Wednesday, August 22,1990 The Battalion Page 11 igust 22,199 ^JGang of convicts hijacks Soviet plane, l Aggieland, t Jasks for political asylum in Pakistan d a mortal sin. JL J do you tell thes hem that a conf« TCU, SMU, iton and A&S enough funds i ca ;s to light Bonlit omes useless an likely to has eft the SWC) useful come from t has been coinei ist gander at sonit nade by official love to the SEt ,von’t finish ninil nore,” said Fret ad football coadi ■ most candid ani ts of the Razor rain part of [lit remains a viablt )r. William lexas A&M Uni >rd here is viablt seen a viable con KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — A gang of con- ncts from a Siberian labor camp overpowered their guards aboard an Aeroflot passenger flight, hijacked the plane to Pakistan and sought politi- il asylum Monday. No one was hurt. One of the convicts apparently smuggled weapons on board in an artificial limb, the offi cial Soviet news agency Tass reported. The 11 hijackers surrendered after landing at Karachi International Airport, and the 29 pas sengers and nine crew members were freed un harmed, officials said. It was the latest in an unprecedented spate of ackings involving Soviet aircraft. There have been at least 13 hijack attempts in the past three months. Airport officials insisting on anonymity said the Tupolev 154 had only five to 15 minutes of fuel left when it landed in Karachi. The authori ties did not say whether the hijackers would be given asylum or sent back to the Soviet Union. The hijacking began Sunday when 15 prison ers were aboard an Aeroflot flight from Neryun- gry, about 3,000 miles east of Moscow, where their labor camp is located. The flight was bound for the nearby city of Yakutsk in eastern Siberia, officials said. It was not known why the prisoners were being taken to Yakutsk, or why they were serving time in prison. The prisoners, armed with guns and home made explosives, overpowered their guards and threatened to blow up the plane, said the inde pendent Soviet news agency Interfax. “All indications are that the weapons were con cealed in an artificial limb used by one of the hi jackers,” Tass said. The hijackers forced the plane to return to Neryungry. There, six prisoners left the plane but two more joined the group, according to So viet Interior ministry spokesman Yuri I. Arshe- nevsky. Of the 70 passengers left on board, the hijack ers allowed 41 women and children to leave the plane in Neryungry, Arshenevsky said. Then they flew west to Krasnoyarsk in Siberia, where authorities negotiated with them for two hours and allowed them to refuel. The plane next flew to Tashkent in Soviet Uz bekistan. There, the hijackers demanded the air craft be allowed to leave the country. After negotiating through the night, authori ties allowed the plane to be refueled and to take off. The hijackers promised to free the passen gers and crew when they landed, officials said. Karachi airport authorities initially denied the jetliner permission to land but relented when the pilot said he did not have enough fuel to fly to another destination, officials said. The airport was briefly closed but reopened to normal traffic after the hijacked plane landed, officials said. Pakistan is an Islamic country, but authorities said none of the hijackers was believed to be Mos lem. There have been at least 13 attempts to hijack Soviet aircraft since late May, mostly by Soviet teen-agers or young men who said they wanted to live in the West. That compares with about 70 such attempts in the 57-year history of Aeroflot, the Soviet state airline. At least six hijackers made it out of the Soviet Union, but all were arrested. Soviet media em phasized that Western countries have been re turning the hijackers to the Soviet Union to face charges. Hijacking carries a penalty of five to 20 years in jail in the Soviet Union. Finland on Monday ordered the extradition of Mikhail Varfolomeyev, who commandeered a Soviet plane on a domestic flight from the Esto nian capital of Tallinn to the Ukrainian city of Lvov. He sought asylum when the plane landed in Helsinki. Finland extradited another young Soviet hijacker last month. U.S. court upholds justice’s free speech NEW ORLEANS (AP) —• A justice of the peace in Texas was within his rights to speak out against what he believed were miscarriages of justice in the handling of traffic offenses in Fort Bend County, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Tuesday. The appeals court overturned the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, which had upheld reprimands issued by the Texas Commission on Judi cial Conduct against James M. Scott Jr., in 1984. Scott was elected to a four-year term as justice of the peace in Fort Bend in 1982. “Soon after taking office, Scott became concerned aoout what he perceived to be an injustice in the administration of the county court system,” the 5th Circuit said in its opinion issued Tuesday. “Apparently, the great major ity of defendants who appealed their traffic offense convictions from justice or municipal courts to the Fort Bend County court-at- law during Scott’s term in office succeeded in having the charges against them dismissed or the fines sharply reduced,” the ap peals court said, noting that the truth of that allegation had never been challenged in six years of lit igation. “This practice, Scott believed, unfairly allowed those ‘in the know’ to violate the traffic laws repeatedly and with impunity while penalizing less sophisticated individuals who committed the same offenses,” the court said. Scott wrote an open letter to county officials, prompting seve ral newspaper articles and an an gry response from at least one of thejudges he criticized. The matter was taken to the Commission on Judicial Conduct, which warned him to be more temperate in the future. mg possibilitywt iWG,” said Franl \thletic Director i now infamous efore the Razor ink gets another pas. ith Bo, Ninja tut and seedy stories ers and promises iown 2-1 W A ^ streaks (AP) — Danny eight straight ding singledto ning tie, as the ended Pitts- ■ win streak a 2 -1 victory, m pfete game, zin, also ended -game losing i. 0 with a 1.51 ig a starter on sburgh to Jeff in the third, r and walked o allow more :he ninth time left-hander n’t allow a hit ibbs’ two-out i. Making his e start, Tom- iving up three ises . “So we stayed r helping each our weight and ate Keith Alex, it guard, lost a s this summer r 300 pounds cill be a lot less le of the line in nutritionists to - us to follow, s didn’t do out we’ve worked ch as Pappas, cl and reserve also slimming • r. Rockholo )0-pound club, R.C. Slocum sed with his o(- ► f the offensive ely hard this l lot of discipli- -now on man) -re at six in the in weight will -er, and that er some oppo- to see what we ATll be a lot ■elp getting to ckness will be The starting un-opener op 5t;es about 2ft 1 ng up against rts about two- ball,” McCal inebacker. It step so I can ane.” tranipionships =s. Great run- ■erbacks need -of fensive line- is and dedica II and the res s, everythiflf ses come bow ■i. Fortune magazine lists oil barons as richest people Mayor’s car stolen during tour of town ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — This city’s mayor may have a tough time convincing GOP officials crime won’t be a problem if they hold their 1992 convention here — his car was stolen during their tour. While Mayor Robert Ulrich met Sunday night with Republican lead ers scouting potential convention sites, someone sw iped his car from the parking lot of the St. Petersburg Hilton. Ulrich returned from a three- hour dinner cruise with a group from the Republican National Com mittee to find shards of broken glass —and another parked car — where his 1980 white Buick four-door had been. Ulrich’s car was recovered about 11 p.m. Sunday after the driver crashed into someone’s front yard. No arrests have been made. The mayor said members, of the GOP delegation werensympathetic about his loss. Ulrich had never been a car-theft victim before. He said he will repair his car. The GOP officials took a three- day tour of the possible convention venue, the new Florida Suncoast Dome and other Tampa Bay-area at tractions. NEW YORK (AP) — If you won dered why oil is worth fighting for, take a look at Fortune magazine’s latest ranking of the world’s bil lionaires. The two richest people on the face of the earth are oil barons, the mag azine reported Tuesday. Sultan Haji Hassanal Bolkiah, oil- rich leader of the tiny Pacific sulta nate of Brunei, retained Fortune’s top title for the fourth straight year with an estimated worth of $25 bil lion, unchanged from 1989. Saudi Arabia’s King Fahd and clan, a focus of the Persian Gulf cri sis, ranked second with assets worth $18 billion, also unchanged from last year. CHICAGO (AP) — A Texas real estate developer Tuesday pled guilty to charges that he illegally obtained more than $90 million in loans from thrifts in Illinois and Texas and a bank in Wisconsin, the Justice De partment said. The six-count indictment filed against James Reagin of Houston stems from a series of fraudulent transactions in 1984 and 1985 against the bank and the three now- collapsed savings and loan institu- The ranks of Fortune’s richest — bankrolled by assets ranging from oil to sneakers to ball bearings — swelled by 25 names this year to 182 individuals and families, controlling a combined empire worth $471.3 bil lion. That’s up about 7 percent from last year. Fortune released the fourth an nual ranking in its Sept. 10 issue. It said the average entrant’s wealth was only slightly higher compared with last year after adjusting for inflation. But the average fortune was still worth about $2.6 billion, which if in vested in 7.5 percent U.S. Treasury bills would earn $534,000 a day. As competitor Forbes magazine did in its annual list released last tions, federal prosecutors said in a statement. Those institutions were Glen El lyn Savings in Glen Ellyn, Ill.; First Savings of South Beloit in South Be loit, Ill.; the B^nk of Alma in Alma, Wis.; and Western Savings in Dallas. Federal officials said Reagin sub verted regulatory authorities to ob tain control of the Glen Ellyn thrift and illegally borrowed money from the four institutions to finance real estate deals. month, Fortune ditched the Sultan of New York, Donald J. Trump, whose real estate and casino empire is bogged down in debt. The mag azine had estimated his holdings at $1.7 billion last year. Ranked third on Fortune’s list was the reclusive Mars family of the United States, whose holdings in clude Mars Inc. candy bars. Uncle Ben’s Rice and Kal-Kan pet food, worth $12.5 billion. Fourth was Britain’s Queen Eliza beth II, the wealthiest woman, with an untaxed personal fortune of $11.7 billion in riches ranging from 267,000 acres of royal real estate to racehorses, crown jewels and a vast stock portfolio. “This case is a classic white collar ‘whodunit’ that follows a sizeable chunk of cash across the country, through a series of fraudulent loans, to the doorstep of three collapsed, federally-insured financial institu tions,” said Attorney General Dick Thornburgh from Washington. Thornburgh called the plea agreement a “significant break through” in efforts to unravel com plex fraud schemes in the nation wide savings and loan industry scandal. Fifth was the Newhouse family of the United States, owners of a large media empire, worth $11.5 billion; sixth was the Reichmann family of Canada, with extensive real estate holdings valued at $ 11.1 billion; tied for seventh were Yoshiaki Tsutsumi, Japan’s richest industrialist, and Ar kansas retailing mogul Sam Walton, both valued at $7.3 billion; eighth was John W. Kluge of the United States, owner of media giant Met romedia Inc., valued at $7.0 billion; ninth was Tsai Wan-lin and family of Taiwan, owners of a construction and insurance empire worth $6.5 billion; 10th was the Thomson fam ily, owners of Canada’s biggest news paper chain, with $6.2 billion. OAXACA, Mexico (AP) — Rescue crews battled bad weather and back- roads Tuesday to get to a mountain town where a mudslide claimed at least 10 lives and left seven injured and five missing, the attorney gener al’s office said. The victims were reported Mon day after mud rolling down a steep hillside knocked over a water storage tank, wiping out at least seven homes below, Oaxaca state Attorney Gener al’s spokesman Pedro Perez Cevallos said. Four of the missing are children, the official news agency Notimex American newcomers included the Stephens family of Arkansas, owners of investment banking, en ergy and real estate holdings worth $1.7 billion; the Parfet family of Ka lamazoo, Mich., owners of a large stake in the Upjohn Co. drugmaker, worth $1.5 billion; and Philip Knight, head of the Nike Inc. ath letic footwear maker, $1.3 billion. Foreign newcomers included Al icia and Esther Koplovitz of Spain, owners of a $2.2 billion construction and banking fortune; Hiroshi Ter- machi, owner of a $1.8 billion Japa nese ball-bearing business; and John Spyros Latsis, European head of a Saudi Arabian shipping and oil-re finery network worth $1.8 billion. said Monday night. Bad weather and impassable roads made rescue efforts difficult, Perez said in an interview. He said the town of La Luz, where the landslide toppled the water tank, could only be reached by a one-hour walk. La Luz is perched high in the Jua rez mountain range 270 miles south east of Mexico Gity. Perez said five of the seven houses in the path of the slide were inhab ited. Notimex said Monday that five people were injured, none seriously. Texas real estate developer pleads guilty to indictments of S&L fraud Mudslide claims 10 PARKING SALE! for 3 montliB only mid wk. for 6 montiis Special Sale Hours 9am-7pm, Mon.-Sat. STEVENS FURNITURE & APPLIANCE 911 S. Texas Ave. 823-2720 Across From Sonic in Bryan COLLEGE LIFE CALLS FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA. IPS TIME FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA' Hours: ll:00am-lam Sun.-Thurs. ll:00aln-2am Fri. & Sat. Call Us! 693-2335 260-9020 1504 Holleman 4407 S. 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