Uk #3 wiles 4474? 2 streets. WORLD ENDS The first hydroelectric power flash struck the Pensivex tower at exactly 1:14 a.m. Many sten- ographers worked late thet night getting our final edition out of the pressroom and into the We've been predicting it since 1900 and here it is. Hundreds were trampled in the anita! dasn for shelter, ttle existed at that time. hundreds survived and lived on to rebuild. after all the warnings and forecasts of doom, the old fireballs roll like tumbleweed down the glowing streets of Manhattan, down 5th Avenue and } Chrough the doors of Twenty-One. On the great plains the fire continues to spread engulfing Wichita Kansas and Muncy on the same day. Yes, the New Era has begun. of whieh pitifully 1i- Cadly, thowen, The best from us This is Process News Bulletin #3 (Dec.73) (What You Need in Your Refuge Room Tools and Equipment: : Jacknife, pick, shovel, Boy Scout type of hand ax, crow- bar, hammer, saw, pliers, adjustable steel | lally columns (to support first-floor joists), ' wrenches, extra door bolts, hinges, pad- locks, wallboard (for covering broken windows), extension cords, lamp sockets, Medical Kit: Salves for burns, gauze bandage, compresses, adhesive tape, splints, chlorine tablets -(for purifying water), mechanic’s soap (for washing off possible radioactive dust). _Fire-Fighting Equipment: Hand ex- | tinguishers, stirrup pump, empty buck- ets, buckets of sand, buckets of water, garden hose (with coupling for attaching it to indoor faucets). Lights: Battery-powered lights, kerosene | lamps, candles, drop light. # Food: Canned food (choose fruits and |) vegetables packed with liquid), bouillon, |, dried milk, powdered cocoa and coffee, Mm raisins, chocolate, dried fruit. : Cooking Equipment: Skillet, teakettle, M covered pot, can opener, brazier, char- coal, bricks and grate (for improvised: fireplace), fireplace fittings (so you can | cook in regular house fireplace), jellied- alcohol stove, extra cans of jellied alcohol, outdoor grills, clean five-gallon cans, waterproofed matches (in tin box or’ dipped in wax), kitchen soap, scouring powder, steel wool, basic chinaware. Clothing: Underwear, socks, old coats, coveralls, overshoes, rubbers, boots, old gloves, rain coats, waterproof fabric, sweaters, jackets, bandannas (for radia- tion or smoke masks). Furniture: Heavy tables, _ bunks, . benches, wheeled cart (for basic evacua- tion kit), packing boxes, trash cans with lids, duckboards (for damp floor). _ Valuables: Extra pair of glasses, lockbox (for valuable papers), money (in small bills). Miscellaneous: Battery radio (car radio - will also work), wind-up clock, maps of city and county, books, writing materials, eye goggles (for smoke or radioactive dust), old newspapers. So now What Now MILLIONS WITHOUT LEADER They wander the dirt roads of the countryside and the streets of the cities. The others have secured thenm- selves in fortresslike sub urban homes, boarded up against the ravenous neigh- ‘borhood pets, the dogs and cats, the whily gerbils or painted turtles. They are protecting their meager st- ores of soy biscuit and 7 government water. The once great city of Washington lies in ruins, the leaders crouched in underground bunker-like capsules,fro- zen cryogenically, set to thaw and emerge like moths at a future time to reass- ume leadership. All along many thought the world would end in Atomic fire, but they were wrong. We are happy it was not another Pearl Harbor type incident.