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Show i ; A DESERET NEWS, A Way, October 2, i- - 1972 Showdown Nears On Bill To Halt N. Viet Travel WASHINGTON (UPI)-T- he House moved today toward a showdown vote on a bill to prohibit U.S. citizens from making unauthorized trips to North Vietnam amid protests the bill would jeopardize prisoner of war releases by Hanoi. Supporters of the measure claimed it was needed to curtail travel by antiwar activists, such as actress Jane Fonda, to Hanoi where they interfere with official efforts to win release of POWs and to ' settle the war. ' But the Democratic Study - Group (DSC) said in a letter ,f liberal Hi use members that the bill was approved by the House Internal Security Committee without adequate con- " 'Sessional review. . ? 4 ., - 4 "Jhe measure ' - - "puts harsh re- straint on the pghtt to travel ' Without providing the'substan-.- . tive and procedural due proc- ess required by the Constitu- tion, according to the DSG , letter signed by Reps. Don Edwards and Phillip Burton of California and Rep. Robert F, Driqan of Massachusetts. of prisoners to antiwar spokesmen. Under the bill, U.S. citizens including reporters cannot travel to nations in armed conflict with the United States unless authorized by the President after a determination of whether the trip was in the national interest. The bill provides that violators would be suoject to 10 years in prison, $10,000 fine, or Some opponents fear only those who support administration policy on Vietnam could be cleared for travel to Hanoi, thus curtailing efforts to' shuttle mail to and from the POWs and preventing release -- - both. The DSG also complained the bill, if , enacted, would give the government power to control the news which comes from' such areas by assuring that only news personnel approved by the government are permitted to travel in countries in combat with the United States". , - v ;- Missing In Action in Southeast Asia, warned that if Congress passes the bill it should consider some alternative channel for movement of mail between the United States and the POWs. enemy and have the effect of to the causing serious damage United of the interests States. Backers of the measure, led by Rep. Richard H. Ichord, DMo., chairman of the Interna Security Committee, contend the amendment to the 1950 Internal Security Act is long overdue. Tne report cited the recent' Jane trip to Hanoi of actress "broadcasts Fonda whose from the enemys' territory to our forces in the field have an obvious tendency to underour of mine the morale In a report on the bill, the coinmitiee said a substantial number of United States cit-'- ! izens have traveled abroad to hostile areas and have there engaged in a variety of activities which necessarily give aid and encouragement to the "Its a hurtful kind of bill in a way that it seems to divide opinfamilies into diverse said Mrs. Grubb who ions, added that it could put POW families into the painful position of having to decide whether to defy the President if they are invited to Hanoi. forces. Mrs. Evelyn Grubb, national director of the League of Families of Prisoners and MARMADUKE THE U.S. SCENE WORLD DATELINES Space Tie Russ-U.- S. cution today for persons using unlicensed firearms to kill. Combined Wire Services Moscow Information Secretary Francisco S, Talad also announced for .the first time since martial law was declared Sept. 23 that fighting, had erupte etween govfemment forces and the Maoist New Peoples Army. He said at least one Communist was killed and eight others captured in an encounter Sunday in Zambales Province. veteran Russian cosmonaut discloses that the first A utives to take slight pay cuts to help finance a revised contract proposal he plans to offer striking city workers. Perk, who did not disclose details of his revised contract was scheduled to proposal, meet with leaders of municipal worker unions this afternoon to try to end the weeklong strike. F!a. - (UPI)-- A dairy farmer, his wife and son and a house guest were shot to death Sunday and police charged a former boy friend of the couples daughter with the slayings. The daughter, Evelyn San- ders, 21, was spared and later notified police who arrested Thomas Turner Chambers, 32, an itinerant farm worker from Gadsden, Ala., ajid Robert Gerald Harris, 2T, cl". Largo, Fla., on murder charges. Chambers and Harris were TAMPA, ' caught after a; 9 . v. Bomb Riot Failed If it is successful it could be the forerunner of a joint expedition to the Mars by the end of the planet century, Vladimir Shatalov, commander of the two Soviet manned flights said. U.S.-Sovi- "It simply $5..000 Reward RALEIGH, N.C. (UP1) -Ahoped today that a $5,000 reward posted in the slaying of a newswoman and a real estate salesman would provide s bresk in the ense. uthorities , The yictjrns,, Tricia Grimes, BILLINGS, MONT.VttPir 23, "and Peter WiffiamsJr., 25,' Three men were in the Yelwere found shot to death Satlowstone County jail t today urday at a picnic area near after a dummy sack pf money the Neuse River east of here. was delivered on demand of Miss. Grimes was womens an extortionist who threatened. editor of the Raleigh Times. , Jr ' to blow up a Montafia "Powt Sunday flight, Frank Daniels , Co. office building unless paid 1, V Jr., president of the Ness and . $100,000. Co., Publishing Observer :j "which- - publishes the . Times, . is of- - V (upi)-a announced the A Cut In Pay?. 1 . ;'4jyear-ddl- , unemployed Bible faring a $5,000 company to any reward l ' salesman;- - who has spent ;j person furnishing the Wake much of the past 10 years in CLEVELAND County sheriff with informaMayor Ralph Perk said today prison or in mental institu-h- e tion leading to arrest and conconfessed Sunday to the viction of the killer or killers. may ask top city halj exec-n- s Erickson said, the agreement, came shortly after 8 a.m., capping a negotiation session which began at 7 p.m. Sunday under auspices of Asst. Labor William of Secretary ' 1 .Admits Slayings : ' i !tfPI) ; ' I r $ .: HONG KONG (UPI)-Ch- ina ' Celebrated its 23rd; birthday Sunday in an atmosphere of gaiety, with official emphasis on recent gains on the diplomatic front. - Thousands of Chinese turned but to attend the festivities Gala throughout Peking. parties were held in the Summer Palace, the Working Peoples Palace of Culture and four other public parks. The News official Agency New China (NCNA) re ; Danes vote today in a referendum called to give the public the final say in the coudecintrys most sion since it joined the North Atlantic Alliance whether to enter the European Common exuded with7 S jiibilant afmo- -' sphere of unity for victory of Chinas new achievement in socialist revolution and construction and on the diplomatic front. . Market. ,, banners and red flags weB everywhere. A huge portrait of Chairman the Tien An Men gate, and on the flanks of the Tien An Men square stood huge portraits of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin. Mao The Sovied news agency Tass said today Egyptian Premier Aziz Sidky will .begin an official visit to the Soviet Union on Oct. 16. Diplomatic sources in both Cairo and London said the visit would be an effort to call a summit conference to repair badly mauled relations. Copenhagen ported that the Chinese capital Multi-colore- d Cairo , Norways rejection of mar- ket membership in a plebiscite last week added suspense to the voting, but the general expectation was that a majority would elect for Denmark to join EEC, the European Eco- nomic Community, on next Jan. 1. . Manila President Ferdinand ' E. Marcos decreed the death penalty by firing squad or electro- - Soviet-Egyptia- n . UPI uiplomatic dent. K..Thaier,-ipQrted.Jnoup- correspon- Belfast Northern Irelands Protestants and embattled Roman Catholics buried their differences long enough Sunday to pray together for peace during Ulsters deadliest weekend in months. But the killing continued today. A British Army Intelligence agent was killed when gunmen a intercepted plainclothes patrol, riddling its light truck with bullets. The soldier; was the 594th person to die in three years of bloodshed between Northern Irelands religious . CLCTJ M LARSZN Democratic Candidate for House of Representatives, (NMrth Davia Dist. 57 Ceuniv) Qualify education and school financing ill be Wo of the moat romplexing problem to face the legislature. I.S. Supreme f lour? decreed school financing cannot be discriminatory. I lnh law stales AM. children must be educated. Physical handicap andor mental retardation should .NO'I deny a child education. Education cannot be measured b the funds spent. Paid Pol. Ad., ttcct WracnCnm.. R. Wnrn. See. i s k . A cB3 isn't fair, Phil. The ore your children! China's Birthday ; ., manned n space venture will last, three days and include a linkup of the spaceships and an exchange of crews. Prospect. awrft'VJ vs MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Settlement of the strike by pilots of Northwest Airlines was announced today by Roy Erickson, vice president Of Northwest. chase over the Howartj Franklin Bridge across Tampa Bay. Soviet-America- nude bodies in the parking lot of the Community Presbyterian Church in suburban Mt. Pilot Strike Settled high-spee- d I i riturders of a Chicago mother qh4,ber infant daughter, police Said. ; , Lee C. Jennings admitted slaying Mrs. Barbara Flanagan, 27, and her daughter, Renee, in early September and dumping their Russia had its hand in the Middle East through military and political arrangements with Syria and Iraq and is now said to be dlearing the decks for a resumption of dealings with Egypt, though on a more limited scale. that London strengthened fimPs S l3 Z i ' . 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