a P M tC4tIT .' ttl, Vol. LXXXII, No. 54-S Ann Arbor, Michigon-Wednesdoy, August 2, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages Vol. LXXXII, No. 54-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, August 2, 1972 Ten Cents Twelve Pages McGovern cancels T time; decision on VP postponed A SOUTH VIETNAMESE SOLDIER, smoking a cigarette and holding a grenade, lifts up strands of barbed wire while his buddy crawls under. Haiphong shipyard it by U.S. N\avy planes WASHINGTON (R) - Sen. George McGovern cancelled a national broadcast last night on the Eagleton matter when the networks refused him free time. He said he would announce his new running mate "within a few days," along with a state- ment concerning Sen. Eagleton. Speculation on Eagleton's re- placement on the Democratic ticket remains high. Two sources close to the presi- dential candidate said the lead- ing contenders to replace Sen. Thomas Eagleton following his precedent - setting withdrawal Monday night appeared to be Sens. Frank Church of Idaho and Edmund Muskie of Maine. But two other major possibili- ties mentioned were former Democratic National Committee Chairman Lawrence O'Brien and former Peace Corps director and one-time Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver. McGovern's press secretary, Richard Dougherty, said the networks refused to give the candidate free air time last night to talk about Eagleton unless McGovern also were to announce his choice as a run- ning mate. Network spokesman in Wash- Ington, however, disagreed. NBC bureau manager Frank Jordan said it was his tentative understanding that the broad- cast would be a discussion of reasons that led to the decision to drop Eagleton. "This would have led to equal time prob- lems," he said. Sen. Edward Kennedy of Mas- sachusetts, who turned down the offer once before, was probably still McGovern's first choice, ac- cording to all sources contacted. Two other names that resur- faced Tuesday were those of Wisconsin Gov. Patrick Lucey and Boston Mayor Kevin White. Lucey told The . Associated Press he had been contacted by a McGovern staffer and told he was under consideration. Lucey said he told the staffer he would accept the vice-presidential nomination if it were offered. SAIGON (P) - U. S. Navy planes blasted a shipyard in North Vietnam's main port of Haiphong; the U. S. Command announced yesterday. President Nguyen Van Thieu predicted the war could be over in six months if the American air blitz continues. The air attack Monday on the Haiphong Shipyard No. 3 was the first of the war against that target, a spokesperson said. Pilots from the carrier Sara- toga reported leaving much of the yard'in flames. Twenty-seven foreign vessels, including four Chinese ships, re- main in Haiphong's deepwater channels, trapped by the mines planted last May, but U. S. spokespeople said the air strikes were not near the deep-draft boats. Overcast skies reduced U. S. strikes over the North to little more than 200, the command said. It reported American war- planes hit other targets that in- cluded eight bridges, 12 river craft, 13 storage areas and warehouses, two fuel pipelines, 12 trucks and missile and artil- lery sites. U. S. planes also flew 318 raids against Vietcong positions in South Vietnam and B52 bombers made 35 strikes north and south of the demilitarized zone, the command said. Thieu declared that Hanoi wants to use its American war prisoners in exchange for a bombing halt but . urged the raids be continued. "If we want to end this war we must continue to destroy all of North Vietnam's military in- stallations and economic pow- er," he told the National De- fense College. RICHARD FERREIRA, vice president of Norsid Corp. of Waltham, Mass., displays a strip of McGovern-Eagleton bumper stickers in his office. Ferreira said, "The distributor told me orders are still coming in for Eagleton material and he hasn't received one cancellation. FOREIGN AID: U.S. to send jets to Thail and By JOHN BURGESS Dispatch News Service BANGKOK-Seventeen A37B jets, donated through Washing- ton's military assistance pro- gram, are on their way to Thai- land to reinforce the Royal Thai Air Force in its fight against locally-based insurgents. The 17 planes are valued at a total of $9.5 million. Last year the Thai Air Force purchased 16 OV10 Broncos, twin-prop strike and reconnais- ance aircraft designed specifi- cally for use in "unconventional warfare." A Thai Air Force spokesman recently announced plans to buy an additional 16 OV10s, at a cost of $15 million. As American airpower has in- creased in Thailand, allied air- power has followed suit. Accord- Air Force ing to unofficial American mili- tary sources, there are now over 200 prop-driven T28 bombers operating in the Laotian theatre, a considerable increase over last year. Equipped with'slide-in, slide- out markings, the T28s bombing in Laos are of unclear owner- ship. Informed Americans say that the planes can change their markings daily, if neces- See U.S., Page 7 Today will be hot and humid and thundershowers are expect- ed. Temperatures will range from a high of 83 to a low to- night of 57. Chess champs unchecked See Story, Page 3 Lookout British troops survey Belfast from a newly established post in the New Lodge Area of the Ulster capital. New bases have been set up in the Catholic ghettos in the hopes of checking the Irish Republican Army,