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Yds. Enough for an average living room, dining room and hallway Carpet Dirty? © Call Sears | Carpet A | Cleaning I 99 Sq. Yd. Your Choice Reg. '11.99 Sq. Yd. Casual Design is made of strong durable nylon pile. The jute back is sturdy and durable. Choose from 5 lustrous decorator colors Summerfest. Beauty and durability at a great low price' It's 100% nylon pile for durability and long: wear. Softly carved multilevel loops give it a stylish look that enhances most any room. And it comes in 5 contemporary colors. You get quality and value, at Sears' BUFFALO COURIER-EXPRESS, Sunday, August 21, 190 Few Dissidents Remain to Blast Soviet 'Trials' MOSCOW (AP) - A handful of dissidents gath- ered Saturday in a Moscow apartment to denounce the recently concluded trials of two comrades. But with their numbers reduced by arrests and exiles, it seemed more a meeting of survivors than of activists. The four men and four wo- men met with Western cor- respondents in the former home of Andrei! D. Sak- harov, from which the now- exiled physicist once led the dissident movement. Their statements on the trials of Russian Orthodox activist priest Gleb Yakunin and Tatyana Velikangva, and another in solidarity with Polish strikers, were as bold and defiant as many others issued from that same apartment over the past decade. 'The Situation Is Awtul' But Ivan Kovalyov, a young member of the Hel sink buman rights group, sounded another theme: ''The situation, as you can see, is awful. We have Tew friends left, and t His father, research biologist Sergel Kovalyov, is serving a sev- en-year labor camp term for his involvement in the un- derground human rights journal, the Chronicle of Current Events. And young Kovalyov's wife, Tatlana Osipova, was arrested in late May for her dissident activities. The dissidents gathered with Sakharov's wife, Yele- pa Bonner, to denounce the stiff sentences passed ear- lier in the week against Fa- ther Yakunin, sentenced to five years in a labor camp followed by five years inter- nal exile, and Mrs. Velika- nova, sentenced to four years in a labor camp and five years Internal exile for circulating the Chronicle. Sentences 'Cruel* ''The cruel sentences threaten their health and their lives and bring suffer- '! ing to their close ones, but they are powerless to crush the living word of truth,\ the dissidents declared. The people at the meeting represented underground organizations like the Hel- ink group and the 'Chris tian Committee for the De- fense of the Rights of Believ- ers in the U.9.5.R., which Yakunin had helped form. These and a variety of other committees had been the component parts of what was known as the buman rights or dissident move- ment. In Its heyday, the move- ment issued resounding statements demanding the civil, political and religious rights promised them by the ‘Sovlel constitution and champloned the rights of minority nationalities, Jews seeking emigration and oth- er religious believers. They printed and circulat- ed a broad range of under- ground literary, political and religious books and Journals, collectively known wo S* Let your ' A13 as the \Samizdat or \self- published.\ Renegades Exiled But in the 1970s the Soviet government began a sys- tematic campaign of exiling or imprisoning the ''otshchepentsy,\ or rene- gades, and the dissident statements became increas- ingly dedicated to the de- fense of comrades in trou- ble. Last week only about a dozen friends and relatives gathered outside the court- houses in which Yakunin and Velikanova were tried, far outnumbered by uni- formed and plainclothes po- lice. Sakharov himself, once the unofficial spokesman and leader of the move- ment, was banished to the Volga River city of Gorky in January. Scores of one-time dissi- dents are in exile, either vo- luntarly or forcibly, includ- ing writers Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Andre! Amal- rik, Andre! Sinyavaky, Via- dimir Bukovsky and Alex- ander Ginzburg, Gen. Pyotr Grigorenko, blologist Zhores Medvedev, physicists Va- lery Chalidze and Pavel Lit- vinov and underground trade unionist Vladimir Bo- risov. Many in Prisons Many others are serving time in prisons or labor camps on charges ranging from treason to slandering the Soviet Union. These in- clude Anatoly Shcharansky, Yuri Orlov, Alexander Po- drabinek, Viktor Nekipelov and Sergel Kovalyov -- joined now by Yakunin and Mre. Velikanova. Still , No. 56 Of the Chro- nicle of Current Events went into underground cir- culation in June, and new recruits from time to time take the place of exiled or jailed members. But the crackdown is con- tinuing and, according to young Kovalyov, even ex- panding. He said authorities apparently have begun to move against the one activi- ty which had remained rela- tively untouched -~ the fund set u? by Solzhenitsyn to help families of political prisoners. Earlier this month, Kova- lyow said, security police searched the apartments of two women whose only known activity had been with the fund, and prosecu- tors arrested a labor camp trustee who had allegedly smuggled packages into the camp, Czech Dissident Reported Arrested VIENNA (P ~*er) - Cze- choslovak dissident Maria Hrommadkova, a spokeswom- an for the \Charter 77\ hu- man rights movement, was in Prague Friday, emigre sources said In Vien- na Saturday. The circumstances of her arrest and the reason were not immediately known, ©LLEGE \A fully accredited two year coeducational institution on South Park Ave. in Hamburg. o ¢ our BEAUTE, m__, C4 successful career start here! 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