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PAGE SIX
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PHOTOGRAPHERS GO TO KAESONG — These five
press photographers are the first United Nations news
men to go to Kaesong, Korea, for the Allied-Communist
peace talks. They are sitting in a jeep at their base camp
near Kaesone. In the center foreground is James Pringle
of the Associated Press. Others, left to right, are Ronnie
Noble of the British Broadeasting Corporation television,
Joe Scherschel of Life Magazine, James Healy of Aeme
Newspictures, and Gene Zenier of Warner-Pathe News
recls.— (AP Wirephoto from Tokyo via radio.)
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FLAG-RAISING IN KOREA—Everybody tries to get into the ach
as these enthusiastic Yank infantrymen raise the American flag,
atop an enemy hill position their outfit has just taken, (Defensd ,
Department photo from NEA.)
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JUST A NICE STROLL—Mrs. Julia Roka King St. Clair is pic
tured arriving in Glendale, Calif,, making good her promise to get
to California “even if I have to walk.” And walk she did, pushing
a wheelbarrow 3000 miles from Jacksonville, Fla,, accompanied by
her 9-year-old son Dolphy and a hitch-hiking cat from Arkansas.
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BOOK HONORS HEROES—These are typical pages in a mag
nificently illuminated Book of the American Dead, honoring U. 8.
personnel who were killed while based in Great Britain during the
w World War 11. It contains an honor roll of 28,000 names. After
being presented to the British people by Gen. Dwight Eisenhower,
# will be placed on exhibition in the American Memorial Chapel
at St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
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GETS UNIQUE JOB—Gordon
Gray, above, president of the
University of North Carolina,
has been named by President
Truman asg director of the new
Psychological Warfare Strategy
Board. Main work of the board
will be .the development and
conduct of world-wide psycho
logical warfare to counter So=-
viet propaganda. ;
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SILLY SEASON — Ray “Old
Iron Pants” Vetter, of Phoenix,
Ariz., who claims to be the
svorld’s first “cactus sitter,” be=
gins a six-week stay atop a
“cactus” perch in an attempt to
win SIOO, Vetier bet a fellow
radio announcer that he can lure
more fansg into the Phoenix soft«
ball park., He’ll have to draw a
total of 105,442 fans to win
his bet,
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FOR WHOM THE SHELLS TOLL — Maj. Roy Dunford, of
Vancouver, B, C,, Canadian Army chaplain, uses this unique set of
s ’ » * ' . ~ s
chimes to summon men of his unit to church services, The chimes
are made from the empty cases of shells fired by the famous Cana
dian artillery unit, “Hell’s Bells.”
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HOMES FOR HAITIANS — For the first time in the colorful
history of the western hemisphere’s only French-speaking republic,
low-cost housing is being built for Haiti's “little man,” The first
“Workers' City” is nearing completion at Port-au-Prince, where
these workers are seen building one of the new homes. A wide-
Spre SO( and economic reform program of President Paul
Magliore calls { 15 low-cost housing pilc ts throughout the
island at a cost of about $564,000,
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
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SCROUNGING FOR FOOD—After a regional bar on gathering seaweed at Kuju- Kunbama.’f
Japan, was lifted, scores of fisherwomen raced to the beach to harvest the slimy plants, Some- ¥
, times called sea lettuce, they are used for salads and to flavor other foods. '/
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KELP WANTED—At a given signal, which lifts the regional ban on gathering seaweed, fisher
women race to the water's edge at Kuju-Kurihama, Japan. The seaweed is dried and used for]
¢ salads or to flavor other foods. + ’
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“TODAY” FOLLOWS “YESTERDAY"”—This automatic hay baler, one of the most advanced
farm machines, is usually pulled by an equally modern tractor. But on this farm, near New Hol
land, Pa., four mules provide the “horsepower.” In most parts of the country, mules and horses
are rapidly disappearing from the farm scene, but Amish farmers still cling to traditional draught
animals. This farmer added a wagon hitch, seat and handbrake and substituted steel wheels for
rubber tires to convert the baler into a mule-drawn machine.
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Tanks were invent~d by the British and first used during World
War I at the battle of the Somme. Pride of the British a,nnored.
forces was this Mark V tank, seen at the Royal Armored Corps
driving and maintenance school at Bovington, Dorset, Eng. The
33-year-old vehicle weighs 29 tons, carried a crew of eight and
mounted two six-pounder guns and light machine guns.
Sept. 3, 1939—World o S J
War M starts as Hitler o |
attacks Poland. \ 8
June 22, 1941—Nazis . Zei ~ g O Wu‘
invade Russia. B SNBSS B
Dec. 7, 1941—U. S. W Rr‘ B r
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attack Pearl Harbor. k : - g s
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occupy Rome. S 0 R ASAE Sl
April 29, 1945—Italy o I
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June 25, 1950—(Korean HIWIN & -’8 R
Time)—North Korean W% s"' i\ &\ 1.7
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South Korea. e §l £ N o |
| [iuly 8, 1951—North WWNNENC_ B TNINS IR man |)}
Korean and Chinese WEEEY 0 Ila rfix:m
Communist officers meet NERMBN Cot? N
with representatives of e 7 N # ){g 15‘
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chief to prepare for [l /W g A 5
cease-fire negotiations. FH . — Se
SUNDAY—DAY OF BIG NEWS-BREAKS—Sunday continues
to live up to its reputation as a day of big wartime news-breaks.
The latest was, of course, the meeting between Communist and UN
officers to discuss a cease-fire that could end the Korean war. Other
important news-breaks that came on Sundays are listed above.
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Used in large numbers during the Normandy invasion of World
War II was the British Cromwell, above. With engines roaring full
throttle, the Cromwell hurls its 28-ton mass off a concrele ramp at
the Royal Armored Corps’ school at Bo*n:ton, Eng. The tank has
o » top speed of over 38 miles an howr, ~
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FLYING LABORATORY—Designed for high-speed B¢t yifit 0.
research is this new delta-winged jet plane, shown ‘ g,le Seab
in England for the British Ministry of Supp]y.' The !.1113‘ Vll""r
craft is powered by a Rolls-Royce Nene turbojet engine. er
formance details are secret.
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WAR DOESN'T STOP SCOUTS—Despite the war that has
devastated their country, Korean Boy Scouts are earrying on in
good shape, as a Navy ecombat photographer learned when he
encountered this Cub patrol in Pusan. After some persuasion, they
posed for this picture, with their three-star leader in the center.
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TURTLES IN THE “SOUP’—Turfles like water, but they also
like to come out once in a while and get some air and sun. Thanks
to flood waters that cover many areas in Kansas, these turtles are
having a tough time trying to find a dry place on the back porch
“of this Wichita house.
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OH, BOY! FRUIT SALAD!—Mama’s bat, liberally decorated "“h,‘
choice and colorful fruit, is just too tempting for roguish Tomymyg
Fenwick, age 2. Tommy prepared to rearrange the decorationsi
while waiting, with his mother and aunt, for ‘a plane from New,
York to Rermuda.
THURSDAY, JULY 18, 1961.