Pope Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, July 10, 1976 Queen Elizabeth romps through New York City NEW YORK - Two hundred years to the day after rebellious New Yorkers tore down the statue of King George III to melt it into bullets, his great - great - great - great - grand- daughter, Queen Elizabeth It, arrived here to continue her Bicentennial visit. Thousands of people cheered wild- ly when the British monarch stepped ashore at noon yesterday and was taken by limousine to Wall Street and Federal Hall where she was proclaimed an honorary New York- er. Compttter tape and confetti showered down on the motorcade through streets jammed with lunch- hour crowds hoping to catch a glimpse of the 50-year-old monarch. WITH HER HUSBAND, Prince Philip, the queen set off on a whirl- wind trip about the town where 200 years ago this summer redcoats were sent ashore by George IIt to begin a seven-year Revolutionary War oc- cupation. Elizabeth's visit to the nation's largest city ends with a dinner and reception at night aboard the royal yacht Britannia, which then voy- ages overnight to the queen's next stop, New Haven, Coonn. As the Britannia brought the royal couple through New York's upper bay, harbor craft tooted a welcome and fireboats sprayed water aloft in slute on a sunny July day with tenperatures near 30. FROM tIER YACHT, the queen boarded a launch which landed her on a red-carpeted gangway leading to the Battery, the southernmost tip of Manhattan Island. It was a preview of the aura of his- tory that surrounded the queen during her visit to the city steeped in An- glo - American history. It was at Bowling Green, just north of the Bat- tery, that on the night of July 9, 1776, American patriots, aflame with the fervor for revolution in the after- math of the Declaration of Indepen- dence, pulled down the two-ton sta- tue of George Itt. The lead was melted down to make bullets to fire at British troops. Present-day rebelliousness was ap- parent yesterday as a plane circled the Statue of liberty during the queen's visit with a sign reading, "England Get out of Ireland." Police helicopters followed the single- engined craft to a landing in New Jersey. The pilot was questioned and released. QUEEN ELIZABETH arrived in New York after spending two days in Washington. A Royal Air Force jet flew her to Newark, where the Britannia awaited her. AP Photo YOU, THE SEVENTH generation descendant of a colonial farmer, may not be able to afford Bloomingdale's department store in New York City, but it's nice to know the queen hasn't yet had to resort to Woolworth's for her handkerchiefs. Queen Elizabeth is shown passing a crowd of shoppers yesterday during her Bicentennial visit to New York. r i i i i rrwrrrwrw rrr r r r l J { r d ng 00 p.IDOcJ k s c u hr ld Ge s \AO V\ IN THE BASEMENT OF THE MICHIGAN UNION 0 Ca