3,000 Marines Sail Home, Biggest Pullout Since Korea

3,000 Marines Sail Home, Biggest Pullout Since Korea

/ ■ t ■ ' ■ PAGE TWENTY-FOUR \- ilaturl;pBtrr MONDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1969 Meet Town Director Candidates Tonight at 8 O’Clock at Nathan Hale School financial aspects of attending The music cohfimltteeoinr of Manchester Assembly, Order will be held tomorrow from 2 :15 college or school;' sources of Center Congregational Church was formeriy at 86 E, .Center About Town Trinity Covenant Church will of Rainbow for Girls, will con­ to 4 p.m. at Wesley Hall of the aid, both scholarships and meet tomorrow at.8 p.m. at the will meet tomorrow at 6:48 p.m. 8L Avwage Daily Net Press Run duct an initiation after a busi­ church. in Memorial Hall o f the The last of four seminars loEms; procedures for applying home of Mrs. Ronald Gocht, 486 ness meeting tonight at 7:30 at PiR6 Phamaoy chimch. The Junior Rhythm Choir of Ike WMk ir.iW beiiqr coilducted by the Man­ for aid; and the parent’s confi­ Gardner St. » the Masonic Temide Refresh­ The Weather ^ dential statement. Charlotte G Craig, social work­ North United Methodist Church •64 C E N TE R STBEK T October 4. isss chester High School giddance ments will be served. er in a Children’s Village pro­ Manchester Adult Evening will rehearse tomorrow at. 3:80 department for parents of stu­ Senior High Tfouth Forum of gram, will discuss "Group MANCBE8TEB—M»-W14 Clearing and ccdd tonight with ' dents planning post-high school School will hold classM on ’Tues­ p.m. at the chuy-ch. V ' r ! Iowa In JO*. Tomorrow sunny Mary CSieney Library has pre­ North United Methodist Church Manchester/Auxiliary of Child Homes for Teenagers.’’ ' . ] 'i i I I education will be held tomorrow day, Nov. 4. Coupleto ; ' 15,790 . 1 " and cool. High about 80. Tliura- pared an updated Ust of books will meet tomorrow at 7 p.m. and Family Services of Con­ night from 7 to 9 In Room A7 and other materials on 'Viet­ A Christian Educatkm Work­ Preacripttoa Set’vle* day’s ouUook tatr, mUdw. at the church. The grade 9 necticut will meet tomorrow at The after-school program of o f the high school. L. Donald nam. Copies may be obtained The Manchester Public Health er's Conference will be held ' ' ! H«meheMter-^4 City o f VilUue Chmrm ^ "Conceptore” will also meet at 10 a.m at the agency-sponsored South United Methodist Church rithiK DEUVEBT Brooks, coimselor, will discuss at the circulation desk. Nurses Association is now locat­ tomorrow at 7:30 pm. at Com­ 7 p.m. at the church. group house, 31 Summit St. Mrs. The confirmation class of VOL. LXXXK, NO. 24 (TWENTY-FOUR PAGES—TWO SECTIONS) ed at 71 E. Center St. Its office munity Baptist Church. MANCHESTER, CONN., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1969 (Chiaotfled Adverttalag oa Page SO) PRICE TEN CBNTb D&L's biggest sole of fhe year starts tedoy Wini Sot. at all S sterM ... shop every dept., many unodvertlsed specials! Dr. Mead Backs Pot WASHINGTON (AP) — FAMOUS MAKE Strike Effect SAVE ON COLORFUL HRST TIME EVER IN OUR ANNIVERSARY SALE! Dr. Margaret Mead, sprtgtd- 10 & 16 RIB NYLON TRICOT ly 67-year<ild aathropoio- COUTURIER JEWELRY 3,000 Marines Sail Home, 27" SQUARE SCARVES ROBES AND LOUNGEWEAR BY A FAMOUS MAKER gtet-aUttKM', has let It be LADIES' UMBRELLAS SLIPS & PETTICOATS known in Oongress If she were young today, "I’m Still Unclear sure I would be using mari­ ' / 2 off 1.90 „ juana.’’ '/4 1 /3 o ff regr. $12 to $24 NB3W YORK (AP) — A union reg. $3 to $30 2.99 to 3.99 Negotiations w ei« at a stand­ She made Hat disclosure reg. $4 3.33 coordinating office says that still with the unions holding reg. $4 to $7 after teetifying t>efore a Sen­ more than 90 per cent of Gener­ firm in their rejection of GB’s ate committee that the weed Biggest Pullout Since Korea Just when you want them most, a delightful collection of long and short reg. to $6 al Blectric’s union workers are Choose handsome jewelry at It’s the season of the scarf! offer of a 20 cents per hour is less haraiftfl than alcobol a great saving! Rope pearl, All famous makes you know out in the nationwide strike wage boost GB has declined to and shouM be legally avail­ Choose frt»n assorted prints robes at these important savings. Choose from Estrons, nylon tricots, fleece “Zolnat the country’s No. 4 in­ stone set metal jewelry, crys­ and colorings in these 27” I Save on fashion umbrellas in on sale for this once-a-year submit the dispute to binding able to persons 16 or older. SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) and velours , . pastels and bright shades! Sizes 8 to 18 or Petite, Small, dustrial giant. The company arbitration. tals, rhinestones, many acetate squares that can be I solids or prints . nylons or event. Sizes 32 to 44 for the aaya its plants wOI be open for "B doesn’t lead to the ex­ —More than 8,000 U. S. matching sets. The company said Monday cesses dt behavior that al­ r " Marines have sailed home worn in so many ways. Medium, Large. 1 acetates. All are great values! slips; petite, small, medium, those who want to work. that more than half of its cohol does," she said, "and from Vietnam in twro large for the petticoats. The full effect of the day-old domestic work force of 310,000 it does not have the teodc strike was only beginning to persons was white collar and 1 crowded ships, the l a r ^ t effects of cigarettes.’’ ffoup-ito return at one time emerge today. Neither the com­ working despite picket lines. A student of prtmiUve cul­ pany, the unions representing It also said that "a few more tures, Dr. Mead demonstrat­ since the Korean War. "Thanks, Dick. It's gtxxl to be 147,000 GB workers nor the Pen­ thousand union-represented em­ ed a hip underatandhig of boek"—a aahitie to Prsoklant tagon which is a major OB cus­ ployes continued to work" at generation gap problems tomer had precise figures on sites including Utica, N.Y., arising from parental preoc­ Nixon—read a algn painted on a cril D&L ftorts opM how badly producUon was crip­ where the employes voted to re­ cupations with marijuana. ••a bog hanging from the am- pled. ject the contract offer but not to “You have the adult phlbtous oaaauit ohlp Jwp,Jima walk out. GB has a total of 280 plants in standing wtOi a cocMaU when it moored Monday at the •v«ry night until 9 p.m. » states. Of 117 plants checked Other locals were bound to saying: *I don’t want my naval stotton pier. in a survey, 28 were operating continue work at plants wtaet« dilid to smoke pot.’ ’’ Another group of Marines normally vriiUe 92 showed ef­ there were locally negotiated hung a peace symbol pointed on Monday thru FiMoy. contracts not yet expired and at a sheet over the aide of the aa- WPST HARTFORD > MANCHESTER FARKADE . fects ranging from production aUghtly curtailed to completely which no grievance impasses sault ehip Bexar end gmvm the existed. Saturday unfR 6 baited. Sources were not avsil- peace sign os it docked. able at other plants. For example, 8,000 workers U.S. Dried Up Many of the 1,1S4 Morlnaa (xmtinued on the job at five ma­ aboard the Iteo Jlma and the BaiSdMaaBa The walkout by a 13-union co- IWw Dfircnn opM jor GB sites in Florida, includ­ Bexar were coming home as a alitlon was seen as a threat to M a u ■'1 ing two Apollo systems plants, result of Um President’s onlera PreaUsot Nixon’s anti-inflation- in Daytona Beach and Cape 50 Years Ago aiy blueprint. But Labor Secre­ to reduce the number of troopo Thufs. night only K^medy. in Vietnam. 0 ® tary George P. ffiuiKs said in NEW YORK (AP)—The Vol­ At the heart of the walkout stead Act became the law of the WaaUngton that the White which began Monday is the Most belai«ed to the Srd Ma­ House would keep hands off the land 80 years ago today. Offi­ rina Regiment and the rest were wage issue. The company ot­ cially the country went dry. Ac­ wage deadlock unless defense tered the 20-cents-an-hour in­ returning from 11-month tours work was imperiled. tually, national prohibition ush­ of duty with other unHa. crease for the first year of a ered in the wettest era In the Shultz suggested in a radio in­ three-year contract, with provl- The 7,000.mlle, 16-day voyage terview that GB was resisting nation’s history, the Roaring Involved a scramble for living sioti for wage reopeners in the 20s. union wage demands because subsequent years. spooe, said Oapt. Martin M. the administration’s anti-infla­ GB also offered up to 28 cents "A great soda] and economic OOaey of Cktroeiado. Oallf., skip­ tion paUdes were squeezing an hour for hlg^y skilled work­ experiment, noble in nature and per ot the Iwo Jlma. profits. ers. The average wage for the far reaching in purpose,” Her­ Vietnamese woman cares for her wounded daugh­ Marine Lt. James Geisainger gaaes fondly at his "Mfhen you crowd thot many His comment brought a quick strikers had been g3.26 an hour. bert Hoover called the National young, ocUve American malea Prohlbllion Act in 1928, the year ter in overcrowded South Vietnam hospital w<^.

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