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The Sheboygan Press from Sheboygan, Wisconsin • Page 1

Location:
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

VOL LXV NO. 1 70 FOUR SECTIONS 32 Paget SHEBOYGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1972 PRICE 10 CENTS Navy Planes Pound North Viet Bunkers Court Stay In Delegates' Test Extended By Burger Hearing Set For Horneck Wednesday Charged with first degree murder in the pistol slaying of ms wue, uary t. nornecK, a leader of the Milwaukee outlaws Motorcycle Club, will appear in Branch 1 of County Court Wednesday for a preliminary hearing. The hearing has been set for 11 a.m. before County Judce Chief Justice's Act Freezes The Issue By VERNON A.

GUIDRY Jr. Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Chief Justice Warren E. Burger today extended until further notice a stay issued by the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals which suspended the effect of its orders returning 151 California delegates to Sen. George Mc-Govern.

Burger's action followed pleas to the Supreme Court by Joseph W. Wilkus, according iwarquarm. Horneck, who was picked Jackie Wins Case Against Cameraman NEW YORK (AP) Freelance photographer Ronald Ga-lella has been barred from going near Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. A federal judge ruled that Galella had "relentlessly invaded" her right to privacy. U.S.

District Court Judge Irving Ben Cooper wrote in his decision Wednesday that Galella "was like a shadow everywhere she went he followed her and engaged ir offensive conduct." Cooper dismissed Galella's suit accusing Mrs. Onassis of interfering with his right to make a living and found him guilty of contempt for defying an earlier order to keep his distance from the family. Galella has made something of a career of photographing the former First Lady and her two children, Caroline and John Kennedy. the Democratic party and by forces of Chicago Mayor Richard J. LXiley for a special term of the court to consider an appeal of the circuit court's decision which also unseated Daley and 5S other Illinois delegates.

Burger's order reads that the circuit stay "is hereby extended until further order of the court." The circuit court stay was due to expire at 2 p.m. The action by Burger freezes the issue as it stands until a decision is made at the Supreme Court level on whether to accept the dual appeals of the circuit court decision. The party hierarchy asked Burger to suspend the effect of the appeals court ruling, which Wednesday overrode the party Credentials Committee to allow McGovern to recover 151 California convention delegates. The Daley forces are seeking just the opposite effect, con By GEORGE ESPER Associated Press Writer SAIGON (AP) U.S. Navy i r-bombers pounded North Vietnamese bunkers south of Quang Tri City today, trying to blast open a path for a task force of South Vietnamese paratroopers advancing on the enemy-hild provincial capital.

Associated Press correspondent Dennis Neeld reported from the northern front that the carrier planes bombed a line of bunkers about 2'2 miles from the center of Quang Tri City. The bunkers were concealed in a row of homes shaded by trees and flanking Highway 1. Two companies of North Vietnamese troops, perhaps 200 or more men, were reported entrenched in the bunkers and firing on the paratroopers despite the air attacks. Penetrate City Limits An American adviser with the paratroopers, Capt." Gail Furrow, 32, of Urbana, Ohio, told Neeld the battalion he is with could have pushed into Quang Tri City on Wednesday but it was essential to secure the highway before advancing. Other paratroopers penetrated the city limits Tuesday but took up defensive positions on the southern edge.

Reliable sources said Lt. Gen. Ngo Quang Truong, com-m a of the counteroffensive, is moving cautiously in hopes of keeping his casualties to a minimum. Field reports said 180 North Vietnamese were killed in clashes around Quang Tri City on Wednesday. South Vietnamese losses were said to be 10 killed and 90 wounded.

Thirty miles to the south of the nine-day-old drive, the North Vietnamese shelled Hue with 122mm artillery for the fifth day. About 100 shells hit the former imperial capital, but half of them were duds. One person was reported wounded, and a Roman Catholic church and a home were badly damaged. On the southern front, the Saigon command claimed that 208 North Vietnamese were killed and 45 weapons captured in lighting along the Cam bodian border 50 miles west of Saigon. Four South Vietnamese were reported killed and 31 wounded.

Weather WISCONSIN Partly cloudy and warmer tonight with chance of thunderstorms mainly north and west portions. lows in the 50s. Friday mostly cloudy with chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the 70s north half and 77 to 83 south half. Sheboygan Temperatures (Official Temperatures By U.S.

Weather Bureau) Yesterday's nigh 73 Overnight low 56 8 a.m. temperature 65 Thursday, July 6 Sunset today 8:35 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow 5:15 a.m. Moonrise tomorrow ....1:46 a.m. New Moon July 10 The total eclipse of the sun at this New Moon Is of the same series as the eclipse of June 30.

1954. That eclipse was total across northern Quebec, the southern tip of Greenland and parts of Europe. (All Times Central Daylight) Computed For The Sheboygan Piuss By Bailey R. Frank, West Hartford, Vermont. part of a cook in the Bonanza TV series and was a passenger, on the plane on a flight from Sacramento.

The two hijackers were killed and another passenger wounded in the exchange of gunfire. (AP Wirephoto) WOUNDED PASSENGER Victor S. Yung of Universal California, is wheeled into Peninsula Hospital at San Francisco, after being wounded in the hijack attempt of a Pacific Southwest Airlines in San Francisco on Wednesday. Yung, 56, plays the Two Teenagers Killed In Crash to Clerk of Courts Raymond up for questioning early Monday morning at a Sheboygar tav- ern, remained in sheriff's cus tody today under 50,000 cash bail. There was no report today as to whether the preliminary hearing will be open to the public.

Judge Wilkus barred the public and news reporters from a preliminary hearing in the Douglas Dean murder case last year on the grounds that pre-trial publicity might jeopardize the defendant's right to a fair trial Bail was set at Horneck's in itial court appearance Wednes day afternoon in County Court Branch 2. The defendant, dressed in black shirt and trousers, ap peared before County Judge John G. Buchen in a court' room occupied by about 25 spectators most of them at torneys. Several members of the Outlaws Motorcycle Club also were present. Three Charges Horneck, with his attorney Ronald I.

Pachefsky of Mil waukee, heard Judge Buchen read three criminal charges against the defendant, He was charged with first degree murder, carrying a concealed weapon, and being a repeater, The body of Horneck's wife. Victoria J. Horneck, 25, of (Turn To Page 6, Col. 4) The victims were pinned in the overturned car, which broke into flames. Fillmore firemen had to pry portions of the car apart to free the bodies after extinguishing the fire.

The Kewaskum Fire Department rescue squad took the two crash victims to St. Joseph Community Hospital. Later they were transferred to the Schmidt Funeral Home. Coroner Robert Boltz would not release the identity of the victims pending positive identification. Parents of the girl reportedly had been visiting at Rhinelander and Boltz was awaiting their return to the city.

Identity of the boy also was being withheld, pending identification of his companion. Their deaths brought to nine the number of traffic fatalities in Washington County this year. BEACON ing from a tending that federal courts should intervene in order to seat Daley and 58 other Illinois delegates ousted by the Cre- oentials Committee. There was no indication when the chief justice might act. The Court of Appeals re stored to McGovern the full 271-vote (California) reversing the committee's vote to take more than half the number from him and apportion them to other primary candidates, chiefly Sen.

Hubert H. Humph rey. The court suspended the ef fect of its rulings until 2 p.m. today to give the high court time to act if it wishes. The Supreme Court has held only three special sessions in its history.

1,436.65 Votes "We feel this case is as com pelling and more compelling" than those which prompted the other sessions, said Democratic National Committee counsel Joseph A. Califano in Miami Beach. "The courts should not get involved in selecting delegates." McGovern forces announced Wednesday afternoon that the appeals-court action gave their candidate more than the 1,509 delegate votes needed for nomination. The Associated Press delegate count, which does not list officially uncommitted delegates who are leaning toward (Tum To Page 6, Col. 3) Speculate On Peace Pressures LONDON (AP) Western diplomats have been speculating on chances that Russia and China may separately be urging North Vietnam toward a peace settlement ever since President Nikolai V.

Podgorny visited Hanoi and Henry A. Kissinger visited Peking last month. But these officials repre- sentine countries with mis' sions in Moscow, Peking and Hanoi, reported today they have seen absolutely no evi dence to suggest that the Russians or Chinese in fact are exercising any effective pressures on North Vietnam. In the one sector where Moscow and Peking could reinforce any advice in favor of a settlement in the supply of arms and other military aid there has been no sign of a cutoff of aid. And these Western authorities said they doubt very much if the competing Russians and Chinese would expose themselves to charges of betraying Hanoi by seeming to turn on them so soon before the resumption of the Paris peace talks next week.

Spokesmen for the Soviet and Chinese embassies here declined formal comment on a report that their' governments have been pressing Hanoi to end the war soon. Speaking privately, one Rus sian official said any author itative statement relating to Soviet policy on Vietnam would not be made in London but in Moscow. A source close to the Chinese embassy said: "No member of the Chinese mission could con ceivably discuss Peking's dealings with Hanoi in this way." During his mission to Moscow, President Nixon devoted hours of his time to discussing with Soviet leaders ways of ending the Vietnam war. It became everyone's secret that he sought Soviet help toward that goal. In the wake of Nixon's visit, President Podgorny journeyed to Hanoi where, Western diplo mats said, he got a lukewarm reception.

Western authorities still are unsure it this was due to Hanoi's resentment against the Russians for permitting the summit talks to take place at a (Turn To Page 6, Col. 1) ey for both him and Spassky but also started an avalanche of confusion, asked the Russian to "accept my sincerest apology." "I simply became carried away by my petty dispute over money with the Icelandic chess organizers," he wrote. The written apology from American challenger was one of the chief conditions posed by the Russians before Spassky would sit down at the chess board with Fischer. Fischer told Spassky: "I have offended you and your country, the Soviet Union, where chess has prestigious position." The temperamental American also apologized to Dr. Max Euwe.

president of the International Cbess Federation, the Icelanders, "the SLAIN HIJACKERS IDENTIFIED The FBI identified today the two men who were killed while hijacking a Pacific Southwest Airlines plane Wednesday in San Francisco. They are Michael Azmanoff, 28, left, and Dimitr Alexiev, 28, right. Two passengers, one of them Victor Yung of the Bonanza TV series, were wounded during the exchange of gunfire. (AP Wirephoto) G-Men Stop Skyjack By Killing 2 Gunmen Alvarez, 58, of Sacramento, a passenger. "The first came through with his hands on his head, and the second came up shooting, blasting away with a shotgun." The hijacker "crumpled to the floor," said Alvarez.

The FBI said the gunman had an (Turn To Page Col. 4) WEST BEND Two unidentified teenagers believed to be West Bend residents, were killed in a single car crash Wednesday night at the deadend intersection of Orchard Valley Road and County Trunk A near here. Authorities were withholding identity of the crash victims as of noon today pending positive identification. Reportedly, one of the victims was an 18-year-old male and the other a 15 or 16-year-old girl. Washington County authorities said the accident occurred when the car, driven by the boy and traveling at a high rate of speed in a southerly direction on Orchard Valley Road, careened across County Trunk A and into an embankment across the highway.

The crash scene is located about five miles northeast of here in the Town of Farming-ton. ERECTING NAVIGATION Prox Urges Military Aid Limits WASHINGTON (AP) Sen. William Proxmire, today urged that the United States negotiate multinational agreements to limit military assistance programs. Through a series of negotiated "arms-free zones," the United States could limit mili tary aid to 10 or fewer countries, Proxmire suggested in a letter to Secretary of State William P. Rogers.

The United States, he said, currently gives military aid to G7 countries, with 47 getting outright military grants. Citing India and Pakistan as examples, Proxmire said "in the past, much of this has done little more than to create mis chief." Proxmire, chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on foreign operations, said administration officials have contended that if the United States did not sell or give arms to smaller nations, France, Britain, or Russia would. "In my view, we should immediately begin efforts to negotiate arms-free zones through the United Nations, through regional organizations, and bilaterally with the major arms-supplying countries of the world," Proxmire said. Todafs Index Regular Page Features No. Ann Landers 11 Bridge 11 Classified 27-31 Comics 14 Editorial 32 Markets 10 Obituaries 6 Personals 4 Polly's Pointers 22 Sports 17-19 Show Time 2S Television 15 Timetable 14 Women's Pages 2123 Sony Bobby Apologizes To Chess Rival Spassky By BOB YEGER Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) wanted to stop the hijacking and stop it we did," said the FBI special agent in charge, describing how authorities stormed a pirated aircraft and killed two hijackers in a gun battle while passengers were still aboard.

Officials said shots fired by one of the hijackers killed a passenger and wounded two others after federal agents charged aboard an interstate Pacific Southwest Airline Boeing 737 taken over by two hijackers for six hours Wednesday. "Certainly we're not pleased that three passengers were wounded," said Robert Geb-hardt, FBI special agent in charge. He made the comment before learning that one of the passengers had died. "But," he said in response to a reporter's question, "some- body had to make a decision." Three FBI men who had sneaked up under the fuselage i of the plane rushed aboard af-1 ter the hijackers refused to re lease 81 passengers, Gebhardt i said. The slain hijackers had do ti a two parachutes, SSOO.OOO and passage to Siberia 1 shortly after taking the plane over in the air, officials said.

Gebhardt said the FBI men I moved in on the plane only after the hijackers refused to rc- lease the passenegrs until the ransom was handed over, i "I saw two FBI men enter i the plane." said Dr. Manuel By STEPHENS BROENING Associated Press Writer REYKJAVIK, Iceland A Bobby Fischer made a full and penitent apology to Boris Spassky today, and organizers of the world chess championship match said the two would meet for their first game Sunday night. The organizers said it had been agreed in principle to hold the drawing tonight to determine which player would have the white pieces and with them the first move. The young American, in a letter delivered by hand this morning to the world chess champion from the Soviet Union, apologized for his "disrespectful behavior." Fischer, whose delayed arrival doubled the prize mon thousands of fans around the world and especially to the millions of fans and the many friends I have in the United States." However, Fischer brushed aside a demand from the Soviet Chess Federation that he forfeit the first match because of his tardy arrival. He said this "would place me at a tremendous handicap" and he didn't believe the "world's champion desires such an advantage in order to play me." "I know you to be a sportsman and a gentleman, and I am looking forward to some exciting chess games with you," Fischer concluded.

Earlier Euwe had met other demands the Russians made on him and suggested (Turn To Page 6, Col. 7) British ship have succeeded in erecting a flashing navigational beacon on the rock island 280 miles from the Scottish mainland in spite of gale-force winds. (AP Wirephoto) British helicopter crew deposits materials to waiting Royal Marine climbing experts atop Rockall, a rock formation at the western extremity in the Atlantic of the United Kingdom A combined service-civilian team work.

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