The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 20, 1986, Image 6

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    Page 6/The Battalion/Friday, June 20, 1986
spy
(continued from pagel)
as an FBI failure who sought re
venge on his employers and sold out
his country for money and sex.
The defense argued, however,
that Miller was merely a bumbling
patriot who believed he could save
his crumbling career by becoming a
double agent and entering the secret
world of Soviet intelligence.
Miller’s lawyers switched their
strategy in the second trial and
called to the witness stand Soviet em
igre Svetlana Ogorodnikov, his lover
who allegedly lured Miller into spy-
ing.
Jury foreman Jorge Cuellar said
outside court that the jurors had
little doubt that Miller was guilty.
“Very early on, we thought there
was just no way he could be acting
the way he did (if he was not guilty),”
Cuellar said.
Asked what single piece of evi
dence was the most important in
convictng Miller, Cuellar said, “His
own statements. His own confes-
Provost
(continued from pagel)
its own course requirements and
eliminate unnecessary courses.
“We’re talking about what we
should be doing to start people out
on living and start people out on be
ing a practicing engineer,” he said.
“You really ought to look at that (the
engineering curriculum) every so of
ten and not just become complacent
with what we’ve been doing in the
past.”
Curriculum concerns, however,
will make up only a small portion of
McDonald’s duties. He will act pri
marily as the vice president of aca
demic affairs.
In that position, he plans to ex
plore ways to cut the administrative
costs of his office as well as increase
its efficency.
McDonald said the closer he gets
to assuming the position of provost,
the more he sees the enormous
amount of paperwork the office pro
duces.
“I knew they were busy but the
enormity of the paper flow is just
now coming to my attention,” Mc
Donald said. “(It) is a serious prob
lem, I think perhaps the administra
tion is too strung out.
“It might be something worth
looking at — is there some way we
can get this thing under control? I’m
not saying it is possible because I do
not know. But it’s a problem that has
to be faced.”
South Africa
(continued from pagel)
Louis le Grange, the law and order
minister.
At least 40 union leaders are
among more than 1,000 people
known to have been jailed without
charge under the state of emer
gency. T he government does not say
how many have been detained and
unofficial estimates range up to
3,000.
Michael Wright, personnel man
ager of the Central News Agency, a
major news distributor and retailer,
said, “All efforts to reach any union
officials have failed. We do not know
where they are.”
Emergency regulations have
brought an unprecedented security
clampdown and severe restrictions
on journalists. Reporters may not
identify detainees, report “subver
sive statements” or write about secu-
ritv force actions without official
permission.
The Foreign Correspondents’ As
sociation said its members “are now
subject to probably the most severe
censorship applied to foreign jour
nalists anywhere in the world.”
At the daily news briefing of the
Bureau for Information, now vir
tually the sole source of official in
formation, chief spokesman Dave
Steward said he was wrong Wednes
day to describe as “devoid of truth” a
report that leaflets were air-dropped
into black townships around Preto
ria telling residents to stay indoors
during the day. He said the leaflets
had been dropped, telling people to
stay indoors for their own safety.
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845-1631