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Kenosha News from Kenosha, Wisconsin • 5

Publication:
Kenosha Newsi
Location:
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

KENOSHA NEWS Monday, June 26, 1972 5 DEAR ABBY Time off for husband means work for wife DEAR ABBY: Do you know how this new idea of working a four-day week is going over? Several men where my husband is employed recently went on that four-day workweek and now my husband is considering going on it. I suppose there are some advantages, but I'm not so sure how I would like that setup. It would mean having my husband around the house an extra day, and in the past some of those long holiday weekends have seemed awfully long to me. I would like to discourage it in a subtle way, of course, 1 but I don't want him to get the wrong idea. Anything you can tell me about it will be appreciated.

N.Y. POST READER DEAR READER: If your husband gets the wrong idea, you're in the clear. It's the right idea you don't want him to get. Malcolm S. Forbes (Editor-in-Chief of Forbes magazine) says the men love the four-day workweek, but their wives aren't so crazy about having their husbands home that much.

Malcom must be reading your mind, Lady. DEAR ABBY: Parents are warned repeatedly to keep cleaning fluids, drugs and poisons locked away where children cannot reach them. But nowhere have I seen a similar warning concerning iron tablets, which can be fatal if taken in large quantities. Recently a beautiful 19-month-old child crawled up on to a chair and took a bottle of iron tablets out of the cupboard. Thinking they were candies, he screwed off the cap and before he could be stopped, swallowed some 50 tablets.

He was rushed to the hospital but died 45 minutes later. From iron tablets, Abby? But that child is just as dead as if he had swallowed rat poison. Please, please, warn others. STILL GRIEVING IN HILLSBOROUGH DEAR STILL GRIEVING: If your letter saves on child, it's well worth printing. Thank you for warning others.

DEAR ABBY: I just boiled when I read the letter from the mother who said, "A man should realize that he doesn't have to stop being a good son in order to be a good husband." I wonder how many married sons are good to their mothers only because their wives insist upon it? I've been married for 18 years, and my mother-in-law lives only a few blocks up the street, and I have to beg my husband to drop in and visit her. And he would never call her up and ask her how she is or if she needs anything if I didn't dial the number for him. When it snows, I'm the one who makes him go to I his mother's and shovel her sidewalk. And I'm the one who sends him to take off her storm windows and put on the screens even before he does our own. and I'm the one who always suggests we invite his mother to go out to dinner with us, or for a movie, or a ride.

If it were up to my husband, he'd see her Christmas and Mother's Day. I suppose all mothers want to think their sons are perfect. Well, I have news for them. In many cases, the daughter-inlaw deserves the credit. If you print this, no name or town, please.

My mother-in-law thinks her son is perfect, and I woudn't want to disillusion her. ONLY A DAUGHTER-IN-LAW DEAR ABBY: A woman wrote in saying she didn't want to have anything to do with her husband at night because he came to bed smelling like a brewery. You sure didn't give her much help. You should have told that woman to put a glass of mouthwash by the side of his bed, and also a spitoon. The reason this world is so messed up is because we can't meet each other half way.

CONCERNED Problems? Trust Abby. For a personal reply, write to ABBY BOX 69700, L.A., CALIF. 90069 and enclose a stamped, addressed envelope. For Abby's booklet, "How to Have a Lovely Wedding," send $1 to Abby, Box 69700, Los Angeles, Cal. 90069.

Bobby Fischer misses expected arrival date LOS ANGELES (UPI)-When Bobby Fischer didn't show up in Reykjavich, Iceland as expected Sunday there was concern he had changed his mind about meeting Russian Boris Spassky in the world chess championship there July 2. But. Fischer, in seclusion here, has every intention of playing Spassky, a chess source said today. Like his game, however, the exact time the HE KNOWS a bottleneck when he's in one. Whitey the pup and a pair of Los Angeles twins, Doug and Tom Smith, get together with a superjar to make an environmental point-a milestone in the recycling program of the glass Hearing ends for Armstrong TORONTO (UPI)-The issue of what constitutes a political crime received close attention in the latest session of the extradition hearing for Karleton Lewis Armstrong, wanted in the United States for murder and arson in the 1970 bombing of the University of Wisconsin's Army Mathematics Research Center (AMRC).

County Court Judge Harry Waisberg said Saturday he would render judgment in the case Friday. Wisconsin has charged Armstrong, 25, with first-degree murder and arson in the bombing which took the life of 33-year-old researcher Robert Fassnacht, a father of three. The AMRC is on the university's Madison campus. Clayton Ruby, Armstrong's lawyer, said there was "not a hint" in the state's case "that it (the crime) isn't political." Attorney Austin Cooper, acting for Wisconsin, said the killing of Fasshacht was not a political crime because it did not result in the "furtherance" of political container industry. The jar symbolizes the billionth glass container reclaimed for conversion into new bottles or secondary products such as street paving and building materials.

Staughton Lynd, and Tom Hayden have testified that the bombing was political. Cooper said all three had "vested interests" in seeing Armstrong not extradited and that their evidence was West Point teaching officers' resignation rate has risen WEST POINT, N.Y. (UPI)The resignation rate of officers assigned to teaching and administrative positions at the U.S. Military Academy a number of them among the most gifted in the Army--has risen by approximately 50 per cent since the period when the Vietnam War was at its height. "It's something to be concerned about," a West Point spokesman said.

"They are the brightest young officers of the Army." Over the past 18 months, the Academy confirmed Sunday, a total of 33 officers at West Po.nt have resigned their commissions. Of the 22 who left the service last year, 15 were faculty members. There was no breakdown concerning the 11 Academy officers who quit the Army in the first half of 1972. There are presently 880 officers at the Academy. Among the West Point officers who chose to leave this year were: -Major Edwin A.

Deagle, West Point class of 1960, has a Deagle said he felt the Army doctorate in government and had not properly prepared its economics from Harvard and officers for war and that the won two Silver Stars in response by the officer corps to Vietnam. the atrocity left him unhappy. Novelist Quits During war, he said, "pieces of your moral ethics are -Major Josiah Bunting 3rd, a eroded. We had not been Rhodes Scholar, the top-ranking sensitive enough to that erosion graduate of the Virginia Milita- process. We tended to think ry Academy class of 1963 and lieutenants and non-commisthe author of "The Lionheads," sioned officers under very great a novel about Army life in stress will maintain a sense of Vietnam.

judgment. We misread those -Capt. Paul Bucha, a winner kinds of pressures. of the Medal of Honor in Deagle said he was "unhappy Vietnam, holder of a master's with the Army's response" to degree in business economics My Lai. The officer corps from Stanford University and a shrugged off the massacre he former fellow ow at the Council of said, as something "strange Foreign Relations.

and unusual." us indicating "a American involvement in the profound crisis of a kind of war reached a peak in 1968-1969 professional ethics." period, shortly after the Tet The West Point spokesman offensive by the Communists. said he felt that some of the Deagle, 34, who taught social other resignations stemmed science at West Point, said the basically from the feeling that My Lai massacre "kind of promotion opportunities were kicked me off" to thinking more limited now. He discountabout a resignation. ed intense opposition to the war In an interview from his or to Army life generally as "emotional." who finished fifth in the Falls Church, home, prime motives. GRAND OPENING SO-FRO BRICS NEWLY ENLARGED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE PERSHING PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER PERSHING BLVD.

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Rites for ex-mayor PASADENA, Calif. -A funeral service will be held Tuesday for former Pasadena mayor and restaurant owner Floyd 0. Gwinn, 74, who died ends. He said Armstrong was not a revolutionary, but simply someone who had escaped prosecution on a charge of murder. He directed his arguments at the defense contention that the crime had a "political character" and so was non-extraditable under the terms of the Canadian Extradition Act.

Ruby cited Circumstances of the bombing to show that it was political. These included Armstrong's alleged statements to one witness, a communique issued after the bombing, a telephone warning just before it, posters that went up around Madison within hours of the blast, and the testimony of witnesses who flatly said the crime was political. He predicted that if Armstrong is extradited, American authorities would "repudiate the fact that a Canadian Court found the crime not political and would try him as a revolutionary. Such well-known anti-war advocates as Noam Chomsky, 0 Hi OF CLEAN-UP SALE 6 et Bring your clothes to WARD CLEANERS and save! Coupon Good on Incoming Garments Only -COUPON COUPON DRESSES (Plain) (Plain) SWEATERS 2 for Men's or Ladies' $150 SKIRTS SUITS PANTS (Plain) Each SHIRTS SPORT $150 COATS (Plain) $1.75 each and Up Reg. 90c each Reg.

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