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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 6

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Orlando, Florida
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6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

White House: No CommenlAs Russians Leave Egypt (Orlauhit firttliurl Wednesday, July 19, 1972 only part of the Russian force which has been on Egyptian soil. American officials questioned If Sudat's announcement meant an Intention to oust the thousands of Soviet servicemen who man the Surface-to-Air (SAM) missiles upon which Egypt is dependent for protection against any deep Israeli air strikes, as well us to send home the Russian pilots who have flown advanced MIG Jets from Egyptiun bases. AT THE STATE Department Press Union had suffered a decisive setback to Us prestige and Influence In the Middle East. THESE officials said they did not have enough Information yet to fully assess the significance of Egyptiun President Anwar Sudat's actions, as reported by the semi-official Middle East News Agency. For one thing, it was noted, the Soviet "military advisers and experts" that Sadat said would be replaced by "our sons in the Egyptian armed forces" represent WASHINGTON (UPI)-Ths Nixon administration from tht Whits House to the State Department to the Pentagon refused comment Tuesday on Egypt's reported decision to order Soviet military advisers and technicians withdrawn from Its territory.

BUT AMERICAN officials privately indicated they were skeptical of any wholesale 'Russian pullout from Egypt and they cautioned against hasty conclusions that the Soviet Fischer Survives Fierce Attack To Draw 4th poised for counterattack. The opening gets its name from a 17th-century Sicilian player, Gioacchino Greco, who specialized in it. In recent years it has become one of the most popular answers to the King's Officer John Kinu wus asked about the Cairo announcement and replied: "I will have no comment, Interpretation or other remarks to inuke." He went so far as to predict that Secretary of State William P. Rogers would take tho same position during an appearance later In San Francisco, Indicating that the White House hud Imposed a blackout on officlul public statements until the administration had a better grasp of the situation. Fischer lost the second on a forfeit it has been the player of the black pieces who has carried the attack.

This is rather unusual. Generally white comes out swinging and maintains the pressure. Flow Of Game pawn since white would then be able to break through black's defenses with NxP. AFTER MOVE 27 Isaac Kahsdan, U.S. Grand master and analyst for the A i a ted Press: Spassky definitely has the upper hand.

Kashdan: Spassky may have slipped on his last move. AFTER MOVE 3J Reuters: Fischer has emerged safe and sound from the melee and the game now looks likely to end in a draw. Experts Seesaw With Ebb And Pawn opening. FISCHER is generally regarded as the world's greatest living expert in the Sicilian, and Spassky has also scored notable victories in it. In both of the games played so far Byrne: If Spassky wants a draw he can do it by swapping queens.

But perhaps he wants to make up for the psychological setback he suffered Sunday. AFTER MOVE 18 Byrne: Spassky took 30 minutes to make his move and he is rejecting the queen swap. He is playing for a win. Dragelub Janosevic: It is a dangerous situation for Fischer perhaps. AFTER MOVE 26 Reuters: It is too dangerous for Spassky to take off the QN Egypt Orders Soviet Aides To Go Home From Intfe 1 Ic experts working on industrial projects.

INFORMED Egyptian sources said Sadat had acted under growing pressure from senior army officers led by Gen. Mohamcd Sadek, deputy premier and war minister. The army officers had become increasingly frustrated by the Soviet Union's failure to provide them with adequate offensive weapons, the sources said. 1 The officers have also asked for the dismissal of Egyptian Prime Minister Aziz Sidky, whom they regard as being too pro-Soviet, the sources added. Other Egyptian sources, however, said that the Egyptian request for the withdrawal of the Soviet military advisers had been conveyed by Sidky during his visit to Moscow last Thursday and Friday.

ACCORDING TO these sources, President Hafez Assad of Syria, Egypt's partner in the Arab Federation, acting on Sadat's behalf, had asked the Soviet leaders during his visit to Moscow at the beginning of this month for a firmer commitment to the liberation by force of Arab territory occupied by Israel. Assad flew directly from Moscow to Cairo with an "unsatisfactory" reply, the sources said. Sadat then decided to send his prime minister, regarded as being highly favored by the Russians, to make a last plea and to present an "ultimatum," according to the sources. LEFT-WING Egyptian sources, stunned by Sadat's surprise move Tuesday, linked it with a week- long visit here last month by Prince Sultan Ben Abdel Aziz, the Saudi defense minister, who had just returned from a visit to the U.S. But Egyptian officials insisted that the U.S.

had not been informed of the Egyptian move. By Sentinel Services Running comments of world chess experts and reporters during the fourth game draw Tuesday at Reykjavik, Iceland, reflected the tenseness of the seesaw struggle: AFTER MOVE 7 Dmitri Bjelica, Yugoslav commentator: Fischer is playing the Sozin attack to the Sicilian Defense and he knows more about it that anyone else in the world. AFTER MOVE 17 U.S. Grandmaster Robert ji a I i i i va i ir 4 ip ANWAR SADAT Didn't get weapons It is known, however, that both Saudi Arabia and Libya, two oil-rich states which supply Egypt with solid financial support, have long been urging Sadat to rely less on the Soviet Union. President Muammar Qaddafi of Libya last year offered to buy advanced weapons for Egypt from western sources in return for an Egyptian break with Moscow, according to Arab diplomats.

EGYPTIAN political sources insisted Tuesday that the ousting of Soviet advisers should not be interpreted as a pro-American move. Egypt rather was demonstrating its independence of the superpowers and had decided that it could only recover its lost territory through its own efforts in alliance with other Arab states, the sources said. They suggested that Sadat's move had been prompted at least partially by the results of President Nixon's Moscow summit talks with the Russians, in which many Egyptians believe the Russians agreed to freeze the Middle East crisis. MOST Egyptians, however, saw Sadat's decision as a reaction to the growing frustration of the army and the criticism of liberal groups. This frustration has been expressed most evidently in last few weeks by Mohamed Hassanein Heykal, the influential chief editor of the newspaper Al Ahram.

Sources at Arab Socialist Union headquarters predicted Tuesday that Sadat would follow up with a cabinet reshuffle. The President Monday met with Gen. Sadek and vice-president Husseiv Al Shafei. The day before he met with vice-president Mahmoud Fawzi. The names of both vice-presidents have been linked with the opposition to the Sidky government.

orders to require detection of waste sources and to enforce existing codes. To dramatize the effects of what one jurisdiction's waste can do to another, the federal pollution experts dropped 1,600 pounds of dye into a Brooklyn sewage treatment plant six days ago. That dye was observed, by helicopter and boat, as it moved away from the plant. Within 63 hours, it had moved in all directions, and had appeared along the popular public beaches at Sandy Hook, N. J.

is still being observed. WHILE A spokesman for the state of New Jersey said he was delighted with the actions, since they help authorities enforce their demands on industrial polluters, New York City's spokesman was outraged. "The feds know every step of our program," said Jerome Kretchmer, head of the city's environmental protection administration. "They've financed it. Why do they serve us with 180-day notices? We have a meeting scheduled with these polluters tomorrow morning to enter into abatement stipulations.

The feds know that. I just don't understand." WW' N.Y. City, Jersey Sued Over Seivage In Harbor From Page 1 However the Yugoslavian grandmaster, Svetozar Gligoric, said that Spassky had erred on his 29th move, R-KR1. Otherwise, said Gligoric, Spassky would have had a clear win. Gligoric did not say what the winning move was.

But after an exchange of rooks on the 39th move there was no doubt. With the same number of pawns on each side, and with bishops of opposite colors, the result was a textbook draw. Some had come to the same conclusion several moves before the end. The three Russians of Spassky's entourage Efim Geller and Nikolai Krogius, grandmasters, and the international master Ivo Nei, were seen leaving the hall 10 minutes before the end of the game. They knew.

THE GAME, held on the stage of Exhibition Hall was preceded by the skirmishing that has been the way of life of this match. This time neither player arrived at 5 p.m. Referee Lothar Schmid started Fischer's clock promptly at 5. Spassky came to the stage seven minutes later. Fischer was 10 minutes late.

He had been on the second floor making sure that film and television cameras had been removed from the hall. The cameras were there only 20 minutes before game time. The film crew of Chester Fox had installed them. Fox has an ex clusive contract with the Icelandic Chess Federation for all film rights. "I PUT the cameras in every day," said Fox.

"That's what my contract reads, and they are ordered out every day, because Fischer threatens to leave." Gudmundur Thorarisson, president of the Icelandic Chess Federation, said that he kept hoping that Fischer would allow the cameras next time. "Who knows?" he said. The Icelandic Chess Federation had been counting heavily on film and television income to balance the deficit that the match alone, without supplementary income, would bring. THE GAME Tuesday was described as absorbing and exciting by experts, and an audience of some 1,200 seemed to agree. "What a great game!" was heard from every side.

Although the Sicilian Defense is one of the oldest openings known to chess, it leads to exciting tilts, with the black pieces highly mobile and Score Shows Tense Fight In 4th Game Following is the score of the fourth game of the World's Chess Championship match at Reykjavik, Iceland, Tuesday: Fischer Spassky (White) (Black) (For simplicity designates Knight) 1. P-K4 P-QB4 2. N-KB3 P-Q3 3. P-Q4 PxP 4. NxP N-KB3 5.

N-QB3 N-B3 6. B-QB4 P-K3 7. B-N3 B-K2 8. B-K3 0-0 9. 0-0 P-QR3 10.

P-B4 NxN 11. BxN P-QN4 12. P-QR3 B-N2 13. Q-Q3 P-QR4 14. P-K5 PxP 15.

PxP N-Q2 16. NxP N-B4 17. BxN BxBch 18. K-Rl 0-N4 19. Q-K2 QR-Q 20.

QR-Q RxR 21. RxR P-R4 22. N-Q6 B-Rl 23. B-B4 P-R5 24. P-R3 B-KB 25.

Q-N4 QxP 26. QxRP P-N4 27. Q-N4 B-B4 28. N-N5 K-N2 29. N-Q4 R-Rl 30.

N-B3 BxN 31. QxB B-Q3 32. Q-B3 QxQ 33. PxO B-K4 34. R-Q7 K-B3 35.

K-Nl BxP 36. B-K2 B-K4 37. K-Bl R-QB1 38. B-R5 R-B2 39. RxR BxR 40.

P-QR4 K-K2 41. K-K2 P-B4 42. K-Q3 B-K4 43. P-B4 K-Q3 44. B-B7 B-N6 45.

P-B5 (Ch) Draw In Anglo-Saxon chess notation, each file on the playing board is listed according to the first initial of the piece originally posted on it, while ranks are numbered from 1-8 away from the player. A rank is a row of eight squares parallel to the white and black sides. Files are perpendicular to the ranks. An example of a move in descriptive notation would be "P-QB4," or pawn to Queen's Bishop four, with the initial of the moving piece followed by the designation of the square moved to. The symbol indicates a capture.

The symbol "O-O" indicates a castling maneuver. "Ch" means a move has placed an opponent's king In check. The symbol is used for knight. a' Washington Post Dispatch NEW YORK The Justice Department Tuesday sued the state of New Jersey and the City of New York for failing to halt pollution of New York Harbor, one of the stink-ingest bodies of water in the world. At the same time, the federal Environmental Protection Agency initiated an action against the jurisdictions to try to force them to clean up the nearly 2 billion gallons of waste poured into the waters every day.

THE ACTION concentrates on human waste. New York City dumps about 350 million gallons of human waste untreated into the Hudson River daily. The justice actions, brought by U.S. attorneys in Newark, Manhattan and Brooklyn, focus on alleged failure of government to force manufacturers to clean their wastes before flushing them into city sanitation systems. The EPA complaints give New York City and the Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission 180 days to submit plans for dealing with the inadequately treated waste.

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Official Visits Moscow U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim (right) meets Tuesday with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. Waldheim arrived in Moscow Monday for his first official visit to Soviet Union. (AP Photo) Hi A i.

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