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Austin American-Statesman from Austin, Texas • 1

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Austin, Texas
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utrfm Aniaitati-i fafesman Read by thp Decision-Makers of Texas Austin, Texosl, Tuesdoy, July 4, 1972 Vol 47 -No 63 56 Poges 10 Cents HOME EDITION iighway Blocked uilding 1 Associated Press Adopting a Senate plan to block construction of a 11-story the purpose of racial balance million by voting $7.7 million conferees went along with Sen- acnaie-nouse negaUators put continue financing state meat Texas Highway building in unless required to do so by a for a new food stamp program ators in deleting nearly $200,000 in wit tne finishing touches late, inspection procedures at a cost downtown Austin bv instructing court order or bv statutes ai- for the needv. tlie same amount from rat control funds and ai i a luinpiuiiiise or $4 3 million tor the state the Iexas Parks and Wildlife ther state or federal. that the House approved. Sena- plying the money, instead, to iie-new tae billion state next business vear HpnarlmiTit to lmv Ihp lunrl fr.r: After tho rirl.r mmmwl inn huH vdtnrl fur $1(14 million elimination of nrprtatnrt budget. Appropriating to $1.5 million and turn it into a Sen.

A. R. Schwartz of Culvers- in their version of the bill. "There has been a good deal In a nnai hectic conference start a Drug Dependent Youth state park. ton said he had learned there i The deletion will have the ef- of looking at this from a com a final session, attended by Lt.

Cov. Project at the Vernon State A busing rider added by the would be problems getting the feet of keeping the food stamp itry standpoint since the Ho'nc ben Barnes and Speaker Ray- School, instead of the Ji 03 mil- House Saturday night prohibits compromise bill through the program from taking effect injshuffled the funds Saturday i-ora i nee. the five senators lion first proposed bv the the Teas Education Agency House without the rider arrJ all 254 counties in the coming1 night, and the predator prob and five representatives House. from spending appropriated suggested that it be restored. fiscal vear.

lent has gotten worse. We need 4 CJL Agreed to the House plan to; funds to bus school children forj The conferees saved 2L7 Except for Caldwell, House! (See BUDGET, Page 8) McGovern's Protest Left Up to Demos WASHINGTON (AP) A was in his home slate at Ken reached agreement by: Letters Purported Hijacker's P.v ROBERT 1.. CAMPBELL WASHINGTON (AP) Mitiwar 2 roup has released open letters to President Nixon nd to "peace and justice lov-ing people, in the world' allegedly from a young Vietnamese man killed in white at. X-MM I lijA U.S. District Court Monday That left the Democratic po fir -V I I litical stage to the court case and the continuing Credentials Committee proceedings in I tempting to hijack a jetliner 'tig fused to enter the dispute over the alloting of California delegates to the Democratic National Convention.

While the candidates relaxed, forces of George McGovcrn: asked George L. Hart Jr. Washington. The credentials panel still was plowing through a record from Manila to Hanoi. The hijacker, tentatively identified as Nguyen Thai Binh, a former fisheries student at be "University of Washington in the more than liOjarray of challenges to the seat stripped from the ing of delegates at the Demo to restore delegates Seattle, was overcome bv South Dakota senator by the cratic National Convention Credentials Com- which opens at Miami Beach Democratic July 10.

mittee. Hart declined lo act, saying the question of whether the state's winner-take-all primary rWf bim 9 -V was fair and equitable is matter to be decided by the North Viels Probe Hue Defenses partv convention, not by the! courts. He said the judiciary' should intervene in party conflicts only when thev involve a clear constitutional principle. pilot of the jetliner and shot to death by an armed passenger Sunday. According to the Indochina Resource Center, Thai Binh is the same person who allcgcdlv sent the letters to the center for distribution.

The typewritten letters state the writer iv "going home take part in the resistance against the I aggression, to confirm the justness of our cause, lo dedicate to the freedom fighters of Vietnam, living and dead. Penciled in on one letter is the direct PanAm. Ml to Hanoi." The San Fran-! cisco-to-Saion flight involved; MAN KILLKn IN HIJACK ATTEMPT PREVIOUSLY PROTESTED (WAR Nguyen Thai Binh. seen here in Seattle, wrote the poster in blood Irish Ended Peacefully By British Show of Force In a parallel and similar nil-; inK delivered at the same SAIGON (AP) North Virt i I i-iiiii Hart refused to upset the Cre-jnitme5R troP" continued to dential Committee's action in sh11 Hue an( the unseating Chicago Mavor Rich-Ity's northwestern defenses on ard Daley and. 58 other Illinois! Monday as South Vietnamese rpnicncle Aonlcnflers, marines ana paratroopers under way rich! in the F'leirf.

Miss curnelv bv Richard BELFAST t.P) i Seweruluurs, wih Ihe. Army said: "We will fiiht the rtcicfates tn the convention. contest, which gets Tuesday nt 7:30 p.m. very same Sportsm-irT Cillian Conoley is the testant. (Staff Photo Creed) pressed North toward the ene GAME CALLED It's baseball" weather in Taylor on the eve of July Fourth, and in Sportsman's Field sits Bobby Bhagg, 8, all ready to play.

But what does he find? Why, the bitf pirls are walking and primping for the Miss Williamson County my-held city of Quan? Tri itnousana ciun-wewms l'mes-'inica vnmm yarns oi acn army we nave nigiu: anticipation of appeals in tant militants bent on scaling Other, it threatened to develop and all day if necessary. jooth cases, Hart told the con-j off one of their Belfast strong- into a major battle. Britain rushed mon- troopsj tending lawyers before giving holds backed down Monday The immediate issue was the into the area until an estimated rulings that the U.S. court! Associated Press correspond ent Holgcr Jensen reported! in the hijacking was Pan American's flight No. 841.

A spokesman at the Resource Center aK) the letters, dated 1. were received Monday from the northern front that night before a massive display determination of Protestant 600 men were in position, with! of Appeals would hear argu- of British military muscle. militants to build a steel barri- reserves in ments in the cases on Tuesday! enemy forces appeared to be falling back from the govern-j The Protestants barricaded Ainsworth Avenue The Protestants also failed in 'despite the Independence Day morning with instructions to West Belfast and extend the support. IDA leaders said The losing attornevs injmcnt counteroftensive and were; M-L- nff ihi-i'u nthpr parliiT in in Pentagon Refuses Comment On Rain-Making Charges "ro-go" areas they have been twecn B.fHKl and 8, W0 men; each ease told newsmen hey attempting to flee in small steadily building in the capital, a ed into surroiindingwill appeal. groups lo avoid intensive allied! The army denied permission streets, armed with The South Dakota senator; air strikes.

neip in punnsning inein. spokesman said the envelopc'the da-v' nut lhe riraw they arrived in was postmarked tne line when llle i army S. Postal ServK e-Hi." a advanced on the fourth, jistal confirmed' Gen. Rolert Ford, command-thp "Hi" meant Hawaii, er of British forces in Northern hijacker reportedly Ireland, said, "We have now boarded the plane at Honolulu. back from the precip- on the grounds the harrier shields, rocks anything they.

was spending the holiday week-j North Vietnamese artil-, would cut off a Roman Catholic ciuld lay their hands on. end at his farm on the Eastern llcrymen blasted Hue for thej WASHINGTON (AP) The.ence magazine which said the military has been involved in enclave of aU'iut 20 families. At one point, women of the! Shore of Maryland. Sen. Hubert! second straight day and morcjp I a Monday refused-rumors and speculation operations since 1980 to An officer of the DA the ncighlKirhood formed a line be- H.

Humphrey flew home for the than 30 122mm artillery shells again to say if the United ing over the alleged efforts to "I- clear targets in North Vietnam. Protestant answer lo the Catho- tween the two forces lo keep holiday at Waverly, Minn. Sen. I crashed into the former impe-iStales has tampered with the ter the weather in Indochina 'The senator also Mid 'he ranks when Protestant The letters were signed "Viet i'c' Edmund S. 1 i chased lris.li Republican, them apart.

Muskie of Maine, rial capital. A military spokes-: man said one boy was wounded weather in Indochina in an ef-has alarmed civilian Scientists I'mted States has used cbem-fort to hamper North Vietnam-jaml -weather experts who are icals to prixluce ram ese military operations. tryinj! to promote international washed out part of the Ho spokesman research. Minn trail, impeding infiltration the armed with cudgels and iron lie- bars gave way in the tense con-said frontation. has The British military display Thai-Binh." Asked about fliscrepancy in names, a source Center siiokesnian Nguyen Thai Binh recently Sen.

Claibourne pell. D-l! I and causing floods resulting, in W. Krcidbeim said the U.S. has; Nor th. South Korea Report Secret Rcimifi.

cation Talks never tried to cause rain over sa' last month be believes the thousands deaths. and four houses were damaged in the daylight attacks. At least 101 shells have hit the city during the two-day barrage. Most were directed at the Citadel, which serves as the military command post for the been using the name "Viet," before irregulars of the Ulster which, the spokesman Defense Association was one of means peace." the strongest in some time in The spokesman described the the violence-torn six counties of center as an "independently Northern Ireland. Several hun-funded research and informa- dred fully armed soldiers were North Vietnam.

But when; asked if rain-making activities' have been attempted in South; North and technically at war despite ffie tions help resolve the issue. northern region. Twelve per- 'Vietnam, Laos or Cambodia, he! Cliess Match 'Go' As Pot Sweetened SKOCT, (AP) According to the 'sow were reported killed in the replied: "I can't enlarge on: lion organization on Indochina "involved, supported by armored mn isorea nave neiu um-ievui dniinuit. am, nw that." Kor the oast vear. there have meetings aimed at peaceful ever, that he believed Sooth a "South-North coordinating -sunaay aiwcn, we si.cn-reunification of the wnin.sula Korea's allies had been told of committee" chaired bv Lee and of ci'y since tne which sends antiwar news- troop carriers, armored cars letters to congressmen, journal- jeeps and heavy trucks.

offensive Uegan March 30. mi, ih ram.nni-. nrviiuuit if.anrt lAPi match turned down Kischefs The confrontation lasted istv and teachers. split by World War II and rav- the impending joint announce- Kim Yong-joo, the North's nc-aged by the. Korean War five nient.

gotiator, will lie formed to car- Knemy gunners pounded ajjnK. The latest, appeared Mon-j Bobby Fischer accepted a' bid for a tut of the gate base camp Monday on the New York Times London banker's offer of a receipts in addition to the prV vears later, the two govern-: jn Washington, Slate DenaVt- '-Y uie negotiations. Mm menlv announced jointly Tues- nienl day. p.ray press officer Charles W. ls director of the Organization.

northwestern approacn to Mue which qiioteil unnamed govern-; $130,000 richer prize pot for the money previously ajira on called the agreement Guidance Department of 'with about 500 rounds of 130mm mcnt sources as saying the Air! 1 championship chess' Marshall quoted Fischer Agreements were reached at "most encouraging." He said North Korea and younger artillery and mortar fire, amorce has seeded clouds to in-j match and flew out of New'sayinR of Slaters proposal: "I meeting in Seoul and PvonR- the United States had no role in brother of Premier Kim II- communique said. They follow Urease and control rainfall York on Monday night toward ijjotta accept it. It's a stu- ci with ground attack that throuijhOul Southeast Asia. this confrontation with Soviet ti-ipcndous offer. He said Fischer gesture "incred- yang to refrain from slanderous the negotiations, but that die sung, statements or armed nrovoca- South Korean government kept 'ee- of repulsed with five North! The purpose, the Times said.itleholder Boris Spassky.

considered the The purpose, the Times said'tleholder Boris Spassky. director central Korea's intelligence Vietnamese killed and gnvrm-was to hinder the movement of pau Marshall, a lawyer in and enerous and brave tion and to install a telephone the Nixon administration in- New York for Fischer, said thej Sater on(Jnn ne rP. 29-yearold American challens- confirmation of fis er had accepted banker by teleplmtie D. Slater's offer of the extra an(, hild hot line between the two capi- formed. agency, said he first proposed a ment losses of one dead and porth Vietnamese troops and tals "in order to prevent the The agreement pledged that bilateral political meeting with four wounded.

jsupplies. spoil enemy attacks 'outbreak of unexpected hostil- reunification would Vie Korea in March through Airborne units already heavy ruins, and to alter ities." the announcement said. Haled by Koreans, with no ait- an unspecified channel and beyond the newest the rain patterns over Laos and CENTRAL TEXAS: Considerable late niht and morning cloudiness with partly cloudy skies and warm weather expected through Wednesdav. There is a slight, chance of showers Tuesday afternoon and eveninq with the probability of measurable precipitation 20 per cent Tuesday afternoon and niht. Temperature? Tuesday will range from the upper 70'.

to the mid 90' s. Winds will bo southerly fit 6 to Ifi inph. Sec more weather data on page 27. SUTsRISE: 6:34 a.m. SUNSET: 8:36 p.m.

side interference. North Korea Pyongyang agreement. tbridge, four miles southeast of i.Morth Vietnam to aid U.S.prue money and would be n.pr planned tf, ny to Ileykjavik. Charges of war preparations has insisted on ttiat le said he made tne proposal the provincial capital, but it isHximliing strike nas insisted on iciai uie provincial capiwi, uui is'oumiiui'4 siriives. in l.nth li I i alWaV'S directinps always ncj njrivi u) uic must arrive in Pinl, repeatedly rejecting (J.S.,le"" tne Scoul sovernment needed for the rcsupply of ad The Tunes story followed anjdcadline.

t.arlier Monday, the kjavjk bj. no)n Tucsday7 a pi across the 38th estions that the United jVa- (ee kukm, rage -vanning government lorccs. anicic in tne June issue oi mm- sponsor iuk muhiijuuimiip recently, raising the specter of CDT or forfeit his chance 'at 73 3 Abortion Vote Delay Intentional? Jit I 5, Spassky arid the title. The first game is to begin at 5 p.m. 'Tuesday CDT postponed from the same time Sunday at Fischer's request.

The Russians, from Spasscy here in Iceland to the Soviel i Chess Federation in Moscow, protested the fact that Mie renewed hostilities. The three-vear conflict that began in 1950 cost two million lives. Of the dead, 51.246 were Americans. The South Korean negotiator, Lee Hu-rak. told a news conference at which he issued the announcement: "This is only the beginning now enter a confrontation with dialogue.

Good News 32 H.loise 32 Horoscope 39 Joyce llaber 11 WASIIINGTOX Wanjen Burger b'y breaking a long tradition of his office as Chief Justice helped to prevent the Supreme Coort from deciding two abortion cases this term and mav mM- 5 while we had a confrontation last-minute struggle within the court to strike down the anti-abortion ks of two states before the term expired last Thursday, according to informed sources. Because of the delay, the court will decide the abortion issue with nine members instead of the seven justices who would have decided the This is the story reliable sources told about the internal court struggle over the abortion cases: Traditionally the Chief Justice has assigned the job of writing the opinion of the court only hen he voted with the majority in a case. When he was not in the majority, Ihe Chief Justice traditionally deferred to the senior Burger backed down. After the regular Friday conference following argument Dec. 1.1 on two cases challenging state anti-abortion laws Burger, who voted with the minority in the conference, assigned the court's opinion lo Harry A.

Blackniun. It may be, according to (See SUPRF.MK. Page 8) justice on the majority side, who assigned the opinion. Hurger occasionally has tried to assign the opinion when he has been in the minority. In a number of instances in the past senior justices voting with the majority for example, the late Hugo L.

Black and the late John Marshall Harlan ohjw'ted to the practice, and Amusements 43 Ann Landers 3 At Wit's End 32 Bridge Classified -) Comics 28 Crossword Puzzle 28 Dear Abby Deaths 27 Dollars and Sense IS 'orlal 4 41 without dialogue in the past." Public Records 23 i.ae said South Korea did not lmrts 33-36 consult its allies including the. World Chess Federation FIDE granted a postponement of Fischer's appearance. When Slater offered to put tip his own money as an extra Inducement to the American grandmaster, he stated: caused an ultimate shift in Uie IV -Radio 38 United States and Japan prior court's position on aliortion. Hralhrr 27 to the meetings with North In the process Burner V.Hir f.mwt Hralth 17 Korea. Vith which it still Is tirpc itiitated me ViH (See CHKSS, Page 6) cases this term.

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Pages Available:
2,714,819
Years Available:
1871-2018