Friday, April 10, 1987/The Battalion/Page 13 Introducing Carrie's Kitchen 4405-B College Main • Specializing in home-style cooking • Daily Lunch Specials • Take out orders • Homemade Cinamon Rolls-Baked Daily Hours: Mon-Thurs 7arn 9am Fri-Sat 7am-3am Sun ll-9pm 846-7945 SATURDAY, APRIL 11 5:00 pm at RUDDER FOUNTAIN Live in Concert (llospel ^ Sponsored by the Baptist ^ Student Union ible -Hirf re l tl Sun 1 Where you can buy a formal for as little as $49. 00 come see our new semi-formal and formal collections Located in Post Oak Village 764-8289 New Spring Hours 10-8 Mon-Sat & 1-5 Sun New Arrivals Daily CHECKS WELCOME Russian officials claim embassies bugged’ by U.S. MOSCOW (AP) — The Soviet Union displayed microphones and other gadgets it said were dug from the walls and floors of its U.S. mis sions Thursday and claimed the de vices prove that Soviets are victims of American spies. The devices, some crammed with miniature electronics and no bigger than a pencil, are “material evidence of who is really intruding into the sovereign territory of others,” For eign Ministry spokesman Boris Pyadyshev said at a news briefing. The display of objects allegedly planted at Soviet missions and resi dences in Washington, San Fran cisco and New York was clearly a Kremlin response to reports that the KGB laced the U.S. Embassy in Mos cow with bugging devices. T he Soviet counterattack came as American officials were trying to gauge a sex-and-spy scandal that al- legly involved U.S. Marine guards who became sexually involved with Soviet women and were enticed into allowing KGB agents inside the American Embassy. It was not possible for journalists to verify that the transmitters, re ceivers and other electronic devices had actually been planted on Soviet property by U.S. agents. The Soviet Union took extraordi nary measures to protect its new Washington embassy after the United States tried in 1979 to bug apartment buildings inside the com pound, the Washington Post re ported Thursday. John Carl Warnecke Sr., who helped design the $65 million com plex, told the newspaper the discov ery of listening devices caused the Soviets to dismantle parts of the new chancery building and X-ray “each inch of steel the night before it was put up.” They also refused to accept materials prefabricated outside the compound, Warnecke said. The Soviets have denied that they spied on the U.S. Embassy in Mos cow. And officials have claimed the United States is trying to poison the atmosphere for the visit of Secretary of State George P. Shultz next week and harm chances for an arms con trol agreement. “Not a single fact has been pro duced,” Pyadyshev commented, con trasting the U.S. charges with the display shown by the Soviets at the news conference. “What we are dealing with is words, and words of this kind are not worth a lot,” he said. Pyadyshev added that accusations of Soviet spy operations aimed at the U.S. Embassy were fabricated by “forces of the extremist, militarist wing” in an attempt to wreck any chance of superpower accord. Ivan N. Miroshkin of the Foreign Ministry’s security service told re porters that some of the devices dis played had been found several days a g°- Spying equipment was found in rooftop beams, bricks and cinderb- locks, Miroshkin said. Among the devices put on display by the Soviets were: • A 4-foot-long noose-shaped coil wrapped in insulation, said to have been used in a bugging system dis guised as an inner-window sealant strip at the new Soviet Embassy of fice tower in Washington. • Four components the size of ra dio tubes that were allegedly planted at the Soviet consulate in San Fran cisco. • A 10-inch-long pencil-slim min iaturized microphone that report edly was used to bug the new Soviet residential complex in Washington. • Photographs and bricks that Miroshkin said showed a bugging device that optically beamed infor mation from the Soviet Embassy res idency on infrared frequencies. Reagan calls spying by Soviets outrageous WASHINGTON (AP) — Presi dent Reagan called Soviet spying in the U.S. Embassy in Moscow “outra geous” Thursday and his chief of staff said while he assumes this coun try keeps an eye on Soviet diplomats, it would never do “what the Soviets have done.” The remarks by both Reagan and his aide, Howard Baker, came in re sponse to an accusation in Moscow by Soviet Foreign Ministry spokes man Boris Pyadyshev that an “ex tremist, militarist wing” in the United States had fabricated charges that the KGB planted listening de vices in both the old U.S. Embassy and the new embassy that is to re place it. Reagan deplored Soviet bugging of the U.S. Embassy in Moscow but declined to say what America does along those lines. “I’m not going to discuss our intel ligence or counter-intelligence, or there wouldn’t be any that would be useful any more,” Reagan told re porters in West Lafayette, Ind., after a speech at Purdue University. Baker said the scope of Soviet spy ing on Americans in Russia “really represent an invasion of our sover eign rights.” “I assume that we have intelli gence capability related to Soviet in stallations, but I don’t know that,” Baker said. “I don’t think the United States would do what the Soviets have done.” Reagan said: “I cannot and will not comment on United States intel ligence activities. Nonetheless, I can say that what the Soviets did to our embassy in Moscow is outrageous, and we have protested strongly. We are conducting a full investigation and will take whatever corrective ac tion is necessary. . . . Diplomatic in stitutions . . . can and must be se cured from Soviet spying.” Baker told reporters aboard Air Force One, “The scope and extent of it really represent an invasion of our sovereign rights .... But I would certainly be disappointed if the United States didn’t have counterin telligence capabilities — intelligence capabilities of our own — in our country and abroad.” Baker said Reagan is indignant, but because of the “high stakes in volved” he will not allow the spying incidents to block Shultz’s arms con trol negotiations in Moscow next week. Baker said that Shultz would raise the espionage issue with Soviet For eign Foreign Mininster Eduard A. Shevarnadze, but was likely to focus largely on arms control issues. Huge crowd greets Gorbachev in Prague PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) — More than 150,000 people warmly greeted Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev when he arrived in Pra gue on Thursday for a visit that has raised hopes among many Czechos lovaks that their conservative lead ership will adopt recent Kremlin re forms. Although welcoming crowds are arranged for Soviet visitors, Prague residents said they could not recall such a big turnout since the first man in space, Yuri Gagarin, came to Prague in 1961. Gorbachev stepped into the crowds to shake hands and told one group in Russian, “We are old friends.” Gorbachev, whose trip was post poned three days because of a cold, held his first talks with host Gustav Husak, the 74-year-old president and party leader, after an airport welcome and a ceremonial greeting in front of Hradcany Castle on a hill overlooking the old city. Little detail emerged from the talks, but a Soviet spokesman said they concerned cooperation between the Communist parties in Moscow and Prague. Gorbachev indicated to Prague residents that he would not make public any differences with Husak. State television showed Gorba chev telling residents of a city suburb that “We have complete trust in (your) leadership.” Husak came to power in 1969 af ter a Soviet-led Warsaw Pact inva sion in August 1968 crushed reform attempts by then Czechoslovak party leader Alexander Dubcek. Since then, Husak’s regime has gained a reputation as one of the most conservative and repressive governments in the Soviet bloc. Husak last month lent strong ver bal support to Moscow’s selective re forms, but made clear they will come slowly — if at all — to Czechoslova kia. But it seemed clear that the Cze choslovak public is interested in the possibility of reform, and that the enthusiasm of the crowds was genu ine. At the airport people waved small Soviet flags and shouted, “Long live Comrade Gorbachev.” Czechoslovak television quoted Vadim Zagladin, deputy head of the Soviet Central Committee’s Interna tional Information Department, as saying Gorbachev would make an important speech on international affairs while in Czechoslovakia. Gorbachev is to speak Friday, and there is speculation he will use the opportunity to announce a withdra wal of some Soviet troops from Czechoslovakia or make new arms control proposals. ■I" AM/PM Clinics Minor Emergencies 10% Student Discount with ID card 3820 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 846-4756 401 S. Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas 779-4756 8a.m.-11 p.m. 7 days a week Walk-in Family Practice FREE BAR-B-QUE YANKEE’S TAVERN s N S S s V S V S S Downtown Snook (Take 60 To Loop 2155, Located close to Snook Baking Company 272-3715 Great Country Atomosphere - Horseshoe Pit and Great Music Not everyone can live at The best apartment complex in Aggieland is almost full for the fall. 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ON THE DOUBLE 331 University 846-3755 HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-lO p.m. Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 10 p.m.-6 p.m. Coupon INTERNATIONAL HOUSE of PANCAKES* RESTAURANT 2.99 Mon: Burgers & French Fries Tues: Chili Beans & Biscuits Wed: All You Can Eat Pancakes Thur: Hot Dogs & French Fries Fri: Beer Battered Fish Sat: French Toast Sun: Spaghetti & Meat Sauce All You Can Eat $2 9 L,e, n ,. no take outs must present this Expires 4/15/87 ! International House of Pancakes Restaurant 103 S. College Skaggs Center