_ _ Ore son Daily_ _ Emerald I'uesiltU . XovcnihiT 28. I ui’cnr (Iri'gnn Volume 'l I. \umliri ti2 Glasnost is not poetic justice Soviet poets rate reforms Bv Joseph Kidd Emerald C ontributor Although iron-fisted gov emment i ontrols on litera lure have loosened In the So vie! I uion questioning the authority id Lenin and the Communist Party is still ta boo, two leading So\ let poets said Monday Mikhail I rernin and Vladi mil t (hand iIim.i ihed what they see as the breakthroughs and failures of Sov let S' Ms lit>st 01 ' openness, and de sir ihed the world of under ground literature in the Sovi et l 'nion in a presentation in the KMC Walnut Room titled "Cultural and E’olitieai late in I.eningrad 11idav I 'III,md ami E.remin are both veteran writers of un dorgruund or literature Snmisil.it literally meaning "sell published" in Russian, is the term used to desi ribe unottii ially pub lished materials a flow of whir h has existed loi tier ades in the Soviet I 'nion S,imisil.it hooks and jour iials are usually published on i opv mar hi lies or simply typewritten and rlistrihuted I 'fliand said "That’s why Xerox no K if j«t Soviet poets. Mikhail Uremia. tell. ami \ latlmur I lliaml. rit;hl spoke on the ettei Is ol i>lasnosl Vtonda\ in the hMI I ruim Vurrvic.h. middle, translated. t hums urn lul.ills oil limits in thn Sos ml I 'iiiiiii Im said I hat is also u In |i ops uia i llilics) i iilinut Im lakrn into llm Sos ml I 'moil Tim amount of under ground literature is huge said Alia Kovri/.huikh. Ten ingrad I dm Studio editor s\ ho also took pari in llm In turn hi l.etungrail alone there .ire .ilmiit .11) •.iimi/.tLil inaga/mes Titles range Irum I’roplr s I rani to \hl\ a s Iniirn.il Irum ()bxinln\ C.inul In \n.ii i lusls ,uni I v nil /s/s l tinmil S.llll Turn lo Sov iels, Page I Center grant brings speakers, film series Hv ( hris Knunclt t liter aid \ss(k kite l ditor A major grant Imm the 1 uni I ilimitation to the I'niveiMlv •• ( enter Ini the Slmlv u! U omi’ii m Socicti is ,111(1111111,; the i.ru 11■ I lu lake I Ill'll a|l|)lMill ll In integrate rninurilv issues into ( hiss i ui i n it 111 in Tin* cuntei iat i n ml a in (i n ai S 11)11.i Kill ;i,«nt Itiim I 111 I uni 1 iinn00 million, at cord ing to the state emplm ineiit division Tribble said he disagrees with those who sav the timber industrv can be replated with servit.e oriented industries "There’s only so much a service industry t an do." he said. "Vou have to have some kind of in dustrv to bring in outside dollars Tribble cited the 53 percent of federal lands already preserved, and added that further preser vation would hurt the small mills his organiza tion represents. I li.it s ii.nl ni'tvs Im them !><•< ause Iln-\ dr pend mi the HIM and the Forest Servu r for their wood," he s.ml "WIlY do vou need to preserve .mvinore th.m volt have:’ When von look .it uh.it vou have what's in the national parks and the whole u dderness system, that 's a lot ot land I illing the Demand I hose ol us who have spent a lot ol our lile in the lores! are hard-pressed to understand uliv everybody nets so terrihlv steamed up about de stroying ecosv stems when we personallv plant a lot ol these replai enienl trees and leave a lieu lor est coming up behind us said Hud Stewart public relations representative toi Hohemia Ini Stewart’s i oncerns about preservation are twn-hild: the issue of jobs and the reminim and the demand for Oregon wood prodmts around the nation and the world "Yes. some things need to be set aside and we certainly have no quarrel with the Congres siniialh designated wilderness and other set asides." he said "Hut I tlunk we came to the point quite some time ago that we have enough preserved already In a sense, vou i an t preserve any living thing It s as if people wanted to put everything in cold storage so that a thousand years from now it would look the same as it does now It just doesn't happen that way It is a common point made by forest industry representatives In addition to the hundreds ol thousands of acres destroyed by fires every sum Turn to Timber, Page 9 L ^ 1 » Sf^ii Poslon Timber industry representatives claim further reductions in the supply of trees to Oregon's mills would threaten the jobs of thousands