The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 06, 1982, Image 20

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    Battalion/ft
May 6,
P 1
Brezhnev condemns
Britain over Falklands
spet
claii
United Press International
MOSCOW — Soviet Presi
dent Leonid Brezhnev ended
five weeks of silence with a
eech backing Argentina’s
aim to the Falkland Islands
and condemning Britain’s
attempt to block the “freedom
movement” in Latin America.
Brezhnev condemned Bri
tain for “colonial brigandage” in
a speech Tuesday toasting the
Soviet Union’s close ties to Latin
America in general, and to
Nicaragua in particular.
The Communist Party lead
er, 75, linked the Falklands
takeover by Argentina to what
he said was the freedom move
ment spreading across Latin
America.
“The peoples want to be mas
ters of their land, of their
homes, be it in Central America
or in the Southern Atlantic,”
Brezhnev told a Kremlin state
dinner for visiting Nicaraguan
leader Daniel Ortega.
“Dangerous complications”
such as the Falklands crisis arise
“precisely
forces which are trying to pre
serve or restore their positions
of dominance and to impose
foreign oppression,” Brezhnev
added.
“They do not stop at threats
and pressure, blackmail and
blockade, or the use of arms,
and they resort to actions hailing
back to the time of colonial bri
gandage.”
The Kremlin leader’s com
ments, though unmistakeably
aimed at Britain, did not name
the Falklands combatants and
he did not pledge any specific
assistance to Buenos Aires.
Brezhnev may have found it
awkward to praise Argentina’s
anti-Communist regime —
whose principal link to Moscow
is grain and meat sales — in the
presence of former guerrillas
from the Marxist-leanmg Man
agua government.
Although Soviet press com
mentary has been solidly behind
Argentina, the remarks were the
first by Brezhnev. They also
marked his first speech in five
weeks, since the Uzbekistan trip
that precipitated widespread re
ports of serious illness.
Soviet television coverage of
Brezhnev’s formal meeting with
Ortega before the state dinner
showed the Communist leader
to be vigorous and alert.
Earlier Tuesday a semiofficial
spokesman repeated the Krem
lin’s rejection of President
Reagan’s proposal for a U.S.-
Soviet summit conference in
June at the United Nations. He
ridiculed speculation that
Brezhnev’s health was a factor.
Brezhnev did not guarantee
any aid to Ortega, who was be
lieved to be seeking help for
Nicaragua’s billion-dollar debt.
However, diplomatic observers
noted the Soviets were giving
him an especially warm recep
tion.
Brezhnev pledged solidarity
with Nicaragua in its “difficul
ties and tension in relations”
with the United States.
Free
(continued from page 1)
similar programs in New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Mississippi and
Tennessee as well,
i None of the center’s activities
are limited to the state because
they are not supported by state
funds. Wolken said the center is
totally
members are part of the board.
One is a representative from the
Development Foundation, and
one is from the Association of
Former Students.
“They don’t vote, but they do
have a voice,” Colson said.
During the past year the cen
ter
supported by private contribu
tions. It depends on businesses,
foundations and private indi
viduals for all of its financial
backing.
“The Texas A&M Associa
tion of Former Students actively
supports the center,” he said.
All the center’s money is
handled through the Develop
ment Foundation, Wolken said,
because the center is not in
cluded in the University budget.
The board includes five
academic deans from the Col
leges of Agriculture, Business
Administration, Education, En
gineering and Liberal Arts and
five alumni who are leaders
from the business community,
Colson said.
“The board establishes the
policy and goals of the center,”
she said.
In addition, two unofficial
experienced several changes.
3ne of these changes was be-
One
coming a part of the College of
Business.
“We were part of the College
of Liberal Arts, but after moving
to the Academic and Agency
Building, we became part of the
College of Business,” she said.
The center also has a new di
rector. Dr. Steve Pejovich, for
merly the acting president of the
University of Dallas, joined the
center’s staff last July.
“He has added an interna
tional dimension,” Colson said.
“We are much more visible
the theory of our educational
programs rests on that basis,”
Colson said.
But now most of the center’s
activity revolves around educa
tion.
The Conference on Leader
ship in Free Enterprise Educa
tion is another example. The
annual week-end conference is
held each April on the A&M
campus and was attended this
year by over 200 school adminis
trators and teachers, she said.
This was the fifth year the center
has hosted the event.
The focus of this year’s con
ference was on public policy,
Colson said. Featured sessions
were “Will Anything Be Left in
the Pot When You Retire? The
Minimum Wage — Catch 22,”
“Enterprise Zones, What Are
They...And Will They Work?”
and “Is Reagan’s Economic Poli
cy Working?”
Staff members fi
ter conducted the set
addition to several
from visiting speaker!
business and academ
munity, Colson said
The center had pli
sponsor another prop
economic educatio:
summer.
In conjunction 1
Gifted and Talented
they offered a trip to It
high-ability high
dents, Colson said.
opportunity to comkii
sroom instruction
hand experience to 1
a free enterprise econt
not enough interest
in the program, so then]
been cancelled, she said |
“I hope we cantryapj
summer,” Colson said.
now.
Colson said the research pro
jects sponsored by the center so
far have resulted in articles for
scholarly journals and non
technical essays distributed to
laymen in a variety of profes
sions.
“We must devote more time
and energy to research because
Now You Know
The Argentine warship sunk by
the British Sunday was once the
USS Phoenix and was dubbed
“The Galloping Ghost on the
Aussie Coast” by
Navy men during Worli
because it never tookali
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