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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • 2

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'iwr'w-- 2 Thi Lincoln Star Friday, July 7, 1972 New York Times News Summary -Minister's criticism1 was not politically inspired. (More on Page 3.) Spassky To Move First Iceland Formal steps were taken to begin the world championship chess match in Reykjavik, ending months of bickering, battling, protests and postponements. The charn. pion, Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union, and the American challenger, Bobby Fischer, shook hands. Spassky drew the right to make the first move in the first game.

(More on Page 23.) (c) 1J72 New York Timet Ntwt Strvic. Bonn Chancellor Willy Brandt of West Germany, with apparent reluctance, accepted the resignation submitted earlier this week by Dr. Karl Schiller, minister of economics and finance and the second most powerful figure in the government, who was unhappy over its currency policies. Schiller's resignation was regarded as a severe blow to the government's prospects in the premature election due in November. Burger Studies Hassles Washington Chief Justice Warren E.

Burger spent the day studying two controversial cases involving the make-up of the California and Chicago delegations at the Democratic National Convention but did not make a decision. As a result, Wednesday's federal court of appeals rulings calling for the seating of all the 271 members of Sen. George McGovern's California delegation and the banning of the 59-member Chicago delegation under Mayor Richard J. Daley still remain in effect. (More on Page 1.) Nixon To Seek Jewish Vote Washington President Nixon's chief political strategists believe he has an excellent chance of making deep Inroads this year into the traditionally Democratic vote of the American Jewish community.

The President's political aides also believe that a significant amount of the funds that American Jews regularly contribute to Democratic presidential campaigns will be diverted this year to the Republican campaign. (More on Page 1.) laird Attacks McGovern Plan Washington Defense Secretary Melvln R. Laird attacked Sen. George McGovern's proposed $30-billion cut in defense spending, declaring that the Democratic presidential candidate's budget "substitutes a philosophy of give away now, beg later, for a philosophy of strength and a willingness to negotiate throughout the world." Laird insisted his If dodo Dice Accepted leSDfETD 'a rat coopers Advance Hijack Ending In Deaths Should Be lesson FBI wuana ri 2iovi San Francisco The FBI agent who ordered the rush of a captive jetliner that ended in shooting deaths of two hijackers and a passenger said Thursday he hopes "it will be a lesson" to future hijackers. The airline's president supported the FBI's action but said he was upset that the passenger had been killed and Michael Azmanoff Dimitr Alexiev Ecumenical Patriarch, 86, Dies Canadian Stanley Carter, 66, a retired railroad conductor who was headed with his wife for Southern California where they hoped to find a new home.

The wounded passengers, both men, were reported in fair condition and were expected to recover. Agent Tom Dugan, said the decision to storm the plane was "our only course of action" after hijackers refused to release passengers. "It's just that we felt we could do it we could go aboard and take these guys into custody," Dugan said. "A lot of factors entered into it." FBI Fired First "When we went aboard and they confronted our men with weapons aimed to shoot to kill, we fired and killed them first," Dugan said. He said the FBI shot first.

Dugan said factors included the hijackers' demand to go to Siberia, the fact they were armed with three guns and held one at the pilot's head and their request for two parachutes although airline officials advised them it would be almost certain death to jump out the side exits of the Boeing 737 twin-engine plane. Andrews, the airline president, said the FBI "took this out of our hands and directed the action." "We are very upset that there was a death and injuries to our passengers," Andrews said. But he added: "I think the FBI conducted themselves in the best manner possible and made a good decision deciding to apprehend the hi-j Dugan said the decision was due solely to circumstances and does not represent a new FBI policy. two other passengers wounded. "The FBI had a well thought out plan and it is obvious to me that it would have succeeded except for the one hijacker going berserk," said J.

Floyd Andrews, president of Pacific Southwest Airlines. FBI agent-in-charge Robert Gebhardt, who is described by the FBI in San Francisco as having made the decision to rush the plane, said: "I hope this will be a lesson. We intended to stop this hijack, and stop it we did." After failing in six hours of negotiations to win release of 81 passengers and a crew of five, FBI agents stormed the plane Wednesday and opened fire on a hijacker who had been holding a gun at the pilot's head in the cockpit. Hijacker Fired Wildly The hijacker in the rear of the plane began firing wildly, wounding two passengers and killing another before he was shot dead by agents, the FBI said. The hijackers were identified Thursday as two Bulgarian natives.

They had demanded $800,000 ransom and wanted to be taken to Siberia. The hijackers were identified as Dimitr K. Alexiev and Michael D. Azmanoff, both 28. Immigration authorities in San Francisco said both escaped across the Iron Curtain from Communist Bulgaria on different dates in 19G8 and had been living at a Hayward, house with Alexiev's wife.

Alexiev worked as an independent taxi driver at the San Francisco airport and Azmanoff was a truck driver and machinist. Immigration officials said both were permanent legal residents of the United States. The dead passenger was Saigon (f) South Viet- respondent Dennis Neeld, with wounded and four were miss- namcse forces advancing the iead elements of the ing. The number of dead, slowly on Quang Tri battled airborne task force, reported believed to be mostly from air North Vietnamese infantrymen that Navy dive bombers action, exceeded the weekly and tanks on the flanks of the dropped hundreds of small average of 9.5 for the first city and rescued 800 refugees, antipersonnel bombs on a row 13 weeks of the North Viet- the Saigon command reported of tree-shaded homes along namese offensive. Seven Friday.

Highway 1 on the southeastern Americans died of nonhostile South Vietnamese forces edge of the city. causes, claimed to have killed 50 The U.S. Command reported The South Vietnamese corn-North Vietnamese troops and that American warplanes flew mand said 2,765 enemy troops destroyed four tanks in the 360 strikes against North Viet- were killed last week. It listed action on Thursday. Four South nam Wednesday in their government losses as 523 men Vietnamese soldiers were heaviest raids since the 1968 killed and 2,199 wounded, reported killed and 26 wound- bombing halt.

The allied commands have ed. An Air Force Phantom was now listed these total The South Vietnamese forces hit by a surface to air missile casualties for the war: also reported seizing a big over Haiphong during the American 45,806 killed in ammunition stockpile. raids. The two crewmen action, 303,190 wounded, 10,229 The refugees were picked up steered the plane out to sea, dead from nonhostile causes, two miles east of Quang Tri bailed out and were rescued. South Vietnamese and taken to My Chanh to the The U.S.

Command reported killed, 381,813 wounded, south, spokesmen said. 14 Americans were killed in North Vietnamese and Viet South Vietnamese action 1 a week, 23 Ceng killed, paratroopers were pushing slowly on Quang Tri behind I a shield of American fighter- UlQlOlTi TQ I JKf 011111" bombers pounding entrenched 1 BU 1 5 IIOWUUIII North Vietnamese troops guarding the access routes to rTPCCIirp Oil Hfl HHI the Northern provincial 1 1 WOWJI VI I I IU1 IVI Thtod Press cor- J.Ifndon -Western relating to Soviet policy on Associated rress cor diplomats said Thursday there Vietnam would not be made rrvn ivmru ott is no evidence to suggest that in London but in Moscow. CflAU china and Moscow are exert- "No the Chinese v. 7 ing anv effective pressures on mission could conceivably Hanoi to negotiate a settlement discuss Peking's dealings with NAilissTARepCRi ntmSg to? 5 in vjetnam- desPite Asian Hanoi in this way," said a Lincoln, 68501. phone 432-1234 missions of U.S.

and Soviet source close to the Chinese second C05s poSiaS9 paid at uncotn. officials last month. Embassy. carrier subscription rates Spokesmen for the Soviet At the Western White House, in uncotn, or vacation address: Daiiv, and Chinese embassies here press secretary Ronald 4Sc weekr Sunday, 35c week; Daily and jis-j fi Sunday, 80c week. declined fcrmal comment on Ziegler refused to comment on mail subscription rates a report that their the reports that Peking and meniments have been Moscow had urged Hanoi to the carrier boy area.

pressing North Vietnamese be more flexible on peace Daily Sunday Bom leaders to end the war- terms. 1Yr. 520 80 $18.20 $39.00 ennn i.u- i 9 mo is.6o 13.65 59.25 soon- We have said all along that SJUIS; 35 III Western diplomats with we expect the settlement of 2.00 1.75 3s missions in Moscow, Peking theVietnamconflict. to ssmXIT'5' and Hanoi dlsulted the be a result of discussions with Associated Press Is exclusively entitled rePrt- Hanoi and that it would not mSMimi A Russian official in Britain be settled in either Moscow Member' Audit Bureau of circulation saii privately that any or Peking," Ziegler said in authoritative statement response to questions. Macedonia, where he made friends with the Catholic population, and in particular the Marist Brothers.

In 1922 he became bishop of Corfu, and in 1931 he went to the United States as Orthodox Archbishop of North and South America, taking U.S. citizenship in 1939. In 1948 he was chosen ecumenical patriarch and allowed to resume his Turkish citizenship to take up the post. Indians Treated Second Class, Panel Charges Oklahoma City (UPI)The residents of Anadarko, home of the American Indian exposition and Indian City, U.S.A., treat Indians as "second class citzenis," the State Human Rights Commission reported Thursday. The commission said its two-month investigation of conditions in the Anadarko area showed Indians are generally denied emergency medical care at the Anadarko Municipal Hospital because they are Indians.

Istanbul, Turkey () Patriarch Athenagoras 86, who led his Orthodox Church into a dialogue with Roman Catholicism after centuries of estrangement, died Friday of kidney failure. The ecumenical patriarch, leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox Christians, broke his hip in a fall a week ago. Doctors said his death at the Balikli Greek Orthodox hospital in Istanbul followed a massive loss of blood pressure. Althenagoras' successor will be chosen by the Holy Synod, wh-ich comprises- 12 metropolitan archbishops of the ecumenical patriarchate. The tall, imposing Athenagoras first met with Pope Paul VI of the Roman Catholic Church in 1967.

It was the first meeting of a Pope and a patriarch since the 15th century, and it led to the revocation of mutual excommunications imposed in 1054. Athenagoras contended that only a "dialope of love" could reunite the churches, and he attempted to prove it with his work. When Pope Paul visited Istanbul in 1967, Athenagoras joined him in the celebration of Mass in the Catholic cathedral. The gospel for the dflv included a phrase over wiuch the two churches had originally split. This was thft so-called Filioque clause, defining the nature of the Holy Spirit.

"What ink and what hatred were split over the Filioque," Athenagoras said later. "Then came love, and everything gave way to it." Athenagoras, who lived a life of forbidding austerity, was barn as Aristoklis Spirou in 1886 at Joannina, then a Turkish town, the son of a doctor. He graduated from Istanbul's island seminary of Halki in 1910 and returned to LOCATION OF SALE Ernie's Store Ceresco, Nebr. 13 mi. no.

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Pages Available:
914,989
Years Available:
1902-1995