Page 10-Tuesday, July 11 1978-The Michigan Daily Soviet dissident policy assailed WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House scolded the Soviet Union yester- day for its human rights position and said the trials of two dissidents are a sign of weakness and a "repressive ac- tion which strikes at the conscience of the entire world." While escalating its dispute with Moscow over human rights, the Carter administration rejected suggestions that it delay this week's resumption of strategic arms limitation talks with Moscow. THE TALKS are "a question which deals with the prospect of mutual an- nihilation" and should not he linked with human rights, Secretary of State Cyrus Vance said. But White House press secretary Leonid Brezhnev, expressing concern for the dissidents on trial. Vance, leaving for Genevaz today for arms limitation talks with the Russians, will carry the message, said Edward Mezvinsky, the U.S. represen- tative to the United Nations Com- mission on Human Rights. VANCE IS TO meet in Geneva with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Mezvinsky mentioned the message to Brezhnev in an address to the Greater New York Conference on Soviet Jewry. "We, as a nation, must stand in in- dignation against the Soviet Union's response to Shcharansky and others like him," said Mezvinsky in remarks that a spokesman said had been cleared with the Carter administration. AT A DAILY White House briefing, Powell said of the Soviet trials: "If such actions are designed to put an end to those who seek increased human rights within the Soviet Union, they will not do that. If they are meant to stop this President or others in this country from speaking out on human rights, they will not do that. "If they are meant to bury the issue of human rights in the international community, they will not do that. In ef- fect, they will not bury it, but most likely raise it higher." "A matter like this is an affront to all those who support human rights and dignity," Powell said. Vance called a news conference yesterday to announcethat he intended to meet with Gromyko despite the start of the trials. Thanks for the memorabilia Jod like loo shil P cha ele' rat Pre hur whi enti whc rigl is a par and sail A tial son ly Powell did say that "ina situation WASHINGTON (AP) - The George Washington. Curator Robert this it is appropriate that we take a Smithsonian Institution may turn down Stewart says he's always looking for k at other aspects of the relation- your favorite model airplane or that the best picture of a famous person, but p" between the two countries. strange bug you caught in a pickle jar, "judging by the number of George 'owell said the trials of Anatoly Sh- but each year curators accept Washington portraits we turn down - ransky and Alexginzburg would donations of thousands of items found about two a week - every American vate the issue of human rights, lying in someone's attic. artist produced a Washington portrait her than bury it and would not stop Since its founding, the Smithsonian at some time in his career." sident Carter from speaking out on has had curators who looked with The Museum of History and nan freedoms and dignity. varying degrees of interest on Technology has a similar problem. donations from the public. Herbert Collins, the political history THIS SORT of repressive action, FOR INSTANCE, during the ad- curator, says it seems every old attic in ch strikes at the conscience of the ministration of Spencer Fullerton America contains a copy of the 19th ire world, is a defeat not for those Baird, who became the second century reprint of the New York Herald o advocate and work for human secretary of the Smithsonian in 1878, its Tribune's story on the assassination of hts and human dignity, but rather it annual report listed donations of Abraham Lincoln. defeat and a sign of weakness on the "sealed bottles containing water from Any trunks that don't have that t of those very forces of oppression the Dead Sea ... a chicken with four reprint, he says, apparently have the injustice which we protest," Powell legs ... a living duck." commemorative hatchet marking the d at a daily White House briefing. But Joseph Henry, the first 100th anniversary of George nd in New York, another presiden- secretary, was more selective. He Washington's death. aide said Carter is sending a per- wrote that he did not want to fill the THE AIR and Space Museum is of- al message to Soviet President Smithsonian with a "series of domestic fered as many as 50 rock samples each feather dusters" of "grasshoppers year, with only one turning out to be a from Indiana." real meteorite. And there are continual 40t EEvery day, people walk into what has offers of old pilot licenses or flight PREPAREFOR:ra been called "the nation's attic," of- uniforms. MCAT - DAT -LSAT ' GRE fering what they believe will be splen- One man offered a collection of old did additions to the national collection. airplane cards and brochures. Those GMAT OCAT VAT SAT Some think that what has been were turned down, but curators found NMB I,1 , gathering dust in their own attics will he also had an interesting collection of make curators and visitors happy. ECFMG-FLEX-VQE SOMETIMES they're right - the in- NAT'L DENTAL BOARDS stitution added 1% million items last C ybrook NURSING BOARDS year, many from just plain folks. But Flexible Programs & hours the Smithsonian turns down many more laybr Trie.IS adifference!!! donations than it accepts. auto mi'obile- For example, curators recently rejected "meteorites" that turned out (ContinuedfromPage 1) to be ordinary rocks, plastic models of of other organizations,' Austin stated. E ONAL famous airplanes, dozens of political Austin said several state agencies are CENTER campaign buttons and a 44-ton milling in the process of creating advisory Test Preparation Speciatists Since 1938 machine, groups to identify and resolve problems For Information Please Call: They also turned down what a would- involving auto safety. 4 (313) 662-3149 be donor thought was Martha "Neither Congress, the Executive Of- For Locations In Other Cities, Call: Washington's wedding dress. It was fice, the Department of Transportation, TOLL FREE: 800-223-1782 found to be machine-stitched, nor the states have ever made a sub- ianans ws aAND THE National Portrait Gallery stantial commitment to actions for in- is frequently offered paintings of creased use of restraints," he charged. COUPON- 2 for 1 Special -COUPON- Buy 1 Super Salad-GET 1 FREE TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY JULY 11, 12 & 13th NOT AVAILABLE FOR CARRY OUT GOOD AFTER 3 P.M. ONLY Longevity Cookery fan5IID&AETs v IA Cfsf'hfl DCTAAS l A314 E. Liberty E~ynIJAAT NTIDAIFn i r.TAII;AkI :12~A 62-'2819 airline maps that may be accepted. Smithsonian curators evaluate any offered item for authenticity and for historic, scientific or aesthetic significance, and judge its condition and preservability. "WHENEVER WE refuse an offer, we try to refer the owner to a more ap- propriate institution such as a state historical society or a local museum," says the institution's registrar, Philip Leslie. But, says Collins, "Some people don't bother to call or write. They just leave their artifacts in the exhibition halls." A common item left in the halls is the insect trapped in the pickle jar - left without a clue to the would-be donor's identity. - At the National Portrait Gallery, curator Stewart recalled an unusual walk-in offer: the artist who offered to donate a portrait of George Washington, saying it would be very realistic because he was in touch with Washington's spirit. And John White, a curator of tran- sportation, recalls the man who offered an elderly horse, which he said had pulled the last horse-drawn tram carriage in the country. Austin push safety efforts AUSTIN SAID despite the develop- ment of passive restraint devices with which the driver does not have to take the initiative and buckle up, safety belts and child restraint devices "will be a vitally important element of the oc- cupant protection system in our motor vehicle population for many decades to come." He pointed out that the safety belt usage rate is about 18 per cent nation- wide and on the decline. Only seven per cent of young children are transported in safe child restraints, he said. Claybrook said in her one year tenure as NHTA administrator, the agency has "been a leader in the sponsorship of medical research on human trauma." SHE CITED the development of a system for reporting the magnitude and location of brain damage, increased data on the human chest and on the strength of femurs and ribs, and the development of standard procedures for examining neck injuries, as recent NHTA achievements. Donald Huelke, University Medical School professor who has investigated fatal crashes in Washtenaw County, said the conference has so far been a