6 Page 10-Saturday, January 26, 1980--The Michigan Daily Hughes is news We make engineering and scientific history year affter year. Like 1976, when five Hughes-developed satellites went intoorbit. If you come to work with us, we'll both make news in your home-town paper. Help Hughes Aircraft Company make news. And electronic miracles. And history. (And no airplanes.) Ask your placement office when Hughes recruiters will be on campus. r------------------, H UG HES Creating a new world with electronics AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F - Punish the Soviets, defector tells U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - A prominent Soviet defector said yesterday that Russian leaders could steer their "cruel and dangerous society" to world domination unless forcefully punished for throwing military might into Afghanistan. Arkady Shevchenko, a .United Nations undersecretary general when he defected in 1978, made a rare public appearance to give a House Intelligen- ce subcommittee a chilling account of life in his homeland and to comment on recent Soviet actions. UNLESS TIE Soviets are punished 'in specific, concrete and forceful ways for their aggression in Afghanistan, the world will find itself in the not-far- distant future under the dominance of Moscow," he s id. ' Boycotting the Olympic Games would be a "serious blow to the Kremlin," he said, since Soviet leaders hold "a long- cherished objective to have such a huge, political show in Moscow." He elaborated on the Soviet- Afghanistan situation and on possible U.S. steps in a later secret hearing. BUTT HIE gave his first personal ex- planation of his defection in a hearing room crowded with reporters and onlookers, including one from th* Soviet news agency Tass. As Shevchenko rose in the Soviet diplomatic ranks, he said, he decided his nation's foreign policy "was not a policy of peace but. a policy of aggression, expansion and en- slavement of other people." Back at home, he said, "tragically for the Soviet people, there are clear and unmistakable signs that Stalinist measures are beginning to revive in or der to curtail the growing discontent of the people. "THE ROLE and power of the KGB (secret police) now is growing similar to that exercised in the darkest days of Stalin's rule, when millions of innocent people became the victims of terrible crimes." This wet'k's exile of dissident Andrei Sakharov was "another indication of the growing power of the KGB," he said, as well as a sign that Sovi leaders know "they can expect nothin from the U.S." at present. I n, his homeland, he said, there are not enough material goods; there is no freedom or privacy., and "respect for elementary human rights does not exist." USSR says dissident won't be prosecuted TR lU0 r~nt erSUpders ARKADY SHEVCIiENKO testified before the house Intelligence subcom- mittee in Washington yesterday. Once a top Soviet U.N. official, Shevchenko said he defected in April 1978 becaue he was disgusted with "aggressive" and "expanionist" Soviet policies. v aay, Z tr a - ore o o°1o 9O9 \r o;9 s v