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Pensacola News Journal from Pensacola, Florida • 23

Location:
Pensacola, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

5B Friday, June 30, 1972 TV s. i Accused Hijacker Held Awaiting Extradition Fischer Demands More Cash To Play Chess Champion 1 1 A- 0 y. V- fl -A IS 'v if i) 1 REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) Bobby Fischer has made a last-minute demand for more money to play in the world chess championship against Russian Boris Spassky, informed sources said Thursday. They reported that the 29 year old American challenger has sent an ultimatum to the Iceland Chess Federation "two or three days ago," saying he would not show up unless he got 30 per cent of the gate receipts on top of the unprecedented sums already guaranteed. Under the agreement Fischer and Spassky signed with the federation, the, players will share a purse of' $125,000, with the winner getting five-eighths of it.

In addition it was agreed that they would each get 30 per cent of receipts from sales of tele- FIND OUT YOURSELF WHY EVERYONE'S TALKING ABOUT- ATTENTION GETTER A possible claimant to the world's most unusual haircut is Walter Cline of Baker, who looks like a short-haired youth until he turns- around. Asked why he had the back of his head trimmed to resemble a man's face he said: "If you live in the desert you have to do something to get attention." (PotmcoI Journal AP Wircphoto) vision and film right for the match. Fischer canceled scheduled flights to Reykjavik Tuesday and Wednesday. This had led to speculation that he was waging a war of nerves with titleholder Spassky. The 24-game match is due to start on Sunday in a sports palace where seats are sold for $5 a game.

Since receiving Fischer's new Icelandic Chess Federation officials have been in almost constant touch with Fred Cramer, a former president of the American Chess Federation, acting as Fischer's advance man, the informants said. It was learned that the Icelandic federation wanted to avoid a rupture and was seeking a compromise. Officials were said to feel the federation could not afford any additional expenses. However, the sources said that while the federation might have trouble breaking even if the match went on as scheduled, it would not stand to lose if the match were canceled. Lothar Schmidt, the West German chosen to referee the match, expressed shock when he was told of the stand off shortly after his arrival Wednesday, informants said.

The news was conveyed to him by Fridrik Olafsson, an Icelandic grandmaster, they added. Hammerste'in Saluie Airs Monday Held Over 2nd Week NO OPEN TODAY 4:45 P.M. FEATURE TIMES 5:05,6:40,8:10,9:40 All SEATS $2.00 ADULTS hearing In Detroit on July 11 to decide if McNally, an unemployed service station attendant, will be sent to St. Louis. Daeiity Pel i Restaurant fish DINNER with franch fries.

CoU 4 law hush puppUt! iStli. Palates -41U241 mm1 wmm HAH BURGERS FRIES uan 4" DRINKS ALSO AT HENRY'S ENJOY CHICKEN FISH SHRIMP HOT DOGS BIG BURGERS 1i2fi THEATRE WARRINGTON, FLA. DETROIT (AP) Martin J. McNally, of Wyandotte, was held without bond in Detroit Thursday on charges stemming from last week's $502,000 skyjacking of an American Airlines 727 jet. McNally, 23, described by neighbors as a quiet and clean cut young man, was charged with violation of the federal air piracy statute and appeared before a federal magistrate in Detroit.

There will be a removal ALL KINDS OF SEAFOODS FRESH DAILY OYSTERS ON THE HALF SHELL PHILLIPS SEAFOOD MARKET OYSTER BAR PHONE477-46S6 S100 N.DAVISHWr. StOCK SOUTH Of PSfNT IANC Discover 1 I evuieijuarie Tonight 130 E. Government St. Complete Entertainment Dining Coinnle dim A Family StyU Rflf.ttf.nl Im Ltippir tod Hrtu fmnrMIH -IRMM. lull uv II.IKM.M.-2 30P.M.

n.r. iiior.M.-ir.uor.M, 1iiIhv' I.llnrtipnn Mrnu I-'ritl (ihicken me gravy, turnip creen. black eye eas. potato Kal-art, fresh diiuai-h, dessert beverajje I rtiiiht'i IHtinrr Mrnu 1'rimeHibof Beef. 12 oz.

Strip Steak Vi Fried Chicken (3JS Shrimp Tempura OR Broiled Snapir l'5 -k -k -k -k -k 1 tli of July CYIi'liralion Slontlay-July 3rd i BW Jj i)vW mwk, fry. June 30th July 2 Frenchie' 'Application' Free, happy and beautiful until death rode as their companion! mi UtTHOCOlOl Ax HOLLYWOOD (AP) A television special produced by "The Friends of the Libraries." It will happen July 3 and not on educational TV. "A Salute to a Cockeyed Optimist: Oscar Hammerstcin II" will be presented on the CBS network with Dinah Shore, Gene Kelly, Henry Fonda, Milton Berle, Helen Hayes, Ryan O'Neal, Ricardo Montalban and other stars. The musical was taped more than a year ago at the University of Southern California and presented by The Friends of the Libraries of U.S.C. How come? The explanation begins with a Hollywood publicist named Stanley Musgrove, a U.S.C.

alumnus. He has organized a series of programs to help support the university's libraries. The focus each year has been on a recently deceased figure of letters and arts: Aldous Huxley, Somerset Maugham, Helen Keller, Vivien Leigh, Cole Porter, Moss Hart, etc. The Porter tribute was an unforgettable evening for the few hundred who witnessed it. Frank Sinatra, Ethel Merman, Fred Astaire, Gene Kelly and others reminisced about the song writer and sang his tunes.

"That's when people started saying that we ought to make television specials out of our programs," says Musgrove. Robert Wise agreed, the producer director of "The Sound of Music" and "The Sand Pebbles" was one of the Hollywood figures Musgrove had enlisted to be a friend to the USC Libraries. Wise's company packaged the Hammerstcin tribute and sold it to Paramount, which made the deal with CBS. "Getting the show on was a problem," Wise recalls. "Some of the performers who might have appeared for a program at the university balked at the notion of a television special.

But others, like Janet Blair, actually volunteered their services. "We asked all the performers to work for scale wages. The proceeds were to go half to the university and half to the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund. We felt there would be more incentive if the stars knew that part of the money was going to their own business." The arragement hit a snag a few days before the show. The television actors union, AFTRA, objected to scale pay and threatened to pull out its V.

V. Sportsman, or (ust Interested? The weather, the tides and sunrise and sunset ore oil in The Pensacota Journal daily. In The News-Journal on Sunday. members. A compromise was reached by paying the stars $1,000 apiece.

"That still was much less than the performers could get from the usual TV special," said Wise, "but it cut down the money that would go to the university and the Relief Fund." Final cost of the special was $230,000, which is one-third to one-half of what most specials run. CBS bought it for $250,000, providing $10,000 apiece to the university and the Relief Fund. If there is a rerun, more money will be added. Why did the special take more than a year to get on the air? The answer concerns television economics. CBS re PUTT-PUTT GOLF COURSES ife.

AMNICA'S OUAUTV CdUMtl CONf NfWWtHlMQTomo NAVYIIVO. sicr. i rii- Racing MUr Ut.4 by Pr.l.i.i.i.l d.1 in II Cunlrif All Ov.Ilh. W.rW. I'lUOtOT rnlmlMil lion Smt-P-rftMinal mn4 wring tO-tpttdt tf am 1 mtn.

i TuexUv thru Saturday 40 1 Navy ftivd. Phn 45-0 1 1 FRIDAY. INCIUOIS Hied, trench fries er bakid eitare, ene fable, heme made bread end butter. TEE DEPOT; la SOpb if A DIFFERENT KINO OF LOVE STORY ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED i Afki 'ill ifn fcl iiflkrtiiii 1 Oni YiT July 3 thru July 6 2 New Features 1st PENSACOLA SHOWING! Kothl.en and Diann. en thir first vacanon olon.

until thy pick up a hitchhiker a ptychopothic kill r. and "CHROME AND HOT LEATHER Mobile Hwy. portedly had more costly specials which it had to present first. And the scheduling of all specials has been difficult because of the withdrawal of a half hour of prime network time by the FCC. SHAIETS lunch of lunch All you can eat $135 I XMiat 75' Playing this Tuesday thru Saturday 0 Dancing THE DEPOT samiajka: PASQUALE SPECIAL STEAK FOR 2 30 0Z.SIR10IN SOUP.SAIA0 HOMEMADE SPAGHETTI I FRENCH FRIES OR IAKED POTATO AND C01E SUW HOME-MADE SPAGHETTI WITH All PASQUALE STEAKSI Ourownlosagna Ravioli ft Spaghetti with Real Roman Taste OPEN 1 1 'TIL 11 11 'TIL 12 PASQUALE 3708 NAVY BLVD.

A REFRESHING Nt H'NCBt im.ii rim toon UNDID WITH IOUII JUtCIf Itlvlft IM A II lOWM nwid with rmumu TWO SEVENTY-FIVE (vas included) AVAILABLE ONIT IN THE U.S.A. AT: incqra lttt-4 Ssvlnf'rit nlHlitdub l'i riiiriili mm. 03 $98 CHEESEBURGER b4 ANNEHJLLKCHAELQNTKEAN KATHLEEN CODfl The sources contended the deadlock over money was the main reason Fischer did not arrive from New York as expected. One ranking American chess expert, who knows Fischer well-but may not have known about the financial disputesaid he felt Fischer was waging a war of nerves against Spassky. Suskind Produces ABC to Telecast Roosevelts' Story As Short Series HOLLYWOOD (AP)-ABC said Tuesday it had acquired the rights to the book "Eleanor and Franklin" and would present the story of the Roosevelts as a limited television series.

Martin Starger, vice president of programs, said David Susskind would produce a six-to-eight-hour version of Joseph Lash's Pulitzer prize-winning biography of the four-term President and his wife. Peter Stone, who wrote the book for the Broadway play will write the first hour and supervise the writing of the other episodes. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. was listed as a consultant to the project.

Production of the scries, which has not been cast, will begin this winter in Hyde Park, N. Campobello, Maine and Washington, D.C. ABC also announced it would film the national theatre version of Eugene O'Xeil's "Long Day's Journey into Night" at the Old Vic Theatre in London this winter for presentation late next season. Sir Laurence Olivier and Constance Cummings will star. Starger said Herbert Brod-kin had been signed to an exclusive contract by ABC to su pervise the production of four original 90-minute or two-hour dramatic specials next sea son.

James E. Duffy, president of the ABC-television network, said that no decision had been made yet on the rumored cancellation of Dick Cavett and that it would not be made until July 28. He said ABS has a massive development program under way for alternative types of late-night programing if Cavett should be cancelled. Starger said that although Jack Paar is under contract to ABC to develop specials for the network it was not likely that Paar would replace Cavett. He said Paar's contract has a late-night option but that "It's for some time In the future and under certain circumstances." Starger said the ABC Sunday Night Movie would lead off Sept.

17 with the Ian Flemming thriller starring Sean Conncry. Other Sunday night movies this fall will include "True "Lawrence of "Plaza "The Odd "Paint Your Wagon." "The Out-of-town- ers," "The Adventures," "Dr. "Taming of i the Shrew" and urn (unuf ATmicvI wrtni r.m. mm PLATTER Our famous It lb. fresh ground I hamburger cooked to your order I topped with cheese, lettuce, to- I mato and pickle slice, rench fried potatoes.

$1109 AFTERNOON FEATURE Fresh Strawberry Shortcake 39 10 We're a family steak house! And being a family steak house means a lot of things, like having a good choice of steak dinners Sirloin Strip, Rib Eye and 15-oz. T-Bone, each served with a huge baked Idaho or rench fries, a hunk of Texas toast and a tossed salad. And it means having chicken and seafood dinners, delicious salads, special plates for the youngsters and dieters. Then you'll find the prices low enough to fit easily into your budget. Finally, everything we do is to make families enjoy their dinners more end more.

TOWN COUNTRY OR CORDOVA MAIL Pcnsacola GREYHOUND PARR U.S. 98 West of Pensacola Newly Enlarged Fully Air Conditioned Superb Dining Pensacolo'i New Unique Supper Club OPEN 4 PM-CLOSED MONDAY Music Comedy Nightly By: 'The Hovelaires' also vocals by Betty Mouring Jerry Tetu Special Floor Show at Midnight DINNERS $QK0 FROM OiOU Phone 455-91 84 3918 Barrancas Ave. (3 blocks east of Old Corry Rd.) "We Specialize In Char Broiled Steak Seafood" Reservation 455-8595 matt asm wimm 9th Ave..

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Pages Available:
1,990,427
Years Available:
1900-2024