NewsE" t Edited by Diana Johnson ---- Students and police clash at May Day rally! SEOUL, South Korea -- Students and workers fought riot police with firebombs and rocks in downtown Seoul Sunday after troopers blocked a rally called by labor and dissident groups to mark May Day. More than 1,300 people were arrested. The clashes were the first major protests on Seoul’s streets since late last year, and they sent terrified pe destrians running for cover. In scattered clashes, bands of pro testers battled the 20,000 riot police deployed to block the rally, called on the eve of the international labor holiday. Police officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, reported dozens of injuries. In Inchon, west of Seoul, and in southeastern Kwangju, protesters also fought police. Police fired warning shots into the air in Sungnam on Seoul’s southern outskirts when about 2(X) workers and students tried to firebomb a po lice station, police said. Five officers were injured. Radical students, dissidents and workers arc mounting violent pro tests to demand the overthrow of the government. They also want higher wages, better working conditions and a share in South Korea’s growing economic prosperity. Most South Korean workers earn subsistence wages for long working weeks. President Roh Tac-woo’s govern ment has warned it may lake emer gency steps to hall strikes, which have cost more than $3 billion in lost production this year. Government leaders arc worried that labor unrest could cripple the economy and fo ment political unrest. Police had no overall figures on the number of protesters in Seoul, but it appeared below 1(),0(X). Rally or ganizers had claimed that 100,000 people would take part, but police blocked off outlying towns near Se oul and prevented workers from Icav ing for the capital. Riot police guarded bus and train stations in Seoul to turn back people arriving for the rally. They also blocked off the meeting site. The worst fighting raged for about four hours around Yonsci University, when about 2,000 students and work ers tried to march past 5,(XX) riot police surrounding the campus. Protesters, many armed with clubs and iron pipes, marched to the beat ol drums and gongs. Police in armored vans opened I ire with multiple tear gas launchers be fore the marchers reached the main gale. Students charged out of the campus and pelted police with h.m dreds of firebombs and rocks. Un' The police vans fired volley after volley at the charging protesters and police repeatedly charged to drive the attackers back. Thick white cloudsof * choking gas cloaked the campus. I In the crowded main shopping district, hundreds of protesters briefly clashed with police blocking the rally site. They lore up paving stones to use as amunition as passers by fled. Police seized dozens of protesters in the downtown clashes, healing and kicking many as they were taken away. Navy plans to reduce weapon stockpile WASHINGTON - The Navy has decided to retire three short range nuclear weapons that ac count for 5 percent of the total stockpile of U.S. warheads, Navy officials said Sunday. By 1991, the Navy will retire the AS ROC nuclear depth charge, the SUBROC missile and the Ter rier missile, a total of 1,100 war heads, according to Navy officers and documents released under the Freedom of Information Act. The weapons originally were intended to provide a nuclear de terrent against attacks on surface ships by Soviet warships and sub marines. But Navy strategists now believe they can protect U.S. ships from other ships by other means _an$l spe a greater eat from Back ~ ITre and Badger bombers based on ■* the to\4w ma&ilarflfc - ■ The decision to unilaterally discard the weapons was contained in documents obtained by an inde pendent analyst, William Arkin. It was first reported in Sunday edi tions of The New York Times ahd confirmed Sunday by Navy offi cers who spoke on condition they not be further identified. It was not clear why the Bush administration chose to take such a major step without public an nouncement and apparently has not sought to include the weapons in negotiations with the Soviet Union. The decision was prompted by the realization that the United States has more aircraft carriers and large surface vessels than the Soviet Union, and that such ships are vulnerable to nuclear attack, said Navy officers. “There is a rccognilion that if there is a nuclear war at sea, we have got more to lose than the Russians,” the Times quoted Vice Admiral Henry C. Muslin, who retired last year after serving as deputy chief of Naval Operations. “The concept of a nuclear war at sea is a concept whose time has passed,” Muslin said in the pub lished report. Arkin said another reason for the decision appears to be a shift in emphasis by the Navy from short range weapons to nuclear-tipped Tomahawk cruise missiles. The Tomahawk can fly below enemy radar and strike targets, such as bomber airfields on the Soviet mainland, at ranges up to 1,300 miles. The Soviet Union has been in sisting that the United States agree to limit or ban submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles, but under the Reagan administration the Navy balked. The issue is being considered as part of a strategic review being conducted by the Bush Administration, to be com pleted by May 10. The decision to retire the short range nuclear weapons will not af fect strategic ballistic missiles sta tioned aboard Navy nuclear subma rines that form a key part of the U.S. nuclear triad, land, air and sea based weapons intended to deter a large-scale attack, said Navy offi cers. The weapons that are being re tired constitute part of the Ameri can nuclear arsenal that has re ceived little public attention in the media or on Capitol Hill, compared to the extensive discussions that have occurred on the cruise and ballistic systems. The ASROC nuclear depth charge, carried aboard U.S. de stroyers, cruisers and frigates in volved in anti-submarine warfare, has a range of up to 6.2 miles. The SUBROC missile is carried | by attack submarines, and is de signed to fly at supersonic speeds, then drop a nuclear charge against enemy submarines. The Terrier anti-aircraft missile, which entered service in l%2, is fired from surface warships and has a range of up to 21.7 miles, accord ing to Janes Fighting Ships, an inde pendently published military hand book. It was not clear whether or how much money the Defense Depart ment will save by retiring the short-range weapons. Soviet police nab members of underground groups MOSCOW - Police grabbed leaders of underground political groups who defied a government warning Sunday and gathered to sell copies of their illegal magazines on a crowded pedestrian mall. Leaders of the Democratic Union, Express Chronicle, Free Migration, Debate, and Trust groups were hauled away and detained after ignoring police calls to disperse. "Down with the fascists!" one man yelled at police as they grabbed the activists. In their publications and in telephone calls to Western reporters, the groups declared Sunday a "samizdat holiday." "Samizdat" is Russian for self-published and is used to describe under ground newspapers and magazines. Exhibiters perched atop concrete planters outside the Vakhtangov theater on busy Arbal Street, silently holding makeshift bulletin boards bearing copies of their publications. Thousands ol onlookers strolled along the pedestrian street in the 70 degree weather and peeked at the publications. T he most sensational ol the newspapers was a copy of the Communist Several other Central Committee speakers I condemned the Democratic Union, w hich bills ■ itself as an alternative political party. They called for a crackdown on it and other informal S groups. The Democratic Union, formed in May, said 8 it seeks multiparty elections, independent trade unions, a new constitution and the w ithdrawal o! S Soviet troops from Eastern Europe.S Nebraskan Editor Curt Wagner 472-1766 Managing Editor Jane Hlrt Assoc News Editors Lee Rood Bob Nelson Editona! Page Editor Amy Edwards Wire Editor Diana Johnson Copy Desk Editor Chuck Green Sports Editor Jett Apel Arts & Entertain ment Editor Micki Haller D versions Editor Joeth Zucco Graphics Editor Tim Hartmann Photo Chief Connie Sheehan Night News Editors Victoria Ayotte Chris Carroll < _ A_IflnHri ^B cuiy uu.iy riuvua inai naci pasted to it cartoons lampooning Soviet founder Vladimir I. Lenin. One cartoon portrayed Lenin as a devil. A policeman announced through a mega phone that the gathering was not sanctioned, and he ordered cxlnbiiers to disperse. About 15 minutes later, officers moved in. Asked why the exhibit was broken up a senior police officer pointed to a Soviet llag Hying nearby and indicated the gathering was holiday W'lh lh° sp'ril °* lhc May Day The exhibitors regularly sell their propa bypoliaf^^'y ant* usual,y arc no1 bothered The Communist Party’s policy-making Cen tta Committee criticized the so-called informal | was'!molerable.and SMd TuCsda>'lhal *•""**“ I °f.ldeolo8,cal subversion, to infect our people f am ~rt 01 ,deoloKicaI AIDS.’^said Re““Kuir,,hepartyChiefof,he Art Directors John Bruce Andy Manhart Sower Editor Klrstln Swanson Supplements Editor Deanna Nelson General Manager Dan Shattil Production Manager Katherine Policky Advertising Manager Robert Bates Sales Manager David Thiemann Circulation Manager Eric Shanks Publications Board Chairman Tom Macy 475-9868 Professional Adviser Don Walton 473-7301 The Daily Nebraskan(USPS 144 080) is the UNI Publications Board, Nebraska Union 34.w St, Lincoln NE, Monday through Friday during > demic year, weekly during summer s®SS'°ns . , Readers are encouraged to submit story g3 comments to the Daily Nebraskan by phoning f- rne , between 9a m and 5 p m Monday through tr y j public also has access to the Publications tioa ; information, contact Tom Macy, 475 9868 Subscription price is $45 for one year Ne Postmaster: Send address changes to the Y , braskan, Nebraska Union 34, 1400 R iKSR'nE. 68588 0448 Second class postaoe paid at Linco . ALL MATERIAL CO^VM'OHT 1982 DAILY NEBRASKAN -