Page 14-Saturday July 19, 1980-The Michigan Daily Assassination squad tries to kill former Iran prime minister PARIS (AP) - A three-man assassination squad posing as jour- nalists made it as far as Shahpour Bakhtiar's apartment door yesterday, but their attempt to kill the former- Iranian prime minister collapsed in a wild shootout that left a French policeman and awoman neighbor dead. All three gunmen were captured, one of them wounded, police said. Three policemen were also reported wounded in the gun battle. THE 65-YEAR-OLD Bakhtiar, leader of Iranian exile forces opposed to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's revolutionary regime, was unharmed in the attack, which he blamed on "professionals that the government in Tehran sent to France." Police said the captured trio all claimed to be Arabs - but they could not be immediately identified. The Iranian revolutionaries have established close relations with some Arab militants. In Tehran, a group calling itself the Guards of Islam said in a statement read over Tehran Radio that it had con- demned "the traitor Bakhtiar" to death according to "holy divine law." It ac- cused the former prime minister of having masterminded an anti-gover- nment conspiracy in Iran that repor- tedly was crushed last week when some 100 "plotters" were arrested. THE STATEMENT did not mention yesterday's abortive assassination bid, but it said another communique would be issued outlining the "revolutionary execution of the convict." A police spokesman gave this account of the attack: The gunmen gained entry to the apar- tment building in the posh Paris suburb of Neuilly by telling.a policeman out- side they were journalists and showing press cards. THEY THEN went up to Bakhtiar's third-floor apartment and rang the bell. When the door was opened, the men drew pistols and started shooting, but were unable to force their way in. One police guard in the hall was killed and another wounded. A neighbor, Yvonne Stein, 45, heard the noise, opened the door, and was shot. She died later ina hospital. The gunmen fired several times into the apartment's reinforced door, but af- ter failing to get it open they ran back downstairs, where they were faced with two more policemen. A gunfight en- sued, both policemen were wounded, but one of them shot a terrorist and for- ced the others to surrender. A POLICE spokesman said protec- tion for Bakhtiar had been increased just 48 hours earlier because of the con- tinued threats against his life from Iran. The guards had been given machine pistols in addition to their normal sidearms, and it was probably because of these, guns that one policeman was able to arrest all three, the spokesman said. The Foreign Ministry denounced the attack and said the French government "will pursue the inquiry with the greatest vigor and will take all the necessary steps required." Iranian revolutionaries, chiefly judge Sadegh Khalkhali, have vowed that death squads will track down Bakhtiar, who was the shah's last prime minister. I U 6 A MEMBER OF.' the squad which attempted to assassinate former Iranian Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar yesterday morning is arrested in front of the building where the attack occurred at Neuilly, France, near Paris. Regents okay 13 per cent hike in tuition costs for 1980-81 (Continuedfrom Page3) spending now, since he said he would probably not support as large a tuition increase next year. University President Harold Shapiro said ifa tuition increase of less than 13 per cent were instituted, "the (Univer- sity) would not fall apart. But we think that's the easy way out." SHAPIRO AND. other University executive officers told the Regents they doubted the University's high quality programs could be maintained without a substantial increase in the student portion of support for the University. Michigan Student Assembly President Marc Breakstone said in a telephone interview yesterday he was upset by the tuition hike: "The thing I object to most is that students are bearing the greatest burden. It seems ironic that students are bearing the brunt of hard times but aren't being compensated proportionally in terms of quality of education. "It's just not fair that students are paying so much, and the money is going to some areas from which they do not benefit directly," he said. BREAKSTONE ALSO agreed with Tuition Rates Per Term, Academic 1980-81 Resident Non-resident Undergraduate - Lower Division ...... $ 682 (up $ 72) $2060 (up $236) Undergradute - Upper Division .......768 (up$ 86) 2218 (up $254) Graduate .............1054 (up $120) 2308 (up $264) Dentistry .............1584 (up $180) 3030 (up $346) Law ................1172 (up $168) 2518 (up $364) Medicine.............1732 (up $198) 3336 (up $382) Candidacy............ 612(up $ 68) 612(up $ 68) Dunn that the University should have attempted to decide which programs will lose money before deciding on how much tuition would have to go up to support the remaining programs. The Regents incorporated the tuition and salary increases into a $246 million general fund budget - an increase of about $20.8 million over the 1979-80 budget. The general fund budget, as well as the total operating budget of $622.5 million, is based on an increase in state appropriations of three per cent. IN THE EVENT the state's ap- propriation increase is less than three per cent, the following contingencies could be enacted, according to Vice- President for Academic Affairs Billy Frye: * Temporarily limiting or freezing expenditures from central accounts; * Replacing some general fund ex- penditures with funds from indirect sources; and, 9 Enforcing a hiring/promotion freeze of whatever magnitude and direction might be required to offset the problem. SHAPIRO STRESSED the importan- ce of the nine per cent salary increase, saying the University pays less to faculty than some of its peer in- stitutions. The president also pointed out the necessity of cutting back some Univer- sity programs, citing a state study that said the University is $25 million to $30 million underfunded. "The University has to get smaller," he said. Laro said, "I think the nine per cent increase in compensation is well justified." Dunn, however, said he did not sup- port the increase because it applies to all employees across the board - he said employees who earn $20,000 per year, for example, are entitled to a larger increase than those who earn $50,000. I I I 0 I