Page 2-Tuesday, January 30, 1979-The Michigan Daily Carter gives nod to cut Hearst sentence (Continued from Page 1)I In recommending that she be freed, Deputy Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti told Carter that Miss Hearst had suffered "degrading experien- ces... as a victim" of her kidnappers. MISS HEARST has announced that she will marry her former bodyguard, Bernard Shaw, on Feb. 14.. Miss Hearst would have been eligible for parole on July 11 and would have completed her term, including time off for good behavior, by May 1982.} She was sentenced to seven years in prison on armed robbery charges in connection with the holdup of the Hibernia Bank in San Francisco on April 15, 1974, Miss Hearst maintained she was brainwashed by her kidnappers and forced to take part in the bank robbery.Hearst *0 Oi SAN DIEGO TEEN HELD: Teng: mixed greeting Sniper By AP and Reuter SAN DIEGO, California - A 16-year- old schoolgirl who complained "Mon- days give me the blues" sprayed a school with 40 rifle shots yesterday, killing two men and injuring eight children .and a policeman before she surrendered. The girl, identified as 16-year-old Brenda Spencer, barricaded herself in- side the family's modest home across the street from Cleveland Elementhry School for six and one-half hours before she quietly agreed to come out. THE GIRL was quoted by police as saying she smoked marijuana cigaret- tes, took barbiturate pills and drank all the whiskey she could find in the house during her shooting spree. The principal of the school, Burton Wragg, was shot as he went to the aid of a wounded child and died in hospital. A maintenance worker was killed when he was shot in the head. Police originally said a policeman and 10 children were wounded, but later reduced the number of children to eight. They were between the ages of six and 14 and were described by hospital spokesmen as being in fair to serious condition. - "I JUST wanted to," the girl told the San Diego Tribune by telephone from her house across the street from Cleveland Elementary School. "It just popped into my head, about last Wed- nesday, I think." , Before hanging up, she said, "I have to go now. I shot a pig, I think, and I want to shoot some more." When the shooting began, some students ran in panic from the school ills two yard and teachers told others to huddle beneath desks and keep away from windows. Later, students were ushered to safety in the school 'auditorium. Nearby homes were evacuated. THE GIRL was alone in the house and her father was at the scene, trying to talk her into giving up while dozens of heavily rmed police' waited and two police helicopters circled overhead. She was reported to have 500 to 600 rounds of ammunition with her. She told the Tribune she began shooting because "I don't like Mondays - this livens up the day," Asked if she was shooting at random, she said she had no target. "No one in particular." The shooting began about 8:40 a.m. as the students were entering the school in the city's northeast La Mesa section, a middle class area of quiet, tree-lined streets and modest frame houses. The last shots were fired about 8:55 a.m. However, the girl, identified only as Brenda by police, remained in the house more than an hour later. She was described as a "pretty good shot" by of- ficers on the scene. - A POLICEMAN on the scene, Sgt. Dave Kelly, said Miss Spencer emerged from the house, put two guns on the ground, then calmly went back in the home and brought out her ammunition before heavily armed officers grabbed the girl. Miss Spencer was whisked to a near- by patrol car and driven to police headquarters. Police spokesman Bill Robinson said, "She is willing to talk to a degree. She is under a lot of pressure. There is no more danger at the school." I (Continued from Page i) Maoist faction opposed to Teng's policy of reaching out to the West, claimed responsibility for the demonstration. State Department spokesman Pat Lucy said Koximoto and Ms. Ransom were issued official press credentials Saturday to cover Teng as represen- tatives of the Worker Press Service. Lucy said their applications were reviewed by the Secret Service before approval. The Secret Service said it was investigating. Carter, who seemed momentarily unsettled by the outbursts, raised his voice and continued his speech without interruption. Teng, 74, looked briefly uneasy. NOTING THE START of the Chinese New Year as well as Teng's historic mission-the first state visit by a leader, of the People's Republic of China-the Presdident declared: "It is a time when family quarrels are forgotten ... a time of reunion and reconiliiation." Carter said: "Today we take another step in the historic normalization of relations. We share in the hope which springs from reconciliation and the an- ticipation of a common journey." After the speech-making, the two leaders chatted in the Oval Office, where Carter disclosed that he and Teng had almost met once before during China's Civila War in 1949. As a Navy officer Carter had stopped briefly in the eastern Chinese port of Tsingtao which was surrounded by Chinese for- ces headed by Teng. TENG LATER had lunch at the State Department where his host was Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. Guests included Defense Secretary Harold Brown, national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and presidential aide Hamilton Jordan. Mrs. Vance en- tertained Teng's wife at a separate lun- cheon. Rounding out Teng's first full day in Washington was a second meeting with Carter, a state dinner in his honor at the White House and a $750,000, star- spangled gala at the Kennedy Center Opera House, financed by U.S. business corporations and televised nationwide and by satellite to China. Among the guests invited to the state dinner Monday night was former President Richard Nison, who set into motion the sequence of events that culminated in Teng's visit with his breakthrough trip to Peking in February 1972. It was Nixon's first return to the White House since he resigned in disgrace in August 1974 because of Watergate. TENG LEAVES Washington Thur- sday for visits to Atlanta, where he will inspect a Ford Motor Co. automobile assembly plant; Houston, Texas, where he will visit the Lyndon Johnson Space Center and Hughes Tool Co.; and Seat- tle, where he will tour the Boeing Co. aircraft plant. He returns to Peking on Feb. 5. In his arrival speech, Teng warned without elaboration that "the factors making for war are visibly growing." But in an interview published Monday in Time Magazine and The Washington Star, the vice premier made a pointed reference to the Soviet Union as "a hot- bed of war" and said the United States was in "strategic retreat." During the White House welcoming, a crowd of several hundred stood on the Ellipse behind the White House. Some of the crowd waved banners and called for independence for Taiwan. visit our PROFESSIOfAL BOOKS department .... The Profesional Books department has an ever-growing selection of computer refer- ence texts and manuals. Iran's doors o en to Khomlni aContius edom Page o MONDAY'S VIOLENCE exp ed in At nearby Kennedy. Square, other him three blocks to the Tehran U Bakhtiar scrapped plans to go on a late afternoon and early evening after rioters set fire to a regional office of sity campus, kicking and beatin mcemaking mission to Khomei's Moslem militants learned of Bakhtiar's SAVAK, the shah's secret police. State along the way. A police spok vile headquarters i France because latest defiance of Khomeini. radio said they also set fire to a pork' later said the general was hospi t .l Univer- ng him esman talized Programming Langucage References-- ALGO G Assembler Languages BASIC COBO FORTRAN P P S -PSS 'ASCA L 'L-1 NO BOL of the Khomeini's "unacceptable con- dition that Bakhtiar first resign as prime minister. "I will negotiate, but I will not resign," Bakhtiar told a news con- ference. He said he was leaving "doors open" for an accommodation with Khomeini, who wants to replace Bakhtiar's , government with a religiously-oriented republic. The rioting was centered in the poor district of south Tehran, where mobs chanting "Death to Bakhtiar," set fire to the Shokoufenou nightclub, Tehran's largest, a brewery, restaurants that serve liquor and five beer trucks. They threw furniture, including a heavy refrigerator, from windows of what they said were brothels. and sausage factory. Islam prohibits the eating of pork, THE RIOTING spread to 24th of Esfand Square, where 30 persons had been killed in fighting between troops and protesters Sunday. A gang pulled police Lt. Gen. Taghi Latifi from the back seat of his automobile near the square, dragged in a coma. Rioters accused Latifi of having ordered security forces to shoot protesters Sunday. There were no reliable overall casualty reports yesterday. One am- bulance driver said he alone had tran- sported three dead, and one hospital reported receiving three wounded, but the final casualty count was expected to be higher. Complete MIDAS and mTS Documentation. Current Technical iterature including materials on .... Pol Pot forces stem invasion Personal Computers S Microcomputer Design A Artificial Intelligence IV Programming Methodology Software Design 4utoma Theory Microproc'essi ng I 71 __EA I BANGKOK (Reuter) - Prime Minister Pol Pot's ousted Cambodian government claimed yesterday it has recaptured almost the whole of the country's southwestern region and pushed its area of control to within 12 miles of Phnom Penh. The loyalist Radio Democratic Kam- puchea (Cambodia) also said Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge troops were making daily incursions into the capital from the west, south and northwest. IT SAID THAT apart from the southern coastal towns of Kampot and Kef, "we have totally liberated the southwest region." The area controlled by the Khmer Rouge, forced out of Phnom Penh by a Vietnamese-led offensive three weeks ago, extended to Kan Tuot, 12 miles southwest of the capital, the radio said. Diplomatic sources here were unable to confirm the claims and were cautious in their assessment of them. They said the Khmer Roughe was making gains, particularly in Takeo Province south of Phnom Penh, where they apparently have regained control of the town of Takeo and were causing their opponents trouble. The radio made no mention of other provincial towns it claimed in lengthy battle reports yesterday also were surrounded nor did it mention Angkor Wat, the centuries-old complex of tem- ples which it said yesterday were in Khmer Rouge hands. The new government of Heng Samrin, installed in Phnom Penh by the Vietnamese-led offensive, claims con- trol over the whole country and the reports of the rebel SPK news agency quoted by Radio Hanoi and the Vietnam News Agency have made no mention of the fighting. MEANWHILE, Vietnam said more. than 100 Chinese troops crossed the border yesterday, shooting and woun- ding many civilians. Radio Hanoi said the incursion in Lang Son Province was designed to provoke tension. Relations between the two countries deteriorated rapidly after Vietnamese- backed forces ousted the Cambodian government of Pol Pot earlier thisamon- th. China supported the Pol Pot ad- ministration. Business Majors (MBA, BBA) Talk To NBD' About"Futures @0 YOURS! WE'LL BE ON YOUR CAMPUS WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 31st If you're interested in commercial lending, you've probably read about the tremendous growth in the banking industry's "Middle Market"- we ARE the Middle Market. 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If an on-campus interview is not possible, send your resume to: Richard J. Kaylor Professional Employment Manager' NATIONAL BANK of DETROIT Woodward Avenue at Fort Street Detroit, Michigan 48232 THE NEW CHINA-News Agency ac- cused Vietnam of trying to wreck Lunar New Year festivities in the border provinces by opening fire in- discriminately. It said targets included a school and homes. Meanwhile at the United Nations, the Pol Pot government accused Vietnam of pillaging Cambodian works of art and called on the United Nations and its members to condemn and halt these "new crimes." In a letter to Secretary General Kurt Waldheim, Ambassador Thiounn Prasith of Cambodia charged the "Vietnamese army of aggression" with committing crimes "worse than those perpetrated by the Hitlerite hordes during World War II." Among the art objects which he said were seized and taken to Vietnam were statues of l$uddha in solid gold and silver from various pagodas in Phnom Penh. Statues, sculptures and stone bas reliefs from Phnom Penh's National Museum and School of Fine Arts, and from the monuments at Angkor also -were taken, he said. "The government of democratic Kampuchea (Cambodia) calls on the U.N. and all governments of countries which love peace and justice to denoun- ce, condemn and halt these new crimes of Vietnam against the nation and people of Kampuchea, and demands that Vietnam restore to Kampuchea all the stolen art objects and that it respect the national patrimony of Kam- puchea," the letter said. Organizational Meeting for a new U of M chapter of AMERICANS FOR DEMOCRATIC ACTION -a political action group interested in progressive change WED., JAN. 31-7:00 pm 35 ANGELL HALL HAVE A H-EART! SEND TE LOVE OF YOUR 11FFi A 1 _"'' ' AValentine 'spay Message through the Michigan Daily Classifieds ONLY: $1.00 for the first line 50C for each additional line Ads will be accepted beginning Jan. 31 until the deadline at noon, Feb..12. 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