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Publication: European Stars and Stripes Thursday, September 21, 1967

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   European Stars and Stripes (Newspaper) - September 21, 1967, Darmstadt, Hesse                                Thursday september 21, 1967 the stars and stripes fag. 3 red guards crucify Man paper reports Hong Kong up a Chi Nese roman Catholic was Cruci fied by red guards in Shanghai last month the English language Hong Kong Star reported wednesday. The Star said the incident was reported by a businessman who returned to Hong Xong  told the paper the red guards spotted their victim by a Cruci fix he wore. He was charged and found guilty of neglecting his prime duty of knowing Mao s thought and choosing religion instead the Man  said big crowds of students during the trial roared the de Mand crucify  the Man was red to a Crossin the school Yard and the red guards pelted him with eggs sandstones then used hot pokers to torture  agonized screams were heard by passersby who told the authorities. By the time he was taken from the red guards theman was apparently insane. He died a few Days later in Hospi Tal the businessman told the Star. Episcopalians end ban Seattle a after fighting Over the Issue for More than two decades male delegates to the episcopal Church s govern ing convention voted overwhelmingly tuesday to abolish its ban against women. The House of Bishops swiftly concurred. Bright eyed that s what you too can beef you Wear these French made Battery pow ered lamps for nighttime Reading or checking wine labels in the cellar. A photo make $280,000 Winner s life miserable friends take pounds of flesh Cherry Willingham eng land a a year ago when John Davies 26-year-old labourer won 100,000 pounds $280,000 in a football lottery he thought his worries were Over. Instead he said tuesday his life has become such a misery he has been forced to go int hiding. For the past 10 weeks he has been away from his wife Shir Ley travelling and living out of suitcase to escape sponges and  have turned a life of Lux Ury into one of misery for me worn cookery Only $149 Start collecting your Complete 12-vol. Woman s Day encyclopedia of cookery now. Each volume contains 168 pages 801 recipes 60 full color illustration thousands of useful cooking facts. Big 8 /2 x 11" size hard covers. He told a reporter. I have lost $14,000 to people who have been begging Money rom me. Once i had friends who ked me for myself. Now i Don t know whether they like me Ormy Money. I never made friends so quickly and been let Down so badly. I am sick to death of  Davies said people dream about winning great sums of Money but i was happier with my week a pay packet working on a build no site wondering whether had enough Money to buy a round of Beers for my  he returned Here tuesday tothe $47,600 Bungalow he bought. He visited with his wife and display advertising on this Naje concerning commercial publications Avaiu ble on the surs and. Stripes Newsstands does not constitute an endorsement by the department of defense or a � its components. Then was relatives. Off again to visit czechs allow boy to join escaped family Vienna up a 12-year-Oldczech boy tuesday rejoined his family who escaped from Czechoslovakia last month under a Hail of bullets and have been waiting Here and praying for his release. Tibor Sindar was sobbing wit tears of Joy As he embraced his parents at Vienna s Schwacha Airport after being released by czechoslovak authorities. The re Union scene was sealed off by to  and his parents were driven off to the  Camp. Tibor was the Only member of he Sindar family captured by czech guards when his parents Sisters and Brothers made their bid for Freedom at the Boundary checkpoint of Ceske Vienice on aug. 13.alexandra and Karl Sindar the parents were shot in the hand and leg by czech Border guards. Their daughters Darin 20, and Olga 19, and their sons Karl 18, and Peter 16, suffered minor in juries. O 1 g a s 2-year-old daughter Claudia carried in the arms of her Mother escaped  was seized before he had reached austrian territory an forced Back into Czechoslovakia. His Fate remained unknown until czechoslovak authorities announced his release to International red Cross officials tues  was flown from Prague to Zurich and handed Over to Delegate of the red Cross who had negotiated his release. From Zurich he flew to Vienna. Seaborg to be a Delegate Washington up presi Dent Johnson tuesday named or. Glen p. Seaborg chairman of the atomic Energy commission As the United states representative at the Lith regular session of the general conference of International atomic agencies which opens sept. 26 in Vienna. Protest trim of welfare Rolls women stage sit in at Senate hearing Washington a broke up a sit in at a Senate hearing tuesday when welfare recipients who previously staged a mothers March on washing ton demanded More time to protest proposed welfare Amend ments. About 60 women and som children appeared before the Senate finance committee to testify against provisions of a House passed social Security Bill. It contains amendments with a tougher approach Testate welfare programs getting Federal Aid. Given an hour the committee session be came a sit in when the women claimed they had not been Given a proper hearing. They were allotted an hour in which their leaders could present their ease but they became angered be cause More senators were not on hand to hear them. The Senate was in session de bating a $10.4-billion Money Bill and part of the time Only on senator was in the committee . Russell b. Long d-la., committee chairman an police bounced that the hearing was cancelled. Some of the women who were present claimed he broke his Gavel in emphasizing the cancellation. Groups of women stayed inthe room for about three hours after the recess despite Long announcement that the session was at an end. They finally left when Jamesm. Powell chief of Capitol police told them they would be arrested and subject to a Fine of $100 and six months in jail i they failed to get out. New group the women mostly negroes were members of a newly formed group called the National Wel fare rights organization. They protested particularly against provisions of the welfare Bill that they said would Cut several Hundred thousand children from Relief Rolls. Wel fare officials dispute this say ing the Bill s provisions might bar 75,000 additional children from getting on the  hearings were to continue for three More Days and the women said they would return  
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