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The Daily News from Lebanon, Pennsylvania • 35

Publication:
The Daily Newsi
Location:
Lebanon, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 35 Foreign Comment I If A II I Lebanon Daily News, Lebanon, Wednesday, July 5, 1972 US Chess Challenger Sleeps While Soviet Champ Fumes To Work It: By FRANCES DRAKE REYKJAVIK, Iceland (UPI) The future of the world chess AH appeared saved when a championship once more is in British millionaire banker and doubt, this time because Soviet chess fan dug into his own Heres IIow DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Heres how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR is LONGFELLOW One letter simplv stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three Ls, for the two Os, etc. Single letters, apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different. CRYPTOQUOTES BGYW RIIZ WGKCR YZYL BGJC GJ TYKZ RIIZ OCJB CIUIZP GYZ TYKZ -LYSO WBYKC Yesterdays Cryptoquote: THE GENT WHO WAKES UP AND FINDS HIMSELF A SUCCESS HASNT BEEN ASLEEP.

-WILSON MIZNER (0 1972 King Feature! Syndicate, Inc.) qualms, WITH faith. Stress level-headedness, serenity, congeniality. SEPTEMBER 24 to OCTOBER 23 (Libra) There will be more to this day than shows at first glance. Take others at their word; also be ready for unintentional errors. Reason out the whys of emotions.

Be composed. OCTOBER 24 to NOVEMBER 22 (Scorpio) Strictly speaking you may not yet be due for the benefits or gains you expect, but accuracy and clock-like precision in all endeavors will bring you big dividends soon. NOVEMBER 23 to DECEMBER 21 (Sagittarius) Many minor situations will decide this days overall picture. Study records, past action, costs; have facts correct. DECEMBER 22 to JANUARY 20 (Capricorn) Special interests, handling the affairs of others, study, science and research call for special care now.

Mixed influences. JANUARY 21 to FEBRUARY 19 (Aquarius) Dont let good chances pass you by. Make the best use of your talents and be opitmistic about the day. It will be brighter than you may realize at first. FEBRUARY 20 to MARCH 20 (Pisces) Clever management could be a prime factor in your success now.

One victory can start a chain of them coming. Keep fit, mentally and physically. Look in the section in which your birthday comes and find what your outlook is according to the stars. FOR THURSDAY JULY 6, 1972 MARCH 21 to APRIL 20 (Aries) Above-average planetary influences support your best endeavors, stimulate your talents. Some fine opportunities indicated.

Go forward" confidently. APRIL 21 to MAY 21 (Taurus) Alertness, reading between the lines will keep you on the ball now. Be consistent in all endeavors. Protect properties. MAY 22 to JUNE 21 (Gemini) Classify everything so that you will have your day well ordered BEFORE you commence.

That special idea or new method could prove profitable if competently implemented. JUNE 22 to JULY 23 (Cancer) There will be nothing dazzling about this day, yet it can offer you a multitude of benefits if you look in the right places. Use your fine know-how. JULY 24 to AUGUST 23 (Leo) A few details may require more attention before you can relax. Handle promptly! Eliminate nonessentials from your program and all should go well.

AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 23 (Virgo) Circumvent troublesome spots, unless duty lies there then take them on face to face, without titleholder Boris Spassky wants American challenger Bobby Fischer punished for his behavior. If a solution is worked out, the 24-game match could start Thursday. But with the championship leaping from one crisis to another, officials were hesitant to make any predictions. The championship was sche- duled to start Sunday, but Fischer, a 29-year-old chess genius from Brooklyn, failed to turn up, mostly because he wanted more money than the $125,000 purse put up by the highly conventional and ultra conservative; also idealistic and humanitarian in your impulses could not only succeed, but be eminently happy in any career where you could be of service to your fellowman, such as medicine, nursing, institutional or any other kind of welfare work. Teaching is also an excellent field for you but, here, you will have to learn to "be more patient with those less gifted than yourself.

If so inclined, you could take up writing with marked success. Traits to curb: Jealousy and hypersensitivity. Birthdate of: John Paul Jones, American naval officer. pocket to offer another $125,000. Fischer was on the next plane to Reykjavik and arrived Tuesday morning, where he quickly left the airport not to be seen since.

The winner of the match will get $150,000 and the loser $100,000. Came the draw Tuesday to see who would play white for the first game and Fischer was asleep. So he sent his second, while Spassky was there in person. The world champion, 35, apparently decided he had had enough of Fischers antics and issued a statement that said: Fischer broke the rules of holding the contest by refusing to come for the ceremony of opening the match. By this, Fischer insulted me, personally, and the Chess Federation of the U.S.S.R., which I represent." He added that since Fischer had broken the rules he must bear the just punishment before (here is a hope of holding the match.

Only after this can I return to the question about the possibility of holding the match. He also demanded a personal apology. I cannot see Bobby apologi- zing, said Fred Cramer of the U.S. Chess Federation. But Fischers lawyer, Paul Marshall, and his second, Father William Lombardy, were more optimistic.

We are hopeful we will be able to solve our differences with the Russians, said Marshall after a hour session with Spasskys advisers Tuesday night. Marshall said he and Father Lombardy; a burly Catholic priest and international chess grand master, will sit down again with the Russians today to try to solve the problems. We are making progress, Father Lombardy said. None of the Americans wanted to say just what the differences are beyond confirming that Spassky and the Soviet Chess Federation delivered two stifly corded protests to the International Chess Federation (FIDE) Tuesday. However other informed chess sources said the documents demanded that FIDE punish Fischer for his failure to turn up for the first scheduled game Sunday.

They also included a demand for a personal apology from Fischer. Fischer remained in a villa provided by the Icelandic organizers ready and eager to start play, according to U.S. chess officials. Spassky told newsmen he did not plan to walk out of the match. I want to play if we can just find a solution, he said.

Dr. Max Euwe, president of the international federation, said he hoped to be able to stage the first of the 24 games Thursday. Euwe said both sides say they want to. play so I believe they will find some solution. It would be a great setback for world chess if we would have to call off the match.

The VOICE of BROADWAY By JACK O'BRIAN YOU BORN TODAY are A DISPUTE IS NIPPED IN THE BUD NEW YORK Always good for an argument, Budd Schulberg has cordially disagreed with us about practically everything One point of agreement, however, is that his most recent book, Loser and Still Champion: Muhammad Ali," packs a punch when it comes to boxing, Budds a pretty knowledgeable soul. Thats one subject on which we always see eye to eye, Budd said recently. The Sweet Science. Prize fighting. Boxing.

The Manly Art. We can even discuss, with the full authority of the self-proclaimed expert, the wizardry of legendary boxers we have never seen. You and I came by our in- PEANUTS Govt. Closes Opening To Left By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst The new Italian government closes at least temporari'y the opening to the left under which Italy has been ruled for most of the last 10 years-. The cabinet put together by 53-year-old Premier Giulio An-dreotti is called a centrist one because it contains IT Christian Democrats, Andreottis own party, five conservative Social Democrats and four Liberals, a party considered a bit right of center.

Left out for, the first time in 10 years were the Marxist Socialists who now have joined the Communists in opposition. In theory, the new government which will have a majority of 173 8, the Chamber of Deputies ends a crisis which has been going on since early in the year. In actual practice the crisis? The Italian Social Movement, the neo-Fascists, went from 24 seats in the Chamber of Deputies to 51, a sizeable gain but only about half of what they hoped for. In general, leftwing parties showed declines. The outcome gave new courage to the Christian Democrats who had been forced into a two front campaign against the neo-Fascists on the right and the Communists on the left.

The Christian Democrats had campaigned on a platform of law and order and the outcome gave Andreotti courage to form his center government. It did not, however, solve any problems. On the right, the neo-Fascists who had sought to win respectability with a campaign of moderation, suddenly reverted to type. Party leader Giorgio Almir-ante declared during a speech Florence that if the government failed to carry out its duties, the political right was ready to replace the state. Such a take-over naturally would require the help of the armed forces.

Strikes and urban terrorism also continued to plague the government. In Milan, an unidentified gunman shot and killed a nationally known law enforcement officer, Luigi Calabresi, chief of the political investigations section of Milans police force. He had played a leading role in investigations of extremist forces. A two-week labor truce declared by Italys three major trade unions before the elections ended in a general scramble of workers to resume their strikes. Farmhands went on a 48-hour strike, airline pilots went on a 24-hour strike.

The trade unions announced 300,000 chemical workers would go out for 24 hours on July 6. Ita'y has lost more man hours to strikes than any other Common Market country and economists have warned of a crisis in the fall unless moderation prevailed in negotiations for new labor contracts directly affecting more than 4 million workers. In other words, the new government was coming in exactly where the old government went out. Marciano, rolled up into one in repressible superstar. Misunderstood as a figure of hate, he survives as a figure of hope, Budd sermonized.

Annville Library Has New Books On Its Shelves terest in this punishing but strangely mental sport at a tender age. There was your father-in-law, Jimmy Bronston, one of our most colorful boxing impresarios, in a mint era, the 20s and 30s. And my old man, B. P. Schulberg, rarely let his work as head of Paramount Pictures, interfere with his duties as a fight fan.

He took me to my first fight, in the old Madison Square Garden, when I was six, Benny Leonard was facing a tough Irish challenger, Richie Mitchell. I pasted pictures of our idol into my scrapbook. B.P. was proud of knowing Benny Leonard who would (like Cassius Clay two generations later) pick the round in which he planned to knock out his man, so that his Jewish cheering section could be accordingly. It may seem unsporting to emphasize the Jewishness of Leonard, the Irish in Richie Mitchell.

But I must confess that through the years of my youth I rooted for our ethnic champions on the West Coast for little Newsboy Brown, (Dave Montrose) and Jackie Fields (Jacob Finkelstein) and my old favorite. Mushy Callahan (Morris Scheer). When Mushy outpointed the Nebraska Wildcat, Ace Hudkins, my proudest possession were 'the boxing gloves Mushy wore in that fight. I hung them over my bed with almost religious awe. How nice it would be if we could become one peaceful human race free of racial barriers and suspicions.

But alas, homo sap still clings to his tribal roots. Each tribe seems in need of symbolic heroes ready to go forth and do battle for the gen. For all our nuclear vision, we still inhabit a stone age of human emotions. In such a world, prize fights provide a emotional safety valve. That is why I consider Muhammad Ali a positive figure.

Black people in America, so long deprived of their heritage, are in need and in quest of heroes. In Muhammad Ali they have their Benny Leonard, their Mickey Walker, their Rocky ANNVILLE Thirty one new books have been placed on the shelves at the Annville Free according to Mrs. Perry Troutman, librarian. They include 17 adult fiction and 14 adult non-fiction. Adult fiction: Murder Most Royal, Plaidy: A Portion For Foxes, McClary; The World; Wallace; The Needles eye, ra bb 1 Blockbusters, Green; My Name Is Asher Lev, Potok; The Optimists Daughter, Welty; Out Of The Dark, Lofts.

The Snow Goose, Gallico; The Godforgotten, Schmitt; The Quiet End Of Evening, Tracy; The Terminal Man, Crichton; The Marked Men, Fakinos; The Tin Lizzie Troop, Swarthout; Bonneys Place, Hale; Jefferson McGraw, Hill, and "Pageant Faded, Karlan. Adult non-fiction: Catalogue of the Worlds Most Popular Coins, Reinfeld; The Mugging, Hunt; Duet in Diamonds, Burke; Inside Australia, Gunther; The School Without Walls, Bremer; Cut Off, Davidson; "The Vasectomy Information Manual, Gillette; The Descent of Woman, Morgan; Jerusalem, Collins; Daisy Bates, Salter; Declaration of Con science, Smith; The Fabulous Onassis, Cafarakis; Be Not Afraid, White and Queen of the Head Hunters, Brooke. Gifts to the Memorial Fund in memory of Mrs. Charles Hanley the book, A Procession of Friends, by Newman has been given by the Annville WCTU, and in memory of Floyd B. Whisler the book, A Catalogue of the Worlds Most Popular Coins, by Reinfeld has been resented by Dr.

and Mrs. Frederick G. Sheese. Paul Weitzcl of Mt. Gretna has presented to the library about two years of back issues of the magazine Science.

This gift completes and brings up to years of that title. CENSUS One hundred 1 forty-three patients, including nine infants. ADMISSIONS John Miller, Lebanon Sylvester Kudela, Lebanon Mrs. Virgie Strainer, Lebanon Charles Rutman Myers town Lynda Gingrich, Lebanon Charles Shires, Lebanon George Keller, Lebanon Mrs. Irene Martin, Cleona Miss Florence Wolfe, Lebanon Mrs.

Ann Bond, Emmaus Mrs. Gertie M. Shirk, Fredericksburg William Heller Lebanon Mrs. Naomi Greeninger, Lebanon Mrs. Donna Obcr, Manheim Mrs.

Emma Miller, Lebanon Mike Vukmirovich, Lebanon Mrs. Bonnie Groover, Portsmouth, N.H. Anthony T. Broton, Jonestown Randy M. Lane, Lebanon Matthew Gyorke, ch a f-ferstown Mrs.

Gertie Keller, Lebanon Mrs. Patricia A. Boltz, Pine Grove -Stephanie Rollman, Lebanon Mrs. Florence Dechert, Lebanon DISCHARGES Mrs. Hilda Waltz, Annville Albert Tonini, Lebanon Brenda Beard, Lebanon Mrs.

Clarissa Mease, Jonestown Mrs. Martha Dove Fredericksburg Mrs. Lillian Gruel, Cornwall Mrs. Patricia Lehman and daughter, Lebanon Miss Mary Hagy, Denver Andrew Frysinger, Newmanstown Mrs. Esther Edris, Lebanon Winfield Boyd Lebanon Mrs.

Dollie Kiscadden, Cleona Miss Joan-Marie I a Fredericksburg Kelly R. Seigrst, Lebanon Mrs. Mary Redcay, Myers-town Mrs. Lois Boltz, Palmyra Mrs. Elizabeth Moyer, Lebanon Miss Mary Sonon, Palmyra Mrs.

Eileen M. Long, Lebanon William Gundrum, Newmans-town Leri A. Sweeney, Lebanon Dawn M. Sweeney, Lebanon Edna Stoltzfus, Lebanon Ronald Rittle, Myerstown Mrs. Beverly Ludwig, Pine Grove Mrs.

Jennie Pushnik, Jonestown i Mrs. Lillian Guerrisi, Lebanon Irvin Roemig, Annville Meyer Fine, Annville Miss Hilda Groh, Mt. Gretna Mrs. Phyllis Peiffer, Myerstown Mrs. Ida Mae Duke, Lebanon Leonard Weidman, Lebanon Walter Mellott, Lebanon Miss Darleen Simmers, Lebanon Mrs.

Mildred Martin, Annville Mrs. Anna Bronik, Lebanon Mrs. Karen Patrick and daughter, Lebanon Mrs. Linda Cooper, Lebanon NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST lo 7AM 1ST 7 Ufl WEATHER OTOCAST WEATHER OUTLOOK Tonight will find shower activity along many parts of the Atlantic Coast states as well as in portions of the Southern Rockies and vicinity. Elsewhere, generally fair weather should prevail.

Minimum temperatures include: (approx, maximum readings in parentheses) Atlanta 65 (83), Boston 56 (68), Chicago 50 (76), Dallas 67 (85), Denver 55 (84), Duluth 48 (71), Jacksonville 72 (89), Kansas City 57 (75), Los Angeles 61 (75), Miami 77 (89), Minneapolis 54 (76), New Orleans 73 (86), New York 61 (72), Phoenix 80 (113), San Francisco 56 (68), Seattle 58 (79), St. Louis 55 (74), Washington 56 (76). Dangerous air pollution levels can be spotted by looking for damage to trees and shrubs around the yard, say plant specialists. i.

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Pages Available:
900,987
Years Available:
1872-2023