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The Times Argus from Barre, Vermont • 2

Publication:
The Times Argusi
Location:
Barre, Vermont
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE TIMES-AKGUS, BARRE-MONTPELIEB, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1970 Two Montpelier Rehabilitation Programs Described For Womens Organization Canadian Police Powers Lessened Drug Educafion Program Sel ThundaY cial work, has had extensive experience in dealing with drug addicts in the Norwalk, area. He will deal with the ef feet of drugs on mental health. Philip A. Angel Orange County states attorney, will present both the viewpoint of law enforcement and the legal aspect of dealing with the person addicted to, or affected by, drug abuse. An ex-addict will serve on the panel and will discuss his attitude toward drugs as one who has lived in the world of drug addiction.

Questions from the audience will be welcome during the open discussion. It is hoped that through the interest and concern created by this program, a Drug Help Center may be formed. NEWBURY The Newbury Womans Club will hold a drug education program in the Congregational Church vestry Thursday, Nov. 5, at 8 p.m. Four panel members will each speak on his aspect of the drug problem and an open discussion will follow.

The program is open to students and adults of the general area. The panel will include Dr. D. Hugh MacNamee, director of the psychiatric unit of Mary Hitchcock Hospital in Hanover, N. H.

His unit handles drug cases at the hospital and he will speak from his experiences on drugs and the relation of drugs to physical health. John Morrison, director of Orange County Mental Health, whose training has been in so generally do not cooperate this area (rehabilitation), lie said. He said the Northway Center has opened a gift shop which operates from 1-5 p.m. The only reason we have this workshop is to get the community to know what we do, he said. The center provides diagnostic services and training for 40 who live there.

Additionally last bight, Richard Powell of the Governor's Committee on Children and Youth, discussed communication between parents and children, drugs and alienation. Drug abuse is only a symptom. of the impersonalization of society. The hard line approach is not a good approach because it leaves no room for understanding, he said. His presentation drew the most comments and questions from AAUW members.

The. year 1956 saw the' opening of the first halfway house iti tire United States. It opened in Montpelier and is still operating. The three-quarter-way house is a less formal concept for individuals who have become self-supporting. AAUW members were told last night that community acceptance of individuals working in the programs, and of the programs themselves, would be a big step to help an individual find a spot in society.

Safstrom said attitudes in Montpelier could be more positive. I can tell you how negative Montpelier is. We wrote to every service organization in the city. to speak and describe our program. yours was the only one which answered.

Service organizations Obituaries Lewis F. Manly Lewis F. Manly, 67, of Medford, and who maintained a summer residency at Kents Corner in Calais, died Nov. 2 in the Champlain Valley Hospital in Plattsburgh, X. H.

He was born in Erie, on April 23, 1903, the son of William and Harriet (Miller) Manly. He was educated in the Erie, Pa. schools and graduated from Erie High School. He graduated from Wooster College, Wooster, Ohio, in 1925. He married Susie Sanford in Boston in 1929.

Mr. Manly was a professor of economics and head varsity football coach at Tufts University in Medford, Mass. He was a member of the Unitarian Church in Medford, and attended the Old West Ohurch in Calais. Surviving are his widow: two sons, John of Plattsburgh, N. and William of Brookline.

two sisters, Mrs, Helen Eddy and Mrs. Harriet Will; both of Philadelphia. a brother, Harvey, of Erie, Pa. Cremation will be in the Mount, Pleasant Crematory in St. Johns-' bury.

Committal sendee will be held on Saturday at 2 p.m. in the Robinson Cemetery in Calais. Barber and Lanier Funeral Home, 139 Main Montpelier, is in charge of the arrangements. immediate access ter a lawyer and says that a person cannot be charged as a member of the outlawed Quebec Liberation Front unless he has attended several meetings. Under the War Measures Act, attendance at one FLQ meeting could result in a five-year prison term.

The FLQ claims responsibility for kidnaping Cross, the British trade commissioner in Montreal, on Oct. 5 and Laporte five days later. Laportes body was found on Oct. 17 and police discovered a note from Cross 12 hours later, but the Briton has not been heard from since. Police say they assume he still is alive.

Police have arrested 423 persons in Quebec Province and still hold 18, but they are still searching for two men charged with both kidnapings and three others charged with conspiracy. Quebec Justice Minister Jerome Choquette said the province and Canada are offering $75,000 for the kidnapers or murderers of Laporte and another $75,000 for information about Cross abductors. Choquette said informers would be protected. He also announced that an old government offer still stands to provide safe conduct to Cuba in exchange for Cross life. OTTAWA (API The Canadian government was moving today toward less sweeping police powers despite lack of success in the search for kidnaped British diplomat James R.

Cross. Rewards of $150,000 were offered for his abductors and the terrorists who kidnaped and killed Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte. Justice Minister John Turner introduced in Parliament on Monday a bill to replace the War Measures Act, which suspends most civil rights and gives police extensive search and detention powers. Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau invoked the act on Oct. 16 with general parliamentary support, but the opposition Conservative party has stepped up criticism recently.

The replacement act, which would expire on April 30, is a very substantial improve ment over the. War Measures Act, said Conservative leader Robert Stanfield. The proposed legislation would cut from three weeks to three days the maximum time a suspect could be held without charge unless the provincial attorney general extended the limit to one week. It also provides that an arrested person may have Julie Morse Sentenced To Five Years In Prison AAUW Awards 129 Fellowships To Women Around The Globe Reconnaissance Unit Deactivated cal storm in the past two weeks. Rivers and streams in South Vietnam's five northernmost provinces have just returned to normal after the worst floods in six years.

The unofficial death toll today rose to 211, including 193 Vietnamese, seven American servicemen and 11 South Koreans. Religion, Sex Preferred In Man's Daily Thoughts SAIGON (AP) The U.S. Air Forces 45th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron is being disbanded and its 20 RF101 Voodoo jets will be reassigned to Air National Guard units in the United States, the U.S. Command announced today. It is the first reconnaissance squadron to be deactivated in Vietnam.

The command refused to say fo which guard units the planes would go. Informed sources said the information was withheld so congressmen from the states affected could make the announcements and get the publicity. Deactivation of the squadron will reduce U.S. strength in Vietnam by 600 airmen and will leave five squadrons of the 43th Tactical Reconnaissance Wing, the parent unit, at Saigons Tan Son Nhut air base. American reconnaissance flights are continuing over North Vietnam despite the halt in the bombing there two years ago.

Continuing the 40,000 man troop cutback President Nixon has ordered by the end of the year, the U.S. Command also reported that another infantry battalion from the 25th Division Several Montpelier programs concerning human rehabilitation were described iby members of the American Association of University Women last night. They also discussed parent-child cammunicatians with a representative of the Governors Committee on Children and Youth. Just a few years ago, disabling emotional problems and physical handicaps were things that weren't discussed comfortably. Today, the situation is im--proving with a public awareness of the fact that problems can arise in any household rich and prominent, or poor and obscure.

Slowly, emotional and physical problems are being pulled out from under the table and out of the closet and individuals are meeting greater community acceptance. The AAUW focused group attention on rehabilitation in the community last night. The operation of the Northway Rehabilitation Center, and a series of mental health facilities in the capital, were explained by Alfred Safstrom, Northway, director, and Mrs. Wallace Short, who discussed half-way and three-quarter- way rehabilitation houses. The Northway Center is a private agency working to assist persons adjust to a handicap, if present, and increase their level of working potential until they are able to fit into society to the best of their ability.

The halfway house, and its successor, the three-quarter-way house, are relatively recent developments in the field of mental health. The post World War II introduction of anti-depressants and other psycho therapeutic drugs, allowed previously long-term mental patients in hospitals to be reached far more rapidly than before. This led to a larger turnover in hospitalized patients, and an increase in the number of patients able to live outside the facility -while receiving counseling and therapy as out patients. The halfway house provides a supportive atmosphere for the individual attempting to re-enter society. Patients admitted to the Cen-al Vermcnt Hospital, Berlin, ince Monday morning include airy Berry.

West ievin Woodhull, East Hill, larre; Mrs. Violet Gosselin, 1 Maple Barre; Mrs. Ali-on Wells, RD 3, tobert Henning, RD, Montpe-ler; Mrs. Dorothy Menard, Wil-amstown; Artie Ihelsea; Mrs. Bessie Mears, 9 Seckley Barre; Mrs.

Bar-ara Sancibrian, RD, Barre; 1 a Hayes, 10 Cross Montpelier; Thomas Smith, t. Johnsbury; Miss Ann Marin, Gallison Hill. Irs. Bessie Coughlin, RD 2, Sarre; Edward Thompson, larshfield: Mrs. Mary 72 E.

State Montpelier nd Harry Coan, South Wood-iury. Discharged were Mrs. Edwin and infant daughter, larshfield; Mrs. Marion Shep-rd, Warren; Mrs. Maud Clark, larton; Otis Chadwick, Ran-lolph Center; Mrs.

Leona Flo ucei, Trow Hill, Barre and tobert Ben way, Upper Granite- 1N MEMORIAM In loving memory of ROGER R. WARD Who passed away Nov. 3, 19.) Sad and sudden was the call Of one so dearly loved bv all. The blow was hard, the shock severe; Little we thought that death was near. The flowers we place upon hi grave May wither and decaj But the love for him who is gone today Will never fade away.

Lovingly remembered by His Wife and Children. Barre Business Briefs Smorgasbord, i salist Fair, Thursday, Nov. 12, 5 to 7. Phone Mrs. Winston Parks for reservations, 476-6462.

adv. Boutique at its best, Crafts booth. All hand made articles. Universalist Fair, Thursday, Nov. 12.

Doors open at 9:00. adv. National Council of Senior Citizens regular monthly meeting, Wednesday, Nov. 4th at the Senior Citizens Center. Note change of date.

Adv. Old Chars to Mend will feature antiques at Mother Hubbard's Cupboard tomorrow at the Barre Congregational Church. Indian Rivr Grapefruit will be on sale at the To Market, To Market booth, adv. any 10-minute period; middle-has been pulled out of the com- aged people at least every 35 bat zone as part of the redeploy- minutes: and people over 65 Mrs. Julie Adams Morse, 18, of Bethel, was sentenced on Monday to a maximum of five years the State Prise in Windsor in connection with the exposure death of an 18-month-old child last year.

Appearing in a navy blue dress, the young Bethel woman stood with her attorney, Peter Langrock, of Middlebury, w'hile Superior Court Judge William C. Hill quickly passed sentence. Mrs. Morse had maintained, until Sept. 21, an innocent plea to a charge of an accessory to a felony in connection with the death of 18-month-old Anthony Martin.

She pleaded guilty to the charge and a pre-sentence investigation was ordered in September by Judge Hill. Following several recommendations by Washington County States Attorney Kimberly Cheney, and a brief recess, the court handed down the sentence. He made the survey on his own just because its interesting to know what people think about. Miamis Sewage On Move MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Those bottle-borne messages from the Rose Bowl are starting to reach the vacation beaches of Broward and Palm Beach counties.

Rose Bowl is the sarcastic name for the big brown patch of sewage which rises two miles out in the Atlantic from the underwater conduit which carries away the raw wastes of Miami Beach. Members of the Eco-Comman-do Force 70, a private ecological group that operates anonymously, joined Gov. Claude Kirk and the Miami News in dumping 700 bottles into the Atlantic near the sewage outlet Oct. 22. Each bottle carried a postcard addressed to the governor or the News.

Kirk said his office participated to show "that at least some of the sewage has got to reach the beach. George Gardner, Kirks administrative assistant, said, The most significant thing about this is it points to the fact that sewage doesnt stay in one place. For the past II days, bottles have floated ashore at Pompano Beach, Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, Hollywood, Port Everglades and Dania, 25 to 40 miles north of the "Rose Bowl. The News has received 62 cards and Kirks office received 47. The Eco-Commando Force, which has proclaimed an unconventional war on pollution, said the bottle experiment was planned to see where the sewage goes after it is dumped.

It appears that some bottles and presumably traces of sewage will make long journeys before they return to shore. A Coast Guard boat spot ted one flotilla of 50 bottles heading northward in the Gulf Stream off Fort Lauderdale. Last summer Kirk signed into law a bill that gives Miami Beach until 1974 to start treating its sewage before emptying it into the ocean. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT Judge Hill said Airs. Morse would receive credit for the time she had been incarcerated since Dec.

16, 1969. She had been remanded to the Regional Correctional Facility in Woodstock in lieu of $15,000 bail for the past 10 months. Mrs. Morse, her husband, Everett L. Morse 24, and her brother-in-law, James M.

Morse, 18, of Bethel, were originally charged jvith first degree murder stemming from the shooting deaths of Everett L. Morse 45. and Airs. Joyce Martin, 22, of Randolph, and the exposure dratli of her son. The two Alorse brothers were indicted on three counts of first degree murder by a Washington County Grand Jury on April 8.

Airs. Morse was indicted on the reduced charge. On July 28, the Alorse brothers were sentenced to life imprisonment in the State Prison in Windsor after being convicted of the second degree murder of their father. Both brothers changed their original pleas to guilty when two counts of the original indictment were dropped and a third count was reduced to seccnd degree murder earlier. in the summer.

On Dec. 14, last year, the bodies of the three victims were discovered in a small cabin located along Route 2 in East Cabot. The authorities believe the deaths occurred on Dec. 2. President Early Bird At The Polls SAN CLEMENTE, Calif.

(AP) President planned to be one of the first Californians at the polls today. Nixon promised to show up with wife Pat and daughter Tri-cia at his precinct polling place, Concordia Elementary School, at 7 a.m. the hour voting begins in this state. On Monday afternoon, Nixon and Tricia flew by helicopter to Riverside to visit the Presidents 90-year-old aunt, Edith Timberlake, in a nursing home. Riverside is the home territory of Democratic Rep.

John V. Tunney, challenging for the U.S. Senate seat of Republican George Alurphy. The Western White House phoned advance word of Nixon's visit to the local GOP congressional candidate, Victor Veysey, who alerted news media and turned out several hundred placard-carrying partisans to give Nixon an airport welcome. Nixon predicted a Veysey victory over Democrat Dave Tun-no, an aide to Tunney who is seeking his boss House seat.

And chatting with Veysey, who was heading for a political rally, the President instructed him, say a word fer Alurphy, too. The Nixons, who moved their voting residence to San Clemente from New York City last year, have never voted here. In they past they cast absentee ballots. Daughter Julie Nixon Eisenhower is in Washington and cast an absentee vote this year. WSTZfiEOVNQl Loti ud Fond tis take util i.a.

Monliy thrm Friday aad Satmr day mntil I a.m. sane day of ptlU-eatioa. Kepilar classified rates spply kit "skip day" sad foiad ads anti be accepted- Ta place year ad Dial tfMdll WILLIAMSTOWN POUND email lifht brown made do. 2 month odd. 433-532B.

19613 POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT $5.5 million. This year, the Educational Foundation also received a $25,000 gift from the Max C. Fleischmann Foundation to help finance the awards for medical students. Two More Die On State Roads BR ATTLEBORO (AP An early morning accident in Brattleboro that claimed the life of an off-duty policeman and a Halloween crash that took the life of a New Hampshire man boosted the states highway traffic toll to 105 today. State police identified the victims as C.

Peter Groeger, 24. cf Brattleboro, and Edward A. Miller, 21, of Claremont, N.H. Groeger was killed shortly before 4 when his car went out of control on U.S. 5 south of Brattleboro, struck a telephone pole and rolled over, pinning the victim underneath.

Troopers said Groeger was an off-duty Brattleboro police officer. A passenger in the car, Miss Deborah Garfield, 20, of Brattleboro, suffered a hip injury and was listed in fair condition at a local hospital. Miller was injured early Saturday when the car in which he was a passenger went off Vermont 131 in Weathersfield and plunged over an embankment. He died this morning at Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital in Hanover, N.H., where the driver of the car, Donald G. Lyn.

23, also of Claremont, was listed in satisfactory condition. Cabot Senior Citizens Clinic Friday CABOT The Senior Citizens of Marshfield will sponsor a clinic for diabetes and glaucoma tests on Friday, Nov. 6. The place will be at the Marshfield Library from 2 to 4 p. m.

All Cabot residents are invited to fill your car and come. according to Mrs. Helen Pitkin, chairman for the event. Those eligible for the diabetes test are all persons 35 or older, or younger adults who are relatives of known diabetics, or are excessively overweight. Anyone wishing to take the test is urged to eat a hearty meal before the test, and taking the test as close ta two hours after the meal as possible.

The test is performed by personnel from the chronic illness division of the state Department of Health, and consists of a simple finger prick and a drop of blood taken from the finger. The glaucoma test is also simple, and both are free. Peacham Mrs. Francis Moore attended Northeast Kingdom Mental Health Board of Directors dinner meeting in Orleans Oct. 26.

She drove to North Danville and then accompanied Mrs. Perce J. Bentley. Mrs. Francis Moore and Mrs.

George Tuzo met at Mrs. Everett Whites Oct. 26 to discuss plans for the organization of an emergency help service in Peacham, known as FISH in other towns. The Church Wcm- Rites For Mrs. Ferry Funeral services for Mrs.

Lillies E. Perry of South Barre, who died early Monday at the Central Vermont Hospital, Berlin, will be held Wednesday at 3 p. m. at the Hooker Funeral Home, 7 Academy Barre. The Rev.

Adolph Unger, interim pastor of the First Baptist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in Hope Cemetery. There are no calling hours. Rites For Mrs. Roddy FAIRFIELD Funeral services for Mrs.

Mary (Mae) B. Roddy were held from St. Patrick's Church Friday morning at 10 :30 with a concelehrated mass. The concelebrants were the Rev. Raymond Walsh, St.

Patricks church and the Rev. Philip J. Branon from the University of Vermont Catholic Center, Burlington. Bearers were Joseph Ladue, Robert Branon, Douglas Webb, Robert King, John Collins, and Horace Riley. Interment was in the family lot in St.

Patricks Cemetery with Father Walsh reading the committal prayers, assisted by Father Branon. There was a delegation present from the Catholic Daughters of America, Court of St. Marys of St. Albans. Many relatives and friends attended.

Rites For Mr. Bullock MILTON Funeral services for Fred T. Bullock were held from the United Church Thursday afternoon at 2 with the Rev. E. H.

Nickerson officiating. Mrs. Estelle Gain was organist. Bearers were Roy Gonyeau, Harold Littlefield Robert Richards. Kenneth Costello and Eugene Towne, Interment was in the family lot in Milton Village cemetery with the Rev.

Nickerson reading the committal prayers. Vermont State Highway Department employes of District No. 5 attended in a body, as did the November Class of Fanny Allen Students of Nursing. Many relatives and friends attended. CAPITAL NEWS NOTES The Capital City Grange will hold a meeting Thursday night, Nov.

5 at 8 p. m. in the Grange Hall. Plans for the MHS awards banquet will be discussed by the Montpelier Boosters Club at its November meeting Wednesday night at 7:30 in the High School cafeteria. Seven tables were in play at the Apollo Bridge Club game held at die Green Mountain Power Corporation auditorium last Friday.

North-South winners were Airs. Charles Rynear-son of Northtield and Wayne Hersey of Montpelier, first; Mr. and Mrs. Oswald Kramer of Burlington, second; Manual Paz and Quincy Perry of Barre, third. East-West winners were Mrs.

Austin Hobson and Mrs. Abner Coleman of Montpelier, first; Austin Hobson of Montpelier and Louis Polli of Granite-ville, second; Edsel Hughes of Montpelier and C. B. Rynearson of Northfield, third. ens Fellowship is being asked to sponsor the program.

If, and when the plan is accepted, it will need "the cooperation of all townspeople. Mrs. Harry Jamieson, also on the committee, was unable to attend. In a move to broaden support for American women in professional fields, the Educational Foundation of the American Association of University Women has awarded for the first time fellowships to 10 young women medical students and to five women law students. They are among the 129 women from die United States and 28 countries around the globe who will receive over $395,300 in stipends for advanced study and research here and abroad during 1970-71.

This sum is the largest to be expened in a single year by tlie association in its 82 years of fellowship awards to women scholars. While the majority of the individual fellowships are in the $3,000 to $4,000 range, there are six American awards of $4,500 to $5,000 and two international fellowships of $5,000 each. In world competition, US women researchers received die $5,000 international fellowships for postdoctoral research in the natural sciences. They are Dr. Juno-Ann Clarke of Cal-ilomia, assistant professor of home economics at San Francisco Stale College, and Dr.

Carole Gatz of Oregon, associate professor of chemistry at Portland State University. Among the four young women scholars receiving the $5,000 American fellowships- is Dr. Alice (Mrs. Dane) Morgan of Brookline, Mass. Dr.

Morgan received a Founders Fellowship and will do a postdoctoral investigation of the gradual development of English literary Renaissance. Other fellowship winners in the North Atlantic Region, of which Vermont is a member, are Rose Rosengard of Annette Niemtzow, Cambridge, Jeanne K. Hambright, Medford; and Marie C. Caskey, New Haven, Conn. Fifty-one of the 78 US fellowship recipients will be doing research for dissertation leading to the doctorate.

The role of women in a variety of settings is being examined by a number of AAUW scholars in addition to European and Middle East problems. Among the 51 recipients from 28 countries, five are medical doctors or dentists. Research and study fields are as varied as those of the American recipients, ranging from pediatric metabolism to modem Chinese history. Of the 129 women, 57 are married. Twenty of them are mothers with children ranging in ages from Ha years to 21.

As in the past, competition for these AAUW fellowships was keen. Dr. Agnes M. Allen of Flagstaff, chairman of the AAUW Fellowships Pro gram Committee, reported that 357 women applied for the 55 international fellowships end 509 for the 74 American fellowships. Funds for the fellowships are contributed yearly by AAUW members and friends throughout the United States and are supplemented by income from die Fellowships Endowment of Capital Business Briefs Save Friday, Nov.

13 for the Our Place bazaar. Trinity Methodist Church. Adv. Shopping Bag Bazaar, Baptist Church, Nov. 5, 1970.

Stenciled work, decoupage, Christmas decorations, canned goods and home-baked food and candy. Adv. 802-985-3315 By Appointment LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) A psychologist says most people think about religion twice as many times a day as they think about sex. Dr.

Paul Cameron of the University of Louisville based his conclusion on a survey of 3.416 persons in five cities Louis-ille, Evansville, Detroit, Los Angeles and Santa Monica, Calif. He asked what each was thinking about in the previous five minutes and reported these findings Young adults, those 18 to 25, think about sex at least once in once an hour. Young adults think about religion once every 25 minutes; middle-aged groups about once every 15 minutes; apd people over 65 once every 10 minutes. Cameron said the study failed lo substantiate a popular notion that young people nowadays are thinking more about world and social problems than their parents are or ever did. He added he had no way of determining whether adults meditated about social problems as often when they were young as their children do now.

Cameron also discovered that the middle-aged appear to think about their pets as often as they think about sex, a state of mind which indicates a phony, strange, inhuman and time-consuming relationship with household animals. He said housewives apparently spend 30 per cent of their time thinking about housework while working women devote 10 per cent of their office time to the same subject. Perhaps this explains why women are so much duller than men, he added. Biramns At Central Vermont Hospital, Berlin, a sen was bom Monday to Robert and Helen (Slanetz) Oatley, Marshfield and daughters to Mark and Virginia (Moulton) Durkee, Chelsea? Harold and Betty (Phillips) Duff, Williamstown; Lawrence and Nancy (Abar) Edson, 131 Barre Montpelier and Gaston and Clemence (Roy) Trepa-nier, Berlin. BARRE NEWS NOTES Mrs.

Randolph Whaples of Storrs, will entertain the National Council of Senior Citizens, of Barre, meeting Wednesday evening, Nov, 4. Card of Thanks We wish to express our deep appreciation to all our friends, relatives and neighbors for the acts of kindness shown us during the Tecent illness and death of our husband, father and brother. Also special thanks to Dr. Dale, Dr. John and Dr.

Charles Perry, 'plus the nurses in the Coronary Cars Unit at the Central Vermont Hospital for the extremely wonderful care given our loved one. Mrs. Emanuele Pilini Miss Femande Pilini Mr. Gotardo Pilini ment of two brigades of the division. Informed sources said an Army helicopter squadron of 31 UH1 Hueys and the Soc Trang air base in the Mekong Delta will he turned over to the South Vietnamese air force at ceremonies Wednesday.

Soc Trang is the first American air base being turned over to the Vietnamese in its entirety. In Washington, the Defense Department rushed out Monday night, the eve of U.S. congressional elections, a report that about 30 Americans were killed in combat last week, the lowest weekly death toll in five years. Normally the weekly casualties are not announced until Thursday. Battlefield action across Indochina was again reported light and scattered.

North Vietnamese troops opened fire on a unit of the U.S. 25th Infantry Divisions 2nd Bri- gade 36 miles northeast of Sai- gon, killing one American and wounding two in the 10-minute attack. The U.S. Command also reported that an Army UH1 helicopter crashed Monday from unknown causes in the Mekong Delta 22 miles southwest of Saigon, killing four Americans. South Vietnamese headquarters announced completion of a two-day operation just inside Cambodia 100 miles west of Saigon.

Headquarters claimed 43 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong killed and said four South Vietnamese w'ere wounded. Heavy artillery fire was heard in Phnom Penh as Cambodian guns opened up on North Vietnamese and Viet Cong attacking a patrol 10 miles northeast of the capital. There was no word of the result. Military weather forecasters warned of a new storm heading toward South Vietnams coastline, which has been battered by two typhoons and a lesser tropi- MUTUO SOCCORSO SPUNTINO POLENTA and TAME RABBIT SUNDAY, Nov. 8 At 1:00 P.M.

Members and Legal Geests Price $2.50 Call 479-0021 For Reservation Dr. Nanci-Ames Curtis announces the opening of her office for the practice of Adult and Family Psychiatry on November 1, 1970 in Shelburne, Vermont Vote Today Until 6:00 P.M. For Rides lo Polls In Barre City CALL 479-2489 Baby Sitting Service Provided Barre City Republican Committee Urged Every Person To VOTE FOR YOUR CANDIDATE American Legion Post 10 Past Commanders Banquet AT CLUBROOMS Saturday Nov. 7, 1970 6:30 P.M. Roast Beef Dinner $3.25 Per Person Dancing To Follow Tickets On Sale At Post Or From Members P.

0. Box 372 Shelburne Shopping Flara.

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