Vol. LXXXVIII, No. 13-S I)MCII Friday, May 19, 1978 cmichi~gan Twenty Pages Ann Arbor, Michigan Ten Cents Ethiopia bombards rebels DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Ethiopian in highlands 50 miles from the Red Sea. backed by air strikes, suffered heavy only outlets to the sea. Insurgents have gunboats shelled the Red Sea coast of Central government troops are trying casualties. been fighting to end Ethiopian rule for rebellious Eritrea and sank scores of to break through ELF lines and lift a The naval bombardment was aimed 16 years. fishing boats yesterday on the fourth six-month-old rebel siege of Asmara. at closing the rebels' sea supply routes, The head of Ethiopia's military day of a major offensive to defeat the the rebels said. government, Lt. Col. Mengistu Haile secessionist forces, the Eritrean THE REBELS also stopped a pincer Mariam, warned in a speech yesterday Liberation Front (ELF) reported here. assault by another 20,000-man THE ETHIOPIAN government has that his nation and Somalia could go to The front's news agency said rebel Ethiopian force on the two main rebel- not officially confirmed that its long- war again over the tiny adjacent state units repulsed attacks by a 20,000-man held Red Sea ports of Massara and expected counter-offensive against the of Djihouti. Ethiopia, backed by Cuban Ethiopian force six miles west of Assab, the ELF said. rebels has begun. Two other rebel fac- troops and Soviet advisers, earlier this Eritrea's provincial capital of Asmara, It said the attackers, who were tions, the Eritrean People's Liberation year defeated Somali forces trying to annex eastern ..t-TL Iin D Y e Y a e n s 0 n Front and the ELF-popular Liberation Forces, have issued no reports on fighting. Eritrea, Ethiopia's northernmost province, is a former Italian colony an- nexed by the late Emperor Haile Selassie in 1962. Its ports are Ethiopia's annex eastern Ethiopia s ga en Desert to Somalia. AN ETHIOPIAN radio report on the speech, monitored in Nairobi, Kenya, said Mengistu charged that Somali See ERITREAN, Page to So kharor Soviets fri Sakharov MOSCOW (AP)-A Soviet court yesterday sentenced dissident physicist Yuri Orlov to 12 years' loss of freedom, and police briefly detained Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei Sakharov with his wife after they struck officers who barred them from the courthouse. Sakharov, also a physicist, is the most prominent Russian dissident. Orlov's was the first of an expected rodnd of trials of Moscow dissenters, with the apparent aim of putting down organized criticism of the Soviet gover- nment. IN WASHINGTON, the House passed by a 399-0 vote and sent to the Senate a resolution asking the Soviet Union to free the 53-year-old Orlov. State Depar- tment spokesman Thomas Reston said the -U.S. government "strongly deplores" the action against Orlov and- called it "a gross distortion of inter- nationally accepted standards of human rights." British politicians from both left and right said the sentence was "shameful" and an "outrage." In a trial that began Monday, Orlov was convicted of "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda" on the basis of documents about Soviet human rights that he wrote and distributed to Geralds placed on two years probation sometime next week. By MICHAEL ARKUSH Most of Geralds' former colleagues Former Rep. Monte Geralds (D- agreed that Geralds received a light Madison Heights), convicted of embez- sentence. Rep. Joseph Forbes (D-Oak zling $24,000 from a former law client, Park), chairman of the House Policy was sentenced yesterday to two years Committee which recommended of probation and either a 90-day jail Geralds' expulsion, said he believes term or a sum of money to be deter- Geralds received a very mild sentence. mined by the results of two pending SeeGERALDSPage12 civil court cases. Geralds was also ordered by an Oakland County Court judge to serve a Orilor total of 400 hours at the Gateway Crisis Center in Madison Heights and pay the probation department $400. ii*1 O rlo v; ALTHOUGH the probation term will start immediately, Geralds is not required to serve at the center until dW dall possible appeals have been detained exhausted. Geralds, who was expelled from the baes.r rsHouse last week, said he was very THE OFFICIAL Tass news agency pleased with the court's ruling. said the court "bore in mind the public "I really didn't know what to expect danger of his crime" in sentencing but I am quite happy with the senten- Orlov to seven years at hard labor and ce, said Geralds. five years of internal exile, meaning GERALDS SAID his lawyer will ap- banshment from Moscow. He has eal the embezzlement conviction to Rep Gerald' See SOVIETS, Page 10 the Michigan Court of Appeals U.S. Summons Ciean suspect WASHINGTON (AP)-U.S. officials are arranging to bring to the United States the former head of the Chilean secret police who is a suspect in the assassination of former Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier, official sources said yesterday. The sources said travel plans were indefinite for bringing to this country' Gen. Manuel Contreras Sepulveda, former director of Chile's disbanded secret police force, the Directorate of National Intelligence. Other details, such as whether the United States pressured the Chilean government into cooperating in' ex- pelling Contreras, were not available. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT and FBI spokesmen would not comment except to say that FBI agents are in Chile and will be joined later this week by Assistant U.S. Attorney Eugene M. Propper, who is in charge of the in- vestigation of Letelier's death. Letelier, an opponent of the right- wing Chilean dictatorship, was killed on Sept. 21, 1976 along with an associate, Ronni Moffitt, when a bomb-exploded under Letelier's car while he was driving along Washington's embassy row. The Council of Hemispheric Affairs, a Washington-based organization that favors democratic rule in Latin America, reported yesterday that U.S. officials planned to bring Contreras to the United States. The report was con- firmed by sources, who declined to be identified. THE GOVERNMENT has charged five men and is holding a sixth as a possible suspect in Letelier's assassination. They include five anti- Castro Cuban exiles, including two who are still at large. Also charged in the case is Michael Vernon Townley, an American citizen who had been living in Chile for more than 20 years and has been identified as SeeCHILi.AN, Page 11