The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 16, 1985 -Page 3 2 more arrest warrants issued in hijackig case 4, Daily F Bradford Young, an LSA sophomore, poses as Red Sox player Ted Williams in front of Bursl Young and other students admit to admiring certain celebrities. Students discuss their personal (Continued from Pagen 1 Photo by DARRIAN SMITH ey Hall yesterday. heroes From AP and UPI GENOA, Italy - Investigators issued arrest warrants yesterday for two more Palestinians, bringing to seven the number of people charged in the hijacking of the Achille Lauro during a Mediterranean cruise that began in this northern port Oct. 3 Gennaro Calabrese de Feo, chief prosecutor of Genoa, would not iden- tify the two Palestinians, reveal the. charges against them, or say if they were in custody. IN DAMASCUS, Syrian and U.S. of- ficials began examining the body of an elderly man that washed ashore near Tartus on Sunday, five days af- ter Leon Klinghoffer, was shot and thrown overboard by the Palestinian hijackers. The new arrest warrants came as Secretary of State George Shultz in Brussels voiced U.S. anger to Italian Foreign Minister Giulio Andreotti over Italy's release of Mohammed Abu Abbas, the Palestinian believed to be the mastermind behind the terrorist attack. Four Palestinians jailed in Spoleto, Italy, already have been charged with hijacking the Italian luxury liner off the coast of Port Said, Egypt, with 511 people aboard Oct. 7 and of killing Klinghoffer,an-American invalid, during the two-day nightmare that ended last Wednesday. Egypt attempted to spirit the four out of that country on Thursday, but U.S. jetfighters intercepted the Egyp- tian airliner carrying the hijackers PIZZA HUT Now accepting applications for Cooking and Waiting daytime and evening help. Please apply in person be- tween 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Mon.- Sun. at the following locations: 2080 W. Stadium Blvd., Ann Arbor 450 E. Michigan, Saline and two other Palestinians, including Abbas, and forced it to land in Italy. Egypt demanded that Reagan apologize for the military action. But Reagan, speech-making in Boise, Idaho, Tuesday, replied "Never!" when asked if the United States would apologize for its successful strike against terrorism. Earlier, aboard Air Force One, White House spokesman Larry Speakes said Reagan had told Egyp- tian and Italian officials he was "con- fident he did the right thing" in inter- cepting the airliner Thursday. The handling of the hijack incident has frayed the normally close relations between the United States and Italy and Egypt. Commenting on Egyptian and Italian reacton to the intercept mission, Speakes said, "The president has made clear to Egypt and the Italians our position . : . He has told them he's confident that he did the right thing and we will continue to work with our friends and allies in the region." A SOURCE who spoke on condition of anonymity said the prisoners a(L; mitted hijacking the ship, but said they did so in a change of plan made when a waiter discovered them with weapons in their cabin. The men said the original planhad been to get off the ship during the scheduled stop at Ashdod, Israel, and stage an attack there, the sourcb reported. He said they also denied killing Klinghoffer. The four men claim membership in the Palestine Liberation Front, a group in the PLO that has split into three factions, one of them led by Mohammed Abbas. They have beeR identified by U.S. Justice Departmen officials as Hallahabdalu al-Asan; Maged Yussef al-Malahi, Hammad Ali Abdulla, and Abdel Atif Ibrahim Fotaser. Vincent Van Gogh to her list of heroes, saying the Dutch painter "epitomizes Ooul and perseverance." "He wasn't Interested in immediate rewards and lived off his own intensity," she ex- plains. And then she rattles off leaders in the women's rights movement "whom I admire because they crystallize the vague rumblings of the masses." "My mom is the most balanced per- son I know," says LSA freshman Kasha Flue ge, who calls her mother "heroic." "SHE HAS used her experiences to be the best person she can. I have always looked up to her so much." But some students say that although they have certain individuals they look up to, they don't let their ad- miration become an overriding force in their daily lives. Holding up a book by Sergi Essinn, LSA senior Ross Vitozki says the Russian poet influences his writing, but little else. "I like the way he writes, but I wouldn't want to run my life like his," he adds. Other students, however, don't claim any heroes. Said Doug Tobias, an LSA freshman: "I'd rather not copy anyone." And Ted Sebransky, another LSA freshman, adds: "I have more faith in myself than in other people." "When I was a kid, I wanted to be like (former New York Mets pitcher) Tom Seaver," Sevransky admits. "but then he got traded, and I grew up. I grew up a lot that day." HILLEL PRESENTS ALLEN GINSBERG POETR YREADING/ PERFORMANCE WEDNESDAY, Oct. 16 RACKHAM AUDITORIUM 8:00 P.M. Tickets available at Ticket World (in the Michigan Union and Hudsons) HAPPENINGS Highlight Allen Ginsberg will read his poetry at 8 p.m. at Rackham Auditorium. Films Cinema Guild - The Mysterious Island, 7 & 8:45 p.m., MLB 3. Michigan Theater Foundation - A Soldier's Story, 7 & 9:10 p.m., Michigan Theater. Mediatrics - Thunderball, 7 p.m.; You Only Live Twice, 9:15 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. Performances Dance Department - Ann Arbor Dance Works, 8 p.m., Studio A, Dance Bldg. School of Music - Horn recital, David Jolley, 8 p.m., Recital Hall. Speakers Department of Economics, Graduiate School of Business Ad- ministration - Donald Lamberton, "Developing Data Service In- distries", 2:30 p.m., 748 North Ingalls Bldg. Women in the Arts Series - R. Pril Smiley, musician and composer, 7:30 p.m , Chrysler Auditorium. Appropriate Technology Association - Allen F. Roberts and Carolyn Cabiero, "Appropriate Technology in the Developing World," 7 p.m., In- ternational Center. School of Natural Resources - Frank Wadsworth, "The Role of Forester in the Tropics," 3:30 p.m., Rm. 1046, Dana Bldg. Business Administration - Barry Sullivan, "A Day in the Life of the CEO at First Chicago," 4 p.m., Hale Auditorium, Assembly Hall. School of Social Work - Noreen Clark & Bonnie Kay, "Women in Development - Health & Poverty," 12:15p.m., 4070 Frieze Bldg. Psychiatry - Richard Nisbett, "Psychometrics of Everyday Life," 10:30 a.m., Children's & Adolescent Pychiatric Hospital Aud. Research Club - Lectures, John Holland, "Machine Learning"; Robert Kozma, "Learning from Media, Especially Computers," 8 p.m., West Conference Rm., Rackham. Meetings Michigan Gay Union - 9 p.m., 802 Monroe. Dissertation Support Group - 1:30 p.m., 3100 Michigan Union. Science Fiction Club - Stilyagi Air Corps, 8:15p.m., MichigannLeague. Ensian Yearbook - 7 p.m., Student Publications Bldg., 420 Maynard. Baha'i Club - 5:30 p.m., Michigan Union. Undergraduate Political Science Association - 7 p.m., Rm. 1412, Mason Hall. Hospice of Washtenaw - 7:30 p.m., 3765 Plaza Drive. LSA Student Government - 6:30 p.m., third floor, Michigan Union. Miscellaneous Guild House Campus Ministry - Beans & rice dinner, 6 to 7:30 p.m., 802 SMonroe St. Ark- Open mike night, 8p.m., 637 S. Main St. Muslim Student Association - Islamic Coffee hour, noon, Rm. 3, third floor, Michigan League. Computing Center - Workshop, Bob Blue, Intro to Tell-A-Graf, Part II, 7 p.m., 1013 NUBS. Chemistry - Seminars: Marjorie Carter, "Concerns in the Develop- ment of Homogeneous Enzyme Immunoassays: An Assay for Cyclic AMP," 4 p.m., 1200 Chem.; Stephen Crowley, "Ultrasound Promoted Organ Organometallic Chemistry," 4p.m., 1300 Chem. Communications - Michael Traugott, "Polical Polling for Newspapers," noon, Marsh Sem. Rm., Frieze Bldg. Engineering - Seminar, Alexander Morgan," "Scaling Pooynomial Systems for Numerical Solution," 4 p.m., 241 IOE. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshops: Basic Concepts of Microcomputer Word Processing, 3113 SEB; MacManage: Disk & File Management on the Macintosh, 10:30 p.m., 3001 SEB. Minority Women's Task Force - Workshop, Stephen Hill, Goal Setting Power, noon, Conf. Rms. 4 & 5, Michigan League. Russian & Eastern European Studies - Brown bag lecture, Nina Tumarkin, "The Cult of the Great Patriotic War," noon, Lane Hall Com- mons Room. School of Dentistry Continuing Education - Workshop, Thomas Snyder, Computer Selection: Making an Informed Choice, Holiday Inn SPONSORS: Hillel U-M English Dept. and Alice Lloyd Pilot Project S B N I 0 R S Your time is almost uyp. If you still haven't had your senior picture taken, you face the possibility of not appearing with the rest of your class in your edition of U-M's year- book, the 1986 Michigan Ensian. There is no charge and no further obligation. Simply stop in the Ensian office weekdays 9-noon or 1-6. No ap- pointment is necessary. Yearbook Special. Order your 1986 yearbook at the sale price of $23 and get the 1983, '84 and '85 Ensians - the yearbooks of your freshman, sophomore and jun- ior years - all for an additional $20. That's a savings of $45. Only 50 available on a first-come, first-serve basis. Cash only.