state/nation/world ernard Kalb resigns over disinformation flap By BARRY SCHWEID AP Diplomatic Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Former newsman Bernard Kalb resigned yes terday as chief spokesman for the State Department over a reported effort by the Reagan administration to mislead the news media on Libya. "Faith in the word of America is the pulsebeat of democracy," Kalb told a farewell news conference. He will be succeeded by his deputy, Charles E. Redman. Kalb, 64, held the job for nearly two years after a long career with The New York Times, CBS and NBC. He said his choice was "whether to allow myself to be absorbed in the ranks of silence, whether to vanish into unop posed acquiescence, or to enter a modest dissent." Asked about Kalb's resignation, President Reagan said late yester day, "No one on our side has been lying to anyone." Kalb praised Secretary of State George P. Shultz as "a monument to integrity, credibility, courage and strength." Anti-drug billpassed By JAMES ROWLEY Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. The House, ignoring threats of a Senate filibuster that could scuttle election-year anti-drug legislation, approved a compromise bill yesterday that includes the death penalty for drug-related killings. The bill, which authorizes $l.B billion for drug enforcement, education and prevention, was passed, 391-23, and sent back to the Senate for further action. House Majority Leader Jim Wright, D- Texas, acknowledged he was getting "mixed signals" from the Senate, where "some senators say they will filibuster" against the death-penalty provision that was also included in the original House bill passed Sept. 11 Wright said other senators told him they had enough votes to stop a filibuster and permit consideration of the legis lation. "That's their problem," Wright said, adding that the House "couldn't pass it under the circumstances without the death penalty " The death penalty for murders com mitted in the furtherance of a continuing illegal drug operation was inserted by Wright in compromise language that was approved Tuesday by the Rules Commit tee. "The inclusion of the death penalty for those•individuals who, as drug kingpins, will stop at nothing to further their enter prise is exactly what is required as weaponry in this war on drugs," said Rep. George Gekas, R-Pa. "We have as a society the obligation to hold the death penalty over the heads of those who would kill at random to make sure their enterprise . . . their drug syn dicate remains intact," he added. American scientist defects, Tass says By ALISON SMALE Associated Press Writer MOSCOW The Soviet news agen cy Tass said yesterday that an Amer ican cancer researcher defected to the Soviet Union after being fired from his job because he opposed U.S. foreign policy. It said Arnold Lokshin, his wife and three children arrived in Moscow yesterday after being granted politi cal asylum Tass said Lokshin, 47, is a San Francisco-born biochemist and onco logist who headed the cancer re search laboratory at St. Joseph's Hospital in Houston, Texas, from 1980 until last month. In Houston, Dr. John Stehlin, scien tific director of the research founda tion at St. Joseph Hospital, said Lokshin was not fired for political reasons. "We were not pleased with his performance. Scientific, period," he said. The hospital spelled the man's name Lockshin instead of Lokshin. The man identified by the Soviets as Lokshin, a woman identified as his wife, and three children were shown on the television evening , news. Speaking in English, he said he and his wife had opposed the Vietnam War and had fought for social justice in the United States ever since. The Russian version of the Tass story gave his wife's name as Lauren, but the English-language version lat er said her name was Lorraine. Tass quoted Lokshin as saying he and his wife made a "very difficult" decision to leave the United States after being persecuted for waging Bernard Kalb The spokesman said he told Shultz of his decision Tuesday night. "The secretary is a man of such over whelming integrity that he allows other people to have their own,".Kalb said. Reagan to urge cuts in missiles at summit By BARRY SCHWEID AP Diplomatic Writer WASHINGTON, D.C. President Reagan intends to stand firm on his "Star Wars" plan and urge an 80 percent slash in Soviet nuclear missiles in Asia at his meeting with Mikhail S. Gorbachev in Iceland, an administration official said yesterday. If the Soviet leader agrees to make conces sions on the'missiles, Reagan and Gorbachev probably will emerge from their session in Reykjavik this weekend with a framework for a treaty to sharply reduce U.S. and Soviet nuclear missiles in Europe, the official said. Also, the president and the general secre tary are likely to set a date.for a full-scale summit meeting in Washington in December, said the official, who demanded anonymity. But Reagan does not intend to negotiate with Gorbachev about the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative, known popularly as Star Wars, and he is not expected to make much headway with the Soviet leader toward re ducing long-range U.S. and Soviet nuclear weapons. The State Department advised the presi dent to seek a compromise with Gorbachev on their views of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Mis sile Treaty, the official said, but Reagan rejected the advice. The ABM treaty strictly limited U.S. and Soviet radar systems and' other defenses against missiles, to lessen chances of nuclear war. Gorbachev asked Reagan in a letter last month to promise to keep the treaty alive for up to 15 years. The Soviets contend the accord prohibited the testing and deployment on Star Wars nuclear and other futuristic devices in space. Reagan, on the other hand, proposed to Gorbachev in a letter in July that the two countries proceed with anti-missile defenses in 7V2 years. • The State Department saw a basis for a compromise between the two positions, but other U.S. agencies persuaded the president that the two stands were in conflict, the official said. "an active struggle against the dan gerous aspects of the foreign policy of the Republican administration." Stehlin said Lokshin was "a decent person but his performance deterio rated during the past six months. Just that, simply that and nothing else." `The statements attributed to Mr. Lokshin ... are patently absurd.' —Pete Martinez The hospital said in a statement: "Arnold Lockshin was employed by the Stehlin Foundation from July 1980 to August 1986. During this time, he worked as a pharmacologist and chemist in the St. Joseph Hospital cancer research lab. His contract was terminated in the latter part of August 1986 because of job perfor mance." In Washington, State Department spokesman Pete Martinez said: "As an American citizen, Mr. Lokshin is welcome to travel to and from the U.S. whenever he chooses and is free to choose his place of residence. "The statements attributed to Mr. Lokshin alleging that the U.S. govern ment harassed him and threatened his life because of his political opin ions are patently absurd," Martinez said. Tass said Lokshin brought with him examples of what he claimed were FBI measures against his family. Shultz, in a statement read by Red man, said:. "I am sorry to see Bernie Kalb go. I admire him as a fine journalist, respect him as a colleague and adviser, and value -him as a friend. Bernie has my thanks for the job he has done and I wish him well." The Washington Post raised the credibility issue last Thursday with a report that the administration had devised a policy that included leaking to reporters false information de signed to convice Moammar Gadhafi, the Libyan leader, that the United States was about to attack his coun try. Shultz told reporters Thursday eve ning, "I know of no decision to have people go out and tell lies to the media." He also qoted Winston Chur chill, the British prime minister dur ing World War 11, saying: "'The truth is so precious it must be attended by a bodyguard of lies."' And, Shultz said, "if there are ways in which we can make Gadhafi ner vous, why shouldn't we?" Kalb, in a statement and in reply to questions, declined to say whether Meanwhile, Reagan yesterday continued to feud with House Democrats over provisions included in a catchall spending bill, which seek to impose a number of restrictions on the U.S. arms buildup. In remarks added to the prepared text of a speech he gave in Atlanta, Reagan said, "Now, hours before my meeting with General Secretary Gorbachev, the House Democrats are trying to tie my hands with restrictive language on foreign policy issues, issues that should be decided at the negotiating table with the Soviets, not at a congressional com mittee table." "I can be looking across the table in Ice- Soviets say By ALISON SMALE Associated Press Writer MOSCOW Mikhail S. Gorbachev de clared yesterday that he sought the Iceland summit because of the urgency of reducing nuclear arms, and senior Soviet officials said it could bring dramatic thaw in U.S.-Soviet relations. A report by the official news agency Tass said the Soviet leader told Foreign Minister Witness Mangwende of Zimbabwe the week end meeting with President Reagan "was dictated by understanding of the extreme necessity to give an impulse" to arms con trol. Echoing comments he made last Friday, Gorbachev said the Reykjavik summit offers a chance "to start at long last resultful work to reduce armaments and lower the danger of nuclear war." Anatoly Dobrynin, former ambassador to Washington and now Gorbachev's top foreign policy adviser, and Viktor Afanasyev, editor of the Communist Party daily Pravda, indi cated in separate comments that the Kremlin has high hopes for the summit. However, Afanasyev said that superpower talki this summer made no progress on arms control and indicated Moscow will blame the ..• ' • Proper job Marine Machinist Wayne Palazzo cleans parts on a propeller of the aircraft Philadelphia Naval Shipyard. Each of the carrier's four propellers Is 21 feet carrier USS Independence, undergoing a $7OO million overhaul at the across and weighs 32 tons. Shultz or the State Department Referring to the reports of a disin played a role in the alleged disinfor- formation campaign, Kalb said he mation. campaign. • was concerned about its impact on "I am making no accusations," the credibility of the United States. Kalb said. "I have set forth what I've "Anything that hurts America's cred done here in the context of a personal ibility, hurts America," he said grappling." • Kalb, an assistant secretary of state as well as top spokesman for the department, was responsible for dai ly news briefings. Using his long experience in television, he helped Shultz develop a smoother public speaking style. Last year, Kalb quiet ly trained the secretary of state in the use of invisible prompters, a tech nique President Reagan mastered earlier Kalb tpld reporters he tried to fol low guidelines set by Shultz in ap pointing him in November 1984 "no lies, no misleading, to be as forthcom ing as possible within security con straints.,' Kalb said he also tried to get out as much information as possible. ' "But now," he said, "a controversy has swirled up around a question of credibility." :i c . -.., • 71:,.. - ,. , :' . i.....' . .V.;:, : .. :.......,..-:',;;-,'-i";',N",',"-I i ~~` t ~. ice. land in a couple of days at a man who could be sitting there thinking if they had their way he doesn't have to negotiate with me, he'd just wait for Congress to get him what he wanted," the president said. "I call on the House Democrats to act on the budget now," he said. "They should act responsibly, they should stop playing politics and jeopardizing the success of our Icelandic talks." In another development, 92 organizations urged Reagan to take concrete steps in Ice land to curtail nuclear tests and to continue U.S. observance of 10 arms control treaties. Among them were the Young Women's tensions might lessen United States if the Reykjavik meeting does not resolve disputes over space weapons and limits on nuclear arms. President Andrei A.. Gromyko, who was foreign minister for nearly three decades, said later that , the meeting "may initiate a turn for the better in Soviet-American rela tions and the world as a whole." Tass said he made the comment at a Kremlin dinner for Thomas Sankara, presi dent of Burkina Faso. Dobrynin said developments before the Reykjavik meeting, which he did not specify, reflected a global feeling "that the time has come to put an end to the menace of a nuclear war through concrete, practical steps." "One should like to hope that the coming meeting in Reykjavik . . . will make it possi ble to achieve a dramatic change for the better in Soviet-American relations, as well as tangible results at the talks on space and nuclear weapons," he told an international conference in Moscow, according to Tass. His comments were similar to those in a Pravda editorial by Afanasyev and a Pravda commentary Sunday that called the summit a sign of hope for "a drastic change for the better" in superpower relations. Afanasyev, a member of the influential Communist Party Central Committee, wrote MIR `Faith in the word of America is the pulsebeat of democracy.' —Bernard Kalb Repeatedly, the department spokesman praised Shultz, calling him "a monument of credibility, in tegrity, courage, strength." He said' he was "not dissenting from Secretary Shultz" but from "that reported information policy." The New York Times, quoting un identified administration officials, said last Friday that the "disinforma tion" program grew out of a mid- August State Department document The Daily Collegian Thursday, Oct. 9, 1986 to the White House laying out a "de ception" campaign. According to the officials, the docu ment represented the consensus of a series of interdepartment meetings, the newspaper said. For his part, Shultz reiterated yes terday that the administration's poli cy was to confuse Gadhafi, not to lie to reporters.. "There isn't any intent to try to spread around false information here so that it gets there and confuses him. That's not the idea at all," Shultz said on ABC-TV's Good Morning America. As a journalist, Kalb for the last decade covered the State Department and was one of the most aggressive questioners and persistent needlers of a succession of department spokesmen. His jocular wit and fond ness for unconventional suits, shirts and ties were in stark contrast to Shultz' personality and style. • When he took the job, he quipped that he was delighted to meet the same U.S. officials who had refused to take his telephone calls. Christian Association, the American Jewish Congress, the National Black Caucus of State Legislators, the United Church of Christ and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO. Reagan met with his senior advisers Tues day at the White House . and reaffirmed his intention to ask Gorbachev for better treat ment of dissidents and other Soviet citizens. Secretary of State George P. Shultz said yesterday that Reagan would look Gorbachev "in the eye" and warn him that without an improved human rights atmosphere in the Soviet Union, there would be no lasting im provement in U.S.-Soviet relations. in his editorial yesterday that the meeting in "cold Reykjavik" could melt the "cold war ice." He made clear that Moscow's assessment of the talks depends on what is achieved in arms control "The Reykjavik meeting, one should think, is called upon to help implement last year's Geneva understandings to prevent outer space, militarization and reduce nuclear weapas stockpiles on earth," he said. "The hopes fixed on Reykjavik are great, but the concerns, worries and apprehensions are just as great: Despite the fact that talks have been going on at expert level, at foreign minister level and at other levels, there has been no progress in the key directions of world politics, in the first 'place those con cerning nuclear arms." Gorbachev repeatedly has urged the Unit ed States to join his 14-month-old moratorium on nuclear testing and contends that research on space-defense system formally known as the Strategic Defense Initiative is intended to develop offensive weapons. Reagan administration officials argue that a test ban cannot be verified and says tests are needed to ensure the reliability of nuclear weapons and try out techniques for the space program. state news briefs Cleanup of gas spill KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. (AP) Hundreds of residents were allowed to return home Wednesday and a major highway, a chool and a shopping mall reopened as crews continued to clean up a leak of as much as 220,000 gallons of gasoline. "The area is clear of danger," Upper Merion Township Manager Ronald Wagemann said a day after the fuel leaked from a Sun Pipeline Co. 14-inch distribution line and forced the evacuation of the area However, police or Sun employees checked the 200 evacuated homes for explosive gasoline fumes before their occupants were allowed to return. "We are not aware of fumes in any of the homes," Wagemann said. "We evacuated as a precaution." Upper Merlon Fire Chief John Waters said the whole area was tested with meters that measure presence of explosive vapors. Workers with pumps and tank trucks continued removing gaso line from a stream Wednesday and flushed storm drains under the 140-store mall with 600 to 1,000 gallons of water a minute, authori ties said. "The threat was real, very real" of a fire or explosion, Sun spokesman Paul Durkin said. man jumps from , bridge Pgh. PITTSBURGH (AP) Police said they don't know why a Pittsburgh man stopped for a traffic violation jumped 40 feet from the Seventh Street Bridge into the Allegheny River yesterday. Patrick L. Lyons, 32; eluded officers after jumping into the river early yesterday morning, police said. He turned himself in later in the day, but was released since police had not issued a warrant for his arrest Police said they stopped Lyons' van at 3 a.m. on a "suspected traffic violation" at a downtown intersection. They said Lyons slid across the seat and got out on the passenger side. • "He said, 'I wasn't driving,' but we saw him, he was the only one in the van," said officer Victor Balsamico. Balsamico said he and another officer chased Lyons on foOt for several blocks before he ran onto the bridge and jumped over the railing. nation news briefs House passes second stopgap bill WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) The House passed an emergency spending bill yesterday after President Reagan told Democrats that their insistence on strategic arms restrictions is threatening a government shutdown. With the federal spending authority expiring at midnight, the House, 264 to 151, passed and sent to the Senate a two-day stopgap bill to forestall a government crisis until tomorrow. The short-term measure would continue current spending poli cies while lawmakers struggle to complete action on the veto threatened long-term measure. It was the second emergency stopgap bill since fiscal 1987 began Oct. 1. However, administration officials said even the brief extension might be vetoed. A provision designed to help fired air traffic controllers is opposed by the administration, and the White House also wanted to see progress on the arms control issues ; said Ed Dale, a spokesman for the Office of Management and Budget. Reagan yesterday rejected an offer by Democrats to delay their arms confrontation until after the president's summit in Iceland this weekend with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. "Now, hours before my meeting with General Secretary Gorba chev, the House Democrats are trying to tie my hands with restrictive language on foreign policy issues," he said. Claiborne deliberations to begin WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) The Senate voted yesterday against allowing a full-dress impeachment trial for Harry E. Claiborne, provoking the judge's lawyer to mount a full-court press to get the decision reversed. After 2 1 / 2 hours of closed-door debate, the senators voted 61-32 for a motion by Majority Leader Bob Dole, R-Kan., that no witnesses be summoned to the Senate chamber as the Nevada judge had requested. The vote, a setback for the convicted tax evader, appeared to clear the way for deliberations today on four articles of impeach ment voted against Claiborne by the House. Dole said he expected a vote on conviction to follow. A two-thirds vote on any article would make Claiborne the fifth federal official in the nation's history to be removed from office in a Senate impeachment trial. All have been judges. Shortly after the Senate vote, Claiborne attorney Oscar Goodman appeared at the federal courthouse three blocks from the Capitol to file a suit seeking a full-bloWn Senate trial. Iranians storm W. German embassy BONN, West Germany (AP) More than 100 angry Iranians stormed the West German Embassy compound in Tehran yester day to protest the closing of Iran's •exhibit at the Frankfurt book fair, but were - driven out with tear gas, the Bonn government said. The attackers, carrying iron bars and saws, shouted "Revenge for Frankfurt!" as they scaled the compound fence, said Foreign Ministry spokesman Hans Schumacher. They tried to force entry to the embassy building, but "retreated voluntarily after they failed to get in," he said. "No one was hurt, there was no harm done" to the embassy in the Iranian capital. Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency said the assault was carried out by 300 students from Tehran University belonging to the extremist Shiite Moslem organization Hezbollah, or Party of God. The militants distributed leaflets charging that the closure of the Iranian exhibit at the book fair "was not the first plot by the German government against the Islamic revolution and would certainly not be the last. "Although the fascist and inhuman German government tries to show a friendly face, it cannot hide its enmity toward the Islamic republic of Iran," the leaflets said. The book fair management closed the Iranian exhibit last Thursday because of fistfights between supporters and opponents of the Khomeini regime. The fair ended Monday. Sex keeps elderly vital, Swedes say GOTEBORG, Sweden (AP) Elderly people who are sexually active have more vitality and better memories than their celibate counterparts, Swedish researchers said yesterday. They also said that psychological rather than biological pioblems are the main reason that middle-aged and elderly people give up sex. The findings are the result of two studies conducted at Goteborg's Sahlgrenska hospital. The first study involved a representative sample of 800 women between the ages of 38 and 60 who were interviewed and examined over a period of 12 years, from 1968 to 1980. The second study involved of men and women over 70, both married and single. "To give up one's sexual life leads to a drop in memory capacity and intellectual ability," Dr. Lam Nilsson, head physician at the hospital, told the national TT news agency. According to one study, 50 percent of the men and 40 percent of the women were sexually active at age 70. Among the 75-year-olds, 33 perent of the men and 20 percent of the women still engaged in sex. 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