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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 16

Location:
Binghamton, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4-B PRESS, Binghamton, N.Y. July 13, 1972 Violence Follows Parades Fischer Threatening to Halt Match If Cameras Remain Federal Aid Prospects Augment Flood Recovery WORLD CHESS FISCHER CHAMPIONSHIP Black 5 SPASSKY BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) Security forces kept the Protestant marchers and the Roman Catholics apart in Northern Ireland on Wednesday, but at least eight persons were killed before and after the parades on the Protestants' Glorious Twelfth. Seamus Twomey, chief of the Irish Republican Army's Provisional wing, told newsmen his forces might consider renewing the cease-fire they ended Sunday after 13 days. But he said the British must guarantee there will be no army raids or arrests, no "harassment" of his men, and complete freedom for the Provisionals to move freely, although in "low profile." The celebration of the Protestant victory on July 12, 1690, at the Battle of the Boyne went off peacefully. But in advance of the marching, on its periphery and in its wake assassins and bombers were hard at work.

Two soldiers were killed and 11 wounded in firefights with IRA guerrillas. The first to die Wednesday was a Protestant 16-year-old. gunned down as he walked through a park in the town of Portadown Then gunmen burst into the Belfast home of a Catholic widow and killed her teen-age son, said to have a mental age of five, as he slept in bed. The hooded body of a man, shot in the head and believed a Protestant, was discovered during the morning in the capital. There was more violence in Portadown after the marching.

Two men a Catholic and a Protestant were shot dead in a bar. Early this morning police found another body in a mainly Protestant area of East Belfast. Sandbagged army replacements came under gun and bomb attack in Londonderry and Belfast. -Associated Press WIREPHOTO HOPELESS SITUATION-This is the final positioning at the end of the first game of the world chess championships. American Bobby Fischer, playing with the black from the top of the diagram, resigned at this point.

(White en audience, which was applauding Spassky. The moves were as follows: -Associated Press WIREPHOTO PORTABLE POOL-William Case of Indianapolis, lnd filled the bed of his pickup truck with plastic and then added water for a swimming pool on wheels. Case, relaxing at top right, was joined by his family and neighborhood children as temperatures reached near 90 degrees in Indianapolis this week. roll For Inflation, More Blame Government While Black While Black Spassky Fischer Spassky Fischer 1 P-04 N-KB3 29 P-NS BxKRP P-QB4 P-K3 30 P-N3 P-KR4 3 N-KB3 P-04 31 K-K2 P-R5 4 N-B3 B-N5 32 K-B3 K-l2 5 P-K3 0-0 33 K-N2 PxP 6 B-03 P-B4 34 PxP BxP 7 N-B3 35 KxB K-d3 8 P-QR3 R4 36 P-R4 K-Q4 9 N-K2 QPxP 37 B-R3 K-K5 10 BxBP B-N3 38 BS P-R3 11 PxP OxO 39 P-N6 P-B4 12 RxQ BxP 40 K-R4 13 P-QN4 B-K2 41 PxP K-K5 14 B-N2 B-02 42 K-RS K-B4 15 QR-B1 KR-Q1 43 B-K3 K-K5 16 N2-Q4 NxN 44 B-B2 K-B4 17 NxN B-R5 45 B-R4 P-K4 18 B-N3 BxB 44 B-N5 P-K5 19 NxB RxRch 47 B-K3 K-B3 20 RxR R-QB1 48 K-N4 K-K 21 K-Bl K-Bl 49 K-N5 K-Q4 22 K-K2 K5 50 K-B5 P-R4 23 R-QB1 RxR 51 B2 P-N 24 BxR P-B3 52 KxP B5 25 N-R5 N-03 53 K-B5 K-N5 2 K-03 B-Ol 54 KxP Kx.P 27 N-B4 B-B2 55 K-Q5 K-N4 28 NxN BxN Si K-Q6 Resigns REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer today was reported threatening to break off his world championship chess match with Boris Spassky unless all movie cameras are removed from the playing hall. "It's quite serious.

He may not play at all," said a member of Fischer's entourage who asked not to be identified. Fischer was scheduled to meet the world champion from the Soviet Union today for the second game of their 24-game match. The American challenger lost the first game Wednesday night. Fischer staged a 30-minute walkout shortly after the play began Wednesday, complaining that a movie camera 150 feet away was making him nervous. Chief referee Lothar Schmid of West Germany, who makes the decisions on all contested points in connection with the match, told Fischer during his walkout there was nothing he could do about the camera.

Film and television rights for the match have been sold to an American promoter, and Fischer and Spassky are to get a share of the proceeds, estimated at a minimum of $27,500 each. A victory yields one point, a draw half a point, and after Wednesday's match Spassky needed 11 more points in the 24-game series to retain his title. Fischer needs 12 4 points to end the 24-year Soviet monopoly of the title. The first game In the match began Tuesday, and Spassky adjourned it after 40 moves with Fischer in bad straits. Five minutes after the game resumed late Wednesday afternoon, Fischer stood up, LUBOMIR PEICHEV Alexiev and Azmanoff both were killed by FBI agents at San Francisco International airport before they received their ransom money.

Azmanoff shot three passengers before he went down himself, the FBI said. One, E. H. Stanley Carter, 66, of Quebec, Canada, died. The other two are recovering.

The FBI said it learned Peichev had been seen with the other two in the weeks leading up to the hijacking and allegedly discussed a "business venture" with them. While Peichev's arrest was PHONE 729-2265 STORAGE? Sow By the Ammnted Press With proepetts brightening for additional millions in federal disaster aid, the flood recovery effort is making progress on several fronts in Southwestern New York. Public officials were cheered by the fact that New York was on the list of six states that would receive $1.7 billion in aid under a proposal made Wednesday by President Nixon. Although it had not yet been announced what New York's share of the proposed aid package would be, Gov. Rockefeller said it "should go far toward restoring the stricken areas" within the Empire State.

Commenting on the Nixon plan, the governor added, "I am confident that the Congress will respond promptly and affirmatively to it." In Elmira, one of the most heavily damaged communities, Mayor Richard C. Loll said of Nixon's plan, "That's great, that's just great." He said he and City Manager Joseph Sartori expected to be among the 500 local leaders attending a special meeting in Washington Friday on the recovery situation. But he said official invitations had not yet been received. About 1,500 persons in Elmira and nearby Corning are still living in evacuation centers, waiting to move to emergency housing. A spokesman for the U.S.

Department of Housing and Urban Development said about 25 flooded out families had moved into mobile homes in the Elmira area. Site preparation was reported under way for about 1,000 more units. The Department of Transportation moved to expedite the movement of oversized mobile homes into the flood area. Consulting Engineers Council of New York State, a private organization, offered free consulting engineering services to stricken areas and the state to help alleviate conditions. The department anticipates 1,500 mobile homes moving over the route in the next three or four weeks, or between 50 and 75 a day.

Another federal agency, the Small Business Administration, said 3,057 applications had been received in the Elmira area for home repair loans totaling about $13 million. The SBA added that 124 businesses in the city had qualified for emergency loans totaling nearly $3 million. While many homes were due to be rebuilt, others were scheduled for demolition. The Army Corps of Engineers was expected to award a contract in the next few days for a teardown project. The City of Elmira has been negotiating to acquire several properties so it can construct a "mini-arterial" to relieve traffic congestion near the flooddamaged downtown area.

Utility service throughout the Southern Tier was again approaching normal. Electrical and telephone service was reported mostly restored to Elmira and Corning. But gas service in some areas remained curtailed because of water in the lines. 'Grandparents9 Project Funded NEW YORK (AP) Sixty-five elderly people will serve as foster grandparents for 130 children in the start of a city program funded by a five-year $1 million grant from the federal government. Awarding of the grant to the Mayor's Office for the Aging was announced Wednesday by Deputy Mayor Edward A.

Morrison. spoke animatedly to chief referee Lothar Schmid of West Germany and strode to a backstage dressing room. Schmid followed him, and Fischer said he wouldn't continue play unless a movie camera 150 feet from the board was shut off. Schmid said he couldn't order the camera removed. Fischer stayed away for 30 minutes, then came back and resumed play.

After Spassky's 56th move Fischer resigned. He reached over and stopped the clock after 63 minutes had elapsed, offered Spassky his hand, folded his scorecard and walked out. He paused once to wave to the being announced here Wednesday, a federal grand jury indicted Francis Michael Goo-dell, 21, Manassas, for hijacking a second PSA jetliner on July 6, the day after the San Francisco hijacking. Goodell, an AWOL soldier from Ft. Riley, took over a PSA Boeing 727 between Oakland and Sacramento, ordering it to San Diego where he picked up $450,000 in ransom money and released all but one passenger, then ordered the plane back to Oakland.

He was later surrendering. talked into FBI Arrests Machinist In Fatal Hijacking Plot government, business or labor? Here are the national findings and those by key population groups: Bus)- Ns Gov't, ness Labor Opin. 29 NATIONAL 39 20 14 College background High school Grade school 29 43 39 24 20 17 44 27 19 34 25 27 31 29 43 18 33 8 12 26 11 17 8 13 20 15 16 10 Men Women 37 41 22 19 Under 30 yrs. 30-49 yrs. 50 over 37 41 39 29 18 16 Republicans Democrats Independents 27 48 39 17 20 23 RENT-A-CAR FROM 5Da 5 OPer ML Many Models AvaialbU RENT-A-TRUCK 167 Main Binghamton! 772-0114 ford Income: $15,000 over 31 18 42 13 41 20 32 11 43 22 29 8 44 25 20 13 38 20 24 19 Under $3,000 38 15 18 33 Prof.

Business 34 20 42 9 Clerical Sales 42 17 31 11 Manual labor 45 23 21 13 Farmers 27 13 44 15 Labor union families 51 24 18 11 Non-union families 35 19 33 15 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) A Bulgarian native the FBI says waited in vain at a lonely Canadian airport for two jetliner hijackers to arrive with $800,000 ransom has been accused of helping plot the incident. The hijackers were killed. The FBI arrested Lubomir i 29, in Oakland Wednesday at his job as a tool and diemaking machinist. Peichev was arraigned later in the day on air piracy charges before U. S.

Magistrate Richard Goldsmith, who ordered him held without bail and set a preliminary hearing for July 21. An FBI affidavit said Peichev and two other Bulgarian immigrants, Dimitr Alexiev and Michael Azmanoff, both 28, flew by chartered plane June 25 to Puntzi Mountain airstrip 200 miles northwest of Kamloops, B. to check the runway, now used only as a base for planes fighting forest fires. It said Peichev returned there July 5, the day Alexiev and Azmanoff hijacked a Pacific Southwest Airways plane here with 79 other passengers and five crew members aboard. Peichev waited at the remote airstrip with a pilot and plane he had chartered at Campbell River on the Vancouver Island, the affidavit said.

Juvenile Institutions Cut Staffs Gannett News Service ALBANY Sharp reductions in staff of state training schools to cut costs were announced Wednesday by Milton Luger, director of the State Division of Youth. A total of 155 employes will be dropped by Aug. 2, he said. This reflects a drop in population at the training schools from 1,340 in the last fiscal year to a daily average of 1,060 for the current fiscal year, Luger said. Rising costs of operation, he said, have increased the 50 per cent share counties must pay for the juveniles they sent to the schools.

It rose from $24.20 a day in 1968 to $52.73 a day last year. As a result, counties balked at committing children to the state institutions, finding other solutions such as private agencies or release on probation, it was said. Luger also faced a $1.9 million budget cut by the legislature this year, It was explained. The staff reductions planned are: Otisville School for Boys, 44 employes; Hudson School for Girls, 29; State Agricultural and Industrial School at Industry, 28; Warwick School for Boys, 19; Highland School for Children, 15, and Tryon School for Boys, 14. One and two jobs will be closed out also at Brookwood Center for Girls, Goshen Center for Boys, Overbook Center for Children, at Red Hook, and South Lansing school for Girls.

In addition, Luger said, vacancies will not be filled, creating more economies. The various work camps of the division are not affected by the new order. Studying Women MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Delegates to the Democratic National Convention have been given a questionnaire on women in politics. The survey will be the basis for the first major study of women in American politics, accoridng to convention officials.

backs, calling him "a self-confessed accomplice, aider and abettor, manipulator and liar." The U.S. District Court jury of six men and six women took the case at 4:43 p. m. EDT Wednesday after six days of testimony. Haag was indicted on 20 counts of mail fraud involving House payroll checks and kickbacks from them, two counts of falsifying House payroll records, and one of obstruction of justice by inducing another employe to lie to a federal grand jury.

By GEORGE GALLUP Field Enterprises, Inc. PRINCETON, N. J. For many months, inflation has been one of the top two domestic concerns of the American people. When asked which is responsible for inflation, more people blame government rather than labor or business.

Four in 10 say government is most to blame, while three in 10 say labor and two in 10 point the finger of blame at business. HOWEVER, ONE'S views on where the blame lies depend in considerable measure on such factors as political affiliation, occupation, educational attainment and income. Nearly half of Democrats (48 per cent) say government is most responsible for inflation, a far larger per cen-tage than name business (20 per cent) or labor (18 per cent). Republicans on the other hand lean heavily to the view that labor is chiefly to blame for inflation. Among the college-educated, professional and business people, and those persons in the upper income brackets, the weight of opinion is that labor proportions in these groups place the blame on government than on business.

In contrast, those with only a grade school education, manual workers and lower income people are prone to place the blame for inflation upon government. HALF OF PERSONS in labor union families (51 per cent) say government is most responsible for inflation, while ,24 per cent name business and 18 per cent labor. One of those who is critical of government is a 33-year-old office worker from Con-n i who commented: "The government hasn't been able to find any effective long-term guidelines that are workable. Thus they are neglecting a major responsibility to the American people." A 44-year-old housewife puts the blame on labor: "the demands of labor on industry are on the whole unrealistic. When labor union members get more money, prices have to be increased or products can't be manufactured.

It's a vicious cycle." Business is the chief culprit, according to a New Jersey homeowner: "Business wants too large a profit. Besides, some companies aren't managed efficiently and there is a tremendous amount of waste. THE RESULTS REPORTED today are based on in-per-son interviews with a total of 1,556 adults, 18 and older. The survey was conducted April 21-24 and covered more than 300 scientifically selected localities across the nation. This question was asked: In your opinion, which is most responsible jor inflation NOTE: Total for each group adds to mora than 100 per cent since some persons gave a multiple response.

181 Million Insured WASHINGTON The number of Americans with private health insurance increased 40 per cent between 1960 and 1970 and now exceeds 181.5 million over 89 per cent of the ituFs7w7d7 I Griswold ItlVU i3 THURS. 9-6 1 St. i I FRI. 9-8 I L7it9-66-4! Market PESCHKE'S U.S.D.A. CHOICE ALL MEAT SHORT CUT STANDING FRANKS RIB ROAST 4-5-6 RIBS 791 n9 CALVES' LIVER JSiitfESL ))tE CHUCKS PILGRIM SLICED 99lB SLAB BACON U.S.D.A.

BONELESS If jr dRkA RUMP OR SIRLOIN TIP ROAST MS OUR OWN MARINATED WILSON'S SPIEDIES CANADIAN BACON 591, SPIEDIES COLD CUTS 49 lorge 7fle llB; Selection I IB. LEAN 10 IB. BAGS CITYIIKICKEN fresh $fi90 $4 39 GROUND BEEF 0 HOT OR SWEET GR0W Italian cnuck 8 gB All Kinds of Patties 11 i i nil i ii iriMiiamin i i M. Jury Out in Texas Case Aide's Kickback Role Deliberated M5if1 TREATYOURSEL pN 8 FRIED I STEAMED CLAMS SHRIMP with Butter 2 Poz. 1,49 wi.htangy $.

5(j "HOT" LOBSTER Roll sauce with Chunks of Lobster Dripping in Butter SO CC BROILED CHOICE with Tossed Salad. TENDERLOIN treasures of the deep STEAK BROILED JUMBO LOBSTER TAIL JUMBO FRIED SHRIMP with Baked Potato DEEP FRIED FRESH SCALLOPS Tossed Sclad STUFFED FLOUNDER WITH CRAB MEAT BROILED FRESH BOSTON SCROD LANE'S RESTAURANT 'TAe Hnest Seafood, Fish Steaks" 729-9492 336 MAIN BING. 798-0142 Hours: THURS. 3 p.m. to 1 1 p.m.; SAT.

3 p.m. to 1 a.m. SUN. NOON to 11 p.m. CLOSED MONDAYS WASHINGTON (AP) A federal jury deliberated today on whether Texas millionaire Rep.

James M. Collins' former chief aide was the manipulator or fall guy in an $18,000 kickback scheme. Lawyers for the former aide1, George A. Haag, 33, told the jury in closing arguments Wednesday that the Dallas Republican congressman conceived the kickback scheme, ordered it implemented and then put the blame on Haag. The prosecution said Haag arranged and pocketed most of the money from the kick-.

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