Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Times from Shreveport, Louisiana • Page 1

Publication:
The Timesi
Location:
Shreveport, Louisiana
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Slime She City Edition Partly Cloudy 101st Year as a Daily and Sunday Newspaper Established as a Weekly in 1839 Shreveport, Louisiana, Wednesday, July 19, 1972 Telephone 424-0373 Ten Cents 134th Year Vol. 101 No. 234 Attica Head Meets With Committee Soviet Military Experts Leaving Egypt, Arabs to Take Posts, Sadat Says By C. C. Miniclier CAIRO (AP) Soviet mili tary advisers and exnerts are ATTICA, N.Y.

(AP)-The superintendent of the Attica Correctional Facility met Tuesday with officers of the "inmate liaison committee" at the prison, where some convicts refused to leave their cells in a protest that began Monday. At noon Tuesday, Supt. Ernest R. Montanye conferred with state Correctional Services Department officials and declared a "temporary state of emergency," closing the prison to visitors and putting tighter security measures into effect with the 554-acre compound. A deputy superintendent de leaving Egypt and will be re placed Dy iairo own soiaiers, President Anwar Sadat announced Tuesday.

He emphasized that the decision "does not touch in anv wav the essence of Soviet-Eevntian friendship." But he also implied that Moscow had not kept scribed the situation as calm just before the supper hour. He lil in lUllir -'t ill ift jfaaitol MWlMMttW' lis uargam on aeuvery oi military equipment, and insisted Eevot would not be told when said slightly more than half of I til tLwii ifcininiiiiiiiiDnriir---' 1 Siii ifcimnwHiinimwtw iimarm wm'mi Aroii.art fciMwmnnMtntwti (UPI Telephoto) Bobby Fischer Arrives for Fourth Game in Chess Match Attica 1,200 inmates remained or how to pull the trigger against Israel. Sadat said the withdrawal order for Soviet militarv nersnn- locked in their one man cells for the second day. The number of protesters decreased during the day. About 100 of the demonstrating group agreed to leave their cells early Tuesday and nel, "who came here upon our Fischer, Spassky Battle 5 Hours, Settle for Draw Guards Held Hostage in Prison Riot request" was ettecave Monday, the Middle East news agency reported.

Informants estimated another 150 stopped their protest in the afternoon, the deputy said. A department spokesman, By Julie Flint sentative District 5, William L. Lowe of 4003 Marion Place, a candidate in District 3, and Thomas A. Wilson of 3030 Meriwether Road, a candidate in District 7. See Stories on Page 4-A.

walked onstage four minutes after the clock started. The American chess whiz from Three persons announced yesterday they will seek election in the Aug. 19 primary as delegates to the state constitutional convention. They are (left to right) William Gaertner of 7631 Ferguson, a candidate in State Repre Gerald Houlihan, said after supper began that the situation "is status quo as far as we know now." He said the state emergency was invoked mainly UPPER MARLBORO, Md. (UPI) Rebellious inmates seized three guards as hostages Brooklyn was 10 minutes over due in the auditorium.

and took over a floor of the Fischer looked confident and to "notify people not to come to Prince Georges County jail the institution to reduce the relaxed, buoyed by his win Monday. It was the first time Tuesday night, but calmed down outside flow of personal and pedestrian traffic, which only See Moves on Page 4-A Heath Aide Quits Post In Fraud Investigation House Okays $1.56 Billion Health Fund adds to the confusion." Lawyers Protest Lawyers, personal visitors his career Fischer had beaten Spassky. He lost to the Russian three times playing black and and reporters are barred from the prison during the state of By Arthur L. Gavshon loped a firm with which he had been briefly associated. drew twice playing white in their five meetings before the world championship round began a week ago.

1 Tho i.lhor nrrnsinn involved emergency, Houlihan said. group of lawyers protested, however, and the matter was scheduled to go before U.S. Di ic Court in Buffalo Fischer, playing the white an American financier, Jerome Hoffman, now in an American iail serving a two-year federal pieces, opened Tuesday's game with his favorite Sozin attack, at Wednesday morning. sentence for fraud. Houlihan said Montanyes meeting with the inmate com Maudling had pined tha hnarris of two Hoffman mittee, elected by prisoners One was the Real Estate Management Co.

of under a program begun throughout the state in January was "the first direct communi- REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP)-Bobby Fischer and Boris Spas-sky struggled for five hours Tuesday in the fourth game of their world championship chess match, then settled for a draw. The score in the 24-game series now stands at 2 for the Soviet champion and VA for the American challenger. They called it quits at the 45th move, The fight had been with a string of startling turnabouts. Each contestant got half-point for the draw. Spassky, 35, won the first game and got the second by forfeit when Fischer failed to show.

The 29-year-old American won the third. Spassky was stone-faced as he left the hardly acknowledging the applause of the crowd. Fischer smiled and waved as he walked out. Error on the 29th Yugoslav grandmaster Sveto-zar Gligoric said Spassky had made a bad error on the 29th move, throwing away the chance of a win. U.S grandmaster Robert Byrne said Spassky, playing at a slight disadvantage with the black pieces, could have pocketed a draw at the 18th move by forcing an exchange of queens.

But the Russian chose to go for a win. The game was packed with surprises, with first white and then black setting the pace. Spectators bet first on Fischer, then on Spassky and then on Fischer again. For the first time in the series, Spassky was late in arriving but not so late as Fischer. The Soviet champion America tne jjanamis.

The other was the Real Estate PimH nf America. Sales. which he is generally acknowledged to be the world's best. Spassky went into the Sicilian defense and countered aggressively. There were no movie cameras in the hall.

Fischer's complaint that they distracted him was a prime reason for his failure to appear for the second game, and for removal of the third game to a private chamber. cation we've had with the LONDON (AP) Reginald Maudling quit as Prime Minister Edward Heath's deputy Tuesday after Scotland Yard's fraud squad moved to probe the collapse of a company he once served. His resignation was announced to the House of Commons by Heath himself who seven years ago just beat Maudling in a contest for the leadership of the Conservative party. Weeks of speculation had been swirling around Home Secretary Maudling, not because he was under suspicion i 1 but because the smell of scandal, for the second time, had enve- inmate population. The basic in Liberia.

He resigned when officials agreed to hear their grievances. Several hours after an estimated 150 inmates took over the top floor of the jail, county executive William Gullett and Sheriff Don Ansell agreed to meet with a delegation of eight prisoners in the presence of a reporter for the Washington Post. One of the hostages was later released unharmed. Lt. Col.

John W. Rhodes of the county police department said "the hostages are in good shape and have been in communications with the other guards. There were apparently no weapons involved and no lives were threatened." i-The rebellious inmates retained control of the upper floor of the building, but authorities said the situation had been calmed and only about 25 men remained defiant. They said the disturbance was well away from the first floor cell of Arthur Herman Bremer, accused assailant in the shooting of Alabama Gov. George Wallace.

"The disturbance was the third in a Maryland prison facility within four days, and followed a pattern set Saturday night when inmates of the Maryland House of Corrections at Jessup rioted until authorities agreed to demands for a meeting with high state officials. purpose of the meeting was to from both in mid-1969 he was at the time an opposition lawmaker and therefore free to pnoaee in business after six outline and define what the issues and questions are or might be as the basis of this self-invoked lock-in." The cameras were taken out Rut tVio immprliate cause of WASHINGTON (AP) The House voted Tuesday to authorize $1.56 billion for an intensified three-year battle against the nation's leading killer and communicable diseases. First, by 380 to 10, the House accepted a bill to step up research into America's chief killer diseases of the heart, lungs and blood. Then, by 386 to 2, it approved a $270 million communicable-disease-control program to combat venereal diseases, measles and tuberculosis. The Nixon administration opposed some key organization features of the legislation, argued against earmarking of funds for specific programs, and said sufficient legal power already exists for programs to control various diseases.

The legislation was sent to the Senate, which has passed similar bills containing larger fund authorizations. The Senate, without dissent, voted f-- a three-year, heart bill and a five-year, $759-million communicable disease control bill. Rep. Paul G. Rogers, head of the House public health subcommittee, said the communicable-disease-control legisla by Chester Fox, whose payment A second meeting was scheduled for Wednesday morning, he Maudling's withdrawal from the for exclusive movie rights contributed to the largest cham said.

Many of the issues remain clouded, he said Tuesday night. government was constitutional. The state prosecutor earlier Tuesday had ordered Scotland Yard to investigate if there were grounds for criminal ac Ihe protest began Monday morning over the laying off of a temporary nurse at the prison. tion as a result oi tne conapse pionship purse in chess history. It was not known whether the cameras would be back in the hall for the fifth game Thursday.

The first surprise was Spas-ky's aggressive counterattack, which cost him a pawn and Although the nurse was reinstat iu.uoo to 20,000 Russian experts are involved. The order does not apply to 10,000 to 15,000 Soviet civilian advisers assisting in engineering and other fields and in construction of industrial complexes and new dams along the Nile. The president made the announcement to the 150-man Central Committee of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only legal political party. He called for a joint high-level Egyptian-Soviet meeting to work out the transfer within the framework of the 15-year friendship treaty signed just over a year ago betwten Cairo and Moscow, the agency said. Later Statement A statement issued later by the committee quoted Sadat as saying: "Taking these decisions does not mean we are delaying the battle with Israel, because we never planned to fight with the Soviet experts and advisers, lt is our battle and we will not fight except with our own soldiers and men.

"Also, we do not Intend to create any confrontation be tween the Soviet Union and the United States." In saying the move does not affect the nature of Egyptian-Soviet relations, Sadat observed: "It is only a clarification position where we give each side his right and put forth a new style for the coming stage of our friendship." In Jerusalem, Israeli sources greeted the announcement with guarded optimism, saying it might lessen the immediate prospects of a new Mideast war. There was no official comment, and one source observed: "Israel can't make a full judgment until it actually knows the Russians are moving out." U.S. Aid Seen An Israeli expert on Middle East affairs, Yehoshua Porath, told a state television interviewer he was certain the United States had promised Cairo "some sort of assistance" to fill the vacuum created by the Soviet exodus. He did not elaborate. The Egyptian news agency quoted Sadat as saying that "all military installations and equipment which have been constructed inside Egyptian territory 1 1 i the 1967 June aggression should be put under Egyptian armed forces and be Egyptian property." Observers said this would apply to complex missile installations and new aircraft equipment which in most analysts' judgment the Egyptians have been inadequately trained to handle well.

Egyptian informants and diplomats had reported Sadat's action earlier. They said several Russians were seen leaving Sunday and Monday, shortly after Premier Aziz Sidky returned from a one-day visit to Moscow. ed, the inmates still refused to Yorkshire architect John Poul- leave their cells. Berserk Man Slays Pilot On Airliner Houlihan said the prisoners made no formal attempt to clearly surprised Fischer. Spas- communicate with prison au thorities or the state corrections sicy seemea determined to avenge his loss of the previous day.

Visiting grandmasters called department, and that the de partment did not know why the protest was continuing. We have only rumors to go it a courageous move on the Russian's part, and Byrne said: "Spassky's got guts. He may be by," he said. He did not son. Maudling, at a time when the Labor party was in power, had headed one of Poulson's companies without taking pay for it Donate to Wife's Project In bankruptcy hearings, Foul-son disclosed that Maudling, instead of being paid, asked that a sum of 22,000 pounds $57,200 at official rates be diverted to his wife's pet theater project.

Mrs. Beryl Maudling once was a ballet dancer. "I do not regard this as a matter either for criticism or for investigation," Maudling said in his resienation letter to elaborate. stroller tion is aimed especially at dealing with gonorrhea and syphilis. The heart bill is envisioned as Prison spokesmen said the inmates had not eaten since 900 of them began the protest Monday, but that they have commissary supplies in their cells that they Rave purchased, and package from relatives.

a companion to the recently enacted "er measure. Heart disease is the nation's leading health problem, afflicting more than 27 million Americans and killing more than one million a year. "It was Father's Day when VAN SISTRUNK and the five women traveling with him his wife, daughter, sister-in-law and two friends decided to stop for services at the First Baptist Church of Orla in West Texas. The six tourists brought the total number present to 19 and The heart bill would provide for 15 research and training centers for cardiovascular dis going tor a win. Spassky needs only 12 points to retain his title.

Fischer must score 1212 to take the championship out of the Soviet Union, where it has reposed since 1948. A win counts one point and a draw half a point. Fischer, who had made his first few moves in quick succession, waited a long time before taking Spassky's pawn. Then the pace of the game began to drag. Spassky sat hunched over the board for half an hour.

Spectators in the hall began to fidget. The neon "Silence" sign flashed on and off. A few members of the audience left the hall, bunched silently at the exits until they were let out in groups by attendants. Fischer covered his face with his hands, bent forward and then back, crossed his legs and uncrossed them. When Spassky finally moved, Fischer replied i besides the preacher.

SIS- CARTAGENA, Colombia (UPI) A passenger aboard a Colombian-owned Tao Airline plane flying between San Andres Island and Bogota apparently went berserk Tuesday night, burst into the cockpit and shot the pilot to death. The man also wounded the copilot, identified as Alfonse Ferrer, who, although critically wounded in the head, managed to land the plane safely. The copilot later was rushed to a local hospital in critical condition. Police took Benjamin Suarez into custody. Police said Suarez was an investor in Tao Airlines, but gave no further explanation for the shooting.

While the pilot, identified as Miguel Beltram, lay dead at the controls, the copilot and flight engineer grappled with the assailant. The Vickers Turbo-proD aircraft flew without a pilot until the two men subdued the assailant. Police said there was some panic among the 48 passengers and two stewardesses aboard the local flight. No injuries were reported among the passengers. eases and 15 others for chronic pulmonary diseases such as bronchitis and emphysema.

Forecast Tod a Warm, Humid TRUNK was the only male in attendance. He was recognized for being the youngest father and the oldest father, and the father Reps. Richard W. Mallary, and Dave Martin, R-Netv, voted against the communicable i coming from the longest dis Blaiichard Okays Bonds for Sewer Blanchard voters Tuesday approved by a vote of more than two-to-one a $390,000 bond issue to finance construction of a sewer system to serve the community. The matter was submitted to voters in the form of three propositions and the first, providing for issuance of $150,000 in revenue bonds, was approved by a vote of 147 to 63.

The second, providing for $120,000 in bonds and indebtedness, was approved by a vote of 140 to 62. The third, also providing for $120,000 in indebtedness, was approved by a vote of 146 to 60. But then he went on to agree that normal investigations should be made on other aspects. That raised difficulties. As home secretary he was responsible for the police themselves and, generally, for the maintenance of law and order in Britain.

Heath told lawmakers he agreed with this even though he wanted Maudling to stay on in the Cabinet in another role. But Maudling, who has held various high offices of state and in the Tory party for 20 years, declined, saying he could do with a re t. Robert Carr, leader of the House of Commons, was named by Heath as stopgap home secretary pending a general Cabinet shakeup. Col. Weathervane thinks the weather will be too warm and humid for a tie and coat today.

disease bill. The dissenters in the vote on the heart bill were Reps. Watkins M. Abbitt, D-Va Partly cloudy John M. A R-Ohio; Frank T.

Bow, R-Ohio; Omar ijn skies are fore-11 cast for Shreve 1 on D-Tex. John N. Camp, H. R. Gross, tance.

ESTELLE DELOACH told STROLLER. "The minister explained that Orla was an oil community and the men had to be at work in the daytime," Miss DELOACH said. He also told the audience there would be another service that night which would attended by Ihe men and more recognition would be given. Others on the trip were R-Iowa; Durward G. Hall, Earl F.

Land grebe, John G. Schmitz, and Keith G. Sebelius, R-Kan. port by the National Weather Service. There is a chance of mainly after-noon and eve-n i thunder-storms and winds will be mostly from the Three Astronauts to Duplicate Skylab Tests immediately and tnen raced! offstage.

Spassky pondered again. He moved. Fischer raced back to the board and made a move in replay. Most bets were on Spassky after nearly four hours of play. "If Fischer finds some defense, he is not a genius, he is a super-genius," said Dmitri Bjeli-ca, Yugoslav chess commentator.

"Fischer has almost lost," said Dragoljub Janosevic, a Yugoslav grandmaster. I A SISTRUNK (VAN's wife); their daughter LILA; LILA MAE MILLWEE, Mrs. SISTRUNK 's sister; and friends, Miss DELOACH and TRESSIE DELOACH. Moscow Meet Held MOSCOW Secretary General Kurt Waldheim met Tuesday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromy-ko, the government news agency Tass reported.

During the meeting the Soviets pledged their support of the United Nations as an "important instrument in the interests of strengthening peace and international security," Tass said. More STROLLER on Page 7-A. and occupy the space station for eight weeks. A third three-man crew will spend another eight weeks in the Skylab late next year. The primary objective of the Skylab project is to see how well man can live and work in weightless space for long periods of time.

southeast at 5 to 15 m.p.h. The high today is expected to be in the low 90s and the low tonight is expected to be in the low 70s. Temperature extremes reported yesterday included a high of 94 and low of 71 in Shreveport; 91 and 69 in Alexandria; 29 and 73 with .32 of an inch of rain in Lufkin, and 90 and 70 in El Dorado, Ark. The weather map may be found on Page 4-C. Iffy P7" The three astronauts will duplicate Skylab mission tests but will not live in a weightless environment in the ground based test chamber.

"What they're doing for us is evaluating all the equipment and food, everything they can crowd in there." said Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin, who is scheduled to fly in the space station for 28 days next May. "I think at the end of that time we'll have a great deal more confidence about needs to be fixed and we can go with it," Kerwin said at a briefing Tuesday. The 199,000 pound space stttion is scheduled to be launched unmanned next April 30 from Cape Kennedy.

Veteran astronaut Charles "Pete" Conrad, the a of the first three-man Skylab crew, reported that preparations are on schedule. However, Conrad and other Skylab officials said the schedule is tight and there is no cushion in the timetable for any problems that might develop between now and lunch time. Three three-man crews will live in the station separately during an eigfct month period. Conrad, Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz are scheduled to be launched May 1, flying an Apollo command ship to link up with the Skylab.

They will spend four weeks in the station. A second crew will take off July 30 in another Apollo SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) Three astronauts will enter a test chamber July 26 to spend the rest of the summer living exactly like Skylab pilots will in space. The exercise was supposed to start Wednesday but problems with a medical experiment forced an eight day delay. Richard S. Johnston, director of life sciences at.

the Manned Spacecraft Center, said the problem should be corrected by the July 26 starting date. Robert L. Crippen, 35, Dr. William E. Thornton, 43, and Karol J.

Bobko, 34, will spend 56 days in the 20-foot chamber to obtain medical data and to try out medical equipment for Skylab. Inside Wxt (Htmes Three Sections -40 Pages Then, in turnabout, Fischer pinned Spassky's queen against his king, forcing a swap of queens. This terminated the Russian's mating attempt, leaving an end game of rooks and bishops of opposite colors. The pace quickened. Spassky was running short of time because of his long deliberations earlier.

The experts began to say it looked like a draw. A few minutes later it was, by mutual agreement. The champion and challenger shook hands across the board. The audience gave them a standing ovation. House-to-house fighting rages in Quang Tri 3-A Today's Chuckle All most men want from their wives are affection, admiration, encouragement and the ability to live grandly on an inadequate income.

Graham Heloise Landers Lowman Markets Porter Sports TV-Radio Weather 7- 2-B 1- 2- 5-C 16-C 1-C 8- 4-C Amuse Astrology Bridge Business Classified Comics Deaths Digest Editorials 7- 2-B 8- 16-C 7-C 6-B 15-A 2-A 6-A Oil firm signs pact with Russia Page 12-A New device may aid premature babies Page 13-A I HkMDft t'PW THAT WAY 1 Times Radio KWKH 1130 on your dial i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Times Archive

Pages Available:
2,338,483
Years Available:
1871-2024