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The Morning News du lieu suivant : Wilmington, Delaware • 3

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The Morning Newsi
Lieu:
Wilmington, Delaware
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3
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The Morning News. Wilmington. Del. Friday. July 7, 1972 foreign Laird calls M'Govern arms plan white flag NAACP is told federal money buoys racism lllffillllC I rCL Allende faces new crisis SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) Hernan del Canto, Chile's interior minister, faced possible impeachment yesterday as President Salvador Allende's leftist government and the anti-Marxist opposition headed for a confrontation in the nation's Congress.

Del Canto, a Socialist and second in line to succession to the presidency, was suspended by the Chamber of Deputies late Wednesday night in a vote for impeachment. The suspension is effective immediately. The Senate, also controlled by the opposition, has 30 days in which to act on the lower chamber's proposal. If it also approves impeachment, Del Canto would be automatically forced to resign. Rains ravage Japan TOKYO (UPI) Three days and nights of torrential rains in western Japan have left more than 200 persons dead, injured, or missing, police said yesterday.

Thousands more were homeless. In the worst single incident more than two feet of rain in two days caused a landslide on Shikoku island, burying 51 per-sons who were working on a washed out road. Rescue crews continued to remove tons of mud and rock last night in the slim hope there might be survivors among the victims buried for more than 24 hours. Police estimated that more than 5,000 persons have been left homeless on Shikoku and Kyushu islands. 20,000 other homes were flooded, they said.

Moscow jams radio, Jews say MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet government has begun jamming Radio Israel's Russian- and Hebrew-language broadcasts to the Soviet Union as part of an effort to cripple the dissident Jewish movement, Jewish sources said yesterday. Sources who have extensive knowledge of the movement's reliance on Radio Israel said the jamming heard as a pulsating drone began in the 24-hour period of June 24-25. Dissidents say the news of arrests, trials and persecutions they report to Western correspondents in Moscow are broadcast back to the Soviet Union by these stations, and thereby inform the Soviet public of what the activists believe to be violations of their civil rights, AP Wirephoto To show it's there Despite gale-force winds, a British helicopter crew drops materiel to a Royal Marine climbing team on Rockall, a rock formation in the Atlantic at the western extremity of the United King dom. A combined civilian-military team, working from a British ship, has erected a flashing navigational beacon atop the narrow rock island located 280 miles from the Scottish mainland. Armed hiiacker seizes Calif.

weather plane, 98; asks $450,000 By Sal Streett Staff Corresondeut DETROIT The Nixon Administration is spending billions of dollars in federal money on programs which directly subsidize racial discrimination in employment, the NAACP's labor director said here yesterday. Herbert Hill told the 2,300 delegates to the NAACP's annual convention that one out of every three jobs in the nation exists as a direct result of U.S. government contracts to pro-vate corporations. Nevertheless, he said, "although many major government contractors have been found guilty of engaging in a variety of discriminatory employment practices, by both federal and state civil rights agencies, they continue to receive lucrative government contracts." "JUST as the Nixon Administration has deliberately withdrawn the longstanding federal commitment to school integration," Hill said, "so it has withdrawn federal support for efforts to eliminate racial discrimination in employment." For the first time in 30 years, Hill said, there no longer exists, for all practical purposes, a separate contract compliance agency in the federal government to guarantee racial balance in companies doing work for the United States. He said the present reduced compliance procedures are "largely cosmetic and illusory." Hill, also attacked "union-controlled apprenticeship programs" in the construction industry.

He said these programs, which are government financed, are "exceedingly prolonged, inefficient and socially undesireable." "The Air Force can train jet pilots in 18 months, and it takes the unions five years to train somebody to be a pipefitter," he said. HILL said the Outreach Pro- gram, designed to filter minority youths into appren-t i i and other job programs, is "also cosmetic and illusory." "We are repeatedly told how lavishly funded these programs are, but we have not been told how many persons have actually gone to work, how many have become journeymen, or how many have received union membership. Nor are we told how many ML 9 Friday, July 7, 1972 GREATER WILMINGTON: Partly cloudy today; high in the middle 70s. Fair tonight and Saturday. Low tonight in the upper 50s.

High Saturday in the upper 70s. Chance of precipitation 10 per cent today and tonight. Winds: variable, less than 10 miles per hour today. DELAWARE. Partly sunny high in the low to middle 70s.

Fair tonight; low in the 50s. Partly cloudy Saturday; high in the 70s. MARYLAND: Partly sunny today; high in the low to middle 70s. Fair tonight; low in the 50s. Partly cloudy Saturday; high in the 70s.

SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA. Mostly sunny today; high in the 70s. Fair and continued cool tonight; low in the 59s. Fair and a little warmer Saturday; high in the middle 70s to middle 83s. SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY: Mostly sunny today; high in the 70s.

Fair and continued cool tonight; low in the 50s. Fair and a little warmer Saturday; high in the middle 70s to middle 80s. DELAYARE AND CHESAPEAKE BAYS: Fair today and tonight. Visibility: Five miles or more, except one to three miles in fug early this morning. Winds: light and variable today and tonight.

Highest temperature yesterday: 74; lowest: 50. Highest humidity yesterday: 90 per cent; lowest: 54 per cent; at midnight: 85 per cent. Precipitation in 24 hours ending 8 p.m.: none. Water temperature at Rehoboth Beach: 65 degrees. Sun rises today at 5:41 a.m.

Sun sets otday at 8:33 p.m. NAllONAl WUlHUi SHVia fOKKASI lofMtSl 7 I Late Bulletin SAN DIEGO. Calif. UPI) -An armed man demanding $450,000 hijacked a Pacific Southwest Airlines jetliner with 57 persons aboard lute yesterday and then released about 30 passengers and a stewardess at San Diego airport. The hijacker earlier had said he would release the women and children when he got the ransom.

A PSA spokesman said his company was gathering the money. Women, children and several men left the plane and were taken to the terminal in buses. THE plane landed at Liud-bergh field here after he commandeered it in northern California and ordered it flown here. It landed and taxied to a remote section of the field. A PSA spokesman said there was "no panic" aboard the plane and all passengers were He said the company was gathering the ransom.

FBI agents said the sky pirate has not told the plane's crew where he wanted to be flown. They said he had demanded one parachute. WASHINGTON (AP) Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said yesterday that Sen. George S.

McGovern's proposed $30 billion slash in military spending would pose "a dangerous and calamitous risk" for U.S. security and world peace. "The so-called white-flag budget substitutes a philosophy of give-away-now, beg-later for a philosophy of strength and willingness to negotiate," Laird said. After Laird made his comments, McGovern issued a statement saying, "There will be no white flag flying if I become President of the United States. I will never permit the United States to become a second-rate power.

"My proposed military budget will make certain that the United States is the strongest nation in the world. But I do not believe in wasting the taxpayers' dollar on needless cost overruns and careless planning. It seems strange to me that the result of Mr. Nixon's arms agreement is a request for a more costly mili-tary budget next year," McGovern said. A gloves-off campaigner in his past career as a Republican congressman, Laird said with obvious relish that the Democratic platform commit-tee had "repudiated" the McGovern proposals to curb defense outlays to $54.8 billion by fiscal 1975.

The Democratic Platform committee rejected recently both hawkish and dovish defense planks. It said "the military budget 'can be reduced substantially with no weakening of our national security." But the committee used no dollar -figures. Laird's reference to a "beg-later" philosophy was an obvious slap at McGovern's statements that, "Begging is better than bombing," Kidnap- Continued From Page Ont Charles. 18; Paul, 15; and Elizabeth, 11. AFTER holding the family at gunpoint for about three hours, he forced them to drive him to Baltimore in their station wagon.

Mintz apparently decided on the long route to Baltimore to avoid crossing the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. He made the trip dressed in Mrs. Shockley's clothing and wore a wig. During the trip he apparently threatened the lives the Shockley family several times before they persuaded him to spare them by promising not to go to the police. MEANWHILE, fellow em-ployes of Mr.

and Mrs. Shockley became worried when they did not arrive at their jobs on Wednesday morning. Police were called to investigate their disappearance and when the Shockleys pulled up to their house at 6:40 p.m. Wednesday evening, they were met by the police. They had apparently been too shaken by the incident to go to police in Mintz is wanted on five counts of kidnaping, one count of burglary, three counts of robbery with a deadly weapon and six counts of assault with intent to commit murder.

Brandon DeWilde killed in crash LAKEWOOD. Colo. UPl-Actor Brandon DeWilde, 30, died yesterday as a result of injuries suffered several hours earlier in a traffic accident in this Denver suburb, police said. DeWilde was in the Denver area for performances of "Butterflies Are Free" at an amusement park theatre He was reportedly driving alone in a heavy rainstorm when his van truck struck a guard rail along a freeway and slammed into a flatbed truck parked along the side of the road, according to Agent Robert E. Moore III of the lake-wood Department of Public Safety.

DeWilde suffered a broken neck, back and leg and died four hours later at a Denver hospital. have dropped out of these pro-grams, even though the national drop-out rate is fifty 50 per cent." he said. Hill maintained, however, that the fundamental problem is not apprenticeship, but with admitting certified and fully-qualified black journeymen directly to union membership and into union-controlled jobs. "On this issue, the craft unions are bitterly resisting' change in their traditional racial practices," he said. HE said that though the myths of apprenticeship are repeatedly peddled by spokesmen for organized labor, "the basic fallacy in the Outreach approach is that even if full racial integration of all union-controlled apprenticeship were achieved, no substantial integration of the craft unions would result.

"The overwhelming majority of white construction workers do not become jour-n ni through apprenticeship training," he said. "About 75 percent of all the skilled construciton workers in the United States are trained directly on the job. "They do not have to be prepared, primed or tutored." Hill said the scandal of the Outreach program, which creates the illusion of progress, is equaled only by a hoax called "hometown solutions." He referred to the "New York plan, the Detroit plan, and others across the country" which have failed miserably at integrating craft unions. "THE government wraps a pretty package, but once you open the package, you will find it empty," he said. Hill, who is white, urged the mostly black delegates to march on construction sites and on picket lines, to support NAACP lawsuits, and to engage in political action to stop "government subsidized racism." The convention, which began Monday, is scheduled to close today with an address by Roy Wilkins, the NAACP executive director.

Hameli- Continued From Pagt One Francis' home1 and the man was taken to the Delaware Division by his son-in-law, William Hunter of 13 W. 24th St. The failure of the hospital to report the case originally, while the man was alive, was put down to "a clerical error" by a hospital official. It was also reported that despite two stab wounds in his lungs, Francis' condition at first was regarded as Bray made the comment aft-, er London reports circulated that the Soviet Union and the Peoples Republica of China are trying to persuade North Vietnam to negotiate seriously at the July 13 resumption of the talks in Paris. Bray also gave the same reply when asked about reports that South Vietnam's foreign minister Tran Van Lam expected some kind of a break soon at the peace talks.

Henry Kissinger, the Presi' dent's national-security adviser, told newsmen on his return from his latest trip to China that some kind of policy review was taking place in Hanoi, he assumed. This was based on the rej turn home of Hanoi's chief Paris negotiator, Xian Thuy, for consultations and new instructions. Politburo member Le Due Tho also returned to Hanoi after stops in Moscow and Peking. Some Communist sources here have affirmed that Mos-c was offering "good advice" to Hanoi to negotiate seriously with the United States. Some U.S.

officials have encouraged the idea that peace negotiations could take place on the basis of President Nixon May 8 call for an internationally supervised cease-fire. out plan and it is obvious to me that it would have succeeded except for the one hijacker going berserk." said J. Floyd Andrews, president of Pacific Southwest Airlines. One of the wounded passen-ers, TV actor Victor Sen Yung, said he thought the FBI action was a "calculated risk. It was the lives of 80 people against a few who might have been hurt." Yung, 56, best known for his portrayal of Hop Sing, the Cartwright family cook on "Bonanza," said from his hospital bed at Peninsula Hospital here that he approved of the FBI charge.

"I'M very sorry that the man (passenger E. II. Stanley Carter) was killed. I don't think the FBI or the airline could have done anything more under the circumstances," Yung said. Yung, shot once in the left side, said he hoped to be released from the hospital tomorrow.

The FBI said the bullet that( struck him was fired by one of the hijackers. Also wounded was Leo Gorm-ley, 46, ot Van Nuys, Calif. His condition was listed as fair. Carter, a retired conductor for Canadian National Railways, was on his way to southern California with his wifp. The couple hoped to find a new home there.

The Southwest Airlines was heading for Holly wood-Burbank Airport when two men commandeered it between Sacramento and San Francisco. FBI agent-in-charge Robert Gebhardt said: "I hope this will be a lesson. We intended to stop this hijack, and stop it we did." Another FBI agent said the decision was due solely to circumstances and does not represent a new FBI policy. Victor Sen Yung shooting or real SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The FBI agent who ordered the rush of a captive jetliner that ended in shooting deaths of two hijackers and a passenger said he hopes "it will be a lesson" to future hijackers. The airline's president supported the FBI's action but said he was upset that the passenger had been killed and two other passengers wounded.

THE FBI had a well thought- 3aOO 30.00 30.12, D.C stills rumor mills on peace I OS ANCHOR VJVA1iAN1A' J7 NEW OHl CANS A M)AM HHAIM SNOW i 1 Vietnam- ui'i wi Aim foiocAM TIDES AT MARINE TERMINAL High LOW Today A.M 10:1 Today P.M 10:45 5:08 5:12 P.M. 5:31 6:31 6:26 6:56 7:23 8:17 8:52 9:17 2:22 4:06 8:02 high Tiuta rouAt A.M. Rehoboth Bay 4:51 Lewes Breakwater Harbor 5:46 Slaughter Beach 4:16 Bowers Beach Bombay Hook Port Penn Reedy Point 8:39 Kent Island 2:57 Baltimore 4:41 ChMAOtAk City 7:24 AIR QUALITY The air quality indicator and forecast based on data collected at the stale's four computerised monitoring station. Today Yesterday VVUUU3 no.cir Kruse School 20 Seventh and French Sts 1(1 County Bldg kirkwood Hwv 10 26 20 Old Ferry Dock New Castle 35 Indicator scale: 0-30, good; 30-60, satisfactory; 60-100, unsatisfactory; more than 100, poor. The index for today is a forecast based also on weather data.

The Weather Elsewheri By The Associated Press High Low Atlanta 73 54 Boston CY 70 58 Chicago CY 73 59 Cincinnati CY 75 50 Cleveland 69 45 Denver CY 85 55 Detroit 75 42 Green Bay CY 81 49 Honolulu CY 87 Art Houston 85 68 Indianapolis CY 73 50 Los Anneies CY 88 66 Louisvilie CY 75 54 Memphis 76 58 Miami CY B6 81 Milwaukee CY 75 52 New Orleans CY 85 77. New York 77 56 Oklahoma City 82 55 Omaha 82 52 Philadelphia 74 57 Phoenix CY 107 84 Pittsburgh 68 53 St. Louis CY 78 51 San Dieqo CY 77 63 San Francisco 60 54 Seattle CY 65 55 Tampa CY 90 78 Washington 73 61 Pr. WASHINGTON (AP)-A State Department spokesman yesterday cautioned against what he called "pendulum swings of speculation" on rumors that the Paris peace talks would bring some break in the long impasse in negotiations with North Vietnam. Spokesman Charles W.

From Page On The town has been cut off and transport planes are dropping supplies. Farther east, fighting was reported on Highway 1, the route connecting Phnom Penh and Saigon, on the east bank of the Mekong River 45 mils southeast of the Cambodian capital. Cambodian forces are believed to be trying to clear the enemy from the highway, cut in mid-April. Woman to resign KUALA LUMPUR (UPI)-. Tan Sri Fatimah Haji Hashim, Malaysia's social welfare minister for the past three years and the only woman in the national cabinet, has announced she will resign at the end of the year.

Fatimah was defeated last month in a party election. Continued resumed full-scale bombing of the North two months ago. THE command said laser bombs knocked out the 96-foot Vu Chua railroad bridge 55 miles south of the border with China. The bridge is on the northeast rail line. The command also reported that U.S.

planes destroyed or damaged 45 supply trucks, 23 warehouses, 4 fuel depots, 2 bridges. 17 barges and other surface craft. 9 antiaircraft guns, 3 radar sites and 6 radar vans. IN Cambodia, the high command reported the enemy slammed more than 600 shells into the besieged district town of Angtassom. 40 miles south of the capital of Phnom Penh, in the heaviest bombardment in more than 2 years of war.

AP Wirephoto It's all in black and white Russian world chess champion Boris Spassky, emerging as the crowd pleaser in Iceland's scheduled match with American Bobby Fischer, signs autographs in Reykjavik after a round of tennis. Spassky also ended up with the white pawn yesterday-which gives him the first move, and a slight advantage-as well as an apology from Fischer, whose holdout for more money will also benefit the Russian. Fischer's apology paved the way for a Tuesday start of the 24-game series, which now carries a purse of roughly $300,000, including a share of the gate receipts and TV and film returns. The winner will get five-eighths, the loser, three-eights. The pre-match performance of the two chess masters is a study in chiaroscuro: Story on page 15.

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