I iay 1 Tlhe Tl Tuesday, June 18, 1985 i - - z. Weather: Slightly cooler temperatures can beexpected this week. Partly cloudy today and breezy with a high of 74 (23C). Tonight will be mostly clear with a low near 45 (7C). The extended forecast through Thursday calls for partly cloudy skies, little if any precipitation with lows in the 50s (13C) and highs in the low 80s (28C). Barb BrandaThe Nebraskan U.S. forces near Lebanon coast Hostages report By the Renter News Service BEIRUT, Lebanon Some 30 remai ning passengers were reported taken from a hyacked TWA jet to one or more secret locations in Beirut before dawn Monday but the United States said it would make no concessions for their release. Shi'ite Moslem leader Nabih Bern said the hostages were removed from the Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 for their own safety in case a military rescue operation was launched. He said he was guaranteeing that they would not be harmed, but also said they would not be released until demands of the hyackers were met. "lam responsible for them (hostages). " Nabih Berri "I gave guarantees to the hijackers that I will not release the hostages or the passengers without the release of the Atleet prisoners," he said at a news conference. Israel holds over 700 Shi'ite prison ers, captured during its three-year occupation of Lebanon, at a camp in the town of Atleet. Berri said the hostages, most of them Americans held since the hyacking Friday, were taken off the plane after at least one unidentified ship and a helicopter appeared off the coast dur ing the night. Israeli gunboats were seen in the area Sunday. Fighters of Berri's Amal militia, which he ordered onto maximum alert during the night, opened fire with anti UNL professor dies David W. Olive, a UNL electrical engineering professor, died Saturday. Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday at Vine Congregational Church, 1800 Twin Ridge Road. Grave side services will be at 4 p.m. in Hun- ' ( V f V v Courtesy of UNL Information Olive Olive worked for the Eastman Kodak Co. in Rochester N.Y., General Electric aircraft guns fearing a seaborne Israeli or U.S. commando attack was under way to free the hostages. "I took all the passengers from the plane outside the airport because I was afraid that something might happen to them and I am responsible for them," Berri, who is also Lebanon's justice minister, told a group of three journal ists. One hostage was killed by the hyack ers Friday. He was identified Monday as U.S. Navy diver Robert Stethem, 23 of Waldorf, Md., who was returning to the United States after an assignment in Greece. An Amal offcial at the airport said the three remaining crew members were still being held hostage on the plane. President Reagan, who immediately after the American hostages were freed from Iran in 1981 promised swift and sure retribution against any who attempted such actions against Ameri cans in the future, again repeated his message Sunday, warning the TWA hijackers "for their own safety" to release their American prisoners. "For their own safety they had better turn these people loose," Reagan said of the hyackers. Israel made clear Monday it would consider releasing the Shi'ite fighters if the United States asked it to do so, but the likelihood of such a request was dismissed by the White House. "We do not make concessions and we do not encourage others to make concessions," White House spokesman Larry Speakes said in Washington after national security adviser Robert McFarlane spoke to Berri on the telephone. in Philadelphia and UNL between receiv ing his master's and doctoral degrees. He received his bachelor's degree from NU in 1950 and his master's in 1954 from the Illinois Institute of Technology. In 1955 he returned to UNL as an electrical engineering professor. After receiving his Ph.D. at the Uni versity of Wisconsin in 1960, he returned to UNL for teaching assignments until 1963 when he accepted an engineering position with Westinghouse Electric utility in East Pittsburgh, Pa. In 1969 he accepted the title of Lloyd Freeman Hunt professor of elec trical engineering at the University of Southern California. Olive returned to UNL as the Lott professor of electrical engineering, where he worked with Nebraska's pub lic power districts on a consulting basis, stimulating research and devel opment in addition to providing advance training and study for their staffs. Olive was a member of the Lincoln Elks Lodge and Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers. He is survived by his daughter, Mar cia of Lincoln; his son, 1st Lt. Mark of Rapid City, S.D., and brothers, Ben of Dayton, Ohio, and George of Temple, NJ. University of Nebraska-Lincoln Bookstore renovation increases size.. .Page 9 edly "We do not ask others to do what we would not do," he said. "TJiey had better turn those people loose. " President Reagan Secretary of State George Shultz said: "We will not make deals with terrorists and will not encourage oth ers to do so." However, U.S. officials expressed guarded optimism that the involve ment of Berri could lead to the early release of the hostages. "There are pluses and minuses in this. You might say they are safer at the moment, but it doesn't necessarily mean their release is more imminent," said a senior State Department official on condition he not be identified. "Berri is a responsible member of the Shi'ite community and his accep tance of responsibility for the well being of the hostages we see as positive and could lead to their early release," he said. Berri said at the news conference the hostages had been moved from the TWA plane for their own safety, but he said: "We don't want anyone to know where they are placed now." They were now being guarded jointly by the hyackers and Amal militiamen, added Berri. McFarlane telephoned Berri Monday in Washington's first direct contact with him since he began negotiating on the hijacking yesterday. The White House said McFarlane's call was not made "to negotiate with Berri or the hyackers but to point out ft ! I f ) I F ! 'jc jf c J I X y 4Y J L ; . jjt Stepping from his F-4 Jet fighter, Charles Lacy Veach, veteran of 275 Vietnam War missions and a shuttle flight crew candidate, takes ground in Lincoln. Veach will lecture on the shuttle program as part of this year's Sorenson Summer Lecture at 10:30 a.m. in UNL's Love Library Auditorium.. Bulging biceps arm arm wrestlers...Page 10 taken from plane that Berri and the hyackers do have the power to release those held there and that they are the key to ending this tragedy." Since the plane was seized on a flight from Athens to Rome last Friday, U.S. officials had reiterated Washing ton's policy of not negotiating with ter rorists, but had left the door open to indirect bargaining. The exact number of hostages re mained unclear. More than 80 of the original 153 passengers and crew mem bers have been freed. Robert Oakley, director of the State Department's office of counter-terrorism, said the United States believed there were 43 hostages, all but one American. This included some 30 hostages reportedly taken from the plane today and a group of passengers with "Jewish sounding names" who were spirited off the plane on Saturday to an unknown destination, he said. Since being seized, the hyackers have moved the plane back and forth between Algiers and Beirut, landing in the Lebanon capital for the third time Sunday morning. The hyackers are also demanding the release of two Arabs awaiting trial in Spain for an assassination attempt on a Libyan diplomat last September. Spain said it would not release the men. The atmosphere at the airport was calm Monday following overnight ten sion caused by the alert. Unconfirmed reports say that the American elite Delta commando group has been moved to the Mediterranean and unusual Israeli and U.S. naval operations have taken place in recent days. 84 No. 159 In addition to the Israeli gunships patrolling off Beirut Airport, several U.S. Navy vessels have pulled into the Mediterranean ahead of schedule, naval sources said. The United States has assembled a strong military presence in the Medi terranean off Lebanon, including the aircraft carrier Nimitz and special anti terrorist troops, Reagan administration sources said Monday. "All the passengers are outside the plane ... All in one place in Bei rut . . .Amal men and the hyackers are with them," Berri said- Asked later at the press conference to confirm that all the hostages were held together, he said: "I think that. I think ... I am not sure. They are out side (the airport). They are outside." Berri said the hyackers were not from his militia but were Shi'ite fun damentalists "in the same line" as the We do not make con- cessions. Larry Speakes pro-Iranian Hizbollah (Party of God), which follows the teachings of Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. He explained his limited role in the situation by saying: "If I arrive (at a solution), that's okay. If they don't accept me I will say okay, goodbye. I will lift my hands. That's all." He attacked the U.S. position that it would not negotiate with "terrorists" to free the hijack hostages saying it was a "one-eyed" policy. "More than 700 people are in Atleet by hyacking. No difference at all," Berri said. "They (the Israelis) did it like hyacking. No difference if you do that on the ground or in the air." Mark DavisThe Nebraskan Vol.