The Independent-News, Volume 93, Number 6, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 July 1967 — Page 12
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THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS — JULY 6, 19f»7
' AROUND THE WORLD IN THE CAMERA'S EYE I * & I^tr^rri1 r।- - * *& Wr & '^o^--^-^u/ "** «i '* ** WO J L \ ’WHBpfv; \ISS : » v $ *' — \ VJpk i w v<\ ris hXV r H i S' !> >^&« ~wMm .cyt ** i * » * i - - • ! ^.y< , < I 1..; ■• -* •.% % . .❖*♦*• j&^. ffilwlllWlwllto^^ NEW WEAPON . . . PFC William H. Sewell, Grantville, Ga., tries out his new XJ-I-48 weapon in Vietnam. The new piece of equipment is a combination of the M-16 rifle and the M-79 grenade launcher. ip^» r r| ■ It I «jiioi lai II tiara ■sutK* iSmßb X ■ THE REAL THING . . . But made of snow'. The copies of Greek temples and statues are part of the Snow Festival in Sabboro, Japan, and these are just a small part of the reproductions. This is an annual event. r ■ < «~t£N ®S ^WgIBI^S L ' J^i |U I 1 ,1. limn ~ <J%; X s, W : ;y a ^*X X g \ 11 mv i "Jftw ^TZsr^wiWrls?a RACERS . . . Ken Chambers and Eric Jackson In this / Specially-outfitted auto set off on a jaunt from Cape Town,, South Africa through the center of Africa in an attempt to peat tlie steamship Windsor Castle from Cape Town to Southampton, England. The only edge given the auto in the race was a plane flight from Algiers to France and aj jerry ride across the English Channel,, — ■—■ ■ wjfl jdfihkfe i * rwWr Iwb L * , * ''-I . .< ' . , ..... < .i | ANOTHER WAR .. . Relics of another war, these live ^artillery shells and other ammunition uere recovered from a i Sunken Japanese gunboat in the Cam Ranh Bay harbor, I j Vietnam. The ship is thought to have been sunk during World, IWar 11.
s ioWpB ■ TAKE THAT ... A ; kick in the teeth you may get if you take up boxing in Thailand where rides are not quite the same as in western countries. Almost anything i goes as this match in Bafigi kok demonstrates. _ J ft •-•’OAV ••• y» • •I.• t. ~M., .; OTmWWW CLEAN-UP... A bull./ dozer clears perlmenter as infantryman works on his foxhole at isolated areaneas War Zone D, Vietnam, Ei> gineers are building anafi> field nearby, but must first ( insure clear fields of fixe to x > protect the installation. t •• i L r i I i i /a & 1 > i m ~ j ' 11 U... t... ... ,v .... > SOME CATCH , . J Pretty Robbie Gelfand, who’ apparently could hook just about anything she set her tnind to, caught more than tehe expected on a visit to {Matheson Hammock Coun« ‘ty Park in Coral Gables. Wida^. ~ ™ <HM| i ^jUr i|J *<^[B^Bs^ jnKjn^^ i TUHHBi > SOME BARBERS ... | While men elsewhere around thw country get their hair { Xut,” California males have long been having their hair ( "styled.” Now, an enterpris-‘ ing Beverly Hills hair stylist has opened an emporium for men staffed with lovely "mi-cro-skirted” lady stylists.' The cost for treatment by the leggy, licensed gals?For just hair styling — $7.50. For •tyling, manicure and shoe •hine— $ 10.00.
’p-A- ' SB* I X/:X : y /flj | I / Jr' ' ■ ' / ./// ft ' WssEHBHbI r,. ^wW ■ . SEA LIFE . . . Getting a closeup of marine life are these visitors to Sea Life Park, near Honolulu, Hawaii. The amazing trained porpoises provide some of the most amusing I entertainment to be found anywhere. - A TOUCH OF JAPAN . . . The Park Towers, an a< ment and office building, is picturesquely reflected by a In the new Japanese garden constructed in the downtown of San Mateo, Calif. The garden was lovingly cons’, with time, labor, materials and funds contributed m* the Japanese Community of San Mateo. f•' • y j ■' A ••• '• '•■ • ■ ■■ v ■••'■•■• • I s\ ' z 1 I * W'' ■; w■ i H SENTINELS . • • Two 60 foot antennas at Pleiku Communications Site in Vietnam overlook rolling grasslands that serve as major U.S. military cantonment in the central highlands. In the hazy distance are mountains infested with Viet Cong. — W 1 e&m * - v WS j: • w ? / 'w / j y~ k 1•. Ja « »'2ll TIRE CHANGER . . . Sister Madelyn Jew’ers, Gray Nutt , of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital, Boston, gives it the "old college try" as she jacks up an auto prior to changing a tire. She rotated four tires during lab exercises of Ford’s "Powder Puff" Mechanics Course which is designed to show women what to do on a lonely road at night. More than 100 Boston nuns, nurses and secretaries enrolled in the pilot courses
