Page 10 The Battalion Tuesday, February 28,1989 Judge adjourns North trial after classified info dispute WASHINGTON (AP) — The judge in Oliver L. North’s Iran-Contra trial abruptly adjourned the pro ceedings today during a dispute that arose during a bench conference over the use of classified information during cross examination of witness Robert W. Owen. U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell sent the jury home for the rest of the day and cleared the courtroom to hold a closed hearing on the classified information at issue. The adjournment came after a heated bench confer ence during which the judge was overheard telling prosecutors, “My ruling is the name must come in,” in dicating the dispute involved disclosing the name of a secret source. The dispute arose as Owen, who was North’s courier to Central America, was being questioned about a 1985 trip he took to Costa Rica to view the site of an airfield for rebel resupply operations. “Ladies and gentlemen,” a H^Tr-lv angry Gesell told jurors as he cleared the courtroom, “I am going to ex cuse you for the day and try to get this roadblock straightened out.” The dispute arose before the noon lunch break when the attorney for the defense, Brendan V. Sullivan Jr., proposed introducing a document into evidence as part of his cross-examination of Owen. The judge asked to see the document over the lunch hour. When the trial reconvened, Gesell apparently ruled during a bench conference that the information was relevant to the case, prompting a half-hour recess while prosecutors consulted with government security ex perts. Another bench conference ensued when court re convened after the recess. Gesell spoke to prosecutor John W. Keker so angrily that his voice could be heard at times in the rear of the courtroom. Pentagon orders construction of war blimp ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. (AP) — When most people think of blimps, they imagine gently float ing giant balloons advertising ev erything from tires to film to co las. The Department of Defense has another picture: protector of warships, able to remain nearly invisible to radar while providing early warning of approaching enemy aircraft. Blimps played this role in World War II but the Navy aban doned its airships as outdated in the early 1960s. Now, the Pentagon has or dered construction of a 425-foot- long blimp that will be the largest non-rigid airship ever built, more than twice as long as a conventio nal blimp. The blimp will be equipped with powerful radar and will be capable of patrolling for several days without refuel ing. It will fly as high as 10,000 feet, and up to 92 miles per hour. “Everyone has been doing these paper studies of the airships ever since they stopped using air ships,” said Ron Hochstetler of Airship Industries, a British blimp maker that is building the military blimp in a joint venture with Westinghouse Electric Corp. Airship Industries sees a new generation of blimps being used not just for military surveillance, but for spotting drug-smuggling planes, monitoring ocean pollut ion and taking tourists on sight seeing flights. Nixon advises world leaders to deal warily with Gorbachev WASHINGTON (AP) — Richard M. Nixon, volunteer adviser to just about every president he has known, has some foreign policy counsel for President Bush: deal warily with Mikhail Gorbachev or risk “being taken to the cleaners.” “His toughness and intelligence will more than compensate for his country’s economic weakness,” Nixon says of the Soviet leader, “and his consummate ability in diplomacy and political maneuver will guar antee that he seldom winds up with the short end of a deal.” The former president, who made his imprint in foreign policy before he was driven from office by the Wa tergate scandal in 1974, has been of fering counsel on his specialty ever since. His 1989 installment is in an essay written for the weighty magazine Foreign Affairs. In it, he seconds Bush’s slow and cautious approach to Moscow. “President Bush should continue to reject the advice of those who urge that he schedule a quick sum mit with Gorbachev in order to have a foreign policy ‘victory’ early in his term,” Nixon writes. “Gorbachev needs a summit far more than the president. “Only when the Bush administra tion has agreed on a strategy with our allies and has a definite program for making significant progress on maior issues should President Bush schedule an American-Soviet sum mit.” Nixon says that having met twice with Nikita Khrushchev, three times with Leonid Brezhnev and with Gor bachev in 1986, he considers the cur rent Soviet leader “in a class of his own.” If Western leaders want to avoid being taken to the cleaners, they must understand what Gorbachev wants and how the West should respond.” — Richard Nixon “He is their match in tenacity and forcefulness, but outstrips them in realism, quickness and intelligence.” Nixon writes that “if Western lead ers want to avoid being taken to the cleaners, they must understand what Gorbachev wants and how the West should respond." Nixon says the new administra tion should link strategic arms con trol negotiations with economic rela tions, Soviet involvement in places like Nicaragua and Angola, conven tional arms reductions and other is sues that divide the super powers, and take a package approach in dealing with Moscow. “Without linkage, Gorbachev will string together a series of easyvicto. ries at the bargaining table," he says, Nixon says that Europe and tlij Western alliance should be the top foreign policy priority for the net administration. “It should call for a major wort ing summit — no black tiesandiio spouses — to hammer out a strategi for enhancing our collective seen, rity,” he writes. Europe was Nixon’s first overseas stop as president 20 years ago, A though black ties and spouses were included on that journey to five al lied capitals. Then, as now, there were strains on the NATO alliance. In Nixon) time, it was the decision of Charles de Gaulle to pull France out of lire military side of the alliance. The cur rent problem is in West Germans, and the issue is modernization of short-range nuclear weapons based there. Secretary of State James A. Baker 111 handled the new administration) first mission to Europe, covering IS nations in eight days. He returned saying that the nuclear moderniza tion question can be worked outand resolved over the next three months Nixon also sees a new relationship with China as a major item on the Gorbachev agenda. He said the United States should welcomedoser relations between the two comnui nist giants. 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