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Chippewa Herald-Telegram from Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin • 16

Location:
Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
16
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE 16 CHIPPEWA HERALD-TELEGRAM THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1972 FISHER 'ONLY JUST STARTED' 1M no rotests ma rring fifth match game of chess title Fischer's second, Father William Lombardy, said the lanky New Yorker "only just started" his campaign to wrest the title irom apassKy. Lombardy, a pi Foodliner Wissota Village unresolved, it appeared not to bother Fischer for the moment. Organizers said they were awaiting word from New York on whether the closed-circuit cameras could be reinstalled. A spokesman for. the company that has bought the film rights, Chester Fox, said: "We hope to resolve the problem before today's game starts.

But cameras must not bother Mr. Fischer. That is our prime and principal concern." because of television cameras in the playing hall. He even failed to turn up for the second game, forfeiting it to Spassky. Going into the fifth game, Spassky leads with 2 points to Fischer's Vz The American challenger needs 12Vr points a win counts one point, a draw for each player to take the title, while the defending champion needs only 12 to retain the championship.

Although the question of the television cameras remained REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky sit down at the chess board-again today. But this time it is different Fischer isn't threatening to walk out' The fifth game of the 24-game world chess championship match begins at 5 p.m. (1 p.m. EDT) with titleholder Spassky, a 35-year-old Russian, playing white which means he makes the first move. Fischer, 29, has protested every previous game," mostly Downtown Store "CLOSED SUNDAYS Downtown Chippewa Falls Catholic priest who also is a grand master, admitted Fischer "had a narrow escape in the fourth game- but don't forget how he demolished Spassky in the third." Iceland grand master Fridrik Olafsson said "the next couple of games could be decisive." WISSOTA VILLAGE 'awful lot of common ground now between inmates, employes (A ttica) mm trying to sidestep us.

We've mm: ATTICA, N.Y. (UPI) Gary Davis, sipping a cold beer and leaning against a pool table in the bar directly across the- The Best Chicken You Ever Tasted street from the Attica Mate become a touchy problem and no one wants to dirty his pretty hands." A spokesman for the Correction Department contends there have been a number of improvements at the prison patterned on the inmates' list of grievances submitted during the riot. The screens which used to separate visiting relatives and friends from the prisoners have been taken down. Inmates now You'll Like The Bank That Looks Ahead wonder6ast ROT IS I RO A STE WITH AN EXCLUSIVE COMBINATION OF SPICES BASTED IN NATURAL JUICES. NO GREASE.

NO BATTER LOW CALORIE HIGH PROTEIN. what brought them to the first major display of discontent at the prison since the fall, said, "I'd have to say the general feeling is that they still have a lot of gripes but that they don't want to go through another September." He quoted several as saying "I'd rather do this now than riot in two weeks." "There's a lot of things the inmates say they want and we agree," said Ronald Wert, a guard and head of the local correction officers union. "They say they want things like more clothing and so on. That's fine with us. It would only make our job easier." Many employes and guards, as well as inmates, express disillusionment with the Correction Department in Albany.

"Let's face it," one guard said, "who cares about prisons? You can't help but get the feeling that even the state is Prison, said there "is an awful lot of common ground now among the inmates and the employes here." Ten months before, Davis, a teadher at the prison, fled the little school building minutes before inmates ransacked and set it on fire. The uprising last September finally ended with a state police assault. Forty-three men 11 employes and 32 inmates died in the nation's bloodiest prison uprising. As Davis spoke, hundreds of inmates were refusing to work or go to meals in apparent protest of the same conditions which boiled over into last fall's rebellion. That three-day strike ended Wednesday, but authorities kept a State of emergency in effect as a.

precautionary measure. Davis, who interviewed the protesting inmates to find out are allowed to shower twice a week instead of once. Even the uniforms have been changed. There also has been an increase in entertainment brought to Attica, with much of it apparently designed to appeal to black inmates. One step taken to ease tensions was a guard recruiting program aimed at attracting minorities.

In June, 40 corrections officers, half of them black, were assigned to Attica. There are about 400 guards at the prison. Northwestern Bank Chippewa Pride BEER MM" MB aw -b. ALWAYS AVAILABLE KJ LTD VzJ V-JpNM I nTl DISCOUNT 4 One white guard who has worked most of his life at Attica said he was glad they brought black guards in. "Some of them are good, some of them are bad, but at least they are guards." Nixon may get Russian trade pact by end of year MOSCOW (UPI) Washington and Moscow get down to business today on promoting GOVERNMENT I NSPECTED-TABLE GOOD' AT STARKIST, LIGHT CHUNK liquor yfr I ILJi I MART Jll I serving Yoo In The Wissota Village Sunday 8 a.m.

till 6 p.m. yrfff 7 nSann mm STEAK POPULAR PRICES mm GOVERNMENT INSPECTED TABLE GOOb 6' 2 OZ. CAN i Schenley CMIDTZ STEAK GOVE RNMENT I NSPECTED-TABLE GOOD" 6 PAK Throw-Aways $3" STEAK B0NDWARE, SHITE BARCLAY Schenley "U.S. GOVERNMENT I NSPECTED-TABLE GOOD" ft I BONELESS $99 ROLLED RUMP SIRLOIN TIP ROUND ROAST QT. big business between themselves.

If all goes well, President Nixon may have the Soviet-American trade pact he wants by year's end. U.S. Commerce Secretary Peter G. Peterson arrives today aboard the presidential jet for a 12-day visit and talks with Soviet officials on removing the barriers to expanded Soviet-American trade! He will lead the American side at the first gathering of the bilateral trade commission set up during Nixon's May summit visit to meet alternately in the two capitals and work out expanded trade. Nixon has instructed Peterson to try to reach' a comprehensive trade agreement with 'the Soviet Union by the end of the year.

Peterson has forecast "tough bargaining ahead" in the drive to give Soviet-American trade a superpower-size boost. The United States last year exported $161 million worth of goods, largely machine tools and surgical instruments, to the Soviet Union. The Russians exported $57 million worth of goods to the United States. The Soviet Union's annual trade with capitalist countries totals more than $4 billion. Despite the recent Soviet purchase of $750 million worth of American grain and the five-year scientific and technical pact between Moscow and the American Occidental Petroleum Co.

that has billion-dollar potential, Peterson faces a rough road. Soviet-American trade has not grown significantly since the May summit and one U.S. embassy official said American businessmen in Moscow "find the ropes are still pretty tough." 100 CT. Your GOVERNMENT I NSPECTE D-TABLE GOOD" ALMADEN Q) Make ricnic Patty Center. Co) (5) Gordy's CEVA CHIANTI BRANDY STEW BARRELS ARMOUR BRAUNSCHWEIGER lb.

HOMEGROWN LARGE SOLID HEADS CABBAGE QT- PONIES BARRELS PETERS I HOME-MADE THURINGER country style or SUMMER SAUSAGE POLISH SAUSAGE 99 89 0 TAPS AVAILABLEi 2YWITH DEPOSIT.

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About Chippewa Herald-Telegram Archive

Pages Available:
531,209
Years Available:
1887-2022