Page 10-Friday, May 19, 1978-The Michigan Daily Soviets jail Orlov; Continued from Page1) fluence on the decision of the court seven days to appeal. Orlov's British lawyer, John Mc- the sentence." Donald, who was refused permission to Orlov's wife Irma said the courtro attend the trial, said in London that an was packed with chosen, hostile sp appeal was being prepared. tators who applauded the sentence a Sakharov, 56, and his wife, Yelena shouted: 'You should have given h Bonner, were detained for five hours af- more." ter the incident with police. Tass said She said her husband "was wond, the couple committed "impudent ful, calm. He kept looking at me a hooligan actions." smiling while the judge was talking.' ALL THIS WAS like a play," Orlov's MRS. ORLOV said that when she a dissident colleague Vladimir Slepak Orlov's 25-year-old son by a previc said after the verdict. "It was all marriage, Dmitri, refused to stand1 decided beforehand. The trial had no in- the reading of the verdict, the son wE Sakharov detained ejected from the courtroom and she was hauled to her feet "like a sack." Afterward, a crowd of 100 supporters, 100 police, plainclothesmen and an- tagonistic onlookers caught a brief glimpse of the red-haired Orlov as he was led into a police van. He raised his hand as supporters chanted "Yura, Yura," the familiar form of his name. Still awaiting trial but with no date set are Antoly Shcharansky and Alexander Ginzburg-co-founders with Orlov of Moscow's "Helsinki" dissident group formed to monitor Soviet com- 103 FM "I am a Witch . . . practice Witchcraft." Gondella On Halloween, Tavi's guest on "EXPRESSIONS" was a practicing Witch. Gondella talked about the ancient and often misunderstood practice of Witchcraft and why she's a Witch. The un- usual is the usual on Expressions. Tune in EX- PRESSIONS every Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday at 10 A.M. pliance with human rights provisions of the 1975 Helsinki accords. GINZBURG WAS arrested just before and Shcharansky just after Orlov, who was imprisoned Feb. 10, 1977. All have been held incom- municado. In Soviet Georgia 1,000 miles south- west of Moscow, Zviad Gamsakhurdia and Merab Kostava, founders of a local Helsinki group, also were on trial yesterday on similar charges. Tass said they have pleaded guilty: Outside the Orlov courtroom, the tall, balding Sakharov, surrounded by 40 dissidents, told police barring his way: "Let me in. Under Soviet law all citizens are allowed into court when a sentence is read." DISSIDESNTS QUOTED Mrs. Sakharov as telling the policemen: "I'm not leaving here. If you touch me, I'll fight." Witnesses said police appeared to be trying to restore calm, but there was a scuffle during which Mrs. Sakharov slapped one policeman in the face and Sakharov hit at a policeman who was trying to restrain him. After this, the witnesses said, Sakharov's arms were seized and he and his wife were bundled into a green bus and driven away. From the window he shouted, "Nobel Prize for Orlov." Sakharov later said he and his wife were freed from a militia station after a prosecutor there spoke on the telephone with a high official. But he said two young men arrested-with him were taken to a court and sentenced to 15 days each for "petty hooliganism." Orlovscase is the latest in a decade and a half of dissident trials during which religious believers, Jews wishing to emigrate and human rights activists have been sentenced to internal exile, labor camps or psychiatric hospitals. Eritrean struggle (Continued from Page 1) troops had already infiltrated into Djibouti. Unless Somalia ceases its "anti-peace and anti-people" activities, he was quoted as saying, there could be another confrontation between the two East African nations. Somalia claims Somali-populated sections of Ethiopia, Djibouti and nor- thern Kenya as part of a "Greater Somalia." The guerrilla efforts - a constant feature of the 16-year Eritrean struggle for independence - may be viewed as "consciousness raising" or as propagandistic mind control. But in either case, their success will be tested if a massive Ethiopian counterattack is now under way in Eritrea as the Eritrean Liberation Front claims. IF THE SOVIETS decide to give all- out support to Ethiopia against Eritrea, they could become involved in their own Vietnam-style debacle. So far there is no confirmation that the Soviets or the estimated 20,00 Cuban troops in Ethiopia are involved in the fighting in Eritrea, and their hesitation to move openly could reflect an awareness of this danger. For the Eritrean guerrillas, the swit- ch of their former Soviet and Cuban allies to the side of the Ethiopians is a difficult element to handle in their EXPRESSIONS - THE TALKOFANN ARBOR I "'' r 1 r ~ , R " . ,.' _. l - r _ ,.. , , _ , . lIr~ 0 RADIO ANN ARBOR