The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 21, 1980, Image 9

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    THE BATTALION
FRIDAY, MARCH 21, 1980
Page 9
orld
oviets won t
iscuss SALT
mies use
od said,
rked since I
:al goverm
andsat pic!»|
Hite infon
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results, he si
ies can use jg;
imates, hesii;, United Press International
can usethtflv WASHINGTON — The Soviet
certain MclUnion is refusing to discuss with the
said authoriwnited States measures it must take
predictedrett^o comply with the terms of the un-
ts months in gratified SALT II arms limitation trea-
rcent depetkty, diplomatic sources said
Thursday.
1 The opportunity for such a discus-
ion arose in Geneva, Switzerland,
^Wednesday when representatives of
oensurettieiMg u.S.-Soviet Standing Consulta-
deh and -^g Commission began one of their
fcmiannual sessions.
■ Soviet representatives made clear
■oscow has no desire to discuss re
ductions required by the Strategic
firms Limitation Treaty at this point
■then the U.S. Senate still has not
■ken up the pact, the sources said.
I President Carter asked the Senate
d to delay consideration of the treaty,
which requires a two-thirds vote for
1 Senate approval, in the aftermath of
fie Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Under SALT II, Russia would
percentageIcihave to dismantle some 254 strategic
■ asmedBMnissile launchers by Jan. 1, 1981.
To meet that deadline, U.S. spe
cialists say, the Russians probably
should begin work immediately
since dismantling could take as long
as 12 months.
The State Department had no im
mediate comment on the Soviet re
fusal to address SALT II compliance
issues. However, sources said the
United States is not overly con
cerned at this point.
Some U.S. officials voiced the
opinion it would be unlikely for the
Russians to discuss SALT II until the
treaty is ratified — particularly not in
the poor atmosphere following the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Carter left open the possibility at
his news conference last Friday that
the administration would be pre
pared to renounce the treaty even if
the Soviets continued to adhere to its
terms.
The administration position in the
aftermath of the shelving of Senate
consideration had been that the Un
ited States would live up to the terms
as long as the Soviet Union did.
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serve the greata
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-eatcned witlifi
r the presemJ
'olice recover
tolen Van Gogh
United Press International
| CAIRO — Authorities have reco-
r trees, livestudKogh painting stolen nearly two
ulture, micrcl|years ago from a Cairo museum and
ticated andv
Man says
ife held
in U.S.
United Press International
ANTI AGO, Chile — A Chilean
breeder claims his 75-year-old
:e was kidnapped last week and
;en to San Clemente, Calif, where
ie is being held prisoner.
■Hector Urbina Tapia, 36, said his
elderly wife. Ana Maria, dis-
Hpeared March 11 and unknown
Mople drugged her, forced her to
sign a set of papers and put her on a
;ht to the United States against her
|He said a few days later three in-
ders entered the couple’s home
Tuesday, Urbina received a dis-
i|ught telephone call from his wife,
o told him she was being kept a
isoner in a San Clemente house.
Chilean authorities have con-
‘med Ana Maria Lenard Goldsmith
t the country March 11 via San-
Igo’s Pudahuel airport and immig-
|tion records show she has not re-
med to Chile.
smuggled to Kuwait, a Cabinet
minister said Thursday.
Three Egyptians, whom the police
would not identify, stole the painting
valued at $2.8 million, Interior
Minister Nabawi Ismail said in a
statement carried by the state-
controlled Middle East News
Agency.
Ismail did not disclose details of
the painting’s recovery, but said ex
perts who examined the recovered
painting testified it was the original.
He said two of the men involved in
the theft have been arrested, but the
third fled to Kuwait.
A Cairo newspaper reported last
month that the painting had been
traced to Kuwait, but authorities
there had “obstructed” its restora
tion to Egypt.
The painting was stolen in June
1978 from museum of the late
Mohammed Mahmoud Khalil, a re
nowned art dealer, in the residential
district of Zamalek.
Guerrillas ask
to renew talks
United Press International
BOGOTA, Colombia — Guerril
las holding 32 hostages in the Domi
nican Republic Embassy asked the
government to renew deadlocked
ransom negotiations, sparking hopes
of a breakthrough in the 23-day-old
crisis.
The talks, stalled since March 13,
were scheduled to start again today
at the request of the April 19 Move
ment guerrillas, government sources
said Wednesday.
The sources added the M-19 set no
conditions for the renewed crisis.
Five previous rounds of talks col
lapsed over the guerrillas’ insistence
— and the government’s refusal —
that 311 jailed leftists be freed from
Colombian prisons in exchange for
the hostages.
A diplomat who leaped from a
second-story window of the captured
embassy early Monday, Ambassador
Fernando Gomez of Uruguay, was
reported to have suffered several in
juries in his flight to freedom.
The Colombian government and
the Uruguay Embassy at first said he
suffered only minor bruises, but a
medical report issued on Wednesday
said he fractured his right hand, right
knee and three vertebrae in the leap
and scramble to safety.
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IF THIS CATCHES YOUR EYE YOU MAY
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