Page 16/The Battalion/Friday, September 27, 1985 Espionage U.S. officials silent on details of high-rank KGB defection Associated Press WASHINGTON — A senior Soviet diplomat reportedly famil iar with KGB spy operations in the United States and other coun tries has defected to the West, a Justice Department official con firmed Thursday. But the department official, declining to be identified, refused to provide any details on the case of Vitaly Yurtchenko,- 50, who was described in press accounts as a high-ranking member of the KGB, the Kremlin’s secret police and intelligence agency. , At the White House, Deputy Press Secretary Edward Djerejian refused to comment on the re port, saying it was an intelligence matter. “I have a strict ‘no comment’ on that,” Djerejian said. NBC News said Yurtchenko, who dropped from sight in Au gust during a temporary assign ment to Rome, reportedly was fa miliar with KGB operations in the United States, Western Europe and Latin America. Yurtchenko could be the high est-ranking KGB defector to the West since the 1930s. Citing unnamed U.S. intelli gence sources, the newspaper said Yurtchenko had been under going debriefing by the CIA somewhere in the United States for the last six weeks. Earlier, The Washington Times had reported that Yurt chenko was believed to be the fifth-ranking official in the KGB, but that could not immediately be confirmed. Officially, the Justice Depart ment had nO comment on the re ports of Yurtchenko’s defection. Italian authorities on Aug. 8 quoted officials of the Soviet em bassy in Rome as reporting that Yurtchenko had vanished with out a trace on Aug. 1. According to the Los Angeles Times account, Yurtchenko had arrived in Rome on July 25 for what was expected to be a 10-day assignment and was staying at the Villa Abamalek, the Soviet am bassador’s residence on the city’s western outskirts. He disap peared after telling Soviet secu rity agents that he was going to visit Vatican museums, the Times said. On Aug. 30, the Italian news paper Corriere della Sera carried a front-page story reporting that Yurtchenko’s disappearance was believed to be directly linked with the Aug. 19 flight to East Ger many of Hans-Joachim Tiedge, West Germany’s top counterspy. Police brutality reported in CapeTown Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A girl, 17, of mixed race whose face was bruised and swollen said Thursday that five officers, behav ing like “real animals,” beat her for no reason in a Cape Town police sta tion. The charges came the day after a judge barred policemen from as saulting prisoners in two other Cape Province cities, Port Elizabeth and Uitenhage, where other allegations of brutality have been made during more than a year of protest against white-minority rule. Cape Town police said they fired on a crowd from which a gasoline bomb was thrown at a police station, killing a 15-year-old black youth. A policeman in the Ciskei tribal home land shot and killed a black man who was in a threatening mob, authori ties there said. Police headquarters reported a dozen riot incidents during the day, mainly rock-throwing and arson, and said 45 black men were arrested for “public violence” in Queenstown in eastern Cape Province. Finance Minister Barend du Ples- sis said in Pretoria that a leading Swiss banker, Fritz Leutwiler, would help the government renegotiate its foreign debt of $24 billion and ma jor creditors had agreed to Leutwil- er’s role. Foreign banks have refused to re new loans to South Africa because of the continued uprising against apartheid, the race laws dial guar antee privilege for the nation’s 5 mil lion whites and deny rights to the 24 million blacks. South Africa’s currency has plum meted in value during the financial crisis and the government post poned repayment of principal on the debt until January. Cheryl Phillips, who lives in the Bishop Lavis suburb of Cape Town, told a news conference five po licemen beat her at the Brackenfell police station after her detention Tuesday morning under the Inter nal Security Act. She belongs to the Westerns Student Action Committee i apartheid group and said sht picked up at a roadblock on her to a rally, apparently becaust carried anti-governmentpampl She said she was struck rep until a senior police olficer, she identified only asSteenkampi ived from Cape Town. Ther . TI w -.» k t /YMifnSnfl H IIYCiJ v pzv. A w Till, i uv y officers then became courteouij apologetic, she said. She said she was released Wed^ day afternoon after being treatel; a district surgeon, then was^ home by police. Her lawyer,! deem H uman, said he wouldti assault charges. College of Agriculture enrollment lessening (continued from page 1) and has awarded approximately 350 agriculture students with yearly scholarships of $2,000, Kunkel said. The highest paying and most sought-after students in agriculture are in the Graduate College, whichi has registered a 12 percent increase in students since last year. But this is the area Kunkel is most concerned about. “We’ve slipped at the graduate level,” he said, because the increase in tuition to $ 120 per credit hour for non-resident students bites down on 50 percent of the graduate enroll ment. Although the graduate pro gram involves one-third of agricul ture students, two-thirds of faculty efforts are channeled there for tea ching and research. Kunkel said many gradual! dents w ho can’t afford the hijkt ition .ire registered forfourli class this semester just to sat rolled, but will soon have to I out. f No need to ban AIDS victims from classrooms (continued from page 1) lie,” he said. “It’s not all that sensa tional really. But that’s not the way the rest of the country seems to be going. “I don’t make light of it. It’s not something you just summarily dis miss. If the child was yours or mine, we obviously would be more emo tionally involved. But purely from the health point of view, there has been an over-reaction,” Bernstein said. He added that AIDS victims pose no threat to other students unless the afflicted child has an open wound, is not toilet-trained or has behavioral problems that n ; cause him or her to bite aM [ child. i “Other than that, the child ski be allowed to go to Bernstein said. Affordable French Elegance From $175.00 MOTOBECANE "Quality Spoken With A French Accent”. A-l LOCK & CYCLE ) Parts^accessories Repairs all makes 3811 E 29th Bryan Town & Country Center 260-9810 (2a.(jcvi£,t On Wellborn Rd. North of TAMU Live Rock & Roll Locomotives 9p.m. - 1 a.m. 4 Hams on Rye 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. $1 Bar Drinks 75tf Long necks 846-1427 Battalion Classifieds Call 845-2611 vsm Nowadays (and nowamghts) the Big Man On Cafl^P, is the one with the biggest collection of Trivial r utsn card sets. So here are six more editions to pursue*. ■ Baby Boomer® Edition—From Eisenhower to Flower Power. ■ Silver Screen Edition—A ton of titillating Tinseltown trivia. ■ All-Star Sports Edition—Here’s your chance to knock a jock right on his artificial turf. ■ Genus 11 Edition—Picks up where the Genus Edition™ laughed off ■ RPM Edition-Music'. Music'. Music'. Erom Beethoven to Boy George. ■ Young Players™ Edition—From the Brothers Grimm to the Brothers Gibb. Get’em all. Play’em all. Have aball'. Sept. 27,19851 | The Battalion Weekly Magazine