n E. k 00 bflmj ^ tothetnd r > 3ls0) I*sa niot, } snuff eetwiiE, and f 0t , ’ leader fj loustoii,, e conssijj !adersof ; lovemeni *,n life can r a maiir I caplin, by Bent 'nd-ston house, marts or agonlii charged* cials said lad beesj S hospE; Tuesdau at and ui wn cheira found pin 's houses g tortured ligninl nnB Texas A&MW^ mm V# The Battalion Vol. 87 No. 128 GSRS 045360 16 Pages College Station, Texas Thursday, April 7,1988 Inside /fP Rating the faculty Ian, 11, s told lie letter d« raving, she has! ■ respons id, "Med 1 can'n rroblems ivas a pod i rehire ft me, who last veat, and diet higt ng either i nearl'f related s, a dsj lg ofoj 15 to® Jumpin’ for joy Tony Wood, a junior physical education major, tries to make a jump shot while a group of his Photo by Mike C. Mulvey friends try to block it. The players were taking ad vantage of the sunny afternoon Wednesday. Hijackers release 32, stay firm on demands NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — The hijackers of a Kuwait Airlines jet re leased 32 more passengers in Iran early Thursday, but warned that those remaining would be in danger if authorities failed to meet the hi jackers’ demands, Iran’s official news agency reported. The release left about 50 passen gers and crew members aboard the plane. > The hijackers warned in a statement that three members of the Kuwaiti royal family who are still aboard the aircraft would pay a dear price if the demands were not ful filled, the agency reported. The gunmen are demanding the release of 17 Shiite Moslems con victed and imprisoned in Kuwait for bombing the U.S. and French em bassies in 1983. Iran’s Islamic Republic News Agency, or IRNA, said the 32 people released Thursday included two flight crew members, a Sudanese and a Yemenite. All those freed were brought to the transit lounge of Mashad airport and were under medical care, it added. The hijackers earlier insisted that the Boeing 747 be refueled. Tehran radio quoted airport authorities at Mashad in northeastern Iran as say ing they would refuel the plane “to prevent any calamity or incident.” IRNA, monitored in Nicosia, quoted the kidnappers’ statement as saying that the Kuwait government understands only the language of force. Earlier, food was brought Wednesday to the 87 people then still aboard the jumbo jet. Deputy Prime Minister Ali Reza Moayyeri told Iranian television Wednesday that talks on the emer gency were under way between Ku waiti Foreign Ministry officials who flew to Iran and officials of the Teh ran government. “These talks continue and we are hopeful that as soon as possible we will be able to resolve this issue with out any difficulty, incident or loss,” Moayyeri said. The airliner landed at Mashhad early Tuesday after being seized during a flight from Bangkok, Thai land to Kuwait. IRNA quoted a freed Jordanian passenger as saying there were five or six hijackers, who wore masks and were armed with pistols and hand grenades. The captive members of Kuwait’s ruling Al-Sabah family, two of whom are women, face “imminent danger” if demands are not met, the hijack ers said Wednesday. Crown Prince Sheik Saad al-Ab- dullah al-Sabah presided at an emer gency meeting of the Kuwaiti Cab inet during the night and said the government would not submit to “blackmail.” In Washington, State Department officials praised the sheikdom for re fusing to yield, declaring, “Kuwait has taken an exemplary position in the struggle against international terrorism, and we applaud them for it.” Twelve Britons are on the plane. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said she would not ask. Kuwait to ne gotiate, and told reporters, “We do not give in to blackmail because it only leads to further tragedies.” U.S. completes deployment as protest begins re hunf : diets, ie goverc with e