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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 6

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

9 A-6 THE SCM)AY RECORD, JULY 2, 1972 ttrgm County, New Jaruy u.s. awards $600 -million ship contracts Jet leaves for Iceland without Bobby Fischer million In the fiscal year that began yesterday and $90 million next year. grams. The authorization bill would have given the corporation S65 C000QOtCIO Qooeooot0 1 B.otX)owioioiidiotOioOiof;Y si iQlinPTED CAI PI UUlVilflE.ll Ui-fE-E-. WASHIXGTOX B) President Nixon announced yesterday that contracts totaling $659.2 million have been awarded to five U.S.

shipyards to build 16 merchant ships. The contracts are the largest that have been awarded in peacetime since the government-subsidy shipbuilding program began in 1936. Administration officials said the contracts will produce 36,000 jobs at shipyards and supply firms on the East and West Coasts and 800 jobs on the ships over the next three years. Among the ships built will be three tankers costing $171.9 million to be built for Seatrain Lines Inc. of Weehawken, N.J., by its ship- eration President Gudmundur Thorarinsson and Andrew Davis, a New York lawyer representing Fischer, produced some results, Thorarinsson said.

"There are still some difficulties," he added. Asked if Davis had promised that his client would show up for the opening match, Thorarinsson replied: have no assurance." The purse, at $123,000, was 10 times greater than any previously offered for the world title. If Fischer doesn't appear for the match, Spassky would retain the title. ed. Others said Fischer would be disqualified if he did not appear.

The matches were scheduled to start at 5 p.m. (1 p.m. EDT) in Reykjavik. The 29-year-old American grand master was balking at a chance to end the Soviet Union's monopoly on the world chess crown because of a last-minute money dispute he created. His llth-hour demand for more money was rejected by the Icelandic Chess Federation that organized the match.

Two meetings between fed From Th Record Wlr Services American chess champion Bobby Fischer failed to board list night's regularly scheduled flight from John F. Kennedy Airport in New York to Iceland. He had been slated to start today the world championship matches with the Soviet Union's Boris Spassky. There were reports that Fischer had asked for a two-day postponement Dr. Max Euwe, president of the International Chess Federation, said in opening ceremonies in Iceland that a postponement could be grant Of UPI Photo 0 2 nun; V7fp5 5 cue BIMASIERCAN GOING WEST President Nixon departs Andrews AFB for his home in San Clemente, Calif.

5 mm building subsidiary, Seatrain Shipbuilding of Brooklyn. WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon yesterday signed legislation providing an immediate 10 per cent increase in monthly compensation payments to about 2 million veterans with service-connected disabilities. The increases will cost $260 million in the first year and be included in checks delivered starting Aug. 1. Beginning next July 1, the law also will eliminate the long-standing distinction e-tween peacetime and wartime veterans.

Putting all service-connected disabled veterans on the same level will cost an additional S54 million in the first year. Washington Post News Service WASHINGTON President Nixon Friday vetoed a bill to increase funds for public broadcasting sharply over two years. The unexpected veto stunned the broadcasting industry. The measure funding the Corporation for 1 i Broadcasting had sailed through the House by a 254 to 69 vote margin and the Senate by an overwhelming 82 to 1 vote. But the Administration has been increasingly critical of public broadcasting, particularly over what it characterized as growing centralization through its network, tration displeasure over the content of some of the network's public affairs pro SOFA OR 2 CHAIRS $1flG502 Called one of worst inland spills in histonj Crews stop oil slick on Schuylkill River $8 1 JL fcJ lobor and your oSoic of ipfcwl grouping of fabrics and devgm.

Our doi to from. ak. ony CI Dl OV FD Dm raanwy. rt and wM fc JltlrWW tlJ otect piut oil weak points reinforcKl A CA Early Anwwaa Skirh and Tuftins SOFA or Including Sptdol I U3" km. 2 CHAIRS Grouping Fabria SHOP AT HOME compute ov 334.7557 88 88 88 88 88 88 497-501 So.

Wash. Ave. rOTTSTOWN, Pa. (UPI) A six-million-gallon oil spill that threatened the water supplies in a five-county area of southeastern Pennsylvania, including Philadelphia, has been contained by cleanup crews along a 32-mile stretch of the Schuylkill River. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), working with the Coast Guard to check what was called possibly the worst inland oil spill in the history of the United States, announced yesterday that the spill had been stopped from slipping downstream into Philadelphia.

Using straw and other absorbent materials, the EPA and Coast Guard collected much of the oil along the banks and foliage stretching from its flood-battered source in Douglassville to Phoenixville. Floodwaters last week carried the oil from storage lagoons into the river. The spill was not fully recognized until the river settled back within its banks. Intake valves to numerous water supplies were protected by "filter fences," two layers of OPENEVES.THURS.,FRI.'til9 wire fence packed with absorbent material. All communities along the oil-slicked stretch continued to draw their water from the Schuylkill.

EPA spokesman Peter Clapper said workers yesterday began burning off the collected oil near its sources, while vacuum trucks disposed of muck much farther down river. He said that an aerial assessment of the damage was begun, but that estimates would not be available immediately. EPA Director William D. Ruckelshaus Friday estimated environmental damage from the spill could amount to $5,000 a mile. Foster Village, Bergenfield 8 to6P.M.

ciaotoooao tooo ootoboo 1 A MARL Even Pitches AfO ura ANOTHER MARLEE BONUS lavebra "FIE nclfi Mb 11 1)1 A Top Quality Acetate Page for Square or Oblong Prints With, Every Roll of Kodacolor Film Processed Printed By MARLEE COLOR $n)79 12 EXPOSURE KODACOLOR FILM PROCESSED PRINTED STILL (Payable in Advance) Some of our Peoples Trust branches never close. Over 9000 of them at last count. So if one of our 33 offices isn't handy for you the nearest mailbox will do just fine. ADDITIONAL BONUS 1. Same Low Price 2.

Top Quality Prints 3. One Day Service 4. Guaranteed Satisfaction 5. Free Bonus Page 'rtMBirfiiftii DAILY 8:30 A.M. 5:30 P.M.

425 MAIN HACKENSACK, NJ. 343-3710 MONDAY NITES TILL 7:00 P.M. SAT. 10:30 A.M. 3:00 P.M.

Personal Banking Peoples Trust of New Jersey P.O. Box 128, Hackensack, New Jersey 07602 Please open my Peoples Trust Savings Account in the amount of I've checked the plan below that meets my needs best. Pyramid Preferred 5 .75 annual interest compounded daily. $250 deposit to open account. $25 minimum deposits to keep it going.

a Pyramid Plus 5.13 to5.00 annual interestcom-pounded daily. Depending on whether you keep your interest in or take it out. $250 deposit to open account. $25 minimum deposits thereafter. Regular Savings Interest compounded from day of deposit on savings left on deposit to end.of quar-.

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About The Record Archive

Pages Available:
3,310,502
Years Available:
1898-2024