Page 6-Wednesday, June 4, 1980-The Michigan Daily ACCUSED OF AIDING BLACK GUERRILLAS 4 JOHA Oxford- ting to energy guilty y of the wl The c face the SOUT tinued b reported building firing te The gi ter guer one of t governs Christ nection estimatc S. African scientist found guilty o-'plans and information about South African oil and kNNESBURG, South Africa (AP)-An During the trial, however, the prosecution sought to coal installations to the African National Cdngress, educated research scientist accused of plot- the Christie to black nationalists who authorities now an outlawed black nationalist group dedicated to the supply . information about South African say were linked to the refinery bombings. overthrow of the white government. installations to black guerrillas was found PRETORIA SUPREME COURT Justice Eloff The prosecution contended during the trial his ANC esterday of supporting the violent overthrow found Christie guilty of five of seven charges filed contact was Frene Ginwala, whom he had met in hite-minority government. against him under the Terrorism Act. Sentencing was London. On Monday night, South African Police onvicted man, Renfrew Christie, 30, could set for Friday. He faces a minimum of five years in Ministe Louis le Grange identified Ginwala as one of death penalty. prison and a maximum penalty of death. the persons behind the attacks on the three refineries H AFRICA'S WAVE of racial unrest con- The defendant, a former deputy president of the late Sunday. o mount yesterday. In one incident, it was National Union of South African Students, had Le Grange also charged that Joe Slovo, a white d that striking black workers set fire to pleaded innocent to all seven charges. South African communist living in Mozambique, and :s at a gold mine and were routed by police He was detained last October shortly after retur- the Soviet ambassador to Zambia, Vasily Solodav- ar gas. ning here upon completion of a doctorate at Britain's nikov, had helped plot the bombings. The Soviet news uilty verdict against Christie came a day af- Oxford University. He worked as a research fellow at agency Tass said the allegation of Kremlin backing rilla saboteurs bombed three oil refineries in the South African Labor and Development Unit at the for the sabotage was "utterly absurd." heir boldest attacks on the white-minority University of Cape Town, researching the history of South Africa has been shaken by a new upsurge in nent. the country's coal-mining industry. racial unrest for the past six weeks as mixed-race ie, a white, was not accused of a direct con- CHRISTIE WAS ACCUSED of stealing detailed students have boycotted classes to protest policies with the refinery attacks, which caused an plans of a South African nuclear power plant under that provide an education for them much inferior to ed $8 million in damage but no fatalities. construction, and of having offered to supply the that given white children. I 4 *1 The most outrageous of em all. Senate approves intelligence bill 89-1 WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate passed a bill yesterday requiring U.S. intelligence agencies to share infor- mation with Congress about major spying and covert operations overseas and in the United States. The vote was 89 to 1 with Sen. William Proxmire (D-Wis.) casting the only "no" vote. The measure now goes to the House. The bill also reduces the number of committees to - which the intelligence agencies must report from eight to two and writes into law the actual practices of congressional oversight of the in- telligence community developed in the last four years. BUT IT represents, in effect, the temporary abandonment of efforts to write a comprehensive charter for the Central Intelligence Agency and other intelligence units because of a failure to reach agreement on its contents. Sen. Birch Bayh (D-Ind.), chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said it is a situation "where a quarter- loaf is better than no loaf at all." He and other committee members said efforts will continue to complete a charter which will, in Bayh's word', "place the intelligence community on the firmest possible constitutional foundation." The bill changes the so-called Hughes-Ryan amendment to make the Intelligence committees of the Senate and House the official watchdogs of the intelligence community. The move would greatly restrict the number of congressmen privy to intelligence secrets. Previously, the CIA was required to report to the foreign affairs, defense and appropriations committees of the House and Senate as well as the in- telligence committees. The measure expands the requirement for reporting intelligence operations, including operations in the United States as well as abroad. a q 6 6 0 CLINT EASTWOOD s"BRONCO BILLY"STARRING SONDRA LOCKE PRODUCED DENNIS HACKIN AND NEAL DOBROFSKY - PROECE ROBERT DALEY ASSOC FRITZ MANES -WRITTE DENNIS HACKIN DIRECTED CUNT EAST WOOD MUSIC SUPERVISED BYSNUFF GARRETT AND CONDUCTED BY STEVE DORFF PG PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BRO: A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY 'SOME MATFAL MAY NOT BE SUrtAB FOR CXItOA i AVAILABLE ON ELEKTRA RECORDS AND TAPES. PANAVISIONO COLOR BY DELUXE ®.WARNE sAACMTS AESEVEO. OPENS JUNE 11TH AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU. 0 A , , , -r: --I---roe---ff ..