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Vol. LXXXV, No. 69 Monday, November ‘ I982 All Indopondont student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
MONDAY W I f d-
home to his first-floor apartment in into the building without shaking “So 'vemeacou eofda ”
fl -
SW announces candidacy BySYLWESTER KRUPPA this Baltic port city where his wife, hands. He was accompanied by four Thgre were nil:l accouhsts of the
AssociatedPressWi-ita' seven children and hundreds of peo- bodyguards whom witnesses de- greeting he received from his wife
McDOWlLL — Grady Stumbo, former state Human Re- ”Elba" maintained a 1°th aniaous scribed 35 government security and Children when he entered the
. . _ .__..__ v1 . agents. a rtment for the first time since
3:320: :icrzrry’i announced his carLdidacy for :he 'l)”m°d Walesa was arrested when martial After five minutes and in response lag: December. His wife, Danuta,
. .0 n '0" 0f governor ”5'9" 0V. among 0"" Y 0“ GDANSK, Poland — Solidarity law was imposed Dec. 13 and Solida- to the incessant chants of the crowd. and some of their children had been
friends In this coal-mining town where he lived as a boy. chief Lech Walesa returned to a joy- rity suspended. The independent Walesa came to the window and allowed to visit him during his inter-

Stumbo became the first Democrat to formally announce fill homecoming yesterday after (‘15- umon “’35 outlawed by Parliament said, “I will speak very briefly be- nment.
that he will seek the gubernatorial nomination. Those con- {Whig to:- mate :‘ffl $351311 Lajétmorllthaeflundregs oftot'hg 5?” cause I have "0t med my voice for “We are just looking at each
. . owmg s reease to y ea rs an ac ms a so oneyear. other," Mrs. Walesa told The Asso-
sidered tobe frontrunnars, Lt. Gov. Martha Layne Collins martial-law custody. were arrested and although many ciat ed Press when reached by tele-
and LouisVille Mayor Harvey Sloane, are expected to an- “In my future conduct. 1 will be have been freed. some are still im- “We have to reach an agreement. phone Asked if she would pass the
nounce by the end of the week. courageous but also prudent and prisoned. bl" h°t 0" 0“" “1°53, he said, phone-to her husband, she shouted:

there is no discussion on it. We must The crowd broke into cheers when 9¢h°'h,8 the statement he made ‘h an “You must be kidding! Now he’s

. win!” Walesa vowed. He spoke the 39-year-old union chief showed intemew “th the government teie- mine!“

NIXON says R0898" should consult Carter through a loudspeaker from a win- up just before 10:30 pm. (4:30 pm. “5‘0“ hetW°rk Saturday before he The crowd, which had dwindled

dow in his apartment after rmhing EST). “There is no freedom without was realeased. from about 2,000 as disappointment

_ . . . . inside past about 500 cheering Solidarity!"the crowd cried. When he asked if the interview ew that Walesa would not return

NEW Yo,“ :mhgrd N'xon his, ("fazed Prezde‘nt ”$09,?" friends and supporters. Waiesa, still with his bushy mus- had been shown on television yester- gr another night, chanted “long

'0 COM”? “0'.“ 0"“9" Pie" 3" . 'mmY °' 9" 'h '5 There was no immediate expiana- tache and wearing a gray suit, daynight,thecrowdroared,“No.” live Walesa!” and then went home
efforts '0 help b"m9 P90“ ‘0 the M'ddie 50“ tion for Walsa’s delay in coming jumped from a Peugeot and rushed “I have to think it over,” he said. athisrequest.

"I think consultations with Carter would be useful," '

Nixon said in an interview with The New York Times pub- w. ... ,_ ,
Iished yesterday. He said Carter knew Israeli Prime Minister . ~-'_ ._1 .. 3? ii” . , ' 1:1
Menachem Begin "better than Reagan does." " fl . g . M . :‘ -‘ .iz.

In a separate interview with WCBS radio, Nixon pre- ‘ j; . '_. . " " ‘ . . "
dicted another war if Begin refused to permit self-govern- i i I ‘ = ' l 3. H -.. - i ,_.'2'
ment for the Palestinians. 4*" ,5 . ~ ' . 3,, .3 ,

. . o a La . I
Vietnam vecs' memorial dedicated slng| n' -;. :- ., . _ .5, - . - __
WASHINGTON —— Under the soaring arches of the Wash- the blues G 3%! _ l. _ i” “iii , , ”-
ington Cathedral, Vietnam veterans heard prayers yester- .' if , 3 *3 " _ 3 ' 3
day that the reconciliation they seek can lead to an end of V V .. *; .
war . - " V N ~ ' ' 9 V9“-

While well-dressed Washingtonians prayed alongside Kentucky C0°Ch Jerry ' i {i V' if
visiting Vietnam veterans in frayed field jackets at the ca- Claiborne expressed his 1;... ,,, i 7,; . : '"
thedral, spontaneous rituals of remembrance took place at dissatisfaction overacall by . _ V :” i ’
the black granite walls of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. one Of the referees in z .3. ‘5.- -- "

The memorial, built at the insistence of Vietnam veter- Saturday's game With Florida (I , .s U l " 2.
ans, was dedicated Saturday following a triumphant veter- 0' Commonwealth Stadium. ./ ’3? 5 5": \
ans' parade down Constitution Avenue. The official ruled 0 Florida \, , 3, ‘3' .

The parade, the veterans said, gave them what they P055 incomplete 9V9" thOUgh ' il/ -»
wanted — a nation's ceremonial gratitude for their sacri- there were OPPOTGMIY "0 ' i Q,
fices no matter how divisive and futile the cause may have receivers in the area and I 5' I [My ‘3 ’
been. Claiborne was expecting an f \ C ”K «

intentional grounding call. The ’ . W.” ‘ ""‘ ‘ - ,‘\\ ”in“ " -
. . Wildcats lost 39-13, dropping ’ 4 L“) V

Briton brings anti-IRA campaign to U.S. their record ‘0 0.9.1. , 3 _ l . ‘
LONDON -— Dismayed by the acquittal of five alleged IRA [x
gun-runners in New York, James Prior, Britain's Northern ‘ .4,“

Ireland secretary, has begun a week-long trip to the United m. VANNOOSI/Kernel Staff - . .. 1 "
States in an effort to stop Americans from giving money to ‘ ,3. .
what he calls IRA front organizations. ‘ - ‘

Prior is taking his campaign to New York, Washington, - M , g ”
Minneapolis, Atlanta and other U.S. cities in a tour that " ,3 3 . *9 m, .
started last night. The government would not disclose his h ' ' " '
full schedule for security reasons. Aides said Prior's main . . .
mess-age will be that a political settlement is the only rea- PUbllSher promlses Improvements
Iistic solution to the problems in the British province and
that violence will achieve nothing but more misery. '

There are reports that guerrillas are looking for new era ea er to merge In Janua
weapons in the United States. I

—— " "_ ' . _ . dro 2.3 rcent over the l t

Gm“ chancellor visits Reagan 3" W333?” The combined paper wrllmcorporate "the best ningpggars, Rim 33,69 to 32,733.

features of both the Herald and the Leader and 031F123 the sameedpegwt herald Cir-

wasumotou — West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl ———-—————-— expand. . . our coverage and commentary in ggfiggggf‘s ”"9"“ {mm

arrived here yesterday for an official visit a day after Presi- The Lexington Leader, a mainstay ways that would not have been possible with The circulation 0‘ the Sunday Her '

dent Reagan gave German-American relations a motor of Lexington journalism for 94 the continugd duplication ofeffort inherent in a aid-Leader grew 46-? percent, from
boost with his announcement of an end to sanctions against years, will merge with the morning . ,, 82,754t0121.168.hesald.

. 3 . Le . H l d J n l two-newspaper operation.

the Sovuet gas pipeline. 'Ix‘tlilegtglmbeith 1:“de Herald Black said the staffs of the two

R9990" and Kohl pi?" several hours Of d'swss'F’m today Leader will be published as a mom- According to an article in Editor pers analysts see the changes as a gaspgfirxgl be corlriiglrftdéohpr;
'h‘” w'" “me" °"‘ 'h" 'mpl'cm'ms °l "‘9 leadership change ing paper. Creed Black. publisher of and Publisher. a journalism trade trend that is likely to continue,“ the 1 er b the” pape l t f It
in the Soviet Union and Reagan's decision to lift sanctions the papers and chairman of the Lex- magazine, the future of afternoon articlesaid. ”88601.38“ waning: (.0
against companies participating in the Soviet pipeline pro- ington Herald-leader Co., an- papers is uncertain. “Most newspa‘ Black said Leader circulation had ”Editorial zmployees atathfierald
iect. The sanctions had been a sore point in relations be- wI-‘g‘dty' an afternoon dail . , . ._ 3 ~~.~.- ., had no comment on the merger yes-
tween Bonn and Washington. published sinée um has experi’: « s 3313““ .3 : : _,v;‘.‘§~,.\ r: ' i - I $3133" dteferring to Black’s Friday

enced a decline in circulation. Black . .2337“: \‘ a -. ‘fi ‘ . ,
KGB WM .bOllt Afghanistan said, however. the merger was not I, #3:?“ - . a {0:13;} if e331 Giggpa‘filsb: or:
. widen m... MM... by i. Lilli iri‘tllllllmi ii-railrr a» duced a... means 1.... m a...
NEW YORK — A Soviet defector who has been described recession. '6'5" . ‘- " . “" .i equivalent of 30 full-time positions ”

. . . “While we have felt the effects of - . - . . . . . .. ....,. . M.“ . . . '
as a KGB officer says Leonid Brezhnev repeatedly ignored the recesion as most other busi- l . d 3 H I l . . An aSSIstant City editor at the‘Her-
KGB advice to stay out of Afghanistan and that Afghan "555 have. bur company is finan. .(‘J (.l'. e [0 fuel-go ““0 mommg Paper aiha Wh° 525k]? "0‘ to be identified,
President Babrak Karmal was a KGB agent ”for many cially healthy and confident about 7' "'3 3.3 .L:'- :erw-mw it. 3; ‘ viii-*LE'IE‘ 2:}: a”, :3' :2” $th drag?” [Semi like“;
years," Time magazine reported. the future," Black said in a pre- . . 3. ~ -1: :QWM“:= :wlfc ‘: j“, oftheLeader. ion partmen

The magazine also quoted Vladimir Kuzichkin, who de- ”figsmfit'“ the merger had I _ " ”7324’“? "" . €-'~."...;"‘ a”??? : 2:3”.523” Bl k sa' d the co b' ed pe

. . . . » . . . 4.33:. -1"; surf": " :,=,..-.:;:2. at“: r 80 1 m in P8 1‘
fected to Great Britain in June. as saying a special ’KGB-led, been solely based on economic rea- ‘_ 3 1 52:131.;33 33:33., 33:33:: $333?!“ T ygége’leik will incorporate “the best features
Sovtet assault force stormed the palace of Karmal s prede- sons. “we would simply fold up The ~ 5‘1“?” ’ 1--’~“'5-“- Y” 35 3......“ “‘ ~-"~“"~ of both the Herald and the Leader
cossor, Hafizullah Amin, and killed him because he wanted Leader. dismiss the staff and pub- Former chief and expand . . . our coverage and
to turn Afghanistan against the Soviet Union. “8'?th Herald “gm“ ‘3? change.“ figmmentar y in ways that would "01

K - - - , - , 3 ~ - e reason or e merger. ve been possible with the contin-

UZ'Chkm said "2,19 ate Sovne ”Oder '9'.”er warnings according' to Black. was “a long- ‘ 0f KGB gets ued duplication of effort inherent in
from the KGB that a Communist takeover in Afghanistan - - - , . . ..

3 . 3 3 range decision based on marketing . atwo-newspaper operation.
presented hamraismg problems . . . an openly Communist and readership 33‘,de we have been 5 Brezhnev I He said it “will follow an indepen-
regime would arouse hostility that would then be directed conducting ioralmosttwoyears. J I dent editorial policy . . . and among
against the Soviet Union." “We are takins this course be- 3- 3f . . " -... . .3 .. ’ ‘ E the improvements we plan is an ex-

cause we have concluded that we 3» I A i «l. 3 _ . 3 3 , pended oppositeeditorial page to
\ “@nhettel'ofsem: tl;e gander: mfg”. 3; N‘ x . 3. .r i «r , provide additional space for a diver-
isers cenra a ens ern en- 3.: ' g . ‘ sit of 0 him."
\ / lucky by concentrating our re- " = W’ 3'12”” .. i y pl _
sources on a single newspaper than ‘ " ' "" 3 Among other changes In the new
WBAT _ by continuing to divide them be- e W 1‘11 ,._ Herald-header will be increased
tween two."hesaid. . ' 5' _ 3- *‘tfi coverage of business and religion.
Black said another factor was a W . ' "‘ “* i gw ”gin Black said the paper 315° will hire
i \ trend toward closings and mergers 5.57233: " fi‘fih’tfiwafij :‘E‘fiffifi figs: 1.373;: an editorial cartoanist earlyin 1&3.
of 8‘th newspapers that has .. .......»...;.-.,. '- Mm”... . swam... . W. 1'0”” . _""’""'° John S Can-o V 40. editor of the
. made their future “increasingly pre- Tlh'" - . 4 New stale vol. *I We Herald since 1979. will be editor of
Ioeomlng mostly sunny but cool today with a high In “doug- M a”? , . y. ' ll m W. the combined paper. Black SIM

thoupporios. Between 1980 and i979. the num- am $35 ‘53; . .. . :‘h£;‘a.""“ Steve Wilson. :5. editor of the
., . Cloor and cold tonight wlth a low in tho low to mid ber 0‘ afternoon dailies in the United * ' my} t i , ' .: ma“: 2"”‘3‘7 Leader 5m“ .1973' has accepted a
2°" State Mined from ”59 to ”05. _ 3., . ,3. ..>¢.‘NQ',-, ' U » . “t: ”a; can“ éfig’ 3:30“ 0:3 33:13:? lit) the executive
Sunny and warmor tomorrow with a blob In tho During thesame ”md‘ the "Mb“ i i' D: in- m “We, “”3"“:3 ‘- 63%;; l ‘ m ‘ ‘

mil '0” ‘0. of mm papers rose from 312 to ‘3‘“ 3. “3.; gm...‘ .. g... . .; ‘ .. afa-‘W » . at asoownedby Mam-Bidder-
PP" ' 382. with a 4.3 million increase in f -: st tit-3‘» ‘ 3‘9' 1.?" _'. ~ , . 1%: - . “6;! Although MEN-Richie? approved
circulation. " “ "i i"“""“"* ' ’ ' ”4 '~ - 'r- . 23-h ' the merger. Wilson said the “deci-

—_________—______—._. sion was all locally based.“