Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, August 10,1972
Page 8
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-
Stores selling insect repellents
are doing a brisk business in
downtown San Francisco, which
has been invaded by swarms of
AREA WIDE
CRUSADE
Aug. 14 thru 20
8 P.M. Nightly
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REV. C.M.Ward
Evangelist
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We know what you’re looking for.
Mosquito invasion
mosquitoes.
The city Health Department
sent investigators to the area
after merchants reported that
mosquitoes by the thousands
had suddenly appeared. Indica
tions are the mosquitoes were
freed from underground by
construction of work on the Bay
Area Rapid Transit subway.
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SAN FRANCISCO DENVER I /
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UFI WEATHER FOTOCAST® — :j:
•:• FORECAST FOR GRIFFIN AREA—Partly cloudy and not quite so hot through tomorrow with g:
$ slight chance of thundershowers late today and chance of thundershowers tomorrow afternoon. :g
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LOVELL, Wyoming—Mr. and Mrs. Don Blackburn open a
stack of letters at North Big Hom Hospital where their 10-
year-old son, Danny, is dying of brain cancer. The boy who
only has days to live was denied passage from Denver to
Billings, Mont., on a Western Airlines flight because of FAA
regulation on passengers with oxygen equipment. The boy’s
father wanted to bring him home to “die in peace’’. Another
airline Frontier flew the boy home. Danny was being treated
in Denver at Colorado General Hospital. (UPI)
Chess players went
on and on with draw
REYKJAVIK (UPI) - Boris
Spassky and Bobby Fischer
played on and on.
Outside in the corridors
grandmasters shook their
heads, drained coffee cups and
one said “Why are they so
proud in there? It’s the deadest
draw in man’s memory. One of
them should give in and offer
the draw.”
Finally on the 55th move the
Russian world champion looked
up from the wooden board,
Fischer nodded and put forward
his hand. The 12th game in the
$250,000 “match of the century”
was split down the middle as
every grandmaster had predict
ed since the adjournment on
the 41st move Tuesday night.
The 13th game is scheduled to
start at 1 p.m. EDT todaj' with
Spassky playing white pieces
and moving first. Fischer has a
7 to 5 point lead and needs
another 5% points to become
the first American to win the
title.
But after Spassky’s devastat
ing display and win in the 11th
game, grandmasters predicted
a battle royal for every half
point.
Spassky bounced back after
going through one of the worst
spells in his 20-year career with
five defeats and three draws in
the last eight games against a
player he mastered for 12
years.
“Another win for Spassky and
the match is wide open and the
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chess world on fire again,” said
Fridrik Olafsson, the Icelandic
grandmaster.
Denmark’s Bent Larsen, one
of the top five chess aces in the
world, agreed and said: “At
one stage it looked as if Fischer
would run away with the title.
But Spassky is made of tough
material, although a two-point
deficit is a terrible handicap
against a player of Fischer’s
caliber.”
If Fischer was pleased over
inching closer towards the title,
he did not show it.
Twice in the closing minutes
the 29-year-old challenger got
out of his $470 swivel chair,
stomped over to the German
arbiter Lothar Schmid, to
complain about the noise.
At one stage during the game
Schmid chased two young boys
from the front seats reserved
for grandmasters. But the
chess aces prefer the corridors,
the crowded cafeteria or the
press rooms to analyze, discuss
and comment on the game.
“Thats where the fun and
action is,” Larsen said before
engaging in a lively debate with
U.S. grandmasters Robert By
rne and Larry Evans.
Shoe Manufactures
Os the shoes manufactured
in the United States, 47 per
cent are for women, 17 per
cent for men, 23 per cent for
children, 12 per cent are
slippers and 1 per cent spe
cialized types, according to
Encyclopaedia Britannica.