Weather Mostly cloudy and mild Thursday and Friday with 10 per cent chance of rain both days. S-SE winds 7-10 mph. High today and tomorrow 73; low tonite 61. Cbe Battalion Vol. 69 No. 53 College Station, Texas Thursday, Dec. 4, 1975 Hijackers shoot Dutch hostage \ ~y~ _K_ T v 'ampus 1 o «f V?ampI I THE MBA-LAW DAY Conference will he Id Saturday in Rooms 205 and 206 of the MSC ginning at 10 a.m. with a coffee. Speakers will former Texas A&M students who have done ill in the fields oflaw and business. Represen ta- tfrom the seven Texas law schools and sev- alofthe major business schools are expected to present. The conference is designed to help dents determine whether or not their career lerests would he better served by obtaining an BA or Law degree. Luncheon reservations will $3 per person and shoidd be placed before 5 m. Thursday at the MSC Director’s Office 15-1914). • THE ANNUAL Engineering Technology Soc- t)’Banquet will be held in rooms 225 and 226 in * MSC December 10. Harold Hill, the Presi- :nt of Curtis Engine Co., will be the featured eaker, Tickets for ETS members will be $3; lets for non-members will be $6.50. Tickets ay be purchased in the Engineering Technol- y Department Office on the first floor of Fer- ierHall. The deadline for buying tickets is Dec. THE CENTURY SINGERS and the Bryan- College Station Orchestra will present the Bach Christmas Oratorio Thursday at 8 p.m. in the Rudder Theater. • THE 21st SCONA conference is planned for Feb. 11-14. It will assemble 200 delegates from 20 U.S. states, Mexico and Canada, including 30 delegates from Texas A&M. Delegates will be chosen by interview from student applications due in the Memorial Student Center director’s office by 5 p.m. Tuesday. The topic will be “Global Power in Transition: Emerging Aggregates of International Influ ence.’ Global power shifts will be studied in the three-day conference through examinations of global corporations, increasing power of develop ing nations and U.S. policy that points to the transition. Speakers confirmed for the conference are Rex Grey, former IT&T president for the Middle East and North Africa, and Admiral Noel Gayler, U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet commander. There will be other key speeches and delegate roundtables that allow informal seminar-type discussions. Texas Associated Press AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands — Indone sian rebels opened a second front in Holland today, taking over the Indonesian consulate in Amsterdam while others holding a hijacked train in the northern part of the country for the third day shot another hostage, officials said, i The rebels are South Molucan nationalists seeking independence for their islands in the Indonesian Archipelago once under Dutch colo nial sway. Police said six men armed with a carbine, a pistol and knives took control of the consulate at midday. A police spokesman said three members of the consulate staff were thought to have been wounded. A large number of people were be lieved to be in the building which was quickly sealed off by security men and armored cars. Police said members of the consulate staff fled as the gunmen stormed in. It was not im mediately known how many escaped. Witnesses said three men escaped from the second floor by climbing down a rope. One of the men was wounded when the gunmen opened fire and the two others were injured when they jumped to the sidewalk, officials said. Police fire forced the gunmen to pull back and all three escapees were hospitalized. In northern Holland, authorities said the five gunment holding hostages in a stranded train pushed a man to the door and shot him. He fell to the tracks and was believed dead. The hijackers killed the engineer and another man when they seized the train Tuesday and have threatened to shoot their 37 remaining hostages one by one unless they are given a flight out of the country. The shooting on the train occured just after a mediator, a South Moluccan resident of the Netherlands selected by the gunmen, left the train. The Indonesians then called the mediator on a field telephone and listed new demands, Dutch officials said. They repeated their demand for a bus to Schiphol airport and a plane to fly to an undis closed destination. Then they asked for more food, drink and medical supplies, five railway lanterns and 10 batteries. Authorities also released a statement appa rently typed aboard the train by the gunmen and handed to the mediator. Written in Dutch, it said: “We are doing this because the people in the train and the Dutch people did not approach the Dutch government 25 years ago when great in justice was done to our people. Queen Juliana said on Nov. 25, 1975: ‘Each people has the right to independence.’ People of Holland, we are not murderers, but we are prepared to fight for our country and kill again for the future of our country and independence and also be killed.” The statement was signed by the “Free South Moluccan Youth.” The South Moluccan islands passed to In donesia in 1949 and in 1950 the islanders staged an unsuccessful revolt. Justice Minister Dries Van Agt said the hijac kers would not be allowed to leave the country because they killed the engineer and another man when they took over the train Tuesday. The Rev. S. Metiary, a South Moluccan na tional, delivered the gunmen’s demands after meeting with them for an hour. He said one of the men told him: “Now we have started this action, there’s no pint in giving up. We’re going on.” The hijackers were said to be members of a South Moluccan youth organization campaipung for independence for their ancestral islands in the Indonesian archipelago. Police said they believed there were 38 hos tages still aboard the train following the escape or release of 25 Tuesday and Wednesday. They said an earlier estimate of 72 hostages resulted from telephone calls from anxious relatives of those aboard. Four passengers were released shortly after the takeover; three others escaped later Tuesday, and 18 ran to safety under the cover of darkness Wednesday night from the unguarded rear sec tion of the train. They said the remaining hostages included 13 women and 25 men, several of them over 60, but no children as officials had previously reported. About 150 police, army marksmen and marine commandos ringed the four-coach train, which was standing in an open field with the bodies of the two dead men beside it. The cordon stayed about 650 yards away. Officials said the gunmen had attached explo sives to one of the coaches. Authorities supplied the train early Wednes day with food, medical supplies and blankets. Officials said the train was heated but without lights. Dutch authorities brought in Johan Alvares Manusama, self-proclaimed leader of the 40,000 South Moluccans living in Holland, to speak with the gunmen. But officials said his 15-minute con versation with two of the young men produced no results. A spokesman for the South Moluccan youth organization said the hijacking was spurred by recent arrests in Indonesia of South Moluccan militants and was intended to draw attention to the plight of South Moluccans living in Holland. The South Moluccas, also known as the Spice islands, are between the Celebes and New Guinea and were the scene of an unsuccessful revolt in 1950 against Indonesia. 35 o 0TTAMPI STUDENT PRODUCTIONS’ One Act Plays ill be presented December 4-6 at 8 p.m. in the oram Theater. Thursday night "The Respectful rostitute” by Sartre, “He” by O’Neill, “Lou Arig Did not Die of Cancer” by Miller, and Mo from Bertha by Williams, will be pre- infed. The Man With the Flower in His louth’’ by Saroyan, “The End of the Trail ” by lulbertson, “The Gift of the Magi’ by Henry, nd'The Eldest" by Ferber will be presented riday; and “Welcome to Andromeda by %te, "Rats” by Harowitz, “Rise in Flame Iriedthe Phoenix” by Williams, and “Thursday ivening” by Morley will presented Saturday. All ickets will be 75 cents, and are available at the dSC Box Office. City THE REDMOND TERRACE Post Office branch will be open on Saturday during the next two weekends to help speed up the Christmas mail rush. In order that all College Station residents can mail their letters and parcels by the Dec. 10 and Dec. 15 deadlines, the Redmond Terrace station will be open from 10a.m. to2p.m. on Saturdays, Dec. 6 and Dec. 13. All services will be provided except food stamps. TWO MAJORS in Fort Hood who served two tours each in Vietnam say the U.S. Army is get ting rid of them while they are taking medical treatment merely to keep them from getting full pension benefits. • CORETTA SCOTT KING said in Dallas last night that American blacks should pressure the government to find out what political forces are at work in Africa. King, who spoke at a dinner in her honor, said that blacks have little knowledge of what is going on in Africa and when anything happens there blacks do nothing. She said that this is unlike the Jewish community that makes its views known about Israel. National THE NATIONAL LEAGUE of Cities passed a resolution in Miami Beach yesterday asking Con gress to waive its new budget procedures in order to re-enact general revenue-sharing quickly next year. ^ EDWARD H. LEVI, attorney general, unlike most of his predecessors, says he insists on super vising the FBI and is voicing criticism of the agency’s past misdeeds. He says his major effort to control FBI conduct lies in a comprehensive set of guidelines now being drafted to prevent future abuses such as those described to a Senate committee Wednesday. World THE LAOTIAN PEOPLE’S Congress elected Prince Souphanouvong, the titular chief of the Communist Pathet Lao movement, to be presi dent of the new People’s Democratic Republic of Laos, and Communist party chief Kaysone Phomvihan to head the new government as pre mier, Vientiane Radio announced. Bike Rack Removed Students were able to see their $1.50 bicycle registra tion fees at work today as a bulldozer ripped out an old bicycle rack to make way for a new one. Staff photo by Glen Johnson 351 UlfE iflif 51 bslem-Christian war Looting continues in Beirut Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon — Armed thieves and iligans are picking the spoils during a lull in ieirufs Moslem-Christian war. Three armed men entered a businessman’s tment in the center of the so-called “safe” lainra Street shopping district one noon this k and started loading up valuables. The maid started screaming. The screams irought guards from the Palestine Research inter around the comer. The guards opened ire, killing one of the robbers and wounding mther one. They, too, were Palestinians. That night a gang knocked down the wall of a hevrolet agency with a bulldozer. They drove Iwith 23 cars worth more than $100,000. The next night British Broadcasting Corpora- fon correspondent Chris Drake came home to his apartment in the “safe” seaside Rauche resi dential district. Shortly after, the doorbell rang. Through the peephole he saw the building’s doorman with two others. He let them in. Wav ing a Russian rifle and a Luger pistol, the two strangers shouted “Fellous! fellous! — Money, money.” Drake was relieved of $400, and the bandits drove off in a Mercedes sedan. Security forces are struggling with a wave of looting, holdups and thievery, a breakdown of law and order produced by eight months of civil war. Nearly every man and boy in Lebanon has a weapon. Common criminals pose as political ac tivists when confronted by the police, who are supposed to remain neutral in the civil war bet ween religious and political factions. Swaggering members of the private Christian and Moslem armies feel themselves above the law and suc cumb to the temptation to loot and steal. Moslem looters following the advance of Mos lem private armies picked clean the comfortable apartments and expensive shops of the Qantari district. Christian militiamen who occupied the Holi day Inn as a firing post looted the hotel of food, drink and television sets. Thev also punched a hole in a wall and carted off the neighboring First National City Bank’s calculators, typewriters and other office equipment. The police blame much of the stealing on poor Palestinian refugees from the crowded, squalid camps around the city. The organized Palestinian guerrilla groups deny their men are involved, but their names are being used. Prof evaluation not distributed to 1,000 classes More than 1,000 undergraduate classes have not yet been surveyed in Student Government’s instructor evaluation program. Most of the uni versity’s 5,000 undergraduate sections being taught this semester have only three or four class days remaining. The forms are supposed to be distributed by the College Councils in most of the university’s departments. The Councils from the Colleges of Liberal Arts, Education, Geo-Sciences, Agricul ture and Business have not yet picked up their questionnaires from Student Government. Only the College of Science is cooperating completely with Student Government by dis tributing the forms in class and having the profes sors return the questionnaires for processing. Federal offices hit by bomb blast Career in space not for Michelle Williams Gets Membership President Jack Williams received honor- [ ary membership to the Pakistanian Student Association. Wajahat Mirzar, president of the organization, and Syed Hussein El- Edroosl, vice-president made the presenta tion. Photo by Glen Johnson Associated Press EL PASO, Tex. — Michelle McCarthy, a laughing three-year old girl from Lordsburg, N.M., returns home this week after a suc cessful operation that turned part of her colon into an esophagus that will help her lead a normal life. The only problem, doctors said, as they bid farewell to Michelle, is that she will have to eat in a sitting or standing position and she can never go into outer space. Michelle, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCarthy, was born without an esophagus, an occurrence in one of every 5,000 births, but her condition was spotted right after birth and she was rushed to Provi dence Hospital here. Doctors inserted an eight-inch tube through the newborn’s stomach going directly to the abdomen and made a hole in her throat to drain fluids and allow her tastebuds to get used to food when she finally could eat. Then for the next three years, Mrs. McCarthy fed her child by pouring milk and bits of food into the tube stomach. On Oct. 3 Michelle returned to the hospi tal for a two-stage operation. The doctors who performed the operation declined to release their names. One said that the first stage of the operation consisted of having a 12-inch section of her colon dis connected and placed into her stomach. Five weeks later in the second phase of the opera tion doctors connected the colon transplant with Michelle’s throat. Doctors said they waited three years for the operation because they wanted Michelle to grow a bit and to allow more room for surgery in the throat area. Monday Michelle had her first real meal. Since then she has had three meals and two snacks a day and nurses said that chewing was the hardest part since she is not used to it and she tires easily. One of the surgeons said the artificial esophagus would grow with Michelle, but would not “work the way a normal esophagus would” meaning that it would not “work the food down” and that is why she would have to rely on “gravity.” Associated Press MIAMI — Guards were posted at all govern ment buildings in Miami early today after four federal offices were rocked by bomb blasts Wed nesday night, police said. One other bomb was defused. No injuries were reported. Several officers narrowly escaped harm when one bomb, found during a city-wide search for other explosives after the first blast, went off before an attempt was made to dismantle it. That blast was at a local Social Security office. It caused minor damage, mostly broken windows. Similar damage was reported at the local FBI headquarters and two post offices. Police said they were searching for a man and woman seen speeding away from one of the post offices. But investigators said they had no idea who was responsible for the bombs. Various Cuban exile groups have claimed re sponsibility for a number of bombings that have occurred in the Miami area in recent months. By early today, however, no one had claimed responsibility for Wednesday’s blasts, which came about a year after a similar wave of bomb ings. Those bombings, also unclaimed, were on the anniversary of the death of Cuban freedom- fighter Antonio Maceo on Dec. 7, 1898. Officers said the first explosion Wednesday came at 8:18 p.m. when a small pipe-bomb went off outside a three-story building housing the Miami offices of the FBI and the Justice Depart ment. An FBI spokesman said several bureau employes were inside at the time. The bomb was set behind a newspaper rack outside the build ing’s lobby. Police Sgt. William Maltz characterized the device, made with a 2 Vi-inch galvanized steel pige, as “a wake-up” bomb. “It’s just to let us know they’re around,” Maltz said. The second explosion occurred at 8:50 p.m. outside the downtown post office. The third came 10 minutes later at a post office branch. The fourth detonated outside the Social Sec urity office at 9:40 p.m. An unexploded device was found near the Florida State Employment office when a derelict picked up a brown paper bag he thought might contain a wine bottle, police said. The man took it with him until he discovered it was an explosive device; he then called police. A pedestrian was the victim of a hit-and-run accident near the scene of one of the bombings, but police said the incidents were not related. Bomb-squad experts carefully examined two other bags found on sidewalks during the search but they contained only trash. Loch Ness Monster? Lawyer shows slides Associated Press CONCORD, N.H. — A researcher has shown a photographic slide of a rust-colored object pur ported to be the legendary Loch Ness monster. The object appeared to have two front appen dages, a long neck and a head. The slide showing was the latest in a series of revelations both in the United States and Great Britain in recent weeks concerning a group of pictures taken underwater by an American photographic team last June at Loch Ness in Scot land. The team was headed by Boston patent attor ney Robert Rines, who is also dean at the Franklin Pierce Law Center in Concord. He showed the slide to a group of about 50 students and friends Wednesday night. The slide depicted an object with distinct fea tures, including the frontal appendages, a trunk Rines said was 12 feet broad ana a neck Rines said was 8 to 1 feet long. “We think it will electrify the world,” Rines said. He said there were other, clearer photographs, some of which were shot at the considerably closer range of 4 feet. He said the monster was “looking right at us with its mouth open.” Rines showed the slide in Concord two days after an announcement was made in London that a scientific symposium scheduled for Dec. 9 and 10 to see Rines’ pictures was canceled because of what the sponsors called excessive publicity in Britain. First word of Rines’ discovery and photos came on Nov. 22 in a copyright story in the Boston Globe. Since then, a number of scientists who have seen one or more of the pictures, have commented publicly. Most have praised the clar ity of the pictures. Wednesday night’s showing of one of the slides was the first to a lay audience. Rines said the slide was taken by an underwater camera at a depth of 45 feet with a strobe light. Rines was angered by the publicity given the photographs, particularly in the British press, and had asked that the description of the slide shown Wednesday night not be made public. A spokesman for Rines emphasized in a tele phone interview that Rines and other members of the Academy of Applied Science — the Boston group which undertook the Loch Ness photo graphic expedition — were leaving it up to the scientific community to determine exactly what the objects photographed are. British naturalist Sir Peter Scott, who has seen the complete set of Rines pictures, announced in London on Monday the cancellation of the sym posium of eminent scientists who were to examine the photos. The decision, “in no sense reflects in the smal lest degree on the nature of the evidence or the integrity of those who obtained it,” said Scott, chancellor of Birmingham University. Scott told reporters shortly after word of the photos leaked last month that the Rines photo graphs helped convince him the Loch Ness monster is a living prehistoric reptile which may be 40 feet long. This week, Prof. Herbert J. Howe, a Purdue University paleontologist, said he believed the monster may be a prehistoric reptile dating 70 million years. He said the Rines photographs may reveal the monster is a plesiosaur or ichthyosaur, types of reptiles believed extinct for more than 50 million years.