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The Spokesman-Review from Spokane, Washington • 1

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Spokane, Washington
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a Pl TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly Cloudy Wednesday High Low Airport 82 59 Downtown 78 50 (Fall Report on Page 2) VIEW SOTH YEAR. NO. 60. THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 13, 1072.

PRICE TEN CENTS. SPOKANE, WASH. Incredible cGovem Campaign Ends With Demo Presidential Nomination 1 'WPJif Illinois Vote Total Puts S.D. Senator Over the Top fa sr 'Nfijv, fit V- 3 7X (Also see stories pages fi, 21. 29 and 30.

Pictures on page 36) By DAVID S. BRODER MIAMI BEACH (WP) The Democratic party Wednesday night placed its leadership and election hopes in the hands of George S. McGovern, ending a four-year journey for the man and the party back from the wreckage of their mutual hopes at the last convention in Chicago. The winners and losers of 1968 reversed places Wednesday night, as the 49-year-old South Dakota senator was put before the country as the man for Americas future. McGovern won the nomination on the first ballot, and when the couni.

went over the 1,509 needed for victory, the delegates filled convention hall with cheers and applause. Vote Total at 1728.35 The roll call ended with the McGovern vote at 1,728.35. Jackson had 525. Wallace had 381.7. Rep.

Shirley Chisholm had 147.5. These were the figures before delegations began the traditional switches of votes after the outcome was assured. Even before the nominating roll call was complete, the unity moves began. Humphrey telephoned McGovern, an old friend and protege before they became political rivals, within minutes after the nomination was settled. Rep.

Chisholm told the convention she would work across the nation for the McGovern ticket. Confronts Demonstrators Earlier McGovern took an hour away from working on his acceptance speech and pondering the choice of a running mate to confront more than 100 demonstrators in the lobby of his convention hotel. Angry over what they took to be a shift away from his past pledge to remove all American troops from Southeast Asia within 90 days of becoming president, they brought the first threat of trouble to the party whose 1968 convention was all but overwhelmed by violence. Saying he wanted to prevent another Chicago, McGovern assured the students I am not shifting my position on any of the fundamental issues, and saw them leave the hotel. Meantime, at Convention Hall, the weary Democrats Californians Cheer McGoverns Actress Shirley McLain, right, joined cheer offered lib Nomination by delegation.

(AP) fuel for about five miles and wouldn't subject his passengers to a crash. The control tower said the plane lost its electrical power while on the runway and the hijackers asked for another aircraft. A National spokesman said a man he identified as Taffa had tried to buy a ticket on a Delta Airlines plane at Philadelphia and when asked for identification, turned and ran. Authorities caught up with him and he produced an Ethiopian passport, was found to be unarmed and was released. He then purchased a ticket for the National flight.

The spokesman said National had no antihijaek devices operational at the Philadelphia airport. Another National Airlines plane landed at the airport and Hijackers Take Over Jets in exas And on East Coast Veep Offer Turned Down by Kennedy sented in this convention than any before. And Sen. Henry M. Jack son of Washington, the last and most outspoken representative of the labor-backed old guard Democrats who are pro phesying that McGovern nomination jeopardizes the Democrats' chances to remain the majority party in Congress and the country.

Shows Hes Winner Replying to them, Sen. Abraham A. Ribicoff of Connecticut said in the nominating speech for McGovern that George McGovern has shown he is a winner. Ribicoff said the. thousands and thousands of McGovern volunteers represent the finest political organization in the history of American politics This organization is available not only for George McGovern but for every Democratic candidate in this land." Obviously trying to reassure the worried Democrats who think McGovern may not be able to overcome President Nixon's current 15-point lead in the polls, Ribicoff reminded them that McGoverns judgment has proved rounder than that of his rivals this year.

Instead of reading the polls, George McGovern was reading the mood of this country, Ribicoff said, "And he was reading it right. Ribicoff did not dwell on the point, but all the Democrats listening knew that in the last six months of internal combat in primaries and caucuses and conventions, conducted under the most open rules of political warfare in American history, McGovern had shown himself the toughest man in the field. Long List The list of those w'ho began the contest for the White House was a long one. In addition to the pight already mentioned Humphrey, Muskie. Mills, McCarthy, Wallace, Sanford, Chisholm and Jackson there were Birch Bayh, Fred Harris, John Lindsay, Sam Yorty, Vance Hartke and Ned Coll, the man with the rubber rat in New Hampshire.

All of them once stood in McGovern's way, but now, as the Republican slogans used to say, Nixon's the one. The choice of Ribicoff, the man who nominated him before. for the nominating speech Wednesday night showed McGoverns memories of Chicago remained sharp and clear. Four years ago, with police battling demonstrators on the streets, Ribcoff looked down from the podium of the fear-and-tension-filled international amphitheater at Chicago's Mayor Richard J. Daley and said there would be no such gestapo tactics" if George McGovern were president.

In return, Ribicoff caught a blast of obscenities from the mayor, shared by a worldwide television audience, and Me Govern got a mere handful of votes. Wednesday night, howeier, Ribicoff nominated the winner, and Daley was banished from the hall, deprived of his seat at the Illinois microphone by a Credentials Challenge brought under McGoverns reforms with consequences for Me Governs candidacy that no one can measure. in an interview Wednesday night, McGovern said his con frontation with the demonstrators at his hotel was a Sunday atternoon excursion com pared to the tragedies" of Chicago four years ago. "This convention is open," he said. A lot of the people who were outside four years ago, shouting to be heard, are on the inside doing the nominating this time.

Credit Given When a popular magazine voted Jean Ann Kathrein of Cary. Illinois, Homemaker of the Year, she passed a portion of the credit on to the Want Ads. Much of her inexpensive home decorating begins with locating old furm ture in the Classified columns. She then strips and refinishes it. I'm a great Want Ad reader, says Mrs Kathrein.

And heres the way Want Ads work for Inland Empire residents: SPANISH caftee table, 05 PA 7 7921 pod taolus Mrs C. Perrigo. N9RI7 Stevens, says, 1 sold thp tables the first day my ad ap peared in The Spokesman Review. Im very pleased with the results of my ad Let a Want Ad work for you Call TE 8-4K64 SUPPORTS MCGOVERN whom the pilot said carried guns and a package they claimed was a bomb, took over the plane and demanded $600,000 In U.S. currency and $20,000 in Mexican pesos and parachutes.

They ordered the plane back to Philadelphia where it landed just before 9 p.m. EDT. About 90 minutes later, pilot Elliott Adams jumped out of the cockpit and was picked up on the funway by police. A doctor who treated him. quoted Adams as saying he jumped because he only had enough Union Ousts Foe of Chavez MODESTO, Calif.

(AP) The head of the cannery workers union here has been ousted for allegedly trying to block efforts by Cesar Chavez to organize farm workers, Teamsters officials said Wednesday. Teamsters General Secretary-Treasurer Murray Miller also said that Ted Gonsalves, secretary-treasurer of the Cannery Workers Union Local 748, would be barred from membership in the union for at least five years. The Cannery Workers Union is an affiliate of the Teamsters. Gonsalves was removed and the union put into trusteeship earlier this month after local members charged him with unauthorized allegedly used to block Chavez organizing efforts in Salinas. McGovern Makes Offer When Kennedy called to congratulate McGovern arly Thursday, the South Dakota i.t.

senator offered his Massachu- 20 minutes la er an FBI ag tts coneague the No. 2 place ELEANOR McGOVERN A Happy Night moved through the ritual of giving McGovern the nomination that has been guaranteed him since the early hours of Tuesday morning, when his superbly led forces most of them first-time delegates who came here under reforms McGovern himself instituted after the Chicago convention defeated the anti-McGovern coalition on the crucial credentials vote. The leaders of that coalition Hubert H. Humphrey and. Edmund S.

Muskie, who were the nominees of the party for president and vice president four years ago ended their 1972 candidacies Tuesday. Wednesday, Wilbur Mills and Eugene J. McCarthy also pulled out of the race. That left only four candidates to go in nomination against McGovern, the man who ran a brief, symbolic protest campaign for the nomination in 1968 and came up one of many losers in the ruins of the Chicago convention. They were: George C.

Wallace, the crippled Alabama governor whose threat to run as a third-party candidate was renewed Wednesday by his campaign manager, Charles Snider. Terry Sanford, the Duke University president w'ho was one of those hoping to benefit from the convention deadlock which never developed. Shirley Chisholm, the black representative from Brooklyn who campaigned as a symbol of the black, Spanish-speaking and women's groups more strongly repre- Offers Victor Jackson forces had collected delegates and pledges throughout the day as anti-McGovern delegates moved to Jackson as an alternative either to Sen. Edmund Muskie, D-Maine. or Sen.

Hubert H. Humphrey. who both withdrew Tuesday. At Jacksons first stop before the South Carolina delegation, Gov. John C.

West endorsed the Washington senator, calling him a great American. His endorsement appeared to give Jackson a sizable block of Ihe 32 South Carolina delegates. The first Washington presidential candidate also picked up the endorsement of Missouris Gov. Warren E. Hearnes and was expected to get several delegates from the withdrawal of Rep.

Wilbur Mills, Wednesday. Jackson told the South Carolina caucus, I feel fairly close to the South Carolina delegation. He recited the history of James Hamilton Lewis, a South Carolina native who was the first congressman elected from Jacksons old Washington congressional district. Jackson said the Democratic party has been a coalition of the young, old, organized labor and minorities. He said the task of the Dem-, ocratic presidential candidate was to bring these basic elements together to win not only the White House, but also all the other races.

I believe I have the broadest based support in my party, he said. I could campaign in the state of South Carolina and- any state in the nation because Scoop Jackson says the same things in South Carolina and in New York City." Proceeding to a press con (Continued on page 6.) told the control tower via theon police radio, to assure the hijacker that all his demands were being met. But, the agent said, hes not going to very real personal reasons. leave the plane until he lets A spokesman said no an-the passengers off. Inouncement of McGoverns new t.

4 choice is expected before mid- After a five-minute pause, day Thursdaj; someone in the control tower' landing at Fort Worth, however, and the pilot flew back to Oklahoma City, landing at Will Rogers Airport. The hijacker ordered the plane to take off and circle the airport while the ransom was being delivered. There was no indication of where the man wanted to go next. An American Airlines spokesman said we are making every effort to accede to the hijackers demands. W'e are making arrangements to fuel him and meet any other demands, the spokesman said.

He said the hijacker has a pistol, but he has not used it in any threatening manner. The hijacking of the National plane also a 727 came as the jet, carrying 113 passengers and a crew of six, approached New York Citys Kennedy International Airport after a flight from Philadelphia. Authorities said two men, IN BRIEF of the Communist-occupied town of Quang Tri. Saigon reported the destruction of nine enemy tanks, but it was apparent that the South Vietnamese had lost some ground. Story on page 3.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (NYT) Bobby Fischer lost the first game of championship chess match with Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union. In a hopeless situation at the 56th move, Fischer stood up and offered his hand. Spassky took it, and the game disappeared into history. A beginners blunder cost Fischer the game, an observer said. NATIONAL SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.

(NYT) Under legislation proposed by President Nixon, homeowners and businessmen in a six-state area hard hit by Hurricane Agnes would receive up to $5,000 each in an outright ederal grant for property repairs and to replace damaged belongings. For persons whose storm damage exceeded $5,000, federal loans would be made available on very easy terms, with an interest rate of 1 per cent and a repayment term of 30 years. NEW YORK (NYT) A federal judge in Philadelphia granted trustees of the bank rupt Penn Central Railroad permission to reduce the rail road's freight train crews from four men to three. Penn Cen tral will begin operating frright trains with an engineer and two trainmen at 12:01 a.m. July 26, and has begun notifying employes in 16 states, the District of Colum bia and Canada.

MIAMI BEACH. Fla. (AP) -Sen. George McGovern, obviously filled with emotion, shook hands with cheering friends, relatives and staff aides after winning the Democratic presidential nomination Wednesday night. But his triumph was tempered with disappointment be-1 cause Sen.

Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts turned down his offer of the vice presidential nomination. Shortly after his nomination, McGovern received a telephone call from Sen. Hubert Humphrey, who had been one of his chief rivals. He took the call in a separate alcove and the conversation could not be heard.

the ticket, aides said. The two men talked for 15 minutes according to at McGovern spokesman, and Kennedy declined the offer for Early Deaths LIMA, Peru (AP) More than 23,000 of the 580,000 children born in Peru in 1971 died because of inadequate medical attention, the Peruvian Institute for Child and Infant Care reported. cies and institutions of higher education in the Inland Empire. The school should be regional, he said, because none of the major population centers are large enough to support separate schools. Hearn said there now are few graduate schools of social work accessible to Inland Empire residents the closest being at the University of Washington.

Hearn said he will recommend that the school be established at Eastern Washington State. College, Cheney. Both EWSC and Washington State University, Pullman, have good undergraduate programs in social work, he said, but the location near Spokane would be a decided advantage in terms of coordination with human service agencies. Hearn said he has had good and eager responses from colleges and universities to the proposed school, and that both Ajsncieletl Ort Hijackers demanding ransom and parachutes commandeered American and National airlines flights Wednesday night in separate incidents on the East Coast and Southwest, authorities said. i The air piracy came a week after two planes on the West Coast were hijacked within 24 hours.

President Nixon ordered stricter searches of all commuter flights after last weeks incidents. The American plane, a three-engine Boeing 727 with 51 passengers and a crew of six, was en route from Oklahoma City to Dallas, when the hijack occurred. Cash Demanded Authorities said an armed man, demanding $550,000 and parachutes, ordered the plane to fly to Fort Worth, about 30 miles from Dallas. First reports said he wanted another plane in Fort Worth. Bad weather prevented a THE NEWS THE CONVENTION MIAMI BEACH (NYT) -Without suspense but with many raw battle wounds, the Democratic National Convention moved to the nomination of Sen.

George McGovern as its candidate for president. The senator from South Dakota, who will be 50 years old next week, has cashed-in three years of dazzling organizational effort for what will appear to have been a deceptively easy first-ballot victory. Story on page 1. MIAMI BEACH (NYT) In recent days at least two possible vice presidential choices have been approached by McGovern political strategists, who told them in effect to stay loose because they were still in the running. The prospects who apparently are under consideration are Gov.

Reubin Askew of Florida, and Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri. However, Askew has said he would not take the job. INTERNATIONAL BELFAST (NYT) Nearly 100,000 men marched throughout Northern Ireland in a vivid display of Protestant power on the annual July 12 orange marches, and the day was marked by violence.

In separate incidents, three youths and two men were shot dead, and explosions shook downtown Londonderry. An extraordinary mood of tension and sullen defiance prevailed. Story on page 30. SAIGON (NYT) There was a clash betwden South Vietnamese marines and airborne troops and North Vietnamese forces on three sides IN SOCIAL SERVICE Graduate School Proposed Jackson Help to By ROBERT HARPER Swkesman-Review Staff Writer MIAMI BEACH Sen. Henry M.

Jackson, offered his support and congratulations to Sen. George S. McGovern, named the Democratic presidential nominee early today. In a telegram sent to McGoverns Doral Hotel headquarters, Jackson said, You put together a brilliant prima ry and convention organization. As a nominee of our party, you shall have my support.

Jacksons telegram concluded by sending best wishes from Jackson and his wife Helen to McGovern and his wife Elean or. Jackson staff predicted as many as 750 first ballot votes after the Washington senator made a series of appearances Wednesday before state delegation caucuses in a last ditch effort to rally anti-McGovern forces. However, in the roll call vote, Jackson received 503.15 delegate votes for nomination before delegates began to switch their support to the victor, McGovern. Jacksons final first hallot tally was 486.65. ON THE INSIDE In Todays Spokesman-Reveiw Comics Crossword Editorials Inland Empire Markets Movies Pictures 29 Radio-TV 2 10 Records 30 4 Sports 24-27 Star Gazer 5 7, 8 Weather 2 22,23 Women 37,38, 5 42, 46.

47, 48, 49 36 News Service Symbols (AP)-The Associated Press (NYT) (c) New York Times (WP) (c) Washington Post (WS) (c) Washington Star (LAT) (c) Los Angeles Times came back to the police radio network and said the hijackers had asked that the new plane be fueled, then brought within sight on the right side. The new crew was expected to leave and the plane left empty, the tower voice said. Washington, Idaho and western Montana. That a model for the school be developed involving cooperation among colleges, universities and social service agencies. That the schools scope be expanded beyond social work, to include preparing people for a variety of health service professions, including rehabilitation counseling, speech and hearing therapy, public health nursing, etc.

Need Pinpointed The Inland Empire is a vast area not served by graduate professional education, Hearn said. "There is need here for manpower in the profession. And the quality of services by the various agencies will go up with a school located here. In addition, he said, the school can serve for retraining of professionals and providing continuous inservice training. Hearn said his feasibility study began several months ago and included trips to agen- A recommendation is to be made to the Washington Council on Higher Education that a graduate school of social work be eatablished in Spokane County, according to Gordon Hearn, dean of the Portland State University school of social work.

Hearn recently completed a feasibility study on such a school in the Inland Empire by request of the council. He told a meeting of social service professionals in Spokane on Wednesday he will recommend that a new school be established here. Following his recommendation, he said, it is up to the council and state legislature whether the school becomes a reality. Hearn said the final draft of his report will be ready by the end of the month and will include four recommendations: Thai a school of social work be established in Spokane. That the school be regional in scope, serving eastern (Continued on page ID nwl fit.

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