Page 4-Saturday, June 13, 1981-The Michigan Daily Brezhnev says U.S. 'lying' about Soviets 4 From AP and UPI MOSCOW - Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev accused the Reagan ad- ministration yesterday of lying about a Soviet military threat and warned that Moscow will respond "rapidly and ef- fectively" toany U.S. Military buildup. In his harshest attack since President Reagan took office, Brezhnev deplored what he said was Washington's shift in policy away from disarmament and towards an increase of strategic arms in Europe. THE STATE Department, reacting sharply to the charges, accused the Soviet leader of trying to divert atten- tion from Moscow's own "massive military buildup." Brezhnev, whose call this year for a summit meeting has been ignored by Reagan, said the United States and other western leaders who talk about a Soviet threat, "are lying and do not even bother to produce at least a sem- blance of proof." THE SOVIET news agency Tass said Brezhnev made the charges during a meeting with former Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, president of the Independent Commission on Disar- mament and Security Issues. "The United States suspended the SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) process and now is concen- trating its efforts on the realization of new programs of strategic armaments. Movement in practically all basic directions in this sphere of SALT has halted or even reveresed," Brezhnev said. STATE DEPARTMENT spokesman David Passage said Breznev evidently Brezhnev . will'respond' to U.S. arms buildup sought to "capitalize for propaganda purposes on the presence in Moscow of the Palms Commission." "The United States has made clear both directly to the Soviet leadership and in public statements our commit- ment to a serious and constructive dialogue on arms control matters, as well as on other vital international problems," Passage said. In Brief Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Boy slips deeper into well FRASCATI, Italy-Alfredo Rampi, a 6-year-old with a heart ailment, slip- ped about 80 feet deeper into the narrow artesian well where he has been trapped more than two days, said rescue workers who broke through above him yesterday from an adjoining shaft. As darkness fell, the child's mournful cries through a walkie-talkie lowered to him could be heard by hundreds gathered to watch the rescue ef- forts. Rescuers speculated that vibrations from drilling the parallel tunnel might have widened the well, which narrowed to 10 inches where he was trapped, allowing the boy to slip. There was no official confirmation. St. Helens may erupt again SEATTLE-Mount St. Helens apparently is heading towards another eruption in the next week or two, experts said yesterday as they issued an extended outlook advisory on the volcano. The U.S. Geological Survey and University of Washington geophysics spokesmen said they expect any eruption to be a non-explosive "dome- building" type, rather than the booming eruption of the type common last summer. Asked if an explosive eruption is possible, geophysicist Bob Norris replied: "It could be. There's nothing to rule that out, although most people are expecting another dome growth." Last Gacy victims buried CHICAGO-For 2 years, the bodies of nine young men were known only by a number. Yesterday, these nameless victims of mass murderer John Gacy Jr. were buried that way-with a prayer that someday their identities will be known. The bodies of the nine-who were among Gacy's 33 young male vic- tims-were laid to rest in nine separate cemeteries to avoid creating a monument to the man convicted of more murders than anyone in the nation's history. Gacy, now on Death Row in Menard State Penitentiary, was sentenced to die in the electric chair after being convicted March 12, 1980, in the sex- related slayings. Each of the nine gravestones will be engraved with the date of the burial and the words, "We Remembered," on behalf of the people of the city, said Tom Moriarty, spokesman for the Funeral Directors Service Associations. Shoplifter killed by accident HOMESTEAD, Fla.-A 22-year-old shoplifting suspect who collapsed and died after being chased and put into a-headlock was a victim of "excusable homicide," a police detective says. Christopher Everett died Wednesday of lack of oxygen to the brain when one of his four civilian captors tried to subdue him with the headlock, said Dr. Roger Mittleman of the Dade Medical Examiner's Office. The incident began when a security guard at a department store saw two men stash jeans under their pant legs, then walk past the checkout line and out of the store. Store employees took after them and two bystanders joined the chase. When one of the store employees caught up with Everett, another pursuer applied the headlock. "They did not mean to injure him or kill him or anything like that," said Dade County homicide detective Linda Beline, who investigated the incident because Homestead's police department does not have a homicide squad. Laser aids in pregnancies WASHINGTON-A new microsurgical procedure using a laser "knife", vaporizes tissue and greatly increases the chance of pregnancy for women with seriously diseased Fallopian tubes, a New Orleans doctor reported yesterday. Dr. Joseph Bellina of the Louisiana State University School of Medicine estimated 400,000 American women between the age of 18 and 30 have disease each year in the twin tubes running from the ovaries to the uterus. One of five such cases is caused by gonorrhea. Unlike standard techniques, the laser is used to drill a hole through the wall of the uterus. "We have been able to salvage half of a population that had been given a 5 percent chance of pregnancy," Bellina said. Plane malfunctioned in crash WASHINGTON-An Air Force tracking aircraft with the commander's wife in the pilot's seat disintegrated with 21 people aboard because an unknown malfunction in a control system slammed the plane into a fatal dive, the Air Force said yesterday. The plane, a military version of the Boeing 707 jetliner, crashed in pieces ina barley field near Walkersville, Md., May 6. It was the sharp depression of the trim tabs on the horizontal stabilizers-the rear wings controlling pitch-that put the plane in "a sudden and unexpected" 30 degree dive, an Air Force spokesman said. The main power system blew out. 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