Page 12-Friday May 8, 1981-The Michigan Daily KING'S ADVISOR, 12 OTHERS WOUNDED Bomb kills 3 Spanish officers I From AP and UPI MADRID (AP)-Two terrorists on a motorbike pulled alongside an army car yesterday, placed a bomb on its roof, and sped off as it exploded, seriously wounding the military ad- viser to King Juan Carlos, killing three officers, and injuring more than a dozen other people. Police said Basque separatists claimed responsibility. The blast, which rattled windows five stories up in a fashionable shopping district, came 48 hours after the assassination of a Spanish general and three policemen. Angry Spaniards pushed past police lines and shouted for a military takeover and the freeing of Lt. Col. Antonio Tejero, who led the Feb. 23 attempted coup by Spain's paramilitary Civil Guard. THE BASQUE separatist guerrilla organization ETA claimed respon- sibility for the bombing attacks in telephone calls to several newspapers, and Prime Minister Calvo Sotelo sum- moned his joint chiefs of staff into emergency session. Within hours of the bombing, Madrid's military commander ordered all troops confined to barracks, fearing another attack by the terrorists who escaped. Police said the assailants pulled up to the car at a red traffic light, tossed a shopping bag carrying the explosive on its roof and sped off as the blast ripped the car apart and set it aflame. LT. GEN. JOAQUIN de Valenzuela, the 68-year-old military adviser to the king, was seriously wounded but was expected to recover after three hours of stomach surgery, officials said. The blast instantly killed the general's military driver, Manuel Rodriquez Taboada, his bodyguard, Lt. Antonio Noguera, and an aide, Lt. Col. Guillermo Tevar. It was the second terrorist attack this - Rather says he NEW YORK (AP)--Dan Rather says he knew he'd feel pressure to maintain the CBS "Evening News" audience as Walter Cronkite's successor, but he adds, "I had no idea it was going to be what it was. "In human terms, nobody can see and hear that much writ- ten and said about himself, and not be aware of it," Rather said in an interview in his ninth week as anchorman. "I DO WORRY some because so much attention is given to the superficial aspects of broadcasting-who's up and who's down," Rather said. "All that counts, but is far less impor- tant than maintaining a standard of good, solid journalism." The pressure, Rather said, has been from the outside, the media in particular, as well as the opposition, and not from his bosses at CBS. Each of the competing networks repor- tedly has spent at least $1 million promoting its own evening newscast since Cronkite's departure. In the two months since Cronkite's departure, the com- feels pressured peting networks have gained slightly on CBS, long the front- runner in ratings for its evening news show. THERE IS SOME question, however, whether the shift in viewer preference is a result of disaffection with Rather or of the extraordinary promotion for ABC's "World News Tonight" and "Nightly News" on NBC. "It appears Rather is changing viewing habits," said Paul Isacsson, CBS vice president for sales, "and what I think you're seeing is viewers looking around, and most of- them coming back to CBS." When Reagan was shot outside the Hilton Hotel in Washington, ABC-the dominant network during the after- noon with its soap-opera lineup-inherited a huge built-in audience. National ratings for the assassination coverage, however, showed CBS with 33 percent of the audience from 3-9 p.m. EDT, to 30 percent for ABC. week against security forces and came 10 weeks after the abortive right-wing coup. Communist guerrillas killed a general and three policemen Monday. GOVERNMENT sources said the Cabinet, which two months ago sent crack army units to patrol the Basque border with France, might impose har- sh new anti-terrorist measures today. The bombing raised Spain's death toll from political violence this year to 25, including 10 military men since a Feb. 23 coup attempt. Police fanned out through the capital and took specially trained dogs on a fruitless search of the Retiro Park where the combers abandoned their red motorcycle. EVEN THE medical staff attending the wounded general at a Madrid hospital were searched. As a weeping Queen Sofia visited the wounded, right-wing extremists shouting for a new military rebellion marched across Madrid to army headquarters. "Democracy kills!" they shouted, urging the army to seize power, and called "Franco, Franco, Franco," in memory of Spanish dictator Francisco Franco who died in 1975. The protesters also denounced King Juan Carlos, whose support for democracy helped stave off the Feb. 23 coup attempt. % I I 4 w "C'2; Hlr C oesF'The\Net Big Thing' -Rolling Stone tA rfreshingly mature style ofimelodic hard roci. in the sense that classic thow auld a'arrant such a handle... -Time Out, London One of the best things to corne out of Ireland since James Joyce and Guinness." -Melody Maker U2. The Talk of the Town. -Overland "ide Talking Heads' pack your bags tar you On a~r veynwabut , Braj avk yii .. I~ru,. "'7-1 Si U.y W ' I 1CO F 3 ,. I I Va7des 5 5 *e 40