Tuesday, January 20, 1987 Daily Nebraskan By The Associated Press , , . - , : -. .. .. LJ.- - - -- ; ' rza , -.. ,-,- . i i ---i' - - - -- ' -i ..I Officials wanted against trade Letters reveal true Mencken Hostage swap may inspire more terrorism BONN, West Germany Prominent politicians cauti oned officials Monday against swapping a Lebanese suspect in the 1985 TWA hijacking for a West German abducted in Beirut. They said a trade would inspire more terrorist attacks. Government spokesmen in Bonn played down reports that the kidnapping in Beirut of businessman Rudolf Cordes was aimed at forcing the release of Mohammed Ali Hamadi, accused of being one of the terrorists who seized the jetliner in June 1985. A U.S. Navy diver on the plane was shot to death at Beirut airport after the jet was commandeered during a flight from Rome to Athens. Hans Stercken, chairman of Parliament's foreign affairs committee, said in a radio interview: "Those who are aware of the tendency toward terrorist acts in the Middle East know that the acceptance of blackmail increases the chan ces of new acts." The Justice Ministry, said Hamadi's extradition to the United States would be accomplished quickly. It had been delayed pending a pledge from the Americans not to apply the death penalty if Hamadi is convicted. West Germany does not have a death penalty. Hamadi, 22, was arrested last Tuesday at the Frankfurt airport after arriving from Beirut. U.S. officials have asked that he be extradited to stand trial in an American Court. Authorities said he was identified by fingerprints as one of those who seized the TWA aircraft June 14, 1985, shot Navy diver Robert Stethem to death and held 39 American passengers hostage for 17 days. Gunmen seized Cordes, 53-year-old Beirut manager of West Germany's Hoechst chemical company, after he arrived in the Lebanese capital Saturday from Frankfurt. NEW YORK ILL. Mencken, "The Bad Boy from Baltimore" who was known for his cynical style and wit, revealed joy and despair in letters he exchanged with the woman he eventu ally married, a new book shows. The collection of love letters, titled "Mencken & Sara," will be published Feb. 14 by the McGraw-Hill Book Co. "The letters reveal a tender and soft side," said the collection's editor, Mar ion Elizabeth Rodgers. "We tend to think of Mencken as an old curmud geon who hated everything, but it is not so." The book contains about 450 letters Mencken exchanged with writer Sara Haardt, whom he married in 1930. They wrote from 1923 until her death of tuberculosis in 1935. Rodgers found the letters in 1981 in the rare book room of the Goucher Col lege library in Baltimore. Mencken, who died in 1956, had donated them in 1936 but ordered that they not be opened for 45 years. The Baltimore-born writer's best known works included, "The American Language," "Prejudices: A Selection," and an autobiographical trilogy, "The Days of ILL. Mencken." Mencken met Haardt in 1923 at Goucher College in Baltimore, when she attended a lecture he was giving called "How to Catch a Husband." At the time, Mencken, a bachelor, was 43 and Haardt 25. "He and Sara were very traditional in their way, but he was just as confused as men are today it took him seven years to propose to Sara," Rodgers noted. Haardt started the correspondence on May 20, 1923. Referring to Mencken's critique of her short stories, she wrote: "These suggestions of yours would make a villain laugh." Many other letters also centered on the couple's craft. But their tone grew fonder and more whimsical after Oct. 7, 1923, when Haardt wrote: "I know one thing: that for a mortal with a sense of humor you are the most perfect gen tleman I have ever seen or heard tell of." Anarchist group 'cracked', but attorney: 'It's out there' SOMERVILLE, N.J. Law officers say they have cracked the most active unit in the domes tic armed underground with convictions in a New York bombing case, a mixed verdict from a New Jersey trooper slaying trial and a pending sedition case in Boston. . But a lawyer for one of the avowed revolution aries in the New Jersey case says of the United Freedom Front: "It's out there. I'm sure you'll hear from them." "Where there is repression, there will always be resistance," said the lawyer, Lynne Stewart. A mistrial was declared Sunday for her client, recognized Manning as a fugitive and conns Richard C.Williams, when a jury failed to reach a cated a gun before being shot by Williams, a verdict Co-defendant Thomas W. Manning was con victed of felony murder, which is committing homicide while committing another felony, robbery and escape. But he was acquitted on the separate charge of murder, leaving in question passenger in the car. Manning contended he shot the trooper in self-defense. Williams denied he was even at the murder scene. The state is considering whether to retry Williams. Despite the mistrial, which the defendants who fired nine shots that killed Trooper Philip hailed as a victory for "anti-imperialist freedom Lamonaco in December 1981. fighters," law enforcement agents say the United The state alleged that Manning was driving a Freedom Front is essentially destroyed, car Lamonaco stopped, and that the trooper "I think they're pretty well wiped out," said New Jersey Detective Sgt. Richard Ryan, who worked on the case for four years. Manning and Williams face lengthy prison terms for their March 1986 conviction with five other United Freedom Front members in the bombing of New York-area corporate and mil itary offices from 1982 to 1984. The seven also face trial in Boston on charges of plotting to overthrow the federal government. It has taken law officers more than a decade to get this far in efforts to break the United Freedom Front. WANT TO COMMUNICATE BETTER? LEARN ASSERTIVE SKILLS! Would you like to communicate your thoughts and feelings more effec tively with others? Our group will help you to become more direct and honest while respecting the rights of others. We will meet for 7 weeks, Tuesday, February 3 - March 17, from 1:30 - 3:30. If interested, contact Sue or Luis at the Counseling Division of SC4, 472-3461. Communists expel liberal educator PEKING Fang Lizhi, an astrophysicist who gained national prominence by standing up for student demonstra tors, was expelled from the Communist Party for preaching Western liberal ideas, the official media reported Monday. Fang, 50, was fired last week from his position as vice president of China Science and Technology University in Hefei. Fang's expulsion from the party came as Zhao Ziyang, the premier and acting party chief, issued assurances that intellectuals would not be victimized by another ideologi cal purge. The Xinhua News Agency said the local party branch decided to expel Fang on Saturday because he "attempted to incite intellectuals against the party and students to make trouble, causing grave consequences." The official said Fang denied Marxism, vilified China's socialist system as "modern feudalism" and called for independence of universities from party leadership. He was accused of "advocating bourgeois democracy and freedom and instigating students to make trouble." Fang, a graduate of Peking University who became one of China's pioneer researchers in laser theory, gained a nationwide reputation for speaking out for greater demo cracy and pointing out anomalies in the socialist system. mm IAffrd" a "A Frsnk Wo Can Ail TUESDAYS & SUNDAYS All You Can EAT Footlongs only 5:00-9:00 every Tuesday F. -, ,i , -. .)'" M Ph. Taco Sunday Hardshell Tacos All Day Sunday 1320 Q Street OPEN: 830-Midnight Sun.-Thurs. 9.00-100 am Fri-Sat. Correction Monday's story about the Nebraska State Student Associa tion's 12th Legislative Assembly incorrectly said, "Students from Chadron State College and UNO were in favor of videotape in struction because learning from a television is far less educa tional than learning from a human being." The story should have said those students were in favor of videotape instruction because it is the only way they can take some classes. UNL delegates, however, were not in favor of videotape instruction because learning from a television is far less educational than learning from a human being. The Daily Nebraskan regrets the error. m a College-career Christian Fellowship presents: dteG fJJJ&sfi Bsss tto&ef a Jive ivesh stutly oj tfie hook, oj 0 Ma) tcit by C-CCf campus minister james Sennett Whtt Jo it mn to bt i Chriitiin? Wht trt the dtfining merki? John Will us 1n this tremendous little took. Come join us end find out! Tussdsy NigJits, Jsnusry 20-Fttrutry 17 7;C3-9:C3 in tfca NzSreika Union, 14th end 11 (Room vill N pssttd un&r "CoUe?-Crr Chri$"in Fellowship") 13 0 JLn Oil Cel. S3l Editor Managing Editor Assoc. Newsbditors Jelf Korbelik 472-1763 Gene Gentrup Tammy Kaup Linda Kallmann Use Oisen 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. The public also has access to the Publications Board. For information, contact Harrison Schultz. 474 7660. Subscription price is $35 for one year. Poslmaster: Send address changes to the Daily Nebraskan, Nebraska Union 54, 1400 R Si., Lincoln, Neb. C55C3-0443. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln. ME. In Brief Sid resorts try to recover LOS ANGELES California's ski season finally is in full swing, but resorts face an uphill battle to recoup millions of dollars lost when a snow shortage left most slopes barren through the Christmas holidays. "If we have a good January, February and March we could certainly recoup some business and make (the losses) up, but it will not be our best year," said Bob Roberts, executive director of the Sierra Ski Areas Association in San Francisco. When the storms that normally dump up to several feet of snow at resorts by late December held off until around New Year's, about one-fifth of the $350 million taken in annually by ski resorts in California and Nevada was lost, Roberts said. Wheelchair contestant is inspirational FAIRFIELD, Calif. Maria Serrao, the first wheelchair contestant in a beauty pageant leading to the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants, says that even though she lost she hopes she was an inspiration to others. The 23-year-old actress, who was paralyzed in a car accident at age 5, received enthusiastic applause during evening gown and swimsuit competitions Sunday. She also was well-received in the opening produc tion, as she swung her arms and spun her wheelchair in a dance number that featured the contestants in a Las Vegas-style chorus line, with feather headdresses and sequined costumes. . "If somebody looks to me as an inspiration, that's great," she said. "People can do a lot of things they think they can't. If I could be a role model for someone to help overcome their obstacles, then I'd feel good." Woman tries to sell her baby JACKSONVILLE, Fla. A pregnant woman who allegedly offered to sell her baby for $15,000 so she could buy a car and pay off debts has been charged with child selling, authorities said. Joi E. Silverthorne, 27, of Tampa, was arrested Saturday after the Jacksonville couple, whom authorities would not identify, met her at Jacksonville International Airport. They were to give $3,500 to Silverthorne as a first payment for her baby, authorities said. Instead, they turned her over to investigators who were nearby and recording the conversation, according to a police report. Child selling is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison, said Assistant State Attorney E. McRae Mathis. Silverthorne was released Sunday on 15,000 bond and is to appear in court Jan. 28, ajail official said. ii