Friday, June 20, 1986AThe Battalion/Page 5 ^cCi If! World and Nation > rrorist denies Achille Lauro killing iENOA, Italy (AP) — The Pales- who had confessed to killing jn Klinghoffer denied in court sday that he did it and claimed 69-year-old invalid American/ not even aboard the hijacked iner Achille Lauro. foussef Magid al-Molqi, 23, de- ned that the report of Klinghof- ^■eath “was a frame-up between epif\.mericans and the Syrians.” ; .SB)fficials identified the body af- ''rMvashed up on the Syrian coast. lice officer slain during investigation ■|N OS A, Mexico (AP) — A dexiain police officer investigat- ,'tg I he slaying of a newspaper publisher was gunned down hursday when he tried to ques- ion passengers in a car, autnori- ies laid. [^■esiliano Garcia, 33, a veteran il the Tamaulipas State Judicial ’olile, died en route to the gov- 'niient hospital in Reynosa af- He was shot with a .45-caliber weapon, said Israel Pena Lucero, omrnandant of the State Judicial 'oVice in Reynosa. N Garcia and rookie officer Man- lelpviedo, 24, were investigating hernirder of Dr. Jorge Brennes, 16,1 the newspaper publisher tinned down Tuesday, Pena Lu- :erl said. / OC ■ vie do remained in tlie gov- Kp'ninent hospital with multiple vWoi|nds, authorities said. : Also on 1 hursday, investiga- :ors from the Hidalgo County " iheriffs office released a com- semii sketch () { the man who k sai(l mumped four .38-caliber bullets aai: utqbvenes. ■ - r predict?: J Judge Lino Monteverde, who is conducting the trial of 15 people charged in last October’s two-day hi jacking, read from a confession Molqi gave a prosecutor Nov. 8. In it, Moltji said the four Palestin ians who seized the ship off Port Said, Egypt, decided to kill a hostage because Syria refused to help press their demands that Israel release 51 Palestinian prisoners. The liner was off the Syrian port of Tartus at the time but was denied permission to enter. Monteverde read from the con fession: “I remember that it was 3:12 (p.m.). I went down where the hos tages were and I forced a Portu guese waiter to bring the American to the stern of the ship. I shot twice, once to the head and once to the chest. “I and Bassam agreed that the First hostage to be killed had to be American. I chose Klinghoffer, an invalid, so that they w'ould know that we had no pity for anyone, just as the Americans, arming Israel, do not take into consideration that Israel kills without discrimination women and children of our people.” Bassam al-Ashker, accused of be ing the fourth hijacker, is to be tried separately in a juvenile court be cause he was 17 w'hen the ship was seized and the 383 people aboard taken hostage. When he had finished reading, Judge Monteverde asked Molqi, “How' do you defend yourself?” “I did not kill him, this is not true,” said the young Palestinian de scribed as the leader of the pirates. Klinghoffer “was not on the ship and I did not see him.” Molqi said in Arabic, through an interpreter, “Not one of us killed an American, not even I.” Monteverde pointed out that an Italian hairdresser and a Portuguese waiter in the crew had said Molqi forced them to dump Klinghoffer’s body overboard. Molqi testified for tw'o hours in the heavily guarded chamber built like a bunker under a Genoa court house. He sat before the judge with an armed policeman at either side. Molqi insisted the pirates intended to leave the Achille Lauro in Ash- dod, Israel, the next stop after Port Said, attack the customs office and “take as many Israelis as possible” hostage. He said they seized the ship only because a waiter became suspicious. Monteverde replied that the waiter told investigators Molqi’s story was false. Canyon crash Plane's tire may have hit helicopter GRAND CANYON VILLAGE, Ariz. (AP) — Grand Canyon Airlines suspended tour flights Thursday as crews working in rugged terrain re covered the bodies of all 25 people killed when a helicopter and air plane crashed in flames into the can yon Wednesday. Officials said there were indica tions that the helicopter’s main rotor had sheared off the plane’s tail, and that one of the plane’s tires had struck the helicopter’s engine cover. John Guthrie, deputy superinten dent of Grand Canyon National Park, said the collision probably oc curred below the rim of the canyon. The National Park Service and the Federal Aviation Administration have said aircraf t are supposed to fly no lower than 2,000 feet above the mile-high rim, but opponents of the flights say the advisory regulation is rarely enforced. Flight manifests showed that 18 of the crash’s victims were foreign tour ists, authorities said. Grand Canyon Airlines of nearby Tusayan, which owned the 20-occu pant DeHavilland Twin Otter air plane, said it was suspending air tour operations pending results of the crash investigation. Coconino County detectives re turned Thursday to the crash site at Tuna Creek, a tributary of the Colo rado River, to photograph, diagram and measure the impact points. National Guard helicopters were used to remove the bodies, which were taken to a Park Service mainte nance building for storage in a re frigerated trailer pending transfer to Flagstaff, 130 miles to the south. Authorities announced a memo rial service for the victims Sunday at the Grand Canyon lodge. National Transportation Safety Board investigators from Washing ton arrived Thursday to begin sort ing out the final seconds of the air craft. John Schulte, a dispatcher in the Kaibab National Forest, said the air plane’s emergency transmitter emitted a signal within seconds of the accident. Sheriffs Sgt. Steven Luckesen, who spent Wednesday night at the crash site, said there was what ap peared to be a tire skid mark on top of a panel of the helicopter engine housing. The airplane has fixed landed gear. The marked panel was some distance from the rest of the helicopter, Luckesen said. Excedrin capsules recalled nationwide SEATTLE (AP) — Tests were under w'ay Thursday to see if a second person had died of cy anide poisoning linked to Extra- Strength Excedrin capsules. The Food and Drug Adminis tration late Wednesday issued a warning, against use of the medi cation after the discovery of a sec ond bottle of poisoned capsules, and manufacturer Bristol-Myers recalled the capsules nationwide. The FDA said more than 73,000 capsules were analyzed and none but the two bottles were found to contain cyanide. Bristol-Myers urged stores to pull the product after the death of Katherine Sue Snow of Au burn, Wash., was blamed on cy anide found in the capsule. Potassium cyanide also was found in a capsule from a bottle that may have been used by an Auburn man w'ho died June 5, said Sue Hutchcroft, an FDA spokeswoman in Seattle. Man gets AIDS from screened blood ATLANTA (AP) — Health re searchers reported Thursday the first case of a patient becoming infected with the AIDS virus from a blood transfusion that had been tested and showed no signs of the deadly disease. The case, which occurred last ■year in Colorado, involved a rare set of circumstances — a donor who gave blood so soon after a homosexual encounter that he had not yet developed the antibo dies which trigger the AIDS blood tests, officials with the fed eral Centers for Disease Control Federal health officials said. The chance of a blood recipi ent getting the virus which causes acquired immune deficiency syn drome remains less than one in 100,000, said Dr. Harold Jaffe, an AIDS specialist with the CDC. But the CDC noted that AIDS antibodies take months to show up in blood tests. For that reason, men who have had sexual contact with another man since 1977 (the advent of AIDS) must not donate blood. In the Colorado case, a 31- year-old blood donor who tested negative for AIDS virus in April 1985 donated again in August 1985, about three months after he had his first homosexual con tact in 1 1 years. The August donation, like the April blood, tested negative. But a 60-year-old surgery patient, ap parently heterosexual and faith fully married for 30 years, ac quired the AIDS virus from a transfusion with the August blood, the CDC said. Late selling causes Dow Jones drop NEW YORK (AP) — The stock market finished lower Thursday as the blue chips sagged amid some late selling. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials changed direction a number of times. It stayed close to Wednesday’s closing level until the final few minutes when sell ing sent the blue chip indicator to its lowest level of the day and left it with a 13.08-point loss at 1,855.86. The market’s erratic behavior was partly caused by apprehen sion on the eve of a “triple witch ing hour” which occurs on the last trading day for a set of futures contracts on stock indexes, op tions on stock indexes, and op tions on individual stocks. ne people; xteed I)' 1 into the i G SOON THECHEfl JISNEYS lusEori FINE JEWELRC ml 'jjZ* Jewelry of Quality Low Prices Everyday Now Offering an extra r i: Y Diamonds, Engagement Rings and Sets, plus many, many more items. Take advantage of our HIGH QUALITY and LOW PRICES! 846-5816 415 W. University Dr. In-Store Financing Major Credit Cards Accepted Parking in Rear Dance Arts Society Summer Schedule Aerobics: Mon.-Thurs. at 7:00 p.m. Tap: Time not yet available Modern: Wednesdays at 8:00 p.m. Ballet: Mondays at 8:00 p.m. Jazz: Time not yet available Dues: $25 for 8 weeks beginning June 18 or $2 per class without membership card. Where: Dance Room, East Kyle For more information call 696-6257 Class begins Monday, June 22 CHECK THE CIAS5IFIED5 For All Your Needs Call Battalion Classified 845-2611 DRESS UP YOUR SUMMER WARDROBE WITH A TAN U TAN A single 30-minute session in a TAN U Solaire tanning bed is like spending 3-4 hours in the sun. SPECIAL SUMMER RATES Your first visit is FREE 104 Old College Main at Northqate 846-9779 Walk-ins Welcome James and Carol Barrett ’85 Battalion Classified 845-2611 Battalion Classified 845-2611