2A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, March 26, 1998 NATION/WORLD Shooting suspects stole guns, van LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - The grandfather of the I11-year-old charged in a deadly school yard ambush said yesterday the boy admitted to stealing seven guns from him and pulling the fire alarm that forced the victims into the line of fire. But his grandson did not confess to killing four classmates and a teacher, saying he couldn't recall what hap- pened, Doug Golden told The Associated Press yesterday. "He told me he fired some shots;" said Golden, who talked to his grand- son, Andrew Golden, with police in jail after Tuesday's shooting. "He said he shot at a car on the park- ing lot but 'I don't remember anything after that,"'said Golden, the manager of a wildlife area. A Juvenile Court judge on yesterday ordered Andrew and his allegediaccom- plice, 13-year-old Mitchell Johnson, held until an April 29 hearing. The two are charged with five counts of murder and 10 counts ofbattery. They did not enter a plea. After he heard about the shootings at Westside Middle School, Doug Golden drove from hospital to hospital fearing Andrew might be among the wounded. Instead, he was directed to the sheriff's office. "After we got out to the jail and found him, they brought the guns in and I recognized them," he said. Golden said the boy then admitted stealing three rifles, four handguns and several boxes of ammunition from his house. His grandson had his own weapons, Golden said, including a shotgun, two rifles, a crossbow and a bow, but didn't know the combination to the steel vault at his house where they were kept, so he and Mitchell tried breaking in. "We were told the other boy brought a torch and hammer and some other tools to try to break into the gun vault and they couldn't do it," he said. So the two broke into his house and took the rifles from a gunrack and found pistols that were hid "all over the house," Golden said. The boys, who had skipped school Tuesday, also took a white van from Mitchell's house and parked it near the school, Golden said. Police said the boys shot from a wooded hill at the rear of the school. Golden said the guns taken from his house were a 30.06 rifle and a .44-caliber Magnum with scopes and a World War II vintage .33-caliber carbine. Also stolen were a pair of small semiautomatic pis- tols, a .38-caliber Smith and Wesson revolver and a .22-caliber Magnum two- barrel Derringer that didn't work. Police say they recovered a 30.06 rifle and a .44-caliber rifle after tackling the boys - dressed head-to-toe in cam- ouflage - as they ran away from the school toward the van. POLITICAL SCIENCE University of Michigan Web address http://www.umich.edu/-compap SPRING, 1998 101 Introduction to Political Theory explore questions of justice, politics, and power through classical and recent theorists 160 Introduction World Politics explore major theories of international politics as applied to current policy problems 412 Legal Process the relationship between law and politics 423 Urban Politics politics in different political systems 440 Comparative Politics contemporary politics in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Turkey in the 20th century 460 World Politics explore major theories and approaches to international politics 472 International Security Affairs how officials make national security decisions SUMMER, 1998 111 Introduction to American Politics studies the clash of political interests and forces in contemporary forces in American politics 412 Legal Process the relationship between law and politics 440 Comparative Politics contemporary politics in key developing areas in Asia in the 20th century 442 Government & Politics in West Europe citizen power and the evolution of the European union 592 Advance Internship in Washington DC Early Registration - April 6, 1998 Entering the Job Market? OVER 80% OF NEW EMPLOYEES ARE DRUG TESTED KNOW BEFORE YOU GO DO IT YOURSELF TESTING KITS ARE AVAILABLE NOW - ONLY YOU KNOW THE RESULTS - THC - COCAINE - OPIATES - AMPHETAMINE - PCP - Alcohol Call Personal Diagnostic Testing 1-888-410-9858 AROUND THE NATION Employers can be liable for harassment WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court indicated yesterday that it wants to hold employers responsible for a supervisor's sexual harassment of workers, but that management should not be automatically liable in every case. During a hearing on a test case involving a Florida lifeguard who sued after being subjected to crude sexual advances by two of her superiors on the beach, the justices became mired in complexity about how to write a standard of legal blame for employers. "This is like running around Robin Hood's barn," Chief Justice William Rehnquist protested as a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., lawyer for the ex-lifeguard offered the court little help in clarifying employers' legal responsibility. "We're looking for something simple and easy to apply" Rehnquist added. But at the end of the hearing - and one immediately afterward, exploring sexual harass- ment of students by teachers - the justices seemed no closer to a simple legal stan- dard for employer responsibility either in the workplace or the school setting. The former lifeguard involved in the first case, Beth Ann Faragher, is now a lawyer in Denver. Yesterday, before the court began hearing her lawyer argue the case, Faragher was sworn in as a member of the court's bar. She leaned forward fre- quently to catch the fast-paced exchanges between the justices in her case and in the school dispute that followed. Disaster relief bill damage toll well above Si billion. "Californians who have been dev- backed by senate astated by this year's floods are in desperate need of resources to WASHINGTON - Acknowledging restore and rebuild their roads, their the damage wrought by El Nino in homes, their businesses and their California, the Senate has agreed on a lives," said Sen. Barbara Boxer (D- disaster assistance fund containing $190 Calif). million for the state's storm-torn roads, levees, farms and military facilities. 0 estions arise over The disaster aid, expected to win final , Senate approval yesterday or today, is r's death warrant included in a catch-all emergency spending measure that underwrites the NEW LONDON, Conn. - Serial deployment of military personnel in killer Michael Ross has literally signed Bosnia and the Persian Gulf. The bill away his life, putting his name at the bot- will be taken up by the House next tom of a 10-page agreement with a pros- week. ecutor to go to his execution quietly. The disaster assistance has been The pact between Ross and special eagerly awaited in California, where El prosecutor C. Robert Satti could force Nino-related storms have caused an esti- Connecticut - a state that has not car- mated $500 million in damage and ried out the death penalty since 1960 - prompted disaster declarations in 41 of to face an execution soon. 58 counties. Legal experts around the country are And the rain continues. calling the deal unprecedented and say it Nonetheless, 1998 has been a rela- has dangerous implications. A human tively mild year for the state. Past floods, rights group says it was the product of an fires, ice storms and earthquakes have "unholy alliance" of the killer and prose- regularly put California's annual disaster cutor. AROUND THE WOLD Clinton, world share ing an emotional three-hour stop at Kigali's airport, came shortly after he blame for slaughter and first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton listened to a cascade of KIGALI, Rwanda - Four years painful recollections from people ago this spring, when Rwanda sud- who survived the campaign by the denly became awash in blood, Hutu-extremist government that then Clinton administration officials ruled Rwanda to exterminate the resisted appeals for intervention and country's Tutsi minority. spent weeks debating whether the mass killings carried out by Hutu Indonesia to detail extremists should properly be called "genocide." new economic pan Yesterday morning, President Clinton came here and acknowledged that the JAKARTA, Indonesia - Indonesian answer should have been simple. officials say they expect to be able to In just 90 days, more than a half mil- unveil as early as next week a new and lion people died in what Clinton called improved economic reform package - the most rapid "slaughter in this blood- the third here in less than five months. filled century we are about to leave' It They hope the plan will not only stabi- was a tragedy, he added, for which the lize the volatile currency but also revive United States other members of the the ailing banking sector and tackle "international community" must share massive private-sector debt. blame. The past two reform plans failed to "We did not act quickly enough restore investor confidence here and after the killing began," Clinton said. resulted in further steep and debilitating "We did not immediately call these falls for the battered currency, the rupi- crimes by their rightful name: geno- ah. cide." Clinton's acknowledgement, dur- - Compiledfrom Daily wire reports. The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscriptions for fall term, starting in September, via U.S. mail are $85. Winter term (January through April) is $95, yearlong (September through April) is $165. On-campus sub- scriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. 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GRAPHICS Jonathan Wo tz, Editor STAFF: Alex Hogg, Michelle McCombs, Jordan Young. BUSNES .TFF eagn More a s v ;:':oi:";;5 t t J :1v ::::::::::::::::. :::.: .......... :::::::::::..::nom:: v .:.."'v.v k / 'Mill I