The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 13, 1978-Page 7 Rights urged for Soviet Jews DAILY EARL.Y BIRD MATINEES -- Adults $1.25 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STA RTING BEFORE 1:30 MON. ttwu SAT. 10 A.M. til 1:3b P.M. SUN. S HOLS.12 Naon -til 1:30 P.M. Monday-Saturday 1:30-5:00, Admission $2.50 Adult and Students Sundays and Holidays 1:30 to Close, $3.50 Adults, $2.50 Students Sunday-Thursday Evenings Student & Senior Citizen Discounts Children 12 And Under, Admissions $1.25 TICKET SALES 1. Tickets sold no sooner than 30 minutes prior to showtime. 2. No tickets sold later than 15 minutes after showtime. By CAROL AZIZIAN A la ck of publicity and an apparent 111 in activity mark the present state f the Soviet Jewry movement llowing the trial of Jewish dissident natoly Shcharansky, according to lenn Richter, national director of the udent Struggle for Soviet Jewry. Richter emphasized that problems of igration for Soviet Jews still exist nd that pressures on the Soviet and .5. governments should continue in rder to help Soviet Jews. RICHTER, WHO is head of the New (ork-based student organization, spoke, tbout Soviet Jewry in the post- ;hcharanksy era to about 25 students ast Monday in the multi-purpose room f the Undergraduate Library. The lec- ure was sponsored by the campus tudent group AKTSIA. Richter said that Shcharansky, who as accused of being a CIA agent )ecause he spoke tok Western newsmen nd acted as a publicity agent for Soviet ewish activists, was sentenced as an ,xanple for Jewish activists and uman rights advocates. Richter said that before and after the rial, the Soviet Jewry movement eached a peak. "There is now an ap- arent period of silence, however, tmong Jewish activists due to a lack f publicity and because the Soviet overnment removed the visible heads of the movement, like Shcharansky," Richter said. "THIS IS A down period in the Soviet Jewry biorhythym," he said. "We have to dig deeper, go beyond the showy headlines because the cycle has changed." Richter said the Soviet government is taking advantage of the apparent silen- ce of dissidents, and this is why pressures should continue to be put on the Soviet and U.S. governments. Richter said that a letter he received from a former Soviet citizen now living in West Germany who recently visited her daughter in the Soviet Union, in- dicated that emigration from the Soviet Union would be stopped due to an in- crease in tourist applications for the 1980 Olympics. "ACCORDING TO her letter, a notice posted in the emigration office in Moscow said that applications for emigration from the U.S.S.R. will be accepted until March 1, 1979," said Richter. "The cutting off of emigration on the pretext of the Olympic Games begins to show the absolute power they have over Soviet citizens and especially over Soviet Jews." In response to this, Richter said that Soviet Jewry groups will ask the U.S. government to press for a definitive statement from the Soviet government. Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry is also supporting the circulation of a petition to remove the 1980 Olympics from Moscow. Circulated by a joint committee of six activist Soviet Jewry groups in France, Israel, England, Canada, and the U.S., the petition is to be presented to the International Olympic Commnittee. RICHTER PRAISED President Car- ter for his outspoken stand on the human rights issue, but said that Carter personalized the issue, limiting it to in- dividuals like Shcharansky. "Sh- charansky became a lever for Soviet- American relations. I don't think Car- ter will do that again," Richter said. "We have to be concerned with prisoners of conscience, with both Jews and non-jews," he continued. "But, there are many more refuseniks (Jews denied exit visas) who encounter one of several forms'of harassment, including loss of jobs, when trying to leave the country. We have to change Soviet emigration practices." Richter said that this is a year of decisions for Soviet Jews and for those involved with Soviet Jewry. "We are at a crossroad and decisions must be made. In this down period, we have to be prepared for the inevitablity of what might happen, but we don't know hat will happen." In 1955, the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations merged into the Western world's largest labor federation. HOWARD HAWKS' 1946 THE BIG SLEEP HUMPHREY BOGART as Raymond chandler's Philip the tough shamus. A man is missing and two hyperactive daughters of a rich man keep getting on Marlowe's case and nerves. The screenplay was co-authored by William faulkner but, after it's over, it's still a mystery. LAUREN BACALL and DOROTHY MALONE also star. SAT: NEW YORK, NEW YORK CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT OLD ARCH AU - 7:00 & 9:05 $1.50 oviet spy trial goes to jury .I UAC Mediatrics presents: JEAN RENOIR/JEAN GABIN films LA BETE HUMAINE (Jean Renoir, 1938) Jean Gabin, Simone Simon and Julien Carett in a menage-a-trois of love, anger and death. "A masterpiece of editing and perfect simplicity... . The acting is of exceptional quality."-Georges Sadoul. 7& 10:20. -AND- THE LOWER DEPTHS (Jean Renoir, 1936) Based on a Maxim Gorky play and set in Renoir's dark Paris of corruption, gambling and midnight ramblings. The Lower Depths follows Jean Gabin as he attempts to retire his career as a thief. Fri. Oct. 13 Nat. Sci. Aud. 8:40 only M*A*S*H (Robert Altman, 1970) A thinly-masked anti-war satire set in Korea, but aimed at Vietnam. A "Saucy, outrageous, irreverent film. Nothing is sacred, not medical surgery, chastity, womanhood, army discipline, marriage, war movies, or the great American institution of football."-Time. ADMISSION $1.50 Sat. Oct. 14 Nat. Sci. Aud. 7 &9 NEWARK, N. J. (AP) - Testimony n the trial of two Soviets accused of spionage - denounced as a "clumsy "arse" by Russia - ended yesterday as he defense rested its case. The case was expected to go to the ury today after the panel was charged y U.S. District Judge Frederick Lacey. Attorneys completed their ummations yesterday. IF CONVICTED, the Soviets face ssible life imprisonment. The panel of seven women and nine ren, including four alternates, heard testimony yesterday morning from six efense witnesses including two Naval nvestigative Service agents and exper- s on weather, telephones, and hotography. The witnesses were uestioned about information ex hanges alleged to have taken place between the defendants and an merican naval officer posing as a ouble agent. Defendants Valdik Aleksandrovich Enger, 39, and Rudolf Chernyayev, 43, both United Nations employees, were arrested May 20 with a Soviet diplomat, Vladimir Petrovich Zinyakin, shortly after they allegedly obtained anti-sub- arne warfare secrets from Lt. Cmdr. Arthur Lindberg, who posed as a traitor ho wanted to make extra money before he retired ZINYAKIN, former third secretary of the Soviet mission to the United ations, allegedly had an orange juice container holding five rolls of filmed secret documents when he was arrested with the others in Woodbridge last May 20. Zinyakin, . who had diplomatic im- munity from prosecution, left the United States a week after his arrest. Special Agent Terrance Tate of the Naval Investigative Service testified esterday he received orders to tell indberg that "he would be well taken are of" after the suspects were rosecuted. Tate, who was called as a witness by the defense, said he modified the order on his own to suggest that Lindberg, who was passed over for promotion, not retire from 'the Navy because the alleged spy activities would be "good, gainful employment." TATE SAID a total of $1,650 was iven to Lindberg. He said the word "reward" never was used, but the oney "was received in the proper pirit." The proceedings, which began Sept. 27, have been sharply criticized by the Soviet Union. Soviet journalist Boris Roshchin wrote in the prestigious Moscow weekly Literary Gazette that testimony presented in the trial so far had been confusing, contradictory and false. "The FBI agents go to such lengths in lying at the trial that those sitting in the courtroom feel embarrassed. In short, every interrogation of a witness at the trial, every new piece of evidence is a new failure for the FBI," the journalist wrote. 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