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Show fi - ky m AnI. 203, No. TD ''alt Lake oirtica .Foe WL ?irt Pi Nixon Aims Arms Salvo C it, Ltah Friday Morning August 23, 1072 r 0 lairn Point Robert B Semple Jr New York Tinier Writer llham Greider Washington Post Writer Bv SAN CLEMENTE Piesident Nixon indirectly accused Sen George McGovern Thursday of gambling with the safe-tv of the American people under a false of economy and warned that the Democratic presidential nominee s policies would reduce America to the second strongest power in the world The Presidents comments came eai-liThuisdav in Chicago as he adoicssed the 54th annual convention of the meti-cathe first of thiee stops in a Legion whirlwind, post convention day of campaigning that also took him to Ltica. Mich , San Diego, and finally home to the Western White House m San Clemente Flew to Michigan banner - n In Ltica, a hotbed of controversy over school busing, Nixon issued a statement reaffirming hcs opposition to busing and prodding Congress to enact various items of anti busing legislation And in San Diego, he spoke briefly before a large and enthusiastic airport welcome in what he has long described as his lucky city ST W MINX - Sen PALL, George McGovern, whose oratory does not usually rouse people out of their chairs, had the 2 000 delegates of the American Fcdeiation of Teachers on their feet Thursday, stomping and shouting wildly What McGovern said wasTeachers or on a picket line if belong in school but not in jail necessaiy low-ke- y - The Demociatic piesidential nominee promised to support the fast growing AFT on two points crucial to the future of unionism m education the right to collective bargaining for teachers and the light to strike McGovern said he subscribes fully to the unions demands for legislation At Page wewi jWWW Mliiut1 - 4 t y 1 ,4 2 C4 J & & ate President ki V 1 " J Nixon speaks to the American Legion con- .? 4 X StkuSHkL 1 Associated tor vention in Chicago Thursday, beginning his campaign Press Wireotioto It was his first appearance after leav-ithe GOP convention meet in Miami Beach. n Downtrend Predicted Prices of Beef Reach Record U.S. Levels But the major event of his dav was the attack he delivered in Chicago on what he believes to be one of his opponents most vulnerable weaknesses fense policy Wft- yqyvJP l$:' i: f present, according to AF T officials, only 17 states allow collective bargaining contracts by teachers and 30 states have laws prohibiting teacher stakes. There is no substitute for a federally insured right to free collectiv e bargaining for unions like the AFT, McGovern said The meeting room went wild with applause. The union endorsed his candidacy A half hour later, however, McGovern was over m Minneapolis addressing the national convention of the Aeterans of Foreign Wars and McGovern dnves them wild in a different way. Opposed to him on the war issue, alarmed by his defense proposals, the V FW members sat in rigid silence while the senator lectured them e on bloated defense spending and the 2, Column !Mnn 4W4WBJLWMfct McGovern to Teachers Deserve Right to Strike By Price Ten Cents de- Nixon did not mention AlcGovern by name Wednesday night during his acceptance speech m Miami and refused to do so again Thursday Bat this was the By Don Kendall Associated Press Writer only concession he made to some of his Retail beef and WASHINGTON to record highs in soared pork prices July, boosting overall food costs also to a new peak But there are signs of some if retailers pass along recent tooling-ol- f reductions said The Agriculture Department Thuisdav the annual cost of a "market-baske- t of food rose $23 m July, a 1 8 perfarm prices cent increase Higher accounted for $16 of the July gain Retail beef averaged more than $1 17 per pound on an all cut basis, compared with $1 13!2 in June The previous record was about $1 16 last February and March. Pork also was up, to a record all cut average of 85 6 cents per pound at supermarkets, compared with 82 cents m June and the earlier record of 82 1 cents in strategists pleas that he remain until the last month of the campaign. He not oi lv attacked the assumptions behind McGoverns defen-pinpos-a!- s but their specific mgiedients, and he derided them all e My pnnciple, like youis, he told the cheering legionnaues is that the I mted States must never have a defense which is second to that of any other nation in the wofld We have economized" he went on We will continue to economize on military spending whenever it is safe to do so But I have never gambled, and I never will gamble with the safetv of the American people under the false banner of economy To Domestic Needs Associated Democratic hopeful George McGovern speaks out for teachers right to strike as he addresses the national Press WireDhoto convention of American Federation of Teachers in St. Paul, Minn. The union endorsed his candidacv. Activists Head Home After Partial Victory - Tired MIAMI BENCH Fla (AP) duffle their activists bags packed vtung and headed fm home Thursday, calling at least a paitial their thiee dav ciU'-advutnrv and dctei mined to keep up their pmtest tin migh the piesideUial election campaign The' blamed the vandalism that swept the streets while President Nixon addressed the Republican National Conven-tioon a minnritv ol then numbeis who. they claimed reacted violently because thev felt betraved hv the police Police in turn, said it was they who were bctiaved bv those animals who violated the agi cement foi peaceful n a We didn t block the hall true But we called attention to the bombover-al- l of Vietnam and what we and thou- ing sands of others think after all our purpose of it and that was Lamb, a spokesman for the Miami Conventions Coalition said the Miami Beach police had broken their word when they refused to let the demonstrators stage a sit in at the Convention Hall entrances Bob The police promptlv denied theie had been any such agreement Rockv Pomerance (Miami Beach po lice chief) betrayed us, let me tell you that " Lamb said If we had been allowed o sit down ? Police Virest 1.000 non demonMi alms about a Ncaily thud of the total who had come to Miami Bpach to pio'cst Nixons vvai policv Most wcio i pleased were ai tested under nominal bonds bv noon ' We made a statement lieie that was heard aciess the count! v, said lohn alii , as he heaped Cox 30 of Stockton his belongings atop his car paiked out side Flamingo Talk 1 Inside Tlic Tribune Tribune Telephone Numbers, Page 2 Page A-- the enti antes we would Have all been attested in 30 minutes to an hour and the demonstration the evening " D-- l n 5,12,17,23 3 would have been over for Busps Block Path The demonstratois found their path to x the enhances barricaded bv bumper-tbumper buses We were defeated tacticallv before we even began." said Marsha Monester-skv- , a member of the Students for a It was a perfect Democratic Society outwitted Thus roving police tiap" bands of clisoigamzed piotcstcis went to slashing tires, dumping gaibage bins, (hi owing eggs and rocks and generallv trashing," m the teim of the youths They slowed, but did not halt, delegate from entering the convention hall o D-- 9 D-- 4 Police Denv ( harge Asked if police had bioken (heir word bv not lotting the demonstrators stage their sit in, Sgt Pete Corso, Miami Beat h police information off.cer, replied Absoluteiv not We made no such agj cement with thorn FriI av 'w Forecast Salt Lawe Citv and vuiriitv lichtlv warmer trmperatuies, skies, windv at time. ftralhe. map raseD" Meat, primarily beef, accounts for of the average family's nearly food budget Pecent reports show live cattle in the Midwest averaged less than $36 per 100 Fischer, playing white, had transthe game by an irresistible attack, coordinating his queen, rooks and other pieces admirably, after Spasskys earlier offensiv e had petered out, leaving his kmg vulnerable From the 3bth move when Fischer gamed a pawn, he looked a sure winner After his 42nd move, Spassky seemed content to wait for the adjournment and piompted to action hv the and hoodlums who went on a rampage and hint people, thie,v paint on delegates, urinated on them cut Pres and We wot e hioligans slashed tires, and disabled cars by flipping open thp hoods and yanking out the It was these animals who violated the agreement for peaceful demonstra tions distributors Faced with these tactics, police turned to tear gas to try to methodically drive groups of youths out of the The demonstrators thought they could do it nonviolently But when the moment came, the yojng people refused to follow sitdovvn plans and wait to be carried off Instead thev ran up and down Collins Avenue, the mam route to the hall and tossed trash cans into traffic lanes. by late July and in August administration officials have predicted consumers soon will find meat prices lower as more cattle reached market one-thir- d pounds by broke windows on cars and blocked up he streets paths of the delegates However the rampage was triggered, it was deal that after it was generally put down, police continued to toss gas bombs and chase down small clusters of youths, many of them simply standing on sidew alks Bobby Edges Closer to Chess Crown Predict Price Cuts by far the largest item, w as price at the farm and whole- But beef, dropping m sale levels And Nixon lb Besides costing some $10 billion less than the present military budget, McGovern's proposals would slow or stop works on a vanetv of sophisticated weapons and weapons systems in order to make possi- See Page 2, Column 5 beef-sellin- g Reuters News Agency American challenger REYKJAVIK Bobby Fischer edged nearer winning the world chess championship when the 18th game of the title series was adjourned here Thursday night with the Soviet title holder, Boris bpassky, a pawn down. 1970 January The proposals to which the President addressed himself are contained m McGoverns 54 8 billion alternative military budget presented to Congress June pared with $1,299 in June. It was i 5 percent more than in July last year. The breakdown showed the farm for $1.17 per pound value" of m supermarkets was 77 5 cents, the same as in June, but more than 14 percent higher than a vear earlier. mid-Augu- down about 10 percent from peaks earlier this summer Dressed wholesale beef cai casses at Chicago also have dropped 'sharply, to less than $55 per 100 pounds, from more than in July A major question is whethei the lower farm and wholesale prices will be passed on fully to consumers In July the Agriculture Department report showed, middlemen widened their price spreads for beef while farmers averaged the same for cattle as in June Comparison of Figures In all, a market basket of food in July theoretically enough to feed a typical family for a year cost $1,322 com $60 formed The Moves, Page deliberated for 15 his reply A-- 6 minutes before sealing Lnusually Friendly The players seemed unusually friendly as they walked off the stage together If Fischer wins the resumed game Friday, he would need only a win and a draw or three draws from the remaining six games to dethrone Spassky and become the first American to hold the world title Fischer led in the senes when play began Thursday evening. The audience followed Fischers play with wonder and admiration, the more so since Spassky made no obvious blunder. 10-- 7 Russ Nobel Novelist Rips Reds New York Times Service not large enough a catch plain people STOCKHOLM Alexander I Solzhen for such a great organization " itsvn. tne Soviet novelist whose works Nooel Foundation spokesmen declined are banned m the Soviet Union, bitterlv to sav how they had obtained the Solzhen- denounced his country in the lecture he n lecture would have deliveied if he could have ac cepted the Nobel Prize accorded him m 1970 The novelist, now 53 years old won the Nobel Prize for literature m 1970 but did not travel to Stockholm to receive .t at the pi lze ceremony on Dec 10 of that yeai because, he said he was afraid that he would not be allowed back mto the Soviet Lmon Another Presentation Fails "Woe to that nation whose liteiatuie is disturbed by the intervention of power he said in his lecture which was published heie today by the Nobel Founda tion n its yearbook "Because thwt is not just a violation against fieedom of print, .t is the dosing dov n of the heart of the a slashing to piecps of its nation memory The writer also denounced the Lmted Nations as an unmoral oigamation in an immoral woild that jealouslv guards the fieedom of some nations and neglects the fieedom of othcis " Savs I lesult acadernv, which selects the annual literature lauieate, was denied a vma Y Spurns ppe.ils an obedient vote, Sol znemtsyn said the lmted Nations declines to undeitake (he in estimation of the gioans, dream-an- d pi iv ate appeals bcsecchincs f humble individual s a Arrangements were then made to present the Nobel medal and diploma to him last spring m a ceremonv in a pri vate apaitment m Mosrow But that was canceled with Dr Karl Rigrnr Gierow, the permarent secretary of the Swedish of - N nc nfpfl Pro VNtrephon Alexander Solzhenitsyn Joe tonvu t Inion v -- V The Nobel Foundation then decided to publish the lecture in the yeaibook, entitled The Nobel Prize in 1971 Gieiow said in a statement that the lecture, as published, was identical to the one that the writer would have delivered at the Moscow ceremony The cash pi ue of about SSIIOOO that accompanied the Nobel award was paid mto a Swiss bank account in Solzhen itsvn s name t (Copvnght) One observer said, When Bobby is at his best Sparky looks like a baby m his hands " Ingenious Compromise The organizers produced an mgemous compromise to the continuing argument about how near spectators should be to the stage The b0 seats were remo'ed at Fischinsistence for the previous game The Russian camp pointed out that changes m playing conditions require the agreement of both sides and the W'est German arbiter, Lothar Schmid, ruled Thursday that the seats should be put back ers Electromc experts and chemists inspected the hall while it was closed today, examining the lighting, the table and the chairs Th s follow ed the protest by Spasskys second, Grandmaster Elint Geller, last Tuesday, halting that electronic or chemical devices might be in use to demoralize the champion Todays Chuckle A well informed man is one whose wife has lust told him what she thinks of him. 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