The Michigan Daily - Saturday, July 9, 1983 - Page 9 Soviets welcome visiting U.S. schoolgirl MOSCOW (AP) - An American schoolgirl invited to the Soviet Union by President Yuri Andropov greeted Moscovites with a few words of Russian yesterday, gave her autograph to Soviet reporters and rode up and down the elevator at her hotel. Soviet children presented 11-year-old Samantha Smith bouquets of flowers when she arrived and a black limousine whisked her and her parents off to the Sovietskaya Hotel, where the Soviet government frequently lodges important guests. THE SOVIET news agency Tass called Samantha "sociable and jovial"- and said she greeted Moscovites by saying "Zdravstkvuite," hello, and "spasibo," thank you. Samantha of Manchester, Maine, said on arrival at the airport that she was carrying a "secret" gift for the 69-year-old Soviet leader and hoped to deliver it to him in person. It has not been announced whether Samantha will meet Andropov. He invited her to visit after she wrote to him this spring, at her mother's suggestion, asking if he would "vote to have a war or not." HER LETTER was printed in the official Com- munist Party newspaper Pravda on April 11, and An- dropov responded with a two-page letter assuring her of Moscow's peaceful intentions and inviting her and her parents on a two-week expenses-paid visit to see the country for themselves. Samantha said she felt "great" about fulfilling her dream of traveling to the Soviet Union, there were no firm plans for meeting with Andropov. . "It just depnds," she said. The Soviet leader post- poned a meeting with West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl this week because of ill health. SAMANTHA was accompanied by her father, Ar- thur Smith, an English professor at the University fo Maine-Augusta, and her mother, Jane. The family rested after their nine-hour flight from Montreal, then visited Moscow's Pupper Theater. If she does meet Andropov, she said she will ask him: "Do you promise me the Soviet Union will never start a war?" "The Americans are not going to start a war, either. So why are we still making all these bombs and pointing them at each other?" she told reporters. SAMANTHA'S MOTHER, said their daughter is a "good example of American youth and it will be good for Russians to meet her." The Smiths were greeted by 10 Soviet boys and girls wearing white tops, red kerchiefs and navy shorts or skirts of the Young Pioneers, the Communist youth group. A police-escorted black Chaika, limousines usually reserved for the Soviet elite, took the family to the hotel, where rooms cost $70 to $100 a night. Tass said Samantha's parents wanted to rest after their trip, but the girl looked around the hotel and rode the elevator instead. Later, the family was received at the state-run Un- ion of Societies of Friendship with Peoples of foreign countries, which is paying for their trip, including about $10,000 for first-class air tickets. The Soviet government newspaper Izvestia had a story and photograph about Samantha's arrival prominently displayed on the back page. A nightly, 15-minute television program of political news around the world featured her arrival as the lead item. mow r . -: , / J J F - r~ -3:0 * J M1 .J 4) 0) N) 03 _ / 4Ya'. mac. V a Opp -31 RECORDS & TAPES 523 E. LIBERTY 994.8031