Monday, September 8, ,1986 Page 2 Daily Nebraskan eft By the Associated Press News L Hijacked Pan Am siege ends Palestinian gunmen seized; U.S. issues arrest warrants KARACHI, Pakistan President Mohammad Zia Ul-Had said Sunday that four young Palestinians who hi jacked a Pan Am jumbo jet will be hanged if convicted of hijacking and murder. "They will receive the punishment that such a crime deserves," Zia told a news conference at Karachi airport. The gunmen seized the plane at the airport, with nearly 400 people aboard, early Friday. The hijacking ended 17 hours later when the lights went out aboard the plane and the hijackers fired on passengers. Pakistani com mandos were in control half an hour after the shooting began. Fifteen people, including three Amer icans, were killed. Hospitals reported 127 injured. U.S. officials have said 17 Americans were wounded. Zia said the hijackers would not be extradited to the United States. The U.S. Justice Department on Sat urday issued arrest warrants for three of the hijackers. U.S. officials said the warrants were, issued as a precaution, ; but emphasized that Pakistan was ' handling the case. "We have a very effective law, the punishment for which is the death sentence," said Zia who returned to Karachi Sunday night after represent-, ing Pakistani the summit of the' non-U aligned movement in Harare, Zimbabwe. Pakistani courts impose death by hanging for murder. The sentence is routinely imposed. The president said the gunmen are Palestinians, ranging in age from 19 to 25. He said they do not appear to be connected to any government. Aft er seizing t he plane, the hijackers had demanded to be flown to Cyprus where they wanted to free jailed Pales tinian terrorists. The four now are being held at an army camp near Karachi. The president said he was com pletely satisfied with the way Pakistani security forces handled the incident. "I'm very proud of them," Zia said. ,"It could have been far worse. Many more lives could have been lost." Khurshid Anwar Mirza, director gen eral of the Civil Aviation Authority and the chief government negotiator during the hijacking, told a news conference Saturday that it took commandos at leastiOwinutes to reach the plane. Manypassengers and other witnesses said they did not see security forces until some time after the shooting began. Airport security officials said Sun day five security guards have been sus pended for suspected negligence be cause they were guarding the gate through which the hijackers, disguised as guards, drove to reach the plane. Over the weekend, Pakistani offi cials offered conflicting statements about the number of people killed and the fate of the hyackers. Officials said Sunday that it appeared 14 passengers and a stewardess were killed. Previous reports had said a ground worker also was killed. Officials also said initially that two hijackers were killed. Zia said he did not know why there had been such confusion. Most survivors left Karachi Sunday. A Pan Am plane flew 2 1 7 passengers to Frankfurt, West Germany. More than half were to continue on to London and New York. An Indian Airlines Airbus evacuated 89 survivors, including 15 wounded, to Bombay. A plain wooden coffin contain ing the body of the slain stewardess, an Indian citizen, was loaded aboard. A U.S. Air Force C-141 medical trans port plane flew 11 injured, including six Americans, to West Germany. FBI investigates hijacking; survivors flown to West Germany FRANKFURT, West Germany - A special Pan Am jumbo jet landed in Frankfurt Sunday with 217 survivors of a hijacking in Karachi, PakisianJL which killed at least 15 pe'ojHe" including three Americans. FBI agents investigating the day long Friday hijacking were at the airport to meet the pic ne and talk to the 44 Americans aboard,-; "if they have evidence to present," said." State department spokesman"" Michael Austrian. The plane arrived at 7:10 p.m. An Indian man was the first to come into the airport lounge, where ; -;soft Hdrinks, coffee and cheesecake fc awaited survivors. "it'was a harrowing experience," said the man, who refused to iden tify himself. "We had a horrible time." After a brief stopover, the plane 'was.to fly to London and New York. 1 Pan Am officials said 72 passengers ' would leave the plane in Frankfurt, 18 in London and 127 would go on to New York. ' The Justice Department on Sat urday issued arrest warrants for the hijackers, charging them with mur der, hostage-taking, attempted air piracy and aircraft sabotage. White House officials said the warrants were issued as a precau tionary measure and emphasized that the Pakistani government is in charge of the case. Nebmyskan Editor Managing Editor Assoc. News Editors Graphics Editor Editorial Page Editor Editorial Page Asst. Wire Editor Copy Desk Chief Sports Editor Arts & Entertain ment Editor Photo Chiel Night News Editors Art Director General Manager Production Manager Advertising Manager Student Advertising Manager Publications Board Chairman Professional Adviser Jeff Korbelik 472-1766 Gene Gentrup Tammy Kaup Linda Hartmann Kurt Eberhardt James Rogers " Todd Von Kampen Scott Thien Joan Rezac Chuck Green Scott Harrah Andrea Hoy BobAsmussen Geofl Goodwin Tomlauder Daniel Shaltil (Catherine Policky Lesley Larson Bryan Peterson Harrison Schultz. 474-7660 Don Walton. 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan (USPS 144-080) is published by the UNL Publications Board Monday through Friday in the fall and spring semesters ana Tuesdays and Fridays in the summer sessions, except during vacations. Readers are encouraged to submit story ideas and comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning 472-1763 between 9 a.m. and 5 p m Monday through Friday. Thepublic also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Harrison Schultz. 474- 7660. . . MC. Subscription price is S35 for one year. Postmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R St Lincoln, Neb. 68588-0448. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln. NE. ALL MATERIAL COPYRIGHT 1988 DAILY NEBRASKAN Tutu to lead South Africa as first black archbishop CAPE TOWN, South Africa Des mond Tutu was installed Sunday as archbishop of Cape Town, the first black to lead the Anglican Church in southern Africa, and promptly used his new pulpit to assail apartheid as evil and unchristian. Bishops, diplomats and civil rights campaigners from across the world were among the 1,400 invited guests crowded into St. George's Cathedral for the ceremony, which blended religious pagentry with a celebration of the anti apartheid movement. "We shall be free, all of us, black and i white, for it is God's intention," Tutu, 54, said near the close of a sweeping 50-minute sermon. But he contended that "the primary violence in this country is the violence of apartheid." Apartheid establishes a racially segre gated society in which the 24 million black majority has no vote in national affairs. The 5 million white minority controls the economy and maintains separate districts, schools and health services. Tutu, wearing white robes and a gold mitre, entered the Bothic cathedral after giving a symbolic knock on its northwest door. The cathedral is across a tree-lined promenade from Parlia ment and President P.W. Botha's offi cial residence. Tutu was then led in a procession to the throne and formally installed as leader of 3 million Anglicans in South Africa, Lesotho, Swaziland, South-west Africa and parts of Mozambique. To cheers from the crowd, he pledged to rule his congregation, about 75 per cent of them black, "with truth, justice and charity." In the audience were Archbishop of Canterbury Robert Runcie; Coretta Scott King, widow of American civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.; and black activist Winnie Mandela, who on Saturday visited her husband, jailed African National Congress leader Nel son Mandela, at nearby Pilsmoor Prison. Following the enthronement, Tutu and Runcie presided over a rain-spattered but festive outdoor service for about 10,000 people at a fairgrounds stadium. Runcie, in a sermon at the fair grounds, praised Tutu as a man of love, vision and peace and endorsed his appeal for non-violence. "As no system based on brutal repres sion can endure, so no change achieved by violence can escape its damaging infection," said Runcie, spiritual leader of the 74 million Anglicans worldwide. "These are the lessons of history. They are the message of the cross." ill La.-- tx i, "H.M! I In t"' '-fi U 1 (1 1 - f ,.0 ( jfl'li ! i ! , r ti , ' i .t rctij I. r yr - a y, b i i t -cv - t ! ::ith, ' ) vi:i V. 5 li f.V.f-l ' s-' J to l! . t VrJty of LilL ,V. ;r:;J.';fcrar:li:lc; W "Jt.r.udd 1 ( w " l r .i A 0;C t!l the way d.v.v: tt.? llr.3 H3 Lr a hur liver Is cm -.cenuA" said Dr. John Nqjarian. We thlr.k there's no reason Jamie ceu'l live a ncrrcial life, go through school, have a profession and get . ... " Jamie underwent her transplant at the university hospital on Nov. 5, - .. - , - i ft l I . 1 L 3 i U ,1 , llmz, U aays Deiore ner ursi injruiu.x,y. 4 ...i.:,.u p ... i The girl lay (lying Deiore me iranspiaiu, -wmui vumv umj uier ner Charles, made a dramatic appeal lor a uonatea organ at a conven ' iwilifttrlf.liins In New York. The life saving organ came from a rimt in Ut'ah. ' father, i.r til If VI t V JVWM""-', - Ut'lSUil nllU UHU ill muimwp - Jamie hud been diagnosed as having biliary atresia, a liver condition th-it t-tril.es :r? child in 20,000. L:u-;-k',t Ilr.yr.n tovm diccovcrcrl A frcvp cfr-.-xir .:': J, TcLr.s Ui HrfJty m:;o;? rNV. n ilyA IS t efthem ' :s in - : i v; ir-5 at :. Thi5.sammer the Mexican government allowed Tulane Enthropologists to '.' ''s c the Hr-t test excavations at Ek W.z:n. "It's clcr that most cf the occupation at this site was bte classic, from about 730 A.D. to 930 A.D.," said E. Wyllys Andrews V, director of Tulane's Middles AmericrJi Twesearch Institute. Gri Lanlia deaths linked to water COLOMBO, Sri Lanka Contaminated water has killed 15 people in the past 10 &ys near the western coastal town cf Puttahm, health cfr.cia!s said Sundcy. Tl'.ey rcforte d at least 100 people have been hospitalized and said the illness was diagnosed as Shipella diarrhea. Dr Hector Gajadeera, health officer in the town of Chilaw, 30 miles to the south, blamed the epidemic on water from a storage tank piped through a 00-year-old supply system without purificat ion. Water-borne epidemics of diarrhea claim some 6,000 lives in Sri Lanka every year. Tropical storm nears Barbados MIAMI A disturbance off the island of Barbados strengthened into a tropical storm Sunday and was given the name Danielle, the fourth named storm of the 1986 Atlantic hurricane season, meteorologists reported. At noon EDT the center of Danielle was located near latitude 1 1.5 north and longitude 55.5 west or 270 miles east-southeast of Barbados, accord ing to an advisory issued by the National Hurricane Center in Coral Gables. The storm, packing 40 mph wind, was moving west-northwest at 20 to 25 mph, and forecasters said conditions were favorable for further strengthening. Gusts swept across the area Sunday and the government of Barbados issued gale warnings for the islands of Barbados, St. Vincent and the Grenadines. The weather service warned small craft elsewhere in the Windward Islands to remain in port. American reporter Daniloff charged with espionage MOSCOW American reporter Nich olas Daniloff was charged with espion age on Sunday, state-run television said, a charge that under the Russian criminal code could carry the death penalty on conviction. Daniloff was believed to be the first foreign journalist ever formally charged with spying here. Daniloff called the Moscow office of his magazine, U.S. News & World Report, and told reporter Jeff Trimble that he was indicted in a legal proceeding at Moscow's Lefortovo Prison at 2 p.m., Trimble said. He told his colleague he was charged under Article 65 of the Russian Federa tion Criminal Code. This article states that those committing espionage "shall be punished by deprivation of freedom for a term of seven to 15 years ... or by death." Trimble quoted Daniloff as saying he did not know when a trial might take place, but that he was told the investi gation of his case could take six months or even nine months if there were extraordinary- circumstances. "My case is moving into a more serious phase," Trimble quoted Dani loff as saying in the 20-minute call. "The charge of espionage puts it on a par with another case we know about." He was referring to Soviet U.N. em ployee Gennadiy Zakharov, who was arrested in New York on Aug. 23 on an espionage charge. Daniloff s wife, Ruth, has claimed her husband was framed in retaliation for Zakharov's arrest. Daniloff, 52, was arrested Aug. 30 moments after a Soviet acquaintance gave him a packet later found to con tain secret maps and photographs. The news weekly magazine correspondent has been held since then at the Mos cow prison. A commentator on the Soviet televi sion news program Vremya confirmed that Daniloff was charged, but gave no details. Foreign Ministry spokesman Gen nady Gerasimov told CBS-TV's "Face the Nation" program on Sunday that a trial would be held soon but gave no date. Gerasimov spoke from Moscow via satellite before word came that Daniloff was charged. "This could have serious implications for U.S.-Soviet relations if this con tinues," White House spokesman Larry Speakes said. Daniloff is innocent." Speakes reiterated that "there will be no trade" of any accused Soviet spy for Daniloff. Meanwhile, Pravda, the Communist Party newspaper, claimed Daniloff worked for the CIA, and that the United States was using the case as an excuse to "frustrate important diplomat meet; ings between the U.S.S.R. and the U.S.