European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - January 15, 1992, Darmstadt, Hesse Wednesday january 15, 1992 the stars and stripes a Page 3have pizza will travel a eventually Anchorage Alaska a when Walter Shane gets a yen for pizza he orders it front any one of a number of restaurants Here. Then he Waits. Days. Shane lives on St. Paul Island in the Pribilof in the Middle of the Bering sea about 750 Miles Southwest of his favorite pizza parlor. It can take three Days for Shane his wife Julie and their 8-year-old Daugh Ter Martha to satisfy their cravings. A it is just a Normal thing now a Julie Shane said recently As she waited for three pizzas and 24 Mcdonald a hamburgers to arrive on the next Reeve Aleutian airways flight from Anchorage. A French Fries done to travel Well but pizzas always do great a she said. Shane said the Cost of getting pizza to the Pribilof is the Cost of the pizza plus $23 for shipping. Many residents in alaskans outlying villages order pizza and other us fast foods for special occasions. Although no one guarantees a piping hot Pepper oni pie on arrival Many restaurants Are More than Happy to Speed a pizza to the Airport. Orders Are often delayed by cancelled flights and bad weather. In Juneau dominoes franchisee Fred Tallmadge and his wife Helen have delivered pizzas by boat to fishermen. A fishermen would Call on the Marine radio. Wed pick up the Call a he said. The fishermen describe their location and Tallmadge toting a hot pizza finds the hungry Crew. Tallmadge has delivered up to 50 pizzas in one shipment to the Southeast Alaska Community of Kaka a population 682. A a it a a lot of fun a he said. A we tape it All together with duct tape haul it to the Airport. It drives the other passengers crazy to have 50 baked pizzas As by William Tuohy the los Angeles times London a Ian and Kevin Maxwell the sons of late publishing tycoon Robert Maxwell refused to answer questions before a British parliamentary committee monday citing possible self incrimination. For the first time their attorneys indicated that both sons faced possible indictments and lawsuits for their roles As directors in companies run by their father. Robert maxwells body was found in the Atlantic in november after he was reported missing from his yacht off the Canary islands. After the two Maxwell sons refused to testify Frank Field chairman of the parliamentary select committee said a we regard it As immensely serious that our requests for documents or copies of documents have not been produced and we regard it equally seriously that the questions which we put to Ian Maxwell and Kevin were not the attorneys for Ian 35, and Kevin 32, said that the Brothers did not possess the company documents concerning pension funds that the committee had requested. Field said that the non partisan committee investigating missing pension funds from Maxwell companies would seek Legal advice to determine whether it should recommend that the Brothers be charged with contempt of parliament by the full House of commons. The committee hearing was televised monday and attorneys for both Maxwell Brothers objected to the Public nature of the proceedings. They indicated that they might advise their clients to answer written questions but Only if the answers were kept secret and withheld from the serious fraud office a government Law enforcement Agency investigating the collapse of the Maxwell Empire. Maxwell companies include Macmillan publishers and the new York daily news in new York and the Mirror group newspapers in Britain. Hundreds of millions of dollars Are missing from pension funds of various Maxwell companies of which the sons were directors. An army of accountants and investigators has been deployed to assess the publishing empires status and it is still not Clear to what degree Ian and Kevin Maxwell were involved. Seated at the table from left Are Kevin maxwells attorney George Carman Kevin Maxwell Ian Maxwell and Ian a attorney John Jarvis during mondays parliamentary proceedings held in London. Money motivated . Traitors sex Kab agent says new York apr most americans who agreed to spy for the soviet Union during the cold War did so for Money not political beliefs a former top Kab officer said monday. And maj. Gen. Oleg Kalugin said he had Little sympathy with those who got caught. A spies do belong in prison. Espionage is not the most Noble profession a said Kalugin who spent 32 years in the soviet secret service becoming chief of International counter espionage in the 1970s. Kalugin has created a stir by claiming that at least three american prisoners of War were interrogated Bysee related Story on Page 9 the Kab in Hanoi Vietnam in either 1976 or 1978, after the . Combat role ended in 1973. His claim is disputed by some . Officials and former Kab colleagues but has prompted the Senate select committee on pow Mia affairs to ask him to testify. Nearly 3,000 americans Are still listed As missing in Southeast Asia. The committee scheduled the hearing for next tuesday in Washington. Kalugin was fired after denouncing the Kab in 19jo but was reinstated after last augusts failed soviet coup in which he supported russian president Boris Yeltsin. Kalugin who was also a member of the soviet parliament is promoting a Book about the coup seven Days that Shook the world. Kalugin said Moscow was Able to recruit americans in a very serious positions in the . Government after world War ii. But he said that after former dictator Josef Stalin was denounced in 1956 by then Premier Nikita Khrushchev a there was a rapid process of Disi Llu Kalugin Sion ment a causing Many politically committed agents to break away. The motive for americans spying for Moscow then became commercial and led to what Kalugin called two of the pkg by a most successful recruiting coups a the John Walker family spy ring and Excia renegade Lee Howard in the 1980s. Walker his son a brother and a family Friend All were sentenced to prison in 1986 for feeding top secret Navy information to the soviets for 17 years. Some . Officials describe the walkers As possibly the most damaging of All spies during the cold War Era. Howard fired by the Cia in 1983 As a mentally unstable drug addict was accused of revealing the names of numerous . Intelligence contacts in the soviet Union. He later eluded Fri agents at his Home in Santa be n.m., and fled to the soviet Union. During the Vietnam War Kalugin said the Kab hoped to recruit some american pos As spies on their return but vietnamese officials refused to give soviet agents direct Access to the captives until after the War. He said Kab agent Oleg Nechiporenko went to Hanoi either in 1976 or 1978. Nechiporenko reported that he had interrogated three pos still there a Navy officer an air Force Pilot and a Cia agent. Nechiporenko has disputed the claim saying he talked with Only one american. V Kalugin said the Cia Man was induced through a Friendly persuasion to provide some information. He said an Effort was made to recruit the Cia agent As a soviet spy and he a gave us some he said the Man later returned to the United states where a phone number the Man gave his soviet interrogator turned out to be fake. No further Contact was Ever made
