Wednesday, April 15, 1987/The Battalion/Page 11 >uv itartl ^eis 10 lead® id diet'it( ierCIwd id in adn pit SOI nd Don we've World and Nation more Marine guards recalled for questioning in spy scandal | WASHINGTON (AP) — The investigation of espionage scandal (hat has rocked the Marine vrps’ elite embassy guard force broadened Tuesday with the announcement that four ards formerly stationed in communist-bloc untries were being recalled from Austria for Questioning. K Robert Sims, chief Pentagon spokesman, said ,the Marines, now assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Vienna, were suspected of possible improper fraternization with foreign citizens while posted | other embassies in Warsaw Pact nations. ledsa A fifth Marine is being replaced for unrelated Jolations of “local security regulations” in Vienna, Sims said, and a sixth was recalled to ap- parasa witness at a pretrial hearing Wednesday irSgt. Clayton J. Lonetree, the guard whose ar- st touched off the current investigation. Sims also said the Marine Corps has tightened j screening procedures for new guard recruits, nd he confirmed that an internal Pentagon tome* htiheri arkin, 1 fail study had recommended changes in the supervi sion of embassy guards. Defense Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger, meantime, said the Pentagon might consider as signing more married Marines, accompanied by their wives, to guard duty instead of relying on young, single servicemen. Sims told a news briefing he could not release the identities of the Marines who had been re called nor disclose at which embassies the men had served before Vienna. He stressed that none had been formally charged with wrongdoing. Lonetree, who has been charged with espio nage, was arrested in December at the Vienna embassy. He had transferred to the Austrian cap ital last fall after working in 1985 and 1986 as a guard at the Moscow embassy. The Marine Corps has formally accused Lone tree and a second former guard, Cpl. Arnold Bracy, of allowing Soviet agents inside the Mos cow embassy on numerous late-night spying for ays last year. Lonetree also has been accused of breaching security at the Vienna facility by providing floor plans and office assignments for the building. Sims declined to say whether any of the four Marines returning for questioning might have served with Lonetree in Moscow, although he ac knowledged they had been targeted as an out growth of the Lonetree investigation. He said his information indicated only that they had worked in Warsaw Pact countries. Pentagon sources have said Lonetree and Bracy became involved sexually with Soviet women in Moscow, who in turn introduced them to Soviet agents. A third Moscow guard has been charged with improper fraternization with Soviet women but is not facing any espionage charges. The Marine Corps has also arrested a fourth man, Sgt. John J. Weirick, on suspicion of espio nage while he worked at the U.S. consulate in the Soviet city of Leningrad in 1981 and 1982. Wei rick is also suspected of having become involved with Soviet women. ty in fi Tied up condtas Committee recommends CBS contract NEW YORK (AP) — The ne- ptiating committee of the Writ ers Guild of America announced Tuesday that it was recommend ing approval of a CBS contract proposal to end a G'/z-week strike Igainst the network. "We are pleased that the nego- ating committee has recom- [nended acceptance of the pack- ” said CBS spokesman Jeorge Schweitzer. “We look for ward to its ratification by the bembership and their return to vork.” Terms of the proposed set- pementwere not revealed. About 525 writers, editors and raphic artists went on strike gainst ABC and CBS on March 2 in a dispute over job security is- ues, not wages. Talks are continuing with BC, said guild spokesman Mar in Waldman. If the CBS contract proposal is Ipproved by the membership, employees could return to ork. The guild announced Monday at CBS had put forth a compre- Siensive settlement offer, and aldman called it “the first on- he-record, complete proposal hat the company has made since Ihe beginning of the strike.” Schweitzer said Monday the of- jfer “reflects the needs and inter- |ests of the company and we are hopeful the guild and its mem- ership will find it a fair and workable formula for the future.” The 50-page document was utlined to the guild’s full nego- iating committee at a daylong eeting. ABC spokesman Tom Mackin eclined to comment, saying only hat ABC was meeting with the uild Tuesday. Kremlin leader offers to axe missiles in new agreement MOSCOW (AP) — Mikhail S. Gorbachev offered Tuesday to elim inate short-range nuclear missiles now in East Germany and Czecho slovakia as part of an arms-control agreement with the United States. The proposal, reported by the So viet news agency Tass, could remove a major roadblock to a treaty ridding Europe of medium-range rockets. Gorbachev “expressed the read iness to record an agreement on me dium-range missiles (including) the Soviet Union’s obligation to elimi nate its shorter-range missiles within a relatively short and clearly defined time frame,” Tass said. But the Tass account said Secre tary of State George P. Shultz, who met with Gorbachev and other So viet officials for more than 10 hours, insisted on a U.S. right to match the shorter-range missiles, which have a 350- to 600-mile range, that would still remain in the Soviet Union. Gorbachev’s proposal seemed to go beyond his previous offer to ne gotiate the withdrawal — but not the dismantling — of the SS-12 and SS- 23 rockets now in the two East Euro pean countries. Tass also said Gorbachev was pre pared to eliminate battlefield tactical missiles. The two sides have thou sands of such weapons, which have a range of up to 350 miles. “We go further than this was stated in Prague,” Tass said, refer ring to the speech Gorbachev made Friday in the Czechoslovak capital. Tass also said Gorbachev insisted that U.S. anti-missile or “Star Wars” research be restricted to laboratories and that the two sides draw up a list of the devices that would not be al lowed to be tested in space in the course of this research. In Santa Barbara, deputy White House press secretary Dan Howard said: “I can say that the ideas pre- Finished with taxes? Group says ‘tax freedom’ won’t be until May 4 WASHINGTON (AP) — Just when you had finished your 1986 re turn and thought it was safe to for get about taxes for awhile, the Tax Foundation predicted Tuesday that the typical American will have to work another 19 days to pay up for 1987. Tax Freedom Day 1987 is May 4 — two days later than last year. Economists at the non-partisan re search organization calculate that if every cent a worker earned during the first part of the year were ear marked for federal, state and local taxes, he or she would have to toil for the tax collectors through May 3. Viewed another way, an average person will have to work two hours and 43 minutes of each eight-hour day to pay taxes. “This year, the American tax payer has returned to the same point he was at prior to passage” of the 1981 federal tax cut, the foundation said. Those across-the-board reduc tions were wiped out by subsequent federal tax increases and a growing tax burden at the state and local lev els, the analysis said. The news came a day before the deadline for filing federal tax re turns — a chore that perhaps 10 mil lion Americans were putting off un til the last hours. Returns must be postmarked by midnight today. As the deadline approached, fi nancial institutions were doing a booming business in Individual Re tirement Accounts, whicli — after these returns — will no longer be universally deductible. Professional returns preparers had all the busi ness they could handle and Internal Revenue Service offices were swamped with last-minute pleas for advice. The IRS expects 6.5 million cou ples and individuals to avoid the fil ing deadline by mailing a Form 4868, which will bring a four-month extension. But that form must be ac companied by a check for any esti mated tax due. •octor: Parkinson’s surgery needs more study [NEW YORK (AP) — Brain sur- Jry developed in Mexico to treat trkinson’s disease is a dramatic ad vance that could lead to new treat ments for strokes and Alzheimer’s Bsease, but it requires more study :ause two of the 1 1 patients who Iceived it have died, a U.S. doctor Sid Tuesday. ■ Abraham Lieberman, chairman of the medical advisory board of the ■merican Parkinson Disease Asso- ; ciation and professor of neurology at New York University, went to j|exico last week to examine the pa- ents and said he was enormously ficou raged. "I think I witnessed history,” he said at a news conference in his of fice. “I think this is the approach you’re going to take to Alzheimer’s, to spinal cord injuries and to strokes.” He predicted that doctors in the United States would rush to adopt the procedure, in which nerve-like cells from one of the patient’s own adrenal glands, located above the kidneys, are transplanted into the brain to replace degenerating brain cells. Less than three weeks have passed since the first report of the surgery appeared in the New England Jour nal of Medicine, and George Allen at Vanderbilt University Medical Cen ter in Nashville has already per formed the operation on one patient there. The patient is in satisfactory condition, and no improvements in her Parkinson’s disease have been reported yet. New York University is preparing to do its first transplant in May, and other hospitals will likely follow suit, Lieberman said. He warned, however, that hasty adoption of the procedure could be dangerous. “My fear is that there will be a number of deaths and the govern ment or the states will come in and say ‘What is going on here?’ ” Lieberman said one Mexican pa tient died from brain seizures 45 days after surgery, possibly as a con sequence of the surgery. But a mem ber of the Mexican transplant team, led by Dr. Ignacio Madrazo, said the death was not caused by the surgery. The patient had a stroke at a site in the brain distant from the area of the transplant, said Dr. Rene Drucker-Colin of the National Au tonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City. The seizures were a consequence of the stroke, he said. The second patient died in Cali fornia, three months after surgery, of a heart attack, according to au topsy results that the Mexican doc tors have just obtained, he said. % Come have Lunch at Rocc&s! and receive a FREE glass of soft drink with purchase of a lunch buffet! with this ad Wednesday night is ‘FREE HURRICANE NIGHT’ 7-10 509 University 846-1023 Graduation Special Solid Navy Blazers $89.99 reg. $125.00 Now Only Post Oak Mall 764-8196 ASM United Methodist Church Monday, Thursday Services April 16 7 p.m. Easter Sunday Service 6 a.m. Sunrise 7 a.m. Breakfast 8,9:30,11 a.m. Worship 417 University 846-8731 POPCORN NOW AVAILABLE AT THE MSC SWEET SHOP 3737 East 29th Street Bryan, Tx 268-4001 sented in Tass are interesting, and we would take them seriously if true.” He said any such proposal must be discussed with NATO allies. A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Tuesday afternoon that Shultz had spoken by telephone with President Reagan’s national security adviser, Frank Carlucci. He would not com ment further. Shultz, in a 4'/2-hour meeting with Gorbachev, delivered a new invita tion from Reagan to go to Washing ton for a superpower summit meet ing this year. But the Soviet leader told report ers that “generally, without reason, I do not go anywhere, particularly America.” Shultz met Gorbachev, along with their senior advisers, in Catherine’s Hall in the Grand Kremlin Palace on the heels of a bitter public exchange between the superpowers on spy charges. Now Open on Saturday ’til 3 p.m. William* 10 Minute Drive-Thru Lube, Oil, & Filter Changes $3 00 oft 205 Holleman OIL, LUBE & Filter Change i (your choice of oil) 764-7992 ! 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