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The Tampa Tribune du lieu suivant : Tampa, Florida • 45

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Lieu:
Tampa, Florida
Date de parution:
Page:
45
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

1 'I''' 11 fir irftiisirts University Presidents may fire editors, 2-B. Conner Blasts Mxon for meat quota lift, 1-B. 'i "i mnii nn TAMPA TRIE NE Partly Cloudy Data on Page 2-A Florid 7 Days Home Delivery 85 Cents 73th YEAR No. 161 FIVE SECTIONS 82 PAGES TAMPA, FLORIDA, THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1972 PRICE TEN CENTS 1 0 II 101 If Welfare People Stake Out Convention Seats McGovern Wins Court Battle For California ft I ss dry I I I THE DEMONSTRATORS represented the National Welfare Rights Organization, the National Tenants Organization and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The welfare rights group is sponsoring a poor people's convention that opened yesterday and will end Sunday, the day before the Democratic conclave starts.

"All we did is walk right in, and that's 1 Please See Page 8, Col. 6 MIAMI BEACH (.0 Representatives of welfare and poor people's organizations took over Convention Hall for a few minutes yesterday to underscore their demand for seats at next week's Democratic National Contention. To the amazement of carpenters and other workmen putting finishing touches to the hall, some 50 persons marched up to the podium and issued a call for 750 delegate seats. nois delegates to the presidential nominating session. In the same order the federal court blocked any state court action that might affect its decision.

THIS WAS another plus for the South Dakota senator since the Daley slate was uncommitteed but a majority of the replacements favors McGovern. An appeal to Supreme Court was ex- Please See Page 15, Col. 8 From Tribune Wiret WASHINGTON A federal appeals court in a 2-1 decision yesterday ordered 151 California delegates restored to George McGovern, prompting his forces to enter a claim on a first-ballot victory at the Democratic Convention in Miami. the same opinion, the U.S. Circuit Rourt of Appeals here upheld another party Committee decision ousting Mayor Richard Daley and 58 others as Illi Mayor Richard J.

Daley Presides at Chicago city council in serious mood (AP) Disguised FBI Agents Rush Plane Hijacker 0 liiiled. her untiled joh Center Cisw-J 'i WA IWW ItOli 4 SS 4 A ii 4 i 4 i 4 4 i i i i Xt SAN FRANCISCO Iff! A hijacker was shot and killed and another, along with three passengers pn a Pacific Southwest Airjiries jet yesterday at San Francisco International Airport, the airline said. Spokesman Gary Kissel saidFBI agents "rushed the plane" and killed one of the 'Two armed men who had com -T" "p'X' s-r-l -if -f I fry v3n ytf't The National Welfare Rights Organization Takes Podium issues demands for poor at Miami Beach Convention Center yesterday. (AP) New Premier Pierre Messmer Leaves The Elysee Palace In Paris Yesterday appointed hy President Georges Pompidou, who fired Jacques Chaban-Delmas earlier (AP) Fischer Asks Pardon; Match May Be Put Off Tanaka Chosen Japan Premier Features 1 France Gets $150-Million Boeing-Peking Sale Approved New Premier mandeered the aircraft. One of the gunmen shot and injured three of the 81 passengers aboard the plane during the exchange of gunfire, the airline said.

THE HIJACKERS were not identified. They had hijacked the Boeing 737 yesterday morning on a flight from Sacramento to San Francisco, demanding $800,000 cash, two parachutes and passage to Siberia via Canada and Alaska, the airline said. Kissel, PSA information officer, said an FBI agent dressed in a pilot's uniform drove to the plane to deliver the cash and parachutes. A hijacker met him at the door and was shot dead by an agent, then the second hijacker came to the door and was shot and injured, Kissel said. IN SAN DIEGO, PSA spokesman Dennis Dittman said that during the exchange of gunfire, three passengers were shot by one of the hijackers, but the extent of their injuries was not immediately known.

Three ambulances rushed to the plane, along with two large buses, to take passengers to the terminal Kissel said. The plane sat on a runway more than a mile from the San Francisco International airport terminal for more than four hours while one of the hijackers sent demands through the pilot, Capt. Dennis Waller of San Diego. WALLER SAID the men demanded flight to Siberia via Canada and Alaska, Kissel said. The pilot himself requested weather maps and flight maps for Siberia.

Kissel said PSA was flying a larger Boeing 727 from San Diego in case the gunmen wanted a plane with a rear exit for a parachute jump escape. He explained the 737 has side exits which would most likely suck a jumper into the tail secton and kill him. "We'll give them everything From Tribune Wires REYKJAVIK, Iceland (A Bobby Fischer apologized. He. told Boris Spassky and the Soviet people yesterday he was sorry if he insulted them by disrupting the world chess championship.

The president of the International Chess Federation admitted he was in the wrong, too, and said he would ask for a one week postponement. DR. MAX EUWE announced he would ask for an- Please See Page 14, Col. 1 TOKYO (UPI) Newly-elected Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka said yes-t a his government's foreign policy would be based on maintaining strong relations with the United States. Tanaka, who was minister of international trade and industry in the cabinet of outgoing Premier Eisaku Sato, spoke at a news conference in his new capacity as president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.

Armed Forces 20-E Astrology 2-IV Business 3-B Classified 7-20-C Comics Crossword 2-IV Deaths 7-IV Editorials 20-A Financial 3-7-B Fishing 6-C Goren on Bridge 2-IV Graham 6-1 Landers 3-IV Morning After 1-C Ellen Peck 22-A Sylvia Porter 17-A Sports 1-6-C Television 4-IV Theaters 5-1V Van Dellen 4-IV Wishing Well 4-IV Women 3-IV administration. Its composition is expected to be announced today or tomorrow. THE CABINET change came 10 days after France's two main leftwing forces the Communists and the Socialists formed an electoral partnership and drew up a common program in preparation for the voting. The Communist-Socialist alliance raised the possibility of Please See Page 8, Col. 1 From Tribune Wires PARIS President Georges Pompidou yesterday fired Jacques Chaban-Delmas, his premier for three years, after a series of scandals rocked the unity of the Gaullist party.

With legislative elections due before next March, Pompidou then appointed hard-line Gaullist Pierre Messmer, 56, to form a new government likely to include many of the leading figures of the outgoing From Tribune Wires WASHINGTON The government gave the Boeing Co. permission yesterday to sell $150 million worth of Boeing 707 commercial jets and spare parts to the People's Republic of China. Negotiations on the proposed sale between representatives of the People's Republic and the Boeing Company continue in Peking, but release of the export license clears any barrier within the U.S. government. A company spokesman said from Boeing headquarters in Seattle he was optimistic the deal would go through.

IF IT DOES, he said it would be a significant order for Boeing. In May, Boeing said the sale of between three and six of the jets was under discus-Please see Page 8, Col. 3 THE PARTY elected him president at its convention yesterday and he will be formally installed as the new prime minister when parliament convenes today. relations are like air and water," said Tanaka. "If we don't have air and water we would die.

Our foreign policy must be based on the maintenance of strong relations between Japan and the United States." Tanaka, 54, also said that his administration would try to open talks to improve relations with China. Tanaka won the party leadership in a showdown vote with Takeo Fukuda, foreign minister and the personal choice of Sato. HIS CONFIRMATION in parliament was considered only a formality since the Liberal-Democrats control both houses. The 71-year-old Sato announced his resignation June 17, touching off a four-way power struggle in the party. Tanaka defeated Fukuda 282 to 190 in the showdown vote on the second ballot at the LDP convention.

None of the four candidates got a majority on the first ballot, necessitating the run- S. Viets Gain In Quang Tri Mothers Tell Probers Of Schoolboy Drug Use From Tribune Wires SAIGON South Vietnamese troops continued to close in yesterday on the heart of Quang Tri City. Still making slow but steady gains, Saigon's drive to retake the country's northernmost province entered its second week. Reports conflicted on how close the South Vietnamese troops were to the center of the provincial capital and how many of them were there, but it was clear they were massing on the city's edge, probing its defenses. SOME MILITARY sources here said they thought the Please See Page 9, Col.

8 syndicate along with two other deaths connected with his case. "MICHAEL DIED of an overdose of pure, uncut heroin and two boys dumped his body in the Mt. Sinai Hospital parking lot by the bay," Mrs. Fletcher said. Only three months before, she said, Please See Page 14, Col.

3 MIAMI' UPI Three mothers detailed for a house committee on drug abuse yesterday how the use of marijuana obtained at school put their children on the road to hard drugs and death. One housewife, Mrs. Shirley Fletcher, suggested the death of her 21-year-old son Michael in 1971 was ordered by a crime Today's Chuckle It is almost too late to elect a President who was born in a log cabin, but perhaps In the future we may elect a President who was born in a mobile home. Please See Page 8, Col. 3 Please See Page 10, Col.

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