errosecution uses state secrets in trial e$f Russian di ssident in Moscow THE BATTALION THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1978 Page 5 PUU. United Press International MOSCOW — The prosecu- in the trial of Anatoly ()l ti haranksy has introduced a yjj emcnt signed by American ^ respondent Robert Toth as , 110| , t of its espionage ease against Soviet dissident. panel of experts testified / t information Sheharanksy (||1) e Western reporters included ,,11 ;C Berets. ri .A;t the trial of activist Alexan- s u Ginzburg in Kaluga, 110 lht ^'es way, the court spent much he day wading through the j ]f ious process of identifying * entering into evidence some ^0 d( >c uments. ^ t Tinzlnirg s wife was barred , n the trial for a second day, his mother, who was allowed attend, reported the docu- nt processing was so boring ctators were falling asleep on I Ilf benches. )uring the closed session of l haransky s trial, the court f [i d a reading of transcripts of summer s KGB interrogation d’oth, a veteran Los Angeles ;sr s correspondent. 1 heharansky, who faces a pos- irmine death penalty, was accused wo^assing information about sen- | nt f'e Soviet defense industries litdt/'othj The Soviets claim Toth (Jgnjj an agent for U S. military in- jof^genbe. ^. heharansky has denied the s ^ t; ionage charges — and Toth 2g | t , denied the Soviet accusations 1U I Mnst both him and ,,, haransky. jjoth w as arrested in Moscow rj^uP 11, 1977, and interrogated for 13 hours by KGB officials at Lefortovo Prison on June 14 and 15. He was forced to sign inter rogation transcripts before being allowed to leave the Soviet Union at the end of his three- year tour of duty in the Times’ Moscow bureau. A panel of security experts — presumably from the KGB — was called in to examine documentary evidence of the in formation Shcharansky provided Toth and other reporters. A court spokesman said, “The experts then read out the text of their written conclusion saying that the information on the de fense industry of the U.S.S.R. and its installations which Shcharansky is said to have for warded to the West is absolutely secret and constitutes a state se cret of the U.S.S.R.” The afternoon session, which was open, was devoted to evi dence on a second charge against Shcharansky — that of anti- Soviet agitation and propaganda. At the Moscow courthouse, Shcharansky s relatives waited outside until a court official summoned his brother Leonid and escorted him inside. The defendant’s mother, Ida Milgrom, rushed to the bar ricade and asked that she also be allowed inside but was told “not House resolution protests Soviet dissidents’ trials United Press International WASHINGTON — The House gave final congressional passage Wednesday to a resolu tion deploring Soviet trials of dis sidents, rejecting attempts to tie the issue to arms limitations talks. The Senate had approved the resolution Tuesday. The resolution reminded the Soviet Union that it signed the Helsinki accord on protection of human rights, and continued: “‘It is the sense of Congress that the trials of Anatoly Shcharansky and others who have defended the Helsinki final act are matters of deep concern to the American people; that these deplorable events inevita bly affect the climate of our rela tions and impose obstacles of the building of confidence and coop eration between our two coun tries. ” A persistent bipartisan effort to strengthen the resolution to a demand for a suspension of arms talks lost. Rep. Clement Zablocki, DWis., chairman of the House International Relations Commit tee and floor manager of the reso lution, said the Soviets’ actions in trials of Shcharansky, Alexander Ginzburg and Viktoras Petkus “raise a question of the credibil ity of the Soviet Union. today — maybe tomorrow. Mrs. Milgrom told reporters: “I regard this as a mockery of a mother not to be allowed into this courtroom. "I cheered for joy when I heard my son was going on trial because I thought I would finally get the chance to see him.” Shcharansky, fighting for his life against charges of “high treason” because of his contacts with Toth, has been held in communicado for the last 17 months. About 20 other relatives and friends stood vigil outside the courthouse, including Boris and Natalia Katz, two friends who have been refused permission to send their baby daughter, Jes sica, to the United States for treatment of a rare digestive sys tem ailment. In Kaluga, Mrs. Irina Ginzburg Wednesday pleaded with the court to allow her back inside to witness the* third day of the trial of her husband. She was expelled from the court twice Tuesday — once for shouting “it’s a lie at a prosecution wit ness. Mrs. Ginzburg sent two notes to the judge Wednesday asking permission to attend the trial again. There was no response from the court and at noon Mrs. Ginzburg was still outside, stand ing and talking to the wife of im prisoned dissident Yuri Orlov. Shcharansky faces possible death by firing squad. Ginzburg faces a maximum 10-year prison term. Most U.S. disasters occur in thirteen Sunbelt states United Press International ATLANTA — William H. Wilcox, head of the Federal Disaster Assis tance Administration, said Wednes day that more than 50 percent of all the disasters in the United States occur in 13 Sunbelt states. Wilcox said such disasters as flash floods, hurricanes and tornadoes cause more destruction in the states of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Ken tucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and New Mexico than in all the remain ing 37 states. That area includes the tornado belt stretching across the South as well as the vast Gulf and South At lantic coasts which are usually the first to bear the brunt of any hur ricanes. Tom Creedle, FDAA regional di rector for the Southeast, said, with the exception of Alabama, all the states in the region have a disaster plan. “Alabama is working on one,” he said. Wilcox, who took part in a review of disaster preparedness plans with regional federal agency heads, said although many governments have emergency plans, most individuals don’t. “There has to be a high occurence of flooding before people will even buy flood insurance,” Wilcox said. “Our experience in recent years is about three-quarters of the damage we reimburse for is caused by flood ing, he said. Wilcox said that even in hur ricanes and tornadoes most of the damage to property is from flooding and not high winds. “The FDAA has budgeted this year some $1 billion to relieve all types of disaster victims but this fig ure doesn’t include relief from state and local governments, insurance companies and losses not covered by any agency,” Wilcox said. “This figure doesn’t even come close.’’ Wilcox also said there is enough time before many natural disasters such as tornadoes and flooding to warn people. “But with maxi-disasters such as leaking gas from derailed trains, we must depend on the people moving as quickly as possible,” he said. He said the FDAA doesn’t provide as sistance until all state and local re sources have been exhausted. “For example, we recommended that the President turn down the Georgia shrimpers’ request for dis aster aid because all state supplies hadn’t been exhausted,” Wilcox said. Vietnamese doctors to search for missing American soldiers United Press International HONOLULU — Vietnamese doctors and government officials who will try to account for Ameri cans still missing in Vietnam have arrived in Hawaii to be briefed on techniques for identifying the re mains of war victims. The six-member group’s arrival from Hanoi to inspect the U.S. Joint Casualty Resolution Center and Central Identification Laboratory is the first visit by Vietnamese gov ernment officials to the United States since the war, except for ap pearances at the United Nations. The visit followed an announce ment by Phan Hien, vice foreign minister, that Vietnam is now ready for establishment of full, uncondi tional diplomatic relations with the U.S. The establishment of full dip lomatic ties has been delayed by the MIA problem. Shad hut hi sm 'iousl (the! < CS olar flare will isrupt power. slow down Skylab, 7 u pt n * m &* c o mmunications Eddie Dominguez '66 Joe Arciniega '74 Unitud Press International ^UMpER, Colo. — A govern- h | scientist said Wednesday a \e solar flare expected within ext 10 days would affect the I^Qfled Skylab space station and bly disrupt power and com- //LM C atjons throughout the north- hiited States. .ie flare will definitely slow IT \ down Skylab,” said Gary Heckman, chief of the Space Environmental Services Center at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis tration. “We can’t say what its exact im pact will be, but the flare will slow it down.” The orbit of the 84-ton orbiting space station has deteriorated more indness link seen birth control pill United Press International TLE ROCK — Reports that cases of blindness may be re- F to birth control pills are in- ag, says an Arkansas eye doc- % Chamologist R. Sloan Wilson of M * Rock said the National Regis- M Drug-Induced Occular Side ^ s is hearing from doctors na- > ide whose patients stricken yCfbh'ndness were using “the registry, part of the Univer- ■ Arkansas medical school in ■•Rock, does not have any way ire the ratio of women with tl problems to those who take ;ontroI pills, however, Wilson “J" There also is no way to prove —Jl is at fault, he said. ■Cve only thing we can say is that does seem to be an incidence people not prone to this be- mf Wilson said. There have * V number of reports in medical are recently that have seemed } it a little more authority that is a connection between the pills routinely are warned the pill may cause vascular problems such as blood clots, strokes and even heart attacks. The eye is just one part of the body where blood vessels may be affected, Wilson said. “From what we know, those who smoke and the pill don’t get along too well. Smoking heats up the cir culatory system,” he said. Complete Line of Used Books. ROTHER’S BOOKSTORE 340 Jersey — At the Southgate rapidly than expected since the last crew left it in 1974. NASA flight controllers are attempting to keep it in orbit until at least the 1979 space shuttle flight. Officials say unusual solar activity may be partially responsible for the station’s deteriorating 240-mile-high orbit. Heckman said next week’s solar flare was expected to be similar to Tuesday’s flare — the largest ever seen on X-ray. That flare produced record-breaking surges of ultraviolet radiation and blacked-out high fre quency radio communication in the North Atlantic and European sec tions. “It principally affected ship to shore communication and some avi ation communication,” Heckman said. The government scientist also said a magnetic storm from the Tuesday flare was expected within 72 hours, but it was not expected to cause serious power distribution problems because it was “too far from the East on the sun. He said the magnetic storm’s most noticeable effect would be the appearance of auroral displays — the Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights — over northern states. Heckman, however, said sci- enstists were 70 percent certain a second major flare would occur within the next 10 days and would cause possibly serious communica tion and power systems disruptions. “People operating communica tions, power and satellite systems will be aware of the flare,” he said. “Those on the streets probably won’t know what’s going on.” Heckman said power companies in Newfoundland would be crippled by the anticipated flare as well as electrical firms in the northeastern United States. “But it’s like the predicting the weather, he said. “We can’t say exactly when it will happen.” If you want the real thing, not frozen or canned . . . We call It “Mexican Food Supreme.” Dallas location: 3071 Northwest Hwy 352-8570 Beer and wine are complimentary during your meal? Salad is served at your table in a bucket. 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