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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 15

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

GULF EDITION Regents To Get plan for student job preparation, 1-B. Clearwater Youth slain in N.C. melee with law officers, 1-B. 1 Chance Of Rain Data on Page 2-A Gulf Days Home Delivery 85 Centi 78th YEAR No. 160 FOUR SECTIONS 46 PAGES TAMPA, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1972 PRICE TEN CENTS 1 a umni a TRIBUNE JL 11 it 'The Land Of The Open Door' Nixon Invites World To 200- Year Fest l)J It The U.S.

celebrates 196th birthday, 10-A. From Tribuae Wires SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. President Nixon yesterday offered to open the nation's borders and Americans to open their own homes to a flood of foreign visitors in 1976 when the United States celebrates its 200th birthday. "Let America be known throughout the world as the 'land of the open the President said in an Independence Day radio address to the nation, We are aware that a real structure of peace cannot be built on good will alone," he said. "Its foundation must be the resolution of those basic national differences which can lead to war." AMONG THE MANY ways in which the United States will celebrate its 200th birthday, in 1976, will be through a program known as Festival USA Nixon noted.

Festival USA will center upon "travel, discovery and hospitality," he said. "Hospitality by Americans to Americans, and hospitality by Americans to millions upon millions of visitors from nearly every country of the globe. Please See Page 6, Col. 5 In his speech from his Western White House office Nixon concentrated on plans for the cation's bicentennial celebration, especially efforts to attract 28 million foreign tourists in 1976, double the flow of visitors last year. THE PRESIDENT specifically suggested that business and industry attempt to cut the costs of travel, lodging and meals, and that air carriers and shipping lines explore ways of offering inexpensive transportation.

Nixon said one "compelling reason for this invitation to the world relates to our hopes for genuine and lasting peace among nations." President Nixon Exhorts The Nation looking forward to the big celebration (UPI) Tiw Towns Reoccupied Viet aratrooDe it rm Fight Quae LSlVi Has Hal i i 2 vie isxf J-1VJII AIIUUIIC ftUCS 1 SAIGON South paratroopers penetrated 1 Vf-7V 1 7 1 suthestern city limits of least 20 North Vietnamese defenders and recaptured a dozen artillery pieces lost when the country's northernmost province fell to the enemy more than two months ago. Allied sotircps said several hundred airborne troops staged a lightning assault against enemy defensive -5V Tribune Photo by Gary Rings strongholds and set up their nightfall, a half mile from the rrencn rresident rompidou Lett) fields rress Questions as disappointed West German Chancellor Willy Brandt listens attentively. Tie Spirit 0 Tie Fourth Court Fails To Rule On Denio Pleas Miami Beach awaits the Democrats, 12-A. From Tribune Wires WASHINGTON In a rare, four-hour holiday session, a three-judge federal court yesterday heard appeals seeking to regain 153 national Democratic convention votes for George S. McGovern and to reinstate 59 ousted Illinois delegates headed by Chicago Mayor Richard J.

Daley. There was no indication when the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, headed by Judge David L. Bazelon, would hand down a ruling. But the urgency of the case the convention opens next week indicated it would be soon, U.S.

DISTRICT Judge George L. Hart Monday upheld the decision of the Democratic Credentials Committee to strip McGovern, the frontrunner for the party's presidential nomination, of 153 delegate votes from the California delegations, and to eject Daley and 58 other Illinois delegates. The appeals court had agreed in advance to hold an Independence Day session no matter which side won in the lower court. LATE YESTERDAYword came fromhhe court clerk's office that the judges would not deliver a ruling until today at the earliest. Some would say it would be the shrewed political move to both seat Daley and give the South Dakota senator his delegates, Joseph A.

Califano, counsel for the Democratic National Committee, told the appellate court. The committee's decisions will be challenged when the convention meets and Cali- fano's remarks appeared to put him on the side of those who wish to see them overturned. But he declined to expand on it following the hearing, saying he would stick to French-German Talk Brings Small Results headed for the shaded spots in parks and the sizzling sunlight of the beaches. On Independence Day a day without a picnic is like a day without sunshine and there was plenty of that yesterday in the Tampa Bay area. The spirit that made America great can be found in a small boy slurping watermelon juice under the American flag on the Fourth of July.

Robert Jacobs, 3, sorts seeds from the pulp at his own private picnic at Lowry Park. Picnickers by the thousands put food and drink on ice and city center. THE GOVERNMENT announced two towns in the area were reoccupied. The government flag was raised during the afternoon at Mai Linh a district headquarters 1.2 miles southeast of Quang Tri, but considered within the city limits. Mai Linh and Hai Lang, six miles southeast of Quang Tri, were the first of 14 towns that fell during the three-month-' old enemy offensive to be re-.

captured by government forces. Associated Press correspondent Dennis Neeld reported that South Vietnamese marines on the eastern flank of the government drive were within four miles of the city. Their officers pre- Plcase See Page 6, Col. 1 exchange rates against the dollar set last year. THEIR SPOKESMEN indicated the Paris summit, scheduled for October, may have to be postponed in order for it to reach decisions on monetary policy.

Pompidou also indicated that Britain must stop floating the pound and return to a fixed exchange rate before the Common Market can move ahead toward monetary Please See Page 6, Col. 2 BONN, Germany UP) The top leaders of France and West Germany reaffirmed yesterday their desire for a Common Market summit and steps leading to European monetary unity. But they apparently failed to overcome some basic differences and left in doubt the timing of both moves. President Georges Pompidou of France and Chancellor Willy Brandt ended two days of talks but announced no specific ways of settling current monetary uncertainty other than reaffirming support of existing foreign Sato Successor Chosen Today becomes prime minister because of the party's abso-Please See Page 6, Col. 1 Seeks Punishment For Fischer Inside NAACP condemns Presided Nixon on busing stand, 10-A.

North Korea calls for removal of U. S. troops, 6-A. John Connally arrives in New Delhi for India talks, 3-A. Astrology 6-IV Business 4-B Classified 5-17-C Comics 6, 7-B Crossword 6-IV Deaths 7-IV Editorials 8-A Fishing 4-B Goren on Bridge 6-IV Graham 6-IV Landers 4-IV Morning After 1-C Sylvia Porter 5-B Sports 1-4-B Theaters 5-IV Television 8-IV Van Dellen 4-IV Wishing Well 6-IV Women 3-IV ipassky Maintains Stalemate TOKYO (UPI) Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) will meet today to elect a new prime minister in a party convention climaxing the nation's most hectic political campaign in nearly a decade.

Kakuei Tanaka, the 54-year-old minister of international trade and industry, was the favorite as the convention opened but he faced a strong challenge by Foreign Minister Takeo Fukuda, 67, the personal choice of outgoing Prime Minister Eisaku Sato. THERE WERE a total of four candidates for the post of LDP president who also If 'I "fit 4 vf i i 0 i match, worth $250,000 to the winner, until tomorrow, at the earliest. REPRESENTATIVES 0 Spassky and Fischer met for two and one-half hours late yesterday but failed to resolve differences. he and the Soviet Union had been insulted by Bobby Fischer and demanding the American challenger be punished before they play for the world title. The Russian titleholder walkout forced another postponement of the world cham- Fischer slept through it all.

He had arrived in the morning from New York and went straight to bed to rest up for the first game, set for 5 p.m. When Fischer woke up he found that the title series was Please See Page 6, Col. 2 From Tribune Wires REYKJAVIK, Iceland -Now it's Boris Spassky's turn to say no and the world chess championship is off again. Spassky stalked out of a meeting yesterday, charging what was already on record. Today's Chuckle The preseat generation of females far outstrips all others.

TAKEO FUKUDA may succeed.

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