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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 37

Location:
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Issue Date:
Page:
37
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL Jumhy. July 9. 1972 New Issue Hits Chess Match: Judge Leaves REYKJAVIK, Iceland 'LTD I not important enough to wrrrlt The Boris Spa.ssky-Bobby the match," he raid. Fischer world chess tham- Cramer said Fischer wat pionship match, already delayed "absolutely relaxed and feeling for nine davs, ran into new prob- great." lems Saturday when the chief: HE SAID HE and Fischer iff arbiter left Iceland. came out of hiding Friday night U.S.

chess sources said and dined in public in a Reyk- Fischer, the 2 9 a ol ja vik restaurant. American challenger, is "ati "funnily enougn nonoay peak form and raring to go" into recognized Bobby," Cramer the first game Tuesday againstj said. "He had a great time. Hp the world champion, Russia loves the iisn nere in iceiana ann Spassky. he had fresh boued salmon ann But the sources said there orange juice, might have to be another! Fischer, who is laying In th postponement until Thursday! presidential suite at Loftleidtr since chief arbiter Lothari Hotel the plushest town Schmid will not be back in town! and sometimes at a pnv3i until then i guarded house put at hn wuuin a ukt disposal, went swimming Friday A WEST C.KItMAN;bcfore lhe sabbath.

grandmaster and the owner of a Ulo bn book publishing firm in Barn-Iiswimmi aflrt. bfrg. flew homo Saturday! Cramor sai() is morninp ami said he would; Jjke an ah)ete am hc js in srt return Thursday. He said he was livsjcal had been injured in a traffic! accident. Schmid's assistant arbiter, -LoTi -sS2S I Lga- iVSSc Secretary Weds Prince, Becomes Gudmundur Arnlaugsson of iceiana, will ne in cnarjje 01 1 1 final preparations, which! include the touchy job off pick ing the chess sets and board to British Princess be used.

Sr'hmid said hp had invited the1 two players to come to the hall together today to check on the A pi 3 rid facilities and hopefully approve! Birgitte Van Deurs, an at- them. But tms meeting as tractive 25-year-old blonde called off Saturday after Schmid! Danish secretary, married left. i Prince Richard of Gloucester on Spassky also left town and Saturday and became a royal went north with Icelandic friend princess, and chess player, Freysteinn! The ceremony was in the r.lh Thorbergsson, on a salmon century Church of St. And'-rw fishing trip. Russian officials! Prince Richard is a cmum of said Spassky would be back' Queen Elizabeth It and 1 01 in Monday, at the latest.

line of succession to the throw. ISO! n.t. roym wpiinms im but the' "1C PomV am' pageantry 'if a II 0 BEIiOSSOX invited Fischer along, American turned down lurch! rrai peace siirnniniung in invitation to observe his CI old rose-coveren slone cwiarr, wiii thatched roots nestling of God's sabbath from Friday! night until Saturday night. Before leaving Spassky said Cite esSSr1IA5'' i roid the church The 400 inhabitants of I ha he was not going to argue about village turned up to see thr arr-inninniink lr pnnce and his bndr. lilt lllcrvuiLi ui ov-iii uu inai u.i.

Photei by Ray Cary Resident Cecil Sexton Displays Jungle Print Decorations Eye-Oponing Print Used in Curtains and Bedspread Both he and his bride liar. "I will leave that to Bobby it ISon janiiil Jerman Kelaxos in "Koom" Built-in Cabinets, His Owii Decor makes no difference to me," the i PSen ouen ai ins cnurrn 35-year-old champion ol 1 uand many of. the lo('al newsmen known him since he was a i child. I red Cramer, vice president uf State Prison Cell House Goes Psychedelic of the U.S. Chess i ederabon Prim.e Rjchard and bMr "re prince William, who was best far superior to anything we man, strolled under umbrellas have seen before" could cause some problems.

"But they are through the rain to the chinch from Earnwcll Manor, family seat of the Gloucesters. PRINCE CHARLES, lirii lo I lie throne, arrived from London by helicopter. He hurried through the rain unsheltered. Other royal guests arrived by car. The Duchess nf Gloucester, mother of the bridegroom, wnr Abortion Law Upheld in N.

Y. How do the men like the new idea? THEIR ENTHUSIASM speaks for them. In less lhan a week the men completed cell doors on both floors, the railing, stairwells and the ceiling. Also planned is the decoration of the dayroom. The major renovation is to bring in living room furniture.

The furniture is being bought from the private funds of several of the men. the jungle provided Cecil Sexton with his color scheme. A wild jungle print is used in the curtains and repeated in the bedspread. Handcrafted picture frames decorate the walls. Pink, ruffled curtains flutter at the window of David Bare-feild's room.

The pink at the window is repeated in several throw rugs and blue is used as contrast in one throw rug and in the bedspread. ALBANY. Y. (LT! -The a white coat and a blue lial, By CAROL C01ICA Of the Journal Staff SANTA FE-Everyone at the state prison is looking at Cell House No. 1 and with psychedelic cell doors it's no wonder.

The psychedelic doors are only part of the latest attempt by prison officials to advance inmates through four steps during their rehabilitation process. The movements into Cell House 1 and its wild-colored doors is the fourth step. It moves a man into the "honor unit'' with expanded privileges. One of the privileges is to furnish his cell as he desires. THE MEN are allowed to decorate their individual six- by-ten-foot cells in any manner they choose within certain limits of good taste to suit their own personalities, said Warden Felix Rodriguez.

"It promotes responsibility by enabling individuality and allowing extra incentives among the 54 residents of Cell House One," said Warden Felix Rodriguez. If the idea works, Rodriguez said, the color changes and decoration will spread at least to Cell House Two. REGARDLESS of the concept, visitors to the cell house are struck by the smell of fresh paint and the rainbow rows of psychedelic colors ranging from brown and lemon yellow to lavender, pink, orange, red and light Queen Elizabeth, the nneen state's highest court declared the state's abortion law the mother, was dressed all in Mi in was and carried a plastic srr- nation's most, liberal constitutional. through umbrella. In a 5-2 decision, lhe Court of; Cither royal guests included Appeals upheld the law.

passed queen's sister. Princes-, and oranges using the tones in his double-tiered cafe curtains, bedspread and dresser scarves. The brown in the curtains is picked up in the simulated leapord-skin throw-rugs. One of the unique features of Jerman's decor is his carpentry, Jerman designed a built-in unit of cabinets and shelves along two walls. The shelves also serve as a bookcase headboard for the bed.

JERMAN, WHO is studying computer processing, built the shelves in his sparetime. He plans to repeat the coco brown in a similar shade on the walls. Joe Snead decorated his room around a soft, avocado green bath carpet. "I cut it to fit the room and it looks like wall-to-wall carpeting," said Snead. "Then since yellow and orange seemed to compliment the green I used those colors when I picked the drapes." he said.

He plans related shades of green for the ceiling and walls. THE WARM, lush colors of blue and that's just the cell doors. On the Inside men are hanging bright draperies and cafe curtains, putting down carpets or hanging pictures. "The colors are really something," said Rodriguez. "But there is also a marked difference in attitude among the men one of self-pride and individuality." Though the prison provides the paint, which the men select from a color chart, curtains and drapes are sent from home or bought by residents themselves with money they earn from prison industries, work release or as teachers, Rodriguez explained.

"To my knowledge this is the only prison in the U.S. which allows decoration to this extent," said Rodriguez. And decoration it certainly is. While one rooms color scheme centers around a vibrant magnetic blue another features wall-to-wall carpeting. BENJAMIN Jerman centered his decorating theme around warm browns, yellows, in which permits an; Margaret.

Thr queen hrrself, abortion for anv reason dunngiher husband Prince Philm Glamorous Nuptial Rile Scheduled in Moscow the first six months of pre-1 their daughter Princess Anne gnancy for New York Siatcj were in Scotland and did not at-residents and out-of-staters. Mend. "The Constitution does The bride arrived with her confer or require 1c al father, an eminent Danish personality for the unborn; the lawyer, and was dressed in a legislature may. or it mav do! white Swiss orcanrlie I The wedding of Valentina Tereshkova, the Soiet Union's only woman cosmonaut, to MOSCOW UPI i The Soviet Union's most glamorous wedding in a generation will take fellow space hero Andrian place Oct. when a Spanish iftikolavev in 1963 with Premier something less, as it did in the bands of lace trimming, a white abortion statute, Nobleman and the beautiful Nkita S.

Khrushchev on the and provide; veil and carried a bouquet of far short of white flowers. some protection blonde daughter of a Uruguayan; scene was the last big (iminmai hnth Unman Cat holies, iglamorous Soviet wedding. conferring legal Associate Judge Charles Bnetel said in the majority decision. But for Moscow's foreign marry in one of Moscow most communitv a ad picturesque Russian Orthodox Rafael's wedding promises to churches. bring back the glamor of the The unDrecedented Czars lor at least an afternoon The court case was brought by Robert M.

Byrn, who sought to be named guardian of all unborn children whose mothers sought abortions. He askeed the court decide whether embmys A chartered plane will bring ceremony courtesy of the AFTER THE ceremony the prince led his bride to a waiting car and drove off to Barnwell Manor for the reception. Because of the rain, the royal couple had to cancel a walk-back to the house through meadows lined with school children some of whom had waited more than seven hours to see the bride and groom Prince Richard met Miss Van Deurs six years ago while an undergraduate at Cambridge University. The couple plan io live in Iondon. 190 diplomats, political leaders and socialites from Madrid, where the couple is still staying.

Another 30 guests will arrive Primate of All Russia and an American Roman a ol i chaplain is scheduled for snouia De icgany recognized as persons. Breitel agreed that the Moscow's Trinity Church in the "om Uruguay, where Posadas- a ih iwomero served twice as embryo is hum "if only member ot Parliament and as necause mav noi Ik- Moscow River. secretary of the National Coun cil of Government. 'haractrred as mil human it is unqucslionalbv alive." i ,1 r-- The bride-to-be is Carmen Posadas-Monlero, 18-year-old daughter of a a T) jn Fllll Spate ambassador to Moscow Luis i Posadas-Monstero. Her fiance is Rafael Ruiz Cueto, a Spanish artistocrat she met in Madrid, where Posadas-Montero just completed six years as ambassador.

Newport Jazz Festival Bells Treasure for Music Lovers Patriarch Pimen, primate of the Russian Orthodox Church, authorized the Rev. Joseph Richards, a chaplain serving loreign Roman Catholics in Moscow, to perform ceremony in Trinity Church. Richards is an American. Pimen's dispensation making the wedding possible has no precedent in Soviet history. Foreign Students To Arrive in City By MARY CAMPBELL AP Music Writer NEW YORK i.4i Logically, the music and the audience should have run out of steam.

But the Newport Jazz Festival in New York, in its eighth day, instead hit one of those exhilarating high points Saturday that lovers of live music wait for and treasure. Duke Ellington and his band played for two hours and 13 minutes and it was brilliant, all the ay. In the middle of it, the thrilled, capacity audience at Carnegie Hall gave a standing ovation to the tone poem. "Harlem." And at the end there was a standing ovation and flowers thrown from the second tier of boxes at Ellington's feet. THOSE IN THE audience who came half an hour early had an extra half hour treat because the band was on stage rehearsing when the doors were opened.

Mrs. Louis More than 130 students representing 20 foreign countries The concert began with two exciting Ellington instrumcn-tals, Jam Blues" and "Rockin' in Rhythm," and went on with the for movements of "Toga Brava," part of which had its premiere at last year's Newport Jazz Festival. After "Happy Reunion" and "A Train," it continued with more African suits, one movement about Chad and "La Plus Belle Africaine," written before the band went to Dakar, Senegal, in 19U6. Drummer Sonny Greer, who was with the band until 1951, sat in for a few licks. Barney Bigard.

clarinetist with the band before. 1942. also appeared, to play "Rose Room" in front of the band. "Harlem." a 1 0 i musical descriptive which brought the audience to its feet, was followed by "Satin Doll" and Money Johnson doing his tribute to Louis Armstrong, "Hello. siM.r.iuM wist i i Short, whose youthful inspira tion was the late Ellington Band vocalist, Ivie Anderson, sang six songs she used to sing.

Then came three girl singers, Betty Farmer, Anita Moore, who had won a college jazz contest, and Aura, from Fumania. Live music, like gambling, carries the thrill of the unexpected big win. People are still talking about the Newport Jaw Festival in 1906 when woman got up and started to dance, oblivious to her surroundings, as Paul Gonsalves was playing "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue." Now the 1972 audience has its own Ellington concert to remember and talk about. Gonsalves was there and soloed a good "Happv Reunion." but this time the high was from beginning to end. many-splendored music anil not the least of it from the man Ellington calls "our new, young, apprentice piano player." will arrive in Albuquerque tonight as part of a Rotary Youth Exchange Tour of the United States.

Rotary Club families will welcome the students, who will spend the evening in local homes. The tour began in Philadelphia and, via chartered bus. has covered many national i parks. Disneyland, and, most recently the Grand Canyon, af wawaiBiaaaaaaaaa aawraaai 7afcai laa -aaaamiaaa a the coin- The students are scheduled to Armstrong greeted on 'arrive al the Hilton Inn at about ser-pianist-conductnr David Darefeild Admires Ilis Curtains Ruffles New Sight in Cell House Prison IJesideiit Joe Snead Used Bath Carpet Gives Wall-to-Wall Comfort ,5 p. m.

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