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Show Sunday, December World Roundup ble to attend. No date for the signing has been set. The spokesman did not cite a reason for the official's leave of absence but reports suggested the country he represented had refused to sign the treaty. The country was not named. Friday's announcement dashed warned Nicaraguan officials Friday not to base Soviet missiles in the country, saying the United States will not permit a repeat of the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. Moynihan's remarks came after meetings with Nicaraguan Interior Minister Tomas Borge Marti THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, UN hopes that the Contadora peace efforts would produce a peace treaty before Christmas. In El Salvador, an influential peasant leader who has championed radical land reforms for the country's future constitution narrowly escaped an assassination attempt in broad daylight. Jorge Camacho, leader of the Popular Democratic Unity Labor Coalition, was attacked by a gunman on his return from talks with peasant nine-memb- one." Happy With Human Rights Record - leaders about El Salvador's forthcoming constitution. m - - MM u. BSk n mm m a m m m m ol UKIVi WINDOWS I i helped lead the tignt to include a provision that would set a maximum limit for flF Anodized Aluminum Frame private land ownership at 275 acres. Rightist opponents of land reform are fighting for an upper limit of at least 650 acres. nez and Sergio Ramirez Mercado, a member of the Sandinista junta. "The United States can never accept or permit the repeat of another crisis in this hemisphere as happened before with Cuba," Moynihan warned. "It would be a political crisis, not a military Double-Streng- I All I th Glass ST Custom Measured to Fit Any 8 OnlyL IfflL P1u T&k Installation 780.00 I GiASS Offer Good Thru Dec. 37 Ph 00ZA070 ! Offer Good I Thru Dtc. 3 fur extravaganza Danuta Walesa arrives for Nobel presentation. Walesa's Wife Accepts- Nobel Prize Lech Norway (UPI) wife today received the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize for her husband, reading his prepared acceptance in which he said "with deep sorrow I think of those who paid with their lives for the loyalty to Solidarity." Danuta Walesa received the Nobel gold medal and a check for 1.5 million kroner ($190,000) from Egil Arvik, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Walesa, who founded the outlawed trade union Solidarity, stayed behind in Poland for fear he would not be allowed back into his homeland. In Stockholm, five Americans and a British novelist today were to be presented the Nobel science, economics and literature prizes by Sweden's King Carl Gustaf XVI, Queen Silvia and other members of the royal family. Norway's King Olav II, who earlier today met informally with Mrs. Walesa, was present at the ceremony at the main hall of Oslo's old university. "With deep sorrow I think of those who paid with their lives for the loyalty to Solidarity, of those who are behind prison bars and who are victims of repressions," Walesa said in a brief speech read by his wife. Walesa quoted the 1905 Nobel laureate in literature, Henryk Sienkiewic, a writer who lived in the land that was to become Poland but at the time was divided between Russia, Austria and West Germans Storm Police in Missile Protest FRANKFURT, West Germany About 700 protesters broke through police blockades and tried to rush a base for Pershing-- 2 missiles as an estimated 7,000 people joined in a new wave of protests. Police spokesmen said 3,000 peoMutlan-ge- n ple were gathering at the Pershing-- 2 base, 35 miles east of Stuttgart, scene of a string of protests and incidents recently. About 700 of them broke through topolice barriers and rushed were prewards the base but vented from reaching it by barbed wire strung 150 yards from the (UPI) anti-missi- le perimeter. Hundreds of police stood by but made little attempt to stop the crowd. Two police helicopters thundered overhead. They also said 4,000 people were gathering at meeting points in Frankfurt preparing to march to the Hausen U.S. Army arms depot in the suburbs of the city and blockade it for the second straight day. Police arrested 204 people at Hausen on Friday. Around 150 people blocked an approach road to the U.S. forces European headquarters in the suburbs of Stuttgart by sitting in the road, a police spokesman said. He said officers carried away some of the protesters but could not move some who chained themselves to each other and to street signs in a line across the road. The anriy barracks has been the target of attacks twice before, both claimed by the outlawed Irish Republican Army. The Scotland Yard spokesman said "the IRA is one of our lines of inquiry" in today's blast. Four soldiers and a woman were taken to the nearby Queen Elizabeth Hospital, where they were heip" treated for minor injuries A i4 ; S&fes fi i &5&s6Pl 1w Karlsruhe. TS A exploded Saturday Artillery Barracks in Woolwich, injuring five people and forcing area residents to flee their homes, a Scotland Yard spokesman said. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the explosion. ; w m A Another 700 demonstrators staged a march in the center of Torrorist Bomb at British Army Barracks Injures Five bomb and shock, police said. (UPI) Residents in the area of in the Royal LONDON ft the miles east of London, barracks, were evacuated as a "standard practice," the spokesman said. 10 The evacuation raised fears among the local population that a second bomb may have been planted. Scotland Yard's anti-terrori- st squad bogan an investigation of the blast. The department was on "full alert," the spokesman said, and has urged the public to watch out for possible further bombing attempts. "We haven't warned of further attacks but obviously that is in everyone's mind," the spokesman j oaiu. -- -i , i y 1 FT" U CS JSLS iio CHRISTMAS p I I fijt & CH OSLO, I I Trunk Show and Sale! Walesa's I I Your Home In Guatemala, police sources reported Friday that three people died and 41 were wounded when some stands in an overcrowded bullring collapsed in the west of the country. The sources said the accident occurred Thursday afternoon at "La Primavera" buliring in the town of Pajapita, 98 miles west of Guatemala City. Pre-holid- ay 25 UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -- Human Rights. The General Assembly declared The assembly "expresses satisFriday that it was satisfied with faction ... at the achievements the achievements of the United made in the field of human rights Nations in implementing the 35- - since its proclamation," said a Universal Declaration of resolution, adopted without a vote. year-ol- d rHOLIDAY SPECIAL COUPON 500,000-memb- , - Page r . The latest in national and international news from United Press International Nicaragua Gets Missile Warning MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI) Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan, . . Confadora Peace Plan Hits Snag United Press International In a damaging blow to ongoing peace initiatives by the Contadora group, Central American ministers have delayed until next year the signing of a regional peace treaty originally planned for before Christmas. The endorsement of the peace treaty had been scheduled to take place during talks Dec. 20 and 21 between foreign ministers from Honduras, El Salvador, Guatemala, Costa Rica and Nicaragua and from the four Contadora nations Mexico, Panama, Colombia and Venezuela. The Contadora countries have been seeking a negotiated, regional solution to Central American conflicts since they first met in January at a resort island of the same name off Panama. A Panamanian Foreign Ministry spokesman said the joint meeting was postponed until sometime in January because one of the Central American ministers was una 11, 1983 ' a, ? STORIES o o o o o I J |