Thursday, April 16,1 QST/The Battalion/Page 9 World and Nation Court-martial decision avoided for Marine in Soviet spy scandal WASHINGTON (AP) — A pre- Irial hearing for a Marine embassy guard accused of espionage recessed (Wednesday without any decision on whether he should be bound over lor court-martial. J Lt. Col. John Shotwell, a Marine ■iorps spokesman, said the pre-trial Jiearirig for Sgt. Clayton J. Lonetree lecessed at about 3:30 p.m. CDT. lie said proceedings would likely be lompleted Thursday morning “be cause they only have one or two wit nesses left.” Lonetree, 25, is a former guard at he U.S. Embassy in Moscow. He has en accused of becoming involved tmantically with a Soviet woman hile working in Moscow and then llowing Soviet agents to f requently bam the embassy late at night last ear. Lonetree and his defense attor- ieys went behind closed doors at 9 a m. Wednesday to hear prosecuting aitorneys present witnesses and other evidence in a bid to justify the start of a court-martial. During a break in the proceed ings, one of Lonetree’s defense at torneys told reporters his client had not denied having a relationship with a Soviet woman who worked at the embassy, Violetta Seina. But Michael V. Stuhff, the attor ney, added he was prepared to pre sent evidence that such fraterniza tion was “a very common, accepted practice.” “Among the things which will be introduced in evidence, we’ll have photographs from the Marine Ball in November of 1985 showing the NCO (non-commissioned officer) in charge with two Soviet women, one under each arm on a sofa, one of them being a KGB colonel, as well as a State Department official with an other Soviet woman,” Stuhff said. Lonetree “has been grievously and dangerously chastized, den igrated for engaging in something that he quite f rankly was encouraged to do,” the attorney said. “We’re very confident that if we have an opportunity to present the facts fairly, it will be clear to every body, to the American people, to the public, to the media, to the Marine Corps, that Sgt. Lonetree is a patri otic, young Marine,” Stuhff said. William Kunstler, another Lone tree attorney, said the defense had offered two legal motions on Wednesday, both of which were denied by the hearing officer. The first was a motion to open the pre trial proceedings to the press and public. The second was a bid to ob tain Lonetree’s release from the brig on grounds he had been unconstitu tionally held for more than 90 days without starting a trial, Kunstler said. The hearing was held at the Quantico Marine Base in Virginia, just south of Washington, where Lo netree has been held behind bars since the end of December. The Ma rine Corps imposed a news blackout on the proceedings. Lonetree’s arrest sparked an in vestigation that has unraveled a ma jor sex-and-spy scandal. Two other Marines have been charged with es pionage as a result of the probe and another has been charged with im proper fraternization with Soviet women. In a related development, the New York Times reported Wednes day the Marine Corps was having trouble gathering evidence to pros ecute Lonetree and an alleged ac complice, Cpl. Arnold Bracy. The paper said much of the case against the two men was based on conflict ing statements given by the two. Officials who weren’t identified in the story were cited as saying the Reagan administration was now di vided over whether to grant immu nity from prosecution to Bracy to improve the case against Lonetree. • “It's mi al and 'in > overcast' ■iilsharti in injure ILLRV: ith wki a i isi io*I a sock en the il area v spose of Son's suicide n courtroom Daffies mom KOKOMO, Ind. (AP) — Rob- rt Gray told his mother he ouldn’t bear a long stretch in ^^^^irison, but she’s as puzzled as lt0 FM anyone about why he brought a asdetol bomb into the county courthouse tnd killed himself in the blast. Fifteen other people, including he sheriff and Gray’s defense at torney, were injured Tuesday. t"the [b Hours earlier, a judge had sum- toned attorneys to discuss re- orts that Gray had threatened filicide. His mother, Betty McKinley, of larion, said, “1 don’t have an Idea about what went through my ion’s head.” Gray, 42, was on trial on two ounts of selling LSD, and faced a laximum prison term of 10Q ears on each count if convicted. i\n autopsy on his body was being onducted Wednesday. Police said they had not deter- e( j f nined where Gray obtained the xplosives. McKinley received a letter from her son on the day of the ilast which said in part: “I love ou. . . . I’m sorry but I couldn’t the rest of my life in prison. /U Why they want me so bad 1 don’t V I mow. I’ve been trying to be good ^ . he last few years.” I Gray’s attorney, Charles * * kruggs, said he believed his di nt intended to detonate the )omb in the Howard County ourtroom, but changed plans vhen Sheriff John D. Beatty be- :ame suspicious about the brief- :ase. 5 pereffl geuillcoi lie says ighouifi ,-suits if s who id e, saiitif ruancy. Amy Carter, Abbie Hoffman innocent of protest charge NORTHAMPTON, Mass. (AP) — A jury found Amy Carter, Abbie Hoffman and 13 other protesters in nocent Wednesday of charges stem ming from a demonstration last fall against CIA recruiters at the Univer sity of Massachusetts. The six-member jury announced the verdict to a courtroom packed with 130 spectators about three hours after it began deliberations. Hampshire County District Court Judge Richard Connon cleared the chamber after the reading of the first verdict was greeted with thun derous applause. “The people of Northampton, a jury of six in Northampton, have found the CIA guilty of a larger crime than trespassing and disor derly conduct and decided we had a legitimate right to protest that,” the daughter of former President Jimmy Carter said as she left the courthouse. “I don’t know what is in the fu ture, but I am sure I am going to be involved in this sort of thing for the rest of my life,” she added. She called her family from the de fendants’ headquarters, where jubi lant supporters and defendants doused each other with champagne. She said her father, who had been following the trial in the Atlanta newspapers, was “really excited.” Carter, who was appearing at Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Ga., said later that he was a “very proud father tonight.” “Amy is a very shy girl, contrary to the image you see projected in the news media,” he said. “But she be lieves very strongly in what she’s doing. “She has been, reluctantly I would say, involved in issues of importance to her. Amy’s been arrested four times, three times for protesting apartheid and this last time for what she considers, and I consider, illegal activity of the CIA in Nicaragua. “I’m very proud of Amy, and eager for her to get back in the class room and make up for lost time.” After the verdict was announced, Hoffman said, “It feels very good, very good. I am proud of what we did. It’s good for the country. It’s good for democracy.” Shultz soys agreement on missile bon possible BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) — Sec retary of State George P. Shultz ex pressed optimism in Moscow non Wednesday about reaching an accord on eliminating medium- range nuclear missiles from Europe and flew to Brussels to consult with NATO allies. “We will consult and, I am sure, come to a good conclusion,” Shultz said before leaving Moscow, where he held three days of meetings with Soviet officials, including Kremlin leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who made new arms proposals. A senior official in the Shultz del egation told reporters here at a mid night briefing, “We are very close to a deal. It all depends on how the dis cussions come out tomorrow (Thurs day) and afterward.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity. In Moscow, Shultz said Soviet For eign Minister Eduard A. Shevard nadze told him the Soviets would bn 1 * hool pi. e $anie*j ’ l ' ial °l lfr | his, k «1 Idle steel plant draws politicians, promises I HOMESTEAD, Pa. (AP) — The Rainbow Kitchen, a Depression-style eatery for the jobless, :y ha'PThas become a magnet for politicians, and so has iat sma lion J schools, j® filled ihibits T ( n ptimf who tf* r doS l ficers it* 1 the idle steel plant beside it. J But when Gary Hart took a turn Wednesday (erving up compassion for down-and-out steel workers, he encountered skepticism from people who have heard promises again and again. B “Since 1980, there have been three presi- ctential candidates through Homestead and doz ens of congressional candidates,” said Michael Stoudt, a grievance officer at United Steelwork- ildreipWs Local 1397, who confronted the Democratic corp n ' i: |presidential candidate outside the gate of the j shuttered U.S. Steel Homestead Works. “We’re just as unemployed,” Stoudt said. jfVe’re just as broke. We’re just as bankrupt. Are fm going to do anything?” ■ Hart, standing in the rain on a plywood plank supported by concrete blocks, said, “I’m not ig>ing to make promises like everybody else. If I get elected in 1988, you’re going to see the steel mills of this country come back up.” Joseph Michel, 75, of nearby West Mifflin, wasn’t buying it. “He can’t do it,” Michel said. “The mills are never coming back. It’s just a political strategy to get the people interested. It’s not going to hap pen. It can’t happen. It’s impossible.” The soup kitchen and cadaver of the steel mill stand in stark contrast to the glory days when the Mononagela Valley was the heart of the U.S. steel industry. Terry Chalich, a pyschiatric nurse at the Vet erans Administration Hospital and president of the kitchen, said, “It’s an attractive backdrop po litically.” “The people don’t see any concrete change,” she said. “There’s no big job creation, no major industry has come here, no concrete solutions. People feel like the Mon Valley is being forgot ten. Robert Anderson, 42, a laid-off steelworker and founder of the kitchen, argued that Hart’s visit had its value. “He’s sort of using us, but we feel we’re using him,” Anderson said. “We want to keep the issues out in the open. The whole point is to try to get help for people. Things just continue to get worse around here.” The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a 1984 presidential candidate, has handed out food at the kitchen that took its name from his Rainbow Coalition. Former U.S. Rep. Robert Edgar, beaten in a U.S. Senate bid last year, washed dishes and served plates last year. And Walter Mondale rep resented Jimmy Carter’s 1980 re-election cam paign with a stop in Homestead. The soup kitchen opened in 1984 to feed the jobless. A hot lunch is provided for 75 to 150 people a day, five days a week. About 1,000 fami lies a week get bags of groceries from the kitch en’s pantry. y RESEARCH/LECAL ASSISTANT POSITIONS A major law firm with offices in Houston, Austin and Dallas is seeking mature individuals with excellent academic creden tials for full-time, permanent positions in its successful legal assistant program, working in such areas of the firm as liti gation, banking, corporate, employee benefits and tax. We require good written and oral communication skills, the capacity to master and organize a new body of knowledge quickly, and the ability and desire to interface with individuals I from diverse backgrounds. We are seeking individuals with [graduate and/or undergraduate degrees. No previous legal experience is required. Descriptive literature is available from Louis Van Pelt, John Cudelman, Ann McDonald and Daniel Orozco in the Placement Office. . Interested persons should forward a copy of their resume, college transcript, and a research paper to: Julia H. Bolling, Vinson & Elkins, 2514 First City Tower, 1001 Fannin, Houston, TX 77002-6760. mss THE DEADLINE for GRADUATION ^ ANNOUNCEMENTS • Don’t Sweat - We Can Help - Call Today s $ j 0 : o« with ad | expires 4/24/87 RQ0 off AGGIELAND PRINT SHOP ■ Quick Quokry Prtnhng 693-8621 1801 Holleman • College Station MATHEMATICS CONTEST The annual Freshman and Sophomore Math ematics Contest will be held Thursday, April 16, 1987 form 7:30 to 9:30 PM. The Freshmen Con test will be in Room 216 Milner Hall and the Sophomore Contest in 304 Milner Hall. No cal culators - all test material will be provided. Prizes for winners of first place will be $100.°°, second place $60.°°, and third place $40.°°. Prerequisite for Freshmen contest is knowledge of calculus through Math 151 or equivalent, for the Sopho more contest knowledge of calculus through Math 253 or equivalent. eliminate their shorter-range mis siles in the Soviet Union within a year, apparently meaning, within a year after Senate ratification of a proposed treaty to rid Europe of hundreds of U.S. and Soviet me dium-range missiles. The Soviets have about 80 shorter-range missiles on their terri tory. In addition, they have about 50 shorter-range launchers — with a range of 350 to 600 miles — in East Germany and Czechoslovakia. Those weapons would be scrapped on the signing of the proposed treaty on medium-range missiles, with a range of 600-3,000 miles. Gorbachev made the proposals during a 4 Vi-half-hour meeting Tuesday with Shultz in the Kremlin. They could remove a major obstacle to a treaty on medium-range mis siles. Pi Beta Phi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon Aggie Dating came TELL M6THIS OH.PITS. ISN'T TkOOtf IT'S NOT EIGHT 4/3 ///?/) 5. ALREAPY, 15 T? / | \ April 16 7:30 p.m. Rudder Auditorium Door prizes Include: a Razz Scooter courtesy of scooter Brown's «1 semester rental) You could win a date with Troy Ireland • Yell Leader lisa Murray - Diamond Darling Tickets: $4 in advance $5 at the door On sa)« ttv»« wmk from 12-4 In th« HSC A tUockmr. For mar* ticket information call 744-IT73,693-1444 or M4-S302. Benefiting MDA and Twin City Mission Here's the Scoop. Hand-dipped Blue-Bell Ice Cream. 75tf Buy one dip — get one free! Pavilion — Rumours — IViSC Basement Snack Bar Now through April 30, 1987 TX ; A Fresh from the Little Creamery in Brenham. Department of Food Services Texas A&M University "Quality First"