The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 11, 1980 News briefs U.S. seeks allies commitment BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI) The United States sought a commitment yesterday from its European allies that Soviet intervention in Poland would automatically trigger political, economic and diplomatic sanctions, U.S. officials said. "The more agreement we can reach here, the greater the deter rence," one senior official said refer ring to possible sanctions allied foreign ministers, including Secretary of State Edmund Muskie, will discuss today and tomorrow. Secretary of Defense Harold Brown warned that a Soviet invasion of Poland also would spur . the 'arms race. He was addressing NATO defense ministers who ended their two-day meeting by stepping up the watch on Poland. The precautionary measures they adopted included deployment of four U.S. Airborne Warning and Control aircraft along the East-West frontier Lennon fans commit suicide By United Press International A 16-year-old Florida girl and a 30-year-old Utah man both despon dent over the murder of John Lennon killed themselves in separale in cidents, authorities said yesterday. Jean Costello, of Brooksville, Fla., said Lennon's death was the "straw that broke the camel's back" and led to her 16-year-old daughter's suicide. She found Colleen Costello dead on the floor of her bedroom when she Leaders want PEKING (UPI) Impatient reformers in China's Communist Party leadership appear to have ac celerated their drive to remove Chairman Hua Guofeng, who was handpicked by the late Mao Tse-tung, diplomatic sources said yesterday. The reformers led by Vice Chair man Deng Xiaoping apparently are aiming to oust Hua frqm the party boss position earlier than expected, possibly before the end of the year, the sources said. If successful, the drive would effec tively complete the placement of Deng's proteges and intimate allies at the top of China's party and government leadership and signal an end to the reign of top leaders iden tified with Mao. The plan appears to entail having Hua replaced by Hu Yaobang, a Deng associate for some 40 years and cur rently mentor of daily party affairs as secretary general' of the secretariat. Hua would be shunted to the side, Jenrette submits resignation WASHINGTON (UPI) Rep. John Jenrette, D-S.C., convicted on an Abscam bribery charge, announced his immediate resignation from Con gress yesterday, thus preventing an expected House vote to expel him during the final days of his term. The third-term congressman an nounced his resignation in a choked voice at the end of 45 minutes of testimony in his own defense to the House ethics committee, which was trying to rush House action before Congress adjourns. "I am submitting my resignation to the speaker," Jenrette said. Jenrette, speaking almost in audibly, added the words: "Pain . . . more than you will ever know . . . Wish you godspeed." But Jenrette's letter of resignation did not get to the speaker's office before it closed for the night yester day. Aides said the letter had not been completed in time. A prolonged ethics investigation, which had already resulted in a com- Solidarity risks more tension WARSAW, Poland (UPI) In a move that could sharply increase the tension between Polish workers and the government, the nation's indepen dent union leadership yesterday call ed for the release of political prisoners and accused authorities of "continuing acts of oppression." Meeting in Gdansk, leaders of the 10-million member labor coalition Solidarity said they would set up a commission to defend political prisoners, whose imprisonment it called "unacceptable." The Solidarity statement was issued just hours after the official newspaper of the Polish army warn ed the unions to confine themselves to labor matters and not associate with "anti-socialist forces," the govern ment's euphemism for political dissenters. It was one of a number of similar warnings issued recently by the Polish army newspaper, by the government and by Poland's Warsaw Pact neighbors. In Moscow, Soviet Union Defense Minister Dmitry Ustinov also issued a fresh warning on Poland, saying the Kremlin would never allow "imperialist forces" to undermine "the positions of the socialist coun tries, specifically of socialist Poland, the Soviet Tass news agency reported. "In this situation," Ustinov said, "the CPSU (Communist Party) is to eavesdrop on Soviet troop movements. A U.S. spokesman in West Berlin said the Soviet Union had lifted restrictions for Western military observers along the Polish-East Ger man border, closed to them since Nov. 29. The ban expired yesterday and has not been renewed, the spokesman said, refusing to give further details. The NATO ministers were careful to avoid any military action that might inflame the tension. However, Muskie said NATO must not ignore the possiblity of an invasion of Poland by the Soviet Union. "Poland is 200 miles from NATO territory. NATO is created to defend the territory and there is the possibili ty of the use of force," Muskie told reporters aboard the plane that took him to Brussels. "NATO cannot be insensitive to the use ..of military force. NATO cannot prudently ignore the use of force." came home for lunch Tuesday afternoon. In Salt Lake City, a 30-year-old man despondent over the murder of Len non placed a pistol in his mouth and . pulled the trigger, police said. They said Michael E. Craig died about 11:35 p.m. Tuesday from a, .25-caliber bullet wound in the head. Witnesses told police Craig became upset after learning Lennon had been shot to death. Hua out soon perhaps as a vice chairman, the sources said. Deng reportedly told visitors that Hu is due for a promotion. Hu has been performing some of the func tions once reserved for the chairman and has hosted Communist Party delegations from Spain and Italy, a role usually played by Hua. He also has made a number of key policy speeches. Hua, by contrast, has "dropped out of sight" recently, the sources said. So far, these indications amount on ly to what one source called "straws in the wind." But he said they have been coming "thick and fast" in re cent weeks that diplomatic analysts believe they signal an accelerated campaign to unseat Hua. "There seems to be a momentum building up," one source said, adding the momentum has become so strong that some analysts are revising their earlier belief that Hua would remain chairman until at least the next party congress, expected in the first half of 1981. mittee finding of guilt, will end today at a meeting called to decide what to report to the House. Jenrette said he is resigning to devote full time to preparation for a hearing next Wednesday before U.S. District Judge William B. Bryant on his motion to set aside his conviction. Seated with elbows on the witness table, frequently appearing to be close to tears, Jenrette predicted Bryant will set aside the verdict on grounds the prosecution violated his due process rights in staging the sting. But that will be too late to salvage his final days in Congress, as Jenrette pointed out. He was defeated for re election, an event he blames on the Abscam conviction. Jenrette and John Stowe, a former South Carolina millionaire whom Jenrette described as now "not worth two nickels," were convicted in Oc tober of accepting a $25,000 bribe from undercover FBI agents in their Abscam sting. conducting a consistent and firm policy of peace, combining it with the strengthening of the defense potential of the Soviet state . . . perfecting the armed forces and supplying them with everything necessary." In Brussels, Belgium, NATO defense ministers met to draft economic and political sanctions that could be imposed on the Soviet Union should it decide to send its troops into Poland. Fears that the Soviets would in tervene militarily last week pro mpted Solidarity, the nation's largest labor coalition, to counsel its member .unions against "unauthorized" strikes. Since then, the labor situation has been calm. However, Solidarity appeared to have again put itself on a collision course with the government by issu ing a statement with clear political overtones. The statement signed by Lech Walesa and other national labor leaders accused the government of "continuing acts of oppression" but stopped short of making a strike threat. "Releasing political prisoners and stopping repression for convictions is a necessary condition for restoring the climate of confidence between the authorities and society and this will serve to deepen the process of democracy in Poland," the statement said. "THE SALE"..ofI9BO Save 20 SAVE UP TO 40% Five Specially Selected Systems MO lag • 9 .2) :;..1) - • 4di 4 44 System System 1 "THE STARTER" Technics SA-101 Reg. Price: $503 Pioneer CL-40 8.1. C. 920 Complete SALE PRICE: $299 95 Sanyo 2016 System "THE PLEASURE" Kenwood KR-710 Pioneer CL-70 8.1. C. 60Z Complete ., Reg. Price: $74495 Pioneer SX-780 Pioneer MCL-3 with cartridge SALE PRICE: $549 System 3 RTR G-40 "THE BEST BUY" Pioneer SX-780 BOSE 301 Technics SLQ-2 Compleie Reg. Price: $lO5O Kenwood KR-5030 8.1. 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Goresh said Chapman urged him to stay at the Dakota for the siifer's return. "I'd wait," Goresh quoted Chapman as saying. "You never knq if you'll see him again . . . It's. possible he could go to Spain or somewhe tonight and you'll never get your album signed." At about II that night as ennon returned to his apartment where Chapman was waiting. Chapmaqillegedly pulled a gun out of his jacket and shot Lennon five times in the headliest and arm. THE PdN STATE SKI TEAM 1/ will hi f a meeting for all per . ll s ons! , erested in X-country rac ing. iil se meet in the IM Wrestl ing Fp)m, 5.6:30 p.m., Thursday, Dec. il li l ' ;; _ AtTHENTIC PI ZA onl t Fre Delivery Fron 4:30 pm Daily 538 E. College Ave. 500! useful and exe r pising steps fro' the corner. Gariler St. 23-4-8616 .. — P o,i CHRISTMAS SPECIALS SAVE 50% WE'VE RECENTLY COM PLETED OUR YEAR END INVENTORY. 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A small group of mourners stood out side the Manhattan funeral home where Lennon's body was taken, but two policemen told UPI the body was moved from the funeral home at mid-afternoon in extreme secrecy for cremation in suburban Hartsdale, N.Y. Friends and acquaintances described Chapman, who faces 15 years to life in prison if convicted of the second-degree murder charge against him, as a drug user, "born-again" Christian, jilted lover and child of a broken home. "I couldn't help myself," a police source quoted Chapman as saying im mediately after Lennon was shot to death Monday night. "Most of me didn't want to do it, but a little of me did." Lennon's wife, Yoko Ono, said she was asked about the killer by her 5-year-old son, Sean, and told him "he was pro bably a confused person." "I told Sean what happened," she said. "I showed him the picture of his father on the cover of the paper and explained the situation. I took Sean to the spot where John lay after he was shot. Lennon's fortune estimated at $235 million UN wirephoto NEW YORK (UPI) John Lennon, who considered himself a socialist and a "working-class hero," amass ed a fortune of up to $235 million. Lennon owned - luxury apartments, mansions, estates, farms, pure-bred cattle, a twin-engine plane and a 62-foot yacht. He also owned 25 percent of Apple Records, which holds copyrights to the Beatles' music, and received "Sean wanted to know why the person shot John if he liked John. I explained that he was probably a confused person." Ono announced a 10-minute silent prayer vigil for the slain rock star at 2 p.m. Sunday "wherever you are." There will be no funeral. Lennon's body was taken from the city medical examiner's office about noon yesterday to the Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel in Manhattan and later moved again for cremation. A prison guard one of four assigned to a continuous suicide watch on Chap man said he had not heard the accus ed killer say "two words since this morn ing" when he was screened by hospital psychiatrists. The television in the day room near Chapman's room was turned down so Chapman could not hear news reports of Lennon's death. "We're being really careful because of the nature of this," Bellevue Hospital spokeswoman Sandy Smith said. "He's not a screaming crazy," Smith said. "It was an uneventful night. Everything is really normal." Dr. Henry Weinstein, of the Forensic Psychiatric Unit at Bellevue, was ex pected to head the psychiatric examina tion of Chapman, but the hospital said it would have no comment on the results until . they were presented in court. Dr. Marvin Stone, a ward doctor at Bellevue, said Chapman seemed "a little bit depressed. He would like to know how his family is doing. He has asked about his wife and his mother." • Stone added Chapman's appetite "is a $l2 million a year in royalties. In an interview in the current edition of Playboy magazine, Lennon called himself "an instinctive socialist." "That meant I think people should get their false teeth and their health looked after," he said. "But apart from that, I worked for the money and I wanted to be rich." little off . . . At the moment he doesn't seem to have any active plans for suicide. He asked for less noise." A police source who was present when Chapman was interviewed immediately after Lennon was shot to death said the suspect told detectives, "Most of me didn't want to do it, but a little of me did. I couldn't help myself.': In Chicago, David Moore, the ex ecutive director of the Duncan YMCA, remembered Chapman as a "fantastic kid" when they worked together in Fort Chaffee, Ark., at an Indochinese reset tlement camp in 1975. "He was one of the most compas sionate staff members we had," Moore said. "He came to be a team coor dinator, one of five in the entire camp. It was a pretty responsible job for a guy on ly 20. "He was a dedicated Christian who had been !born again' with a firm religious faith," Moore said. "He was very much a Beatle fan and played their music constantly. I can remember one night we had a discussion at home, about that comment by one of the Beatles (Lennon) that they were more important to the world . than Jesus Christ. "I can remember him saying, 'Who the hell are they to compare themselves to Jesus?' He harped on it a little. He thought they were being arrogant." Moore said Chapman was "madly in love" with a girl named Jessica but said he "became unglued when he couldn't cut it in school and the girl told him to pack off. That's when he headed for Hawaii, where he learned his parents The Daily Collegian Thursday, Dec. 11, 1980-5 were getting divorced. Then he had a nervous breakdown." Moore said the last time he saw Chap man was in 1978 in Geneva, Switzerland. "He told me he had tried to commit suicide in Honolulu, that he felt life wasn't worth living," Moore said. At Chapman's arraignment, his court appointed lawyer, Herbert Adlerberg, said his client had attempted suicide a second time within the last six weeks with the same .38-caliber Charter Arms revolver he allegedly used to kill Lennon on Monday night. Detectives continued their search for clues to a motive for the slaying, but ap peared as baffled as Chapman's friends and acquaintances. "We don't know why (he did it)," Deputy Inspector Peter Prezioso said. Police said it was not known how he smuggled his snub-nosed revolver onto the flight from Honolulu but pointed out that baggage which is not carried on the plane is not subjected to the xray ex amination of hand baggage. Chapman was carrying the purchase slip for the gun when he was arrested, police said. Chapman, who played Beatles music at high volume for hours a day and, like the slain rock star, married a woman of Japanese descent, eventually became so obsessed with his idol that he signed out from his last job in Honolulu as 'John Lennon." Chapman was lurking arouna Len non's apartment building for three days before the shooting to get the musician's autograph on his comeback record, "Double Fantasy." When the Beatles were at the height of their populari ty, the Rev. David Noebel, a right-wing Christian crusader, described them as a Communist plot "to make a generation of American youth mentally ill and emotionally unstable." To that, Beatle Paul McCartney replied: "Us Com munists? Why, we can't be Communists. We're the world's number one capitalists."