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The Record from Hackensack, New Jersey • 1

Publication:
The Recordi
Location:
Hackensack, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

mm VoL 78 No. 19 178 PAGES 8 Sections SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972 Servlno New Jnw nd New York from HackensacJc N. J. 07602 25 CENTS Would seat both Illinois factions McGovern asks compromise 4 I CI I f1 lA -V i v- 1 I V' 't Yfifr vh if vk I I Jk 1 ity; KiiV' 17 ''v--: GREETING THEIR MAN Supporters of Sen. George S.

McGovern welcome him to his campaign headquarters AP Photp Soviet to purchase U. S. MAKES CONNECTION An will be used on the floor of World chess match faces another delay Ziegler said, will give financial help to American grain farmers and to others such as longshoremen and shippers. U.S. private commercial exporters will negotiate sales with the Soviet Union at 6Vs-per-cent interest through the Commodity Credit Corporation for repayment in three years from dates of deliveries.

By ROBERT COMSTOCK Politics Editor MIAMI BEACH Sen. George S. McGovern is proposing a compromise which would seat Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley and his 59 Cook County delegates with a half-vote each at the Democratic National Convention. "But there's no room for compromise at all on California," the South Dakotan said yesterday.

"I won California fair and square under rules which everyone understood and which were challenged by no candidate until it was all over. We can change the rules of the game, but not after the game has been played." A showdown floor fight over the two credentials disputes tomorrow night was assured More Democratic party convention news will be found on Pages A-4 and A-21. At Ease magazine has a convention special. by a U. S.

Supreme Court decision Friday reversing the ruling of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, which had awarded all 271 California delegates to McGovern. It also left the question of whether Daley delegates should be ousted up to the convention. McGovern suggested that the convention might seat the Daley delegates and their challengers, all with a half-vote each.

Similar to Jersey compromise Such a compromise, similar to one worked out for challenged delegates from New Jersey's Hudson and Essex counties, would preserve a voice for the powerful Daley machine while meeting quotas for black, youth, and female delegates which Daley ignored. In Chicago yesterday, Circuit Court Judge Daniel A. Covelli issued an injunction barring challengers to Daley from taking seats at the convention. Covelli ruled the challengers had not been elected according to Illinois statutes. He said the U.

S. Supreme Court decision Friday allowed the Cook County court to take jurisdiction. The practical effect of the injunction was in doubt. Most challengers had been sched- uled to take a flight to Miami that left prior to the ruling, and probably could not be served with notice of the court action. But McGovern asserted that the a 1 i i a delegation meets requirements of the law ana the party's reform rules.

The matter has been raised solely as part of a "Stop Mc- See COMPROMISE, Page A-4 least 120,000 rock music fans installer checks phones that the convention. ponementuntil Thursday since chief arbiter Lothar Schmid will not be back in town until then. i a West German grand master and the owner of a book publishing firm in Bamberg, flew home yesterday morning and said he would return Thursday. He said he was leaving because one of his sons had been injured in a traffic accident. Schmid's assistant arbiter, Gudmundur Arnlaugsson of See CHESS, Page A-2 During the first year of the agreement, beginning Aug.

1, 1972, the Soviet Union will purchase at least $200 million of U.S. grain a mix of wheat, corn, sorghum, rye, barley, and oats. White House press secretary Ronald Ziegler said President Nixon was pleased to announce the agreement, which, six dies in Pinkerton guard was examined by the Camden County medical examiner. Cause of death was listed as brain damage from a self-inflicted wound. A bullet had remained lodged at the base of.

his skull. Grace killed six persons and United Press International SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. The Soviet Union and the United States yesterday signed an agreement under which the Russians agreed to buy $750 million worth of U.S.-grown grain over a three-year period. It was the largest agricultural commodities transaction ever made between two nations. Slayer of Special to The Sunday Record CHERRY HILL Edwin Grace, who killed six men in a shooting spree June 21, died yesterday in Cherry Hill Medical Center, without a word that might indicate a motive for the tragic rampage.

The body of the 33-year-old Cherry Hill hospital United ress International REYKJAVIK, Iceland The Boris Spassky-Bobby Fischer world chess championship match, already delayed for nine days, ran into new problems yesterday when the chief arbiter left Iceland. U. S. chess sources said Fischer, the 29-year-old American challenger, is "at peak form and raring to go" into the first game Tuesday against the world champion, Russia's Spassky. But the sources said there might have to be another post wounded six others, choosing only male victims, in a Cherry Hill office building.

The shooting lasted seven minutes. Investigators have been pursuing the theory that Grace had a grudge against Key Personnel, an employment agency in the building. AP Photo at the Doral Hotel. grai duce the cost to taxpayers of storage, handling, and other charges associated with maintaining commodity stocks. "The President also feels that the agreement is a tribute to the immense productivity of America's farmers, which makes possible export sales of this magnitude.

"Finally, in terms of foreign policy, the President considers this agreement a very important concrete forward step in the commercial relations between the United States and the Soviet Union which benefits both countries. As such, it builds on the accomplishments of the summit meeting in Moscow last month Henry Kissinger, i 's chief national security adviser, told newsmen that negotiations leading to the agree- See GRAIN, Page A-2 attend rockfest r. SUNDAY CIRCULATION LAST MONTH 181,704 79 HOME DELIVERED A 2'A-hour show in the skies tomorrow afternoon will mark the last solar eclipse in this region for the next 52 years. Science writer Warren Froe-lich's story is on Page A-17. A million-dollar project will enclose Bergen Mall.

See Page C-ll. Action Line Amusements Business Classified Editorials Horoscope Obituaries Sports B-4 B-17 C-ll D-6 D-2 B-20 C-10 CI 10 Travel Weather A-4 Also these advertising supplements in areas selected by the advertisers: Two Guys Grand Way Carriage House Fisher Aviation1 'i'jw UifSLf s-W' Total amount of credit outstanding is not to exceed $500 million. "It will provide grain farmers with a boost in income," said Ziegler. "It will also provide jobs for Americans involved in shipping the grain-including longshoremen, seamen, exporters, railroad and barge line workers. It will re- Grace had applied there unsuccessfully for a job.

Among those killed with two sawed-off, rifles were the owner of the agency, Stephen Robinson, 41, of Cinnaminson, and employ- See SLAYER, Page A-4 120,000 Pocono By BOB CUNNINGHAM Staff Writer Thousands of people went to Pennsylvania yesterday looking for some good rock music and a taste of the Woodstock spirit. They found a rain-fed sea of mud, injuries, food problems, a massive traffic jam all famous ingredients of the classic Woodstock rockfest and some high spirits as well at the Pocono International Raceway festival. A Wallington youth killed in a car crash on Interstate 80, a few miles from the raceway, was the only fatality reported Dennis Ferment, 17, of 212 Wallington Ave. was thrown from a car as it rolled down a highway embankment. (Obituary on Page C-10.) The car landed on his chest.

Two other Wallington youths, including the driver, received only minor injuries. Bernard Ruttenberg.a spokesman for the festival who said he was in the press headquarters and couldn't see what was going on In the crowd, said, "We didn't want another Woodstock, and we didn't get it." Late in the afternoon, how See THOUSANDS, Page A-2 AP Photo POCONO PANDEMONIUM At 4 fought mud and monstrous traffic Jams at Pennsylvania concert. I 1.

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