ce “W In, fttisonti) "‘It'resn Winterfii ^Ijidsofu c *®in (m Ms, lit no*,, ( Cubans still in flight l rs •. MM United Press International As problems at Cuban refugee re settlement centers continue this week, President Carter has reiter ated charges Fidel Castro sent “har dened criminals” to the United States in the refugee sealift. For the third straight day Mon day, only a few stragglers made the 110-mile voyage from Cuba’s Mariel Harbor to Key West. The four boats arriving carried a total of 369 Cubans, raising the ferrying opera tion’s 50-day total to 112,533 re fugees. Vselma Sanchez, a crew member aboard a cabin cruiser that brought 42 refugees into Key West, Fla., Monday said Cubans at Mariel hinted the Cuban government wanted to prolong the sea shuttle. “They said in so many words that there were programs to slow us down,” she said. “They could have loaded us a lot faster, but they deli berately made us wait.” Boat owner Rolando Mesa agreed. “If he (Castro) keeps a few boats there, he can keep on playing this game.” In Miami Monday, Carter, speak ing in Spanish at a news conference for the Miami Spanish press, said he has directed the State Department to press for the return to Cuba of undesirables that had been dumped onto the sealift. “Among the many people fleeing oppression in Cuba, Fidel Castro has cynically included several hundred hardened criminals from Cuban jails,” Carter said. Secretary of State Edmund Mus- kie made similar charges Sunday. “This despicable action of Castro is a violation of international law and practice, and the government of Cuba is obligated to accept the re turn of those criminals,” Carter said. As the last of the refugees came ashore in Florida, problems con tinued at several relocation centers around the country. At the Fort Chaffee, Ark., refugee relocation center — scene of a June 1 riot in which 100 people were arrested, four buildings were burned and five persons were shot — Army officials netted a working distillery and several homemade weapons in a check of two barracks. Two Cubans were arrested for running the still. Fort officials said they had sus pected a moonshining operation Florida Corn Fresh, Sweet! . . Crown Colony Instant Tea 100% Tea ... Make it Hot or Cold Finest Safeway Quality Valencia Oranges o $ i California Lbs. JL Mushrooms Fresh, 8 Oz. 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Relocation at the Fort McCoy, Wis., refugee center, however, is THE BATTALION Page 7 WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1980 proceeding at a snail’s pace. Only 47 of some 13,000 refugees had been resettled Monday, but officials were relieved to report that so far there have been no security problems. But in El Paso, Texas, Pete Reyes, the INS official given the responsi bility of supervising 60 Cubans im plicated in the Fort Chaffee riot, says he needs more men to guarantee security. Five dozen Cubans were transfer red from Fort Chaffee to an alien detention center late Saturday- Future of the news Profitable ad plan United Press International ATLANTA — Satellite transmis sion of advertising will revolutionize the newspaper industry, resulting in added profits for the daily newspap er, says Washington Post board chairman Katharine Graham. Graham, president of the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers Associa tion, told ANPA members Monday the major wire services are working with newspapers to install receiver dish antennae for satellite transmis sion of news and pictures. In the very near future, she said, advertising also will be sent by satel lite, allowing marketers of nationally known products to swiftly transmit photo reproductions of ads to hun dreds of papers across the nation. Graham said the new procedure will require standardization of col umn width and other physical speci fications, but would be a necessary step to keep newspapers competitive with other media. “As you know, our industry has long made it something of a chal lenge for national advertisers to spend their dollars in newspapers by forcing them to make up ads to fit hundreds of varied formats and col umn sizes,” she said. Graham made her comments at the opening session of the ANPA re search institute convention during which newspaper publishers, editors and production managers from across the country will be informed of the latest technology in the indus try, including satellite delivery of news and advertising. The conference, which has attracted some 10,000 newspaper ex ecutives, ends Wednesday. She said the ANPA is working with advertising agencies and major cor porations to develop standard adver tisement sizes for satellite transmis sion. “Now, we are on the verge of proposing a schedule that would accommodate just about every news paper page imaginable — but con front advertisers with fewer than two-dozen sizes and shapes,” she said. “If we can achieve this system — and we are hoping to achieve that by the end of this year — I think it will mark a historic and profitable step forward for our industry.” Graham said advertising agencies have told the ANPA many more manufacturers would use newspap ers for their advertising if sizes were standardized and transmission of lay out and text could be handled more quickly over a large area. She said “while there are many challenges yet to be overcome,” it may be possible to demonstrate a satellite test transmission of advertis ing at the next ANPA production management conference in Atlantic City next year. Surgery disputed for nearsighted United Press International WASHINGTON — A government advisory council says more re search is needed before it can endorse surgery to correct nearsighted ness, a common vision disorder usually corrected easily by eyeglasses or contact Jenses. nu .The operation. was develope