state/nation/world Reagan to propose nuclear 'build-down' By BARRY SCHWEID Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON President Rea gan is preparing to propose to the Soviet Union that each side remove two strategic nuclear warheads from their arsenals for every new one deployed, a senior U.S. official said yesterday. The move to integrate the "build down" concept into the U.S. nego tiating position at the Geneva arms control talks is certain to improve prospects for congressional appro val of the MX missile program. A number of key senators, includ ing Democrat Sam Nunn of Georgia and Republican William Cohen of Maine, have urged Reagan's shift to the build-down approach. He indi cated last spring he might be recep tive, but did not officially embrace the idea in a subsequent round of changes in the U.S. position in the Strategic Arms Reduction Talks. Since the administration already has proposed a cut of some 2,200 warheads = the Soviets would have to destroy about 2,900 to reach Rea gan's proposed ceiling of 5,000 on each side the "build-down" idea could be easily incorporated into the U.S. stand, said the official, who spoke only on condition he not be named. How the Soviets will react is not clear. They have resisted other U.S. efforts to set the terms for reducing strategic nuclear weapons, and "in general, they say that's your prob lem," said the official. Lebanese shelling: By TERRY A. ANDERSON Associated Press Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon The U.S. ambassador's resi dence in a Beirut suburb came under shellfire last night and American warships responded with a 10-minute barrage against the gunneis in the hills overlooking the capital. Embassy spokesman John Stewart said the naval . I • • , ".• -,4 - ....-4. ,i ' k r' '' ' '‘‘ rA . * tit • 4•4! ,i, ' •*... 'l' I,i ''-' s:' 4 1. , 1 ~,i9O 1i", i d 1 .- -1 .. „,. •,- AA i 4 %f :t 4 ...1• 4 ..„.., , ~.., .....:711 I 4 ~ • '!. A- i ..- r ,....,.,,...;,, i , ,, ~..,.;, ) 0 11 ,•. , , ..-. 00.t.. ,, ,P-.. ~,,,-t.;.‘.,..19 .... ;A: .',•; ...,;:. -..... .. . '*..., , . : : ~ I , ' .°. .. % *:.,*...:-'. - 4...,,,.' : . ...*:!...,;„„ ' - '}:. 'ov •' *-.• ~ '.. . '. !. At' ''•,..: i tr .• ..........• ...... 1 ,,... :::, ~.....i . ,.....,•,..4„,..t tr:. ........„,,,. 4 ._ ..,,.:,„..........,:•,,,..,,:...,:it....:iv.,.:,....,i:....,.i. The U.S. destroyer John . Rodgers sails off Beirut near the Corniche, the once popular seaside resort, of war-torn Lebanon. John Rodgers has periodically fired into Druse-Syrian positions the past few days. Soviets to return debris from jet; U.S. ship detects 'black box' By EUGENE MOOSA Associated Press Writer WAKKANAI, Japan The Kremlin said yesterday it will give the Japanese "items and documents" from the downed South Korean jetliner Sept. 26. U.S. officials said no remains would be turned over, and that the Soviets have been harassing , the U.S. Navy which located then lost pings from the "black box." The Soviets informed the U.S. and Japa nese Embassies in Moscow of the turnover date. State Department spokesman John Hughes told reporters in Washington there was no elaboration on the nature of the items except that they would not include remains of any of the victims. Hughes also denied a Soviet charge that the plane delayed its departure from Anchorage, Alaska, to synchronize its ap proach to the Kamchatka Peninsula with The negotiations are due to re sume Oct. 5 in Geneva, Switzerland, despite the chill in U.S.-Soviet rela tions over the shooting down of a South Korean commercial jetliner, killing all 269 people, including 61 Americans, aboard. Edward Rowny, the chief U.S. negotiator to the talks, told a small group of reporters yesterday "we certainly are aware of the Korean airline incident. You can't brush it away." But, Rowny said, "we feel it is in our interest to continue arms con trol, and we are going to go back to negotiate and do it." Separate talks with the Soyiets on intermediate-range nuclear missiles in Europe resumed Sept. 5. While progress on both fronts has been slow, Reagan- has assured allied leaders that he intends to pursue arms control and is prepared to take a flexible approach. Richard Burt, the assistant secre tary of state for European affairs, met secretly in Brussels on Monday with the disarmament chiefs of the NATO governments, it was learned. West German sources in Bonn said the allies had given Burt the go ahead for a new U.S. initiative at the intermediate-range talks. A U.S. official, who spoke on con dition he not be identified, said it would involve three points: • The United States was pre pared to discuss with the Soviets imposing limitations on American bombers, based in Europe, that can U.S. ambassador's home comes under fire; U.S. naval bombardment follows Bombardment "was in response to the shelling at or very near to the U.S. residence. To the best of my knowledge, the residence was not hit. I know, however, that no one has been hurt. As far as I know, the ambassador was home tonight." In Columbia, S.C., White House spokesman Larry Speakes said President Reagan was told that the ambas sador's residence came under "heavy shelling." "We don't have any reports of injuries," Speakes said. =:: Y 'n=•? -4 . .R "I the flight of a U.S. spy satellite. A Japanese Foreign Ministry official, who declined to be identified, told reporters in Wakkanai that the "items and documents" will be turned over at Nevelisk, on the west coast of Sakhalin near the area where the Korean Air Lines jet was shot down by a Soviet interceptor Sept. 1. The Soviets also specified that the Japa nese are not to use a warship, and that the type of vessel to be used was under dis cussion. The airliner carried 269 people, including 61 Americans, to their deaths. A feverish hunt is under way by the -Soviet, U.S., Japanese and South Korean ships for the "black box," the in-flight recording system comprised of at least two devices that could shed light on the flight's final moments. There were unconfirmed reports that the Soviets had found the "black box," but carry either conventional or nuclear bombs. • The United States would con sider reducing both the Pershing 2 and cruise missiles to be deployed in Europe if an agreement is reached with the Soviets setting equal limits on the missiles they have targeted on the NATO countries. • Without yielding on its right to match the 108 Soviet missiles tar- Soviets call for resistance to U.S. missiles By ALISON SMALE Associated Press Writer MOSCOW Warning that nuclear war "would be a hell for the whole of mankind," President Yuri V. Andropov yesterday urged West• German legislators not to deploy new U.S. missiles this winter. Andropov, whose name the Soviets have care fully kept out of the uproar over the South Korean airliner, apparently was trying to direct world attention back to nuclear disarmament. He urged the West Germans to take "the most vigorous and decisive action" to forestall deploy ment on their soil of 108 Pershing 2 and 96 cruise missiles due to begin in December. Other NATO countries are slated to get 368 of the missiles. Andropov's statement was his first since a Soviet interceptor shot down a South Korean jumbo jet over the Soviet island of Sakhalin Sept. 1. All 269 aboard, including 61 Americans, died. The statement, carried by the official Tass news agency in reaction to what was called an appeal by "a group of West German Bundestag (Parliament) deputies," made no mention of the ~;~- ~~<,~ -~:~ ,:,.....' ). 41 , - I ) •,,,,, '4 ,eilt ii , , ?.... .. i 3 b ,c ~., , 14 ik lIPI P . AP laserphoto. Pentagon sources in Washington were skep tical. . "We've heard they may have found some thing, but it could be a plant, said one source, voicing fears that the Soviets may publicly announce finding a "black box" that may actually have been doctored to provide support for Soviet charges the KAL flight was part of an American intelligence gathering mission. Pentagon spokesman Benjamin Welles said the U.S. Navy twice found and then lost signals from the "black box" in internation al waters 2,500 feet deep off Sakhalin Island. "We're quite certain what we got was what we're looking for, then we lost it," Welles said. He said the U.S. ships searching for the flight recorder are being harassed by the Soviet flotilla that is also looking for the recorder and wreckage. Welles said there "are continuing in- geted on Asia, the United States might not insist on counting them against the American total. The revisions may be announced by thd White House or they could be included in the speech Reagan will make to the U.N. General Assembly next Monday. Reagan's instructions to RoWny late next week are expected to re flect a willingness to make further plane issue. It also contained no new offer on limiting nuclear arms in Europe and was seen by Western analysts in Moscow as part of a campaign to keep Andropov's image that of a peacemaker who was not involved in " the military decision to shoot down the South Korean plane. Western diplomats said Andropov returned to Moscow from vacation when the plane was shot down and that he had now gone back on vacation. The fact that the letter sent by 57 West German opposition Social Democrats was mailed July 11 but a reply appeared only now also suggested Andropov's move was timed to limit any damage to Soviet standing from the plane disaster. In Bonn, government spokesman Peter Boa nisch reacted to Andropov's statement by saying, "Propagandistic comments don't help any more now. Rather, what,really would help would be proposal's on the negotiating table at Geneva." In Washington, State Department spokesman John Hughes *Characterized the Andropov statement as "nothing new," and said it "doesn't break any new ground." Hughes said a freeze on arms levels in Europe would "preserve current Soviet strategic advan- Reagan is in Columbia for a political fund-raising dinner. Speakes said Ambassador Robert S. Dillon and a deputy special envoy, Richard Fairbanks, were in the residence compound at the time of the shelling. He said some artillery rounds landed inside the compound but he had no report of the extent of damage. Beirut Radio reported a fire was burning inside the compound. The shelling began shortly before midnight, and Beirut was shaken by blasts from the warships just offshore as they opened fire. U.S. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said the destroyer John Rodgers and the guided missile cruiser Virginia "responded" to firing near Dillon's residence in a suburb east of Beirut. He said the residence was not hit and the 1,200 Marines in the peacekeeping force went on "Condition One" alert at their positions near the Beirut airport. People along Beirut's beachfront said they saw flashes lighting up the sky from the warships and they believed at least 20 shells were fired. The ships continued shooting for about 10 minutes, they said. The shells striking the ambassador's compount appar ently came from Druse militia positions in the nearby hills. ' Several hours before the late-night shelling began, Druse militiamen and Palestinian guerrillas returned to the attack on Souk el-Gharb after being repulsed twice earlier in the day. One attack during the afternoon caught U.S. military observers in the strategic Christian , town overlooking Beirut, but an American spokesman•said he didn't think they Were still there when the night attack began. It was the first time American military personnel had been in the front lines since the Lebanese civil war resumed 16 days ago. There was no resumption of the heavy U.S. Navy shelling that on Monday hit Druse positions around the hilltop town where President Amin Gemayel's govern-. ment and its army are facing their biggest test so far. Monday's Navy action marked the first time that U.S. forces had directly supported the Lebanese army in its battle for Beirut against Syrian-backed Druse and Pales tinian militiamen. The Reagan administration has emphasized that it is determined to protect Souk el-Gharb and one key admin istration official said army control of the town was "vital." Souk el-Gharb sits astride a ridgeline that controls access to the capital from the southeast and is often referred to as "the backdoor of Beirut." It also provides a clear line of fire on the Marine base beside the Beirut changes in the U.S. bargaining posi tion. One already broached with the Soviets is to offer to limit the num ber of American long-range bomb ers equipped, to carry air-launched cruise missiles. There are 400 in the U.S. force, each capable of carrying 20 of these missiles. • As a "negotiating tactic," the offi- stances where U.S. ships have maneuvered to avoid potentially hazardous navigational situations." He also said the Soviets have created "electronic disturbances," apparently to jam the U.S. hunt for the flight recorder. The "pings" from the flight recorder were picked up Monday by the Narragansett, a Navy tug that is trailing an underwater microphone tuned to receive the signals. The signalswere lost after an hour, picked up again, for 30 minutes, and then lost a second time, Welles said. The search for wreckage is being compli cated by the large number of vessels in the area, Welles said. In addition .to Soviet and U.S. vessels, Japanese and South Korean ships ate also combing the area. In addition, there is a large amount of debris such as sunken ships, said a Navy source who declined to be identified. "We've gotten quite a few false alarms on the The Daily Collegian Wednesday Sept. 21, 1983. cial said, the United States has hinted it would accept a ceiling on such bombers. Those without cruise missiles would carry identification markers so the Soviets could tell if the agreement was being observed. Still, the talks are unlikely to "come down to the bottom line" before the end of the year, said the U.S. official who discussed the situa tion on condition he not be named. tages and reduce their incentives to agree to substantial reductions." Meanwhile, ideology and propaganda chiefs from the Warsaw Pact, Mongolia, Vietnam, Laos and Cuba met in Moscow, to coordinate the "struggle against the deploydent of new medi um-range nuclear missiles in Europe, fOr the reduction of the existing medium-range systems, foxl ridding Europe of all nuclear weapons, both medium-range and tactical, for an end to the arms race," Tass said. West German peace • activists, supported by many left-wing Social Democrats, are among the most vigorous European opponents of the planned NATO deployment of 572 cruise and Pershing 2 missiles, and the Kremlin has courted their support in its effort to block installation of the new weapons. The Soviet Union now has an estimated 350 SS 20s in place. Andropov also had said that his offer in August to destroy , missiles was contingent upon NATO reduction of U.S. bombers capable of carrying nuclear missiles. airport nine miles to the northwest. U.S. planes flew frequent reconnaissance flights over the area yesterday. Pentagon sources in Washington said • Syrian troops may have fired an anti-aircraft missile at a Navy F-14, but the plane was not hit. The Pentagon sources also said the battleship New Jersey has entered the Mediterkanean and should join the U.S. Navy armada off Lebanon Friday. The New Jersey's weapons include nine 16-inch guns that can fire a one-ton shell up to 25 miles. `To the best of my knowledge, the residence was not hit. I know, however, that no one has been hurt.' —John Stewart, U.S. Embassy spokesman A Lebanese army communique said "insurgents" tried to infiltrate Souk el-Gharb before dawn but were driven back. "Six infiltrators were killed and several others wounded," the communique said. "The rest of the force fled." A second infiltration attempt came in the afternoon, about an hour after a party of six or seven P.S. Army and Marine observers headed by an Army colonel arrived in the town. The Americans apparently were conferring with the local Lebanese command at their headquarters in the local hotel when the fighting broke out about a mile away. An hour-long battle followed in which hundreds of shells and rockets were ,exchanged, but there was no report that any Americans were wounded. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan of Shenando ah, Ga., said the team had been sent to collect informa tion on the situation at Souk el-Gharb. Another Marine spokesman, Warrant Officer Charles Rowe of San Fran cisco, Calif., denied the observers were sent to direct the fire of the Navy ships offshore. The commander of the Lebanese army's forwardmost position, Ist It. John Salloum, told reporters hundreds of rockets and artillery shells fell Monday on his position, which was the target of repeated heavy ground assaults by both Druse and Palestinian militiamen. "We lost three people, one a lieutenant," he said. "There were many wounded. I am tired. My men are tired. We have been here 12 days." sonar," which is used to search the seabed Stormy weather curtailed search opera tions yesterday. "The Soviet fleet is likely to conduct overnight search operations for the black box" said Rear Adm. Masayoshi Kato of the Japan Maritime Safety Agency. The agen cy's patrol boats are monitoring Soviet and U.S. search activities north of tiny Moneron Island, off the west coast of Sakhalin. • Kato said 22 Soviet vessels were observed either visually or on radar screens yester day. Seven U.S. Navy and Coast Guard vessels have also been seen operating adja cent to the soviet fleet. Japanese officials also spotted a Soviet intelligence gathering ship.. Four South Korean trawlers were near Moneron, while 21 Japanese vessels contin ued to search for wreckage and bodies washed southward toward the northern coast of Japan's Hokkaido coast: State may require child restraint HARRISBURG ( AP) A bill requiring children under age 4 to be restrained by a car seat or seat belt while traveling in a vehicle was approved by a House committee yesterday. Pennsylvania is one of only nine states that do not require the use of restraint systems for young children in cars and trucks. The House Consumer Affairs Committee voted 15-5 to approve the bill, which is an amended and more liberal version of a bill approved last April by the Senate. For example, the House version would have violators fined $25, while the Senate version would have imposed a $5O fine. In both versions, a district justice could waive the fine under certain circumstances. Contracts may become easy reading HARRISBURG (AP) The House Consumer Affairs Committee yesterday approved a bill requiring plain language in all consumer contracts except insurance policies. The bill would affect any written agreements in which a consum er borrows money, obtains credit or buys, leases or rents an item, real estate or services. The state attorney general would have power to reject contracts that fail to meet state standards. The bill includes 10 "readibility" tests such as: • , Short words, sentences and paragraphs must be used as much as possible. • No Latin, French or archaic English words or words with obsolete meanings can be used. • No sentences can include double negatives or exceptions to exceptions. Experiments using interferon begin CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) Doctors have begun human experi ments with a kind of interferon made by genetically rearranged bacteria that scientists believe is far more powerful against cancer than other forms of the germ killer yet tested. Biogen Inc. said yesterday that doctors at a hospital in the Netherlands gave injections of the substance, called gamma interferon, to a lung cancer patient last week. "The evidence going into the trials is as encouraging as evidence could be," said Dr. Walter Gilbert, a Nobel Prize winner who is Biogen's chairman. Gamma interferon is made in extremely small amounts by the body's immune system. Another form called alpha interferon is produced by white blood cells, while beta interferon is made by connective tissue. During the 19705, interferon was widely touted as a potential cancer cure, but it was too hard to extract the substance from human blood to test it widely. However, with genetic engineering, researchers have . been able to insert human interferon genes into bacteria, which then make the protein in limitless quantities. USDA recalls school lunch meat WASHINGTON (AP) Agriculture Secretary John R. Block yesterday ordered an immediate halt to all school distribution of ground beef produced by two plants in Colorado and Nebraska. The meat was processed by Cattle King of Denver and Nebraska Beef Packers Inc., Gering, Neb. A spokesman for both firms, independent corporations with joint ownership, said the govern ment's action was based on "false and slanderous" information. Block said the action was prompted by reports indicating "the ground beef may have come from substandard cattle and may have been processed under less than sanitary" plant conditions. The impounded meat is being checked for "foreign matter, chemical residues and spoilage," he said. The Agriculture Department estimated that about 6.4 million pounds of the meat is still in distribution channels. John McClung, of USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service, said Cattle King provided about 14 percent of the ground beef used in the school lunch program last year, and Nebraska Beef about 7 percent. "Commodities approved for the school lunch program have always been of the highest quality and it is imperative to take these steps as another indication of the government's commitment to maintain such standards." Block said that USDA's inspectors are already analyzing sam ples of the meat from 14 locations across the country and that the results would be ready in a few days. Priest, rebel chief killed in Honduras TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) A Roman Catholic priest from Chicago and a leftist guerrilla leader were killed during an operation by government forces against rebels in the eastern highlands, an army spokesman said yesterday. Col. Cesar Elvir Sierra identified the American as James Francis Carney Handley, 58, but gave no details about his death other than saying it occurred in the jungles of eastern Olancho province. He said the guerrilla chieftain, Jose Maria Reyes Mata, was killed Sunday in a gunfight with soldiers and police. U.S. Embassy officials declined comment on Handley's death. Sierra, in his report, said both Handley and Reyes Mata had received guerrilla training in Cuban and Nicaragua. There were reports here that Handley had left the priesthood. Acquaintances described him as a a former Jesuit and said he was expelled from Honduras in November 1979 after being accused of trying to organize a peasant revolt. Pro-Marcos rally turns into melee MANILA, Philippines (AP) A suburban rally for President Ferdinand E. Marcos disintegrated yesterday when thousands of counter-demonstrators burned the stage and pelted Marcos sup porters with mops, garbage and urine-filled cans. At the same time, about 7,000 students screaming "Marcos resign!" and "Marcos Hitler!" staged the biggest protest march by students in the capital in years, demanding that the right-wing president quit. The melee in sububan Makati, metropolitan Manila's financial center, and the march in the capital were the latest anti-govern ment demonstrations to protest the assassination of Benigno Aquino, Marcos' main rival. . . stock 'report Record high set; Volume Shares 3rd straight gain 120,422,240 Issues Traded NEW YORK YORK ( AP) Falling 1,985 interest rates helped propel the Dow Jones industrial aver- Up age to a record high yesterday 1,016 -- as the stock market recorded its third straight gain. Unchanged The oldest and best known of 378 the market indicators climbed 15.25 to 1,249.19, surpassing its Down previous closing peak of 591 1,248.30 on June 16. 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