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The Baltimore Sun from Baltimore, Maryland • 3

Publication:
The Baltimore Suni
Location:
Baltimore, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SUN, Wednesday, April 19, 1972 A3 Chess clubs fear match in jeopardy Moscow (Reuter) The Soviet Chess Federation said tonight that the world title match between the Soviet hold MR er, Boris Spassky, and the Amer ican challenger, Bobby Fischer, Tomorrow at Harundale Mall, 1 p.m. 40 minute live performance by the original road show cast! Sponsored by HK and WKTK radio 50,000 watts stereo 1 05 FM Admission free 5lrrilti' -k 1st iillliRra iilillllHM lltlw is in jeopardy. unth anniversary Its statement said Iceland's Chess Federation has "expressed doubts as to the possibility of holding the second half of the match in Reykjavik." UPI Restaurant takes a dive Russians blame Fischer The Dutch Chess Federation, according to its Soviet counterpart, has turned down the request by Max Euwe, Dutch president of the World Chess Federation, to take over the arrangements for the first half of the match, which Belgrade abandoned last week after a dispute over guarantees that The popular Showboat restaurant in Buffalo apparently sprang a leak early yesterday and sank to the bottom of the Niagara River. Authorities said no one was aboard the old paddle-wheeler when she began sinking. every sale item is at least 20 off the price for which we would normally sell it Mr.

Fischer would appear. The Soviet statement, reported by Tass news agency, blamed U.S. test car's bumper works; air bag fails in high-speed crash Mr. Fischer and the World Federation leadership for the situa tion. "Fischer endless whims Phoenix, Ariz.

The fed serious accidents with minor outside, since the doors re and connivance by the World Federation placed in a predicament" those chess federations eral government's experimental injuries. "Some manufacturers will be mained closed. One of the main reasons for auto smashed into a concrete which had showed an- interest barrier at 50 miles an hour the light damage, Dynamic Sci putting these ideas into production as soon as we find out they in organizing the match, it said, yesterday, damaging the bump ence scientists said, was the The Soviet Federation said it did not like Mr. Euwe's com er area and one of three pas senger dummies. bumper which automatically extends one foot in front of the car at speeds of 30 miles an promise decision to divide the injury to tne dummy was caused by the failure of an air match between two cities but hour or faster.

Scientists said the car had a was ready to abide by decisions taken. bag to inflate as fast as expected. On the other hand, the front normal V-8 engine mounted in B. Buck-passing charged half of a conventional car wrinkled up like an accordion in an work. But when we determine what ideas are good and feasible, we will issue federal standards that must be met, leaving enough time for manufacturers to meet Mr.

Volpe said. Moving along a ground-mounted monorail, the experimental vehicle smacked into the barrier with its three dummies unsecured by seat belts. The air bag failed to inflate in three-hundredths of a second, and the dummies were thrown into the windshield, shattering it. The dummy on the passenger side of the front seat presumably would have been seri the front and, also could meet federal emission control standards of 1973. Mr.

Volpe said the experiments are conducted because death and injury by auto is Mr. Euwe's comments after Belgrade announced that it similar test crash. could no longer play host to the After watching from a desert first half of the match, due to testing site, John A. Volpe, the Transportation Secretary, told "reaching epidemic proportions 22 auto manufacturing repre around the industrialized world." begin June 22, showed a "desire to justify Robert Fischer's unseemly behavior and to lay the blame on somebody sehtatives and several hundred others that the results of expe "Here in -the United States alone, more than 55,000 persons were killed and an estimated riments could create sweeping else," the Soviet group said. ously injured or auto design changes in the not too distant future.

The Department of Transpor 3.8 million more were injured last year in auto crashes," he Student stabs 7, kills 9-year-old girl Sol Davis, chief of systems engineering for Fairchild-Hiller, said. tation hopes through a $4 million developers of the auto, said an "These experimental safety traffic safety program to pro Lausanne, Switzerland (Reu duce a vehicle that will allow immediate investigation would vehicle prototypes are being de -passengers to walk away from signed to help put an end to ter) A 21-year-old student ran from his apartment here yesterday and stabbed seven peo those statistics. However, I do be conducted to determine why the. air bags failed to inflate quickly enough. not think it is stretching the case to call this concept a ple with a kitchen knife, killing revolutionary rather than an a 9-year-old girl and seriously wounding the others.

Court enjoins term-paper firm New York A company The student was captured and Scientists with Dynamic Science, a testing company which conducted the tests, said the simulated accident was equal to a head-on collision between two cars at 50 miles an hour. They said they should know within two weeks what injuries evolutionary one. Mr. Volpe said he felt some of the safety concepts being tested here could be incorporated in production models within three to four years. disarmed by a policeman after a chase through the center of the city.

His name was not given. would have been suffered had the occupants been human. The dummies were equipped with human responses. Except for i the enlarged bumper and a periscopic mir ror which protruded above the roofline, the vehicle developed by Fairchild Hiller appeared like any other four-door sedan at first glance. that sold term papers to students, who in turn submitted i them to teachers as their own work, was temporarily enjoined in Manhattan Supreme Court yesterday from doing business.

A temporary receiver was ap-' pointed to conserve the company's assets. 1 j' Justice Abraham Gellinoff or-t dered an early trial of charges leveled by the state attorney general's office against Term-papers, and several other firms under whose names it conducted business, that it was impairing the integrity of the educational process. Stephen Mindell, an assistant attorney general who handled the case, told newsmen that the decision established "a national precedent." "We expect that other states now, on the basis of this decision, will move in and prosecute companies engaged in selling term papers to students," he said. But, when scientists com monog rammed blouses by Bobby James eg. 57 $3.50 Polyester-cotton blouses mono-grammed with 2 or 3 initials, on the bodice or collar.

Choose the Italian or'Bermuda collar or have one of each. Sizes 28 to 36, 38 to 44; tol-. ors below. Carrollton Separates all stores pared the car with a convex tionai one which also was crashed into the barrier the similarity was gone. The front half of the conventional car, which was crashed before yes terday's experiments, was wrin kled accordion style into the passenger compartment.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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