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Democrat and Chronicle from Rochester, New York • Page 4

Location:
Rochester, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

:1 hi. GRAIN CI: 137: 4A -i sy. Fischer-Spassky Match Starting Date in Doubt Around the Nation If ing the chess sets anil board to used. Schmid aid he bad Invited the two players to come to the ball together today to check on the facilities and lawfully approve them. Rut this meeting was calle'J Cf eslei day after hmid ft.

Spassky also leit town and went north with Icelandic friend and player, I'reysteinn Thorbergssun, cn a salmon fishing trip. Russian officials said Spassky would back tomorrow, at the For 1, Tinted State granted the Soviet Iniou for the fust tune the same Agriculture IVparl-nieni credit arrangement given on farm commodity Mies to Allied countries. Moscow acceptance tf the credit terms, repayment in three years with 6' per out interest, came two week ago, and followed the proposal made by Nixon in his Kremlin mi mm it talks in May. The agreement was signed in ashington by Secretary of Commerce Peter iJ Peu-rsnn. Secretary of Agriculture Karl Hut and Deputy Soviet Trade Minister N.

It. Kuin. It required the Soviet I'nion to buy from private S. commercial exporters a minimum of $7a0 million of wheat, corn, barley, sorghum, rye or oats in the three years beginning Aug. 1.

First year sales will be at least million with Moscow having the option each year of the types of gram it wants. since chief arbiter lailhar Schmidt will not be baiit ill (own until then. Schmid. a West (iermun grandmaster and the owner of a book publishing firm in Hamberg, flew homt yesterday morning and said he would return Thursd'ty. said be was leaving because one of his sons had Ix'cn injured in a traffic accident.

Sthmid'a assistant arbiter, Gudmundur Arnlaugsson of Iceland, will be in charge of final preparations, which include the touchy job of puk REYKJAVIK, Iceland (I'Pli The Hons Spa Ay-Hobby Kim her world cn- championship match, aheady delavrd for nuid d.t). tin into new problems eterday when the chief arbiter left Iceland. I' S. chesi sources Mid Fischer, the year-old American challenger, is "at peak form and raring to go" into the first game Tuesday against the world champion, Russia's Spassky. Rut the sources said there might have to lie another postponement, until Thursday.

Jj-f i is 4'- i 1 Guard Held in Slayings Dies CIIKRRY HILL, N.J. il TJi A security guard accused of the mass murder of fix peiwor.s died yesterday, partially paralyzed and Mil! unable to say anything that might explain the shooting spree he staged 17 days no. Kdwin J. Grace. 3J.

dud at the Cherry Hill Medical Center after his condition worened in the early morning, Mrs. Elizabeth Pailey, supctusor at the hospital, said. Doctors said the bullet from a self-inflicted wound was II lodged at the base of trace's skull when he died. The wound left his right side para! wed imil prevented him from speaking. 21 Arrested in Drug Raid NASHVILLE, Tenn.

The arrests yesterday of 21 Nashvillians, five of them charged with possession of nearly six pounds of uncut mescaline, brought to the number of drug-related arrests in two days of raids in four areas of the State, police said. Nearly 40 persons were still being sought on various arrants, the police said. Airlines Step Up Security By L'm'ffrf Press International Major airlines yesterday began stepping up security precautions to comply with President Nixon's emergency order requiring strict anti-hijacking measures on all domestic commuter flights. The response to the President's order, issued Friday by the Federal Aviation Administration, ranged from "100 per cent" ffcunty checks of all passengers and luggage at some airports to a good deal less at others. Some carriers said all carry-on luggage would be screened and ticket agents warned passengers to expect delays; others said security would be tightened but declined to say how or when.

Truman X-Rays Delayed KANSAS CITY (AP) A lower gastrointestinal X-ray series for former President Harry S. Truman has Deen delayed because of an irritated colon, a hospital spokesman said yesterday. The 88-vear-old Truman's most faithful visitor, his wife, Advisor Henry Kissinger outlines agreement. (AP) jmcs iwj for other economic progress The White House said agri cultural experts estimate that between 3,000 and 5,000 additional jobs are created for each $100 million of grain This will be the third major sale to the Soviets of grain from I'. S.

stockpiles in a decade. Moscow bought $130 million in feed grains last fall, and $140 million in wheat in l3. The latest deal elevates the Soviet I'nion to the second position on the list of foreign purchasers of U. S. grain, behind Japan's average annual purchases of $437 million.

Officials said an average purchase rate of $250 million annually by the Soviets would increase U. S. exports of the six grains by almost 17 per cent. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, who announced the agreement, said Nixon believed it has gained "three important benefits for the American people and the U.S.

economy." "It will provide grain farmers with boost in income," exports meaning that "a ina FASHION SHOE involved in shipping the gram, including longshoremen, seamen, exporters, railroad and barpe line workers. It will reduce the cost to taxpayers of storage and handling and other charges associated with maintaining commodity stocks." The President also feels, Ziegler said, that the agreement "is a tribute to the immense productivity of America's farmers, which makes possible export sales of this magnitude." And, the presidential spokesman said, the deal "builds on the accomplishments of the summit meeting in Mosaow." clearance range of 21.500 to 37.500 man-years of work for workers are involved in this deal." Butz predicted at the Washington news conference that the Soviets would exceed the minimum $750-million purchase. He said he based his prediction on the assumption that the Russians would need more feed grains to succed in their five-year program to increase the production of animal protein by 25 per cent. 90 90 8 14 to will also Americans Ziegler said. "It provide jobs for Bess, arrived at Research Medical Center yesterday at 10 a.m.

I I I FAA 'Fought Faulty Units1 Sun Eclipse Tomorrow Da 7 i ii 1 Drn fnf frrtm 1 1 nrl nrl i -Vint-- Ai.tiM United Press International from land, sea and air the chatka in By as eastern Siberia, the WASHINGTON (AP) The Federal Aviation REGULARLY M8 TO 30 A super selection of current footwear looks in pumps, anklestraps, platforms and sandals too! Wedges, walking heels, shaped heels suede, smooth leathers, patents, vinyls. Find white, bone, navy black and other colors. Shop early. hard-to-find sizes: Wide 6 to 12 X-Wide 6 to 12 Moon's shadow blots out the Sun. Experts warned that viewing should be done only indirectly to avoid permanent eye damage.

Starting at sunrise near Sakhalin Island north of Japan, the eclipse will travel eastward in a 113-mile-wide arc across the Sea of Okhotsk and the Peninsula of Kam A total eclipse of the Sun will spread darkness across a narros strip of Alaska and Canada tomorrow and cast its shadow over parts of the United States. The blackout will range from about 14 per cent in San Francisco to 90 per cent in Boston. Scientists and amateur astronomers will be watching Bering Strait, northern Alaska and Canada, Hudson Bay and the Candadian Maritime Provinces to fade away before dusk in the North Atlantic at 5:03 p.m. EDT. On the East Coast of America, a partial eclipse will begin at 2:32 p.m.

EDT, reach its height at 3:41 p.m. and end at 4:43 p.m. Administration has paid Raytheon Corp. $1.5 million "to ipurchase air traffic control display units that, by a wide i margin, failed to meet government specifications," Rep. Jack I Brooks, said yesterday.

"Purchase was on an 'as is' basis and was for ostensible 'purpose of reshipment to the Raytheon factory in 1 'Massachusetts to establish some type of display testing 1 laboratory. Just why the FAA should purchase defective equipment that does not meet government specifications to help furnish a contractor's laboratory is a real mystery the Congress must seek to solve," Brooks said. Available at Midtown Only LANE BRYANT Kin Still Not Told Pilot Died sspeciQ 1 7 1 Mi A -i i i fff MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Four days after his father died in the wreckage of an antique airplane, Junius D. Morrison Jr.

is still trying to trace his mother and young brother to tell them of the tragedy. "They are traveling the world," Morrison said yester-: day. "I have tried every way I can think of to contact them i and had no success at all." 12.90 POLYESTER PANTOPS 8.90 Cool, very collectable pantops designed to be worn easily over shorts and pants this summer. Choose the new shirttail look or classic cut, both in mw LPwf 7 P'-srJX'tmK LIGHT, COOL DRESSES A great group you see just two at a great price! Find a super selection of styles and colors in cottons, polyester knits and carefree blends including these the halfer-collared coatdress in white or navy rayonpolyester, the zipdress in navy, lilac or red tweedy polyester. special sizes 14V to 26 glorious prints.

a i special sizes 38 to 46 Junius June. Morrison, a i 59-year-old jetliner pilot for I Eastern Airlines, died Tues-t day when his Curtiss-Wright "pusher plane," similar to the one in which he had learned to fly 40 years earlier, crashed in a Missouri field. Morrison had purchased the open-cockpit airplane and said i he thought it would be "a lark," to spend his vacation flying it across country. He left Moses Lake, June 30 bound for his home in sub- urban Miami Shores. Morrison, an Eastern pilot i since 1939, had eight months to go before retiring.

His body was found 1,000 feet from the wrecked plane in the northwest portion of Missouri. i The younger Morrison, 29, said his father's body was in a Miami funeral home and i the funeral would be delayed until his mother, Lil Kirk Morrison, and brother, Bobby, 13, returned home. GO-ALONG BERMUDA SHORTS 5.90 ilpi 1 LAN? BRYANT 1 v. Pull on a pair and you'll see what real warm-weather comfort is! Easy-f tfing polyester with stitched front crease. 300 BIKES IN STOCK 3 5 10 SPEED MIDTOWN PIA7A LONGRIDCE PIA7A palette of colors whit lllar.

limp. black, navy, brown. special waists 32 to 42 3122 Wonroe Ave. Ar. Oft I.

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Pages Available:
2,657,149
Years Available:
1871-2024