Newspaper Page Text
Page 6
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, April 3,1975
yjatMA
And
Trevira Makes It Easy
For you—
to step out in style in trendsetting Knitmates suited for summer occasions in soft toned
silhouettes of Pink Geranium and Meadow Mist combined with white.
HL
/ | / ' k James Kenrob Knitmates \'l ! i j'Aa
/ A XrA J are designed to suit y. •' ®
J 9 your mood in a casual IjUtO |
Bh.l 'IIP iR "no fashioned
z | < in 100% polyester. L| ? \X
I J V II \ Sizes 6to 18. V F V
\ ' Solid color ribbed, w
\ xJLjStJ v-neck cardigan, M 4.00 v
James Kenrob designs y h Solid co * or Jn?
trendsetting silhouettes fa/ four B ore swin 8 skirt, 124.00
suited for sophisticated tastes. A division of Dalton ' /yjOp I
These summer-minded 11 \V A Va\ s'
knitmates are fashioned I, /j fX V
in 100% polyester. | -Z B \
Sizes 6to 18. I \Xr h i l
Solid color boucle H I] i/Jr
self belted jacket, H 4.00 h / L A jhi
Solid color boucle 1/ ll l\ \ \lz >
four gore swing skirt, >24.00 / ■ / / 1 r \
/ * / I 1 *x \
A division of Dalton //'if / 1 j \
//Ii / I i \
,/ // \ I / I \ 11
<_l ! F /Ji \ *
I I '
/ / '
I \ I
II \ I
I / \
I / \
/ /
l( A
(\\ jr*
® Hi
iihO r? '
'fOM/V v Put on sportive airs with jpff X ''
h James Kenrob Knitmates tMaT< V
< u- u- i i iihv .' rs
®>u f/jP ja fashioned in x A, ’ |I|IL > f\|
Wl 100% polyester. \ \ |WV\ ) \||
fpllO Sizes 6to 18. V Wi : Ewßk
WuV V Two tone ■
J&kw*' striped skivvy top, mOO Get suited for summer /LaffV * " WoWMf
* '« Solid color in James Kenrob Knitmates T
XVi'- ' ' \ pull-on pants, 130.00 designed in classic shapes [' 1\ ■.l' t* Wb
i \ and fashioned \\VAjiJ \ I \ |hK
Br| W<O4 Adivisiono,Da,ton in 100% polyester. .1 \ i .
• Sizes 6to 18.
ff t 4 1- j. jj jp [ U Multi-color 1 q . If >
t I F | striped shirt jacket, >oß.oo X\ 1g
I L, J I Solid color {? |L T
If I ribbed mock turtleneck, $24.00?< \
j / / Solid color XF \ g
If ■ I pull-on pants, 830.00 I I I **W
/ A division of Dalton \ T
* u \
Ii \ \ V
f / / A I
I -J ? 1 Mlf w® at' *
ill' / 1 1
I I / K \
il I | \ \
11 I / J \
A\ ShUkSUb L ' \
t ... "First In Fashion”
’Na, *
k- T •s. ’I ll ; *L>"’
Ktr* mA W. l
nf -' 'AwVBe
RjpHd| Kl ran a?
Wr ,i SJ 'WRK
W JWKw.
Crying baby girl transferred from one boat to another during
evacuation of refugees.
Cong ready to talk
SAIGON (UPI) - Senior
Communist diplomats said to
night the Viet Cong will enter
into immediate negotiations for
a cease-fire if South Viet
namese President Nguyen Van
Thieu is ousted.
“They are ready to stop the
fighting immediately,” a lead
ing Communist diplomat with
close ties to the Viet Cong
military delegation in Saigon
told the UPI.
“I am sure that if Thieu goes
the PRG (Provisional Revolu
tionary Government) will enter
into immediate negotiations,”
the diplomat said. “The PRG is
very interested in negotiating.”
With the Communist peace
feelers, no major Communist
advances were reported today
in their offensive that has
swallowed up most of South
Vietnam.
Streams of refugees and
army stragglers still poured
Reinforcements rushed
PHNOM PENH (UPI) — The
government rushed reinforce
ments today to an area five
miles northwest of Phnom Penh
where a rebel force punched a
hole in the city’s defense
perimeter Wednesday.
Heavy fighting was reported
there today and the government
said the situation was not clear.
Military sources said rebel
forces destroyed a government
force of three Mll3 armored
personnel carriers at Puon
Phnom village five miles
northwest of the Phnom Penh
airport when they raced in to
try to relieve government
troops who have been encircled
for several days.
The government also gave up
new ground south of Phnom
Penh and the Communist
victories increased the threat to
the airport—Phnom Penh’s only
link with the outside world.
About 60 rockets hit the city
and the airport Wednesday, and
early today, damaging some
planes but failing to halt the
U.S. airlift.
The U.S. Embassy was able
to fly a group of 53 embassy
workers to Bangkok today
under announced planes to
evacuate 15 per cent of the
personnel to Thailand “tem
porarily.” They were 31 Kore
nas, 15 Filipinos, one French
and six American military
personnel.
One U.S. DCS rice plane was
slightly damaged by machine
gun fire and an airplane
belonging to a local airline was
reported hit by shrapnel Wed
nesday, slightly wounding its
American pilot and seriously
wounding a Cambodian me
chanic. This morning, shrapnel
damaged a T2B attack bomber
and wounded the pilot.
(Thailand Premier Kukrit
Pramjo touched off a brief
flurry of excitement in Bangkok
when he said he had reports
that Phnom Penh had fallen.
He quickly corrected the report
but said Communists had
moved to the outskirts of the
Cambodian capital.)
There was heavy fighting all
around Phnom Penh, some of it
into Saigon and the city
government issued shoot to kill
orders and other stringent
regulations to keep control of a
chaotic situation.
Military authorities an
nounced that the curfew in
Saigon was being moved ahead
one hour from 10 p.m. to 9 p.m.
effective tonight.
In the Mekong Delta city of
Can Tho, 75 miles southwest of
Saigon where Australian planes
flew in 1,800 refugees Wednes
day, the curfew was moved up
to 8 p.m. from 10 p.m.
Thieu’s fate was increasingly
in doubt. He was in disfavor
with some military leaders who
blamed him for the debacle
that has delivered three-fourths
of South Vietnam to the
Communists without a struggle.
Reports Wednesday said the
generals had given Thieu three
days to resign. The Council of
Generals met throughout the
only 2% miles from the heart of
the city, the closest across the
Mekong River from Phnom
Penh.
Military sources said the size
__-A___ Triple-cushion heel 'vk y
X DOIXaUe F/ ,or bu °y anc y-
Jr*” m J/ Cushioned arch-lift
DortD-oed ““f / WxS^i^ ,upport \i
[ U Air-celled cushion 1
I [ , —A for comfort.
■A Steel shank / \ F | J II
1 £BB » QBB V r ’ ,ren9,h y
Av ® V Long-lived welt
construction.
One Lot
Children's Tennis 1A Price
Shoes '
f)9
OPEN iZO / .
• SERVICE
MY (C-tTsHOES T uauty «
WED. IKiiillii 125 South Hill Street
day to discuss action—only the
second time in three years the
generals were known to have
met in a group.
There was pressure from the
Saigon senate, from Buddhists,
from militant Roman Catholics
and from outside sources for
Thieu to step down. Today in
London, Sen. Jacob Javits, R-
N.Y., said there was a
possibility the U.S. Congress
would be more favorably
disposed to aid South Vietnam
if Thieu quit.
Another Communist diplomat
said, “Negotiations which
would bring about some sort of
coalition and elections would be
the cheap way to victory.”
The diplomats said, however
that the Viet Cong would likely
press for a decisive battle for
Saigon if President Thieu
remained in office. There were
similar official statements
Wednesday in Paris by mem-
of the insurgent force that
broke through the defense
perimeter along a dike five
miles northwest of the city was
not known, but that one
bers of the permanent Viet
Cong delegation there who said
Saigon could even come under
artillery bombardment.
The Communists indicated
that the three-party National
Council of Reconciliation which
was provided for in the Paris
peace accords but was never
put into operation might be the
vehicle for the peace negotia
tions.
There have never been
substantive talks between the
South Vietnamese and Viet
Cong—and there has been no
formal contact between them
since April of 1974 when Saigon
called off the weekly meetings
in Saigon and Paris.
The shoot to kill orders
already have been carried out
in some areas. The commander
of the 111 Corps—the Saigon
area — used firing squads
Wednesday to execute a num
ber of unruly troops.
battalion of government rein
forcements was moved in to try
to stem the rebel advance. The
sources said fighting continued
through the day.