( * _ ? Page 26 - The Chronicl DE The deadline for Tuesday at 5 p.m f ' ... our office later th; used the j - .11 ?Bi - --* ? i,w I Small / I Business ? i Bookkeeping t 4 Hoars: 9 Til 9 Dally Incor ^ ? ???" Accou. C.G.\ Asso Suite 201 2080 Beech St. I -i?r?1? RIC1 I ^tf PR I]JU 28; Walk. T Q| jet way SI L PHONI FREl 10% SEi u.?? i Fash; ? See this so right choice c high he< I s CLO' 534 i t r e Saturday April 2, 1977 4DLENE I all news and articles is . Articles reaching an that will he Following week ~--aar., LPersonal | Inrrwnn 1 . ifJH T~ ' J v C.G. Watson ne Tax And j nting Service & Vat son & dates. Inc. 2409 N. Liberty St. . . cIARDSON9 S I | ARMACY J 21 Nftw 1 ertown Ave. | | loppings Ceifler i: 724-3959 J 5 DELIVER YH I H I MOR CITIZEN ' S H 1COUNTU J _ | PROCESSING AVAILABLE || ck & White and Color ||| q n*v ccDvirr " " SHOES I I I / ... ion at it's high< exciting high heel strap pump, with your new spring outfits. In :olor! Take another look at that il, and smart patent look! rzd son BLACK ZAJ / lams < rHING COMPANY IN. LIBERTY ST. \ | World Sc 11 (For C (The American public gj"?sho'tiM" "tee* aftreasf~gf our general progress and involvements, both military And diplomatic, throughput the world. Because of Fencagon reluctance to release Atl ? | details known to others ! outside the U. S., this twopart series relies upon a Japanese reporter's notes. We are grateful to V. Hirano.) (Part I of Two Parts) Fresh Activity In Japan ?Those in the United States who failed to learn thtf lessons from the defeat in Viet Nam have, in the so-called "post-Viet Nam" stage, further stren ghthened the policy of "power in East Asia". This is reflected in their advocacy of "the first attack by nuclear weapons", destroying the heart of an enemy", and jthe "nine day's war" as a short decisive nuclear war. It is also shown in frequent and severer military training carried out in South ? Korea under?Sr ao^~ pices. Those on the far H right 4iQlitically, and who are strongly pro-militarist, speak openly in this way. Immediately after the relinquishing of Saigon on 30 April 1975, President Ford and the then Defense Secretary Schlesinger declared that the U. S. would not hesitate to make a first attack by nuclear weapons against-its - enemy. Thisputs the U.S.A. in a posfp sibly compromising position Niche Club H The Flower Niche Club met Saturday afternoon in t.ViO Vlnral T^ooi rm nnnoi4_ i v?4w m. AW* Hi jLyvuign xy V/^)Ui b~ ment of the Winston-Salem i /Forsyth Covinty School's ,< Career Center with Mr. John j 3St, See many < P|%P| FOCUS ON U PROCEDUI lassroom and Group Discussion) wfth respect to promoting? peace, as some see it. Later, in a joint statement with Japanese Prime ^vXinistci' miivi 6, 1375], President Ford said that the maintenance of peace on the Korean peninsula was necessary for the peace and security of East Asia, including Japan. The U.S. President stated this on a day which marked the 30th anniversary of Hiro-,., shima. He also extolled the existing agreements between tne u/S., Japan and South Korea as being important. At the_ end of 1975, President Ford outlined the "New Pacific Doctrine" in Which he stated that the U.S. alliance with Japan ! was the mainstay of i U.S.A.'s strategy in Asia. On this basis, it was mutually agreed upon hy both sides to establish the U.S.?Japan < Military Consulative Com- < mittee during 1976. This is i now being implemented in the form of specific steps for ensuring the free and stable use of U.S. military bases in Japan by U.S. for ce?7~ for strengthening the Japan Self-Defense Army on a qualitative level, for ad justing the share to be allocated to the U.S. and Japan for military operations, and for arranging "togtsttcs^ancT transportation. The "Winter Mountain Operation" deployed iir~ South Korea jointly by the U.S., the Republic of Korea, and Japanese troops during February?1976 was evi dence of the fact that the focal point of current tenas Terrarium Karakash, instructor, in Horticulture at the center, conducting a workshop ion making terrariums using colored sand. Each member made a terrarium using glass n > this and other styles ' i.S. MILITARY | I IES IN ASIA ;l | insula. This cold season || operation, carried out g around Pohan on the east- J ein coast oi South Korea & was seen by some observ- ~ " ||~ ers as not for jungle combat, H like the Vietnam War but |i for attack oo the regular army of an enemy, as the main firearms employed | L were 106mm anti-tank || guns. The U.S. military |L . bases in Okinawa were set as H an inseparable part of the Operation^ They will be the M supporting bases in the rear for another Korean was being schemed by tfie f H U.S.* |i The use of military bases i I in Japan in an emergency on the Korean Peninsula has . f\\ been openly approved, as stated by the Japanese | Prime Minister Miki and Foreign Minister Miyazawa. This is a matter of grave || concern, now the U.S. has carried its nuclear weapons into South Korea. - H Key Questions: L In what ways are || interests of black ij A mericans and Third || World Peoples?dealt ?| with in the above || material? - 11 2. What practical things j| does it appear\ in the above material, that J ^ . deeply concerned i| groups and individuals || may do to protect black and Third H World interests? 8 3. What other issues are II ?? raised dealing with |i -the best interests of i| our nation as a whole? jS i Workshop ? containers of different shapes and sizes. Mrs. Kenneth R. Williams, president, presided over the business session with Mrs. D.C. Hobson reporting on the trip that the club is to J^ake to I (Jlimqua-Penn 111 May." Mrs. Roberta Cook, DisI strict Four Director, and Mrs. I Romelia Mason, State FedP Afofinr r> ry ' r} , , ' - - . . guests at the meeting. The group took a guided tour of the center with Mrs. Iris Officer, Guidance Counsellor, conducting the tour. Miss Louise Smith was hostess to the meeting. yiyTPJjTPj Di-Gel. The Anti-Gas Antacid.