aj robbery attempt at the_ Spa- ghetti House restaurant in fash- ionable Knightsbridge at 2 a.m. last Sunday. Originally there were eight hostages, but the gunmen freed two who wereI taken ill. The relationship between thei gunmen and hostages ws simi- lar to that which develoed be- tween Swedish hostages and their bank robber cantors in Stockholm in August 173. IN THAT case the robbers held three women and a man in a cramped bank vault for six days. Two of the eirs de- yloped close svrnatv for their cantors and on leaving the tear ga-drenched vaut nro- tected the men and calld to police, "Don't hulrt th'em," Doctors exnlairied their atti- th1de as a natural f'pelingr of nin- itv with the closest humans in a tight and Pressing situatin A-t Only Ted"uwnte 112writa that no St( .i ldeal er o f f esrie iorDiis 1~f you ng ?reo ring milar to ours Will beat -- -- " " r --mmm" -41=w W - *we'll pa We call its in el *after yc your stE by you back the diff erence. it Pric And Efect for a~n entire month )U buy mreo. During our Back-To-School Sale you'll save $82 on this great system with EPI 60 "Linear Sound" loudspeakers, the powerful Kenwood 2400 am/fm stereo receiver and. a fully- equipped BSR 2260X automatic turntable. (Price Protec- tion guarantees you the lowest price and our thirteen other Customer Satisfaction Policies guarantee you complete happiness. In writing!) This Week: &''%A^ 65X^.. .., r: !;?3." r.".. e !.x.*; r" ...j{Nypnyrnq ":.wrrr Wig,,}swvrr 6}X: . ;?:Srfr.'" nti.'s9" f"s :.irf,":; ., v, $.":5{:. r.;{.S.X ',.;?.y;.,;: .Daiiv Officin1 Poillpt;n i as4a Friday, October 3 Darr Calendar WUOM : George Woodcock, Cana- dlai author, critic, "Towards Com- passion & Detachment: The Philoro- phiers of Pessiism & Our Time," parts I & II of 5-part series by Ra- dio Canada Int'l, 1:05 a.m. Educ. Commnunicationis Media /A-V Ctr.: Dr. Jekyll and 16r: Hyde, Cab- inet of Dr. Caligart, Schorling Aud. °SEB, noon. Philosophy: Thos. Smasz. Syracuse! U. author, Mytb of Mental Illness,. "Disagreement is Not Disease," 102 Arch., 1 p.m. Int'l Division, Infor'ma Recrea- : tion: Volley ball, badminton, table' tennis, jogging, Waterman Gym. '7-10 ip.m. Biological Determinism Series: A. SchWartz, "The Politics of Statistics :i I.Q. & Heredity," 3 p~m.; V. Wood- ward, U. of Minnesota, "Race I.Q. Heredity: Scientific Racism?" Rack- ham Amph., 7:3 p.m.; A. Montagu.I anthropologist, 'Aggression," Rack- ham Aud., 7:3 p.m.I Astronomy: Hugh D. Aler, "The Simple Expanding Source Model Ver- sus Observations of Radio Outbursts In Extragalactic Objects," P&A Col- loq. Am., 4 p.m. Mustc School: Faculty recital - John Mohler, clarinetist, Lynne Lynch, pianist, Recital Hall, 8 p.m. *KEN WOOD 122 E. WASHINGTON ST., ;ANN ARBOR 668-83?8 Iin Nlic i-,m : East .I:1nSina. Rchva4 .l ak_ -'erh r'n 1-r, tri f llpt r nit Q,. 0, ., ,,...L. -,,IA .___