Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 11, 1985 Walesa testifies on behalf of three union activists IN BRIEF From United Press international GDANSK, Poland (UPI) - Solidarity founder Lech Walesa entered a courtroom wearing jeans and a T-shirt yesterday and testified that three union activists on trial for planning an illegal strike are innocent. One defendant rose in the dock and shouted, "Lech, don't worry! Solidarity will win!" Walesa also sent a statement to the Polish parliament saying the trial represents an "escalation of lawlessness" in Poland akin to the brutal era of Soviet leader Josef Stalin. Walesa signed the statement as a leader of the Solidarity union, which is banned by the government. WEARING jeans, a denim jacket and a T- shirtemblazoned with a small Solidarity emblem and the separate investigation to determine if the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize winner should be charged with planning to disturb the peace. No charges have yet been filed. "I will tell the court that it was a legal meeting," Walesa said on his arrival. "We did not hide the fact we were to meet together. That's the truth." The moustachioed Walesa testified for an hour, saying "three innocent men are in the dock," sources said. After Walesa testified, the sources said Judge Krzysztof Zieniuk followed routine procedure and asked if anyone had questions for the witness. Defendant Adam Michnik raised his hand and said he had a statement. slI ch up un Li ch te th de at pr to ogan "L'Homme de Fer" (The Iron Man) - for a Fran- HE STOOD, lifted his hand in a V-for-victory sign and ifilm about Solidarity's 1980 formation - walesa drove shouted, "Lech, don't worry! Solidarity will win!" ito the courthouse in his Volkswagen van. Mih FtoregncourhousinalisbreoaenngMichnik, ejected from court three times last week for Foreign journalists, barred from attending the trial of accusing the judge of being partial, was thrown out again aderground Solidarity activists Adam Michnik, Bogdan for his outburst, the sources said. as and Wladyslaw Frasyniuk, were allowed to stand ose to the eitrance to the courthouse when Walesa en- In his testimony, Walesa dismissed the credibility of a red the court. A moment later, security guards pushed tape-recorded conversation between Lis and two secret em away. police agents, charging it was fake. The three defendants were arrested at a Feb. 13 un- "Dictatorships resort to such methods," he said of the erground Solidarity strategy meeting - which Walesa tape. tended - in which a 15-minute strike was discussed to Walesa later told reporters the judge properly rotest food price hikes. Police charged them with trying Wls ae odrprestejdepoel organize an illegal strikei reprimanded him at one point during his testimony when -upon being asked who else he and the defendants expec- ted at the Feb. 13 meeting - he snapped: "It was not you WALESA was not arrested but authorities opened a we were waiting for." Von Bulow acquitted PROVIDENCE, RI-Danish jet-setter Claus von Bulow, 58, weeping with relief and applauded by spectators, was acquitted yes- terday of two counts of trying to mur- der his heiress wife with insulin in- jections. The debonair financier, whose 1982 conviction on the same charges was overturned on appeal,' said he was "very grateful to everyone" and had "no feeling of vindictiveness or any kind of hard feelings." He said he wanted to put the or- deal behind him "by leading a quiet life and ceasing to be in the public eye." American kidnapped by Beirut gunmen BEIRUT, Lebanon-Uniden- tified gunmen kidnapped an American University of Beirut dean from a limousine minutes af- ter he flew into Beirut airport from a U.S. visit, officials said yester- day. It was the third abduction of a school employee in less than two weeks. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, which brought to seven the number of Americans missing in Lebanon. The pro-Iranian Islamic Jihad terrorist group previously said it was holding five of the abducted Americans. ThomasSutherland, 53, dean of American University's School of Agriculture in Beirut, was seized Sunday night in mostly Moslem west Beirut as he was being driven on the Beirut International Airport road upon his return from a trip to his home in Fort Collins, Colo. China buys German atomic reactors BONN, West Germany-Chinese officials traveling with Premier Zhaoziyang signed a letter of intent yesterday to buy four atomic reactors and said they wanted to offset the cost by accepting highly radioactive spent fuel from West Germany. The letter of intent was one of several bilateral agreements signed by aides to Chancellor Helmut Kohl and Zhao. Others in- cluded extending for 10 years a bilateral economic cooperation pact calling for development aid and technology exchanges and allieviating double taxation. Kohl and Zhao watched as Chinese nuclear officials and representatives of the Siemens electric concern's Kraftwerk Union subsidiary signed a memorandum on a major nuclear project that could be worth almost $2 billion to the West German com- pany. Kids drown in pool GARY, Ind.-Five children searching for frogs in a closed public swimming pool waded into dirty water at the deep end and drowned as they tried in vain to climb the pool's slimy walls and floor, police said. "I could see it myself where they had scratched the pool with their fingernails when they tried to get out," said Gary Detective William Burns. One boy and four girls, who were all related, climbed a 7-foot, chain link fence Sunday night to get into the pool, police said. The pool was scheduled to open at the end of the month and had not been cleaned since last year. Scout leaders get maximum sentence ST. JOHNS, Mich.-Twin brothers convicted in connection with a Boy Scout sex abuse scandal yesterday received the maximum penalty-life in prison--from a judge who said his job is justice, not mercy. Donald Gowing, 47, appeared shaken as his sentence was pronounced by Clinton County Cir- cuit Judge Randy Tohvonen, and brother Delmar, sitting nearby, wept. Delmar received a similar sentence shortly thereafter. I 4 We Are the World'profits go to work NEW YORK (UPI) - The first the plane in a warm, morning sun, Artists for Africa. airlift of relief supplies for the star- Ross said, "We made music, and now ving and sick in Africa financed by the we are talking about saving lives and When the jetliner makes its first "We Are the World" record made by spreading love. This is a very impor- stop in Brussels early Tuesday mor- 45 top American musical stars left tant cause in my life. This is only the ning, more than 182,000 packages of yesterday for Sudan and Ethiopia. beginning, but we all want to do high energy biscuits will also be taken Singer-Actress Diana Ross saw off more." aboard, and singer Harry Belafonte the supplies aboard a Flying Tigers Aboard the plane were more than and his wife will get on for the flight to cargo jetliner and said, "We are 200,000 pounds of medical supplies, Africa. beginning to make a difference." vitamins, blankets and tents under Standing on a raised platform near the sponsorship of United Support of HALF THE cargo will be unloaded in Khartoum Tuesday morning. Four W fIJJ, to MIll I CAW I hours later, the plane will arrive in to Addis Ababa with the other half. (ContinuedfromPage 1) Among those leaving New York asked about what role military on the plane was Marlon Jackson, one research should play on campus, of the Jackson Five, who said he was which has been a source of controver- representing the 45 artists who made the recording. Jackson said he wanted sy"t the Unotersoyook at research in -to thank all those who purchased the ternis of its overall objective," Wilson records, albums, and other merchan- said, adding that it would be "preten- sdise, including "We Are the World" T- tious" of her to make a statement shirts., about such research at the University right now. Rock stars such as Tina Turner, "The term military research is sort Lionel Ritchie, Bruce Springsteen, of undefinable," she said. "It's a long T . Ray Charles, Bob Dylan, Huey Lewis discussion, but an important one." -.and the News and others joined in UNIVERSITY Prof. Arnold Monto, making the record. who headed the 10-member commit- tee that aided in the selection of can- A spokesman for the artists said didates for the position, said Wilson 1 $6.5 million had so far been raised was chosen for her wide range of ex- from sales of the recording and ad- perience, which includes university ditional revenue, estimated at $40 research projects and consultation for million, is expected to be generated national agencies and programs. from contributions, books and other "The problem with the vice ...awaitsRegents' approval items and special programs. president of research at the Univer- group of executive officers," Monto sity of Michigan is you have to have a said. "This plane behind us is just the tip- lot of breadth," Monto said, ex- Wilson will replace Alfred Sussman, top of a vast iceberg of help for the plaining that the position requires ex- who is retiring after serving as the in- people of Africa," James Grant, perience and knowledge of both the terim vice president for research and 'o natural and social sciences. graduate studies since 1983. Susman executive director of the United "I think she's going to be an ex- will resume teaching biology at the Emergn Indaid. cellent addition to our already strong University. Emergency Fund, said. Vol. XCV - No. 16-S The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at The University of Michigan. Subscription Iates: September through April - $35 outside the city; May through August - $8.00 in Ann Arbor, $15.50 outside the city. 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