Page4-Tuesday, May 19, 1981-The Michigan Daily Police doubt conspiracy in Pope's shooting I From AP and UPI ROME - Poliee investigating the shooting of Pope John Paul II said yesterday there is only a "very, very remote" chance the accused gunman is part of an international conspiracy. While Interpol agents in other countries were checking statements made by the suspect, Mehmet Ali Agca, about his travels since fleeing a Turkish prison, Italian authorities circulated pictures of two of his hometown friends to Italian newspapers. POLICE SAID THE two whose pic- tures they had, Mehmet Sener, 25, and Oral Gelik, 23, were from Malatya, Turkey, Agca's hometown. Although no arrest warrants are out for them in Italy, Turkish police said they were connected to terrorist murders there. Sener was accused of providing Agca with the gun used to assassinate a Turkish journalist in February 1979. Agca was awaiting trial for that killing when he escaped in November 1979. In Turkey, official sources said a teacher and a former policeman were arrested in connection with the false passport used by Agca. Arrested were Farik Ozgun, whose name was on the passport; Jerhan Ender, a former policeman whose photo was on the passport, and Ibrahim Kurt, suspected of getting the false documents needed for the passport. Ozgun had been arrested earlier in Turkey. ALFREDO LAZZERINI, chief of the anti-terrorist police squad and head of the papal shooting investigation, said there is no evidence the two whose pic- tures are being circulated were ever in Italy or involved in the pope's shooting. He said authorities are trying to check them out to determine if they may have aided Agca in the 18 months between SHORT or LONG Hairstyles for Men and Women DASCOLA STYLISTS .615 E. Liberty-668-9329 " 3739 Washtenaw-971-9975 " 613 N. Maple-761-2733 " 611 E. University-662-0354 his prison escape and the pope's shooting. "He (Agca) may have been a hired killer, or he may not have been," Laz- zerini said. "As for an international conspiracy, it's a very, very remote possibility." Newspapers reported the mother of ,the pope's accused assailant was seeking forgiveness from the pope. John Paul said Sunday in a tape- recorded message for worshippers in St. Peter's Square that he had "sin- cerely pardoned" Agca. VATICAN OFFICIALS said Sunday's papal "pardon" would not affect criminal proceedings against Agca, who is charged with attempted murder. One of the two American women wounded in the attack, Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N.Y., underwent a second operation for a temporary intestinal bypass similar to the one the pontiff "received earlier. Her general condition was described as satisfactory. The other American, Rose Hill, 21, who lives in Frankfurt, West Germany, was in good condition and may be able to leave the hospital in about one week. MEANWHILE, POPE John Paul was moved from the intensive care unit to a general care hospital room, yesterday, his 61st birthday. In St. Peter's Square, where the pope was wounded five days ago, 31 cardinals led prayers in a special birthday Mass, attended by 6,800 people. Cardinal Carlo Confalonieri, 87-year- old dean of the Sacred College of Car- dinals, celebrated the Mass in St. Peter's Basilica. He asked: "Why was the pope at- tacked, he who is the unarmed messenger of the good news, the un- tiring testimony of peace and love on the world's roads. Why raise the armed hand of violence and hatred against one who raises his hands only to embrace children, to caress the sick, to comfort and bless all those who approach him?" The pope remains under 24-hour medical supervision and still-must un- dergo surgery to close the temporary intestinal bypass performed after the shooting. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Habib resumes shuttle to avert Mideast war BEIRUT, Lebanon - U.S. envoy Philip Habib resumed his Damascus- Beirut-Jerusalem shuttle today after a side trip to Saudi Arabia, seeking support for his mission to avert a Mideast war over Syrian anti-aircraft missiles in Lebanon. Not long before Habib touched down at Damascus airport, the official Syrian news agency SANA reported President Hafez Assad had repeated his warning against an Israeli military move against the missiles, indicating he had no intention of giving in to Israeli demands that they be removed. In a Damascus Radio statement late Sunday, Assad said, "Syria will strongly resist any attempt by Israel to intervene in Lebanon's internal af- fairs or to escalate its aggression against the country." He blamed Israel for escalating tension to "justify an attack on Lebanon aimed at liquidating the Palestinian resistance" guerrillas. "In my opinion, Saudi Arabia is not capable of playing any useful role whatsoever," Begin told newsmen yesterday. "It is one of the most corrupt states in the world, a reactionary, Middle Ages regime, concentrated in the hands of one family." GM workers may have more say in decision-makin DETROIT - General Motors Corp. wants to give more decision-making authority to lower-level managers and workers as part of its drive to in- crease productivity, top GM executives said yesterday. "Given the chance, people will do good work and make good decisions," said GM Industrial Relations Vice President Alfred S. Warren. "And they must be given the chance to do so." GM and the UAW are seeking to involve workers more completely in their jobs through various Quality of Work Life programs, often including round- table discussions on local plant problems. Irving Bluestone, former UAW vice president and head of the union's General Motors Department, warned that Quality of Work Life programs won't succeed unless workers are elevated from what he described as "second-class citizen" status. Effort to end strike, falters; union breaks off bar gaining WASHINGTON - Efforts to end the 7/2-week-old United Mine Workers strike against the soft coal industry faltered again yesterday over the issue of job security, and the union broke off bargaining. An hour after negotiations resumed here following a weekend break, chief industry representative Bobby R. Brown told reporters the talks were recessing indefinitely. In intense bargaining over the last several days, the parties have remained deadlocked on the volatile -issue of how much work the coal com- panies can subcontract tq non-union operations. Asked whether the industry had in effect given the union atake-it-or-leave- it offer, United Mine Workers President Sam Church replied: "We've discussed many of the issues. We haven't been able to agree yet so I have to, under our constitution, make periodic reports to update them (the bargaining council) and look for guidance." Church said it would probably be Wednesday or Thursday before the bargainers could be assembled at the UMW's international headquarters here to assess the situation. Author William Saroyan dies of cancer at age 72 FRESNO, Calif. - William Saroyan, the writer who tried "to express the individuality of people" in such works as the Pulitzer Prize-winning play "The Time of Your Life" and the novel "The Human Comedy," died of can- cer yesterday at the age of 72. The Armenian author was only 26 when he became famous in 1934 by win- ning the O'Henry Award for his first major short story, "The Daring Young Man On the Flying Trapeze." It was the product of a period when Saroyan turned out a short story daily for a month, refining his philosophy that "speed and brevity is the point out of which comes unified work." Alabama police search for convicts after prison breakout ATMORE, Ala. - Lawmen used elicopters and bloodhounds yesterday to search for four of eight inmates who broke out of Alabama's maximum security prison. Ron Tate, spokesman for Holman Correctional Facility, said four of the inmates were captured yesterday, apparently as they were trying to make their way to nearby Interstte 65. * I, Wing PIANd2w1eendsHuressons " opee TEST PE f4aciites#o epet YnSher ied revewof ca l ss ndsup'-95 Opotuit t tanfe adr an~31 7-