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The Billings Gazette from Billings, Montana • 2

Location:
Billings, Montana
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2
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gfrr Sillinga CSairitr Evening Ednen Chess play starts 1 p.m. EDT. National prestige was at stake for the defending Russian. The Soviet Union subsidizes chess and has dominated the game for decades. rocked bv explosions vrs fast between 8 am.

Monday and 4 4ii a Tuesday Bntish troops were involved in 1 45 of the shootouts and claimed they killed or wounded lr gunmen Protestants and Catholics fouh! in the other dashes The hooded body of a murdered man in his 2' is was found near the center of Belfast, shot in the chest and head He was the 414th confirmed fatality in the three years of communal warfare, the seventh since the cease-fire ended and the 23rd since it began two weeks ago. Most of the latter were murdered similarly, apparently settling old scores. Bombs damaged stores, offices and homes in three areas of Belfast Flying glass injured five persons. Other explosions wrecked property in Londonderry. Strabane, Maghersfelt and Armagh but caused no casualties.

"We are now back to square one." said IRA chieftain Martin McGuinness. "Our campaign has restarted, and there will be more violence than before." REYKJAVIK, ICELAND (AP) The World Chess Championship began Tuesday without Bobby Fischer, the American challenger. Champion Boris Spassky of Russia arrived exactly on time at 5 p.m., waited a minute, then calmly pushed his queen's pawn forward two spaces. Referee Lothar Schmid of West Germany pushed the button on the time clock and the match had begun. Fischer sometimes chooses to be late to tournaments and matches.

It was not known where he was. Then seven minutes alter Spassky began the game, Fischer appeared from offstage left. With long strides he sped to the black leather swivel chair placed behind the white side of the board. Applause which greeted Fischer's arrival arose in crescendo when Spassky moved forward from the side of the stage where he had been waiting to shake Fischer's hand. The American took a minute to regard the board and the queen's pawn opening Spassky favors.

Fischer moved his queen's side knight to the queen's bishop three square. Spassky seated himself and replied with a threat to the center of the board with his queen's bishop's pawn. Fischer pushed his king's pawn forward a square. Fischer has three losses and two draws with Spassky in five previous games. Fischer has never beaten the Russian playing black.

Last-minute adjustments were being made on the stage of Reykjavik's sports hall. The playing table was shortened, the green-and-white marble chessboard constructed for the fourth time, and the overhead lighting changed. But these were small details compared to the tangled negotiations and war of nerves that preceded the encounter, originally set to start July 2. Spassky, 35, drew the white chessmen and with them the first move. Fisher, 29, of Brooklyn, N.Y., had the black pieces.

One game will be played each Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday, starting at 5 p.m. Photofax Such sweet victory Willie Brown a leader of Sen. George McGovern's California delegation, and Frank Mankiewicz, McGovern's campaign coordinator, rejoice on the floor of the Democratic National Convention early Tuesday when the convention voted to overturn the credentials committee which had taken 151 California delegates from McGovern. The victory makes McGovern almost a certainty to capture the party's presidential nomination. 0 ealley BELFAST.

Northern Ireland (APi Militant Protestant threatened early Tuesday to take the offensive in Northern Ireland as gun -battles and bomb explosions rocked the province. fense Association, which claims it can put 40,000 armed men into the field, said if the British do not crush the Roman Catholic guerrillas of the Irish Republican Army, the association will take the offensive against the IRA and do its "level best to eliminate and destroy it." The British government 1.800 more troops into the province in preparation for the traditionally explosive summer season of Protestant parades celebrating historic events in the centuries of Protestant-Catholic warfare in Northern Ireland. The first parade is Wednesday. The reinforcements bring the garrison to 16,800 men. the biggest it has been in the three years of communal turmoil.

In the wake of the collapse Sunday night of the IRA ceasefire, army headquarters reported 232 shooting incidents in Bel- Bugging has GOP WASHINGTON (APi The Committee for the Re-election of the President is worried that a hearing on a suit involving the break-in and bugging attempt at Democratic headquarters here could cause "incalculable" damage to President Nixon's campaign. For this reason, the committee asked U.S. District Court Monday to postpone the hearing on a $1 million damage suit against the committee until after the Nov. 7 election. Published Dailv and Sunday bv THE GAZETTE PRINTING COMPANY Billings.

Montana. 59103 Second-Class Postage Paid at Billings, Montana MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE With Without Sunday Sundav Sunday One Year $28 00 $24 00 JI3 00 Six Months 17 00 14 00 9 00 Three Months 10 00 9 00 The above rates apply to Montana. Wyoming and North Dakota subscriptions only. MAIL SIHSCRIPTION RATES TO OTHER AREAS THAN MONTANA, YOMING NORTH DAKOTA With Without Sundav Sundav Sundav One Year J33 00 28ob (IS 00 Six Months 21 00 18 00 10 00 Three Months 12 00 11 00 Home Deliver) Rate Daily and Sundav $3 00 per month Daily Only $2 25 Sunday only SI 25 per mo. The Gazette a member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication of dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also local news published herein NOTICE TO BILLINGS SUBSCRIBERS To report delivery errors please phone 245-3071 from I am until 5 30 weekdays and 2S2-0411 from 5 30 pm evenings and beore 10 34 a Sundays and Hobdays hen possible please contact your route earner before' calling The Gazette Box 2507 the powers vested in the hands of the voters." "What an insult to the voters," Simon said.

"The losers those rejected by the voters-have become the winners." SIMON MAINTAINED that if Daley's organization had been given a hearing on its charges against the Singer slate, "we could have given the lie to charges of violence" at Singer caucuses. "In fact," Simon said, "there were shouts of outrage by citizens at being told that only losing candidates could vote at the caucuses." CHLORINE-TASTING WATER? See the AQUA BELL WATER FRESHNER with activated charcoal filter that gives drinking water a clear spring freshness at (deqaatofa I Evergreen Drug attempt upse The suit was filed by Democratic National Chairman Lawrence F. O'Brien after it was revealed that one of the five men arrested in the May 15 break-in was James W. McCord the security coordinator for the re-election committee. However, to hear the suit before the election, the committee said, could deter campaign workers and contributions, force disclosure of confidential campaign information and provide the Democrats with a reason to hold news conferences.

The concern expressed to the court contrasted with a statement by former Nixon campaign manager John N. Mitchell, who earlier had said the Democrats' suit was a "political stunt." The suit claimed damages on grounds that the break-in interfered with rights of all Democrats. The five men allegedly were arrested inside the Democratic headquarters and were charged with burglary. Police also seized a quantity of electronic bugging equipment. Kenneth W.

Parkinson, attorney for the re-election committee, told the court that hearings prior to the Nov. 7 election would "allow Mr. O'Brien and the Democratic National Committee to utilize this lawsuit as a forum from which to accuse this committee of complicity in criminal conduct throughout the election campaign." He denied the committee was involved in the break-in. But he said repeated mention of the "coincidental employment" of McCord by the committee would be particularly TV GUIDE Tuesday, July 1 1 KOOK-TV Ch. 2 7:00 Captain Kangaree CBS News 1:30 Jack Lalanne Jackie's Journal Leveef Life 10:06 Where The Heart Is 10:25 CBS News 10:30 Search for Temerrew 11:00 Levi Is A Many Splendor ed Thing 11:30 As The Werld Turns 12:00 Montana TV News 12:30 Guiding Light 1:00 Secret Storm 1:30 Edgeef Night 2:00 Leva American Style 2:30 Family Affair 3:00 Lucy Shew 3:30 My Three Sons 4:00 Beverly Hillbillies 4:40 Truth or Consequences 5:00 Walter Cronkite News 5:30 Montana TV News 5:00 Montana TV News 5:30 Campaign '72 Democratic Convention 10:00 Montana TV News 10:30 The Tonight Show 12:00 Weather News in, i 11 1 --ii iiiiim DEALIN' dale says If you hove good TRADE-IN when you buy new appliance or TV i see me! "I con moke you the best deal in town, Hands Down." r-ffg low As Even less With Trade-in E-Z Terms C1122.

RANGES REFRIGERATORS FREEZERS Your Choke! $17995 APPLIANCES 2910 Minnesota Ave. Billings, Mont. 245-6385 KULR-TV Ch. 8 7:00 The Today Show 7:25 Weather RFD 7:30 The Today Show 1:00 Dinah's Place 1:30 Concentration 9:00 Saleof the Century :30 Hollywood Squares 10:00 Jeopardy 10:30 Split Second 11:00 All My Children 11:30 Let's Make A Deal 12:00 The Newlywed Game 12:30 KULR-8News 1:00 General Hospital 1:30 One Life to Live 2:00 Another World: Somerset 2:30 Days of Our Lives 3:00 Three On A Match 3:30 Password 4:00 ABC Cartoons KULR-O90-MINUTES 4:30 NBC Nightly News 5:00 ABC Evening News 5:30 KULR-tNews 4:00 The Brady Bunch 4:30 Mod Squad 7:30 Democratic National Convention :00 Marcus 10:00 KULR-INews 10:30 Corner Bar 11:00 Marty Feldman Comedy Machine 11:30 Dick Cavett Show ONE RACK NECKTIES PRICE placed an immediate call to the convention floor, and Rep. Roman C.

Pucinski (111.) relayed his instructions to acting delegation chairman Clyde Choate. Choate obtained recognition and said 'T oppose the motion for suspension of the rules and demand a roll-call vote." He also established that two-thirds approval was required. FOR MCGOVERN forces, Wisconsin Gov. Pat Luckey said that he was urging delegates to support the compromise. The compromise came up after arguments on each side of the Chicago challenge were presented to the convention.

Daley's side of the challenge dispute was stated to the convention by former Chicago Corporation Counsel Raymond F. Simon, who declared that the essence of the case was that Daley's slate had been elected. Singer's slate, Simon charged, was "chosen in secret by a handful of self-appointed usurpers of WE WASH CLOTHES Dry Fold Them, Tool 20' lb FABRIC CARE CLEANING CENTER 902 N. 24th St. 252-9073 posed by former Nebraska Gov.

Frank Morrison but was the handiwork of McGovern's campaign manager, Frank Mankiewicz. Mankiewicz said in an interview that he hoped to force the two reluctant sides to the Chicago dispute to accept a peace "like you have in the middle east." IN FACT, however, one leader of the challenge delegation, the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, told Mankiewicz that he favored the compromise, and the other leader, Aid. William S.

Singer said that he would accept it if it were the convention's will. The Singer-Jackson group held a closed and apparently tumultuous caucus about the compromise proposal. Shouts of "no, no" could be heard from inside the meeting. A Daley Democrat who managed to make his way inside, Richard Mell, said he got the impression that Singer felt he had been "sold out," but Singer denied it. ON THE OTHER side, the opposition of Mayor Daley and Illinois regulars was absolute.

When the compromise was proposed, Daley apparently By MORTON KONDRACKE (C) 1972, Chicago Sun-Times MIAMI BEACH-Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley rejected a compromise solution to the Chicago credentials dispute early Tuesday morning and was ousted from the Democratic National Convention by a vote of 1,486.05 to 1,371.55. The mayor placed a personal call to the convention floor from an undisclosed location to instruct his supporters to fight for the seating of his elected delegate slate and to reject any compromise. INSPIRED BY supporters of Sen. George McGovern (S.D.), the compromise would have seated both Daley's 59 delegates and a challenge slate of 59 and would have given each delegate one-half vote.

The convention spent more than 90 minutes on the Chicago challenge at the end of 8V2 hours of credentials battling that ended at 4:30 a.m. (EDT). Daley's ouster came following the failure of backers of the compromise to obtain the necessary two-thirds vote required to suspend the convention rules. THE RULES suspension-necessary because the compromise had not been introduced early enough to be considered as normal resolution did not even garner a simple majority, owing to the opposition of Daley's supporters. The vote was 1.411.05 to 1,483.08.

The compromise was pro -a n' kS-iM II I THEAL BEDOO 100 PAIR t1t tAA DOUBLE KNIT PANTS Reg. $78 fo $38 IV to afcW 100 PAIR YOUNG MEN'S FLARES Reg. $9 to $72 4 ONEGROUP tlA LONG SLEEVE BODY SHIRTS Reg. $9 to $20 3 to IU ONEGROUP LONG SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS Reg. $8 to 12 WALK SHORTS AND SWIM SUITS rJA LIGHT WEIGHT JACKETS Reg.

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Pages Available:
1,788,941
Years Available:
1882-2024