SPage Ten '111-4E SU)MMER DA#LY Saturday, July 2#, 11973 PageTen HE SMMERD~iL Satrday Jul 21,197 Jumbo jet hijacked; one passenger killed I~t~tS11e!. we6:25-9 10 [WALT SMEY'S IEA ACIEVEN By iThe AP An [CP Three hijackers claiming to be Japanese leftists commandeered a jumbo jet from Amsterdam last night and after the craft landed in the Persian Gulf sheikdom of Dubai a corpse and a wounded crewman were removed. The hijackers said they were acting on behalf of "the Pales- tinian people=" They hijacked the Japan Airlines 747 as it left Holland bound for Tokyo. AIRLINE OFFICIALS in the Japanese capital said "an explo- sion" early in the 3,000 mile flight across Europe and the Mid- dle East killed a woman passen- ger and injured the chief purser. They were reportedly shot. Armed police surrounded the plane and the passengers re- mained aboard after the plane landed. Sheik Mohamed Rashind, minister of the United Arab Emirates defense force, svent on board the jet to negotiate. The hijackers are demanding that Israel release the surviving Japanese gunman in the Lod Airport massacre. "THE POSITION of Israel that we don't give in to blackmail still holds," Israeli minister of transport S h i m o n Peres told newsmen at Lod Airport near Tel Aviv. A Japan Airlines spokesperson said the hijackers tried to land the big Boeing 747 with 145 per- sons aboard at Basra, an Iraqi city on the Persian Gulf, but were forced on because the airport was too small. The spokesperson said the craft th-n tried to set down at Bah- rein, a small, oil-rich Arab state on the gulf, but authorities re- fused permission to land. THE SPOKESPERSON said the hijackers were holding the 123 passengers and 22 crew hostage for the release of an imprisoned Japanese leftist who took part in the May, 1972, Lod massacre. The Japanese jet -flight 404 Sheriff impounds Greyhound buses from Paris to Tokyo with sched- uled stops in Amsterdam and Anchorage-was seized over Hol- land shortly after taking off from Amsterdam. Italian air force jets scrambled and followed the commandered plane, but eventually let the craft head toward the Middle East. Officials at Rome's Ciampino military airport said a message radioed from the plane while it passed over Italy identified the hijackers as "members of Ja- pan's Red Army acting for the Palestinian people." Bullard: Pot repeal only 'temporary' ANN ARBOR (UPI) - State Rep. Perry Bullard, (D-Ann Ar- bor), yesterday said repeal of Ann Arbor's liberal marijuana ordinance was only a "tempor- ary blow" to efforts to legalize marijuana. Bullard also called for a re- call campaign by "progressive people in the city of Ann Arbor" against Republicans who voted to repeal the ordinance that set a $5 fine for use or possession of marijuana. "The backward repeal vote by the Republican council members on July 10 is a temporary blow to statewide legalization efforts," Bullard said in a monthly news- letter to constituents. THE DAILY certainly hopes that Bullard's analysis of the situation is more accurate than his facts. The council meeting was held July 9 nut a day later as he would have his constitu- ents believe. Sorry Perry. Daily Official Billetitl DAY CALENDAR Saturday, July 21 Free Art Fair: E. University, 10 an- Ai Arbor Street Fair: S. & E. Uni- versity. 9 an.-5 pi . Sunday, July 22 TV Center: "The American Con- sumer: Lite Insurance," wwJ-TV, Channei 4, noon. Mondlay, July 13 Cluster Commnications Comm. Open meeting. 3524 SAB. noon, Cnriion Reitai :. . Knight. sti- dent carilonneur, nButon Tower, 7 pm Audio-Visual Summer Films: Native Americans, Chicanos Theme. "Mexican Americans: Viva La Raza!" Aud. 3, MLB, 7 pm. CEW: "Poiteness in the Language o Women," Resin Lakot, Rackham Ampha. 8pm. TITUSVILLE, Fla.t)-- Sher- iff's deputies impounded yester- day the last of nine Greyhound buses which a judge had ordered held as securits until Greyhound settles a $192,000 law suit. Later in the day, the company posted $400,000 bond to win re- lease of the 10-ton Scenicruisers. "TIIEY'VE POSTED a bond and got their buses back," a sheriff's spokesmnan said. "We had nine buses this morning. Now we have none." The seizure of buses began on Wednesday when deputies took control of a Gre hoind buts with eight passengers aboard. The company then agreed to provide eight o t h e r Scenicruisers as "hostages" until the suit was setfled. Theddeputies went to the Gres- hound depot in Titusville, which is located near Cape Kennedy, on Thursday and Friday morn- ing and collected the eight buses, storing them at a local body shop. THE BATTLE of the buses involves Greyhound's fight over $192,000 in damages awarded in a 1970 lawsuit to the widow of Charles Cory, a Volasia County man killed in a 1966 bus-truck accident. Greyhound said the deputies had caused inconvenience to its passengers who were held up for two hours before being allowed to continue their journey on an- other bits. "They threatened to stop more buses, which would he unneces- sary disruption of. local, county and stateatransit," said Conpton French, a spokesman for Grey' hound. "IT'S EASY TO seize a bus" said Emile Eichelberger, of the Brevard County Sheriff's Depart- ment. "You don't have to bunt for them. They can't hide and sou know wher they're going to be at. Youa jusot r e a d the schedule." - Circuit Court Judge Tom Wad- dell rejected a request Thursday by Greshound to stop the bus seizures. Waddell said GreyhounJ had missed the deadline for fur- ther action in the case. He said a court order permitting the deputies to hold the buses would he allowed to stand. Greyhound then agreed to pit up the eight $20,000 buses as security pending an appeal to the Florida Supreme Court. "They have so many buses, and we only want to seize a few to cover the damages," said Jim Nance, Mrs. Cory's lawyer, who obtained the original court order. Subscribe to The Daily Phone 764-0558 TONIGHT and SUNDAY A remarkable duplex film program: JULES FEIFFER'S DIR., MIKE NICHOLS Carnal Knowledge Starring Jock idicolson, Candice Bergen, Art Garfunkel, and Ana Morgaret in "One of the best movies ever!" --e Smith, Cosmopoloan -plus- - CRARLTON 1ESTON4 as TheOegaMan Rosalind Cush cinema guild TONIGHT-July 21 Kenji Mizoguchi's STREET OF SHAME In this film Mizoguchi examines the lives of four women in a Tokyo Brothel in considering problems of legalized prostitution. One of the greatest directors of women, his film is a compas- sionate portrayal, one which refuses to exploit the lurid aspects of the characters' lives. and 10p.m. Architecture Aud." $1 The last man alive .. .is not alone Modern Languages Auditoriums both films seen at 7:15 and 9:15 p.m. $V.25 cont. $2.00 double feature at 7:15 only Washington at Theyer New Morning _ Friends of Newsreel