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Fort Lauderdale News du lieu suivant : Fort Lauderdale, Florida • Page 8

Lieu:
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Date de parution:
Page:
8
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

7L South Broward Edition" 1 Askciv Hits t. Weather Utility Rule Partly cloudy through tomorrow with showers mainly during night and morning hours. Details on Page 2A. Gov. Renbin Askew wants the Public Service Commission to make utilities pay their own corporate income taxes.

Story, page ISA. Vol. 61, No. 223 1972 Gore Newspapers Company HOLLYWOOD BUREAU: 2128 Hollywood Blvd. TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1972 5 Sections 68 Pages Ten Cents Mr IMM EWS 'til I til If i I Tl WVUY line of "shopper's guides" from the Insurance Department.

There have been guides to hospitals, life insurance and car insurance. The surgery guide brought a quick response from the Penn-' sylvania Medical Society. Dr. George P. Rosemond of Philadelphia, surgeon president of the society, said several of Denenberg's suggestions to the consumer had Tbe Associated Preis HARRISBURG, Pi.

-Pennsylvania Insurance Commissioner Herbert' Denen-berg'i latest consumer tare li a shopper's guide to surgery. The manual spells out 14 rules for a person to. follow before getting on the operating table. "If these rules are followed, about 194,000 Pennsytvanians may be able to protect them selves from unnecessary surgery every year," Denenberg said. "Most physicians and surgeons are honest and humane enough not to propose unneed-ed surgery," he continued.

"But studies Indicate that per-, haps as many as 15,000 licensed doctors in the United States are unfit to practice medicine." The report it the fourth in a merit. But they were obscured, he said, because enberg "cluttered" the report "with all of the hackneyed barbs of headline-happy pessimists." Rosemond admitted "questionable surgical practices" do occur. "All of the 300,000 medical doctors in the country do not (Continued on Page 2A, Col. 3) 1 A Red Advisers Reioorted Due I I. i jgt 7 JL 1 1 It! 1 To Exit xtr lit I Egypt '(-V'- fl Pun 1 ft 4 lill A The Associated Press CAIRO President Anwar Sadat has asked the Soviet Union to withdraw its military advisers from Egypt, informed sources said today.

Several of the advisers were seen leaving Sunday and yesterday, shortly after Premier Aziz Sidky returned from a one-day visit to Moscow. Sadat informed the 1S0-member central committee of the ruling Arab Socialist Union of the action today and several heads of foreign missions here were called yesterday to see top Egyptian officials, including the chief U.S. diplomat here, the informants said. Estimates of the number of Soviet military advisers in -Egypt range from 10,000 to 20,000. They came after the late he agreed to Soviet military presence.

He went to the Soviet capital during Israel's deep penetration bombing raids against Egypt. Two months later badly' needed surface-to-air EAM missiles, manned by Soviets, began arriving irt Egypt. The withdrawal of military advisers, perhaps because they have finished their job and trained the Egyptian army, was expected to be popular among the masses. Student demonstration blocked Cairo streets last January for nearly a week with participants questioning Egypt's relationship with the Soviet Union. Removal of the military visers may be considered by (Continued on Page 2 Col.

4) PROTEST SAFETY AWARD This little girl was among 'Nader's Raiders' who protested outside a San Francisco hotel yesterday where General Motors president Edward Cole received the first annual safety award of the National Motor Vehicle Safety Advisory Council. See story on Page 7D. Apwipito 1 AP Wlrephote PRESIDENT SADAT calls in envoys VICTORY SMILE Bobby Fischer leaves Reykjavik's Laugardalsholl Hall yesterday after defeating Boris Spassky in the third gameof the world chess championship. See story on Page 2A. President Carnal Abdcl Nasser's secret visit to Moscow in January 1970 in which 71 1 i -J Blasts Cripple Destroyer SINATRA Sinatra Promises Crime Testimony United Press International SAIGON Two unexplained underwater explosions rocked the destroyer Warrington a off tion of the blasts was under way.

Spokesmen said the explosions were outside the Warrington's hull. This left open the possibilities that the destroyer had struck a mine either North Vietnamese or American or had been hit by the accidental firing of another warship in the task 1 force. A few hours earlier the Warrington, in company with her sister destroyers Robison and Hull, had been shelling the North Vietnamese coast. They panhandle, under its own power. But after its engine room began to flood it was taken under though the flooding was brought under control.

The destroyer was en route today to Subic Bay in' the Philippines for repairs. 1 On June 4 the destroyer Joseph Strauss was damaged by two underwater explosions by 1 1 i from shore! But naval spokesmen said there were no Communist gunboats nor any shore batteries firing when the Warrington was hit. The Navy said an investiga reported destroying two supply craft ferrying supplies ashore from a freighter. The freighter's nationality was not disclosed. Other naval ships joined today with U.S.

Air Force BS2 bombers and allied tactical aircraft and helicopters to bombard North Vietnamese reinforcements trying to reach Quang Tri city. Military spokesmen said the BS2s pounded Communist staging areas within three miles of the city last night. A U.S. Command spokes man said 42 B52s dropped' more than 1,000 tons of explosives on suspected Communist positions three to 14 miles west, north and south of the embattled city. About 2,500 North Vietnamese troops were spotted last week in northwestern Quang Tri province and an estimated 15,000 Communist soldiers are believed to have been pulled from the battlefields in Laos to North Vietnam.

Allied officers expressed fears the fresh troops may be thrown into the battle for Quang Tri. Cu As On In Lumber Industry United Press International WASHINGTON Most of the lumber industry was under government (wage and price controls today a move the administration hoped would keep other exempt in-d i from inflationary price increases. The noting that lumber prices climbed more than 14 per cent in the past year, slapped on the controls yesterday. Its spokesmen said the action served notice on other sectors of the economy that inflationary price boosts would not be tolerated. The Cost of Living Council placed controls on all manufacturing, wholesale and retail businesses with annual lumber sales of more than $100,000.

About 62,000 lumber industry firms out of originally exempt were affected by the move. BUILDING BOOM It was the first time the council had reimposed controls on a portion of the economy it had previously exempted. "This action should serve notice to all exempt sectors that inflationary price increases will not be permitted," said Council Director Donald Rumsfeld. A boom in home construction has contributed to increases in the price of lumber. The "council said it feared additional pressure would be brought to bear by the extensive rebuilding in the eastern (Continued on Page 2A, Col.

8) Over 200,000 Affected North Vietnam, the U.S., Command said today. Military sources said there was no Communist activity in the area when the blasts occurred. One crewman was slightly wounded, the command said. He was given first aid and returned to duty. In South.

Vietnam, the government drive to recapture Quang Tri city entered its third week today with the North Vietnamese still in control of the city's walled citadel, Saigon said. The U.S. Command reported two incidents in the Quang Tri-Hue area in which U.S. aircraft fire accidentally wounded five South Vietnamese soldiers yesterday. BOMBING ERROR Near Quang Tri city, two Air Force jet fighter-bombers erroneously fired on a government Marine position, wounded four men.

Near Hue, 35 miles south of Quang Tri, a Marine fighter-bomber in a similar error fired on a government Marine battalion, injuring one soldier. The Warrington 'left the scene, about 20 miles offshore from the North Vietnamese Brooklyn Blackout 'Serious' 7" United Press International WASHINGTON Frank Sinatra promised to appear before, the House Crime Committee today to answer questions about his association with a now defunct race track allegedly bankrolled in part by the New England Mafia. Committee Chairman Claude Pepper, said Sinatra had exercised his prerogatives as a witness under House rules to bar television, radio and cameras from the open session. The panel is conducting an investigation of criminal infiltration into sports. It wants to ask Sinatra about his role as vice president of the Berkshire Race Track of Hancock, Mass.

Committee investigators said that during the six to nine months that Sinatra filled the post in 1963 and 1964 the New England Mafia held a "substantial" interest in it. The track finally went bankrupt and closed in 196S. The committee has been trying to talk to Sinatra since May but has met a series of obstacles. Pepper said it was about to serve him with a subpoena in Baltimore on May 19 when the entertainer briefly stepped out of retirement and sang at a function honoring his friend and golfing companion, Vice President Spiro T. Agnew.

But Sen. John Tunney, according to Pepper, informed the committee that Sinatra wanted to be spared the embarrassment and would testify without a subpoena. The next thing the committee knew Sinatra was in Europe, where U.S. subpoenas cannot be served with any legal effect. On June 27, according to Pepper, Sinatra agreed through his attorney to testify voluntarily today.

The fiery-tempered Sinatra denies the existence of the Mafia, the shadowy organized crime network allegedly trans-sported to the United States from Italy. Sinatra almost got into a fight when he was introduced to Mario Puzo, the author of the best selling novel, "The Godfather." The book, purportedly a fictional account of the Mafia, contains a character which closely resembles Sinatra. The Associated Press NEW YORK Several residential sections of Brooklyn were crippled by a serious blackout last night and more than 100,000 customers faced another scorching day today without power to help them bear the heat. It was described as the largest blackout here since the Northeast power failure in November, 1965. Homes were suddenly plunged into darkness.

Refrigerators and air conditioners went off. Television sets darkened. And many people spent the night outside in the relative coolness of their porches. Hospitals and police stations with emergency generators were largely unaffected. Consolidated Edison shut off electricity to the Bay Ridge, Sunset Park and Gowanus sections at 9:45 p.m.' after six of 10 feeder cables had stopped functioning.

A Con Ed spokesman said the number of customers affected by the blackout might go as high as 200,000 or 300,000 and that the power loss would last through this afternoon or later. The National Weather Service predicted temperatures in the 90s today, with the humidity expected to be uncomfortably high. The decision to cut the power was made, according to the spokesman, to avoid overloading the four feeder lines that were still functioning. "If we didn't cut the power when we did, the entire system would have been destroyed," he said. The immediate cause of the breakdown was not determined.

Earlier yesterday, Con Ed had reduced voltage by 3 per cent to its three million customers in most of the city and Westchester County after a 250,000 kilowatt gas turbine generator in Ravenswood, Queens quit. IRA Puts Out New Truce Feelers i Irt few bombs blasted the predominantly Protestant town of Por-tadown, southwest of Belfast. One wrecked a tavern. 'NO-MAN'S LAND' 2 More Indicted In Yablonski Killings 3A McGovern Takes Break In Black Hills 5 A Antiwar Vets Change Protest Tactics 8B ed to demands from Catholic residents to stop shooting after the British army said it would pull out most of the 700 men it had stationed there if the guerrillas quit first. IRA commander Sean Henderson said his men would not attack unless provoked.

Some British units were expected to withdraw today, after William Whitelaw, Britain's administrator in Northern Ireland, conferred with his security chiefs. The Associated Press BELFAST New feelers for a cease-fire in Northern Ireland were reported today after guerrillas of the Irish Republican Army halted their attacks in the bullet-scarred Lenadoon district of Belfast. David O'Connell, chief strategist of the IRA's Provisional wing, said in Dublin that overtures for a new truce with British forces were being made. O'Connell, who led negotiations for the cease-fire collapsed nine days ago, declined to elaborate. British authorities would not confirm his statement.

Despite the hint of peace, 100 shootings and gunfights were reported across the province between midnight Monday and 8 a.m. today. The British Army said soldiers hit eight guerrillas in gunfights in Belfast and Londonderry, Northern Ireland's second largest city, where three big bombs caused heavy damage in the commercial district Monday. Three solders were reported wounded by snipers. Two Protestant vigilantes and Catholic guerrillas battled in Duncairn Gardens, a no-man's land in North Belfast, the Army said.

The IRA Provisionals agreed late yesterday to halt their bomb and bullet attacks in the Lenadoon area of Southwest Belfast. They yield- Business, Stocks 5-7C Classified 4-17C Comics 18, 19A Crossword Puzzle 19A Editorials 12, 13A Entertainment 6, 7B Horoscope ISA Living 1-3C Local News 1-3, SB Movie Time Clock 7B Obituaries 16A Sports 1-3D Television 4D Weather Report 2A Defense Secretary Mel-: vin Laird says Eagleton made deal with McGovern on F1S fighter plane. See story page 4A. Richard J. Daley has a big smile as he announces that he.

will support the Democratic presidential ticket this fall. Sec story page 5A. BOAT REPAIRS: We stress FORK LIFT RENTALS with or Neivs Phones. 5274,111: Circulation, S2M751; Classified, S2S-1681 American Exoress is OK at quality workmanship from For your "Bride and Joy" buy your diamond at Pribble's Jewelry in Sears Town. Adv.

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