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Daily Press from Newport News, Virginia • Page 60

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Daily Pressi
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Newport News, Virginia
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60
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6 York Williamsburg James City YorkWomaiillcads cites top diplomats DAILY PRESS. NEWPORT NEWS. VIRGINIA. SUNDAY MORNING. JULY .10, 1072 Retiri Recalls UN's Highlights ng fog Show Planning eporter Bertil F.

Swaiison of York-town has been named show chairman for Langley Kennel Club's 28Ui annual unbenched all-breed dog show to be held with American Kennel Club sanction Sept. 29 at Hampton Roads Coliseum. The announcement of Swan-son's appointment was made earlier this week at a LKC dinner by Leonard J. Lcavitt of Hampton, club president. Swanson announced a series conformation training classes for novice dogs andor novice exhibitors to be held on Tuesdays at 7 p.m.

in the parking lot of Riverdale Plaza Shopping Center beginning this week. The classes are being offered free by LKC, the Peninsula's only AKC recognized all-breed club. The classes will be 'conducted by Robert E. Booth of Yorktown, and AKC approved judge, and Roald licit man of Seaford, a veteran trainer and exhibitor, under the supervision of M. Davis Waltrip of Hampton, a veteran AKC approved professional all-breed handler.

Swanson said in order to be eligible for the free classes dogs must be six months old by Sept. 29 and must be purebred and eligible for registration with AKC. Also, their certificates of immunization for rabies and DHL must be shown. The chairman said each week's class will feature various LKC members who have produced champions in their breeds who will assist in the instruction. Further information may be obtained by calling Mrs.

Robert E. Booth, 868-7210; Mrs. Joseph C. Denmark, 596-2262; or Swanson, 877-4025. Inflation In U.S.

Strains United Nations9 Finances those noses out of other people's countries." One of Lodge's most memorable- speeches was delivered to the Security Council in a predawn session during tJie Soviet military intervention In Hungary in 1956. Replying to Soviet charges of U.S. subversion in Hungary, Lodge said: "The Soviet apparently have us believe that our American program, which aims to fill people's stom-aches with food, is somehow inferior to a Soviot program which fills their stomachs with lead, as this night's tragic dispatches all too plainly and poignantly show. Lodge left his U.N. post to run for vice president on the ticket with Nixon in 1960, the year John F.

Kennedy won. Perhaps the most influential personalities in molding the future of the United Nations have been the men who served as secretary-general. The first, Trygve Lie, was a blunt-speaking but gentle man who seemed more like the Norwegian labor politician that he was originally than like a diplomat. He resigned under Soviet fire after seven years in office because of his stand on the Korean war but not before he had won acceptance for his concept that the of i of secretary-general must include political functions as well as administrative. One of his achievements was to obtain from the Rockefeller family a gift of the 17-acre tract of land where U.N.

headquarters is located. His successor, Dag Ham-marskjuld, agreed with Lie's views on the functions of the secretary-general and continued to expand them. There were few other similarities although Hammarskjold came from neighboring Sweden. became Identified, with weighty decisions. There is no doubt that Adlai Stevenson ranks high among these.

Jn my opinion the two-t i presidential nominee was the most witty and the most eloquent of the thousands of diplomats I heard speak during 26 years Jit the United Nations. At the height of the Cuban missile crisis in 1962 he broke the tension in the Seciuity Council by telling a joke. It was during this debate that, Stevensor. told Soviet Ambassador Valerian Zorin that he was ready to wait "until hell freezes over" for a yes or no answer as to Whether the Soviet Union had placed offensive missiles in Cuba. Later oa, defending the U.S.

naval quarantine of Cuba, Stevenson quoted an Abraham Lincoln story about a passerby who was charged by a farmer's ferocious boar. Here is the way Stevenson told it: "The man picked up a pitchfork and met the boar head-on. The boar died, and the irate farmer denounced the passer-by and asked him why he didn't use the blunt end of the pitchfork, and the man replied: Why didn't the boar attack rr with his blunt end?" Stevenson's years as chief U.S. delegate terminated by his unexpected death in 1965 were not always happy ones for him although they were exciting for the public and his colleagues. He was saddened by President Lyndon B.

Johnson's policies on Vietnam and by his own inability to help end the war. He also was disillusioned by the performance of the United Nations which he had strongly supported from the beginning. Just a few days before his death he expressed his disappointment. At the 20th anniversary session he said: "In (Editor's Note Max Har-relson came out of Arkansas to be a reporter in New York and then an AP reporter in Europe in the '30s. Assigned to U.N.

headquarters in 1946, ho has been AP's chief correspondent there 22 years. Retiring this week, he recalls some highspots and personalities of U.N. history.) By MAX HARULLSO.V Associated Press Writer UNITED NATION'S, N.Y. (AP) The U.N. charter, written during the final months of World War II, set forth goals reflecting the rhetoric of war-wear leaders who dreamed of a just and peaceful world.

A generation later the world organization is still here although many of its hopes remain unfulfilled and its charter is battered. Whether it will save "succeeding generations from the scourge of war" remains to be seen, but it certainly has provided a stage for a parade of world figures who engaged in an unending war of words. Looking back over a quarter century, I remember the drama provided by these personalities. Some are recalled for their antics, but there also were the tense moments when representatives of the superpowers confronted each other while the world seemed to teeter on the brink of an abyss. In 1946 I sat in the gallery as Andrei Gromyko, then a youthful-looking 37, gathered his papers and walked out of a Security Council meeting.

I saw a black cat walk across the rostrum in Paris while Anthony Eden was addressing the General Assembly. I saw Henry Cabot Lodge startle the Security Council by displaying a large, wooden eagle which he said had been bugged while mounted behind the desk of U.S. Ambassador Averell Harriman in Moscow. The list of personalities who have appeared at the United Nations reads like a world who's who: Adlai St Fidel Guevara. Khrushchev Jawaharla Pope Paul Elizabeth II of llailo Selassie of Ethiopia.

most of the recent prime ministers of Britain and every president of the United States from Harry Truman on. No one will forget how Khrushchev kept the General Assembly in an uproar for an entire month in 1960 with his shoe-pounding act and oilier antics. Of course many incidents had small significance. There was the time the Shah of Iran started reading a speech before the Assembly and got well along in the opening salutation before he realized he was reading the text of another address scheduled for a group of businessmen. He met the crisis by folding his manuscript, pulling the other one from his pocket and remarking simply: "Wrong speech." There was a m0re dramatic incident when the Indian delegate, V.K.

Khrishna Menon, fainted while taking part in a Security Council meeting. Menon was famous at U.N. headquarters not only as the man who made the longest speech in the organization's hi something over seven hours but also for the frequency of his interventions. His readiness to speak on any occasion led one wit to observe, as the U.N. doctor worked over Menon's limp form: "If they would just wave a microphone before his face, he would sit up immediately and start talking." Most deeply etched in my memory is the image of the regulars the diplomats who represented their governments in the day-to-day debate and whose personalities could not have been more different.

Vishinsky as a veteran Bol-s i revolutionary had served as prosecutor in one of Stalin's ruthless purges. Lodge is the handsome and aristocratic descendant of Boston's Cabot clan, grandson of Uie Henry Cabot Lodge who helped block U.S. entry into the League of Nations. Typical of Vishinsky's styles was a speech he made as foreign minister during the 1951 General Assembly session in Paris. Commenting on a Western proposal outlined by President Truman, calling for a census of all nuclear and other weapons.

Vishinsky said it reminded him of the English saying that "the mountain has brought forth a mouse." "I will amend this," he said, "only by saying tha'. it brought forth a still-born mouse." Referring to Truman he added: "After reading this speech I could not get to sleep all night-because I was choking with laughter. I am not by nature given to laughter, but even on this platform although I am refraining from laughter I am unable to restrain my irony over this sensational peace offensive by which the United States delegation hoped to wrest the initiative from the Soviet Union. I trust they will accept our congratudations." Vishinsky once cited a news story telling of the slaying of two Negroes by a sheriff in Florida immediately after the U.S. Supreme Court had reversed their rape convictions because of trial errors.

"This is apparently what human rights means in America," he said. "We would counsel you to pay greater attention to matters in your own country, in the vicinity of your own noses, and to keep the bright glow of 1945 too many looked to the United Nations for the full ami final answer to world peace. And in retrospect that day may seem to have opened with the hint of a false dawn." Going back a bit before Stevenson's appearance in 1961, one of the big attractions was the battling of the "cold warriors" notably John Foster Dulles, Dean Acheson and Lodge on one side, and Jacob Malik, Vishinsky and Gromyko on the other. Dulles and Acheson joined the fray only occasionally, during General Assembly sessions. The others fought long and furiously over the years.

The dour Gromyko has outlasted them all, serving as the Soviet Union's first permanent representative and in recent years attending assembly sessions as foreign minister. Malik, now back at the United Nations for a second tour as Soviet delegate, proudly claims the record for casting more vetoes than any other individual. Many still talk about his performance as resident of the Security Council in August 1950, when he paralyzed the council for a month by parliamentary maneuvering. Vishinsky and Lodge were the most colorful of the group and the most talented in the use of invective and other cold war weapons. A Soviet foreign minister, Vishinsky already was famous for his sharp tongue.

When Lodge became President Dwight D. Eisenhower's U. N. representative in 1953. Shortly afterward, Vishinsky became Soviet delegate and for two years, until his death at the end of 1954, the sparks flew.

Both Lodge and Vishinsky knew how to slug it out and how to grab a headline, al-though their backgrounds until the end of 1973 and to provide $118 million as previously planned. The divergent appropriation bills are before a conference committee of House and Senate. Secretary of State William P. Rogers has said the United Nations will run out of money by about October if the House plan prevails. Paradoxically, while the administration is trying to keep Congress from cutting the current U.N.

contribution, it will be trying to negotiate the 25 per cent assessment in the U.N. General Assembly this fall. By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS, (AP) The United States is putting a financial strain on the United Nations, not the same way the Soviet Union and1 France did in the '60s but on a somewhat similar scale. In those days, the Russians, the French and others of less authority refused to pay disputed special assessments for U.N.

peacekeeping operations and ran the organization $52 million to $73 million into the hole, depending on how you figure it. Nowadays, the United Nations and some of its specialized agencies have to spend more for goods and services because of two world phenomena rooted largely in the U.S. economy inflation and the 1971 dollar evaluation. On top of that, the United States has started a campaign to get the United Nations and half the 10 related agencies to reduce the U.S. share of then-total budgeted expenses.

The aim is to cut U.S. assessments to 25 per cent of the funds the United Nations collects from members. TTB 9 Effort Goat At Navy J3aaa contemptuously The goats have grazed the land bare and depleted Kahoolawe of most of its vegetation. The resulting erosion has left a sun-baked hardpan that supports only the thorny kiawe trees. But the Navy is not discouraged.

"I'm certain," Capt. Joseph Elmer said; "that the nation which put men on the Moon, can make a resort island out of Kahoolawe." after a two-and-a-half ton cache of opium was found by authorities years ago. The site is perfect for a resort if the developers could find some way of getting rid of the Navy, the goats, the bombers, hordes of mice which periodically infest the island, the erosion, the dust storms and the tons of buried explosives. Capt. Elmer is sure a way will be found.

"If we can get men on the moon The next scale of U.N. assessmentsthe percentage each member must pay toward the annual budget will be for the three-year period 19 7 4-76. The recommended scale will come out of a session of the assembly's Committee on Contributions, next spring. To make sure that the desired reduction in the U.S. contribution is recommended, the United States must see that the committee gets instructions to that effect from the 1972 assembly.

Voting in the assembly is based on "the sovereign equality" of all U.N. members, recognized in the charter. So the 132 members have one vote each. Contributions for the support of the United Nations are assessed mainly in accordance with members' capacity to pay. The United States pays almost $64 million a year for its one assembly vote; the 61 poorest members pay $70,788 each.

This "extreme disparity between voting power on the one hand and financial contributions on the other" was given in the assembly Dec. 22 as one reason the United States should pay less. This citation was by Rep. Edward J. Der-winski of Illinois, a member Jogging Fad Is Contagious To Brazilian 'Cooper Fans' The United Nations and four agencies are in danger of facing the 25 per cent ceiling immediatelyby act of Congress.

The Nixon administration asked Congress to appropriate enough money to pay ail the United States owes the six organizations this year on assessments ranging from 24 to 52 per cent. The House voted to apply the 25 per cent rule to the United Nations and four agencies retroactively to the beginning of this year, and to appropriate $94 million for U.N. purposes. The Senate voted to postpone application of the ceiling saturated sheep. Apparently some of the goats escaped the roundup when the animals were removed.

The target ranges used by the Navy are located in the middle of the island where concentric circles of whitewashed tires and oil drums form the bullseyes used for booming practice. There is also a convoy of derelict trucks for strafing practice along with two "enemy airstrips" for the fighters and bombers to work over. The Navy says only one out of four bombs dropped is "live ordnance" while the others are smoke bombs or duds. Ground crews from Barbers Point visit Kahoolawe every six weeks to two months to repair the targets. They are quartered at Smugglers' Cove just above one of the most beautiful, unspoiled beaches in the Hawaiian chain.

The beach got its name shrapnel and trying to dig up all the buried ordnance would require a computer operation with a budget increase equal to construction of a new fleet of destroyers. And the Navy has been under increasing pressure to give back Kahoolawe and stop using it as a bombing range, particularly since last year when the mayor's house on nearby Maui was shaken by the concussion of bomb explosions. The Navy points out that Kahoolawe is the only convenient and economical spot in the entire Pacific where the Hawaiian based ships and planes can perfect their gunnery and bombing techniques. New procedures are being used by the Navy to minimize the civilian' dis-comforture on Maui but the grumbling continues. Nobody is exactly certain how the goats got to Kahoolawe in the first place.

It is likely that they were brought DRIVE IN THEATRE Strawberry Plain Rd. The Barbers Point Naval Air Station operations officer admits though that he's been outnumbered by the goats, just as the state has been outsmarted. One suggestion was to plant acres of poisonous oleanders but nobody has figured out how to get the shrubs started. Another idea was to use overdoses of tranquilizing drugs, but that failed when tests showed an inordinate amount of the drug would be needed to kill a goat. Poion bait proved useless as the smart goats refused to even nibble the templing alfalfa cake spread around the goat communities.

The Navy can't open the island to goat hunters because of the danger from unex-p 1 bombs and shells which have been rained down on Kahoolawe for more than 20 years. And that brings up the second fine-printed clause in the Navy's deed to Kahoolawe. The secretary of the Navy is obliged to return the island to the state when it is no longer needed for naval purposes "reasonably safe for human habitation without cost to the state of Hawaii." Defusing all the duds, raking up the tons of rusted July 28-29-30 Double Feature "FROGS" plus- "House That Screamed" Port Calls Starts 8:30 $1.50 Per Both Rated PG Person Correia asked the city to put up markers 100 meters apart along the sand at Boa Viagem beach. His idea was to ease the burden of counting for Cooper disciples on the. distance run.

"I now have an enormous disposition to do my daily later," Gen, Humberto Ellery told a reporter in Fortaleza. The director of the Ceara State governor's advisory board heads a group of 50 Cooper disciples who invade the city's streets and beaches before sunrise. "The key to the whole thing is the oxegenation of the body," says Claudio Morais Coutinho, who is on the coaching staff of Brazil's national soccer selection and is credited with introducing the method in Brazil. The method? "Run, swim, EDITOR'S NOTE The followina in- A.m.tiAn tux. f.irnlch..

In th flailM Press by the Hampton Roads Maritime of the U.S. delegation. over at the turn of the centu By DAVID VIDAL SAO PAULO, Brazil (AP) You can see them every morning jogging along the beaches of Rio de Janeiro or the treelined fringes of Sao Paulo. Men and women. The fat wanting to become thin and the skinny stimulating their bodies to stand up to any physical challenge.

Young and old, they form a sort of religion. The "Cooper method" is making exercise fanatics out of many usually sedentary, professional-type Brazilians. Disciples range from former President Juscelino Ku-bitschek, who at 71 has clocked 12:00 for a 1, Geometer run, to housewives and civil servants. The Brazilian national soccer team an object of veneration in this soccer-obsessed nation is also on the list. The fad has reached the stage of causing sharp divisions of opinion among doctors some oppose its in ry when the island was leased to Maui ranchers who turned IWilinmslmrj: Store Only I f' iL I The U.S.

chief delegate, George put it another way in a June speech: the United Nations should guard against "too great financial scheduling. Both arrivals and departures are subject to change without notice because of unforeseen complications. Today: AMOCO CONNECTICUT (AM) Ld Amoco Yorktown; ARAGRACE (NOR), Ld sen cargo NIT; BJORGF-JELL (NOR), Ld coal CARE3EKA (DUTCH), Ld gen cargo Naval WeaDons Station. Yorktown; i ii guuig io ue an i loose some 15,000 sheep, 5,000 By ROBERT C. MILLER KAHOOLAWE, Hawaii (UPI) There is no credibility gap on this parched, uninhabited Hawaiian island.

The U.S. Navy admits the goats are winning the war on Kahoolawe. The goats have survived everything in the Navy's arsenal up to and including 500-pound bombs, rockets, machine guns and naval gunfire, for after all, the 44-square mile island is the Pacific Fleet's bombing range and target island. This smallest of the eight principal islands of the Hawaiian archipelago is its biggest headache. Nobody lives on it, but everybody wants it.

Thousands fly over the eroded, scabby acreage every day enroute to Hawaii's other beautiful islands, but the few who have lived on Kahoolawe since it was discovered by Captain Cook were either hermits, sheep herders or criminals exiled by the old Hawaiian kings for theft or adultery. The secretary of the Navy was handed the deed to the 28,260 acres by the president 19 years ago, but his lawyers should have read the fine print a bit more carefully, for there were two joker clauses that have plagued the Navy ever since. The worst was about the goats. Executive Order No. 10436 requires the secretary of the Navy "to eradicate, or keep to a maximum of 200 head, all cloven-hooved animals on the island." To which the love-making, fecund goats have replied with a contemptuous "Baaa." A Havaii Division of Forestry spokesman, Russell K.

Lebarron, said an accurate survey of the goat population on Kahoolawe several years ago showed some 5,000 billies, nannies and kids. "Since then nearly 11,000 have been killed," Labarron said, "and nobody knows how many are still there. Nannies may produce from two to four kids a year, and if left alone with no predators, the goat herd could increase by more than 50 per cent in a single year." green forest (am), Discti msjs dependence on any one mem Naval Base; MORMACCOVE (AM), Disch I Id gen cargo NIT; POLYFREE- ber." DOM (NOR). Ld coal CS.O. goats and several head of cattle.

The sheep-raising venture failed because there was no way of washing the red-stained wool from the dust Spring ride a bicycle, walk and-or run in place in that order." Brazil's recent victory in a 20-nation soccer tournament boosted the prestige of the Cooper method. A bicycle factory1 repoits doubled sales from 1970 to 1972. How far such logic will go is a matter of opinion. Some diplomats suggest that other members will balk at paying more so the Americans can pay less, and the United States will fail to get the votes it needs to win. But U.S.

officials use a powerful practical argument: if the assembly doesn't cut the U.S. contribution, Congress will. The cut, applied now, would cost the United Nations $13,238,272, the World Health Organization $5,484,590, the Food and Agriculture Organization $3,052,012, the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Monday: AMERICAN LANCER (AM), Disch Id contrs NIT; ATLANTIC SAGA (SWEDE), Discch Id contrs PMT; COHCORDI FJELL (NOR), Ld gen cargo Newport News; HELLENIC PRIDE (GRK), Ld gen cargo; HOEGH MUSKETEER (NOR). Ld coal LAKE ONTARIO (SWED), Disch frozen meat NIT; MANAGUA (NIC), Ld fertiliser E.

R.T.J PRESIDENT MADISON (AM), Disci) gen cargo LPD; STEEL MAKER (AM), Ld gen cargo Newport News; TAGAYTAY (NOR), Ld gen cara0; WHITE OCEAN (SWED), Ld gen cargo Newport News. Tuesday: AMERICAN LEADER (AM) Disch Id contrs NIT; LONG HOPE Disch Id contn NIT; LONG HOPE (NOR), Ld coal; YOUNG AMERICA (AM), Disch Id contrs NIT. Wegnesaay: ACT 3 (BR), Ld gen cargo NIT; AFRICAN SUN (AM), Ld sen "'qo NIT; ATLANTIC COGNAC (FRl, D'sch Id contn PMT; GLADYS BOW. ATHR (BR), Ld gen cargo; HELLENIC HERO (GRK), Disch gen cargo; STEEL EXECUTIVE (AM), Disch ft Id MSTS Naval Base. Thursday: AFRICAN CRESCENT AW- Dl'c'' td gen cargo; DART "ntr NIT; EXPORT COMMERCE (AM), Disch Id Ben cargo; GALEONA (SPAN), Disch Id gen cargo; HELLENIC TORCH GRK).

Ld. gen cargo; MAIN EXPRESS (OER), Disch ft Id contn NITi trnn. $aooo to $-2ini iftofkfli discriminate application, but one says: "It's the best thing medicine has as a system of physical conditioning." He is cardiologist Keuclides i m- i Fontagno Marques, who 20 1st, 2nd 1 3rd MORTGAGE LOANS Kvcry nccasinn ahead rails fur the I' ltl watch that means most a Wl' jif handsome, utterly dependable "Vf Omega. We have them in the most pleasing st yles for those ho mean most to you. anuai Man's dav dale tTJi calendar in 229-1475 SUM.

thru TOES. CONSOLIDATE ALL YOUR BILLS LOWER YOUR PAYMENTS "Epic battle days before doing his jog was in the hospital with half a dozen broken ribs. He had been in an auto accident. His enthusiasm reflects the contagion about the exercise system established by Dr. Kenneth H.

Cooper of the U.S. Space Agency. ui me JrSMc'h W.T"vsffi Cultural Organization 200' International Atomic vamali diki, Energy Agency $1,033,726 and gHenELLc.rgo-; 'hI' the International Civil Avia- Uon Organization $332,063. 9n'LPo, Bush said the United States OR MAC I GEL (AM), Ld gen cargo nit; nova scotia (br), Ld gen would aiso ask reductions, ca got OCEAN PROSPER (LIB). Dich L-r- ji.

Id contrs gen; TOPDALSFJORD wnen justified" its COn- (NOR), Disch ld eti cargo. Trihiitinnc In enmn trio TT sexes. NY. 1mn Xlf r': aTuraav: ar can stad v. II you aft now paying monthly b.lli Ihoio, FURNITURE 35 CAB 75 DEPT.

55 APPLIANSES 25 LOAN 37 DFPT. 35 TOTAL SSOHTHLT PAIkKNTI $262 steel 1 65 7 -) I.iifK marquise sluie in while hf or vellow, with I Man's 17-jewel J'ijM 3 water-resist 41 85 jjri WE CAN COMBINE ALL YOUR BILLS INTO ONE LOW LOW BUDGET BOOSTING PAYMENT Dinch I Id gen Newport News; AMER In the northeastern city of Recife, Councilman Ciovis LAN tEGEND (AM), Disch Id gen caroo NIT; C. V. SEA WITCH (AM), Disch Id contrs NIT; MARIT MAERSK (OAN), Ld gen cargo Newport News; MORMACALTAIR (AM), Disch gen cargo; RIO DULCE (ARG). Disch frozen meat NIT; SANTA ISABEL (M), Ld ol cargo tallow; SELFOSS (ICE), Disch 4 Id ten cargo; SOLARES (SPAN), Ld coal NtW.

Richard Burton Genevieve Bujold THREE OFFICES TO SERVE YOU agencies that assess it less than 25 per cent. As an example the International Telecommunication Union assesses it 11.6 per cent. The United Nations and the 10 agencies collect some or ail of their assessments in dollars and pay some of their expenses in other kinds of money used where they operate. Devaluation means thev MASONIC NOTICE A Called Communication of Wit- tlamibur Ledje No. A.r.

HEWPOfsT NEWS 5C5-5573 809 Main St. N.N.,Va. HAMPTON 247-0411 2003 Ktcoufhtan Rd. Hampton, Va. H1CEKW0CD 12347 Warwick Blvd.

N.N., Va. sonie Tempi Monday July 31, t'Tl at 7:10 P.M. Work In the E.A. Deere. Refreshments.

By order of F. W. Johnson M. M. W.

Runion, Secy. I.adv's Ilk Rold- i filled i Ji I bracelet J97 Williamsburg Shopping Center "WAX "MUSEUM THt 5TOIIV OF COLONIAL AMEUICA YMChartr have to pay more dollars for No. ne, o.e will hM in he cjher kinds nf monpv -Sirh M.iome Temple, YorKtown "er 1UIKJS 01 m0Y- Thursday, Auust wt at i p.m. Devaluation and inflation are ftMular business. tr rr ot in.

wormy Mjtren, iMrMy probably costing the 11 orga- T. leese. Thomas, Scr.lery n'ZationS $20 million in 1972. Virg OPEN 111 If! MORTGAGE lIllLl AND LOAN ROUTE 60 WEST 3 MILES FROM HISTORIC AREA 7 DAYS A WEEK SHOWS AT 6:33 1 9 P.M. ASSOCIATION.

INC..

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