[ aeenantthelies540onherasedastBvAtoreWhen the world’s largest air- crew, numbering 5,200 men andnue079 craft carrier the USS Enter-slippedaci'ordedSouwelcome but one which wasofffor|cisco’s Golden Gate Bridge last mixed with both jov and sor- of month, after eight months and row—joy for the men who re- a‘quar13 000 successful missions turned, sorrow for the ones ^* against the enemy in North Viet who didn’t,Nam, it was greeted by crowds one of those who didn’t re-of cheering spectators, turn was Lt. Wendell K. Alcorn, moJMembers of the Enterprise son of Mr. and Mrs. John R.24-1•erAlcorn of Kittanning RD 2, pilotinclrn-le-Klansmen'sof a Skvhawk A-4C which was ^shot down while on a bombing ^er;re [ 7DecembertheVerdictCern/Since that time Alcorn’s par-!pjflents have heard nothing otherBut SealedAATHENS, Ga (UPI)Federal jury, deli theearlythan that their son is missing inL . action However other members Qe ^ of his squadron have written to|eye —A Say they believe Alcorn is being1into held as a prisoner of war ini p-hours, Hanoi.der: returned a sealed verdict todayj Just h()W En. Mo|| m the trial of three Ku hlux rij 6 Klansmen charged w’rth eon-! v ,,aispiracy in theniphtr.Hpr maUon« according to Capt. j the, • , . James F. Hollowav, skipper ofslaving of a prominent Negro ,, , . .» kf* •° educator from Washington, the atom,c * P°wered carr,erDC.Holloway did say one squadron l-lThe verdict won't be opened ^ aboard lost four of itsuntil alter the trial of three! pilots. It was not an aver-RKlansmen on similar a^e ^8ure* but ** should give; nen- otherin charges resulting from the^011 a P^tty idea of how curiLin- death of Army reserve Lt. Col. l^ings were,” he added outLemueliiian ikh.*Aa nofYr*.