The Independent-News, Volume 92, Number 28, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 8 December 1966 — Page 12
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- THE INDEPENDENT NEWS - DEC. 8, 1066
AROUND THE WORLD IN THE CAMERA'S EYE > . . .•? r * I II w kF . . >•<*TTWT^ L ■ ' < /IfcN ■ R&4 Ji POLICE SHOW . . . West Berlin police take the spotlight at the Olympic Stadium here. Here, a group of law enforcers performs a dazzling motorcycle stunt. The act was cheered by the large audience. JHL >«» ; . - .. ^ m• ‘ ' r& M 5 ■■■ ■ ■ ■■ • ■.. ? „ r- *. I a • ■■ ■ gg 49| ; ’WSPO;wv/ f'" i " -7;i ( , a, 101^ wEi FOOD AND !U s f . . . A paratrooper from the Ist Brigade, 101st Aii e Division offers food to liberated Viet Cong prisoners ar . command post in Viet Nam. SpßßffjsHEM . Jkx? I FUNNY "MONEY" .. . "Bills" are wrapped in packets Ix*fore being put into .Monopoly games boxes. Each game fjoasts more than $15,000. Parker Brothers, Salem, Mass, prints "$2lO million" daily. In a typical year, the company •wlls over one million games, using 328 million "bills”, J Vcighing 113 tons. h|gK« 1k - ‘ Al & p^.4 * 1 STRANGE JUNKYARD FELLOWS ... A tank which has se* n the last of its movie career days shares Rome "cemc! y" rights with a group of cars which have ended their road careers. The tank has been through many wars — but only on nrcen, never fur real.
p •„, i F sH ▼ JM < -*«» - ...,-dW j ■< T CAGEY HAT . . . A sorrowful Arctic fox peers from n leather "cap-cage" fashioned from a dog muzzle, for this unique bonnet. The "cagey" hat is from the new winter collection presented by London’s milliner Simone Mirman. /»I ‘ 1 11 C j i / WV-M^q I li I I 1 S-1«. r; PRETTY’ PICTURE . . . Patricia Harty is one of the attractive actresses performing in this season's television shows. She makes a pretty picture as she practices her painting hobby. -'MM < - ..^E^gr ^^ggsggr . RESTING SPOT ... A Bolivian Indian woman, wearing the typical hat of the Cochabamba region, finds the new 38 million dollar oil pipeline that runs from the Bolivian lands across the Andes mountains to the sea, a convenient resting place while enroute to a nearby market. ■h B F i; ONE OF THE THOUSANDS . . . Ibis chic young Parisian girl wears the three badges which indicate to tourists in Fra nee that she can speak Spanish, English, and German. The badges, which will be worn by voluntary interpreters during the next tourist sea►on, are part of a program called "Friends by the ThouRands." to aid visitors to France.
■ KS >r • ’ • JBw ; '^w^' mH SCENIC . . . This isn't Norway, hut New Zealand, which also has fiords. This scene is in Fiordland National Park on the South Island. Not far away are fern forests, alps and meadows. , I s ' •V I f mjK£©^ RISING UP . . . In a demonstration of ruggedness, a Ford industrial tractor rises from the ground during demonstration. This is, however, not recommendwl operational pnmxli re for tractors, generally used for trenching, backrillings, loading and other industrial purposes. • - ' ON THE ROCKS « • • Four little Geisha girh are taking time out from their tea pouring ceremonies to look at swans on a lake in Kyoto, Japan, The girls wear their traditional dress when w orking. A .' I A- -i Nl t ? WF X; ■■ 'befißb /a '' ' ' y . . »**t7*. ‘ HAR\ ESI I IMF . . . PJ'C James P. Hughes, Clark Mills, N. Y., and Pl C Stephen 11. Gardens, Philadelphia, Pa., members of the 327 Infantry, keep guard while Vietnamesa workers haivtst rice crop near Tuy Hoa. I# t>-s wb * v->> ' : x -aAri^ 4 < ~ ^WE* . ' - ' jaaiiftlira F: 4bK 3 INDIAN SCENE ... Visitors to Jaipur, India, are a always surprised at the number of camels in the streets. They I are working animals and, while there are plenty’ of elephanta, Jr also, these haughty camels make a lasting impression.
