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The Miami Herald from Miami, Florida • 94

Publication:
The Miami Heraldi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
94
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2-A Sat July 15 1972 THE MIAMI HERALD Near PBX Quang Tri Yiet Troops Anything Went In Last Hours 1 Of Convention Navy announced it had duced a new television-guided 2000-pound bomb that scored direct hits against first six targets in North Vietnam The bomb called by Navy aviators was called an improved version of the a 1000-pounder guided to its target by a television camera in its nose The new bomb knocked out four bridges and two military supply buildings in its fust six missions a spokesman said mer American port of Cam Ranh Bay destroying an undisclosed quantity of gasoline the Saigon command reported Enemy troops in the Mmh forest the Mekong Delta attacked a South Vietnamese district headquarters but were repulsed the com-m a said Thirty-four enemy were claimed killed and government casualties were reported as seven killed and 24 wounded Three of the dead were civilians a spokesman said IN THE air war the US of engagements less than three miles from the city The marines claimed they killed 69 North Vietnamese and found the bodies of 48 killed by air strikes Marine casualties were put at three killed and 18 wounded Paratroopers within a mile of the southern and southeastern edges of the city were shelled and engaged by enemy troops They claimed 19 enemy killed while losing four killed and four wounded a spokesman said Authoritative sources say the South Vietnamese strate The Saigon Command said its troops still had not entered Quang Tri but paratroopers closing on the northeastern sector of city reported they engaged the North Vietnamese only 500 yards from the city limits They claimed to have killed 18 North Vietnamese and said their own casualties were light ASSOCIATED Press correspondent Richard Blystone reported from the task force headquarters that government marines fought a series SAIGON (AP) Fighting raged around Quang Tri Friday and South Vietnamese troops advancing fiom the northeast reportedly were within 500 jards of the provincial capital Military sources said North Vietnamese gunners shot down a helicopter near Quang Tri killing Col Ngu-yan Trong Bas chief of staff of the airborne division making the advance from the northeast Light South Vietnamese also were wounded when the helicopter crashed gy in the counteroffensive is to engage the North Vietnamese wherever possible outside the city while laying siege to Quang Tri itself with artillery and air strikes IN THIS manner the sources say the government forces hope to wear down the defenders without becoming bogged down or trapped in bloody high-casu-alty street fighting against well-entrenched troops Farther south Communist gunners shelled a South Vietnamese fuel depot at the for- Fighting doning its low-profile policy of the past three months stormed the Divis Street housing development half a mile from city center searching for arms and gunmen of the Irish Republican Army Troops stayed posted on the roofs and balconies to flush out snipers MORE THAN 700 troops on the western outskirts of the city fought a nightlong battle with gunmen operating from the Catholic area of a modern housing development The army claimed 35 gunmen were hit in battles throughout Belfast WILLIAM Whitelaw administrator for the province told the House of Commons that 3000 rounds were fired at troops from the Divis Street complex 'Rocket launchers have also been used in the area by terrorists for the first he said Declaring this increased the risk of damage and casualties Whitelaw announced he had ordered the army to the areas from which the attacks were In Londonderry guerrillas used a baby carriage to smuggle a bomb through army checkpoints into the city center and the blast wrecked a corner of the main square Britibh Troops at the Ready on Belfast Firing Line soldier use armored car as shield in duel with gueriillas Guerrillas in Belfast Use Rockets Forfeit Of Second Game Upheld by Judges REYKJAVIK Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer charged Friday that tournament organizers seemed to and provoke deliberately but an appeals committee rejected his request to play the chess game he forfeited to Boris SpassXy The world champion from the Soviet Union was awarded second game in the championship match when Fischer refused to appear staying in his hotel suite because he objected to three moving picture cameras in the hall Thus Spassky who won the first game was 2-0 in the 24-game series He needs 10 more points to retain the title A victory counts one point and a draw half a point Fischer agreed to go ahead with the match if the cameras were removed although the movie and television rights allowed the Icelandic Chess Federation to otfer a record $125000 purse for the two players GUDMUNDUR Thorarinsson president of the Icelandic federation said that if the match was stopped by disqualification the organizers would not pay the share This meant that Fischer could lose both his chances at the title and a great sum of money As the loser he would be entitled to $46875 from the chess federation $45000 from a purse of about $120000 offered by British financier James Slater and $27500 from television and movie rights In a seven-page letter to Lothar Schmid the chief referee the American said he was told the cameras would be silent and invisible but "nothing could have been farther from the He previously had told Schmid that although he could not see or hear the cameras the knowledge that they were there made him nervous In his letter however he asserted: "The bungling unknowns who claimed to be professional cameramen were clumsy rude and deceitful The only thing invisible silent and out of sight was the fairness of the part of the organizers i HAVE never compromised on anything affecting playing conditions of the game itself which is my art and my profession seemed to me that the organizers deliberately tried to upset and provoke me by the way they coddled and kowtowed to that camera crew am keen to play this match and I hope game two will be scheduled for Sunday July 16 at five in the Fischer declared that when all the camera equipment had been removed "I will be at the A four-man committee voted 3-1 to reject request for a replay said Gudmunder Arnlaughsson of Iceland assistant referee who served on the committee "We agreed to support he said of us felt that it could not be done otherwise There was one against" OPPOSING was Fred Cramer an official of the US Chess Federation and an associate of Fischer The other members were Baldur Moller an Icelandic Chess Federation official and Nikolai Krogius a Spassky aide Yefim Geller second and Viktor Ivonin from the Soviet Sports Committee urged strict application of the tournament rules These provide that the clock must be started if a player appear on time for a game After an hour the game is forfeited if he appear The Russians said a match can be postponed only for a written medical excuse and no excuse had been given Fischer delivered a copy of his protest to hotel after handing it to Schmid He stuck the sealed envelope in pigeonhole The Russian got it as he was eating breakfast in the hotel dining room Spassky read it and said about everything except Spassky commented that he was disappointed and planned to go fishing for two days and not think about chess 5 Civilians 4 Troops Die in to ty Catholics no longer will accept government by the Protestant majority alone but he assured Protestants that his government has "no intention of enforcing with the Irish Republic on the people of the north by force Londonderry was hit by its third bomb explosion of the Judge Cites Poverty-Level Wage In Overturning Ruling ing our own but said that must never become a second-rate" If be becomes president he said-America keep its defense alert and fully sufficient to meet any danger" Before appearance Eagleton came before the convention pledging to the dignity of the vice and not to use it as a platform for dividing the country He mention Agnew by name but the delegates knew his target have not lost our he said we have jost is the leadership to show us the THE FINAL session of the convention opened buzzing with surprise pleasure and indifference over choice of Eagleton A small army of forlorn stragglers hopeful to the end pushed and elbowed through the aisles with placards in support of former Massachusetts Gov Endicott Peabody and Alaska Sen Mike Gravel who took seriously the advance notice that this was to be the most open convention in history and decided to run for vice president THOUGH it was supposed to be a night free of tension celebrating the appearance of the nominee to make his acceptance speech and to anoint his choice of a running mate the tireless reformers were not ready to relax They insisted upon a roll-call vote on a new charter for the party which many veteran party figures opposed because its effect was to deprive them further of power and influence the state and national organizations Naturally the reformers swept the vote as' easily as they swept the convention but not until an interminable delay while New York caucused and other states recast their votes CHAIRMAN Lawrence a sentimental man brought on House Speaker Carl Albert for a brief speech redolent of the past are two reasons why we must win the the dimunitive Albert said is George McGovern The other is Richard Albert implored the delegates go back and raise him a great And then made his farewell address as a top party official He told the convention: have shown the capacity to level with ourselves and to level with the American TO RUN the gamut of openness Gloria Stemem the darling of the feminists nominated Mrs 'Frances (Cissy) Farenthold the Texas legislator who ran a surprisingly strong race for governor of Texas in the Democratic primary By the time businessman Stanley Arnold was nominated for vice president the delegates were restless bored weary and inattentive and some even among the reformers must have had a flickering thought about whether conventions should be all that open WHEN it was announced at 12 20 a Friday that the nominating speeches were ended the delegates managed an incredulous cheer Then came a lengthy roll-call ballot on the nominations in which many more names Archie Bunker CBS newsman Roger Mudd and a Joe Smith of Scotts-bluff Neb received a smattering of votes The process was highlighted by the decision of the Alabama delegation to cast all its 37 votes for Sen Eagleton Its spokesman Fred Folsom told the convention that Wallace would have wanted to name his own vice-presidential candidate and that Alabama would extend the courtesy to McGovern THE ALABAMA vote which took only a brief time to deliver contrasted sharply with the ballots of the other states For their action the Alabamians received a round of applause from the hall The final round of applause came after the voting and the speeches ended At 327 the 36th Democratic National Convention was gaveled to an end By PETER LISAGOR Miami Heratd-Chicaa Daily News Wirt Sen George Stanley McGovern has taken over a reconstructed Democratic Party The South Dakota insurgent accepted the 1972 presidential nomination early Friday morning pledging to the senseless bombing of Indochina on Inaugural and reaching out to apprehensive and resentful Democrats who had been overwhelmed with exuberant disdain by his reform-minded supporters But he yielded little or not at all on the policy ideas that have disturbed so many of the party regulars in a speech that went directly on the attack against President economic and Vietnam war policies 1IIS CHOICE of Sen Thomas Eagleton a border-state Catholic as his vice-presidential running mate excited few among his followers and placated fewer among the disgruntled southerners and big-city leaders of the North But it did lead to a postmidnight game in which delegates cast isolated votes for Mayor Richard Daley Ralph Nader Yippie leader Jerry Rubin the Rev Daniel Berrigan and a score of nonentities The discipline of the convention went to pieces in its last hours and McGovern was brought to the podium at 235 am hardly considered prime television time by even his most ardent supporter The candidate was introduced by Sen Edward Kennedy the man he wanted as a running mate and Kennedy brought the convention to its feet perhaps with memories of what might have been clapping in unison for several minutes In a rousing stem-winder Kennedy recited from the political works of Woodrow Wilson Franklin Roosevelt Harry Truman his brother John Kennedy land Lyndon Johnson and said George McGovern would match their more glorious moments And then came the ritual of losers smiling through clenched teeth while joining the victor clasping his hand overhead First Hubert Humphrey then Edmund Muskie Henry Jackson Shirley Chisholm and Terry Sanford COMMENTING on the hours consumed in the vice-presidential selection process McGovern recalled the GOP convention that picked Spiro Agnew four years ago and said: learned that it pays to take a little more His acceptance speech was an amalgam of populist doctrine scriptural injunction literary allusions and Woody folksy sentiments He praised each of his rivals by name and hailed the of Gov George Wallace Votes for Wallace in the campaign he said "showed the depth of discontent in this WITHOUT mentioning his big-labor foes by name McGovern also acted to mollify them by saying that the single domestic of his administration would be to ensure that -every able-bodied American would have job to He said he would discuss tax reform the campaign despite what he called the Nixon Administration's preference for waiting until after the election when behind closed committee doors powerful friends and their paid lobbyists can tuin every effort at reform into a new loophole for the rich and powerful It was a speech that AFL-CIO President George Meany a devoted foe could have delivered McGOVERN who started his remarkable campaign as a bitter war foe got his biggest applause when he said that he had secret plan for peace I have a public plan "As one whose heart has ached for 10 years over the agony of Vietnam I will halt the senseless bombing of Indochina on Inauguration He pledged that within 90 1 days of his inauguration all American soldiers and prisoners be out of the jungle and out of their cells and back America where they belong HE CALLED fora turning from "excessive preoccupation overseas to rebuild- day The blast turned a shop in the devastated Waterloo Place shopping area into an inferno A crowd gathered and troops had to fire rubber bullets to disperse the people The Londonderry Chamber of Trade wired British Prime Minister Edward Heath appealing for troop reinforcements The army dispatched 600 more men from Belfast the Bureau of Labor Statistics in determining an income necessary to afford adequate food clothing and shelter and similar THE OPINION declared that Congress poverty-level earnings as prescribed annually by the Office of Management and Budget as a yardstick for determining exemptions from wage The council set the $190 ceiling after the Pay Board failed to'come up with a figure The Pay Board took three separate votes Proposals for $350 and $220 were rejected A council spokesman said at the time that the $190 BATTLES continued through Friday afternoon with concentrated assaults on two police stations in West Belfast and sniper attacks on many points in the city Bombs blasted bars and factories in Belfast and damaged the war-torn center of Londonderry the province's second largest city The British Army aban- cutoff would exempt 21 per cent of the nonsupervisory workers while $335 would exempt more than 50 per cent Jones said the alarm at the prospect of an exemption for over 50 per cent of the nonsupervisory working force is less convincing in the light of its recent ruling exempting small businesses from both price and wage He pointed out that the council authorized the exemption to eliminate the administrative burden in regu-1 a i small businesses About 19 million employes were affected "regardless of their annual or hourly income" he said Great Lakes and upper Mississippi Valley and from southeast Florida to New England Warm and humid air covered much of the eastern half of the Weather Wets Midwest Seaboard Steams The weather over most of the Midwest and along the Atlantic seaboard was wet as showers and thundershowers spread from the Dakotas to the lower storms are in store for Florida and from southeast Arizona to the Mississippi Valley and the Northeast Showers will occur in the northern nation although Tampa registered a record low of 69 degrees Fair skies prevailed over the rest of the nation The national forecast: Scattered thunder JULY 15 of Commerce feu to the Economic Stabilization Act said that increases to any individual whose earnings are substandard or who is a member of the working poor shall not be limited in any manner until such time as his earnings are no longer substandard or he is no longer a member of the working Quoting from a congressional report Jones said that Congress intended that the exemption from wage controls apply to "ail persons whose earnings are at or below levels established by Tide Tables in Sports Sec MIAMI AND VICINITY: Partly cloudy through Sunday with a few showers High in upper 80s low in mid-70s Mostly southeast winds 10-15 miles per hour Shower probability 30 per cent MIDDLE WEST COAST NAPLES AND LAKE OKEECHOBEE AREAS: Part-ly cloudy through Sunday with chance of thundershowers mainly during the afternoon and evening Lows 70 to 75 Highs 88 to 93 Variable winds 10 mph becoming onshore occa Sionally 15 mph during the afternoon and gusty near showers Rain probability 50 per cent INDIAN RIVER-BREVARD AREAS-Partly cloudy through Sunday witn thundershowers likely Lows 70 to 75 Hiohs 88 to 93 Variable winds 10 mph berommg onshore occasionally '5 mph during the afternoon end gusty near thundershowers Ram probability 60 per cent BROWARD AREAS: partly cloudy through Sunday with a chance of thundershowers mainly during the night and morning hours and shifting inland during the afternoon Lows 75 to 80 Highs 86 to 90 Mostly southeast winds 10 to 15 moh gusty near showers Ram probability jO per cent KEYS AREAS- partly cloudy through Sunday with a chance of showers mamly during night and morning hours Lows near 80 Highs near 90 East and Southeast winds 10 to 15 mph gusty near showers Rain probability 3Q per cent FLORIDA: partly cloudy through Sunday with scattered afternoon end evening thunlershowers except showers begin ning afong the Southeast coast and Keys during the late night and mors-ing hours Lows near 80 Southeast Coast and Keys with 70s elsewhere Huihs 88 to 93 FLORIDA ETXENDED OUTLOOK: Monday through Wednesday partly cloudy with widely scattered mamly no on or tiering thundershowers Low near 80 in the Revs and marnty 70s elsewhere Highs to 95 FORECAST WEATHER MAP FOR SAT AM Map Pa qnd Epreepsts National WotHr Service NOAA Deportment Local National World Temperatures GREATER MIAMI Rockies and the Northern Plains It will continue to be warm and humid from the Gulf states to the Great Lakes and New England Pree Miami Bay Frnt Prk 86 80 03 North Miami Beach 91 76 South Miami 89 72 04 91 68 89 70 88 71 88 71 87 49 77 62 90 74 100 75 84 64 75 67 65 73 97 74 Free 88 74 05 86 75 85 II Coral Gable Miami Airport Miami Beach FLORIDA Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Des Moines Detroit Duluth Indianapolis Kansas City Milwaukee Mpls -St Omaha St Louis WEST TOO 66 68 56 76 60 84 74 95 59 96 73 85 73 88 73 116 62 85 66 96 73 106 17 93 62 94 74 74 67 92 60 73 57 Aibuauerqug Anchorage Bismarck Brownsville Denver Ft Worth Honolulu Houston Las Vegas Los Anodes Okla City Phoenix Salt City San Anlomo San Oie90 Francisco Seattle WEATHER BROADCAST 1 NATION it Mil INK ANA CENTER ccnwjous epTi ocasts MM! IWSSMW WALM KCACH 182 AO RH COBT IN AP0 rSTObkl ArQVOAN A T-w FOREIGN City Aberdeen Amsterdam Ankara Athens Auckland Berlin Birmingham Sunrise Today 6:38 Moonri-e Today 11:17 ain Sunset Today 8:14 pm IP Cll Moon-fl Today 11:26 pm July It July Au All.

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