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Dayton Daily News from Dayton, Ohio • 1

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Dayton Daily Newsi
Location:
Dayton, Ohio
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1
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FINAL DAYTON DAILY NEWS THE WEATHER Partly cloudy Thursday; high 71-73. Cloudy, cool, chance of showers tonight; low 51-53. (More weather, page 44). Vol. 95, No.

300 Dayton, Ohio, Wednesday, July 5, 1972 10 Cents 80 Pages Japan Conservatives Elect Prime Minister New Approach Promised Toward China, U.S. TOKYO JP Japan's ruling conservatives today named Kakuei Tanaka, a dynamic rags-to-riches construction man turned politician, to be prime minister with a mandate for bold new approaches to the United States and China. The Liberal-Democratic party in effect turned its back on the cautious establishment politics of Prime Minister Ei-saku Sato, who is retiring at 71. It decisively rejected the bid of his protege, 67-year-old Foreign Minister Takeo Fu-kuda, to succeed him. HbbbLbbHbiB ImPjBBBBBBBBBBii rHUss hit Daily News Photo by Bill Fox Tanaka, at 54 the youngest prime minister since 1945, won the party presidency and with it leadership of the government at a convention of the party's members in the Diet, the Japanese parliament.

The vote on the second runoff ballot was 282-190, with four blank votes. The Diet will meet Thursday to confirm Tanaka as prime minister for a three-year term, a formality since the party has a sizable majority TWO INJURED IN PIQUA was heading north on Ohio 66 when his auto struck a power pole, went up a slight incline, became airborne, then landed on top of a burial vault at Forest Hill cemetery. Booher was charged by the Highway Patrol with driving while intoxicated. James L. Booher, 46, of 520 Clark Piqua, and Brian T.

Smith, 4, of 212 S. Roosevelt Piqua, were treated at Memorial hospital and released Monday with injuries received after Booher lost control of his auto. Highway patrolmen said Booher UPI Tilephoto TANAKA RAISES ARMS, SHOUTS 'BANZAI' Predecessor Sato Held Office 7 Years, 8 Months Tot Released Unharmed As Hijack Attempt Fails Convention Delegates, Non-Delegates Issues Miami Beach worries about non-delegates while McGovern, Humphrey forces await court decision on delegates. Page 2. WASHINGTON won't be the same after departure of news-making Martha Mitchell.

Page 15. OFF AGAIN, off again chess match off again as Russian champ demands 'just punishment' for Bobby Fischer. Page 2. BARBARA BUTLER'S principal and a fellow teacher talk of revenge promised by one of Barb's 13-year-old students. Page 6.

U.S. Jets Hit Hanoi Depots Japan's new prime minister called a quick, decisive self-made man. Page H. in both houses. He is expected to announce his cabinet on Friday.

TANAKA'S victory resulted from growing restlessness within the party over Sato's inability to cope with the problems of China, the United' States and mounting domestic difficulties. Little change would have been expected had Fukuda been chosen. The leaders of two powerful factions in the party who also ran, former Foreign Ministers Takeo Miki andMasayoshi Ohira, stood out for change. When they were knocked out on the first ballot, they threw their support by advance agreement to Tanaka. Tanaka made a brief, restrained acceptance speech stressing that unity of the party must continue.

He has said previously that he would give his major attention to repairing the frayed relations with the United States and to bringing about diplomatic relations with Communist China. TANAKA is committed to go it alone on China and to adopt a more independent attitude toward the United States while seeking to paper over differences with Washington. He should be well fitted to deal with the economic problems between the United States and Japan, having served both as Minister of Finance and as Minister of International Trade and Industry. His qualifications for negotiating with China are not as clearcut. But it seems likely that his cabinet will include Miki, who has made his mark with the Chinese on several visits.

TANAKA appears to share Miki's conviction that a new peace treaty has to be worked out with Peking to replace the 1952 pact with Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalist regime. That is one of Peking's conditions for rapprochement. His election ends the long hold on the reins of power of political bureaucrats and also breaks the succession of disciples of the late, influential Prime Minister Shigeru Yosh-ida. But though Sato did not back Tanaka's candidacy to succeed him, he was one of Sato's key men during his record seven years and eight months in office and held the post of general secretary of the party for five terms. of mental hospital in FIRE SWEEPS through ward England killing 30 patients.

Page 5. From Dolly Nw Wirt sorvlctt -American jets wrecked three major depots on the edges of Hanoi. Tuesday in the heaviest raids on North Vietnam in weeks; and a 7th Fleet task force sank or damaged 12 supply barges off the North Vietnam coast, the U.S. Command announced today. TOWN OF 9 HONORING BIG PAST BINGHAM CANYON, Utah (UPI) This little mining town no longer exists, but the people who lived here don't want it forgotten.

The town was disincorporated Saturday and the town's remaining nine citizens plan to build a monument to its past, when it was a i community of 10,000. Kennecott Copper will take over the area in mid-July, when the town is completely vacated'. Bingham's residents voted the town out of existence last November because it no longer had enough people to support it. Home Family 35-37 Horoscope i46 Magazine 38 Sports 1, 9. 23 Television 68 Weather 44 Amusements 54, 55 Bridge 47 Business News 28, 29 Classified 57, 65 Deaths 56 Editorials 32, 33 BUFFALO, N.Y.

UPI A man who held a young girl at knifepoint in an apparent attempt to hijack an American Airlines 707 at Buffalo International airport surrendered to an FBI agent early today. "He apparently decided he was not going to get out" of the said Richard Ash, special agent in charge of the FBI office here. "IF JHERE'S no shooting, I'll come out," Ash quoted the man as saying moments before he emerged from the aircraft carrying his hostage, who appeared to be 2 or 3 years old. Ash said an FBI agent had sneaked aboard the plane and confronted the man. After the agent assured the man there would be no shooting, the man threw down his knife and carried the girl in his arms down the ramp to a waiting police car.

The child was not harmed, Ash said, but was taken by radioed back that it had been leveled by bombardment. Heavy naval shelling and aerial bombing preceded the North Vietnamese capture of the province, South Vietnam's northernmost, May 1, and during the government drive to retake the city over the past eight days. North Vietnam claimed that U.S. planes bombed and strafed residential areas of Hanoi, "killing or injuring many persons, and destroying or damaging hundreds of dwelling houses." Body Found in Room Of Robbery Suspect was from a slight wound the man had suffered. POLICE IDENTIFIED the man as Charles Smith, 23, of Buffalo.

The youngster was not identified immediately. Police said Smith allegedly stabbed the girl's mother and a man earlier in Buffalo. The woman was reported in critical condition, the man in fair condition, at Deaconess hospital in Buffalo. Police said Smith apparently slipped aboard the unoccupied jet about 5 a.m. and demanded that American Airlines provide a pilot for the craft.

A GROUP OF FBI agents and police gathered near a ramp to the plane, using a baggage cart as a barricade. A man and woman took turns using a bullhorn to call up to Smith. The woman, identified by an FBI agent as Smith's mother, walked part way up the ramp at one point, talked with Smith, then returned. Smith and the girl were visible just inside the plane. Scores of airline passengers passed through the terminal as usual.

Many seemed unaware of what was happening at the American gate. POLICE SAID that, after the stabbing, Smith grabbed the girl and drove to the airport. There, they said, he created a commotion at the post office and threatened to harm the girl. He then dragged the girl along as he climbed aboard the jet. Police said Smith had left a note at his mother's home.

They said it read: "I love you. 1 love myself. I love everybody. I love God, but if I have to do away with myself, I will." In South Vietnam there was heavy fighting on the northern front, and Hue was shelled for the fourth day. Lead elements of South Vietnamese paratroopers and Marines knifed into Communist-held Quang Tri city today and reported the city leveled by bombing.

MILITARY sources said the troops entered the citadel, the fortress in the middle of the city, and encountered little resistance. Five miles east of the city today, government troops in their eight-day push to recapture Communist-held Quang Tri province staved off North Vietnamese counter-attacks, Saigon spokesmen said. South Vietnamese marines backed by allied airpower, artillery and. naval gunfire killed 57 Communist troops without any casualties of their own. Two milessoutheastof Quang Tri city at sundown Tuesday, a battalion of about 500 Communists attacked government troops in an assault ambulance to a Buffalo hospital for examination.

Blood on the child's clothing, Ash said, DETERGENTS STUDY Montgomery county sheriff's deputies arrested a robbery suspect this morning at a motel on Germantown Pk. and found another man dead in the room where the apprehension was made. Montgomery county sheriff's deputies and Tipp City police were trying to arrest one man for questioning about a Tipp City robbery Saturday. THE MANAGER of the motel said the dead man was a guest at the motel. Sheriff's deputies said the man who fled the motel later returned and when they ar- Premier Resigns PARIS -UPI Jacques Chaban-Delmas, premier since 1969, has resigned, Elysee Palace announced today.

4 No reason was immediately given. A brief communique said President Georaes PomDidou Some Nonphosphates Linked to Blindness rested him, they found another man dead in the room. Officers did not release details in the case. The shooting occurred about 4:20 a.m. at the motel -at 5164 Germantown Pike.

THE ALLEGED accomplice of the fugitive, James (Miley) Marcum, 45, of Hamilton was, arrested by Butler county sheriff's deputies in Hamilton Sunday. Marcum entered a plea of not guilty to charges of armed robbery in Miami county court in Tipp City Monday. He is now being held in the Miami County jail at Troy. Tipp City police said that Dorsey's Foodliner market was held up and about $1,800 in cash and food stamps were taken Saturday. They said two men were believed involved with one of them serving as driver of the getaway car.

O'Neill to Consult fmirt'e Ttpntli Riilina led bv 18 tanks and at aboul received Chaban-Delmas after oun ucaui luuuig the same tlme, another battal- a cabinet meeting and that ilicate (Electro-Sol), and one with phosphate (Cascade). MATERIAL WAS put into the left eyes of New Zealand white rabbits and reactions were recorded at one, two three, seven and 14 days. The researchers said all the products tested irritated the ion attacked seven miles east of the city. No casualty reports were available oneither skirmish. CORRESPONDENT Barney Seibert reported the troops entering Quang Tri city today COLUMBUS UPI Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice C.

William O'Neill says he has requested a copy of the U.S. Supreme Court ruling dealing with the death penalty before proceeding with several cases pending before the state court. Flag Designer Dies KODIAK, Alaska-GPI-Ben-nie Benson, designer of the Alaska flag, died Sunday at 58. Benson, an aviation mechanic, won a gold watch and $1,000 for his design in 1927. Chaiban-Delmas offered the resignation, which also included other members of the government.

Chaban-Delmas, 57, became premier June 20, 1969, after the election of Pompidou as president. Russians Free Jewish Activist; Wed Ohioan WASHINGTO UPI Some nonphosphate detergents on the market can cause irreversible blindness if accidentally rubbed into the eye, according to an unpublished government study. "The results of this study indicate the rather sharp demarcation between moderate ocular damage caused by soap in phosphate detergents and the intense causticity of carbonates and metasilicates," the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences concluded. The Food and Drug administration, charged with protecting the public from hazardous substances, has reacted to the report with disdain. "THEY ARE treading ot side the realm in which they should be operating," said an official in FDA's Bureau of Product Safety.

"We have the charter, we have the mandate." The Institute's study concentrated on nine synthetic-detergent products purchased near its Triangle Park, N.C., facili- Seven were laundry prod-ties. ucts, of which three contained phosphates (Tide, Ajax, and Dash); two contained carbonate) Sears, and Arm and Hammer), one had metasill-cate (Ecolog-G), and one was a soap powder (Ivory Snow). Two were dishwashing coin-pounds, one containing metas- eyes and caused an inflammation, known as conpunctivitis, and some clouding of the cornea. The soap-powder eyes began clearing by 72 hours and1 were healthy again at seven days. The laundry-phosphate eyes cleared in all but one of 24 rabbits by 14 days.

"THE REACTION to carbonate and metasilicate detergents was nfore intense," the report said. Carbonates caused chronic opacities on 14 of 18 rabbits. Eleven animals suffered partial or total destruction of the cornea and a deterioration of tissue in the eyelids. "The metasillcate caused chronic opacities in all of the experimental rabbits. One of six rabbits developed necrosis of the cornea and surrounding tissues," the report said.

Test results were similar tor dishwashing detergents: "Four of six I i regressed with the phosphate and no corneal perforations were noted at 14 days. In contrast, 11 of 12 corneas were ruptured in those eyes exposed to the metasillcate." pjl "'tjpljl fflft WT" .1 WASHINGTON UP) Russian authorities have released a young Jewish activist who was arrested last month after he emerged from hiding to marry an American from Cincinnati, the Union of Councils for Soviet Jews said here today. A spokesman, Karen Kravett, said Gavriel Shapiro, 27, the bridegroom, was released on June 30, but that the best man at the wedding, Mark Nashpitz, 25, remained in custody. BOTH MEN were charged with violating Soviet draft laws after they refused to report for military duty and went into hiding in mid-May. Kravett said they were among a number of Jewish activists who were ordered drafted just prior to the visit to Russia of President Nixon.

They are scheduled to be tried on the charges, but no date has been set, she said. Kravett said the information came via telephone from contacts Inside the Soviet Union. She speculated that publicity about the case caused authorities to release Shapiro. SHAPIRO AND Nashpitz had emerged from hiding and thereby faced almost certain arrest so Shipiro could wed Judy Silver of Cincinnati on June 8 in Moscow. The couple met when Miss Silver once before visited Russia and they carried on a courtship by telephone and correspondence.

The new Mrs. Shapiro was not allowed to remain in Russia, however, and had to leave on June 12. Shapiro was arrested later that day, and Nashpitz was picked up on June 15. The Union of Councils for Soviet Jews also has received word that another Russian Jew, Vladimir Markman, has been charged with giving false information about the Soviet Union and with being absent as a witness from the trial of another Jew. Markman reportedly has been under arrest at Sverdlovsk since Apr.

29. Kravett said, meanwhile, that Russian authorities have been jamming all broadcasts Into the Soviet Union by the Voice of Israel for the past 10 days, an action considered "very unusual." She also said that Jews wishing to leave Russia for Israel are having the same difficulties getting exit visas as they did before President Nixon's visit, despite indications the situation might Improve. UPI Tfltphoto SHAPIRO (LEFT), WIFE AT RECENT MEETING IN SOVIET UNION Russian Had Been Jailed for Refusing to Enter Military in USSR I.

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