Page 2-Wednesday, May 31, 1978-The Michigan Daily ACCUSED OF PASSING DEFENSE SECRETS Russians indicted on spy charges NEW4RK, N.J. (AP)-Two Russians who work at in prison on conspiracy charges. On each of two counts as garbage. their country's U.N. mission were indicted by a federal of obtaining information, they could get 10 years in THE NAVY OFFICER, working with the FBI, grand jury yesterday on charges of obtaining U.S. prison and a $10,000 fine. received his payments in a similar manner and never defense secrets and conspiring to pass them to the Vladimir Petrovich Zinyakin, third secretary of met face-to-face with his cohorts, officials said. He Soyiet Union. They face possible life imprisonment if the Soviet Mission to the United Nations, was named as initially was contacted by telephone and all convicted. an unindicted co-conspirator, but not a defendant arrangements for "drops' were handled by telpehone Rudolf Petrovich Chernayayev, 43, a personnel of- because he has diplomatic immunity. He left the coun- and through notes hidden in a specified phone booth, ficer at the U.N. Secretariat, and Valdik Aleksan- try abouta week ago. authorities said. drovich Enger, 39, an assistant to the U.N. under- ALL THREE WERE accused of tryng to induce a The indictment says the Navy officer was recruited secretary general, were charged ina three-count indic- commissioned Navy officer, who was not identified, to by the Soviets last August after he took a cruise to tment handed down about an hour before they were to provide them with several classified documents in ex- Bermuda on the MS Kazakhstan, which is owned and face a federal magistrate for a preliminary hearing on change for $20,000, the indictment said. operated by the Soviet Union. the charges. They were arrested May 20 in Woodbridge near the The Soviets were arrested about 14 months after a THEIR APPEARANCE was canceled because of the Garden State Parkway. former Soviet seaman was charged in New Jersey with indictment and they remained in custody at the The documents, doctored in Washington to protect espionage. Ivan Roglasky was ruled incompetent to Metropolitan Corrections Center in Manhattan in lieu U.S. secrets, were passed to the Soviets in telephone stand trial and has been undergoing treatment at a of $2 million bail. booths along the Garden State Parkway, authorities federal hospital in Springfield, Mo., for more than a If convicted, they face a maximum sentence of life said. They were stashed in cartons and cans, disguised year. Mobuto claims invaders murdered hostages confliciting reports on whether the The Zairian Red Cross has said the The rebels are Lunda tribesmen op- By The Associated Press rebels took white civilian hostages with death toll in Kolwezi was 720. That in- posed to Mobutu who fled in the mid- President Mobuto Sese Seko of Zaire them as they retreated toward their cluded 132 foreigners. Belgian officials 1960's after an unsuccessful rebellion in claimed yesterday that rebel tribesmen bases in Angola. said the bodies of 72 whites had been Shaba, then known as Katanga. A driven out of the southern Zaire city of Mobutu, in Morocco seeking military found and that 289 still were unaccoun- similar invasion was repulsed last Kolwezi massacred an undetermined help from King Hassan II, said in an in- ted for since the May 12 invasion by an spring by Zairian troops aided by about number of white hostages over the terview with the official Moroccan , estimated 4,000 Angola-based rebels. 1,500 Moroccans. Belgian and French weekend somewhere in the bush. news agency, "According to infor- France has said 44 of its citizens are troops evacuated about 2,500 foreigner His claim could not be confirmed mation obtained by our special ser- missing. from Kolwezi after the latest attack. from other sources, and the Defense Ministry in Paris said it had no infor- mation or comment on it. FRENCH paratroopers routed the rebels from Kolwezi almost two weeks ago and remain in Zaire's southern province of Shaba to protect European civilians still there. There have been Birth defects are forever. Unless you help. TO PROTECT THE UNBORN AND THE NEWBORN March of Dimes vices, the hostages who were held by the rebels were all liquidated, men, women and children." "I cannot tell you how many there were," he said. "The drama occurred last Saturday in the bush. But I could not tell you exactly where." THE FRENCH troops who recap- tured Kolwezi May 20 said the rebels killed many Europeans during their 10- day occupation and took dozens of European hostages with them when they fled into the bush. The French began a pursuit of the rebels to try to free the hostages, but were called back as the rebelsapproached the Zambian and Angolan borders. The rebels have claimed, through their spokesmen in Brussels, Belgium, that they took no civilian hostages, only seven Frenchmen who served as military advisers to Zairian troops. But refugees and Zairian witnesses have reported seeing the fleeing rebeu with white hostages. Landowners testify to halt burial of PBB cattle CALLING ALL WORK/STUDY STUDENTS aggressive friendly dedicated nterested in sales and public relations? IF SO, THEN YOU'RE WHAT WE WANT TO WORK ON THE MICHIGAN DAILY. Part-time or full-time available during fres- man orientation (June 12-August 11) $3.65/ hour work/study only. CALL 764-0560 IF INTERESTED 0 MIO (UPI) - Several Oscoda County landowners testified in circuit court yesterday in their effort to prevent the state from burying thousands of PBB- contaminated cattle carcasses in a massive, clay-lined pit. A number of state officials were ex- Sadat: I'll give peace two months (Cont inuefromPage i) Vague as it was, Sadat's two-month limit was the first time he had set a deadline for the initiative he began six months ago with his dramatic visit to Jerusalem. "THE MOMENTUM of the peace process now is slacking," he told repor- ters. "But it has not stopped. For now there is a stalemate of sorts. It is not frozen but going in slow motion." Proposals and counter-proposals between Egypt and Israel since last November have failed to break the stalemate, which centers on the future of the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the Jordan River. At present, Egypt and Israel are ex- changing views via the United States. U-MfILBft and RKPreducft Professional service and the finest in hair, skin, and personal care. AT THE UNION pected to appear before Circuit Court Judge Allan Miller when the two-day evidentiary hearing resumes today. THE HEARING was ordered by the Michigan Supreme Court, which refused to rule on the legality of the pit until it could be determined whether area residents would be adversely af- fected by state plans. The landowners claimed that burying the tainted farm animals in the pit would threatena nearby watershed and groundwater supplies. The Oscoda County PBB Action Committee filed suit, accusing state of- ficials with failing to obtain the necessary permits to construct the 2.2 acre, clay-lined pit for thousands of farm animals contaminated when the toxic fire retardant polybrominated biphenyls (PBB) accidentally was mixed into a batch of livestock feed in 1973.a HOWARD TANNER, director of the Department of Natural Resources, and Fred Kellow, director of the DNR's Resource Recovery Division, were among the state officials under sub- poena in the case. Assistant Attorney General Don Kefkey told Miller that the committee first must prove that the pit represents a danger before any other issues can be examined at the hearing. MIller ruled, however, that though "safety is one issue, it is not the only issue." THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXvIII, No. 20-s Wednesday, May 31, 1978 is editedand managed by siudentisatthe University of Michigan. News phone 764-562. Second class pbstage is'paid at Ann Arbnr, Michigan48911. Published daily Tuesday tisrosgih Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summersession.publishedTuesdaythroughsatur- day morning.Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by maioutside Ann Arbor