Israeli official's brother defends T 07 The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 7, 1983 - Page 3 Russia to deploy new 1'alesfln By MICHAEL ROLNICK "Occupation corrupts" was the essage of Richard Arens, the out- spoken brother of Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens, in an Ann Arbor address yesterday. Arens, A University graduate and currently law professor at the Univer- sity of Bridgeport (Connecticut), ac- cused Israeli soldiers of beatings, ra'ings, and gang abuse against Palestinians in Israeli-occupied territories. Arens compared Israeli treatment of the Palestinians West Bank to the racist policies of South Africa. SPEAKING TO A crowd of about 75 people with few undergraduates at the Wesley Foundation, Arens also blamed Israel for the massacre of Palestinians in Lebanese camps last year. "Phalange militia were not allowed but invited into the camps" by the Israelis, Arens said. Arens also warned against Israeli nuclear capability in the Middle East. tians. He condemned the Israeli aerial attack on an Iraqi nuclear power in January 1981 and said that Israeli collaboration with South Africa in the field of nuclear military power was decreasing the chances for peace in the region. Arens said that the Israelis, who regard themselves as a tiny David surrounded by many Goliaths, rank fourth on the world's most atomically armed list, and therefore it is the Israelis-not the Arab countries-who are the Goliaths of the region. He said the country's interest in maintaining nuclear superiority was the reason for Israel's refusal to sign the nuclear non- proliferation treaty. ARENS WENT ON to urge the audience to write to their represen- tatives in congress to counter the strong Israeli lobby in Washington. He questioned why the United States was willing to give Israel $300 million per year while regions within the United States, such as Michigan, are in economic turmoil. The United Staes give a "knee jerk response whenver the mobile missile to, WASHINGTON (AP) - The Soviet backs at the hands Union is apparently preparing to deploy the Bekka Valley of to Syria a surface-to-surface missile the Soviet Union rep which would represent a significant losses in planes, new threat to Israel, U.S. intelligence equipment, accor sources said yesterday. telligence sources. These sources, speaking on the condition Going beyondr they not be identified, said there is Soviets installed SA evidence the Soviets will probably send missiles never befo to Syria the 75-mile range SS-21, which Middle East and se never before has been deployed outside nel to operate th of the Warsaw Pact region in Europe. telligence officials sr Senior sefense officials The Soviets prov have said the SS-21 is part of the air defense system: new generation of Soviet surface-to- erected a comple surface missiles which can carry high Soviet military adv explosives or nuclear warheads. If the communicate dir Soviets were to station SS-21s in military headquarte southern Syria, such weapons could cover targets in Israel. SS-21s could also pose a threat to Lebanon. RENT The SS-21 was described in a Pen- tagon report earlier this year as a REFRIGE mobile missile, carried on a six-wheeled transporter-launcher. Designed to replace an earlier type of Pha surface-to-surface missile called 973- FROG-7, the SS-21 was said by the Pen- tagon to be more accurate, "thus For imm enabling greater targeting flexibility and deeper strikes" than previously free de possible. Following Syria's battlefield set- Syria of Israeli forces in Lebanon last year, placed all of Syria's tanks, and other ding to U.S. in- replacement, the AM-5 surface-to-air ire deployed in the nt military, person- iose missiles, in- aid. ided an integrated for the Syrians and x through which isers in Syria could ectly with Soviet rs in Moscow. TA RATOR one 6587 nediate slivery Richard Arens, brother of Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Arens, speaks out against the Israeli government. Israelis want aid," he said. "The Executive branch approves it and Congress adds to it." Arens was brought to Ann Arbor by the American-Arab Anti- Discrimination Committee, the Ecumenical Campus Center, and the American Friends Service Committee. 0 Nb N A - Judge imprisons Brink's robbers for life GOSHEN, N.Y. (AP) - Three radicals Authorities said th described by a judge as unrepentant Brink's robbery ble and calculating killers were sentenced "family" of terrorists yesterday to 75 years to life in prison for Judith Clark, 33, D murdering three people in the $1.6 and Kuwasi Balagoo million Brink's armored car holdup two court when Ritter im years ago. secutive 25-year-to-li "I harbor no illusions about any of murders and concurr these defendants. They hold society in terms for the robber contempt and have no respect for said to be listening t human life," said Orange County Judge, over a speaker syst David Ritter. pen. HE SAID the armored car robbery THEY HAD app was "a cold, calculated and deliberate' moments earlier t plan." Society must be protected from statements to a cour "these defendants and the violence they porters, who applau represent," he said. "Free the land!" HAPPENIN Highlight The Professional Theatre Program presents the comedy, by Richard Brinsley Sheridan. The show begins at 8 p.m.,i delssohn Theater. he arrests in the ew the lid off a s. David Gilbert, 39, n, 36, were not in nposed three con- fe terms for the ent 12%-to-25 year y. But they were o the proceedings tem in a holding eared in court o make defiant troom full of sup- ded and shouted, "You can kill or jail a revolutionary, but you can't kill or jail the revolution," said Gilbert, as wild applause broke out in the courtroom. The trio, former members of the Weather Underground and the Black Liberation Army, are not appealing their conviction for the Oct. 2, 1981 holdup at a Nanuet shopping mall in which a Brink's guard was slain and two police officers died in the ensuing shootout. A JURY deliberated less than three hours before convicting the defendants Sept. 14 of three counts of murder and four of robbery. Two co-defendants Kathy Boudin and Samuel Brown, are scheduled for trial on the same charges Wednesday. Kenneth Gribetz, the Rockland Coun- ty district attorney who prosecuted the case, recommended the maximum sen- tence. "The defendants have expressed not the slightest sign of contrition, sorrow, or remorse for their activities, but rather .a firm desire and commitment to continue their struggle against the United States and their values, to con- tinue to rob, maim and kill," he said. Gribetz warned Ritter that it would be a serious mistake "not to take these defendants at their word when they state that they are revolutionaries." GS- Bail set for suspect tVi llage Apohecary 1112 South University 663-5533 Visa, Master Charge, MESSA. PCS, Blue Cross, Travelers, MediMet "- C i in jjd.n.KCI' 11lul'clcl S "The Rivals," in Lydia Men- Films Alternative Action-The Secret of Nimh, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Cinema I-Alien. 7 & 9:15 p.m., MLB 3. Cinema Guild - Mad Max, 7,8:45 & 10:30 p.m. Lorch. AAFC - My Dinner with Andre, 7 & 9:15 p.m., Angell Aud. A. Mediatrics-James Bond film festival, Dr. No, 1:30 p.m., From Russia with Love, 3:35 p.m., Goldfinger, 5:35 p.m., Thunderball, 7:50 p.m., You Only Live Twice, 10 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performance Network-Films by Andrea Gomez, Ningun and Bus Stop, 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. Performances School of Music-University Wind Ensemble and Symphony Band, 8 p.m., Hill. The Brecht Company - "A Man's a Man," 8 p.m., R.C. Auditorium. Musical Society - Western Opera Theater, "Madame Butterfly," 8 p.m., ,Power Center. Seva Foundation - Violin concert, Lalgudi Jayaraman & Party, 8 p.m., Schorling Aud. Women of the University Faculty - Organ recital, Marilyn Mason Brown, 7 p.m., organ studio, School of Music. Ark - Madcat Ruth, 8p.m., 1421 Hill. Second Chance - York Road. ,Speakers Astronomy - Charles Cowley, "Exotic Elements in the Universe," 8:30 p.m. followed by film, What Stars are Made of, 8:30 p.m. Angell Aud. B. South and Southeast Asian Studies - Brown bag lecture, Gayl Ness, John - Broomfield, "Military Funding for Area Studies: An Open Forum," noon, 130 Lane Hall. Dickens Fellowship - Beverly Pooley, "Dickens and Chancery," 8 p.m., Faculty Dining Room, Lawyers Club. South & Southeast AsianStudies-Suresh Vasant, "The Junnar Caves of Maharashtra and Their Environs," 12:15 p.m., Lane Hall Commons Rm. Engineering-Charles Ingram, "Research and Development to Support Defense System Design," 3:30 p.m., 107 Aerospace Engineering Bldg. Anthropology-Colloquium, Ann Anagnost, "Beginning and End of a Chinese Emperor," 4 p.m., 2053 LSA. Guild House - How Women Grow and Change, Marguerite Oliver, "Women's Lives," noon, 802 Monroe. School of Art-Jack Faxon, "Collecting Art in Michigan," 8 p.m., Hale Aud. Meetings Korean Christian Fellowship - Bible study meeting, 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class-7:30 p.m., University Reformed Church. Duplicate Bridge Club - Open game, 7:15 p.m., League. Tae Kwon Do CLub - Practice, 5 p.m., CCRB Martial Arts Rm. Chinese Students Christian Fellowship - Fellowship and Bible study, 7:30 p.m., Memorial Christian Church. Miscellaneous Women's Athletics-Field Hockey, Michigan vs. Michigan State, 4 p.m., Ferry Field. Museum of Art - Art Break, Dorothy Farhat, "Gerome Kamrowski: A Retrospective Exhibition," 12:10 p.m., W. Gallery. SYDA Foundation-"An Evening with Swami Apurvananda," 8 p.m., 1522 Hill. MARSHAL, Minn. (AP) - A judge set bail at $250,000 yesterday for a teen- ager accused of second-degree murder for the slayings of two bank officers at a farm once owned by his father. Steven Jenkins, 18, replied to Lyon County District Judge George Mar- shall's questions in a voice too low to be heard by most in the courtroom. He did not enter a plea. LINCOLN County attorney Michael Cable had sought bail of $50,000. Mar- shall appointed Robert Maunu of Pipestone as Jenkins' attorney and set the youth's next court appearance for Oct. 2. Jenkins and his father, James Jenkins, 46, were charged with the deaths of Rudolph Blythe, 42, and Deems Thulin, 37, president and vice president, respectively, of the Buffalo Ridge State Bank of Ruthton. The two were slain last week on a farm where the Jenkins family had lived before the bank foreclosed on the mortgage and claimed the property. Father and son fled law enforcement authorities until the younger Jenkins surrendered Sunday night in Texas af- ter his father apparently committed suicide. Jenkins has been described as a friendly but shy youth with a fixation for guns and other military trappings. His grandfather, Clayton Jenkins, said the teen had hoped to join the Marines but failed the physical due to a ruptured spleen. The elder Jenkins was described as a hard-working man who stayed to him- self and longed to get back into far- ming., Since the foreclosure four years ago, he had held construction jobs and a janitorial position at a school in Brownwood, Texas. The Ulimae'Za The World s Largest Sipi'an Piz; ,s A Benefit for the 1983 United Way Torch Fund FRI., OCTOBER 21.1983 REGENTS PLAZA EPA investigator dispells Love Canal incident $2.00 advance sales $3.00 day of event includes: pizza, salad, beverage * Michigan Union .Ticket Office, -CTC " 763-1107 (Continued from Page 1). up the Love Canal story because of the irony in its name, not because it was the nation's most dangerous site. "The student has to realize the post- industrial society has the problem of toxics to deal with just as the '30s, '40s, and '50s had the problems of women's rights and desegregation. . . The dif- ference between toxics and those issues is that you have to have more technical background to play the game." Kaufman said he was disappointed that only 30 people turned out for his speech. Usually when he speaks at a college he said he gets crowds of around 500 to 600 people. "Students should get involved with the issues and educate themselves to some degree." .---- j 1 _---- * UON UNION " Brethren Productions in association with WQRS Timeless FM 105, presents William Bolcom Piano Al&~J~r,, Joan Morris Mezzo Soprano QOODY Saturday, October 29, 1983, 8:00 p.m. They bring American songs to life! THE CANADIAN Sunday Afternoon December 11, 1983 4:00 p.m. Returning by popular demand! The Best of" Gilbert & Sullivan - 8pm Oct.29 Crisler Arena featuring the Stars of the D'oyly Carte Opera Company FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1984, 8:00 p.m. _. ' ..: -sue $13 12 11 r . . A