The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 14, 1985, Image 7

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    Friday June 14, 1985/The Battalion/Page 7
WORLD AND NATION
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Gandhi politely criticizes
U.S. defense, foreign policy
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Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Indian Prime
Minister Rajiv Gandhi, addressing a
|oint meeting of Congress, politely
signaled his disagreement Thursday
with U.S. policies on defense, Paki
stan and foreign aid while also dis
puting the American view of the Af
ghanistan conflict.
In a veiled rebuke of President
Reagan’s proposed missile defense
program, known informally as “Star
Wars,” Gandhi said he has “deep
reservations about the militarization
outer space.”
And in an apparent reference to
jthe U.S. sale of F-16 jet fighters and
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other weapons to Pakistan, Gandhi
said India is “directly affected” by
the flow of “increasingly sophisti
cated arms into our neighborhood.”
Without compromising India’s
position on these and other issues
that have been irritants in Indo-
American relations, Gandhi ap
peared to please his audience with
his absence of polemics, low-key de
livery and occasional humor. At the
conclusion of his remarks, he re
ceived a 90-second standing ovation.
The large turnout of senators and
House members for the address sug
gested a high degree of congressio
nal curiosity about the 40-year-old
leader of the world’s largest democ
racy. Widespread absenteeism often
has marked previous congressional
addresses by foreign heads of gov
ernment.
Early in his 20-minute address,
Gandhi drew laughter when he said
that “it was Indian tea that stimu
lated your independence
movement.”
On substantive issues, his criticism
of the United States was mild and in
direct.
The United States and India are
far apart on the issue of Soviet-occu
pied Afghanistan, and Gandhi indi
cated there has been no narrowing
of differences with the administra
tion on that issue during his visit.
Workers ID
photos of
Mengele
Associated Press
SAG PAULO, Brazil — Farm
workers from the interior of south
eastern Brazil identified photo
graphs of the man thought to be
Nazi fugitive Dr. Josef Mengele as
the man they knew as a secretive,
dictatorial foreigner named “Peter,”
a f ederal police chief said Thursday.
The report by Romeu Tuma,
head of Sao Paulo’s federal police
and the man in charge of the Meng
ele case, came as medical experts re
sumed weighing and examining
some 208 bones.
Tuma told reporters that people
shown photographs of the man
thought to be Mengele identified
him as Peter, or Pedro, the Portu
guese equivalent.
Mengele, who would be 74 if he
was alive, was accused of directing
the deaths of about 400,000 Jews,
Poles, Gypsies and others at Ausch
witz during World War II, and of
conducting barbaric medical experi
ments at the camp in Nazi-occupied
Poland.
One week ago police dug up a
body buried in a country grave at
Embu, a small town 17 miles from
Sao Paulo. The grave bore the name
of Wolfgang Gerhard and was that
of a man police said drowped in Feb
ruary 1979 while on a swim in the
ocean. But the real Wolfgang Ger
hard died in Austria.
Army, Air Force start investigations
Teams probing alleged spy ring
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — The Army
and Air Force have set up special
of their own to determine
whether codes and messages were
ompromjsed by an alleged spy ring
that sold Navy secrets to the Soviets.
Officials of both services said
ring wariniln Thursday it was too early to deter-
an’s pressseett mine the precise ripple effect of the
Navy spy scandal, which so far has
has elicited 4 resulted in the arrests of four men,
heGenevaans including accused ringleader John
A. Walker Jr.
They acknowledged, however,
that each of the services uses coding
equipment similar to devices that the
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Navy believes may have been com
promised by spying.
Prosecutors, meanwhile, said they
expected grand juries in Norfolk,
and San Francisco, to get the cases
against two of those charged by early
next week.
On Gapitol Hill, Sen. Ted Stevens,
R-Alaska, introduced a bill provid
ing for the death penalty for people
convicted of selling classified materi
als.
“If there is an execution, it should
be public and on television,” Stevens
told a news conference. “We’re try
ing to bring up the visibility of this
kind of crime and deter people who
may be starting down this road.”
Currently, the maximum penalty
is life in prison. Treason committed
during wartime carries the death
penalty.
Several Army sources, speaking
only on condition they not be identi
fied, said it was unclear whether the
Soviets actually could have read sen
sitive Army message traffic as the
Navy now fears happened in its case.
They said that knowledge of the en
cryption and transmitting equip
ment alone likely was insufficient,
since the precise codes and “keys”
used by the Army differ from those
of the Navy.
The creation of a special evalua
tion team “should not be interpreted
as evidence that the breach of secu
rity that Walker represents for the
Navy constitutes a breach of security
for the Army,” the Army said in a
written statement.
John Walker, the alleged leader, is
a former Navy chief warrant officer
who held a number of sensitive com
munication posts both on land and
at sea in submarines before retiring
in 1976. The three other men
charged in the case — including
Walker’s brother and son — served
or were serving in the Navy.
Nicaragua resolved to defend itself;
Ortega considering arms purchase
Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua — Presi
dent Daniel Ortega said Thursday
|that he would lift a five-month-old
|inoratorium on arms imports and
hinted that Nicaragua might renew
attempts to buy high-performance
warplanes.
Speaking one day after the U.S.
House of Representatives approved
$27 million in logistical aid for Nica
raguan rebels, Ortega said Nicara
gua would do “all that’s necessary” to
defend itself .
He called the House vote “unac
ceptable, illegal and immoral med
dling” that “obliges us to strengthen
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