OCR Text |
Show 12 A The Salt Lake Tribune, Sunday, August Russ Critic Indian-Pakista- Talks ni By Bernard Wemraub - Janies Paper! - The physicist MOSCOW known as the father of the Soviet hydrogen bomb says a top Soviet legal official has accused him of giving out information of interest to foreign intelligence services. Dr. Andrei D. Sakharov, an outspoken critic of Soviet civil rights policies, told Saturday of the warning in a written account of a meeting he had Thursday with M. P. deputy general procurator, a post similiar to prosecutor. The account was made available to some western newsmen. Sakharov said he was reminded he had worked in secret areas of special importance" and had agreed not to meet foreigners. Indian and NEW DELHI officials resumed Pakistani crucial talks today in an effort to break the political deadlock on the subcontinent. Not Eager to Accept The second group involved are the 175,000 to 200,000 Bengalis in Pakistan, stranded there during the war, who seek to go to Bangladesh, which the Bengalis consider their homeland - A mob BELFAST (UPI) beat up six policemen in the town of Portadown early Saturday after cruising gunmen, firing from a car, killed a ITotestant in an apparent random attack. Along the border with the Irish Republic, a bomb demolished the post office in the village of Middletown. Three masked gunmen forced the postmistress to flee before planting the bomb and escaping themselves. The explosives went of; minutes later, but no one was injured. Police attributed the shooting death of Trevor Holland in Portadown, 22 miles southwest of Belfast, to another random attack by the gunmen who have killed 13 persons within the past year. Holland, shot from a passmg car as he stood in front of a cafe, vas the 866th fatality in the four years of violence among the majority Protestants, minority Catholics and the security forces of North- ern Ireland. Shortly after his death, a mob beat up six policemen in CUT a riot outside dance hall in Portadown. $93 Sears Best $449.99 TV portable color wone-butto- tuning. Slight scratch. n nals a' eral government has to duplicate stale investigations of prospective parents to qualify the child for an immigration Los Angeles Times Service SAIGON Congresswoman Patsy Mink of Hawaii ended a four-da- y visit to South Vietnam Saturday, pushing hard for her bill to ease American requirements red-tap- e visa. "There are now about 2,000 applications pending under the old legislation, she said. In the last fiscal year only 455 Vietnamese orphans were cleared through the current procedures. that slow the adoption of Vietnamese w'ar orphans. Theres not even a good es- timate on how many there are, the Hawaii Democrat said. Immediate Citizenship As a result of her trip and recommendations made to her by South Vietnamese welfare officials, she also said she would amen her measure to grant immediate citizenship to orphans when their adoption becomes legal. As it now stands such children must wait two years She generally accepts the South Vietnamese official figure of some 15,000 children with an American father who has gone. Some estimates put the total number of orphans at 40.000. Whats an Orphan But what do you mean by an orphan, Mrs. Mink asked. Here in South Vietnam they frequently Jefine an orphan as a child with a single parent, which means the mother. We would not characterize a child with one living parent as an The South Vietnamese felt most strongly that we should grant immediate citizenship so that the child is not left in some kind of legal limbo in the event of divorce or something like that. orphan. What Mrs. Mink is pushing and has been since 1970 is a relatively simple measure. It would speed adoption procedures in the United States by dropping a legislative requirement that the fed $356 CUT Mrs. Mink said she did not see much prospect for her measure while the war was going on but now that the violence is declining she feels the timing is better. $241.99 Dryer Gold electric wWrinkle Guard. Dented. Ve 169 249 229 319 88 119 84 224 209 219 1 $133 Our $299.99 Fishing Boat$1 CUT 12-f- t I Foamed fiberglass. Slight damage. CUT $100 Sears $349.99 Washer lady Kenmore. White 1 push button. Dented. $1 15 Our $314.99 Dishwasher CUT lady Kenmore Portable. m I Avocado. Dented. I QQ Vv portable, dented. Lady Kenmore white, CUT $100 Car $279.99 Dishwasher $1 I 7Q W portable. White, dented. CUT $100 Our $274.99 Dishwasher portable. Coppertone. Dented. CUT $73 Our $229.99 Compactors Choice of colors. Assorted. Dented. CUT $1 30 Our CUT $123 Our $479.99 Refrigerator fL 1 82-c- awcado. W,ice irak tr, cold water. Dented. CUT $1 1 6 Our 1732-cft gold. With $414.99 Refrigerator icemaker. Dented. $140 Sears $554.99 CUT fL 19.0-c- motJet gold wrth ice maAer, cold New, discontinued electronic model. $4 E ON SALE! Q $1 QQ vw CUT 1 8,000 I ' BTU 1 1 0-- Air Conditioner Refrigerated. Display. Sears-Outl- 9:30 a.m. AND CO. yf to 6 p.m. riqcprl Sunday ; O9 Cm tmm 40off 99 Store J75 West 13th South Shop Mon. thru Sat. Satislaetion Guaranteed or Your 'lone y Bark $1 I Rebuilt Hand Power Tools $125 Sears $224.93 SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE SEARS, ROEBUCK 4 $127 Our $249.93 Calculator 00 ta sell! See our assortment. CUT VVU $OOQ WhiU wier. Dental 7 AT m $Q R C Side-by-Si- $1I $329.99 Water Softner Used, but rebuilt to work like new. QQ JM 1 $1 10 Our $309.99 Dishwasher CUT 139 99 CC $0lQW $1 $Q $47 Sears $11 6.99 Water Heater Electric heater with slight damage. 136 163 182 $43 Our $179.99 Dryer White electric wWrinkle Guard. Dented. CUT $51 Our May Reach Agreement before the talks Shortly Easy Viet Adoption Sought by Demo In Belfast anti-Sovi- 1 head of the Indian delegation, said Officers character frankly which and the procuracy, guards the law and the interests of our society, can no longer stand aside. Pakistan has demanded the return of all the prisoners, and now threatens to place 203 Bengalis on trial for treason, if the Dacca government conducts war crimes tribu- We met, we discussed, we P. N. Ilaksar, dispersed, Mob Beats Harmful Character' "At that time, it could be considered that you were speaking from the position of a Soviet person on separate insufficiencies and mistakes, Sakharov quoted Malyarov as saying. Bui recently, your activities and pronouncements have taken on a more harmful and ... Although speculation has creased about a breakthrough in the tang'ed postwar dispute involving these three groups, the atmosphere at todays meetings were marked by secrecy and uncertainty. Mal-aro- start. n in- k Draw Own Conclusion in li At stake in the negotiations are three hostage groups. One of these is the 93,000 Pakistani military and civilian prisoners held in Indian camps war in since the three-weeDecember, 1971, that resulted in the creation of tangladesh from what had been the eastern half of Pakistan. 'But you meet foreigners and give them information which is of interest to foreign I ask intelligence services all the you to consider seriousness of this warning and draw your own concluthe account quoted sions, Malyarov as saying The physicist, a founder of for the Soviet Committee Human Rights, denied any contact with secret work for five years and said his conwith foreigners, versations many of them journalists, had nothing to do with state, military or technological secrets. been 52, has Sakharov, subjected to increasing official pressure in recent weeks. He is said to fear it is a prelude to his incarceration in a prison or mental asylum. Malyarov, the account said, told Sakharov the authorities had closely followed his civil rights activities from the South Blocks, the Red and Sandstone government secretariat, Aziz Ahmed. Pakistans foreign secretary and head of the nation's delegation, said: It is good that the dialogue has at we last been resumed hope we may reach an agreement during this visit. A fundamental bar to agreement remains the demand of the Bangladesh government to hold prisoner of war trials in Dacca for 195 unnamed Pakistanis charged with murdering civilians and committing atrocities and rape before and during the war. third group are the more than one million Bihans These are in Bangladesh. Moslems, from the Indian state of Bihar, who largely sympathized with the Pakistani army during the 1971 war. Neither the Dacca government nor Pakistan is eager to accept large numbers of these Biharis, now in squalid camps in Bangladesh. The New York Times Writer Associated Press Writer CUT DOUGlASl Negotiations Resume for Three Groups Feeling Legal Ire By 19, 1973. Ail Items Subject to ,rior Sale At (Ms point, there is some feeling that the issue of the P.O.W. trials may be set aside but not dropped and that negotiations are focusing upon the return of most of the Pakistanis in exchange for most of the Bengalis. Tha future of the Biharis remains less certain. Sources close to the negotiations point out that Indias essential aim is to return the prisoners of war. Once these prisoners are handed over, sources say, India would extricate herself from the negotiations and leave it to Pakistan and Bangladesh to work out the fate of the 195 Pakistanis held for trial, and the 203 Bengalis in Pakistan. (Copyright) W SINGLE VISION GLASSES AS LOW AS CHOICE OF FRAME FROM LAR.GE SELECTION OF MODERN FRAME STYLES Complete A BUY ONE PAIR OF GLASSES AT DOUGLAS OPTICALS REGULAR 10W PRICE AND SPARE PAIR PRESCRIPTION 'fi PRICE OFFER EXPIRES AUGUST OOWNTOWN SALT 147 LAKE CITY South Main SI, tSJS SUGAR HOUSE 2102 S. 11th East 485-129363-450- BANK AMERICARD AND MASTER CHARGE |