-The Daily Collegian Thursday Oct. 30, 1980 Newsbriefs Accused spy BALTIMORE (UPI) - Former CIA agent David Henry Barnett pleaded guilty yesterday to charges he acted as a Soviet “mole” and sold secrets to the Russian KGB for nearly $lOO,OOO in cash. The secrets concerned a CIA opera tion to steal information about Rus sian military hardware. Barnett, looked calm but occa sionally grinded his teeth, as he entered his guilty plena on a one-count indictment before U.S. District Judge Frank A. Kaufman. The charges carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Barnett, 47, is believed to be the highest ranking CIA agent to admit working for the Russian secret service. Chrysler reports another loss DETROIT (UPI) Chrysler Corp. reported a third quarter loss yester day of $490 million, boosting auto in dustry red ink in the first nine months of financially devastating 1980 to $3.6 billion. Ironically, Chrysler management and the government were encouraged by the performance. It marked the first time in Chrysler’s two-year financial, crisis that it posted a quarterly loss smaller than General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. It also represented a rare improve ment from the second quarter, when the company lost $536 million. Normally, auto industry financial results are poorest in the third or California brush fire contained YORBA LINDA, Calif. (UPI) - Firefighters yesterday contained the worst of three large wind-driven brush fires that blackened more than 27,000 acres of grassy Southern California hillsides and threatened a country club. The two most serious blazes were reported fully contained and the third nearly under cpntrol by midafternoon. The largest fire charred 11,000 acres in Yorba Linda, 30 miles southeast of Los Angeles. A 8,700-acre blaze flashed through dry canyons west of Thousand Oaks in Ventura County Tuesday. Another brush fire that broke out yesterday morning in Ventura Coun ty, northwest of the other blaze, burn- Carter favors PITTSBURGH (AP) - President Carter yesterday cited a personal reason for keeping environmental standards high to protect one of his favorite haunts, “a nice, beautiful trout stream’’ in central Pennsylvania. “Nothing would grieve me more than to see that beautiful stream someday destroyed by acid rain and be sterile and have no life and no beauty,” Carter told guests .at his town meeting here. State environmental authorities complain that sulfur pollution from coal-fired generating stations in up wind states west of Pennsylvania Nation $59 billion in red WASHINGTON (UPI) - The na tion’s budget was $59 billion in the red in fiscal 1980 the second highest deficit on record, the government reported yesterday. While an improvement over the ad ministration’s mid-year economic projection, the 1980 deficit was well above the $39.8 billion level proposed in January and compares with the previous year’s $27.7 billion deficit. The announcement was contained in the Treasury Department’s first of ficial report on actual government Reagan preferred by seniors POTTSVILLE, Pa. (AP) - In mock presidential balloting, high school seniors in Schuylkill County chose Republican Ronald Reagan over Democratic President Jimmy Carter, 816 to 500. Independent John Anderson got 166 votes, with other candidates getting 53. The polling of over 1,500 students at 16 public and non-public schools was the 16th mock election staged by the Pottsville Republican newspaper in the past eight years. It was conducted Tuesday, before the Carter-Reagan televised debate. Alleged ax murdressacquitted McKINNEY, Texas (UPI) - A churchgoing housewife whose private life included two extramarital affairs was found innocent of murder yester day by a jury that decided she was ac ting in self defense when she hacked her former lover’s wife to death with an ax. The nine-woman, three-man jury acquitted Candace Montgomery, 30, following just over three hours of deliberation. She was charged in the death of friend and fellow church member Betty Gore, who succumbed to 41 blows of an ax. Mrs. Montgomery, mother of two young children, showed no emotion when the verdict was read by District pleads guilty With the guilty plea, there will be no trial. Sentencing was set for Dec. 8 in U.S. District Court. Barnett, of Bethesda, Md., was released on recognizance. Under terms of a plea bargaining agreement, Barnett said he would cooperate fully with the FBI and the CIA in providing further information regarding his activities as a Soviet “mole.” Barnett also agreed to take a lie dectector test and undergo a psychiatric examination. In a 25-page statement of facts read to Judge Kaufman, the government said Barnett worked for the KGB from 1976 until April, 1980. Barnett had a 12-year career with the CIA before he quit in 1970. July-September quarter, when costs of model changeovers are absorbed. That was the case with Ford and GM this year. Chrysler, rescued from bankruptcy this year by an $BOO million dole of government-secured cash, held firm to projections it can earn a profit in the fourth quarter of this year. But it added several important qualifications. “Assuming some moderation in in terest rates, a modest upturn in the economy, and some improvement in the current rate of truck sales, Chrysler should report a profit in the fourth quarter,” said Chairman Lee A.lacocca. ed 3,600 acres and threatened the Saticoy Country Club before firefighters got it 75 percent contain ed by midafternoon. Fireman Bill Wright, 40, suffered minor burns on his face while driving a bulldozer that was overrun by the rapidly moving flames and was treated at Sherman Oaks Community Hospital burn center. The Yorba Linda fire was started by arsonists who set blazes along the Corona Freeway and the Orange County supervisors posted a $lO,OOO reward for capture of two suspects driving a brown sedan in the Prado Dam area near the fire’s origin. The Ventura blaze near Thousand Oaks was ignited by embers from an illegal campfire, officials said. environment turns some of Pennsylvania’s rain to mild acid. Carter’s fishing spot is along Spruce Creek near State College. He has visited the area five times to fish from stream-side land owned by R. Wayne Harpster, a dairy farmer. The stream is well-known among fly fishermen for its cold, clean waters and lively brown trout. Carter mentioned it in responding to a ques tion about how he intended to spur in dustrial development, including the production and use of coal, while maintaining present air and water pollution restrictions. spending for the year ended Sept. 30, and released yesterday. The monthly report originally was scheduled for last Friday, but com plications in compiling the year-end figures delayed its release, Treasury officials said. The result was the report was made public after Tuesday night’s presidential debates possibly depriving Republican nominee Ronald Reagan of further ammuni tion against President Carter’s economic record. In voting for U.S. senator, Republican Arlen Specter defeated Democrat Pete Flaherty 785 to 703. In the state attorney general race, GOP candidate Leroy Zimmerman won with 783 votes to Democrat Michael O’Pake’s 716. The students would return Auditor General A 1 Benedict, a Democrat, to office by a margin of 784 ballots to 670 for Republican challenger James Knepper. Democratic incumbent Robert E. Casey turned back Republican R. Budd Dwyer in the treasurer’s race, 809 to 644. Judge Tom Ryan. She fought back tears, however, as she and her hus band, Pat, were whisked quickly out of the Collin County courthouse under heavy security invoked because of death threats against the defendant. As she was hurried to defense at- torney Robert Udashen’s car, mobb- ed by reporters, several spectators shouted, “Murderer!” “How can they let a confessed murderer go free?” one gray-haired woman asked. “Now she’ll be able to sleep with some other woman’s husband,” another woman added, referring to the affairs Mrs. Montgomery admit ted having. Nixon says FBI break-ins OK Former president says Vietnam war justified entries WASHINGTON (UPI) - Richard Nix on, driven from office after the most famous burglary in U.S. history, testified yesterday he felt FBI “black bag” break-ins were justified in the ear ly 1970 s because America was at war. But Nixon, in a unique court ap pearance interrupted briefly by shouting leftist sympathizers, gave no indication he was aware the FBI secretly entered private homes in a hunt for fugitive members of the Weather Underground, a militant antiwar group. The former president testified at the 6'/2-week-old trial of W. Mark Felt and Edward S. Miller, the FBl’s former No. 2 and No. 3 men who are charged with ap proving nine illegal entries in hopes of finding the fugitive radicals. Nixon appeared at the trial just days before the presidential election Explosion hits Peking's main train station PEKING (AP) A mysterious explosion rocked central Peking’s crowded main railroad station yester day and witnesses said about 20 persons were killed or wounded. Most officials refused to comment, but one called it an “accident.” A foreign ministry spokesman said authorities were investigating the 6:15 p.m. “accident” but gave no details. ' Reports of casualties could not be immediately con firmed. A steady stream of ambulances left the station and sped down Peking’s main Chang An Boulevard, about a block away from the station. One man in the crowd of several thousand people gathered outside the station said the explosion occur red in an elevator and about 20 people were killed or wounded. A soldier who overheard the comment touch ed the man’s arm and he fell silent. “What happened? We can’t get through,” said Wear flame-retan lhal relied fight Trick or Treat Hours 6-9 pm October 30 * Tehran Radio reported a mass breakout by 1,500 prisoners held in Iraq, including some Iranian prisoners of war. But most of the escapees were from Iraq, Kuwait and Syria, the radio said. At the United Nations in New York, the Security Council held its seventh open meeting on the 38-day Persian Gulf con flict. The council has already asked both nations to stop fighting. The Iranian claims that heavy Iraqi * bombers penetrated as far as Qom, 75 miles south of Tehran, and near Esfahan, 145 miles south of Qom, mark ed the first reported use of heavy bombers in the conflict. Qom is 380 miles east of the nearest Iraqi air.base. Iraq reported aerial attacks on Ira nian missile launchers on the southern front cost it two aircraft. It was not known if Khomeini, who Tuesday rejected a cease-fire with Iraq during a speech delivered north of Tehran, was in Qom. The Iranian com munique did not report an attack on the holy Shiite city. “All six crew members of the bombers to strengthen relations Delta village, Sadat’s birthplace about 50 miles north of Cairo. It was their second and last business session during Navon’s five-day visit ending today “We must do the maximum to consolidate the relations bet ween Egypt and Israel and the peace treaty because this is the cornerstone for a comprehensive settlement that will come sooner or later,” Sadat said. And, he said, the normalization of relations would not be af- fected by the slow progress in the autonomy talks about the future of the 1.1 Palestinians in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. The Sadat-Navon program for speeding normalization ranges from the creation of a “High Command for Peace” to the construction of a new highway and railroad between the two countries. were burnt in the fire of Allah’s punish ment,” the Iranian communique said. Khomeini’s Shiite sect rules Persian Iran. Iraq is Arab, and Has a Shiite ma jority dominated by the socialist Sunni Moslem government of President Sad dam Hussein. Iran claimed its planes inflicted heavy damage on refineries on the edge of the Iraqi capital and Basra, Iraq’s southern port on the disputed Shatt al-Arab water way that once divided the two nations. The communique also reported air at tacks on an oil-pumping station and railroad bridge near Kirkuk in northern Iraq. Iraq denied reports of damage at the Baghdad refinery. Reporters and other observers said they heard no explosions and that a sandstorm obscuring city’s skyline would make accurate bombing difficult. Jets also hit an Iraqi truck convoy in the oil province of Khuzestan at the bot tom of the 300-mile battle front and raid ed the island of Umm al-Rassas in the Shatt al-Arab. • CALCULATORS • M* SAVE 50% - JSgf TEXAS INSTRUMENTS TI-55 Reg. *4O SALE *32.95 Texas Inst. 1030..... Texas Inst. 50 Texas Inst. 57 Texas Inst. MBA Texas Inst. 58C. ..... Texas Inst. 59 Kingspoint SC-40 .... Bowmar MX-140 .... Hewlett/Packard 37E Hewlett/Packard 38C Hewlett/Packard 41C • SPEAKERS • Grut starter 1. PIONEER CL-40 speaker. . . A consumer's lop . rated each* 80 2. EPI7OC Classic compact 3. PIONEER MCL-3 speaker..... A national favorite . each ‘ll5 5 4. EPI 100 V 5. ADVENT MODEL I BigSoung 6. JBLI-19 Introduction to JBl aaclt ’lBO * 139° 7. BI C B-44 Super savings each *lBO *13900 America's most 8. BOSE 301 favorite 9. MR 6300 D i!|*Lv Spectacular sound 10. BOSE 901 111 and savings ■ m a a« a a mf*.sow. list»iso “r KENWOOD • VIDEO* Technics INT. 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