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Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
Smokey Bear A Hypocrite . The United States Forest Service is guilty of shocking disregard for the public in- terest and violating a con- gressional mandate, in the way it has permitted private industry to rape the u- tional forests. Hearings re- cently in Washington reveal- ed progressive aba:ndonment of the mUltiple use-sustain- ed yield principle enacted by Congress in 1960. The 1960 act requires re- placement of harvested tim· ber by new growth, aJJd equal attention to all forest uses - watershed protec- tion, wildlife, fish, grazing aJJd recreation, as well a~ timber. However, the so- called forest management technique of clear cutting has been permitted increas- ingly. This involves clear harvest of trees· of all ages 81ld kinds, regardless of marketability, in vast areas - of the national forests. The nude scars of once beautiful Bitterroot National Forest in MontaJJa a:nd Mon- ongahela Natioul Forest in West Virginia stand as prime examples. Erosion, watershed degrdation, silt- ed streams and daJJgerous depletion of soil nutrient re- serves inevitably follow con- tinued clea:r cutting. The Forest Service admits to being five million acres behind in reforesting logged lands, aJJd 13 million acres behind in thinning aJJd other improvements. Yet it has agreed with a startling re- commendation of the Pub- lic Land Law Review Com- mision that timber harvest become the domin8Jlt use of national forests. The Nixon administration has already capitulated to timber inter- ests aJJd annotmced plans to increase timber harvest on public laJJds 60 percent by 1978. Lumber interests say clear cutting is essential for some. species, such as Douglas fir, to propogate. Yet clear cut- ting- . has devastated vast ·areas of Eastern hardwoods, · too. The lumber industry de- fends its plaJJs as necessary to meet 'the nation's housing goals. Yet it is apparent that these firms benefit ha:nd- somely from. the more effi- cient, profitable,· \cut every thing in sight\ approach. For years the Forest Serv- ice's symbol of timber pro- tection, Smokey Bea:r, has warned against forest fires. Meanwhile increased private exploitatioll has been per- mitted to wreak much the same kind of damage. Sad to say, the Forest Service makes a hypocrite out of Smokey Bear. -Milwaukee Journal Houses Pass Pollution Insurance· BiU ALBANY, N.Y. (UPD - In- dustries, in New York State would -be prohibited from pur- chasing_ insurance as protection against possible ·government fines for air a:nd water pollution under a bill awaiting action by Governor Rockefeller. '. ' } URNAL- Serving The Lake Plaiil;s Country- Orleans, Niag_ara, Genesee HANGARING IN THERE-The mockup: of the Boeing Supersonic Transport (SST) rests forlornly at. the Boeing Development Center in Seattle, Wash., while MEDINA, NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY. MAY 19. 1971 PRICE' 10 . the Senate considers President Nixon's House-approved request for $85 million for further research and de- velopment of the giant, 1,800-mile-an-hour airliner. • •• \ C - ·ts·· ·1o· ·n· · · o· -,--- · - . . . . . . . .. ·. . . . .... . : ; . . : . ..... -; . _., -. . . - . - . . . a ·t•--e . -·. -. : .. ·Senate Expectecf.to Vote AnJ Kill Revival Today_ ' . rea(ly to say how. . t the cost w~Uld be ~o keep qte pJ;Qgi'am go1ng. . . I . G:.~nclls:i~=n th~~~~;p:~ tion as short-sighted. He. said, \There was public gpposiUon to the steam engine. feople ·were WASHINGTON <UPI) -The away. The only thing that will against the steam~t. People senate moved toward burial go away, if we don't revive it, opposed the aul!>mpbiJe. Tiley once again of the SST program will be an American· SST and opposed the aiFPJaJle. They today amid arguments it would American commercial air su- ~pposed the jet air.lplane.\ .be foolish to stop it and periority. T A w·1 · J! \d t 1 irresponsible to continue it. \It is foolish not to go ahead Btletng ·Air~~:~ ~[e~a!der!t 189 State Employees P.onder Albion ·-Jobs The .Senate was expected to and finish it, even. at an extra around Capitol Hijl Tuesday, vote---and kill-late in the day, · cost. Extra costs would jQst conferring with jawmalters, possibly at a night meeting, a add to the amount that would including Magnuso~l House-approved move to revive be paid back <by the airline It was under: Wil~~9n losing their jobs. It is really a the supersonic tr 11 nsport pro- industry) to the government.'' made it clear Bo. was not hard decisioJJ for them to make. gram by converting an $85.3 Sen. WilUam ProxmiJ::e, D· interested in reviv. the SS'l' \Personally I am greatly milliop appropriation 'intended Wis., one of the leading foes of un_der the _prese ~ · contract. concerned with the effect that the for terminating the program building ~he 1,800-mile-an-bour Instead it wants the $52.14 removal of the center will have into a fund for continuing It. ~lane, ~d . not respond to a millioJJ it woUld . r eive under on the immediate locality. As for Sen. warren Magnuson, D- fmger-pomtmg re!Ilark b_Y Mag·. government cane lation~ myself, I will go back to my home Wash:, whose home state QUSO!i-. ~ho sat directly m front of the $85.3 millioL <:onverted in Florida. I had looked forward already .has suffered the pains of him m the Senate-that he into a revival frlnd. by the to enjoying one of Western New of unemployment from halting once made a \powerful speech\ H 'II . . ALBION- With the shut-down returning to her home in Florida correct_ion are two separate York's delightful summers after SST work at Seattle earlier this in favor of_ the ss_T. ·. oThusee. Hou\'\\'pass1 m· easure .. date Friday, June 4, for the next month, expresses real c~te~~r1es aJJd e111:ployees who having experienced one of its ld h' ll .; · In t d Pr h d \\\' it', Narcotics Center here ap- concern over the situation. qualified for narcotics woUld not atrocious winters but that's the year, to Is co eagues uurmg sea ' ox!llu:e ammere also ~armarked $33.~ million ·in proaching, considerable \soul- Approximately 35 of the Albion be immediately transferable to way the cookie c~umbles., the final day's debate: at the · ec~norntcs of the contract terminatio~ for Gener- c t ' h lr d correction. c '·'The SST isn'tl ·o- go dprogram, saymg no one seemed bauilt.Ed·leecr_.tric Co., th __ e. ·,., S_ST .engm· e searching\ is being done' by the en er emp.oyees ave ~ ea Y 189 employees as to whether to gone to Ray Br<>?k. 'rbe_se ~nclude Concludes the head~ of Nar- \up-root\ themselves from their some of those With Sellllortty _who cotics here, \The situation here is 0 n g r· e s s I o· n a . r . Unde~ ~he compromise, the environs and go to the new center have ~een emplo~ed here . m a really pathetic. While some wlib . · · ·. . . . , - - ·. . . . · . . . . e r $85.3 million for B~ and GE at Ray Brook or to remain and be ~upervisory c~pactty and will be had originally stated that they would be turned 'I back · into at least temporarily out of work. mcorporated mto the ne~ work would not give up their residence E d · • 1 d . • termination fwicls_, .li its or!$i!'al fr:s-:ea~!:a;:li~:iholi~fm~ ~~~~es~!~=~~~~~·owr~~r:::e~ ~~~ha::ds:r~e :~::.~g~ t~~ n -._ s Ra1 roa -_ . s- t,r···• ke-. · . ~'::\ correction to accept the tern- employees at Al~Ion who ~ad not Brook, the vast majority, who are · . · . · . . burse• the goverflinl~t for . the porary post as administrator of co~plete~ thetr pro~ahonary women, have families here, and WASHINGTON (UPI) Within hl:lurs, trains began \This is another case wbere $12 million it ~\f spent hi the Narcotics Center here in penod of SIX months will have an are torn between the thought of Freight and passenger trains rolling out of yards around the the railroad industry· was · administrative eo · ~ - October of last year and who is opportunity of completing it at being separated from them and rumbled down the tracks across country to deliver a two-day rescued by Congress from their It was also und rs~d that · Ray Brook. She states that this the nation today as union backlog of freight halted by the obligation to settle labor .the appropriation puld further M I • I does not mean that they will Six-Hour signalmen complied with a strike,. which forced shutdown disputes through tbe collective be e~arged to. y off the . U t1p e continue to have immediate Congressional order to end a of some mineS and factories, bargainil).g process,\ Chamber- major U.S. airline who have employment but will give them Ba· . ttle two-day strike that shut 'down and caused slowdowns in a lain said. \If the rail industry sunk $58.5 millio into the I • • an opportunity of being placed on the rail system from coast to number of industries. does not fulfill•it!l respoJJsibUity project. n1t1r1eS the reserve list and the first to be coast. Passenger· ser~ice was re- dur~the e)(tended ~riod,)t is: . . • .. · called in case of vacancies. SAIGON (UPI)-Thousands Congress passed emergency ported (lear normal this . morn- poSSible that there .. will- be n .J . . . . T . . For Drl .v:er Mrs. Lindsay discounts the of South Vietnamese troops legislation Tuesday night order- i~ on most of the country's a~other rail crisis on Oct. 1 of ronuerlll . ' I ax statement that came out of driving into the A Shau Valley ing the 13,000-member Brother- railroads·, including. the busy this year.\ · ·. · · · . · Richard A. Reed, 26, of Ridge c?tics?enteremployeeswouldbe with large Communist forces back to work at least until Oct. Chicago and some other major -virtually all r~p service~ ~e· n· a· u·, e··, l'ft•ss· Albany tbat the present Nar- fought a six-hour battle today hood of Railroad Signalmen commuter runs into New York, The walke>ut sbut· ·.do~. o· . .,. F.' · ·. Mobile Estates, Holley, was given Jo_bs in a!lY J?FOP!>S~ new entrenched there, UPI front 1, aJJd giving them, an interim cities, where ~housan~s of cou!lt? because mos.t of th~. _ . ~---- . _. · _ •. . ._I Vi ·. '# hospitl_llized early today after the· _correctronal.. m_shtuhQn . .that dispatches -reported. It 'was. the 13..5. per, cent;..-pay . increase.·· workers , were .. mconvemenced natlt>R .s .. - 1).~·-· 600,9(}1} . r~L. , _,., .. · . ., = • .,..., '\- .~ .. auto he was driving left Ridge would be established here, by first major battle of the three- President NiXon signed it into by the strike. . workers observed picket lineS; a· I· . s·. h·~· d· . > Rd. about 5(\0 ft. east of East asserting that narcotics and week-old campaign. . law at 10,:40 p.m. EDT. The new Amtrak national Nixon said he signed the . ·. ue ··-.·. ·f' ,' ' -· Holley Rd., Town of Murray, and passenger system anpounc.ed congressioria~ resolution \in .· · · · ' ; .. ·. hit a large tree. H ,. B h s •II' B. t R' ull·.ng .on that all but four of 184 mtermty order to end the current . ALBANY N=·· !,UPI) Th State Police said the car left the ·a·m· 10 . eac ma· oa trains it operates were being national railroad strike which . . · • • ·. ; · · · · · . -. .e pavement shortly after 1 a.m. . . . · · . · · restored today, witb all service has resulted in severe hardship .Roc~efe~er a . IStl'l!tion 18 while traveling west. It hit a ·. M d•· ·· •d operating Thursday. to millions -of Americans and collSidermg a 1 per!cent ·tax on mailbox, knocked over a sign, H bo . 'd . e ICSI . Signalinen President c.' J. woUld, if it continued, sharply ~lueCressand~lue~hi(!}dhealtb: then hit the tree and overturned. ar • r Chamberlain immediately or- CUrtail the CUrrent Upturn i1_1 lll;SUFance~prem~lJRl~' tpe Albany Mr. Reed suffered a possible Ab • · dered union members to return the ution's economy.'' TIIDes-Umon repo~f!l today. broken jaw' possible fractured ortlons to the job. but warned there . The signalmen, who\ operate -· Th~ ':lewspaper ~oted sourc· ribs, numerous cuts and bruises. WASHINGTON- PlaMing by Hamlin Beach will aid the State would be another strike if the the railroads' complex switches es. 'Y!-thin t!te ~P~ea~ership as Orleans County Sheriff's Dept. the Army Corps of Engineers for of New 'York to meet the ever NEW YORK (UPI) The State rail carriers failed to negotiate and communications equip- ~:y~~~e~Islag:: · ·Ck lDlpleJDent made report of a two-car ac- construction of a small boat expanding' demands for Supreme Court rUled Tuesday a ·settle~ent-a goal that has ment, have claimed they a:re bu~ Jthe~ · as d .!1~ i' ·~t'n °le;; cident which occurred at 3: 15 harbor at Hamlin Beach State recreational facilities in our area women on welfare had the right elud~d th~ union and the gr?ssly underpaid for their. reached o:owh:h!~% ga; ahead p.m. yesterday. Park on Lake Ontario will begin by continuing development of to receive abortions. under the carr1ers m 21 .months of skilled work at a present 'th th 1 i , · · Deputies said a vehicle shortly, Representative Barber Hamlin Beach State Park'' state's medica~d program. contract talks. - average of $3.78 an hour. They WIIf intr~fu~ _. $d approved operated by Cathy E. Ruggles, B. Conable Jr. (37th District) Conable declared. \There is' a New York c 1 ~y has askec;l_the . . . • • • ~ave as~~ for a 55 per cent _· in the legislature, th~ tax 18, of 819 County Line Rd., announced today. The Corps,_of need for a boat harbor on that c_ourt to s_et .~~Ide a \clanf1ca~ Down W1th M1n1, catcthhup wage ed~$t ?thver 42 coul~ g~er~te ~-.~o million in Hamlin, was coming off Route Engineers hopes actual con- part of the Lake to increase bon- of policy Issued last month U · • h •d• · mon S, compar, WI· an the state's fiscal year which be- 237 in the Town of Kendall and struction can be initiated boating safety as well as provide b~ ~tate Social Services Com- _ · p W1t . M1 . 1 em~rgency boards recommen-. gan April 1. · entering Route 18. She did not sometime in the 1974 fiscal year, adequate accommodatiqns.'' . miSSioner ~eorge Wym~n. The . - .. - ~tion for a 42 · per cent Reacting to tbe .r~t 1 a Blue ~s;Yv:n~ ~~~ o~:~~ ~.Ro, K~~t. ReJ'~~~~l:n:a~tihe network of The congressman said he had st~te~ent limited . a~rtions to NEW YORK (UPI)-Design- mcrease over 42 months. Cross-Blue Shield :official. said it b d . ed b C I be paid for by medicatd to those ers WJ'aught with what to do would \destroy the l¢ffectiveness and the two ·collided. Neither parks in this region operated een a vts Y o · Ray· S. ~ases only where ~hey ~er~ about' hemlines finally have G.Qi ~_·A __ $ \''0 of the Blue . Cr6sst.Blue_ Shjeld occupant was hurt. under the Genesee- State Park Hansen, Buffalo district necessary and medically mdi- skl'rted the t\ssue wt\th a ~--llliiii ~~ mnv_ement in New ~-= ork State· !' Commission. engineer, of the decision to t d \ ,.. ;~r· Construction of the boat hllJbor proceed with the Hamlin Beach ca e · · s · · flattering · compromise. Down · R. ill • ~\ph. Hammersl~y. Jr~,_,.presi- Religious Film Boards Against .Rating System NEW YORK <UPD-The is a $1 millio_n p'roJ'ect which will planriirtg at this time. In addition Justice ~n.tUel S~Ieg~, m a with ~he extremes of the mini, . e' lr; 'A .,. dent of Blue Cross ofNor(.heast· ~-pag~ deci!?Ion, said withhold- up with the awkw~rd (for · _ _. 11 . ·t!iJ· Ill ern New York, tenntid tbe .idea be financl,!,d jointly by the federal to benefiting navigation the mg r_eimburse:rp.,,ents_. for legal mos·t) loo·k of .the rm'di', and \vicious and irtes\\'. ns_ib_le/' Be government and the State of New project will also provide ·ex- bo t d al f 1 G b. m I\' t . f 'l'ti f rt f\ h' a r Io_!ls was a ent o _equa . onward with a hap•ny comprom- . said_ regional non~profit. health yo.;:be located in Hamlin Beach ae:di~~l:fed. ~ec~e~1ronais :;. protection of the law. Without ise of lengths :;,vering the . am tj · rf'l_ · .e agencies in New.York State pro- State Park, the harbor is ex- tivities. dqe pr?,cess a:nd caMot be tol- knees. ::~·· vide. coverage fOr,. ·. Jtalf the pec ted to have an 8-foot deep The Hamlin Beach proJ'ect was erated. . . Matter of fact the New York · state's 18;000,000 residents.:- . He s,,aid ·.th~ ~tate ~ad. p_ ~ac- firms· currently' sh~wt'ng thet·r· BOSTON · <uPl)-·. After Ed· - entrance channel varying in authorized by Congress· in 1968 t1ced an mvtdtous discriiDma v ward Finch Cox marries Tri. \cia $ width from '00 to 200 .feet and a and· plalllling funds were ap- · · ·· · . · · · - adv81lce fall and winter collec- 18.5 a•JJ• · ., _tion__ agamst m_ digeJJt. women,_de_- ti'ons ·to th·- e nau·on's. buyers ·ar·. e Nixon, the· newlywedS wUf live ··_---_. _· I ~~--~··· . dock ch_ aJlllel and maneuvering proved in 1969. One of the first th · t edi 1 · · $180 · · th th' · d n· nymg :em. a_cces. s o .m ca so .adama\t about the . knees m an . . -a-mon IF . oor. W h f B area 1 470 feet long and. 20() feet steps in development of the plan t tm t h ch il bl to .. alku pa' rt t. f bl' 'ks. ort 0 . ·oo!!!l\e· ... _rea en. w I . ·.Is av_ a a ,e, bem' g covered nex·t sea. son. ·that w · p a . men a · ew . oc . · · . · . · a.·. The senate approved the bill unanimously Monday. It was passed earlier in the year by o1 · the Assembly. Catholic and Protestant film boards Tuesday rated the motion picture industry's film ratings, declared them ineffec- tive in protecting youth from sex and violence, and withdrew support from the system. The church boards said they plan to initiate their own rating wide, Breakwaters totaling 1,270 for the proJ'ect will be a model th th uff t fu ds f.. Harva d S a · · ose WI- s Imen n · , the firm of Teal Traina ·.om · · r · qu · re m . feet in length will be constructed study of breakwater _ ;The. court .or~et:ed Wyman s apologized when a model Cambridge, a copyrighted story WASHINGTON (UPIY - in the Lake and a 9-foot high arrangements to be conducted at d~rective ?f April 8 ~Illltilled and appeared in a late day black in today's · Boston Herald American con8uiners Will. drink revetment will be built along the the Waterways Experiment ordered him to contmue to pro- chiff. dr bo. . h •....:.. Traveler reported. a record-breaking :$18.5 ~billion shoreline on either side of the Station in Vicksburg, Mississippi. vide reimbursement for abor- ·. on · · ess a · ve .· er . Allees. The four story brick apart- worth of beer, wine; liquor and harbor. The study is expected to be tions authorized under the The ~ees woUld~ covered. by mentis· around the corner from other- alcoholic beverages this • Without the legislation, pro- \Construction of this harbor at completed next year. state's abortion law. the tm~e that des~gn. got mto Cox's three-room bachelor year·, the Agriculture Depart- .' I ponants said industries which pollute the- envirOnment could continue to do so - since the cost of insurance would be chea~r than installation of anti- pollution equipment, and would pay for whatever fines might be levied. systems. The National Catholic Office for Motion Pictures and the rJ\l U s • t r£T. k pro~uction and ~ppmg, Teal_ · a~rtment , on· Massachvsetts ment predicts. 1!ama,_ the president, assured- Avenue and has a living· room, Department economists.~aid · Film Commission of the Nation- .l o_n .. . .17-0nor 0. Cle_ry- .l_ ta·-. es his audience. . . two bedrOQms, reception hall,. spending on .alcohOl-which baa To go . With . the m~re bath, kitchenette and ·a. small climbed '19 pet cent since 1960- ~ollservB:hvehemhnes c?mmg back porch. . . . · - · was -mounting \m::r-e&JJOP$! to m~o fasbton.. there .also IS t:Jie As w.as tbe .case when David growing consumer 1inoome, tbe fail-safe revival of the classics and Julie Njxoft Nixon Eisen- increasing pr.opOrtjl)n of -;young of the 19 3Qs and 1940s. hower live_d in Northampton;- adults and th~-soclal aceep· The bill would also prohibit the purchase of iQ.suranc~ to protect against damage caused by pollution. al Council -of Churches said r they no longer could support the industry's efforts at self- 20 t lilT d. .u· h s· h l ev~~~~tio~atrick J. Sullivan, . . a _ _ . J.f'.J.e lna_ .J.~lJY ·. c 00 director of the Catholic Associa- . l:::J ' tio~ of America's <MPAA)'s The Arista Chapter of the withthecovetedArista:Key.This honesty, loyalty and morality. ratings was the GP category. National HonQr Society inducted award, selected by vote of the . R~Ula Ott, t~e high school's The GP-fllins for all ages 20 new members yesterday af-. current membership, is granted foreign exchange student, was TEMPERATURES with parental guidaQce suggest- ternoQn in an impressive on the basis of unselfish service granted honorary membership iJ,l ~-is in ~nger of becom~ a. cer!~onl. ~j)nd~cted .in . the to the school} classmates and.the recognition of her scbolastjc in principal cities c~tch-all ca~gory for ·films Senior ~g~ ·School A'!Jditornun. community; dependable arid attainments a:nl;l her fine con- Area Residen.t $loG 'Winners In State· ~ottery which. should·\. ~ave all; R 'l'be grl:)Up, represent!Dg. the top. responsible leadership and. tri}Jution of Ufe at Medilia Sehlor Amqng · the prelirilinary win- ALBANY,. N.Y. (UP!)-. High- <r~stncted) raung, SulllVan 10 per dent of the class of 1!17.2, expression of the bigb ideals of High School thjs year. nersin the AprU,statelbtt~y are low temperatures in principal sa~~- . . . ;, · were tap~ for membership . . , _ . . . ··. · . · . . · · · · , . . SJ~Veral · ·Orleans CoUnty cities Tuesday and this morn- We believe, Ute boards based on the standards of out- K N' . t <., • . ·c· I . b w·tt . residents. They include: William ing: said, \that the _rating$ . at standing'leadership, s~ola:rshlp, ' enan ., a ure .·. u ·.. I Sullinger, 4623 South Gr~vel present do not take mto account character and service •. ;New · · · · - ·· · · · · RQad;·Medina; EleU:Jr.., Oiteves Albany Binghamton Boaton Buffalo Chicago Cleveland Detroit Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Beach New Orleans New York Seattle High LOw 81 50 79 63 ~ 48 82 61 86 69 86 64 88 61 83 . 51 87 65 82 .77 86 62 85 50 94 sufficiently the total' cont~t·of Arista meJ;nbets 'include .David v· .... •t L .. , .,.~ E. 't t·. . Sr.,Sen.tieo,63WestStateStteet; a given film! that they. place Anderson, Paul Barber, Deborall . . .-lSI . .. yn Vt .e· .• . s a e Elizabeth Ec~. 360 West State too· much weight on overt\ sex Beafenbough, Mark Benson, . . . . - , ·. St.,. bptb of Albion; Uougles J. · aQd l!ot .enough on the implicit Sharon. Clark, Lynn: Collins, LOCKP. OR\' Th . . . . . ••N- . . . Blanchard, .4!3 West Albion St., exPlOitation of sex and the Karen Dick, Shawn Galbreath. '' .· · · ... -. · e Keun this, out~g. n.mu· on tbe e&,~~e Rolley, a:nc.f.Wilia:rd and I!:dn,a over-aU ~pa~ of violence a:nd Ph:yll~ GiUmeister; Pamehi Cente!'~ature(?lubplaJ!SatriP.~ grounds l$ .a man made pond, Pritchard; 21& North Avenue o_ther antiSOCia~ ~~ts of the Heydt, Kirk Krebs, Patri¢H 1 th;e~if!iatJ1Smith 1 e;;ta~,_ .. RObm stooked. with ash. duckS. anq M:ecuna. · · ' film- on the ~Ud. :. · . . . Mayell, AJJn Santillo, Dana· Hill., m. LyndonVille .saturday geese. · _ . . · . · AlsO a preliniinaey winner was The agen~tes .. _ s~~ . the:( bave Scharping, Barbara · Schnackel,. aftetnoon.. . - ·.The group will ~eet at tbe Everett _ G. AlbOne · 2 Locust p~ for inSt'iliditig tben\ own Craig . Shier ling, · Deborall' . ''Attractions at the estate for Kena:n C$ter pa:rking. lot and Drive, ~rt. ' . · · rati{lg system a~ stressecl. _the Strickland, Constance Vosler, ~ature-lovers include unus.ual depart. ~ tberc; at 1 p.m. · None .of tbt- area preliminary ~eed for voluntat!Y self-resida· Patricia Wertman, and · Steven · un.ported treest shrubs and Any~e ~e!'~ted. m the nature winners . were drawn ·.for · ·the tton as opposed to government Wieczorek. · · flowers,\ according .to Eugene ~~b s · acti~tl~ 1s we!come to grand prizes and each . will censorship. · · · steve. Sbierling was presented M. ;Allison. the club's l~der for JOm tbe,grouPat any tUne. receivea$IOOeonsolationawf9:d. - . I the Seer~ $erviee will have an tanee e>f drinkjqg~·· · apar,tment in the same .. building. In · comparcisoD.. .anotb.er de- The Coxes will be in constant partment . report. shc)wed tbe communicatio~ With the ~et value of milk sale~, r.ose 30 per servicemen :;mc:t· a closed_circuit cent in 11 years, and·_so'ft drink\ TV system will be installed for . sales in the aame · pericMl rose security. . . 166 per cent. - · . : Have, A Chuckle . ,.. .. . . . : . KINGl$ LY., England {OPt). ..... When MrJ. Ann James, 35,. fo11nd ·seven. duck .aSP- irJ o deietted nHt, ih• d.eci~ to take over. fh•, jet& bf fi:atchina· ..... m. · - ··. \It was eaq during th ·ctay but I hc:id' to: tak• tbem tiJ ~ with JmJ cd -night;\ ·~ sa~ Tuftclay~- ''I :'Wnlp~ them •n a clOth .bag and slep,t with them for tW-o ·nights. · · until they .hafdaed.' 1 · · • · . . . ' . . · LIVERPOOL,· Englancf· (UP;IJ _...,. AnpJa.J~-.,,. 4; . wanmd to add a.f.,.. more· bubbles to-her IMtW. bclth. _ -so ~ ~urecf in het.· m•r'• $120 ~-of Cha'ftt1 · No. 5 IWfUme. . . · ·. . . ·· - \It was my ·own fault,' I · .uppose, for ·ljtctvlilll It Clround/' taid An .. ICI's ·rnothtr. Mrs. leryi.J~...-. ~,-- < .: •