-.toURGlASS - UFDC Image Array 2

8
HIGH TIDE 10-31-69 3 2 at 0718 4"1 at 1948 -.toURGlASS LOW T:Dr: 10-31-69 2 1 at 0154 2 3 It 1242 I VOL 9, No 8540 01\.." i -'" ... All The News That FltS We Prlnt KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS Thursday, October 30, 1969 J Panther leader Seale Calls Judge Hoffman 'Fascist Dog' CHICAGO (UPI) -- Black Panther er Bobby Seale shed his gag and leath- er shackles long enough In court to- day to struggle wlldly wlth U S Mar- shals and scream eplthets at U.S Dlstrlct Court Judge JU11US J Hoff- man Hoffman "You fasclst dog" lng plg " and "You ly- slder " Seale and hlS chalr were toppled In- to the press section In a tumultuous scuffle The Negro mliltant shouted that U S Marshals, seeklng to subdue hlm, elbowed hlm In the groln Other defendants crled that had been klcked In the groln Twlce as Seale carrled from the courtroom In hlS chalr he shouted ob- scenltles at the Judge He called Seale's seven codefendants on charg- es of consplrlng to lnclte the rlots of the 19E8 Democratlc Natl0nal Con- ventl0n week repeatedly shouted,"Look w'hat they are dOlng to hlm" and de- fled the Judge's orders that they rlse when he entered or left the courtroom Between Seale's outbursts, whlle he squlrmed In hlS bonds and grunted in- coherently, defense and prosecutl0n attorneys argued stormlly, exchanglng frequent lnsults Hoffman JOlned In at tlmes and adjourned the mornlng seSS10n early saylng, "There are some aspects of thlS case I want to con- South BiHer Ahout School Desegregation When the flrst dlsruptl0n carne, as Marshals sought to loosen a metal buckle that was hurtlng the prlsoner. Kunstler stormed to the bench and ask- ed "When are we gOlng to stop thlS medleval torture?" "ThlS lS a dlsgrace to the law," he sald "I am ashamed to be dn lawyer " Hoffman scolded back, "You be for thp way you've CGPdu2ted yourself " U S Attorrey Foran the Lef'ensc. of "gross conduct" and conttmpt £01 maklng a motlon that the Jury bp Legarl1ng the gagglng ATLANTA (UPI) -- The Supreme Court's tough, new desegregate "now" school order drew bltter comment from offlclals across the South today, wlth many I freely predlctlng that lt sounds the death knell for publlc educatl0n Alabama Attorney General MacDonald Galll0n sald the decree was a "body blow to the publlC schools and our chlldren here and everywhere," and Sen o Eastland declared "the declslon spells dlsaster for publlc educatl0n HI M1SS1SS1PPl and many areas of the South " In a rullng that carne 15 years, flve months and 12 days after the 1954 de- cree outlawlng school segregatlon, the hlgh court held yesterday that lt was "the obllgatlon of every school dlstrlct to termlnate dual systems at once " Although the rullng carne as a blow to the Admlnlstratl0n, whlch had urged a go-slow P011CY In M1SS1SS1PPl - the state agalnst WhlCh the new rullng was speclflcally dlrected - Presldent Nlxon ptomlsed hlS backlng He sald he would exert hlS leadershlp In solv- lng the "practlcal and human problems" resultlng the rullng Southern offlclals sald the problems would be many Gov Lester Maddox of Georgla predlcted the rullng would create a "hell hole" of educatlon In the state and would brlng about a de- terl0ratlon of educatl0n because whltes In the future wlll "not vote for needed school bond lssues " Statistlcs complIed by the Depart- ment of Health, Educatl0n and Welfare show that desplte the 15 year gap Slnce school segregatl0n was outlawed, the maJorlty of the South's negro youths stl1l attend black schools Nixon Asis Congress for Buyer's Bill of Iligllts WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Presldent Nlxon asked Congress today for a "Buyer's Blll of Rlghts" WhlCh for the flrst tlme would permlt consumers to sue In federal court for damages resultlng from fraudulent or deceptlve trade practlces The SUlts, brought lndlvldually or by groups of consumers sharlng the cost of lltlgatlon, would be based on a proposed broad new federal law bannlng frauds and deceptlons already condemned by the Federal Trade Com- mlSSlon 9,000 North Viet Troops Reported Near Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -- Upwards of 9,000 North Vletnamese troops were reported movlng lnto South Vlet Nam' s Centred Hlghlands near the Cambodlan bordel today Pressures lntenslfled on Am- erlca. bases guardlng the Jungle fron- tler a major flghtlng was predlcted Inteillgence reports sald two regl- ments of North Vletnamese Infantry and elements of an artlilery reglment have been ldentlfled In the Bu Prang-Du( Lap area 125 mlles northeast of SaL- gon Another North Vletnamese reglment was reported operatlng near the U S Green Beret camp at Ben Het 260 ml1es northeast of Salgon and elght mlles of the pOlnt where the borders of South Vlet Nam, Cambodla and Laos meet A North Vletnamese reglment normdlly numbers about 2,900 men Black Coeds Takeover Vassar Administration Building POUGHKEEPSIE, N Y (UPI) -- FlftV mliltant black coeds barrlcaded them- selves In a sectl0n of the Vassar College Admlnlstratl0n BUlldlng today wlth the ald of off-campus black males to enforce separatlst demand·, Top admlnlstrators at the fashl0n- able, 1,600-pupil Hudson Rlver Valley School reJ ected demands for a ate dormltory for blacks and a black studles course WhlCh would lead to a degree They sald they would make no conceSSlons "under duress " The Vassar College cO'llposed of admlnlstrators, facult" dnd stu- dents lmmedlately went 1.uto beSSlon to dJ.scuss the lmpasse Vassdr, founded In 1861, took In male students recent- ly CourU.J0Dl lP Edgartown, Mass Kennedy Granted Closed Hearing Ilequest BOSTON (UP}) -- The Massachusetts Supreme COhrt glanted today Sen Ed- ward M Kernedy's request for a closed lnquest publlC and press In to the death of Mary Jo Kepechne The full bench of the hlgh court ruled In a wlde-ranglng declsl0n that only the Kopechne lnquest but all fu- ture lnquests In Massachusetts "be closed to the publlc and to all news medla " The court sald In a l7-page deC1Sl011 that lnquest wltnesses "may be accom- panled and advlsed by counsel whlle In attendance or testlfYlng at an lnquest " On thlS pOlnt, the court left to the dlscretlon of the presldlng Judge whether lawyers would be allowed to cross-examlne wltnesses and present eVldence as Kennedy's lawyers wanted The court rejected Kennedy's bld to Edgartown D1St Court Judge Janes A Boyle who had ruled that would be allowed to attend the lnquest The court set no date for the lnquest but sald ltS rullngs "should not hlnder or delay the pendlng lnquest" The]J1- quest was delayed for thlS declslon

Transcript of -.toURGlASS - UFDC Image Array 2

HIGH TIDE 10-31-69 3 2 at 0718 4"1 at 1948 -.toURGlASS LOW T:Dr:

10-31-69 2 1 at 0154 2 3 It 1242

I VOL 9, No 8540

01\.." i

"'~~"r~"" -'" ...

All The News That FltS We Prlnt KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS Thursday, October 30, 1969 J

Panther leader Seale Calls Judge Hoffman 'Fascist Dog' CHICAGO (UPI) -- Black Panther Lead~

er Bobby Seale shed his gag and leath­er shackles long enough In court to­day to struggle wlldly wlth U S Mar­shals and scream eplthets at U.S Dlstrlct Court Judge JU11US J Hoff­man

Hoffman "You fasclst dog" lng plg "

and "You ly- slder "

Seale and hlS chalr were toppled In­to the press section In a tumultuous scuffle The Negro mliltant shouted that U S Marshals, seeklng to subdue hlm, elbowed hlm In the groln Other defendants crled that ~e had been klcked In the groln

Twlce as Seale ~as carrled from the courtroom In hlS chalr he shouted ob­scenltles at the Judge He called

Seale's seven codefendants on charg­es of consplrlng to lnclte the rlots of the 19E8 Democratlc Natl0nal Con­ventl0n week repeatedly shouted,"Look w'hat they are dOlng to hlm" and de­fled the Judge's orders that they rlse when he entered or left the courtroom

Between Seale's outbursts, whlle he squlrmed In hlS bonds and grunted in­coherently, defense and prosecutl0n attorneys argued stormlly, exchanglng frequent lnsults Hoffman JOlned In at tlmes and adjourned the mornlng seSS10n early saylng, "There are some aspects of thlS case I want to con-

South BiHer Ahout School Desegregation

When the flrst dlsruptl0n carne, as Marshals sought to loosen a metal buckle that was hurtlng the prlsoner. Kunstler stormed to the bench and ask­ed "When are we gOlng to stop thlS medleval torture?"

"ThlS lS a dlsgrace to the law," he sald "I am ashamed to be dn .~erlcan lawyer "

Hoffman scolded back, "You ~hovld be ash~med for thp way you've CGPdu2ted yourself "

U S Attorrey Thoroa~ Foran acc~sPd the Lef'ensc. of "gross conduct" and conttmpt £01 maklng a motlon that the Jury bp ~0lled Legarl1ng the gagglng

ATLANTA (UPI) -- The Supreme Court's tough, new desegregate "now" school order drew bltter comment from offlclals across the South today, wlth many I freely predlctlng that lt sounds the death knell for publlc educatl0n

Alabama Attorney General MacDonald Galll0n sald the decree was a "body blow to the publlC schools and our chlldren here and everywhere," and Sen JamE~ o Eastland declared "the declslon spells dlsaster for publlc educatl0n HI

M1SS1SS1PPl and many areas of the South "

In a rullng that carne 15 years, flve months and 12 days after the 1954 de­cree outlawlng school segregatlon, the hlgh court held yesterday that lt was "the obllgatlon of every school dlstrlct to termlnate dual systems at once "

Although the rullng carne as a blow to the Admlnlstratl0n, whlch had urged a go-slow P011CY In M1SS1SS1PPl - the state agalnst WhlCh the new rullng was speclflcally dlrected - Presldent Nlxon ptomlsed hlS backlng He sald he would exert hlS leadershlp In solv­lng the "practlcal and human problems" resultlng f~om the rullng

Southern offlclals sald the problems would be many Gov Lester Maddox of Georgla predlcted the rullng would create a "hell hole" of educatlon In the state and would brlng about a de­terl0ratlon of educatl0n because whltes In the future wlll "not vote for needed school bond lssues "

Statistlcs complIed by the Depart­ment of Health, Educatl0n and Welfare show that desplte the 15 year gap Slnce school segregatl0n was outlawed, the maJorlty of the South's negro youths stl1l attend black schools

Nixon Asis Congress for Buyer's Bill of Iligllts

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Presldent Nlxon asked Congress today for a "Buyer's Blll of Rlghts" WhlCh for the flrst tlme would permlt consumers to sue In federal court for damages resultlng from fraudulent or deceptlve trade practlces

The SUlts, brought lndlvldually or by groups of consumers sharlng the cost of lltlgatlon, would be based on a proposed broad new federal law bannlng frauds and deceptlons already condemned by the Federal Trade Com­mlSSlon

9,000 North Viet Troops

Reported Near Cambodia SAIGON (UPI) -- Upwards of 9,000

North Vletnamese troops were reported movlng lnto South Vlet Nam' s Centred Hlghlands near the Cambodlan bordel today Pressures lntenslfled on Am­erlca. bases guardlng the Jungle fron­tler a ~ major flghtlng was predlcted

Inteillgence reports sald two regl­ments of North Vletnamese Infantry and elements of an artlilery reglment have been ldentlfled In the Bu Prang-Du( Lap area 125 mlles northeast of SaL­gon

Another North Vletnamese reglment was reported operatlng near the U S Green Beret camp at Ben Het 260 ml1es northeast of Salgon and elght mlles of the pOlnt where the borders of South Vlet Nam, Cambodla and Laos meet

A North Vletnamese reglment normdlly numbers about 2,900 men

Black Coeds Takeover Vassar Administration Building POUGHKEEPSIE, N Y (UPI) -- FlftV

mliltant black coeds barrlcaded them­selves In a sectl0n of the Vassar College Admlnlstratl0n BUlldlng today wlth the ald of off-campus black males to enforce separatlst demand·,

Top admlnlstrators at the fashl0n­able, 1,600-pupil Hudson Rlver Valley School reJ ected demands for a sepal~­

ate dormltory for blacks and a black studles course WhlCh would lead to a degree They sald they would make no conceSSlons "under duress "

The Vassar College Councl~, cO'llposed of admlnlstrators, facult" dnd stu­dents lmmedlately went 1.uto beSSlon to dJ.scuss the lmpasse Vassdr, founded In 1861, took In male students recent­ly

CourU.J0Dl lP Edgartown, Mass

Kennedy Granted Closed Hearing Ilequest

BOSTON (UP}) -- The Massachusetts Supreme COhrt glanted today Sen Ed­ward M Kernedy's request for a closed lnquest ~arrlng publlC and press In to the death of Mary Jo Kepechne

The full bench of the hlgh court ruled In a wlde-ranglng declsl0n that only the Kopechne lnquest but all fu­ture lnquests In Massachusetts "be closed to the publlc and to all news medla "

The court sald In a l7-page deC1Sl011 that lnquest wltnesses "may be accom­panled and advlsed by counsel whlle In attendance or testlfYlng at an lnquest "

On thlS pOlnt, the court left to the dlscretlon of the presldlng Judge whether lawyers would be allowed to cross-examlne wltnesses and present eVldence as Kennedy's lawyers wanted

The court rejected Kennedy's bld to dl~quallfy Edgartown D1St Court Judge Janes A Boyle who had ruled that new~men would be allowed to attend the lnquest

The court set no date for the lnquest but sald ltS rullngs "should not hlnder or delay the pendlng lnquest" The]J1-quest was delayed for thlS declslon

.. -

--- - ... , Page 2 HOURGLASS Thursday, October 30, 1969 i

~ ____ ~====================~========== ____________________________________________________________________________________________ 1

Lack of TV Pleases Newcomer "The lack of telev1s1.on 1S great I th1nk

1t prov1des an atmosphere for the fam1ly to do more th1ngs together "

Th1s 1S how Global's new Safety Eng1neer Dave Montgomery V1ews KwaJale1n

The Montgomerys are from Northern Ca11forn1a, where Dave worked for the Lawrence Rad1at10n Laboratory 11 years

Why d1.d Dave leave the West Coast for the bllsterlng trop1cs?

Says Dave, "It sounded lnterest1ng and I had some fr1.ends who were here We were pleasantly surprlsed It wasn't as hot as we had expected

H1.s wlfe, June, lS learn1ng to SW1m Dave enJoys reef1.ng, trap shoot1.ng and boatlng He also wants to learn to sall

Sons Mark, Gregory and Dav1d have found few d1.ff1.cultles 1.n adJust1.ng to KwaJa­leln's dlverse rec­reatlonal opportun­ltles

Before returnlng to gomerys plan to V1Slt and New Zealand

the ma1.nland, the Mont­the Orlent, Australla,

Welcome to the lsland, Mon tgomerys •

CDC Site Manager: Art Hille Art HIlle worked on the lunar excurSlon mod­

ule that the Apollo 11 Astronauts used 1.n theIr July Moon landlng He was an electron1c technlclan for Grumman Alrcraft at that tlme

FM Sch dule TODAY AND TOMORROW, Oct 30 & 31

KHACHATURIAN - Masquerade SU1te -7 30 pm 1 Galop 2 Waltz 3 Mazurka Romance Hollywood Bowl Symphony Orchestra conducted by Alfred New­man THE BARBER OF SEVILLE - Opera fa 1n two acts by G R1SSln1 7 44 pm

buf-

F1garo Count Almav1va Ros1na Dr. Bartolo Don Bas1.l1o Berta F10rello and Off1.cer of

Manuel Ausensl Ugo Bene111 Teresa Berganza Fernando Coreno N1colal Chlauroy Stefan1a Malgu

. Dlno Mantovanl the Guard Orchestra conducted T1.m1ngs

e Cora ROSS1n1. d1 Napol1 by S1.lv10 Varv1.SO

2 49 00, 2 24.00

Act 1, Sc 1 37 00, Sc Act 2, Sc 1 33 00, Sc

Sung ln Ital1.an JOHANN STRAUSS - Waltzes - 10 07 pm V01.ces of Sprlng, Op 410, Artlsts Llfe, Op 316, Wlne, Wo­men and Song, Op 333 Antal Dor­at1 conducts the London Ph1lhar­monlC Orchestra All tlmes llsted are approx1mate Dlnner mUS1C from 6 30 - 7 30 pm

Sr. Teen Club Party There wlll be a Sr Teen Club

Balloween Party thlS Frldav even­lng, Oct 31st fro~ 8 - 12 at the Teen Club $1 25 Stag and $2 00 Drag no costu~e requ1red but you must wear a mask A pr1ze w1ll be awarded for the best mask ~OVle at 10 pm

Costume Judging Presently, Art's slte manager for Control

Data Corporatlon Art and hlS staff of two men are responsIble for malntalnlng the CDC computer at the KMR Data Center HALLOWEEN COSTUME JUDGING

Art sald CDC start- thlS Frlday evenlng at 6 30 at ed ln 1958 when the the Rlchardson Theater Should

corporat1.on numbered elght men CDC now employs 44,000 and Art belleves ln 10 years, "Control Data wlll be a household word llke IBM "

After work Art of­ten snorkels and he chuckled, "After my lfe. Bobb1.e, learned to

SWIm, I haven't been able to get her out of the water "

The II ills have a four-year-old daughter, Angela and "one KwaJ condltlon dog"

1he famIly has been on Island one vear and wants to tour the OrIent before returnlng to t-hnneapolls

"In fact," Art Interjected, ''If I can get a transfer wIth CDC we'd lIke another tour over-seas "

Toastmistress Slate Dinner Meeting Ciln you see yourself, "Traveillng Wlthout

Tears through MIcronesIa?" Well, Pat Cataldo lS prepared to tell us how to do lt wlth a slIde talk at the Nov 3 dInner meetlng of the KwaJalein Toastmlstress Club Pat lS the YYWC representatIve to the KwaJalein Atoll Inter­Island Cornmunlty Relatlons Commlttee She has traveled extensIvely, IS a past presldent of the YYWC and IS ardently lnterested ln the Ml­croneSlan culture She brIngs a knowledgeable background to enhance her sllde talk If you have heard dne of her women's club travel talks you wlll be acqualnted w1.th her perceptIve and wltty presentatlon If you want to know ~ore about the Trust Terrltory, plan on attendlng our dlnner meetlng Please don't walt for a Toastmlstress to call you Evervone lS wel­come The soclal hour beglns at 7 pm and dln­ner lS served at 7 30 pm For a no host res­ervatlon, call Shlrley Johnson at 82648 by Sunday, Nov 2

lt raln the COQtest wlll be held ln Ivev Theater Judglng 1.S for chlldren through the 6th grade of school r,et busy now two days left to prepare your costume

Mail Early

Hobby Show

( BLACK CORAL WALL PLAQUES and an arrangement came from the recesses of the bachelor quarters where a lot of beau­tlful work lS done

BEAUTIFULLY CRAFTED JAPANESE DOLLS handcrafted by M1Ch1ko Guas­

tamach1o, Wlll be d1splayed at the Hobby Show on Nov 9th

ART COOK shows h1S latest pa1.nt-1ng "The Log Cab1n."

TURTLES BITE and when there lS talent and patlence, look what can be done Th1s 1S a hobby of bachelors on 1sland

ROUGH ROCK TO FINISHED JEWELRY 1S called lapadery work These p1eces, 1n Jade and opal w1ll be shown at the Hobby Show

Mark your calendar now for Sun­day, Nov 9th and be sure you at­tend the Hobby Show at the "Hllton BU1ld1.ng" located next to Surfway

If you have a hobby flll out an entry blank and turn 1t ln rlght away

Thursday, OctoDer 30, 1969 HOURGLASS

Reds Relecl Plan for Secrel Talks Jakarta, Indonesla (UPI)--Adm John S. McCain, Commander of the U.S. Forces in

the Paclflc proposed the Paris peace talk negotlations be sWltched to smaller, secret meetlngs The Comrounlsts reJected the Amerlcan move

U S Chlef negotlator Henry Cabot Lodge proposed that the first such secret seSS10n be held next Tuesday--the morning after Presldent Nixon dellvers his much heralded speech on Vlet Nam.

But a dlsappolnted Lodge told newsmen after today's formal cORference seSS10~ that the Communlst negotlators "reJected lt out of hand--I'm sorry to say"

The Vlet Cong's "forelgn mlnlster," Mme Nguyen Thl Blnh, conflrmed to news­men after the ParlS meetlng "We re­Jected the Amerlcan offer."

Range Operation

Page 3

Am rican Sci ntist's Th ory of Quark

W j ns Nob I Physics Priz Stockholm (UPI)--Prof Murray

Gell-Mann, an American scientist who launched the theory of the quark -­the smallest particle in the universe -- was awarded the 1969 Nobel Prize for PhYS1CS.

A Br1ton and a Norwegian, who pio­neered research lnto the chang1ng atomlC pattern of o~ganic mQlecules, won the 1969 Prize for Chemlstry

Both Hanol and Vlet Cong delegatlons countered Lodge's proposal wlth thelr own call for dlrect negotlatl0ns bet­ween Washlngton and the Vlet Cong

A "SPEEDBALL" Launch operatlon at R01- The Royal Swedish Academy of

Mme Blnh sald Lodge "would not an­swer our proposal "

Lodge had proposed that the number of negotlators from each of the four del­egatlons --U S , South Vletnamese, North Vletnamese and Vlet Cong--be re­duced from 13 to four each, and that the texts of thelr proposals ln the behlnd-the-scenes talks be kept secret

The U S delegatl0n chlef sald he made the proposal "because I felt so strongly that we needed a new approach to break out of the present sterlle sltuatl0n and remote serl0US negotl­atlons "

Lodge complalned that the present conference procedure has allowed the conference to degenerate lnto a "pro­paganda forum -- not a peace forum "

Although newsmen have been banned from the conference hall ever Slnce the four-slded conference began early thls year, each of the delegatl0ns has released the text of ltS prepared statements after the weekly seSS10ns

Because nelther slde was able to Wln the other over to ltS proposals, Lodge sald, the four delegatlons agreed to go on meetlng on the present once-a-week formula-every Thursday

ItTo meet agaln Thursday lS better than not to meet at all," he sald

Nixon Praises Agnew

For t A Great Job' Washlngton (UPI)--Vlce Presldent

Splro T Agnew, wldely crltlclzed for hlS sharp attack on antlwar demonstra­tors, today won pralse from Presldent Nlxon for dOlng "A great Job"

Nlxon made no dlrect reference to Agnew's denunclatl0n of peace demon­strators when he and the Vlce presl­dent appeared together at a Whlte House receptl0n for the Herltage Groups D1V1S10n of the Republlcan Natl0nal Commlttee

The Presldent told the group, WhlCh seeks GOP support from ethnlc groups, "The Vlce presldent from tlme to tlme feels he's very much ln touch because of hlS Greek background now I'm not Greek but I'm very proud to have the Vlce presldent wlth hlS Greek back­ground ln thls~Admlnlstratl0n, and he's done a great Job"

It was Nlxon's flrst publlC pralse of Agnew Slnce the Vlce pres1dent, 1n a New Orleans speech Oct 19, denoun­ced the leaders of the Vlet Nam Mora­torlum as professl0nal anarchlsts supported by self-styled 1ntellect­uals who are In reallty "lmpudent snobs "

The Whlte House later sald the speech was not cleared by Presldent Nlxon

After pra1s1ng Agnew, Nlxon turned the mlcrophone over to the Vlce pres-1dent who recently revealed that he forbade h1S own teen-age daughter, Klm, from partlclpatlng 1n the Mora­torlum day actlv1ty

Agnew expressed admirat10n for Nat10n­al herl~age stresslng dlsclpllne

Namur lS scheduled for tomorrow, Oct 31. SClences gave Prof Murray Gell-Mann, There wl11 be no blackout or "take cover" a 40-year-old sClentific WhlZ kld of requlrements at KwaJaleln. Callfornla Inst1tute of Technology,

In connectl0n wlth thlS operatlon a the $72,400 award for h1S br1111ant hazard area wl1l exist In the oceanWlth-theorles concernlng elementary partl­ln the area shown 1n the sketch below cles, the tlny bUllding stones of the

~\:~ \) ~

All personnel and of the above ocean the hours of 1030

169°';0 E ?OIO' I

\

i I

JT ( 1\ \ TO~L G,

C' ·AIC 10_1\

All, ITOLL

1(1 I [

I O·JE ,TOL

~ 00ll} '! 1

1690 0. ~

,,}l.Il{l,'1'l, A TOLL

craft must remaln aLL hazard area between

and 0030 on Nov 1

MAIL EARLY

\1~lC\"S

The Sony 666-D

atom The academy c1ted Gell-Mann for

"h1S contributl0ns and dlscover1es concernlng the classlflcatl0n of ele­mentary partlcles and thelr lnteract-10ns "

Gell-Mann was the 28th Amerlcan to Wln the phYS1CS award In the hlstory of the Nobel Prlzes

The Swedlsh academy sald Gell-Mann's contrlbutl0ns to partlcle research "have ln many cases been of declslve lmportance for the further development" of partlcle theorles

H1S theory of the quark appeared to be verlfled thlS year when an Austral­lan sClentlst, Prof. Charles McCuster of the Unlverslty of Sydney, announced that he belleved he had dlscovered and ls01ated the quark

Gell-Mann has been a leadlng tary partlcle phUSlcist for 15 desplte hlS relatlve yOuth.

elemen­years

He publlshed hlS flrst lmportant flndlngs ln 1933 on the behavl0r of partlc1es and 1n 1961 opened new avenues for partlcle researchers He found that a so-called symmetry prln­clple could be applled also to ele­mentary partlcles

Three-Motor, ESP Auto-Reverse Stereo Tape Deck

Features • ESP Automatic Tape Reverse • Three motors • Feather touch solenOid transport controls • SNR nOise reduction system • Ultra high frequency bias • Sound-on sound (With optional RK 80 and MX 6S) • Two speeds

I

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r---------------------------------______________________________________________________________________ ------~---1 Page 4 HOURGLASS SPORTS Thursday, ()( t (.;t)( r ~(), _J:!()~---, __

.. 6,

A WECO METS RUNNER dashes for flrst base where Kentron's Melfl walts for the ball

Spencer Haywood's War Spencer Haywood nearly started a war, now

he's wlnnlng the battles When Haywood de­clded to leave the Urlverslty of Detrolt dur-109 the summer, although he had two years of ellglblllty remalnlng, and slgn wlth the Den­ver Rockets of the Amerlcan Basketball Asso­clatlon, he helped create a break In merger talks between the ABA and the Natlonal Bas­ketball Assoclatlon

Slnce then, he has proved he belongs ln the pros Although the Rockets are wlnless ln seven games, Haywood has shown he lS a Wlnner by averaglng better than 20 pOlnts and nearly 20 rebounds a game

Desplte the rlft created by Haywood's pre­mature departure from Detrolt and hasty slgnlng wlth Denver, Spencer says he would llke to see the leagues merge He doesn't belleve that tr'e young f1J3A wlll fold, al­though lt has been beset wlth attendance problems and lack of a natlonal televlslon contract

In fact, wlth R1Ck Barry of the Washlngton Caps out for the season Wl th a knee lnJury and Connle Hawklns havlng abandoned the ABA for the lillA, Haywood has the added responsl­bllltJ of belng the new league's number one gate attractlon He enJoys the challenge

He says, "I'd rather look back and say that I was part of somethlng new Maybe my slgnlng ,nIl encourage other players to slgn "

Even before Haywood slgned wlth Denver and before he entered Detrolt, he was a natlonal celebrlty In the summer of 1968, the mus­cular SlX foot elght and one-half lnch, 225-pound center led the Unlted States Bas­ketball team to V1CtOry ln the 01ymP1C games at ~1exlco Clty Then, ln hlS flrst and only season at Detrolt, he prevlously spent one year at Trlnldad Junlor College~ he topped the natlon In rebound average wlth 21 and fl ve-tenths a game and was fourth ln s cor­lng ,nth an average of 31 and elght tenths pOlnts a game

Pro Bas'etba" The Phlladelphla 76ers moved lnto second

place ln the Eastern Dlvlslon of the Natlonal Basketball Assoclatlon last nlght wlth a 129-105 vlctory over the Baltlmore Bullets Hal Greer wlth 32 pOlnts and Jlm Washlngton wlth 25 led the Phlladelphla scorlng attack

The 4tlanta Hawks came from behlnd to beat the San Dlego Rockets 117-113 A fourth quarter surge by Blll Brldges and Joe Cald­well brought the Hawks back from a flve pOlnt deflclt Brldges taliled 27 pOlnts whlle Caldwell had 24 Elvln Hayes of San Dlego led all scorlng wlth a total of 34 pOlnts

There was no trouble at all for the Ch1-cago Bulls as they outpaced the San Fran­C1SCO Warrlors, lOl-87

In the ABA the New York Nets came from elght pOlnts behlnd at the half to score a 99-92 Wln over the Mlaml Florldlans At one pOlnt of the fourth quarter the Nets scored 17 pOlnts to three of Mlamls

Cal-20 Racing Series LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL November 2

843 1159 1 Morency 2 Delaney 3 Morency 4 Delaney

1507

Ir10n Clapp Clapp Ir10n 1391

1156 Kuhn Kuhn Reynolds Reynolds 874

1 Sears Hegeman Malpass 2 Henry Hegeman Jol1coeur 3 Sears M1chel Jol1coeur 4 Henry M1chel Malpass COIDmlttee Kay, cha1rman, Kes­sler, LeBlanc, Cotr1ll Sk1ppers' meet1ng 8 am sharp at Mar1na

* * * * * Master's Golf Club

A new golf club, the Kwajale1n Master~ Golf Club, 1S now be1ng formed for golfers w1th hand1-caps of 0 thru 15 Membersh1p wlll be Ilm1ted to 40 Anyone 1nterested please contact John Vllor1a at the Golf Course or phone 83368 for add1t1onal 1n­formatlon

HIGH SCHOOL teammates cheer a runner scor&ng ~n the EagZes VB H~gh SchooZ game Sunday

fast Pi'ch Resul,s Kentron's Calvert held the Eag­

les to two h1tS 1n p1tchlng hlS team to a 10-0 shutout at Brandon Fleld last n1ght Watson led the Wlnners ll-hlt attack w1th a double and a home run Three teammates contrlbuted two hltS aplece

* * * S K F scored a flve-1nnlng 16-2

Wln over the Ralnbows at Dally Fleld last n1ght Alex led the Wlnners wlth three hltS, Henry contrlbuted a grand slam home run Fnday, Oct 31 Dally Fleld 5 15 Wenoca vs Bldg & Grnds

(Talbert & Neale) Brandon Fleld 5 15 Rocky Rooters vs Have Falth

(Watson & Santos) Saturday, Nov 1 Dally Fleld 5 15 Southern Cross vs Palm Ter

(Gouvela & Antonol) Brandon Fleld 5 15 Olympla vs Orchld Island

(Yamashlta & M1erk) Sunday, Nov 2 Dally F1eld 1 30 Kentron vs H1gh School

(Conrad & Andy) 3 00 Weco Mets vs Southern Cross

(Neale & Talbert) 5 00 Vlklngs vs Orch1d Island

(Kauanu1 & Akana) Brandon F1eld 1 30 Ralnbows vs ROl Namur

(Yamashlta & M1erk) 3 00 Wenoca vs Have Falth

(Ch1ng & Petry) 5 00 Sandbaggers vs Rocky Rooters

(Santos & Runyon)

* * * * *

Fnday, Oct 31 5 pm Mets vs New York Saturday, Nov 1 5 pm Glants vs Ebeye Islanders Sunday, Nov 2 3 pm Dodgers vs Atlanta 5 pm Whlte Sox vs New York

'NOTE There w1ll be a Llttle League coaches meet1ng Tuesday, Nov 4 at Speclal Serv1ces offlce at 5 pm Yesterday's Results

Atlanta railled for f1ve runs In the fourth lnn1ng to p1ck up a 7-2 Wln over the Wh1te Sox 1n L1ttle League act10n yesterday The W1nners led 2-1 when a slngle by Johnston sparked the rally Seven Atlanta batters each had one h1t

* * * * * Bacllelors Learn to Swim

All bachelors who are 1nterested 1n learnlng to SW1m come to the Bachelors' Pool on Sunday, Nov 2 from 2 to 4 pm Sam Slndora wlll be beglnn1ng a new seSSlon of SWlm classes

* * * * * Volleyball Results

LDS B over Douglas 8-7 15-4

50th State over Ebeye 11-0 14-10

Orch1d Island over Palm Terrace B 15-11 8-7

Fnday, Oct 31 6 pm Palm Terrace B vs Roadrunners Sunday, Nov 1 6 pm Douglas vs Press B 7 pm Press A vs Unknowns 8 pm Roadrunners vs 50th State

* * * * * NHL Re~ulfs

In the Nat10nal Hockey League last nlght the Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Boston Bru1ns, 4-2 It was the flrst loss of the season for the tough Brulns who have com­plIed 8 record of SlX wlns, one loss and one tle Power play goals by Murray Ollver and Jlm McKenney provlded the Maple Leafs wlth thelr thlrd Wln aga1nst three los­ses

The Mlnnesota North Stars turn­ed back the Montreal Canadlens, 4-1 A 35-foot shot by Danny Grant In the second perlod broke up a 1-1 tle and proved to be all M1nnesota needed The North Star V1CtOry put them 1n a tle for flrst In the NHL West

A goal by German born center Wal­ter Tkazuk early 1n the f1nal pe­rlod put the New York Rangers 1n front as they went on to beat the Pl ttsburgh Penqu1ns, 3-1 It was \ the n1nth tlme 1n 11 games that New York has beated Plttsburgh

The Oakland Seals, because of goals by rookles Wayne Mulo1n and Don O'Donoghue, moved to the top of the Western Dlvlslon wlth a 3-1 V1CtOry over the Chlcago Black Hawks

Rookle Gary Monahan got h1S flrst league goal as the Detro1t Red Wlngs defeated the Los Angeles Klngs, 5-2

* * * * * Three black athletes have qUlt

t~e Unlverslty of wyom1ng track team 1n support of 14 blacks d1S­mlssed from the football squad Track coach John Walker told the athletes they were maklng a mlS-take A SU1t w1ll be flIed today asklng for relnstatement of the football players

* * * * *

[ ----- - ------Thurs~ay, October 30, 1969 HOURGLASS I 1.1." r

/

Nixon Pledges Leadership in School Decision Hous Approv

To Giv Pres"

His Draft Loft

sM asur

Nixon

ry Plan Washlngton (UPI)--Presldent Nlxon pledged hlS admlnlstratlon's leadershlp to­day to solvlng the "practlcal and human problems" ralsed by the Supreme Court's order for an Immedlate end to segregatlon of publlC schools WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The House

In a statement Issued by the Whlte House after he met wlth Attorney General John N Mltchell, the Presldent made no judgment of the court rulIng agalnst the

approved and sent to the Senate today a blll to glve Presldent NIxon hlS draft lottery plan, but the Senate sald lt would not conslder the measure thlS year

JustIce Department's move for delay In desegregat~on of 30 MISSISSlPPl school dIstrIcts

"The Supreme Court has spoken declsl­vely on the tlmlng of school desegrega­tIon," NIxon sald

"There are, of course, practlcal and human problems Involved Wlth all of us workIng together In full respect of the law, I am confldent we can overcome these problems

III Intend to use the leadershlp res ces of the executlve branch of govern­ment to asslst In every posslble way In dOIng so I call upon all cltlzens and partIcularly those In leadershlp POS1-tlons to work together In seekIng solu­tIons for these problems In accordance wIth the mandate of the court"

~ltchell conferred wIth Nlxon after he had dlSCUSSeQ the Impllcatlons of the court declslon wIth AssIstant Attorney General Jerry Leonard, chlef of the department's CIVll rlghts dlvlslon who had argued the government's case for de­lay before the court

A slmllar meetlng was held at the De­partment of Health, Educatlon and Wel­fare

NIxon's statement Indlcated the Ad-mInIstratIon vlewed the declslon as applYlng to all dual publlC school sys­tems In the natlon IIBut nobody knows ,II one offlclal sald

Government lawyers were reported pon­d0rlng whether the rullng mlght be ap­nlled only to the MISSISSlPPl school ~Irtrlcts Involved In the court case, t~c ~ntlre state of MISSISS1PPl or to ~ll Southern states WhlCh have ever oprrated segregated schools as offlclal DollCY

~IO matter how the rullng ultImately lS lnterpreted, It IS bound to set a nrcccdcnt for future rullngs In Slml­l~r cdse~ over the natIon

J, OY1Clrd told reporters yesterda;y that " f th" court were to order Instant In­+ ~r~tLon, nothlng would change The Cjurt cannot enforce ItS own order -odlr~ Clnd people have to do It and we IU~t don't have enough"

It 0as uncertaJn Just what effect the court's rulIng would have on new govern­~ent procedures that emphaSIzed court actIon rather than the federal fund cut offo to force schools to Integrate

Gov. R cts Deseg regation B~ton f\ouge, La (UPI)--Gov John

LcKelthen today flatly refused to comply ~ 1 tll federal demands for complete de­segregatIon of Loulslana colleges He sald It would ta~e federal marshals to o"1'os(' hIm

"\-Ie are tIred of beIng treated as gUI­nea Pl~S and second class CItIzens In t IS state," JicKelthen saId

The federal desegregatIon demands were restated In a letter earlIer thIS week to the Loulslana State Unlverslty sys­tem and to the State Board of Educatlon, wh_ch governs 11 other LOUISIana col­leges

~1cKel then saId hIS state's colleges and unlversltles have been desegrega­ted SInce a 1954 U S Supreme Court de­CISIon He sald any further desegrega­tIon would have to be enforced by federal marshals

Leon Panetta, dIrector for In the Department of Health, and Welfare saId Loulslana's educatIon systems have untIl ber to come up WIth plans

CIVll rlghts Educatlon two hIgher mld-Decem-

GIVING HER ALL-Tu",~hng for the ball dUlmg a match agam"t "" (,tthorn Scotland Joan Tench of the Foden L ,till' <;OU II team 10'ie~ her ShOI t5 m the fmal of the Ladle'> InternatIOnal Knockout Football competItIOn In

London I~nl" 'lnd (('flhlpplwto)

Arab Guerrillas Driven From Lebanese Fortress (UPI)--Arab guerrlllas today fought

theIr way Into the Lebanese fortress town of Rachaya but were drIver. out whIle a Lebanese delegatlon In CaIro sought to keep peace dlScusslons from collapse

Arab guerrllla leaders-have refused to go to Calro to talk WIth the Leba­nese delegatIon, led by MaJ Gen Eml' Bustanl, and sources close to the CUSSlons saId prospects for an early Solutlon were dIm

Bustanl scheduled a nlghttlme meet­Ing WIth Egyptlan Presldent Gabal Ab­del Nasser But the Lebanese comman­der-ln-chlef planned to return to Bel­rut tomorrow unless progress was made tcward settllng the confllct

UPI correspondent Ray Wllklnson re­ported from Rachaya that the guerrll­las tWlce today poured out of the hIlls to ~ttack the fortress town In South Lebanon WIth rockets, mortars and machlneguns The fIrst assault was repulsed by Lebanese army uefend-

At one pOInt, Wllklnson reported, a band of rebels fought theIr way InSIde the town, but were eventually drIven out

The Army rushed reInforcements to the besleged town of 6,000

The Rachaya attacks cOJnclded WIth guerrIlla actIon agalnst the AI-Kolel­at AIr Base and new clashed In the northern CIty of TrIpolI

Spokesmen saId guerrIllas fIrIng rockets and l20-mlllmeter artIllery damaged the runway and an aIrport bUIldIng at AI-Kolelat, two mIles

Informed of Senate Democratlc Lead­er Mlke MansfIeld's declslon agalnst taklng up the lottery now, Nlxon urged hlm to reconslder "Clearly, thlS IS not a matter WhlCh should be casually dlsmlssed or made a polltlcal foot­ball," NHmn sald At the heart of the controversy was a deslre on the part" of many llberals In Congress to undertake a broad overhaul of the Selectlve SerVIce thIS year The Presldent wants hlS lottery Imple­mented now wlth further reform next year after a study commlSSlon makes ItS recommendatlons

"Polntlng to the further reforms WhlCh mlght be made IS no excuse to make no reforms at all," the PreSl­dent sald at the end of the day that saw draft lssue bounclng back and forth between the House, the Senate and the Whlte House

The House overwhelmlngly approved the lottery plan, 382-13, after beat­lng back efforts to open the lottery blll up to all sorts of further Sel­ectlve SerVlce changes Mansfleld announced hlS declslon agalnst taklng up the blll on the Senate floor and In the face of a threat by the Pres­Ident to Implement a modlfled random selectlon plan by executlve order by the end of the year lf Congress dld not act

Under the Presldent's lottery pro­posal passed by the House, 19-year­olds would make up the draft pool and those to be Inducted would be selected at random by a computer

Wlth the Republlcan-Southern De~­ocrat coalltlon compoSlng the mal­orlty, the House refused on ~ ~~5-129

vote to conslder abo11shlr~ student deferments and other draft reforms that had been demanded by a group of 11berals from both partles

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

Industrla1s 57 24 up 10 Transportatlon 43 56 up 18 Utliltles N/A Flnance N/A All Stocks 54 28 up 08 Equlvalent to a galn of SlX cents ln the average prlce of a NYSE share

DOW JONES CLOSING AVERAGES

30 Industrla1s 850 51 up 2 17 20 Ralls 200 41 off 55 15 Utl1ltles 118 77 off 03 65 Stocks 285 92 up 13

south of the SyrIan border and 65 ~~ mlles north of BeIrut ~~':\"

Two mInor bombs exploded In Belrut ~ ~ today and Arab guerrlllas armed wIth 'm '\ machlneguns led a funeral proceSSIon .1' ~ ~

~ ".... .. through the CIty for a PalestInIan ~

~ .. w yout~ kIlled In earlIer flghtcng ~. ' ~ ,"1 ~

The latest attack on Rachaya, a Junc COSMONAUT VISITORS ~ Sovlet lo,nllllllut, \[ 11 l.,1l tlon town about 40 ml1es southeast of GeorglY Betegovoy (left) ilnd hon,t ll1tm F,oldl-tll\ llt ,11

BeIrut, was the fourth In three days the US on 1 two week Vl,lt B,tC"O\O\ lllldt I -Pllt

and the heavlest so far flight il yell 19O FeoktLsto\ 1 'lle1lt"t \\ ,- 1 111< 'l1bt' ,'I the fll~L thlee lTI'ln "PHI telill thc Q,O\ltt tllblltd III l"h~

Page 6 HOURGLASS Thursday, October 30, 1969

Vita 1-:====;;;~~H::::a;;;;;;do;;'s;::::T=h=e=y'll==Do~I=t=E=ve=ry=T=tm::::e;;;;:;;:;;;®;:. ====:::;!I Ka i longs Are An Ancient Chinese JolE USED TO BE A

eAAFL'I TILL ALL HIS SOLVENT 50FTIES GCJr WISE TO !-lIM'

Tradition Hong Kong

t-JO I'M. EA.TING LA.TER.'

I .JUST WANTED TO TALK TO YOU GUYS, HMM W!-lAT'S THAT? AND MJ.AT

ARE YOU !-lAVING? I .JUST WA.NT TO

TASTE IT

Lives on Today By STEVE LIBBY

Wrttlen EspecUtlly for Central Press and Thus Newspaper A GREAT DEAL has to be

said for old style tradItIOn In the New World many

herItages are passed down from generatIOn to generatIOn In more than one commumty sons go mto the same busmess as theIr father and theIr father s father

• In

.111;~'1 PartIcularly from such lands as Israel or earlIer Palestme from Lebanon and the other ArabIc natIOns from Scandma vIa and from southern Europe -there IS a kmd of take care of one s brothers attItude whIch IS m the finest tradItIOn of the Golden Rule

\l ~ \ '~~\ I

I \\ ~ \,

w.~~:i,~ .Jihl ~;·f,<

WAITED NINE YEARS TO JUMP SHIP JIl'l Voktouhhk I left ) 26 L lach ""U)OI \\ho ~lId he \I.dlt!.d nine Jt. Irs to ]LlIl1P 'hIp to ft ecdom ,tmd, In front of "" ne\l tl lilt t home m Sun V llln C i1lt \I llh h" [,Iend Antonm B~uman an (Jthel Lz,-,h rffug~c \lha c lme tll thl L::, In 19,,0 VOklOUh ' 11k \\ 1'-, ~I lntrd },(I111]"'-"I011 to q 1\ In the"L S [01 1. }(,U· lnd

h" 1 ;;UII {!teed job '.\lth ~ 'teel f1bnntlOn turn

AUTUMN HARVEST L lh n fit PlIIICh, \11th hook lldclcr' ",t Lte lnd (It\ POlllL pull Unl\ll It\ of Tt\. h .... tudent'" un l

"'1\1.. our lr€t'-' lJrutt",t (10m hl~h bl lndlf'''' of 11\1 olk"l '1nd l \pr€I..,I..,f' ..... In Au'-.tIJl Tf'x T\"t.nt\ ..,ttlcilnt.., \~I If'] ulLd Soon

,ftel\l lid bulldo~eh l11o\cd mInd knocked rio\\n the lrees

FIRST LADY GLAMOR-Meet Con,tance Cornell Stuart 31 Mrs Pat N,xon s ne" pr es, st'cretary-a t $30 000 I ) CJ.r Mrs Studrt "hose husband I1kewI"e " a WhIte HOllbC d Ide LS from \Vheel mg \V Va "nd" a 1962 110nol grad of the U of Md and hds had publIc reldtlOns "nd 'ldvertlOmg experience Hel predecessor MI' Get ry \'"n Del' Heuvel gocs to Rome a, the U S ambassa

dol" "pecI'l1 'tIde

unperturbed on Sen'ltc Inve,tlgatlOns ('OffilTIlttee Vvltne..,s stand In

'" a' lungton \ hel e he m voked thc fIfth amendment m r efusmg to testify about

racl{ptcetlng m the man '1 gement of 't'rvlce club,

SUBWAY STOP- A car \\edged mto a "ub\\av entrance m MeXICO Crty I' exammed by bystanders after a motol'J"t made d \\ rang turn on , do\\ nto\\ n street Wllnesses SaId the drIver suffered head mjurles but \\ as able to \I Iggle free befO! e an dmbulance ar nved Police ",lId they would charge hIm \\ rtll d Imaging pubhc propprty - \\hen found

The Chmese of centUrIes ago long before theIr turn toward CommUnIsm had theIr kal fongs a name a thousand years old epItomIzed by the phrase help thy neIghbor And thiS trad,tIOn contmues today m BntIsh Hong Kong where there are 143 dIfferent help tht' needy organIzatIOns alone servmg 800 000 needy

A VIctIm (left) of a Hong Kong fire seeks aId-and gets It-from h,s neIghborhood kalfong assocIatIon

* • THE TINY 400 square mIle

colony can probably boast more welfare agenCIes per capIta than anywhere else m the world In addltlOn the governmt'nt s own SocIal WelfCLre Department plays a VItal tole In the com mumtv

These kalfongs have made a VItal contnbutlOn to Hong Kong s socIal "elfare and per haps supposedly more sophIst! cated cultures could take ales son from them

Transla ted II terally as street or dlStllCt orgamzatJon the kalfcngs denved theIr name 3

mlllemum ago m Chma where purel y neIghborhood bodle, jomed together to make certam no one m the ImmedIate neIgh borhood was m need

The tradltlOn of the kmfong has not surpn"mgly been strong m the Crown Colony smce Its bcgmmngs because of Hong Kong s high percentage of Chmese populatlOn

THE FIRST was founded more than a century ago In the qUIet VIllage of Stanley on the "ou th shore of the Island An other was established 50 yeal s later m a Kowloon dIstrIct on the mamland pemnsula Both CLdhered to anclent kalfong pnnclples

today Wus born shortly after World War II when a local man named ParkIll Woo re vlved It m a bIg wa:,

Parkm \Voo opened a new kaIfong In a decaymg suburb of Kowloon known as Sham shupw 18 years ago The Idea caught on like WIldfIre and speakmg of fIre thIS tOP'C has been closelv IdentifIed WIth kal fong, smce the 1950s "hen out breaks III Hong Kong s squat ter are'! S were dally occurren ces Then kmfongs concentrat cd prlmal'lly upon materIal help and abslStance

* • THE NFEOf:, of each com

mumty aggravated by the tre mendons mrlux of post war lefugees weIghed heavllv upon the ,hoLilders of the reSIdents and contmually ,traIlled their resources Eu t more kalfongs were founded and other chan table orgamzatlOns leaped to the Icscue

Hong Kong; people enJoy he hIghest standard of lIvmg m all ASia outSide of Japan but the karfongs nevertheless stIll play 'ln effectIve role They deal dally WIth the more so phrstlcated problems whIch have emerged throughout the bUbtlmg terl'ltory Therr work embraces all a;pects of com mumty hfe Includmg educa tlOnal Lultural medIcal and re

fong~ have provIded free school mg for many thousands of chll dren In medICal areas variOUS kalfongs have more than 200 doctors and herbahsts treatmg members

Chmese opera hIstorIcal plays and other tradItIOnal events are orgamzed regularly and produced for the entertam ment and enlightenment of all -WIth a speCIal emphaSIS on stressIng the cultures of old

* * :'<

POSSIBL Y the kalfongs most valuable functIOn III modern tImes IS the hnk whIch they prOVIde between the people and the government One offICIal mvolved WIth the kalfong move ment "mce 1953 IS Stephen Ho "ho de<;cnbed the kalfongs as

the best thmg that has ever happened to Hong Kong They ha ve not only achle\ ed a great and proud record of provldmg schools c1lmcs and vocatlOnal tmmmg he says but most Importantly they have Injected mto theIr members a sense of commumty prIde

Today, kmfong, have then motto a re phrasmg of the Golden Rule

To hve m harmony WIth your neIghbors to protect and rely on one another to share one another S JOys and sorrows to render assIstance to one an other m lImes of dIffIculty and to promote good morale and the betterment of

SORRY ABOUT LAURI~-Mrs MItchell JUl'lSlch takes a last look around her llvmg room m Empire La to see that all the furmture IS on blocks and chaIr" to save It maybe from Hurncane Laurre The bnck home was only four months old when the famIly had

OW-TIMER SNODGRAS5 BREAKS IN

A NEW, YOUNG GUY, AND

EXPOUNDS ON THE LONG

TIME IT'LL TAKE

TI-IEN SNOD FINDS OUT HE'S GETTING A PROMOTION AND THE

NEWCOMER. IS HIS

REPLACEMENT I 1'fw«t.< AND" TIP 0"

TWI I'ORJ!""'~ To AL.j:REO

s,o..NTCRO

to abandon It for HurrIcane CamIlle Now thIS

Hado's They'll Do It Every TIme ®

GoT TO BE WIDE AWAKE T~IS FF'S It-rrRICATE REAL TOUCHY'

v ......... • ... 1'0 GET TI-IE HANG OF IT

44 /III,to.YMONO 5'1'

STAMF~ WIN ."-'-'<-IIU

f a n u t s

B e f I e

w . I Z a ~

l. Thursday, October 30, 1969

AR~N'"f YOu GOIt-lG­SOUTH FOR 'fHe::.

WI"-l"fe::.R 'Z

-~\ Z '1 'I

5OMETlM~ r WAKE UP "THINKING I'M GOIN6 TO HAVE A 600D DM, BUT IT ALWA'1!7 TURN6 OUT TO

BE A BAD DA'I

~

1H~"-l HOW COMe:: YOLJ'~e:: WAl.KIN.:r INS'f'e:AD OF Fl-,{I/o.Ic:r :z

\

HOW COME r NEVER WAKE UP 'THINKING I'M EiOIN6 TO HAVE A GOOD DAII AND THEN REALL'I HAVE A GOOD DA'I? 011.. HOW COME I NEVER li.\4KE UP TUINKIN€i I'M GOIN6 TO HAVE A BAD DA'I, AND THEN HAVE A 6000 DM?

IF fH~ 600D LORD HAD WAN"f~D uS

fO Fl.'!' H~ WOLJl.D HAVE: PROVIDe::D us WI"fH WI"-lGS I

HOURGLASS

~ ~~ ~~~--

- -~~~

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B Jay Becker

(Top Record Holder ,n Masters Individual Champ,onah,p Play)

BIDDING QUIZ Partner bIds One Club next

player passes both sIdes vulner able What would vou bId now wIth each of the following four hands?

] .KJ84 .QJ63 +Q75 "",92 2 .AJ9 .KJ72 +AQ6 "",Q83

3 .AJ94 .AQ87 +AK952 "'-4 .73 .J9543 +AKQ 10 "",K8

1 One heart When partner bIds one of a SUI t you are re qUlred to respond If you hold 6 or more POInts m hIgh cards You don t expect partner to make game when you have only 6 pOInts-he WIll seldom have hands worth 20 pOints or more - nevertheless you keep the bIddIng alive to cover this pos Slbillty

When you have as many as 9 POInts the chance of making game IS g rea t I Y Increased -though It s stIli not worth wrIt Ing home about WIth 9 POInts you plan to bId once and then retIre from the pIcture unless partner s rebId IndIcates strong game prospects - for example by hIS makIng a Jump rebId In that case you would bId agaIn

As you plan to bId only once, It IS better to respond WIth a heart than a spade ThIS per­mIts both a spade or a heart fIt to be found whereas a spade response mIght result In your never fmdIng a he art fit If partner had four hearts

It would be wrong to respond

one not rump The search for a major SUIt fIt clearly comes fIrst

2 Three notrump ThIS shows 16 or 17 POInts notrump dIS tnbutlOn (generally 4 3 3 - 3) and strength In all SUItS Nat urally the three notrump re sponse suggests Interest In a slam If partner has more than a mlmmum opening bId

3 One dIamond Of course thiS IS an enormous hand oppo sIte an opemng bId but ItS value IS greatly ImpaIred when part ner bIds your v 0 I d Had he opened WIth a spade a heart or a dIamond nothIng short of an earthquake should stop you from eventually contractIng for SIX or seven But opposIte a club bId It IS best to draw m your horns untIl a SUIt fIt IS found

A modest response of one dla mond (not twO) IS ali that IS necessary at thIS POInt You re spond m your longest SUIt fIrst so that If and when you bId spades or hearts later partner WIll know they are four card SUitS

4 One heart To respond one dIamond would be mcol-rect SUIts are practIcally always bid accordmg to theIr length and not theIr hIgh card strength The rum IS to fmd the SUIt m whIch there IS the greatest com bIned length HIgh card content IS only a secondary consldera tlOn

HECK; NO I

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LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE

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Page 7

1 CROSS'WORD By Eugene Sheffer I HORIZONTAL 48 Underlying 1 --Khan quality " Machine 52 Sped

part 53 Balance 7 --Flow 54 Insect egg

12 Deface 55 Goddess 13 Single unIt of 14 Auriculate retribubon 15 SalutaUon 56 Candy 16 Under- 57 Letter

estImate 58 .Jomed 18 .Japanese VERTICAL

com 1 Accu-19 Thomas mulate

2 Mallet

3 Sport area " Unexpected

stratagem 5 History 6 Adm&ns

concem 7 Withered 8 Vehicle 9 Constel.

latIon 10 Caress 11 CItruS

dnnk 17 Con­

cludes 20 Grand

Answer to yesterday s puzzle 22 Youth 23 Affmn 27 Goddess

of dawn 29 BIrd 31 Church

part 34 ForbfIed 35 WeIghted 37 Couple 38 SCrutInIze 39 Clull 41 Caprice 45 Sea bIrds 47--

Gershwm

DHLEP

CO PT .H UG .w AND AD AR .0 LE .A LEE DE CA NT ER .5 LAM IR AD E • • 1>1 AT URE

•• • E TC H. NE D •• ..JA RS .R 00 T • 100 AP E. PA NN E. NOD WA N. DB OL .A GRA _E RN .R YO T • •• AR GU ED~ OA ST LO AM .REME MB ER TO DO .ER I. IR AE OM ER .WTAG. CI TE ,

Avera,,_ tim_ or 101a&ll" IS mlDatel

(JRYPrOqUJPS

DWMIPESLYK E

21 CIvil War General

23 Bows companion

24 Vigor 25 Supplement 26 Com

munl8t 28 Crude

metal 30 Hawthorn 31 MountaIn 32 Card game 33 Sailor 36 Reducmg

regImen 37 sport 40 Hag 42 --

Bmgham 43 Angry 44 French

paInter 45 Allowance

for waste 46 Hardens 48 --and

downs "9 At present

tIme 50 ExpIre 51 Compass

point

ITFYTH

EKVR SMFN KVHETE RMLWN

'1"esterliay's Cryptoqulp LOVELY RIVER VALLEY AT TRACTS CURIOUS TOURISTS

BIG GEORGE! by Virgil Partch

"I thmk all she wants IS a lIttle attention"

WISHING WELL~.I RegIstered U S Patent OffIce

4- 8 2 7 6 3 4- 5 2 8 6 7 3 A B H E C R Q Y 0 E 0 T E 3 7 6 8 " 2 5 3 6 " 3 6 7 S E N T U M 0 P S I 0 I R 2 8 3 4 5 6 3 4 5 7 4 8 2 E T N C U D S K C N S E W 8 3 6 2 7 4 5 8 6 3 2 4 8

R E E 0 A E A Y R T E T E 3 6 4 7 2 6 3 5 4 2 5 6 3 0 N T L S E A N L E W W L 7 6 8 4 8 3 5 2 3 6 4 7 3

L I A E R E I N T D M 0 T 7 4 3 6 5 2 7 4 6 8 3 6 4-

V E E E N D E N A S R S T

HERE Is a pleasant htUe game tbat WIll give you a message every day It IS a numerIcal puzzle designed to spell out

your fortune Count the letters In your first name If the num-ber of letters IS 6 or more subtract 4 If the number is less than 6 add 3 The result IS your key number Start at the upper left hand corner of the rectangle and check everyone of yOUl key numbers left to rIght Then read the message the letters under the checked flgUl es gIve you

~age 8

CLASSIFIED FOR SALE

GIrls' 20" bIke 1 year old, Kwaj condI­tIon $8 00 Call 84525, Tr 825.

Instamatlc 104 camera In underwater hOUSIng wIth flash never used $50 Fred Lazarus, 82371

Ladles' shoes, SIzes 8 and 8 1/2, whIte, red, yellow patent, varIety of whIte leather pump and sandal type, pInk and blue leather, black peau de SOlS Two brown haIrpieces, one Dynel and one hu­man hair Many bermuda shorts, lIke new, SIze 12, blue, pInk, whIte, beIge, print, etc. Call 82346 after 5 or see at Tr 565 between 5 and 9 pm.

New power tools--Toastmaster 3/8" drIll, model 5603 @ $16, Skll saber jIg saw, model 42524 @ $31, Toastmaster bench grInder, model 5575 ~ $18 and a Pola­rOId 104 camera for $35 StIll avaIl­able, one SprInt Bug go-cart WIth the MC 101 engIne Quarters 419A or call 82105

UnIcycle - lots of fun to learn to rIde one Call 84686 after 5

KIddIe seat for bIke, superIor condI­tIon, lronlng board, Drltz taIlors' ham for home seWIng Call 83403

WANTED

Good used Nlkkormat body after 5 pm

Phone 82617

Copy of "A GUIde to Shell CollectIng In the Kwajaleln Atoll" by Brost and Coale - please call 83627

To buy, borrow or your gIve-away "Block" pedals for a trIcycle and tape pIcture hooks Call 82219

LOST

In vlclnlty of Ivey Hall and Tr boy's glasses wlth black rIms 82610 Reward

108, Call

CalICO cat, Tag No 15561, answers to the name of Coco, would probably be seen around Palm Street area, If seen please call 84517

Young black and whlte cat left 492-B last Sunday wearIng red collar WIth bell Please call 82438

FOUND

The SecurIty Department IS haVIng a bIcycle sale soon The folloWlng bICY­cles are located at the statlon If your blcycle IS lIsted below please come and pIck It up 0847-B 0309-R 0872-R 0149-R 0185-R 0022-R 0116-R 0290-R 0131-R 0243-R 0345-R 0625-R 0765-R 0252-R 0219-R 1115-R 1259-R 1020-B 1921-R 1399-R 1511-B 1103-R 2501-R 2509-R 2146-R 2781-R 2002-B 2841-R 2564-R 2212-R 2411-R 2633-R 2801-R 2810-R 2408-R 2248-R 2789-R 3814-B 3992-B 3312-R 3894-B 3132-R 3150-B 3311-B 3500-B 3209-R 3416-R 3419-R 3948-B 3991-B 3883-B 4421-B 4440-B 4029-B 4214-B 4843-B 4132-B

0177-R 0246-R 0198-R 0619-R 1990-R 1694-R 1632-B 2321-R 2346-B 2115-R 2544-B 2401-R 3355-B 3448-R 3648-R 3215-R 3949-B 4524-B 4090-B

Buy Bonds

0454-R 0446-R 0556-R 0965-R 1659-R 1027-R 1912-R 2676-R 2965-B 2911-B 2461-R 2803-R 3202-B 3899-B 3932-R 3804-B 4029-R 4208-B

HOURGLASS

SERVICES

CHILD CARE -- WIll keep your ChIld whIle you work or relax, or full-tIme whIle you are off Island, any age. Fences yard and patIO Call Mrs Lee COVIngton, 82539, Qtrs 436-B, POln­setta.

ANNOUNCEMENTS The Scuba Club Sund~ dIve for Nov 2 WIll be a student checkout dIve to Carlos Island The boat WIll leave the dock at 10 30 Scheduled dlve­masters are W Cameron and F Cataldo Students and dlvemasters selected by the ChIef Dlvemaster WIll have fIrst prIorIty f9~J~a~lng All SWImmers must have flotat10n vests

Mr MIller from KamaaIna VISIon Center WIll be on Island from FrIday Oct 31st thru Monday, Nov 3rd, for delIvery of contact lense and eyeglasses ordered durIng hlS last VISIt In September DuplIcatIon, adjustments, and delIver­Ies WIll be accordIng to the follOWIng schedule FrIday, Oct 31 1-9 30 pm DelIvery of contact lense to patIents whose last names begIn WIth A - R Saturday, Nov 1 7 30 - 11 30 am

12 30 - 4 30 pm DelI­very of eyeglasses A - G

4 30 - 6 pm Dellvery of contact lense S - Z Sunday, Nov 2 1 30 - 11 30 am

12-30 - 4 pm DelIvery of eyeglasses H - 0

4 - 6 pm New contact lense orders taken

Thursd~, October 30, 1969

Pl BLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES AT THE DIREC"l'ION OF THE COMMANDING '7.-"'FFICER J(I.>lJALEIN MISSILE RANGE MARSHALL ISLANDS CONTRACT DAHC-60-70-C-OOOl

The HourGlass 15 publlshed dally Monday through Saturday Matenal for publlcat.lOn on the Around To'Wn page must be submltted In ;:rrltlng

to the HourGla.ss 72 hours prlor to desl.red publlcatlon date Ma.tenal -.l the Ad and sports pages must be !3ubm1tted ~n wr~tlng to the HourGlass Office 24 hours before denred publ~catlon dates

'Telephone not~ces and ads 'W"~ll not be accepted All copy and photographs be-cOILe the property of the HourGlass Republ~cat~on of ma.ter~al conta~ned hereIn IS not authorized WIthout approv­

al of the Command~ng OffIcer Kwajale~n M~6s~le Range If you have not rece~ ved your copy of the HourGlass by 6 15 pm please ca] 1

83539 betveen 6 15 and 6 45 pm and a copy wlil be dellvered to you EDITOR Larry Corsl STAFF Lucy Bloedel 'Rudy Ba.ld...-ln FEATURE WRITE'R Hobert

Ph,lhps CHculat,on Manager James McCowen GLOBAL ASSOCIATES

Official Bulletin DATE DUTY OFFICER PHONE 100ct69 MAJ Sllnes 83691 310ct69 LTC WhItehorn 82602 1 Nov69 MAJ Schaaf 82438 2 Nov69 CW3 Sands 82629 3 Nov69 MAJ Thompson 84555 4 Nov69 CPT Flsher 84533 5 Nov69 CW3 Sands 82629 6 Nov69 MAJ Johnson 82208 1 Nov69 CPT Belknap 82466 8 Nov69 CPT Rader 84691 9 Nov69 CPT Burke 83524

Duty hours of 11 30 - 12 30 Monday through FrIday, phone 81419 for Duty OffIcer

Duty OffIcer IS Kwajaleln MISSIle Range CommandIng OffIcer's represen­tatlve durIng other than normal duty hours

Tonight's Movi s

RICHARDSON Open to all Island resldents OCEAN VIEW Adult male bachelor personnel YOWKE YUK

Eye of the Cat MIchael SarraZIn Suspense-Drama Color 7 30 A Desparados VInce Edwards Western 1 30 & 12 30

Color AT

Monday, Nov 3 7 30 - 11 30 am 12 30 - 4 30 pm

of eyeglasses P - Z DelIvery Club mem-

bers only,

A Man For All Seasons Paul ScofIeld, Wendy Hlller, Robert Shaw

4 30 - 6 pm New con-tact lense orders taken DIstrIbutIon of eyeglasses and contact lenses wlll be at the CommunIty Center, telephone 81560

All CCD teachers and stUdents please note that there WIll be no CatechIsm classes Saturday, Nov 1 because of the hcly day of obllgatlon

Art GUlld Beglnnlng Nov 5 for ten weeks Jlm Hen~y, art Instructor at Kwajaleln Hlgh School, wlll hold baSIC draWIng classes for begInners on Wed­nesd~ evenIngs from 1 to 9 30 pm The cost IS $20 per student and IS non­refundable MaterIals WIll be avaIl­able to buy at class tIme Call ElaIne WhItehorn at 82602 to enroll and for membershIp InformatIon

A Range OperatIon IS scheduled for to­nIght Although there WIll be no gene­ral blackout on Kwajaleln, optIcal re­qUIrements may neceSSItate turnIng off the rotatIng beacon and pOSSIbly some other lIghts durIng certaIn phases of the operatIon VehIcle lIghts WIll not be affected In connectIon WIth thIS operatIon ha­zard areas WIll eXIst In the ocean WIth­In a 200 nautIcal mIle radIUS of Kwaja­leln and In the Kwajaleln Atoll on the Islands and In the lagoon between a lIne JOInIng and IncludIng Bogerl and Yabbenohr Islands and a lIne JOInIng and IncludIng BIgej and Gea Islands All personnel ather than those aSSIgned to duty or lIVIng on Meck Island and all craft must remaIn out of the above hazard areas between the hours of 1800 tonIght and 0400 tomorrow

The Hobby Show sponsored by the Art GUIld wlll be held Sunday, November 9 from 3 to 8 pm All Island reSI­dents are urged to enter theIr arts and crafts exhlblts Entry blanks are avaIlable allover the Island

no one under 18 allowed IVEY HALL ReSIdents of Depen-dent's hOUSIng TRADE

WINDS ROl-Namur personnel MECK

ISLAND Meck Is personnel

Drama Color 1 & 9 10 ATC MarrIage on the Rocks Frank SInatra, Deborah Kerr, Dean Martln Comedy Color 6 30 & 8 30 AT ThIS Savage Land Barry Sulll van Western 8

Color AT

Buona Sera Mrs Campbell GIna Lollobrlglda Comedy Color 8 (Tomorrow NIght) AT

vJednesday 2 p.m. - 6 p.m. Thursday 2 p.m. - 6 p.m. FrlQay 2 p.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.