PAGE TWENTY-EIGHT - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Manchester, Conn., Thurs.. Nov. 11.1976 X-ray examination warnings The weather Inside today Variable cloudiness today, high being rewritten by institute around 40. Fair tonight, low 20-25. Area news ... 14-15 Family . ........ 6 The Bible Study Group of North Saturday fair, high near 40. National United Methodist Church will meet Business..........5 B S. World...........16 WASHINGTON (UPI) - sors around the country, excessive radiation so that weather forecast mt(p on Page 2. Comics........... 17 Obituaries..........18 tonight at 7:30 at the church. EIGHTEEN p a g e s **The Bright One” The government is where mammographies the absorbed tissue dose is Editorial ...........4 Sports...........10-12 rewriting the warning in- are offered, not to ad­ more than one rad per PLUS HERALD EXCHANGE Manchester Composite Squadron PRICE* FIFTEEN CENTS struttions to women who minister them to women exam, a danger even to MANCHES1BR, CONN,, FRIDAy, NOVEMBER 12, 1976- VOL. XCVI, No. 37 of the Civil Air Patrol will meet NEW Plus The Herald Clarified Exchange use X-ray examinations to under 50 unless special cir­ women over sio.” tonight from 7 to 9:30 at Manchester determine if they have cumstances — such as a Not involved in the State Armony. Membership is open breast cancer. previous history of cancer request are thousands of & to all young people from Grade 7 The National Cancer — exist. private-practice through high school. More informa­ Institute said it is revising Dr. Theodore Cooper, operations, which also USED tion may be obtained by calling 646- the consent form, which assistant Health, Educa­ offer mammographies. 6344 or 871-0257. some such women must tion and Welfare secretary But, Wolfe said, the sign, to address the same for health, also said he was governrtient should begin ! BICYCLES Waves and wind A setback card game will be played points raised Tuesday by ordering a report on some addressing the problem at Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Cronin hall of Ralph Nader's Health of the allegations made by the federal level. Mayfair Gardens. All Mayfair Research Group — mainly the Nader group that One NCI researcher said residents are invited. that the risks may out­ excessive amounts of the agency is in the midst I *5 Dtposlt holds weigh the benefits for radiation were detected at of revising the form and ■ ■ T S ’ t hamper sea rescue The nominating committee of women under 50. some centers — amounts will address some of the any BIKE TIL North United Methodist Church will Nader's group said there sufficiently high to pose a points Wolfe raised. He I meet tonight at 9 at the church. CHRISTMAS HONOLULU (UPI) - Twenty-foot crewmen clinging to the logs, but a hold and the engine room were should be a specific war­ problem even for women said the situation is waves and winds of 40 knots today spokesman at Coast Guard flooded, the skipper said. ning that women under 50 over 50. > "volatile” and changing The prudential board of Center hampered efforts to rescue surviving Shortly afterward, the radioman should not have such Wolfe said the present daily as new information headquarters in San Francisco said Congregational Church will meet I THE crew members of a Panamanian ship said in his last message that he was examinations, called mam­ “informed consent” sheet comes in. the fliers were unable to determine tonight at 7:30 in the Robbins Room that sank in the Pacific 1,400 miles leaving his post to board a lifeboat. mographies, and should "fails to warn about either I BIKE SHOP whether the crewman clinging to of the church. the increased risks for GREETMG CAROS I 1U Sprue* SI. northwest of Honolulu. logs got to the rafts. The sinking occurred midway point out some of the Ten of the 33-man crew from the potential danger of X-ray women under 50 or the \ 647-1027 Three other freighters headed between Hawaii and the Aleutian Al-Anon family groups will meet FORIIUOGCASIOIIS lost vessel, the 486-foot lumber exposure. existence of mam­ I m MT MH tMB.r toward the site of the disaster were Islands. tonight at 8 at the Pathfinders Club, I Sm Our Laiyu OfSfMay freighter Carnelian-1, were picked up The institute in August mography machines, I TM,aosDtaiiiMU not expected to arrive until later 102 Norman St., with beginners group from the ice cold water as two Other freighters in the area were told the 28 centers it spon­ which are emitting enough today. meeting at 7:30, and Friday at 10 ARTHUR DRUG freighters searched for the survivors The Carnelian 1, three hours before identified as the 555-foot Russian a.m. at the South United Methodist in total darkness and in stormy con­ it was abandoned by the crew Khudozhnik Saryan, the 540-foot Church campus. Alateen for the 12- to ditions. Thursday, radioed that a storm had Norwegian Jalanta, and the 615-foot 20-year-old children of problem The rescued crewmen owed their swept the logs from its decks. One Japanese Shunyo Maru. drinkers will meet tonight at 8 at the lives to the fact that they could cling Pathfinders Club. The family groups to a mass of floating logs that had are open to those affected by formed part of the ship’s cargo. someone with a drinking problem. The freighter Hunter, her own ef­ forts hampered by a shifting cargo of Pollster says The United Pentecostal Church lumber, picked up two men identified will have a Bible study tonight at 7:30 only as Burmese nationals and the at the church, 187 Woodbridge St. Japanese freighter. Wisteria, found the other eight. "The Wisteria is expected to find Populist coalition some more, but she is having problems finding anybody in the gave Carter victory dark,” said a Coast Guard Foot Prints spokesman. "We just don't have any PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - President­ whites and voters in the middle class, idea how many more men are in the elect Jimmy Carter’s pollster and losing upper income votes," he to get grant (Herald photo by Dunn) water.” believes Carter won the election by said. A Navy P3 patrol plane flew over achieving the goal of 19th-century Cadell said the New Deal coalition Foot Prints, a non-profit art center (Herald photo by Bevins) the area a few minutes after the in Manchester, will receive a direct To demonstrate origami populists — a coalition of blacks in essentially held for Carter, although crew abandoned the vessel. It large numbers, blue-collar and lower matching grant from the Connecticut directed two Coast Guard rescue in some cases the margins were income whites, and middle-class down from what they had been in the Contmission on the Arts. Legion Past Commanders lay wreath at Veterans^ Field planes to the scene. The Coast Guard voters. last 20 years. Foot Prints will receive $2,500 to Mariko Shimizu, left, and her sister, Mayumi, of Japan, who are pilots said eight men were seen Past Commanders Association of the Dilworth-Cornell-Quey Post of the American Legion He said Catholics, for instance, help pay its co-directors' salaries and clutching logs and "a few” others Patrick Caddell, the pollster, said living in Manchester for a year, will give an origami demonstra­ in Manchester honored their 23 deceased members at a wreath-laying ecremony Thursday dropped by about 6 per cent, es­ a challenge grant of up to |2,500 to be managed to climbed onto one life T hursday the 1976 electio n tion Saturday during a Holiday Fair from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in at Veterans’ Field in East Cemetery. Placing the wreath in front of the monument are from pecially ill large industrial cities. matched when fund raising activities raft. All were wearing life defhonstrated a dramatic shift in the Fellowship Hall of '^inity Covenant Church, 302 Hackmatack St. left, Charles Wigren and Everett Kennedy. Looking on are, from left, Francis Leary, Earl In other categories, Caddell said: surpass last year’s total of $3,500. preservers. percentage of the nation’s total vote Petersen, Theodore L. Fairbanks, Robert Donahue, Eugene Freeman, and Harold Pohl. — In small town rural areas. TTie grant was approved recently Sale items at the fair, which is being sponsored by the Covenant The Coast Guard dropped six life to the South and away from the Mid­ Henry Wierzbicki, the post’s public relations officer, also attended. Carter got crucial gains, particularly by the Connecticut Commission on Women of the church for its missionary projects, will include rafts and survival packages to the dle Atlantic states. the Arts. baked goods, handmade leather articles, shellcraft, plants, dried Carter, meanwhile, his six-day in the Midwest. His performance in Although no specific fund raising arrangements, attic treasures, jewelry, imports, (Christmas vacation off the Georgia coast ended, these parts of Ohio, Illinois and Penn­ events have been planned yet by Foot sylvania "was the best of any items and packages for children. A coffee shop will be open from planned to meet privately at his Prints, a spokesman from the center home today with campaign director Democrat of post-World War II.” said tlut the advisory board will be 10 to 11:30 a.m., and a meatloaf lunch will be served from noon Hamilton Jordan and transition —In the suburbs. Carter and Ford Today’s "broke about even,” with the edge to sending out letters soon concerning to 2 p.m. in the Harvest Lunchroom. Mrs; Bonnie Fiendel and Democratic governors to meet director Jack Watson Jr.
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