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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 2

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The Baltimore Suni
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Baltimore, Maryland
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A 2 THE SUN, Wednesday, July 12, 1972 posiue paid at Battiiriore. Md. f- 'Vs. Peron rejects invitation home Bj BOBERI A. EKLANDSOH Rio it Janeiro Bureau of The Sun Rio de Janeiro The battle of alone, will be the presidential News capsule Tho heads for Paris via Peking By JOHN' E.

WOODRULL Hong Kong Bureau of The fun Hong Kong Le Due Tho, the top-level "adviser" who holds 'candidate of the Justicialist I II 4 1 I i i I I In the nation Senator George McGovern clinched the Democratic presidential nomination and turned his attention to selecting a vice presidential candidate with a list that includes Senator Edward M. Kennedy and Leonard Woodcock, president of the United Auto Workers Page Al Gov. George Wallace made an appearance at the national convention to argue for his anti-busing platform Page Al The space agency disclosed that the Apollo 16 astronauts secretly carried 400 souvenir stamped envelopes to the moon and that they would have been sold for $600,000 or more. Al Manufacturers' inventories, one of the soft spots In the economy, are expected to increase sharply in the July-September quarter, a Department of Commerce survey released yesterday shows Page C9 3 words between Buenos Aires and Madrid continued ester day as Gen. Juan D.

Peron rejected, through an intermediary, President Alejandro A. Lanusse's challenge to return to Argentina by August 25 if he is to be a serious presidential candidate. After conferring with Gen eral Peron in Madrid, Rodolfo Galimbert, Peronist youth del egate on the national board of the Justicialist movement, de clared: "Peron will return to Argentina only after the move ment has won power through the elections. Mr. Galimbert said the ex dictator would not return be fore the August date for lack of security.

"If he returns, the military government will try to kill him, he said. March 25 is the date scheduled for the first general elec tions since the armed forces seized power in June, 1966. General Peron was overthrown in 1955 after a 10-year dictator ship. He has spent most of the period since then in exile in Madrid. Meanwhile, in Buenos Aires, Dr.

Hector Campora, General Peron personal representa tive, declared General La nusse's demand "an imposition and a caprice, and said there is no basis for it in law or the constitution. Dr. Campora said General Peron would return before or after August 25 "as he judges it convenient, and he, and he William P. Rogers, Secretary of State, leaves the Vatican after talks with Pope Paul VI concerning the pontiff's efforts on behalf of American prisoners of war. the real power on the Commu- nits peace-talks team, arrived in Peking yesterday on his way to the Paris negotiations.

Mr. Tho has been present in Paris for almost every significant development in the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong positions at the peace talks, and his trip there is the first clear sign that the Vietnamese Com munists plan to be in position to handle any serious negotia tions that develop when the talks resume tomorrow. Schumann ends trip But Maurice Schumann, the French foreign minister, cau tioned today at the end of five-day trip to Peking that he found scant sign without China that top officials there expect tne fans talks to end the war any time soon. Mr. Schumann had talks with China Communist party chairman, Mao Tse-tung something of a diplomatic coup in that the chairman usually sees only heads of state and with the premier, Chou En-lai, as well as other top Chinese leaders during his trip.

Wire service reports reaching here quoted Mr. Schumann as telling correspondents at Shanghai, where he left China to return to Paris yesterday, that he found no signs of optimism among the Chinese officials regarding the Paris talks. Mr. Tho is officially listed as an adviser to the North Viet namese delegation at the Paris talks, but he is the only member of the all-powerful Hanoi Politburo assigned to the talks and has shown repeatedly that he is the only member with real negotiating authority. The McGovern forces played a careful strategy in the credentials fight to avoid a test of the chairman's favorable rulings Many Illinois politicians WALLACE IN MIAMI i (- i i 1 jg? fi believe that Mayor Richard Daley will support the McGovern ticket A6 Senator Edward M.

Kennedy appeared to be the top choice for the McGovern vice presidential candidate but there was considerable doubt he would accept A8 Several thousand demonstrators -marched on the Convention Hall, but the police narrowly averted violence. A9 Senator Edmund S. Muskie showed himself to be indecisive to the end in his quest for the Presidency; Senator Hubert H. Humphrey bowed out of what was his last race for the White House A8 Pope lias sought of prisoners, Rogers 1 movement" In the same speech Friday in which he challenged General Peron to return. President Lanusse announced two more actions that could have more immediate consequences in Argentina: a government freeze on the bank accounts of the huge General Labor Confederation, General Peron's political base, and withdrawal of its recognition as a public entity.

The federation represents 2V4 million to 3 million organized workers, and they can paralyze the country almost at will through general strikes. They have demonstrated this power before, although General Peron has been holding labor on a short leash in recent months. The Lanusse government is attempting to force General Peron to renounce his presidential candidacy because the armed forces will not permit his return to Argentina under any circumstances. As the political tension in creases, the possibility also grows that conservative mil itary and business factions will join together to try to over throw General Lanusse and cancel the elections. Although Peronists do not represent a majority, they have at least a plurality, and in an open election they proba bly could win a large share of the offices available and the presidency, if General Peron is allowed to run freely.

rare miscalculation by the American genius. Perhaps he had thought of a resource by 32 P-R6, when the bishop might escape. But Mr. Spassky could then continue 33, K-Kt4, B-Kt8; 34, KxP, BxP; 35, B-Q2, and the black bishop is still lost. In the remaining moves of the session, Mr.

Fischer put up all the resistance possible. It remains to be seen whether he can recover from the one error. Spassky, Fischer adjourn championship chess match In the world The first game in the world chess championship between the titleholder, Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union, and Bobby Fischer of the U.S., was adjourned after 40 moves with the Russian in the stronger position Page Al Cuba has become the first nation in the Western Hemisphere to be a member of Comecon, the Soviet bloc's economic counterpart to the European Common Market Page Al Several hundred South Vietnamese marines were dropped behind North Vietnamese lines north of Quang Tri city, and ground fire was so heavy that it knocked down three American helicopters that flew them in Page Al The battle of words- between Buenos Aires and Madrid continued as Juan Peron, Argentina's former dictator, rejected, through an intermediary, President Alejandro Lanusse's challenge to return to the country by August 25 if he is to be a serious presidential candidate Page A2 Viet marines dropped behind Red lines: 3 conters downed lVI for an hour In a private audience. the eve of the resumption 0f the Paris peace talks, the Pope told Mr. Rogers he hoped the negotiations would lead to a "realistic and final" agree ment "according to the just wishes of all the Vietnamese people." The Pope has often de nounced the Vietnam war, but latelv has spoken out more forcefully on what he calls an "intolerable and bloody war.

Mr. Rogers said the Vatican attempted directly or mdi' rectly to try to arrange an "each citizen is a fighter, each house a fortress." At An Loc, far to the south, South Vietnamese 5th Division troops and rangers who had defended the city were pulled out of the ruined provincial capital in a massive airlift as the siege went through its 96th day. The forces in the town 60 miles north of Saigon were replaced by the South Vietnamese 18th Division and fresh rangers carried in by the American and South Vietnamese helicopters. Brig. Gen.

Le Van Hung, commander of the 5th Division who had been in An Loc almost since the start of the siege, flew out with his troops. In the air war, the U.S. command reported that American jets flew 188 strikes against North Vietnam Monday, a sharp drop from the previous several days. Bad weather was cited as the rea- son for the decline. Play-by-play Le Due Tho, Hanoi's senior politburo member, was on his way to Paris for the resumption of the Vietnam peace talks A2 William P.

Rogers, the Secretary of State, said that the Vatican has tried to obtain the release of U.S. prisoners of war in North but "'so far to no avail." Hanoi accused the U.S. of continuing bombing raids on dikes in North Vietnam in a bid to cause floods. A2 Rifle taken in Quang Tri In the city liSililfi release says exchange of prisoners of war; to obtain a report from the North Vietnamese about the missing; to assure the delivery of more mail to the prisoners, and to assure that the North Vietnamese treat the prisoners in a humanitarian way accord ing to the provisions of the Geneva convention. The Vatican communique, one of the longest ever issued after a panel audience with a government official said: "Mr.

Rogers stated the continuing desire of the United States for a prompt, negotiated solution to the Vietnam conflict and thanked the Holy Father for his tireless efforts on behalf of peace in that region and the whole world." At his news conference, Mr. Rogers said he was generally hopeful that the reopening of the peace talks might bring some movement by the North Vietnamese toward a settle ment of the war. He gave these reasons: Climate for peace 1. The North Vietnamese of fensive has proved unsuccess ful. 2.

The U.S. bombing of the North has been "unusually effective." 3. President Nixon's trips to Moscow and Peking have produced a better climate for peace in the world. 4. The continuation of the war serves "nobody's inter est." Rome was Mr.

Rogers's last stop on a tour of nine nations. The secretary said several government leaders on his tour had suggested that the United States impose a political settlement on the South Vietnamese. Mr. Rogers said, however, "We prefer to have those solutions worked out by the Viet namese themselves." shattered Sunday. As a result, security forces were negotiating last minute changes in route with the Orange lodges.

And British Cabi net ministers met last night in London to approve contingency plans. Troops arriving on the Belfast docks brought the total in the province to about 17,500. They will be supplemented by 8,000 reservists of the Ulster Defense Regiment and 6,000 police and police reservists. July 12 is always a day of tension and scattered minor violence, though it has not in recent years triggered the major outbreaks that are al ways feared. The trains for Dublin yester day were packed with Catholic women and children getting out of Northern Ireland as they traditionally do on this day.

The Catholic morning paper announced for the first time in its history that it would not publish today. It gave no rea son, but distribution difficulties and staff fears of being out last night were believed re sponsible. Ferries from Scotland depos ited hundreds of Scottish Or angemen planning to man Protestant barricades in sup port of the Ulster Defense As- ociation, which is not part of the Orange parade but is standing by in defensive and counterattack posture. About 22,000 Orangemen with 90 bands will march 6 miles through Belfast to a new field purchased by the Orange order HAWAII From 379 1 WK. PKG.

From BALTIMORE longer Stoyi Avoilobi. CALL VE. 7-3400 Biltimori Travtt Ct 21 5 W. SwKogi St Rome Uft William P. Rog ers, Secretary of Mate, said yesterday that the Vatican has inea to oDiain me release oi u.o.

prisoners or war in iorin Vietnam but "so far to no avail." There have been hints that the Vatican has initiated con tacts on behalf of the Ameri can prisoners, but this was believed the first time an American official has drawn a clear picture of the Holy See's efforts. Mr. Rogers spoke at a news conference in Rome shortly after meeting with Pope Paul JL served as the South Vietnam- ese 3d Infantry Division head quarters before the division was routed by the North Vietnamese, who took Quang Tri on Mayl. The latest assault tightened the South Vietnamese grip around Quang Tri city. Marines are now pressing on the northern and eastern outskirts and airborne forces are dug in on the southeastern and southern edges.

The North Vietnamese remain entrenched in the city center despite heavy American bombing, and the paratroopers' efforts to penetrate the city have been stalled for five days. The Viet Cong's liberation radio announced the election of a 13-member people's revolutionary committee for Quang Tri province to be headed by Le Sang, identified as a revolutionary since 1930. The committee called for everyone to adopt the slogan Soldiers Bj DANIEL BERGER Sun Staff Correspondent Belfast Bonfires, barricades and massive security measures last night inaugurated today's traditional Battle of the Boyne celebrations by Ulster ProteS' tants. Blazes fueled by old furniture and rubber tires soared above Sandy Row and the Shankhill and dozens of other Protestant strongholds. Excited children fed the flames and roasted potatoes while women danced and sang the old sectarian songs and men fueled themselves on whisky in the narrow bunting- strewn streets.

These time-honored rites, culminating in today's Glorious Twelfth parade in Belfast and several other towns, commemorates the defeat of the Catholic Army of the deposed King James II by the forces of the Protestant King William III in 1690 at a site on the Boyne Viet emperor Paris (Reuter) The former Vietnamese emperor, Bao Dai, appealed yesterday to the Viet namese people to join in national reconciliation and help rebuild Vietnam. In one of his rare public statements since he was deposed in 1955, the former emperor said: "The time has come to put an end to the fratricidal war and enable our people to tend to their wounds and sufferings and to recover at last peace and concord." The former emperor, the last of the crowned monarchs of Vietnam, now living in exile in France, also sent his appeal to CHESS, from Al pionship chess match with Bobby Fischer. After 40 moves and five hours of play, Mr. Spassky is a bishop ahead. The American challenger has five pawns to Mr.

Spassky's three and his king is better placed. This may prove to be sufficient compensation. Actually, for the first 28 moves, the match was one of the dullest championship contests on record. For the first nine moves, the game was identical to one played in 1951 between Petro-sian and Tolush of the Soviet Union. Two moves later, the queens were exchanged, and the pawn formation was left in exact balance.

More pieces soon went off the board, including all the rooks by the 23d move At that point, it seemed only a question of time before one of the players would propose draw and the other would ac cept. The chance of error was not worthy of consideration with players of this stature. But it happened. On his 29th turn, Mr. Fischer took a pawn that was unprotected.

Both players knew that the bishop which captured the pawn could be trapped. What had Mr. Fischer seen? It must be put down to holiday in a Protestant suburb that is thought to be more immune to snipers than the former field An equal number will march in a smaller parade. The one causing greatest worry is in Portadown, 25 miles southwest of here, where the route goes down a Catholic street and both the Ulster De fense Association and the IRA have issued threats. kacn ceieDration involves a web of minor parades to and from the assembly areas for the main march.

It is usually on the departures of the small groups that scattered stonings by Catholics occur. The first soldier slain since the resumption of fighting was shot yesterday by a sniper in Londdliderry, where two big bombs wrecked many shops. MA KF. your diamond QlO mounting gird for Ulster Reykjavik (Reuter) JVillnwin. are the orjenlnr mmu in t.h fir.

match between Borla Sniuuirv (white) and Bobbv Ptur.hur hi-n in the WOrld CheM ChamnlnniHIr. here: White Black Whit. Black I.P-Q4 Kt-KB3 31.K-B1 K-Bl P-B4 P-K3 22.K-K2 Kt-K5 3.Kt-KB3 P-Q4 23. R-QB1 RxR 1. B-Kt5 24.

BxR P-B3 5. P-K3 6. B-Q3 25. Kt-RS Kt-Q3 P-B4 26. K-Q3 B-Ql Kt-B3 27.

Kt-B4 B-B2 B-R4 28. KtxKt BxKt QPXP 29. P-Kt5 BxP B-Kt3 30. P-Kt3 P-KR4 7. 8.

P-QR3 9. Kt-K2 10. BxP 11. PxP QxQ 31. K-K2 P-R5 K-K2 PxP lz.itxy BxP 32.

K-B3 13. P-QKt4 B-K2 33. K-Kt2 14. B-Kt2 B-Q2 34. PxP 15.

QR-B1 KR-Q1 35. KxB 16. Kt(K2)-Q4 36.P-R4 KtxKt 37. B-R3 17. KtxKt B-R5 38.

B-B5 18. B-Kt3 BxB 39. P-Kt 19. KtxB RxR ch 40. K-R4 20.

RxR R-QB1 Game adjourned. BxP K-Q3 K-Q4 K-K5 P-R3 P-B4 P-B5 Each sauare on a. r.hiuuhnitrrf la designated according to the file (tne vertical row) and the rank (the horizontal row) on which it lta. Each file la given the Initial of the piece originally posted on It King: queen; bishop; Kt, knight; rook), and the ranks ara numbered 1 to 8 away from the player. Each square thua has a dual designation one for white moves and one for black.

squares In the blshoo. knlehfc and rook flies also are identified as being on the queen's aide or the king's side of the board (as KB3, the third square away from the player In the king's bishop file), but the K-side and Q-slde Indication of Is omitted when no ambiguity would result. A move is written In the form Q4," the Initial of the movlnz piece followed by the designation of the square to which it is moved. In the example, a pawn moves to the square Q4. The symbol Indicates a ean- ture.

as In "RxQ." where a rook captures the queen, or "QPxQBP." where the pawn In the queen file captures the pawn In the queen's bishop file. Other symbols used are where the king castles on the king's side; and where tne king castles on the nueen'a side. ald-fnxhionpd new again! Your precious diamond looks larger in a Star-Glo mounting. r. 111 Fii Pf 9 11 13 0 WAR, from Al aboard the third were wounded, the command reported.

In a report delayed by search and rescue operations, the U.S. command disclosed that a Marine A-6 fighter- bomber was shot down Friday 33 miles west-southwest of Quang Tri in the Khe Sanh area near the Laotian border. The two crewmen were listed as missing. Radio Hanoi said in an earlier broadcast that one of them was captured. ihe area the marines as saulted is about Vk miles northwest of Quang Tri, just across the Thach Han River from the Quang Tri combat base.

The base, is a former U.S. Army installation that Hanoi says U.S. bombed dikes again Hong Kong (Reuter) Hanoi accused the United States yes terday of continuing bombing raids on dikes in North Viet nam in an attempt to cause floods. lne foreign Ministry, in a statement quoted by the North Vietnamese news agency, said U.S. aircraft Monday attacked the dikes along the Thai Binh and Kinh Thay rivers in Hai Hung province.

The ministry statement claimed the U.S. "laid dozens of bombs on a portion of less than 300 meters of the dike that runs across Nam Sach district." "The bombing of almost all the dike systems in North Viet nam in the past three months have been conducted in a very wicked design to destroy or weaken dikes and, thereby, to cause floods, the ministry said. The consequences of these acts are incalculable," it added. The agency, in a separate report monitored here yester day, said U.S. planes last Mon day attacked with four demo lition and nearly 500 dart bombs" the Co Tien sea dikes in An Thuy district near Haiphong.

The bombs were said to have dug a crater 25 feet deep and 30 feet across in the surface of tne oiKe ana damaged it se verely for a stretch of 120 feet. "Hundreds of hectares acres! of cultivated land, therefore, are in danger of being flooded by seawater now that the season of storms has already set in," the agency said. The ministry statement was further quoted as saying that the U.S. claims that it had never singled out dikes for targets "cannot cover the indisputable crimes they have committed in North Vietnam." Sporadic violence continued in Northern Ireland as the British province braced for more unrest with the big Protestant parades that are scheduled today A2 Patriarch Athenagoras was buried at a funeral in Istanbul, Turkey, attended by Protestant and Catholic lead ers, but a dispute broke out between Greece and Turkey over the method of electing his successor A4 North Korea is making the announcement of its reunification talks with South Korea the occasion for a new round of denunciations of the U.S. role in the south-.

An Israeli general told a military court that he is trying Kozo Okamoto, the Japanese terrorist who survived the Lod Airport massacre, how he lured the defendant into making a confession by offering to give him a revolver afterwards so that he could kill himself A5 and state Dale Anderson, Baltimore county's executive, said that he called for withdrawal of a Cable TV bill to give his staff opportunity to study the mat ter C13. EecUon Supervisors began checking a list of 13,000 signers of a petition submitted by group seeking a change in the manner of county councilmen C13. Five City Jail inmates who were tried without counsel filed pleas for release and new trials under a recent Supreme Court decision A10. The Kennedy Institute began a program to screen inner city children for signs of lead-poisoning C13. Two Baltimore Harbor industries-American Smelting and Refining Company and Allied Chemical Corporation-were indicted by a federal grand jury on more than 50 counts each of polluting the Patapsco River basin.

Page Governor Mandel has been asked by a state conservation group to study the environmental impact of a proposed development on Chincoteague Bay on Maryland's Eastern Shore Back Page Twenty-three-year-old Laurel man has been arrested and charged in a warrant with participating in the daring hijacking and $3,413 robbery of a race track bus in Baltimore last week. Police have obtained a warrant for another suspect, also a Laurel man Back Page Two Baltimore public schools were battlegrounds. In wilting heat, parents' groups gathered to fight bureaucratic regulations that they felt made little sense Back Page Thomas J. Burke, a 25-year veteran of the city's Fire Department, was named its commander by a unanimous Board of Fire Commissioners. Chief Burke is a nationally recognized expert in the field of fire Page Farmers in eight Eastern tation center in the Old Mount Shore and Southern Maryland Royal Hotel lost an attempt to counties are eligible for Farm- have the city zoning board ers Home Administration block continuation of the pro-flood-damage loans A10.

C13 River that is now in the Irish Republic. To prevent a repetition of last year's Irish Republican Army bombings along the pa rade route, British soldiers sealed off downtown Belfast completely, causing evening traffic jams on the edges. But the Provisional IRA was busy elsewhere, erecting permanent concrete and steel spike barricades in streets of Andersontown, Turf-Lodge and the Ardoyne, in hopes of creat ing Belfast's first Catholic "no-go" areas equivalent to those in Londonderry. The proposed parade became a virtual certainty last winter when the Catholic Civil Rights Association made a mockery of the previous Stormont gov ernment ban on all proces sions. But the planning last week was against the backdrop of the IRA cease-fire, which was calls for peace North Vietnam and President Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam, according to his political bureau here.

He said in part, "Like any other Vietnamese citizens, I hope with all my heart to see national reconciliation. Let us stretch our hands to each other for the survival of Vietnam." The former emperor, who succeeded his father, Emperor Kahi Dinh, on the throne of Annam, the old French protectorate, reigned for 20 years, until he was deposed by Ho Chi Minh's Communist forces in 1945. He returned to Viet nam as head of state in 1949 until French rule ended in The Harford county commissioners postponed the adoption of an ordinance overhauling the county's planning and zon ing process and again delayed hiring the county's first planning director Cll. vppuncma Ul uB ui- THOMAS J. BURKE new fire chief specially fashioned with four diamonds beneath the center stone to add new beauty and more life than everl Budget Term and J6dz- CASTIXBEHG8 HVtleM.

SA.7-2HOH Park Free at allSlrei 1955. President Ton Due Thang of.

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