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··. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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.JoRDAN,SOII

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the ,two Vletnama, one·111 the Meigs County Jiak.a.A.Rama
northern edge of the A ·Shau Champions, Mta. Robett J.
Valley near the Lao~ border Lewis, of Pomeroy, cake, IIlli
and the fourth 41 mlJej n.orth of Mrs. Paul 8rnllll, Racine, pie
Saigon. .
··
will comj)ele in· the ~
· Tbe 8&amp;2 ~~rib,' 19 Vletnul IJeke.offl to be .held In the
fjl)lcnred
. . Sunday s nm'I"PP!on · Electric BuiJ4Ing at the OJIIo
of S!ra~ortreu .raidl ~ -State·F!IIr In cOJambus on Sept.
Norllf. •~lndmeie inllltratlon 4.
routes IIlli troop c:om:enlra~
.
' In~, CGmnuuld . also ~~ Meigs eounty winnera
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· will .1ie competing far fi'IZel of
~'::0 c~CJIII
,1,1110. .llolll ncelveclllll caa1t

:.::to:~e:~:w~= :!
enure stale IIIX.'e school starte.
FOlD' more confirmed caaes
and II SUBJN!Cied caaes were

·pt&amp;IOII reported Friday, bringing Ill 59
tbe number of confirmed caaeo
tn the city tbla year. Two per.
. ~~!· ~ of the dlaeaae.

STAT. P' A It M

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ThiB $eaMJn ••• Erijoy

ARE YOU SATISFIED
WITH YOUR PRESENT
BANK?
.00 THEY OFFER
YOU THESE SERVICES?

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. • The caiu,mand ~ ' ~·
· tiloopa lll1ed 48 NQI'th Vlema..
' mese a'lid Viet tong over the
weekend In opera tiona deld8ne4
··
. lo protect 1be emblitlltd
artUJary baae O'Retlly a
Cam· mDIDllalntop outpost 12 riuJes
stopped the east of the Laolfln border and

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wavtns crowda 011 bla way from P-&amp;i!ll'lfSIII'li'SIWIII~II'IIII-WIIIWlllf!IM•--•~ {
Klmpo Jntemallonal Airport to ~
Seoul, will ~~~ett with Prclldl!nt ~
Park a.ung.s.e Oil the u.s. ~~
plan to wlllldraw 20,000

Secret Docrurumr. Wanted

In Defetu1ing Lt. Calley

=~~~tS:: ~

intense oppoaiUoa ,in Park's ~
Ft. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)-Defenauttornrya!or lit
gOVft'lllllelll.
~ Lt. WOllam L. Cilley Jr. today nlled motion• c!MJ~ .
Apew aaid, "AI part of our :&amp; wllll ''nallonal. rrecurlty'' they hoped woaklllrinC to u,lll '
continuing effort to u111t ~ key sn-atton lel'lnomy CGRCel'lllr1J the aDeced
Korea to defend lteelf aa we ~ mn=cn r1 ctvntans In the bill v~ hi!!IW til
reduce ground forces, the ~= Myl.al4.
United States baa dl!clded Ill ~
Civilian atlorneJ Gecqe W. Latlmef lllld be haped
give to Korea a wing of tactical
thai
the 1i1Wt1rJ judp, OIL R4lld W. Kl'"•redl, would
fighter Ff (PIIantom) alrerafl,
force
a declullflcallon rl certain ldlimalioll dMIIng .•
and to station theae planes in "'
r::
with tile alleged murden. Callq, fJ, • fonner platooo . .
Korea."
•Y.
leader In VIetnam when the lncldelit allegedb' oeeumd In .
He did not elaborate but U.S.
offlclala aald It would mean
Marcllllll, It clarpd with pnmledllted auder in the
transfer of an e•tlmated 64 ~ death r1 102 men, wamen and cNidnn.
.
Pllantom jet&amp; from U.S. baaes
In Japan to Korea tllla faU .
It also waa understood the
recwdl, orden, and Information acquired IJrou8h aecret ~
Nb:on adminlllrall011 would
cbaanell. Be aald the nature rl the doalmente waa the
seek a supplementary budget
reason this pntrlalllelrlng waa to be beldln aecret.
·
from Congreu, probably of~
"I
lbtnt
any
lime
you
are
(the
govai4DI!ilt)
going
to
million, for Korean ald.
use claastfled documenll to try to oonvlct a man,"
Alb Reclproealloa
Agnew said in bla arrival
La~aald. " ... 1~".'reenti~to~eethem.:J
remarks that lhe United States
has "confidence . in Korea(Continued on page 8)

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~ at &amp;:SO' a. m: today In a
~ coJllllon on Ri. 7
appill,i&lt;lJ:Utely all:. tenfllll of a
mtlesoutllofthejundlonof,Rt.

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,.. Holzer '
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Rutledge Queen, fOID'-1•· In both heata. Scot Mae, owned
old bay mare, owned by ll9dne7 by WOllam Miller F'i Mac
Hanaon, Jacksoll, driven by Dr. Bienton, Piketon, ~by 0.
Fred Hess, toot both beals of Van F - toot lhlrd both
the .Ohlllco Stake• race bella.
Saturday afternoon In the
F1r1t beat winner in the lhlrd
II'I'IIJHIP of the Meigs County
L. D.
Fair's horae raclre.
.;:: slakes are IIO&amp;IO!Hn!J.

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stabs was Irish Land, owned
and driven by Arthur Ewing of
Cardington IIlli tlltrd waa taken
by Knox Lee, owned by Earl
and norence Fox of Johnstown
and driven by VIrgil Butta. In
the second beat of the alakea,

Oacar

~·;, ~
lhlrd.

IIAas

~· ;~~;~:by

with lllgllto, aecond,.,.! Uncle
Oacar, third.
Wavtns Tlme, owned and
driven by Jbn Hlnea of Piketon,
waa first place winner in the
first beat of the fourth race.

Grtll, IIlli Rlghto, given by
Holsum Bakery.
Fair Board ofllclala reported
thll year Ill be one of the 111011
succesaful raclni cards over the
paot several years.

~~ieE:::: Abba Eban Heads
JsraeJi UN T eam ·.·

second race Saturday were won

by Real Fancy, owned and
driven by Ray Newhart of

p atro1man

Near Death

· 1'1!11-la.

to

Spires Time, OWIIed .•!~=~;
Dcllald and Dorotba II!
local, toot second

norence Fox. In the
Pomeroy Golf Course; Real
Second 1n the flrat beat of the beat Circle Demon toot ltrat Fancy, given by Five Potnta

Marietta with Swift Saber,
ownOd by Arthur Ewing second
berm, IIWI!I'Ved baclt onto the daughters, Mrs. c.-1 Chaney,
'
hlghwaywhereaheioelcontrol, Rl. 2, GaillpoJia, Unda and
strlklnl I Milla '1'raru!fer van Louise Baird, at home; •
opera.led bJ Charles q.ta..._ brOther, John Hershman,
GaWpolta. beadoll. ,
Cleveland, and eight grandBOth ~ were 1 thrown ~.
from the vehicle.
Baird
born'
Gete and a ~. Alonzo. ~ AM
waa
W~,Z4,Bldwell, w'ertlreated wDecoul.d21ha,lv954ebee,lnnGa~~or' ~
and released at thai Holzer
...u wuo
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faD at GaWa Academy High
.
Center. · : third ......,. Survivors Include her
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In the van, WIJUam ""'"""
eacaped tn~~ut. No father, Wayne ~~~·--~
are .apecled to be GaDipolls, ll1ree "'""'"' • ....
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ll1ree sisters.
~11\Dl""
)ltller's Home for Funerals
11 ~~~i}:~~~~=· '{Ill announce final ar•

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TbevlclliDawereldelltill,ldQ
( Ella illlrd, 114, and Rq{aa
• llili1l; is, Jtt 2, GautpoJ¥,: '
Mra. ~ !VII ijJJed Iiillah
, • tly, ......... ,illflid dlild in
lbe ~·~ ......;.m~ ouiiOoll
·-...:.. ............
... ind a ........ -.~· the
at the

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wW be compettna In till! Jieml. eettlllcalea, and the lhlrd place
11naia with the
alJiun. winnerS wW receive t250 and
pion~ of . Clermont, ' Jby, . cerllflcates. Each remslning
Rou, St,vk, ,&amp;1loto, La . · 1'· conteslant participating In the
~'«~age, and Darke
• · final b8ke-&lt;Jff will receive ~.
Dilly wlnnera wW
v ;tloo In the event that Mrs. Lewis
eacib IIlli
to' ~te or Mrs. Smith are unable to
1n !lie fllilf.~ ~·
compete 1n the seml.flnal liakechampionairuelected.onSept. off, then the c0101ty runner-up
,
_ will repreient Meigs County.
6.
Wihnera of the final! ~I Mn., Margaret Parker of
an!l state cbamp~Pii- wjiJ . p~y, .Route 3; was. run·
eacb ~~JUPI . lll , . ."'"!In~ rw'a ~~t,

Ella. Ba • d ' . and
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R DO'JftB
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J6 Become
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~~=; 'lim .. ~ U~~IJi t21·1p~tt"·lravelllflfll!!!!ll!ll A: ~r.!~ ·'!:Ji l'l41,1er07. Wai"""'" In ~ouiiw-.pan IIi.· -~~
' fer . 211 mrles 80U
lo the Sta... F.U.
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(Continued on page 4)
am ·Whk:b It fw ;;; I
sjiu~t.of Da Nq.
l!:frs. !.ewis and Mrs; Smith NCelve prbel. of ·~ r Pill*
:havenotyetw!llltro.OOO.

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IF YOUR BANK OFFERS ntiStnt~ ftO' N~ ;lO
CHANGE - IF NOT rrs TIME TO -~ 1t) DE

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1. No Service Charge on Checkinc
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Accounts. No Minimum Balance Required
2. Highest Legal Rate For Your
.
Savinp Dollar
3. BankAmericard
4. eo..-plete Banking~.

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~ MeetahoWlthdr~~~-h

:;::_
. dllri' · ~ were laking the base early Sunday but Soulh
lqlilatlll acrou l)unbooQa,
Vlelllameae rorcea repulsed the
·
•'1fle'.vtel Coog '"' often aasault, mill~ 11p0kesmen A mother and dalll!lltar Poll Stale Highway! Patrol, sons, Marvin and Ora,
itlfjulilc to light our troopl," be said.
·
·became GIIBa County's eighth Regina Baird was drlviJIII Gallipolis, and John of
, '· .
and nlllth.traftlc falalllln of the north. Her auto ran • off the Pasadena, Calif. ; three

Wonderfrd cQlor/ul Woril! Of ·

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§[~Pfmr;;;J;:Qff10hillco
Stakes Won by ·•
B M
fro J k '·

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI)
- A week · long immunizaUon
.:rive has failed to slow the
•IUICf spread of diphtheria In San
1

CIIIIII-K. Sllowd•

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Soulh Korea.
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through the streets of Seoul in
Sunburned from P~.··olf a mol«cade that stopped so
.
thll morning Oil the• l'l!dflc that he could greet Koreans
taland of Guam, ~ drOYe waiting Ill see bbn.
· waves to~ crowds and a . _._ ..
. . . ... . , . .
Fact«y girls dreased In white
proilllse Of ~ l'banll!m :&lt;.u; &amp; ; ; :.1 ~ -·~ • • uniforms with brigllt blue capa
jet ftg!lter-llombera to allay
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and students and paaaersby
South Korea's ~about the Final Grand8t8il4 lunsed forward to grup Af!·
wilhdra1ral of some U.S. troopa.
1
new's hllld.
'l'be warp~ ,and·~ aid
,
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"Mr. VIce President, please,
will be forthcoming · tO ao1ten Show m Down~lll' may 1 shake your hlllll?" one
1be effect of withdrawing 20,000
;
student shouted. Agnew lunged
American lro(lll8 from K~~rean
DapiCe a dowapear~': forward and answered, "SUre!"
aoU,
Agnew aald as he ari'lved Salllrday _,.. ID. ·
Agnew's itinerary calls for
.m~
til Mr. and Mra. Dllllne Jordan
on the ·flrat leg of a tolD' that capaC!Ity grsndl!l•nd
. ~ !rips to Taiwan, South VIetnam,
rl . - Carpenter, waa me of the 'tlb!nen In the ptdal , wW lake him Ill four Allan lland fer a free a!utJc:ll 'l1lailand IIlli possibly Cambo11'actor PdUnll conlell staled at the Meigs County Junior
natlw.
program at tile 11'1111 l!a!aaal dia.
. Fair.
.
Slandlng barebeaded In City Melp Cowrty Fair. :' · . . En route from Guam Agnew
HaU Square In a drizzling rain,
VIc HJC)e, bJIIed as filii" held a news conference' aboard
Agnew told Prime Minister mu baad, emcee lie bla jet and said the admlnlalra·
Chun1 D Kwon IIlli a bJg llllowiq G!Jellla&amp; wilb II Ifill- tton wW circumvent If nece818·
welcoming crowd In a city along 14 "D,;'I"'I Gtmui a.JII ry, the proposed cq..esaional
bedecked with American flqa No More. ne FI01!~r, reslrletlOIIS 011 paying foreign
.,
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that President Nb:on had Family, .-fltfq of lie troopa wflgilt In lndoclllna. He
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ordend him· to ''reaffirm the ~. Ialiier, two - !IIIII alao said the admlntalratlon
lmporlance ·we attach to the lwo daqlden, ea~. was dedlcaWd to helping the
e o u t p l e d g e a contained~ our mutual wit~ lutrameatal i¥1•· present Cambodian regime.
defense treaty.''
"'nclDI . Ull eom:::&lt;&gt;l ilild , "We going w do everything
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Pnmllel Jets ·
vocal aadlerl by llie !..... \ we can to help the Lon Nol
He promloed to aend 54 monalrei wbo lila emPW:red ·government," Agnew said. Lon
Pllantom jell to Soulh Korea eomedJ Ill llletr ad ~ Nol 11 premier of Cambodia.
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -1be uld. "'l'bey disperse when uur ::':..
-v
""•....-•
.~new, w
ove wu u""
Cambodian iDIUiary cmunand tr~ arrive "
CGmmunlq,;,.
from
Saigon
nlze
the
defense
capabllity"
of
..
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......
::::1.12!18!&lt;~.
II'?~
.
cileerlng,
American
• Dag •
aald lo!iaY Allled alr strlkel
Jdu.l ~ North Vietnan)ese
and ~ CloD&amp;.In a Commr!nisl
IIIIICIII&amp;rY region aiona the
border.

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MONDAY. AUGUST 24, 1970

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SEOUL, liPulla

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\'ICe ~t
APew
!Iegan a lour
Far Eaat
klclay with !landlhakea IIlli

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GOOD BUY

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make: They cannot choose to
make us accept what tbef
believe we cannot IIlli should
not accept because we are
weak."
And the semiofficial Cairo
De1J1118per AI A11ram said todaJ
Egyplfln President Gamai Abo
dill N....,. and Jordan's Klni
Huasetn have agreed the 11k11J .
ceaae-llre and the peaee . . 1/
DeBOIIatlons are no re&amp;aCIII to :' '
crack down on Palestlnlaa
gueniJlas

or call

withdrawal d. Iraqi

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Reifs Gloomy on ':t;o ~~spec:ts-

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ItAY CROMLEY,' •NEA

Washingt0p Correspondent

B, IIILL IW~J)EN'

Carty

~~masses."

"Such a situation bas cau~ tile guerrlllas lc&gt; be easily
Npulsed by the enemy."
Regular army commanders bave looked down on the
,llletriDas and refused to help them and to work with
ihem . . . The North Vietnamese command "at each level
ooJ,y takes care of Its . . . subordinate force and Ignores . ..
lower forces," especially the guerrilla forces with wblch
It is oupposed to fie cCM&gt;perallng.
Tbbtgs have gotten so bad among North Vietnamese
mainline troops, says the do~ument, tltat there· Is a tendency for them to disperse "when faced witlt difficulties
. . . not for the purpose of joining . . . with the guerrillas
In order to attack tile enemy anew, but rather for the pur·
pose of shunning contact with the enemy. Such a tendency
causes the main forces engaged In countering enemy
sweeps to he easily decimated (defeated) and esposed to
enemy psywar (psychological warfare) activities ..."
The document implies the Viet Cong have become too
dependent on modern weapons shipped ln from Hanoi . . .
'lbey should Instead "manage to obtain ljlelr ammunition
and weapons by capturing from the enemy, or to produce
on the spot for their own requirement."
This "separation from the people" In the communities
in which tile guerriJias and North Vietnamese operate.bas
caused a Ioas of combat effectiveness. It has made it very
difficult to recruit new men and has made "many difflcul·
ties" in "messing and billeting" troops.
"As a result of our (Communist) polltlcal weaknesses"

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firlt.~. . .' I ,
fa, ~ playeol &amp;iturday,
Bal~ routed l:lenver 24-7

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ldckOtf
bJiliUitht84 tilt
DelrpltUQ!!f'Wiil-iwerlhON.W
0r1eana sflijl.l w~· I'll"'
put tbe ~~to stay In
tbe lhllil ~ ·Prize ~
~e· ~,..~ltw~
fi!OPily ~. iCclnld fO\"
l)li,lrolt. : , '
'1'be MflutMota VOOngl who
lljlve ~ 111 Jll~. ~~~~jack !CaPP'Il UJit1 demandl,
tilrned to Gary ~ . Kapp'a
111 cW-aludylalt ·, •'euozzo

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th8t I!; Jllld lied tbo ~for Cat'~ II
GVIIett~l!e '~aiiD8llelil coo*lli"!!·~'IIIUltdd. ~lmt1!&gt; r ••. ,

NE1i' YdiQt

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Ill lllrlciJDnall.• · 'IBJc Red· ~It afler tbe ~~ 1ildJe . w~•·
Maeldnt" bUt lhe ~"'*' 'llllug ~e4 .. TV. •'
NQI.n ' . •

roo~tte)icaa~~inlii

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u lbe big trfWI.s In hlU..!D'•
lract a .few Je&amp;r5 ~iiJ&lt;md drive to tile Nallmal Lague

• TheRe&amp;won•"Jciuflhang.
e; ~Y ,over .11\11 Meu ·on
ltill!lftllilh of Jobnily Bench's
twHUDdoublewlthtwooutln
lhe nlntb lmlng.
.
'l'bewlnmadeJliDMerrttftbo
Natlmal ~ague'allr111V1!1111111
wlnnerlbl'"""*\'1·
'1'be Me1o had tali:en a Z.lleed
In the e~tb ' ~er tile Reds
IICill'ed on two singles by Bemle
Carbo and Tommy .Helms' In
tile allth.
Merritt, who was removed attertboeJcbtbforapinchhitter,
walked four and .atruck out
seven In gaining hlol9th win
against 10 !oases.
'1'be Redt were Idle today.
In other National League
games Philadelphia blanked
Houston, 4-G, St. Louis edged
San Dl!!Jio, 8-7, and San Francisco nipped Chicago, ~· The
AUantaatMonlrealcontestwu
rained out.
Clemente Sets Reeord
Hard-hltt,ing Roberto
Clementecollectedfivehi:•for
the aeeond day in a row, in·
eluding a IIOlo homer. as tile
Plr lee
shed hi
tile aDodg":. Witb23hlo~oa~':.m::
two games Clemente set a
major teague record. Steve
Blass stopped tile Dodgers on
four hilo 1n gaining hlo eighth
win.
Frank Johnson's basesloaded plnch-lrlt single In lhe
ninth gave tile Giants the tying
and winning runs against tile
Cubs. Juan Marlcbal gained hlo
eighth win and MUt Pappa~• took
tile loss his sixth
Dero~ Johnaon drove 1n three
runs with a slllgle and hlo :Uih
homer 1n leading tile Phlllies
past the Aslros. Rlci Wise was
the winner, evening his record
at 11-11 while Wsde Blasingame
suffered his forst Joss against
one Win.
Jose ('.ardenal was Ule big gun
in t11e Cardinal victory, driving
in five 1'11118, Including a pair
wltb a slnele climaxiruz a threerun ninth Inning rally. Frank
.
. St. LoUIS
.
Linzy,
tile last of five
pitchers, collected his fourth
win against sit losses as the
Cards completed a sweep pf tile
three-game sertes.

H oo
~ 0, 0 0

~~·~ ;,

'

Tatl!!i ~

Once again, the American ayatem of government Is
dem0111tra11Dg how marveloualy complex and elaborately
roundabout Ill declslon-reacbinS proces101 can he.
Lut June, Ccmgreu tnrlftl~nd ovenrbelminiiiY paned
and the Pmldentpromptly
ed Into Jaw ODe cillbe most
far-reaching and eontrO\Ien revlaloaa of the rulea ol our
pOlitleal game In the nation' a hiatory. In one fetleralawoop,
tile 18'111 Voting Rlgbta Act added 11 mUUon to ~ eleele by establishing a natlallal mlnlmiiDI vo~ age of 18
, lor 10011' meuure, bannhag Uteraey teJla and estalJ..
bing ttandarcl residency requlrementl. AU traditionally
were ar,.a of state nsponllbUlty.
:And. jlow, u everyone Involved Intended all along, the
il!ltlfl' is coins to court fc!r 8llOther declllon, whlcb 1111)'
·!of·!~Jaal aDd tben again, maybe not In l1lln8 ault agalnat
tiio' states, Mllona imd ldlho, which have rejected tile act
Where It coDfllcts with tlleir state vottng Jaws, tile Juatlce
D'ellartment II in effect uk!Dg the SU)Inme Court 1c&gt; under·
~ Prelltlellt and Coagreu and cim&amp;rm the 18-year-old
v* u the law of tile land.
'
entlUed to vote baa alwaya
of who
del!Ded area of American
e orilinal CollllltuUon
In Arlicfe Lon the 801118
that election of member's
several Statea" qualified
DIIDieroua braDCh of the State

~

other reference and the Bill of Rigbll'
eonllmlad to tile atatea powera not Ill·
to the laderal gOVOl'IUIIent, that seemed
In full contrOl. ADd so they were for
the Racoaatructlon Alilendmenls-the 14th,
voting age of 21, and the lstb,
vote "on I!=CQunt of nee, color
aervltude"-through the 24th,
~.federal authority

2:r:!:!&amp;

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18-Year-Old Vote--Is It Low or Not?

'J

3G I 1

NEW YOJIK I'· . . •'i''
hlo $l!OO,IM)II !orql b)'~ pemllll.
.
"ff4 ~ .I'IHSilllrgh' r
0 1 o o Now 'l'crk •
three llllies and gaining a Tb' Rella aputtered mo~!,'~,
tho Jut· II lba Lol· ~ ~
-~Oak~
yards ui ·u ~
ih8 mentarliJ~y,lhppfnl!tlle
Harrelson so
n 0 o C.h!l:aQo :!,
~ ". ' l ii!Jidoocll,'' tbe iJin 18hd, . 3Wl, ,. ~~ , wbipped
Pacbr•IOWeli tmf ~ 1n ~ of a doublebeader to the
Jones 11 I
H 1 o ~h11~• h
., ' lftiriefalllllflle~t- New~,:S:•l7'. ~
ahigh«~ ' tld;ller~' ·.
NewYorkMeta~Gun~
Shaonsk~b
~8H Monteaf'a
0 10
~ ·~~~nc~·:· ~ A11!«11i idlecL Houai4Jn, 14-7; Miami
The world Cllaritplpn KaM85 W81t to work with an e)'ei!Oplq
~!=. 1
~ the CIW:aio iJeul defeateol ·~ .• Ft'aflclaco, 17-7,
City tbloli callect !111 ' ~an strikeout perfonnaooe In tht
Foy 3b
2 0 o.I
folililllu the Natlanal F'Oolliall GreeD' Bay !lfpped Da)lu ~
Steneruil to put any ibe - - ' game.
Grote c
l o 0 o Cincinnati
~, ~IIDII ~- Kania City t.lpped C!n:elarid:
Br~. Sfe11etUc1 ~a pair 'lbe Jtyearold lerthander
err~~~~ P,l1
21 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~t:a ~
IIDillll on Ill llfUh Pf\!11'1111 • IJ-13; and St. ~ romped
of 0-)'ard 'field goall In ,the fmn Lynn, Ky., came on in I'll·
Taylor p
o o o o Aijanta •
62
tOnira the ~· wJilatJa Ol
~II tl.al.
final mlnu..
.. .
lief 8Dd methodlcaUy mowed
·Sinolelon ph
1 1 .1 0· .tt.OUSI&lt;J11
56 .70
!!c,.,~
· tliU~tVIdlrf
Apalrilr~PlJIIl~eB down Ills atralgbt Meta .. on
Totals
MHt ' SanDI?.,o
..a 79 .378
. J!'·it ,, •.,
·'• '· . Baltlclion gqt ·~• r~bY~~paltof byJobnny~~tlle llrlkeouts ln ,a 7-6 Qnc:lnnatl
~~~: out when winning run N...;,York"r&amp;'~.~~~~:
·~~. ~101 lib J~ perfarmancea against Denver lollchdowii)I!ISIIelto~the lmpetualoi .the~'~ wlnoflerNewYorkhadtaken
Cincinnati
10002001Q-.l Cinci7NewYor.kS, 2nd
~
i'iiiliatb'ar·tbe New 1York Jela fro1il veteran q~ Bousl4ln OIM · · "'· · vlctoey over Cincinnati. '1'be the OlJenet, ~
New Yor~
· 100 ooo 103-5 Philadelphia • Houston o
""
, · !l,lJCit ~ lor aelimi ~ JohnntUnltaaandEill'l MortaD ' 1'Jte MJam~Dio)pblnagot
Benpls played with ' ~
The idslllralght atrlkeout5 for
E-Gmiry, Gra~er. DP- Pittsburgh 11 Los Ang o
tf j .
~ : ~ ~ Ida pre aniOn train- Who bOth " tolled touchdolni flrit ,dividend !rUn the lrade Lewis, a former New York a relief Jitcher lied the Jea8ue
~= Yf:k2· ~0 B-;~"''J::i 1 :· ~nL~~n:i~: 4°~~90 3 ~J ·
·
iii·.· .
J1881!e11, In ngltterlng the 11111 that brought Paul Warfield Giant place kicker, at quarter· record for COMOCUtlve atrlke&lt;Bench. HR- Aaee (2) (20, 21l ' AIIanto at MoniTJill, ·lll&gt;d., raii)l
· '&amp;1'!~th. WP!~ ·fiU!te .~. slraltlhtColt)JfHe&amp;i!On~; (rorii the Clrieland .Browns. back.
outs and Ironically came
Bench !42) . ~8-Peroz. s- ToUl'' Pnol!able Plt~htrl ,
·(·~ ·~riOt' a~ tQ rtak · ltoinan Caliriel ioltojwed' ~ WaifleJ4'teamed with· ~· In a game playeol Friday against Tom Seaver, tht loalng
Nolan, Harrelson.
~~~Times lOTI
'· ,
1
r
}iii ~bll ._ 'on ,,,tlle f:0U01i · form for . lbe. , 1M. back' ~· !)riHe 011 a 50-)&lt;arcJ night tbe Buffalo Bills pve )itcher, wbo holds the overall
Nolen
~
h
er
b~
~
J;hl~~~~e~J"('-%';."..
~~~~·
6
52 2
~ llekl of~ Yale Bll'rl Ange~ llam8 bf .tllrowlng touchdown paaa In tile fourtb Coach John Rauch bl~ fl~st league record with 10 straight.
Carroll
11·3 11 1 1 o p.m. .
.
,
~· The Jet 1t1r clldn•t lhr'ee IDucbdown p&amp;I!IIOil In a quarter tc&gt; per the Dolphlna victoey of the season by ~ling Gullett wound up with eight
Granger L,6·3 2·3 2 2 2 2 1 Atlonta I·Stone &amp;.91 at Mel!)·,
~t up • hll teammates come-lrom.beblnd victory over over San Franctsco for tbelr the Plilladelphla Eagles $.20. lllrlkeout5ln the four lnn1ni1 he
Gen!Ty
7 4 3 3 5 1 !real !Sioneman 4-12) , Bp.m. ',
iioinil,.:ll-2t, lc&gt; lba ~York OaldU4. A i!OI'e knee .bad ~' straichl victory.
O.J. Simpson and noover worked while gaining hio third
Tat'";.~S-4 . 2 2 I I 0 0 (Clnl~:~~~~~~ -~
' ~II. u th!l ''otber ..~uarter· releptedGabddtoupectator
Alldono!ISbowoFana
BubbaThCil'II14Jnrecelvedankle win In five starts wlille reaf.
·. s'etONDGAME
Houstoin atMon!Teal , night
~. In N• Yprk," Fran role In list w~k'a CMII)Ieal )'lith Donqy Anderson, IIOffieWbal Injuries but are not expected 1o flrmillg the "can't miss" label
CINCINNATI
Atl~nta at New York, night ,0
·Menton of' the Qlang threw DaDal ·· ,
of a · d(lappolntment 51nce miss tbla !ll!&lt;k's game against the Reds tagged on him when
ob r h bl Cine! at. Pl&gt;lla, night
,, ,
Jb,ee toucbilow '&lt;
SOOiiy~ 'Wiilliuna' 102-¥atd
..
. ,
they drafted him from Soulx
Rose rf
5 2 l 0 Chicago at Los Ang, nipht '
·.' . .
• pMiil In tbe
.
signing a ~000. bonus con- WaShington.
FaJIJTh ~~t byNorthemRedslagued.
~r~ ~
~ ~ g ~~~~::~ ~~~;a~?~lght . l
.
.
e ... ~
tbe
an
May lb
s oo1
r
Me15 combined with Pltll·
Carbo II
LU...!
Amerlc.n League
y
·
burgh's 11-11 thra8hlng of Loa
tfelins2b
51 2 I
Eo~
L
.'
.
'
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Angeles enabled Clnclnnatland
Coralles c
3 0 1 0 Baltimore
so '45 · .~· ~·:
tbe Pirates to gain a half game
~~~rdss
~
New York
69 56 .552 11 .,.
1
By·· MeJMNt
eJcbiiOIIIel.
Theonlyhits'Joililaonoiubwed two's,tbenNbaveacltanceat In their respective dlvlslona.
Stewartph
1 1 13 ~\~
~ ~ :~~ ~~ ~ ~;
UI!ISportsWrller
In other AL games, Delrolt were a three-run homer by rookie of the year," uld 1beRedsoowleadtbo'l:lod2ers
Concepclonss
1 0 0 0 Cleveland
61 64 .4811 19 ····
Bill Bob Joru.oo d!!mllllltrat. nipped MUwaukee, I-ll; Balli· Tony Conigliaro 1n tile fourth Johnson. "But thet's asking by II \It In tile West, while
M&lt;.Giothlln P
1 0 0 0 Washington 60 65 .ol80 20 ,•[
ed · tbe · .-~ . of hll potential more edged California, 64; and a, double by Reggie Smith qultealol,. "
Plttaburghlsthreeaheadofthe
:'::~:~~np
~gg~
Wost
''
Suqday •wMn he ttro-blt the Wuhlngton routed Minnesota, In the ninth. Other than tbst, be Despite Jill QlllstandfD&amp; pitch- Mets.
Gullet p
2 0 0 o Minnesota
W. L Pet. GB
'llclllor! tied Sol u ·the ·!Wl'all 11-11 Clevel4ltd topped Oakland, was In complete control.
fnl!, Johnson would !lave ended
"This Is tile fastest I've been
Totals
37 7 12 • California
~~ ~
5'' 1'
·. ~ out -1 4-3 victory. U; and the New York Yankees
Alb Quite ALot
up. tile 111ser bad lt not been for au year," said the IJ..foot, 19&amp;NEW YORK
O..kiond
68 58 :s.oo 6',;·
B•ljiN ~ ·onl)o two hila, won ~. nlghd:ap of a "I've got seven or e!ght more a two-ran triple by Bob Ollver p:nmd ~uDell after stoppfnl! tile
Harrelson 55
ob4 1bJ Kansas City .OS
77 l84"26
46 80 365 2811
J~ ·.. d'-blllhed a club doubleheader, 7-9, after drop- starla, and HI could win five In tbe seventh which put the Meta. I bad my rhythm and
Garrett2b
4 2 1 1 Milwaukee
· 57 30 "
~ With 121trlkeoull u he ping the· open01·, ~. to the or six of those 8Dd get my Royals ahead. Ed Kirkpatrick my motl111 was real good."
Jones d
2 2 o o Chlcagsunilar'~ R:u1
:
~ bla iUIII victory qalnll Chlcaio White Sell.
earned run average down In the al&amp;o contributed to tile Jloxala' Gullett, who spurned a numShamsky If1
l 0 0 O Chlcogo 2 New York o, 1st ·. ·
attack witb his 15tb homer.
~ of OOIJege football offers
~!:=~1 b
~ g~ ~ New York 7 Chicago 5, 2nd ··
" ,,., ' ·
4 0 0 1 Kansas City 4 Boston 3
Mickey Lolk:li pitched almost ~use baseball is my first
Foy 3b
···
' ,,. · •
·
·· ··
·
·
u well as Jollnson, .in the love, g~t help at tbo plate from
Dyer c
l o o o ~~~~g~% 1 :~.~~': ~
,.,
~e
'
Tfgers' victory over tile Brew. pinch hitter Jimmy Stewart,
Seaverp
2 0 0 0 Cievelond 8 Oakland 6
· iT
1
•
•
.'·..•
M
. l,
•
ers, but he had to he baii&amp;i out wltose thre&amp;run homer In the
FAgrl,:~~
P
00
0 0 Balllmore 6 California 5
1.
0
1
.
of a nlntiHnnlng Jam lil' Tom seventh enabled the Reds to
SlderttP
Ao ~ 8 Todaf~V;-'i=.bi~JWhers ·~
(UPI)- wjde-(,pen field and ran 44 Summerslntlleflnalperiod.
'l'tmJ1lerman. Lollch aJJowed overtaie tile Meta and band
Slnglelonlf
10 0 0 NewYOI'k [Siottiemyre l2·10)
29 5 4 ~ at Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7,
Browns yards' for the tally.
Leroy Kellyledbotb teams In only two hila and struck oull4, faltering Staver hiB third con·
~~~~~nail
002 020
8
to defC!ildlng 11te only scoring In tile entire rushing wltb ~ yards, an then left the game wben tbe secutlve loss.
N- York
.•
203 000 ooo-300--. l), ' 30 p.m.
"'"-"'~
.......
:
"•·"
f
f
d
try
B
loaded
·S
!Only
game scheduled!
·
.__... ....... aeeona ..... cameonfleldgoals average o our yar a .
rewers
tile bases witb
E- Dyer . DP- Cincinnatl 1.
Tuesday's
Games
''
be teady by Cockroft and Sfenerud, ' Rookie tWilling back Steve none out In the ninth.
TheMetawontlleopenerooa
LOB-Cincinnati 11, New York New YOI'k atKan City, nlgrit!
72B-R
Cleveland gained 250 y~d to Egale from Colorado had to be Timmennan took over 'B!ld palrofhomersbyTommle Agee
BoslcM at Minn. nir,ht
38 G
11 HR
161 for Kansas City and bad 15 helped ,of! tile field by hl8 got Ted Kubiak to force pinch- - hlo .:1001 8Dd Zlst - and a
stewarf"i 1) . - s~~~r~elso;;: ~1r 6:;)":9f;,inn~~~
Oral dolillll to lhe tblef's eight. Browns team-mates just before rwmer Ruu Snyder at .tlje tltree-&lt;"un ruDy In tile nlnlh In
Bravo. ·
Mllw at Cleve ' night
Nal&amp;on.hlt 13 of :12 posses far tile balf enc!ed. He suffered an plate, struck out Tomn!y wlllch Red reliever 8Dd loser
lp h r or bb sb Oakland at B~lt night
previOIJ&amp; l7S yards, but bad two Injury to hio right knee, which Harper and retired plnciHIItter Wayne i}ranger walked In the
FIRST GAME
':fa~~~~:~n ~ ~:; ~ ~ ~ ~
, ln::r:~:=~~t~~~~~ Jte ~d:opOillted onlall;;odat.-. i DaY!! ~ on • &lt;;,gl'oundout lo ~tpt;~,JWcl TIIY)llt,,.~,.
CINCINNATI
Gu~ W, l-2 ~ &lt;1 ollll' ; · • .: •• . •
ti
' Jest relltiltftn the extent M·1fle j end1he gil,ni:U~as Tll'ru'nJl'· WOFkW.klr ~i lOt ~'
"••".. lti r 1\.bl Se r.I, .17.4 -~ 1U,..6., s.. ~ _~Jl
111.';;,•;: ' IJtjiD'y 'li'erif 1tO btl' iteleased ' man's 22nd save 'Of~ season. GuQetl, Who has beo!n Jlltii8i("'RoooJ1
50 0 0 Fri . Ha
• r'
1 0 ~&lt;t&gt;i' iJ ~~
'' bll ''ll~lifi~·'· tOday.
" ,,
Cuellar ........,.00
to Sandy Koufax at a C'Ompal&amp;· Tol~n i:f
4 I I 0 So ecki
I 0 0 0 0 1 CINCINNATI (UP!)- One
"i""'
bl
ld b
•t
Perez. 3b
3 I 2 1 HOP- By Seaver (Tolen) . T - I
.
The Orioles wM lost a game e age, sa e W8811 aware Benchc
ength wms were recorded by
3 2 2 2 2, 59. A-.:~.m.
1o tbe Angela ln tile JOtb Inning
~over ln tile $7500 Rhineand
Saturday night, puDed one out
lander Handicap and Bare
c10
In tile ninth on a twiHlUI runPocket in the $4000 Tristate
scllring
single
by
Paul
Blair.
Handicap
Saturday in River
1
1
Blair's hit made a 19-game
Downs' two featured races.
winner of Mlke Cuellar, !fho
..
went all lhe way for the WILMINGTON,Ohio (UP!)- half, but tile Cardinals' Johnny Bengals.
Orioles.
"We . were just overwhelmed. Roland plunged over for two Guy Dennis, second year Finland legalized public~
Frank Howard did. In the Outmwmed." A weary Paul touchdowns afw entering the guard for the Bengals, summed roulette in 1!!69 and wheelll '!
Twins for the second straight Brown had litUe good to say game in the second half and the 1t up for the team. " It was just of chance now spin in 11 Fl~ ·
nish cities.
ns
day as he and Del Unser about his Cincinnati Bengals' team added another TD in lhe a bad ball game," he said.
·ol
cracked three-nm homers to 41·20 loss lo tile St. Louis fourth quarter to demolish the "And I was the worst I've
~
By ..1111'01'f)paDlAN
lll'l!&lt;l. ~he's different than support the &amp;IE-lUI pitching of Cardinals Saturday night.
ever played in my life, •' he
Complete Lines
j '
. ·tlJ'I ~Writer
IOmaDJoftbeot:hell,.lhouih, Ia Dick BoSman. Howard, cracked "Call It what you will,'' tile
added. "I don 't want to take
·j
~ ,1:0~ (UPI) Sm~e that be ,Uepl going out tllere hlo 36th of tile season wltb two coach said. "There isn't much I
anything away from St. Louis,
peoptl,'"~towmder and ,buot~agutwhetberlte's ,., in tile flrsllnnlng to spoil can add to 'it."
but they weren~ as good as
If ~ Meta ~:lin do It again.
rlred. or not.
Jlm Perry's bid for hlo 1!ltb The 8engals bad trailed by
Miami." Miami beat' lhe
wtnnlnl 1bal, In ltaelt, lln't 10 bad.
"U you go 8l'OWid saying victory.
·
only three points, 2G-l7, at lhe
Bengals tile week before.
1
'Mllt smorulplflCIIIt Ia tht )'IIU're tired, ~ you..'re lOinS Eddie Lean's two-run double
Doug Dressler, rookie runrung
1, :;•~:~ ICOI'e
'•
(i
·co;. face
~ tile . Meta are lo ~I tired, Tommie A&amp;ee snap!!ed a U tie In tile eighth
back, agreed.
be~.~~lnr to· wonde~ tbem- 118!'1. "l'byllcuDy•. I am t~. inning ancl enabl¢ tile lndlarl8 ~ .. n
"They weren't nearly as fired
~
s;.,·al'd II
,· ,·.. llro11hav.'.to be~ )'IIUrun 1\ to sweep their tbr~ set'l'UCI.al
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio up as Miami was, yet they ran
'I
~~=~C~·!oo;Jt: lol,oul mfe'llft!leld' ~ atesl )'lith the Athletics. Grals ,
•
(UPI) - The fourth annual over us," be said.
,
.
a.lol II(~. Wha.ll lrY to. do •. Nettles and Jack Heidemann
Nation~ I Tractor Pulling Horst Muhlmann ticked two "Wher e Shoes Are Sensi bly IT
Priced "
.f
·tltOC!&amp;h.'· ~ keep .my~eU up boniered for Cleveland whUe
Otamptonsblps ended Sanday field goals for lhe Bengals, a
Middleport
~;~:;~:::· QlelitaJIY.•I dolt~ let ID)'IC!l,f lei Genll Tenace, pitcher John ·
at the Wood
County 34-yard one in lhe second period
· down In :;
Yov. lull (ldom, ruck· Monclay and Don
FairgroWlda and f!J,OOO In prise and a :!9-yard goal for
t'8D''j~
he""&gt;i r.ilncher each ~ted for
money was distributed to Cinc~'sflnalscorlng.
~"i1'11f, !1'!'\l'l
one
IJl
OW&amp;Qd.
:
'
winners In Ills cla8808.
l!ro\m 88ld be would probably
thiS
, ' Tojljmy John,pitched a four.
Bill Rausch of Forest, Oblo, I1I8D about 10 cuts from the
hitlel'andLula i~Irlclocollect. Bob Sa~s· Quaker .Stale wm tbo 7,000 pound modified squad Ibis week as a result of
ed iout hill u · the White Sox Service Center Sl..Pltch soft- wlllla''fullpuD"of330feet.'l'be tile losa.
defeated· the Y~ :In the b~ll leanl captured thre' feat, of pulllng a !Dad added 1o
flnl'
o1 tbair tl,oubleheatl· 'friu!upll8 over the weekend.
the back of a lractor the full . - - -- - ~.~~r~~
111e Yankees
In the Athens tournament, contest dlatance, was only THE 11AfLY SENTINEL
to win
r~ Stale do'imed tile Logan equalled by one other winner,

·~- ~iiPt'IIWiff«
, •!.Wiili D • • ~

I'!,Ii.l''";i.

WASffiNGTON (NEA)
It is common and natural to talk of our· difficulties in
VIetnam. It Is easr to forget the North Vietnamese and
VietCong have thett own very serious internal l.'ro~Jems.
'lbiJ reporter has just read the most pessbnlilic assessment of the Vietnam war he has ever seen.
It was contained In a direCtive on how the war Is to he
fought in 1970 and for the forseeable future, written by the
Centru Office for South Vietnam (the Commanlst ~h
command In the south) and directed to all provlncljil,
municipal and )niJitary region party committees. Wrll:teli
In November, 1968, it was only recently captured.
'lbiJ "Resolution" was not meant to he discouraging. oil
almost every page It boasts of the great defeats handed
the Americans and South Vietnamese. The crumblin~ of
tile Saigon ~ovemment Is confidently predicted. Fmal
Yietory Is hailed.
But in directing party committees on their future tasks
and away from their mistakes, it outlines what bas gon~
wrong In the past and what Is sun out of kilter.
Wbat has baepened is that "we (Communists) placed too
much reliance ' on winniDg the war lhrougb military victories; "we failed" to motivate the masses-to get close
to the people and get them on "our" side.
Tbf' political struggle was neglected. Propagandlzation
of the
line bas not been carried on with diligence.
Party eadership bas deteriorated.
The party committees have become "divorced" from
the guerrillas and the guerrillas "dissociated" from tile

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The Shoe Sox

Cop8 Three

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Dlildren's
Back to School

12,000 pound modified.
Carl
Bosse
Of Ada,
Ohio, Ill the
Other
wilutin
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ItAY CROMLEY,' •NEA

Washingt0p Correspondent

B, IIILL IW~J)EN'

Carty

~~masses."

"Such a situation bas cau~ tile guerrlllas lc&gt; be easily
Npulsed by the enemy."
Regular army commanders bave looked down on the
,llletriDas and refused to help them and to work with
ihem . . . The North Vietnamese command "at each level
ooJ,y takes care of Its . . . subordinate force and Ignores . ..
lower forces," especially the guerrilla forces with wblch
It is oupposed to fie cCM&gt;perallng.
Tbbtgs have gotten so bad among North Vietnamese
mainline troops, says the do~ument, tltat there· Is a tendency for them to disperse "when faced witlt difficulties
. . . not for the purpose of joining . . . with the guerrillas
In order to attack tile enemy anew, but rather for the pur·
pose of shunning contact with the enemy. Such a tendency
causes the main forces engaged In countering enemy
sweeps to he easily decimated (defeated) and esposed to
enemy psywar (psychological warfare) activities ..."
The document implies the Viet Cong have become too
dependent on modern weapons shipped ln from Hanoi . . .
'lbey should Instead "manage to obtain ljlelr ammunition
and weapons by capturing from the enemy, or to produce
on the spot for their own requirement."
This "separation from the people" In the communities
in which tile guerriJias and North Vietnamese operate.bas
caused a Ioas of combat effectiveness. It has made it very
difficult to recruit new men and has made "many difflcul·
ties" in "messing and billeting" troops.
"As a result of our (Communist) polltlcal weaknesses"

· · . _.;,
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firlt.~. . .' I ,
fa, ~ playeol &amp;iturday,
Bal~ routed l:lenver 24-7

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fi!OPily ~. iCclnld fO\"
l)li,lrolt. : , '
'1'be MflutMota VOOngl who
lljlve ~ 111 Jll~. ~~~~jack !CaPP'Il UJit1 demandl,
tilrned to Gary ~ . Kapp'a
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Maeldnt" bUt lhe ~"'*' 'llllug ~e4 .. TV. •'
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u lbe big trfWI.s In hlU..!D'•
lract a .few Je&amp;r5 ~iiJ&lt;md drive to tile Nallmal Lague

• TheRe&amp;won•"Jciuflhang.
e; ~Y ,over .11\11 Meu ·on
ltill!lftllilh of Jobnily Bench's
twHUDdoublewlthtwooutln
lhe nlntb lmlng.
.
'l'bewlnmadeJliDMerrttftbo
Natlmal ~ague'allr111V1!1111111
wlnnerlbl'"""*\'1·
'1'be Me1o had tali:en a Z.lleed
In the e~tb ' ~er tile Reds
IICill'ed on two singles by Bemle
Carbo and Tommy .Helms' In
tile allth.
Merritt, who was removed attertboeJcbtbforapinchhitter,
walked four and .atruck out
seven In gaining hlol9th win
against 10 !oases.
'1'be Redt were Idle today.
In other National League
games Philadelphia blanked
Houston, 4-G, St. Louis edged
San Dl!!Jio, 8-7, and San Francisco nipped Chicago, ~· The
AUantaatMonlrealcontestwu
rained out.
Clemente Sets Reeord
Hard-hltt,ing Roberto
Clementecollectedfivehi:•for
the aeeond day in a row, in·
eluding a IIOlo homer. as tile
Plr lee
shed hi
tile aDodg":. Witb23hlo~oa~':.m::
two games Clemente set a
major teague record. Steve
Blass stopped tile Dodgers on
four hilo 1n gaining hlo eighth
win.
Frank Johnson's basesloaded plnch-lrlt single In lhe
ninth gave tile Giants the tying
and winning runs against tile
Cubs. Juan Marlcbal gained hlo
eighth win and MUt Pappa~• took
tile loss his sixth
Dero~ Johnaon drove 1n three
runs with a slllgle and hlo :Uih
homer 1n leading tile Phlllies
past the Aslros. Rlci Wise was
the winner, evening his record
at 11-11 while Wsde Blasingame
suffered his forst Joss against
one Win.
Jose ('.ardenal was Ule big gun
in t11e Cardinal victory, driving
in five 1'11118, Including a pair
wltb a slnele climaxiruz a threerun ninth Inning rally. Frank
.
. St. LoUIS
.
Linzy,
tile last of five
pitchers, collected his fourth
win against sit losses as the
Cards completed a sweep pf tile
three-game sertes.

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Once again, the American ayatem of government Is
dem0111tra11Dg how marveloualy complex and elaborately
roundabout Ill declslon-reacbinS proces101 can he.
Lut June, Ccmgreu tnrlftl~nd ovenrbelminiiiY paned
and the Pmldentpromptly
ed Into Jaw ODe cillbe most
far-reaching and eontrO\Ien revlaloaa of the rulea ol our
pOlitleal game In the nation' a hiatory. In one fetleralawoop,
tile 18'111 Voting Rlgbta Act added 11 mUUon to ~ eleele by establishing a natlallal mlnlmiiDI vo~ age of 18
, lor 10011' meuure, bannhag Uteraey teJla and estalJ..
bing ttandarcl residency requlrementl. AU traditionally
were ar,.a of state nsponllbUlty.
:And. jlow, u everyone Involved Intended all along, the
il!ltlfl' is coins to court fc!r 8llOther declllon, whlcb 1111)'
·!of·!~Jaal aDd tben again, maybe not In l1lln8 ault agalnat
tiio' states, Mllona imd ldlho, which have rejected tile act
Where It coDfllcts with tlleir state vottng Jaws, tile Juatlce
D'ellartment II in effect uk!Dg the SU)Inme Court 1c&gt; under·
~ Prelltlellt and Coagreu and cim&amp;rm the 18-year-old
v* u the law of tile land.
'
entlUed to vote baa alwaya
of who
del!Ded area of American
e orilinal CollllltuUon
In Arlicfe Lon the 801118
that election of member's
several Statea" qualified
DIIDieroua braDCh of the State

~

other reference and the Bill of Rigbll'
eonllmlad to tile atatea powera not Ill·
to the laderal gOVOl'IUIIent, that seemed
In full contrOl. ADd so they were for
the Racoaatructlon Alilendmenls-the 14th,
voting age of 21, and the lstb,
vote "on I!=CQunt of nee, color
aervltude"-through the 24th,
~.federal authority

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18-Year-Old Vote--Is It Low or Not?

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NEW YOJIK I'· . . •'i''
hlo $l!OO,IM)II !orql b)'~ pemllll.
.
"ff4 ~ .I'IHSilllrgh' r
0 1 o o Now 'l'crk •
three llllies and gaining a Tb' Rella aputtered mo~!,'~,
tho Jut· II lba Lol· ~ ~
-~Oak~
yards ui ·u ~
ih8 mentarliJ~y,lhppfnl!tlle
Harrelson so
n 0 o C.h!l:aQo :!,
~ ". ' l ii!Jidoocll,'' tbe iJin 18hd, . 3Wl, ,. ~~ , wbipped
Pacbr•IOWeli tmf ~ 1n ~ of a doublebeader to the
Jones 11 I
H 1 o ~h11~• h
., ' lftiriefalllllflle~t- New~,:S:•l7'. ~
ahigh«~ ' tld;ller~' ·.
NewYorkMeta~Gun~
Shaonsk~b
~8H Monteaf'a
0 10
~ ·~~~nc~·:· ~ A11!«11i idlecL Houai4Jn, 14-7; Miami
The world Cllaritplpn KaM85 W81t to work with an e)'ei!Oplq
~!=. 1
~ the CIW:aio iJeul defeateol ·~ .• Ft'aflclaco, 17-7,
City tbloli callect !111 ' ~an strikeout perfonnaooe In tht
Foy 3b
2 0 o.I
folililllu the Natlanal F'Oolliall GreeD' Bay !lfpped Da)lu ~
Steneruil to put any ibe - - ' game.
Grote c
l o 0 o Cincinnati
~, ~IIDII ~- Kania City t.lpped C!n:elarid:
Br~. Sfe11etUc1 ~a pair 'lbe Jtyearold lerthander
err~~~~ P,l1
21 ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~t:a ~
IIDillll on Ill llfUh Pf\!11'1111 • IJ-13; and St. ~ romped
of 0-)'ard 'field goall In ,the fmn Lynn, Ky., came on in I'll·
Taylor p
o o o o Aijanta •
62
tOnira the ~· wJilatJa Ol
~II tl.al.
final mlnu..
.. .
lief 8Dd methodlcaUy mowed
·Sinolelon ph
1 1 .1 0· .tt.OUSI&lt;J11
56 .70
!!c,.,~
· tliU~tVIdlrf
Apalrilr~PlJIIl~eB down Ills atralgbt Meta .. on
Totals
MHt ' SanDI?.,o
..a 79 .378
. J!'·it ,, •.,
·'• '· . Baltlclion gqt ·~• r~bY~~paltof byJobnny~~tlle llrlkeouts ln ,a 7-6 Qnc:lnnatl
~~~: out when winning run N...;,York"r&amp;'~.~~~~:
·~~. ~101 lib J~ perfarmancea against Denver lollchdowii)I!ISIIelto~the lmpetualoi .the~'~ wlnoflerNewYorkhadtaken
Cincinnati
10002001Q-.l Cinci7NewYor.kS, 2nd
~
i'iiiliatb'ar·tbe New 1York Jela fro1il veteran q~ Bousl4ln OIM · · "'· · vlctoey over Cincinnati. '1'be the OlJenet, ~
New Yor~
· 100 ooo 103-5 Philadelphia • Houston o
""
, · !l,lJCit ~ lor aelimi ~ JohnntUnltaaandEill'l MortaD ' 1'Jte MJam~Dio)pblnagot
Benpls played with ' ~
The idslllralght atrlkeout5 for
E-Gmiry, Gra~er. DP- Pittsburgh 11 Los Ang o
tf j .
~ : ~ ~ Ida pre aniOn train- Who bOth " tolled touchdolni flrit ,dividend !rUn the lrade Lewis, a former New York a relief Jitcher lied the Jea8ue
~= Yf:k2· ~0 B-;~"''J::i 1 :· ~nL~~n:i~: 4°~~90 3 ~J ·
·
iii·.· .
J1881!e11, In ngltterlng the 11111 that brought Paul Warfield Giant place kicker, at quarter· record for COMOCUtlve atrlke&lt;Bench. HR- Aaee (2) (20, 21l ' AIIanto at MoniTJill, ·lll&gt;d., raii)l
· '&amp;1'!~th. WP!~ ·fiU!te .~. slraltlhtColt)JfHe&amp;i!On~; (rorii the Clrieland .Browns. back.
outs and Ironically came
Bench !42) . ~8-Peroz. s- ToUl'' Pnol!able Plt~htrl ,
·(·~ ·~riOt' a~ tQ rtak · ltoinan Caliriel ioltojwed' ~ WaifleJ4'teamed with· ~· In a game playeol Friday against Tom Seaver, tht loalng
Nolan, Harrelson.
~~~Times lOTI
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}iii ~bll ._ 'on ,,,tlle f:0U01i · form for . lbe. , 1M. back' ~· !)riHe 011 a 50-)&lt;arcJ night tbe Buffalo Bills pve )itcher, wbo holds the overall
Nolen
~
h
er
b~
~
J;hl~~~~e~J"('-%';."..
~~~~·
6
52 2
~ llekl of~ Yale Bll'rl Ange~ llam8 bf .tllrowlng touchdown paaa In tile fourtb Coach John Rauch bl~ fl~st league record with 10 straight.
Carroll
11·3 11 1 1 o p.m. .
.
,
~· The Jet 1t1r clldn•t lhr'ee IDucbdown p&amp;I!IIOil In a quarter tc&gt; per the Dolphlna victoey of the season by ~ling Gullett wound up with eight
Granger L,6·3 2·3 2 2 2 2 1 Atlonta I·Stone &amp;.91 at Mel!)·,
~t up • hll teammates come-lrom.beblnd victory over over San Franctsco for tbelr the Plilladelphla Eagles $.20. lllrlkeout5ln the four lnn1ni1 he
Gen!Ty
7 4 3 3 5 1 !real !Sioneman 4-12) , Bp.m. ',
iioinil,.:ll-2t, lc&gt; lba ~York OaldU4. A i!OI'e knee .bad ~' straichl victory.
O.J. Simpson and noover worked while gaining hio third
Tat'";.~S-4 . 2 2 I I 0 0 (Clnl~:~~~~~~ -~
' ~II. u th!l ''otber ..~uarter· releptedGabddtoupectator
Alldono!ISbowoFana
BubbaThCil'II14Jnrecelvedankle win In five starts wlille reaf.
·. s'etONDGAME
Houstoin atMon!Teal , night
~. In N• Yprk," Fran role In list w~k'a CMII)Ieal )'lith Donqy Anderson, IIOffieWbal Injuries but are not expected 1o flrmillg the "can't miss" label
CINCINNATI
Atl~nta at New York, night ,0
·Menton of' the Qlang threw DaDal ·· ,
of a · d(lappolntment 51nce miss tbla !ll!&lt;k's game against the Reds tagged on him when
ob r h bl Cine! at. Pl&gt;lla, night
,, ,
Jb,ee toucbilow '&lt;
SOOiiy~ 'Wiilliuna' 102-¥atd
..
. ,
they drafted him from Soulx
Rose rf
5 2 l 0 Chicago at Los Ang, nipht '
·.' . .
• pMiil In tbe
.
signing a ~000. bonus con- WaShington.
FaJIJTh ~~t byNorthemRedslagued.
~r~ ~
~ ~ g ~~~~::~ ~~~;a~?~lght . l
.
.
e ... ~
tbe
an
May lb
s oo1
r
Me15 combined with Pltll·
Carbo II
LU...!
Amerlc.n League
y
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burgh's 11-11 thra8hlng of Loa
tfelins2b
51 2 I
Eo~
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Angeles enabled Clnclnnatland
Coralles c
3 0 1 0 Baltimore
so '45 · .~· ~·:
tbe Pirates to gain a half game
~~~rdss
~
New York
69 56 .552 11 .,.
1
By·· MeJMNt
eJcbiiOIIIel.
Theonlyhits'Joililaonoiubwed two's,tbenNbaveacltanceat In their respective dlvlslona.
Stewartph
1 1 13 ~\~
~ ~ :~~ ~~ ~ ~;
UI!ISportsWrller
In other AL games, Delrolt were a three-run homer by rookie of the year," uld 1beRedsoowleadtbo'l:lod2ers
Concepclonss
1 0 0 0 Cleveland
61 64 .4811 19 ····
Bill Bob Joru.oo d!!mllllltrat. nipped MUwaukee, I-ll; Balli· Tony Conigliaro 1n tile fourth Johnson. "But thet's asking by II \It In tile West, while
M&lt;.Giothlln P
1 0 0 0 Washington 60 65 .ol80 20 ,•[
ed · tbe · .-~ . of hll potential more edged California, 64; and a, double by Reggie Smith qultealol,. "
Plttaburghlsthreeaheadofthe
:'::~:~~np
~gg~
Wost
''
Suqday •wMn he ttro-blt the Wuhlngton routed Minnesota, In the ninth. Other than tbst, be Despite Jill QlllstandfD&amp; pitch- Mets.
Gullet p
2 0 0 o Minnesota
W. L Pet. GB
'llclllor! tied Sol u ·the ·!Wl'all 11-11 Clevel4ltd topped Oakland, was In complete control.
fnl!, Johnson would !lave ended
"This Is tile fastest I've been
Totals
37 7 12 • California
~~ ~
5'' 1'
·. ~ out -1 4-3 victory. U; and the New York Yankees
Alb Quite ALot
up. tile 111ser bad lt not been for au year," said the IJ..foot, 19&amp;NEW YORK
O..kiond
68 58 :s.oo 6',;·
B•ljiN ~ ·onl)o two hila, won ~. nlghd:ap of a "I've got seven or e!ght more a two-ran triple by Bob Ollver p:nmd ~uDell after stoppfnl! tile
Harrelson 55
ob4 1bJ Kansas City .OS
77 l84"26
46 80 365 2811
J~ ·.. d'-blllhed a club doubleheader, 7-9, after drop- starla, and HI could win five In tbe seventh which put the Meta. I bad my rhythm and
Garrett2b
4 2 1 1 Milwaukee
· 57 30 "
~ With 121trlkeoull u he ping the· open01·, ~. to the or six of those 8Dd get my Royals ahead. Ed Kirkpatrick my motl111 was real good."
Jones d
2 2 o o Chlcagsunilar'~ R:u1
:
~ bla iUIII victory qalnll Chlcaio White Sell.
earned run average down In the al&amp;o contributed to tile Jloxala' Gullett, who spurned a numShamsky If1
l 0 0 O Chlcogo 2 New York o, 1st ·. ·
attack witb his 15tb homer.
~ of OOIJege football offers
~!:=~1 b
~ g~ ~ New York 7 Chicago 5, 2nd ··
" ,,., ' ·
4 0 0 1 Kansas City 4 Boston 3
Mickey Lolk:li pitched almost ~use baseball is my first
Foy 3b
···
' ,,. · •
·
·· ··
·
·
u well as Jollnson, .in the love, g~t help at tbo plate from
Dyer c
l o o o ~~~~g~% 1 :~.~~': ~
,.,
~e
'
Tfgers' victory over tile Brew. pinch hitter Jimmy Stewart,
Seaverp
2 0 0 0 Cievelond 8 Oakland 6
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ers, but he had to he baii&amp;i out wltose thre&amp;run homer In the
FAgrl,:~~
P
00
0 0 Balllmore 6 California 5
1.
0
1
.
of a nlntiHnnlng Jam lil' Tom seventh enabled the Reds to
SlderttP
Ao ~ 8 Todaf~V;-'i=.bi~JWhers ·~
(UPI)- wjde-(,pen field and ran 44 Summerslntlleflnalperiod.
'l'tmJ1lerman. Lollch aJJowed overtaie tile Meta and band
Slnglelonlf
10 0 0 NewYOI'k [Siottiemyre l2·10)
29 5 4 ~ at Kansas City (Fitzmorris 7,
Browns yards' for the tally.
Leroy Kellyledbotb teams In only two hila and struck oull4, faltering Staver hiB third con·
~~~~~nail
002 020
8
to defC!ildlng 11te only scoring In tile entire rushing wltb ~ yards, an then left the game wben tbe secutlve loss.
N- York
.•
203 000 ooo-300--. l), ' 30 p.m.
"'"-"'~
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:
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f
f
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try
B
loaded
·S
!Only
game scheduled!
·
.__... ....... aeeona ..... cameonfleldgoals average o our yar a .
rewers
tile bases witb
E- Dyer . DP- Cincinnatl 1.
Tuesday's
Games
''
be teady by Cockroft and Sfenerud, ' Rookie tWilling back Steve none out In the ninth.
TheMetawontlleopenerooa
LOB-Cincinnati 11, New York New YOI'k atKan City, nlgrit!
72B-R
Cleveland gained 250 y~d to Egale from Colorado had to be Timmennan took over 'B!ld palrofhomersbyTommle Agee
BoslcM at Minn. nir,ht
38 G
11 HR
161 for Kansas City and bad 15 helped ,of! tile field by hl8 got Ted Kubiak to force pinch- - hlo .:1001 8Dd Zlst - and a
stewarf"i 1) . - s~~~r~elso;;: ~1r 6:;)":9f;,inn~~~
Oral dolillll to lhe tblef's eight. Browns team-mates just before rwmer Ruu Snyder at .tlje tltree-&lt;"un ruDy In tile nlnlh In
Bravo. ·
Mllw at Cleve ' night
Nal&amp;on.hlt 13 of :12 posses far tile balf enc!ed. He suffered an plate, struck out Tomn!y wlllch Red reliever 8Dd loser
lp h r or bb sb Oakland at B~lt night
previOIJ&amp; l7S yards, but bad two Injury to hio right knee, which Harper and retired plnciHIItter Wayne i}ranger walked In the
FIRST GAME
':fa~~~~:~n ~ ~:; ~ ~ ~ ~
, ln::r:~:=~~t~~~~~ Jte ~d:opOillted onlall;;odat.-. i DaY!! ~ on • &lt;;,gl'oundout lo ~tpt;~,JWcl TIIY)llt,,.~,.
CINCINNATI
Gu~ W, l-2 ~ &lt;1 ollll' ; · • .: •• . •
ti
' Jest relltiltftn the extent M·1fle j end1he gil,ni:U~as Tll'ru'nJl'· WOFkW.klr ~i lOt ~'
"••".. lti r 1\.bl Se r.I, .17.4 -~ 1U,..6., s.. ~ _~Jl
111.';;,•;: ' IJtjiD'y 'li'erif 1tO btl' iteleased ' man's 22nd save 'Of~ season. GuQetl, Who has beo!n Jlltii8i("'RoooJ1
50 0 0 Fri . Ha
• r'
1 0 ~&lt;t&gt;i' iJ ~~
'' bll ''ll~lifi~·'· tOday.
" ,,
Cuellar ........,.00
to Sandy Koufax at a C'Ompal&amp;· Tol~n i:f
4 I I 0 So ecki
I 0 0 0 0 1 CINCINNATI (UP!)- One
"i""'
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ld b
•t
Perez. 3b
3 I 2 1 HOP- By Seaver (Tolen) . T - I
.
The Orioles wM lost a game e age, sa e W8811 aware Benchc
ength wms were recorded by
3 2 2 2 2, 59. A-.:~.m.
1o tbe Angela ln tile JOtb Inning
~over ln tile $7500 Rhineand
Saturday night, puDed one out
lander Handicap and Bare
c10
In tile ninth on a twiHlUI runPocket in the $4000 Tristate
scllring
single
by
Paul
Blair.
Handicap
Saturday in River
1
1
Blair's hit made a 19-game
Downs' two featured races.
winner of Mlke Cuellar, !fho
..
went all lhe way for the WILMINGTON,Ohio (UP!)- half, but tile Cardinals' Johnny Bengals.
Orioles.
"We . were just overwhelmed. Roland plunged over for two Guy Dennis, second year Finland legalized public~
Frank Howard did. In the Outmwmed." A weary Paul touchdowns afw entering the guard for the Bengals, summed roulette in 1!!69 and wheelll '!
Twins for the second straight Brown had litUe good to say game in the second half and the 1t up for the team. " It was just of chance now spin in 11 Fl~ ·
nish cities.
ns
day as he and Del Unser about his Cincinnati Bengals' team added another TD in lhe a bad ball game," he said.
·ol
cracked three-nm homers to 41·20 loss lo tile St. Louis fourth quarter to demolish the "And I was the worst I've
~
By ..1111'01'f)paDlAN
lll'l!&lt;l. ~he's different than support the &amp;IE-lUI pitching of Cardinals Saturday night.
ever played in my life, •' he
Complete Lines
j '
. ·tlJ'I ~Writer
IOmaDJoftbeot:hell,.lhouih, Ia Dick BoSman. Howard, cracked "Call It what you will,'' tile
added. "I don 't want to take
·j
~ ,1:0~ (UPI) Sm~e that be ,Uepl going out tllere hlo 36th of tile season wltb two coach said. "There isn't much I
anything away from St. Louis,
peoptl,'"~towmder and ,buot~agutwhetberlte's ,., in tile flrsllnnlng to spoil can add to 'it."
but they weren~ as good as
If ~ Meta ~:lin do It again.
rlred. or not.
Jlm Perry's bid for hlo 1!ltb The 8engals bad trailed by
Miami." Miami beat' lhe
wtnnlnl 1bal, In ltaelt, lln't 10 bad.
"U you go 8l'OWid saying victory.
·
only three points, 2G-l7, at lhe
Bengals tile week before.
1
'Mllt smorulplflCIIIt Ia tht )'IIU're tired, ~ you..'re lOinS Eddie Lean's two-run double
Doug Dressler, rookie runrung
1, :;•~:~ ICOI'e
'•
(i
·co;. face
~ tile . Meta are lo ~I tired, Tommie A&amp;ee snap!!ed a U tie In tile eighth
back, agreed.
be~.~~lnr to· wonde~ tbem- 118!'1. "l'byllcuDy•. I am t~. inning ancl enabl¢ tile lndlarl8 ~ .. n
"They weren't nearly as fired
~
s;.,·al'd II
,· ,·.. llro11hav.'.to be~ )'IIUrun 1\ to sweep their tbr~ set'l'UCI.al
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio up as Miami was, yet they ran
'I
~~=~C~·!oo;Jt: lol,oul mfe'llft!leld' ~ atesl )'lith the Athletics. Grals ,
•
(UPI) - The fourth annual over us," be said.
,
.
a.lol II(~. Wha.ll lrY to. do •. Nettles and Jack Heidemann
Nation~ I Tractor Pulling Horst Muhlmann ticked two "Wher e Shoes Are Sensi bly IT
Priced "
.f
·tltOC!&amp;h.'· ~ keep .my~eU up boniered for Cleveland whUe
Otamptonsblps ended Sanday field goals for lhe Bengals, a
Middleport
~;~:;~:::· QlelitaJIY.•I dolt~ let ID)'IC!l,f lei Genll Tenace, pitcher John ·
at the Wood
County 34-yard one in lhe second period
· down In :;
Yov. lull (ldom, ruck· Monclay and Don
FairgroWlda and f!J,OOO In prise and a :!9-yard goal for
t'8D''j~
he""&gt;i r.ilncher each ~ted for
money was distributed to Cinc~'sflnalscorlng.
~"i1'11f, !1'!'\l'l
one
IJl
OW&amp;Qd.
:
'
winners In Ills cla8808.
l!ro\m 88ld be would probably
thiS
, ' Tojljmy John,pitched a four.
Bill Rausch of Forest, Oblo, I1I8D about 10 cuts from the
hitlel'andLula i~Irlclocollect. Bob Sa~s· Quaker .Stale wm tbo 7,000 pound modified squad Ibis week as a result of
ed iout hill u · the White Sox Service Center Sl..Pltch soft- wlllla''fullpuD"of330feet.'l'be tile losa.
defeated· the Y~ :In the b~ll leanl captured thre' feat, of pulllng a !Dad added 1o
flnl'
o1 tbair tl,oubleheatl· 'friu!upll8 over the weekend.
the back of a lractor the full . - - -- - ~.~~r~~
111e Yankees
In the Athens tournament, contest dlatance, was only THE 11AfLY SENTINEL
to win
r~ Stale do'imed tile Logan equalled by one other winner,

·~- ~iiPt'IIWiff«
, •!.Wiili D • • ~

I'!,Ii.l''";i.

WASffiNGTON (NEA)
It is common and natural to talk of our· difficulties in
VIetnam. It Is easr to forget the North Vietnamese and
VietCong have thett own very serious internal l.'ro~Jems.
'lbiJ reporter has just read the most pessbnlilic assessment of the Vietnam war he has ever seen.
It was contained In a direCtive on how the war Is to he
fought in 1970 and for the forseeable future, written by the
Centru Office for South Vietnam (the Commanlst ~h
command In the south) and directed to all provlncljil,
municipal and )niJitary region party committees. Wrll:teli
In November, 1968, it was only recently captured.
'lbiJ "Resolution" was not meant to he discouraging. oil
almost every page It boasts of the great defeats handed
the Americans and South Vietnamese. The crumblin~ of
tile Saigon ~ovemment Is confidently predicted. Fmal
Yietory Is hailed.
But in directing party committees on their future tasks
and away from their mistakes, it outlines what bas gon~
wrong In the past and what Is sun out of kilter.
Wbat has baepened is that "we (Communists) placed too
much reliance ' on winniDg the war lhrougb military victories; "we failed" to motivate the masses-to get close
to the people and get them on "our" side.
Tbf' political struggle was neglected. Propagandlzation
of the
line bas not been carried on with diligence.
Party eadership bas deteriorated.
The party committees have become "divorced" from
the guerrillas and the guerrillas "dissociated" from tile

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Cop8 Three

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12,000 pound modified.
Carl
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Of Ada,
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Fairview News Notes

News, Events

WA'ITR ESS wonltd, doy or
nl~ht,

lull ... port time.

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Fairview News Notes

News, Events

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nl~ht,

lull ... port time.

can

!hi Blue Torten. Phone !'92·

9941 .

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tUi&gt;I}-A -~ aqd two
"'~ ~ !lave C411•
·plnlcled a m&amp;Chlne IIIey say
;- ~ 'allout lillf of all
MM't ·~ baurs 'Ill' !Mil
~ In ac~Yance.

_,.L, .l " •. ' ,.,

!lei,!'!, !Jy · ~up an umjllial

beet caned an · "~c" ~l
Pl)yliciAila ,bjo:ie noted lhllt
when IUCb beats ~ lh
frequency poe of diem ... ~
heart In~ deadl1 llbrlllaliOI!
whlcb must be rapidly c:llft'eCI.

Tbey uy lllelr ''ventricular eel.
detect« and allrm" One problem now Ia lbat,
can predicl ve~~lrlc:ular llbriUa- because thele beats are not
tlon, an elecir!cJI failure In the detected' in time, palienla die
before leaching hospitals.
Tbelr macblne Ia about tbe
size
of a cigarette pack, has
Infant Di&amp; at
twa sensors wbich are placed
Home of Parentll on tbe cheo;t and Ia poWered by

Jmpu!JO

a tr&amp;n!iator battery.
Christopher Allen Haley, The physician and chemlat Ia
lllfant son of Mark and Donna Dr. John W. ~ .of 'tbe
Lee (Hooper) Haley, died Lawrence Radiation LaboratoSaturday morning at tbe home ry. The electnmlca eqineerll1ll
ol bla parents on N. Second are Richard D. Lawhorn and
An., Middleport.
Robert L. Chapman.
Sw;'vlvlng In addition to bla
Their machine still needs
parents, 1re tbe grandparents, clinical teals bot Chapman
Mr. and ·Mra. Dwight ~y' declarea: "We're talking
WHEN '111E -SAINTS- St. llerutis, that Ia - 10 marehfDJ Ill, tli~f'~. ~aiiPINd
Rulilild, and Mr. and Mrs. about tbe potential of saving
to carry braady lleJ•· Tbla pup, oae of nine bonl 'to "Held! at N'orlllfteld Ceat,r,
Donald Hooper, Shade; great- hundreds of thouaanda of lives
Ohio, daeaa't Melli quite ap to 11.
.
JI'IIldparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon Utile, Middleport, and
Gus Graham, The Plains, and
several aunts and uncles.
Funeral services wlll be
Tueaday at 10 a. m. at the
Rawllnp-Coats Funeral Home
with tbe Rev. 0. H. Cart of.
flclatlng. Burial will be In the
Three persons suffered minor
Mllea raoetery at Rutland. injuries at 9:45a. m. Sunday in
by Mort Reed
Friends mioy call at tbe funeral a traffic accident on Rl. 33 In
home anytime.
Meigs CoWlty . According to tbe

Three Injured
In Accident

gear last P'rlda7 Iii preparatkin for lint pmel followlnl
Labor Day. Above, a ~der offensive IUid defellllve unit
go ~til 111 tile Middleport practice field.
·

lONG FOO'l'8AlL -~· ~ '" the air again In
Meigs County aslbe ~. Tomr
"lid Eagles of
Meigs Local, Southern ~ IUid EBit
~~ on run

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Gallipolis Pt •I State Highway
Patrol, Herbert E. Whaley, 28,
Rt. 1, Shade, lost control of his
auto, went oft the right side of
the highway and struck an

MEIGS lltEAlRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
......124&amp; 25

JOHN ANO WIRY
ITtchnlco~rl

Dustin Hoffman Is JOHN I
Mia Farro Is WIRY I

"R" restricted! Persons

under 17 not admitted unless
accompanied by a parent or
guardian I
Ca~r1oons:

Judos Kudos

Rock Haund
Don't I» Silly
Adml .. lon : 11.110

embankment.
Whaley and two paaaengers,
Brian Whaley, age sb, and
Carla Whaley, age eltlbt, were
treated at Veterana Memorial
Hoapltal lor minor injuries.
Damage was moderate to ··

::"!:t!~o·::..,~

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EXPO '70 Commemorative Medal

..__ _ _ ___, Moderate Damll8tl

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Reported to Auto

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9 A.Mi to 7 P.M.

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Double Faaturs Program
"MIDNIGHT COWBOY"

1ea•1

Dustin Hoffman, John

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Anthony Qu1nn
M1chatl Ca1ne
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Moi1ibar Fedarlll

Jill

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I Academy Award Wlnnarl
· t Picture of the Y011r

inlPotiWOy.
SAVII&amp;Sdl
Olllo
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''~P!I:b~nt 111kl Jamti Aljlert

TDiilgbi&amp;T.....r.y

ICOrlllniiDUIIYl
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County sheriff's'

11AIO
NDRIVE·IN
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Oilier I 1111111 -

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bulnol

32, Racine, Rl. 2, wai
· driving • 1!164 Dodge north
pulling a U Haul trailer,
WUUam E. AdklM, 15, Racine,
· Rt. 2, going south in a '59 Ford,
attempted a left band turn Into
the ltarry Hill driveway into the
aide of Riffle's car.
·' Adkins waa cited on charges
of no ~ator's license, no
Ucense plates, and failure to
yield right (l( way. The Riffle
vehicle was heavily damaged
and the Adkins car was
delnollahetl. There were no
Injuries. ·

NEW P1tESS UNIT ARRIVES - A new 1-page prea unit arrlwd at the Olio Valley '
Publlabing Co. Monday, and Ia currently being inslalled on the company's tllree-year-old
offset preas. The new $30,000 unit wiD enable tbe COIIIJHIDY to increase ita Bingle-run&lt;l&amp;pllcity
to 32P'I8•. and double Its co!ar capabl!ltles. Pictured above unloading the ~&gt;ton unit, left to
right, are lnstallsr Bill Carsten, of tbe Goal Co., Chicago, parllaUy bidden from view; J"Y
Hackney, CoiiUilbull; Mike G.vcla&gt;Oieshlre, and Othp MattoJ;, Pl. Pleaaant, press room
superintendent. The new unit Ia apected to be In operation by the.end of tbe week.

Blight Damages~

Frien4Aug.

MATCHING

"

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Af'PUANCES AVA!LAllE,·

qpnlud •(• shaped c:&lt;~binets l"!'nild to meet ~: deii!ands
~ a busy ....._Ira, Modem styli.., plut t~ ~~~~~ of walnut
!tine cabiliel,l clli!lbinld ytllh euy-to-Ciun FcfnnfUII countel-

tcp. Special feaitns Include nrlon llidea on d!IWI!rs foumooth·

er ..,_nlns ·~ ~nation lilna~o&lt;:~tch

Oil tO ba~ •lid ~II
cabulllts. Unot 111Ciudes: roomy cabllli!b, counlirtop, c;ol9t'ed
steel sink to match appliances, faucat Yllth ~ray and ba&lt;l!&lt;et
llralner.
·
.

'

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