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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 1

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

111 llli Sunny 4th Foreseen for most In Bay Area, 1-B Censure Is Hinted in furor over USF appointment, 1-B mini iL i jg gniyjpj'yiMmimw as irwggpwjm 'my rrmn? TAMPA TfflBTO! Partly Cloudy Data on Page 2-A Final City 7 Days Home Delivery 85 Cents 78th YEAR No. 158 FOUR SECTIONS 48 PAGES TAMPA, FLORIDA, MONDAY, JULY 3, 1972 PRICE TEN CENTS Nixon To Keep Low When Demos Gather M'Governites To Take Calif. Case To Court yy 1 SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (UPl President Nixon relaxed at his villa beside the Pacific yesterday as he prepared to revise his re-election strategy to compensate for the loss of John N. Mitchell as the campaign's day-to-day manager.

A Western White House spokesman said Nixon spent the morning on White House paperwork. Some routine matters piled up last week while Nixon was devoting his time to a Vietnam troop withdrawal an nouncement and a news conference on the politically sensitive Social Security benefit increase. THE PRESIDENT planned to remain in-Calii'ornia for two and a half weeks until after the Democrats select his fall opponent in their Miami Beach convention, scheduled July 10-14. Aides said the President will try to do Please See Page 4, Col. 4 lengers will be filed today for a hearing before U.S.

District Court Judge George Hart. REINHARDT SAID the court action was approved by McGovern. The candidate described the case as "right on the merits. He told us he thinks we are doing the right thing," the California delegate said. The suit asks that the chairman of the Credentials Committee, Mrs.

Patricia Harris, be ordered to certify to the convention Please See Page 5, CoL 1 From Tribune Wires WASHINGTON Backers of Sen. George S. McGovern announced yesterday they will go to federal court to challenge the Credentials Committee ruling that stripped McGovern of 151 California delegates to the Democratic convention. Stephen Reinhardt, Democratic national committeeman from California and a co-chairman of the 271-member delegation, said a suit to bar the seating of the 151 chal George McGovern Street bear? President Nixon housekeeping out West POTF sshc StiH Unsettled dia, Paks Agree TrooD Pullback 1 V-t i-: 3 -Kg; More Talks To Include Kashmir i SI 4 4 Antiwar South Vietnamese Lies Dead On Runway Near Plane He Tried To Hijack 4 he was subdued and shot by pilot and passenger after threatening to blow up craft (UPI) 111 lt 'I Am Doing This For i ut He Died Revenge. Stalemate, Not Checkmate, Yet Chess player Boris Spassky, facing er, claiming illness, did not appear I camera, talks to Soviet officials out- for the match originally scheduled to side his hotel in Reykjavik yesterday.

start yesterday. He has been given The Russian chess master is in Ice- until noon tomorrow to make his ap- land for a world championship match pearance. See Page with Bobby Fischer of the U.S. Fisch- Inside France's Pompidou and West Germany's Brandt meet on monetary problems, 4-A. Nation gets ready for July 4th, 6-A.

Israelis fight wave of bank robberies, 4-A. Northwest Airlines lays off most nonstriking workers, 4-B. Astrology 6-IV Classified 7-19-C Comics 6, 7-B Crossword 2-IV Deaths 7-1V Editorials 10-A Goren on Bridge 2-IV Graham 5-IV Landers 3-IV Ellen Peck 8-B Sylvia Porter 12-A Television 4-IV Theaters 5-IV Wishing Well 6-IV Women 3-IV SIMLA, India The leaders of India and Pakistan signed an agreement early today calling for partial troop withdrawals along their 800-mile common border. Pakistani spokesmen also said the two sides agreed to "reduce tension" in disputed Kashmir, including troop pull-backs from the explosive cease-fire line there, and that the pact did not include handing over territory taken In the India-Pakistan war last December. INDIAN SOURCES maintained, however, that the agreement did not call for withdrawals in Kashmir.

Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of India and President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto of Pakistan signed the agreement at a hastily arranged ceremony nine hours before Bhutto was scheduled to return to Pakistan, culminating five days of tough summit bargaining at this Himalayan hill station resort. Indian sources said other points of the agreement were renunciation of force to settle disputes and the settling of mutual problems bilaterally without calling in third parties. An official of the Pakistan Foreign Office said the agreement also will lead to separate talks on the return of Pakistani prisoners of war Please See Page 5, Col. 7 Ulster Tension Grows In Wake Of 3 Killings From Tribune Wires SAIGON "I am doing this for revenge. Your bombers are maiming and killing our people of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.

You are going to fly me to Hanoi and this airplane will be destroyed when we get there." Capt. Gene Vaughn said in Hong Kong early today he was confronted with those words from a young Asian, apparently a South Vietnamese, who tried to hijack his Pan American World Airways 747 jumbo jet between the Philippines and South Vietnam. THE MAN was waving a "bomb" made out of lemons wrapped in tinfoil and tried to take over the big jet with 149 persons aboard. He was overpowered by the pilot and shot to death by a passenger after Please See Page 4, Col. 5 and shot in the head and brought to six the number in the back.

killed since an IRA truce was POLICE IDENTIFIED none of the three, whose deaths Please See Page 4, Col. 5 Atfi Today's Chuckle You're lucky If you get paid every two weeks one week's pay woa't buy Capt. Gene Vaughn Holds Up Cartridge one of these killed would-be hijacker (AP) Martha Makes Troubled Call Quang Tri Offensive Continues From Tribune Wires BELFAST Three bullet-riddled bodies were found in Belfast yesterday, amid rising tension between Roman Catholics and Protestants. Security officials said last night that the three were murdered by assassination squads, but there was uncertainty whether the killers were Protestant or Catholic extremists. TWO OF the men, aged between 35 and 40, were found by children playing on a cricket ground near the site of a predawn attack on British troops.

The IRA denied its men were involved in the attack and said it was the work of a small group of "vigilantes" outside IRA control. The third victim wa3 a 25-year-old man whose body was tossed out ot a speeding car in the Forth River Road area, a Protestant section. He had been badly beaten 1 Reds Bombard Hue, Kill At Least 12 1 A A 1 if By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mrs. Martha Mitchell said yesterday she is happy her husband got out of politics as she had demanded but she made it clear she doesn't believe her troubles are over. "I'm still a political prisoner," she told me in a telephone call.

"I can't talk long. I am calling surreptitiously." When pressed as to whether Mitchell's resignation Saturday as President Nixon's reelection campaign director Please See Page 4, Col. 4 munist offensive but it was stripped of two-thirds of its defenders last week when the South Vietnamese struck north to recapture Quang Tri Province. Torrential rains that bogged their advance Saturday eased yesterday, and extensive contacts were reported. ALLIED OFFICERS in Hue SAIGON (UPI) Communists bombarded the old imperial capital of Hue with artillery and rockets yesterday for the first time since launching their offensive in South Vietnam three month3 ago.

The old capital, third largest city in the country, has long been regarded as a major objective of the Com quarters for South Vietnam's northern sector. The fort, which was captured by Communists in the 1968 Tet lunar new year offensive, is surrounded by ramshackle, tin-roofed huts in which many of the bombardment casualties occurred. No casualties were reported inside the Citadel. EIGHT MILES to the south said the Communists fired more than 80 rockets and shells into the old capital yesterday in morning and evening barrages which killed at least 12 persons and wounded 41. Most of the fire was directed at the Citadel, an early 19th-century fortress in the city's old section that now serves as military head of Hue, the Communists shelled Camp Eagle, a principal bastion of the old capital's defenses and headquarters of South Vietnam's 1st Infantry Division.

UPI correspondent Chad Huntley, reporting from the camp, said the Communists fired about a dozen rounds Please See Page 4, Col. 8 Martha Mitchell 'still a prisoner'.

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Years Available:
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