CLEVELAND RIOTS TAKE FOURTH LIFE AS BOUNDARIES ...

8
HIGH TIDE AT 2218 4.2 AT 0924 7- 2 4-66 VOL. 7 No. CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)--THE FEDERAL SPACE AGENCY REPORTED TODAY THAT GEMlNI-IO As- TRONAUTS JOHN YOUNG AND MICHAEL COLLINS APPARENTLY FAILED TO BRING BACK PICTURES OF COLLINS' SPECTACULAR SPACEWALK TO ANOTHER SATELLITE, BUT SAID THEY DID NOT YET KNOW WHY. A NASA SPOKESMAN SAID THE ASTRONAUTS DID RETURN WITH SOME PICTURES OF GEMINI -IO's RENDEZVOUS WITH THE AGENA-IO SATEL- LITE AND SOME TERRAIN PHOTOGRAPHS. "WHAT WE DO HAVE IS PRETTY GOOD QUALITY EXCEPT THE SUBJECT IS NOT WHAT WE ARE LOOKING FOR " YOUNG AND COLLINS REMAINED IN SECLUSION AT THE LAUNCH SITE UNDERGOING A WEEKEND OF DEBRIEFINGS AND WERE NOT AVAILABLE FOR COMMENT KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS LC1tI TIDE 1.8 AT 0318 1.9 AT 1548 7-24-66 SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1966 CLEVELAND RIOTS TAKE FOURTH LIFE AS BOUNDARIES WIDEN OUTSIDE HOUGH CLEVELAND (UPI)--A NEGRO WAS SHOT TO DEATH BY WHITE MEN TODAY, INCREASING TENSION IN THE EAST SIDE SLUMS TORN WEEK-LONG BY BULLETS AND FIREBOMBS. WEARY POLICE CONCENTRATED FORCES BETWEEN NEGRO AND ITALIAN NEIGHBORHOODS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF VIOLENCE BENORIS TONEY, 29-YEAR-OLD NEGRO FATHER OF FIVE, DIED IN LAKESIDE HOSPITAL THIS NOON, THE FOURTH VICTIM OF THE RIOTING WHICH HAS RlPPED THE CITY SINCE MONDAY NIGHT HIS FACE WAS SMASHED BY A DOUBLE SHOTGUN BLAST FIRED INTO HIS CAR AT 3 AM. POLICE HELD TWO WHITE MEN AND SAID THEY PLANNED TO ARREST A THIRD WITHIN 24 HOURS Two OTHER WHITE MEN, A JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY STUDENT AND AN OUT-OF-TOWN MAN WERE QUESTIONED IN THE SHOOTING AND RELEASED. SIX GUNS WERE SEIZED AT THE SCENE. THE SHOOTING OF TONEY INTERRUPTED THE QUIETEST NIGHT IN A WEEK THAT HAD PRODUCED THREE DEATHS, AT LEAST A SCORE OF INJURED AND MOUNT- ING PROPERTY DAMAGE. TEAMS OF VANDALS, SOME SCARCELY OUT OF CHILDHOOD, ROAMED A 50-BLOCK AREA SETTING BUILDINGS ABLAZE WITH CRUDE FIREBOMBS AND SMASHING STORE FRONTS FOR LOOTING. SERVICE STATIONS WERE THE SOURCE OF "MOLOTOV COCKTAIL" JUfCE, AND BEING CAREFULLY GUARDED CONG RETALIATION HITS HOSPITALi HASTINGS TOLL PASSES 1,000 MARK THE FACT THE TROUBLE NO LONGER WAS BEING CONTAINED IN THE HOUGH AREA CAUSED GRAVE CONCERN AMONG POLICE MAYOR RALPH S LOCHER INSISTED, HOWEVER, THE TROUBLE COULD BE HANDLED BY FORCES NOW ON THE SCENE, AND CON- TINUED RESISTING PRESSURE FOR MARTIAL RULE OR A WHOLESALE CURFEW. SAIGON (UPI)--COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS LAUNCHED A MORTAR ATTACK TONIGHT ON ONE CF THE LARGEST U.S. HELICOPTER BASES IN VIET NAM. IN GROUND FIGHTING, THE U.S. 1ST INFANTRY DIVISION OPENED A NEW OFFENSIVE 25 MILES NORTH OF SAIGON AND MAR1NES 1ATTLING A COM- MUNIST DIVISION IN THE NORTHWEST RAN THE ESTIMATED ENEMY DEATH TOLL TO 1,124. EVERY AVAILABLE POLICE OFFICER WAS PRESSED INTO SERVICE FOR THE EXPECTED SATURDAY NIGHT CLIMAX OF TROUBLE EVEN ON NORMAL WEEKENDS THE EAST SIDE SLUMS KEEP OFFICErs HOPPING WITH PROSTITUTION, BEATINGS, SHOOTINGS, ROB- BERIES, MUGGINGS AND ROWDYISM. THE VIET CONG RAID WAS IN APPARENT RETALIATION FOR A MAMMOTH NINE-BATTALION SWEEP BY THE U.S. MARINES AGAINST A NORTH VIETNAMESE DIVISION IN THE FAR NORTHWEST CORNER OF SOUTH VIET NAM. A U.S. SPOKESMAN SAID THE COMMUNIST DIVISION APPARENTLY MARCHED DIRECTLY SOUTHWARD ACROSS THE DEMILITARIZED ZONE SEPARATING NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAM. IN THE AIR WAR, U.S. PLANES AGAIN BOMBED OIL STORAGE FACILITIES IN NORTH VIET NAM. A NAVY SKYHAWK JET WAS DAMAGED BY GROUND- FIRE TODAY NEAR VINH BUT THE PILOT MANAGED TO EJECT FROM HIS CRIPPLED JET OVER THE SEA WHERE HE WAS PICKED UP BY A BOAT FROM A NAVY DESTROYER. COMMUNIST NORTH VIET NAM CLAIMED THAT AN AMERICAN WARPLANE WAS SHOT DOWN ON THE NOON AND THE PILOT CAPTURED. U.S. MARINE SPOKESMEN SAID THE MARBLE MOUNTAIN AIRFIELD WAS STRUCK BY 30 ROUNDS OF MOTAR FIRE, BUT ALERT MARINE PILOTS LIFTED THEIR HELICOPTERS INTO THE AIR AND OUT OF DANGER WHILE THE ATTACK WAS GOING ON. A FLARE SHIP LIT UP THE AREA AND AMERICAN "HUEY" HELICOPTER GUNSHIPS POURED FIRE ON (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) HANOI NAMES COMMITTEE TO TRY U.S. AIRMEN TOKYO (UPI)--COMMUNIST NORTH VIET NAM HAS ESTABLISHED AN OFFICIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE U.S. "WAR CRIMES!! IN VIET NAM, RADIO HANOI ANNOUNCED TODAY. IT WAS THE FIRST FORMAL MOVE BY THE Ho CHI MINH GOVERNMENT TO FIND A LEGALISTIC BASIS FOR FEARED WAR CRIME TRIALS OF CAP- TURED U.S. PILOTS DOWNED OVER THE COMMU- NIST TERRITORY. THE HANOI BROADCAST, MONITORED HERE, SAID THE COMMITTEE HELD ITS FIRST SESSION YESTERDAY TO DISCUSS "THE DIRECTION AND PROGRAM OF WORK." THE BROADCAST INDENTIFIED THE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN AS MINISTER OF PUBLIC HELATH PHAM NGOC THACH AND THE VICE-CHAIRMAN AS PHAM VAN BACH, PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME PEOPLES COURT. A LATER HANOI BROADCAST CARRIED CHARGES THAT THE INCREASED U.S. RA1DS ON NORTH VIE NAM HAVE HIT SCHOOLS, POPULATED CITIES, HOSPITALS, DAMS, DYKES, FARMS, FACTORIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH BUILDINGS. IT SAID GIANT U.S. RAIDS FROM JUNE r2 TO JUNE 22 VIRTUALLY WIPED OUT A MEDICAL COM- PLEX, HOUSING A LEPROSY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT CENTER. THE BROADCAST SAID THE ATTACKS DESTROYED 160 BUILDINGS AND KILLED 39 PATIENTS AND MEDICAL WORKERS. THE "WAR CRIMES" ANNOUNCEMENT MADE NO SPECIFIC MENTION OF THE CAPTURED U.S. PILOTS OR OTHER PRISONERS OF WAR, BUT AN INDICATION THAT HANOI WAS ATTEMPTING TO BUILD A AGAINST THE PILOTS WAS SEEN IN THE NAMING OF HA VAN LAU, CHIEF HANOI LIAISON OFFICER WITH THE ICC, TO THE COMMITTEE. ICC IS THE GENEVA CON- VENTION'S INTERNATIONAL CONTROL COMMISSION. FACTION LEADERS AGREE TO COOL NEW YORK RIOl NEW YORK (UPI)--LEADERS OF WARRING ITAL- IAN, NEGRO AND PUERTO RICAN FACTIONS IN BROOKLYN'S EAST NEW YORK SECTION MET WITH MAYOR JOHN V. LINDSAY TODAY, SHOOK HANDS AND AGREED TO !!COOL IT.II WHETHER THE TRUCE WOULD TO THE STREETS WHERE RENEWED VIOLENCE HAD ERUPTED atM._ , .... p ...... " •• 11M_ .N ..... " ." ......... '5" THERE WAS NO CHANGE IN POLICE PLANS AND SOME 1,500 RIOT-TRAINED TACTICAL PATROL SQUAD MEMBERS WERE ORDERED OUT FOR THE SECOND NIGHT. HOPES FOR A PAUSE IN HOSTILITIES WERE BASED ON THE RESPONSE OF YOUTH LEADERS WHO ATTENDED THE HASTILY-CALLED CITY HALL MEET- ING. AMONG THEM WERE THE HEADS OF RIVAL NEGRO AND PUERTO RICAN GANGS AND WHITE MEM- BERS OF SPONGE -- THE SOCIETY FOR THE PRE- VENTION OF NEGROES GETTING EVERYTHING. "WE! RE GO I NG TO COOL IT," A SER 10US-FACED YOUTH REPORTED AT THE END OF THE 2 1/2- HOUR CLOSED-DOOR SESSION. "IT'S BEEN AGREED BY EVERYONE HERE TO MAKE EVERY EFFORT FOR PEACE," LINDSAY SAID, liTO COOL IT OFF AND HELP CALM IT." THE MAYOR ADMITTED THAT "IN ONE OR TWO CASES UNDOUBTEDLY PART OF THE TROUBLE COMES IN ADDITION TO THE 2,000 NATIONAL ALREADY ON DUTY IN THE ZONE, ANOTHER CLEVELAND AREA TROOPS, JUST BACK FROM SUMMER CAMP, WERE HELD IN READINESS AT THEIR LOCAL ARMORY FOR RIOT DUTY IF NEEDED. THE GUARD WAS CALLED HOME ONE DAY EARLY FROM CAMP, AP- PARENTLY TO DEAL WITH MAJOR TROUBLE IF IT SHOULD COME. POLICE REMAINED CONVINCED A "MASTER MIND" .' '" .......... "' + "re. 1 iN .". tft Y t !'! I',,,,! ''''Otlfi RIOT (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) -------------------------------- SENATE MAY RUSH LAW TO SEIZE IDLE WASHINGTON (UPI)--SENATE DEMOCRATIC LEADER MIKE MANSFIELD SAID TODAY THAT IF NECESSARY THE SENATE WOULD POSTPONE FOREIGN AID DEBATE NEXT WEEt TO ACT ON LEGISLATION TO END THE t6-DAY-OLD AIRLINE STRIKE HIS VOW TO WORK FOR AN EARLY END TO THt COSTLY WALKOUT, WHICH AFFECTS FIVE MAJOR CAR' RIERS, CAME AS NEGOTIATORS ENDED ANOTHER DAY OF FRUITLESS TALKS. AT THE SAME TIME, UNION NEGOTIATORS WARNED THAT ANY STRIKE-BREAKING LEGISLATION WOULD ONLY PROLONG A FINAL SETTLEMENT. AIRLINE SPOKESMAN WILLIAM J CURTIN DIS- FROM OUTSIDERS. II HE DID NOT SPECIFY WHETHER CLOSED THAT THE CARRIERS HAD MADE ANOTHER HE WAS REFERRING TO THE TRAVELING AGITATORS OFFER TO THE UNION AND HAD !!IMPROVED OUR (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) POSITION AT THE BARGAINING TABLE,II BUT HE SOUNDS WARN I NG SAID "THERE IS NO INDICATION THE UNION IS WILLING TO NEGOTIATE." JAKARTA UPI)--ARMY STRONGMAN LT. GEN. As THE TALKS RECESSED UNTIL TOMORROW, ASSI- SUHARTO WARNED TODAY INDONESIA'S OUTLAWED STANT LABOR SECRETARY JAMES J. REYNOLDS SAID COMMUNIST PARTY (PKI) MAY MOUNT "A POLITI- THE DEADLOCK WAS SO SEVERE THAT IF IT WERE CAL GUERRILLA OFFENSIVE" THAT COULD LEAD AN "ORDINARY DISPUTE I WOULD BE PREPARED TO TO NEW BLOODSHED BETWEEN GOVERNMENT AND SAY NOTHING COULD BE DONE," BUT HE SAID IT LEFTIST SUPPORTERS. SO DEEPLY INVOLVED THE NATIONAL INTEREST IIWE SHUARTO SAID THE LEADERS OF PJ{I, ONCE THE WILL KEEP TRYING AND TRYING." LARGEST COMMUNIST PARTY IN THE fREE WORLD, REYNOLDS, CHIEF FEDERAL MEDIATOR IN THE WERE STILL ACTIVE DESPITE THE GOVERNMENT TALKS, POINTED OUT TO BOTH SIDES THE STATE- BAN ON THE PARTY AND PLANNED A COMEBACK BE- MENT BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON THAT THE RIGHT TO FORE THE COUNTRylS GENERAL ELECTIONS PRO- COLLECTIVE CARRIES WITH IT THE MISED FOR 1968. DUTY TO BARGAIN CONSTUCTIVELY. "THEIR CURRENT STRATEGY IS TO REACH A ALL THE TALKS TODAY WERE SEPARATE AND AT TURNING POINT IN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS BE- NO TIME DID MANAGEMENT AND LABOR FACE EACH FORt: THE FORTHCOMING GENERAL ELECTIONS,!! HE OTHER DIRECTLY. TOLD A VETERANS' CONFERENCE IN LEMBANG, SENATE ACTION NEXT WEEK WOULD BE ON A PRO- WEST JAVA. "THEIR TACTICS WILL CONSIST OF POSAL BY SEN WAYNE MORSE, (DEM.-ORE.), ACTS OF SABOTAGE TO PREVENT THE NEW CABINET WOULD PERMIT PRESIDENT JOHNSON TO ASK A FROM REALIZING ITS PROGRAM," HE ADDED. FEDERAL COURT TO END THE STRIKE BY PLACING IIIN THIS WAY THEY HOPE TO DISCREDIT THE THE CARRIERS IN RECEIVERSHIP AND RESUME OPER- ARMED FORCES AND THE POLITICAL PARTIES SUP- ATIONS UNDER TERMS OF THE OLD CONTRACT PORTING THE GOVERNMENT," SUHARTO SAID. AT THE SAME TIME, SUHARTO WARNED IN AN IN TERVIEW PUBLISHED IN THE MANILA TIMES TODAY 1 THAT ALTHOUGH THE GOVERNMENT'S CAMPAIGN AGAINST COMMUNIST TERRORISTS "IS GOING I SMOOTHLY" SOME OF ITS LEADERS WERE S1=ILL AT LARGE. LIMITED BLACKOUT TONIGHT (DETAILS ON PAGE EIGHT)

Transcript of CLEVELAND RIOTS TAKE FOURTH LIFE AS BOUNDARIES ...

HIGH TIDE 1~.2 AT 2218 4.2 AT 0924 7-24-66

VOL. 7 No.

CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)--THE FEDERAL SPACE AGENCY REPORTED TODAY THAT GEMlNI-IO As­TRONAUTS JOHN YOUNG AND MICHAEL COLLINS APPARENTLY FAILED TO BRING BACK PICTURES OF COLLINS' SPECTACULAR SPACEWALK TO ANOTHER SATELLITE, BUT SAID THEY DID NOT YET KNOW WHY.

A NASA SPOKESMAN SAID THE ASTRONAUTS DID RETURN WITH SOME PICTURES OF GEMINI -IO's RENDEZVOUS WITH THE AGENA-IO SATEL­LITE AND SOME TERRAIN PHOTOGRAPHS. "WHAT WE DO HAVE IS PRETTY GOOD QUALITY EXCEPT THE SUBJECT IS NOT WHAT WE ARE LOOKING FOR "

YOUNG AND COLLINS REMAINED IN SECLUSION AT THE LAUNCH SITE UNDERGOING A WEEKEND OF DEBRIEFINGS AND WERE NOT AVAILABLE FOR COMMENT

KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS

LC1tI TIDE 1.8 AT 0318 1.9 AT 1548

7-24-66

SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1966

CLEVELAND RIOTS TAKE FOURTH LIFE AS BOUNDARIES WIDEN OUTSIDE HOUGH

CLEVELAND (UPI)--A NEGRO WAS SHOT TO DEATH BY WHITE MEN TODAY, INCREASING TENSION IN THE EAST SIDE SLUMS TORN WEEK-LONG BY BULLETS AND FIREBOMBS. WEARY POLICE CONCENTRATED FORCES BETWEEN NEGRO AND ITALIAN NEIGHBORHOODS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF VIOLENCE

BENORIS TONEY, 29-YEAR-OLD NEGRO FATHER OF FIVE, DIED IN LAKESIDE HOSPITAL THIS AFTE~ NOON, THE FOURTH VICTIM OF THE RIOTING WHICH HAS RlPPED THE CITY SINCE MONDAY NIGHT

HIS FACE WAS SMASHED BY A DOUBLE SHOTGUN BLAST FIRED INTO HIS CAR AT 3 AM. POLICE HELD TWO WHITE MEN AND SAID THEY PLANNED TO ARREST A THIRD WITHIN 24 HOURS

Two OTHER WHITE MEN, A JOHN CARROLL UNIVERSITY STUDENT AND AN OUT-OF-TOWN MAN WERE QUESTIONED IN THE SHOOTING AND RELEASED.

SIX GUNS WERE SEIZED AT THE SCENE. THE SHOOTING OF TONEY INTERRUPTED THE QUIETEST NIGHT IN A WEEK THAT HAD PRODUCED THREE DEATHS, AT LEAST A SCORE OF INJURED AND MOUNT­ING PROPERTY DAMAGE.

TEAMS OF VANDALS, SOME SCARCELY OUT OF CHILDHOOD, ROAMED A 50-BLOCK AREA SETTING BUILDINGS ABLAZE WITH CRUDE FIREBOMBS AND SMASHING STORE FRONTS FOR LOOTING. SERVICE STATIONS WERE THE SOURCE OF "MOLOTOV COCKTAIL" JUfCE, AND BEING CAREFULLY GUARDED

CONG RETALIATION HITS HOSPITALi HASTINGS TOLL PASSES 1,000 MARK

THE FACT THE TROUBLE NO LONGER WAS BEING CONTAINED IN THE HOUGH AREA CAUSED GRAVE CONCERN AMONG POLICE MAYOR RALPH S LOCHER INSISTED, HOWEVER, THE TROUBLE COULD BE HANDLED BY FORCES NOW ON THE SCENE, AND CON­TINUED RESISTING PRESSURE FOR MARTIAL RULE OR A WHOLESALE CURFEW.

SAIGON (UPI)--COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS LAUNCHED A MORTAR ATTACK TONIGHT ON ONE CF THE LARGEST U.S. HELICOPTER BASES IN VIET NAM. IN GROUND FIGHTING, THE U.S. 1ST INFANTRY DIVISION OPENED A NEW OFFENSIVE 25 MILES NORTH OF SAIGON AND MAR1NES 1ATTLING A COM­MUNIST DIVISION IN THE NORTHWEST RAN THE ESTIMATED ENEMY DEATH TOLL TO 1,124. EVERY AVAILABLE POLICE OFFICER WAS PRESSED

INTO SERVICE FOR THE EXPECTED SATURDAY NIGHT CLIMAX OF TROUBLE EVEN ON NORMAL WEEKENDS THE EAST SIDE SLUMS KEEP OFFICErs HOPPING WITH PROSTITUTION, BEATINGS, SHOOTINGS, ROB­BERIES, MUGGINGS AND ROWDYISM.

THE VIET CONG RAID WAS IN APPARENT RETALIATION FOR A MAMMOTH NINE-BATTALION SWEEP BY THE U.S. MARINES AGAINST A NORTH VIETNAMESE DIVISION IN THE FAR NORTHWEST CORNER OF SOUTH VIET NAM. A U.S. SPOKESMAN SAID THE COMMUNIST DIVISION APPARENTLY MARCHED DIRECTLY SOUTHWARD ACROSS THE DEMILITARIZED ZONE SEPARATING NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAM.

IN THE AIR WAR, U.S. PLANES AGAIN BOMBED OIL STORAGE FACILITIES IN NORTH VIET NAM. A NAVY SKYHAWK JET WAS DAMAGED BY GROUND­FIRE TODAY NEAR VINH BUT THE PILOT MANAGED TO EJECT FROM HIS CRIPPLED JET OVER THE SEA WHERE HE WAS PICKED UP BY A BOAT FROM A NAVY DESTROYER.

COMMUNIST NORTH VIET NAM CLAIMED THAT AN AMERICAN WARPLANE WAS SHOT DOWN ON THE

~ ~-.,.~

NOON AND THE PILOT CAPTURED. U.S. MARINE SPOKESMEN SAID THE MARBLE

MOUNTAIN AIRFIELD WAS STRUCK BY 30 ROUNDS OF MOTAR FIRE, BUT ALERT MARINE PILOTS LIFTED THEIR HELICOPTERS INTO THE AIR AND OUT OF DANGER WHILE THE ATTACK WAS GOING ON.

A FLARE SHIP LIT UP THE AREA AND AMERICAN "HUEY" HELICOPTER GUNSHIPS POURED FIRE ON

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

HANOI NAMES COMMITTEE TO TRY U.S. AIRMEN TOKYO (UPI)--COMMUNIST NORTH VIET NAM

HAS ESTABLISHED AN OFFICIAL COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE U.S. "WAR CRIMES!! IN VIET NAM, RADIO HANOI ANNOUNCED TODAY.

IT WAS THE FIRST FORMAL MOVE BY THE Ho CHI MINH GOVERNMENT TO FIND A LEGALISTIC BASIS FOR FEARED WAR CRIME TRIALS OF CAP­TURED U.S. PILOTS DOWNED OVER THE COMMU­NIST TERRITORY.

THE HANOI BROADCAST, MONITORED HERE, SAID THE COMMITTEE HELD ITS FIRST SESSION YESTERDAY TO DISCUSS "THE DIRECTION AND PROGRAM OF WORK."

THE BROADCAST INDENTIFIED THE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN AS MINISTER OF PUBLIC HELATH PHAM NGOC THACH AND THE VICE-CHAIRMAN AS PHAM VAN BACH, PRESIDENT OF THE SUPREME PEOPLES COURT.

A LATER HANOI BROADCAST CARRIED CHARGES THAT THE INCREASED U.S. RA1DS ON NORTH VIE NAM HAVE HIT SCHOOLS, POPULATED CITIES, HOSPITALS, DAMS, DYKES, FARMS, FACTORIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH BUILDINGS.

IT SAID GIANT U.S. RAIDS FROM JUNE r2 TO JUNE 22 VIRTUALLY WIPED OUT A MEDICAL COM­PLEX, HOUSING A LEPROSY RESEARCH AND TREATMENT CENTER. THE BROADCAST SAID THE ATTACKS DESTROYED 160 BUILDINGS AND KILLED 39 PATIENTS AND MEDICAL WORKERS.

THE "WAR CRIMES" ANNOUNCEMENT MADE NO SPECIFIC MENTION OF THE CAPTURED U.S. PILOTS OR OTHER PRISONERS OF WAR, BUT AN INDICATION THAT HANOI WAS ATTEMPTING TO BUILD A C~SE AGAINST THE AME~ICAN PILOTS WAS SEEN IN THE NAMING OF CO~ HA VAN LAU, CHIEF HANOI LIAISON OFFICER WITH THE ICC, TO THE COMMITTEE. ICC IS THE GENEVA CON­VENTION'S INTERNATIONAL CONTROL COMMISSION.

FACTION LEADERS AGREE TO COOL NEW YORK RIOl NEW YORK (UPI)--LEADERS OF WARRING ITAL­

IAN, NEGRO AND PUERTO RICAN FACTIONS IN BROOKLYN'S EAST NEW YORK SECTION MET WITH MAYOR JOHN V. LINDSAY TODAY, SHOOK HANDS AND AGREED TO !!COOL IT.II

WHETHER THE TRUCE WOULD E~TEND TO THE STREETS WHERE RENEWED VIOLENCE HAD ERUPTED atM._ , .... p ...... " •• 11M_ .N ..... " ." ......... '5"

THERE WAS NO CHANGE IN POLICE PLANS AND SOME 1,500 RIOT-TRAINED TACTICAL PATROL SQUAD MEMBERS WERE ORDERED OUT FOR THE SECOND NIGHT.

HOPES FOR A PAUSE IN HOSTILITIES WERE BASED ON THE RESPONSE OF YOUTH LEADERS WHO ATTENDED THE HASTILY-CALLED CITY HALL MEET­ING. AMONG THEM WERE THE HEADS OF RIVAL NEGRO AND PUERTO RICAN GANGS AND WHITE MEM­BERS OF SPONGE -- THE SOCIETY FOR THE PRE­VENTION OF NEGROES GETTING EVERYTHING.

"WE! RE GO I NG TO COOL IT," A SER 10US-FACED YOUTH REPORTED AT THE END OF THE 2 1/2-HOUR CLOSED-DOOR SESSION.

"IT'S BEEN AGREED BY EVERYONE HERE TO MAKE EVERY EFFORT FOR PEACE," LINDSAY SAID, liTO COOL IT OFF AND HELP CALM IT."

THE MAYOR ADMITTED THAT "IN ONE OR TWO CASES UNDOUBTEDLY PART OF THE TROUBLE COMES

IN ADDITION TO THE 2,000 NATIONAL GUARDSME~ ALREADY ON DUTY IN THE ZONE, ANOTHER 1~00 CLEVELAND AREA TROOPS, JUST BACK FROM SUMMER CAMP, WERE HELD IN READINESS AT THEIR LOCAL ARMORY FOR RIOT DUTY IF NEEDED. THE GUARD WAS CALLED HOME ONE DAY EARLY FROM CAMP, AP­PARENTLY TO DEAL WITH MAJOR TROUBLE IF IT SHOULD COME.

POLICE REMAINED CONVINCED A "MASTER MIND" .' '" .......... "' + "re.1 iN • .". tft Y t !'! I',,,,! ''''Otlfi

RIOT (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

--------------------------------SENATE MAY RUSH LAW TO SEIZE IDLE AIRLIN~

WASHINGTON (UPI)--SENATE DEMOCRATIC LEADER MIKE MANSFIELD SAID TODAY THAT IF NECESSARY THE SENATE WOULD POSTPONE FOREIGN AID DEBATE NEXT WEEt TO ACT ON LEGISLATION TO END THE t6-DAY-OLD AIRLINE STRIKE

HIS VOW TO WORK FOR AN EARLY END TO THt COSTLY WALKOUT, WHICH AFFECTS FIVE MAJOR CAR' RIERS, CAME AS NEGOTIATORS ENDED ANOTHER DAY OF FRUITLESS TALKS.

AT THE SAME TIME, UNION NEGOTIATORS WARNED THAT ANY STRIKE-BREAKING LEGISLATION WOULD ONLY PROLONG A FINAL SETTLEMENT.

AIRLINE SPOKESMAN WILLIAM J CURTIN DIS-FROM OUTSIDERS. II HE DID NOT SPECIFY WHETHER CLOSED THAT THE CARRIERS HAD MADE ANOTHER HE WAS REFERRING TO THE TRAVELING AGITATORS OFFER TO THE UNION AND HAD !!IMPROVED OUR

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) POSITION AT THE BARGAINING TABLE,II BUT HE

SUHAR~O SOUNDS WARN I NG SAID "THERE IS NO INDICATION THE UNION IS WILLING TO NEGOTIATE."

JAKARTA UPI)--ARMY STRONGMAN LT. GEN. As THE TALKS RECESSED UNTIL TOMORROW, ASSI-SUHARTO WARNED TODAY INDONESIA'S OUTLAWED STANT LABOR SECRETARY JAMES J. REYNOLDS SAID COMMUNIST PARTY (PKI) MAY MOUNT "A POLITI- THE DEADLOCK WAS SO SEVERE THAT IF IT WERE CAL GUERRILLA OFFENSIVE" THAT COULD LEAD AN "ORDINARY DISPUTE I WOULD BE PREPARED TO TO NEW BLOODSHED BETWEEN GOVERNMENT AND SAY NOTHING COULD BE DONE," BUT HE SAID IT LEFTIST SUPPORTERS. SO DEEPLY INVOLVED THE NATIONAL INTEREST IIWE

SHUARTO SAID THE LEADERS OF PJ{I, ONCE THE WILL KEEP TRYING AND TRYING." LARGEST COMMUNIST PARTY IN THE fREE WORLD, REYNOLDS, CHIEF FEDERAL MEDIATOR IN THE WERE STILL ACTIVE DESPITE THE GOVERNMENT TALKS, POINTED OUT TO BOTH SIDES THE STATE-BAN ON THE PARTY AND PLANNED A COMEBACK BE- MENT BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON THAT THE RIGHT TO FORE THE COUNTRylS GENERAL ELECTIONS PRO- COLLECTIVE BARGAIN~G CARRIES WITH IT THE MISED FOR 1968. DUTY TO BARGAIN CONSTUCTIVELY.

"THEIR CURRENT STRATEGY IS TO REACH A ALL THE TALKS TODAY WERE SEPARATE AND AT TURNING POINT IN POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS BE- NO TIME DID MANAGEMENT AND LABOR FACE EACH FORt: THE FORTHCOMING GENERAL ELECTIONS,!! HE OTHER DIRECTLY. TOLD A VETERANS' CONFERENCE IN LEMBANG, SENATE ACTION NEXT WEEK WOULD BE ON A PRO-WEST JAVA. "THEIR TACTICS WILL CONSIST OF POSAL BY SEN WAYNE MORSE, (DEM.-ORE.), ACTS OF SABOTAGE TO PREVENT THE NEW CABINET ~teH WOULD PERMIT PRESIDENT JOHNSON TO ASK A FROM REALIZING ITS PROGRAM," HE ADDED. FEDERAL COURT TO END THE STRIKE BY PLACING

IIIN THIS WAY THEY HOPE TO DISCREDIT THE THE CARRIERS IN RECEIVERSHIP AND RESUME OPER­ARMED FORCES AND THE POLITICAL PARTIES SUP- ATIONS UNDER TERMS OF THE OLD CONTRACT PORTING THE GOVERNMENT," SUHARTO SAID.

AT THE SAME TIME, SUHARTO WARNED IN AN IN TERVIEW PUBLISHED IN THE MANILA TIMES TODAY

1 THAT ALTHOUGH THE GOVERNMENT'S CAMPAIGN AGAINST COMMUNIST TERRORISTS "IS GOING I SMOOTHLY" SOME OF ITS LEADERS WERE S1=ILL AT LARGE.

LIMITED BLACKOUT TONIGHT

(DETAILS ON PAGE EIGHT)

-------------------~-------------------------------------------------------------------- ....

PAGE '=

SEVENTH AR~Y CO~MAND WILL BE DIt>~OLVED

HOUr~GL\SS

JOHNSON STRIKES BACK SATURDAY

I ,

\p SIJ ! NGT ON (Up ( ) --THE DEFENSE DEPART , hE.IH Ar, \)Ul-.JCED TODAY WHAT AMOUNTEf"I TO

Trlf U I 5501.,.1IT ION OF THE 7TH ARM AND

W,TH JOHNSON IN THE MIDWEST (UPI)-­PRFS,I IDENT JOHNSON, TAK I NG HIS CASE FOR TilE 't/AR I N V I ET NAM TO THE HEARTLAND )F AMERICA, WAR lED TOvAY THAT IF COM-

FULBRlGHT ~TIR~ SENATE BUT LBJ Ib SEEN CLEAN

WASH I NGTON (Up I ) --SEN J. WILL. I AM FULBRIGHT WAVED A FADING BUT TESTED PED WArNING FLAG THIS WEEK IN ~IS CAMPAIGN TO SIDETRACK PRESIDENT JOHN­SON'S ASIAN POLICY FOR SENATORS. IT

r1ERGER W tTH -JEAD~) ARTERS FOR Ll ROPE AI 11~ll _L.UI.., ... t STATEMENf SAID THIS 'It} AS" A ~ G f A S T REA M LI N I N G ,... I, C).

EUROPEAN FORC[- NECESSITATED BY fRidJCE! ~ DEMAND nAT AMER I CAN FOHCt..!:» Lf~VE FRENCH SOIL

A PENTAGON SPOKES'-1A" SA I J 7hE KL-ORGANIZATION WO~LD HAVE NO EFFELT ON T ril NV1BER OF U.S. TROOPS STAT 10NED IN L ROPE 0 HE.. SA J D I T I f~VI)LVED NO hEDUC­liON IN THE 210,OOO-MAN FORCE

~RENCh PRESiDENT ~HAHLES DE GAULLE, iN SETTING UP A TIME SC~fDLL[ For FRENCH WITtirR \4A.., ~ lM tH ~JATO' t •

TARY STRUCTURE, ~ F LA ~~ r ~T F ~Ib~

TROOPS MUST LEAVE FRANCE BY NEXT SPRING

THE UN!~ED STATES IS ~OW IN THE PRO­cess OF W!~HDRAWiNG TilE APPROXIMATELY 30~OOO MEI~ T HAS STATIOIJCn IN FRA~CE -~r--lO~lll AS p~,\r Of ,fE i'J\TO COfvHAND I"IEA,DQuARTlRS

',.t 7TH AD~1Y }lc..AL-QUARTERS IS ,\OltJ

~O(A'[D Ar S~JT7GAnr: G(RM~NY, ABOUT ;c t-l'/,_E:J FrC~1 >1E! GEU'3ERG

MUNIST AGGRESSION CAI~ WIN IN ASIA IT CAN SUCCEED IN AFRICA AND LATIN AMERICA

THE PRESIDENT WAS ON A WHIRLWINDS, EIGHT-SPEECH TOUR THRO~GH INDIANA, KEN­TUCKY ANO ILLINOIS WHICrl BORE ALL T~E

I-.1A ~\"S OF A CAMPA I GN SW I fIG B JT WH I CH THE Viii I TE ~IOl 'SE I NS I STElJ wAS NON-POL I T I CAL

iN SPEECH AFTER SPEECH HE HAMMERED AT THE T~EME THAT THE UNITED STATES WILL STAY IN VIET NAM "UNTIL THE COM­MUNISTS END THE FIGHTING OR ~EGOTIATE

AN HONORABLI:.. PEACE." BEFOnE )~2,000 PEOPl.E I'J IrJDIANAPOL.IS'

')T Mr, )"011= .... T C I RCL£, HE DEPARTED FROM /'1.3 TEXT Tf) ~COLD CRITICS OF HIS POLI­CIE~ IN WASHINGTON

JOHNSON NOTED THAT THE COMM 'N 1ST V lET CONG "ATTACI{ED YESTERDAY A U.So NAVY HOSPITAL Ir~ DA NANG" AND AT LEAST THREE At-1ER I CArJ S ~ I L.0[(.3 WI:..RE I NJ\ RELJ.

"TI ERE ~E PEOPLE" WHO DENOUNCE OUR Oil STRIKE~ AGAINST vEPOTS IN NORTH

V I ET NAtv'! BUT THEY HEMA I N STRAIJGEl Y SllE/H WhEN TilE VIET CONG TURNS ~10RTARS

ON A HOSPITAL,' JOHNSON SAID "I JUST WISH THEY WOuLD ASK THEMSELVES IF THEIR STANDARD OF JUDGMENT IS REALLY FAIR."

" ) READ ADVISE AND CONSENT" THE CHAIRMAN OF THE SENAT£ FOREIGN

RELATIONS COMMITTEE SAID IN EFFECT THAT THE PRESIDENT MAY BE BYPASSING THE SENATE AND ITS CONSTITUTIONAL RICHT TO "ADVISE AND CONSENT" TO TREAT I ES BY ADVANC! NG "S'tJEEP I NG COM­MITMENTS" TO ASIAN COUNTRIES.

HE WAS TOUCHING A SENSITIVE SENATE NERVEo

FULBRIGHT'S FLOOR SPEECH TRIGGERED A DENIAL OF ANY SUCH PRESIDENTIAL INTENTION fROM DEMOCRATIC LEADER MIKE

f'.1ANSF I ELD, MONT , BUT FULBR i GHT I S DE­TAILED EXPLANATION OF HiS CASE INDI­CATED HiS STONGEST EVIDENCE IN LAY QUOTATlONS fROM ViCE PRESIDENT HUBERT H. HUMPHREY AND tN THE WRITINGS or WASHINGTON NEWSPAPER CORRESPONDENTSo

TilE ARKANSA S DEMOCRAT ADDED HI i S FILLIP, HOWEVER HE SAiD THAT LAS] YEAR~ WALT. W ROSTOW, NOW PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S NATiONAL SECURliY ADVISER BUT THEN A STATE DEPAR~MENT POLICY PLANNER, TOLD HIM HE BELIEVES "IT

-I-JE. Pur'- AGCN SA I D GEN. ANDREW pot_ ME,b RA wOU~ L COtJ T ! N uE AS HIE ARMY'S EUROPEAN COMMANDEP LT GE~o TrlEODORE J. CO~~AY, PRESENTLY 7TH ARMY COMMANDE WILl BECO~E 8EPuTY COMMANDER Of ALL­EL-,~OPE FORCES

I ~~( REORGANiZATION IS EXPECTED TO BE CC\,·P""E..TED BY NEXT DECo L "ThiS ACTION

I is 5L ' NG TAKEN AS AN INiTIAL STlP I

AMERICA WILL NOT PULL O)T OF VIET NAM HE SAID, BECAl'SE IT KNOWS "IF GUERILLA WARFARE SuCCEEDS IN ASIA, IT CAN ALSO SUCCEED IN AFRICA AND LATIN AMERICA AS WEL.L."

AL.THO GH HE NAMED NO NAMES, JOHNSON WAS APPARENTL.Y ADDRESSING HIS WORDS

IS A PROPER ROLE FOR TH!S COUNTRY TO BECOME A MAJOR ASIAN POWER, TO CREATE A BALANCE THERE AS OPPOSED TO CHiNA AND RUSSIA."

FULBRIGHT TOLD HIS COL.LEAGUES THAT THIS WAS NOT ~ECESSAR!LY WRONG BUT "iT CAME AS A GREAT SHOCK TO ME."

! -dE :vRRE~7 STRUCTJRE IN EUROPE AS A

J T or TI,E NECESS i TY TO REL.OCATE u S rv' I ~ \ T «\ R Y F 0 ~ C E S f R Of-1 F RAN C E ,11 THE DE~E~SE DEPARTMENT ANNOUNCEMENT SAID.

IH( S'ATEMENT DISCLOSED THAT THE ~NI-ED STATES WOJLD NOT TJRN OVER ThE 7TH ARMv FACILITIES AT STJTTGART TO THE WEST GERMANS, BUT IT SAID NO DECISION HAD BEEN MADE ON fUTuRE USE OF TilE IN-STAlLATION o

KREMLIN NCTICES GEMINI MoscO\-J (UPI )--A SO" lET r-.EWSPAPER TO­

DAY SAID TilE FLIGHT OF GEI-1lNI-IO WAS A I'St.. CCES:3 11

TRLJD" -"E 'tADE UNION NEWSPAPER, GAVE TIll F! r~.s; C.Ot-1MENT SEEN HERE ON THE F II GHT ,~THE PAST, AMER I CAN SPACEMEN HAVE BEEN ACCUSED OF SPYING ON RUSSIA,

TO SEN J. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT, (DEM.­ARK ), AND OTiERS IN CONGRESS WHO HAVE CRITIZED THE AMERICAN AIR STRIKES IN NORTH VIET tJAM

DODD DENIES TRIPLE AIR ~ARE PAYMENT

WASHII\GTO,~ (UPI)--SEN THOMAS J. DODD, WHOSE FINANces ARE UNDER SENATE INVESTI GAT ION, DENIES liE WAS REIMBURSED BY THE GOVERNME JT "P~WPEI~L Y" PA I D HIS WA Y.

A SECOND PAYt-IENT OF THAT AMOUNI' WAS FROM HIS HOSTS THEr~E AND "lAS FOR HIS WIFE, W, 0 ACCOM~ANIED HIM ON THE TRIP, DODD SAID

THE CONNECTICUT DEMOCRAT FLATLY DENtE A CHA ~GE BY Ii IS F"ORt1ER A I DE, JAMES P BOYD JR , THAT HE ALSO CHARGED THE AIR FARE AS CAMPAIGN EXPENSES

MANSF!ELD'S RESPONSE WAS ROSTOW IS NEITHER SECRETARY OF SlATE NOR PRESI~ DENT.

THE DEMOCRATIC LEADER, WHO JOINS FULBR!GHT iN HIS CONCfRN ABOuT THE ViET NAM WAR, ASSURED THE SENATE IT WOULD NOT BE BYPASSED. HE SAID H~ WAS SURE THAT IF JOHNSON HAD A NEW DOCTRINE IN MIND "IT WouLD BE BROUGHT TO THE SENATE FOR ITS ADVICE AND CONSENT --AT LEAST I HOPE THAT WOULD BE THE CASE"

THE FLOOR LEADER'S QUALifiCATION OF "HOPEI! MAY REflECT SOME OF THE SENATE'S TRADITIONAL UNEASE OVER EXECUTIVE FOREIGN POL.ICY MOVES WHICH SKIRT THE TREATY PROCESS. SINCE WORLD WAR II LEGISLATIVE AND EXECUTIVE AGREEMENTS HAVE BEEN USED AT TIMES TO CARRY OUT POLICIES WHICH IN EARLIER YEARS MIGHT

OR O~ jG~ORING SAFETY IN THEIR RUSH TO HE SAID ~IS TICKET WAS PAID FOR BY HAVE INVOLVED TnLATIES, REQUiRING A B(AT THE SOVIET UNION, BUT DURING TilE THE SENATE JUVENILE DELIQUENCY SUB- TWO-THIRDS VOTE OF THE SENATE. GO"I~'!-!O FLIGHT, SOVIET PAPERS CON- cm4MITTEE v:HICH HE HEADS, AND HIS WIFES FULBRIGHT'S SPEECH YESTERDAY WAS DES-r I HE D Th -tlSELVE3 TO STI-\A I GIlT-FO ~WAtW T I CKl T vIAS PI ,~CHASED BY THE Los ANGELES CR I BED BY THE WH ITE HOUSE AS "D I SAP-FACTuAL RE~OrTING, AND MA~E NO COMPARI- JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE POINTING AND INCONSISTENT WITH WHAT SON WITh THE CURRENTLY STAGNANT SOVIET AFTEr~ A CHeCK OF HIS RECORDS, DODD THE SENATOR HAS SAID BEFORE." MAfd,ED SPACE PROGRAM. SAID IN A STATEMENT, " •• 1 AN ASSURED WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY BILL D.

TRuu SAiD MANY OF GEMINI-IO's ACCOM- THAT NO EXPENSES FOR THIS TRIP WERE MOYERS SAID,"I KNOW OF NO PRESIDENT WHO PLISHMENTS -- INCLUDING THE RENDEZVOUS, PAID FOR FROM MY CAMPAIGN FUNDS" HAS CONSULTED WITH CONGRESS MORE FRE-DOCKiNG AND SPACE WALK __ "HAD BEEN DONE EARLIER, BOYD, DODD'S CLOSE AIDE FOh QUENTLY THAN PRESIDENT JOHNSON AND HE BE~ORE AND ARE NOTHING NEW." 12 YEARS, TOLD UPI THAT THE SENATOR HAS GONE OUT OF HIS WAY TO INVOLVE THE

"THERE WERE SOME NEW MONENTS," IT COLLECTED PLANE FARE FROM ALL THREE SENATE IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF HIS SAID aT SINGLED OUT THE DOUBLE RENDEZ- SOURCES IT WAS ONE OF "SEVERAL TIMES" POLICIES" VOUS ALTITUDE RECORD AND THE USE OF WHEN DODD DOUBLED UP ON TICKET REIM- FULBRIGHT WHO WANTS TO SEE "OLD MYTHS'

:/I " f B "" THE AGE,JA ROCKET AS AN OUTBOARD MOTOR. BURSEMENTS, OYD SAID, AND AN ITEM HE REPLACED BY NEW REALITIES IN FOREIGN HAMER I CAN SCI ENT I STS PLAt' THE I R PUT BEFORE THE SEt.ATE ETH I CS COMM I TTEE. AfFA I RS, MAY HAVE BEEN I GNOR I NG ONE

F'o!GflTS STATISTICALLY," TRUli SAID. "WHA THAT PANEL-IS INVESTIGATING CHARGES REALITY IN HIS ARGUMENT. RECENT PRESI-1 EY FA!l TO FULFILL ON ONE FLIGHT, DODD POCKETED AS MUCH AS $200,000 IN DENTS -- rROM EISENHOWER THROUGH JOHN-fhEv TRY TO FULFILL ON A SECOND. SUCCES CAMPAIGN CONTRIBJTIONS FOR HIS OWN USE. SON -- HAVE BEEN CIRCUMSPECT IN CON-REPLACES FAILURE, AND JHE FLIGHT OF IT ALSO IS STUDYING THE ALLEGATION HE SULTING THE SENATE IN ADVANCE ON

" GEMIHI-iO WAS A SUCCESSFUL ONE. IMPROPERLY USED HIS PUBLIC OFFICE TO BENEFIT PuBLIC RELATIONS MAN JULIUS

MAJOR FOREIGN POLICY MOVES, WHETHER IM­PLEMENTED BY TREATY OR LEGISLATION.

~AN FRANCISCO (UPl)--BRIG. GEN. JOSEPH KLEIN. WO S~ bLLWELL JR. SAID YESTERDAY THAT DODD ADDRESSED A JAYCEE II ~ 1-,~1ER i CAN TROOPS REL I NQIJ I SHeD V I ET NAtv', HIS WEEIl-LONG TR I P TO THE

THEY HAVE RECOGNIZED THAT A POLICY DINNER DURING NOT STRONGLY SUPPORTED IN CONGRESS IS WEST COAST IN HEADED FOR TROUBL.ES. SENATORS AND HOUSE

1"t'I-lE LJ'HTt::> STATES WOJLD BEcm1E "NOTHING THE SPRING OF 1964, 1 " IH(',~ .... rIAN A THIRD-RATE POWERo

I S~I LWEll, WHO LED THE ARMY SUPPORT C:;'OUP n N V I ET NAM FROt.1 1962 TO 1964 i~' 0 NOW D'RfCTS THE TRAINING OF SPECIAL !~-O(E3 T100PG ~T FORT BRAGG, N.C , ADDE~ . " II ~\': l,J OULD EVER TRUST US AGA IN. , ~J TOLD THE COMMONWEALTH CLUB AT

~ v' Lu,-JCHEON THAT THE V I ET NAt, ,::' A BATTLE OF "INTERNAL INSUR-

LONDON (UPI)--THE EVENING STANDARD OFFERED THIS WRY CARTOON COMMENT TODAY ON THE NEW BRITISH AUSTERITY PROGRAM

PRISON GOVERNOR, ADDRESSING FOUR PRISONERS BROUGHT BEFORE HIM FOR DIS-ORD~RLY CONDUCT

"ANY MORE TROUBLE FRm-1 YOU AND I f LL HAVE YOU ALL RELEASED."

EMBERS NOW SIT IN AT LEAST AS OBSERVERS ON TREATY NEGOTIATlNG TEAMS WtiEN A ?ACT REACHES THE SE~ATE MOST OF ITS

ROUBLE-SPOTS HAVL BEEN SMOOTHED OUT. OHNSON'S FRIENDS IN CONGRESS THINK HE

"CONSENSUS" PRESIDENT WiLL BE MORE ATHER THAN LESS, LIKE HIS IMMEDIATE REDECESSORS.

KEEP KWAJALE I N CLEAN 0

CO .. ,- D ONT ~ T KStN W I JJ:t_~O~M_,t-_'_'~' J.S~ti:.!.v1.!... _".1-_______________________________________________________________ _

PAGE 3 HOURGLASS

DETCHEMENDY MICHAUD RITES HELD AT KWAJALEIN CHAPEL

~ t"iARG~RET BEVERL. Y DETCHEMENDY, DAUGHTER OF MR 0 AND MRS. EDWARD [3R I AN DETCHEMEN­DY OF KWA JALC IN, BECPt1E THE. BP I DE LA!jT NIGHT OF tiJ;. JMtC~ STEPHEN MICHAUD, SON OF MR. AND r:rs. JA.-1t.!:. ALrAIiAi-i fdCHAUu uF JeNE'SUORO, LOUISIANA. THE IMPRESSIVE DO n'LC-/\ HIG CL:1Et'ONY \JA~ HeLD AT • WA ",ALE IN tv1EMOR I At. CHAPl.L AT 7 0 t CLOCK W r TH 1-'THEf \'ILLIAI-1 SUCI'tN ufFICIATING.

Jl L.I A LYNN DETCIiEt1Et:oY, :; 1,Ti-_r Of TIiE or I DE, WAS IvlA 10 OF HONor, WITH JAMES T::RhEtJCL f Ef.1 CA CJF 1.1:.t-. rroN !jEPV I ~~G A3 oE.~T ~1AN. !.,;R I DES!!A IDS WERI:. CAROL. ZEBAL AND DIANE: QUINN, BOTH OF KWAJAl.EIN, WHILE MICHAEL DETCHEMENDY OF THE l'NIVERSITY OF MISSOURI, OROTHER OF THE BRIDE, AND STEPHC~ SPIRICK ROBERT MERRICK AND DILL CAr~c.y, ALL Of V.E~:Tt:UI\, \:EHF" U~HCHS.

FL0WLR CIFL!j WCP~ ~t~fl.A ANt ~IM~Ck~Y STA~LEY. THE ryR6\NIST WA5 JtrRY RA~IO~G

~iARK I)FTCH':MCf',.l,iY, Lf'OTHER OF n:c BRIDE, AND DOhPLD ~[LCRME VLrc ALTAR OOYS.

THE eRIDE WAS LOVELY IN A WHiTt PEAlj DE SOlE GOWN WITH ROUNDED NECKl.INE AND ELBOW-LENGTH SLEEVES TRIMMED WITH ALEN­CION LACE AND PEARLSo A FULL CATHEDRAL TRAIN EXTENDING FROM PLEATS IN THE BACK TOPPED WITH A BOW OF THE DRESS MATERIAL WAS TRIMMED WITH APPLIQUES OF LACE.

BEVERLY DETCHEMENDY HER ELBOW-l~~GTH VEIl. OF ILLUSION EX­TENDED FROM A PILLBOX OF ALENCION LACE, AND HER FLOWERS WERE A SPRAY OF WHITE ORCHIDS AND TUBEROSE. SHE CARRIED A HANDKERCHIEF MADE BY HER GRANDMOTHER, MRS. T.H. BEVERLY, 70 YEARS AGO, AND CARRIED BY BOTH BEVERLY'S MOTHER AND GRANDMOTHER AT THEIR WEDDINGS.

THE MAID OF HONOR AND TWO BRIDESMAIDS WORE IDENTICAL TWO-TONED EMPIRE-WAISTED GOWNS CUT ON STRAIGHT LINES WITH LONG­SLEEVED, ROUND-NECKED l.AVENDER CHIFFON TOPS. THE SKIRTS WERE LONG WITH FORMAL TRAINS. MATCHING l.AVENDER PILLBOXES AND BEIGE SHOES COMPLETED THEIR ENSEMBLES, AND EACH ATTENDANT CARRIED A SPRAY OF

• AND rvlRS. JA~ES M CHAUD •• 0 • CUTT i tlG

BEAUTifUL 60 POUND WEDDING CAKE. HE MASTERPIECE OF HAND ARTISTRY, MADE Y ABE NICKELS *.N2.1 ~J.p.~"1aif.tLiC~'.L

~.IlII:J\iJL.'I'/AS rOUR TIERED AND LAVISHLY DEC-HATlD WITH PALE PINK AND PEARL WHITE ANDY ROSES.

BRIDE'S MOTHERiS DRESS WAS A Sll-., ER LAME SHEATH WiTH SCOOPED NECKLINE NO SHORT DOLMAN SLEEVES PIPED WITH

EV SATIN AND FINISHED WITH A GREY ATIN BELT. THE HAT WAS A GREY VEIL OPPED WITH A SATIN BOW, AND THE OUTFIT ,. AS SET OFF WITH SIl.VER LAME SHOES AND

SIl.VER BEADED BAG. THE OR I DE t S GO I NG-AWA Y OUTF IT CONS I ST­

A TWO-PIECE NAVY HOUNDSTOOTH AND Sl.EEVELESS OVERBLOUSE COMB IN­TRIMMED IN WHITE PIQUE AND NAVY,

NO NAVY SHOES, BAG, AND LARGE-BRIMMED AT.

THE NEWLYWEDS ~EFT THIS MORNING FOR HONEYMOON IN HONOLUl.U AND KAUAI. FROM

HERE THEY WIl.L TRAVEl. TO RUSTON, LAo, ERE BOTH WILL ATTEND LOUISANIA POLY­

ECHNIC INSTITUTE.

THE WEDDING PARTY •••• AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB ,RECEPTION. THEY ARE, FROM LEFT, BOB MERRICK, DIANE QUINN, TERRY MERICA, JUl.IA DETCHEMENDY, J,M AND BEV, CAROL ZEBAL MIKE DETCHEMENDY AND BILL GANDY. A lARGE CROWD ATTENDED THE CHAMPAGNE RECEP­TION, AND ENJOYED THE EXCELLENT BUFFET AND DRINKS. THE FESTIVITY OF THE OCCAS­ION WAS HIGHl.IGHTED BY THE PRESENCE OF r1ANY FAMILIAR AND DISiINGlHSHtO'p'ACtS.

I NC(f)NVEN'''EN(tE Ell M I NA TED IN THE PAST iT HAS BEEN NECESSARY

ABOUT ONCE A YEAR TO SHUT DOWN MOST Of THE KITCHEN FACILITIES AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB FOR CLEANING~ INSPECTION AND OVERH~o THIS HAS RESULTED IN MAJOR INCONVENIENCE TO PATRONS OF THE DaNING

ROOM THEREo THIS YEAR, HOWEVER, NO SUCH SHUT­

DOWN Will OCCURo THANKS TO ED LOOSE AND HIS CREW FROM GLOBAL ASSOCIATES, SERVICE WILL CONTINUE UNINTERRUPTED DURING THE NORMAL DOWN PERIOD. ED

E INSTA

BOILER, PICTURED ABOVE, TO TAKE OVER WHILE THE CREW WORKS ON THE REGULAR SYSTEMo

THIS IS ANOTHER EXAMPLE or THE MANY TASKS PERFORMED BY GLOBAL's OMC DE­PARTMENT FOR tlTI;JE HEAlTH~ WEl.f'ARE AND CONVENiENCE OF THE ENTIRE COMMUNITYo

THIS IS rROUBlE DESK WEEKoooo!r ANY= ONE WHO READ YESTERDAY'S ITEM ON THE ZERO DEfECTS AWARD TO ROSEMARY DELORME WONDERS WHY SWEET ROSEMARY SUDDENLY SOUNDS LiKE GRAVEL GERTIE AFTER 4.30 EACH DAY; iT ISNwT BECAUSE SHEtS TAL~ HERSELf' HOARSE ON THOSE 90 PHONE CAl.lS.

IN FACT, AFTER 4:30 IT ISN'T ROSE­MARY AT ALL. THE VOICE HAPPENS TO BE THAT or ANOTHER UNSUNG HERO, THE MAR­INE DEPARTMENT DISPATCHER ON DUTY. HE IS THE TROUBLE DESK FROM 4 30 PM UNTIl. 7-30 IN THE MORNING.

WERT COMMONLY -- ESPECIALLY IN THE OFTEN-DESPERATE WEE HOURS -- THE VOICE OF THE TROUBLED DESK IS LES HOLMES.

THANKS, CAP'No

CREDIT UNION CHARTERED SAIPAN, MARIANA ISLANDS -- A TRUST

TERRITORY CREDIT UNION CHARTER rOR THE OF UTWE, VILLAGE OF KUSAIE,

IN PONAPE DISTRICT, WAS SIGNED BY HIGH COMMISSIONER WIl.LIAM R. NORWOOD LAST WEEK. THE ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION AND BYLAWS WERE SUBMITTED BY DISTRICT COOPERATIVE OFrlCER MORT COLODNY, UN­DER WHOSE GUIDANCE THE CREDIT UNION WAS ORGANIZEDo

'StVERAL ADDITIONAL COOPERATIVE AND CRED IT UNJctN!ICHARTERS ARE BE I NG PRO-'"11',"'--CESS ED AND WILL BE SUBMITTED ON THE RETURN Of HEADQUARTERS COOPERATIVE OF­FICER SAMUEL MITCHELL IN ABOUT A WEEK~ ACCORDING TO ACTING COOP OFFICER CHARLES Mo SICARD. SICARD SAID THE GROWiNG NUMBER OF CHARTER REQUESTS IS AN INDICATION OF THE RAPID DEVELOPMENT

COOPERATIVES IN THE TRUST TERRITORYo

MA Il CALL A e-124 BROUGHT IN 2,774 POUNDS OF

LAST NIGHT, AND THE RED TAILED BROUGHT IN 740 POUNDS DURING THE

SAIPAN, MARIANA ISLANDS -- MARGARITA CABRERA AND INOCENCIALSABLAN OF SAIPAN HAVE BEEN SELECTED Tl)RE~RESENT THE TRUST TERRITORY AT THE EAST-WEST INTER­NATIONAL GIRL SCOUT AUGUST CONFERENCE.

~----------------~ .. ~---------------~~----------------------------------------------------------.------~~ ~ P~GE 4

MINE BLAST KILLS SEVEN IN .~EuT VIRGINIA TOvvN

M~o HOPE, W. VA. (UPl) SEVE~ ME..N WER( KiL~ED TODAY WHAN AN EXPLOSION ~~PPED 7HROUGH A SOFT COAL MINE NEAR ~HdS SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA COMMUNITY.

fHE EXPLOSION, BELIEVED CAUSED BY ~E~hANE GAS, OCCURED SHORTLY AFTER 9 AM eN Tt-CE S"!",-iX ,'v.I~E ()f T l 'JE.W' hlVI:.R C, , ABOUT TWO MILLS fROM THE MINE EN­"'~ANCL

(~M~A~v PRES;~ENT WILLIAM L. HASLAM SAUD 2i ~EN WERE WORKING IN THE MINE WHE~ THE EXP~OSION OCCURRED. NINE Of it-i.:M '.I.ERE IN THE IMMEDIATE I!L.AST AREA BuT Til.') ESCAPED.

aWO 30DBES WERE BROUGHT OUT IN THE AF~~R~OJNo THE.. OTHERS WERE BEING RE­~OV~D lATE TODAY. NINE WERE WORKING IN T~E B~AST AREA AND ALL BUT TwO WERE KillED. THE SURVIVORS WERE IDENTifiED AS DON LEGG Of BECKLEY, W. VA., AND LbO~O ~ALCOMB Of MAPLE fORK, W. VAo 3vr~ WERE HOSPITALIZED BUT THEIR CON­:,! lO~S ~EPE NOT REVEALED.

H0URC,LASS

TRIPLE DEATH MY~TERY

HENDERSONVILLE, N.C. {UPI)--THE BAT­TERED BODIES ~f TWO MlN AND A HALf NUDE WOMAN WERE fOUND IN A WOODED AREA AT NEARBY ~AKE SUMMIT, POLICE RE-PO nED rODAY.

kN AUTOMOBilE JACK, BELIEVED TO BE THE MAIN MURDER WEAPON, WAS fOUND NEAR THE BODIESo THE WOMAN HAD ALSO BEEN SHOT. THE VICTIMS WERE fOUND LYING fACE-UP IN A SEMI-CIRCLE.

BOTH MEN, IDENTIFIED AS VERNON SHIP­MAN AND CHARLES WALTER GLASS, BOTH 40 AND BOTH Of HENDERSONVILLE, WERE fULLY CLOTHED.

THE WOMAN, TENTATIVELY IDENTifiED AS MRS. LOUISE DAVtS SHUMATE, Of ASHE­VILLE, WAS NAKED EXCEPT FOR A SHIRTo

AUTHORITIES COULD OF'FER NO EXPLANA­Tto~ F'OR THE KILLINGS.

THE TWO MEN SLAIN WERE LAST SEEN YESTERDAY AfTERNOON BY A PASSING MOTOR­IST AS THEY DRO~E IN SHIPMAN'S CAR ALONG T~E LITTLE RIVER ROAD ABOUT TWO MILES SOUTHEAST Of HERE. THE PASSING

JOHNSON OEPLORE~ RIOTS; u PU~HE~ GREAT ~CIETY

INDIANAPOLIS (UPl)--PRESIDENT JOHN­SON TODAY DEPLORED tI~IOTS IN THE STREETS" OF' THE NATION'S CITIES\, THEY TEAR THE fABRIC Of SOCIETY A,~D SER~E"" ONLY TO HURT THOSE WHO CAUSE THE DIS­ORDERS, HE SAID.

THE PRESIDENT VOICED HIS ALARM ABOUT

I THE RECENT RACIAL DISORDERS IN A I SPEECH IN WHICH HE ALSO DEfENDED THE

ADMINISTRATIONiS FIGHT AGAINST INFLA-TION. HE SAID IT COULD SUCCEED ONLY WITH THE HELP Of BUSINESS AND LABOR.

HE SAID THE NATION CAN ACHIEVE GREAT SOCIETY STATUS BY BUILDING ON "A

~ STRONG ECONOMY, A SENSE Of DUTY AND A I SPACIOUS VISION." ! ALL RIGHTS CARRY DUTIES, HE SAID, t I AND THE fiRST IS TO KEEP THE PEACEoAN

ALTERNATIVE TO SELf-DISCIPLINE IS TYRANNY," HE DECLARED.

HE SAID A SECOND DUTY IS TO CHANGE BOTH LAW AND LAWMAKERS THROUGH PEACE­fUL MEANS, NOT VIOLENCE, AND A THIRD is TO RESPECT OPINIONS AND INTERESTS 7wo or THE JEAD WERE HOWARD MORRIS,

3G j c~ OAK haLL, Wo VA., A fATHER Of f ~ V:, AND LUKE BOWYER, 45, Of MAPLE FORt'" A FAT~EP Ot SiX. THE OTHERS WERE NOT •

MOTORIST, WHOM POLICE DID NOT IDENTifY, Of fELLOW CITIZENS, WHO DO NOT PRO-SAID HE RECOGNIZED SHIP~A~ AND SAID TEST WITHOUT CAUSE. THERE WERE THREE OTHER PERSONS IN THE IIMANY AMERICANS ARE LIVING IN p~

flOENiuFIED !MMEDiATElYo CARo ~ORRgSU BROTHER, HOMER, 39, WAS IN POLlCE SAID THE MOTORIST COULD NOT

T~E ~~~E AT THE TIMEo HE SAID THE EX- IDENTifY THE OTHER THREE, AND DID NOT ~~OS~ON "SENT ME PLUMB OVER ONE SHUTTLE MENTION THE PRESENCE Of A WOMAN. CARv t~ SOUNDED LIKE SOME THING THAT SHIPMAN AND GLASS WERE PARTNERS IN ~C~~ ~ TAKE YOUR HEAD Offo" THE TEMPO MUSIC SHOP IN HEN~ERSON-W~£N THE WO~D Of THE EXPLOSION SPREA~ ViLLE. POLICE ALSO SAID SHIPMAN WOR~j

j: R " E t.,!!)S AND RELA T I VES Of THE M) NERS ~ . fOR THE NORTH CAROL I NA UNEMPLOYMENT .lOC~ED TO T~E MINE fOR A MOURNfUL COMPENSATION SERVICE.

POVERTY, WITHOUT JOBS, A~D uN NISERABL HOUSING CONDITIONS,'" HE SAiD. "THEY ARE A SMALL MINORITY Of OUR POPULATiON, BUT THEIR PLIGHT IS A CAUSE FOR NATION AL CONCERNo

"WE HAVE BEEN WORKING TO RELIEVE THEIR PLIGHT. OUR GOAL IS TO BREAK DOWN THE GHETTOES, ~REATE JOBS, IM­PROVE EDUCATION, PRaVIDE BETTER HOMES."

V'PG~bo SHIPMAN'S fAMILY REPORTED THE TWO VJ1l" ~Ar-1 SloAM, NEW RIVER PRESIDENT, MEN MISSING WEDNESDAY AfTER THEY fAIt£.o IN PYRAMIDS~ ~HAOOW~;

TOLD TYEM TWO MEN WERE DEAD AND fiVE TO RETURN fROM A SUNDA Y OUT I NG. TANKS" JETS~ II ~~, LES UNACCOUW"ED FOR, BUT SIX HOURS lATER, CAIRO (UPI)--EGYPT TODAY UNV'ILED til

AT 2 55 FM HE SAID THE fiVE WERE DEAD. NUR~E WALKOUT UN~ETTLED ,NEW SOVIET-BUILT AIR-TO-GROUND "Mls- 1 T~E AN~OUNCEMENT EVOKED A RENDING SAN fRANCISCO (UPI)--SEPARATE TALKS I SILES, MIG JET fiGHTERS AND NEW Rus-

WAUL FROM THE CROWD. BETWEEN NURSES AND STATE CONCILIATORS I SIAN T55 TANKS IN A BIG MILITARY) Ill'

"Oti NO, GOD NO, IT CANiT BE," SCREAM- LASTED UNTIl.. THE EARLY HOURS TODAY IN PARADEQ ED A WOMAN. SHE fELL PROSTRATE TO THE THE CONTINUING EfFORT TO HALT MASS THE MISSILES WOULD ENABLE THE UNITED GROuND, AROSE AND TRI~D TO fORCE HER RESIGNATIONS. ARAB REPUBLIC AIR FORCE TO STRIKE vlA'Y' PA ST POll CE 0 "LE T ME GOo I WANT I A HOSP I TAL SPOKESMAN SA 10 YESTERDA Y TARGETS I N I SRA EL WITHOUT ACTUALL Y Tv SEE HIMo MAYBE IT WASN'T HIM." I THAT 2,282 SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA FLYING OVER THE COUNTRYe A~OTHlq Of THE SURVIVING MINORS WAS r NURSES HAVE SUBMITTED TWO-WEEK NOTICES, THE BRIGHT RED PAINTED MISSILES,

,'lJGn GARRETT, 50, Of ~1T. HOPE, A BIG EffECTIVE AUG. 3-4 , TO BACK THEIR DE- \ DESIGNED TO BE SLUNG BENEATH THE WINGS MAN W!TH HAM-LIKE HANDS. HIS fACE ; MAND fOR HIGHER PAY. Of SOVIET TU-6 MEDIUM RANGE BOMBERS, SWEATY AND DIRT-COVERED, GARRETT RE- DIRECTOR THOMAS NICOLOPULOS Of THE HIGHLIGHTED A TWO-HOUR MILITARY PARADE lA1ED THAT HE AND EIGHT OTHER MEN WERE ,STATE CONCILIATION SERVICE SAID THE ; MARKING THE 14TH ANNIVERSARY Of THE , ' 500 fEET fROM THE BLAST SCENE. I SEPARATE TALKS WITH THE NURSES WERE EGYPTIAN REVOLUTION.

" , T F HE SAID THEY TRIED TO ESCAPE BUT WERE I HELD TO fiND OUT HOW THEY SEE THE ! HE REVOLUTION TOPPLED KING AROUK DRIVEN BACK BY CARBON MONOXIDE GAS, I SITUATION." I fROM THE THRONE AND PUT PRESIDENT GAMAL S~OKE, AND fALLING SLATE. THEY TOOK HE SAID A SEPARATE SESSION WITH THE :ABDEL NASSER IN POWER. R[~UGE jN A SMALL ROOM, USING CANVAS TO ~ HOSPITALS WAS SCHEDULED MONDAY, AND A ~I BEfORE THE PARADE STARTED VICE PRESI-SHUT OUT THE fUMES. ONE OF THE NINE, ! JOINT MEETING TUESDAY AT THE THE HILTON DENT ABDEL HAKIN AMER VOWED THAT WAS THE REV. GENE HALL, WHO IN ADDITION tHOTE_ EGYPT'S ARMED fORCES WOULD LI9uIDATE TO MINiNG IS THE PASTOR Of THE PERRY ~ WHEN ASKED ABOUT THE PROBABLE OUTCOME ANY (SRAEL AGGRESSION AND W'IIP.-EcO.uT GAPTIS. CHURCH, WHICH SITS ALONG THE BY A NEWSMAN, NICOLOPULOS REPLIED, "I "IMPERIALISM" IN THE ARAB WORLD. BA~KS Of THE NE~ RIVER. CAN'T SAY I'M OPTIMISTIC NOW. You WILL As 20 SOVIET-MADE TANKS RUMBLED

"hE SUGGESTED" E HAVE A PRAYI:,.R MEET I NI;! HAVE TO ASK ME LATE TUE..SDAY NIGHT." THROUGH THE CA I RO STREETS, 34 Of THE uARRETT RELATED. '\~E KNEW WHA T HAD I NEGOT I A T IONS BETWEEN 33 BAY AREA NEW M I G-211 S STREA KED THROUGH THE SKI ES HAPPENED BUT THAT WAS ALL. WE DIDN'T ,HOSPITALS AND THE CALifORNIA NURSES IN PRECISE fORMATIONS. ~NOW WHETHER WE'D EVER GET OUT SO EVERy-IAssOCIATION BROKE DOWN EARLIER THIS THE CAIRO GOVERNMENT BEGAN ACQUIR!NG ONE KNEELED DOWN. HE DIDNKT HAVE TO WEEK. THE CNA THEN CALLED FOR RESIGN- THE MIG 2(ls fROM THE SOVIET UNION ASK US 0 ~ AT IONS BY TH E AREA 5 3,644 NURSES. S I X MONTHS AGO. TH E PLANES ARE ALL-

'THEN HE CAME OUT WITH A GOOD STRONG BEFORE THE TALKS COLLAPSED, BOTH WEATHER VERSIONS Of THE WELL-KNOWN PRAYER AND IT WAS PLENTY LENGTHY. I SIDES AGREED TENTATIVELY TO fORM A fACT MIG-21. T~ERE WASN!T A MAN PRESENT THAT DIDN'T I FINDING PANEL TO MAKE SETTLEMENT RE- THE NEW TANKS ARE MODifiED VERSIONS APPRECiATE ITo" : COMMENDATIONS, HOWEVER DISAGREEMENT Of RUSSIA'S T54 CARRYING SPECIAL

AN HOUR LATER, THE MEN MADE THEIR lAROSE OVER INTERIM PAY INCREASES. EQUIPMENT fOR NIGHT fiGHTING. WAY TO SAfETY. DEATH IS THE MINORS' THE NURSES SEEK MONTHLY PAY BOOSTS SEASONED OBSERVERS SAID THE VARIETY CON'5TA~T 0 AMOCLES SWORD. "I T COMES ON 1 fROM THE CURRENT RANGE Of $44o-,~ 10 OF' WEAPONS 0 I SPLAYED WAS GREATER THAN YC vp rH "'D ALL THE i I ME/ SA 10 MORR IS. i TO A SCALE Of $664-$783· SEVERAL I N ANY OTHER PARADE HERE I N RECENT !. CCMES T0 ME EVERY DAY. II.o.BuT ( HOSPITALS HAVE ANNOUNCED INTERIM RAISES YEARS.

(,,H, j I' ~ARDLY QU IT, IT r S ALL I KNOW." : Of ABOUT $60 A MONTH. HOWEVER, A NEW SHORT RANGE GROUND-

SA'~ ~N"ONIC, TEX. (UP;)--SUZIE GOMEZ, 2~ TOLD POLICE FRIDAY SHE REfUSED -' ~~REE DIFfERENT MEN A DANCE AT A PARTY --URSDA't NIGHT.

3rlE SAlD THE fiRST MAN CALLED HER A ... "'lE.

j TtJE SECOI-iD THREW BOTTLES AT HER

k~ ~H~ TUIRD BROKE A CHAIR OVER HER ~~: :~E WAS RECOVERING AT HOME.

'- ~ r t:: \I £ r' E. I N V EST I GA T 11\ G •

STOCKHOLM (UP1)--"WHAT KIND OF' ENTER­I TAINMENT IS THIS~" ASKED AN ANGRY ; PATRON AT A STOCKHOLM RESTAURANT.

THE ENTERTAINMENT WAS PROVIDED BY A MAGICIAN WHO THREW STEEL RINGS INTO THE AUDIENCE AS PART Of HIS ACT. ONE Of THE RINGS HIT THE PATRON IN THE

I MOUTH AND KNOCKED OUT HIS TEETH.

USE HOURGLASS WHi'JT ~DS

TO-GROUND MISSILE REPORTED TO HAVE BEEN DEVELOPED IN A GERMAN-OPERATED EGYPTIAN ROCKET WORKS WAS NOT SHOWN AS HAD BEEN EXPE~TED.

AMER PLEDGEb THE U.A.R. TO DEfEND ANY ARAB COUNTRY AGA I NST "l SRAL EL I AGGRESSION" REGARDLESS Of INTER-ARAB DIFfERENCES.

HE SPOKE ONLY TEN DAYS AfTER ISRAELI AIR fORCE JETS ATTACKED A SYRIAN ENG I NEER I NG I NSTAlLAT ION ON THE JORDOtJ RIVER 0

• f- "'*' ~ -------------~ .. ~----------~ .. ~----------------------------------------------~CD .. ~------------~ .. ~----------------~

F,,: - HOURGLASS SATURDAY, JULY

JOMAKAJ TAKE Tt/O BY BRENT KELLOGG

THE JOMAKAJ MADE IT TWO IN A ROW OVER THE NA ALI I YESTERDAY AfTERNOON IN THE SECOND)GAMEIOF THE M~WNtAIN6ALL

__________________________________________________________________________________ ,WORLD SERIES, AS THEY POUNCED ON THE

KINGS 10-5.

s rts section ~AN FRANCISCO TAKES BEATING p~~ I LADELPN I A CLEAflS UP 8-0

DY UNITE~ PRESS INTERNATIONAL CrO~'E ROJAS HIT TWO HOME RUNS fOR TH)EE RUNS ~ND TONY TAYLOR DROVE IN FOUR

~ORE .I~T~ A ~JMER AND P DOUBLE TO POWER THE PHILADELPHiA PHILLIES TO AN 8-0 V~:T !''1r ,::vc -~·h .. SAl\! l='"RANCISC'O GiANTS TODAY BEi-H,U A THREE-HIlTER BY GIANT ( ~ L" 1.1..' Q t~ ~ I "\ G

C~l\o<a ~v., ,hO \LLOwED BuT THREE SINGLES IS NuW 9-2 AGAINST THE GIANTS IN HIS CARfER. ROJAS, ~rlO rlAD ~ CAREER TorAL OF SIX HOME RUNS GOING INTO THIS SEASON, HIT ;is FOURTrl OF THe YEAR WITH NOBODY ON IN THE FiRST AND HIS FIFTH IN THE FI~T~ !NNING wlTrl A RUNNER ON BASE.

TAYLOR HIT A T~REE-RUN SHOT FOR HlS FifTH DOUBLED HOME ANOT~ER RUN IN ThE EIGHTH.

IN YESTERDAY'S GAME, GAYLORD PERRv PJTCHED A TWO-HITTE~ A~D WILLIE MCSOVEY 18~~TCD IN r,REE RU~3 plT~ A ~OMER AND

j

OF T~E SEASON IN THE FO QTH AND

AMERICAN LEAGuE

STAN AKANA AND ART KAKAKAWAI STARTED THE ACTION ROLLING FOR THE KINGS WITH BACK TO BACK DOUBLES THAT SCORED THE FIRST RUN fOR THE NA AL~ I. DON KNIPPEN WHO CONNECTED AND SENT A HIGH, WIDE, AND WONDERFUL FLY INTO CENTER FIELD fOR A TRIPLE THAT BROUGHT IN ANOTHER RUN FOR THE KINGS, AS THEY TOOK OVER iN THE TOP HALf OF THE FIRST INNING.

THERE WAS A JAMMED PACKED CROWD ON HAND TO WATCH THE JOMAKAJ, STILL HAPPY AfTER LAST TUESDAY'S WIN, COME TO BAT

THE KINGS DIDN'T HAVE BOBBY IHA AT ALL SCARED AS HE MOVED IN TO GET A DOUBLE AND SCORED TWO RUNS FOR THE JOMAKAJ WHICH T~ED THE SCORE AT 2-2.

1HE KINGS STAR lED TO FIGHT BACK IN THE SECOND AND THIRD INNINGS, ONLY TO I~ DOLBLE AS THE ~iA~TS BEAT THE P~)LS

j~~I. THE VICTO~Y ~CVE: THE GIANTS li~ wiTHIN TWO P[R~[~-AGE PCI~TS OF THE 'r"JRST-PlACE P[IPA~ES~ 1:- PITTSBURGH

FRED WH~TF~ELDu~ TWO~RU~ HOMER IN THE GO DOWN WITHOUT ANY RUNS IN EITHER BY

IS 10 LOSE THE G_MC M1 iOUSTON TONIGHT, !~4~ fRANCISCC Wll~ STAY WITHIN TWO !::'GI/'I-':: Ct:" rJ~ST P!..A.CE. IF THE PIRATES !, 81\\, ""1'[ "::"ANTS ..JILL ~OVE DOWN ONE I '- - vf A GAME.

I 2[~KY, IN RECORDING HiS 14TH VICTORY IAG~JN5T ~UST TWO LOSSES, STRUCK OUT HIS :CAREER HIGH Of 15 BATTERS, INCLUDING i-~[ ~ARD-HITTING RICHIE ALLENo I I

I

I METS LOSE vV~NN!NG ~TREAK

SANDY KOUFAX GAVE UP EIGhT HITS AND WAL~ED F~VE TO GAIN HIS 17TH VICTORY OF THE SE~SON W'TH A 4-2 VICTORY OVER NEW YORK AS Los ANGELES SNAPPED THE MEt WINNI~G STREAK AT SEVENo THE DODGER

!POWDER PUFFERS GOT SEVEN SINGLES AND A

\

OOUBLE FOR TI ErR SIX RUNS. W1NNiNG PITCHER BOB GIBSON DROVE IN

~ RUN AND SCORED ONE HIMSEI F WHILE A ilOWING SIX HlT5 IN ROUTE TO A 4-0 ~TJ LOUIS CARDINALS VICTORY OVER THE C~ ICAGO CUBS CUB STARTER ROBIN ROBERT ~tlJ THE CARDS TO TWO SINGLES, WHILE IN fHF EIGHTH ~HIL GAGLIANO OPENED W'TH A !S!NGLE, TOOK SECOND ON A SACRIFICE, WENT ho THIR~ ON A flY BALL AND SCORED ~N PIBSON'S DOUBLE CURT FLOOD's SINGLE ~~EN SCORED GIBSON ~ Lou UROCK HIT A SOLO HOMER I N THE ~INTH. THEN MCCARVER SINGLED, WENT TO ~HiRD ON ORLANDO CEPEDA'S BASE HIT AND ~CORED ON A FLY BY MIKE SHANNON.

~ IN NIGHT GAMES TONIGHT IN THE NATIONAL

EAGUE, PITTSBURGH IS AT HOUSTON AND TLANTA IS AT CINCINNATI

1

I UPI--CARPETS MADE IN THE M,DDLE EAST /HAVE ONE OR MORE FLAWS INCLUDED INTENT­!'ONA~L I AS RECOGNITION OF THE CRAfTS­ItlANtS BELIEF THAT ONLY ALLAH IS PERfECT.

EVENTH ~NN!NG PUS~ED ~HE CLEVELAND THE EXCELLENT PITCHING OF PITCHER CLIFf INDIANS P~ST THE DETRCI7 TiGERS 6-5 CLARK.

TURDAY AND COMPLETED A CO~EBACK THAT THE JOMAKAJ RETURNED IN THE THIRD IN-fARTED W~T~ ~~E :~!BE DOWN 5-0. NING, AND BROUGHT THE SCORE TO 2-5 IN DETROiT ~~vKED FOUR RUNS IN THE FIRST FAVOR OF THE JOMAKAJ AS CHARLIE HIRA­

iNNiNG ON THREE SINGLES, A WALK, NORM MOTO, WITH A MAN ON SECOND AND THIRD, ASHvS DOUBLE AND AND ERROR JAKE DROVE IN A HOME RUN THAT SENT THE BALL

OD'S TRIPLE SCORED DON WERT WHO HAD flYING iNTO RIGHT FIELD AND ENDING UP lKED, WITH THE TIGERS' FIFTH RUN IN T THE SIDE OF THE SPECIAL SERVICES

HE SECOND iNNING. CLEVELAND RAll!ED FOR TWO RUNS IN THE

HiRD AND TWO MORE !N THE ~IXTH TO PULL o 5-4. CHUCK HINTON THEN REACHED ON AY OYLER'S ERROR IN THE SEVENTH AND ODE HOME ON WHITFIELD's 6TH HOMER OF HE SEASON.

WHiTEY FORD'S WILD THROW ON AN EIGHTH INNING BUNT ALLOWED RICK REICHARDT TO

CORE THE WINNiNG RUN FROM FiRST BASE IN A 7-6 VICTORY FOR THE CALIFORNIA ANGELS OVER THE NEW YORK YANKEES.

REICHARDT HAD OPENED THE FRAME WITH A INGLE AND WITH ONE OUT WILLIE SMITH UNTED, FORD FiELDED THE BALL, WHIRLED NO THREW TO FIRST, BUT NO ONE WAS OVERiNG THE BAG AND THE BALL ROLLED NTO THE ~iGHTFIElD CORNER. THE ANGELS HAD JUMPED TO A 3-0 LEAD

ITH CONSE~UTIVE DOUBLES BY JOSE CARD­NAL, TOM SATRIANO AND JIM FREGOSI IN HE FIRST AND A SOLO HOME RUN BY BOBBY NOOP IN THE SECOND.

MICKEY MANTLE HIT HIS NINTH CAREER NO SLAM HOME RUN IN THE THiRD AND

OM TRESH SMASHED A TWO-RUN BLAST TO COUNT FOR ALL THE YANKEE RUNS. THE ANGELS LATER PICKED UP RUNS ON A SOLO HOMER BY CARDENAL AND A TWO-RUN SINGLE BY KNOOP.

UILDING THE NA ALI I SURGED BACK IN THE TOP OF

THE SEVENTH AS THEY CONTINUED TO TRY NO GET THE GAME AWAY FROM THE JOMAKAJ.

ALEX HAMPTON HIT A HOME RUN fOR THE tNGS, AND BROUGHT THEM TWO MORE RUNS,

BUT TO NO AVAIL. THE JOMAKAJ ONCE AGAIN CAME OUT ON

TOP WITH THE VICTORY 10-5 WINNING PITCHER WAS CLIFF CLARK, WHO SHOWED EXCELLENT PITCHING POWER, AND THE LOSER

ILL FIGUEIRA

BOX SCORE JOMAKAJ AB HITS RUNS

4 I I 4 3 3 4 2 2

C. 3 2 1 1 0 0 I 0 0 4 0 0 4 0 0

3 2 0

3 0 I 2 0 2

33 10 -1-1

THE NEXT GAME TO BE PLAYED IN THE UNTAINBALL WORLD SERIES WILL BE PLAYED

MONDAY, JULY 25- DUE TO THE ARRIVAL THE GUAM BEAR, TODAY'S GAME WILL NOT PLA YEO.

BARRY MOORE ALLOWED THREE HITS IN HIS FIRST MAJOR LEAGUE START AND KEN Mc­MULLEN'S BASES-LOADED DOUBLE HIGH­LIGHTED A FIVE-RUN FOURTH INNING FOR WASHINGTON AS THE SENATORS BURIED THE

-----------; THE KANSAS CITY ATHLETICS 8-1.

STUNG BY A BEE, Sandra SpuzlCh, Indlanapohs, Ind, shows her foot to other lady golf professlOnals after bemg forced

to Wlthdraw from a tournament m Cmcmnatl

THE KC RUN CAME IN DANNY CATER'S FOURTH HOMER OF THE YEAR. ED BRINK TRIPPLED IN TWO RUNS IN THE WASHINGTON SECOND. THE SENATORS WRAPPED IT UP

. WITH THE BIG fOURTH iNNING RALLY DURING WHICH KANSAS CITY MADE FOUR ERRORS.

CHICAGO WAS AT BALTIMORE AND MINNESOT PLAYED AT BOSTON, IN OTHER AMERICAN LEAGUE ACTION TONIGHT.

SANDY BAY, ENGLAND (UPI)~~WHEN THE DEVON FIRE BRIGADE RACED OUT TO RESCUE TWO PERSONS STRANDED ON A ROCK BY HIGH TIDE, THE MAROONED COUPLE WANTED NO PART OF THE RESCUE.

A SPOKESMAN FOR THE BRIGADE SAID THE COUPLE APPEARED TO BE "COURTING AND SAID THEY WOULD BE QUITE HAPPY UNTIL THE TIDE WENT OUT AGA,N IN FIVE HOURS TIME."

----BE NEAT-- ... -

from fairways

THE DEADLINE FOR ENTERING THE KWAJA­LEIN GOLF ASSOCIATION SCOTCH TWOSOME TOURNAMENT WILL BE THURSDAY, JULY 28.

PICK UP YOUR PARTNERS AND CALL JOE KAULUKUKUI, PHONE 420, OR FRANK GRAN­ICH, PHONE 470 AND JOHN JONJS, PHONE 9-218. HANDICAPS WILL BE USED BY TAKING THE TWO PARTNER~IHANDICAP AND DIVIDING IT IN HALF. FOR EXAMPLE: COMBINED PARTNERS HANDICAP IS 20,DIVrb~ EO) BY 2 THE TEAM HANDICAP WILL BE 10 FOR NINE HOLES.

t LAST YEARS WINNERS WERE TONY MOSLEY

AND JOE KAULUKUKUI.

PAGE ~

FM PROGRAM FOR JULY 24 SUNDAY, JULY 24 - MONDAY, JULY 25

SPECTRUM

- 29

?ETITE !>UITE - DEBUSSY - L'ORCtlESTRA DE LA SUISSE ROMANDE, ERNST ANSER­~1ET CONDUCT I NG - 13: 30

OPERA HALL - HOST, FRANK BOWLING - 120:20 "TURANDOT BY PUCC I NE - THE Rm.1E ORCHESTRA HOUSE CHORUS AND ORCHESTRA, FRANCESCO MOLINARt-PRADElLI CONDUCTING, BIRGIT NILSSON - SOPRANO, FRANCO CORElLI - TENOR, RENATA SCOTTO - SOPRANO, BONAlDO GIAIOTTI - BASS. ACT RUNNING TIMES: 1-32:00, II - 42:00, III - 38:00

TUESDAY, JULY 26 - WEDNESDAY, JULY 27 - REPEATED BY REQUEST JUST MUS Ie

I. COCKTAILS WITH CAVAllARO" - 33+ h VERY PRECIOUS LOVE, ARRIVEDERCI ROMA, 'Till, WITCHCRA~T, All THE WAY, TWILIGHT TIME, ANOTHER TIME, J'JST IN TIME, SAY DARLING, I REMEMBER IT WELL, LIDA ROSE, RETURN TO ME.

2. "THE MAulC ISLAfl.DS" - ALrRED NEWMAN AND THE KEN DARBY SINGERS - 40+ HANA MAUl, HAWAI IAN WAR CHANT, LOVELY HULA HANDS, HAWAI IAN WEDDING SONG, LEGEND or THE RAIN, THE MAGIC ISLANDS, TRADE WINDS, SWEET LEI­lANI, LOVE SOfl.G or KAlOA, MEDLEY

PERSONAL PREF£RENCt: 'THE GREAT BANDS or YESTERYEAR 1- HOST - ED WEIR, 120r

THURSDAY, JULY 28 - FRIDAY, JULY 29 FOLK HERITAGE HOST, JOHN OSBORN - 46~oo+ THE MUSIC or CISCO HOUSTON AND THE WEAVERS INCLUDING TALKING GU~TAq SLUES, OLD DAN TUCKER, HARD TRAVElIN', THE ERIE CANAL, THE STATE or ARKANSAS AND EDDYSTONE LIGHT.

_ JUST MUS IC I. GREEK DANCE MUSIC - KYRIALOS AND HIS ORCHESTRA - 30+

THEME rROM ZORBA THE GREEK, KYMATA, MIA FORA MONAHA-FTANI, MIKqO TAXIDI STO YALO, MONAXIA, OTAN TIN NYKTA, SYNNE~A PLAT lA, I lAPINI, TSlfTE­TEll, E~TA EVODOMADIS, ILIACHTIDA, EROTIKOo

2. JAN AND DEAN'S POP SYMPHONY No. I - IN 12 HIT MOVEMENTS - THE BEL-AIR PoPs ORCHESTRA, ARRANGED AND CONDUCTED BY JAN BERRY AND GEORGE TIPTON

30:00= THE LITTLE OLD LADY ~ROM PASADENA, BABY TALK, HONOLULU LULU, DEAD MAN'S CURVE, SURr CITY, IT'S A SHAME TO SAY GOODBYE, YOu REAlL) KNOW How TO HURT A GUY, SIDEWALK SURrIN', HEART AND SOUL, THE NEW GIRL iN SCHOOL, LINDA

TAKE FIVE - HOST, BilL GRAVES - 40:50

-~ATUr.DAY, JULY 23, 1966

W,\R (CONTINUED rROM PAr.,- Ol'tE),

THE COMMUNISTS' ATTACK POSITIONS. THE SPOKEMAN SAID THREE OF THE AMER­

ICANS WOUNDED IN THE ATTACK WERE SER­VICEMEN ON DUTY. THE MORTAR ~IRE ALSO WOUNDED THREE OTHER AMERICANS IN A NAVAL HOSPITAL ALONGSIDE THE HELICOPTER fiELD.

TONIGHT'S RAID rAILED TO MATCH THE PUNCH O~ A VIET CONG RAID LAST OCTo 29 THAT DAMAGED 40 HELICOPTERS BY THE SAME BASE, KILLED A MARINE, WOUNDED ABOUT 100 SEABEES BUilDING THE HOSPI­TAL AND CRUMPLED SOME BUILDINGS.

IN THE LATEST ATTACK, SMALL ARMS ~IRE RAKED THE SOUTH END Of THE HEll­PAD BUT THE COMMUNISTS DID NOT CHARGE INTO THE BASE COMPOUND AS THEY HAD DONE IN THE PREVIOUS RAID.

10 THE SOUTH, HEAVY NEW GROUND riGHT­ING BROKE OUT IN THE ONG DONG JUNGLE, 2) t11 lES NORTH O~ SA I GON, \JHERE A MULTI BA-TALION ~ORCE OF THE UoS 151 INFANTRY DIV.5!ON ENGAGED A lARCE V!ET CONG FORCE THIS A~TERNOON

~It ITARv SPOKESMEN SAID ONE AME~!CAN I~~ANTRY BATTALION OVERRAN A ViET CONG BUNKtR AND CAPTURED SEVERAL MAC~INE~ GUNS, ALONG WI'~ A NUMBER OF AUTOMATiC WEAPONS AND A SUPPLY Of AMMUNITIONS.

CASUALTiES TO U.S. SOLDIERS IN A HELiCOPTER BORNE AND FOOT ASSAULT WERE DESCRIBED AS "VERY llC:.HTo" SPOKESMEN SAID VlET CONG CASUALTIES WERE STilL BEING DETERMINED.

,Taws FAR THE MARINES ESTBMATE THEY HAVE KilLED A TOTAL Of 1124 NORTH VIETNAMESE IN THE EIGHT-DAY-OLD SWEEP KNOWN AS OPERATION HASTINGS. Or THESE 582 WERE CONfiRMED KiLLED BY BODY COUNT AND 542 "PROBABLE" KILLS. OVERALL MARINE CASUALTIES WERE DE~ SCRIBED AS LIGHT.

'FOR MOLDY FIGS 11- ~EATURING JOHNNY 0000'3 BLACK BOTTOt1 STOMPEqS, RED NICHOLS,

DUKE ELLINGTON, BUNK JOHNSON AND JEllY ROll MORTON

A U.S MiliTARY SPOKESMAN SA~D TODAY THAT THE NOqTH VIETNAMESE DIVISION AGAINST WHICH TBE MARINE ATTACK WAS DIRECTED IS BELIEVED TO HAVE MARCHED DIRECTLY ACROSS THE DEMILITARIZED BOR­DER ZONE STRIP fROM NORTH VIET NAM. NOTE: TIMES GIVEN ARE ACCURATE TO THE SECOND WHEN POSSIBLE AND ARE GEN­

EROUS IN All OTHER CASES. TIMES, EXCEPT WHERE NOTED, DO NOT IN­CLUDE COMMENTARY, BUT ARE MUSICAL CONTENT ALONE. AiR TIME, UNLESS OTHERWISE ANNOUNCED, IS 7:45.

CLEVE LAND(cONT IN~!~Ef~~~) THEY CITED PIN-POINT fiREBOMBING O~

"ACA.,T E..L' I lD I NGS Arm AN APPARENT I\NC\"IL ECGE O~ COt-1'1UN I CAT IONS AND ~ I RE­u0t1!J r ANLFACTURE WHICH WOULD NORt-IAllY ~0T CE KNLWN TO YOUNGSTERS.

LEWIS G. ROBINSON, HEAD OF THE JOMO Fr.EEDOtl KENYATTA (JFK) HOUSE, A M I L­ITA .. T YOUTH CENTER IN THE HOUGH AREA, ~ENIED ACCUSATIONS IT WAS THE SITE vf A SCrlOOl fOR fIREBOMBERS. ROBIN­scr VAS ~IRED BY THE CITY lAST YEAR AfTER HE ORGANIZED A RlrLE CLUB fOR THE rJEfn.SE Cf CIVil PIGHTS DEMON-STf tlTOHS

I THE MANUFACTURE O~ ~ I REBOt-IBS IS COMMON KNOWLEDGE THROUGHOUT THE COtt'~THY Arm THE WORlD,1I ROBINSON SAID.

D:TA I LS WEr: I'J IJf'vSPAPEr.S AND ON TV I.J THE 1904 .-'leTS ot"" ROCHESTEh AND PHILADELPHIA. IN 15155 THEPE \-JERE EXACT DESCRIPTIONS O~ THEM WHEN THEY WERE USED IN THE HUNGARIAN UPRISING AGAINST THE COMMUNISTS."

ROBINSON CHARGED THAT THE TROUBLE IN HOUGH IS BASICAllY THE REfUSAL O~

THE CITY AUTHORITIES TO RECOGKJZE THE C<"t-IPLA I NTS Of S!..'Jtl DWELLERS CAUGHT I N A. AiU.A LL T P1ATElY DEST I NED fOR URCA', F ErJCWAl RAZ I NG BUT CURRENTLY A\JASH IN £31 TT ERNESS, POVERTY AND DE­LlilQUENCY.

LE JEPS REFUSE TO ADMIT THAT THE ?C~PLE ARE FRUSTRATED BY A lONG LIST "r- GROKEN prOMISES," HE SAID.

AN U:dDE',TIFIED 19-YEAR-OlD NEGRO SA 10: "WH ITE MAN OWNED THE STORE .... PRICES TOO HIGti. I liKE TO SEE' rTf AURN "

GEMINAUT~-10 SETTLE DOWN FOR WEEKEND OF TALKiNG

CAPE KENNEDY (UP/)--JO~N YO~NG AND MICHAEL COLLINS, THE GEMINI-IO ASTRO­NAUTS WHO WE~E TOO BUSY IN SPACE TO DO MUCH TALKING, TODAY SETTLED DOWN TO A WEEKEND Of SECLUSEN AT THE LAUNCH SITE TO MAKE UP fOR IT.

THE PROUD SPACE PILOTS WERE QUART­ERED IN THE SPECIAL ASTRONAUT APART­MENTS AT THE MERRITT ISLAND MOONPORT TO REPORT ON THE SUCCESSES, DISAPPOINT­MENTS AND PUZZLES Of THEIR THREE DAYS IN SPACE.

ASTRONAUT CHIEf DONALD K. SLAYTON, WHO IS IN CHARGE or THE TEDIOUS, BUT IMPORTANT DEBRIE~ING SESSIONS, SAID A~TER SPLASHDOWN THURSDAY THE ASTRO­NAUTS IIWERE JUST BUSIER THAN THE DEVil UP THERE. THEY DIDNT'S HAVE MUCH TIME TO TALK.

"I THINK ANY TEST PilOT GIVEN THE CHOICE BETWEEN TALKING TO THE GROUND AND DOING THE JOB IS GOING TO DO THE JOB" •• " HE SAID THE TALKING COULD BE DONE ON THE GROUND.

AND THAT'S WHAT WE EXPECT THEM TO DO. '

YOUNG AND COLL I tJS ARE SCHEDULED TO WIND UP THEIR TALKING SESSIONS AT THE CAPE SUNDAY AND ~LY HOME TO HOUSTON EITHER SUNDAY NIGHT OR MONDAY ~OR RE­UNIONS WITH THEIl'< FAMILIES AND t-10RE DEBRIEfINGS.

THE ASTRONAUTS RETURtlED TO H'E I R LAUNCH SITE FRIDAY IN TWO NAVY HELI­COPTERS AND WERE lHEN WHISKED AWAY TO THEIR QUARTEkS

NE~ YORK (CONTINUED ~ROM PAGE ONE)

REPORTED TURNING UP AT SIMilAR OUT­BREAKS IN CHICAGO AND CLEVELANDJR SIM­PLY TO RESIDENTS or OTHER PARTS or THE CITY. No NONE ~ROM OUT or THE CITY HAS BEEN ARRESTED AS or TODAY.

WITH THE BROOKLYN DELEGATION NODDING AGREEt1ENT THE MAYOR SA I D THE UNREST STEt1MED ~ROM THE BAS I C PROBLEMS O~

"NEGlECT, MISTRUST AND CHANGE BUT MAIN­LY ~EAR."

THE GROUP BURST INTO APPLAUSE WHEN THREE YOUNG MEN, A NEGRO , A PUERTO RICAN AND A WHITE SHOOK HANDS WITH EACH 0THER AND WITH THE MAYOR.

As THE MAYOR ATTEMPTED TO ARRANGE A TRUCE THE FIRE DEPARTMENT MOBILIZED rOR POSSIBLE rURTHER DISORDERS IN BROOK­lYN, THE SCTION or QUEENS BORDERING BROOKLYN AND HARLEM.

THE DEPARTMENT SENT OUT SPECIAL II RE _ CAll" ORDERS KEEPING ON DUTY HAlr THE MEN WHO NORMAllY WOULD GO or~ DUTY AT 6 PM EDT. THE EXTRA MEN WERE ON HAND TO riGHT BLAZES TOUCHED o~r BY ~IRE

BOMBS AND PROTECT fEllOW rlRErlGHTERS fROM MOB ATTACKS.

ONLY HOURS EARLIER HUNDREDS or EAST NEW YORK RESIDENTS ERUPTED INTO NEW VIOLENCE. NEGRO NIGHTRIDERS WOUNDED TWO PUERTO RICAN MENo POLICE WERE BOMBARDED BY GUNSHOTS, fiREBOMBS, ROCKS, AND BOTTLES.

I THE HAMBURGER GOES BACK TO 780 AoD. I WHEN ITALIAN PHYSICIANS PRESCRIBED

CHOPPED BEEr, rRIED WITH ONIONS, AS A CURE ~OR COLDS AND COUGHS.

GRASSHOPPERS CAN'T LEAP UNLESS THE TEf1PERATURE I S AT LEAST 62 DEGREES.

PAGE

BOWL I NG ALLEY

DSPENDEH1iS POOL

MARINA

BACHELORS POOL

HOBBY-CERAMICS SI-OP

LIBRARY

SPECIAL SERVICES GEAR lOCKER

PI-OTO LAB

TENN IS OOURTS

GOLF SHACK

E~N BEACH L I FE GUARD ON DUTY

TRAP RANGE

PISTOL RANGE

MON 25

0930-2330

0900-1900

0930- 1900

0700-2100

CLOSED

0900-2200

0830- 173°

0730-2300

163°-1930

W HEN

** RICHARDSON THEATER

YOKWE YUK THEATER

THE GHOST &. MR CHICKEN 7 30

THE SILENCE

7 &. ~

TUES 26 WED 27

0930-2330 0930-2 330

--------- 0900-1900

0930- 1900 0930- 1900

0700-2100 0700-2100

FOR SUM M E

0900-2200

0830- 1730

1~00-2300

073f)-2 300

1630- 1930

F LAG

1700-1800

THE SILENCE

7 30

DESERT PAT­ROL ( &. 9

0900-2200

08 30- 1730

It)00-2300

0730-2300

1630-1930

S H ° 1700-1800

OPERATION GOLD INCOT

7 30

THAT DARN CAT 7 &. 9

I-OURGLASS

THURS 28 FRI 29

0930-2330 0930-2330

0900-1900 0900-1900

0930-1900 0930-1900

0700-2100 ----------

PRO G RAM

0900-2200

0830-1730

1800-2 300

0730-2300

16 30-1930

0900-2200

0830-173°

1800-2300

0730-2300

1630- 1930

S TED 0 N L

Spy SQUAD

7 30

THE GHOST &. MR CHICKEN 7 &. 9

DESERT PATROL 7 30

10 liTTLE INDIANS 7 &. 9

SAT 30

0930-2400

0900-1900

0700-1900

0700-2100

0900-2200

0830-1730

1200-1900

0730-2300

0730-1930

SUN 31

0930-2330

0900-1900

0700-1900

0700-2100

1300-2200

0830-113° 1200-1430

1200-1900

0730-2 300

0730- 1930

E G U A R 0 S TAN 0

ITTLE DIANS 7 30 SNOW WHITE 3 STOOGES 9 30

OPERATION GOLD INGOT 7 &. 9

'300- '500

0900-1100

THAT DARN &. CAT

7 30

Spy SQUAD

7 &. 9

SATURDAY, JULY 23, 1966

KWAJALEIN SUNDAY CHURCH SERVICES

CATI-OLIC ~AND 9 15 AM IN THE MEMORIAL CHAPEL AND AT 1120 AM ON ROI NAMUR DAILY MASS AT 4 45 PM IN THE BLESSED SACRAMENT CHAPEL MONDAY THROUGH SATUR­DAY CoNFESSIONS BEFORE WEEKDAY MASSES AND ON SATURDAY FROM 4 TO 4 45 PM AND FROM 7 TO 8 PM

CHURCH OF CHRIST SERVICES WILL BE HELD THIS LORD'S DAY

AT 10 15 AM IN ROOM #25 OF GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL BIBLE STUDY IS AT I lAM SER­VICES ARE SUNDAY EVENING AT 6

LATTER-DAY SAINTS SERVICES ARE HELD IN ROOM #13 OF THE

GOERGE SEITZ SCHOOL PRIESTHOOD MEET­ING IS AT J 30 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL AND

SACRAMENT MEETING AT 9 30 AM

EPISOOPAL EVENING PRAYER SERVICES WILL BE CONDUCTED EACH SUN­

DAY EVENING AT 6 IN THE CHAPEL

PENTECOSTAL WORSHIP SERVICES WILL BE HELD AT 7 PM SUN­

DAY IN THE CHAPEL

PROTESTANT WORSHIP SERVICES WILL BE HELD AT 8 '0

AND , I AM AT THE ISLAND MEMORIAL CHAPEL DR ROBERT C SMITH WILL PREACH THE SERMON ENTITLED"A REQUEST AND A RESOLVE"BASED ON THE TEXT TO JOHN 12 20 - 36

A NURSERY IS PROVIDED IN THE ISLAND DAY NURSERY FOR THE SUNDAY SCHOOL AND , I AM SERVICE - 9 15 AM TO 12 45 PM

SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASSES FOR ALL AGES OCEANVIEW THEATER

10 LITTLE INDIANS

Spy SQUAD THE SILENCERS 7 30 &. 12 15

DESERT PAT­ROL

THE GHOST &. MR CHICKEN 7 30 &. 12 '5

THAT DARN CAT

OPERATION ARE HELD AT THE GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL

7 30 &. 12 15 GOLD INGOT AT 9 40 AM ADULTS ARE PRESENT TO 7 30 &. 12'5 ASSIST NEWCOMERS IN FINDING THEIR CLASS

t--------------------r------------+-------------t--------------+------------+-------------~------------4---________ -+ ROOM SUNDAY SCHOOL ON ROI NAMUR IS THE GHOST &. 10 liTTLE AT 9 AM IN THE COMMUNITY BUILDING

7 30 &. 12 15 7 30 &. 12 15 7 30 &. 12 15

IVEY HAll THEATER

Spy SQUAD 6 30 &. 8 30

OPERAT I ON GOLD INGOT

DESERT PATROL 6 30 &. 8 30

THE SILENCERS THAT DARN CAT 6 30 &. 8 30 6 30 &. 0 40

MR CHICKEN INDIANS THE WORSHIP SERVICE ON ROI NAMUR WILL 6 30 &. 8 30 6 30 &. 8 30 BE HELD AT 7 PM IN THE COMMUNITY BUILD-

TRADE WINDS THEATER

THE GHOST &. MR CO"'!EDY COLOR

THAT DARN CAT ~

CHICKEN-90 MIN

6 30 &. 8 35

THE GHOST &. 10 LITTLE IN­MR CHICKEN DIANS ~ 8

ATC THAT DARN CAT-122 MIN CRIME COMEDY COLOR

OPERATION GOLD INGOT 8

ATC

CIOb8R CARlOOt\S COLOR CAR'lOONS ING AND WILL BE LED BY DR ROBERT C

I 00 SMITH ---------------------------Spy SQUAD THE SILENCERS DESERT PAT- RELIGIOUS CHARITY RiviNG 8 8 ROL

b OPERATION GOLD INGOT-120 MIN AT MYSTERY BLACK AND WHITE

UPI--AMERICANS LAST YEAR GAVE ABOUT PERCENT OF THEIR INCOME Ta SUPPORT

OF RELIGIOUS INSITUTIONS

DON KNOTS, JOAN STALEY HALEY MILLS, DEAN JONES, RODDY McDowE~ MARTINE CAROL, FELIX MA~TIN

THE FIGURE COMES FROM "GIVING USA, A REPORT COMP1LEO ANNUALLY BY THE AMERI­CAN ASSOCIATION OF FUND-RAISING COUN-

To FILL A BLAND SPACE IN A NEWSPAP~R COLUM~, TYPESETTER lUTHER HEGGS INSERTS AN ITEM Ot MURDER AND MY3TERY TWENTY YEARS OLD THE STORY CATCHES THE INTER-EST OF THE TOWN, AND THE EDITOR SENDS LUTHER INTO THE OLD HAUNTED HOUSE rOR A FOLLOW-UP STORY DON KNOTTS, THE WOULD-BE HERO, PROVIDES HIS INDIVIDUAL BRAND OF FUN IN THIS COMEDY RELEASE DATE 1966

DESERT PATROL-I 10 MIN ATC WAn DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH, JOHN GREGSON

JUST BEFORE ALAMEI'J IN WORLD WAR II,

WALT DISNEY HAS PRODUCED A DELIGHT­FUL STORY ABOUT A CLEVER SIAMESE CAT WHO BECOMES AN AIDE FOR THE F B.I D C (DARN CAT) IN HIS NIGHTLY ROUNDS OF THE NEIGHBORHOOD KEEPS COMING HOME WITH ITEMS THAT HVE BEEN DESCRIBED IN VARIOUS ROBBERIES PLENTY OF TOP SUPPORTING PLAYERS PROVIDE AMUSING MOMENTS RELEASE DATE 1966

1

TEN LITTLE INDIANS-98 MIN AT ~YSTERY DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE HUGH O'BRIEN, SHIRLEY EATON

iNI\OCENT VICTIM OF AN ILLEGAL PLOT, RENE IS FORCED TO JOIN A GROUP OF GANGSTERS. HIS MOTHER ASKS FELIX TO FINu HER SON FELIX FOLLOWS HIS FRIEND AS THE GANG MOVES tROM EUROPEAN CITY TO CITY THIS IS A FRENCH PRODUCTION RELEAS~ DATE 1965

Spy SQUAD-86 MIN. ATC Spy DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE RICHARD MILLER, DICK ONEIL

GOVERNMENT AGENTS BECOME INVOLVED IN A CHASE WHICH INVOLVES UNFORESEEN OB­STACLES AND BLUNDERS AND OTHER FACTORS THROWN IN THEIR PATHS THERE IS A UNIQUE TWIST ENDING WITH SOME HUMOR ALL ITS OWN RELEASE DATE 1959

SEL

THE REPORT, PUBLISHED THIS WEEK, SAYS THAT RELIGIOUS GIVING IN 1965 TOTALLED $5 5 BILLION THE PERSONAL INCOME Ot AMERICANS IN 1965 TOTALLED ~530 DILLION

GIVING TO RELIGIOUS INSTITUTIONS HAS NEARLY DOUBLED IN DOLLAR VOLUME DURING THE PAST 10 YEARS BUT PERSONAL IN­COMES HAVE ALSO SHOWN A SPECTACULAR ~lSE OVER T~E SAME PERIOD THUS, EVEN THOUGH NEW RECORD HIGHS I IN CONTRI­BUTIONS ARE PROCLAI~[D EACH YEA~, AMERI­CANS TODAY ARE GIVING ALMOST EXACTLY THE SAME PROPORTION OF THEIR INCOME TO CHURCHES AS THEY DID A DECADE AGO

ANOTHER PROPORTION WHICH TENDS TU REMAIN CONSTANT IS RELIGION'S SHARE OF

THE SEVEN ~EN ARE PURSUED BY ENEMY PLAN~ ONE BY ONE TO PAY tOR AN UNPUNISHED PROGRESS IS THE MOTHER Ot PROBLEMS TtTAL AMERICAN GIVING THE LATEST AND A GERMAN SCOUT CAR RELEASE DATE I MURDER RELEASE DATE 1966 G K CHESTERTON REPORT SHOWS THAT RELIGIOUS INSTITU-

A BRITISH pATROL IS SENT OUT ACROSS THE DESERT TO RAID AMARA, ONE OF ROMMEL'S PETROL DUMPS INTEREST IS KEPT UP AS

IN THIS AGATHA CHRISTIE MYSTERY, TEN PEOPLE, STRANGERS TO EACH OTHER, ARE ISOLATED FOR A WEEKEND IN A SNOWBOUND RETREAT, AS GUESTS Or A MAN NONE Or THEM KNOWS THEY ARE TO BE M~RDERED

I~ __________ ~ ______ ----------------~--~--------------------~------------~----------------------------__________ ~TIONS RECEIVED 49 CENTS 0F EVERY DOLLAR

P. or <:71 I) II 1 CONTRIBUTED TO PHILANTHROPY BY IN-• ic Jh. VV.ek .. $ ~ DIVIDUALS, FOUNDATIONS AND CORPORATIO~S

~ THE RELIGIOUS SHARE RARELY DE,IATES

I-.--------------------------------------r---------------------------------------------------------------____________ t MDRE THAN ONE OR TWO PERCENTAGE POINTS FROM AN EVEN HALF

THE SILENCERS-I 15 MIN A COMEDY SPOOF COLOR DEAN MARTIN, STELLA STEVENS, VICTOR BRUNO, DALIAH LAVI, ROBERT WEBBER

MATT HELM, Spy HERO IN DONALD HAMIL­TON'S NOVELS WHO PROTECTS US FROM THEM, COMES TO THE SCREEN IN THE PERSON Or DEAN MARTIN MATT IS SENT TO NEW MEXICO TO DESTROY THE HEADQUARTERS OF BIG 0, AN INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION BENT ON INTE FERING WITH AN AMERICAN ATOMIC TEST ~IRLS AND GADGETS, SPIES, AND STRIPPERS ABOUND AS THE PLOT SWINGS THROUGH THE SOUTHWEST THE ENTIRE SPOOr IS SLATH­ERED WITH SEX, SOMEWHAT MODIFIED BY THE ANTICS OF ACCIDENT-PRONE STELLA STEVENS RELEASE DATE 1966

CROWLE, ENGLAND (UPI}--THE REV HER­MAN SPEAKMAN HAS BANNED GIRLS UNDER 8 rROM BECOMING BRIDESMAIDS IN WEDDING CEREMONIES AT HIS CHURCH HE SAID THEY orTEN CRY SO LOUD THAT THE EXCHANGE OF VOWS CANNOT BE HEARD "THE LITTLE BRIDESMAIDS LOOK VERY PRETTY ON WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHS, ' TIiE SPOKESMA ... SA I 0, "BUT I BELIEVE THEY ARE rAR TOO YOUNG TO UNDERSTAND WHAT IS HAPPENING"

Ir ONE WANTS MARRIAGE TO BE A REFUGE, rRIENOSHIP MUST GRADUALLY REPLACE LOVE

ALAIN

COUNTING CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCHOOL~, COLLEGES, HOSPITALS, ORPHANAGES, WEL­FARE AGENCIES, COMMUNITY CHESTS AND OTHER CIVIC ANO CULTURAL CAUSES, AMERI­CANS GAVE $1 I 3 BILLION LAST YEAR, OR ABOUT 2 PERCENT Or THEIR TorAL INCOME

RELIGIOU~ vCHlv~ RI~ING --By LOUIS CASSELS, UPI THE DtEPEST SCHISM IN AFRICAN RELIGIOU

LirE TODAY IS BETWEEN THOSE WHO FAveR AND THOSE WHO DEPLORe: "SOCIAL ACTIOf..

SOCIAL ACTION IS A CATCH-ALL TERM FOR THE GROWING INVOLVEMENT OF CHURCHES IN ACTIVITIES THAT ARE AIMED NOT AT THE SALVATION OF INDIVIDUAL SOULS BUT AT THE REMEDYING OF SOCIAL tVtL SUCH AS WAR, POVERTY AND RACIAL DISCRIMINA­TION

RECENT EVENTS IN THE EPISCOPAL DIO­CESE OF WASHINGTON, 0 C , PROVIDE A GOOD EXAMPLE or THE TENSIONS WHICH ARE DEVELOPING OVER SOCIAL ACTION

THE SU~rRAGAN (ASSISTANT) BISHOP or THE qIOCESE, THE RT REV PAUL MOORE JR , HAS BEEN CONSPICUOUSLY IDENTlrlED WITH THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT HE IS NATIONAL CHAIRMAN or THE DELTA

MINISTRY, WHICH AIDS NEGROES IN MISS­ISSIPPI H£ ALSO HAS GIVEN STRONG PUBLIC SUPPORT TO THE "FREE 0 C MOVE-I ________________________________________ L-__________________ ~ __________________________ ~~~~~~~~--~~~~~MENT" WHICIi SEEKS 1i0ME RULE FOR THE

RICHARDSON - EVERYONE MAY ATTEND DoUBLE rEATURE ON SATURDAY NIGHTS D,STRICT O~ COLUMBIA YOKWE YUK--- YOKWE YUK MEMBERS ONLY CARD CHECK PERIODICALLY PRE-SCHOOL OR SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN MAY NOT ATTEND IVEY HALL---DEPENDENTS ONLY. MATINEE ON SATS AND SUNS, RULES AND REGULATIONS LISTED OUTSIDE THEATER

OCEAN Vltw--MALE ADULT PERSONNEL ONLY

PAGE 8 t-K)URGLASS

Q.ASSIFIED fOR SALE

NEW SIZE 13 WHITE PATENT "GO-AHEADS" FOR GIRL - $3, SIZE II lADY'S WHITE COTTON TWill BERMUDAS - $4 CAll

2295

Boy SCOUT UNifORM - liKE NEW - COM­PLETE - SIZE 14, SKATE BOARD, 26" lADY'S BIKES - $3 & $2, MAN'S 26" 2-SPEED BIKE - $15, MAN'S 26" BIKE -$8, IRONING BOARD - $2, STEAM IRON -$3 CAll 403 OR SEE AT TR 5 18

PLAY PEN AND PAD, CAR BED WITH PAD, WALKER AND ADJUSTABLE BABY SEaT WITH PAD - $10 FOR All, PlAY-TEX BABY BOTTLES WITH 4 BOXES DISPOSABLE RE­FillS AND ASSEMBLER - $5 CALL 2453

WOMEN'S CLUB MEMBERS - PLEASE BE SAVING THE fOllOWING ITEMS TO BE USED FOR DANCE DECORATIONS EMPTY CHIANTI WINE BOTTLES, TIN CAN LIDS - All SIZES, OLD CANDLES Of ANY COLOR CAll ESTHER BELLEN AT 2290 OR Lucy BLOEDEL AT 2295 fOR PICK-UP IF YOU HAVE ANY ITEMS TO DONATE, WE WOULD liKE TO GET THEM AS SOON AS POSSIBLE

..... ANY WOMEN'S CLUB MEMBER INTERESTED

IN HELPING WITH AN flOp ART" CONTEST,

PLEASE CALL 2290 OR 2295

READING GLASSES IN BROWN CASE CALL 741 EVENINGS OR 502 DAYS

FOUND

BEADED CHAIN WITH KEY AND SMALL PLASTIC SURfBOARD MODEL AND ONE OTHER ITEM DESCRIBE 3RD ITEM TO CLAIM KEY CALL 612

WATCH fOUND IN VICINITY Of BACHELORS POOL' CLAIM AT HOURGLASS

WDRK WANTED

BABYSITTING AT NIGHT CALL 2286

BABYSITTING DAYS fOR WORKING MOTH­ERS CALL 2449 OR COME TO TR 642

CHilD CARE IN MY HOME fOR LITTLE GIRLS AGES 2 - 6 FOR INfORMATION ABOUT RATES, CALL MRS ELLISON AT

2247

MRS HELEN SCOUTARIS - 480-B - WILL TAKE CARE Of CHilDREN WHOSE MOTHERS WilL BE TAKING INVENTORY AT MACY'S

CAll 2471

BRINKIS HIT T,;lCE IN DAY BEDfORD, MASS (UPI)--ARMED WITH

THE SLENDEREST Of CLUES, POLICE TODAY SOUGHT fOUR 'STRICTLY PROfESSIONAL' GUNMEN WHO USED SURPRISE AND SPEED TO ROB THREE BRINK'S GUARDS Of $131,

000

ANNOUNCEMENTS fIL-AMERICAN CLUB POT LUCK - EVERY­ONE WELCOME - EMON BEACH SUNDAY, JULY 24 - 12 NOON - 7 PM - PAVilliON 12 BRING FOOD AND llQUOa

AfRS RADIO ANNOUNCES SOME PROGRAM CHANGES IN THE CURRENT SCHEDULE MONDAY THROUGH fRIDAY AT 7 15 - "IN­TERLUDE", SATURDAY AT 7 PM - NEWS, 7 05 PM - "INTERLUDE" DuE TO a S WAVE SCHEDULE CHANGE, THE SPORTS PAGE HAS BEEN CANCEllED

MASTER POINT DUPLICATE BRIDGE Will BE SUNDAY, JUlT 24 AT 7 15 PM AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB

"LE DISCOTHEQUE" TICKETS MAY BE BOUGHT NOW ~ BY WOMEN'S CLUB MEMBERS AND MAY BE PURCHASED fROM GINNY SMITH (2708) OR ANN WAGNER (2785) PRICE IS $4 PER PERSON FOR AN EVENING OF DINNER, ENTERTAINMENT, AND nANCING ON AUGUST 8 ANY RE­MAINING TICKETS Will BE SOLD TO BOQ RESIDE~TS AND OTHER ISLAND RESJDENTS WITH YOKWE YUK CLUB PRIVilEGES

EXECUT I VE BOARD MEET I NG Of THE PROTES­TANT WOMEN'S CHAPEL fELLOWSHIP WILL BE MONDAY, JULY 25, AT 8 PM AT THE HOME Of GLORIA MUIRHEAD, QTRS 224A ALL OfFICERS AND CIRCLE CHAIRMEN ARE ASKED TO ATTEND

PROTESTANT WOMEN'S CHAPEL FEllOW­SHIP - SCHEDULE Of CIRCLE MEETINuS IS AS fOLLOWS ALICE lEE CIRCLE No MEETING, ANNA DEDERER CIRCLE MEETS TUESDAY, JULY 26, AT 9 30 AM IN THE HOME Of GLORIA MUIRHEAD, QTRS 224A MEETINGS Of THE THREE EVENING CIRCLES WILL BE CANCELLED IN ORDER THAT MEMBERS MAY ATTEND THE RECEPTION FOR REV PAUL GREOGORY TUESDAY, JULY 26, AT 7 30 PM AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB

SCUBA CLUB SUNDAY DIVE WILL DEPART AT 8 AM fROM THE MARINA TO THE OCEAN SIDE Of GEA GUESTS ARE WELCOME, BUT MUST ~E ACCOMPANIED BY A CLUB MEMBER LifE VESTS ARE REQUIRED DIVEMASTERS Will BE GARY BENTON AND

PHil MONSON d

SCUBA CLUB DIVE FROM ROI WILL lEAVE ROI BY M-BOAT AT 12 30 SUNDAY, JULY 24 FOR MORE INfORMATION, CALL ED SCHIELE ON ROI, EXT 08

NEW HOURS EffECTIVE MONDAY, AUGUST I, MACY'S NEW STORE HOURS WILL BE

MON &. THURS 1100 TO 1530 1630 TO 1930

TUE , WED, FRI - 1100 TO 1300 1400 TO 1730

SATURDAY -------- 0930 TO 1300

NEW LAUNDRY HOURS WILL BE

MON &. THURS 0730 TO 1730 TUE., WED, FRI.- 0730 TO 1700 SATURDAY --------0730 TO 1300

THE BANDITS, THREe Of THEM CARRYING THOMPSON SUBMACHINEGUNS, DROVE UP TO BRINK'S CREW AT 1146 AM, TOOK THEIR GUNS AND SPED Off IN A CAR WITH fiVE MONEY CONTAINERS

THE OPERATION OUTSIDE THE MITRE CORP ELECTRONICS COMPANY TOOK AN ESTIMATED 15 SECONDS THE GUARDS NEVER HAD A CHANce TO USE TH[IR WEA­

PONS A BRINK'S SPOKESMAN SA~D THE EM­

PLYES WOULD 'HAVE BEEN CRAZY If THEY HAD TRieD ANYTHING WHEN LOOKING DOWN

MUZZLE Of A MACHINEGUN "

WOWI

SPECIAL SALE!

I. W • HARPER BOURBON for just $1.95 (Was $2.95) Hurry while the supply lasts!

at the PACKAGE SmRE

ATTENTION PLEASE MACY'S WILL BE CLOSED fOR IN­VENTORY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JULY 29 AND 30 OPEN fOR BUSI­

NESS AGAIN ON AUGUST I AT II AM

SHOWTIME

7 & 9 05

HARPER AT PAUL NEWMAN, LAUREN BACALL, PAMELA TIFFIN, ROBERT WAGNER MYSTERY CoLOR

SHOWTIME

7 30

SERGEANT DEADHEAD ATC FRANKIE AVALON, FRED CLARK, EVE ARDEN COMEDY COLOR

SHOWTIME 630&830

~UEEN OF BlOOD AT JOHN SAXON, BAS I l t~ATHBOI'IE SPACE DRAMA COLOR

SHOWTIME 7 30 &. 12 15

T~[ NIGHT OF THE GRIZZLY CLINT WALKER, MARTHA HYER WESTERN ADVENTURE

ATC

5HOWTIME 8

COR01CAN BROTHER~ AT GEOFfRey HORNE, JEAN SERVAIS DRAMA COLOR

MOVIES ARE KEYED AS TO THE AUDIENCE FOR WHICH THEY ARE SUITABLE THE SYM­BOLS A, T AND C REPRESENT ADUlfS, TEENS AND CHilDREN, RESPECTiVelY THE PRE­SENCE OF ANY Of THE THREE SYMBOLS IN­DICATES THAT THE fiLM IS CONSIDERED SUITABLE fOR THE AUDIENCE GROUP REPRE­SENTED BY THE SYMBOLS

SUNDAY' MOVIES -----------JuLY YOKWE YUK---JOHNNY RENO

7 &. 9 RICHARDSON--THE NIGHT OF THE

GRIZZLY 7 30 IVEY HALL---SERGEANT DEADHEAD

6 30 &. 8 30 OCEAN VIEW--HARPER

7 30 &. 12 15 TRADE WINDS-RAIDERS Of lEYTE

8

24~ 1966 A

ATC

ATC

AT

AT

MATINEE I PM AT IVEY HALL - SHOW WHITE AND THE THREE STOOGES

YOKWE YUK THEATER REGULATIONS

YOKWE YUK MEMBERS SHOULD CARRY THEIR MEMBERSHIP CARDS WHEN ATTENDING THE YOKWE YUK THEATER FAILURE TO HAVE CARD IN POSSESSION MAY MEAN EVICTION fROM THE THEATER ONLY CARD MEMBERS MAY ATTEND MOVIES No PRE-SCHOOL OR SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN MAY ATTEND

SATURDAY, JULY 24, 1966

PUBLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES AT THE DIRECTION Of THE COMMANDING OFfiCER, KWAJALEIN TEST SITE, MARSHALLjSLANDS CONTRACT DA-O 1-021-AMC-90004 ("t) -

THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAilY MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DEADLINE fOR NOTICES IS 4 PM THE DAY BEFORE PUBLI­CATION AND DEADLINE fOR NEWS ITEMS IS 10 AM THE DAY OF PUBLICATION

THE HOURGLASS RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT LETTERS TO THE EDITOR FOR THE SAKE OF BREVITY ALL COPY, LETTERS AND PHOTOGRAPHS SUBMITTED fOR PUBLICA­TION BECOME THE PROPERTY OF THE HoUR­GLASS REPUBLICATION Of MATERIAL CON­TAINED HEREIN IS NOT AUTHORIZED WITH­OUT THE PRIOR APPROVAL OF THE COMMAND­ING OFFICER, KWAJAlEIN TEST SITE

IF YOU HAVE NOT RECEIVED YOUR HOUR­GLASS BY 6 15 PM, PLEASE CALL 539 BE­TWEEN THE HOURS OF 6 15 AND 6 45 AND A COpy WILL BE DELIVERED TO YOU

EDITOR STAFF

SPORTS ED ITOR LITt-K)GRAPHER

NEil PHELPS-MUNSON ADDIE JCHNSON LYNN llfFICK ZELMA RIDGELY BRENT KELLOGG RICHARD RUfFOLO

OffiCIAL NOTICES DATE OFfiCIAL BULLETIN

23 JULv66 24 JULy66 22 JUlv66 2b JULy66 27 JULy66 23 JUly66 29 JUly66

CPT J P ILT 0 w. CW3 F C lTC l H CPT L L CPT J J ILT D.W.

COPPENS OLIVER BAKER OGDEN FRI ESZ

OSBORN OLIVER

PI-ONE

2407 602

2142 2497 2287 2371 002

DUTY OfFICER IS KWAJALEIN TEST SITE COMMANDING OffiCER'S REPRESENTATIVE DURING OTHER THAN NORMAL DUTY HOURS

BLACKOUT A RANGE OPERATION REQUIRING AN AlL­

ISLAND BLACKOUT IS SCHEDULED FOR MONDAV, JULY 25 All RESIDENTS Will ENSURE THAT EXTERIOR LIGHTS UNDER THEIR CONTROL ARE OUT AT OR BEfORE THE BEGINNING OF THE BLACKOUT AND REMAIN OUT UNTIL THE BLACKOUT IS LIFTED THE EARLIEST TIME rOR THE BLACKOUT WILL BE 2100 HOURS THE BLACKOUT WILL BE IN EFFECT WHILE THE STREET LIGHTS AND THE ROTATING BEA­CON ON THE WATER TOWER ARE OUT THERE MAY ALSO BE A REQUIREMENT fOR ONE OR MORE LIMITED AREA BLACKOUTS PRIOR TO THE AlL-ISlNAD BLACKOUT If IMPOSED, THE LIMITED AREA BLACKOUTS ARE NECES­SARY fOR CERTAIN PHASES Of PRE-MISSION OPTICS CALIBRATION

EXCEPT FOR EMERGENCY VEHICLES NO VEHICLES WILL BE OPERATED DURING ANY BLACKOUT PERIOD

THERE IS NO"TAKE COVER REQUIRE­MENT FOR THIS OPERATION

IN CONNECTION WITH THIS OPERATION HAZARD AREAS WilL EXIST IN THE OCEAN WITHIN A 200 NAUTICAL MILE RADIUS OF KWAJALEIN AND IN THE KWAJALEIN ATOLL ON THE ISLANDS AND IN THE LAGOON BETWEEN A liNE JOINING AND INCLUDING BOGERI AND YABBENOHR AND A LINE JOIN­ING AND INCLUDING BIGEJ AND GEA All PERSONNEL AND CRAfT MUST REMAIN OUT Of THE ABOVE HAZARD AREAS BETWEEN THE HOURS Of 2000 JULY 25 AND 0300 JULY 2~6~. __________________________ __

BLACKOUT TONIGHT RANGE OPTICAL INSTRUMENT CALIBRA­

TION TONIGHT WilL REQUIRE AN ALL­ISLAND BLACKOUT Of ALL OUTSIDE liGHTS INCLUDING STREET liGHTS fROM 2000 UNTil COMPLETION Of THE CALIBRATIONS NORMAL VEHICULAR TRAFfiC WILL NOT BE AFFECTED

iU I LSON TRADES ON BEA TLES LlVERPOOL (UPI)--PRIME MINISTER HAR­

OLD WILSON TODAY INVADED BEATlE TERRI­TORY. HE CALLED ON THE NATION'S YOUTH TO START SWINGING IN THEIR JOBS IN AN EfFORT TO LifT BRITAIN'S SAG­GING ECONOMY THE LEVEL Of ITS POP CULTURE

THE BEATLES GOT TO THE TOP BY WORK­ING HARD, THE PRIME MINISTER SAID,

AND THE NATION'S YOUT~ SHOULD fOllOW THE EXAMPLE OF THEIR LONG-HAIRED IDOLS

"DoN'T BE AFRAID TO ASSERT YOUR­SELVES WE ONLY GOT TO THE TOP lEAGUE WITH OUT POP CULTURE BECAUSE OUR POP GROUPS ASSERTED THEMSELVES," HE URGED

WILSON'S REMARKS CAME BEfORE SEVER­AL HUMORED lONG-HAIRED AND MINI­SKIRTED LASSIES CROWDED INTO THE DINGY CELLAR OF LIVERPOOL'S CAVERN

CLUB -- THE BIRTHPLACE OF THE BEATlES