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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 1

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

US allows banks to pay unlimited interest on $2500 accounts (A tool to compete with money market funds Page 55) Guide to features ARTSFILMS 70 DEATHS 29 Brisked away TUESDAY Sunny, 40-45 WEDNESDAY Sunny, near 50 HIGH TIDE 11:26 a.m.. 11:55 p.m. FULL REPORT PAGE 20 ASK THE GLOBE 18 BRIDGE 75 BUSINESS 39 EDITORIALS 22 HOROSCOPE 20 LIVING 72 TVRADIO 75 TWISTAGRAM 75 CLASSIFIED COMICS 30-38 76 Vol. 222. No, 139 1982.

Globe Newspaper Co. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 16. 1982 Til.l,... non ruwt Classified ivk.juuiic Circulation 929-2222 1 US court i1 -m draft 11 says Andropov eases tone in oration sign-up invalid as at funera Government to appeal decision in Calif, case Meets Bush and Shultz after Brezhnev's burial -s 1 i Resting on gun carriage pulled by armored personnel carrier, Square for burial yesterday.

Soviet president and Communist Leonid Brezhnev's casket is transported to Moscow's Red Party chief was interred in Lenin Mausoleum. Page 6. upi photo -am Arms DlltS issue iiM I From Wire Services LOS ANGELES A federal Judge Iruled yesterday that the Selective Service regulations requiring draft registration were invalid, saying the government did not follow proper procedures when it enacted the law-. US District Judge Terry Hatter ruling in the case of a 21-year-old draft resister, said the time and place requirements of the presidential proclamation establishing registration and a July 18, 1980, Selective Service regulation setting the manner of registration "are invalid" because they did not comply with a required time period for notification. Hatter's ruling came after the government refused to turn over certain documents and evidence that the defense had sought and refused to permit Edwin Meese 3d.

the White House counselor, to tes- tify in the case of David Wayte. Hatter said the government failed to prove that Wayte had not been the subject of selective discrimination in the prosecution, of draft registration resisters. 1 At the same time, he said the presidential proclamation was put into effect too soon. Along with the congressional grant of authority cited by President Jimmy Carter came the responsibility to guarantee a 30-day period before the final publication of the proclamation for notice and comments, court documents said. I "The court cannot close its eyes to the fact that the proclamation became effective a mere 21 days after it was published," Hatter said in his ruling.

He also cited the government's refusal to turn over the documents and permit Meese's testimony at a Special evidentiary hearing. Wayte's case had yet to come to trial. DRAFT. Page 2 Catholic bishop i i It xk A From Wire Services MOSCOW The new hea'd of the Soviet Communist Party, Yuri V. Andropov, who led other top officials to the Red Square gravesite of Leonid I.

Brezhnev yesterday, gave a funeral oration that struck a more moderate tone than have recent Kremlin pronouncements. Apart from one critical reference to "the forces of imperialism," the new Soviet leader praised Brezhnev, the Soviet leader who died last Wednesday, as an "outstanding fighter for a secure peace" and said the Kremlin remained ready "for honest, equal and mutually beneficial with any country. Marshal Dmitri Ustinov, the defense minister, also sounded far less belligerent than eight days ago when he addressed the nationfrom the same spot during celebrations of the 65th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Later, Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State George Shultz talked with An-, jdropov for-about 30 minutes a session that Bush described as "frank, cordial and substantive." The conversation, which took place in the Kremlin about three hours after Brezhnev's funeral, gave the Reagan Administration its first direct contact with the new Soviet leadership only three days after the succession. In a statement distributed to reporters at Moscow's Sheremetevo Airport minutes before his departure, Bush said that "the meeting was frank, cordial and substantive.

It gave both sides the opportunity to exchange views on the state of their relations." He would not to characterize the-meeting further or answer questions about it. The official Tass news agency reported the meeting yesterday evening without comment. It said that the Soviet side expressed "gratitude for the respect shown on the part of the US Administration for the memory of Leonid I. Brezhnev" and that the conversation included a "brief exchange of views on fundamental matters of Soviet-US relations." Andropov, Tass said, stressed to the US officials that the Soviet Union seeks peace and is ANDROPOV, Page 6 i By James L. Franklin Globe Staff WASHINGTON The National Conference of Catholic Bishops began debating a pastoral letter critical of US defense policy yesterday with opponents' charging that the latest draft of the letter has "great potential for seriously dividing our church and our nation." That, assessment was voiced by" Terence Cardinal Cooke of New York, who Is also head of the Military Or-dinariate, the church agency serving the religious needs of Catholics in the armed services.

Cardinal Cooke earlier this year answered bishops who criticized US possession of nuclear weapons by writing a letter reassuring Catholics in the military that nuclear deterrence is morally tolerable. Yesterday he complained of finding "political, strategic and military speculation in the pastoral letter, which insists that deterrence is morally tenable only as long as it is a way station to disarmament." The nearly 300 bishops here will spend a third of their four-day annual meeting debating the details of the letter, which must receive a two-thirds vote of approval BISHOPS, Page 15 Yuri Andropov (left), named general secretary of Soviet Communist Party after death of Leonid Brezhnev, greets Vice President George Bush on latter's arrival at Andropov's Kremlin office for a meeting after yesterday's funeral service for Brezhnev. TASS PHOTO VIA UPI alesa treads a tightrope Gannett agrees to buy Ch. 56 for $47 million tisis cobkxsi Better not stand near these guys By Donald Altschiller I Special to The Globe In Yiddish, they are called I shlimazls. Author Leo Rosten once defined this inimitable personality in relation to its counterpart: "A shlemiel is a man who is always spilling hot soup down the neck of a shlimazl." Shlimazls get no respect.

Examples abound. Consid- er a former park ranger from Virginia named Roy C. Sulli- van, whose experiences dis- proved the old aphorism that lightning never strikes the I same object twice. I By the summer of 1970, I lightning had struck Sulli- van three times, this time badly searing his shoulder. I He had lost his big toenail in 1942 and his eyebrows were singed in July 1969.

The fourth strike came April 16, IN THIS CORNER. Page 15 i I if in i I By Michael Dobbs Washington Post GDANSK, Poland Celebrating his first full day of freedom, Lech Walesa, leader of the outlawed Solidarity trade union, yesterday said he was walking a political tightrope. Walesa said that before his release Sunday he had been given a three-hour lecture at the prosecutor general's office in Warsaw. He did not give details, but he presumably was warned that he would face arrest under martial-law regulations if he attempted to conduct union activity. In Moscow, Poland's martial-law leader.

Gen. Woj-ciech Jaruzelskl, yesterday was quoted as saying he would stick to his timetable for lifting martial law by the end of next month. Page 7. Walesa, an electrician who rose to world attention in August 1980 when he led a strike of shipyard workers that ended with an agreement to set up independent trade unions in Poland, said he was both surprised and "very suspicious" when he learned last Wednesday that he would be freed. Insisting that his release had been he said: "I signed nothing; I put myself under no obligations; I Joined nothing; I was simply released." Aside from putting on weight, Walesa appeared to have changed little after 1 1 months in detention.

Since POLAND, Page 7 owned WLVI for eight years, will operate the Boston UHF stationun-tll the sale completed, and no changes are contemplated in the Ch. 56 operation, he said. "The Ch. 56 management will run the station, as it has. They have, and need, the personnel now in place," the Field official said.

He referred any questions of future changes to the proposed new owner. The Boston investors' group, headed by Ch. 56 general manager Gerald Walsh, was organized when Field placed its five UHF stations on the market earlier this year. The Walsh group reportedly had secured a credit line worth $44 million, but was unable to meet the cash-6n-the-barrelhead requirement, Walsh declined to discuss the $44-milllon-bid report yesterday, GANNETT, Page 14 By Robert A. McLean' Globe Staff, Boston's WLVI-TV (Ch.

56) has been purchased for $47 million by the Gannett one of the country's most-aggressive publishers and broadcasters, under a sales agreement announced yesterday by Gannett and Field Enterprises Inc. Gannett, which owns the nation's largest newspaper chain and a rapidly growing broadcasting complex among Its numerous communications operations, reportedly -outbid a Boston investors' group by $3 million and was able to meet the Field stipulation that the sale be a cash transaction. The purchase is subject to Federal Communications Commission approval, expected no earlier than mid-1983, a Field official said yesterday. The Chicago-based communications corporation, which has Lech Walesa's wife, Danuta, tries to quiet crowd so Solidarity leader can address those who gathered outside Walesa's Gdansk home Sunday following his release by Polish government, ap photo The learning center at top end of Silicon Valley IKSILTECEI IVZST LAST OF THREE PARTS Administration asks busing limit The Reagan Administration stepped up its attacks on court-ordered busing yesterday, urging the Supreme Court to consider restricting racial desegregation efforts in Nashville, Tenn. The court has not yet said whether It will hear the case.

Page Stanford MBA ('83) looking for ambitious Electrical Engineerlng-Computer Science doctorate or masters degree student to join a 5050 business partnership in startup venture. Individual will design and build microprocessor based business system for a retail Industry. Market research being conducted this summer; desire to write business plan by December, 1982. bers of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Kubo, the MBA student, is typical of the entrepreneurial students In business and engineering that Stanford seems to attract.

With a working wife, he hopes to have his company launched by the time he graduates next spring. If he succeeds, his firm will be one more SILICON VALLEY, Page 56 is' By Ronald Rosenberg Globe Staff PALO ALTO. Calif, Larry Kubo, a second-year graduate business student who posted that sign, had little trouble finding qualified engineering students interested in, starting up their own businesses. After all, this is Stanford University, world renowned teaching and research university which a granted 479 PhDs last year including 50 in electrical engineering and which boasts a 1200-mem-ber faculty that Includes 10 Nobel laureates and 106 members mem 1 THRONEBERRY I Shlimazl's shlimazl Flyer posted at Stanford I.

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Years Available:
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