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Show r j FAHAErS SFEC1AL Bf ll EDITED by LLOYD SHEARER W BECAUSE OF VOLUME OF MAIL RECEIVED, PARADE REGRETS IT CANNOT ANSWER QUERIES. There are now approximately 11 million households in this country which consist of one person. Ten years V there were 7 million such households. ago are these "loners"? are females residing mainly in metroWho Two-thir- k v t ' 1 p'r i:1V Vl. J)( os w fiB'SR fill Ni2 politan cities. ir What that 'It1 vE 1 ds who GALL GIRLS it is people live be- yond the Iron want most? Curtain Hard currency Swedish krona, French francs, German marks, XI 50 British I RICHARD NIXON ON THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL IN 1968 r-- aV' 1 . M 5 ? t y. 'vs V? V Ui george McGovern HUBERT HUMPHRE LIKE ALL GOOD POLITICIANS, PBS! one should take campaign No promises too llfgjyli seriously. In 1968 when Richard Nixon was running for the Presidency, he promised, if elected, to end the war and "win the peace in the Pacific." He promised also to "bring us together," and to "run an open administration." He EDMUND MUSKIE GEORGE WALLACE THE DEMOCRATS ARE MAKING THEIR PROMISES promised to restore "law and order," avoid wage and price controls, reduce the debt, along with several other chimeras, all of which were made in good faith, but none of which was kept. Time and circumstance, however, play havoc with the best mans dreams. Which is why the promises of Muskie, Wallace, TODAY. Humphrey, McGovern, and other Democratic Presidential hopefuls should not be accepted without some realistic skepticism. What a candidate promises out of office and what he can do in office are miles apart, or as Jonathan Swift wrote more than 200 years ago, "Promises and piecrust are made to be broken." U.S. dollars, These are pounds. the currencies which permit them to buy "luxury" goods. For such currency they will do almost anything. And a group of Hungarian beauties has. Eight of them, each a delectable dish, formed a call girl ring in Budapest which serviced Western businessmen. A few weeks ago after a month-lon- g trial a Budapest court sentenced the girls to terms ranging from jail four to 40 months. The judge said: "They engaged in business like clandestine prostitution for the purpose of obtaining large sums of unregistered foreign currency." Hungary bans all types of prostitution and insists that foreign money be registered with the state bank. The indictment said the girls solicited especially Germans Westerners, Americans and in nightclubs, charging $50 and up per night for their services. They then sold the money on the black market or mailed it out to Swiss banks. Those Swiss get in on everything. 20 PARADE MAY 21, 1972 |