Page 12—Smoke Signals, Wednesday, January 31, 1973 Nostalgia Craze In New Fashions ROME (AP) — Valentino is giving the nostalgia craze a boost, stressing the romantic, feminine look in his spring- summer collections. Pants bowed out and skirts curtsied in. Miniskirts — re member them? — are out. The Valentino showing Thurs day ended five days of Italian high fashion presentations for the 1973 season. Designers didn’t agree on everything dur ing their showings, but one message was clear. They are aiming at women who like look ing like women. Valentino’s mood was flow ery. He borrowed the flower- Additionol Troopers Requested RALEIGH (AP) — Highway Patrol Commander Edwin Guy said today his department has requested funding for 150 addi tional troopers during the next two years. Guy said the additional troopers would give his force, already second largest in the United States, 1,211 officers. Some of the positions are feder ally funded, he said. Guy and Motor Vehicles Com missioner Joe Garrett dis cussed the department’s legis lative proposals and reviewed its activities for the past year in brief appearances before the High Highway Safety Com mittee. Both endorsed proposals to strengthen laws dealing with al cohol tests for motorists and high speed pursuits. Guy also suggested mandatory license suspension and probationary periods for motorists convicted of driving under the influence of intoxicants or drugs, making the punishment uniform with major speeding convictions. Guy labeled alcohol as “the greatest single factor involving death and injury on your streets and highways today.” He said the Highway Patrol charged 46,000 motorists last year with driving while in toxicated. The patrol as a whole charged 360,000 persons with “clear cut, substantial vio lations” of state law in 1972, Guy said. sprigged prints of grand mother’s nightie for 3 series nf after-dark dresses. Pink violets and roses showed up on full-skirted, ruffled eve ning georgettes, usually cut high in the bodice. More blos soms cascaded down the flow ing sleeves, and a flower nose gay nestled at the shoulder or waist. Valentino’s new spring colors are apple green and pale lilac. But he didn’t forget his favorite white and beige, which domi nated the daytime collection. Combined in checks, they were used in a raw silk trench coat that had a shirttail hem. The companion suit featured a belted jacket, also shirttailed, and a moderately flaring skirt. Valentino’s daytime skirts barely clear the knee. Seven-eights coats, in white or beige, were belted and had set-in sleeves. Severe little white wool dresses got a feminine touch from drawnwork on the bodice. Their cardigan jackets were in a herringbone pattern knit. Two women designers, Irene Galitzine and Mila Schoen, put pants high in their offerings but kept things on a feminine Flane. Mila Schoen’s pants were wide and cuffed, ankle-length and of linen for beach wear. Her skirts sailed above the knee. Irene Galitzine’s woman is really feminine and her colors of beige, blue-green and peach are classic. Another designer, Ognibene- Zendman, made no bones about nostalgia. Her clothes recall the woman of the 30s. Dresses are loosely belted just below the natural waist with wrist-length or elbow-length sleeves. Stud Study Shows Studs Cut Accidents Snow tires with studs de crease accidents, according to an independent survey taken by police departments in sub urban New Jersey communi ties. In the period from Dec. 1, 1971 to April 1, 1972 more than 90 per cent of all cars involved in accidents were not equipped with studded snow tires. The survey was conducted in areas where at least 50 per cent of the motor ists used studded tires. Two Ships Collide BEAUFORT, N.C. (AP)—At least two ships collided Wednesday night off the North Carolina coast, sinking one. An other vessel believed to have been involved in the collision has refused Coast Guard orders to return to Wilmington and was steaming south. Marlin Murphy, Coast Guard operations officer at Fort Ma con, said the collision occurred about 10:30 p.m. eight miles north of the Diamond Shoals lighthouse. Sunk in the colli sion was the Wayne Laurel, a 71-foot fishing trawler based in Wanchese, N.C. The craft’s four crewmen were rescued uninjured shortly after the Wayne laurel sunk. /f DOWN WAYS- The Sturgeon class nuclear-powered attack submarine Parche slips down the ways in launching ceremonies at Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. in Pascagoula. Sen. Alan Bible (D-Nev.) was the principal speaker and Mrs. Philip Beshany, wife of Vice Adimiral Beshany was sponser. Her daughter, Mrs. Natalie Braniff, was matron of honor. People In News SAIGON (AP) — President Nguyen Van Thieu has sched uled a lavish reception at Inde pendence Palace Friday to fol low the marriage of his only daughter and Nguyen Tan ■IVieu, son of the director of Air Vietnam. Thieu’s daughter, Nguyen Thi Tuan Anh, and Trieu are to be married in Saigon’s Catholic cathedral, with a mass to be celebrated by Archbishop Ngu yen Van Binh. The reception at Independ ence Palace will be followed by a banquet at the home of Trieu’s parents. Tuan Anh, 18, and Trieu, 28, are scheduled to leave for the United States soon after the wedding to study at the Univer sity of Pittsburgh, she in eco nomics and Trieu in inter national affairs. PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Rose Kennedy, mother of the late President John F. Kenne dy, says she “married for love and got a little money along with it.” Mrs. Kennedy said she once had to break a date with the late Joseph P. Kennedy, he man she later married, for a Harvard prom because her mother insisted that she instead accompany her to Palm Beach. “As fate would have it. I’ve been in Palm Beach every year since andl’ve still never been to a senior prom,” Mrs. Kenne dy told an interviewer. “I’ve had an exciting life. I married for love and got a little money along with it.” New Orleans to California To See Rolling Stones Murjrfiy said a fishing vessel near the scene of the mishap reported that two other ships were possibly involved in the collision. The freighter Hellenic Laurel of Copenhagen, Den mark, heeded Coast Guard or ders to return to Wilmington and is expected there about noon. The second, the Thyra Torm of unidentified registry, ignored orders to return to port from a Coast Guard vessel and is being tracked by a Coast Guard C130 aircraft. Murphy said if necessary, the vessel will be tracked to its next port of call where it will be impounded. INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) — It had been a long trip from New Orleans, hitchhiking all the way, and now 20-year-old Mary Wood was plunking down her last $25 to see the Rolling Stones in concert. “Now I’ll be broke forever,” she said. Like a handful of others with no place to stay, Mary was en camped by an outside wall of the Inglewood Forum and de termined to endure the rain and chilly winds until the per formance Thursday evening. Mostly young and wearing everything from fancy bell bot toms to Army surplus fatigues, thousands of fans showed up to pay from $10 to $100 for a ticket to see the British group widely regarded as No. 1 in the world of rock music. A sellout — which seemed certain — of all 18,699 seats would raise a gross of $516,810. The net proceeds are intended for the victims of last month’s earthquake at Managua, Nica ragua. Bianca Jagger, wife of the Rolling Stones’ lead singer, Mick, is a Nicarauguan. Tickets went on sale early Tuesday morning; and, by late Tuesday, only a few $25 and $100 tickets were left. Forum manager Jim Appell called it “the fastest-selling concert we’ve ever bad.” Fourteen-year-old Merrie Lawson said she saved her ba bysitting money for weeks and used it to buy a $25 ticket. “I was saving up for some thing big, and this is it,” she said. “The Rolling Stones are No. 1.” Mrs. Kennedy, 82, said ste is now writing her memoirs. TEL AVIV (AP) — Premier Golda Meir has returned to Is rael after a six-day journey which took her to Paris, Rome and Geneva. “After six days of such pro ductivity, I really deserve a prize,” the 74-year-old Mrs. Meir said today as she stepped from the plane at Lod Airport. In Paris, Mrs. Meir attended a meeting of Socialist leaders. In Rome, she had an udience with Pope Paul VI and met with Italian government lead ers. In Geneva, she conferred with President Houphouet-Boig- ny of the Ivory Coast. She old newsmen that the pontiff had offered to do all he could for peace in the Mideast’ but she said he did not offer him elf as a mediator. “Problems were raised. I’m not sure I convinced him, but I would call it a dignified, friend ly, frank meeting,” Mrs. Meir said. She said Pope Paul had ex pressed his thanks for Israeli protection of Christian holy sites in Jerusalem. People in the News SANTO DOMINGO (AP) - Actress Jane Fonda has obtain ed a quickie Dominican divorce from French movie director Fioger Vadim, court sources re port. They said Miss Fonda ar rived here Monday under an alias and, with advance ar rangements handled by a Santo Domingo law firm, obtained the divorce on Tuesday. She and Vadim were married in 1965. Her attorneys here declined to comment on the ground the actress’ U.S. lawyers had said she wanted no publicity.