Passer au contenu principal
La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
Un journal d’éditeur Extra®

The Atlanta Constitution du lieu suivant : Atlanta, Georgia • 1

Lieu:
Atlanta, Georgia
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION For 104 Years the South' Standard Newspaper P.O. Box 4689 ATLANTA, GA. 30302, MONDAY, JULY 3, 1972 VOL. 105, No. 15 62 PAGES, 4 SECTIONS TEN CENTS LONG-DISTANCE OPERATOR Ring One Up for Him Bond Say mi -lllfis 1 i You just told them there was a choice between right and wrong.

QUESTION: You're pilty as charged and you're happy about it? BOND: That's right. QUESTION: Gov. Carter and state party chairman Charles Kirbo apparently are the main ones who have criticized you for your role in the delegate controversy. Do you have any other comment about their views? BOND: I think what it amounts to is that it's like a thief caught in a hen house. When fore the Democratic Credentials Committee? BOND: I admit it.

I helped mastermind it. I was one of the challengers. But I heard Gov. Carter say I had spent the last three days in Washington, and that's not true. I spent the last three days in New York.

QUESTION: It was alleged yon actually took a poll of the committee members and helped talk them into voting the way they did on the Georgia delegation. Did you do that? BOND: Oh, yes. I lobbied with them. But I wasn't there. I did it all by telephone.

And I'm proud to admit it. It wasn't difficult. the policeman runs in and catches him with some chickens under one arm and a bag in the other, he's apt to get angry at the policeman. And I feel I'm the policeman in this instance. Gov.

Carter and Mr. Kirbo knew the procedures they used were wrong. They knew that in spite of all the improvements made in Georgia's delegate selection over the last four years that what happened in the election of these 13 at-large delegates and the four delegates and three alternates down in the First Congressional District was wrong. See QUOTE, Page 20-A State Rep. Julian Bond of Atlanta will play a big role in Sen.

George McGovern's attempt to win the Democratic presidential nomination next week at the party's convention at Miami Beach. Constitution report' er Sam Hopkins interviews the black legis- viator: about some of the political contro-' versiekjnvolved. QUESTION: How do yon respond to charges by Gov. Jimmy Carter and others that you helped mastermind the successful challenge of some of Georgia's delegates be- i DID IT ALL BY TELEPHONE Julian Bond Explains Credentials Role Passenger Kills So Viet Student Papers in 1 Big Edition For Independence Day The Atlanta Constitution and The Atlanta Journal will be combined Tuesday into one Independence Day issue with complete news coverage plus features, columns and comics of the two newspapers. Regular home delivery subscribers receive the combined Independence Day edition on Tuesday morning.

The Circulation Service Center, phone 252-4141, will be open Tuesday from 8 a.m. until noon for your convenience. Classified advertising deadline for the Tuesday combined edition is noon today. Deadline for new classified ads in the Wednesday editions is 5:30 p.m. today.

Hijacking 747 NEWS THIS MORNING July 3, 1972 GOOD MORNING! Variable cloudiness is expected across Georgia Monday with scattered afternoon or evening thundershowers, mainly over the northern half of the state. Highs should vary from the mid-80s in the north to the low 90s in the central and southern sections. Lows should be in the 60s to the low 70s in the south. Details on Page2-A. WORLD BONN President Georges Pompidou of France meets in Bonn Monday with Chancellor Willy Brandt amid signs they are close to an agreement on monetary policy.

Page 7-B. BELFAST Children find the bodies of two slain men in a cricket ground Sunday near the site of a predawn battle in which British troops were under heavy fire. A third obdy was found in another area. Page 5-A. SAN FRANCISCO A California woman is reunited with the daughter she lost in Germany 27 years ago after escaping from a Nazi prison camp.

Page 3-A. ROME Rome's tiny streets and big squares are as clogged with traffic as ever as the city's experiment with free buses ends. Page 18-A. VATICAN CITY Pope Paul VI lamented Sunday a growing conviction that peace is Impossible and that only strong-arm methods can maintain a temporary and false truce. Page 19-A.

NATION WASHINGTON Mrs. Martha Mitchell said Sunday she's happy her husband got out of politics as she had demanded but she made it clear sehe doesn't believe her troubles are over. Page 2-A. From Fress Dispatches SAIGON A South Vietnamese student, apparently an anti-war dissident whose scholarship to study in the United States had recently been canceled, was shot and killed Sunday after he attempted to hijack a Pan American flight to Hanoi. The pilot then heaved the hijacker's body to the concrete taxiway at Tan Son Nhut Airport.

The hijacker, identified as Nguyen Thai Einh, was shot five times by a passenger on the 747 jumbo jet as he struggled with the aircraft's pilot. A student named Nguyen Thai Binh at the University of Washington at Seattle was one of seven South Vietnamese students whose Agency for International Development scholarships had been cancelled on June 7. All were ordered to return to South Vietnam, and refused. All had been active in antiwar causes in the United States. Friends of the student said they believed he was the hijacker.

"I called him last week," said Nguyen Tang Huyen, another of the group. "He said he would take care of his problem himself. He said he wanted to go home." The man carried a package he claimed was a bomb in one hand and a long knife in the other. He said he intended to blow up the aircraft after it reached Hanoi in a "revenge act" for the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, the pilot said.

After landing at Saigon on a pretext of refueling, the pilot, Capt. Gene Vaughn, 53, and two passengers got the air pirate off guard, knocked the "bomb" from his hand and wrestled him to the floor. During the struggle, Vaughn rolled away See HIJACK, Page 20-A FOIL ENEMY Viet Rain Altered By U.S. By SEYMOUR M.HERSH WASHINGTON (NYT) The United States has been secretly seeding clouds over North Vietnam, Laos and South Vietnam to increase and control the rainfall for military purposes. Government sources, both civilian and military, said during an extensive series of interviews that the Air Force cloud-seeding program has been aimed most recently at hindering movement of North Vietnamese troops and equipment and supressing enemy anti-aircraft missile fire.

The disclosure confirmed growing speculation in congressional and scientific circles about the use of weather modification in Southeast Asia. Despite years of experiments with rain-making in the United States and elsewhere, scientists are not sure they understand its long-term effect on the ecology of a region. The weather manipulation in Indochina, which was first tried in South Vietnam in 1963, is the first confirmed use of meterologi-cal warfare. Although it is not prohibited by any international conventions on warfare, artificial rain-making has been strenuously opposed by some State department officials. It could not be determined whether the operations were being conducted in connection with the current North Vietnamese offensive or the renewed American bombing of the north.

Beginning in 1967, some State department officials protested that the United States, by deliberately altering natural rainfall in parts of Indochina, was taking envronmen-tal risks of unknown proportions. But many advocates of the operation have found little wrong with using weather modification as a military weapon. "What's worse," one official asked, "dropping bombs or rain?" All of the officials interviewed said that the United States did not have the capabilty to cause heavy flooding during the summer in the northern parts of North Vietnam, where serious flooding occurred last year. Officially, the White House and State department declined comment on the use of meteorological warfare. "This is one of those things where no one is going to say anything," one official said.

Most officials interviewed agreed that the seeding had accomplished one of its main objectives muddying roads and flooding lines of communication. But there were also many military and government officials who expressed doubt that the project had caused any dramatic results. The sources, without providing details, also said that a method had been developed for treating clouds with a chemical that even-utally produced an acidic rainfall capable of fouling the operation of North Vietnamese radar equipment used for directing surface-to-air missiles. In addition to hampering SAM Missiles and delaying North Vietnamese infiltration, See SEED, Page 14-A Jt '5 SAIGON POLICE GUARD 747 AFTER HIJACK ATTEMPT FAILED Passengers, Crew Slid to Safety Down Inflated Emergency Chute I IKIllffl HOLLYWOOD, Calif. -Author Erich Segal tells Constitution Television Editor Paul Jones Story" will be telecast during the 1972-73 season.

Page 4 B. HARRIS POLL shows a wellspring of sympathy has developed for Gov. George C. Wallace since he was shot. Page 9-A.

NEW YORK -The U.S. energy shortage is "very serious and demands immediate corrective action," the Chase Manhattan Bank asserts. Page 7-D. Next Move Is Fischer's I yf' "SUPER-DUPER" SHOW Erich Segal REYKAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Bobby Fischer failed to appear for the opening game in his world championship chess match with Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union Sunday but the match was postponed for two days to give the American challenger one more chance to play. "The simplest and maybe correct way to deal with this would be to disqualify Fischer from championship play," Dr.

Max Euwe, president of the International Chess Federation (FIDE), said in announcing the postponement. The postponement was made primarily to protect the Icelandic financial backers of the match and to preserve the image of the game, itself, Euwe said. If Fischer does not appear for the drawing of lots now scheduled for Tuesday at noon 8 a.m. (EDT) he will be disqualified and lose his right to challenge the 35-year-old Russian for the world chess title, Euwe said. Fischer, unhappy over the financial terms arranged for the match, three times canceled flights from New York last week and he failed to board the last direct flight that would have gotten him to Iceland on time Saturday night Associated Press Photos PILOT DESCRIBES HOW HE AND OTHERS WRESTLED WITH HIJACKER Capt.

Gene Vaughn Holds Up .357 Magnum Cartridge Fired by Passenger HOLLYWOOD Eddie (Popeye) Egan is out to further an acting career that started when the former New York city detective played a role in "The French Connection." Page 3-C. CHICAGO Two persons were killed and three wounded Sunday in what police believe was an execution of a leader of the Black Stone Nation, a federation of street gangs. Page 5-B. SILVER SPRING, Md. Gov.

George C. Wallace is a model patient who jokes and winks despite his pain and suffering, attending doctors and nurses say. Page 12-A. MINNEAPOLIS Northwest Airlines has laid off a "very substantial majority" of its 8,500 non-striking employes as the result of a walkout by pilots. Page 9-A.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. At 23, Terence P. Mc-Govern is torn between making her own life and helping her father became president of the United States. Page 13-A. ATLANTA THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS Commission in Atlanta gets about 100 complaints each week from owners of home entertainment devices that receive signals they are not supposed Page 4-B.

CONSTRUCTION IN CLAYTON County of single-family homes and condominiums is overtaking the number of apartments being built. Page 8-A. CASES AGAINST DOCTORS How Do You Prove Negligence? lev i INDEX gence. But the damage was so minor that taking the case to court would do more harm to the client and doctor both. For instance, a catheter may be left in an arm during blood vessel surgery.

It was negligently left in. But the doctor went back and took it out. There was no permanent damage, only temporary discomfort." All right, suppose a case passes Riser's screening, and he takes it. What does he have to prove? Three things, he says: First a doctor-patient relationship. This would be pretty clear for example, if a doctor has been treating a patient for years.

But you can have problems. Kiser gives one: "A patient has pain in his chest, palpitations, and so on. He goes to a doctor who can't take the case he has surgery coming up right See MALPRACTICE, Page 20-A Second of a series. By BOB GEURJNK Attorney Eugene R. Kiser sat in his office In the Candler Building and tried to put into plain English what happens in medical malpractice cases.

First, he screens them. "The lawyer owes an ethical duty to the medical profession and his client to screen out those cases which aren't legitimate medical negligence." For instance, a person honestly thinks the doctor was negligent just because something went wrong, even though the doctor used all the care he had to and even more. "A person comes in with a malignancy which has spread," Kiser says. "The doctor had told him that, asfar as he could see, be Jesse OuOar 1-D Movies, Amusements Reg Murphy 4-A Sports 1-D Television 4-B Want Ads 4-C had cut out all of the previous cancer. But the doctor also fails to tell the patient the cancer could recur.

When the malignancy did recur the patient honestly felt the doctor hadn't removed all the cancer and had been negligent. Other patients may be "obviously bitter" against the doctor's callousness about, say an operation that was otherwise competently done. They want to "get" the doctor. Again, says Kiser, "A person comes in with an injury at was the result of negli Astrology BobHarrell 8-A Business, Industry Comics, Jumble 2-C Crossword Puzzle 2-C Deaths 3-C Editorials 4-A Goren on Bridge 2-C Weather 2-A Women, Family 2-. CHESSMASTERS WAIT FOR TUESDAY 1 Boris Spassky, Bobby Fischer 4- 1.

Obtenir un accès à Newspapers.com

  • La plus grande collection de journaux en ligne
  • Plus de 300 journaux des années 1700 à 2000
  • Des millions de pages supplémentaires ajoutées chaque mois

Journaux d’éditeur Extra®

  • Du contenu sous licence exclusif d’éditeurs premium comme le The Atlanta Constitution
  • Des collections publiées aussi récemment que le mois dernier
  • Continuellement mis à jour

À propos de la collection The Atlanta Constitution

Pages disponibles:
4 102 343
Années disponibles:
1868-2024