Milestones
RELEASED. CHARLES JENKINS, 64, U.S. Army sergeant who in 1965 deserted his unit along the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Korea to avoid facing possible combat in Vietnam; from a military jail in Yokosuka, Japan; after serving 25 days for the desertion, of which he was convicted in a Nov. 3 court-martial. Jenkins had defected to North Korea as a step in a complicated plan to return to the U.S. Instead, he was captured and held for 39 years. After North Korea's Kim Jong Il agreed to release fellow prisoner Hitomi Soga, whom Jenkins married in 1980, Soga pressed successfully for the release of her husband who turned himself in to U.S authorities in Japan and their two North Korean born daughters.
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RELEASED. ANGELITO NAYAN, 34, of the Philippines, left, SHQIPE HEBIBI, 36, of Kosovo, center, and ANNETTA FLANIGAN, 43, of Northern Ireland, U.N. workers who were in Afghanistan to help organize the October elections; after being kidnapped in Kabul on Oct. 28. A Taliban splinter group took responsibility for the kidnappings and claims the government agreed to free prisoners in exchange for the release. But Afghan leaders, denying any such deal, said the kidnappers were thieves motivated by ransom money, not politics.
DIED. ARTHUR HAILEY, 84, best-selling author of such institutional-crisis sagas as Airport and Hotel; in his sleep; at home on New Providence Island in the Bahamas. Hailey's books, dismissed by critics as cliched, were blockbusters that turned mundane settings into labyrinths of deception and malice. Airport (1968) spawned a film starring Burt Lancaster.
DIED. J.L. HUNTER (RED) ROUNTREE, 92, America's oldest known bank robber; in a prison hospital in Springfield, Mo. A former tycoon who founded a Texas machinery company, Rountree pulled his first heist at age 86. Holdups, he said, made him "feel good, awful good."
DIED. ANCEL KEYS, 100, whose landmark Seven Countries study of 12,000 healthy men across the globe cemented the link between saturated fat and heart disease; in Minneapolis. Known as Mr. Cholesterol, Keys popularized his findings in the 1959 best seller Eat Well and Stay Well and landed on the cover of TIME. Earlier he invented the K-ration, named for him, a nutritious yet tiny meal World War II soldiers carried into combat.
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