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Daily News from New York, New York • 120

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
120
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS. SATURDAY. JULY 15. 1972 sn tut 424 it ATTNTEWS 012)lw2im YOUR MOVE. BOBBY! JULY u.

ttn The Inquiring Votograpbcr PvMlthM aar Surae Mew Vor Mews TJ Il 404 V. Mr Ve. N.V. 1017. F.

M. Flvnn. CwnrnM PuMHrwi wmm- fan le'eet. EraoKiv Editor end vr. va eiea.

i v. a pmmt, woim ew a. j. mkma ir Wor Ot ma iaMn apaylelio relet wr teiy i taiaai Mr no aaort km ra JOHN Alt TON Tub News arrejaW far thu mm. raVi mmmd a Ka.

1- mtumsm Tar, fleahrawrk Hu, TllBQrKSTtOX Are the Nerth Yariaaaaeae bkrlf la aerie aiJy atrcvtute for peace hefere the aeViil rW WHERE ASKED Vanowa apot THE ANSWERS RalfJ. A. Coal. W. l4h St, MUaEM Of TM AMOCiattO NItt TW AwflM PM amm mHilnli a tar A PROMISE-OR A HOAX? "Within 90 days of my inauguration.

every American oUi-r and every American prisoner will be out of I he jungle and out of their cells and back home in Atnerar where they belon." So spoke Sen. George McGovem early yesterday in accepting the Democratic presidential nomination, and the statement brought his frenzied peacenik supporters to I their feet howling ap proval. orootijra. rata-Un impart ftpeeialiM: "Al-tfcovFh the Pmri peace talk are acata. 1 i Wk the North Vart-Wantrm w.3 wail I ae wh i elected.

Ee-mwf the ua. Most American. feel, consider the South Dakotan's bujrout blueprint shameful. But no one contents the fact that a President McGovern cite the a respite. They wf Iwe Ntt will ee the hoaUir whwe the talk on." 3' I Vr I lt I yank American forces l-X IT A.

I home, no matter how dan- ft ft. ft Aane tleniuaf, Katleta serous tnai mijrni ne lor the long-term interest of trpwt: "te. I thiak IheyVe brew badSy hurt by ar recent actiocM ar tntn-iC thetr harbor and kmc Luer beam boab aaeh more accurately. They tnay wamt to end the war VOICE OF THE PEOPLE eeft aMre tha we do, Jack Lee, Swell Ota Talk. the U.S., or how murderous the consequences to our South Vietnamese allies.

But McGovem sank to the level of glib, cruel trickery with his flat guarantee that he could deliver American prisoners from North Vietnam's hellhole jails. Hanoi alone holds the keys to PV ceils, and the ransom it demands for the captives is higher than even McGovern has publicly said he is willing to pay The Red want more than just an American pullout and an end to VS. aid to South Vietnam. They demand we aid them in imposing a Communist-dominated regime on Saigon. Has McGovern made a secret, private deal to swallow even that humiliation? Or wras he perpetrating a hoax on the anguished families of PWs by making a pledge he knows he cannot fulfill? We.

and a lot of other Americans, would like to know. If Hanoi has I sacked away even a millimeter from its hard-line stance, there was. no sign of it at THE PARIS PEACE TALKS attorney? don't JKjV i a IX the A'-ab iMlxm. The ruiniCXL S'TVfT II.V IWI. Vt1il tartnortaT mw liteir am- Vl.iiai MM I wirtt l(He WWf Tiofie tu1 t.Ti1i- l.ie tvnt.imiKt tnay pwwn.

eiw 'fV. Aiiiitm tfrin' mmi-h Ttua would tap fiti 'ay if.mitiitir YJf hae a fmotit Ee fre mT rS tWy te nHi r-Vjr) lm ace table. We h.e a anary yttirVir a W-3t lo Ihe naliotnJ Ac rjrjf I Itte if rwwHMtm, a we ett that three w-IJ wiatiy ro.ri' mtrt ati4 onay Ujwm Ar-munii-d at tt t-t1 irwutT-trt KIVC. tailmeal that we Vw South VarfAaoa. I dMt IhuA war wiQ he r-9d fr a mnmT of year." Kant R.

Kim. Wrt Rod hank elTana3: "Ve. I beliete the aarfTkiaalM- W4 i TW k1 en a kww Tl tt' I mt trw tW Ararao fl aije4e ftSfow a rtffH of diwt, AJ Vf Get-era tuadtat e-a mA-tated y-. A Ute eee? CP Itrewkltwr A WifWrriat.1e. will be cwndarl-ed ha a mM annee.

There are chac la attitede that ki: SU-alfiifd. a'airt mrttit itt Tfi. Vr.w 3 utie titma tttf )'jtrnin mr lamr wadmc walee 1 ktwww mtrw a 1 flint -tif ttutif rl Tlieee 4 tinfw fit ite 't1d itiavr jMMipIr a-Mi tiKit M4i lnx, aitd eia-fwwn ftir 1 tie CAlnr-WVE a nt; hi. hiit Iatw.k1jn: trV-od tlie iitiV etullina 4m rwi'innwirt enwari'li loitilMrlA, Oty t'tiiveeMHy Vry Virtk tia Okrewed fiewie tarn tirewMial ftsia. ennlwdrtut ere i4 atJ lt aiTfioikla, TS'tiat tAitiir aurvry Itawe la 4 wrt.li ii-1uJ" tientwiMtia atiili tar Ui tie I m6TXUid ttnl lte etiUtit (n'limj Utewe fitrram i ta HniwittNale iw aiuHe4 lw eintto4iHe asake tht bkely.

Oa tbe ar. when they got under way asain Thursday after a 10-week recess caused by North Vietnam's invasion of the South. Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh, chief mouthpiece for the Vict Cong, stood on her bosses' longtime position that the U.S. must, in effect, give up all its interests in South Vietnam and betray Saigon to the Reds.

Our side stood on its refusal to abandon its allies anywhere and its assurances that honest negotiations will lead to a settlement satisfactory to any reasonable person. It seems possible, at least, that Hanoi's stubbornness was just an opening gambit. Certainly U.S. bombing and harbor-minings up north are hurting the Red enemy, and it is widely reported that both Moscow and Peking are pressing Hanoi to move for a settlement. So we hope President Richard M.

Nixon will continue the steady, relentless pounding up north. That bombing is far more likely to bring this war to an end and return American prisoners than any amount of begging McGovern has in mind. Idrtiee anh tik c4we a kfftwa twre by North i ilW4rr aifce eHldt teal a ee Korea to acy rowntty. Soih Kr. fr fca.

raitaax, alo thaak rrxi Nt-aw'a Inp to rVkittr and Macww (noy hae rt diflaaaaW aare Notth aetAaam." ant ht ei iw ame deokcy 4oewwl, ti ud-He Atwerira wHl atort-H-e. MlOtArX CkVXO fraxA'Tw: l.W kiaed wmV-ttc aniWle 4a. Dewiereair New Totker? toaH at Vm while ywa wee fferir eee ka "faa crrty. rS A U1 mt rdr3 wa eni liarmr' Mrs. Adle CVatvl.

Tatk. law cWk: -1 talk J1 dree a thry hae oWr fr lae the at wfcU wee had aw I taa rlarlMft, If Ni hU wtJe clahntn ml that ee ry 1W kww ft Ie.fea'(4C e. al Coaw-eert-iw. C. NTAU fO lt tcr.lK UkA.1j-' Ttr Kr' eAte-ta3 -eUd t.lidJ"" juAf atet f.rr.

T-e enr wnfk a4 hard for M-mt vu1mMv. ami vt te har le raua kWl MMif hour kmnte. art! i tveSeHnj -r i aaMr lr ai- yr. teaH ir real arai tiy fraoa North aHae4 bera l-r Wtit'il kh, catiruit. Iftterate ewtiw o)irrtnttvtiai wti4i a flllklij' ftvfcllCHUia MTtSfclT Wiuiiiatlatt 'tia1 etiakna ttie Vnme w4 atmimfniteil hi tturt lMir thiitk Htt tie tmni re-Mtie if 4a a 4fael4i MtMlt4 ItMl tik Mi twwitre tf tl tnt- -Oirt'me lilw the 4it it ftctiaHf waa tn rf4 iikWN soviet, tk VI at.haiiati read Ctiat ie tiisj- fa)k cfly -Se-Mutmntrt en ta hH 1 I ilium SHIFTING THE BURDEN A master plan submitted to the city's Board of Higher Education contains, among other proposals, a sensible suggestion that City U.

be relieved of responsibility for remedial work needed to raise students to college levels. That task, the planners contend, should be tossed back to the city school system. How right they are! If the city schools were doing their job properly, there would be no necessity for special classes to bring City U. freshman up to snuff in basic subjects. Since the failure lies in the elementary and secondary schools, that's where the cure should be effected.

kacne he at wew. If era he'a ftrwaaiaaid to rtH iTT ate rt at alaanat ttaoAedaaU-ly. 9 Waiter R. Mall. 5-UScw 1- a anatiy nr w14 wawt land.

raaaii raiaaOi afwraal- could flf4. tUCHACIt J. MlkTT. call rom C1XAMT Ht: "The tola. aaark t4 cwntaiM IOIH) TNtetmetrt.

Preaidrat I elected. North VaHaa thaah Mcfeeera wi3 fan war re- COME OFF IT, BOBBY Brooklyn's Bobby Fischer may be a whit at chess, but he is acting like a sulky, brattish boor in his world championship match with Russian Boris Spassky. We're surprised the seething hosts for the contest haven long ago pitched him out of Iceland on his ear and told him to play his match On an iceberg if he doesn't like the set-up them. iaior tiwiii tVMtectaai Adanth.Wiratr Jecnme fcjretritaarr avad $utatMa De ftaruneit Cuaawi Wttier Sertoet tUmh have taciaaed ateiffe. twirtt4 to tW raargte irw.

lar kaea faat towwltttftf 3tna are. I am ana 4ay aTtet day with tnwwrA. hwl ye aaa aVaae naawnl kweai aeirh initial I ekeacM, nttf-us imie te iTh.HJt ewe1 ajmnnwrnt. Tli to ci tx'tiaivr. At outii coot, 4 atnttMMmitiie a ft Jr mi an Inm ret, lie eiefifll 4 ttg litte dime ewU if le tartm j-rnf fHKikeu.

I any 4m. Iuil4 eMnre ttuilditir V.arfin tf ihejr liav ewat 11, eiiiKx. Tr.sfyc'futTavT." laoieaatrty tt he beceeat bt If Nitoai reekerted. North Varfjaaaa laay be feewd to arrrf4 r-e aJI-.

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Years Available:
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