WHILE HURRICANE ALLEN lived up to only a fraction of his advance billing, due to the path he chose between Brownsville, Texas and Kingsville, he still left South Texas coastal communities with a lot to clean up. This palm tree survived Allen's wind and tides but the boat "Oso Granda" didn't fare as well. R EFUGEES DEMAND RETURN TO HA VANA: co to au be pa the me th toy Cubans hijack a,. arrested minutes before the plane took From APand UPi off from Key West for what was to be a MIAMI-The second Air Florida 15-minute flight to Miami, agents said. mmuter jet in four days was hijacked The Boeing 737 was commandeered Havana yesterday, and Cuban about 10 minutes after its 10:30 a.m. thorities detained seven suspects takeoff. The hijackers dumped gasoline lieved to be Cubans who had taken on the plane's floor, pulled out their rt in the recent Freeedom Flotilla, cigarette lighters, and demanded to go e FBI said. to Cuba, special FBI agent William The 61 other passengers and six crew Nettles said. embers returned safely to Miami less "Five minutes after the flight was an six hours after the incident began. airborne, two passengers came for- AN EIGHTH MAN, who tried to slip a ward with a flight attendant, yelling y metal gun past security guards, was 'Cuba ! Cuba ! Cuba!.' Nettles said. Dems move toward unity (Continued from Page 1) His platform statement, shortly before his guaranteed renomination, of- fered a bow to Kennedy, the president saying "I enthusiastically endorse" the ideals of the challenger he defeated. rTHE JOBS PLANK becanme the cen- tral issue in the dispute over unity behind the platform and the ticket and on it, Carter avoided the very specifics Kennedy anh his labor allies wanted. The AFL-CIO statement said, "We will continue to work for specific job creation programs ... within the ad- ministration's new economic program." But Rep. Shirley Chisholm described the Carter platform statement as "nebulous poop," and said she was "not satisfied with generalities." THE KENNEDY plank promised $12 billion to create 800,000 jobs for the unemployed. Carter said he supported the intent of that plank. "I will soon announce an economic program compatible with those aims and which I believe the delegates to this convention will enthusiastically sup- port," he said. In fact, it was an economic recovery plan he had outlined before. Exactly a week before he had told the National Urban League that his plan would create "millions and millions and millions" of new jobs. Carter said his plan would spur economic recovery, curb unem- ployment and slow inflation. "Our economic recovery program will create hundreds of thousands of jobs in the next year and substantirlly more over the long run," he said. irliner "They yelled in Spanish that they had an explosive and if they didn't go to Cuba, they would blow the plane up. "THEY TOOK THE flight attendant to the rear of the plane and they had the gas in a, container. Some of it (the gasoline) splashed on the interior of the plane and some of it splashed on the stewardess. They struck matches and flashed their lighters," Nettles said. One passenger also was splashed with the gasoline, he said. The plane landed safely in Havana and departed after passengers had lun- ch and shopped in Jose.Marti Airport tourist shops, authorities said. The plane arrived at Miami International Airport at 4:02 p.m. A man identified as J. Hernandez was arrested in Key West after trying to slip a toy gun through the airport's metal- detection device, Nettles said. "HE TRIGGERED THE device's alarm, and he then pulled out a metal cigarette lighter," Nettles said. The man then walked back into the main lobby with four other men, who were on the passenger list as P. Rodriguez, L. Rodriguez, L. Rivera, and E. Flores, he said. A flight controller at the Key West tower said the plane had taken off for Miami when the pilot contacted the U.S. Naval base at nearby Boca Chica to report the plane had been ordered to Cuba. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative Presents at Aud A: $1.50 THURSDAY, AUGUST 14 THE DEER HUNTER (MICHAEL CIMINO, 1978) 6:30 8 9:30-Aud A The ,VietnamWarnad;tsimpaton,,,th,...nnsy- .. agd Oscar win.e, Christoph., Walk.)i tha subject of Cimino's mammotha, three-hor drama. M.ryl Streep co-st. Oafo r Be. Picture, 1978. 35mm,,. Tomorrow: Cint Eastwood in THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY at MLB. -Thursday, August 14, 180-Poge 7 S. Texas hurricane repair bill in millions BROWNSVILLE, Texas (AP) - Hurricane Allen may not have lived up to advance billing, but its-destructive march across South Texas willirun up a tab of several hundred million dollars in losses and overtime costs to in- dividuals, governments, and businesses. County officials in the Lower Rio Grande Valley and the Coastal Bend area of Corpus Christi are trying to compile damage reports and start federal assistance funds flowing to the homeless and suffering as the flood waters recede. THE AMERICAN Insurance Association said yesterday in Austin that the insured damage in the seven coastal counties worst hit will total about $42.47 million. "Our figures don't include flood damage, risk to oil platforms, and properties or commercial boats," said Reginal Manager Frank Lewis. Allen did only a fraction of the damage that had been feared, mainly because its path sent the strongest win- ds through sparsely populated rangelands between Brownsville and Kingsville. Two Texans died, although the Caribbean death toll was in the hundreds. "We are truly blessed," said Gov. Bill Clements. He estimated damage at $600 million. The last major storm to hit southern Texas, Hurricane Celia, wreaked $450 million in property damage in 1970. Hurricane Allen likely will top that mark due to inflation and its wider area. "A MASTERPIECE ." H ELD OVER .; SAT., SUN A. - 500 130 3 "THEMRGEOF e 4fARIAGBRAUN SATSUN- 0030520 7 25 9:30 l INDIVIDUAL. THEATRES 51h Ave a er y 719700 LAST PER. ANCE fht +JA THURS., FR. 1Y 7:00, 9:00 Sat., Sun. $1.50 til 1:00 CONTACT LENSES soft and hard* contact lenses $210.00 includes exam, fitting, dispensing, follow-up visits, starter kits, and 6 month checkup. * includes a second pair of hard /enseA Dr. Paul C. 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