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The News from Paterson, New Jersey • 18

Publication:
The Newsi
Location:
Paterson, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

yj tr B-4 The News, Wednesday, October 22, 1986 U.S. retaliates with expulsion North Jerseyans see 4newr Soviet Union telligence agents last month and "(Continued from Page A-l) embassy in Washington and no more than 26 at the consulate in San Francisco. This amounts to a reduction of 54 positions in Washington and 15 in San Francisco. But with some of the posts currently unfilled, 38 people will be required to leave the capital and 12 must quit San Francisco. The five Soviets declared "persona non grata" were identified as counselors Vasiliy Fedotov, Oleg Likhachev and Aleksandr Metelkin and attache Nikolay Kokovin, all at the embassy in Washington, and Lev Zaytsev, consul in San Francisco.

This matches the expulsion of the five Americans from Moscow for what the Soviets Sunday called "impermissible activities." Redman said the five Soviets wore singled out because "Ihey are persons we have reason to believe have engaged in activities inconsistent with their diplomatic status." This appeared to an allegation that they were involved in espionage activites, but Redman did not make the charge directly. However, he stressed their expulsion was caused by "the unjustified action by the Soviets in expelling five U.S. diplomats in Moscow." In Moscow, Gennady Gerasi-mov, a spokesman for the Soviet Foreign Ministry, said "if the United States will insist on continuing this game of tit-for-tat, then this can continue indefinitely. We consider it is time to stop." The official Soviet news agency Tass, in a Russian-language dispatch dutelined Washington, said Tuesday that with the expulsion, "the Reagan administration has undertaken the next step aimed at worsening Soviet-Amer-' ican relations." Congress last year, in an amendment by Sens. Patrick Leahy and William Cohen, gave the executive branch three years to bring the diplomatic staffs in the two countries to equality.

The amendment permitted the administration to determine how and when to meet the deadline. A second amendment by Leahy, and Cohen, R-Maine, was passed and signed earlier this month. It requires that within three years the U.S. and Soviet U.N. missions be roughly equal.

Twenty-five Soviets who were working at the U.N. mission in ordered to leave. The Soviets re- sponded Sunday with the expulsion of the five American diplomats by Oct. 31. Usually, the two sides cool down after a round of expulsions.

But the Reagan administration considered kicking out the Sovi-. ets in New York a separate issue. Another 70 will be ordered to leave in three steps over the next 18 months. With the expulsion of the four Soviets based in Washington and the one in San Francisco, the Soviet diplomatic complement in the United States was reduced to 246. Redman said the five can be replaced.

"The United States regrets that the Soviets have insisted on taking actions that have made these steps necessary," he said. "In taking the actions described above, the United States had corrected a long-standing imbalance in our relationship." At the White House, presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said the steps taken by the United States should not spill over into other areas. "We would hope it docs not interfere with progress made at Iceland and that we can continue to seek arms control and other agreements with the Soviet Union," Speakes said. Asked if arms control could be separated from the expulsion of diplomats, "In our opinion they can, yes." As for the possibility of further retaliation by the Soviets. Speakes said, "We'll see.

We hope they don't." If the Soviets do retaliate, "the president has a number of options that continue to be at his disposal," Speakes said. He did not elaborate. The expulsion decision was considered at a White House meeting Monday attended by the president, Secretary of State George P. Shultz, chief of staff Donald T. Regan, national security adviser John Poindexter and others, Speakes said.

During her last night in the Soviet Union, McCormick said, she even had the opportunity to speak with a Jewish family that had been refused emigration visas. She said the father, an electrical engineer, had lost his job; his wife, a pediatrician, had lost two jobs before finding another one, and their sons were continually harassed. "Their lives were horrible," McCormick said. Barry noted that like America, the Soviet Union has traffic problems, women in politics, day-care centers and political activism. But it has also preserved the flavor of the past, as reflected in country villages with narrow streets, 500-year-old town halls, and landscapes dotted with old castles.

"(Prior to the trip) we felt everything would be a trick," Barry said. "But they have completely rebuilt their country since World War II and they would not have time for tricks." The group represented Citizens for a Sane Nuclear Policy; the Essex County Office for Peace; the Nuclear Freeze movement and the Coalition for Nuclear Disarmement. Richard Hough-Ross, executive director of Bridges for Peace, said the organization began in 1981, when a group at the Norwich (Vt.) Congregational Church was doing work on "peace making." When the group completed its studies, it "actually wanted to foster peace and began to create lines of communication with the Soviets," Hough-Ross said. He said eight exchanges have taken place since the first delegation from the U.S. visited the Soviet Union in December 1983.

MENNELLA'S POULTRY CO. I 306 21 st Paterson, H.J. 345-1 300 Open Daily 8-5 15 lb. Bag I 15 lb. Bag LEG OR LEGS LEG 025 WINGS 75 QUARTERS Ba.

MIXED' 55 lb. I 65 ib. Bag 151b. Bag CTp LEGS 'b- gig Bag 15 lb. Bag fi enp WINGS fb5 njBa9 ONE LB.

OF FRANKS "FREE" With any of the above JUMBO EGGS s1 IV TURKEY NECK (3)0 DRUMSTICKS TRY OUR PRECOOKED FULLY FRED CHICKEN lb. BAG (tMlI 5 WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS New York were identified as in- WE WILL BEAT ANY ADVERTISED FUEL OIL PRICE JASKY'S "Ml A A At CALL STANJOCORP. 4-444 DAILY 300 GALLONS OR MORE The News Classifieds Get Results Call 365-3272 BEER SODA NJ Transit will close Paterson Station (Continued from Page A-l) Transit. The station has the lowest ridership of any on the line, she said. Average ridership at the NJ't LEADING discounter 1 OF fine ninca 1 U5 (Continued from Page A-l) ciety and the seeming lack of paranoia among its people and officials.

"They treated us as representatives of United States communities," Barry said. "We were whisked through customs. We could go wherever we wanted and got all our questions answered. Clearly, we were not being followed." However, he said that they did meet a religious group that spent almost three hours in customs in the middle of the night and was never aware of what its schedule was supposed to be. "They did not have a wide range of contacts," Barry said.

"We were not Christopher Columbus. They had hosted other Americans, Japanese and Germans," he said. "They had welcomed tourists from many countries, which was news to us. "There is a tremendous interest in the Soviet Union of new ideas and expanding (heir relationship with U.S. cities.

They are very open to international relationships, which our country is not." "Americans are woefully uninformed about the Soviet Union," McCormick said. "Someone (in the U.S.) even asked me if I had seen the Iron Curtain." Although she only saw a "microcosm of Soviet society," McCormick said she can understand the "Soviet sense of insecurity and why they are so frightened. They have 11 countries bordering them, regular invasions and so many battles fought on their soil." She also found that despite a heavy emphasis on serious academic subjects, students "did not have the freedom to question and challenge" teachers as American students do. other stations is 435. compared to South Paterson's 20, Greenberg said.

Twenly-three trains are scheduled to stop there each day. But PARSIPPANY SUCCASUNNA 120 Route 46 499 Route 10 1 22 7-2244 584-3334 jj i Un nPSOIIUUK HtlUHTI, NJ talo Tkn. Oil. 23 11AM-IPM Quality Inn 293 At 17 appfoi.2mllnioiilhil.(0 WOrtd Inc. a Advertised No rib, run 1 mmmmmm wi ihm IL HLT.

4llea9rain 7 CWlt-mwt 1 2' iUM PHHadelphla TZrf Uf? Crow iTst11M WINE LIQUOR EISMODXASiRra I Calvert cm Tanqueray en Smirnoff Vodka Hiram Walker Vodka Absolut 199 Bacardi Rum Slim 1 13 MAKE WALLPAPER AFFORDABLE' BUTLER Ciwl law Atam twta 1516 Koute 25 838-8411 199 Bacardi Rum TP Captain Morgan C99lbfcrr johnnle S7773 FALL SALE rg(Q) (5) DIAMflrUn IPWPI EV CUAMf V-- V-- tO 4V OFF i vri uayj umy LAYAWAY UNTIL XMAS the low ridership makes it financially impractical to keep the station open, she said. She said the station accommodates an average of less than one person per train. Further, she said, NJ transit would have to spend $95,000 to repair the station and $5,000 annually to maintain it. A new platform, a passenger shelter, new stairs and improved lighting would all be needed, she said. Riders are being notified of the station's closing by signs posted on the trains and in the stations, she said, and discussions on closing the station have been under way for months.

The few customers using the station can either use the Paterson Station on Market Street or the Clifton Station to the south. She said both stations can be reached within 20 minutes by mass transit. The Paterson Station will cost patrons the same as the South Paterson Station, $2.70 one way to the Hoboken Terminal. The Clifton Station is $2.40 for the same trip. Shown Below is A sample Of The Many sale Items MY MtNHlTTlU 11V Salo Oct 24 AM7PM floo.ew.H Hnl.l M.alZ 81 maaiaoa a ootit 51 IROOkLYN.

MY Salotat. Od.29 11AM-4PM Ooldan Qoto Inn knapptt. Eilt. loll Parkway ''Pa aaP" "1 IBB ltmmtmlmtmmmmiKm Spiced Rum AMERICAN FAVORITES FETZER Premium Raa 15 mar FETZER Premium Waitt 1.S lilar FREKCH SQROEAUX CH. LAR0SE TRINTAUD0N 1983 7mi 4" 4" 5" 12" 16" CH.

B0URGNEUF VAYR0N 1982 7Mmi CH. MOULIN DES CARRUA0ES 198 3 790 ml FREKCH RHQXE WISES PAUL JABOULET Croat Hermitage PAUL JABOULET Chaleanbiii Du Pape PAUL JABOULET Cot Roiia GUIGAL Hermitage 1I7B 6J 7" 12" 23" 750. 750. AUSTRALIAN MISSES HILL SMITH Fume Blanc 750 ml TALTARNI Sbiraj 750 ml HILL SMITH Cabernet Sauvtgnon 750 ml SPARXLISS KI3.ES CORDONIU BrulClatilco 750 ml MARTINI A ROSSI Atll Spumanle 750 ml. 4" 5" 6" 4" 7" PIPER SONOMA nil 750 ml.

3 DOMAINE CHAND0N n9i Napa Valley Orut 750 ml. 9 BOLLINGER Champaona 760 ml 40 PERRIER JOUET m. Flower Soiii. 750 ml 40 ii i manner v.v dqq mw Stock "84" Itallai Brand tW Cran Duque D'Alba QCg tT Spanish Brandy mm LM Almarlon n- uin ornnuj I fiitinnior Hfif Hiram Walker IA. Anisette plantation Peaches Cream re fl99 juuuieinLuiururi CALIFGBMIA JUGS EMBROS 2W 2M 2" 4" 4" 5" 5" 5" Glt.rjlit EMBROS Rhine EMBROS Rote OPICI Burgundy OPICI Chablrt FRANZIA Ch.blts FRANZIA Hote FRANZIA Burgundy Him 3 Mlir met 4 Kin 4 lilr liter Son liler Boa 5 lilei Boa BLUSH I ROSE WISES BANDIERA Whit.

Zinl.ntlt! 750 ml MASTROBERARDINO La Cryma Hgw 790 ml MATEUS Rota 15 liter AMERICAN RED WIKES HAWK CREST Cabernat Seuvignon 740 ml ALEXANDER VALLEY VINEYARD Cabarttat Saimgnott 19B3 7Mml. ROBERT MONDAVI Cabarn-rl Sauvignon TM) ml. 3" 4" 5" 4 8" 9" MAYACAMAS 19" Cibarnal ftauvignon 19B1 750 ml AMERICAN WHITE WIKES WENTE t.nc Blanc 7M ml STE MICHELLE JohHnnisberg Riesling 750 ml. FETZEH arral Salad Chardgflnay 1984 Ory Sauvlgnon Blanc 750 ml. ALEXANDER VALLEY VINEYARD Chardonay 1M3 790 ml.

3" 4" 6" 6-B" KALIN 1 an Caacdannay tM 7M ml 14 IT czrn specials ANCHOR TEAM 1 R8115 tan FranclKO BOULDER ALE 1202 pbci; Colorado THREE HORSE BRAND insi -OiK(TaooMwayswintrMl" 801 RBtls lUcjsf Holland 1(J CROLSCH 12oz Ucj-e Holland HEINEKEN 14c'sr Holland OINKELACKER vourCMoiceocgi Light or Dark 1207 RBm Ocau cerwanv NECRA M00EL0 1202 1. RBtis ID NEW AMSTERDAM rsiis 17" New York City 6ggl.vV. R.J. Hodges n9l C1ZACIAXS I SCOTCHES Walker's JtwtNriUlrt Caiidlia Seagrams v.0. 10" A.iZtvm Sark Stotck wais J5C0TCB rJohn Begg viiMCapScotck Walker Black mm JLKSSTI, wmn label ITALIAN RED WISCES REGALEAU HeO FOLONARI BardoMno FOLONARI Valpolicella RUFIFNO Retarva Ducal Gold CERETTO aarbaraece Bncce Aslle 1903 2" 3" 3" 11" 19" 750 ml I lila I 5 lll.l 750 ml 750 ml.

ITALIAN WHITE WISES REGALEALI VMte 750 ml FAZI BATTAGLIA Vertflcchle 15 Irlei SAN ANGELO Pinal arrgia 750 ml 2" 5" 5" SKERBSESI DESSERT WISES OSBORNE fine 8harry 750 ml. PEYMARTIN Cream Sherry 750 ml COCKBURN Special Reserve Port 750 ml 2" 2" 9" TOKAJI ASZU PUTTUNOS 750 ml 9" APERITIFS I PUNT MES 7 7" Ce Sweat Vermouth 3 liter INTERNATIONAL FAVORITES TORRES mm. i TORRES t). Vina Sal 750 ml. BUOWEISER flea light 24 1202 NRBtIS 9cm CALIFORNIA COOLERS Oil Li Pi 1202 HUBM llAtirrV Non Alcoholic.

.24 1202 N. BUS 14 case SCHWEPPS Mixers 59e NO LIMIT WHILE SUPPLIES LAST 1101111 noi Pittmriiiy owt 0 wo opnuTio i micis wciuos utii on ucomtic hviiimki UH 0 UM1 Ml MtPOatlOU fOP nRWUPMCal (P40M PrCS OFPf CTIVf WID OCT. II iS THRU TUtS OCT 30. 1000 or Nnttsrw i tuna dim. rnu.imt NIRWUIU.

Uintni.tflta SIQrttl irtnii it i courox pt. wmmhoio op toimsi 5S 13M) 7j5 ft fill i2T Jii IS RHEINCOLD Regular 241207 Cans OLD MILWAUKEE Regular STROM'S 7 Regular MILLER Regular UINDAUI BAVOMNf It.MrWOf leieajtt CortwIUMC. iocbavo. ciftst Mwam wo. saraaaway 004-1117 117 70M 7 417 Jt( 17-asM usun.ciiuMi JlWItSOPI.

men listio i Mi inimmimw.l mmncimm 5M en A 24 1207. Cam VCaw 1 SO Pack flea VCrP 24-1 2 07 Cans Seas MTinON AUINDAU BAVOMNf at, Mu 1 I 101VjfMt I rornirnmu ftw vr K1 II ONLY AT THESE SHOWROOMS OPEN TO PUBLIC NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY umun.nj Hia.NHP.1 IP.H, HT 8aloMoa.0cl.20 81I1T1101 Oct. 21 11AMIPM 11AM-7PM 1523MorrliAvo. VISTA lull. 2 Block! El 3 World Trim Cantor EHl40.0tPiRt 22 Division Of Diamond Jewelry n.ibnci Waa, MaolaiCaifl.

Amorltan Etprau Purchata Prlca Dlnan Carle Bleach MJI A oiamona importers on t.v. "aKUft WVlri HM MorrrtJtvr, Union. W.J. 07085 1301)964-7975 mm tm Down On Tola A..

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