Agnes la By The Associated Press At least 23 persons were reported dead and thousands of others homeless yesterday in the wake of Tropical Storm Agnes as it lashed the Northeast coast. In Pennsylvania, where high winds and seven inches of rain caused five deaths, Governor Milton Shapp declared a' state of "extreme emergency." Highways were blocked, communi- cations cut-off and thousands had to be evacu- ated from their homes in the battered state. Washington D.C. and its metropolitan area were hard hit by the storm as well. The U.S. Weather Service said yesterday, the Potomac River will crest at 16 feet-six feet above flood stage and the highest the river has been since 1942. Just outside the capital in Prince William County, Virginia, flood and raid damage was extensive. "This is a terrible situation. I've never seen shes coast anything like it," a county official said. "Cars have been washed off the roads with people in them." Weather Service forecasts predicted Virginia's James River will rage 20 feet above flood level before the storm is over. Virginia officials have called for amphibious military vehicles to evacuate stranded motorists on Interstates 95 and 66 after heavy trucks sent out earlier were unable to reach them. In New York City, weeks of heavy rain and flooding have caused the Small Business Ad- ministration to declare four counties in the vicinity disaster areas. Flash flood warnings remained in effect for most of the state as well as north central and western Pennsylvania. As the hurricane moved north, it left in its path a trail of destruction throughout the South. The worst damage appeared to have been in North Carolina where raging waters threatened to burst a dam near Burnsville. it Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 23, 1972 :: lVol. LXXXII, No. 32-S Ten Cents y -Associated Press Twelve Pages THE CITY MARINA? No. This mess used to be a trailer park in Salem, Va. before Agnes struck. Flood waters from the swollen ... Roanoke rushed into the park leaving trailer owners adrift. Biggest raids of war hit N. Viets JOAN BAEZ talks about yesterday's "Ring Around Congress" demonstration in Washington D.C. W Womenprotest IndochlinIfa War By LINDA DREEBEN, Daily Washington Reporter and DIANE LEVICK While several thousand women and children encircled the capitol building in Washington, D.C. yesterday to protest the Indo- chinese war, about 32 women and children demonstrated locally outside the office of Rep. Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor). Chilly winds and gray, threatening skies prevented a larger local turnout. However, the protesters-including a young mother with her 18-month-old baby-braved the weather to deliver anti- war messages to their congressman's office. Organized by the Interfaith Council For Peace (ICP), demon- strators peacefully formed a semi-circle around the adjacent street corner and sang "Kumbaya," accompanied by a girl on guitar. Just before noon, they left messages inside Esch's office call- ing on him to lobby vigorously for the end-the-war bill he intro- duced June 7. The bill, now in House committee, would cut off funds for the Indochina war by Sept. 1, providing' that arrangements have been set for the release of prisoners of war and an accounting has been made for men missing in action. Children too young to write their own messages drew pic- tures for Esch, who was, as expected, out of town. A message to Esch from ICP head Barbara Fuller read, "En- closed is a picture of Vietnamese children running down Highway 1, screaming with pain from the napalm that is burning them. "If this is what happens to our friends in this awful war, what horrors must we be creating for our "enemies"-men, women and children?" One demonstrator said, "I'm here because I couldn't make it to See WOMEN, Page 9 SAIGON A') - E v e r y available B52 in Vietnam was mustered into a mas- sive raid aimed at blunting an imminent North Vietna- mese attack on Hue yester- day. In the raids, the heaviest of the entire war, over 4 million pounds of bombs were dropped on sup -cted North Vietnamese troop positions in communist- h Id Quang Tri Province. The North Vietnamese push a,,.ainst Hue - staged from Quang Tri in the north and the A Shau Valley in the west - is the biggest communist move in over a month, according to ob- servers. Gen. Abrams ordered every scheduled B52 air raid cancelled in order to direct the full force of the planes against the im- pending attack. The North Vietnamese south- ward thrust came inuresponse to an invasion of Quang Tri Province by South Vietnamese troops. The South Vietnamese were thrown back but the com- munist drive has been tempor- arily halted by the massive U.S. air attacks. Whether the communists will attempt to take Hue remains unclear. "Obviously there was a lot of activity," said one U.S. officer. South Vietnamese paratroop- ers holding the line southwest of Highway 1 claimed 100 North Vietnamese were killed, and of- ficers said North Vietnamese armored vehicles were knocked out in fiehting on both sides of the My Chanh River. On the western flank of Hue, South Vietnamese infantrymen battled North Vietnamese troops for seven hours. near Firebase King, 12 miles southwest of the city. With the help of air and artillery strikes. 75 North Viet- namese troops were killed and 21 weapons captured, the Sai- gon command claimed. TWO VIETNAMESE poke around in the rubble of An Loc. look- ing for something to eat or something to sell. SECRET TERMS: England, IRA LONDON (/P) - Militants of reciprocal response is forthcom- the Irish Republican Army (I- ing from the armed forces of RA) and the British _ govern- the British crown." ment have agreed on a cease- -In London, British minister fire in Northern Ireland after for Northern Ireland, William nearly four years of bitter con- Whitelaw, told the House of flict that has cost 375 lives. Commons: "If offensive oper- But the promise of peace in ations by the IRA in Northern the province was immediately Ireland cease on Monday night, clouded by rumblings of dis- Her Majesty's forces will ob- content among leaders of the viously reciprocate." Protestant majority, suspicious -In Dublin a second IRA of IRA motives. statement said the movement There were these develop- took Whitelaw's response "as an ments yesterday in the three- acceptance of a bilateral sus- way struggle involving the ul- pension of off nsive operations" tra-nationalist Provisional wing to begin midnight Monday. of the IRA under Roman Cath- -In Belfast and elsewhere olic leadership, the British gov- Protestant groups displayed un- ernment and the Protestant easiness some asserting that the community: British and IRA had secretly -In Dublin the Provisionals negotiated a deal. announced: "The IRA will sus- The extreme right-wing Van- pend offensive operations as guard Movement, for instance, from midnight, Monday, June warned it would not "sit back 26, 1972, provided that a public See IRA, Page 9