: V*VW% HMf K'.wrj Paqe 12 THE BATTALION WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1981 National Helmich pleads guilty to save wife and son o Prescriptions Filled Glasses Repaired 216 N. MAIN BRYAN Mon.-Fri. Sat. 822-610f> 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 8 a.m.-1 p.mj We Gets What Ya Likes In The Way Takara - Miyata - Campagnolo Cinelli - Shimano - Sun Tour and much more Cycles, Etc. Plus the Best Repairs & 5 lus the Best Repairs & Prices Around — Call Usl 403 University — 846-BIKE Op«n 10-7 Mon.-Fri., 10-5 Sul. Northgata (Acroaa from Poat Otfloa) Simply Great United Press International JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Confessed spy Joseph George Helmich Jr. says the Army was the only family he knew and he “knowingly and willingly” bet rayed its secrets to the Soviets to I keep from being court martialed over a few hundred dollars in bad checks. In a surprise move, the 44- year-old ex-Army warrant officer stood up Monday at the outset of the second week of his espionage trial and pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiring to peddle military code information to the Russians. In return, the government dropped three charges of actual espionage against him. Defense attorney Peter M. Dearing said Helmich wanted to “terminate” the trial “because of the pressure on his wife and 10- year-old son.” Helmich was accused of selling — for $131,000 — a maintenance manual, technical information and key lists for the KL-7 Cryptosy stem, a coding machine still used by the Army today. As a result of his plea deal, Hel mich will be eligible for parole in 10 years at the most, while convic tion on all four counts would have meant up to 40 years in prison. Mexican Food. THE WEDNESHAY SPECIAL C* tdrive i Office of Traffic safety He also pledged to submit to further questioning by the FBI — “anything the government wants to do to him short of putting him on the rack,” his attorney said. U.S. Attorney Gary Betz said: “Justice is served and completely served by accepting this plea. This man is an absolute traitor to this country. He caused serious harm to our country at a time when we had servicemen fighting in Viet nam.” U.S. District Judge Susan H. Black, who quizzed Helmich at length about his plea, set sentenc ing for Nov. 5. Exactly what harm Helmich did by selling the military code infor mation has never been defined. Betz referred to testimony from military officials that the informa tion would have allowed the Viet namese to know “our war plans, to read our mail.” But Helmich — who has an IQ of 147 — told Black that “the de gree of injury to the United States would have to be limited at this point in the history of our com munications.” Helmich was the second- incommand of an Army communi cations relay station called “the blockhouse” in Paris in the mid- 1960s. Later, he was assigned to Fort Bragg, N.C., where he was the “crypto custodian” for the 50th Signal Battalion. In testimony Friday, FBI agent James K. Murphy quoted Hel mich as saying in a sworn state ment last February that he went to MONTEREY DINNER ^y| 5>q/reg. $4.85 FIESTA. DINNER IZ QQ / REG. O • $4.45 C'oiir*te» ENCHILADA DINNER 4ft «Z Q/REG. $3.65 S6BRING... 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ROOM 701 RUDDER TOWER B p.m. Wednesday Sept. 30 * TONIGHT * the Soviet Embassy in Paris when he got into financial difficulties and his commanding officer threatened him with a court- martial if he didn’t clear up his debts in 24 hours. “I’d been in the Army since I was 17 and it was the only family I had known,” Helmich told the judge Monday. “I got into some financial problems and I was about to be thrown out by a court- martial.” He admitted he went to the Russians to peddle information “knowingly and willingly. No one held a gun to my head,” he said, but “there was a lot of psychologic al pressure.” Money, in the long run, proved his undoing. He spent the $131,000 the Russians gave him so lavishly and swiftly that it drew suspicion, but nothing was proven. But last year, long after he had left the service, he was seen going into the Soviet Embassy in Otta wa, Canada, to find out about matching funds he was told were set aside for him in a Swiss bank account. He was penniless. The FBI reopened the case and Helmich gave them the details of his dealings. Black asked him about the Swiss funds. “There were none, your hon or,” Helmich said in a low voice. Dearing, standing beside him, added, “They had bed to him, your honor.” Almanac keeps traditions alive United Press International CONCORD, N.H. — The 190th Old Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a snowy but warmer than usual winter for much of the country. Abe Weatherwise, the alma nac’s fictional forecaster, claims he has been 80 percent accurate since his yellow-jacketed alma nac was first printed in 1792. Unlike the forecasts of colo nial days, the data are now put into a computer along with “Time-honored weather trend observations.” Weatherwise takes that information and con verts it into the time-honored verse that makes up his long- range forecasts. normal and summer and earl; J fall will be dry, Weatherwisj says. Along with keeping Weat erwise alive, the almanac main tains other traditions. A sma! hole is still punched in tlie uf per left comer so farmers can put it on a hook nexttothestiM or in the bathroom for readin; on cold winter’s nights. Ik usual charts on the stars, tic tides and the gestation tablefc animals are also included. The almanac predicts a major cold wave and snowstorm will move into the East and extend into the Southern states during late December and early Janu ary. Above average snowfalls are predicted for parts of New England, the Midwest, the Ohio Valley and the northern Rocky Mountain region during the 1981-82 winter. Featured articles deal uit! the joys of owning a pet cncltel, (“They don’t eat very mud’ There are menus from acoov» lx>ok used by the residents { Shishmarf, Alaska, incluiliii| tasty treats such as owl, bet feet, seal flipper and ice era made from reindeer fat (k lx‘rries can be added to it.”! In keeping with tic onslaught of winter, the ab nac also contains a four-pa article on folklore cures forth common cold. Milder-than-normal temper atures will occur throughout most of the country during the winter. The Western and Great Plains states will enjoy a war mer and drier winter despite a wet February and March east of the Rockies. Spring will be colder than Standing on one’s be underwater, wearing a bag d onions, inhaling dry licorks leaves, growing a mustache, i drinking yourself to intoxicafe will not help to cure a cold, tic author says. But a bowl of chicken son; will clear up sinus passagesfes- ter than other hot beverage the article maintains. Water pollution in cities may pose future problem United Press International WASHINGTON — The En vironmental Protection Agency says preliminary data show 23 of the nation’s urban areas may have water pollution problems that will be hard to solve. In releasing the information Monday, the EPA emphasized the data are sketchy and in some cases outdated. In no case, it said, is the water unsafe to drink. “These documents were not prepared for public release but for use by the EPA regional offices in conjunction with the states in fol low-up field studies to determine if these areas have toxic pollutant problems,” EPA Administrator Ann Gorsuch said in letters to the mayors of cities served by the wa terways. Gorsuch said the agency was required to release the data under a Freedom of Information Act re quest from an environmental group, the Natural Resources De fense Council. The information was “based on many assumptions, including sev eral critical assumptions now known to be incorrect,” Gorsuch said. “In addition, the agency has recently become aware of errors in the water quality data used in the ambient analysis.” 1 At ana IVils. larsh I “! ball SC'llOC that i head REWARD If you don't smoke, I can offer important savings on auto insurance. Claim your reward from: Non Allen Agency 707 Texas Avenue Suite 110-A 696-9351 The urban areas with waterways that may need additional clean-up protection beyond the use of “best available technology” by those who discharge into the streams Baton Rouge, La.; BeauE Texas; Birmingham, Ala.; Ck leston, W.Va.; Charlotte, M Coeur d’ Alene, Idaho; Davti Ohio; Des Moines, Iowa: Gif Ind.; Kingsport, Tenn.; Loue- le, Ky.; Memphis, Tenn,; Ill- land, Mich.; Saginaw, Mich,;fs saic, N.J.; Philadelphia; ft sburgh; St. Louis; Scranton, h Springfield, Mass.; Syne N.Y.; Lima, Ohio; and Y®!- stown, Ohio. In addition, the agenc) sd theoretical “pencil and projections indicate drinldMK; ter problems could occur in lit the cities — Beaumont, Bimfe ham, Charleston, Charloft Lima, Louisville, Pasaic, Pit ladelphia, Pittsburgh andM stown. “We have recommended t- low-up field studies for f these areas,” Gorsuch » “Many of these studies ares« under way.” SWC terba | “A durir schoc cause those great said. “B in M marn that s when so re: schol; Rei confic offfoi confe in pa: that\ back flywe mean settin feeor< gin oi I Aazent dealty ! i 1 1 I 1. Our job is scouting. Tell us your needs & leave the search to us. 846-8179 4015 Texas Ave., Bryan (next to Taco Bell) CHRISTA PANDEY BROKER t tops 1 HllllllllllllllllllllMIIIIIINIHIIIlWI®'! r rds 1 G70X14 = Full Road $^Q46 : down; = Hazard F.E.T. ond So lot Tu All Ttroo Mounted & Balanced W.75 Owners: Billy Winters Gsorge Emery E&W | Tire Distributors = 2706 Pinfeather • Bryi 11 = M.C. 775-900? M sVuDENT ERNMENT A &. M UNIVERSITY JUDICIAL BOARD INTERVIEWS 2 GRADUATES 2 JUNIORS 2 SENIORS 2 SOPHOMORES ?i ir Duties include constitutional, legislative and electW regulations interpretations as granted by the Studed Body Constitution and University Rules and Regula tions. APPLY BY 5 P.M. FBI. OCT. 2 216 C MSC P V t