war ranging near the heart of north vietnamese capital

8
HIGH TIDE 5.3 AT 1]12 9 AT 0454 4-21-66 VOL 7 NO 2984 UPI--ENGlISH DRIVE TO THE lEFT BECAUSE EARLY HORSEMEN PASSED EACH OTHER TO THE RIGHT IN ORDER TO QUICKLY DRAW SWORDS If NEEDED. AMERICANS DRIVE TO THE RIGHT BE- CAUSE CONESTOGA WAGON DRIVERS RODE THE lEFT lEAD Of TEAMS AND COULD BETTER GAUGE PASSING DISTANCE ON THE lEFT. THEY RODE THE lEfT lEAD HORSE BECAUSE HORSES WERE TRAINED TO BE MOUNTED FROM THE lEFT fOR THE SAME REASON ENGLISHMEN PASS TO THE RIGHT -- SO THE RIGHT HAND MIGHT BE FREE TO DRAW A LOW TIDE 0.6 AT 2306 0.5 AT 1112 4-21-66 KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS WEDNESDAY, APRil 20, 1966 WAR RANGING NEAR THE HEART OF NORTH VIETNAMESE CAPITAL SAIGON (UPI)--U.S. WARPLANES, TIGHTENING THEIR NOOSE AROUND NORTH VIET NAM'S HANOI-HAI- PHONG INDUSTRIAL HEART, HAVE SMASHED A BRIDGE 10 MilES FROM HAIPHONG IN THEIR CLOSEST AT- TACK TO THAT VITAL PORT CITY, U.S. SPOKESMEN ANNOUNCED TODAY. NAVY SKYHAWK JETS STREAKING IN FOR THE ATTACK YESTERDAY HAD TO flY PAST COMMUNIST SUR- fACE-TO-AIR MISSILES BUT NONE OF THE AMERICAN PLANES WAS REPORTED HIT. IN ANOTHER AIR RAID ONLY FIVE MilES SOUTH Of THE DEMiliTARIZED ZONE BORDER, GIANT GUAM- BASED B-52 BOMBERS TODAY POUNDED A SUSPECTED VIET CONG INfilTRATION AND BASE CAMP. WHilE AMERICAN PLANES ATTACKED ON BOTH SIDES Of THE BORDER, VIET CONG TERRORISTS STRUCK SENATE REJECTS BY 55-38 VOTE DIRKSEN·S APPORTIONMENT MOVE AGAIN IN DOWNTOWN SAIGON, HURLING A HAND GRENADE AT A U.S. MiliTARY HOTEL. A GROUP Of VISITING AMERICAN PACifiSTS AL- SO WERE ACTIVE IN SAIGON. ANGRY VIETNAMESE STUDENTS HURLED EGGS, TOMATOES AND CAME CLOSE TO ATTACKING THE SIX PACifiSTS AfTER VIETNAM- ESE POLICE PREVENTED THEM FROM HOLDING A WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE SENATE TODAY REJECTED fOR THE THIRD TIME SENATE REPUBLICAN lEADER EVERETT M DIRKSEN'S ATTEMPT TO NUllifY THE SUPREME COURT'S "ONE MAN, ONE VOTE" RULING ON STATE lEGISLATIVE APPORTIONMENT. NEWS CONFERENCE THE AMERICANS THEN THREATEN- ED TO MARCH ON THE U S. EMBASSY TO PROTEST AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT IN THE VIET NAM WAR. THE VOTE WAS 55 TO 38, SEVEN VOTES SHORT Of THE TWO-THIRDS REQUIRED fOR SENATE APPROVAL Of A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT. IT WAS THE SAME MARGIN BY WHICH DIRKSEN SUffERED DEFEAT IN THE lAST SHOWDOWN IN AUGUST, 1965. THEY WERE ORDERED TO GET OUT Of THE COUNTRY "TH IS Will BE THE END OF IT" SA I 0 SENATE DEMOCRAT I C lEADER MIKE MANSf I ElD. "Too MANY BY MIDNIGHT THURSDAY. STATES HAVE BEEN REAPPORTIONED ALREADY. " IN AN IMPASSIONED SPEECH BEfORE THE ROll CAll, DIRKSEN DECLARED THAT "THIS ISSUE Will THE AIR ATTACK ON THE HANOI OUTSKIRTS WAS THE THIRD IN THREE DAYS BY AMERICAN JETS PENETRATING INTO THE VERY SUBURBS Of EITHER THE COMMUNIST CAPITAL CITY OF HANOI OR ITS PORT, HAIPHONG. MONDAY, NAVY JETS BLASTED NOT fADE AWAY" liKE THE OLD SOLD I ER I N THE lATE GEN DOUGLAS MAcARTHUR'S fAREWEll SPEECH "I CAN ASSURE MEMBERS OF THE SENATE THAT AS lONG AS I AM IN THE SENATE, THIS ISSUE IS NOT GOING TO DIE. IT Will NOT fADE AWAY WE INTEND TO GO TO THE PEOPLE Of THE COUNTRY. LET THEM DETERMINE WHETHER THE SUPREME COURT CAN BUilD A BERLIN WAll BEYOND WHICH THERE IS NO STATUS," HE SAID. VOTING fOR DIRKSEN'S AMENDMENT WERE 27 DEMOCRATS AND THREE REPUBLICANS THE ONLY SWITCH FROM THE AUGUST liNEUP WAS SEN. LEE METCAlf, (OEM -MoNT.), WHO VOTED TODAY AGAINST THE AMENDMENT THE PROPOSAL, MODIFIED CONSIDERABLY SINCE IT WAS fiRST OfFERED UNSUCCESSfUllY IN 1964, WOULD HAVE PERMITTED A STATE TO APPORTION ONE HOUSE OF ITS lEGISLATURE ON THE BASIS Of RIGHT AND LEFT CLASH AS VISITS ANKARA (UPI)--LEFT-WING TURKISH STUDENTS PROTESTING U.S. FOREIGN POLICY BOOED SECRE- TARY Of STATE DEAN RUSK TODAY AND SCUfflED WITH RIGHT-WING STUDENTS POLICE AND TROOPS DROVE Off THE DEMONSTRATORS. THE CLASH OCCURRED AS RUSK ARRIVED AT THE TURKISH ARMY OffiCERS' CLUB TO lUNCH WITH TURKISH PREMIER SUlEYMAN DEMIREl AfTER THE OPENING SESSION Of THE ANNUAL MEETING Of THE CENTRAL TREATY ORGANIZATION (CENTO) LATER, lEfT-WING DEMONSTRATORS STAGED A fiVE MINUTE SIT-IN IN fRONT OF THE U.S. IN- FORMATION CENTER. THE lEfT-WING STUDENTS HAD GATHERED IN fRONT Of THE CLUB BEFORE RUSK ARRIVED AND A BIG POWER PLANT 14 MilES NORTHEAST Of HAI- PHONG AND SUNDAY AIR FORCE PLANES BOMBED TWO SAM SITES WITHIN 15 MilES Of HANOI (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) EVENTS IN VIET NAM ENCOURAGE MCNAMARA WASHINGTON (UPI)--DEfENSE SECRETARY ROBERT S. McNAMARA SAID TODAY HE WAS "ENCOURAGED" BY CURRENT POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH VIET NAM, BUT HE WARNED THAT THE COMMUNISTS APPARENTLY ARE PREPARING fOR A lARGE-SCALE MiliTARY OFfENSIVE IN THE MONSOON SEASON GEOGRAPHICAL OR POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS AS WEl BOOED lOUDLY WHEN HE STEPPED fROM HIS CAR. AS POPULATION If APPROVED IN A STATE REFEREN- RIGHT-WING STUDENTS WADED IN AND TWO Of THE McNAMARA SAID THE UNITED STATES COULD NOT WIN THE WAR WITHOUT THE POLITICAL AND MILI- TARY SUPPORT Of THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE PEOPLE, AND SHOULD NOT TRY TO DUM (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) eN WILL FIRM RED CHINA POLICY ANTI-AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS WERE AND THE DEfENSE SECRETARY MADE A lONG-fWAITED HAD TO BE HOSPITALIZED. PUBLIC APPEARANCE BEfORE THE SENATE FOREIGN POLICE AND STEEL-HELMETED TROOPS MOVED IN RELATIONS COMMITTEE, TESTIFYING ON NATIONAL AND DROVE OFF BOTH GROUPS OF DEMONSTRATORS TELEVISION IN THE MARBLE-PILLARED SENATE THE RIGHTIST STUDENTS FOllOWED THE ANTI- CAUCUS ROOM. AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS AND CLASHED IN REELING OFF fACTS AND fiGURES, RESPONDING WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE UNITED STATES IS PART OF THE TWON. TO SOME QUESTIONS IN A GOOD MOOD AND WITH STICKING TO ITS BASIC POLICY LINE ON PAKISTAN WAS NOT REPRESENTED AT THE OPEN- DRY HUMOR, McNAMARA VIGOROUSLY DEFENDED THE NIST CHINA -- DESPITE SUPERFICIAL GESTURES ING SESSION Of CENTD TODAY BUT A SPOKESMAN U S. PRESENCE IN SOUTH VIET NAM AND SAID THAT IT IS LESS RIGID -- WHilE TAKING A SAID PAKISTANI PRESIDENT MOHAMMAD AYUB KHAN AMERICANS SHOULD BE PROUD OF THE RESTRAINT BROAD NEW LOOK AT THE ENTIRE ASIAN PICTURE. WOULD ARRIVE LATER. PAKISTAN HAS EXPRESSED SHOWN BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON. THE REVIEW, SPURRED IN PART BY DOMESTIC GROWING DISENCHANTMENT OVER THE ALLIANCE HE ALSO ANALYZED THE CURRENT POLITICAL UN- POLITICAL CONSIDERATIONS, STEMS fROM A DE- BECAUSE THE U S. AND BRITAIN REFUSED Mlll- REST IN SOUTH VIET NAM, DENIED THAT BOMB SIRE TO MAKE CERTAIN THAT THE RIGID U.S. POSI-TARY SUPPORT DURING THE KASHMIR WAR WITH SHORTAGES WERE HAMPERING AIR OPERATIONS, TION OF THE PAST 17 YEARS HAS NOT PREVENTED INDIA LAST FAll SAID REPORTS Of INSUFFICIENT BOMB PRODUCTION PROGRESS ON ASIAN PROBLEMS. THE VIET NAM (.\TUDENTS MA'1J I NG USE WERE "BALONEY", AND URGED APPROVAL OF PRESI- ISSUE NATURAllY lOOMS lARGE IN THESE CON- 1\ DENT JOHNSON'S $3.39 BILLION FOREIGN AID SIDERATIONS. THERE ARE HINTS, BUT NOTHING MORE AS YET, THAT THE ADMINISTRATION MAY ADOPT A MORE TOLERANT ATTITUDE TOWARD RED CHINESE MEMBER- SHIP IN THE UNITED NATIONS, BUT THE APPRAISAL IS FAR FROM fiNISHED AND NOBODY CARES TO PRE- DICT THE OUTCOME. THE STATE DEPARTMENT SAID TODAY THERE WAS "NO CHANGE IN u.S. POLICY" IN A DECLARATION YESTERDAY BY U.N AMBASSADOR ARTHUR J. GOLD- BERG, WHO SET "MINIMUM CONDITIONS" FOR PEK- ING'S ADMISSION TO THE WORLD ORGANIZATION THE SPOKESMAN DECLINED, HOWEVER, TO RULE OLT THE POSSIBiliTY IMPLIED IN GOLDBERG'S REMARKS THAT THE UNITED STATES WOULD ACCEPT THE "TWO CHINAS" IDEA IN THE UNITED NATIONS IF PEKING DROPPED ITS DEMANDS fOR OUST[R Of NATIONALIST CHINA, CANCEllATION OF THE U.N. RESOlUT ION CONDEMN I NG "AGGRESS I ON" IN KOR EA, AND ELIMINATION OF U S. "lACKIES" FROM THE WORLD BODY DIPLOMATIC SPECULATION ON A POSSIBLE RE- VISION OF U.S. POLICY IN ASIA HAS INCREASED STEADilY SINCE THE FIRST Of THE YEAR. IT GAINED IMPETUS WHEN THE UNITED STATES DIS- CLOSED IT WOULD PERMIT NEWSMEN, SCHOLARS AND SCIENTISTS TO viSIT RED CHINA AND ADMIT VISI- TORS FROM PEKING IN THOSE CATEGORIES. OF CHEM "NOWLEDGE AUTHORIZATION REQUEST. 1\ IT WAS THE COMMITTEE'S CONSIDERATION OF NEW YORK (UPI)--COllEGE AND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN BROOKYN ARE MAKING THE HALLU- CINOGENIC DRUG LSD IN CHEMISTRY CLASSROOMS, BROOKLYN DIST. ATTY. AARON KOOTA SAID YES- TERDAY. HE SAID THERE WOULD BE A CRACKDOWN BY SCHOOL OfFICIALS. KOOTA WOULD NOT REVEAL HOW MANY SCHOOLS OR HOW MANY STUDENTS WERE INVOLVED IN THE RELATIVELY-SIMPLE MANUfACTURE Of THE CON- THIS Bill THAT BROUGHT McNAMARA TO CAPITOL Hill (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) BUDDHIST ACCUSES SAIGON (UPI)--BuDDHIST lEADER THICH THIEN MINH TOLD A RAllY Of 10,000 OF HIS FAITHFUL TONIGHT THE GOVERNMENT WAS PLOTTING TO STAY IN POWER AND PREVENT RETURN TO CIViliAN RULE IT APPEARED THE CURRENT TRUCE WITH THE GOVERN- SCIOUSNESS-EXPANDING DRUG, BRANDED AS THE MENT MIGHT BE SHORT liVED. "MOST DANGEROUS DRUG IN THE NATION" BY THE IN DA NANG, MORE THAN 2,000 ROMAN CATHOLICS NEW YORK COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY HE SAID HELD AN ANTI-BUDDHIST DEMONSTRATION, STUDENT USE Of LSD WAS ON THE UPSWING FEARS OF A RELIGIOUS STRifE TO THE ALREADY THE DANGER LIES IN THE LACK OF KNOWLEDGE TANGLED POLITICAL CRISIS. TENSION HAS OF LSD's ULTIMATE EFfECT ON THE USER. THE HEIGHTENED IN SAIGON BY EXPLOSION Of A TERROR- DRUG WAS DROPPED FROM PRODUCTION BY ITS ONLY 1ST GRENADE WHICH WOUNDED FOUR VIETNAMESE OUT- COMMERCIAL MAKER SEVERAL DAYS AGO AMID SIDE A U.S. ARMY BillET. MOUNTING PRESSURE TO CURB ITS USE. LEGALLY, MINH, CLAD IN SAffRON ROBES, CALLED IN A LSD HAS BEEN USED ONLY IN EXPERIMENTS IN CROWD OF 10,000 TO THE VIEN HOA DAO PAGODA, PSYCHOTHERAPY UNDER CLOSE MEDICAL SUPERVIS- COMMAND CENTER fOR THE ANTI-GOVERNMENT DRIVE, ION. KOOTA MADE THE CHARGE AT A NEWS CONfERENCE ATTENDED BY REPRESENTATIVES OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, BOARD OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND THE POLICE NARCOTICS SQUAD TO MAKE HIS NEW CHARGES AGAINST THE GOVERN- MENT OF PREMIER NGUYEN CAO Ky. "THE BUDDHISTS AT THE PRESENT TIME SHOULD BE READY TO fiGHT BECAUSE THE BE- liEVE THE GOVERNMENT IS PLOTTING SOMETHING AND IS NOT SINCERE ABOUT DOING WHAT THEY iJ.tA..ILE.. .... e.R.QMiS£o " SA 10

Transcript of war ranging near the heart of north vietnamese capital

HIGH TIDE 5.3 AT 1]12 ~ 9 AT 0454 4-21-66

VOL 7 NO 2984

UPI--ENGlISH DRIVE TO THE lEFT BECAUSE EARLY HORSEMEN PASSED EACH OTHER TO THE RIGHT IN ORDER TO QUICKLY DRAW SWORDS If NEEDED. AMERICANS DRIVE TO THE RIGHT BE­CAUSE CONESTOGA WAGON DRIVERS RODE THE lEFT lEAD H~RSE Of TEAMS AND COULD BETTER GAUGE PASSING DISTANCE ON THE lEFT. THEY RODE THE lEfT lEAD HORSE BECAUSE HORSES WERE TRAINED TO BE MOUNTED FROM THE lEFT fOR THE SAME REASON ENGLISHMEN PASS TO THE RIGHT -- SO THE RIGHT HAND MIGHT BE FREE TO DRAW A WE~PON.

LOW TIDE 0.6 AT 2306 0.5 AT 1112

4-21-66

KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS WEDNESDAY, APRil 20, 1966

WAR RANGING NEAR THE HEART OF NORTH VIETNAMESE CAPITAL

SAIGON (UPI)--U.S. WARPLANES, TIGHTENING THEIR NOOSE AROUND NORTH VIET NAM'S HANOI-HAI­PHONG INDUSTRIAL HEART, HAVE SMASHED A BRIDGE 10 MilES FROM HAIPHONG IN THEIR CLOSEST AT­TACK TO THAT VITAL PORT CITY, U.S. SPOKESMEN ANNOUNCED TODAY.

NAVY SKYHAWK JETS STREAKING IN FOR THE ATTACK YESTERDAY HAD TO flY PAST COMMUNIST SUR­fACE-TO-AIR MISSILES BUT NONE OF THE AMERICAN PLANES WAS REPORTED HIT.

IN ANOTHER AIR RAID ONLY FIVE MilES SOUTH Of THE DEMiliTARIZED ZONE BORDER, GIANT GUAM­BASED B-52 BOMBERS TODAY POUNDED A SUSPECTED VIET CONG INfilTRATION AND BASE CAMP.

WHilE AMERICAN PLANES ATTACKED ON BOTH SIDES Of THE BORDER, VIET CONG TERRORISTS STRUCK

SENATE REJECTS BY 55-38 VOTE DIRKSEN·S APPORTIONMENT MOVE

AGAIN IN DOWNTOWN SAIGON, HURLING A HAND GRENADE AT A U.S. MiliTARY HOTEL.

A GROUP Of VISITING AMERICAN PACifiSTS AL­SO WERE ACTIVE IN SAIGON. ANGRY VIETNAMESE STUDENTS HURLED EGGS, TOMATOES AND CAME CLOSE TO ATTACKING THE SIX PACifiSTS AfTER VIETNAM­ESE POLICE PREVENTED THEM FROM HOLDING A

WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE SENATE TODAY REJECTED fOR THE THIRD TIME SENATE REPUBLICAN lEADER EVERETT M DIRKSEN'S ATTEMPT TO NUllifY THE SUPREME COURT'S "ONE MAN, ONE VOTE" RULING ON STATE lEGISLATIVE APPORTIONMENT. NEWS CONFERENCE THE AMERICANS THEN THREATEN­

ED TO MARCH ON THE U S. EMBASSY TO PROTEST AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT IN THE VIET NAM WAR.

THE VOTE WAS 55 TO 38, SEVEN VOTES SHORT Of THE TWO-THIRDS REQUIRED fOR SENATE APPROVAL Of A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT. IT WAS THE SAME MARGIN BY WHICH DIRKSEN SUffERED DEFEAT IN THE lAST SHOWDOWN IN AUGUST, 1965. THEY WERE ORDERED TO GET OUT Of THE COUNTRY

"TH IS Will BE THE END OF IT" SA I 0 SENATE DEMOCRAT I C lEADER MIKE MANSf I ElD. "Too MANY BY MIDNIGHT THURSDAY. STATES HAVE BEEN REAPPORTIONED ALREADY. "

IN AN IMPASSIONED SPEECH BEfORE THE ROll CAll, DIRKSEN DECLARED THAT "THIS ISSUE Will THE AIR ATTACK ON THE HANOI OUTSKIRTS WAS

THE THIRD IN THREE DAYS BY AMERICAN JETS PENETRATING INTO THE VERY SUBURBS Of EITHER THE COMMUNIST CAPITAL CITY OF HANOI OR ITS PORT, HAIPHONG. MONDAY, NAVY JETS BLASTED

NOT fADE AWAY" liKE THE OLD SOLD I ER I N THE lATE GEN DOUGLAS MAcARTHUR'S fAREWEll SPEECH

"I CAN ASSURE MEMBERS OF THE SENATE THAT AS lONG AS I AM IN THE SENATE, THIS ISSUE IS NOT GOING TO DIE. IT Will NOT fADE AWAY

WE INTEND TO GO TO THE PEOPLE Of THE COUNTRY. LET THEM DETERMINE WHETHER THE SUPREME COURT CAN BUilD A BERLIN WAll BEYOND WHICH THERE IS NO STATUS," HE SAID.

VOTING fOR DIRKSEN'S AMENDMENT WERE 27 DEMOCRATS AND THREE REPUBLICANS THE ONLY SWITCH FROM THE AUGUST liNEUP WAS SEN. LEE METCAlf, (OEM -MoNT.), WHO VOTED TODAY AGAINST THE AMENDMENT

THE PROPOSAL, MODIFIED CONSIDERABLY SINCE IT WAS fiRST OfFERED UNSUCCESSfUllY IN 1964,

WOULD HAVE PERMITTED A STATE TO APPORTION ONE HOUSE OF ITS lEGISLATURE ON THE BASIS Of

RIGHT AND LEFT CLASH AS RUS~ VISITS TU~XEY ANKARA (UPI)--LEFT-WING TURKISH STUDENTS

PROTESTING U.S. FOREIGN POLICY BOOED SECRE­TARY Of STATE DEAN RUSK TODAY AND SCUfflED WITH RIGHT-WING STUDENTS POLICE AND TROOPS DROVE Off THE DEMONSTRATORS.

THE CLASH OCCURRED AS RUSK ARRIVED AT THE TURKISH ARMY OffiCERS' CLUB TO lUNCH WITH TURKISH PREMIER SUlEYMAN DEMIREl AfTER THE OPENING SESSION Of THE ANNUAL MEETING Of THE CENTRAL TREATY ORGANIZATION (CENTO)

LATER, lEfT-WING DEMONSTRATORS STAGED A fiVE MINUTE SIT-IN IN fRONT OF THE U.S. IN­FORMATION CENTER.

THE lEfT-WING STUDENTS HAD GATHERED IN fRONT Of THE CLUB BEFORE RUSK ARRIVED AND

A BIG POWER PLANT 14 MilES NORTHEAST Of HAI­PHONG AND SUNDAY AIR FORCE PLANES BOMBED TWO SAM SITES WITHIN 15 MilES Of HANOI

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

EVENTS IN VIET NAM ENCOURAGE MCNAMARA

WASHINGTON (UPI)--DEfENSE SECRETARY ROBERT S. McNAMARA SAID TODAY HE WAS "ENCOURAGED" BY CURRENT POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS IN SOUTH VIET NAM, BUT HE WARNED THAT THE COMMUNISTS APPARENTLY ARE PREPARING fOR A lARGE-SCALE MiliTARY OFfENSIVE IN THE MONSOON SEASON

GEOGRAPHICAL OR POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS AS WEl BOOED lOUDLY WHEN HE STEPPED fROM HIS CAR. AS POPULATION If APPROVED IN A STATE REFEREN- RIGHT-WING STUDENTS WADED IN AND TWO Of THE

McNAMARA SAID THE UNITED STATES COULD NOT WIN THE WAR WITHOUT THE POLITICAL AND MILI­TARY SUPPORT Of THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE PEOPLE, AND SHOULD NOT TRY TO

DUM (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

u.~. eN

WILL ~TAND FIRM RED CHINA POLICY

ANTI-AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS WERE K~lfED AND THE DEfENSE SECRETARY MADE A lONG-fWAITED HAD TO BE HOSPITALIZED. PUBLIC APPEARANCE BEfORE THE SENATE FOREIGN

POLICE AND STEEL-HELMETED TROOPS MOVED IN RELATIONS COMMITTEE, TESTIFYING ON NATIONAL AND DROVE OFF BOTH GROUPS OF DEMONSTRATORS TELEVISION IN THE MARBLE-PILLARED SENATE THE RIGHTIST STUDENTS FOllOWED THE ANTI- CAUCUS ROOM. AMERICAN DEMONSTRATORS AND CLASHED IN ANOTH~ REELING OFF fACTS AND fiGURES, RESPONDING

WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE UNITED STATES IS PART OF THE TWON. TO SOME QUESTIONS IN A GOOD MOOD AND WITH STICKING TO ITS BASIC POLICY LINE ON COMMU~ PAKISTAN WAS NOT REPRESENTED AT THE OPEN- DRY HUMOR, McNAMARA VIGOROUSLY DEFENDED THE NIST CHINA -- DESPITE SUPERFICIAL GESTURES ING SESSION Of CENTD TODAY BUT A SPOKESMAN U S. PRESENCE IN SOUTH VIET NAM AND SAID THAT IT IS LESS RIGID -- WHilE TAKING A SAID PAKISTANI PRESIDENT MOHAMMAD AYUB KHAN AMERICANS SHOULD BE PROUD OF THE RESTRAINT BROAD NEW LOOK AT THE ENTIRE ASIAN PICTURE. WOULD ARRIVE LATER. PAKISTAN HAS EXPRESSED SHOWN BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON.

THE REVIEW, SPURRED IN PART BY DOMESTIC GROWING DISENCHANTMENT OVER THE ALLIANCE HE ALSO ANALYZED THE CURRENT POLITICAL UN-POLITICAL CONSIDERATIONS, STEMS fROM A DE- BECAUSE THE U S. AND BRITAIN REFUSED Mlll- REST IN SOUTH VIET NAM, DENIED THAT BOMB SIRE TO MAKE CERTAIN THAT THE RIGID U.S. POSI-TARY SUPPORT DURING THE KASHMIR WAR WITH SHORTAGES WERE HAMPERING AIR OPERATIONS, TION OF THE PAST 17 YEARS HAS NOT PREVENTED INDIA LAST FAll SAID REPORTS Of INSUFFICIENT BOMB PRODUCTION

PROGRESS ON ASIAN PROBLEMS. THE VIET NAM (.\TUDENTS MA'1J I NG USE WERE "BALONEY", AND URGED APPROVAL OF PRESI-ISSUE NATURAllY lOOMS lARGE IN THESE CON- ~ 1\ DENT JOHNSON'S $3.39 BILLION FOREIGN AID SIDERATIONS.

THERE ARE HINTS, BUT NOTHING MORE AS YET, THAT THE ADMINISTRATION MAY ADOPT A MORE TOLERANT ATTITUDE TOWARD RED CHINESE MEMBER­SHIP IN THE UNITED NATIONS, BUT THE APPRAISAL IS FAR FROM fiNISHED AND NOBODY CARES TO PRE-DICT THE OUTCOME.

THE STATE DEPARTMENT SAID TODAY THERE WAS "NO CHANGE IN u.S. POLICY" IN A DECLARATION YESTERDAY BY U.N AMBASSADOR ARTHUR J. GOLD­BERG, WHO SET "MINIMUM CONDITIONS" FOR PEK­ING'S ADMISSION TO THE WORLD ORGANIZATION

THE SPOKESMAN DECLINED, HOWEVER, TO RULE OLT THE POSSIBiliTY IMPLIED IN GOLDBERG'S REMARKS THAT THE UNITED STATES WOULD ACCEPT THE "TWO CHINAS" IDEA IN THE UNITED NATIONS IF PEKING DROPPED ITS DEMANDS fOR OUST[R Of NATIONALIST CHINA, CANCEllATION OF THE U.N. RESOlUT ION CONDEMN I NG "AGGRESS I ON" IN KOR EA, AND ELIMINATION OF U S. "lACKIES" FROM THE WORLD BODY

DIPLOMATIC SPECULATION ON A POSSIBLE RE­VISION OF U.S. POLICY IN ASIA HAS INCREASED STEADilY SINCE THE FIRST Of THE YEAR. IT GAINED IMPETUS WHEN THE UNITED STATES DIS­CLOSED IT WOULD PERMIT NEWSMEN, SCHOLARS AND SCIENTISTS TO viSIT RED CHINA AND ADMIT VISI­TORS FROM PEKING IN THOSE CATEGORIES.

OF CHEM "NOWLEDGE AUTHORIZATION REQUEST. 1\ IT WAS THE COMMITTEE'S CONSIDERATION OF

NEW YORK (UPI)--COllEGE AND HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS IN BROOKYN ARE MAKING THE HALLU­CINOGENIC DRUG LSD IN CHEMISTRY CLASSROOMS, BROOKLYN DIST. ATTY. AARON KOOTA SAID YES­TERDAY. HE SAID THERE WOULD BE A CRACKDOWN BY SCHOOL OfFICIALS.

KOOTA WOULD NOT REVEAL HOW MANY SCHOOLS OR HOW MANY STUDENTS WERE INVOLVED IN THE RELATIVELY-SIMPLE MANUfACTURE Of THE CON-

THIS Bill THAT BROUGHT McNAMARA TO CAPITOL Hill (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

BUDDHIST ACCUSES ~Y SAIGON (UPI)--BuDDHIST lEADER THICH THIEN

MINH TOLD A RAllY Of 10,000 OF HIS FAITHFUL TONIGHT THE GOVERNMENT WAS PLOTTING TO STAY IN POWER AND PREVENT RETURN TO CIViliAN RULE IT APPEARED THE CURRENT TRUCE WITH THE GOVERN-

SCIOUSNESS-EXPANDING DRUG, BRANDED AS THE MENT MIGHT BE SHORT liVED. "MOST DANGEROUS DRUG IN THE NATION" BY THE IN DA NANG, MORE THAN 2,000 ROMAN CATHOLICS NEW YORK COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY HE SAID HELD AN ANTI-BUDDHIST DEMONSTRATION, ADDI~G STUDENT USE Of LSD WAS ON THE UPSWING FEARS OF A RELIGIOUS STRifE TO THE ALREADY

THE DANGER LIES IN THE LACK OF KNOWLEDGE TANGLED POLITICAL CRISIS. TENSION HAS OF LSD's ULTIMATE EFfECT ON THE USER. THE HEIGHTENED IN SAIGON BY EXPLOSION Of A TERROR-DRUG WAS DROPPED FROM PRODUCTION BY ITS ONLY 1ST GRENADE WHICH WOUNDED FOUR VIETNAMESE OUT-COMMERCIAL MAKER SEVERAL DAYS AGO AMID SIDE A U.S. ARMY BillET. MOUNTING PRESSURE TO CURB ITS USE. LEGALLY, MINH, CLAD IN SAffRON ROBES, CALLED IN A LSD HAS BEEN USED ONLY IN EXPERIMENTS IN CROWD OF 10,000 TO THE VIEN HOA DAO PAGODA, PSYCHOTHERAPY UNDER CLOSE MEDICAL SUPERVIS- COMMAND CENTER fOR THE ANTI-GOVERNMENT DRIVE, ION.

KOOTA MADE THE CHARGE AT A NEWS CONfERENCE ATTENDED BY REPRESENTATIVES OF THE BOARD OF EDUCATION, BOARD OF HIGHER EDUCATION AND THE POLICE NARCOTICS SQUAD

TO MAKE HIS NEW CHARGES AGAINST THE GOVERN­MENT OF PREMIER NGUYEN CAO Ky.

"THE BUDDHISTS AT THE PRESENT TIME SHOULD BE READY TO fiGHT BECAUSE THE BUDDHIS~ BE­liEVE THE GOVERNMENT IS PLOTTING SOMETHING AND IS NOT SINCERE ABOUT DOING WHAT THEY iJ.tA..ILE.. ....e.R.QMiS£o " H£ SA 10

PAGE 2. _ HOURGLASS EDNESDAY,9 APR i~ ::>, 1966' +--------------- ---------------------r--------------------------------------,---------------~--------~--~--------~

TERRORISTS HURL GRENADE INTO UoS. ARMY BILLET

SAIGON (UPi)-=TERRORISTS HURLED A HAND GRENADE AT A U.S. MILiTARY HOTEL TONIGHT THE EXPLOSiON WOUNDED FOUR V I ETNAt<lESE

U S MiLITARY POLICE SAiD TWO MEN ON A MOTORBIKE HURLED THE GRENADE AT THE AMER'CA~ ARMED GUARO OuTSIDE THE ilLI­rJO~s HOiE,,- BiU.ET.

Tile _) _ ,JADE HIT I N FRONT OF THE GUARDvS SANDBAG BARRiCADE. THE AMER­ICAN SENTRY WAS NOT HURT. GRENADE FRAGMENTS HIT fOUR VIETNAMESE BYSTAND­ERS.

THE TERRORISTS,9 BELiEVED TO HAVE BEEM COMMUNiST ViET CONG, ESCAPED.

THE ATTACK for THE ViET CONG PATTERN. THIS WEEK TERROR!STS ON MOTORBIKES HAVE HURLED GRENADES IN SA!GON AT AN AMERiCAN BUS AND INTO A U.S. ARMY TRUCK.

IN THE BUS iNCiDENT, THE GRENADE BOUNCED OFr A PROTECTiVE WiRE WiNDOW SHiElD AND EXPLODED iN THE STREET. THE GRENADE THAT LANDED iN THE TRUCK WAS A DUD ~ND DiD NOT EXPLODE. No ONE WAS HURT ~N [flT~ER iNCiDENT.

As iN TON8GHT uS ATTACK ON THE JLLi~ NOiS HOTEL B~LlET~ THE VuET CONG SENT TWO AGENTS SPEEDuNG BY ON A MOTOR~ BiKE. THE ~AN RiDiNG TANOE~ ~URlED THE GREN~IDE.

THE ijlLiNOiS HOTEL is NEAR THE RiVER ON THE EDGE Of DOWNTOWN SADGON.

CASTRO CLAIMS CUBA ST~LL HAS M!SS!LES

OFFENBURG, GERMANY (UPi)-~F8DEl CAS­TRO WAS QUOTED TODAY AS SAYiNG CUBA STILL HAS SOVIET MiSSibES WHiCH COULD HIT MIAMi BEACH.

IN AN iNTERViEW PUBLiSHED IN THE CURRENT ~SSUE OF THE WEEKLY GERMAN MAGAZiNE BUNTE ~lusrRiERTEj THE CUBAN PREM8ER SA~D ijT WAS OUSTED SOVIET PRi: MIER NaKUTA S. KHRUSHCHEV WHO WANTED MISSOlES PLACED iN CUBA.

"IT WAS NOT I WHO WANTED THE Rus­SIAN MISSiLES IN THiS COUNTRY," CAS­TRO WAS QUOTED. "!T WAS KHRUSHCHEV WHO WANTED TO HAVE THEM HERE TO FRIGHTEN AMERiCA. WELl~ NOW, ! DiD NEED HIS AijD AND WAS NOT REALLY IN A POSITiON TO SAY NO, BUT WHEN HE TOOK THEM AWAY, WE FELT HURT AND OFFENDED. THATiS HOW WE ARE TEMPERAMENTALLY, AND THATis WHY THE PORTRAITS OF KHRUS~ CHEV DISAPPEARED FROM ALL HAVANA STREETS.

"A THING LIKE THAT MUST NOT NECES­SARILY MEAN THE END OF A FRIENDSHIP. AT THAT TOME, KHRUSHCHEV DiD EXPLAIN SOMEWHAT IN DETAil WHY HE TOOK THE MISSILES AWAY. ! COULD SEE HIS POINT. ••• THE MHLLIONS OF RUBLES HE GAVE ME INSTEAD WERE MUCH MORE IMPORTANT FOR

ME AND MY COUNTRY, AND~ BY THE WAY, WE STILL HAVE RUSSIAN MISSILES, SMALL­ER ONES, BUT THEY ALSO ENABLE US TO HIT THE AMERICAN COAST."

THE CUBAN PREMIER WAS ASKED WHY HE HATED THE A~ERICANS SO MUCH.

"I HATE HIE AMER I CANS BECAUSE THEY ARE SO STUPiD AND BECAUSE THEY BE­LIEVE US TO BE EVEN MORE STUPID. I PREPARED MY REVOLUTION IN AMERICA AND I EVEN GOT SUPPORT THERE, BUT WHEN AFTER MONTHS OF PRIVATION I RETURNED FROM THE MOUNTAiNS AND AT lAST LIBER­ATED CUBA~ THE AMERICANS WERE ALL BUT BENEVOLENT FRIENDS.

"DAMN iT, WHY DiD THEY KEEP GRUMB­LING AT ME? I WAS SUPPOSED TO DO THIS AND THAT. THEN AGAiN NOT THIS BUT SOMETHING ELSE. AND PARTICULARLY NOTHING AGAiNST THEIR BUSINESS INTE­RESTS. OF COURSE~ THAT WAS QUiTE UN­ACCEPTABLE.

"I DIDN'T liBERATE CUBA SO THAT THE AMERICANS COULD DO EVEN BETTER BUSi= NESS.

COSMOS-i 15 IN ORBIT Moscow (UP;)--THE SOVIET UNION TO­

DAY LAUNCHED THE 115TH UNMANNED SAT­ELLITE IN iTS COSMOS SERIES, THE TASS NEWS AGENCY ANNOUNCED.

TASS SAID COSMos-I 15 CARRiED SCiEN­TOFIC APPARATUS FOR THE CONTINUATION OF THE SPACE RESEARCH UNDER A PROGRAM FiRST ANNOUNCED ON MARCH 16~ 1962.

THERE WAS NO iNDICATiON THAT iT CARRiED ANIMALS SUCH AS COSMos-I!O, WHICH CARRIED SPACE DOGS BlACKIE AND BREEZE THROUGH THE VAN ALLEN RAD8ATiON BELT SURROUNDING THE EARTH.

BLACKIE AND BREEZE WERE RETURNED TO EARTH ON MARCH 17 FOR STUDiES OF THE RADiATiON EFFECTS TO DETERMINE WHAT PRECAUTIONS WOLl BE NEEDED BEFORE SENDING MAN THROUGH THE VAN ALLEN BELT ON HiS WAY TO THE MOON.

THEIR FLIGHT WAS EXPECTED TO PRE­SAGE A MANNED FLIGHT OF SEVERAL WEEKS WHICH WILL ALSO SWING THROUGH THE VAN ALLEN BELT IN THE NOT TOO DISTANT fUTURE.

THE SOVIET UNOONDS LAST MAJOR SPACE EXPLOiT WAS THE FijRST ORBIT OF A SPACE SHOP AROUND THE MOON, ACHIEVED APRiL 3 ey lUNA~~O.

lUNA~!O HAS SONCE SENT BACK REPORT THAT T~E MOON OS MADE Of ROCK SOMOlAR TO THAT WHUC~ fORMS THE EARTH AND IS iN AN AREA OF ~E~VY METEORiTE UNTENQ SOTYo

lASS SAUD l~E SP~TNOK is ON ORBiT WiTH AN ONUTOAl ROTATOON PERIOD or 8903 MDNUTES~ AN APOGE( or 18405 Mil~~ A PERiGEE Of 117.9 MBLES AND AN ON= CliNATOON OF 65 DEGREESo

THE AGENCY SAID iT CARRiES A RADOO TRANSMITTER WITH A FREQUENCY OF 19.= 995 MEGACYClES,9 A RADiO SYSTEM FOR MEASUREMENT OF ORBiTAL ELEMENTS AND A TELEMETROC SYSTEM TO SEND BACK scnENTOFnc DNFORMATBON.

TASS SAiD ALl EQUllPMENT W~S fUNC= TIONiNG NORMAllYo

POMPIDO~ EXPLA!NS PULLOUT PARIS (UPI)~-PREMIER GEORGES POMPO­

DOU SAID TODAY FRANCE DECODED TO PULL OUT OF NATO BECAUSE IT RAN INTO "A WALL or OPPOSITOON" FROM THE UNiTED STATES AND THE OTHER ALLIES WHEN FRANCE CALLED FOR REFORM OF THE ALLO~ ANCE.

"WE WERE TOLD THAT ALLIANCE AND IN­TEGRATION WERE INSEPARABLE," POMPBDOU SAIDo

POMPiDOU DEFENDED PRESiDENT CHARLES DE GAUllEDS NATO POliCIES IN A NATIO­NAL ASSEMBLY DEBATE THAT IS TO END TONIGHT WITH A VOTE OF CENSURE AGADNST DE GAULLE. THE GOVERNMENT WAS ALMOST CERTAIN TO DEfEAT THE MEASURE.

"WE DO NOT BLUSH BECAUSE WE ATTACH A PRICE TO OUR ALLIANCE WITH OUR AME~ ICAN FRiENDS OR OUR EUROPEAN NEiGH~ BORS," POMPiOOU SAIDo

"WE ARE NOT SERVilE ENOUGH TO BE­LIEVE WE OFFER NOTHING iN EXCHANGE o

A FRANCE THAT IS INDEPENDENT AND THE MISTRESS OF HER OWN POLICY IS NOT SUCH A NEGLIGiBLE ALlYo SHE CAN PLAY HER OWN PART AND THROW ALL HER WEIGHT iN­TO IMPROVING RELATIONS BETWEEN EAST AND WEST ON WHiCH DEPENDS THE FUTURE OF EUROPE AND WORLD PEACE."

FOREIGN MiNISTER MAURiCE COUVE DE MURVILLE TOLD THE FRENCH CABINET EAR= LBER TODAY HE IS CONFIDENT OF REACH­iNG AN AGREEMENT WiTH BONN ON KEEPiNG FRENCH TROOPS ON WEST GERMANY AFTER THEY ARE WITHDRAWN FROM NATO JULY 10

GOVERNMENT SOURCES SAID COUVE DE MURViLLE TOLD THE CABINET THiS WAS HIS IMPRESSiON AFTER TWO DAYS OF TALKS WITH WEST GERMAN OFrlCllALS IN BONN LAST WEEKEND.

lHE ONLY TROUBLE WITH BEiNG A GOOD SPORT is THAT YOU HAVE TO LOSE TO PROVE iTo

GOVERNMENT TO MARKET MOkE FEDERAL LOANS

WASHONGTON \UPi)--PRESODENT JOHNSON TODAY ASKED CONGRESS TO MAKE IT EASiER FOR PRiVATE LENDERS TO TAKE OVER FED­ERAL lOANS THROUGH POOLING or GOVERN­MENT CREDITS AND OTHER STEPS TO EN­COURAGE INVESTOR PARTICIPATIONo

JOHNSON PROPOSED TO SEND THE HOUSE AND SENATE A uPARTICiPATION SALES ACT OF 1966" AHMED AT REPLACiNG $8 BILLION iN PUBLiC CREDIT WOTH PRiVATE fUNDSo

THE MEASURE WOULD GO INTO EFFECT IN THE CURRENT FiSCAL YEAR AND ALSO APPLY IN T~E FiSCAL YEAR BEGINNiNG JULY 10

IN A LETTER ACCOMPANYiNG THE MEASUR~ THE PRESIDENT STRESSED THE LONG-TERM iMPORTANCE OF REPLACiNG PUBLIC CREDIT WiTH PRiVATE LOANS FOR REASONS RANGING fROM TAXPAYER SAVINGS TO STRENGTHENING THE CREDIT MARKET.

THE LEGiSLATION WOULD ~coPROVIDE FOR "POOliNG MANY LOANS

TOGETHER AND SELlUNG PARTueOPATiONS IN THE POOL" RATHER THAN HAVBNG THE GOVERNMENT MAKE "A NUMBER OF RELATiVELY SMALL AND UNCOORDiNATED OFFERINGS OF LO~S IN THE MARKET.tI

-~CENTRAl8ZE SALE OF POOL PARTICIPA­TUONS IN A S~NGlE AGENCY -- THE FED­ERAL NAT~ONAl MORTGAGE ASSOCiATION (fNMA) =~ RATHER THAN HAVE EACH AGENCY SEll iTS OWN LOANS.

~co!N CASES WHERE FEDERAL INTEREST RATES ARE BELOW THOSE OF THE PRIVATE MARKfTj ALLOW THE GOVERNMENT TO "MAKE SUPPLEMENTARY PAYMENTS TO THE TRUSTEE or THE POOL TO COVER THE iNTEREST iN~

SUrFijCUENCY. u THIS WOULD BE SUBJECT TO ADVANCE AUTHORiZATiON BY Ap'ROPRIA~ TiONS COMMiTTEES OF BOTH HOUSESo

JO~NSON SAiD ilT~E PARTiCiPATiON SALES ACT or ~966 WiLL PERMiT US TO CONSERVE OUR B~DGET RESOURCES BY SUBSTITUTING PRiVATE fOR PUBLIC tREDRT WH8LE STULL MEETiNG URGENT CREDiT NEEDS UN THE MOST ErriCiENT AND ECONOMiC MANNER POSS~BLEo"

"IT WILL ENABLE US TO MAKE THE CREDiT MARKET STRONGER, MORE COMPETITiVE, AND BETTER ABLE TO SERVE THE NEEDS OF OUR GROWING ECONOMY," HE ADDED.

"ABOVE ALL,\) THE LEGISLATiON WiLl BENEFIT MiLLiONS or TAXPAYERS AND THE MANY VITAL PROGRAMS SUPPORTED BY FED­ERAL CREDIT. THE ACT WilL HELP US MOVE THIS NATiON FORWARD AND BRiNG A BETTER LorE TO ALL THE PEOPLEo"

JOHNSON SAiD THE VOLUME OF FEDERAL LOANS OUTSTANDiNG AS OF LAST JUNE 30 EXCEEDED $33 BILliON AND iNVOLVES PRO­GRAMS TO HELP FARMERS, BUSiNESSMEN, HOME BUYERS, VETERANS, STUDENTS, COL­lEGES AND SCHOOLS.

HE SAID THE GOVERNMENT MADE THE lOANS "TO f8 NANCE ESSENT I AL ACT I V iT I ES WH I CH WOULD NOT OTHERWiSE RECEIVE ADEQUATE rONANCiAL SUPPORTo"

HE ALSO SAID "DESIRABLE AS THESE ACTiVITiES ARE, FEDERAL LENDING NEiTHER CAN, NOR SHOULD,9 SHOULDER THE ENTIRE JOBo"

"UNDER OUR SYSTEM or FREE ENTERPRiSE 8T US fAR BETTER FOR THE GOVERNMENT TO MOBiLIZE PRIVATE CAPiTAL TO THESE ENDS. !T IS FAR BETTER FOR THE GOVERN­MENT TO STiMULATE AND SUPPLEMENT PRIV­ATE LENDING RATHER THAN TO SUBSTITUTE FOR 8T," HE SAID.

To DO THIS FEDERAL LOANS ARE SOLD TO PRIVATE UNVESTPRS DiRECTLY OR -~ iN CASES BNVOLVBNG THE EXPORT IMPORT BANK, VETERANS ADM!NISTRATiON, AND FNMA -­THROUGH "PARTICiPATIONS" iN POOLS OF LOANS, HE SAID.

HE SAiD THE PROPOSED lEGiSLATION WOULD BROADLY EXPAND THAT SALES PROGRAM, EX­TENDING POOL PARTICiPATION TECHNIQUES TO OTHER lENDING PROGRAMS, INCLUDING THOSE OF THE FARMERSi HOME ADMiNiSTRA­TiON, THE OFFiCE OF EDUCATiON, COLLEGE HOUSING j PUBLBC FACiLITIES LOANS, AND THE SMALL BUSiNESS ADMINiSTRATION. ~

TOW tiU~~FELD AND BLEYMA I ER :lENS

A:!(IVE ;(WAJALE I N TODAY

~AJo GEN. HAROLD E HU~fELDJ COMMANDER OF THE 1ST STRA­TEGIC AEROSPACE 0 V~S~ON, US~F~ ARRIVED ON KWAJALEIN THiS AFTERNOON ACCOMPAN~ED BY BR~G. GENo JOSEPH S. BlEYMABER, COMMANDER OF THE A~R FORCE W~STERN TEST RANGE.

THiS is GENERAL HUMfELDiS fiRST ViSiT TO KWAJALEIN AND WHILE HERE HE Wijll TOUR ISLAND FAC~l~TiES AND BE BRIEFED ON THE iNSTRUMENTATiON AS OPERATED BY KTS, NBKE-X AND PROJECT PR[':;S PERSONNEL.

'." GENERAL HUMFElD WAS ASSiGNED TO H~S PRESENT POSITION AT

VANDENBERG AFB iN NOVEMBER Of ~965. PRiOR TO THIS ASSIGN­MENT HE SERVED AS DEPUTY COMMANDER OF THE STRATEGiC AIR COMMAND'S FIFTEENTH AIR FORCE AT MARCH AFB, CALiF. HELEN MCDANIEL •••• HANDS OVER PRESIDENCY OF YOKWE YUK WO-

HE is A GRADUATE Of THE UN~VERSijTY OF CALiFORNIA AT Los ANGELES, THE COMMA~D STAfF SCHOOL OF FORT LEVENWORTH, KAN., THE AiR STAFf SCHOOL, ORLANDO,

MEN'S CLUB TO JERRY ARMSTRONG (RIGHT) AT TUESDAY'S LUNCH­EON MEETING. KAY DULL (LEFT) ASSUMES OFFICE OF FIRST VICE PRESIDENT VACATED BY JERRY,

FLA., AND THE AiR COMMAND AND ST~ff SCHOOL AT MAXWELL AFB, ALA. YE HAS SERVED UN THE UN~rED STA~ES AS WEll AS

IN 1948 fHE GENEPAl JOiNED THE STRA­TEGIC AIR COMMAND WHERE HE HAS REMAiN~

ED TO THiS DAY. GENERAL HUMfElD HAS ACCRUED MORE THAN 9,000 FLYING HOURS IN MORE THAN 59 DijffERENT TYPES Of Mil ITARY AijRCRAFTo

BRiG GEN. JOSEPH S. BlEYMAijER WHO LAST V~SJTED KWAJAlEijN IN JANUARY, ASSUMED COMMAND OF THf AfjR FOR WESTERN TEST RANGE AT VANDENBERG AFB iN SEP­TEMBER, !965o HE is RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MA~NTENANCE, OPERAT!ON, AND MODiriCAT~ON, AS NEED£D~ Of THE WESTERN PORTiON OF THE GLOBAL RANGE IN SUPPORT OF

BRIG GEN. DEPARTMENT OF DEfENSE, J S BLfvMAIER NATuONAl AERONAUTICS A

• 0 SPACE ADMINISTRATiON, AND OTHER RANGE USERS' PROGRAMS AS DI­RECTED BY THE NATiONAL RANGE DaVISION AND CONSISTENT W~TH ES1ABL~SHED AL POLICIES AND PRIOR!T!ES.

IIp A C I F ~ C A"

MACY'S ANNUAL FASH!ON SHOW ~UNDAY> APRil 24, AT 4 PM.

YOKWE YUK CLUB.

LATEST ARRIVAL A BABY GiRL WAS BORN TO PAT AND

GEORGE CAPARELLA TH i S MORN I NG, APR I L 2~ AT 2 59. THE BABY WEIGHED NINE POUNDS ONE-HALf OUNCE AT BIRTH AND HAS BEEN NAMED CAROL EilEEN. THE CAPARELLA'S HAVE ONE OTHER CHiLD, LISA MARIE AGED TWO AND A HAlf YEARS. GEORGE IS EM­PLOYED BY LINCOLN LAB. ON ROI-NAMUR AND THE FAMILY LiVES AT TR. 605.

THE KWAJALEIN HOSPITAL HAS JUST AD­MiTTED A SiX YEAR OLD CHILD WITH A DI­AGNOSIS Of PNEUMOCOCCI MENINGITIS. TH~S is NOT THE EPIDEMIC TYPE WHICH HAS RECENTLY BEEN SEEN IN MILITARY INS­TALLATIONS ON THE MAINLAND. THIS NO­T~CE is TO ijNFORM KWAJALEiN RESIDENTS THAT THERE is NO CAUSE fOR ALARM AS

DiSEASE APPEARS IN RARE ISOLATED

ONE OF THE DRESSES SHE WILL MODEL IN SUNDAY'S "PACIFICA" fASHION SHOW AT T YOKWE YUK CLUB. THE THEME WILL BE A FASHION LOOK INDIGENOUS TO THE PACIFIC SHORELiNE -- FROM CALifORNIA TO HAWAI I. BRIGHT, SUNNY CLOTHING ESPECIALLY AD­APTABLE TO KWAJALEIN. THE SHOW WILL iNClUD~ ACTIVE SPORTSWEAR, LEISURE AND EVENING WEAR.

WOMENI~ CLUB VCTt~ $1400 FOR TRU~T TERR~TORY U~E

FUNDS TOTAliNG $1400 WERE EAR-MARKED TUESDAY BY MEMBERS OF THE YOKWE YUK WOMEN'S CLUB FOR ED~CAT!ONAl AND RECRE­ATIONAL PURPOSES IN THE TRUST TERRiTOR~

AT THEIR MONTHLY MEETING IN THE BANYA ROOM, MEMBERS VOTED TO SET ASIDE $100 FOR THE PURCHASE OF GAMES AND OTHER RE­CREATiONAL ITEMS FOR THE FOUR DORMITO­RIES AT THE MAJURO H,GH SCHOOL. AN­OTHER $300 WAS DESJGNATED AS PRIZE MONEY FOR A WINNER iN AN ESSAY CONTEST BE~NG CONDUCTED AMONG STUDENTS AT THE MAJURO HIGH SCHOOL. THE fUNDS Will COVER EXPENSES OF A STUDENT TO ATTEND THE CELEBRATiON OF MiCRONESIAN DAY IN SAIPAN AND PARTICIPATE IN THE SECOND SESSION OF THE CONGRESS OF MiCRONESIA.

AN ADDiTIONAL $1000 WAS APPROVED AS A SCHOLARSHIP GRANT fOR MRS. ElMA COLE­MAN WHO is WORKiNG TOWARD A DEGREE IN NURSING. HER HUSBAND is STUDYING FOR THE MEDICAL PROFESSION.

MONEY FOR THESE PROJECTS WAS PROVIDED BY INCOME fROM THE BARGAIN BAZAAR, CUR­RENTLY UNDER SUPERVISION Of RHODA HOLTZ.

MILDRED VAN HORN WAS CHAIRMAN Of THE APRIL MEETING WHICH fEATURED JIM BUNCH, HAIR STYLIST, WHO DISCUSSED HAIR STYLES AND MAKE-UP MOST SUITABLE fOR KWAJALEIN

NEWCOMERS INTRODUCED WERE ELENA ANDRULiS, GINNY SMiTH, LORENE GOSSETT, MARGARET BELOT, MANDY KLAMT, Jo BENN, ELIZABETH TIMAS, AND BARBARA DARRELL. FAREWELL CORSAGES WERE PRESENTED TO YVONNE SCHOLAR AND ANNA ACHENBACH

DALLY FIELD TO CLu;:;E DOvvN FOR CARNIVAL CON~TRUCTION

DALLY FiELD WILL BE CLOSED SUNDAY MAY 15 TO PERMIT CONSTRUCTION Of BOOTHS FOR THE 1966 KWAJALEIN COMMUNITY CARNI­VAL, IT WAS ANNOUNCED TODAY.

ALL BALL GAMES SCHEDULED THROUGH SUN­DAY WILL BE COMPLETED. BOOTH CONSTRUC­TION WilL START ON MONDAY, ACCORDING TO E. G DAVIS, BOOTH PARTICIPATION CHAIRMAN, AND G. S HAMILTON, BOOTH CONSTRUCTION CHAIRMAN. ALL BOOTHS MUST BE COMPLETED BY WEDNESDAY, MAY 25TH, PAINTING WILL BE COMPLETED ON MAY 26TH AND 27TH AND STOCKING Will BEGIN AT 8 00 M ON SATURDAY MAY 28TH, THE CAR-

PAGE 4

K~NS~S CLEANING UP FRC~/I TCRNAOO 4 TTACK

OVERLAND PARK, KAN (UPI)--SALVAGE CREWS WORKING IN DRIZZLING RAIN TODAY ATTACKED PILES OF RUBBLE THAT HAD BEEN TWO-STORY AND SPLIT LEVEL HOUSES IN THE $25,000 CLASS BEFORE A TORNADO STRUCK YESTERDAY.

THE TWISTER BRUSED AN ELEME~TARY

SCHOOL IN THE KANSAS CITY SUBURB BUT 450 CHILDREN WHO HUDDLED ALONG INSIDE WALLS WERE UNHARMED. THEN IT CHEWED UP A ROw OF HOUSES, MOST OF WHICH WERE ONLY TWO OR THREE YEARS OLD.

HOURGLASS

'JvR ITER 0 I ~~ECT;) FL'L I TZER NEW YORK (UPI)--THE PULITZER PRIZE

WAS DESCRIBED TODAY IN THE CURRENT ISSUE OF MCCALL'S MAGAZINE AS A HAP­

HAZARD AND CASUAL SELECTION OF FRE­QUENTL Y UNWORTHY WORK BY NEWSMEN "WHO MAKE NO PRETENSE AT ALL OF BEING AUTHORITIES.

PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY RECEIVED THE 1957 AWARD fOR "PROfiLES IN COUR­AGE" MORE fOR "THE GALLANTRY Of THE YOUNG MAN WRITING IT IN THE PAIN OF HIS ILLNESS THAN fOR FRESH INSIGHT OR ORIGINAL SCHOLARSHIP," THE ARTICLE

WEDNESDAY, A~L 20, 1966

BIGGE~T IKA~I HEAJACHE 10 REBELLICUu KUk00

BY PHIL NEWSOM WASHINGTON (UPI)--FoR MORE THAN 2,500

YEARS A MID-EASTERN PEOPLE WHOSE ORIGIN IS LOST IN ANTIQUITY HAVE INHABITED A LAND WHICH TODAY INCLUDES PARTS OF IRAN, IRAQ, SYRIA, TURKEY AND THE SOVIET UNION

NEVER CONQUERED BUT NEVER INDEPENDENT THESE ARE THE KURDS

IN ANCIENT TIMES THEY FOUGHT THE GREEKS, THE SYRIANS AND THE MONDOLS.

No ONE WAS SERIOUSLY INJURED CHIEF JOHN KENYAN JR, CALLED IT NEAR MIRACLE II

POL I CE SA I D. TODAY, THEIR NUMBERS ARE ESTIMATED

AT ABOUT FOUR MILLION, OF WHOM 1.5 MILLION INHABIT THE NORTHERN MOUNTAINS OF IRAQ.

"A IT ALSO ALLEGES ERNEST HEMINGWAY WAS

KE~YAN ESTIMATED PROPERTY LOSS AT $1 MILLION, INCLUDING 15 HOUSES WHICH WERE DESTROYED AND ABOUT 35 OTHERS WHICH WERE DAMAGED

TRAFFIC WAS MOVING NORMALLY TODAY BUT HOUSEHOLDERS LIVING IN THE AREA WERE REQUIRED TO SHOW PASSES FOR AD­MITTANCE THE HOMELESS FOUND SHELTER WITH RELATIVES OR FRIENDS OR IN A POSH SUBURBAN MOTEL WHICH REPORTED 13 FAMILIES HOUSED IN 16 ROOMS.

THOUSANDS Of PERSONS INCLUDING SOME IN DOWNTOWN KANSAS CITY, Mo., 15 MILES TO T~l NORTHEAST, SAW THE FUNNEL HANGING LIKE A WHITE ROPE FROM A RELA­TIVELY PALE CLOUD AS IT HOPSCOTCHED ACROSS THE SKY.

"AT FIRST IT WAS A HARMLESS LITTLE WHITE FUNNEL THAT CAME OUT OF A WHITE fLUfFY CLOUD," MRS. WILLIAM Bopp OF NEARBY OLATHE SAID. MR. AND MRS. Bopp AND THEIR TWO CHILDREN WATCHED THE TORNADO FROM A BRIDGE.

FOR A T litE THE TORNADO SEEMED TO THREATEN MUCH OF METROPOLITAN KANSAS C,TY. AT LEAST SIX OTHER TWISTERS WERE REPORTED IN JOHNSON COUNTY, KAN­SAS, WHERE OVERLAND PARK IS LOCATED, AND IN SOUTH KANSAS CITY. NONE CAUS­ED ANY INJURIES AND DAMAGE WAS SLIGHT.

GCP SPL I T eN vvAR WASHINGTON (UPI)--HoUSE A~D SENATE

REPUBLICAN LEADERS APPEARED HEADED IN OPPOSITE DIRECTIONS TODAY IN THEIR POLICIES ON THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRA­TION'S HANDLING Of THE WAR IN VIET NAM

SENATE GOP LEADER EVERETT M. DIRK­SEN, ILL, WAS ON RECORD AS QUESTION-ING CHARGES BY HOUSE COUNTERPART, REP.

GERALD R. FORD, MICH., THAT THE AD­MINISTRATION IS GUILTY OF "SriOCKING MISMANAGEMENT" IN PURSUING THE WAR.

FORD LEVELED THE CHARGES LAST WEEK AT A NEWS CONFERENCE IN WHICH HE AC­CUSED THE ADMINISTRATION OF CAUSING A SHORTAGE OF BOMBS IN SOUTH VIET NAM, OF A LACK Of CLEAR POLICY AND OF BUNGLING RELATIONS WITH THE SOUTH V,ETNAMESE

I DIRKSEN, SPEAKING WITH NEWSMEN YES-I TERDA Y, ! N EFFE CT DEFENDED THE AD-i I MINISTRATION'S HANDLING OF THE WAR I

WHILE TRYING TO AVOID A DIRECTLY CON­I TRADICTING FORD. I "IN WHAT RESPECT IS IT SHOCKING?"

DIRKSEN PARRIED WHEN HE WAS ASKED ABOUT THE MISMANAGEMENT CHARGES "WHO ARE THE SHOCKERS'?"

DIRKSEN WAS ASKED IF HE THOUGHT PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S HONOLULU MEETING WITH SOUTH VIETNAMESE PREMIER NGUYEN CAO Ky WAS A MISTAKE BECAUSE IT DIS­PLA YEO THE U. S GOVERNMENT 'I EMBRAC I NG Ky PUBLICLY"

"THAT'S A MATTER ON WHICH I COULDN'T PASS JUDGMENT WHEN YOU ARE FIGHT-

DENIED THE 1941 PRIZE IN LITERATURE BECAUSE DR. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER, THE PRESIDENT Of COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, BRANDED "FOR WHOM THE BELL':. TOLLS" AS "LASCIVIOUS" AND VETOED THE SELECTION Of THE EXPERTS ON THE LITERATURE JURY.

THE ARTICLE, BY ROBERT BENDINER, CHARGES THAT WASHINGTON COLUMNIST ARTHUR KROCK, A FORMER LONG-TERM MEM­BER OF THE PRIZE BOARD, WAS A "HIGH PREl6SURE SOURCE" WHO ALLOWED FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS, AND EVEN HIS STEPSON TO INFLUENCE HIS PREJUDICES, WHICH HE LATER RECOMMENDED STRONGLY TO THE BOARD

BENDINER, A FORMER MANAGING EDITOR OF THE NATION MAGAZINE, HAS WRITTEN BOOKS ON WASHINGTON POLITICS.

IN 1965, THERE WAS DISSATISFACTION WITH THE SELECTION OF THE ADVISORY JURORS ON SPOT NEWS REPORT I NG. "To HURRY ALONG" THE TASK OF SELECTION, THE ARTICLE SAID, SOMEONE BROUGHT UP

THERE, SINCE 1961, THEY HAVE BEEN BATTLING FOR AN AUTONOMOUS STATE OF KUR DISTAN.

THEY fOUGHT THE IRAQI GOVERNMENT OF PREMIER ABDUL KARIM KASSEM UNTIL KAS­SEM MET HIS OWN VIOLENT DEATH IN A MILITARY COUP IN 1963.

THEY fOUGHT PRESIDENT ABDEL SALAM AREf UNTIL HE DIED LAST WEEK IN A HELI­COPTER CRASH DURING A SANDSTORM

Now AREF1S BROTHER, MAJ. GEN. ABDUL RAHMAN AREF, IN AN INTERVIEW DISTRIBUT­ED BY THE MIDDLE EAST NEWS AGENCY, HAS PROMISED THE KURDS THEY WILL HAVE AUTON­OMY.

IN A LAND OF PL9TS, COUNTER-PLOTS AND MILITARY COUPS, WHERE VIOLENCE CAN BE STIRRED AS SUDDENLY AS A DESERT SANDSTORM, THE PROMISE MAY MEAN MUOH OR NOTHING.

PERHAPS IT MEANS THAT THE NEW REGIME IS CONVINCED THAT THE KURDS IN THEIR

THE COVERAGE OF A LOCAL FLOOD BY A MOUNTAIN fORTRESSES CANNOT BE CRUSHED WRITER OF THE HUNGRY HORSE NEWS, COlUM-MILITARILY, BIA FALLS, MONTANA. PERHAPS IT WAS MADE ONLY TO HELP

"THAT I T HAD DONE A FINE JOB OF RE- SMOOTH THE TRANSFER OF POWER I N BAGHDAD. PORTING WAS ALL TO THE GOOD, AND ITS BAGHDAD GOVERNMENTS HAVE SPOKEN SOFT-NAME MADE I T ALL BUT I RRES I STABLE," L Y TO THE KURDS BEFORE, ONl Y TO RESUME THE ARTICLE CHARGED. MILITARY ACTION AGAINST THEM.

THE 1950 DRAMA PRIZE, AWARDED TO THE KURDS ARE NOT ARABS AND DO NOT RICHARD RODGERS AND OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN, SPEAK THE ARAB LANGUAGE THEIR OWN WAS ALSO GIVEN TO JOSHUA LOGAN, WHO IS CLOSER TO THAT OF IRAN. CO-AUTHORED THE AWARD WINNING MUSICAL AN ESTIMATED 10,000 TO 20,000 KURDISH "SOUTH PAC IF IC," AFTER RODGERS CALLED REBELS ARE LED BY 62-YEAR-OLD GEN Mus-AND ASKED THE BOARD WHETHER LOGAN TAFA AL-BARZANI. "HAD BEEN OMITTED BY OVERSIGHT," THE LAST DECEMBER, BARZANI REJECTED A ARTICLE SAID. GOVERNMENT OFFER TO RECOGNIZE THE KURDS

THE BOARD, MADE UP OF NEWSMEN AND AS A "NATION" WITH THEIR OWN LANGUAGE THE PRESIDENT OF COLUMBIA, FREQUENTLY AND CULTURE, SAYING THE REBELS WOULD DISREGARDS THE CHOICES OF THE EXPERT FIGHT 10 TO 20 YEARS IF NECESSARY TO WIN JURORS, BENDINER SAID. A GEOGRAPHICALLY DEFINED AUTONOMOUS

LILLIAN HELLMAN, PHILIP BARRY. S.N. STATE WITH ITS OWN LEGISLATURE, EXECU­BEHRMAN, CLIFFORD ODETS, PAUL VINCENT TIVE BRANCH AND POLICE WITHIN THE NA­CARROLL, JOHN VAN DRUTEN, ROBERT LOWELLTIONAL BOUNDARIES OF IRAQ. HE WOULD AND EDWARD ALBEE ARE AMONG DRAMAJISTS LEAVE FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND OVER-ALL NA­LISTED WHO HAVE BEEN HONORED BY EVERY TIONAL DEFENSE TO THE IRAQI GOVERNMENT. AWARD BUT THE PULITZER. THE QUARREL HAS GONE BEYOND NATIONAL

THIS LIST, THE ARTICLE SAID, "IS NOT BOUNDAIRI£S RELATIONS WITH IRAN HAVE QOIT8 AS STRIKING AS THE ROSTER OF APPROACHED THE BREAKING POINT OVER MISSING GIANTS IN FICTION" IRANiS REFUSAL TO CLOSE ITS BORDERS TO

"THE NET RESULT IS THAT TWO OR THREE THE KURDISH REBELS. ANONYMOUS JURORS WILL HAVE RECOMMENDED ALSO ACCUSED OF HELPING THE KURDS A BOOK FOR A PULITZER PRIZE AND TWO KAVE BEEN THE UNITED STATES, BRITAIN, OR THREE UNIDENTIFIED FRIENDS OF TWO THE SOVIET UNION AND ISRAEL OR THREE ADMITTEDLY INE~PERT JUDGES IRAQ ALSO HAS CHARGED THAT A CLAN~ WILL HAVE ~DVISED THEM WHETHER OR NOT DESTINE RADIO OPERATING IN BULGARIA TO ABIDE BY THOSE RECOMMENDATIONS," AIDS THE REBELS. THE ARTICLE SAID. AT Hom:, THE KURDkSH REVOLT HAS'::'TIED

ROSYTH, SCOTLAND (UPI)--LAURENCE HENDERSON, 20, THE TALLEST ~AN IN THE BRITISH ROYAL NAVY AT 6-FOOT-8, HAS HAD TO CONFINE HIMSELF TO QUARTERS FOR THE PAST MONTH BECAUSE THE NAVY CAN'T FIND A PAIR OF SIZE 14 SHOES TO FIT HIM

LONDON (UPI)--BRITISH ARTIST JAMES

UP SOME 40,000 OF IRAQiS 45,000 TROOPS AND HAS WEAKENED AN ECONOMY ALREADY SUFFERING FROM EXPENSIVE EXPERIMENTS IN SOCIALISM.

EVEN FOR THE UNITED ARAB REPUBLiC'S PRESIDENT GAMAL ABDEL NASSER IT HAS HAD AN ANNOYING EFFECT. NASSER OPPOSES MILITARY ACTION AGAINST THE KURDS BE­CAUSE IT DELAYS HIS OWN PLANS FOR A REUNION BETWEEN THE U.A R. AND IRAQ.

ING TO KEEP A GOVERNMENT AFLOAT, ANY EVANS, 35, ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT BEFORE LITTLE GESTURE IS HELPFUL, AND I MOVING TO GREECE HE PLANS TO CHANGE DON'T BELIEVE ANYBODY CAN QUARREL WITH HIS NAME TO CONSTANTIN IVANOVITCH IT," DIRKSEN REPLIED

DISCUSSING FORD'S CHARGE OF BOMB SHORTAGES, DIRKSEN MADE IT CLEAR HE UNDERSTOOD THE PROBLEM WAS ONE OF

ANDREYEV. HE SAID THE GREEKS HAVE DIFFICULTY

PRONOUNCING THE NAME "EVANS."

ALTOGETHER, NATIONAL HATRED IS SOME-THING PECULIAR You WILL ALWAYS FIND 11

STRONGEST AND MOST VIOLENT WHERE THERE IS THE LOWEST D~GREE OF CULTURE.

GOETHE

FINDING SIEVEDORES TO UNLOAD BOMBS F~ I ~~S~H~I~P~S-2I~N~~~O~U~T~H~V~IE~T~N~A~M~E~S=E~P~O~R~T~S~' ______ -L ________________________________________________________________________________ __

HOURGLASS IEDNESDA Y, Ap~ ~O, 1966

JUNIOR SOCCER

Sport's section INI~H: ~~~~O:A~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~:T~~~~~M RAIDERS DEFEATED THE NA ALI I 3 TO I FRANK SERAFINI'S TWO FINE GOALS IN THE FIRST HALf GAVE THE RAIDERS A 2 TO I

~ ______________________________________ ~ _________________________________________ I LEAD AT THE HALF TIMEu IN THE SECOND

3A~EB~LL 'DC' '~'D' 'P i'\ t".l1 \.J I ,J'--tONY :O\!iGl.IA~O, THE DEFENDING

AM£~ICAN ~lAGuE ~O~E RuN CHAMPION W~O WA~ ~CMfRLESS AND BATTING ONLY .138, hl- nl~ F ~ST Of T~E SEASON TODAY TO LEAD T~~ 8CSTON qEC SOX TO A 5-3 VIC­TOR~ OVER ~rE DET~OIT IIGERS~

'i WA~ ~~E ON~Y DAY ~AME PLAYED IN T~E AI j MI~NE'30"'A AT KANSAS CITY HAV!~G BlEN RAINED OUT AND NEW YORK AT _lEVELANC, WAS~I~GTON AT BALTIMORE AND C~ICAGO AT CA~lfOR~IA WERE TO PLAY

N I G."'P GAMES COt\,dSol IA~O) L'IvlI"T"fD TO TnREE SINGLES

AND A DOJBt E IN 29 EARLIER BATTING TRIPS, liNED A PiTCH BY TERRY Fox IN­TO T~[ ~EFr FiElD SCR~EN IN THE SIXTH INNiNG FO~~OwING SINGLES BY LENNY GREE~ AND CARL YAS7RZEMSKI.

Bos'o~ RELIEVEq DICK ~ADATZ, SHOW­ING T~E fORM T~A7 ~~DE hl~ ONE OF BASEBALL'S BEST BU~LPEN ARTISTS, HELD THE TiGERS TO ONE RUN OVER THE LAST THREE INNINGS TO SAVE TrlE VICTORY FOR STARTER JERRY S1EPiEhSON, W~O WAS CREDITED WIT~ ~IS FIRST MAJOR lEAGUE

VICTOR" DON DEMETE~ HAD hlT A SO~O HOMER

FOR DETROIT I~ THE FOURT~, HIS FIRST, TO BREA~ A ~-ij 'IE AfTER THE TIGERS HAD SCORED IN THE THIRD ON JERRY LUMPEiS TRIDlE A~D A~ KAll~EIS SINGLE.

1~E RED S0X iAGGED DE1ROIT STARTER DAVE WICKERSnAM FOR A RUN IN THE SECOND ON SINGtES B~ GEORGE SCOTT AND BOB TILLMAN A~D RICO PETROCELL liS DOU~ BLEo THE RED SOX DROVE OUl Fox IN T~E SEVENT~ WITH ANOTHER RU~ ON A WALK TO PE1ROCElli AND GEORGE SMITH'S COUBLE

IN OTHER BASEBALL NEWS THE CLEVE­LAND IhDIA~~ BEA~ -KE NEW YORK YANKEES 3 TO I T~£ 8A~T ~ORE ORIOLES CRUSH-ED T"",E WASl"'" I NG10"J SEI'lA TORS, 14-8 BOSTON BLANKED DEr~ I~ 7-0 IN THE MORNING HALF Of A DOUBL~~lADER BUT LOST i~ T~E SECOND GAME 6 TO 4. THE CHICAGO WnlTE SOX BEAT ~~E CALIFORNIA ANGELS 3 TO ~ LME SAN fRANCISCO GIANTS TROUNCED THE CHICAGO CUBS 11-10, AND IT WAS .HE Sr LOuis CARDINAL OVER THE NEW VORK ~ETS 5 TO 2 BRIEF­lY IT WAS THE HOJSTON ASTROS OVER THE los ANGE~ES DODGERS, 8-5, THE PITTS­BURGH PIRATES OVER THE CINCINNATI RlDS, 7 TO 3 AND ~HE PTLANTA BRAVES OVER THE PHILADELP~IA PHILS 3 TO I.

~EAGUE STAt\DINGS AY'~Q '," A~ I..EAGuE

Mle., 2c'1oc. fv1ARINE DEPT"

P M Z FIL-AM KENTRON NA AL I I PRESS-Rol

EBErE BASKETS NA A~II "A" WECo R I KI' 1\ I S

JOMA KA J II F3 lv

JA'rC£E,) FRONTIER> WILOCATS

NATIJ~A ...

WON

3 2 I ~

i (,

° o LEAGUE

3 2 3 3 I o o o

KEI'HRON

TRIPLE 'Ali LEAGUE !

HIGH SCHOOL Il SEAGULLS EBEYE RANGER~ Do· GLAS ACCIDENTS P tv Z

~

2

! o

LOST o I o I 2 2 I 2

o o I I I 2

~ o o I I I 2 2

L 0 CAL o P 0 R T S HALF, JEFF HARDIN DROVE THROUGH THE MIDDLE TO SCORE THE FINAL TALLY FOR

THE ADULT BEGINNERS SWIMMING COURSE THE RAIDERS. THE NA ALII'S LONE GOAL WILL BEGIN TOMORROW, APRil 21, PROMPT- CAME FROM THE fOOT OF TOM BAKER. STEVE LV AT 5.15 PM) AT THE DEPENDENTS' POOL. BATEN PLAYED A FINE BALLGAME ON DEFENSE

THE KWAJALEIN TENNIS CLUB WILL HOLD A SHORT BUSINESS MEETING AT THE COUNT­DOWN CLUB ON THURSDAY, APRIL 21 AT 8.30 PM. ITEMS TO BE DISCUSSED WILL INCLUDE TYE RESULTS OF BALLOTING ON RULE CHANGES, THE MENS' SINGLES TOURNA MENT, A KTC PARTY AND NOMINATION OF NEW OFFICERS,

THE KWAJALEIN ALL-iSLAND MEN'S SIN­GLES TENN~S TOURNAMENT SPONSORED BY SPECIAL SERVICES AND THE KWAJAlEIN TEN NIS CLUB WILL BE PLAYED APRIL 29 THRO MAY 8. ANY MALE ~SLAND RESIDENT WHO IS INTERESrED IN PLAYING SHOULD CON­TACT ONE OF THE rOLlOWING TO REGISTERo REMI REMITICADO, 9-3/7 DAYS, Gus GUASTAMACHIO, 386 DAYS, 675 EVENINGS, RAY ALIVIADO, 318 DAYS AND ED KIESSLIN 9-209 DAYS AND 692 EVENINGS.

THE 10URNAMENT WilL CONSIST OF A BEG!NNERS, AN iNTERMEDIATE AND AN AD­VANCED D!VISION

DEADLINE FOR REGISTRATION IS TUESDAY APRIL 26.

WOMENiS VOLLEYBALL DISPLAYING FINE TEAMWORK AND HUSTLE,

THE ICHI-BANS BErllND THE fINE LEADER­SHIP Of MARY MCCRARY DEFEATED THE NA All I I N TWO HARD fOUGHT SETS 15-13, 15-90 THE fiRST SET WAS NIP AND TUCK WITH SEVERAL FINE VOLLEYS MADE BY BOTH SIDESo THE ~c~I-BANS, AFTER TRAILING IN THE FIRST SET, CAME BACK STRONG TO KNOT THE COUNT AT 13 ALL AND SCORED TWO FAST POINTS TO WIN THE SET, iN THE SECOND SET THE !CHI-BANS CON­TINUED THEIR STEADY PLAYING TO OVER­COME A TIRED NA All I TEAM. NORMA RILEY, DONNA FRIESZ, ELSIE SMITH, PHYLLIS MOORE AND NANCY BURKE PLAYED WELL ALONG WITH MARY FOR THE ICHI­BANSo SADAKO CHING, JUDY GILLIS, LEORA CUMMINGS AND JUANITA CLARK PER­FORMED WELL fOR THE NA ALI I

THE HIGHLANDERS KEPT THEIR HOPES ALIVE IN QUALifYING FOR THE ROUND Ro­BIN SERIES BY SLIDING PAST THE LEPRE­CHAUNS IN THREE SETS 9- 15, 15-4, 15-110 BOTH TEAMS PUT ON A GREAT GAME LAST NIGHT WHICH WENT DOWN TO THE WIRE THE SECOND SET WAS A HUMDINGER AND NERVE WRACKING TO WATCH. WITH THE SCORE TIED AT 14 ALL BOTH TEAMS BROKE EACH SIDE SERVE BEfORE THE HIGHLANDERS CAME THROUGH WITH THE WINNING POINT. TE~RY GERRITY, CATHv ARMSTRONG, DAWN KRONISH AND JUDI DECKER LED THE HIGH­LANDERS FOR THE LEPRECHAUNS IT WAS BETTY HENSLEY, BARBARA SHORES AND KATHY BUTLER.

STORRS, CONN (UPI )--TENSION •• IS ••• REPORTED ••• MOUNTING. FOR •• THE ••• 1966

c TOR~r[ TOURNAMENT •• oAT ••• THE ••• UNI­VERSlfY •• oOF •• CONNECTICUT.

ER' GOLF CLASS:

FOR THE FIL-AM'S AND DESERVES A LOT OF CREDIT. BOTH TEAMS SHOWED A LOT OF HUSTLE AND GOOD SPORTSMANSHIP.

MOUNTAINBALL

HARD IT

IN THE AMERICAN LEAGUE AT DALLY FIELD THE HIGH SCHOOL I TEAM WON A FOUGHT GAME OVER KENT RON 12 TO I I. WAS AN UPHILL VICTORY FOR THE HIGH SCHOOL I TEAM WHO TRAILED FOR FOUR FULL INNINGS. IN HE FifTH INNING THE HIGH SCHOOLERS SCORED TWO RUNS TO TAKE THE LEAD ON DETCHEMENDY'S AND CRAFTON'S SINGLES KENTRON STARTED A RALLY GOING IN THE SEVENTH INNING BY SCORING TWO RUNS TO TIE THE SCORE ON KEN CONNER~ AND TOM ~EYERS' RUN PRODUCING SINGLES. THE HIGH SCHOOL1S WINNING RUN CAME IN THE BOTTOM OF THE SEVENTH INNING ON DWIGHT Ross' SINGLE SCORING BRITTON WITH THE WINNING RUN. Ross LED THE HIGH SCHOOL'S BATTING BY COLLECTING THREE SINGLES. TOM MEYERS WAS THE HITTING STAR FOR KENTRON WITH TWO SINGLES. W,NNING PITCHER WAS SCOTT SHELHORSE AND THE LOSER WAS Ao BUETTNER.

IN THE NATIONAL LEAGUE AT BRANDON FIELD THE EBEYE BASKETS KEPT THEIR UNDEFEATED RECORD CLEAN BY DEFEATING THE W,LDCATS 6 TO 4. THE WILDCATS SCORED THREE RUNS IN THE FIRST INNING TO TAKE THE LEAD. THE EBEYE BASKETS CAME BACK WITH fOUR RUNS IN THE FOURTH INNING ON ERRfT!C FIELDING BY THE WILD­CATS TO LEAD 6 TO 3 THE WILDCATS SCORED A SINGLE RUN IN THE SEVENTH INN­ING FOR THEIR FOUR RUN TOTAL.

ATTENTION SHUFFLEBOARD PLAYERS THE DEADLINE fOR ENTRY IN THE SPECIAL

SERVICES SHUfFLEBOARD TOURNAMENT WILL BE FRIDAY, APRIL 22 AT 4 PM. ALL THOSE WHO WISH TO PARTICIPATE ARE ASKED TO CALL 420.

HANDBALL MATCHES THURS., APRIL 21 COURT I

POLLARD & HIRST VS SCHOLAR & SUC COURT 2

VERRY & FRIESZ VS WISBAN & AIREND SAT., APRIL 23 COURT I

CUMMINGS & REICH VS SHOLAR & SUCHAN COURT 2

BLOEDEL & PASCOE VS WISBAN & AIREND SUN., APR I L 24 COURT I II AM

VERRY & FRIESZ VS WARDLAW & DELLEPEL COURT I I I I AM

WINN & PARKER VS PURSLEY & HILL

ABOUT ••• 200 ... NON-SNAPPING ••• TURTLES o •• ARE ••• EXPECTED ••• TO ••• ENTER •• THE ... 13 fEET 6 INCH •• RACE ••• WHICH ••• BEGINS •• APRIL 27

The wedge t th green

I \GE 6 " R (CONT I NUED FROM .i.' PAGE ONE)

-~E LAS~ PAID WAS CARRIED OUT BY NAVY I ;' -4 _E ... .., PWM 'THE CARR I ER U S.S 0 T I CON­CEPC~Ac P~lO~S SAID THEY DESTROYED AT LEAS~ O~E SPAN Of A VITAL HIGHWAY 8R~D­

C~ 10 MJ.ES NORTH OF HAIPHONG. I THE AMER,CAN PILOTS ALSO REPORTED I - I G,",~ II "IIG s::"Ou P SAMS ST~EAK I NG ThROUGI-f I ~~E SKY AS T~E~ MADE THE BOMBING RUN.

7~~RE wAS ",,0 REPORT OF A~Y PLANES \ BE IIvG lOS"" II N THE. RA! 0, BUT AN AMER I CAN SPO~E~MpN A~~OUNCED THAT THREE MORE A~E~~CAN WAqPL~NES HAD BEEN SHOT DOWN OVER NOq~w V.ET NAM IN THE PAST THREE DAYS

O~E O~ T~E DOWNED PLANES WAS A U.S. NAVY A-IE SKYRA!DER THAT CRASHED 25 ~JLES SOvTH OF ViNH MONDAYo THE PILOT WAS llJ STED AS M! SS I NG TODAY AFTER SEARCH OPERAT~ONS WERE CALLED OFF.

YESTERDAY, A U S. AIR FORCE F-I05 JET WAS HJT BY GROUND FIRE WEST OF DONG Ho~ tHE SPO~ES""AN SA 10. ITS P ILor WAS MiSS~NG A~D ~EARED DEAD.

A"'OT~£R F - '105 ON AN ARMED RECONNA I S­SANCE ~~SSJON WAS SHOT DOWN BY ANTI­A~RCRA~~ f~qE ABOUT 60 MILES NORTH Of' T~t DEM M ~ HAR ij ZED ZONE BORDER. ITS p~lOT} CAPT JOHN Bo ABERNATHY EJECTED ~RO~ THE FLA~ING JET AND WAS RESCUED BY AN ~~3c ~E~ICOPTERo

Ai T~E Tg~E 4;S PLANE WAS HIT, ABERN­AT~Y WAS lEADJ~G A FLIGHT OF FOUR THUN­OERC~iE~ F~G~TER-BOMBERS OVER ROUTE 15 NE~R THt ~u G!A PASS, THE MOUNTAIN PASS ON T~E Ho CHi MiNH TRA!l THAT WAS PUL­VERIZED BY B-52 BOMBERS IN A MASSIVE RA~D lAST WEEKQ ABCqNATH~ P~RACHUTED INTO A MOUNTAIN­

OUS, ~U~GLED AREA AND ESTABLISHED RADIO CONTACT WQ~y THE OTHER F-105So ~E WAS RESCuED BV A HEliCOPTER THAT CAME UNDER HEAVY ~nRE ~RO~ NORTH VIETNAMESE GUN­NERS.

TWE C~PTAIN OF T~E RESCUE SHIP, ROBERT Do rV?~A~-, SA JD "WE WERE DRAW!NG 57;Io1M ~%RE ~H~N ~E WENT iN TO DROP THE HOISTo ALTHOUGH FIRE WAS PRETTY ACCURATE AND WE HAD TO ~OV£f FOR A FEW MINUTES, WE D~DN~r rAKE ANY Hnso"

I~ OT~ER A~R ACTIO~ YESTERDAY NAVY PiLors ~lEW A TOTAL OF 18 MISSiONS OVER NORT~ V'E~ ~A~~ THEY REPORTED DESTROY­ING OR C'MAG~NG MORE THAN 17 CARGO JUN~ AND ~EAVjL~ DAMAGING TWO COMMUNICATIONS lOwERS AND TWO MILiTARY STRUCTURESo

AiR FORCE PILOTS FLEW 13 MISSIONS AGAINST THE NORTH, DESTROYING FIVE TRUCKS AND TOUCHING OFF SECONDARY EX­PLOSiONS iN OTHER MILITARY INSTALLA­TIONS THEY HIT. THEY ALSO SILENCED ONE ANTi-AIRCRA~- SITE, AND LEFT TWO BRIDGES DAMAGED AND ONE SEGMENT OF ROAD CUT.

iN GROuND ATTACKS, AN ESTIMATED 15 VIET CONG GUERR~LlAS INFILTRATED THE A~ERqCAN AiR 8~3[ AT AN KHE, CENTRAL ~iGHlAND ~E~DQuARTERS OF THE U.S. 1ST AiR CAVALRY DIVJSION, EARLY TODAY AND DA~AGED ~~0 C-130 HERCULES CARGO PLANES W~;~ SAT~~EL EXPkOSIVE CHARGESo

THE VjET rONG ATTACKED AT 2 AM WITH SIX ROUNCS OF ~ORTAR SHELLS, AIR BASE GuARDS SPOTTED THE GUERRilLAS AS THEY CRAWLED AWAY AND OPENED FIRE ON THEM, BUT T~ERE WERE NO REPORTS OF ANY VIET COPt,lG CASUALTIES

A II ST CA 'lfAlRY HEl I COPTER ON "ANT 1-~ORTARiI PAT~Ol SPOTTED THE VIET CONG MORT~R FLASHES AND REPORTED SILENCING THE MORTAR POS!T~ONS WITH ROCKET FIREe

U,S 25TH INFANTRY DIVISION TROOPS, "0 K If CONTiNuiNG PERAT!ON AHALA~ KILLED

ElGHT VIET eONG AND SEIZED TWO TONS OF RICE TOD~Y a~ AN AREA 28 MILES NORTHWES' OF SA~GON

EARlY TODAY A VjET CONG FORCE OF UN­KNOWN SUZE ATTACKED A SECURITY FORCE GUARDJNG AN lNSTALlATION IN THE OPERA-TiON ~REA THE COMMUNISTS DETONATED TWO CLAY~ORE MiNES AGAINST T~E DEFENDING FORCE T~E AMER!CAN iNFANTRYMEN RETURN~ ED fHRE W 1H 90MM TANK GUNS AND MACHINE .. GUNS 'HfRE wERE NO U S CASUALTIES"

HOURGLASS

D I ....,"'1 SEN (CON'TI NUED FROM .,1\\ PAGE ONE)

DIRKSEN HAD ENVUSIONED ADDED SUP-PORT BY AGREE~NG TO A LAST-MINUTE CHANGE REQUiRING T~Ai, BEFORE A STA~E REAPPORT!ONED 1N THiS WAV~ IT ~JRST CO~PLY W~T~ THE SUPREME COURT RIJ!..\I\IG

THE COURT DECREED iN JUlr~ 1964, THAT THE MEMBERS o~ BOTH HOUSES OF A STATE tEG S~ATURE MUST REPRESENT DISTRICTS SUBS~ANTlAll( EQUAL IN POPLn_A'" • 0"1 0

S'NCE T~E RJ~ ~G) 37 STATES HAVE REAP?ORTnONED ON AN Al~-POPULATiON BASlSc DIRKSEN AND H~S OPPONENTS HAVE NOTED ~~AT BV NEXT FAll~ AT lEAS~ THREE-FOUR~HS OF THE STATE ~EG!SlATU~ES -- ~HE NUMBER REQUIRED 70 RA~~FY A CO~ST!TUT!ONAl AMEND­MENT SUCH AS D~RKSENiS -- ALREADY WOULD HAVE COMPbt~O ~ITH TH~ COURT RUU NG 0

DEMCCRAT~C SENo PALL Ho DOUGLAS, WHO uS D~PKSE~JS FEL~OW SENATOR FROM 1ll,NO Sj SA1D ~~E VOTE WAS "A DEFE~r fOR AN"~"C~V!L RIGHTS FORCES ~HAT WERE F9GHT!NG HARD FOR THE 0 I RI<SEN At-4END"'EN~ 0 Ii

IIT"n S W h,.l CERn A ~ N ... 'f HELP TO EN­SURE EQUAL R ij GI"''US fO'" ~EGROES ~" HE SAiD, ADDi~G T~AT THE RE~L GAINS W~ll BE F£l~ ~N THE GROW!NG SUBURBS RATHER T~AN !~ THE CIT~ESo

SEN. ~RANK J. LAUSCHE, (DEM.-OHIO~ DiSAGqEED. iiq CAN ONLY SEE LEGIS­LAT~VE ACTIVjTiES BEING DOMINATED BY THE PO~UTijCAL fORCES OF THE lARGE

" CITilES, HE SAuD. SEN. Will.AM PROXMJRE, (OEM -WIS 1

SA~D THE DiRKSEN AMfNDMENTiS PURPOSE WAS TO "DES~RO"n' JUD~C!Al REViEW" BY THE SUP~EME CO~RT9 BUT SEN. ROMAN La ~~USKA~ (REP.-NEB.)~ A D!RKSEN ALLY, SA!D Hf SA~ NOTHING BAD iN lnM~r~NG T~E COuRT S JURiSD:CTiON, SO~ETWiNG HE SA'D CO~GqESS HAD DONE ,~ FEMALE SvF~RAGE. P~OH'B!TffON AND fEDERAL iNCOME TAXES.

MC:jAMA~A (CONTiNUED FROM

PAGE ONE) HE HAD DECLINED TO TESTIFY IN PUBLIC WHE~ THE COMMiTTEE HELD fiTS MUCH PUBL~CiZED ViET NAM DEBATE.

MCNAMftRA READ A PREPARED STATEMENT URGiNG THe COMMllTTEE TO APPROVE THE FULL $917 MiLliON SOUGHT FOR M!ll­TARV ASSiSTANCE. HE SAiD iT WAS IRRATIONAL TO SPEND $50 BiLLION A VEAR ON U S ARMEO FORCES, BUT RE­FUSE MiLiTARY HELP TO ALliES ON THE FRINGES OF THE iRON AND BAMBOO CUR­TAINS.

THE COMMJ1TEt, LED BY ITS CHAiRMAN AND ARCH-ADMiNiSTRATION OPPONENT, SEN. Jo WILLIAM FUlBR!GHT~ THEN SHIFTED ATTENTION TO THE VIET NAM WAR. SOME OF THE QUESTIONING WAS CRITiCAL, SOME NOT.

MUCH ATTENTiON WAS FOCUSED ON THE CURRENT UPROAR ~N SOUTn VIET NAM BETWEEN THE BUDDHiSTS, THE CATHO­LiCS, AND THE MJliTARY REGuME HEADED BY PREMIER NGUYEN CAO Ky"

McNAMARA CONCEDED, AS HE HAS RE­CENTLY, THAT THE UNREST HAD HAMPERED SOME MiLITARY OPERATIONS. HE SAID, HOWEVER~ THAT "nHS MAY SOUND NAIVE, BUT liM ENCOURAGED BY THE EVENTS OF THE PAST TI-iREE WEEKS."

"T~EY WERE ON 'THE VERGE OF Mili­TARY CONFLICT BETWEEN THEMSELVES," MrNAMARA SAUD. "iT DIlDNJT OCCUR."

THE SECRETARY SAiD THE DEFENSE DEPARTMENT FUllV SUPPORTED THE DE­CISiON OF THE V!ETNAMESE GOVERNMENT TO HC~D ElECT"ONS iN THREE TO FIVE MONTHS HE SAID HE DID NOT THINK A cnViLIAN GOVERNME~u WOULD AFrECT THE COURSE Of THE WAR~ DEPENDING ON HOW THE ELECTION is CARR nED OUT. THE ROLE OF U S TROOPS THEN~ HE SAiD, WiLL NOT BE TO iNTERFERE IN THE ElEC­T~ON } BUT "TO PROViDE SECURiTY,"

EDNESDAY, APR~

WALL STREET TeDA Y · NEW YORK (UPI)--THE STOCK MARKET

STAGED AN ACTIVE RALLY TODAY AND PR I CES ADVANCED ALONG A BROAD fRONT

EVEN THE DUl_ BLUE CHIP SECT10N PARTICIPATED IN THE UPSWING. PRICES ADVANCED ALMOST STEADIlV THROUGHOUT THE DAy BuT SO~E FAIRLY HEAVY SE~LING !N THE FU~AL MINUTES PA~ED A NUMBER Of GAINS

THE UN'TED PRESS ~NTERNATiONAL STOCK MARKET IND!CA~OR SHOWED AN AVERAGE GAiN o~ 0,42 ON THE 1,437 'SSUES TRADED. GAINERS OuTNUMBERED ~OSERS 720 TO 4690 THERE WERE 89 NfW i966 H!GHS AND 44 NEW lOWS

DOW-vONES iNDUSTR~ALS ADVANCED 9.64 TO 951 28 AND RA!LS PUSHED AHEAD 2.46 TO 265 970 STANDARD & POOR!S 500 STOCK INDEX JUMPED, ° 5 i TO 92008.

TRADING SWELlED TO 10,5309000 SHARES FROM 8,820,000 SHARES YESTERDAY.

ROAN SELECTION TRuST CONTINUED TO DOMiNATE THE ACTiVE I..IS1'o ~T ROSE ~ n/4 TO i5~ i/8 O~ 386,900 SHARES.

ATLAS CORP WAS !N SECOND PLACE~ UN­CHANGED AT 4 1/2 ON 237,00 SHARES. BRUNSWiCK TACKED O~ 778 AT I i ON ~74,000 SHARES IN THiRD SPOT

SCM CORP WAS ALSO AC~IVE iT AD-VANCED TO A H~GH Of 84 ~/4 BuT BACKED OFf TO FtN~S~ AT 82 3/4 UP i 7/8< THE RiSE APPARENTLY WAS IN CONTINUED RES­PONSE TO ITS fAVORABLE EARNiNGS STATE­MENT RELEASED MONDAY,

CALUMET & HECLA DROPPED 3 3/4 IN AC­TIVE DEALiNGSo THE STOCK HAS BEEN IN A DOWNTREND SiNCE iT SOARED 25 POINTS FRIDAY IN ITS fiRST TRADE SINCE APRIL 6,

ELECTRONICS GAVE UP A DAv-LONG up­TREND AND T~RNED LOWER i~ THE FiNAL MiNUTESo MOTOROLA lOST 5, FAiRCHILD CAMERA 2 1/4 AND HONEYWE.LL, TEXAS INS­TRUME~TS3 ADMIRAL AND COLLINS RADiO AROUND i EACh, ZENiTH AND i8M PICKED UP 3 EACHe

STEEl$ RALLIED AROUND MID-DAY BUT FAILED TO HOLD THEiR BEST LEVELSe LUKENS WAS UP 3 5/8, McLOUTH I 3/4, JONES & LAUGHLiN I 3/8 AND U S STEEL I 1/4

AIRLINES FOLLOWED THE SAME PATTERN AS ELECTRONICS BUT MANAGED TO MAiNTAIN A HiGHER TONE. KlM CliMBED 2 i/2, NORTHWEST 2~ BRANIFF! 1/4, UNiTED 1-3/8 AND CONTINENTAL 7/8.

BOEiNG CONTINUED YESTERDAyiS RETREAT WiTH A LOSS OF 6 7/80 THE STOCK HAS BEEN UNDER PRESSURE ON REPORTS SOME AIRLINES HAVE fOUND METAL FATIGUE DAM­AGE IN BOEINGJS OLDER 707 JETS.

GENERAL DYNAMiCS JUMPED 2. DOUGLAS OVERCAME EARLY DULLNESS AND SPRINTED 3 1/40 UNiTED AiRCRAFT ROSE I 5/8, LING-TEMCO I 1/8 AND BEECH AIRCRAFT I 7/8.

CORNING GLASS CLIMBED 7 POINTS. CHRYSLER ADVANCED I, APPARENTLY IN CONTINUED RESPONSE TO ITS RECORD FIRST QUARTER SALES AND PROF!TS, GENERAL MOTORS ADDED I 3/8 Du PONT CLIMBED 4 !/2 AND EASTMAN KODAK ROSE Ie GEN .. ERAL ELECTRIC JUMPED 3

PRICES WERE HIGHER IN ACTIVE DEALINGS ON THE AMERICAN EXCHANGE. VOLUME SWELLED TO 5,590,000 SHARES FROM 4,-780,000 SHARES YESTERDAY OF THE 915 ISSUES TRADED, 397 ADVANCED, 287 DE­CLINED AND 231 HELD UNCHANGED.

SALiSBURY, RHODESiA (UPI )--RIOT PO­LICE FIRED OVER THE HEADS OF AN AFRICAN MOB YESTERDAY AFTER CARS AND BUILDINGS WERE STONED iN HARARI TOWNSHIP IN THE OUTSKIRTS Of SAliSBURY.

AUTHORITIES SAID NO iNJURiES WERE RE­PORTED IN ~iGHFIELD, MUFAKOSE AND KAM­BAZUMA TOWNSHIPS, ALL AFRiCAN DISTRICTS WITHIN WAlK~NG DiSTANCE OF SALISBURY'S CENTER. A POliCE SPOKESMAN SAID RIOT POLHCE CALLED OUT TO HANDLE THE TROUBLE IN THE HARARI DiSTR~CT FiRED OVER THE HEADS OF THE MOO TO PROTECT PROPERTY THE iMMED~ATE CAUSE Of THE DISTURBANCES W.AS UNKNOWN "'1=' c:;,.t. In

Computers '1'0 Invest Your Money? ~ e

By CHARLES W WHITE Wrttten Especially for Central

Press and ThIs Newspaper WILL A BUZZING bhnking

computer behemoth be makmg your stock market and other bus mess deCISIOns for you one of these days"

It begms to look hke it, in fact If you happen to be an in­vestor, particularly In mutual funds or With advICe of leading brokerage houses you can bet that a highly sophisticated su­per fantastic and very costly computer somewhere is already helpmg to make your deCisions

'" . '" SO NEW and dynamiC IS this

trend that not a few economl'lts arc worrying about it even blammg fast run ups m certain glamor stocks on computer stimulatIOn

a t \\

Others, ltke H Russell Mor­rison, New York, head of com­puter work for Standard Sta­tiStiCS, Inc a subsidiary of Standard and Poor s, are con vmced that computers With de tailed analyses of thousands of stocks minute by mmute will lead to better inve<;tmg and may tend to stabilize markets

This II the "Electronic Stock Evaluator" In operation r However that may be It s a

known fact that the investment mdustry IS puttmg at least $3 million a year mto data pro cessmg l:!~lVICes compared to only about $300000 three or four years ago

• MAJOR brokerage houses,

banks, and even pnvate invest ors are usmg thtm

Banks in the Midwest are rapidly moving over to compu­tenzatlOn and the Midwest Stock Exchange recently jOined the space age hot figure parade

It s not somethmr; Just any­body can get mto though ex ccpt mdlrectly through hiS bank, broker or mutual fund An expert With IBM says $35-000 a month rental for one of these machmes would be con side red ' pretty low -It could be $100 000 - and the machmes themselves can cost up m the

'CROSSWORD

I 2. ~ 4- ~!) 0

11. ~ I~

IS Ib

~ ~ ~ IS ~ 2.1 2~ ~~ ~

2.4-

2.5 ~ ~b !l0 ~ ~l ~?I ~4

~ ~ ~ 3b

!)S !l9 40 ~ 4'2 ~ 43 44

48 ~ 4'1

51 ~ Sl

mllhons What the machmes do for

you, baSICally IS to follow pnce changes and fundamentals such as earnmgs sales dividends etc, on as many as 7,000 stocks traded on major exchanges (There are nearly 2 000 Issues on the New York Stock Ex change alone far too big a Job for any mdlvldual to follow­and the machmes do It mmute to mmute)

b kill e d programmer,; put carefully guarded selectIOn for mulae mto the machmes a buy or sale may be flashed by elec trontc readout when say XYZ Inc suddenly moves Into a hot or horrible trend

Results" Standard which publishes advisory serVices and handles about $3 5 bllhon for chents not long ago found they were gettmg better Ylelds­well worth the money It costs them

• • BIG insurance compames

swear by their magnetic tapes bmary tapes punched cards

John Lambert of RockVille Center New York a former General Electnc analyst plO

By Eugene Sheffer'

7 ~i 9 10 1\

~ 14

~ 11

19 20

~ ~ ~ 2.1 2.8 2.9

~ "32

~ ~s

~ ~7

41 ~ ~ ~ 45 4(' 41

~ SO

~ 53

1'2.-9

HORIZONTAL 36 msects 52 sttll 8 Moses 1 methods 5 equal 8 fishing

poles 12 on the

sheltered side

13 be m debt 14 discharge 15 intended 17 prima

donna 18 child's

play­thing

19 spend­thrift

21 Greek phYSICian

24 employ 25 Russiart

name 26 musical

composI­tions

30-Grande

31 Chmese societtes

32 haunch 33 yearnmgs 35 mother

of Helen of Troy

ONKYB

37 fresher 53 Engbsh crossmg 38 hot, jettmg schOOl 9 neglect

sprmg 10 plunge 41 dance VERTIOAL headfIrst 42 exclama- 1 mass 11 heavenly

tion 2 beverage body 43 flattered 3 afflrma- 16 electrIfIed 48 father bve particle 49 thing 4 dog 20 skills

(law) 5 small 21 lass 50 Roman horse 22 exchange

garment 6 solemn premlUm 51 foot of wonder 23 dlvmg

an ape 7 songbirds bird --------------------------- 24 suspends Answer to yesterday's puzzle 26 perverse

12. ,

Averace time of solution 24 minutes «0 1965, King Features Synd Inc)

CRYPTOQUIPS

OPQCV CQLJLO

27 smew 28 assistant 29 box 31 prong 34 aerated 35 envoy 37 nothmg 38 deep cut 39 Charles

Lamb 40 wool 41 eqUItable 44 Scotch

nver 45 tmychlld 46 personalt ty 47 actor -­

Dalley

TPKJNKV

QPKYBOCT

Yesterday's Cryptoqulp CLEVER VILLAIN CAN INVEI­GLE NAIVE GIRL

nee red his own • Electronic Stock Evaluator' service In 1961 convinced that if you could forecast the course of a ballistIC missile you could do something like It With stocks

• LAST YEAR a hst of 10

Lambert selectIOns-or rather selecttons by hIS IBM 1410 and a .other machme he deSigned hImself - appreciated better than 60 per cent from July to Dec 31 While the Dow Jones Industnal Average was climb mg 11 % per cent

Many fmanclal experts in cludmg Don Campbell author of Understandmg Stocks aren t qUIte convmced It de pends on what you feed mto the machmes these skeptiCS say

The age IS too new and the vanables '>tlll too unknown to draw any sweeping conclu slOns Campbell wrote recently The computers he says can goof as unfortunately as pea pIe

Do you have ~oofs? com putel man Lambert was asked

SUI e he replted Everybody has them

e

PARKS CHOPPER AT METER-Motonsts were amazed when John Bourne puttmg hiS money mto a parkmg meter in London left hiS helicopter parked at the curb He brought the craft to the parkmg place by road (Coblephoto)

WANTS "TO SEE EVERYTHING"-After helpmg plant one of several trees she donated to help beautify Court House Square m Johnson CIty Tex Lynda Bird Johnson saId she hopes to go to Europe thiS summer and I want to see everythmg , The PreSident and Mrs Johnson are believed to have offered the tnp abroad as a college graduatIOn

present She IS 22

'-he WO'iIl'T~ound Us 1II11111111111111111111111111111111111111~~1I1II1I1I1I1I1II1I1I1I1I1I1II1I1I1II1I1I

Chances are thiS mawed couple won't be speaking when they wake up In the morning, because one of them probably snores

By JAMES H WINCHESiER Celltral PI ess A ~~OCHltlOli COli espollriellt

DO YOU SNORE? Well hsten to thiS It s esllmated rather conserval!vely that

one out of eight people snOles ThiS mean'> that In the UnIted States alone some 20 mllllOn disrupt the sleep of another 20 mil hon every mght

Snormg occurs m both sexe~ and at all ages although It s more common m older people It does no harm to the snorer but he usually has trouble convmcmg sleepmg mates that It s a trifle In some states snormg IS ,-------------­conSidered justifICatIOn for dl of the tongue It IS composed vorce on grounds of mcompat of muscle connective tissue Iblhty Durmg World War II and mucous membrane All' snormg was recogmzed as a bleathed m through the open maJor air raid shelter problem mouth cau"es It to flap like a by the Bnllsh and they used loose »all JI1 the wmd to Issue eal plug" to anyone who ThIS snoring condItIOn can be \\ anted them caused by a lot of thmgs among

The sounds of snonng range from a gentle buzz and a low \\ hlstle to a prolonged snort or stentonan roal Sometimes 01

so It seems ItS tones resemble those produced by a pneuma tiC drill Researchers have found that m the daytime snormg usually appearS wlthm 45 mm utes of falllllg asleep

ADMINISTRATION of a bar bltuate often results m Immedl ate snollng and deep sleep At mght snormg usually occurs abcut one and a half hoUl s af ter falling a"leep InCidentally some sCientists say you don t snore when you dl eam The theory IS that you re concen tratmg on the dl eam story and your body unconsclOu"ly Just doesn t have lime fOI you to snore too The sleep of snorers tests show usually IS hghter than that of non snorels

Snormg accordmg to medical dlctlOnalles IS to breathe nOls Ily durmg sleep due to vlbra lIon of the uvula and soft pal ate The uvula IS described as th" small soft st! ucture hang mg frnm the free edge of the palate m midline above the root

them large mfected tonSils or adenOIds but whatever the rea son not too much can be done about It Remo\al of the ton"II'l and adenOIds sonH.tlmes helps but not al\\ U)"

INVENTIVE gel1luse" have been attaclung the problem for yea I s but they haven thad much mOl e succe"" than the doctors MOl ethan 300 anti snonng deVice" ale regl"tercd With the U S Patent Office mest of them ba'>ed on the fol lowmg fOUl pimci ples

I The mouth shOUld be kept shut, (2) Mouth breath Ing should be rfstrlcted or pre\ ented e\ en If the mouth Is open, (3) The snorer should not be allo\\ I'd to slt'ep on hi .. hacl' and (4) HIS tongue should he l{ept flat

One suggestIOn IS that a rub ber ball With a bUllt m squeak be sewn mto the back of the pajama Jaclcet Then \\ hen the snOi er rolls onto hiS back, the sound WIll wake h1l11 up

It sounds as good as anj thmg

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B . Jay Becker

(Top Record-Holder In Masten' IndIvidual Champlon,hlp Play)

East dealer ly the last thing you should do East-West vulnerable IS lose your temper because of

a play partner makes, and then NORTH compound that supposed error

WEfn .K108 ,AKQ9 +9862 .7t'i

• 72 With one of your own , J 10 5 Gettmg down to cases sup-! ~ i ~ 6 3 pose you are East, defendmg ... EAST agamst two spades on the bld-

dmg shown Your IllustriOUS • Q 4 partner cashes the A-K-Q of , 7 6 3 hearts, declarer followmg SUit + Q J 10 3 to all of them • Q 10 8 2 At this pomt you may be

SOUTH thmkmg that a diamond shift • A J 9 6 5 3 would probably be best, but • 842 that you can stand a club lead + A 7 also If partner thinks that IS .A4 best

The biddmg But then to your surprise East South West North partner plays the nme of hearts Pass 1 • Pass 1 NT declarer dlscardmg a club from

dummy West s play may strike Pass 2. you as strange smce It IS sel-

Opening lead-kmg of hearts dom wise to present declarer Let's say that you are de- WIth a ruff and discard but you

fending a hand and your part- should take the play m stride ner chooses a line of defense and try to figure out why part­you don't understand It IS prob- ner made thiS extraordmary ably best in such case to go play along WIth partner because he It would not be right to diS­may know somethmg about the card on the nme of hearts hand that you don't know In which you might be mclmed to any event, it mIght be best to do If you gave no thought to humor him even if only for the reason for partner splay morale purposes No, the proper thmg to do IS

Of course, there IS always ruff the nme of hearts With the the possibility that partner does queen of spades because partner not know what he IS domg and apparently wants you to ruff is chucking the defense Even hIgh III order to help promote so, it may be wise to cooperate hiS trump holdmg If you do, the .on the off-chance that he does contract IS defeated, if you know what he's doing Certain- don't, South makes the contract

(0 1965, King Features Syndicate Inc)

PAGE 8

aASSIFIED FOR SALE

KODAK 300 PftOJECTOft WITH BOTH IN­STAMATIC AND UNIVERSAL CHANGE~S PLUS FOUft SLIDE TRAYS PftOJECTOft IN GOOD CONDITION AND HAS NEW BULB INSTALLED $35 FOR THE LOT CALL 2390

BARBE~SHOPPERS BY THE DOZEN TO SING AT THE USUAL THURSDAY NIGHT GET­TOGETHER THURSDAY'S SPEBSQSA GET­TOGETHER WILL BE HELD AT THE FINE AftTS BUILDING BETWEEN 7 30 & 9 30 BRING A SET OF LOOSE VOCAL CORDS AND A FRIEND FOR AN EVENING OF UNADULTER­ATED ENTERTAINMENT

A JADE TEARDROP EARRING AT THE PMZ CLUB SATURDAY NIGHT CALL 2469

ADULTS PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES WITH BLACK FRAMES CALL 536

FOUND

ADDING MACHINE DELIVERED TO WRONG ADDRESS CALL AND IDENTIFY, 2345

MAN'S RING AND WATCH, 2ND DECK IN SHOWER ROOM CALL 310 AND ASK FOR GIL

aN1'H .r

Hallmark of Excellence

MACY'S IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE ARRiVAL OF THE WORLD-RENOUNED ZENITH TRANS-OCEANIC RADIO NINE AM AND FM, PLUS SEVEN SHORTWAVE BANDS ENCOMPASSING THE FULL RANGE OF MARINE, WEATHER, AND SHORT­WAVE FREQuENCIES

HANDSOME AND STURDY, THE QUALITY OF THIS PRECISION RADIO SPEAKS FOR ITSELF SUPERB TONE AND FAR­REACHING POWER MEAN TRULY WORLD­WIDE RECEPTION

COUNTLESS THOUSANDS HAVE CONSID­ERED THE TRANS-OCEANIC SUCH A FINE PIECE OF EQUIPMENT THEy'VE BEEN WILLING TO PAY THE FULL RE­TAIL PRICE OF $275 MACY'S CAN OFFER IT TO YOU FOR ~ THAN $150' AN EXCEPTIONAL PRICE FOR AN EXCEPTIONAL PERFORMER'"

ATTENTION MEN'

MACY'S HAS JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF TROPICAL WORSTED SUI~ B'f ~ POPULAk THREE-AND-FW BUTTON MODELS I~ MEDIUM AND DARK COLORS AT A SUBSTANTIAL ~ TO YOU'

ALSO NEW IN THE MEN'S AND Boy'S DEPARTMENTS, BLAZER JACKETS IN ASSORTED COLOftS FOR THAT JUST­RIGHT D-BONNAIR£ TOUCH' COME IN AND SEE THEM'

AT MACY'S ON THURSDAY, APRIL 21

VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, CALIF (UPI)--A STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND COM­BAT CREW FROM MCCONNEL AIR FORCE BAS~ KANSAS, SUCCESSFULLY LAUNCHED A TITAN-II ICBM HERE TODAY AT 1244 AM PST THE LAUNCH WAS ONE IN A SERIES OF TESTS OF BOTH MISSILES AND CREWS THAT HAVE BEEN O~ ALERT IN SAC's DETERRENT FORCE SINCE JUNE 1963 PRE­LIMJNARY REPORTS INDICATED THAT THE MISSILE WAS ON COURSE fOR A SELECTED TARGET IN THE PACIFIC

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE UNDER CURRENT DEFENSE DEPARTMENT POLICY

THERE AftE TWO WORDS fOR E

HOURGLASS WEDNESDAY, AP~IL 20, 1966

CLUB NOTICES SENIOR PROTESTANT CHAPEL CHOIR MEETS TONIGHT AT 7 30 IN THE CHAPEL

KWAJALEIN ATOLL ART GUILD WILL HOLD A WORKSHOP THU~SDAY EVENING FROM 7 TO 10 AT THE SCUBA CLUBHOUSE ALL MEMBERS AND NON-MEMBERS ARE WELCOME

PROTESTANT COUPLES' CLUB PONAPE PARrY FRlDAY, APRIL 29 AT 8 PM LAST TIME THE MARKVE'S WILL BE WITH US, SO DO PLAN TO ATTEND AND GET YOUR BABYSIT­TER NOW

AN N OUNCEMENTS ADULT EDUCATION COURSE IN COMPUTER PROGRAMMING WILL MEET AS SCHEDULED THIS EVENING

EVENING BIBLE STUDY GROUPS WILL MEET AT THE HOME OF MR AND MRS JACK GLOVER, TR 707 AT 8 PM THURSDAY, APRIL 21 ALL INTE~ESTED PE~SO~S A~E CO~DIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND FOR INFORMATION, CALL 690

SCUBA CLASS--ALL PERSONS ATTENDING THIS CLASS, STARTING APRIL 29, MUST PASS A POOL TEST THIS FRIDAY, APRIL 22, AT 5 30 PM AT BACHELORS' POOL EVERYONE BRING MASK, SNORKEL AND FINS ALL PERSONS TAKING THE COURSE MUST TAKE A SCUBA PHYSICAL PLEASE M4KE APPOINTMENTS NOW AT THE HOSPITAL

MARKVE FAREWELL PARTY A fAREWELL PARTY FOR THE MARKVE

FAMILY WILL BE HELD APRIL 24 FROM I 30 TO 4 PM AT EMON BEACH BRING YOUR FAVORITE CASSEROLE, SALAD OR DESSERT THERE WILL BE A CHARGE Of 25 CENTS PER PERSON TO COVER THE COST OF BEVERAGES AND TABLEWARE Is­LAND RESIDENTS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND PLEASE MAKE RESERVATIONS NO LATER THAN THURSDAY, APRIL 21, 10 PM FOR RESERVATIONS OR FURTHER INfORMATION, CALL BETTY SHAffER, 2161, ESTHER BELLEN, 2290, JACK GLOVER, 378 OR NAN HOYT, 2241

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 M~Y ATTEND MOVIES No PRE-SCHOOL OR SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN MAY ATTEND

SPACE GL I DER PlA~'~'ED CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)--THE AIR FORCE

PLANS TO ROCKET A MINIATURE SPACE GLIDER 100 MILES HIGH IN NOVEMBER fOR A SOARING SWEEP BACK TO EARTH IN A PREVIEW OF RETURNS fOR MANNED SpACE­SHIPS OF THE fUTURE

FOUR SCIENTISTS TOOK THE WRAPS OfF THE SO-INCH, 890-POUND DELTA-SHAPED CRAFT YESTERDAY IN A HIGHLY-DETAILED PAPER PRESENTED TO A SPACE CONFERENCE OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAU­TICS AND ASTRONAUTICS

THE MARTIN Co IS BUILDING FOUR OF THE GLIDERS FOR AN AIR FORCE PROGRAM CALLED PRIME IT IS DESIGNED TO LEAD THE WAY TOWARD DEVELOPMENT OF LARGER CRAFT THAT ONE DAY MAY ENABLE ASTRO­NAUTS TO LAND AT JETPORTS ON RETURN FROM SPACE

"THIS PROGRAM IS EXPECTED TO PRODUCE TECHNOLOGY THAT COULD BE ApPLICABLE TO MANNED, MANEUVERABLE REENTRY," THE SCIENTISTS SAID THEY POINTED OUT THAT THE GLIDER'S fLIGHT WILL SIMULATE CONDITIONS THAT WOULD BE ENCOUNTERED ON A RETURN FROM LOW EARTH ORBIT

SHOWTIME 7 00 & 9 00

WILD ON THE BEACH ATC FRANKIE RANDALL, SHERRY JACKSON MUSICAL BLACK AND WHITE

ALSO NEWS

SHOWTIME

7 30

THE GRASS I~ GREENER A CARY GRANT, DEBORAH KERR, ROBERT MITCHUM COMEDY COLOR WIDE SCREEN

!Jv.'1 JJall THE NANNY

SHOw'T I ME 6 30 & 8 30

AT BETTE DAVIS, WILLIAM DIX SUSPENSE DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE

Oc.a.n 'U.w SHOWTIME 7 30 & 12 15

THE KNACK A RITA TUSHINGHAM, RAY BROOKS FARCE COMEDY BLACK AND WHITE

SHOWTIME 8 00

HEAD OF A TYRANT AT GI ROTT I, ISABELLE COREY

COLOR WIDE SCREEN

ARE KEYED AS TO THE AUDIENCE FOR WHICH THEY ARE SUITABLE THE SYM­BOLS A, T AND C REPRESENT ADULTS, TEENS

NO CHILDREN RESPECTIVELY THE PRESENCE F ANY OF THE THREE SYMBOLS INDICATES HAT THE FILM IS CONSIDERED SUITABLE FOR

GROUP REPRESENTED BY THE

UFO LANDS IN THE LAP OF BROOKLYN TRA~HMAN

WASHINGTON (UPI)--HAS THE AMERICAN BARBERSHOP, ONCE THE CITADEL Of THE GIRLIE MAGAZINE AND THE RACY CALENDAR, BECOME A BRANCH LIBRARY FOR THE GREAT SOCIETY'I

REPUBLICAN MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE Ap­PROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE DISCOVERED RE­CENTLY THAT 300,000 COPIES OF A FEDERAL BOOKLET DESCRIBING THE GOVERNMENT'S EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS WERE SENT TO BAR­BERSHOPS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY

REP MELVIN R LAIID, (REP -WIS ), PRODUCED THE BROCHURE AT A CLOSED HEAR-

PUBLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES AT THE DIRECTION OF THE COMMANDING OFFICER, KWAJALEIN TEST SITE, MARSHALL ISLANDS CONTRACT DA-01-021-AMC-90004 (Y)

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 PH~TOGRAPHS 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 Hou~ GLASS BY 6 15 PM, PLEASE CALL 350 BE­TWEEN THE HOURS OF 6 15 AND 6 45 PM AND A COpy WILL BE DELIVERED TO YOU

ASST EDITOR EDITOR STAFF

NEIL PHELPS-MUNSON DORIS WALLIN BETTY DION SHARON NANNI

PART TIME LITHOGRAPHER

JUDY GILLIS RICHARD RUFFOLO

OFFICIAL NOTICES DATE OFFICIAL BULLETIN

20 APR66 LT COL L H OGDEN 21 APR66 LT C E SCHELIN 22 APR66 CAPT L L FRIESZ 23 APR66 CAPT J M DULL 24 ApR66 MAJ J 0 SAMMONS 25 APR66 LT COL R L BRYANT 26 APR66 1ST LT 0 W OLIVER

PHONE 2497

760 2287 2214 2289 2209

602

DUTY OFFICER IS KWAJALEIN TEST S,TE COMMANDING OFFICER'S REPRESENTATIVE DURING OTHER THAN NORMAL DUTY HOURS

GIFT PASSES TO INDIGENOUS PERSONNEL ALL RESIDENTS ARE REMINDED THAT

ONLY SUPERVISORY PERSONNEL AND WIVES OCCUPYING FAMILY-TYPE HOUSING ARE AUTHORIZED TO PRESENT GifTS TO THE MARSHALLESE A fiVE-DOLLAR ($5) MAXI­MUM HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED AS THE TOTAL MONETARY VALUE OF GIFTS THE PRAC­TICE OF ORDERING GIFTS FOR INDIGENOUS PERSONNEL THROUGH MAIL-ORDER CHANNELS WHERE AN A P.O ADDRESS IS USED IS CONTRARY TO POSTAL REGULATIONS AND THEREFORE, NOT AUTHORIZED WHETHER SUCH PURCHASES ARE PAID fOR BY THE DONOR OR RECIPIENT HAS NO EfFECT ON THIS REGULATION ONLY ONE PASS WILL B~ ISSU£D TO ANY ON~ O~~R £ACH DAY~

IN ORDER TO REFINISH THE LANES, THE BOWLING ALLEY WILL BE CLOSED FOR APPROXIMATELY THREE DAYS STARTING TUESDAY, APRIL 26

SMALL FRY BEACH TRIP RE-SCHEDULED-­THE TRIP TO CORAL SANDS BEACH FOR CHILDREN 7 TO 9 YEARS OLD, WHICH WAS RAINED OUT LAST SATURDAY MORNING, WILL BE TRIED AGAIN THIS COMING FRIDAY AFTERNOON AFTER SCHOOL THE BUSES WILL PICK THE CHILDREN up AT THE IVEY HALL pARKING LOT AT 3 30 AND RETURN THEM THERE BY 5 15 THE CHILDREN MUST HAVE THEIR PERMISSION NOTES TO MAKE THE TRIP IF THEY WANT TO BRING A DRINK AND SNACK ALONG, PLEASE BE SURE IT IS PLAINLY MARKED WITH THE FIRST ~ND LAST NAME (ICE FOR THE DRINKS WILL BE PROVIDED) THE CHILD­REN WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY OLDER HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS AND THE YOUTH DIREcmR

GOVERNMENT IS USING BARBERSHOP PROPAGANDA

NEW YORK (UPI)--NoTHING MUCH SUR­PRISES NEW YORK'S GARBAGE COLLECTORS, WHO KNOW THEy'RE APT TO FIND JUST ABOUT ANYTHING IN A GARBAGE CAN WHAT PLUMMETS OUT OF THE SKY IS SOMETHING ELSE AGAIN -- EVEN IN BROOKLYN

NOBODY WAS MORE SURPRISED YESTERDAY THAN FRANK TISCIA WHEN A RED-HOT OB­JECT THAT MIGHT BE A METEORITE CRASH­ED THROUGH THE SIDE WINDOW OF HIS GARBAGE TRUCK NEAR GRAVESEND BAY

THE THREE-POUND OBJECT BURNED THRD~ THE GLOVES OF CO-WORKERS WHO TRIED TO PICK IT UP THE BEWILDERED TISCIA WAS CUT ABOUT THE FACE BY SHATTERED GLASS IT TOOK THE OBJECT, MEASURING SEVEN BY THREE INCHES, ABOUT 10 MI­NUTES TO COOL OFF AFTER IT WAS GINGER­LY KICKED OUT OF THE TRUCK CAB

TISCIA AND HIS CO-WORKERS, PAUL SCIRE AND JULIUS CoNDEMI, DESCRIBED THE OBJECT BY TELEPHONE TO VINCENT MANSON, METEOROLOGIST FOR THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY THEY SAID ONE END WAS BURNT BLACK LIKE CHARCOAL

ING OF THE SUBCOMMITTEE IN CHARGE OF Ttf:: AND THE SIDES WERE SHINY GRAY WITH U S OFFICE OF EDUCATION BUDGET THE BLACK SUBSTANCES EMBEDDED THE WHOLE PROCEEDINGS WERE MADE PUBLIC TODAY

"THI'> IS A PICTURE BOOK VERY HEAVILY BRANDED WITH THE LBJ BRAND," LAIRD SAID "HIS PICTURE IS THROUGH HERE QUITE OF-TEN I SUPPOSE IT IS TO AID THESE SCHOOL ADMINISTRATORS IN DRAWING UP APPLICATIONS UNDER THIS NEW ACT"

REP ROBERT H MICHEL, (REP -ILL ), INTERJECTED THAT HE fOUND PICTURES OF THE PRESIDENT ON SEVEN PAGES OF THE 65-pAGE BOOKLET

OBJECT, THEY SAID, SMELLED LIKE SUL­PHUR

MANSON PLANNED TO LOOK OVER THE OB­JECT TODAY IN A GARAGE LOCKER WHERE TISCIA SECURED IT FOR SAFEKEEPING -­IF IT IS A METEORITE, THE MUSEUM MAY PAY UP TO $600 FOR IT

THE MOST USEFUL VIRTU~ IS pATIENCE JOHN LJEWEY