Page 4-Tuesday, July 21, 1981-The Michigan Daily Agca confesses; wants Vatican trial I From AP and UPI ROME - Turkish terrorist Mehmet All Agca told a jury yesterday that he shot Pope John Paul II in St. Peter's Square, but he refused to answer questions on grounds the court had no jurisdiction in crimes committed in Vatican City. Agca, 23, with a full beard and wearing a light green shirt and gray trousers, claimed he was tortured and subjected to "inhuman" conditions in Italian jails since he was arrested and charged with the May 13 attempt on the pontiff's life. THE DEFENDENT claimed he was kept in inhuman conditions in the maximum-security Rebibbia prison near Rome. "I don't understand whether I am in a medieval prison or in a prison of a democratic country," he said in a five-minute statement in Turkish that was translated into Italian for the court. Agca also alleged he was tortured by Italian police and demanded to be han- ded over to the Vatican and be tried by an international tribunal instead of by an Italian court. "On May 13, I was within the con- fines of Vatican City when I shot the head of state of Vatican City," said Agca, 23, wearing a newly grown beard and testifying from a bullet-proof glass cubicle. "WITH THE FIRST shot I wanted to hit the pope," he said. "The second shot went off because of panic. I was sure I would by lynched by the crowd and I even thought of killing myself." Agca said at the start of the trial, "One country cannot try me for what I have done in another foreign coun- try . . . I absolutely don't accept the jurisdiction of the Italian court." The Lateran Treaty of 1929, which spells out relations between the Holy See and Italy, says crimes committed in Vatican City can be tried by Italian authorities. AFTER AGCA'S court-appointed lawyer, Pietro D'Ovidio, gave an opening statement, Chief Judge Severino Santiapichi ruled the court has jurisdiction, When he asked is the suspect wished to remain silent, as is his right, Agca said he would not respond because he didn't accept the court's jurisdiction. Agca, who sat facing the judge and a jury of two women and. four men, threatened to refuse food if he is not tried by the Vatican within five months. Official concurs spies operate on (Continued from Page1) said he preferred not to comment prior to that meeting. In the meantime, a memorial service was held for Chen Saturday, both in Ann Arbor and at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh where Chen was an assistant professor in statistics. ACCORDING TO Prof. Morris DeGroot, former head of the CMU statistics department, about 170 people came to the memorial service from as far away as Chicago and New York. He said it was about "one-third memorial service and two-thirds political rally." After the service the crowd marched through the streets of Pittsburgh from the CMU campus to the University of Pittsburgh. CONTACT LENSES Soft contact lenses $169 Daily extended wear lenses $235 Extended wear lenses $350 Hard contact lenses - 2 pair $150 Includes all professional fees Dr. Paul Uslan, Optometrist 545 Church Street 769-1222 by appointment campus The initial announcements said the agents of the KMT (the ruling party in Taiwan) were not to be allowed at the service, though DeGroot said there were a few people who were suspected KMT agents. "Many of the students wore masks" for fear of retribution said DeGroot, who added it "would be good to try and find out hopefully by some in- vestigations and hearings" who the suspected KMT agents are. IN ANN ARBOR, none of the atten- dants of the service wore masks but the service did have a distinct political flavor. "It should have been more on human rights - not so much on Taiwanese in- dependence," said a woman from Hong Kong who was a friend of Chen's. The right wing of the Taiwanese In- dependence Movement (TIM) was in charge of the service and they made it sound as if Chen was on the right, when in fact he was on the left wing of TIM, she said. Toward the end of the service there was a call for speakers from the floor - and a subsequent small response - maybe for fear of being identified, said statistics department Chairman Micael Woodroofe. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Latest hunger striker on verge of death BELFAST, Northern Ireland-IRA hunger striker Kieran Doherty lay dying of starvation yesterday and there were signs his death could trigger a political crisis in the neighboring Irish Republic. A spokesman for Sinn Fein, the outlawed Irish Republican Army's political wing, said Doherty was "lapsing in and out of consciousness" on his 60th day without food. He said Doherty has been given last rites of the Roman Catholic Church and that his death was considered "just a matter-of time." Doherty, 25, who is servinga 22-year term in Maze Prison for possession of guns and explosives, was elected to the Irish Parliament in Dublin on June 11. His death would mean an empty seat in the Cavan-Monaghan district, leaving Irish Prime Minister Garret FitzGerald's minority government dangerously exposed. Interest rates up; stock market sinking NEW YORK-Interest rates rose sharply yesterday, sending the stock market reeling to its worst loss in six months and also depressing the prices of gold and other commodities while boosting the dollar. The rise in interest rates came as President Reagan heard complaints from European leaders in Ottawa about the high level ofu.S. interest rates, which French President Francois Mitterand said were contributing to unemployment in his country. The increase in interest rates did not affect the 20.5 percent prime bank lending rate but affected most other rates. The discount rate on 6-month Treasury bills at yesterday's auction was 15.318 percent, up from 14.23 per- cent a week ago and the highest rate in almost two months. Bomb disrupts Swiss airport ZURICH, Switzerland-A powerful bomb went off yesterday at the un- derground railway station of Zurich's international airport, slightly injuring five people and causing about $50,000 in damage, police said. The bombing, for which Armenian militants claimed responsibility, was the second in slightly more than 24 hours in usually tranquil Switzerland. About three hours after yesterday's explosion, an anonymous caller to a news agency in Geneva said the blast was the work of the "June 9th Organization," which also took responsibility for an explosion Sunday after- noon outside the federal parliament building in Bern. The organization takes its name from the date last month an avowed Ar- menian commando was arrested in the fatal shooting of a Turkish consular employee in midtown Geneva. Bear's death sentence upheld MOUNT VERNON, Ill.-A state appeals court yesterday upheld a death sentence for an 18-year-old brown bruin who bit a young camper, but lawyers on Tommy the Bear's side say the fight for his life isn't over. "We'll exhaust all out legal options before we let him go," said Johnson County State's Attorney J. Louis Wingate after the Illinois Appellate Court agreed the bear should be tested for rabies. Attorney Thomas Keefe Jr., who sought that court order on behalf of the bitten camper and his parents, went to the appeals court when camp officials ignored the ruling, observing instead a Johnson County restraining order keeping the bear alive and placing the bear in quarantine. The bear bit 11-year-old Scott Burrelsman on July 7 when the boy reached into Tommy's pen at feeding time despite a handler's warnings to keep clear. Bar owners 'off the hook' LANSING-Gov. William Milliken signed into law yesterday a bill designed to take off the hook bar owners who say they unwittingly violated the campaign finance law during last year's battle to lower the drinking age. The measure, sponsored by the lawmaker who headed up the drinking age campaign, exempts from fines all those who contributed $200 or more to a ballot proposal before Oct. 15 without registering as a ballot committee as required by law. It has been estimated that 300 bar owners violated the law when con- tributing last year to the 19 is Fair Committee which sought unsuccessfully to lower the legal drinking age from 21 to 19. The Michigan Council on Alcohol Problems, which supports the higher drinking age, said 130 liquor license holders have been fined just over $100,000, or an average of $750 each. bA NEW cr.ofGarden-fresh, all-you-can-eat SALAD BAR! INI