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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 3

Location:
Orlando, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Fischer's Demands Kill Chess Match fl AMSTERDAM The World Chess Federation canceled the world championship encounter in Belgrade between Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union and his U.S. challenger Bobby Fischer Thursday, after a long dispute with Fischer over financial terms. Belgrade was to have been the site for the first half of the championship match from June 22 to July 8. The second half was fixed for Reykjavic, Iceland. THE WORLD Chess Federation, (FIDE), based in Amsterdam, said it informed the national associations of the Soviet Union, United States, Iceland and Yugoslavia of the cancellation Thursday.

Its secretary was now asking FIDE President Max Euwe, who is in Australia, for instructions on what to do next. Terms for the match were originally agreed on March 31, but Fischer subsequently sought a larger financial share, including a share of television and film fees. Although on April 4, the U.S. Chess Federation advised FIDE that Fischer agreed to the date and site for the match against Spassky, the message made no reference to the financial terms. FURTHER exchanges failed to sort out the problems, and to satisfy the Belgrade organizers the federation asked the Soviet and the United States Chess Federations each to provide a $35,000 guarantee that their players would meet as arranged.

The guarantee was provided by the Soviet Federation but was not forthcoming from United States. Two days ago the Belgrade organizers finally withdrew their offer to play host, saying it would be impossible for them to make preparations in time. Better using Bill Welcomed 4 1 Compromise Possible In Richardson UrjK'S Hunt For Answer watcMny soldier keeps careful soldier keeps careful I -'v ft mi Chunce To Tulh Mijuehev9s Priev: leave but kept gun on crew during broadcast interview in which he deplored plight of "my people." Then he meekly surrendered. Above picture shows police officer strapping on armored equipment behind fence shielding him from hijacked plane. (AP) Strange terms were demanded by Mexican-American hijacker who took over Frontier airliner (above) and forced it to land at Los Angeles airport.

Ricardo Charvez Ortez, short order cook, said he wanted no ransom, simply a chance to broadcast his story over airport radio transmitter. He let passengers British watch outside burning tea house in Londonderry Thursday as terrorists set off chain of explosions across Northern Ireland, leaving elderly woman dead and trail of destruction in biggest upsurge of violence since Britain officially took over running country. (AP) Labor Scores Lack Of Food PriceConlrols WASHINGTON (UPI) -The AFL-CIO's own price monitors, displaying grocery items to dramatize their point, said Thursday that government price controls were a farce and that even strict wartime-style measures would be an improvement. If it takes an elaborate new bureaucracy to run effective price controls, the AFL-CIO's Leo Perlis told the Price Commission, "then by God have a bureaucracy." PERLIS, DIRECTOR of community services for the 13.6 million-member labor federation, ac- Prices Watched, Pg. 3-E companied six "price watchers," from a Denver housewife to a Spanish-speaking machinist from California, who reported a broad range of food price boosts and charged that the Internal Revenue Service didn't respond to their complaints.

Mrs. Violet Waggoner, a riveter in the machinists' union, laid out jars of instant tea and coffee, cat food, hamburger relish and dishwashing detergent. She said her five-month survey of Denver supermarkets indicated 77 of 99 items had risen in price, adding 5 per cent to the average grocery bill. "It's a consumer's nightmare," she said. IRS Chief Doubts Value Of Tax Filer's License ITT Inquiry WASHINGTON (Reuter) The White House and key Senate Republicans are discussing possible compromises in an effort to save the endangered nomination of Richard Kleindienst as attorney general.

Sen. Charles Mathias, a leading member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, said the discussions of possible compromises center on working out a formula by which White House aides could be questioned informally on the relationship between the Nixon administration and International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation (ITT). EFFORTS TO WORK out a compromise began after the nomination ran into serious trouble because influential southern Democrats said they would oppose Kleindienst unless Peter Flani-gan, a White House aide, testifies in the current Senate judiciary hearings. The hearings which are embarrassing the administration, were touched off March 2 by Columnist Jack Anderson's articles suggesting a link between ITT's financial support for the Republican national convention and the Justice Department's settlement last year of anti-trust cases involving the huge international conglomerate. DEMOCRATIC Senators want to question Flanigan on his role in obtaining an outside consultant's study which had a major influence on the Justice Department's decision to reach an out of court settlement instead of taking the anti-trust cases to the Supreme Court.

The White House has said President Nixon will not allow Flanigan to testify on the grounds of executive privilege the controversial doctrine that confidential presidential advisers are not subject to questioning by congressional committees. Marshall H. Becker, of the University's School of Hygiene and Public Health. Becker, the senior man on the five-member survey team, theorized that older doctors tended to use more of well-advertised drugs, even if they were controversial, but younger doctors relied heavily on such sources as scientific articles and reports from their peers. Sentinel Calendar DANCES Plantation Squares, Ben Whit Raceway, 8 p.m.

Orlando Whirl Twirl Club, Slovak Gardens, 8 p.m. Younq Adult Club Sinqles, Orlando Garden Club, 7 P.m. CLINIC Glaucoma Detection Center: Free Tests, 62 W. Miller 10 a.m. -2 p.m.

CARDS Orlando Duplicate Bridge Club, Sunshine Park, 10:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. EXHIBITIONS Oranqe County Historical Museum: Artifacts, E. Central 2-4 p.m. Loch Haven Art Cenfer: Western Art Members' Show, 2418 E.

Mills 10 a.m. -5 p.m. Beal-Maltbie Shell Museum: "Treasures of the Tides," Rollins College, 10 a.m.-S p.m. Morse Gallery of Art: Tiffany Collection, Rollins College, 1-S p.m. APRIL 1972 Sun.

Mon. Tue. Wed. Thur. Fri.

Sat. INCOME DUE 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Star Dispatch WASHINGTON Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Elliot L. Richardson urged Congress Thursday to find ways to "improve" the Nixon Administration's antibusing program. "We are seeking the hest answers, not just answers with our own stand," the cabinet officer told a House judiciary subcommittee. He added, "We are open to any suggestions for improvements in our proposals." Richardson in a prepared statement made no comment on a contradiction between his views and those of acting Atty.

Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst over the scope of the administration's program. KLEINDIENST told the subcommittee Wednesday every past school desegregation order involving busing would be subject to reopening if the President's program were enacted by Congress. Earlier, Richardson had said that only recent busing orders by courts would be reopened under the new program.

The secretary was expected to be questioned closely about this contradiction. Rich ardson's appearance followed a denunciation of the Nixon busing moratorium legislation by a senior House Republican who cosponsored it. The proposal is unconstitutional because it would "prostitute the courts," Rep. William M. McCulloch of Ohio, the ranking GOP member of the committee, declared Wednesday.

McCULLOCH, long a civil rights advocate, rep udiated the administration measure while Kleindienst was testifying. In his opening remarks, Richardson complained to the subcommittee that the busing issue had become surrounded by "so much heat and so little light." He said the administration and Congress, working together, "need to quiet fears." sac Again menace. And to think, Central monsters in unprecedented see them again. You can see a special report Bues: is it 1 4 Oflanbo Swtincl WO X2E STiVT lOlA Ij Friday, April 11, 1972 3 A prepared returns. While IRS has no accurate figures 6n the number of returns which are prepared commercially every year, it estimates 50 per cent of the 75 million tax forms due April 17 are prapared commercially.

Although the IRS opposes licensing of preparers, Walters said Congress might consider establishing statutory penalties on the preparers of the 10 to 25 per cent of the deficiency in paid tax caused by a preparer who knowingly understates income or overstates deductions, exemptions and other credits. 1 33E3S Busier Young Boctors Out-Prescribe Seniors Reds On Way To Talk War Debt Payment Sfrm nrk ffimra Dispatch To The Sentinel MOSCOW A Soviet delegation left Thursday for Washington to begin critical negotiations with the United States on repayment of a large World War II lend-lease debt that has long blocked major expansion of Soviet-American trade. Chief snag has been inability to agree on the actual debt $800 million claimed by the U.S. the $500 million set by Russia. SINCE THE Soviets agreed in January to reopen the debt talks after a hiatus of 12 years, the Nixon administration has come to regard these negotiations as a key barometer of how rapidly Soviet-American trade can develop over the long term.

The White House has declined to take action on repeated Soviet pleas for relaxation of American tariffs on Soviet exports to the United States until the debt question is settled. Moscow needs to expand exports in order to help pay for major imports of American agricultural products and industrial technology. TO GRANT MOSCOW the most favored nation treatment that it has requested that is, to put it on the same tariff footing as other American trading partners would require congressional action. But the administration refuses to seek' such action while the debt question remains unresolved. Central Florida Museum-Planetarium: "Weather-wise," 8)0 E.

Rollins 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Orlando Public Library: Carver Junior Hiqh School Art Work, 10 N. Rosalind 9:30 a Maitland Art Center: Frederick Blakeslee Oils, 231 Packwood 10 a.m.-4 p.m. CLUBS Winter Park Toastmasters Club, 3674 Mt. Vernon Motor Lodqe, 7:30 a.m.

County South Rotary Club, Valley Forge Country Club, 8 a.m. Town Club or Winter Park, Langford Hotel, noon. Downtown Orlando Kiwams Club, First Federal of Orlando, 12:15 p.m. South Orlando Sertoma Club, Gold Key Inn, 12:15 p.m. Orlando Downtown Lions Club, Park Plaza Hotel, 12:15 P.m.

LEAF Society, Park Plaia, noon. Orlando South Rotary Club, Ramada Inn South, 12:15 P.m. Pennsylvania Club, College Park First Federal, 1:15 p.m. Oronge County Barracks 237, World War I Veterans, 1700 Edgewater Drive, 2 p.m. Orlando Chess Club, Sunshine Park, 7:30 P.m.

Orlando Table Tennis Club, Jaycee Community Center, 7:30 p.m. MEETINGS Texaco Robert Meyer Motor Inn, 8:30 i.tn. John Robert Powers, Robert Meyer, a.m. Classical League of Florida, Robert Meyer, 3 p.m. Kennedy Space Center, Gold Key Inn, a.m.

Field Enterprises, Gold Kev Inn, 7 p.m. Crown Cork Seal Langford Hotel, 8 a.m. Mobil Oil Corporation, Langford, 8:30 a.m. Mary Kay Cosmetics, Langtord, 11:30 a.m. General Agents and Mutual Manager Association (GAMMA i.

Lanqtord, 2 p.m. Florida Association of Life Underwriters, Langford, p.m. (When scheduling events open to the public, consult the Orlando Area Chamber of Commerct Community Calendar to avoid conflicts) uinioniaa Mies WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Internal Revenue Service commissioner, Johnnie M. Walters, testified Thursday it would be a disservice to taxpayers to require licensing of commercial tax preparers "for whose competence and integrity the IRS could not vouch." Appearing before a House Government Operations subcommittee investigating the tax preparation industry, Walters presented several alternatives that Congress and the IRS could consider to crackdown on incompetent or fraudulent tax preparers. He said that 2,200 of 3,174 preparers surveyed by IRS agents this year have submitted incorrect returns either deliberately or by mistake.

Rep. John S. Monagon, the subcommittee chairman, opened the hearings with the announcement that the Justice Department has begun 72 prosecutions in 22 states against preparers of fraudulent tax returns. Walters emphasized, however, that hundreds of other preparers submitted honest and competently Engineers Told To Find Design For Quake Area TEHRAN, Iran (UPI) Engineers and architects Thursday flew to the earthquake devastated village of Kheir in southern Iran with orders to design quake-proof dwellings for survivors. Government sources said three teams from Pahlavi University in Shiraz, 100 miles north of Kheir, were flown by helicopter into the area in which 45 of 60 villages were wiped out by an earthquake Monday.

NMENT OFFICIALS said the death toll will be "nearly 4,000." At least 400 survivors were receiving treatment for serious injuries. The region in southern Iran, Persian Guif-is notoriously vulnerable to earthquakes. THE EXPERTS are charged with finding ways in which villagers who tend the lands can live in safety. BALTIMORE, Md. Iff) Younger doctors tend to be more skeptical and better prescrib-ers than older physicians, according to a study by a Johns Hopkins University sociologist.

"One fascinating thing was that the better prescribers had larger and more hurried practices and were able to spend less time with their patients than the older ones," said Dr. OPERA Florida Symphony Opera Gala Guild: "Lucia di Lammermoor," Orlando Municipal Auditorium, I p.m. MUSIC Orlando Sports Stadium: Gospel Sins with the Oak Ritlqe Boys, Econlockhatcnee Trail, Union Park, 8 p.m. THEATER Rollins Student Production: "Stop the World, I Want to Gel Off," Annie Russell Theater, 8:30 p.m. Seminole Mutual Concert Association: "The Star Spansled Girl," Santord Center, 8 p.m.

Sebastian's Dinner Tneater: "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," mo Central Florida Parkway, Dinner Show 8:40 P.m. Indian River Players: "Never Too Late," Airport Theater, Melbourne, 8:30 p.m. Osceola Hi9h School Thespians: "The Spiral Staircase," Team-Teachin9 Building, Kissimmee, Snoe's'triniT'Players: "U.T.B.U.." Airport Theater, DeLand, 8:30 p.m. Lakeview Pavers: "Send Me No Flowers," Lakeview High School Auditorium, Winter Garden, 8 p.m. MUSICALS Edqewater Choral Society: "Ruddigore," Ed9ewater Hion School, 8 p.m.

Lyman High School: "Carousel," Lyman High Auditorium, Longwood, I P.m. Music Theater of Brevard: "South Pacific," Brevard Community College, Cocoa, 8 p.m. Florida Southern College Concert Choir: "South Pacific," Branscomb Memorial Auditorium, Lakeland, 8:15 p.m. SKY SHOW Central Florida Museum Planetarium: "The Edge of Space," Robert Neville, curator, 810 E. Rollins 8 p.m.

i Does anybody love the lovebug? Car washes, maybe. Auto mechanics, perhaps, repairing clogged radiators and overheating cooling systems. No, the majority view the bibiomdae fly somewhat of a 1 Florida- blasted by the numbers last year, soon will them even sooner Sunday in us or them? in the Florida Magazine. By Tom Fiedler..

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