Commandos Stand By As West Germany Stages Manhunt

8
I KWAJALEIN ATOLL, MARSHALL ISLANDS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977 NUMBER 204 Commandos Stand By As West Germany Stages Manhunt BONN (UPI) -- Chancellor Helmut Schmldt today called on the commandos who captured a hlJacked alrllner to stand ready for new terrorlst attacks as West Germany staged the blggest manhunt ln ltS hlstory for the murderers of lndustnallst Hanns-t'artln Schleyer. The government urged the entlre populatlon to help hunt down 16 suspects through one mllllon wanted posters ln seven languages plus placards, radlo announcements and loudspeaker trucks. "All avallable pollce are ln actlon," a pollce offlclal sald. "Tens of thousands of automo- blles have been checked. Numer- ous bUlldlngs have been search- ed. Controls at alrports and borders have been tl ghtened." One thousand pollcemen and securlty offlclals were asslgn2d to a speclal commlSSlon estab- llshed ln Cologne, where Schley- er's automoblle was ambushed early last to dlrect the hunt, the Federal Crlmlnal Of- fl ce announced. "lie have recelved 2,600 clues from the publlC, some very val- uable," Ench Ruckmch, the head of the commlSSlon, told repor- ters. The government offered re- wards totallng $220,000 to catch the terrorlsts, who threatened to strlke agaln to avenge the deaths of the Arab-led hlJackers and of three terrorlst leaders lmprlsoned ln Stuttgart. "Revenge for the murder of Andreas Baader," was smeared on a wall ln Hamburg. And the Baader-Melnhof gang members who kldnapped the 62-year-old chalr- man of the Federatlon of German Industry Sept. 5 warned ln an- nounclng hl s death, "The fl ght lS Just beglnnlng." Schmldt, at a ceremony to decorate the 28 commandos who freed 86 hostages Tuesday morn- lng, sald, "The flght agalnst lnternatlonal terrorlsm lS by no means over. Not ln Germany and nowhere else ln the world." At the ce remony 1 n the South African Action Censored JOHANNESBURG (UPI) -- The government's unprecedented crackdown on antl-apartheld op- posltlon and the detentlon of some 70 government opponents today drew loud and wldespread local press crltlclsm. State supportlnq Afrlkaans newspapers condemned pollce and Justlce Mlnlster Jlmmy Kruger's measures yesterday that llqUl- dated 18 antl-apartheld lnstl- tutlons, detalned suspects, banned vocal crltlcs and closed two newspapers, The vlorld, and ltS slster paper Weekend World. Both were papers clrculatlng among blacks. Transvaler, always a staunch government supporter WhlCh has several Cablnet mln- lsters on ltS board, sald the crackdown was the actlon of "fnghtened and foollsh men." In a speclal frontpage edl- tonal headed "Into An Age Of Darkness," the Opposltlon Rand sald the country was belng led "lnto a dlctatorshlp ln WhlCh the last llghts of freedom and dlssent are ex- tlngulshed." The sald the lmpact of the actlon "exceeded even the dlsasterous avalanche of ad- verse publlClty that Steve Bl- ko's death In detentlon un- leashed -- and of course has been doubly dlsasterous comlng on top of that event." The newspaper sald "Two 1 amps of frel'dom have gone out. •• we are saddened o " HIJACKED PLANE LANDS AT ATLANTA ATLANTA (UPI) -- A suspected Georgla bank robber hlJacked a Frontler Alrllnes Jetllner ln Nebraska today and forced lt to fly to Atlanta Vla Kansas Clty to free from Jall a prlsoner who ad- mltted to pollce ln Alabama that he had a homosexual relatlon- ShlP wlth the hlJacker. The Boelng 737 Jetllner, wlth 11 passengers and four crew on board, landed at Hartsfleld at 12:02 pm EDT. The hlJacker was ldentlfled by the Federal Bureau of Investl- gatlon as Thomas Mlchael Hannan, 29, of Grand Island, Nebraska. The QrlSOner he came to free was ldentlfled as George Davld Stewart, 29, a natlve of Mo- blle, Alabama. They were arres- ted ln Alabama ln September after allegedly holdlng up an Atlanta bank. A Moblle, Alabama, pollce lntelllgence report on Stewart descnbed hlm as a "real welr- do" who was antl-Jewlsh and was arrested on a downtown Moblle street In 1973 carrYlng a concealed weapon under a NaZl unlform. Moblle Pollce Sgt. James Glll, readlng from the lntelll- gence report, quoted Stewart as saylng he met Hannan In Berkeley, Callfornla, last year. "They had been travellng around the country Slnce then and both admltted to havlng homosexual relatlOns," Glll sald. In addltlon to demandlng the release of Stewart, Han- nan sought $3 mllllon In cash, two parachutes, two machlne guns and two .45 callber plS- tols. , The Frontl e r Alrll nes 1 plane, hlJacked ln Grand Is- land, wlth 35 passengers and crew, flew to Kansas Clty, Mlssourl, where lt took on fuel and released the women and chlldren passengers, then left for Atlanta. After landlng, the plane taxled to a cargo bUlldlng about one and a half mlles north of the maln termlnal where authorltles had a com- mand post set up. Attorney General Grlffln Bell sald from Washlngton that federal law prohlblts the use of mllltary commandos to storm the alrcraft. West, Soviet-Bloc Trade Charges BELGRADE (UPI) -- Western and Sovlet-bloc dlplomats traded charges at the Belgrade Confer- ence yesterday, wlth communlst dlplomats angrlly accuslng the West of lnterferlng ln thelr In- ternal affalrs by crltlclzlng them on human rlghts. Brltaln, the Netherlands and Sweden all conder,'ned Czechoslo- vakla's trlal and convlctlon of four dlssldents ln Prague Tues- day, touchlng off heated Sovlet- bloc reactlons. The 35-natlon conference lS revlewlng the 1975 Helslnkl Agreement, lncludlng ltS human rlghts guarantees. , Dlplomats quoted a Brltlsh delegate as saYlng hlS country was "deeply di s turbed" by the Prague tnal. "He must state our Vlews on events WhlCh are lnconslstent wlth the (Helslnkl) Flnal Act," he sald, wlthout mentlonlng Czechoslovakla by name. Czechoslovakla then demanded the floor and denounced the Western countrles for spreadlng "dlstorted lnformatlon." Western delegates also asked 3nvlpt-bloc countries to explair. thelr pollcles on lnternatlonal marnages. Military Seizes Thai Control :1E av' lv-quarded Chancellery, Schrnldt echoed a statement he r.lilde earller ln Parllament: "YOL: have proven that a free state 15 not helpless agalnst terrorlsts ••• In your jedlcatlon, tralnlng and wllllngness to take great rlsks, you are a American Businessmen Meet BANGKOK (UPI) -- Thalland's senlor generals, the powers be- hlnd the government for a year, today overthrew thelr 3PPolntea mlnlsters and selzed open con- trol of the natlon. '.lOde 1 for our youth." * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * : FINANCIAL NEWS : *DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES* *30 Indus. up 2.60 qt 814.80 * *20 Trans. off 0.05 at 205.15* *15 Utlls. off 0.36 at 111.05* *65 Stocks up 0.29 at 279.87 * * Volume: 20,520,000 shares * *Closlng Gold PrlcE: $160.60* *Closlng Sllver Pnce: $4077* *LISTINGS AVAILABLE IN LIBRARY* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * SURF & SUN * *AS OF 0001 HOURS 19"OCT 177* *DAILY RAINFALL: .19 lnch* *MONTHLY TOTAL: 7.95 lnches* *YEARLY TOTAL: 65.06 lnches* * TOMORROW * *Hl Tlde: 12363.7 1 * *Lo Tlde: 0609 2.0 1 1822 2.3 1 * *Sunnse: 0637 Sunset: 1834* *Moonrlse: 1413 Moonset: 0130* *FOR FORECAST, CALL 84700* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * To Discuss Overseas Tax Problems SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA (UPI) -- More than 50 senlor executlves representlng Amerlcan buslness throughout the ASla-Paclflc re- glon arrlved today for the nlnth annual meetlng of the ASla Paclflc Councll of Amerlcan Chambers of Commerce (APCAC). Together wlth a Slmllar number of leadlng Amerlcan buslness- men from throughout Australla, the representatlves wlll conduct four days of lntenslve dlSCUS- Slons on lssues of vltal con- cern to the expatrlate U.S. buslness communlty In the Pacl- flC basln. Formal plenary seSSlons, augmented by a serles of dlS- CUSSlon groups and worklng com- mlttees, wlll seek to hammer out a unlfled posltlon wlth WhlCh APCAC spokesmen can ap- proach U.S. Congresslonal rep- resentatl ves. Recent changes to the Inter- nal Revenue Servlce Code gov- ernlng U.S. taxatlon of lncome earned abroad by Amerlcans llV- lng overseas wlll be a maJor tOP1C of dlScusslon. Known as the Sectlon 911 problem (In reference to that portlon of the IRS Code appll- cable to overseas earned In- come by Amerlcans who have es- a bona flde resldence abroad), APCAC has long vOlced ltS concern at the harMful ef- fect thlS wlll have on the U.S. buslness presence overseas, and ultlmately on the U.S. bal- ance of payments. Delegates are expected to support efforts to delay the lmplementatlon of chanqes for at least another vearo Offlclal Radlo Thalland sald the coup leader, former Defense Ml nl S te r Adm. Sangad Cha 10 ryoo, told Klng Bhumlbol he was forced to selze power "to remedy a de- tenoratlng sltuatlon." Polltlcal sources sald Prlme Mlnlster Tanln Kralvlxlen re- fused a "request" by the mlll- tary command to flre half of hlS 18-member cablnet, and the generals then launched the coup. Sangad told a natlonWlde televlslon audlence Tanln's pledge to restore democracy by 1992 was too ponderous, and he pledged to hold a general elec- tlon next year. In the meantlme, Sangad banned polltlcal gatherlngs and hoardlng, and promlsed to lmprove the economy and lnter- nal secunty. The coup appeared peaceful althouqh troops patrolled Bang- kok streets.

Transcript of Commandos Stand By As West Germany Stages Manhunt

'jOLU~;E I ~ KWAJALEIN ATOLL, MARSHALL ISLANDS, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977 NUMBER 204

Commandos Stand By As West Germany Stages Manhunt

BONN (UPI) -- Chancellor Helmut Schmldt today called on the commandos who captured a hlJacked alrllner to stand ready for new terrorlst attacks as West Germany staged the blggest manhunt ln ltS hlstory for the murderers of lndustnallst Hanns-t'artln Schleyer.

The government urged the entlre populatlon to help hunt down 16 suspects through one mllllon wanted posters ln seven languages plus placards, radlo announcements and loudspeaker trucks.

"All avallable pollce are ln actlon," a pollce offlclal sald. "Tens of thousands of automo­blles have been checked. Numer­ous bUlldlngs have been search­ed. Controls at alrports and borders have been tl ghtened."

One thousand pollcemen and securlty offlclals were asslgn2d to a speclal commlSSlon estab­llshed ln Cologne, where Schley­er's automoblle was ambushed early last month~ to dlrect the hunt, the Federal Crlmlnal Of­fl ce announced.

"lie have recelved 2,600 clues from the publlC, some very val­uable," Ench Ruckmch, the head of the commlSSlon, told repor­ters.

The government offered re­wards totallng $220,000 to catch the terrorlsts, who threatened to strlke agaln to avenge the deaths of the Arab-led hlJackers and of three terrorlst leaders lmprlsoned ln Stuttgart.

"Revenge for the murder of Andreas Baader," was smeared on a wall ln Hamburg. And the Baader-Melnhof gang members who kldnapped the 62-year-old chalr­man of the Federatlon of German Industry Sept. 5 warned ln an­nounclng hl s death, "The fl ght lS Just beglnnlng."

Schmldt, at a ceremony to decorate the 28 commandos who freed 86 hostages Tuesday morn­lng, sald, "The flght agalnst lnternatlonal terrorlsm lS by no means over. Not ln Germany and nowhere else ln the world."

At the ce remony 1 n the

South African Action Censored

JOHANNESBURG (UPI) -- The government's unprecedented crackdown on antl-apartheld op­posltlon and the detentlon of some 70 government opponents today drew loud and wldespread local press crltlclsm.

State supportlnq Afrlkaans newspapers condemned pollce and Justlce Mlnlster Jlmmy Kruger's measures yesterday that llqUl­dated 18 antl-apartheld lnstl­tutlons, detalned suspects, banned vocal crltlcs and closed two newspapers, The vlorld, and ltS slster paper Weekend World. Both were papers clrculatlng among blacks.

D~e Transvaler, always a staunch government supporter WhlCh has several Cablnet mln­lsters on ltS board, sald the crackdown was the actlon of "fnghtened and foollsh men."

In a speclal frontpage edl­tonal headed "Into An Age Of Darkness," the Opposltlon Rand Da~ly Ma~l sald the country was belng led "lnto a dlctatorshlp ln WhlCh the last llghts of freedom and dlssent are ex­tlngulshed."

The Ma~l sald the lmpact of the actlon "exceeded even the dlsasterous avalanche of ad­verse publlClty that Steve Bl­ko's death In detentlon un­leashed -- and of course has been doubly dlsasterous comlng on top of that event."

The C~t~zen newspaper sald "Two 1 amps of frel'dom have gone out. •• we are saddened o "

HIJACKED PLANE LANDS AT ATLANTA ATLANTA (UPI) -- A suspected Georgla bank robber hlJacked a

Frontler Alrllnes Jetllner ln Nebraska today and forced lt to fly to Atlanta Vla Kansas Clty to free from Jall a prlsoner who ad­mltted to pollce ln Alabama that he had a homosexual relatlon­ShlP wlth the hlJacker.

The Boelng 737 Jetllner, wlth 11 passengers and four crew on board, landed at Hartsfleld at 12:02 pm EDT.

The hlJacker was ldentlfled by the Federal Bureau of Investl­gatlon as Thomas Mlchael Hannan, 29, of Grand Island, Nebraska. The QrlSOner he came to free was ldentlfled as George Davld Stewart, 29, a natlve of Mo­blle, Alabama. They were arres­ted ln Alabama ln September after allegedly holdlng up an Atlanta bank.

A Moblle, Alabama, pollce lntelllgence report on Stewart descnbed hlm as a "real welr­do" who was antl-Jewlsh and was arrested on a downtown Moblle street In 1973 carrYlng a concealed weapon under a NaZl unlform.

Moblle Pollce Sgt. James Glll, readlng from the lntelll­gence report, quoted Stewart as saylng he met Hannan In Berkeley, Callfornla, last year.

"They had been travellng around the country Slnce then and both admltted to havlng homosexual relatlOns," Glll sald.

In addltlon to demandlng the release of Stewart, Han­nan sought $3 mllllon In cash, two parachutes, two machlne guns and two .45 callber plS­tols. , The Frontl e r Alrll nes 1

plane, hlJacked ln Grand Is­land, wlth 35 passengers and crew, flew to Kansas Clty, Mlssourl, where lt took on fuel and released the women and chlldren passengers, then left for Atlanta.

After landlng, the plane taxled to a cargo bUlldlng about one and a half mlles north of the maln termlnal where authorltles had a com­mand post set up.

Attorney General Grlffln Bell sald from Washlngton that federal law prohlblts the use of mllltary commandos to storm the alrcraft.

West, Soviet-Bloc Trade Charges

BELGRADE (UPI) -- Western and Sovlet-bloc dlplomats traded charges at the Belgrade Confer­ence yesterday, wlth communlst dlplomats angrlly accuslng the West of lnterferlng ln thelr In­ternal affalrs by crltlclzlng them on human rlghts.

Brltaln, the Netherlands and Sweden all conder,'ned Czechoslo­vakla's trlal and convlctlon of four dlssldents ln Prague Tues­day, touchlng off heated Sovlet­bloc reactlons.

The 35-natlon conference lS revlewlng the 1975 Helslnkl Agreement, lncludlng ltS human rlghts guarantees.

, Dlplomats quoted a Brltlsh delegate as saYlng hlS country was "deeply di s turbed" by the Prague tnal. "He must state our Vlews on events WhlCh are lnconslstent wlth the (Helslnkl) Flnal Act," he sald, wlthout mentlonlng Czechoslovakla by name.

Czechoslovakla then demanded the floor and denounced the Western countrles for spreadlng "dlstorted lnformatlon."

Western delegates also asked 3nvlpt-bloc countries to explair. thelr pollcles on lnternatlonal marnages.

Military Seizes Thai Control

:1E av' lv-quarded Chancellery, Schrnldt echoed a statement he r.lilde earller ln Parllament: "YOL: have proven that a free state 15 not helpless agalnst terrorlsts ••• In your jedlcatlon, courag~, tralnlng and wllllngness to take great rlsks, you are a American Businessmen Meet

BANGKOK (UPI) -- Thalland's senlor generals, the powers be­hlnd the government for a year, today overthrew thelr 3PPolntea mlnlsters and selzed open con­trol of the natlon. '.lOde 1 for our youth."

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * : FINANCIAL NEWS : *DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES* *30 Indus. up 2.60 qt 814.80 * *20 Trans. off 0.05 at 205.15* *15 Utlls. off 0.36 at 111.05* *65 Stocks up 0.29 at 279.87 * * Volume: 20,520,000 shares * *Closlng Gold PrlcE: $160.60* *Closlng Sllver Pnce: $4077* *LISTINGS AVAILABLE IN LIBRARY* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * ** * SURF & SUN * *AS OF 0001 HOURS 19"OCT 177* *DAILY RAINFALL: .19 lnch* *MONTHLY TOTAL: 7.95 lnches* *YEARLY TOTAL: 65.06 lnches* * TOMORROW * *Hl Tlde: 12363.71 * *Lo Tlde: 0609 2.0 1 1822 2.3 1* *Sunnse: 0637 Sunset: 1834* *Moonrlse: 1413 Moonset: 0130* *FOR FORECAST, CALL 84700* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

To Discuss Overseas Tax Problems SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA (UPI) -- More than 50 senlor executlves

representlng Amerlcan buslness throughout the ASla-Paclflc re­glon arrlved today for the nlnth annual meetlng of the ASla Paclflc Councll of Amerlcan Chambers of Commerce (APCAC).

Together wlth a Slmllar number of leadlng Amerlcan buslness­men from throughout Australla, the representatlves wlll conduct four days of lntenslve dlSCUS­Slons on lssues of vltal con­cern to the expatrlate U.S. buslness communlty In the Pacl­flC basln.

Formal plenary seSSlons, augmented by a serles of dlS­CUSSlon groups and worklng com­mlttees, wlll seek to hammer out a unlfled posltlon wlth WhlCh APCAC spokesmen can ap­proach U.S. Congresslonal rep­resentatl ves.

Recent changes to the Inter­nal Revenue Servlce Code gov­ernlng U.S. taxatlon of lncome earned abroad by Amerlcans llV­lng overseas wlll be a maJor

tOP1C of dlScusslon. Known as the Sectlon 911

problem (In reference to that portlon of the IRS Code appll­cable to overseas earned In­come by Amerlcans who have es­tab~lshed a bona flde resldence abroad), APCAC has long vOlced ltS concern at the harMful ef­fect thlS wlll have on the U.S. buslness presence overseas, and ultlmately on the U.S. bal­ance of payments.

Delegates are expected to support efforts to delay the lmplementatlon of chanqes for at least another vearo

Offlclal Radlo Thalland sald the coup leader, former Defense Ml nl S te r Adm. Sangad Cha 10 ryoo, told Klng Bhumlbol he was forced to selze power "to remedy a de­tenoratlng sltuatlon."

Polltlcal sources sald Prlme Mlnlster Tanln Kralvlxlen re­fused a "request" by the mlll­tary command to flre half of hlS 18-member cablnet, and the generals then launched the coup.

Sangad told a natlonWlde televlslon audlence Tanln's pledge to restore democracy by 1992 was too ponderous, and he pledged to hold a general elec­tlon next year.

In the meantlme, Sangad banned polltlcal gatherlngs and hoardlng, and promlsed to lmprove the economy and lnter­nal secunty.

The coup appeared peaceful althouqh troops patrolled Bang­kok streets.

PAGE 2

former Korean CIA Agent Testifies On Koreagate

~ASHINGTON (UPI) -- A former Korean CIA agent tolrl the House EthlCS Commlttee today he was 1nformed 1n 1975 that a hlgh offlclal of Connress and a Presldentlal asslstant were lnvolved In "the Tongsun Park affan "

The vntness, testlfYlno at the panel's second daY of hearlnos on alleoed Korean efforts to buy lnfluence ln Congress, sald hlS 1nformat1on came from Hancho Klm, a Korean-born bus1nessman who - llke rlce dealer Parr - has been lndlcted by a federal orand Jury

The wltness, Klm Sang Keun, made the co~~ents under ouestloning and was not asked lm~edlately to ldentlfy the Conqresslonal offlclal and the I,'hlte House assistant he talked about

In yest2rday'~ openlno seSSlon, testlmony by Klm Sanq Keun and others suggested that Korea's dlplomats, ltS CIA agents and even Presldent Park Churg Hee were in on efforts to buy lnfluence on Capltol ~lll ln the 1970s.

Rut speclal counsel Leon Jaworski made clear therp would be no namlng of Congress­men alleoedly lnvolved untll the next phase of ~ear1nqS - probably early next year

Klr, reSUmlnq testimony today, sald he spoke to Hancho Klm by phone Aprll 20, 1Q75. He sald Klm asked hlm then lf he knew any­thino ~~out Tonqsun Park, the central flgure In the alleqed scandal, and told hlm that "the Tonqsun Park affalr lS very compl1-

Pan Am Cuts Trans-Pacific Air fares In Half for '18

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Pan Amencan World Alrways sald today lt plans to cut the cost of trans-Paclflc travel In half next year by lntroduclng ln that area the same sort of budget fares now offered between New York and London.

The new fare plan would reduce the prlce of scheduled, reserved-seat fllghts to Tokyo to as llttle as $259 from the U.S malnland and $199 from Hawall

Pan Am sald lt lntends to start selllng Paclflc budget tlckets lmmedlately, subject to approval by U Sand forelgn governments, even thouqh the flrst fllghts under the new fare are not scheduled to take place untll Jan 15.

The alrllne sald the new advance-re­servation budget fares wlll be offered on fllghts llnklng New York, Los Angeles, San Franclsco, Portland and Seattle w1th Bang­Kok. Guam, Hong Kong, Manlla, Okinawa, Osaka, Slngapore, Talpe1 and Tokyo.

Perhaps the most lmportant route lncluded ln the new fare proposal lS the one llnk1ng the Unlted States wlth Tokyo.

Pan Am sald ltS budget fare would cut the cost of travel on that route to $349 from New York, a savlng of 49 percent from eXlstlng economy fares; to $259 on fllghts from the West Coast, a savlng of 48 percent; and to $199 on fllghts from Honolulu, a savlng of 51 percent.

cated " D tL 8 I· t· L Under qUestlomng, the wltness sald Hancho ea n , n,ec Ion aw ~~~v:~n;~o~~~ ~:~kn:~~a~~. a Conqressman In- Questioned 8y Condemned Men

Asked lf Klm sald that was "a hlgh of- AUSTIN, TEXAS (UPI) -- Leglslators who flclal of the Congress," the wltness replled, approved a new law provldlng for death by "Yes, thilt's what he sald." lnJectlon sald lt would be a more humane

Asked lf ~lm also sald "an asslstant to system of executlon than the electrlc chalr. the Presldent on the Unlted States" was In- But attorneys for two condemned men volved, the wltness sald, "Yes, that's what complalned yesterday the law was so loosely Hancho Klm sald." drawn lt could allow the cholce of such

Computer Science Group Cuts Ties With Soviets

NEW YORK (UPI) -- Amerlca's largest computer SClence organlzation sald today lt has cut tles wlth the Sovlet Unlon's Academy of SClences because of an "absurd" spYlng charQP aqalnst dlssldent Anatoly Shcharansky and persecutlon of other scientlsts In Russla.

The AssoclatlOn of Computlng r·lachlnery, a non-prof1t oroanlzatlon wlth 35,000 members, broke off relatlons In a letter to Academy of SClences Presldent Anatoly P. Alexandrov.

The letter, released by the Commlttee of Concerned SClentlsts WhlCh lS also a non­proflt group, asked ~lexanarov to lntervene In the unhappy" case of Shcharansky, a 29-year-old computer expert.

The letter, also sent to the SovlPt Unlon's chlef prosecutor ~oman A. Rudenko, saHi Shcharansky has been Jalled on "the absurd and contemptlhle charge of belng an agent of the CIA."

"You must know, academlclan Alexandrov, that the members of your famous Orqanlzatlon, and all SClentlsts and technologlsts of the Sovlet Un1on, beneflt greatly by lnteractlon wlth the world commumty," the letter sald

Judges' Conduct Questioned In Rosenberg Spy Trial

\.I,l\SHl"lGTON (UPI) -- Documents rel atlng to the spy trlal of JUllUS and Ethel Rosen­burg show the trlal Judge had contacts wlth prosecutors before, during and after the trlal t~at sent the souple to the electrlc chalr, lawyers say.

Such contacts are forbldden by law and can lead to lmpeachment of the trlal judge.

The documents were among 30,000 pages of materlal obtalned from the FBI and other sources In a Freedom of Informatlon Act request by Robert Meeropol, the 30-year-old son of t~e couple who has been trYlnn for years to clear hlS parents' name

Some 100 lawyers and law professors who have studled the documents recently urged the Senate and House Judlclary CO~lttees In a jOlnt letter to lnvestlqate the conduct )f Judge Irvlng Kaufman.

palnful substances as antlfreeze and lye for the lethal lnJectlon.

Lawy(rs for two Fort l~orth, Texas, men, Bllly Joe Battle and Kenneth Granvlel, urged the State Court of Crlmlnal Appeals to strlke down the death by lnjectlon law as unconstltutlonal

They sald the leglslature should have speclfled what rrug could be used for executlons.

"Cruel and unusual pUnlshment lS pre­sented as a dlstlnct posslblllty under the present stt'tute," Battle's attorney John Bradt sa 1 d. "I t perml ts the dlrector of the Texas Department of Correctlons to use antifreeze 1 f he wants to "

Granvlel 's attorney, Frank W. Sulllvan, sald TDC dlrector, W J Estelle Jr., lndlcated he nlans to use sodlum penathol but Sulllvan sald he was afrald of the cholce other offlclals mlght make.

Both attorneys, however, sald thelr cllents were not eager to face the electrlc chalr elther.

"My cllent lS not anxlOUS to go elther way," Brady sald

Howard Fender, Asslstant Tarrant County Distrlct Attorney, sald defense lawyers would challenge the death penalty law no matter how speclflc the statute was.

Fender sald detalls of executlons should be left to prlson offlclals and courts should lntervene only lf authorltles select some lnhumane, palnfu1 substance such as lye In lnJectlOns.

American Vets ~eturn To Site Of W W" Leyte Battle

MANILA, THE PHILIPPINES (UPI) -- About 50 Amerlcan veterans of World War II return­ed today to the central PhlllpP1nes to commemorate the 33rd annlversary of Gen. Douglas MacArthur's landlng on the beach at Leyte.

The Amerlcans were accompanled by 200 other veterans of the Allled Forces, lncludlng a large nu~ber of Flllplno veterans, a representatlon from Australla, former members of a Mexlcan flghter squad­ron and a delegatlon from Japan In what was bllled as a reunlon for peace.

Ceremonles at the landlng slte lncluded the dedlcatlon of the MacArthur 11emonal.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977

WORLD NEWS BRIEfS WASHINGTON (UPI) -- The Admlnlstratlon

yesterday formally announced that the Shah of Iran wlll V1Slt Presldent Carter at the Whlte House next month.

The announcement conflrmed earller re­ports that the Shah was plannlng a Washlng­ton V1Slt. It w1ll be the flrst meetlng between the two

Press Secretary Jody Powell sald Carter had lnvlted the Shah for a state V1S1t Nov. 15 and 16. The Presld('l1-:' 1'. "lsC' scheduled to meet wlth the Shah on hlS trlp next month to Tehran

*** CLEVELAND (UPI) Prlnce Charles of

England arrlved today to the cheers of about 1,000 persons, lncludlng one woman who spoke to hlm ln ~elsh. Then the Prlnce klssed another woman whose mother was born ln Bntaln.

Prlnce Charles, who flew to Cleveland from Chlcago, offlclally was welcomed to Ohio by Gov James A. Rhodes, Cleveland Mayor Ralph Perk and other state and local offlclals.

*** BONN (UPI) -- The eldest son of slaln

lndustr1allst Hanns-Martln Schleyer charged today the West German government dellber­ately sabotaged payment of a $15 mllllon ransom.

Hans Eberhard Schleyer, 35, sald the government purposely leaked detalls on how, where and when he was gOlng to hand over the money.

Instructlons for paylng the ransom came ln telephone messages last Frlday, he sald.

Asked who he belleves the leak, the son said. a dellberate leak by the

responslble for "It lias probably federa 1

government. Thelr whole concept was to galn tlme."

*** TOKYO (UPI) -- A South Korean Army

offlcer today "came over" to North Korea across the Demllltarlzed Zone (DMZ) separatlng the two Koreas along wlth hlS wlreless operator, North Korea's offlclal news agency reported

The Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) sald ln a broadcast, monltored ln Tokyo, the two crossed the central sector of the Demllltarlzed Zone.

The broadcast ldentlfled the offlcer as Lt Col Yu Un Hak, Commander of the Flrst Battallon, 69th ReOlment, 20th D1V1Slon of the South Korean Army.

The other defector was identlfled as 1S Pfc. 0 Bong Ju, Yu's wlreless operator, lt sald.

*** NASSAU, BAHAMAS (UPI) -- Queen Ellza­

beth opens the Bahamas Parllament today, announclng the policles of Prlme Mlnlster Lynden O. Plndllng's new government for the next year

The ceremony, wlth the Queen seated on a speclally-bullt throne in the Senate, marks the flrst tlme ln the 248-year hlstory of the Bahamas Parllament that the leglslatlve seSSlon has been opened by a rullng Brltlsh monarch.

It lS the maln event on the Queen's second and flnal day here and the hlgh-11ght of the royal V1Slt.

*** WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Legal actlon has

been started by the Immlgratlon and Naturallzation Servlce agalnst four alleged NaZl war crlmlnals who have been livlng ln the Unlted States Slnce the end of World War II, Rep. Joshua Ellberg, D-Penn­sylvan1a, said yesterday.

Ellberg sald Israell eyewitnesses to war crlmes have been brought to the Unlted States especlally for the deport­atlon and denaturallzatlon hearlngs.

***

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Presldent Carter means lt when he says he wlll cancel his nlne-natlon global trlp next month to rlde herd on Congress lf lt falls to com­plete a comprehensive energy program by then, top aldes say.

Carter's trlp to four contlnents lS scheduled to begln Nov. 22. But he sald he thlnks Congress wlll produce an acceptable energy bl11 before then

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977

He chopped and chopped but it grew higher and higher

Concorde Is No' An Ogre by Edward K. DeLong

WASHINGTON, (UPI) -- If the Concorde superson1c transport has not proved 1tself the most welcome nelghbor to those who live near Washlngton's Dulles A1rport, nelther has lt turned out to the ogre some had feared.

Slxteen months of landlngs and takeoffs at Dulles have estab-11shed wlthout questlon that the Anglo-French SST lS a n01sy alr­plane.

Its average takeoff roar of 119.4 effectlve perceived nOlse dec1bels lS more than tWlce that of the nOlSlest subson1c. but Sllghtly less than had been pred1cted.

Its landlng nOlse--116.5-- lS exactly the pred1cted level and qUleter than some of the loudest subsonlC alrcraft.

A total of 969 Concorde arrlvals and departures from May 24. 1976, through the end of September 1977 produced 1,387 complalnts from alrport nelghbors about nOlse, vlbrat10n, frightened ch11dren or anlmals and other dlsturbances.

Just one famlly, however, produced 7 percent of those com­plalnts and e1ght fam111es accounted for about 20 percent of the total. Many people who 11ve or work near the a1rport reported they qU1t notlc1ng the Concorde's passage after the novelty wore off.

Cr1tlcs had predicted the thunder of the SST's eng1nes would cause maJor structural damage to bUlld1ngs near the flagpath. There were two cla1ms of damage that prompted 1nvestlgat10n dur1ng the 16-month tr1al at Dulles--a cracked plcture wlndow and cracks 1n a carport floor.

But government eng1neers found the SST nOlse was too weak to have been the culpr1t and sald structural settllng of new founda­t10ns was the more llkely cause. Elght other damage complalnts were received dur1ng the tr1al perlod, but none was substant1ated.

U.S. Space Agency enq1neers measured structural V1brat10n 1n the hlstorlc Sully Plantat10n, adJacent to the runway used by the SST at Dulles, and 1n three homes under the fllght path 1n Mary­land because of concern the Concorde's extra low frequency sound m1ght cause problems.

They found the SST caused more VlbratlOn than other a1rcraft, but less than many rout1ne household events such as c10s1ng doors and w1ndows. The vibrat10ns, wh11e not1ceable, were well below levels that would cause damage to bU11d1ngs, they sald.

Only one son1C boom was recorded--caused on June 20, 1976 by an Alr France Jet that delayed too long slowlng down as 1t ap­proached the U.S. coast--but no one on the ground notlced enough d1sturbance from 1t to repor-t It.

NOlse lS Concorde's worst enemy, but to ltS crltlcs 1t is by no means the only one.

Some said SST exhaust would damage the ozone layer of the upper atmosphere WhlCh screens out cancer-causlng u1travlolet radlatl0n from the Sun. SC1entists concluded no such damage can be shown.

There were predictlons the SST could not safely fly a Paris­to-Washlngton route and retaln enough fuel to go to an alternate alrport ln an emergency. Operat10na1 experlence proved that fear groundless.

There were claims the SST would reouire soeclal handlinq bv a1r trafflC controllers, dtstractlng them and posslbly endangering other craft. After moAtbs of fllghts, the Dulles control tower ch1ef reported the SST was 'belng treated as "Just another ai r­plane."

Alrllne offiClals sald the SSTs were maklng money if the fllghts to Washlngton were cons1dered by themselves, but they acknowledged they could not make the $3.5 bl11lon Concorde program a flnanc1al success untl1 they were allowed to serve New York's busy alr travel hub--Kennedy Alrport.

PAGE 3

Israel figll,s Arab Boyco" by Joseph W. Gr~gg

LONDON (UPI) -- The 30-year-old Arab economlC boycott agalnst Israel lS beglnnlng to leak at the seams--wlth a hefty asslst from recent U.S. antlboycott leglslat10n, accord1ng to the Israell offlc1al who leads his country's battle agalnst It.

But, he says, Israel st111 is campalqnlng hard to get Euro­pean countrles--partlcularly the nlne Conmon r~arket members--to J01n the Unlted States and Canada In res1st1ng the boycott. "The leg1s1atlon signed by Presldent Carter 1n June was a real breakthrough," says Dan Halperin, a young Israel1 off1c1al who holds the dual Job of deputy dlrector general of hlS country's finance m1nlstry and d1rector of its ant1boycott bureau.

"It was a breakthrough because, for the first time, 1t gdve Amer1can companles a protectlve sh1eld they lacked. If they are accused by Arabs of breaches of the boycott, they now can say thlS lS not thelr own POllCY but U.S. government policy," he sa1d.

Halperln took tlme out durlng a br1ef London stopover on hlS way back home from antiboycott talks In Wash1ngton to outllne what Israel is doing to f1ght the boycott.

The boycott, clamped down by the Arabs after the Jew1sh State was proclalmed In 1948, or1g1nally was deslgned to br1ng about Israel's econom1C strangulatlon by preventlng other countr1es from d01ng buslness wlth It. Compan1es defYlng the boycott were "bl ackllsted" by the Arabs.

But Halperln says it had llttle effect before the 1973 Yom K1ppur War and the Mlddle East 011 crlS1S.

"It was only then," he sald, "that many U.S. and European companles showed hesltatlon about dOlng bus1ness w1th us because of thelr 1nterests In the 011 countrles. That was why Israel set up 1 ts ant1 boycott bureau to f1 ght the boycott."

Halperln sald the recent U.S. ant1boycott legls1atlon was "a b1g step 1n the nght dnect10n."

"We hope the U.S. government wlll see to lt that the splnt of the law lS adhered to," he sald.

He sald recent Canadlan antiboycott regulatlons also are "encouraging." He descrlbed a French antlboycott law as "very sat 1 s factory" and noted that an ant1 boycott blll a 1 so 1 s belng submltted to the Britlsh Parllament.

"We are now concentratlng our maln efforts on publlC oplnlOn In the Umted States and Europe," Halpenn sald.

"We have found from expenence that in the Umted States ln particular lt lS publlC oplnlon that has to be awakened, because usually 1t reacts strongly when lt hears that Amer1can compan1es are belng d1ctated to from outside."

Halperln sald the Arab boycott lS masterm1nded from a central offlce 1n Damascus, headed by Mohammed Mahgoub, an Arab League off1c1al. But he sa1d there are b1g dlfferences In the way 1t 1S enforced In dlfferent Arab countrles.

"The toughest are Iraq and L1bya," he sa1d. "Egypt, Saudl Arab1a. Syrla and the gulf states are less strlct. It 1S not clear whether A1ger1a applles It. Tunlsla and Morocco never have app11ed it at all."

Ha1perJn sa1d there are no re11ab1e f1gures for the number of compan1es "blackl1sted" because they do bus1ness wlth Israel or have Israel1 or Jew1sh connections. Estlmates, he sa1d. have ranged between 2,000 and 10,000.

Mahgoub hlmself has glven the f1gure of 4,000, he sa1d, "but we have no real means of check1ng th1S."

PRIMARY, SECONDARY AND TERTIARY BOYCOTTS A book to be published October 31 In New York (Random House)

says the Arabs have used "prlmary," "secondary," and "tert1aty" boycotts In the1r attempt to strangle Israel economlcally.

The book, "the economic war against the Jews," was wntten by two London-based WrJ ters: Terence PrJ ttl e, a former Br1 t1 sh fore1gn correspondent for the newspaper the Guard~an, and Walter Henry Nelson, a New Yorker and former new ed1tor of Radlo Free Europe In r'1un1ch. He now llVes 1n Londono

The "pnma ry" boycott. Prl tt le and Nelson exp 1 al n, "cons 1 s ts of the refusal by the Arabs to trade W1 th I s rae 1 1 n any way."

The "secondary" boycott, they say, "lS almed at companles that lnvest In or do bus1ness w1th Israel. By v101atlng the ex­tens1ve, confuslng and often contradlctory boycott regulat10ns, they are subJect to black11st1ng, WhlCh means excluslon from Arab ma rkets."

A "tertiary" boycott, Pnttle and Nelson explaln, operat1ng in "thl'rd" countrles, "threatens f1 rms trad1ng w1th anyone who does buslness with Israe1--even wlth companles that have 'Z10n­lStS' (read 'Jews') on the1r boards or 1n executive pos1tlons.

"What emerges," they say. "lS a plcture of the world buslness communlty be1ng held to ransom by a small group of countnes."

Thousands of flrms, they say, partlcularly 1n the Un1ted States but also In Europe, have rece1ved demands from the Arabs telllng them to fill In forms conflrmlng they have no Israell or Jew1sh connect10ns.

Others, they say, before d01ng buslness wlth Arab countr1es, are requlred to obtaln certlflcates from Arab embassles or con­sulates conflrmlng they do not do bus1nesS w1th Israel and have no Jewlsh connectlons.

Fa11ure to f11e such forms or certlflcates, they say, often means the firms are placed on the Arab blackllst.

Halperin sald a growlng number of companles who do buslness w1th Israel also are be1ng allowed to do so wlth frab CQUntrles desplte the boycott. A recent example, he sald, was the Coca­Cola Company, WhlCh has been allowed to reopen 1n Egypt after be1ng on the Arab black11st for 12 years.

"The Arabs seem to permlt thlS when lt appears to be to then advantage," he sald. "There has been no declared change 1n Arab boycott P011CY. But they do seem to be implementing 1t more elastlcally and wlth more loopholes--always provldlng thlS lS to their advantage." .

PAGE 4

Global Associates Presents Service A wards

C. H. (Gus) Sonderman, Manager, Admin~strat~ve Serv~ces, recently presented Global Assoc~ates Serv~ce Awards to several employees for the~r long and devoted serv~ce on KwaJale~n. Front row, left to r~ght: M~les FUJ~moto, F~nance, f~ve years, Wally Sam­pagna, F~nance, ten years; Lester Ruben, Av~on~cs, f~ve years. Not p~ctured: N. R. B~rkler, Av~at~on, ten years; J. L~mos, Av~at~on, f~ve years.

Back row, left to r~ght: Bob Drake, Sonderman, Don Carr~ngton.

New 11 Law Estab'ishes 200·Mi'e Fishery Zone

(MNS) -- H1gh Comm1SS1oner Adr1an P. W1nkel Tuesday slgned 1nto law a major p1ece of leg1slat1on Wh1Ch w1ll establ1sh a 200-m1l e f1shery zone for the Trus t Ter­ritory.

"There lS no questlOn," W1nke1 sa1d at the slgnlng ceremony, "that th1S 1eg1s1a­t10n lS probably the most slgn1ficant pass­ed ty the spec1a1 sesslOn" of the Congress of ~11crones1a.

After July 1, 1979, no fore1gn f1sh1ng may be perm1tted 1n the terr1tor1a1 sea and f1shery zones of M1crones1a except by val-1d and app11cab1e perm1ts lssued by the M1croneS1an Mar1tlme Authorlty, or In com­p11ance w1th fore1gn flshlng agreements approved by the Congress of ~llcronesla by a reso1utlon. "

The bl11 sets flnes rang1ng from $50,000 for v101at1ons of f1sh1ng permit provls1ons to $250,000 for bod11y lnJury to any TT law enforcement off1cla1. TT courts are also empowered to 1mpound any vessel, gear, supp11es and catch of any offendlng for­elgn flshermen.

Prov1s1on lS also made for separate Jurlsdlctlon over D1str1ct waters by D1str1ct author1t1es, should a Dlstr1ct not want the TT-Wlde Author1ty to adm1n1s­ter the area. Any D1str1ct that secedes from M1cronesla could reta1n Jur1sdlct1on over ltS f1shery zone, the b1ll prov1des.

The 1eg1s1at1on perm1ts the new1y-auth­orlzed M1crones1an Mar1tlme Author1ty to make d1rect contact w1th var10US flsh1ng compan1es, lssue perm1ts for f1sh1ng and to estab11sh and enforce regu1atlons for the regu1at1on and conservat1on of var10US specles of mar1ne resources found ln M1-croneSlan waters.

Kwa; 1911 V.f. W. Poppy Gir'

Shelly We~ssner, 8, daughter of Capt. and Mrs. Jeffrey T. We~ssner, has been selected as the 1977 V.F.W. Poppy G~rl for KwaJale~n. A number of contestants part~­c~pated through sub=ss~on of the~r photo­graphs and entry forms. All entr~es were Judged by an ~mparUal panel of Judges on Wednesday.

Shelly, a 3rd grade student at George Se~tz School, w~ll accompany local V.F.W. members on Sa turday and Sunday, October 22 and 23, as they sell Buddy popp~es, wh~ch are manufactured for the V.F.W. by d~s­abled veterans. Proceeds from th~s annual effort are marked for use ~n veterans' ass~stance programs.

t

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, - Clip and Say

'ab,sitter List RestrIctIVe Hours

Name Ase Schoolnl2hts lIeekends Phone

lfnda Hayes Adult Lunch hour for school 84569 Patty Geneva)' Adult 82208 He 1 ene Munger Adult 82776 OeeOee Beer 14 10 30 none 83674 Ca ro 1 yn !A.ron 11 1000 11 30 82602 GIna Cox 12 none none 83624 KIm Cox 14 none none 83624 BettIna ElStoIIan 14 11 00 none 82342 carolyn Eck 12 11 00 none 82209 CeCe Fox 14 11 30 none 82687 Kim Genevay 15 none none 82208 Karen Godlcl 15 none none 84455 MIchele HaskIns 11 none none 83621 !Athy Ho 1 thaus 13 aftemoons 12 00 82202 Sherry Ho 1 thaus 101, afternoons 12 00 82202 CIndy Hufflllan 121; 1000 12 00 82337 Jay Hughes 13 1000 12 00 82774 DebbIe KIefer 12 none none 82729 S ... ron Kiefer 14 none none 82729 LorI Koppenhaver 14 none none 82308 Jeff Linder 12 1000 12 00 82406 JIm LInder 14 11 00 none 82406 Joyce LI nder 14 11 00 none 82406 Bob Marks 13 11-00 none 84486 Hike Mart,n 13 1000 none 82241 Robbl.e McL«ughl in 13 none none 84578 Denise Mel san 15 none none 82766 Gayle Sth1ueter 15 1100 none 82349 Steve Smee 14 10 00 none 81928 BrIan Smoot 11 jus t weekends 82357 Kelly Smoot 14 1000 none 82357 Michelle Sahl 121; none none 82857 Brenda Sweetland 13 none none 82765 111 RIppey 14 10 30 none 82723 Andrea Van lIetta 15 none none 83737

The Y Y W C provIdes this hst of names of KwaJaleHI young people who are interested In babYSItting as a courtesy to all Island reSIdents. SInce It Is iqlOsslble to lIst each chfld's experIence in this area, WI! suggest that parents fallow their own guldelfnes In securIng a sItter

Cooperation Helps Ser,ice

1977

Telephone service on a party 11ne de­pends on the cooperat1on of all subscrib­ers on that line. Party line users are ask­ed to be considerate in using their phones so as not to interfere with the serV1ce of others.

Party line subscribers must always be aware that when they tie up the 11ne for extended periods by either uSlng the phone or leaving the instrument off thp hoo~, they are also busying the line so that the sharing party cannot receive or orlq1-nate calls.

A good po1lcy to remember is that the sharing party may have off1c1a1 or emer­gency use; accord1ng1y, each call, incom­ing or outgoing, must be limited to a reasonable duration.

14hen d1a1ing or US1ng party 11ne ser­Vlce, please be courteous and cooperat1ve with your fellO\'I subscr1ber. ~~ake sure that all instruments are hung up.

Nhen makinq a call, 11ft the rece1ver and be sure the 11ne 1S not in use. If you hear dialing clicks, the r1nging Slo­na1 or voices, you know the 11ne lS 1n use. If you are ta1klng and another party corres on tl,e line, let rim knobl, in a courtpous Manner, tllat t'1e 11 ne ic; i'l LlSC'.

All personnel ",ill it11l'leciiate1y rF.11'l­(1uish the party line II/hen infon"ec tilat an emergency eX1sts.

The telephone eouipment at this 1nsta1-1ation has been provided for the purpose of transactlng offic1al business. Personal or unofficial use is considered secondary. If service abuse occurs, telephone serV1ce can be terminated. The b1ll d1d not mentlOn the lssue of

tuna f1sh1ng, defin1ng 1nstead ~lcrones1an JUrlSd1ct1on w1th1n the zone "to the ex­tent perm1tted by 1nternat1ona1 law." G'oba' Management C'ub Members Comp'ete Course The 1eg1s1at1on now satisf1es the U.S. Wh1Ch has argued 1n the U.N. Law of the Sea conferences that tuna f1sh1ng should not be regulated by any f1sh1ng natlOn.

The b111 proh1b1ts M1crones1an nego­tlat10ns of flshery agreements w1th for­e1gn nat1ons, and 1nstead allows the U.S. to negot1ate on M1crones1a's behalf. Such dea11ngs by the U.S., however, would re­qU1 re concurrence by the Congress of M1-croneS1 a.

Loolc for White E'ephants On the theory that "one person's Junk

lS another person's treasure," the "I,ite Elephant Comm1ttee for Ho11C'flY f3azaar urges KwaJ res1nents to look around Quar­ters and pat10s to find thOSf "I can't use 1t, but 1t'S too (lood to throl" a~/ay" 1 tern!'. The commi ttee 1-/111 l,/e 1 come all these ",,/"it~ elep~ants" for then tah1e at the Bazaar. Drop donations off at Chr1s 'funter's (luarters, 1M, or Gerry Corey's (1uarters, ~87-P. -

Several members of the Global Manaqemer.t Club, a chapter of N.M.A., recently rece~ved NMA Ach~evement Awards for successful complet~on of the NMA course, "Batten - Tough­M~nded Management." Shown, left to r~ght: Gordon S~mpson, John B. Dav~s, Allen Ventura, Joseph Plouffe, Ken C. Holt, Bob McLaughl~n and Hal Russell. Not p~ctured: Art H~gh, Rod Lechner, Roll~e Cavan, Robert He~n, Don McLearen, Robert Terefenko, Ken Moriuchi and D~SCUSSlon Leader Henry Lum.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977

ANN

LANDERS DEAR ANN· I work for a large supermarket

Your Individual Horoscope

==== Frances Drake======~~=== FOR FRIDAY, OcrOBER 21, 1977

What kind of day Will tomorrow be? To fun out what the stars say, read the forecast given for your btrth SIgn

curately as usual Better double-check I On the perllOll8l Side, romance and travel favored

chaln, as a dell manager. I enjoy my job, AR~ ~~ which lS glving customers free samples of (Mar 21 to Apr 20) ~

SCORPIO '*<"_ ( Oct 24 to Nov 22) JIl, f"IH""'

Some ungovernable momenta uxilcated, but you can handle With your native mtelligence and astuteness Just be sure to keep emotiOOll under control

d . Give collSlderauon to K1eas cheese, spreads, an p1eces of salaml and and methods that "clicked" other goodi es. before, and could agam Add a

Unfortunately, some people don't reallZe bit of glamor to presentations a sample lS not a free lunch. It is a TASTE Be optlDUSbc of the product offered -- a gilllTlick to ac- r:"~~StoMaY21) ~g qualnt the customer with the flavor. Many Favorable Venus influences times I have mi ssed my coffee breaks to cut give you many advantages, but salaml up in cubes, only to have customers you mwrt proawte your own grab handful s and send the k1 ds back four mterests to keep the ball rollmg, and flYe tlmes. Ii course Romance m !ugh

When I put a tray of cheese spreads on ~~ ft~ top of the counter, some customers gobble (May 22 to June 21) ~ 1 ike pl gs, drop cheese on my bread and rolls MlXed mfluences All ac-and smear cheese on my showcase w1ndow. uVlbes W1ll have to be well-

My POlnt is this: ENJOY! TASTE! If you orgamzed before you can

h d proceed effiCIently Emphasize

llke w at you have taste, buy some, take lt composure, good Judgment, home, and gobble and stuff yourself tlll you delicacy of approach bust. Feed your grandch11dren seconds, CANCER 8~ thlrds and fourths if you 11ke -- and smear (June 22 to July 23) "t-I 1 tall over YOUR Wl ndows. -- Dell Lady Think constructively and

reckon With all po881ble con-VEAR VEL I: One a 6 the but way.6 to meM - bngencles before takmg on new

h enterpnses In fact, day will be

U/[.e people ,w to watc.h t e way they behave better for roubne matters than when Mmetfung 6Jtee -w 066eJLed. Than/v., 60Jt for unusual ventures .f.a.y-<-ng d out -<-n .6uc.h p-<-uU/[.uque .f.a.nguage. LEO n ~ I6 anyone who Jtead6 thl.6 -w wondeJUng .i6 (July 24 to Aug 23) ""~ VeL[ Lady -w Wlung about you -- .6he plWb- Stellar mfluences stunulate

SAGITI'ARIUS ,~ (Nov 23 to Dec. 21) )/IfICf"

A good day for attauliq one of your cherished goals Someone behind the scenes 18 worktng m your mterests CAPRICORN t--\( (Dec 22 to Jan 20) 'VJ\U('

A fine day for teamwork Many useful Ideas wtll result from an exchange of VieWS with assoC18tes Some good news mdlcated m the p m AQUARIUS ~~ (Jan 21 to Feb 19) -~

A down-to-earth attitude needed Don't let yourself be drawn mto a wlurlwmd of rumor and speculation - now rife m many quarters PISCES )( ({';;:;v (Feb 20 to Mar 20) ~

Don't let surface ghtter beguile you Search for facts before accepting any proposItion - no matter how rosy It sounds

ably ,w. your strength of purpose and willmgness to plough through YOU BORN TODAY have a rough terram and up steep tremendous sense of respon­

DEAR ANN LANDERS· Pl ease answer thl s 1 n "hills" Plan for better slblhty, W1ll work more than your column. I'm sure a great many people tomorrows ordmarlly hard for gamful would apprec1ate the lnformation as well as (VIRAugG024 to Sept 23) np\.A returns, and expect them to

1 f -;a. mater18llze, also W1ll work for myse . Give your 1mBgmatlon a bit llttle or notiung when you know

Is there any number to call -- any place more rem now You have all the you are truly helplllg a wor-where a person can report chi ld abuse and tools needed for success, so go thwblle cause You are ver-not have to 1 dentl fy hl mse 1 f? I know of a forward - confidently hopeful satlle, have a talent for mUSlC, sltuatlon that breaks my heart but the of all outcomes wrttmg,probablyforsketchmg,

t b th 1 t d I 1 d LIBRA n pambng or deslglling Btrthdate paren s are 0 c ose 0 me an wou (Sept 24 to Oct 23):0: of AlfredNobel,founderofthe Just dle lf they found out I turned them In. You may not sIZe up oc- Nobel Prize, Samuel T

I'm sure so many more people would cooper- cupabonal Sltuabons as ac- Coleridge,Eng poet ate Wl th the a uthorl t 1 e s if th ey knew they ===:.....:==:=:-.=-....::::.~..:::::::::.:::2::!:...=:~!::.:=--__ _

could do lt secretly. Thank you for your (I) help, Ann. -- Want To Help But Afrald ~ V

DEAR AFRAID: EVeJLy .6tate o66eJt.6 pJtotec.-.uon 60lt the abw.,ed c.Wd tMough ill loc.at du1..d wel6a1te depM:tment. A c.onc.eJLned nugh­bolt OIL lte1iLttve c.an JtepoJr...t a C.M e 06 c.fu1..d abw.,e anonymow.,ly.

In Itt-<-no-w, you c.ould c.at.e. the VepM:tment 06 ChddJz.en and Fanu..iy SeJLv-<-c.u. Many Ut­-<-u have hot--fA..nu 60Jt .unmeckate ac.t<.on. Chec.k. wUh yoU/[. local c:U.6ttuu atioJtney Olt c.fUe6 06 po-fA..c.e -<-6 the telephone opeJcJLtoJt cannot g-<-ve you the numbeJL.

DEAR ANN LANDERS May I respond to "Kln Of Robert E. Lee" now that my blood pressure lS back to normal?

Vlrglnla happens to occupy a central space on our Eastern Seaboard and we are con­sldered Easterners -- NOT Southerners.

I don't know what kind of characters "Kln" has been hanging out w1th, but I have been to New York several tlmes and I have yet to hear anyone say, "Look at the pretty bOlds," or "Where lS the terlet?"

Ignorant people can be found in every part of the country. It all depends on wlth whom one keeps company. -- No Snob, Just Factual

DEAR FACTUAL· fUght you alte. "K-<-n" daJr.n­ed nealt .6taJtted anotheJL C~vit Walt. The mo~t outJtaged JteadeJt.6 wJtote 6IWm BattimoJte, Md. and Ratugh, N. C.

(Hang on to yoU!t Con6edeJLate money, boy.6, the South wdl !Lv.. e agiUn! )

CONFIDENTIAL To Not Laughlng: Nobody says you have to laugh, but a sense of humor can be a llfe-saver when you bump up agalnst the type of sltuatlon you are fac1ng. It can help you overlook the unattract1ve, tol­erate the unpleasant and cope wlth the unex­pected. Laughter and tears are often separ­ated by a very thln llne ... and lt'S always better to laugh than cry.

* * * Have problems that need to be dlscussed wlth someone else? Mall your questlon with a stamped, self-addressed envelope to ANN LANDERS,P.O. Box 11995, Chlcago, Ill. 60611

AIR TIME PROGRAM KWAJALEIN Tonight 3 00 7 00 BARETTA 4 00 8 00 SPORTS (tba)

Fnday

R. T.

52 05 150 00

3 00 7 00 ADAM 12 26·23 3 28 7.28 CHICO AND THE MAN 27 37 4 00 8 00 FALL OF EAGLES 55 34 5 00 9 00 DEPARTMENT "S" 52 38 6·00 10·00 I Spy 53 17 -----------------------------------------ROI-NAMUR Tonlght 3·00 7:00 ADAM 12 25 12 3 27 7·27 CHICO AND THE MAN 26 57 4 00 8:00 FALL OF EAGLES 56·43 5 00 9·00 DEPARTMENT "S" 53 12 6 00 10 00 I Spy 53 21

Fn dai'. 3 00 7 00 BAR ETTA 53:09 4 00 8 00 SPORTS (tba~ 150·00

MOVIES Tom ght

RICHARDSON----FOREVER FEMALE-----------PG MECK ISLAND---THE LAST PICTURE SHOW-----R YOKWE YUK-----7 00 THE FIVE PENNIES-----G

9 ~O, 12 30 THE CAR------PG IVEY HALL-----6 30 THE KINGDOM OF

CROOKED MIRRORS------G 8 30 THE LAST HARD MEN----R

TRADEWINDS----THE CHAMPAGNE MURDERS-----R Fnday

-RICHARDSON----TNT JACKSON---------------R MECK ISLAND---MAN ON A SWING-----------PG YOKWE YUK-----OUTLAW BLUES-------------PG IVEY HALL-----THE FIVE PENNIES----------G TRADEWINDS----ORCA---------------------PG

MOTION PICTURE ASSOCIATION RATINGS G-- General Audlences PG- Parental GUldance Suggested R-- Restr1cted, persons under 17 not ad­

mltted unless accompanled by an adult

PAGE 5

AfRS AM e 1220 Radio effective October 23, J977

Sunday 8: 05 Pro .... ootball TBA.

11:05 East of Lden 11:30 Banners of Fait.'1 12:05 Carmen Dragan 1:05 Sunday Serenade 1: 35 ~1eet the Press, IlBC 2:05 CBS F'eaturee; + ~1U'3l.C 2: 35 Issues & Anr,- ~r<;, AOC 3: 05 I.Dve an the Rock 3:35 t:'ace the Nahan, CBS 4:05 Bill SW1art 6:00 Everu.ng News Ieport 6: 10 Srorts Scorehoard

tix., Bulletin Board 6: 30 Grand Ole c.pry 6:55 The Unexplainable 7: 05 THE CrosBY YEArs (ne<,,) 8:05 ~~lden Da'!s of Radio 8:30 Playhouse 25 8: 55 ])(N DRYST"IALE 00 SPORTf' (re- J) 9: 05 l.dventure Theatre 9: 30 TOO "Nhi c;tler

10:05 Bl.g Band Countdo ... 'l1.

11:05 Jeanl.e ~~lls 12: 00 ~'ol'3 Headll.nes 12: 02 SllTUlca.st AH and !'"'~ til 6 A 1 ----~~'7S (N THE HOOP----------

Monday thru Fr1d~ 6 : O~ CDrrEE BPEAK (ne J) 6: 30 I1ml'> 6:37 Jun Denny til q 6:50 'bminq Ne;/S Report:

CBS T'irc;t Line P.erort, Neils, Spts., Tbc., ens ~ewsBreal(

7:50 r£ne S,.alit, NBC 8: 00 Earth ~1e Ie; 8: 15 Paul Harvey ~e' IS, l>BC 8:4() 'eet the Cook, cns 8: 56 Bulletin Board 9:00 All Things Considered , ~~R

10:05 r~ne Prl.CC 11:05 TInaer Carroll 1l:30--~:ed Only: '~arshallee;e Hr. 12:0a Neon Report

Sport'?, ~'x. 12: 20 "rtist of t..'1e Day 12: 3fJ Jlrrenean ':lisco

1:'15 nan ':'racy MONDAY-Pro Football 2: 05 Ed thshihara til 4

Bch K'\.Ilqslev Fri Only 2: as ','lJ\RY HELEN Bl'RFO (ne") 3: OS

2:30 l'hats Ha~ing, CPS 4:05 Charll.e Tuna 5: 1)5 '''trHe o~ t1-)(> Islands 5:20 Paul Farve" (2nd Ainng) 5:30 Feature 25:

Han - II. Cossell, ~BC' Tue & \ Ted - :'cnreet.1V6, ;\DC TIu:" - CaD. Cl.kRr., CBS 'Pn - Pul:lll.c Policy "arum, 'illS

5:'35 Evenlng News Report Stocks,News. Sports, Wx., Econom1c News, ABC, Newsbreak PM, CBS,Bulletin Board DulletJ.n Board

h:30 Link's Little Ones 'i: 35 TCNn and Countrv 7:'15 Pete 9mith 8:05 ,Tohn Lane til 10

10: 05 Ile1vs Canr-entaries 10: 30 AF'RI'S Srorts Page 10: 35 J1.m De·rter 11:05 f\olfran ,Tack 12: 1)0 Ne'lTS Headlines 12: 02 SJIUlcast An and 1':1 til 6 Al1 -------NElJS CN THE Ham, EXa:PT 8 1\1.'1---

Saturday 6·06 J1m Denny tll 9 6 : 30 ~.JeillS

6: 50 Jlbml.Ilg tIe,1S r1epcrL: CBS F~rst Ll.ne Ferort, 110"5, Spts., ~x., rus NeI'lShrcak College Footbul1 TR~

1i):3n Story Teller 11:05 ~ed ~lLun 12:05 ~neTl.ean Country Countdom

3:05 l~rlcan ~op 40 Ii: ao Evernnsr Ne 1S r.erort 6: 10 ;,rortC1 Scoreboard

~;X., Bulletin Board 1';:30 IlOOPAV mR IIOLLYIDOD (na") 7:05 D~ek Clark 8: I) 5 ,Tohnnv Darl.Il 9:0S ~ Profl.le of •••

10: 05 'ID'-1 CA'''PBELL PIAVPACK (n!?") 12: ('\1') ~le- .• <; Headl1.Ilec; l2: ()2 Slr'lllcast N1 and F"'1 t.l.1 8 .:'.,11

-------tT!'}\TC; (lII THE HCUR-------------

PAGE 6 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1977

Tonight- The Leftovers vs Sun Devils I In Women's Volleyball

The Leftovers Women's Volleyball team from left to r~ght ~n the front row are: Jean W~dd~son, D~ane Landrett~, Lee Allas and Carolyn Hag~hara. In the back row are G~nny F~nk, C~ndy Terw~lll­ger, Jer~ Gramos, D~ane Lull and Joe Caskey. M~ss~ng are: Carol Kapahu and Eleanor Kuratsu.

The Sun Dev~ls I Women's Volleyball team from left to r~ght ~n the front row are: Debb~e Corey, Franc~ne Gouve~a, Lesl~e Bursey and mascot, J.P. Corey. Stand~ng are Coach Charley Valdez, Tanya Haw­k~ns, Iwalan~ Carr, K~m prunest~, D~ane Fellhoelter and Donna Corey.

Women's Sof,ball Action In ~wmen's Softball actlOn yesterday

the Leftovers wlped out the Ms Flts 23 to O. Marlene Bass, Judy Sumter and Juel Partrldge had four hltS each for the Leftovers. Team­mate Carol Kapahu hlt a trlple ln the flfth lnnlng.

Marsha Rockowltz and Marylee Bastlanelll had the only hltS for the Ms FltS.

Women's Sof,ball Schedule ~T~~~GH~un DeVlls vs Over The Hlll Gang

FRIDAY 5·15 Spartans II vs Sunshlne SATURDAY 1:30 Good Tlmes vs Ms FltS 3:00 Sunshlne vs Ralnbows 4.30 Spartans II vs Leftovers SUNDAY 1:36 -Good Tlmes vs Spartans II 3:00 Over The Hlll Gang vs Spartans 4:30 Sunshlne vs Ms Fl ts MONDAY 3:00 "B" League All Stars 4.30 "A" League All Stars TUESDAY 5:15 Spartans II VS Over The Hlll Gang

Men's Sof,ball Resul,s On Dally Fleld yesterday the Benchwarmers

defeated the Sun Devlls II by a score of 8 to 3. Paul Hopklns and D1Ck Whltney came up wlth two hltS each for the Benchwarmers.

The Sun Devlls II had thelr three runs off three hltS, all by Walren George. Vln­cent Cardlllo dld a flne Job at the short­stop posltlono

On Brandon Fleld a close and well played ball game between the Rlders and Kolohe ended wlth the score 4 to 3, the Rlders comlng up Wlnners. Jeff Beckley had a great day at the plate wlth a double and a trlple for three trlps. Chuck Gruebner had two hltS for the Rlders.

The Kolohe team had three hltS for three trlPS from Jlm Sumter and John Padayao connected for a long home run that landed ln the bleachers of the basketball courts. On the defenslve slde Danny Hanakal made a good fleldlng stop, tagged flrst and threw to second for a double play.

(waia/ein Tennis Club The KwaJaleln Tennls Club wl11 have a

short buslness meetlng prlor to Team Tennls on Frlday. -The meetlng wl11 start at 6:30 pm ln the bleachers at the Yuk Tennls Courts. Agenda ltems wlll be nomlnatlon of new Club offlcers and doubles ladders.

Anyone wlshlng to JOln the Club lS more than welcome to attend the meetlng.

List n To AFRS For Sp rts FOOTBALL

So. Cal. vs Notre Dame on Sat. at 5:45 am Cal. vs U.C.L.A. on Sat. at 2:00 pm Baltlmore vs New England on Sun. at 8:00 am Ml nnesota vs Los An ge 1 es on r~on. at 1: 00 pm

Kwaia/ein Bowling Scores WEDNESDAY EARLY BIRD LEAGUE

Women ~Game 191, by Glnny Eastman 2nd Hlgh Game 190, by Pat Thlmsen Hlgh Serles 524, by Barbara Coleman 2nd Hlgh Serles 478, by Mary James Palepa Smlth plcked up the 5-10 & 6-7-10

SplltS. Sue Stegner plcked up the 5-7 Spllt.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT LATE BIRDS Men dlgh Game 191, by Earl Coon 2nd Hlgh Game 186, by Loule Moore Hlgh Serles 524, by Henry Cabasag 2nd Hlgh Serles 521, by Earl Coon Women ,i19h Game 208, by r~arle-Andree l1ston 2nd Hlgh Game 182, by Barbara Coleman Hlgh Serles 524, by Marle-Andree Llston 2nd Hlgh Serles 454, by Barbara Coleman Lynne Moore converted the 5-7 Spllt. Gwen Dlnklns converted the 5-6-10 Spllt.

Bowling Tournamen, Sa,urday Last two days to enter the Bowllng

Tourney. Slgn Up at the KwaJ Bowllng Lanes. Bowllng tlmes are 3·30-5:30 and 7:30 pm.

Team Tennis Resul,s In Team Tennls actlon on the Yuk Courts

last nlght the Luvs and Strung Loose tled at 2-2. For the Luvs, Steve RockoWl tz and Don Mldklff demollshed Sam Hasegawa and Dan Sholar (no score glven); Jlm Scott and Loren Wood edged Normen Sables and Ron Webb 10-8. For Strung Loose Llnda Taylor and Jerry Kaczorowskl trlumphed 10-7 over Joyce Jones and Don Easterday, and Betsy Webb and Kay Sklnner defeated Darlene Dlhel and Mary Lee Bastlanelll, 10-6.

In raln-delayed actlon Debble Lull and Jlm Klefer defeated Fran Lull and Pat Thlm­sen 11-10 to cllnch Double Troubles'3-1 vlctory over the TullpS.

Sun Devils , Boys Spo,'igh,

Steve Smee, Johnny Thomason, Freshman, ~s a E~ghth Grade, plays P~tcher for the Sun Left Center for the Dev~ls I. Sun Dev~ls I.

Men's Softball Schedule TONIGHT Brandon - 5: 15 Is 1 anders vs Leftovers Dally - 5:15 Donkeys vs Drlfters F.{ICAY Brandon - 5: 15 Leftovers vs Retreads Dally - 5:15 Benchwarmers vs Medlcare SATURDAY B randor. - 4: 30 H & H vs Den ve r Don keys Dally - 1:30 Jabre vs Snake Plt

3:00 Plt Vlpers vs Sun Devlls II 4:30 Roadrunners vs Spartans

SUNDAY Brandon -12.00 10-4 vs Snake Plt

1:30 Leftouts vs Oly's 3:00 Leftovers vs Kolohe 4:30 Stlffs vs Retreads

Dally -12:00 Medlcare vs Sun Devlls II 3:00 Sun Devlls I vs Meck Wrecks 4:30 Charge vs Benchwarmers

-12:00 Leftouts vs Donkeys

- 5:15 Rlders vs Stlffs

MONDAY Dally TUESDAY Brandon Dally - 5:15 Plt Vlpers vs Meck Wrecks

(waia/ein Dar' league F1Sh 'n' ChlPS 10 Blue Knlghts 10 F1Sh 'n' ChlPS II 9 Annle's Room 8

Sllm Shots Musketeers Da Tons Snake Plt

4 4 5 6

Player of the Week: Jerry Heavner (Snake Plt) won hlS slngle match, doubled out ln the team match and shot hlgh scores of 125, 105 and 100.

Other Hl L 1 tes: Mac McGoven (Da Tons) 120 Jeff Beckley 96 ln Robble Roblson 72 ln and 100 Jlm Lyle (Blue Knlghts) 125 and 100 Bud Younkln (Annle's Room) 62 out Dlckle LaPOlnte (Da Tons) 105 & 101 Terry Elllott (ChlpS I) 111 Laurle Pachllls (Sllm Shots) 104 Mltch Plrtle (Snake Plt) 101

R1Ck Llston (Musketeers), 8111 Wolett (Mus­keteers) and Dave Nleuwstad (ChlpS II) all had 100.

Team Tennis Schedule FRIDAY 7:00 Pussycats vs Double Faults ~ONDAY 7:00 TullPS vs Lobsters IiEDNESDAY 7:00 Pussycats vs Luvs

NBA Scores WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS

Buffalo Chlcago San AntonlO Denver Los Angeles Golden State Phlladelphla

112 Kansas Clty 107 Houston 114 Boston 133 Mllwaukee 133 Indl ana 116 Seattle 113 Detrolt

SUPPORT SPORTS ON KWAJALEIN!!!

108 103 109 115 120 84 96

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977

o D n y 0.­n

B e e t l e

u r '1

A. o a p p

W e e d s

Be

C i.

(c),

(.{'ou WEI<E PUT HEI<E ON EARTH TO SING 'iOuR 61RD SONGS AND HELP MAKE THE WOI<LD 8EAUTI FUL ...

IN f(ETUk:N THE'! SHOOT AT '{OU WITH B8 GUNS AND SLINGSHOTS!

I WAS JUST AeovrT'O MAK6 A WITHDRAWAL f

I KNOWIAIHAT NOlA/, MR YOU'RE GOIN6 70 TREVOR A5k I NO, I mOO

I ' JUST [JorT fOR.

\ THE SlzABU3

CtJMMISSION I

A '\ ----~ ~'" t:'-;' \

~~~:>@~~

II L-11fL-E'­SfllL-f[7 IN

SHOOI-OUi WlfH IAI11-f-AL-f/~

THAT HAs TO BE THE WORST BARGAIN I'VE HEARo OF IN

ALL MLf LIFE I

by Johnny hart

AND r JUSf 6EAT'YOV 10 IT

UH NO, 51R

I \

PAGE 7 .

"DoNi' WORRY DAD. fM NOr USING RJLISH .• THESE ARE JUST CRAYONS ~

Cl'Osswon/ By Eugene Sheller ACROSS

1 HIatus 4 Slap 8 Scotch caps

1% Most of naval

13 Astnngent 14 Sloth 15 Sur up 16 Large

falcon 18 Fast 20 Rocky hill 21 Citrus

frwt 24 Broom 28 Torpedo­

shaped underwater deVIce

32 Tissue 33 Gone by 34 Musical

study 36 Edgeofa

wound 37 Scotch

land tax 39 Certam

VIOIm sounds

UExpert 43 Geralnt's

WIfe

44 Lobster eggs DOWN 46 Birthmark 1 Sharp 50 Heavy metal spur

Iodide 2 Grand· 55 Most of parental

Sarah 3 Star facet 5& Mme 4 PrISOner

entrance 5 Caucho tree 57 Sacred 6 In favor of

lIDage 7 Measures 58 Alcoholic of length

liquor 8 Small tower 59 Atuca 9 CiIckoo

township 10 Homo 60 Camp sapiens

shelter 11 Woo 61 Homed 17 Sailor

viper (slang) Avg solution time 23 min.

19 High note 22 N T book 23 Habituate 25 Give up

for profit 26 Medley 27 Charts 28 S A rodent Z90ld 30 Word before

bush or mary

31 Paradise 35 Promment 38 Fairy 40 "-ona

Grecian Urn"

42 Overly 45 Correct

copy 47 Portuguese

measure 48Extlnct

WIld ox 49 Coarse

meal 50 CiIshIon 51 Dutch

commune 52 Border 53 Age or

cap 54 Put on

They'll Do It Every Time

TH£ FAST­FOOP CHAIN

COMMERCIALS ARE so

t./VEL'f, so UP-BEAT,

SO P'f'NAMIC

PAGE 8

FOR SALE SEAR's ~-WHEEL BIKE Sandblasted and pa1nt­ed, four years old w1th baskets, $75. Call 83634 after 5 pm or 83434 dur1ng duty hours 204/2t

PATIO w1th detached storage shed. Make offer. Call 83353 days and 82503 even1ngs

204/2t MOTOCROSS BIKE Schw1nn ten speed seat, Motocross ~dle bars, heavy duty r1m 1n the back and a me~lum duty rlm 1n the front w1th a regular 20" t1re ,$25 Also a flshlnq reel, $5 Call 83329 204/2t

HAIIID GUNS ')ml th and l'/esson .44 Magnum revolver, Model 29.2, 6~ In. barrel, n1ckel ~inlsh, red front slght and whlte outl1ne rearslqht, custom tuned act10n, ln wood preservatlve case. Safarlland pistol belt and holster (also, shoulder holster) plus ammun1tlOn ... $600. Colt Python .357 Magnur I

Revolver 6" barrel Double act10n custom tuned for Pollce Marksman Assoclat10n. Mustang custom combat gr1ps and regular factory gr1ps wlth new Safar1land field hol­ster and new duty holster, $475 Sm1th and v!esson "Tarqet Master" Automatlc~ SPL Wadcutter, model 52.2. It has detach­able barrel we1ghts, spare magazlne, bush­lng wrench, spare bushlng plate, wrlst traln1nq welght and box of ammun1t10n, $d50. German Walther PPKS .380 Automat1c P1stol. New w1th three f1nger extens10n magaz1nes, one regular magaz1ne and ut1l1ty case w1th cleamng rod. Make offer l Call 83851 from 9 am to 9 pm. 203/2t

SANSUI 5500 RECEIVER has term1nals for three tape decks, plus Aux and two phono also front panel tape deck w1tr 4 sets of speakers. Two head phones w1th micro­phone, plus four channel un1t (no1se reduct10n un1t) All th1S with high watt output. One year new only $275. Lall 82768. 203/2t

MOVIE PROJECTOR 8 mm regular/sugar-Elmo brand w1th many features. Cost $129 looks qood but we prefer to stay w1th st1ll shots. Yours for only $75. Call 84618

FOLD-A-I,jAY 20" gICYCLE $80 Call 83760 203/2t

11 x 14 ,)HAG MULTI-SHADE GOLD CARPET pad 1ncluderl .. See at 493-A anyt1me. 203/2t

CUHHIIIIG SALE ~1en's, women's,boys' (ages 5-15) cloth1ng. Good cond1t10n and reasonab 1 e pn ces See at 4q3- '\ ThlJrsr'ay and Fr1day, October 20-21 203/2t

BABY PORT-A-CRIR w1th mattress and bumper. lfs. Also sell1ng a back pack for carry-1nq Ch11d, metal fram~, $15 anQ Cosco baby carr1er w1th adjustable handle,$4. Call 82668. 203/2t

FOUND CHILO'S FLIP-FLOPS' 1n good cond1tion Found at the Press p1cn1C Call 82885 and 1dent1fy. 202/3t

SERVICES OFFERED BABYSITTER' Respons1ble 17-year-old glrl very experlenced w1th 1nfants and young ch11dren. Call 82669 and ask for Klm. 203

WANTED AIR-CONDITIONERS' Need two each 19,000 capac1ty A/C, or one each 19,000 and one 13,000 by Nov. 1. Call H-82570. 204/3t

20" BICYCLE: Call H-82774 or \-1-82033. 203

TWO TICKETS TO THE OKTOBERFEST' Call 83475.

MECHANIC I AUTOMOTIVE Appl1cant selected w1l1 perform lubr1cat10n and prevent1ve ma1ntenance on veh1cles and equ1pment used at KMR. Knowledge of automot1ve tools and equ1pment for the repalr of gasol1ne and d1esel eng1nes helpful Must have a current operators llcense and at least two years exper1ence 1n automot1ve ma1ntenance work. Apply to Global Assoc1ates Personnel Off1ce Bldg. 781 203/3t

COMMUNITY NOTICES 'IANDBALL TOURNMENT Anyone 1nterested 1n plaY1ng slngles or doubles call 82484.

204/3t CATHOLIC WOMEN'S CLUB w111 be hold1ng the1r annual p1cn1c w1th the ladles from the Cathol1c Women's Club of Ebeye on Tuesday, Oct. 25 at Emon Beach. Fest1v1t1es w111 beg1n at 10 am and end at 2 pm. A covered d1Sh luncheon w111 be served at 12'30 pm. Everyone 1S asked to br1ng a covered d1Sh to pass. If you 1ntend to attend, or w1sh further 1nformat10n call Eleanor V1ttulo, 83787 before 9 am or after 5 pm dally. Please come and enJoy a good t1me l 204/3t

BIBLE MEMORY COURSE' Enroll now to part1c1-pate in the 35th annual program of memor-1zlng scr1pture. Seven outstanding memory plans for ages 3 to 13. Each enrollee 1S rpqu1red to memor1ze and rec1te a glven ass1gnment each week for a per10d of 12 to 15 weeks. For further deta11s call 82243. 204/3t

CUB SCOUTS PACK #135. Terminal no later than for tr1p to Roi-Namur. 1mately 7:30 pm

Be at the A1r 10'00 am October 24 Return home approx-

204/3t

THE SS PIONEER CONTRACTOR ARRIVED, today October 20 Access to Echo P1er 1S llm1ted to those persons and veh1cles that have "Echo Pier" badges and veh1cle slgns Any person requ1r1ng access to Echo P1er who does not have the proper badge or veh1cle slgns may obta1n a temporary one at the Mar1ne Department off1ce. 204/2t

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP BIBLE STUDY: will meet ton1ght at 7 pm (424-C). All persons welcome. ~e are currently studY1ng the Gospel of John. 204/1to

I AM TRYING TO CONTACT HERBERT LEU! Please contact M1ke at 82708. 204/2t

JOIN IN THE FUN AND FELLOWSHIP. Saturday, October 29 at the YY Club start1ng at 7 pm. Th1S masquerade d1nner/dance 1S sponsored by the Global NMA Club. Wear a costume or come dressed as a pre-teen, western, Poly­neS1an, Amer1can tourlst, etc. If you prefer come as you are. For t1ckets call H. Lum 83353. 202/3t

CATHOLIC PAKISH PICNIC: Plan to come to the Par1sh p1cn1c on Sunday, Nov. 6, from 1 to 5 pm at the Coral Sands Beach. Fam111es br1ng a salad or desert. Hot dogs, hamburgers, dr1nks, plates and utens1ls w1ll be prov1ded. Bus transport­at10n 1S planned For more 1nformat10n call J1m Tal1ch 77445/82724. 204/2t

GLOBAL ~WA: - cl ub meet1 ng schedul ed for Thursday, October 27. Informal huddle and pupu's at 6 30 pm Meet1ng starts at 7 pm. All members and guests are 1nv1ted.

OUTSIDE BARBEQUE STEAK COOK OUT' at the Ocean V1ew Club Sunday, Oct. 23 from 4-9 pm. Bes1des the steak, baked potatoJ

salad bar and one free beer w111 be served w1th each meal. Bachelors and Bachelor­ette's only. $6 00 per person.

KALIEDOSCOPE. w111 meet ton1qht at 7 pm. (444-A) For more 1nformat10n call 82524.

ARRIVAL OF ORTHODONTIST Or Robert C. Sample, Orthodont1st, w111 arr1ve on KwaJ­ale1n on Fr1day, October 21, and w111 depart on Monday, October 24. Pat1ents w111 be seen on Fr1day afternoon and on Saturday and Sunday. Please call the Dental Cl1n1c, 82165 for appo1ntments. A fee 1S charged for consultat10n or exam-1nat10n. 202/4t

DISCO NIGHT AT THE YY CLUB: 21, 1n the Bar and Lounge. 7 : 30 to 11 pm.

Fn day, Oct. Adults onlyll

202/3t

ISLAND MUSICIANS All mUS1C1ans are 1n­v1ted to Slt in on a Veterans Day Jam seSS10n 1n the Banyan Room, YY ClUb. How about gett1ng together and entertain1ng at this afternoon Happy Hour event being sponsored J01ntly by the V F Wand Amer1-can Leg10n. Monday, October 24, 1300 to 1700.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1977

---------------------1 ••• ,,1 ......... 1:1 "'DU.G\"..!'~":

Th. HourGlass IS pub/lSh.d by Global Assoc,a'.' Monday

'hrough Friday at ,h. direction 01 'he Commande" Kwa,alelft

MIS"/e Rang., Marshall Island., under conlracr DASG

60-7S-C-000I Th. v, .... and opln'on. expr .... d .n 'h.

newspaper are no' necessa"Iy 'hose of ,h. Department 0' ,h.

Army Th" newspaper, an unofflclCI' publlcClhon Clu,horlzed

under ,h. prOV.Slon. 01 con'rael DASG60-7S-C-000I,

IS reproduced by o"s.' prln'lng'

Communications should be addressed '0 ,lte HourGlau,

Box 1733, APO San FrancISco, Cahlorn.a 96SSS, or by

calling B-3S39

Ma'erlals appearing' .n 'he HourGlass may no' be

reprln'ed w"hou' 'he approwal 01 ,h. Commonder, ICwo,al.,n

MISSII. Rang. All Wan' Ad. and nal.c •• mu.' b •• ubm.II.d

an GA Farm 8028 48 work.ng houri proor '0 pub/.callon

JIM WATT, Ed,'ar

PAT CATALDO, AssaCla'. Ed"or,

SHARON BECHTOLD, Sporls, SANDRA LLOYD, TyplS' 1-__ , __________________ ,

OUTGROWN CLOTHES? DISCARDED TOYS? Donate them to Bargain Bazaar, please call 82785, 82233 or 84728 to arrange for p1ck-up.

HOLIDAY BAZAAR. Workshops every Frlday afternoon - 12'30 to 3 pm at the Art GU1ld BU11d1ng (1051) next to the Comm Center. Please J01n us! 204/1to

POWER OUTAGE: There w111 be a power outage on Feeder 2-4 R01 Namur on Oct. 22 from 0800 to 1600 hours. BU11d1ngs effected will be 8105, 8106, Scuba Shack and Gym.203/2t

MICRONESIAN HANDICRAFT SHOP has a new Sh1P­ment from the Marshalls or=coasters, star wall hangings and bread baskets On sale ton1ght from 7:30-9 pm. 203/2t

ALL VETERANS' are 1nv1ted to stop by th~~ YY Club on Monday, October 24, 1300 to 1700 to enJOy an afternoon of comradesh1p, Happy Hour prlces, pupu's,mov1es, and un­scheduled enterta1nment. ThlS event w111 be J01ntly hosted by V.F.W Post 10268 and Amerlcan LeglOn Post 44. No fraternal aff11iat10n 1S requ1red. Th1S 1S a Veterans Day soc1al event for all veterans and act1ve duty m1l1tary personnel. 203/3t

KWAJPLEIN SHRINE CLUB w11l hold 1ts monthly bus1ness meet1ng 1n the Banyan Room of the YY Club ton1ght, October 20 at 7 pm. All Shr1ners, whether members or not, are 1nv1ted to attend 2u3/2t

BROWNIE TROOP #6: Br1ng a bag lunch and meet at the G1rl Scout Hut at 12 00 Fr1day, October 21. Drink and dessert w111 be prov1ded. 203/3t

TELL 'EM CHICKEN MAN SENT YOU' At the end or-a-lonq hol1day weekend, llke the upcom1ng October 24th weekend, wlll you be bored w1th leftovers, greasy burgers, and burnt p1zza? Put 1n your order by October 21st for Col Squanders Ch1cken Express fast food service sponsored by the Kwajale1n H1gh School Jr. Class. W1th each order you w111 rece1ve three p1eces of del1C10uS chicken, macaron1 salad, and a fresh roll for only $2, plus, we will del1ver your meal to your quarters between 5:00 pm and 7:00 pm. Place your order now w1th a Jr. class representat1ve at the blue booth 1n front of Macy's. Remember, advance orders only. 203/3t

CALLING ALL KWAJ GIRL SCOUTS. You are 1n­vited to the Jul1ette Low B1rthday Party glven by Cadette Troop #5. We need you to help us celebrate wlth cake and punch, play games and slgn the B1rthday card. Come to BU1ld1ng 356 Sunday, October 30 and wear your un1form. Brown1e Troops come from 1-2 pm -- Junlor ~roops from 2-3 pm.

22-23

Post 10268