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The Tampa Tribune from Tampa, Florida • 17

Publication:
The Tampa Tribunei
Location:
Tampa, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

HEARTLAND 4-A THE TAMPA TRIBUNE, Wednesday. July 12, 1972 British Soldier, Three In Ulster 9 BELFAST (LTD Gun-mfefl killed three persons, in Northern Ireland yesterday and another died of wounds suffered earlier in violence between British troops and Protestants and Roman Catholics. The killings came ontf day before the Protestant Orange Order parades, expected to trigger even more sectarian fighting. One of those killed was a British soldier who was hit by a sniper bullet as his patrol cleared the rubble of a A sf "if 1 Jr a mmm jmniiwiiiii41 mm mm mini miii bombed fiower shop in Londonderry. A 17-year-old youth was killed in an exchange of fire between soldiers and gunmen in Belfast's Catholic Ander-sontown district.

The Army said the youth was believed to be a sniper. Boris Spassky, left, And Bobby Fischer Are Study In Chess Master First Game Concentration their celebrated world championship match is finally underway in Reykjavik, Iceland. (AP) Fischer Errs, Faces t' i i-: Afc i 1 I r--' fjy a Uphill Hi Apollo 15 Crew Dram Stamp Deal Reprimand Chess Title Play THE BODY of a man in his 20s, bound and gagged, was found earlier in the day in a field in the Protestant Carlisle circus area of Belfast, and another man died in the hospital from gunshot wounds suffered earlier. Elsewhere in Northern Ireland, police said gunmen stole more than $3,700 in three robberies in County Armagh and bombed a pub at Balalgy, 40 miles north of Belfast. No injuries were reported.

The killings brought the death toll in three years of violence in the province to 421. The province's British government, meanwh 11 brought in more troops and ordered Portestants to change the route of today's Orange Order- parades, originally, planned by the Protestants to skirt the edges of Belfast's Catholic neighborhoods. The parades, commemorating the 1690 Battle of the Boyne which resulted in Protestant domination over Northern Ireland's Catholic, minority, have sparked sectarian olence in past years. About 500 additional British troops arrived yesterday to help keep peace during the' parades and deal with snipers who have stepped up their attacks the provisional wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) called off its cease-fire Sunday. did not appear for several suspense-filled minutes.

Fischer, dressed in a blue suit and white shirt, shook Spassky's hand, quickly sat down and took two minutes to respond to the champion's opening queen gambit by choosing the Nimzo-Indian defense. Father Lombardy, said the American meant no slight to Spassky by arriving late. "The traffic was just a bit more heavy than we had expected and we arrived at the hall only a few minutes before match time," Lombardy said. EARLY IN the game, Fischer went over to the arbiter a couple of times and appeared to be objecting to a huge sign in blue, white and red showing the International Chess Federation (FIDE) emblem and the name of the Icelandic Chess Federation. The sign decorated the stage where the two players sat alone with the arbiter and his deputy.

covers that had the agency's full approval. NASA said it permits astronauts, within established procedures, to carry personal souvenir-type items, including postal covers, on space flights, v-r THESE ARTICLES are to be retained by the astronauts or given to personal friends, and are not to be used or given for commercial purposes or personal gain, the agency said. Advertisements of Apolo 15 covers at 4,850 deutschmarks or about $1,500 each, 'in a West German magazine, called Ijhe at- tehtion, of space officials, to an apparent violation the rules. '-1 ii NASA said it learned in the course of its inquiry that the Apollo 15 crew, before the flight, had agreed to provide 100 postal covers to an acquaintance, with the revenue to go into a trust fund for their children: i The acquaintance -was iden. tif ied as Horst' Walter Eier-mann of Stuttgart, 9 Naturalized' American, well known in Airmen Prisoners On TV CBS News broadcast filmed interviews Monday with fiv6 American airmen, prisoners in Hanoi, who up.

to now had been' listed as missing. Film was obtained through an agency in Japan. Top, left: Capt. Charles Allen Jackson, Littleton, Capt. William David Beekman, Toledo, center; Capt.

John Paul hometown not available, New Jersey; Capt. David Dingee, Homestead, bottom Capt. David Elyan Grant, Chattanooga, and in hospital, Capt. Richard Francis Logan of California. (AP) WASHINGTON UPI National Aeronautics and Space Administration disclosed yesterday that the Apollo 15 astronauts, on their round trip to the moon last summer, secretly carried 400 souvenir stamped envelopes that could have been sold to collectors for $600,000 or more.

The three have been disciplined, NASA said. One hundred of the unauthorized envelopes were given to an acquaintance of the astronauts and were sold at a reported price of $1,500 each. The astronauts, in an apparent change of heart, decUned to take any of that $150,000, NASA said. THE 300 UNSOLD envelopes, known to the philatelic trade as postal covers, have been impounded at NASA's Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston. NASA said in a formal an-.

nouncement that the astro-l. nauts David Scott, Alfred Worden and James Irwin exercised poor judgment. "Therefore they will be re-. primanded and their actions will be given consideration in their selection for future as-i signments' NASU said. Irwin retires Augf 1 to head his own evangelistic Scott arid Worden are currently unasslgned to any space missions.

The 400 envelopes were carried without permission, without official knowledge and in violation of NASA regulations, along with 232 Apollo 15 LOUISVILLE, KY. I Li I i Down 3 US. Helicopters Terror Blast Wounds 1 1 In Israel Bus Depot TEL AVIV (UPI) A grenade exploded in the central bus station yesterday, wounding 11 persons, police said. It was the first guerrilla attack in this city in nine months. A police spokesman said about 300 Arabs in the area were taken into custody following the explosion "in order to prevent them from being attacked in order to protect them, but there was really no need for it." THE SPOKESMAN described the explosion, which went off in a men's room, as "a terrorist act." Those hurt in the blast suffered only minor injuries and nine were released after treatment at Hadassah hospital.

Ambulances of the Magen David Adorn, the Israejie quiva-lent of the Red Cross, Sped to the scene and police and troops cordoned off the streets near the sprawling, outdoor bus station. i r. The station, in the southern section of the city, is almost always crowded with bus passengers and heavy auto traffic. It is the main station for the interurban buses that travel countrywide. Urban buses use the streets nearby.

The attack was the first guerrilla incident In Tel Aviv since Nov. 11 when a bomb exploded aboard a bus after its arrival from Tiva on the northern coast. Two passersby were wounded. the Cocoa area. 'Said Eieimann prmerjy Cape Kennedy for of Los Angeles)' cpritr actor in-' volved in heashieicl work.

Herman Sieger, a West German dealer in stamps; advertised the 100 postal covers for at the $1,500 price. A NASA 'spokesman said the souvenir envelopes apparently sold at a brisk pace. 5- i house. a r. The broadcast accused the i United States Ayt killing hundreds of civilians-in the bombing of populated areas of -Tri Pro vinbe.

On another front far to the south, government military sources said troops of the South Vietnamese 5th Division and rangers who had defended An Loc were pulled out of the ruined provincial capital in a massive "airlift as the siege went, through its 96th day. The forces in the town 60 miles north of Saigon were by the South Vietnamese 18th Division and fresh rangers carried in by the American, and South Vietnamese helicopters, which flew out the third garrison. forts to penetrate the city have been stalled for five days. The South Vietnamese claimed more than 300 enemy killed in fighting laround the city yesterday. Government casualties were put at six killed and 13 wounded.

MARINES knocked out four tanks in the fighting' and captured two more undamaged a said. The airborne claimed two tanks destroyed. The Viet Cong's Liberation radio announced the election of a 13-member people's committee for Quang Tri Province to be headed by Le Sang, identified, as a revolutionary since 1930. The committee called for everyone to adopt, the slogan "each citizen, is a fighter, From Page 1 copters Vere twin-rotor CH46 Sea Knights that were able to return to South Vietnamese lines before going down. The third, a CH53 Sea Stallion that an carry about 70 combat-equipped Vietnamese, was reported down in "the bat-tle area.

The assault by government marines tightened the South'1 Vietnamese' grip around Quang Tri City. Marines aje'now pressing oft the northern and eastern outskirts and the airborne are dug in on the southeastern and southern edges. The' enemy entrenched in the city center despite heavy American bombing, and the paratroopers' ef BLENDED WHISKEY 86 PROOF 65 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS 01972 CALVERT DIST. Battle In From Page 1 who was playing white, a slight advantage with a bishop and three pawns. Fischer, 29, had five pawns on the board.

FISCHER appeared calm when he arrived eight minutes after the start of the $250,000 match and was wel- corned by the capacity crowd of 3,000 with a 30-second ova-tipn. But as the game progressed, Fischer appeared angry with himself. When the game was adjourned with one-half hour of playing time remaining, Fischer's second, Father William Lombardy, said, "Bobby is fighting for a draw." But Robert Byrne, another U.S. grand master, said, Fischer is in trouble and he might lose." Fischer apparently er-rored on the 29th move when he took Spassky's king rook pawn and got his bishop trapped in the process. The Russian lost another pawn before taking Fischer's bishop off the board.

Some experts described the move as an" attempt by the American to Inject-, some life, into -a rather 'dull game." But the general opinion seemed to" be that into a simple.trap. FISCHER ALSO appeared to be playing for a draw from the start- quite unlike his normal aggressive tactics possibly arguing that a draw playing the black pieces, or defense, would give him a chance in the second game when he plays white and has the initiative from the start. From their first moves, both contenders played brisk-; ly, trading queens in the 11th and 12th moves but taking no 5 advantage through even the 20th move. The game began precisely on time at 5 p.m., but Fischer 3 YBOR CITY rv m. ff, mm, mm mm mmm Why dsim'f simi i body Is mole whistey taste it's a count ry Out buyers were in the right spot at the right time Our bid took this fabulous stock of men's women's and children's Famous Name Brand Shoes.

Ill ISP r) AND MORE 6 -ePra an? It took us many years, thousands of tests and mil- lions of dollars to come up with a soft whiskey. 4 do it we had to break a lot of whiskey-making traditions. think you'll find the end result was well worth rt; An 86 proof whiskey that's even soft enough to drink i straight up. i If somebody else wants to make a whiskey that tastes as soft as Calvert Extra, they'll have to do it -S the way we did. The hard way.

4 "06 FRANKIIN Downtown Tampa 4413 NEBRASKA AVE. 140-142 S. WEST SHORE BIVD. (Town Squaro Shopping Centtr) 8511 FIORIDA AVE. 341S HENDERSON BIVD.

iMtrusi irvm inicrnoiionai inni 2330 N. DAIE MABRY HWY. hctp ffHTOrfMiHrn am gamma CALVERT EXTRA.THE SOFT WHISKEY A.

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