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Deseret News from Salt Lake City, Utah • 9

Publication:
Deseret Newsi
Location:
Salt Lake City, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A9 DESERET NEWS, Y.edne.day, Juno 23, 1972 3 U.S. Gunboats For South Korea French Testing A-Bombs Anderson Releases More Vietnam Papers Chan9e voteRui" PAPEETE, TAHITI (UPD France, ignoring world-wide pioic'is has stalled nuclear tes.s the Soul Pan'ic. Government sources -aid today the fast bomb in tile senes was detonated Sunday morning The soutees sail a setond explosion would take plate l.uei this week. The solutes did no -p' i tin ot Sundays explo si, Bu1 Flam delen'C nitirev sml Tue-dav in Paris dial the new tes mill'd nol ho on 1 v.eld The nnnistrv also a would neilhet ionium not give details concerning the explosions iinul i he uuietu blasts aie ovei (See conimeir.il on Page A 16 keep lorees in South Korea at sutficient strength and aleitnpss provide an effei tive deterrent against uni The Ini'ed States ciirrent'v his about 41)009 men in Soto Kotei PPvident ion his the n.iion will maintain it cuiient troop strength theie at least until the end of the 1973 fiscal yeai Yu. who teceived a US nulitaiv tuiefing Monday tn.it North Koiea was capable of launching a sudden attack th little or no warning, said the military strength of the Communists had inti eased During the last year, Yu said, the North Koreans have further reinforced their military capabilities bv continuing to introduce offensive weapons and fortifying the demilitarized zone, while they were launching peace propaganda to disguise their actual motives EM ORK I 1 So let ipmier Alc.xei Ko'vgin passed Ament an piopo'-! regarding the Vietnam i.u lo Hanoi, acioidmg to a iutheito unpublished reel ion Wt the Pentagon Papeis, the feu York Times reported i The papers, dealing vnth iiplonidtic rn'oves between aashington, Moscow, Hanoi Inti other nations, also show that the Soviet Union in 1965 jefused to act as an inter-liediary between the United states and North Vietnam.

I The Times, which first published part of the Pentagon Papers last year, said the Iresent section was ptovided I column! 1 Jack Anderson, iho did not disclose how he foi the report. I The leport shows, the Times said, that in May, 1965, Ambassador Foy D. Kohler met in Moscow with Sonet Fmeign Minister Nikolai P. Firvubin. Kohler asked whether the Sompi gov-etnment would pass on tc Hanoi a message saying theie would be a halt in th bombing of North Vietnam as of May 12 that year in the hope that may be a step tow aid peace.

Firyubm answ ered the must find its own way of transmitting messages to Hanoi, the papers show. However, by December, 1966, the papers said some in government felt the Soviet Union was taking part in a Polish move to get peace talks started. V.iieti Kosygin visited London in February, 19l7, The Bntist, were fust startled, then delighted, to nd Ko -gn piupi to play an uive lele mtet be lie I S. a Min." Times (uo ed sen'; say leg Kosyg rnav not have understood the full import of the pioposals lie was transmitting, the report said. "He may also have been quite willing to subordinate D.R.V.

(North Vietnam) interests to the Soviet desire to avoid further escalations in Vietnam." However, the study said, Kosygin exerted no pressures on North Vietnam, but merely acted as a more or less neutral agent of transmission. The neutrality, the papeis suggested, may have been prompted at least in part by Soviet uncertainty about the role of the Chinese in the ar. WASHINGTON (lPI)-A vens- group believes at leit 50 million eligible o'er will not vote in the presiden Hal election in November. The Youth Citizenship Fund (YCF) put the blame Tuesday largely on registration obstructions. Its spokesmen suggested a walk in and vote system in which registration and voting would be simultaneous.

Representatives for YCF and two other citizens' piouns. Common Cause and thp League of Women Voters, testified before a house Post Office subcommittee. The argued that current voter registra'ion laws me probably unnecessary and demonstrably obstructive. THE STORE ROOM WORLD DATELINES Thieu Receives More Power Combined Saigon AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo. (UPIt Defense Secie-tary Melvin Lind wound up two days of private sessions with Sou'll Koiean defense of-fcials Tuesday by signing a 816 null! agipomeiii aimed at beet it up Koie iv foiees The agieenieti' whioo apparently was worked out prior to Liiid's meeting heie with Sou'h Koiean Defense Munster Yu Joe-Hong, will help Sou'll Koto.

i ii owe thtee gunboats fiom the United Stales. Laird stressed pnoi to the signing, however, th.r President Nixon still was moving the United States from an era of confrontation to an eta of negotiation The two defense ministers issued a joint statement saying North Korean military capabilities continue to pose a serious threat lo tire Republic of Korea. They pledged to fi unrj nnn? -hOB CB2, Pres. Nnion Van Thieu today signed into law hastily passed legislation giving him almost unlimited power for six months. The legislation was parsed by a bare quorum of pro-tovernment senators in a semi-secret meeting late Tuesday light.

Opposition senators a majority of the 60-member tpper house had protested the meeting. The pro-Thieu senators voted unanimously to extend the powers of the president and there appaied to liHl thp onnosition could do about thp vote. lanberra EISUMMERMERC VINGAGIGA 'GuTd' The IntPi ni mdidprs of the Southeast Vm Tien tv Oi 'on der'ere't today in Australia that chances of building last ng pf'ce row sppm bet'er than they have been for a mg time. But they also said their region still faces a grow-ig danger fiom covert forms of Communist intervention nd interference including externally promoted insurgency, jbversion. infiltration and terrorism, narBctilarlv in the hilippmes and Thailand.

mvmz Simla Pakistani Pres. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto arrived in India today fr summit talks with Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi jmed at squelching hostilities between the two nations that, iv spanned a quarter of a century. Mrs. Gandhi at rived Tuesday at this Himalayan hilltop sfetion and greeted Bhutto and his 87-member delegation aduv for the start of talks that will affect the lives of the 700 million people living in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Belfast 'Jf Rock-throwing clashes bet.ween Protestants and Roman Catholics endangered Northern Irelands fragile one-day-old peace.

A British army spokesman warned against complacency and a police spokesman said A spark could blow it all Underscoring the threats to the peace ushered in by the Iifish Republican Armys (IRA) cease-fire, militant protes-tnts headed for a meeting with Britains secretary of state 0r Notthern Ireland to demand all-out militaiy action bair" IRA strongholds. Q'CaniEgiSgi ynmiTzifinazB 'ttaailiS iWcrld's A Pawn Chess Match ynmaiifc firmer lie Set vices asked, How come a player of your experience can lose so many games in a row "I had a toothache during the first game, so I lost, Tar-takower replied. In the second game I had a headache, so I lost. In the third game, an attack of rheumatism in the left shoulder, so I lost. In the fourth game, I wasnt feeling so well, so I lost.

And in the fifth game? Veil, must one have to win every game? Addiction to chess has often disrupted and even destroyed married life. Tony Santasiere, a veteran master, once excoriated the great Sammy Resh-evsky for being a failure on the ievel of love," his term for the creative artist who risks all for the beauty of an idea without thinking of the monev that accompanies the winning of a tournament. Reshevskys sin stemmed from his confession, Never again will I permit chess to interfere with the more im-nnrtanr husiness of caring for my family, a premise that left his critics horror-stricken. "Any unskilled laborer can raise a family, snorted Santasiere, a bachelor. "But a Reshevsky? A genius, a dream for all humanity? Schopenhauer was correct: a married philosopher is ridiculous." Despite the presence of an occasional female, chess remains predominantly male-oriented.

In the 1930s. Vera i a Czech-born Englishwoman, consid ered capable of beating the best ot the men, but her career was cut short whec she perished in a German buzz-bomb attack duiing World War II. WHILE OUR QUANTITIES LAST1 RICES EFFECTIVE THURS. 10 A.M. 10(21 Ete "ti 4tT5: Mattrns AHandTowtl ow O'-ro: 9 P.M.

IttoJl pntinued from First Page 1 retired at 21, became a lose, and died at 47 in 1884. wing a heritage of chess ipory that is pre-eminent to is day. It is said he was in-ne the last 26 years of his e. Ernest Jones, the Bntish xychoanalyst who was ds 'biographer, saw iess as an aspect of the fam-v structure. The king is the uher, the queen the mother, the Raw ns obviously the nildren.

At the climax of the ime (or family quarrel), the iwi, (or children) press for-ard to assassinate the king ir father). The most vicious 'ows are often executed by le queen, indicating that omens lib may not be that cw, after all. (Indeed, a liberated manufacturer has fut on market a chess set in which the roles of king and hippo are reversed, with the PI liieen the larger piece.) The first official world hampion, in 1866, Wil-iclm Steimtz He was born in irague, but shuttled through-mt his life between Vienna, and New York. Todays concepts of position, openings and defense are due lo 40 years of his dedication to die game. Theie is an eccentric humor hat is associated with chess masters.

One of its great exponents was Xavier Tarta-kower, a Mittel Euiopean of diverge passpoits during the period between the two world ars. In one tournament Tai Iakov er suffered a taie live lO'-'ys in succession "as Gown fir MrtMWntKnViNl3MT.W..

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