The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, December 14, 1983, Image 13

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    Wednesday, December 14, 1983/The Battalion/Page 13
itockholm
on said
oper ho|.
The opii). 1
improper
ye on two
ight come
iramble[if lt m uec * from P a g e
the United States also
tysto the fears of the West-
nEuropeans, Hansen said,
nericanofficials, during the
nference, plan to adc
lystomake suprise attack by
Soviet Union against the
estmore difficult — an issue
close to home for West-
Europeans.
• It'sclear that we are at war
ih the Soviets in terms of
in
bkopinion,” Hansen said,
his is a struggle for the
ndsand hearts of the Euro-
t ms, and others, and you
* i y to the strengths and
) iknesses of each side.”
t lansen said he believes
i is negotiations will con-
i ue between the United
ese kindj ies and the Soviet Union,
my kindd rough he doesn’t know
I ;n. He said both countries
ead of tlrs stalks to continue.
■vice attl; jut, he said, the Soviets will
rcentof® ————————
rentbuttlt
?re is somt. i i 1 t j O'
mally.Tht
tommy aird|
iccause In
says parem
lectationso
have to compromise. “The
Soviets have to recognize that
they are not entitled to any
greater security than other na
tions in the world.”
The United States also
wants to continue negotia
tions, “but it must do so on
terms that guarantees its own
security and that of our allies
and doesn’t allow the Soviets
the margin of advantage that
they think they are entitled
to,” Hansen said.
Hansen acknowledged that
relations between the two na
tions are bad. “Both sides rec
ognize that relations are bad,
he said. “But in my views, rela
tions are not so bad today that
one need to be thinking about
the eminence of nuclear war.
“Both sides are realistic.
Both sides want to make sure
there is not a nuclear war. And
both sides will do everything
they can to ensure that.”
Downed Korean plane crew
of infringement
unaware
United Press International
MONTREAL — A South
Korean airliner shot down last
Sept. 1 by Soviet fighters was
flying on a wrong heading and
the crew was unaware the
jumbo jet had strayed into
Soviet airspace, an interna
tional aviation panel said
Tuesday.
“No evidence was found
during the investigation to in
dicate that the flight crew of
Korean Air Lines 007 was, at
any time, aware of the flight’s
deviation from its planned
route in spite of the fact that it
continued along the same
general off-track flight path
for some 5 hours and 26 mi
nutes,” said a report by the In
ternational Civil Aviation
Organization.
The Boeing 747 was shot
kpit
the
down by Soviet fighters over
the northern Sea of Japan on a
flight from New York to
Seoul, South Korea, via
Anchorage, Alaska. All 269
people aboard, including U.S.
Rep. Larry McDonald, D-Ga.,
were killed.
The ICAO report said the
aircraft strayed into Soviet
airspace because the cockj
crew was either flying
wrong navigational heading
or had erred in inserting flight
coordinates into the on-board
computer.
The plane was equipped
with so-called inertial naviga
tion systems, which are prog
rammed through the compu
ters at the beginning of the
flight and then require no
further external guidance
points to keep the aircraft on
course.
Why KAL 007 had strayed
so far off course was puzzling.
The ICAO report said it could
not determine conclusively
what occurred or why the air
craft was 300 nautical miles
north of its assigned flight
path.
However, the report said,
“a single finger error in enter
ing more than 100 digits and
letters at the outset of the
flight” could have caused the
plane to fly 10 degrees off
course.
“The investigative effort
was compelled to procede on
the basis of limited hard facts,
circumstantial evidence,
assumptions and calculations
and to base some of its key
findings on postulated and
then simulated most likely sce
narios of what may have trans
pired,” it said.
The report dismissed
Soviet allegations the jetliner
was on a spy mission for the
United States. It said the flight
was on schedule, though off
The Soviets reiterated the
spy claim Monday at the open
ing session of the special meet
ing of the U.N. agency at its
Montreal headquarters. The
two-day meeting adjourned
after releasing the summary
of its report.
German vitamin treatments
r
tiled on ses
1 HOW bo, L> n i tt (I Press International
accepuWtl AN QVER, West Germany
arecoiMj j ov [ e anc j s t a g e actor Yul
;ti televisioij in er was told in September
. a ] )USf i adlungcancer and would be
leinloutBi |j n t wo months, but Tues-
■ii sex™ h e said radiation has
n theiri ,ght “spectacular” results
nen arelr< he is determined to beat the
ire their pa iSf
se they leiti
ie way thd
portant (hi
is in the 6
id. “We tty
ngths by
. The fai
ort struciw
ially pan
ul Brynner fighting lung cancer
mer said cancer
, who hasi ; diagnosed Sept.
V, gets mot ° \
eferalsfin after he found
inpsychoky all lump on his
s not only Id ,
,ve and ntf ^
veil.
:hild abuse! |'m still here and still work-
cull job,"ft "he said with a hoarse
; communi klein a telephone interview
itsomeotii! L'Pl from Hanover, where
rkers have:
ily basis. I
,nd draini
he is currently taking carrot-
based vitamin treatment under a
West German cancer specialist.
“The picture is very optimis
tic,” said the 64-year-old star of
“The King and I” and countless
movies and stage shows.
Brynner said cancer was di
agnosed Sept. 13 after he found
a small lump on his neck.
“I was taking my make-up off
after a show when I felt a small
pearl-like lump in my neck. I
had a blood test and it was con
firmed,” he said.
Brynner said doctors had
been pessimistic on his chances
of survival.
“The estimates were 4-8
weeks. The condition advances
very quickly and we had to act. I
took radiation treatment every
day for seven and a half weeks.
Fortunately the results were
spectacular and we are optimis
tic it has stabilized,” Brynner
said.
He said he had not stopped
work because of the illness.
“The estimates were
4-8 weeks. The condi
tion advances very
quickly and we had to
act. Fortunately the
results were spectacu
lar and we are opti
mistic it has stabil
ized, ” Brynner said.
“I have been touring in “The
King and I” and I will open
again in the play in Baltimore in
February as planned,” he said.
Brynner arrived in West Ger
many last Thursday with his
fourth wife Kathy Lee and
traveled immediately to the Sil-
bersee Clinic of controversial
cancer specialist Dr. Hans A.
Nieper, 55, in a Hanover
suburb.
“He is a specialist who is very
well known. His field is prevent
ing a reccurence of the disease,”
Brynner said.
“The treatment is diet-based
and involves taking certain vita
mins in vegetable form,” Bryn
ner said.
Nieper has an almost legen
dary reputation in the United
States for his success with cancer
patients but West German ex
perts reject his unorthodox
methods.
“Some people in Germany
wrinkle their noses at me. But in
Los Angeles and other Amer
ican cities they stop in the street
when I come,” he told an inter
viewer recently.
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door ands
'ingTlli “ nued from P a g e l)
t is wantinj .
wav hew utthe triumphant day and
oalofDHl was supposed to be the
togetheri ty’s joyous homecoming
& *rom Mrs. Walesa’s appear-
at Nobel ceremonies in
'ay became a nightmare of
:e harassment, family aides
eededI
abused dii;
i “Variety «|
families l'£,
iRhashelpd
every inco®
ssion.'
ankowski, who was on the
ile drive with the family
Czestochowa to their home
lansk on the Baltic coast.
child becait U< 7 K uu LUC , 0 1 ailK
-eded thetij P^e stopped their car 3
stor identity checks — mak-
hetrip an 11-hour ordeal.
„. ,_n Lodz, the four were de-
a r va ™ ii|ed for two hours and the
He adults body-searched,
^Most (rt :o ' VS ^’ Sa ^ * n a te l e ph° ne * n '
ision becau* L sa jj | ie was or( j erec i t<)
juontfQUJove f,i ac i<_ j a cket and
while police checked him
^apparently hunting for a
recording of a speech
ba planned to deliver
T
|ly the Walesas’ 13-year-
n, Bogdan, was spared an
tie search.
he family’s luggage
:hed closely and identity
were checked minutely
at each of the 13 interruptions
by police; family aides said —
even though Walesa has one of
the best-recognized faces in Po
land.
By the time they reached
Gdansk they were exhausted
and Walesa was reported ill.
The official watch had begun
in Czestochowa. One police car,
part of the surveillance team
that follows Walesa everywhere,
stood outside the fortress walls
of the monastery as a biting cold
fog swirled about the walls of the
church compound.
Placing his gold Nobel medal
before the icon, which many
Poles revere as the miraculous
protector of their nation, Walesa
prayed: ’’holy Mother, queen of
Poland . direct me so that I
might carry out my service and
multiply your glory.”
In Warsaw, Communist au
thorities disclosed they arrested
a priest known for his outspoken
pro-Solidarity views.
Officials said the Rev. Jerzy
Popieluszko was arrested after
undisclosed contraband mate
rials — presumably related to
the Solidarity underground —
were found in an apartment reg
istered in his name.
Detention of the priest
marked the steepest slide yet in
steadily declining church-state
relations, and coincided with the
martial law anniversary.
Bookstore
Northqate
846-4518
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