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The Times du lieu suivant : Munster, Indiana • 2

Publication:
The Timesi
Lieu:
Munster, Indiana
Date de parution:
Page:
2
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4 THE Monday, July 3, 1972 ft (fr" in ii Fischer's Time Short REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI)-Bobby Fischer's time runs out at 8 a.m. Tuesday. Fischer, the 29-year-old Brooklyn chess genius, must turn up in Reykjavik by then or lose the right to challenge Soviet titleholder Boris Spas-sky for the world championship, a match that has generated wider interest than any chess game in history. Fischer, apparently bargaining for more money, was hiding out in New York while the great debate of he show up or won't he?" raged. The 24-game series was to have started Sunday.

But when Fischer didn't show the president of the International Chess Federation, Dr. Max Euwe, announced that he was postponing the deadline until neon Tuesday. If Fisher does not appear for the drawing of lots scheduled, for that time, Surrounded by. legal wisdom, Mrs. Jerome Hajduch does some research of her own.

She's law librarian in the new Hammond courthouse. The library quarters are eye-appealing, quiet and Legal Lore NIPSCO Gets Fund NIXON FEARS MARTHA: RED TOKYO (AP)-North Viet GARY The Environmental Protection Agency has approved $4.2 million in federal matching funds for construc Gandhi, Bhutto Reach First Pact Gayle Kiyawa of 1624 Central Whiting, graduated from Chicago Wesley Memorial Hospital School of Nursing on June 23. She plans to join the hospital's staff after qualifying as a registered nurse. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas Kiyawa. 'Work' Will Face Congress WASHINGTON (AP) Congress will have lots of work left when it reassembles on July 17 following a two-week recess. When they adjourned Friday, the legislators had completed six months of the 1972 session. Many of President Nixon's key legislative recommendations remained pending. Work still facing Congress included; Nixon's $5 billion revenue-sharing bill, which has passed the house and has had a friendly reception in the Senate Finance Committee.

1 a reform, which Nixon has termed his most important domestic proposal. It's fate is uncertain. Nixon's government reorganization plans, to reshuffle several Cabinet departments. Support is lacking in Congress. Antibusing bills which appear to have been stalled.

Republicans say they will offer them as amendments to other legislation. The foreign military aid bill which has been encumbered with an end-the-war amendment. Administration supporters will try to kill the amendment. A proposed minimum wage hike from $1.63 to $2.20 hourly. Nixon favors $2.

Gun control legislation already approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. Cheap handguns would be primarily affected. Major antipoverty and water pollution bills, approved by the Senate and House but with differences that need to be resolved. jointly from William D. Ruck- elshaus, EPA administrator and Dean H.

Mitchell, NIPS-CO chairman and chief executive officer. The $8.4 million anti-pollution device will be installed at the utility's Dean H. Mitchell generating station in Gary. The demonstration plant, to vbe installed on a 115,000 kilowatt coal-fired boiler, will, if successful, reduce sulfur dioxide emission from high sulfer content coal by more than 90 per cent. It will also recover sulfur in granular or solid form for the first time in the development of any EPA financed S02 removal system, as well as establish operating reliability and develop accurate cost data for projecting future large scale sulfur dioxide removal stations.

The cost will be shared equally by NIPSCO and the federal government. Engineering work will begin immediately with completion of all demonstrations scheduled for July 1975. Agreement on the project came after months of working out specifications and cost estimates in which NIPSCO will become the prime contractor for EPA. tion of a Northern Indiana Public Service Company sul-fer dioxide removal facility. The announcement came meanwhile, the representatives of the two sides will meet to discuss further the normalization of relations, including the questions of repatriation of prisoners of war and civilian internees, a final settlement of Jammu and Kashmir and the resumption of diplomatic relations." Excluding Kashmir, India during the December war seized a total of 5139 square miles of territory in West Pakistan, while Pakistan took 69 square miles of Indian territory.

In Kashmir, where the troops will remain in position, India took 480 square miles and Pakistan occupied 53 square miles. The agreement said the troops withdrawals would take place within 30 days after ratification by both governments. Striking Pilots OKTalh MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) Northwest Airlines and striking pilots resmue negotiations today and a union spokesman said "things might start to move." Federal Mediator Harry Bickford said late Sunday that negotiations would resume at 2 p.m. EDT, the first bargaining session since the strike began Friday morning.

Both the Air Line Pilots Association ALPA and the company say they are in essential agreement on salary terms for pilots, a 26.7 per cent increase in pay and fringe benefits over three years. STILL TO BE resolved are policy matters such as crew rest and work days, the union said. ALPA said pilots agreed to 13-hour days, but the company "insists that the pilots must work at 14-hour day and proposes that the minimum crew rest periods be shortened to eight hours," from the current overnight rest of nine hours, 15 minutes. Northwestis accepting flight reservations for July 10 and beyond. Both sides indicate no assurance the strike will be over by then.

Northwest also will begin two daily round-trip flights to Chicago Tuesday, manned by supervisory personnel. About 350 striking pilots ferried 28 stranded Northwest aircraft to home bases in Minneapolis, Seattle and New York. No passengers, mail or cargo were carried. The move was made under an agreement reached Saturday between Northwest and the 1,619 striking pilots. AN AIRLINE spokesman said Sunday Northwest has laid off "a very substantial majority" of its 8,500 nonstrik-ing employers because of the strike, but said he did not know the exact number.

Slightly more than half of Northwest's some 10,000 employes live in the Minneapo-lis-St. Paul area. Most of the rest live in the Seattle area. Northwest pilots had been flying without a contract since June 30, 1971. CARMICHAEL CREDIT CARPS YDllK SlANlAKU UV- FOR A TH Or 60 HOME GROWN TOMATOES and Sour Cherries JANSCN'S 2122 RIDGE RD.

HIGHLAND By Times Wire Services Nixon Buoyed SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. President Nixon, buoyed by polls showing him leading all his likely opponents, plans to leave the spotlight to the squabbling Democrats and spend the next two weeks quietly mapping his own reelection strategy. White House aides said today he still would rely heavily for political advice on former Atty. Gen. John N.

Mitchell, who stepped down over the weekend as his campaign chief. Martha a'POW WASHINGTON Martha Mitchell rejoices that her husband has gotten out of full-time politics, but she still says she is a "political prisoner." Mrs. Mitchell made another call to a reporter Sunday and gave her reaction to the announcement of her husband, John F. Mitchell, Saturday that he was leaving his job as chairman of the committee to re-elect President Nixon. "Sure, that's what I wanted," she said when asked how she viewed the resignation.

But she spoke in a low voice, did not talk long, and hung up the telephone abruptly. 'Demos Fumble DETROIT Roy Wilkins, executive director of the NAACP, says Democratic Na-t i a 1 Convention delegate fights mean President Nixon will be "handed re-election on a platter by a bunch of tumblers." "All you have to do is read headlines in the last three weeks to know there's some fast footwork going on around second base," Wilkins told a news conference Sunday night on the eve of the NAACP's annual convention. "Now Nixon's pretty bad. But there's a streak of good here and there," Wilkins added. Mart Summit BONN President Georges Pompidou arrived in Bonn today for two days of talks with Chancellor Willy Brandt on the future of the European Common Market and the currencies of its member countries.

At the top of their agenda were monetary questions in the aftermath of Britain's floating of the pound and whether to go ahead with the summit meetings of the enlarged Common Market including Britain planned for October. The significance of the semiannual consultation was heightened by a French warning that the Oct.19-20 Paris summit will have to be postponed several months unless concrete results are assured by first overcoming differences between the participants. Up-date your life When was the last time you reviewed your life insurance program? You get a good deal in life with State Farm. Come in or call. ED ROSENWIHKEL Agent 7114 Calumet Ave.

WE 2-8283 ITATI FARM State Farm is all you need to know about insurance. INSURANC! State Farm Lid Insurance Company Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois I 1 Vy; (Advertisement) he will be disqua'ifed SR. CITIZENS Ride The Buses DOWNTOWN ONLY 25C SEE THE 1972 MOWERS-TRACTORS AND TILLERS CARstensen's Service Co. 6950 Indianapolis Blvd. Tl 4-8030 Woodmar GOING ON VACATION? WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION OF SUMMER SPORTSWEAR INCLUDING SlackHt Pant 'Handbags Tops Bank Americiri Mastercharja MARY DUNCANSON'S Import and Apparel Shoppe EI33 Calumet Hammond FREEMAN SHOES FOR MEN From $1695 SHOES 3831 Highway-Highland Men.

and Fri. Til 9 P.M. sure what is actually causing your hair loss? Even if baldness seems to "run in the family," this is certainly no proof of the cause of your hair loss. Many conditions can cause hair loss. No matter which one is causing your hair loss, if you wait until you are slick Bald and your hair roots are dead you are beyond help.

So, if you still have hair on top of your head, and would like to stop hair loss and grow more hair now is the time to do something about it before it's too late. FREE CONSULTATION Just take a few minutes of your time on Wednesday, July 5, and go to the Holiday Inn, 465 Broadway, In Gary, Indiana, between 1 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. and ask the Desk Clerk for J. Volpe's room number.

There is no charge or obligation all consultations are private, you will not be embarrassed in any way. be Chamber of Commerce I 2 SIMLA, India (AP)-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto reached their first peace agreement early today and promised future negotiations on the other issues between their two nations, including Kashmir and the Pakistani POWs in India. The agreement, which came after five days of talks in this Himalayan resort, said Indian and Pakistani forces will withdraw from the territories they seized last December along India's western border except in Kashmir. There they will maintain the cease-fire line established by the two-week war in December. The pact also contained a pledge to settle all disputes bilaterally and peacefully, and said steps should be taken to restore and normalize rela- tions, which Pakistan severed Dec.

6 when India recognized Bangladesh, the former East Pakistan. THE AGREEMENT gave no timetable, but called for measures to resume communications and air links, promote travel between their countries, reopen trade, and carry out scientific and cultural exchanges. It said Mrs. Gandhi and Bhutto would meet again "at a mutually convenient time in the future and that in the THE TIMES Hammond Publisher Ftyet'e Himmond, ind. (4M2S1.

Enttrcd as Second Cls Matter in tr Post 0lc Hammond, IndF V. 1911. under Act of Conores of March XUn' MEMIEI 0 AUDIT UREAU OF CIRCULATIONS SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By Csrrlar Dally nd Sunday, Wc per weefe $1. every two By Mall I All Zonas. One Veer SW.0O; Six Month l.M; Three Months ttJSt One Monti) Special mail rett 1o servicemen: Six Months, Three Months.

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Sun. 9 to ID Highland Pharmacy 2906 Highway Avenue B38-S100 HIGHLAND Ik' vXfi 1 fly tor nam's Communist party newspaper said today that John N. Mitchell resigned as President Nixcn's campaign chief because there were fears his wife Martha "would unveil all the disgusting machinations of the Republican bosses." Mitchell has long been a close associate of Nixon's said Nhan Dan, and Mrs. Mitchell has lately "strongly denounced to the American public the dirty tricks of Nixon and his Republican party in the election campaign." Trinity Lads Finish 3rd PHILADELPHIA (AP)-A rowing pair from Trinity College in Hartford has finished third in the Independence Day Regatta on Schuylkill River Sunday. Trinity sernios Dave Brown and Rick Ricci followed pairs from the Potomac Boat Club, Washington, D.C., and the Mercantioe Rowing Club to Cambridge, Mass.

The Pot-Mercantile Rowing Club to of 7:11.2 for the course. NCI. NO MONET DOWN PHONE: Office: WE 1-3150 Home: TE 8-3278 I- ifffrni I Mr- Their flying saucer may be anchored to. the ground, but it's still a barrel of fun as children from six to 60 flocked to the Lansing Three carnival. Festivities continue through the Fourth at the Knights of Columbus grounds at 178th.

and Carnival Frank Moran Shows How He EeGrew Hair. He Did Not Have Male Pattern Baldness. MIDWEST ERICKSON HAIR CONSULTANT WILL EXPLAIN HAIR PROBLEMS FREE AT THE HOLIDAY INN 465 BROADWAY GARY, INDIANA WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1972 HOURS 1 P.M. to 8:30 P.M. Jti em ABSOLUTELY PAIHTIUG! Deluxe 24x22 Garane '1942 aia Chicago, July 3 Now is the time to act on this great opportunity.

Every hair -worried person (man or woman) should take advantage of this FREE CONSULTATION. Many users have reported not only stopping hair from thinning but are really growing more hair. GUARANTEED You will be given a written guarantee on a pro-rated basis from the beginning to the end. Naturally we could not give you such a guarantee if it didn't work. CAN'T HELP Male pattern baldness is the cause of a great majority of cases of baldness and excessive hair loss, for which no method is effective.

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