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Daily News from New York, New York • 150

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
150
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

C-trfr LL By JEFFREY ANTEVIL Washington, July 6 (NEWS Bureau) Chief Justice Warren E. Burger put a freeze today on the disputed Democratic National Convention delegates from California and Illinois, in order to give the Supreme Court time to decide whether to hear appeals. California and Illinois forces opposing the nomination of Sen. George McGovern had asked the Supreme Court earlier today to convene a rare session and reverse the lower court's decision depriving thern of their seats. Pending that decision, Burger issued a stay of the lower court's first-ballot 'nomination in Miami Beach next week.

Challenging the appeals court's action in the California rase, lawyers for the Democratic National Committee asserted in their high court brief that the lower court judges had "thrown the country into a cnstitutional crisis" by interfering with the political process. They asked Burger to rail the vacationing justices together in order to reinstate the Democratic credentials committee's decision which awarded Calilomia's convention votes in to the showing of each candidate Continued on page 37, cof. I) fornia and 53 from Illinois, including Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, were appealing a U.S. Appeals Court ruling yesterday which awarded all 271 California delegates to McGovern -and seated a group of Illinois Insurgents, most of them McGovern supporters, in place of the Daley regulars. The nearly 200 McGovern votes involved in the challenge could be decisive to the South Dakota senator's hopes for a rulings; The action temporarily delayed hear the appeals, the lower-court ruling would stand.

An announcement will not come at least until tomorrow, a court spokesman said. The delegates, 153 from Cali the lower-court ruling giving the contested seats to more solidly pro-McGovern delegations in each state iyi place of the ousted delegates. If the high court refuses to Warren E. Buffer Supreme Court wanli look 2i Ust MlSmir HHakdwd A lihy After Oakland, July 6 (Combined Dispatches) Twenty-four hours after (he FBI shot two hijackers to death, an armed man seized another Pacific Southwest Airways jetliner tonight and demanded $450,000 in There were 53 persons aboard the air- cralt, an airline spokesman said. of a second The hijacking Southwest Airways plane came after an FBI agent, who took cisco are going to do some drastic things." The plane was on a flight from Burbank to Oakland and Sacramento when the hijacking occurred.

The plane was diverted toward San Diego, an airline spokesman said. 3 Killed Yesterday In San Francisco yesterday an FBI agent ordered the rush of a captive jetliner that ended in the part in ending a hijack in Francisco yesterday, said he hoped his action would "be a lesson" to future skyjackers. A Pacific Southwest spokesman at San Francisco Airport said the hijacker radioed, "If I don't get the 1450,000 my friends in Las Vegas, Los Angeles and San Fran UPI Telephotos Hijack suspects Diroitr Alexieff (left) and Michael Azmanoff were killed by the FBI aboard jet plane. passCsy to Stanley Victor Carter Sm Ym One mfmnded, mme mMad They had demanded IftOfliOO, parachutes, map and charts, and wanted to fly to Siberia. Their names were Dimitr K.

Alexieff and Michael I). Aimon. By ROBERT BYRNE (Continued mm pgm 30. cel. 3) asked the Russian to accept his apology for "my disrespectful behavior in not attending the opening ceremony." Fischer had delayed the opening of the match, scheduled for July 2, by haggling with the Icelandic Chess Federation over the proceeds of the match.

The stalemate over the mon3y was broken unexpectedly Tuesday when British banker INDEX TO FEATURES Robert Byrne cAeu i an international grandmaster. I deaths of two hijackers and a passenger. I The airline's president sup-J ported the FBI's action but said 1: he was upset that the passenger I had been killed and two other passengers wounded. 1 "The FBI had a well-thought-lout plan, and it is obvious to 1 me that it would have succeeded except for the one hijacker go-ing berserk," said J. Floyd An-I drews, president of Pacific South- west Airlines.

I FBI agent-in-charge Robert 3 Gebhardt, described by the FBI in San Francisco as having made I the decision to rush the plane, 5 said: "1 hope this will be a lesson. We intended to stop this hijack, and stop it we did." I After failing in six hours of negotiations to win release of 81 passengers and a crew of five, 1FBI agents stormed the plane I yesterday and opened fire on a i hijacker who ha been holding a gun at the pilot's head in the cockpit. Hijackers Bulgarian The hijacker in the rear of the plane began firing wildly, wound- ing two passengers and killing another before he was shot dead by agents, the FBI said. The two hijackers were identi- I fied today as Bulgarian natives. Beauty 46 Warren Km 39 Brxtoe bjr Coren 62 Or.

Jean Mayer 44 Bunnell Column 42 Menri 52 Classified 63 ObUuarws (A Correct Thing 44 Patterns 6 Crossword 34 People's Vo 39 Editorial 39 Reed Fashions 43 Social Security 4g Food 44 Sports 66 FnendinNeed 44 Stock Market 42 Home Furnishings 43 Stay 12 Horoscope 4B Theater S3 Inquiring, Fotog. 39 Trips and Treats 34 Jetly Side Down 46 TV. Radio 47 Jumble 64 Or. Van DHIen 34 Special Correspondent of The News Reykjavik, Iceland, July. 6 Bobby Fischer, debonair in a pale green suit, pointed to Boris Spassky's closed left hand tonight and discovered he had selected the black pawn concealed in it.

That, meant that Spassky, who smiled slightly as he opened his hand, will have the first move in the first game Tuesday of the 24-game world championship match. The draw was made as Fischer, the American challenger, and Spassky, the Soviet world champion, stood face to face on the stage of the Laugardalshoell, Reykjavik's snort exhibition palace. But it was done in the same manner as park bench chess wii.i Spassky taking a black pawn and r. white pawn in each hand, juggling them behind his back and extending his closed hands to Fischer. Fischer, the 29-year-old temperamental chess genius from Brooklyn, and Spassky, 35, of Moscow, met for the draw after Fischer sent a handwritten letter of apology to Spassky this morning.

In the letter Fischer Comics. James Slater, an avid chess fan, offered to contribute $125,000 to the prize fund. Fischer then left New York for Reykjavik. Slater's doubling of the original purse put up by the Icelanders will give the winner and the loser $93,750 the biggest purse ever for a championship chess match. Spassky, showing the strain of waiting out the pregame gambits, requested a delay of his own to repair his frayed nerves.

Lothar chmidt of West Germany, the head referee, granied the request and set the first game for 5 p.m. Tuesday at Laugardalshoell. After Fischer and Spassky met tonight for Gasoline Alky 48 Moor) Mtillms 7 52 Beetle Battey 62 The Nngnbors 46 Blond ie 62 OnSLtoe 9 Broom-Hilda 48 Orphan Anrue 60 Oondi 48 Sesame Street 78 Friday Foster 62 Brenda Starr 62 Like It 56 Terry SS LilAbner 48 0.ck Tracy 62 touie 48 Winriie Wmklc 48 Rex Morgan 62 (Continued on page 22, col. 1) umKmmnmmWTmmmmMm HOW CITIES FARED YESTERDAY Temperature laches 8 ajn. High Lew el Rain Wtaflwr TEMPERATURES IN NEW YORK Max.

77 at 3:25 p.m.; Mirt 56 at 6:05 a.m. Highest this date, It in 1911 Lowest this date, 57 in 1956 DAILY ALMANAC FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1972 NAT WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST SUNNY, BREEZY AND WARM. Temperature range- 55-77; winds north at -10-T5 mph. Tomorrow; partly cloudy, chance of showers. JULY 1972 See Met.

Tee. Tkar Fri. Sat. 2 3 iSTm 5 8 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 1 a.m 59 2 a.m 59 3 a.m 59 4 a.m 59 5 a.m. 59 6 a.m 57 7 a.m 58 a.m 60 9 a.m.

62 10 a.m 65 11 a.m 70 Noon 73 p.m.Z4 1 p.m 74 3 p.m 76 '4 p.m 75 5 p.m 75 -6 p.m 72 7 p.m 73 8 p.m 68 9 p.m 66 10 p.m65 11 p.m 65 Midnight65 Albany Ancnorage Atlanta Boston Buffalo Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Denver Detroit Fort Worth 74 74 71 70 48 73 75 49 85 75 8t 85 MOON Clear Clear Cloudy Pt Cloudy Pt Cloudy Cloudy Pt. Cloudy Cloudy .02 Pt. Cloudy Clear Clear Clear Cloudy Pt. Cloudy .1 Drule Lkify 3 July 1 0 July 1 8 July 26 For 24 hours ending at It p.m., 4 Mean temperature, normal. J6; below normal since July 1, 2.7 degrees.

52 54 42 sa 54 59 50 45 55 4 54 4t 64. 41 S3 51 73 72 57 84 68 54 77 55 loslQ. New First Q. Full Houston AIRDIXt PRECIPITATION Yesterday: Pollution levels were rated TODAY'S FORECAST K'. WKi Burlington 4S-.

Detroit "Buttoo AlbanyV SCIevetand" -y Nw 41-74- Pittsburgh 55'77 H-JT 7v Columbus Philadelphia 1(3) FUR I S-n--K''5r'7lSPT. CLOUDY 7 Elkins Washington CLOUDY "T-VC SMKtS acceptable tor 24 hours ended a m. Eastern Daylight Time Sunrise 5:33 a.m.; sunset 1:30 p.m. Moon rses 2:01 a.m.; sets 5:42 p.m. Morning s'ars: Venus.

Saturn; evening stars: Mercury. Mars, Jupiter, Neptune. Yesterday, none; inches. Total this Total since July 1, total since Jan. 1, 34.86 date.

1971, 22.86 inches. 0.39 inch. .13 J4 Taday: PoMuiion be acceptable. Los Angeles 84 Miami Beach 84 Minneapolis 60 Montreal 74 K'ew Orleans 85 Orlando 95 Philadelphia 74 Phcenix 107 Salt Lake City. 97 San Francisco 40 San Juan.

P.R. 89 Seattle 45 TEMP-HUMIDITY INDEX 69 at 1 p.m.; 69 at 5 p.m. 106 of us ere affected when index hits 70; Pt.Ckwov Cloudy Th. Storm CWwr Pt.Ctoudv Pt. Cloudy Clear Over Pt.

Cloudv PLCIcudy Rain TIDES (By National Ocean Survey) Sandy Hook The Battery Willets Pt. A.M. P.M. A.M.. fJA.

AJM. P.M. gh 5:12 5:43 5:42. 6:17 :50 9:12 nan at all at 80 1 rut Daily News puMitned aa-ly escept Sunday by New Yer News El Od New York. Second cU pcil 1 Pb New Vortt.

N.V. tlvC 51 iS. Louis it Washington 73 Trace HIMDItY6t ij -'j-. if.

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