Wednesday, June 4, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 World and Nation Shiites win in fierce Beirut battle ed trenit::}’ . namem iE | RUT Le b anon (AP) — Shiite l(Hlt f ' c \isl[€Bn militiamen crushed an out- d P' a ™|nJd and (unmanned Sunni Mos- )i e-tourrkj biction Tuesday after a bitter i , hour battle in the streets of west 's '„T 4 vmiuu, j 0 || te re p ortec i 4() people were ! fed and 190 wounded in the ters tokrWer struggle between the two on the; islem militias and in a 16th day of losefou'hting at Palestinian refugee and titudeat Ifvjas the hea\ iest fighting in west tru| in weeks. cannon and mortar fire set >od nucl- ildirgs ablaze and wounded civil- t, and k-1 Muddled in doorways as gun- Ellis saic|i,raked streets with fire from au- ing leant|at|( weapons and recoilless rifles, an do»- Police said 25 people were killed •erience d l|l9 wounded in the confronta tion between Shiite and Sunni Mos lem factions. Fifteen people were killed and 71 injured in clashes between Amal mi litia and Palestinian guerrillas around the camps. Justice Minister Nabih Berri, who heads the Amal militia, claimed vic tory for his fighters in the battle against a Sunni faction called the February 6 Movement, which is headed by Shaker Berjawi. The Movement was named after the 1984 date of a Moslem uprising in west Berlin against the army. The fighting Tuesday appeared to be an attempt by Amal to assert its superiority in west Beirut. But in what seemed to be concilia tory gestures, Berri ordered his mili tiamen to abstain from looting. He also offered to turn over all neighborhoods that have been con quered by his militiamen to the Leb anese army. Sunni political and religious lead ers have been critical of the militias that have turned west Beirut into a haven for kidnappers, assassins and bank robbers. Moslem radio stations said a 360- man army task force was formed un der the command of Capt. Mah moud Kassar to move into the en clave of the February 6 Movement, which is located off west Beirut’s Corniche Mazraa commercial dis trict. Amal captured the area in a three pronged offensive. Hundreds of Shiite militiamen pushed in behind barrages of T-54 tank fire and 120mm mortars to overrun Berjawi’s headquarters and his house. They set his father’s nearby house afire. Berjawi was reported to have es caped with an estimated 50 follow ers. His 100 militiamen also were re ported to have been supported by 800 other Sunni fighters from va rious factions. But they were outnumbered by the Amal forces, which had superior firepower. Amal said its attack followed the slaying Monday of two kidnapped Shiites by some of Berjawi’s mili tiamen. rinonner takes train home to Gorky, Sakharov ■SCOW (AP) — Yelena Bon- ■r. putimisald Tuesday she sent a telegram ledtohir her husband, Andrei Sakharov, ■ she would be on the over- nish po» ;htIrain to Gorky, and if the KGB artwheel it go through he probably would et ler at the station. n Yandei ihe said she hoped to return to ■vercame isccjw in a few days from Gorky, to ich she and the dissident physicist Irelandli confined in internal exile, to col- eated L;ibaggage she shipped separately :rsi\. months in the West. I hope they will agree to let me,” id when T told reporters in her Moscow a defendt irtment. “I want to see my hus- i But Dji tdand to rest a bit. If I’m not back the 58tii e by the 15th (of June), then they t Jenninfi'en’t let me come. That’s exact.” vfrs. Bonner, 63, received medical aveuscomtnient and visited relatives in the inces,"Bil ked States, then stopped in seve- i, said.“If West European countries on her :es, Algera-jfB way back to the Soviet Union. She said she was “terribly tired,” but decided to make the overnight train trip to the city 250 miles east of Moscow because she was anxious to see her husband after the long sepa ration. Sakharov, who is 65 and won the 1975 Nobel Peace Prize, was exiled to Gorky in January 1980 and his wife was confined to it in August 1984 after being convicted of anti- state slander. The city is closed to foreigners. If Mrs. Bonner is allowed to re turn to Moscow, she should be able to give foreign reporters and diplo mats an up-to-date report on Sakha rov’s health and living conditions. Before being restricted to Gorky, she traveled to Moscow once a month, buying supplies and main taining links to the outside world by meeting with foreigners and diplo mats. Sakharov won the Nobel prize for challenging Soviet policies on hu man rights and military matters. He has never been tried or charged with a crime. The physicist, who helped create the Soviet hydrogen bomb, was stripped of all honors except mem bership in the Soviet Academy of Sciences and sent to Gorky after crit icizing the December 1979 Soviet in tervention in Afghanistan. Mrs. Bonner returned to Moscow for the first time in 19 months late last November, but refused to talk with Westerners about life in Gorky. She said she had agreed not to do so as a condition of being allowed out of the country. Sakharov had gone on three hun ger strikes in 18 months demanding permission for his wife to leve the country for medical attention. Mrs. Bonner left Dec. 2, was treated for glaucoma in Italy, then went to the United States for heart bypass surgery. Her son by her first marriage, Alexei Semyonov; daugh ter and son-in-law Tatiana and Ef rem Yankelevich and mother Ruf live in Newton, Mass. She gradually became more out spoken, met freed Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky and Western political leaders, and wrote articles about her life in Gorky with Sakha rov. In one article, she said they were virtually isolated, under constant surveillance and forced to drive to a town park to listen to Western radio stations because a device in their apartment jams radio and affects television reception. e lateintlti 25 minulBl bard orders rd orobe into postal finance )id. Hum Washington (ap) — The ), Lean..: overning board of the Postal re- ervke ordered an investigation uesday of how the agency 1 the tuncP eru l s money, four days after a trd,” Cumf mer postal governor pleaded give him u ‘% to embezzlement, and wort.If addition to the wide-rang- hat incentJS internal probe of the agency’s •hthimllr/ocedures for buying equip- iunds - lenl an< l ‘ ts spending practices, ie board of governors also di- scted a review to determine , , hether the process for selecting , f ostniaster General Albert V. Ga- 1 cha 7 l0 l las tainted. : scored a U | [gainst Mil John R. McKean, the postal . That adtfrard’s chairman, said, “There is Hindi be! 0 indication that Mr. Casey is in- isociation olved in any impropriety what- g FederaiiTvei. We don’t believe there is captured By corruption at all.” Peter E. Voss, the board’s vice hairman until he resigned, leaded guilty last Friday in con- Ittion with a scheme to steer a '250 million contract to a com- any whose public relations con et by Militant was paying Voss a fee. tnd Bird. 1 L ". einthepei The reach of the internal lOattheer robe was broadened to include re circumstances behind Casey’s led by nflection, McKean said. This he second ime after the governing board H two coif red the executive search firm for a 5(M iat recommended Casey. The executive recruiter, Wil- am A. Spartin, had started a ’ ,u j 1 . , iarch for Casey’s successor in e ght of Casey’s intention to quit thalfwIrrlid-August. Government records show that artin was a director of the h company and president of public relations company that laccused of funneling money Voss. Weinberger: Stealth planes will cost $277 million each WASHINGTON (AP) — Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger, going public with heretofore secret cost information on the radar-elud ing Stealth bomber program, told Congress on Tuesday that each of the new planes will cost only about $12 million more than the B-l bombers now in production. Weinberger, in a one-page fact sheet intended to protect the Stealth from budget cuts, said the new bomber carries a total program cost of $36.6 billion in fiscal 1981 dollars. That is the estimate for buying 132 of the new planes, which have been described as almost impervious to radar detection. The B-l program, under which 100 planes are being purchased, car ries an estimated pricetag of $26.5 billion, Weinberger continued. “Thus the estimated average cost per B-1B is $265 million, and the cost of the far more capable Ad vanced Technology Bomber (Stealth) is $277 million for each air craft,” the defense secretary said. “The ATB program is on sched ule; the technology is well under stood and working, and we expect the system to be operational in the early 1990s. In terms of mission ca pability, the ATB’s unique low-ob servable characteristics make it far more survivable than the B-1B. “This superior survivability, com bined with the ATB’s payload and range, substantially increases its mili tary effectiveness over that of the B- 1B.” The information released by Weinberger had been provided by the Pentagon to top congressional leaders earlier this year on a classi fied basis, meaning it could not be used in public debate. Congress has to decide this year whether to give its full support to the secret Stealth program or to buy more conventional B-Ts, about which there is copious information. Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wis., chairman of the House Armed Services Com mittee, complained in April that Weinberger’s devotion to secrecy was preventing an informed debate about the merits of Stealth and jeop ardizing the plane’s future. The Stealth bomber is under at tack on Capitol Hill as an unproven technology that should not be pur sued at the expense of the B-l. The debate has sharpened in recent months because the Rockwell Inter national Corp., which builds the B-l, is already beginning to shut down parts of its production line. The Air Force had previously awarded contracts to Rockwell for 100 B-l bombers. Weinberger ear lier this year said he had no inten tion of changing the Pentagon’s plan to replace its aging B-52 bombers with 100 B-l’s and 132 Stealth bombers. Rockwell, in an unsolicited bid de signed to continue the program, of fered in March to build 48 additio nal B-l’s at a new price of about $140 million per plane in 1981 dol lars. AT&T begins hiring temporary operators WASHINGTON (AP) — AT&T has begun hiring thousands of tem porary telephone operators to re place striking workers as negotiators for the company and its largest em ployee union huddled in what were described as largely unproductive bargaining sessions Tuesday. Officials for the telecommunca- tions giant said 2,000 temporary op erators were hired Monday and an other 1,000 on Tuesday to help run switchboards normally staffed by 24,000 union operators in the week. American Telephone and Tele graph Co. was struck Sunday by 155,000 members of the Commu nications Workers of America, 36,000 of them telephone operators, after the union rejected the compa ny’s offer of an 8 percent pay in crease over the next three years. Herb Linnen, an AT&T spokes man said Tuesday, “If the strike con tinues, we’ll hire up to 7,000 tempo raries to help us through this situation.” The union, meanwhile, estimated that AT&T is losing $50 million a day because of the strike. Francine Zucker, a union spokeswoman, said that figure was calculated on estimates of lost busi ness based on the company’s 1985 annual report. Linnen said, “We’re not able to quantify the impact at this time. I don’t know where the union is get ting its figures.” Linnen, however, acknowledged that AT&T’s average response time in answering calls for long-distance assistance Tuesday was 15 times longer than normal. However, he said the response time averaged 60 seconds on Mon day, the first working business day of the strike. The normal average re sponse time for an operator to an swer when a caller dials zero is 2 sec onds, he said. uclear safety Gorbachev calls for creation of international safeguard system ^iTED NATIONS (AP) —Mi i S. Gorbachev urged the wor Isday to create without delay ; jrnational system of safeguar Jnst such nuclear disasters as tl losion and fire at the Chernot T ler plant. lOi Ji a message to U.N. Secretar f 10(11 | eral J av i er Perez de Cuellar, tl lUUIIet leader also urged agreeme ng governments on measur nst nuclear terrorism, mentio 42 cases of sabotage at nucle ities in the West. orbachev, obviously still smart- from Western criticism of how , Clusifi^Soviet Union handled the acci- M5-261I at ^ ie Ukrainian power plant, osed that an international accord forbid “attempts to use nu clear accidents to exacerbate ten sions and distrust in relations among states.” Soviet officials did not report the April 26 accidefit until nearly three days later, after high radiation levels were reported in Scandinavia and Sweden demanded an explanation from the Kremlin. The death toll from the accident now stands at 25. A Soviet doctor said Tuesday that 18,000 people were hospitalized immediately af terward, but all except about 300 were released in a few days. Lessons learned from Chernobyl “should serve to the benefit of all mankind,” Gorbachev said in the message. It was delivered orally by outgoing Soviet Ambassador Yuri Dubinin, who has been appointed ambassador to Washington, and an English transcript was made avail able to reporters. Bv giving prominence to nuclear terrorism, Gorbachev appeared to be directing attention to an area in which the West is more vulnerable than the Soviet Union. There has been no suggestion of sabotage at Chernobyl. “One cannot but feel concerned by the facts of purposely inflicted damages to nuclear power enter prises, which have taken place in the West,” Gorbachev said. “Thus, for example, 32 such cases were regis tered in the United States from 1974 to 1984. Ten attacks on different nu clear facilites were undertaken in Europe from 1966 to 1977.” Because of shortcomings in exist ing systems to prevent theft of highly enriched fissionable materi als, he said, “There is an imminent need for an elaboration of a reliable system of measures to prevent nu clear terrorism in all its manifesta tions.” President Reagan and the leaders of six other industrial democracies called at their Tokyo summit last month for an international conven tion “committing the parties to re port and exchange information in the event of nuclear emergencies or accidents.” CASH for gold, silver, old coins, diamonds Full Jewelry Repair Large Stock of Diamonds Gold Chains TEXAS COIN EXCHANGE 404 University Dr. 846-8916 3202-A Texas Ave. (across from El Chico,Bryan) 779-7662 mm.mmmmmmmmmmmtssn SCHULMAN THEATRES 1 2.50 ADMISSION 1. Any show before 3PM 2. Tuesday - All Seats 3. 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