Page 4 -The Michigan Daily -Saturday, June 15, 1985 S. African army attacks exiles Botswana president Quett Masire (ContinuedfromPage1) 27, a Dutch citizen, was shot in both called the raid an "act of brutality northeastof theSouth African border. legs and was being treated at a and violence" and said it was "par- At the Dutch Embassy in Pretoria, hospital. ticularly deplorable" because he had First Secretary Jacobus van der .e Elden said one of those killed was They had recently moved into repeatedly assured Pretoria he did Somalia-born Achmed Geer, who once house that previously was occupied by not allow guerrillas to use Botswana fled to Holland and was given refugee ANC members, according to Western as a springboard for attacks on South status. His wife Roelfien Geer-Stoffer, diplomats in Gaborone. Africa. Terrorists take 116 hostages (Continued from Page J The gunmen also demande', that Beirut, claimed responsibility for the the United States. Israel release fundamentalist third hijacking in the Middle East in Passengers freed in Beirut were Moslems detained in its prisons and as many days. flown to Cyprus. called for a public denunciation of a Minutes after the hijacked plane Controllers at the Beirut airport bombing attack in Beirut on March 8 left Beirut, a person telephoned a repeatedly refused landing per- that killed 85 people. Moslem fun- Western news agency saying the mission for TWA Flight 847 - to no damentalists claimed the bomb at- plane was hijacked by the Islamic avail. tack was aimed at a Shiite leader and Jihad to "prove to America that we The pilot radioed that one hijacker was masterminded by Israel and the can hit you anywhere we want." was brandishing a hand grenade. CIA. In Washington, President Reagan "Beirut, the hijacker has pulled the "If the demands are not met, the was awakened early yesterday and pin on his hand grenade. We will land hijackers threaten to execute the told of the crisis. in Beirut! He is desperate. He has hostages," the official Algerian news "We're doing everything we can pulled a hand grenade pin and he is agency APS said, do" to assure the passengers' safety, ready to blow up the aircraft! We The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad he told reporters following a Rose must - I repeat must - land at terrorist organization, responsible for Garden ceremony. Beiurt. No alternative," the pilot several kidnappings of westerners in The hijacked plane was destined for radioed back. Gay community promotes 'liberation' (Continued from Page 1) Syler, a member of the pride week "Some people feel so strongly about group looking for liberation," Toy planning committee, who we are that they're willing to take said. action," said Diana DeVries. a THE MOVEMENT in the gay com- "IT'S SAYING to the world, I am University student, referring to an munity for liberation began in earnest who I am, and I'm proud of who I am event two years ago when a gunman in 1969 in New York City when and I'm not going to let you push me showed up at a pride week rally and homosexuals in Greenwich Village back into the closet because you don't threatened those in attendance. fought back against police is a key approve,' "he said. For DeVries, the most important issue, pride - in oneself, regardless "In my opinion, (pride week focuses part of pride week is that "the of social pressures is closely related on) accepting an identity that's been element of pride runs so strong, and to obtaining that freedom, made very hard to accept, and caring so many prople are willing to take "From my own perspective, theabu yourself," said Nancy lum, a that risk." week is about taking pride in who you former University student and an are and what we've accomplished in advocate for studenta inthe Human the field of civil rights," said John Sexuality Office. Helicoptercalled as air NOTES gun causes disturbance A 17-year-old boy was arraigned in (ContinuedfromPage1) danger because the gun was just an 15th District Court yesterday on air rifle and was told that the gun charges of carrying a concealed we had the county helicopter." violated a city ordinance, weapon and attempted felonious Officer J.R. Tieman, the first to en- According to house residents, the assault in the Union Thursday night. ter the house, added, "Anytime gun has never been shot. House Medhatt Mossad, an Ann Arbor there's a weapon involved you have to resident Matthew Friedman said this resident originally from Cairo, was act accordingly." is the first time anyone has com- arrested after University security of- WHEN TIEMAN got to the house, plained about the rifle. ficer Lloyd Wafer found a 25-caliber he asked house resident Bennett "When they (passers-by) walk by handgun in his right pocket, accor- Kaplan, who was outside cooking, if and see us with the gun, they give us ding to police officer Michael there was a gun at the house. Kaplan dirty looks. I can't understand it. It's Shubring. told the officer that there was no all part of the laughs," he said, noting Just before Wafer learned that that the gun bears little resemblance Mossad had a gun, Mossad reportedly toa real rifle. threatened someone else at the party STANLEY H. KAPLAN The police asked that the gun be with asgun. stored away and the residents said According to campus security they will comply with the request. director Leo Heatley, the incident oc- curred at a party in the Union after Corrections Huron High School's graduation ceremony. An article in yesterday's Daily inac- A preliminary hearing will be held curately said the Nicaraguan gover- June 26 at 9 a.m. to determine * nment is communist. The Sandinistas whether the case should go to trial. do not call themselves communists. The maximum penalty f or carrying K.oALRssEWAfWEKOs The same article said the newspaper a concealed weapon and an attempted M pIAN 662.3149 "El Nuevo Diario" is aligned with the felonious assault is five years in - AL 203 E.oove 4 government. The newspaper supports prison for each charge. the Sandinistas, but it is independent. -Laura Bischoff IN BRIEF From United Press International 4 Soviet Union expels U.S. diplomat as spy MOSCOW - The Soviet Union yesterday ordered the expulsion of U.S. diplomat Paul Stombaugh, charging he had been caught taking part in "a major espionage action" by the United States. The official Tass news agency said Stombaugh had been caught Thursday "in the act" of spying but it did not specify what he had been doing. A U.S. Embassy spokesman con- firmed Stombaugh was a second secretary in the political depar- tment but refused to comment on the espionage charges. Contaminated cheese causes 28 deaths LOS ANGELES - Mexican-style cheeses believed to have caused the deaths of 28 people were pulled from store shelves in eight states yesterday, and makers said they were "sick at heart" to learn they may be the source of a deadly bac- teria. Officials with Jalisco Mexican Products Inc., told reporters that about 99 percent of the company's producta have been removed from supermarket shelves and the suburban plant where the cheeses are manufactured was voluntarily shut down. "As of this morning, we have no information as to the possible sources of this bacteria," Jalisco President Gary McPherson said. "We are cooperating fully with federal, state and county authorities and will continue to do so." Pilots' union studies tentative settlement CHICAGO - The United Airlines pilots' union yesterday pressed through another day of study of a tentative settlement to end the 29- day-old strike that stifled the nation's largest air carrier. The Master Executive Council of the Air Line Pilots Association was a dedline today to approve the ten- tativeagreement. An ALPA spokesman said representatives of the Association of Flight Attendants also met with United to discuss a back-to-work agreement of their own. "They're deliberating on the issues today and I think they intend to meet for as long as it takes," ALPA spokesman Sam O'Daniel said. "Hopefully, we can all work out a back-to-work agreement to everyone's liking." Economic reports reflect good and bad WASHINGTON - Wholesale prices hardly moved in May, in- creasing just 0.2 percent, but fac- tory production fell again, par- ticularly at auto plants, gover- nment economists said yesterday. The reports were mixed news for the economy, showing inflation remains subdued but that factory workers and farmers are being squeezed harder by the slow economy. The Labor Department's Producer Price Index has moved up at an annual rate of only 1.8 percent since the beginning of the year, no different from last year that ended with a medest 1.7 per- cent increases at wholesale. Shuttle crew hopes for good weather CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The shuttle Discovery's interna- tional crew - including an Arab prince - arrived at the spaceport yesterday optimistic for a Monay launch despite stormy weather ex- pected through the weekend. "We hope to give you a big, big flame on Monday morning," Commander Daniel Brandenstein said. "We're down here for the real thing now and we feel we're all trained and ready to go," he said. "Hopefully, the weather man will cooperate and by Monday morning all this will have gone away." It will be the first spaceflight to include crew members from three nations. Vol. XCV - No.20-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at The University of Michigan. Subscription rates: September through April - $35 outside the city; May through August - $8.00 in Ann Arbor, $15.50 outside the city. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Editor in Chief ................ ERIC MATTSON Business Manager .......... DAWN WILLACKER Managing EdiA.THOMAS HRACH Sales Manage. .MARY ANNE HOGAN Opjiio Page Edjitors...ANDREW ERIKSEN Ass't. Sle, Manager ....CYNTHIA NIXON KAREN KLEIN Disp lay Manager........KELLIE WORLEY Arts Editor ..... ......CHRIS LAER Ass't. Display Mnage.r. SHERYL BIESMAN Associate Arts Editor .............. JOHN LOGIE Marketing Manager .. .. STEVEN BLOOM SposEditor.... ADAM MARTIN As't. 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