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These are stock portraits of five of the Israelis held hostage by Arab terrorists at the Olympic Village in Munich, Germany, on Sept. 5, 1972. In the top row, from left, are: Joseph Romano, weightlifter; Amitzur Shapira, athletics coach; and David Berger, weightlifter. In bottom row, from left are, Andre Spitzer, fencing coach; and Kehat Shorr, marksmanship coach. It is reported that the second Israeli killed was Romano. (AP Photo)
PHOTO: EAST NEWS PALESTYNSKI LIDER ABU DAOUD KTORY JEST ODPOWIEDZIALNY ZA ATAK TERRORYSTYCZNY PODCZAS OLIMPIADY W 1972 ROKU W MONACHIUM (FILES) Photo dated 11 January 1977 of Palestinian leader Abu Daoud (C), who admits responsibility for the terrorist attack against Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, being driven to Orly airport under police protection after being freed by French authorities. Abu Daoud, whose real name is Mohammed Daoud Odeh, was barred from entering the Palestinian territories 13 June 1999 by outgoing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, after Germany reissued an arrest warrant for Odeh last week. EDS NOTE: B/W only.
Ankie Spitzer, widow of the Israeli fencing coach, Andre Spitzer, who was slain by Arab terrorists Sept. 5, surveys the room where the incident occurred at Munich's Olympic Village in West Germany on Sept. 8, 1972. The chalk circles on the wall were made by West German police to trace the impact of the bullets. (AP Photo)
US American Air Force officers carry the coffin of Israeli Olympic weightlifter David Berger inside a US air Force Starlifter cargo plane at the US Air Force base Fuerstenfeldbruck near Munich, Thursday September 7, 1972. The plane took off for Cleveland, Ohio, where Berger's parents are waiting. Berger 28, was one of 11 Israeli hostages killed by terrorists late Tuesday night in a battle with West German police officers. Berger a native of Cleveland, immigrated to Israel two years ago and held dual citizenship. (AP Photo/Anonymous)
The two West German border police helicopters that carried armed terrorists and their nine Israeli Olympian hostages, stand at Fuerstenfeldbruck air force base twenty miles west of Munich, Germany, on Sept. 7, 1972. The helicopter in foreground is a burned out shell as a result of a hand grenade explosion set off by one of the terrorists apparently committing suicide rather than risking capture in the evening of Sept. 5. Nine of the 11 Israelis taken hostage at the Olympic Village died in the shoot-out at the air force base. Five Palestinian terrorists and a German policeman were killed in the incident, known as the
West German soldiers have closed the US Air Force base Fuerstenfeldbruck near Munich, Wednesday September 6, 1972. A Palestinian commando squad landed here earlier with a helicopter with nine Israeli Olympic team hostages. Police and members of the squad fought a gun battle which resulted in the killing of all nine hostages, five terrorists and one West German police officer. Several members of the terrorists were reported to have escaped. (AP Photo/Anonymous)
West German Chancellor Willi Brandt, left, and Israel's ambassador to West Germany, Ben Horin, stand next to each other during a memorial service in the Olympic stadium in Munich, West Germany, Wednesday September 6, 1972 for the Israeli victims killed in yesterday's Arab terrorists attack and subsequent police shoot-out. All 11 Israeli hostages were killed. Sitting right with glasses is IOC chairman Avery Brundage and Organizing Committee chairman Willi Daume. (AP Photo/Anonymous)
Members of Israel's Olympic team placed black ribbons in their pockets mourning for their comrades killed in yesterday's Arab terrorists attack and subsequent police shoot-out leave the Olympic stadium in Munich, West Germany, Wednesday September 6, 1972 after a memorial service. All 11 Israeli hostages were killed. (AP Photo/Anonymous)
PHOTO: EAST NEWS JEDEN Z TERRORYSTOW PALESTYNSKICH NA BALKONIE DOMU SPORTOWCOW IZRAELSKICH A Arab guerilla member appears on the balcony of the Israeli house, 05 September 1972 at the Munich Olympic village. Arabs guerilla occupied the building in a surprise raid, killing two Israelis and keeping nine others as hostages.
West German sharpshooters work their way up buildings and over roofs in the Olympic Village in Munich during a futile attempt to get into position to confront Palestinian guerillas who held eleven Israeli athletes hostage, Sept. 5, 1972. Hostages and guerillas were later transferred to an air field where West German security forces opened fire on the Palestinians, five of whom were killed along with the eleven Olympic athletes. (AP Photo)
A police officer blocks the entrance gate of the Olympic village in Munich, West Germany, Tuesday September 5, 1972 as two Australian athletes returning from early training try to get access. Doors were blocked following the murder of members of Israel's delegation taken hostage earlier. (AP Photo/Anonymous)