The Independent-News, Volume 92, Number 2, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 June 1966 — Page 7

AROUND THE WORLD IN THE CAMERA'S EYE f -vv y- __ L At A ■? S RftnßMfiMlMaM^ : '. ^. x < ft ft.. A -ja IB * \ S ' 7 JB 0 xi^b 0 w /*MB c&KK WgyW MERMAIDS ALL . . . Nine mermaids are pictured above. One is a statue, the legendary Princess Wonderous, the others, quite real, are among 30 girls who perf''’-m underwater routines at Weekl Wachee, Florida.

a iLfla !kJaril wßwHEvwi f^idi PTwJb . * r * w MbW <«'jhlKKsn ^Yj^^BkftS BLMMi h M |L| ■pß ONE IS REAL . . . Two-year-old Lisa Jakubas, of North Bergen, NJ. joines doll counterparts at the doll stand of a New Jersev amusement nark

wk <ss^ i $ lw ^OBiilOii^^ mL jk|^ .ml z ^W ■LjBBjjMBF aHl® !R®f ~ mwcptl, rdM EDDIE OVERSEAS ..." Hng among the troopers of the "Screaming Eagles’* Ist ado, honorary paratrooper Eddie Fisher watches part ( ■ w from the audience. Fisher did his show for the troopen teii helipad at the "Eagles’* Phan Rang base camp.

rx -r—■•■••■—■.•■■ v w*■ ■ w ••• y•• ■ • x• *• • '•" • ' |m2JWWWWW| y K jJB r 4: i { > ; Mr k * .WsSv - : -1 UI I**' . g - d L. K. ~ *C - • * TIME OUT . . . There Is time in Vietnam for things Other than fighting. Army Private Francisco Guerrerre, Dededo, Guam, is making molding to trim walls of a gir school at Pleiku. Guerrerre is a member of the p'’ nl 1 ’ borne Brigade. The school was closed because of damage incurred during emergency use as refugee and trooo Quarters.

-—. • ■ r v A.'~~ ->Ta»‘ ; jglgHk * 1 «188 • j FISHY BUSINESS . . . Dick Boreman, of St. Petersburg, Fla., works hard for a fish dinner. He starts the fillet process after members of his Underwater dub speared a 250-pound Giant Grouper (Spotted Jewish).

| ' I JK,^. —j I* W • SUNNY SPOT . . . This lady uses handmade parasol for protection from sun rather than rain. Crossing a Singapore bridge, she ehades child, slung inshawy, from the sun.

|3w<*W m vx ,•• .. | BF^ * DOGGING IT . . . Rex has the reputation of being the best of all 21 watchdogs serving with the Danor Battalion, Da n ish-Norwegion unit stationed in the Gaza Strip. But he doesn’t even notice the camerman who catches him sneaking a pipe.

iKW/',\ QUIETUDE.. .The Verrazanno Bridge spans the Narrows between Brooklyn and Manhattan and an old Civil War cannon with a row of cannonballs completes the scene. W ith not one person in sight there exists a quietness and peacefulnesa for the dreamer or the thinker to appreciate.

JUNE Hi, 1966 — THE INDEPENDENT NEWS —

*** hftMMW'RftKßftftf ■ ■■' ' ; a ' ft LT* ‘ I * JET SET . • • The U. S. Military Airlift Command uses its most modern fanjet airliner, the C-14? Star Lifter, on weekly trips to American Embassies around the world. Plane above left Charleston AFB, S. C., flying east. Weekly flights also leave Travis AFB. Calif., flvink westward.

[ & ■■ - M r ft ^WBFW w - ' F '/-BRb wSaßi wS^ftMnlk i' yfrt?*’ ’ ft? ' ■ 4^'4l “w ~ ik.T '' . x - - ' aKLSf ■ CLOSE WATCH . . • Keeping close watch, and offering a cup of water, men of the U.S. Army’s 119th Aviation Company stand guard over guerillas captured during an operation in Vietnam’s Phy Yen Province.

■ifTHWTHTFrVRMM flKiL^crMOjfTJTOa A JR hlftMlO tJI •■5^.4 aft 3[ -> BP - BW I W^L Sr R Il * W B ^^^BBBBEMBBSBEBB^ffii^^ • > *l^B HAPPY BIRTHDAY . . . Happy Birthday Nickel is the theme of a new exhibit at New York's Chase Manhattan Bank Money Museum. Here, the nickel, 100 years old on May 16, is confronted by Chief John Big Tree, who is already 104. The Chief, who modelled for the Indian Head Nickel, came from his reservation near Syracuse, N. Y. to visit the museum nn the train nrcasinn.

W '4' tt i '<& i 1 Be %• jPS3b^ LOOKING BEHIND . . . Ideal for the secret agent, these nifty glasses, designed by Parisian Frederic Senn, allow one to keep an eye on what is happening behind without looking backwards. Women may be interested in seeing how their sex apixsd is faring as they walk down the street to the tune of low whistles. Looking back might find a compliment ot appreciative eves reflected in the mirrors of these candid glasses.

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