Nl e ity-fvefdialfael Ninety-five years of editorial freedom Vol. XCV, No. 20-S Copyiht 1985 Saturday, June 15, 1985 Fifteen Cents U.S. PULLS OUT AMBASSADOR TO S. AFRICA Eight Pages S. African army attacks dissident group JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (UPI) - South African uniforms. He said they attacked 10 houses in which ANC "We have decided to recall Ambassador Herman Nickel soldiers staged a lightning raid into neighboring Botswana "terrorists" lived in Gaborone, Botswana's capital. He said home for consultations to review the situation," State Depar- yesterday, attacking the homes of black African National three women were among those killed. tment spokesman Bernard Kalb said. Congress dissidents and killing 13 to 15 people, the military Viljoen said two people, either Botswana police or ANC THE ATTACK "raises the most serious questions about said, members, opened fire on the raiders from a car and also were South Africa's sincerity" in negotiations with the United To protest the incursion, the United States announced it was shot to dE States on bringing about a peaceful resolution to southern recalling the ambassador to South Africa, Herman Nickel. minorit L Aovernment C Africa's problems. RADIO BOTSWANA said among those killed in the predawn In Washington, the announcement of Nickel's recall was Radio Botswana said the raiders attacked shortly after mid- raid were a 6-year-old child with his uncle. It said some vic- linked directly by a State Department spokesman to the incur- night and fired heavy and light machine guns and mortars for tims were shot at close range inside their bedrooms. sion into Botswana and to the capture last month of a South about half an hour in at least five locations of the city 10 miles South African Defense Chief Gen. Constand Viljoen said the Africa patrol in Cabinda, Angola, apparently on a mission to See S. AFRICAN, Page 4 raiders included both black and white soldiers in camouflage sabotage the U.S.-operated Gulf Oil refinery there. Arab terrorists hijack jet ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) - Armed Arab terrorists who hijacked a TWA jet over Greece with 153 people aboard - most of them Americans - released 40 passengers during a terror-filled odyssey Friday and then took off for Beirut, airport sources said. It was the third hijacking in three days. The Boeing 727 left Algiers airport at 8:25 p.m. (3:25 p.m. EDT) after 21 of the passengers - men, women and children - were allowed to leave the plane in Algiers, the airport sources said. Nineteen were released at an earlier stop in Beirut. THE PLANE, with 113 passengers and crew remaining on board, took off from Algiers about five hours after landing. Air traffic con- trollers in France and Italy said it was heading back to Beirut. During tense negotiations with Algerian authorities, the militants - armed with sub- machine guns and hand grenades - threatened to "execute" their hostages if their demand for the release of Shiite Moslem prisoners in Israeli jails was not met. Witnesses in Algiers said two airport buses that had earlier approached the air- craft, a mile from the air terminal at the end of a run- way, returned to the airport's VIP lounge just before 8 p.m. with 18 passengers. Within a half-hour, the air- craft taxied onto one of the airport's two runways and took off five hours after it had landed at Algiers' Houari Boumidienne International Airport. One passenger was reported shot and wounded. The Boeing 727, seized minutes after it departed from the Athens airport for Rome, was first forced to land at Beirut International airport where 19 passengers - 17 women and two children - were freed in exchange for fuel, TWA officials said. The plane was then forced to the Algerian capital of Algiers, where it landed with 134 people aboard, including eight crew members. The airline said 104 of the people aboard were American. Among the original passengers, 34 were part of a Catholic group from Rock- ford, Ill., returning from a tour of the Middle East, the State Department said. The hijackers, believed to number from two to four and to be armed with grenades and Soviet AK-47 submachine guns, issued a list of demands in negotiations conducted with Algerian authorities. They insisted on a public condemnation of U.S. foreign policy, particularly Washington's financial sup- port of Israel. See TERRORISTS, Page 4 Assocata rr Some of the 19 women and children freed by hijackers of a TWA jet run across the tar- mac to safety after sliding out of the plane. By CHRISTY RIEDEL students P rid e W eek Politics, oetr, and pride will draw Hrmdn W together the Ann Arbor homosexual Pride We community and its supporters for been hel Lesbian/Gay Pride Week starting importan Monday. gay comr Pride week will feature films, slide "It's in shows, dances, workshops, an gay men SCof funit y, ecumenical service, a candlelight liberation commemoration, and a variety of for non-g sspeakers including attorneys who raising ev have fought for civil rights for gays. "We v JIM TOY, advocate for s in the University's SexualityhOffice, said that eek, which he estimates has d in Ann Arbor since 1972, is at for both the gay and non- munities. rportant for lesbians and for in terms of a psycho-political n," he said. "It's important ay people as a consciousness vent." iew ourselves as a minority See GAY,Page4 Fake rifle brings police By STEVE HERZ an unloaded air rifle. As a party at 1020 Oakland was just SGT. GEER OF the Ann Arbor heating up at 9 p.m. last night, a team Police Department, who refused to of Ann Arbor police officers respon- give his first name, said that someone ded to a call that a resident was point called the police and said, "There's a a gun at passing cars by surrounding man pointing a rifle. He's sitting on the house with four cars and posting a the front porch with a rifle." man on each side of the house while a With that, Geer explained, "We use helicopter circled overhead, whatever we have available. Tonight Fortunately, the gun involved was See HELICOPTER, Page 4 Huron Shazam Goonies Are we going to lower the Look for mostly cloudy skies with a Not quite good enough. Huron River to death? chance of thundershowers Arts, Page 6 Opinion, Page 5