Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 22, 1984, Page 4, Image 4

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From Associated Press Reports
Soviet spies
discovered
BRUSSELS, Belgium — The
Justice Ministry said Monday
two Soviet spies have been ar
rested for trying to obtain secret
NATO documents and will be
immediately expelled.
The ministry, in a news
release, also said the case of a
Soviet diplomat was being
studied by the government.
The release did not identify
the diplomat or the two alleged
spies. The ministry said the
spies tried to obtain “highly
classified" documents of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organiza
tion and were arrested this past
weekend.
NATO headquarters is in
Belgium.
The ministry gave no other
details.
Sakharov
given degree
PHILADELPHIA — The Univer
sity of Pennsylvania awarded an
honorary degree in absentia
Monday to Soviet dissident and
Nobel Peace Prize winner An
drei Sakharov, who is being
kept in exile in the Soviet
Union.
Sakharov, who also turned 63
on Monday, “may be a thorn in
the flesh of the Soviet regime,
but his principled stance should
prick the conscience of govern
ments and individuals the world
over," Penn Pres. Sheldon
Hackney said in a citation that
accompanied the doctor of
science degree.
A chair was reserved for
Sakharov in the front row on the
large stage of the 15,000-seat
Civic Center, where the com
mencement exercises for 3,500
students were held.
Sakharov also had been in
vited to address Sunday's Bac
calaureate Day exercises at the
university, but there has been
no public word from the
Kremlin on his whereabouts or
health since friends said he
began a hunger strike May 2.
Sakharov's wife reported he
was taken from his home by
authorities five days after he
began his hunger strike.
On Sunday, Georges Mar
chais, secretary-general of the
French Communist Party, said
he was told in a response to a
letter he sent “to the highest
level in the Soviet Union" that
Sakharov was in a clinic and that
he and his wife were in
"satisfactory" health.
Soviet subs
set off coast
WASHINGTON — The Soviet
Union has stationed one addi
tional nuclear-missile-firing sub
marine off the U.S. East Coast
and one more off the West
Coast in what Pentagon officials
regard as a move of little
military significance.
Defense sources on Monday
dismissed as essentially a
political action the increase of
Soviet missile-firing sub
strength within about 1,000
miles of the U.S. mainland.
Soviet Defense Minister
Dmitri Ustinov announced Sun
day, through the Soviet news
agency Tass, that Moscow has
increased the number of
nuclear-armed submarines off
U.S. shores and said their
missiles could hit targets in the
United States within 10 minutes
of launch.
The new Soviet subs would be
in addition to the five or so that
intelligence officials say have
long been stationed off the
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Ustinov's announcement of
deployments of the type the
Soviets normally keep secret
was cited by Pentagon officials
as evidence that the action is
more political than of military
significance. It carries forward
Soviet threats to respond to
deployment of new U.S. land
based missiles in Europe under
the NATO umbrella.
“We regard this as a familiar
litany of Soviet assertions and
threats," White House
spokesman Larry Speakes said
Monday in response to
Ustinov's announcement.
Speakes said the buildup oc
curred while the United States
and the Soviets were involved in
arms talks, which have since
ceased.
Economy to
grow slowly
WASHINGTON — Economic
growth will slow dramatically in
the next few months from its re
cent rapid pace, but the current
recovery will last into 1985, a
group of business economists is
predicting.
The National Association of
Business Economists said a
survey of some 200 of its
members found them still op
timistic about economic
strength this year, but
pessimistic about how long the
current recovery will last.
The economists forecast an
annual growth rate of 5.7 per
cent for all of 1984, compared
with 3.4 percent growth in 1984.
The forecast saw the 8.8 percent
pace set from January through
March slowing in the current
quarter and for the rest of the
year.
Sixty-nine percent of the
group's members predicted that
the next recession would begin
by the end of 1985. A minority of
12 percent saw the recession
coming at the end of this year
and 26 percent forecast it would
not occur until 1987.
A. Nicholas Filippello, presi
dent of the association and chief
economist for Monsanto, said
the majority of economists
believed this economic recovery
would not last as long as normal
because of interrelated pro
blems of rising interest rates, a
huge federal budget deficit and
growing red ink in the country's
foreign trade performance.
Banks' prime lending rate,
which has risen three times in
the last two months and now
stands at 12.5 percent, will sur
pass 13 percent by the end of
the year, the economists
forecast.