WECO FACING STRIKE FOR NUCLEAR TESTING

10
TIDE 10·8.66 3.5 AT 132 4 VOL. 7 NO. 3 1 24 KWAJALE IN, MARSHALL ISLANDS LOW TIDE 10-8.66 2.4 AT 1842, 2.0 AT 0706 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1966 BRIGHTON, ENGLAND (UPI)--PRIME MINISTER HAROLD WILSON VON 8ACKING fOR HIS RHODESIA POLICY TODAY BY A THREE YOTE MAJOR- ITY IN THE FINAL SESSION Of THC RULING LABOR PARTY'S ANNUAL CONfERENCE. ALLIED fORCES DESTROY UNIT Of NEARLY 2 1 000 RED TROOPS REPRESENTATIVES Of MORE THAN ONE AND A HALf MILLION LABORITES VOTED AGAINST THE POLICY BECAUSe THEY WANTED STRONGER ACTION AGAINST PREMIER IAN SMITH'S II-MONTH-OLD REBEL RE- GIME. AT ONE POINT FOREIGN OFfiCE MINISTER SAIGON (UPI)--AMERICAN COMMANDERS SAID TODAY A THREE-PRONGED ASSAULT BY U.S. AND ALLIED TROOPS ALONG THE CENTRAL COAST Of SOUTH VIET NAM HAS KNOCKED OUT AN ELITE COMMUNIST FORCE OF 2,000 MEN AND TAKEN A RECORD BAG OF PRISONERS. IN WHAT TOP OFFICERS CAllED ONE OF THE WAR'S BIGGEST VICTORIES. U.S., SOUTH AND SOUTH KOREAN TROOPS KILLED 1,045 COM- MUNISTS, CAPTURED 605 OTHERS AND PICKED UP 1,667 VIET CONG SUSPECTS IN A TWO-WEEK LONG OFFENSIVE. THE LATTER, ABOUT 400 HAVE TURNED OUT TO BE REGULAR VIET CoNG GUERRILLAS OF STATE MRS. [IRENE WHITE GOT A DERISIVE SLOW HAND CLAp fOR SUGGESTING A RETURN TO CONSTITUTIONAL RULE IN THE COUNTRY. MAJ. GEN. JOHN NORTON, COMMANDER or THE U.S. 1ST AIR CAVALRY DIVISION) SAID HIS TROOPS ALONE HAVE TAKEN 308 VIET CONG AND HORTH VIETNAMESE pRISONERS IN THEIR PART OF THE DRIVE, A RECORD FOR A U.S. DIVISION IN A SINGLE WEEK or THE wAR. JOHNSON REFOCUSES ATTENTION ON EUROPEAN TRADE AND UNITY NEW (UPI}--PRESIOENT JOHNSON, REDEDICATING THE UNITED STATES TO A EUROPE, ANNOUNCED TODAY PLANS TO U.S. TRADE WITH COMMUNIST NATIONS AND URGED A BROADER ROLE rOA A MODERNIZED NATO. IN A MAJOR SPEECH JUST TEN DAYS BEFORE HE WAS TO LEAVE rOR THE MANilA SUMMIT CONfERENCE ON VIET NAM, JOHNSON 08VIOUSlY MEANT TO CONVINCE EUROPEANS THAT U.S. PREOCCUPATION WITH SOUTHEAST ASIA HAD NOT BLINDED HJS ADMINISTRATION TO OLD WORLD PROBLEMS. SPEAKING TO THE NATIONAL CONrERENCE or WRITERS, THE PRESIDENT OUTLINED THREE POINTS TO PEAcErULlY UNlry EUROPE: --NEW EFrORTS TO CLOSE THE BREACH SETWEEN THE COMMUNIST BLOC AND THE WESTERN ALLIANCE, INCLUDING MORE TRADE BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE EASTEAN EUROPEAN COMMUNISTS. -- "V I GOROUS PUASU IT" Of POL IT I CAL UN I TY AMONG WESTERN EUROPEAN ALLIES TO MAKE THEM AN "EQUAL PARTNER" OF THE UNITED STATES IN IM- PROVING RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA. TWO SCHOOL AID BillS HURT ADMINISTRATION --KEEPING NATO "STRONG AND ABREAST or THE WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE HOUSE ANO SENATE TIMES" OESPITE FRANCE'S MILITARY BY HAVE APPROVED SCHOOL AID 81LLS THAT KICK STREAMLINING COMMAND ORGANIZATION, CREATION THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRATION WHERE IT HURTS Of A pERMANENT NUCLEAR PLANN,NG COMMITTEE AND THE MOST IN THIS ELECTION YEAR -- IN THE SPEEDING THE TRANS-ATLANTIC U.S. SUPPLY SYS- SWOLLEN 8UDGET AND THE SENSITIVE AREA OF TEM. 75 ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATORS, ASSEMBLED SO HURRIEDLY THEY PAINTED SIGNS ON THE STREETS, PICKETED THE CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT BUILDING WHERE JOHNSON SPOKE, auT HE ENTERED BEFORE THEY ARR I veD. 'tfiolltsEIiIT 1 Nt; GROUflS· AS rMt YOUTH AGAINST WAR AND FASCIS'" AND THE COMMITTEE fOR NONYIOlENT THEY CARRIED SIGNS THAT READ "BIG rlRMS GET RICH, Gis DIE", AND "BRING THE Gis NOW." (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) WECO FACING STRIKE OF 22,000 WORKERS (UPI)--A SPOKESMAN FOR THE MUNICATIONS WORKERS OF AMERICA UNION SAID LAST NIGHT RANK AND rilE UNION MEM8ERS HAVE REJECTED AN AGREEMENT REACHED IN NEGOTIA- TIONS WITH WESTERN ELECTRIC Co. THE SPOKESMAN SAID UNorFICIAl rlGURES ON THE SECRET BALLOTING Of CWA WORKERS SHOWEO 8,231 vOTES _GAINST THE AGREEMENT AND 7,240 IN fAVOR. THE PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT FIRM Of ERNST & ERNST WILL MAKE AN OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT ON THE FIGURES LATE TODAY. THE SPOKESMAN SAID CWA PRESIDENT JOSEPH A. BIERNE HAS CALLED A "'EETING OF THE PRESI- DENTS or 18 CWA lOCAL UNIONS FOR MONDAY IN NEW YORK TO "REVIEW THE SITUATION WITH ,.AR- TICULAR REGARD rOR THOSE LOCALS WHICH TI,.PEO THE VOTE DOWNWARD." THE CWA AND WECo HAO REACHED AN 11TH-HOUR AGREEMENT ON AUG. 28, THE SAME DATE 22,000 CWA INSTALLERS wERE TO GO ON STRIKE. THE St- CRET NATION-WIDE BALLOT ON THE AGREEMENT HAS BEEN IN THE PROCESS Of aEING COLLECTED AND TABULATED. THE AGRE[MENT THAT WAS REJECTED BY THE CWA HAD cALLED FOR A BASIC WAGE or .5.50 TO $8 PER WEEK IN THE fiRST 18 M0NTHS or A THREE-YEAR CONTRACT, WITH A WAGE OPENtR CLAUSE AT THE END OF THE 'IRST 18 MONTHS or THE CONTRACT. STRIKE PLANS ARE PENDINQ CERTI.ICATION or THE VOTt. A STRIKE COULD IDLE HORE THAN 250,000 TELEPHONE ACROSS THE NATION BECAUSE OF PICKETING BY 22,000 CWA MEM- BERS. ADDITIONAL IN THE CONTRACT OF- BY THE COMPANY INCLUDED UPGRAOING OF CERTAIN JOBS IN SOME CITIES, WHICH WOULD HAVE PROVIO[O A WAGE INCREASE Of $11 TO $12 flER WEEK rOA CERTAIN WORKERS. THE ITRIKE THREAT WAS VIEWED AS AT IN ,.ART AN orrSHOOT 0' lABOR UNREST HAl THt NATION RECENTLY. , RACE RELATIONS. THE TWO VERSIONS OF THE SCHOOL AID MEAS- URE, PASSED YESTERDAY, FAR EXCEED THE RE- QUEST FOR SPENDING AUTHORITY WHICH CAME THE WHITE HOUSE -- DESPiTE HIS WARNING AT A NEWS CONfERENCE WHILE DEBATE WAS GOING ON THAT A VOT[' "To 'Si50ST THE eUOGl"T WOULD A VOTE TO RAISE TAXES. THE HOUSE -- ApPROVED 237 TO 97 -- WOULD ALLOW $5.7 BilLION fOR THE ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL AID PROGRA'" AND THE OLDER "IMPACTED AREAS" PLAN FOR THE TWO YEARS THAT BEGAN LAST JULY I. THE SENATE BILL -- PASSED 54 TO 16 -- WOULD AUTHORIZE $6.4 BILLION FOR THE SAME PERIOD. THE HOUSE WAS ABOUT $430 MILLION OVER THE PRESIDENTlS REQUESTj THE SENATE WELL ovER $1 BILLION IN EXCESS. THE DifFER- ING VERSIONS ARE TO BE RECONCILED BY A HOUSE-SENATE CONFERENCE PERHAPS EVEN MORE pAINFUL FOR THE ADMIN- ISTRATION WAS THE HOUSEtS APPROVAL OF AN AMENDMENT BARRING THE U.S. OFFICE OF EDUCA- TION FROM DELAYING GRANTS O. AID FUNDS TO SCHOOL OISTRICTS UNLESS IT HAS fiRST PROVED THAT THEY ARE PRACTICING RACIAL DISCRIMINA- TION. JUDD SEES REDS· WOES KANSAS CITY (UPI)--WDRlD COMMUNISM WILL BE IN DEEP TROUBLE IF THE U.S. PREVAilS IN VIET NAM, fORMER CONGRESSMAN WALTER H. JUDO SAID TOOAY, "THE QUESTION IN VIET NAM IS HOW INTER- NATIONAL DISPUTES ARE TO BE SETTlEO," JUDO SAID -- BY fORCE OR BY RESOLUTION AND DIP- LOMACY. THE FORMER MEDICAL MISSIONARY TO CHINA AND lATER REPUBliCAN REPRESENTATIVE tROM MINNESOTA 3AI& THAT THE STAKES IN THE VIET- NAMESE WAR ARE SOUTHEAST ASIA AND ULTIMATE- lY, THE weRlD IF" CHINA "CAN HUMilIATE THE U.S. IN V,ET NA"' ••• THtN \tI0 IN THE WORLD CAN TRUST U.S. POLICY AGAIN?" JUDO ASKED. "If THEY rAil WE pREVAil .. THEN COMMUNISM IS IN TROU8lE." HE SAID CQMMuNISM surrERE; A "COLOSSAL SETBACK" IN INDONESIA AND ClflNA AS YET HAS 8EEN UNABLE TO SOllDlry ITs PQSITION IN CONTROL or THE ASIAN MAINLAND. uGHINAls REAL GOAl. IS NOT VI [T NAM," JLlPD SA I D. "IT IS DOMINATION Of THE WORLD COMMUNIST HeVE- IItENT.tI ONE BILLION PEOPLE -- ONE THIRD Of THE WORLD'S PEOPLE -- liVE IN 15 COUNTRIEI [XTENOING fROM MAINLAN6 or CHINA, JUDO SAID, AND CONTROL OF" THEM MEAN DOMIN- ANCE rOR PEK I NG. ONE or NORTONtS 1ST CAVALRY OFrICERS, LT. COL. GEORGE MciLWAIN 7 SAID AN ENTIRE BAT- TALION OF THE COMMUNIST 18TH REGIMENT "WAS CO,",PLETElY DESTROYED THIS WEEK" IN HEAVY rIGHTING 30 MILES NORTH OF QUI NHON. McilWAIN, eo"''''ANO[R Of THE 1ST SQUADRON. 9TH CAVALRY, WAS SHOT DOWN TwICE IN HIS HEL- ICOPTER THIS WEEK IN THE fiGHTING 290 MILES NORTHEAST or SAIGON THAT SAW ALLIED TROOPS PUSH A BIG VIET CoNG-NORTH VIETNAMESE fORCE BACK UP AGAINST THE SEACOAST AND METHODICAL- LY SMASH IT TO PIECES. ALLIED TROOPS CONTINUED MOPPING-UP ACTION IN THE COASTAL AREA, VHILE LARGE-SCALE riGHTING BROKE OUT AGAIN TO THE NORTH OF A SECOND BIG BATTLEfiELD -- THE DISPUTED MOUN- TAIN JUNGLE JUST BELOW THE DEMilITARIZED ZONE DIVIDING NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAH. GOVERNMENT $AIO AN ESTIMATED THREE NORTH VIETNA"'[SE BATTALIONS -- UP TO 1,200 MEN -- SLASHED THROUGH THE JUNGLES AND ATTACKED A SOUTH VIETNAMESE PARATROOP rORCE NEAR POSITIONS Or THE U.S. MARINES WHO HAVE BORNE THE BRUNT Of THE RECENT FIGHTING IN THE G1Z AREA. (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) AEC SEEKING NEW SITE FOR NUCLEAR TESTING LAS VEGAS ATOMIC ENERGY COMMIS- SION CONF"IRMED TODAY THAT IT IS SEARCHING rOR A SECOND NUCLEAR TESTING SITE IN NEVADA, INDICATING THAT THE UNITED STATES MIGHT BE PREPARING TO LARGER NUCLEAR DEVICES THE A[C SAID THAT ITS NEVADA OPERATIONS OFF"ICE WAS STUOYING lOCATIONS THE PRES- ENT NEVADA TEST SITE FOR rUTURE UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING. THE AREA BEING STUDIED WAS lOCATED IN CEN- TRAL NEVADA, BOUNDED ROUGHLY BY THE SMALL NEVADA TOWNS or TONOPAH, EUREKA AND AUSTIN "A PROGRAM or EXPLORATION WILL Bt BEGUN TO OETERMINE SURrACE AND UNDERGROUND CHARAC- TERISTICS," SAID A SPOKESMAN rOR THE AEC. HE WOULD NEITHER CONrlRH NOR DENY REPORTS TH4T THE CURRENT NEVADA TEST SITE WAS IN- SUfFICIENT FOR fUTURE NUCLEAR TESTS WHICH WERE BEING PLANNED. THE ORDrR TO SEEK ADDITIONAL TESTING rA- ClliTtES wAS BASED UPON SCIENTlriC AND TECHNICAL ADJUSTMENTS. IT WAS UNRELATED TO CURRENT LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS AT THE SITE. THE "SAME CARE Will BE EXERCISEO AS IN ALL SUCH SELECTIONs n l THE SpOKESMAN SAID. SWEDES SORE AT SUBS GOTEBORG, SWEDEN (UPI)--ANGERED BY REPEAT- ED IItVSTERY SUBMARINE INTRUSIONS INTO AN AREA MANY or ITS CLOSELY-GUARDED DErENSE SECRETS, THE NAVY TODAY ORDERED ANY rUTURE TRESPASSERS BROUGHT TO THE SURrACE -- WITH DEPTH CHARGES If NECESSARY. "SWEDEN IS NOT GOING TO TOLERATE ANY MORE I NTRUS IONS or HER TERRITOR tAL WATERS," SA 10 AN OrrlCIAl STATEMENT. HELICOPTERS AND VARSHIPS WrT" SONAR ANO DEPTH CHARGES SCOURED AN AREA TO- OAY OrF" THE VINGA LIGHTHOUSE IN THE GoTEBORG P[NINSUlA TODAY WHERE fOUR INTRUSIONS BY A SUeMARINE OR SUBMARINES HAVE BEEN REPORTED IN THE PAST WEEK. THEY HAD ORDERS TO BRING ANY TRESPASSERS TO THE SURrACE AHO MAKE THEM lEAVE SWEDISH VATERS. ON WEONESDAV A HElICO'TER SCAR[D A SU8 VITH A DEPTH CHARG[ IN TH[ MIDOlE or SWED- EN'S BIGGEST NAVAL MANEUVERS IN au' IT, OR A COMPANION, CAME BACK IN THE DAY AND AGAIN Y[STERDAY.

Transcript of WECO FACING STRIKE FOR NUCLEAR TESTING

K~Gi TIDE 10·8.66 3.5 AT 1324

VOL. 7 NO. 3124 KWAJALE IN, MARSHALL ISLANDS

LOW TIDE 10-8.66

2.4 AT 1842, 2.0 AT 0706

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1966

BRIGHTON, ENGLAND (UPI)--PRIME MINISTER HAROLD WILSON VON 8ACKING fOR HIS RHODESIA POLICY TODAY BY A THREE NIL~ION YOTE MAJOR­ITY IN THE FINAL SESSION Of THC RULING LABOR PARTY'S ANNUAL CONfERENCE.

ALLIED fORCES DESTROY UNIT Of NEARLY 21 000 RED TROOPS

REPRESENTATIVES Of MORE THAN ONE AND A HALf MILLION LABORITES VOTED AGAINST THE POLICY BECAUSe THEY WANTED STRONGER ACTION AGAINST PREMIER IAN SMITH'S II-MONTH-OLD REBEL RE­GIME. AT ONE POINT FOREIGN OFfiCE MINISTER

SAIGON (UPI)--AMERICAN COMMANDERS SAID TODAY A THREE-PRONGED ASSAULT BY U.S. AND ALLIED TROOPS ALONG THE CENTRAL COAST Of SOUTH VIET NAM HAS KNOCKED OUT AN ELITE COMMUNIST FORCE OF 2,000 MEN AND TAKEN A RECORD BAG OF PRISONERS. IN WHAT TOP OFFICERS CAllED ONE OF THE WAR'S BIGGEST VICTORIES. U.S., SOUTH VIETNA~ESE AND SOUTH KOREAN TROOPS KILLED 1,045 COM­MUNISTS, CAPTURED 605 OTHERS AND PICKED UP 1,667 VIET CONG SUSPECTS IN A TWO-WEEK LONG OFFENSIVE. O~ THE LATTER, ABOUT 400 HAVE TURNED OUT TO BE REGULAR VIET CoNG GUERRILLAS

OF STATE MRS. [IRENE WHITE GOT A DERISIVE SLOW HAND CLAp fOR SUGGESTING A RETURN TO CONSTITUTIONAL RULE IN THE COUNTRY.

MAJ. GEN. JOHN NORTON, COMMANDER or THE U.S. 1ST AIR CAVALRY DIVISION) SAID HIS TROOPS ALONE HAVE TAKEN 308 VIET CONG AND HORTH VIETNAMESE pRISONERS IN THEIR PART OF THE DRIVE, A RECORD FOR A U.S. DIVISION IN A SINGLE WEEK or THE wAR.

JOHNSON REFOCUSES ATTENTION ON EUROPEAN TRADE AND UNITY

NEW YOR~ (UPI}--PRESIOENT JOHNSON, REDEDICATING THE UNITED STATES TO A UNI~IEO EUROPE, ANNOUNCED TODAY PLANS TO I~CREASE U.S. TRADE WITH COMMUNIST NATIONS AND URGED A BROADER ROLE rOA A MODERNIZED NATO. IN A MAJOR SPEECH JUST TEN DAYS BEFORE HE WAS TO LEAVE rOR THE MANilA SUMMIT CONfERENCE ON VIET NAM, JOHNSON 08VIOUSlY MEANT TO CONVINCE EUROPEANS THAT U.S. PREOCCUPATION WITH SOUTHEAST ASIA HAD NOT BLINDED HJS ADMINISTRATION TO OLD WORLD PROBLEMS. SPEAKING TO THE NATIONAL CONrERENCE or EDITOAIA~ WRITERS, THE PRESIDENT OUTLINED THREE POINTS TO PEAcErULlY UNlry EUROPE:

--NEW EFrORTS TO CLOSE THE BREACH SETWEEN THE COMMUNIST BLOC AND THE WESTERN ALLIANCE, INCLUDING MORE TRADE BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND THE EASTEAN EUROPEAN COMMUNISTS.

-- "V I GOROUS PUASU IT" Of POL IT I CAL UN I TY AMONG WESTERN EUROPEAN ALLIES TO MAKE THEM AN "EQUAL PARTNER" OF THE UNITED STATES IN IM­PROVING RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA.

TWO SCHOOL AID BillS HURT ADMINISTRATION

--KEEPING NATO "STRONG AND ABREAST or THE WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE HOUSE ANO SENATE TIMES" OESPITE FRANCE'S MILITARY DE~ECTION BY HAVE APPROVED SCHOOL AID 81LLS THAT KICK STREAMLINING COMMAND ORGANIZATION, CREATION THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRATION WHERE IT HURTS Of A pERMANENT NUCLEAR PLANN,NG COMMITTEE AND THE MOST IN THIS ELECTION YEAR -- IN THE SPEEDING THE TRANS-ATLANTIC U.S. SUPPLY SYS- SWOLLEN 8UDGET AND THE SENSITIVE AREA OF TEM. ~OME 75 ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATORS, ASSEMBLED SO

HURRIEDLY THEY PAINTED SIGNS ON THE STREETS, PICKETED THE CARNEGIE ENDOWMENT BUILDING WHERE JOHNSON SPOKE, auT HE ENTERED BEFORE THEY ARR I veD. 'tfiolltsEIiIT 1 Nt; ~UCH GROUflS· AS rMt YOUTH AGAINST WAR AND FASCIS'" AND THE COMMITTEE fOR NONYIOlENT ACTIO~, THEY CARRIED SIGNS THAT READ "BIG rlRMS GET RICH, Gis DIE", AND "BRING HO~E THE Gis NOW."

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

WECO FACING STRIKE OF 22,000 WORKERS

WASHI~GTON (UPI)--A SPOKESMAN FOR THE CO~­MUNICATIONS WORKERS OF AMERICA UNION SAID LAST NIGHT RANK AND rilE UNION MEM8ERS HAVE REJECTED AN AGREEMENT REACHED IN NEGOTIA­TIONS WITH WESTERN ELECTRIC Co.

THE SPOKESMAN SAID UNorFICIAl rlGURES ON THE SECRET BALLOTING Of CWA WORKERS SHOWEO 8,231 vOTES _GAINST THE AGREEMENT AND 7,240 IN fAVOR. THE ~ASHINGTON PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT FIRM Of ERNST & ERNST WILL MAKE AN OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT ON THE FIGURES LATE TODAY.

THE SPOKESMAN SAID CWA PRESIDENT JOSEPH A. BIERNE HAS CALLED A "'EETING OF THE PRESI­DENTS or 18 CWA lOCAL UNIONS FOR MONDAY IN NEW YORK TO "REVIEW THE SITUATION WITH ,.AR­TICULAR REGARD rOR THOSE LOCALS WHICH TI,.PEO THE VOTE DOWNWARD."

THE CWA AND WECo HAO REACHED AN 11TH-HOUR AGREEMENT ON AUG. 28, THE SAME DATE 22,000 CWA INSTALLERS wERE TO GO ON STRIKE. THE St­CRET NATION-WIDE BALLOT ON THE AGREEMENT HAS BEEN IN THE PROCESS Of aEING COLLECTED AND TABULATED.

THE AGRE[MENT THAT WAS REJECTED BY THE CWA HAD cALLED FOR A BASIC WAGE INCRE~SE or .5.50 TO $8 PER WEEK IN THE fiRST 18 M0NTHS or A THREE-YEAR CONTRACT, WITH A WAGE OPENtR CLAUSE AT THE END OF THE 'IRST 18 MONTHS or THE CONTRACT.

STRIKE PLANS ARE PENDINQ CERTI.ICATION or THE VOTt. A STRIKE COULD IDLE HORE THAN 250,000 TELEPHONE ~ORKERS ACROSS THE NATION BECAUSE OF PICKETING BY T~[ 22,000 CWA MEM­BERS.

ADDITIONAL BENE~ITS IN THE CONTRACT OF­~EREO BY THE COMPANY INCLUDED UPGRAOING OF CERTAIN JOBS IN SOME CITIES, WHICH WOULD HAVE PROVIO[O A WAGE INCREASE Of $11 TO $12 flER WEEK rOA CERTAIN WORKERS.

THE ITRIKE THREAT WAS VIEWED AS BEIN~ AT ~EAST IN ,.ART AN orrSHOOT 0' lABOR UNREST ~HIC" HAl PLA~UED THt NATION RECENTLY. ,

RACE RELATIONS. THE TWO VERSIONS OF THE SCHOOL AID MEAS-

URE, PASSED YESTERDAY, FAR EXCEED THE RE­QUEST FOR SPENDING AUTHORITY WHICH CAME ~ROM THE WHITE HOUSE -- DESPiTE HIS WARNING AT A NEWS CONfERENCE WHILE DEBATE WAS GOING ON THAT A VOT[' "To 'Si50ST THE eUOGl"T WOULD e£ A VOTE TO RAISE TAXES.

THE HOUSE BI~l -- ApPROVED 237 TO 97 -­WOULD ALLOW $5.7 BilLION fOR THE ELEMENTARY AND SECONDARY SCHOOL AID PROGRA'" AND THE OLDER "IMPACTED AREAS" PLAN FOR THE TWO YEARS THAT BEGAN LAST JULY I. THE SENATE BILL -- PASSED 54 TO 16 -- WOULD AUTHORIZE $6.4 BILLION FOR THE SAME PERIOD.

THE HOUSE WAS ABOUT $430 MILLION OVER THE PRESIDENTlS ONE-~EAR REQUESTj THE SENATE WELL ovER $1 BILLION IN EXCESS. THE DifFER­ING VERSIONS ARE TO BE RECONCILED BY A HOUSE-SENATE CONFERENCE

PERHAPS EVEN MORE pAINFUL FOR THE ADMIN­ISTRATION WAS THE HOUSEtS APPROVAL OF AN AMENDMENT BARRING THE U.S. OFFICE OF EDUCA­TION FROM DELAYING GRANTS O. AID FUNDS TO SCHOOL OISTRICTS UNLESS IT HAS fiRST PROVED THAT THEY ARE PRACTICING RACIAL DISCRIMINA­TION.

JUDD SEES REDS· WOES KANSAS CITY (UPI)--WDRlD COMMUNISM WILL

BE IN DEEP TROUBLE IF THE U.S. PREVAilS IN VIET NAM, fORMER CONGRESSMAN WALTER H. JUDO SAID TOOAY,

"THE QUESTION IN VIET NAM IS HOW INTER­NATIONAL DISPUTES ARE TO BE SETTlEO," JUDO SAID -- BY fORCE OR BY RESOLUTION AND DIP­LOMACY.

THE FORMER MEDICAL MISSIONARY TO CHINA AND lATER REPUBliCAN REPRESENTATIVE tROM MINNESOTA 3AI& THAT THE STAKES IN THE VIET­NAMESE WAR ARE SOUTHEAST ASIA AND ULTIMATE­lY, THE weRlD

IF" CHINA "CAN HUMilIATE THE U.S. IN V,ET NA"' ••• THtN \tI0 IN THE WORLD CAN TRUST U.S. POLICY AGAIN?" JUDO ASKED. "If THEY rAil AN~ WE pREVAil .. THEN COMMUNISM IS IN TROU8lE."

HE SAID CQMMuNISM surrERE; A "COLOSSAL SETBACK" IN INDONESIA AND ClflNA AS YET HAS 8EEN UNABLE TO SOllDlry ITs PQSITION IN CONTROL or THE ASIAN MAINLAND. uGHINAls REAL GOAl. IS NOT VI [T NAM," JLlPD SA I D. "IT IS DOMINATION Of THE WORLD COMMUNIST HeVE­IItENT.tI ONE BILLION PEOPLE -- ONE THIRD Of THE WORLD'S PEOPLE -- liVE IN 15 COUNTRIEI [XTENOING fROM ~H£ MAINLAN6 or CHINA, JUDO SAID, AND CONTROL OF" THEM W~ULO MEAN DOMIN­ANCE rOR PEK I NG.

ONE or NORTONtS 1ST CAVALRY OFrICERS, LT. COL. GEORGE MciLWAIN 7 SAID AN ENTIRE BAT­TALION OF THE COMMUNIST 18TH REGIMENT "WAS CO,",PLETElY DESTROYED THIS WEEK" IN HEAVY rIGHTING 30 MILES NORTH OF QUI NHON.

McilWAIN, eo"''''ANO[R Of THE 1ST SQUADRON. 9TH CAVALRY, WAS SHOT DOWN TwICE IN HIS HEL­ICOPTER THIS WEEK IN THE fiGHTING 290 MILES NORTHEAST or SAIGON THAT SAW ALLIED TROOPS PUSH A BIG VIET CoNG-NORTH VIETNAMESE fORCE BACK UP AGAINST THE SEACOAST AND METHODICAL­LY SMASH IT TO PIECES.

ALLIED TROOPS CONTINUED MOPPING-UP ACTION IN THE COASTAL AREA, VHILE LARGE-SCALE riGHTING BROKE OUT AGAIN TO THE NORTH OF A SECOND BIG BATTLEfiELD -- THE DISPUTED MOUN­TAIN JUNGLE JUST BELOW THE DEMilITARIZED ZONE DIVIDING NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAH.

GOVERNMENT SPOKE5~EN $AIO AN ESTIMATED THREE NORTH VIETNA"'[SE BATTALIONS -- UP TO 1,200 MEN -- SLASHED THROUGH THE JUNGLES AND ATTACKED A MA~OR SOUTH VIETNAMESE PARATROOP rORCE NEAR POSITIONS Or THE U.S. MARINES WHO HAVE BORNE THE BRUNT Of THE RECENT FIGHTING IN THE G1Z AREA.

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX)

AEC SEEKING NEW SITE FOR NUCLEAR TESTING LAS VEGAS (UPJ)~-THE ATOMIC ENERGY COMMIS­

SION CONF"IRMED TODAY THAT IT IS SEARCHING rOR A SECOND NUCLEAR TESTING SITE IN NEVADA, INDICATING THAT THE UNITED STATES MIGHT BE PREPARING TO EX~lDDE LARGER NUCLEAR DEVICES

THE A[C SAID THAT ITS NEVADA OPERATIONS OFF"ICE WAS STUOYING lOCATIONS NEA~ THE PRES­ENT NEVADA TEST SITE FOR rUTURE UNDERGROUND NUCLEAR TESTING.

THE AREA BEING STUDIED WAS lOCATED IN CEN­TRAL NEVADA, BOUNDED ROUGHLY BY THE SMALL NEVADA TOWNS or TONOPAH, EUREKA AND AUSTIN

"A PROGRAM or EXPLORATION WILL Bt BEGUN TO OETERMINE SURrACE AND UNDERGROUND CHARAC­TERISTICS," SAID A SPOKESMAN rOR THE AEC. HE WOULD NEITHER CONrlRH NOR DENY REPORTS TH4T THE CURRENT NEVADA TEST SITE WAS IN­SUfFICIENT FOR fUTURE NUCLEAR TESTS WHICH WERE BEING PLANNED.

THE ORDrR TO SEEK ADDITIONAL TESTING rA­ClliTtES wAS BASED UPON SCIENTlriC AND TECHNICAL ADJUSTMENTS. IT WAS UNRELATED TO CURRENT LABOR AND INDUSTRIAL PROBLEMS AT THE SITE.

THE "SAME CARE Will BE EXERCISEO AS IN ALL SUCH SELECTIONs n

l THE SpOKESMAN SAID.

SWEDES SORE AT SUBS GOTEBORG, SWEDEN (UPI)--ANGERED BY REPEAT­

ED IItVSTERY SUBMARINE INTRUSIONS INTO AN AREA ~OLOING MANY or ITS CLOSELY-GUARDED DErENSE SECRETS, THE SWEDIS~ NAVY TODAY ORDERED ANY rUTURE TRESPASSERS BROUGHT TO THE SURrACE -­WITH DEPTH CHARGES If NECESSARY.

"SWEDEN IS NOT GOING TO TOLERATE ANY MORE I NTRUS IONS or HER TERRITOR tAL WATERS," SA 10 AN OrrlCIAl STATEMENT.

HELICOPTERS AND VARSHIPS EQUIP~ED WrT" SONAR ANO DEPTH CHARGES SCOURED AN AREA TO­OAY OrF" THE VINGA LIGHTHOUSE IN THE GoTEBORG P[NINSUlA TODAY WHERE fOUR INTRUSIONS BY A SUeMARINE OR SUBMARINES HAVE BEEN REPORTED IN THE PAST WEEK. THEY HAD ORDERS TO BRING ANY TRESPASSERS TO THE SURrACE AHO MAKE THEM lEAVE SWEDISH VATERS.

ON WEONESDAV A HElICO'TER SCAR[D ~ A SU8 VITH A DEPTH CHARG[ IN TH[ MIDOlE or SWED­EN'S BIGGEST NAVAL MANEUVERS IN Y~ARS, au' IT, OR A COMPANION, CAME BACK lAT~R IN THE DAY AND AGAIN Y[STERDAY.

THE MAIN EVENT Th( fUl • .Jnu II dlstlHl of Clll( 19O 'PP<Ht, ,bout t" he ,llund"l< d ,I'> " 1 foot ,~'<tee mam CL utJt~ und"L In lnt(.ro.,.u tu,n blu\\lng: t 1 r-, f()ot hD]f' Ul the P l .... ...:ITlent and "Pl>utlng " 1 ruot g\'; 'Ct mto the atr The ba'>Lment of on[' ,)jfl( L bu,ldmg ,,0.\., ftooded With thtee fed of wate!' Author.

It"", ,,':> It "Ill Like d. " cek to ,eplIlr the mam

REPUBLICANS ASK JOHNSON TO POSTPONE ASIAN TRIP

WASHINGTON (UPJ)--A GROUP OF HOUSE REPUB­LICANS ASKED PRESIDENT JOHNSON TODAY TO POSTPO~E HIS ASIAN TRIP BECAUSE IT CAME TOO NEAq THE U.S. ELECTIONS AHD WOULo FALL IN

THE SHADOW OF PARTISAN POLITICS.n

THERE WAS NO LIKELIHOOD THAT JOHNSON WOuLD

~GREE TO ~HE!R REQUEST. REP PAUL fiNDLEY; (REP.-ILL.), AND 13

OTHER GOP HOUSE MEMBERS URGED A DELAY UNTIL AfTER THE Nov. 8 ELECTIONS THE PRESIDENT IS SCHEDULED TO LEAVE OCT 17 AND RETURN

HOME ON Nov. 2 THE R(PUBLICANS DID NOT ACCUSE JOHNSON OF

ANY POLITICAL MOTIVATION IN MAKING THE TRIP AND SAID THEY WISHED HIM WELL, BUT iHEY SAID NEWSMEN COVERING JOHNSON "INEVITABLY" WOULD T(NO TO RELATE DEVELOPMENTS ON THE TRIP WITH THE DOMESTIC POLITICAL CAMPAIGN.

JOHNSON IS GOING TO ATTEND THE SEVEN-NA­TtON MANILA CONFERENCE ON VIET NAM, BUT HAS EXPANDEP THE JOURHEY INTO A 17-DAY, 25,000-MILE TRIP TO FIVE OTHER COUNTRIES -- NEW ZEALAND, AUSTRALIA, THAILAND, MALAYSIA AND KOREA

AT HIS NEWS CONFERENCE YESTERDAY, THE PRESIDENT SHRUGGED O~F CHARGES BY SOME CRITICS THAT THE TRIP APPEARED DESIGNED TO rOCUS FAVORABLE ATTENTION ON HIS ~CMINISTRA­

TION TO ENHANCE DEMOCRATS· ELECTIONS

CHANCES. "I JUST THINI'( YOU HAVE TO EVALUATE THE

CRITICS) AND EVALUATE THE CIRCUMSTANCES AND DRAW YOUR OWN CONCLUSIONS," HE TOLO NEWSMEN WHEN ASKED ABOUT THE PARTISAN IMPLICATIONS

OF THE TRIP THE PRESIDENT GAVE NO INDICATION HE MIGHT

INVITE A BIPARTISAN GROUP OF CONGR(SSMEN

TO ACCOMPANY HIM. CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS; HOWEVER, DID NOT

eAR THE POSSIBILITY THAT JOHNSON ~IGHT IN­VITE SOME LAWMAKERS -- NOT NECESSARILY THE rOp LEADERS -- TO JOIN HIM AT THE LAST MO~

MENT. SENATE DEMOCRATIC LEADER ~IKE MANSFIELD

TOLC N(~SMCN THAT HE PERSONALLY THOUGHT IT WOULD BE eETTER Ir JOHNSON WENT ALONE.

SENATE GOP LEADER EVERETT M. DIRKSEN WAS AMONG THOSE WHO SUGGESTED THAT THE PRESI­DENT MIGHT MAKE A LAST-MINUTE DECISION TO HAVE SOME MEMBERS Or CONGRESS ACCOMPANY

HIM.

TAVARES~ FLA. {UPI)--REPORTS THAT TWo YOUNG WOMEN WHO DISAPPEARED ON AN OUTING IN THE SPRAWLING OCALA NATIONAL FO~EST LAST WEEKEND MAY HAYE BEEN SEEN IN OTHER STATES ARE BEING THOROUGHLY CHECKED OUT, AUTHORI­

TIES SAID HERE TODAY. DEPUTY SHERIFF MALCOLM MCCALL DECLINED TO

SAY WHERE THE CALLS HAD COME rROM OR HOW RECENTLY THE POSSILS( SIGHTINGS MA~ HAVE BrEN. "WE ARE GETTING A WONDERrUL RESPONSE rROM ALL OVER THE COUNTRY," HE SAID, "aUT WE WOULDNtT WANT TO CREATE ANY rALSE HOPE ON ANYONE'S PART." MCCALL SAID THE SEARCH

WOULD CONTINVE.

HOURGLASS

JOHNSON LASHES BACK HtWARK~ N.J. (UPI)--PAE.SIDEHT JOHNSON

CHA~GED TODAY TH( REPUBLICANS WERE WAGING A "rEAR" CAMPAIGN BECAUSE THEy HAD NO SOLU­tiONS TO THE HAT ION'S ILLS.

IN A SPEECH PR£PARED ~OR A NEW JERSEY DEMOCRATIC RALLY .- HIS ~IRST POLITICAL AD­DRESS SINCE LABOR DAY -- JOHNSON 5AI0 THE GOP WAS CAMPAIGNING rOR THE Nov. B ELEC­TIONS WITH A ONE-WORO PLATFORM, "AND THAT WORD IS FEAR."

"THE REPUBL.ICAN SYM80L IS THE ELEPH .... NT AND THE ELtPHANT NEVER FORGETS," JOHNSON 51,'0. "THe REPUBLICANS AEMEMBER THAT THEy

HAVE ALWAYS BEEN ELECTED BY SCARING PEOPLE~ THE PRESIDENT SAID THE REPUBLICANS HAD

"NO CONSTRUCTIVE PROGRAMS TO riGHT INFLA­TION."

"THEY I4[KTtOM HO PROGRAM TO EASE. RACIAL TENSIONS," HE SAID. "THEY DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO ABouT CRIME IN THE STREETS OR HOW TO END THE WAR IN VIET NAM, SUT THEY DO KNOW THAT If THEY CAN SCARE PEOPLE, THEY MA'f WIN A FEw VOTES."

JOHNSON SAID THE PRESENT DEMOCRATIC-CON­TROLLtD CONGRESS HAD ACCOMPLISHED MORE THAN ALL PREVIOUS CON~RESSES WHEN M£ASURED 8'1'

LAWS AFf"EeTING PEOPLE -- EDUCATION, HEALTH, POVERTY, TRANSPORTATION, CONSERVATION, PO~­

LuTION, IMMIGRATION AND CITIES "THAT IS A 81G STATEMENT," HE SAID, "aUT

I WILL STANO ON IT."STRIKING BACK AT GOP

AT~CKS ON INFLAT10N, JOHNSON SAID THAT OURING THEI rlNAl 67 MDNTHS OF ~~ EISENHO~ ADMil Nt STtlAT I bill PR ICES a. IMBED II I"ERC[NT tOM­¥4R£D WITH 9 PEWCENT FOR HIS AOMINISTRATION

WAGES AND SALARIES DURING THE SAME PERIOD

ROSE 29 PERCENT UNDER THE EISENHOWER ADMIN~ I STRATION AND 47 PERCENT UNDER THE DEMOCRAT~ HE ADDEO

SINCE 1961, JOHNSON SAID, THE TVPICAL AMERICAN rAMILY OF FOUR HAS ENJOYED AN IN­CREAS( OF ABOUT $1,200 IN ANNUAL tNCO~E.

ON THE SUBJECT OF CREDIBILITV, JOHNSON SA 10 "FOOL ING THE PEOPLE HAS BECOME THE NAME or THE GAME fOR A GOOD MANY REPUBLI­CANS IN CONGRESS"

PANOAS' ROMANCE WARMING Moscow (UPI)--CHI-CHI AND ~N-AN, THE

COURTING GIANT PANDAS, SPENT THEIR FIRST NIGHT TOGETHER TODAY

O'flCALS ~RO~ THE Moscow AND LONDON Zoos SET UP AN ALL-NIGHT WATCH AROUND THE FENCED ENCLOSURE AT Moscow ZOO. THEY SAID THEY HOPEO CHI-CHI AND AN-AN WILL GET SO uSED TO EACH OTHER'S PRESENCE DURING THE NIGHT THAT A MATING -- THE FIRST EV(R WATCHED BY WESTERN SCIENTISTS -- WILL TAKE PLACE.

THE DECISION TO LET THEM SPENO THE NIGHT TOGETHER WAS MADE AS THE PANDAS PACED CAu­TIOUSLY AROUND ONE ANOTHER DURING THE AFT­ERNOON. AN EARLIER MORNING SESSION TOOAY ENDED ArTER CHI-CHI; A fEMALE PANDA .ROM LONDON, SPURNED ADVANCES BY Moscow's AN-AN.

IITHEY ARE GETTING ON wELL NOW AND ARE GETTING USEO TO ONE ANOTHER," DR. DESMOND

MORRIS, T~E LONDON ZOO DIRECTOR, SAID. I'BES I DES, THEY ARE NOCTURNAL AN IMALS BY

NATURE AND USUA~LY SHOW MORE ACTIVITY AFTER DUSK," HE SAIl) "IN AODITION~ THERE WILL BE FEWER PEOPLE AROUND AT NIGHT. II

,J I F THEY GET ON WELL," HE ADDED, uTHEY

I4AY BE KEPT TOCETHER NON-STOP FROM NOW ON." MORR I 5 SA I D ~E WAS CHEERED BY CH I-CHlfs

BEtiAVIOR TOOAY

FRIDAY, OCTOBER ,~966

MILITARY SPaND~G UP ABOVE BUO~T PLAN~

,

WASH I NGTON (UPt)--M I L ITARY S~[NO I NG, SPURTING UP BECAUSE Or VIET NAN WAR EX­PANSIONS, IS RUNNING AT AN ANNUAL RATE OF'

ALMOST $4 ~ILLION ABOVE PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S ESTIMATE rOR THE CURRENT FISCAL YEAR.

MOREOVER, UNDER PRESENT TRENDS. THE MILI­TARY OUTLAY HAY GO TO $7 BILLION ASOVE THE ORIGINAL BUDGET ESTIMATES BY THE TIME TME rlSCAL YEAR ENOS NE~T JUNE 30.

ArTER ON~V THREE MONTHS OF THE Ntw FISCAL YEAR, THE ANNUAL DEFENSE SPENDING RATE HAS

CLIMBED TO ABOUT $62 BILLION COMPARED TO THE ORIGINA~ GOAL OF $58.31 BilliON OUT­LINED TO CONGRESS LAST JANUARY

COMPUTATIONS MADE TODAY INDICATED THE SPENDING FIGURE COULD REACH ABOUT *65 BIL­LION FOR THE 12-MOHTH PERIOD, UNlESS VAYS ARE FOUND To MAKE DEEP CUTS AND THIS APPEARS UNLIKELY.

THESE STATISTICS AND THEIR OBVIOUS [F~ECT ON TAX-INCREASE DELIBERATIONS EXPLAIN THE HARD NEW REviEW OF THE MI~ITARY BUDGET THAT JOHNSON HAS DIRECTEO DEfENSE SECAETARY ROSERT S. McNAMARA TO MAKE.

THE PRESIDENT MENTIONED THE REVIEW YES­TERDAY WHEN HE TOLD HIS NEWS CON~ERENCE

THAT HE WAS NOT READY YET TO DECIDE WHETHER A TAX INCREASE WOULD BE NEEDED

McNAMARA LEAVES rOR SAIGON TOMORROw TO GATHER DATA 'OR KEY DECISIONS ON NEXT YEAR'S MONEy NEEOS, TROOP LEVELS ANO ARMS PRODUCTION

THE TRIP, LIKE THE BUDGET REVIEW HERE, WILL BE OEEPLY CONCERNED WITH THE AMOUNT OF ExTRA MONEY THE ADMINISTRATION MUST SEEK rROM CONGRESS EARLY IN 1967.

A MULTI-BILLION SUPPLEMENTAL APPROPRI .... -TION CLEARLY WILL BE REQUIRED TO MEET THE MUCH LARGER DEFENSE EXPENOITURES NOW fORE­CAST.

SUBANDRIO OENIE~ TREACHERY JAKARTA (uPl)--FORMER FOREIGN MINISTER

SUBANORIOtS CHIEr OF INTELLIGENCE. TESTI­

'IED TODAY THAT HE PERSO~ALLY INFORMED SUBANDRIO or THE STEPPED-UP INDONESIAN COMMUNIST PARTY (PKI) ACTIVITIES WHICH LEO TO THE ABORTIVE COMMUNIST COUP LAST YEAR.

BRIG GEN. SUGtNT SUTAR~O, CHIEF O~ STAFr or THE CENTRAL INTELLIGE~CE BoDY, MADE THE DISCLOSURE DURING THE rouRTH DAY OF SUBANDRIO'S TREASON TRIAL

SUTARTO SAID, "I WENT TO SEE SUBANDRIO AT HIS HOME SOMETIME IN THE MIDDLE or LAST YEAR TO REPOR7 ON STEPPEO UP PKI ACTIVITY IN CENTRAL JAVA AND ON INTENSIFIED TRAIN­ING OF COMMUNIST YOUTH AT CROCODILE HOLE"

IT WAS AT CROCODILE HOLE, TEH M!LES SOUTH Or JAKARTA, WHERE THE COMMUNISTS KILLED AND BURIED SIX ARMY GENERALS DURING THE COUP-ATTEMPT.

SUSANDRIO DENIED TH~T HE RECEIVED SUCH IN.ORMATION FROM SUTARTO, BUT THE INTELLI­GENCE CHIEr STUCK 8'1' HIS TESTIMONY

SUTARTO ALSO TESTI~IEO THAT IN EARY MA1 HE LEAR~ED Of" A PlAN BY "A COUNCIL O. GENERAlS" TO OVERTHROW THE PARLIAMENT HIS INrORMANT; HE SAID J WAS A COMMUNIST MEMBER or PARLIAMENT.

HE ALSO SAID HE RECEIVED IN MAy A DOCU­MENT ALLEGEDLY WRITTEN BY rORMER BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO JAKARTA S'R ANDREW GILCHRIST, WHICH INDICATED AN IMPENDING BRITISH AND U S ATTACK ON INDONESIA.

Style leaders for the season, crafted in a tradit10n demanding excellence at every level.

• FLAm TOE BLACK anum • BROWN GRAm BLOOHER. • BLACK GRAIN BLLCHER (shawn) • BLACK MOCCASIN • BLACK CORDOVAN

Most styles are available in a COM­PLETE SIZE RANGE from 6c through 13E.

_-L ______ ~ ____ __ ~ ~ ~~ ___ .

WHO'S BEH INO THE DOOR TO~~'IGHTl THE FIRST NIGHT AUDIENCE or THE NINTM

GU~ST WAS TREATED LAST EVENING 10 A FINE PERrORMANCE or THRILLS AND CHILLS WITH OCCASIONAL aURSTS or COMEDY. A HIGH SPOT IN THE rlRST ACT WAS CERTAINLY THt UNEX-

APPEARANCE or THE

NT HAD lit EN ;, DARK SECRET. IT CAN ONLY BE SAID THAT WHEN STAN MoRKETTER$ AS THE FIRST GUEST, MADE HIS 8RIEF, 8UT EF ,ECTIVE, APPEAR­ANCE THE AUDIENCE

SPELL-BOUND. A DlrFERENT

~ IRST GUEST WILL APPEAR FOR EACH OF THE SUCCEEDING PERFORMANCES or THE NINTH GUEST. EACH, A WELL-KNOWN ISLAND RESIDENT, HAS PERFECTED HIS DIFFICULT ROLE AS THE FIRST FAl~ GUY IN THE PLAY.

A FEW TICKETS ARE STILL AVAILABLE.

COL. HARTSELL H. NORTHINGTON, ••• NEWLY ASSIGNED DE~UTY NIKE-X PROJECT MANAGER OF COE ACTIVITIES, CENTER, ARRIVED ON KWAJALEIN OCTOBER 5 ACCOMPANIED BY COL. DAVID ROBERTS FRON THE OrFICE, CHIEF OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF ARMY, SECOND ON LEFT, AND MR. W. E, COURTNEY OF THE NIKE-X OFrICE, REDSTONE, THEY WERE GREETED ON THEIR ARRIVAL BY MAJOR VERNON K. DAVIS, COE AREA ENGINEER, LEFT, AND MAJOR RICHARD AUSTIN, DEPUTY FOR ATOLL OPERATIOHSL-~R~IQ~HT~,~,-______________________________________________________ ___

COE DEPUTY NXP MANAGER INSPECTS CONSTRUCTION

COL. HARTSEL H. NORTHINGTON, DEPUTY NIKE-X PROJECT MANAGER OF CDE ACTIVITIES, IS VISITING KWAJALEIN WITH COL. DAYID ROBERTS, O~­riCE OF CHIEF OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT or ARMY ANO MR. W. E. COURT­NEY OF THE NIKE-X OFFICE FOR THE PURPOSE or ORIENTATION AND IN­SPECTION OF CONSTRUCTION FACILITIES ON KWAJALEIN ATOLL. THE GROUP WILL BE HERE UNTIL OCT. 13.

COCo NORTHINGTON,WHO ONLY RECENTLY RECEIVED ASSIGNMENT TO HIS PRtsENT POST, WAS FORMERLY WITH THE OFFICE, DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF, LOGISTICS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, AS ASSISTANT PROJECT MANAGER FOR COE ACTIVITltS. HE WAS A MEM8ER'OFTHE ARMY BALLISTIC MISSILE AGENCY AT REDSTONE DURING THE DAYS WHEN THIS AGENCY WAS THE ARMY'S PIONEERING ORGANIZATION IN BOTH TACTICAL AND SPACE 800STER ROCKETS.

COL. NORTHINGTON, DURING THE PERIOD FROM MARCH 1965 UNTIL JUNE 1959, SPENT TWO YEARS AS DEPUTY CHIEF IN THE ENGINEER'S OrFICE AT

ABMA AND A YEAR AS REDSTONE ARSENAL POST ENGINEER.

,CHRISTENED, ••• TWO NEW CAL-20 SAILBOATS RECENTLY ARRIVED ON KWAJA­A NATIVE or ALTUS, OKLA., COL. NORTHINGTON HOLDS A BS DEGREE IN

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING FROM OKLAHOMA STATE UNIVERSITY ANO HAS DONE POST GRADUATE WORK AT GEORGE WAS"'NGTON UNIVERSITY. DURING WORLD WAR II HE SERVED WITH A COMBAT ENGlftEER GROUP IN BELGIUM, GERMANY

I LE IN. THE PUN 10 II (SMALL BREEZE) PURCHSED BY BilL AVERY AND BILL , CHERRY ANO THE KATHY G. PURCHASED BY GEORGE GUNTHER AND JIN COMER i WERE CAUSE FOR A RECENT CHRISTENING PARTY AT THE MARINA. IT IS

UNDERSTOOD THAT WHILE THE NEW CRAFT NAY HAYE -H-A-W-A-I-I-A-I\j-V-O-T--'E~R-R-E-G-I-"'-T-R-A-T-1-01" , BEEN CHRISTENED WITH THE TRADITIONAL CHAM- v : PAGNE J HOST OF THE PARTICIPANTS wr~E CHRIS­, TENED 8Y IMMERSION IN THE LAGOON. ONE RE­i ~ORT HAS IT THAT A CERTAIN EOITOR SPENT MORE : TIME IN THAN OUT OF THE WATER.

THE NEWLY ARRIVED SAIL80ATS ARE 20 FEET , LONG HrTH CABIN SPACE FOR FOUR AND ARE DE­I SIGNEO FOR ALL-ROUND SAILING. [ OtHER ISLAND SAILING FANS WHO MIGHT BE IN­:TERESTED IN OBTAINING THEIR ~WN BOATS ARE : INVITED TO CONTACT ANY ONE or THE A8QVE MEN­'TIONED OWNERS WHO HAVE A FINE SUPPLY OF iPAMPHLETS AND OTHER LITERKTORE CONCERNING

THE CAL 205 AND THEIR PURCHASE.

PAPERBOY OF Tt£ MONTH TROPHY •••• I S PRE­SENTED TO DAVID NESS BY HOURGLASS CIRCULA­TION MANAGER, DANA OoGERS. THE HONOR or BEING PA~ERBOY or THE MoNTH GOES TO THE BOY WHO HAS WORKED MOST EFrlCIENTLY AND HAS HAD THE rEWEST COMPLA'NTS rROM RESIDENTS 0" HIS ROUTE.

DAVID MAS aEEN AN HOURGLASS PAPERBOY rOR SEVERAL MONTHS. EL~V[N-ytAP-OLD DAVID IS IN THE SIXTH GRADE. HE IS THE SON OF CLAR­ENCE NESS, PRI"CI~AL or G.S. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, AND MARGERY N[SS7 rlRST GRADE TEACHER. -----------------------

THE fiNANCE COMMITTEE or THE YOKWE YUK WOMEN'S CLUB WILL MEET MoNOAY, OCT. 10 AT I. PM AT QTRI. 430-B•

RESIDENTS OF HAWAII MAY REGISTER TO VOTE IN THE GENERAL ELECTION TO BE HELD SOON IN HAWAII. MR. TAKASHI KAWAKAWI, DEPUTY REG­ISTRAR, WILL PROVIDE VOTER REGISTRATION AT THE CROSSROADS ON MONDAY, OCTOBER 10 AT 1 PH AND ALL DAY TUESDAY, OCT08ER II,

HAWAIIAN RESIDENTS ARE REMINDED THAT IF THEY DIO NOT VOTE IN THE LAST ELECTION J

THEY MUST REGISTER IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE rORTHCOMING ELECTION. REGISTRATIONS MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATtR THAN MIDNIGHT OCTOBER II. ...

FIRST OF THE BRYAN SERIEb STARTING TODAY, THE SERIES OF ARTICLES

CONCERNING MICRONESIA THAT WAS ~U8LISHED

IN THE HOURGLASS THE LATTER HALF or 1965 WILL 8E RUN AGAIN EACH FRIDAY.

FOLLOWING IS THE LIST OF ARTICLES AS THEY A~PEAR IN THE HOURGLASS.

TABLE OF CONT[I'iTS PACIFIC GEOGRAPHY MAOE EASY MAN COMES TO THE PACIFIC PACIFIC ISLAND GROUPS WHAT IS AN ATOLL? PLANT LirE ON ATOLLS -- PART I PLANT LI~E ON ATOLLS -- PART 2 BIRDS or THE MARSHALLS MARSHALL ISLANDS INSECTS -- PART I MARSHALL ISLANO. INSECTS .~ PART II FISHES IN THE MICRONESIAN SEA PART FISHES IN THE MICRONESIAN SEA -- PART II MARINE SHELLS -- PART I MARINE SHELLS -- PART 1 I LIFE ON A CORAL REEF KWA~AL[IN PLACE NAMES MAKINQ A LIVING ON AN ATOLL THE MARSHALL ISLANDERS CANOES AND NAVIGATION ALL IN A DAytS WORK THE DECORATIVE ARTS IN THE MARSHALL I,LAN"S D'SCOWERY AND EXPLORATION IN THE MAR­SHALL ISUND'

• \ TRADERS, WHALERS AND MISSIONARIES THE MARSNALL ISLAND. AS A GERNAN COLONY BETWEEN Two WARS TNE BATTLE FOR THE MARSHALL ISLANDS RECONSTRUCTION BEGIN' ATOMIC BoMas AND DISPLACED PER'ONS

AND THE NETHERLANDS. IN HIS LAST ASSIGNMENT WITH DCSLOG Ht

WAS CHIE~, INSTALLATIONS PROGRAM BRANCH AND DEPUTY CHIEF, INSTALLATIONS MANAGEMENT DI­VISION INSTALLATIONS DIRECTORATE.

HE IS A GRADUATE OF BOTH THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE AND THE COMMAND ANO GENERAL STAFF COLLEGE AND IS THE HOLDER OF THE SILVER STAR AWARDED IN KOREA. HE HAS ALSO B~N AWARDED THE BRONZE STAR WITH FIRST o~~ LEAr CLUSTER, ________________________ __

DIn "T III

SunstrOke, sunburn and heat exhaustion re~

spect neither age nor occupafton Gardening, qolf, te,.nls or merely lYing In the 5un can be almost as dangerous as Wielding a pIck and shovel-so whether you work out-of-doors, are a sporh enthUSiast, or lUst hope for a eoat of tan, when the sun starts to burn put on a hat and shIrt

SYMPTOMS OF HEATSTROKE

Attack IS sudden Intense diZZiness and

headache Rapidly unconSCIOUS

Face red and flushed Skm hot and dry-

no perspiration Pulse slow and full Breathmg IS deep -

TREATMENT

Take patient to cool place

Remove excess clothmg

Lay patient down Keep head high Apply cool appllcatrons Do not give strmulants OBTAIN MEDICAL CARE

P ... GE 4 HOURGLASS r~lbAYJ OCTOBER 7, 1966

AIR FORCE COUMISSIONS I NEZ SMASHES YUCATAN PE~ING-MOSCOW SQUABBLE II FLY I NG SAUCER It STUDY MulCO CITV (UPI )--ECCEINTRIC KILLER HURR 1- BREAKS STUDEfI4T EXCHANGE

W",SHINGTON (UPI)--THE AIR FORCE COMMISSION- CANE IMEl SMASHED 35-FGO T WAVES INTO THE MGscow (UPI)--SLA~~ING B ... CK AT PEKING'S "ED TNE UNIVERSITY or ~COLORAOO TODAY TO CON- NO~THERN YUCATAN COAST TOOAV AND HEADED IH~ ... NTI-SOVIET C."~AICNJ Russ'A TODAY ORDEREO

DUCT AN ·'N-DE~TH" STUDy or rLYING S"'UCERS TO THE SOUTHWESTERN GULr OF MEXICO TOWARD "'Ll CHINESE STUDENTS IN THE SoVIET UNION OUT FOR THE NEXT 18 MONTHS. THE MULTI-MILLION OOLL ... R MINATITLAH-COAT- OF THE COUNTRY BY THE END OF OCTOBER lND

THE ~ROJECTJ ANNOUNCED BY AIR fORCE SEC- ZACOALCO'S PETRO~EUM AND SULPNUR COMPLEX. TOLD ITS OWN EXHANG& STUDENTS IN CHINA TO RETART HAROLD BROWN J "'~PARENTLY IS THE OUT- PRESS DISPATCHES FROM THE PORT OF PRO- 'COME HOME IMMEDIATELY. GROWTH OF CONTINUING ~UBLIC MISTRUST OF AIR GRESO SAID THE ARMED FORCES AND POLICE M ... N- THE PEKI~Q-Hoscow BREACH WIDENED WITH FUR-Fo~cE I~VESTIG~TIONS or THOUS ... NDS OF UNIOENT~ ~GED TO EV~CUAT[ 10,000 OF THE TOWN'S THER SOVIET HI~T5 OF NEW EFrORTS TO DRUM RED IFIED FLYING OBJECTS WHICH SOME CITIZENS 17,000 RESIDENTS IN 800 TRUCKS AND SUSES CHINA rROM THE WORLD COMMUNIST MOVEMENT. BELIEVE MAY Bt vlSlTeRS FROM OTHER PL",NETS. BEFORE FLOOD WATERS CUT THE HIGHWAY BETWEEN OBSERVERS SAID THE REMOVAL or SOVIET

THE AIR FORCE WON APpROV ... L L ... ST SPRING PROGRESO AND HERID.... STUDENTS COULD ONLY WORSEN THE "OUMBFOUNOING 'ROM THE HOUSE ARMED SERVICES COMMITTEE FOR THE NEWSPA~£R E~ UNIVERSAL GRAFICD IN BRAINLESSNESS" OF CURRENT CHINESE EDUCATION. ITS OWN PERIOQIC INVESTIGATIONS, BUT THE

COMMITTEE ALSO C"'LLED FOR A FURTHER, EXH"'US-TIVE 5TUDY .0 THROW SOME LICHT ON UNSOLVEO OCCURRENCES.

S INCE I~H, THE AIR FORCE HAS INVESTI­GATED 10,896 UFO SIGHTINGS AND fAILED TO IDENTlry 655 rOR LACK OF SUFFICIENT INFOR­MATION. OTHER SICHTINGS HAVE 8EEN ATTRIBUTED TO A V ... RIETY Or PHENOMENA SUCH AS MISSILE rlRINGS, HOAXES OR HALLUCINATIONS.

THE AIR fORCE RE~ORTS HAVE NEVER CITED

ANY EVIOENCE OF EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL INTELLI-GENCE OR CONTROL J NOR OIC THEY FIND ANY EVIDENCE OF PERfORMANCE WHICH VIOLATED THE

LAWS OF MECHANICS. BROWN's ANNOUNCEMENT S ... ID TH~T COLORADO

WOULD SELECT SEVERAL OTHER UNIVERSITIES TO

TAKE PART IN THE IIIIOEPEIIIOENT INVE5TIG"TiON, AND REPORT TO THE AIR FORCE IN EARLY 1968.

ABOUT 100 SCIENTISTS ... RE EX~ECTEO TO 'ARTICIPATE THEY WILL HAVE ACCESS TO AIR fORCE FILES.

THE NATIONAL ACADEMY Dr SCIENCES ALSO HAS

AGREED TO APPOINT A P",NEL TO REVIEW THE

COLORAao RE~ORT. THE DIRECTOR or THE STUDY, EXPECTED TO

COST $300,000, WILL BE DR. EDWARD U. CONDON, FORMER DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL BUREAU OF STANDARDS AND NOW A PHYSICS ~ROFESSOR AT

COLORADO. CONOON SERVEO AS AN ASSISTANT DIRECTOR

or THE Los ALAMOS, N.M., LABORATORY WHEN IT WAS ENGAGEO IN OEVELOPING THE ATOMIC aOMB.

HE WAS EMBROILEO IN CONTROVERSY WITH THE HOUSE COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN ACTIVITIES IN THE 19505 AND HIS SECURITT CLEARANCE W ... S LifTED AT ONE POINT J BUT LATER RESTORED.

McNAMARA WILL APPRAISE NEEDS OF VIET NAM WAR

SAIGON (UPI}--U S. SECRETARY OF DErENSE ROBERT S. McNAMARA, WHO CAME HERE II MONTHS AGO AND SA.ID "WE HAVE STOPPED LOSING THE

WAR," ARR I VES HERE SUNDAY TO MAKE ANOTHER APPRAISAL OF THE ESCALATING CONFLICT.

WHEN McNAMARA ARRIVED HERE LAST Nov. 28 THERE WERE I (0,000 AMERICAN TROOPS IN VIET NAM TODAY THERE ARE 316,000 AND MORE ARE

COMING. THE U.S DEATH TOLL THEN WAS SLIGHTLY

LESS THAN 2,000 TODAY IT IS MORE THAN

5,400 THE GIGANTIC EXCAL ... TION OF THE VIET NAM

WAR BEGAN IN 1965, A YEAR O~ DECISION FOR THE UNITED STATES THE YEAR 1966 WAS TO B~ THE YEAR OF THE SHOWDOWN, BUT SO FAR AN

END TO THE WAR IS NOT IN SIGHT DESPITE McNAMARA'S CAUTIOUS APPRAISAL

DURING HIS LAST vrSIT HERE, THERE WAS AN AIR or OPTIMISH. U.S. TROOPS HAD STOPPED ADVISING ANO BEGUN ~IGHTING IN EARNEST.

THE SITUATION WAS QUITE DIFFERENT WHEN THE DE~ENSE SECRETARY WAS HERE IN JULY 1965. AT THAT TIME A VIET CONG MONSOO~ orFENSlvE HAD GOTTEN OFF TO • SMASHING START AND SOUTH VIETNAMESE FORCES WERE NEAR COLLA~St.

THERE IS LITTLt DOUBT THAT MILITARy LEADERS HlRE WILL RECOMMEND TMAT MORE U.S. COHa ... T TROO~S BE SENT TO VIET N ... M TO HELP PLUG COMMUNIST INFILTRATION ROUTES.

SINCE McNAMARA'S LAST VISIT, HANOliS LAOTION SU~PLY LINE INTO SOUTH VIET NAM H",S BEEN HIT BY ... LMOST DAILY AIR STRIKES. KEY PETROLEUM STORES ON THE OUTSKIRTS OF HANOI ",ND HAIPHONG HAVE BEEN KNOCKED OUT.

STILL THE ENEMY FIGHTS "'1'10 FIGHTS WELL, PARTICUL ... RLY ALONG THE DEMILITARIZED ZONE,

WHICH SE~"'RATES THE WARRING COUNTRIES. INTELLIGENCE SOURCES SAY THE NORTH VIET-N ... MESE ARMY HAS M ... SSED TROOPS AND SUPPLIES IN AND JUST SOUTH OF THE DMZ AND ~LANS ... FORAY TO THE SoUTH WHEN THE IMMINENT MON­

SOON RAINS 8EGIN. THE ENEMY ALSO riGHTS WELL IN THE MEKONG

RIVER DELTA, THE RICH SOUTHERN TIP or SOUTH VIET N"'M WHICH CONTAINS MOST OF THE NATION'S ~OpULATION AND PRACTIC ... LLY ALL ITS FOOO­

~ROOUCING CAPABILITY, TH[RE IS LITTLE DouBT THAT MILITARY LEAO­

ERS HERE WILL DISCUSS WITH McNAMARA THE ~DSSI8ILITY OF puT11HG LARGE AMERICAN

MrxlCo CITY RE~ORTED FROM PROGRESO THAT A USING THE PHRASE "I"RINCIPLE OF RECIPROCITY/' PILOT 80AT WITH MORE THAN 70 PERSONS ABO ... RD RUSSIA ORDERED SOviET STUDENTS STILL IN CHINA W ... S MISSING OFrSHORE AND FEARED LOST. 'NEZ HOME BY MONDAY AND GAVE THEIR OPPOSITE HAS ALRE ... DY CLAIHED MORE THAN JOO LIVES IN CHINESE NUMBERS IN RUSSIA UNTIL THE END OF ITSWEEKLONG SWATH OF DESTRUCTION THROUGH THE MONTH TO CLE ... R OUT. ALL CLASSES FOR CHIN-THE CARIBBEAN AND ATLANTIC. ESE STUDENTS AND TRAINEES IN Russ, ... WERE

MEAGER REPORTS rROM PROGRESO 5AID WINOS STO~PEO. WERE SO HIGH TH ... T PEDESTRIANS WERE HUGGING THE SOVIET STATEMENT, HANDED TO TH~ REO THE WALLS TO KEEP rROM BEING BLOWN DOWN. CHINESE EMBASSY J HADE NO BONES ... BOUT THE DoCKS WERE SU8MERGEO AND SEA WATER WAS POUR FACT THAT THE MOVE W ... S IN RETALIATION FOR ING FOUR BLOCKS INTO THE CITY. AT LE ... ST 50 PEKING i , OROER L ... ST MONTH BARRING SOVIET HOUSES WERE REPORTEO KNOCKED DOWN. STUDENTS AND TRAINEES rROM CLASSROOMS IN

THE NAVY DEPARTMENT REPORTED "MOUNTA INOUS CHIN .... A DECREE OF St~T. 20 ORDERED AlL WAVES" BATTERED THE OFFSHORE ISLETS or fOREIGN STUDENTS OUT OF CHINA. ARENAS, TRANGULOS, PEREZ AND ARCOS. RUSSIA NOTED THAT SOVIET STUOENTS WERE

BE! I DES PROGRESO J TH E C:OMMUN I TI E 9. Of "lI~ I LATERALLY" ORDERED TO LEA VE. CH[LEN ",ND CHICXULB WERE lLSO EVACU ... TED. No FIGURES WERE AVAILABLE TO SHOW HOW MANY THE RESORT ISLANDS or ISLAS MU~ERES AND CO- STUOENTS WERE INVOLVED IN aOTH COUNTRIES. lUNEl ALSO rELT THE HURRICANE'S STING BUT CHINA ORIGINALLY GAVE rOREIGN STUDENTS 15 THE NAVY DEPARTMENT SAID USE OF EMERGENCY DAYS TO LEAVE THE COUNTRY ArTER IT CLOSED SHELTERS AP~ARENTLY PREVENTED LOSS OF LifE. ALL ITS SCHOOLS FOR THE SCHOOL YEAR DURING

RED WORLD SEEKS HAND IN BIG CHINA SHAKEUP

HONG KONC (UPI)--RUSSIA AND ITS WORLD COM­

MUNIST ... LLIES ARE M ... KING PREpAR~TIONS TO INTERFERE IN THE QURRtNT ~OWER STRUGGLE

AMON& THE WOULD-BE SUCCESSORS TO AGING COMMUNIST CHINESE LEADER MAO TSE-TUNG, WESTERN DIPLOMATIC SOURCES SAID TODAY.

TME SOURCES S ... IO IN A PREp ... RED AN ... LYSIS OF REO CHIN ... 'S INTERNAL POLITICAL STRUGGLE

THAT 'OSSIBLE OUTSIDE iNTERFERENCE WAS IN­DIC ... TEO BY RECENT DIPLOM"'TIC ACTIVITY iN­VOLVING SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN OFFICI ... LS.

THE PURGE WHICH CHAIRMAN MAo TSE-TUNG CALLS A "CULTURAL REVOLUTION."

THE SOVIET ORDER TELLING ... LL RUSSIAN STUDENTS TO GET HOME BY OCT. 10 INDICATED SOME HAD IGNORED THE CHINESE 15-DAY DEADLINE

THE SOVIET T ... ss NEWS AGENCY OISTRIBUTEO DETAILS OF THE ORDER BY THE MINISTRY OF ED­UCATION.

IT ALSO ISSUED A NEW CH ... RCE THAT CHINESE TEEN-AGE RED GUARDS WERE CONTINUIWG THEIR RAMPAGES AND HAD BEATEN WORKERS AT A TIRE FACTORY 1 KILLING AT LEAST ONE. THEY ALSO BEAT 40 "OLD REVOLUTIONARIES" AT A CHEKIANG COMMUNIST P ... RTY HEADQUARTERS, ACCORDING TO DISPATCHES REACHING Moscow.

THE UNPRECEDENTEO WALKOUT BY SoviET ANO IND" ... T IONS or A SOVIET MOVE TO BLACKLIST OTHER COMMU"IST PARTY DELECATIONS AT PEKINGS PEKING IN THE COMMUNIST WORLD CAME IN THE 17TH ANNUAL NATIONAL DAY CELEBRATIONS, OCT. FORM OF A NEW SUGGESTION ~OR A R£n SUMMIT l, AMD A BARRAGE or RECENT CRITICISM CONFERENCE TO DISCUSS THE SITUATION AGAINST PEKING'S SWEEPING "CULTURAL REVOL- TH[ SOVIET PARTY NEWSI"APER PR.VOA PUBLISHEO lITIDN" PURGE WERE RErERRED TO SPECIFICALLY A STATEMENT BY THE ECUAOOR(AN PARTY URGING

IN THE ANALYSIS. A "CONFERENCE OF COMMUNIST PARTIES TO OVER-THE SOURCES SAID THE INTERNAL UPHEAVAL COME THE S~LIT (IN THE COM~UNIST MOVEMENT)

WAS DEADLY SERIOuS AND DIRECTED ay DISSI­DENT ELEMENTS IN THE PARTY ... G ... INST M ... o's ... PPARENT SUCCESSOR, DEFENSE MINISTER LIN PUO, AND THE "EXTREME BEHAVIOR" OF YOUTH­FUL REO GUARDS WHO H"'VE SPEAR-HE ... OED CHIN""~ "CULTURAL PURGES".

"SO F~R IT IS UNLIKELY THAT THE SOVIET UNION HAS EXERTED ... NY INFLUENCE IN THE CON­

FLICTING FACTIONS IN CHIN"', " THE SOURCES SAID. "HOWEVER; SINCE THE ~O"ER STRUGGLE INSIDE THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY IS ONE OF LirE AND DEATH AND ONE WHICH TENOS TO BE I"ROLONGED BECAUSE OF THE STRONG RESIS­TANCE TO LIN PI ... O, EVERY MEANS WILL BE EMPLOYED IN DESI"ERATION BY THE ANTAGONISTS~ INCLUDING SUPPORT rROM OUTSIDE THE PARTY AND THE COUNTRY".

"Busy CONSULTATIONS AMONG SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN CO~NTRIES INDICATES THAT TMEY ... RE M~KING PREPARATIONS TO IMFLU~NCE THE COURSE OF THE INNER STRUGGLE IN CHI~AJ WHETHER INVITED OR UNINVITED, AND NOT IDLY ~ATC"ING FOR THE RESULT," THE SOURCES ADDEO.

SOVIET COMMUNIST PARTY CHIEF LEONID BREZHNEV RECENTLY COM~LETEO A SWE£P THROUGH EAST EURO~E, CONSULTIHG WITH COMMUNIST PARTY LEADERS ON CHINA'S M"'VERICK POLICIES.

FIGNTIMG UNITS IN T"! DELTA FOR THE rIR$T

TIME. ONE ARGUMENT MILITARY LEADERS HAVE USED

IS THAT MO~E U.S. TROOPS ARE NEEDED TO STEM INrlLTRATIQN or ENEMY SOLDIERS INTO THE SOUTH, Now THEY SAY, ~RIVATELYJ THAT INFIL­TRATION HAS L[VEL[D OFF

IT IS [STIM ... TED THAT THERE ARE NOW ... SOUT ~83JOOO ENEMY TROOPS IN THE SOUTH. WHEN McN ... N ... R ... WAS NERE LAST THE rlGURE WAS PUT AT 220,000.

ALel(D FORCES -- AMERICAHS, SOUTH VIET­NAMESE, AND OTHERS -- MA I NT ... IN ... BOUT A rOUR-TO-ONE NUMERIC ... L AOVANT ... GE OVER COM­MUNIST FORCtS IN THE SoUTH. THII IS ... BOUT THE SAME AS WHEN McNAM ... RA W"'S HERE IN NOVEMBER.

AND DISAGREEMENTS."

BACKLA::lH FEARED BU I LDII'tG WASHINGTON (UPI)--WITH THE ELECTIONS LESS

TH ... N A MONTH AWAY, THE SPECTER OF A WHITE BACKLASH IS HAUNTING THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRA­TION FROM CAPITOL HILL TO THE WHITE HOUSE.

RACIAL PROGRESSIVES FEAR THAT THE SUMMER or BIG-CITY RIOTING ANO "BL ... CK POWER" SLOGANEERING IS TURNING S ... CK THE TIDE OF PUBLIC SYMI"ATHY THAT M ... DE ~OSSIBLE THE LAST rEW TE ... RS' FORW~RD STRIDES IN CIVIL RIGHTS.

PRESIDENT JOHNSON TOOK HIS TURN AT LAyiNG THE BACKL~SH GHOST TO REST AT HIS NEWS CON-

FERENCE YESTERDAY. ASKED ... SOUT RE,UBLICAN CHARGES TH~T THE

ADMINISTRATION WAS NOT DOIHG ENOUGH TO HALT STREET VIOLENCE -- BOTH RIOTS AND CRIME --JOHNSON SAID:

"WE ARt VERY CDNCE~NEO AND WE ... RE VERY OETERMINED TO SEE THAT LAW AND OROtR AlW"'VS ~REV~IL OVER VIOLENCE. WE W"'NT TO HAVE THt VOICE OF REASON DROWN OU' THE VOICE or ViOLENCE ••••

.rWH I LE WE ARE NOT OBL I V 10US TO THE ~ROB-LEMS TH",T HRING FORTH THE ~ROTESTS, WE ARE CONCERNED THAT THEY BE PROTESTS WITHOUT VIOLENCE AND WITHIN L ... W AND ORDER."

JOHNSON ALSO MADE IT CLEAR HE WAS KEE~'NG AT ARM'S LENGTH FROM DEMOCR ... TS RIDING THE BACKlASK ISSUE.

ASKED IF HE WOULD SUPPORT DEMOCRATIC C ... NDIDATES FOR STATE OFFICE wHO ARE RUNNING ON ... NTI-CIVIL RIGHTS PLATFORMS, JoHNSON SAID THEY H ... D NOT ASKED HIM TO SUPPORT THEN AND "I HAYE NO PL ... NS TO 00 SO."

No NAMES WERE MENTIONED, BUT THE EXCH ... NCE CLEARLY REFERRED TO SUCH SEGREGATIONIST C ... NDIDATES ... S JIM JOHNSON IN ARKANSAS AND LESTER MAODOX IN GEORGI .... BoTH ARE SEEKING

GoVERNORSH I~S. AT THE CA~ITOL, CIVIL RIGHTS SUPPORTERS

RECEIVED A SETBACK YESTERDAY ON TWO ISSUES WHICH LIKELY WOULD HAVE GONE THEIR WAY.

fEW MONTHS AGO.

• HOORGLASS

Sports section DODGERS ARE STILL CONfiDENT BU1s~~HE ~oLfnLETbE~~.,~2t STUNT

BALTIMORE (UPI)--THE BALTIMORE ORIOLES, ALL ~RI"EO TO MAKE IT TMRIE IN A ROW TOMORROW, WILL SENO 'WALLY BUNKER AGAINST CLAUDE OSTEEN, THE SOUTH~AW WHO THE Los ANGELES DODGERS

HOPE CAN SAVE THEN rOR THE S(COND STRAIGHT WITH THE DODG(RS TWO GAMES DOWN AND CAST

OSTEEN riNDS HIMSELf IN VIRTVALLY THE SAME

YEAR. IN THE ROLE Of 5-2 UNDERDOGS fOR THE SERIES, POSITION THAT HE WAS AGAINST THE MINNESOTA

" 27 "T TWINS A YEAR AGO "IT'S THE SAME SITUATION AS LAST YEAR, SHRUQGED THE -YEAR-OLD. HE ONLY DlfrERtNCE IS THAT WE WERE AT HOME A YEAR AGO AND NOW WE'RE HERE. 1 DON'T WORRY ABDUl

THE BALLPARKS, THOUGH. I JUST HAVE TO KEE~ THE BALL OOWN." OSTEEN DID ~RECISELV THAT AGAINST THE TWINS AND BEAT THEM 4-0, IN THE THIRD GAME Of THE

1965 WORLD SERIES AfTEA THE TWINS HAD DEfEATED DON DRYSDALE AND SANOY KoUrAX IN THE flAST

CONTESTS AS THE ORIOLES HAVE THIS YEAR. "THE LAST TIME I PITCHED HERE, WHEN I WAS WITH 'WASHINGTON IN 1964," RECALLED OSTEEN,

"I WON." DOOGER MANAGER WALT ALSTON LIKEWISE WAS

NOT ES~ECIALLY DISTRESSED ASOUT THE fACT HIS CLue WAS MOviNG IHTO ALIEN TERRITORY.

"I KNOW WE'RE DOWN TWO," HE SAID. "I DON'T THINK WHERE WE PlA¥ HAKES MUCH OI~rER­ENCE. ITIS HOW yOU PLAY, NOT WHERE. WE PLAY THE SAME KINO or GAME ALL THE TIME"

ASKED Ir WILLIE DAVIS WILL ~LAY IN THE THIRD GAME ALSTON SAID HE DEfiNITELY WILL, DESPITE THE fACT THE DODGER CENTERflELOER SET A WORLD SERIES RECORD BY COMMITTING THREE [RRORS IN YESTERDAY'S CONTEST.

"WILLIE OAII1S WIL.L PLA"t IN ALL THE REMAIN­ING GAMES," ALSON SAIO.

THE DODGER MANAGER ADDEO HE PLANNED NO LINEUP CHANGES AND BALTIMORE Boss HANK BAUER SAID HE WOULD USE THE SAME LINEUP AGAINST OSTEEN AS HE DID A~AINST KOUfAX IN

THE SECOND CONTEST. CO~ING BACK TO THEIR O~N BACKYARD, THE

ORIOLES WERE (-5 fAVORITES TO WIN THE THIRD GAME BEHIND THE RIGHTHANOED BUNKER, WHO WAS AM IN-AND-OUTER MOST Of THE SEA$ON. HE "AD A 10-6 RECORD AND AN UNIMPRESSIVE 4.29 EARNED RUN AVERAGE AND WAS ON THE DISABLED LIST WITH TENDONITIS rROM LATE JULY UNTIL. MID-AUGUST,

IIBUT Nt HAS BEEN LOOKIN~ REAL GOOD LATElY~" EXPLAINEC BAUER. nHt PITCHED flVt INNINGS AGAINST MINNESOTA lAST SUNDAY AND SHUT THEM

" ouT. REALIZING HE WAS IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT BUT

TOP COLLEGIATE GAMES TOMORROW ARKANSAS yS BAYLOR GEORGIA TECH VS TEM~ESSEE 1~8IANA YS MINNESOTA MICHIGAN STATE VS MICHIGAN OKLA. STAT£ VS COLORADO OREGON STATE vs NORTH~ESTERH SYRACUSE vs NAVY PITTSBURGH vs WEST VIRGINIA WASH. STATE vs ARIZONA STATE W,SCONSIN vs NEBRASKA YAlE 'll'S BROWN L.S.U. vs TEXAS A.& H. FLOAIDA STATE vs FLORIDA MARYLAND VS DUKE T.C.U. vs TEXAS TECH. NOTRE DAME VS ARMY U.C.L.A. vs RICE U.S.C. VS WASHINGTON NEBRASKA VS WISCONSIN

SPORTS PATROL By STEVE SNIDER

NEW YORK (UPI)--BIG JOE SCANNELLA, WHO COACHES AT LITTLE C. W. POST COLLEGE OUT ON LONG ISlAND~ WANTS TO STRIKE A BLOW IN BE­HAlf Of ALL COLLEGE ~OOTBAlL COACHES IN

AMERICA.

rAIDAV, OCTOBEA 7, 1966

LOCAL SPORTS KGA GOLF"' TOURr'4AM[l\JT

THE KWAJALEIN GOLF ASSOCIATION rOUR~N BEST BALl la-HOLe TOURNAMENT wiTH FULL HANDICAP WILL TEE orf SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, AT 7=30 AM. PRIZES WILL 8E AS ~OLLOWS: I$T - $lOO, 2ND - *50.00, 3RD - $30.00 AND 4TH .. $20.00.

BECAUSE OF THE lARGE ENTRY, ALL. ~LAYERS ARE REOUES~ED TO 8[ ON TIME. DUES AND ENTRY FEES WILL 8£ COLLECTED AT THE GOlr COURSE.

AfTER THE TOURNAMENT, fROM 3 PM TO 6 PM, ALL ~lAYERS ARE INVITE~ TO THE CROSSROADS (~ORCH) rOR rREE DRINKS AND ~U ~U'S.

SUNDAY'S STARTING TIMES ARE LISTEO BELOW: 7:30 RONE, EVANS, DIERLAM, MISCHLER 1:36 S. KOA, FUKUDA, TOVAMA, KAKAZU 7:42 FRANK, P[NDLETON, SCHUMATE, STOKES 7.48 KANESHIRO, TAKAHASHI, GoNZALES

VI VEROS 7;54 BAKER, HAROIN, LILlY, KUPAHU 8:00 HENDERSON, IHA, YONEMURA, PAL.OMA 8.06 NADING, BULLA, HAMABATA, TOME 8:12 MEHAU, AKANA, McKEAGUE, HANAKAHI 8:18 E~SOM, GARDNER, CLARK, MOOR~ 8:24 [YMAN, FOSTER, McDONALD, ACKERMAN 8:30 SHIMODA, M'YASHIRO, ~£DAJ KAULUKUKU' 8.36 SHIBATA, PANIKU, HARDY, HIRST 8.42 LAKE, KURIL&O, RIEWER, EHLEMrELDT 8:48 GIMA, ASE, TABATA, YAMAMOTO 8:54 ArANO, GINOZA, OKUDA, SERRANO 9.00 JONES, CLUGSTON, SWANGIN, MURRAY 9:10 PADEKEN, CAMPBELL, KIBODEAUX, ZEBAL 9.18 SCHETTER, McKINlEV, SHEEHAN, CALLAWAY 9:25 GVHIER, UTSUMI, V.LENTINO, PURDY 10:45 D'AMICO, GRAHICH, DULL, KALAHIKI

WOMEI~ 'S SOFTBALL THE SAND~IPE~~ TURNED A CLOSE 8ALLGAME

INTO ... RouTE YESTERDAY 1N THE LAST TWO IN­NINGS TO DEfEAT THE 'SLANDERS 19-7. TH~ ISLANDERS KfPT PACE WITH THE SANDPIPERS THROUGHOUT THE FIRST fIVE INNINGS Of PLAY TRAILING 7-5 UNTil THE fATAL lAST TWO INNINGS.

IN THE SIXTH INNING RAINA COBLE'S HOMERUN STARTED THE SANDPIPERS ON A RALLY THAT WAS GOOD fOR SIX RUNS. IN THE TOp Of THE SEV-ENTH THEY TALlltD SIX MORE RUNS ON SINGLES BY l,z HARALSON, C'NDY ELLISON, V'CKIE AOOY AND DEBBIE HaOSON 1 fOR THE ONt-SIOED VICTORY.

THE ISLANDERS PLAYED A GOOD BALlGAME fOR flV( INNINGS BUT FELL APART IN THE LAST

"THERE OUGHT TO BE A AULE/' INSISTED SCANNELLA, "WHEREBY o~rICIALS ARE PENALIZED WHEN THEY BLOW ONE. THERE OUGHTA BE A WAY TRYING HARD NOT TO SHOw IT, THE SMILlNG TWO INNINGS WITH ERRATIC ~IELOIN~.

HAUER SAID "I FIGURE I GOT A LITTLE ADVAN- TO PUNISH 'EM. FINE 'EM 25 SUCKS OR SOME- THt WINNING ~ITCH£R WAS LIZ HARA~SON AND " TH IN"''' TAGE PLAYING ON MY HOME GROUND - THE L.OSER WAS JOAN RUSHING.

SOME or THE DODGERS, INCLUDING OSTEEN WHO AN OffiCIAL BLEW A DECISI~N ON SCANN£LLA'E HAD A 17-14 RECORD THIS SEASON, COUL~N'T TEAN lAST WEEK BUT, AS JOE NOTED, ~WHAT QU In: S([ TH"T. GOOD I 5 AN "POLOGY?"

"BAU .. "AKS REALLY DON'T MAKE THAT MUCH "TEAMS ARE ~tNALIZtO rOR RULES INFRACTIONS

WOMEN'S SOFTBALL SCHEDULE SUM. OCT. 9 DALLY FIELD 3 ~M SANDPIPERS Vs NA ALII (VERRY &.

DlfrERENCE;' SAIO THE DODGER LErTHANDER. AND A COACH IS ~ENAL.IZEO ElY GETTING liCKED PHIL REGAN, THE Los ANGEL.E:S REllEr ACE, WHtN Ht MAKES MISTAKES," HE SAIO. "OfriClAlS 5 ~M

ADDEO! "WE HAVEN'T PLAYED LIKE. WE KNOW wE AREN'T ~ENALIZED IN ANY WAY UNLESS THEy'RE Kuu-IPO vs ISLANDERS

ALAMEDA) (VERRY &

BRAME) CAN. WE BEAT OURSELVES IN THAT SECONO ~AME, BAD ALL THE TIME AND THEN THEY SIMPLY DON'T TUES. OCT. 11 DALLY FIELD BuT 10'[ rEEL If VE CAN BEAT BUNKER WE CAN GET JOBS ANY MORE." 5:}O ~14 SANDPI~ERS '11'5 Kuu-I,-o (VERRY & STILL WIN THIS THING. WHILE C.W. POST IS JUST A ~IN~OIMT ON TME HARVEST)

COCKY DICK STUART PUT IT STilL ANOTHER WAY. COLLEGIATE fOOTBALL MAP, THt orflCIATING "WE PL.AN TO flY BACK TO Los ANGELES MONDAY GENERALLY IS AVtRAGE fOR THE tASTtRN stC-

NIGHT," HE SAID. TOR. HOWEVER 1 THINGS LIKE THIS DO HAPPEN! By THAT, STUART IMPLIED THE DODGERS WOULD SCANNElLA HAD HIS TEAM IN A 6-6 TIE

STILL BE ALIVE ArTER MONDAyfs rirTH GAME AGAINST ALfRED LAST WtEK WHEN ONE Of HIS LADS BROKE LOOSE ON A LONG RUN. H£ WAS IN

'N

MEN'S FAST PITCH SCHEDULE SAT. OCT. 8 DAllY FIEL.D 5!15 ~M HI. ALII "A" VS RIKAKIS

(KEATON & JOE K.) BRANDON FIELD AND THAT A SIXTH AND SEVENTH WOULD BE NEC­

ESSARY WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY IN Los ANGELES. THE CLEAR AT THE 20 WHEN THE REfEREE 5UOO[N- 5 PM KENTRO,", VS HIGH SCHOOL (HARVEST & Jr400S) DES~ITE THE BEATING HE SUrFERED YESTEADAY,

KourAX rOUND THAT HIS PO~UlARITY PRECEDED HIM HERE. EVEN THOUGH BALTIMORE IS AN AMER­ICAN LEAGUE CITY AND THE DODGER SOUTH~AW NEVER AP~EAREO HERE OURING THE SEASON, HE WAS BESIEGED fOR HIS AUTOGRAPH WHEN HE CAME DOWN TO THE HOTEL LOBBY TO BOARD THE BUS WHICH CARRIED THE DOOQERS TO THE 8A LPARK.

FOR MOST or THE DODGERS OUTSIDE Of EX­AMERICAN LEAGUERS LIKE OSTEEN AND REGAN, THEIR WORKOUT MARKED THE FIRST TIME THEY HAD BEEN INSIDE THE ORIOLES' BALLPARK. THEY TOOK A DNE-HOUR BATTING DRILL IMMEDIATELY AfTER THE ORIOLES HAD ENGAQEO IN A SIMilAR ArTERNOON SESSION.

YOU ARE THE QUARTERBACK By JAC9t KEMP

Bur'AlO BILLS QUARTERBACK AND 1965 AfL IIPUYER or THE YEAR"

SITUATION: You ARE HOST TO KANSAS CITT ON A BITTER

COLD DAY. WITH THREE MINUTES TO GO IN THE GAMEJ YOU ARE WIN~ING BY TWO POINTS. 'T'a THIRD ~OWN AND 18 YARDS TO GG rOR A rlRrT •

\

DOWN. THE 8ALL RESTS ON YOUR OWN TWO-YARD liNt. THE PRESSURE IS OM WMtN yOU CALL rOR A ••••••• (ANSWER ON PAGt SIK)

lY 8LEW HIS WHiSTLE. "WHAT'S THAT fOR'll! SCANNELLA "'ANTED TO

KNOW. THE WHISTLE-TOOTER WAS CHAGRINED. III JUST BLEW THE WHISTLE -- "'HAT CAN I

NON. OCT. to DALLY FltLD 5: 15 ~M COMMUTERS VS NA Al I I "B:'

(BURKE & ALAMEDA) BRANDON FIELD

TELL YOU?H HE SAID rINALlY. 5 ~M KENTRON va Fil-AM (KEATON & HARVlST) SO T"EY ~UT TKE BALL IN PLAY ON THE ALFRED

20~ SINCE ALL ~lAY MUST STO~ WHEH THE WHISTLE BLOWS ANO THAT'S wHERE THE BAll CARRIER HAD STO~PED.

THATfS WHERE THE SCORING STO~~ED, TOO, I N A 6-6 11 E.

"FUNNY THING IS," SAID SCANNElLA, lilT

WAS ONE or THE: BEST orflCIATED GAMES WE'RE LIKELY TO SEE -- EXCE~T fOR THAT ONE BOOT."

A WEIRD-O BOBBED UP IN THt PRINCtTON­COLUMBIA GAME TH£ SAME DAY, THOuGH tHANCES ARE IT WASN'r AS CeST~Y.-

PRINCETON "AD A fiRST DOWN ON THE COlUMSIA 41~ BUT THREE DOWNS LATER IT WAS rouRTH DOWN AND 16 ON ITS OwN 47.

THE ~RINC[TO"' PUNTED AND CDUUMBIA RAN 8A.CK TO ITS 22. LtNlSMEH MUR~IED DeWN WITH THt STICKS AND tHAINS Bt~ORE THEY lEARNED A PENALTY fLAQ MAD IEEN DROPPED AND HALr BURIED IN TNE MUD.

COLUMBIA WAI ASSESSED 15 YARDS fOR

NOW YOU KNOW -- ANCIENT EGYPTIAN DICE S~ECIMENS fOUND IN TNE RUINS Of TH£8ES INDI­CATE THAT DICE WER[ THEN LOADED FOR CHEATING PURPOSES, ACCORDING TO COLLIERS ENCYCLO'£OIA.

HOLDING. OrFICIAL$ "IiilIJESS(O" "'HERE TN!: BALL HAD BEEN ~UT IN ~LAY AND DECIDED PRINCETON HAD A fiRST DOWN ON COLUMBIA'S 40 -- THREE YARDS SHORT or THE DISTANCE ACTUALLY NEEDED uP TO THE COL.UMBIA 37.

WELL, THE PRINCETOHS DIDNIT SC.RE SO T"t ERROR PROBABLY "'A'N'T IIGNIFICANT THOUPH COLUMBIA WOULD U~ ON tTS weN riVE ArTER THE N£~T PUNT INSTEAD DF ON ITS 22. PRINCETUN WON JI t4-12.

HOtRQ.ASS WANT ADS GET RESIL TS

~ L _ .:, -I:':' E T -;-r J 'i

~EW YORK (~PI)--TRAOERS CONTINUED ~C POUND ~WA~ Ai T~[ GLAMO~ SHAq£S ON T~E ~YS: iODAy AS THE MARKET MAIN-1~.~SD ~ ST~ADY DOWNTREND.

\,-,' 1~1-I , IT1l E IN "I-'E OVERN - rlT NEWS 10 ST!M~~A7~ DEMAND FOR STu. S, BROK­ERS [NEFAltY wERE RESIGNE~ TO A NEW 5t .0£ EVEN aU:)?E THE OPENlf\JG BEL.L

TrlC JP! STOCK MARKET 1~~5CArOq SLID 1.36 PERCEN~ ON ~HE I U3 i ISSUES T~ADt0. THrR£ WERE 9\6 LOSEqS ANO O~LY 280 GAINERS. ONE lSSUE TCUCrlE~ NEW i966 ~!GH \o;'H!LE ... 60 F"ElL TO NE';/ LOWS.

lHE SrOCK EXCHANGE (NDEX POSTED A lOSS EQUAL 10 ~ CENTS IN THE AVERAGE ~;ARE pqlCE. TRADING S~ElLED TO Bj -

I~O,~OO S"'ARE5 ~ROM C~IIO,OOO SHARES 'fESTERDA 'I'"

JO,",' JONES INDUSTRIAL AV[RAGE 7'UM­

BI,EO 5.29 TO 744.32, A N£W 1966 LOW" AND ITS WORST LEVEL S~NCE IT STOOD AT 7'+1.00 O"l ~H1Vo 27, 1963,

CONCERN OveR THffiO Q~~RTER PROfITS co~r'~~ED '0 DOMINAT~ INVESTOR AND ;R~DER DECiSiONS AN~ ~K~ NORMAL PRE­~EEKEND EVEN!NG-UP OPERATIONS AND PR~ FiT-TAKING ONLY AGGRAVA;ED THE SITUA-j IO~.

O~E BROKER FOINTED CWT 7HAT ANOTHER ~AJOR rAC10R IN THE SLUMP or GLA~OR SHARES IS THE GROWING TENDENCY ON THE ~ART Of ;~ADERS TO SELL THE H!GH­FL~ERS SHORI, HE ALSO POINTEC OUT lHAT SOME TRADERS AR~ SE:KING HIGrl

PRICE-EARNiNGS RAT!O SHArES THAT HAVE RESISTED THE RECE~T SLICE AND ARE ~OT~NTIAL SHORT SALES.

PRESIDEN~ JO~NSON'S PROPOSAL FOR r.~EArER TRADE W1T~ THE REO BLOC, MADE AT A NEW YOR~ MEETING Or EOliORIAL wRltrRS: HAD ll~TLE IMPACT ON THE i-'Aii:'<Ei.

HOURGLASS

HCURGL~0S 0TOCK LI~TI,,.G0 AMERICAN AIRLINES AMERICAN PHOTO AME R I CAN T &. T AMPEX.

ANACONDA BOEING CHRYSLER DOUGLAS

FORD

GEN ELECTRIC GEN MOTORS G(N T & R IBM LOCKHEED lONF STAR eM M:iM MMM MOBIL Oil

PAN AMER I CAN RCA SEARS SHELL OIL SPERRY RII.ND 5ro OIL OF CAL. 5ro OIL Of' N.J. UN I TED FRU IT

U.s. GYPSUM 'WARNER BROS PIC.

46 3/8 -I 1/2 5 1/8 -3/8 50 3/4 +1/4 17 5/8 + 1/8 68 1/8 -5/8 47 1/4 +1 7/8 3~ 5/8 -1/8

~I 1/~ 85 3/8 72 5/8 29

292 5/8 52 1/8 14 1/4 26 1/4

~~ ~~~ 40 7/8 ~~ 3/4

61 21 1/8

~~ §;~ 10 1/2 43 7/8 It 3/4

+1 -1/8 -3/4 -12 5/8 -I 1/2 -1/8 -I -6 518 -3/8 -I 118 -I riB -I -3/4 - \ 1/4 -5/8 +1/8 -5/8 -7/8 -1/8

Dow JONES C!.OSING RANGE or AVERAGES STOCKS 30 INOUS 20 RA tLS

15 UTll.S 65 STOCKS

CLOSE 744.32 184.34 122·72 261.27

i I" R ..... ::-uO', "K "1:.......... ,-n ~--\u

CHANGE

Of'F 5.29 Orr 3.13 OrF LI2 OFf' 2,7(

THIS IS A CP~CIAL S:TUATIDN WHICH ~AKES IT ABSO~UT~lY IMPERATIVE FOR us TO HOLD ON TO TH~ BALL. f WOULD THROW A poSSESSION-TYPE PASS. THAT IS A PAT-TERN OF MEDI~M RANGE ANO TO AN OUTSIDE

SPERRY RAND WAS Tt£ VOLUME LEADER AGAlh. iT FELL I 1/4 TO 21 1/8 ON RECEIVER, rITH~R HOOKING, CURLING OR

180 500 p SLANTING IN TO AVOID A C~ANCE OF INTER-. J SHARES. OLAROID PLA

3CE

tD/2

SECOND CE.PTION THAT MIGHT OCCvR I~ I WERE TO ON THE ACTIVE LIST, LOSING AT _ 118 16~ 4no THROW OVER THE MICOlL, REMEMBER, THE

X ON j, U SHARE,S. 10 5/8 DEFENSE WILL at LOO~ING FOR THE PASS, EROX wAS THIRD. T TUMBLED

~A ~ /8 \ / so ~ou WILt uE TRYING TO HIT YOUR R~-,- 13~ 3 ) ON l~oJ900 SHARES. THr CEIVERS IN SLOTS LEFT VACANT BY TrlE ~(OCK f'ElL MORE T~AN 7 VESTERDAY. ZONE DErE~SE. IT IS DOUBTFUL THEY WOULD IRADERS APP~RENTLY ARE CONCERNED ABOUT BLITZ IN THIS SITUATION, BECAUSE THEY :HE CO~PAN¥ 5 THIRD QUARTER PROfITS. THEN HAVE TO PLAY TIGHT MAN-FOR-MAN D£­~(VEqAL W~EKS AGO XEROX SAID ITS THIRD FENS~ !N THE SECONDARY. ~UARTE~ GROWTH RATE WOULD SLOW A BIT.

fAIRCHILD CAMERA SANK 7 IN rOURTH FOREIGi'l ":'\Ll BILL P .. ACE iN iHE ACTIVE I.IST. bEl'>!T UP TO JOHI~~O,'t

IBM TUMBLED 12 5/8 AT THE HEAO OF A WASHINGTON {UPII--CONGRESS APPROVED wEAK ELECTRONICS SECTION. TRADING IN AND SENT TO PRESIOENT JOHN~ON TODAY A ,HE SleeK 'wAS HALIEO FOR A wHILE. THE. COMPROMISE $2.93 8jLU0N fOREIGN AID COMPANY DENIED ~T WAS PLANNING TO APPROPR!ATIONS 3ILL. T~E AOPROPRIATION, ENTER THE orFICE COPYING MACHINE F'El~SMALLER THAN ALL BUT TWO P~EVIOUS rOR-

KLM CONTINUED TO PACE THE OOWNTREND tlGN AID MONEy DILLS IN TH~ PROGRAM'S IN AI~LI~(S. IT LOST 6 1(8. DELTA 20-YtAR HISTORY, WAS PASSED BY VOICE

AIRt IN~S ~C~L MeRE THAN AND BRANIFr, VOTE IN TKE SENAT~ AND BY A lS9-B9 CONTINENTAL AND NORTHWEST DROPPED ROLL CALL VOT~ IN THE HOUSE.

AROUND 3 EACH. THE TOTAL WAS ABOUT $500 MILLION LESS BELL & HO~ELl RETREATED AGAIN, LOS- THAN TH~ PqESIOZNT'S REQUEST, AND $110

ING I 1/2: D(S,,"E rAVQRABLE NINE Lt..5S THAN ORiGINAllY VOTED BY THE HOUSE

~CNiPS EARNINGS EXPECTATIONS. SUT IT WAS 506STANTlALLY THE SAME FIG-PR!CES ~r.~£ ALSO LOWER ON THE AMERI- URE WITH SLIGHTLY ALTERED D

'5TRlaVTION

C~N EXCHANGE. Gr TrlE 872 ISSUES TRADE~Of' ~UNDSJ AS THE SENATE APPROVED WED-5~7 ~ETREATEDJ 197 HELD UNCHANGED AND NESDAY.

ONLY IuS ADVANCED. VOLUME SVELL~O TO ABO~T ~2. 14 BILLION WAS fOR ECONOMIC 2,410,OGC SHARES fROM 2,270,000 A3SISTANCE, AND $792 MILLION rOR MIL1-SHARES Y~ST£RDAYo TAKY AID.

THE hMEX INDEX DROPPED 24 CENTS. ONLY THE: $2.7 BILLION fOREIGN AID

BILL or 1955 AND TYE: $2.76 BILLION AID ~ILL Of 1957 ~tR~ SMAL~ER THAN THIS Y~AR'S APPROPRIATjON. SEN. THOMAS J. DOD~, (DEM.-CONN.) WAq~tD THAT DEBATE O~ l~E BilL HARKED THE FuLL-fLtDGED EMERGENCE or NEO-NATIONALlSM

H,

~t3ht~~TON ~ _F!;--l~E SE~ATE Ap­~~Of~\ATI0~5 C~~Y~TTC[ TO~AY APPROV[D ~9B6.5 MtL~JON Fr~ MILITARv CONSTR~:-~'0 ~ ~RCP C ~CRE T~A~ $2 BILLlvN - 'f ... r - 19_£ A? C' RO P R I ,e. T iON.

r h ::. ["'r:(J? Fi£" ",,(.(.T;..O THE [lr~ENsE DE­~AK~~;~T S 0(CISiO~ TO OEr£R ~ _ARC[

"-'c--r!:;'" c; T~t M!~lrARY CON5TRUCT~CN _~~~M .~~ THE CURRENT fiSCAL YEAR

:i:~,S~ DF THE WAR IN VIET NAM, AL-T~1_~- "JN0S HAD BEEN APPROPRIATEO BY

IN A SPEECH INSERTeD IN THE CONGRES­SIC~AL RECORD, 0000 SAID THAT ERSTWHiLE

(NTCqNATIONALISTS HAD TURNED ISOLATION­IST AND WERE USING THE DEBATE AS A PO­LITICAL f'OOTBALL I1 TO PUT PRESSURE ON THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRATION TO ALTER !TS V!ET NAH POLICY.

(CO~'" j 1" J£" ~ I-'"ROM ?~GE ONE]

T~t SOUT~ V~[~~l~ESE ~OUG~~ BAC~

rIERCE~~ N ~~E cR~-DAW' ~JrT~E. lHE!~ SPOK[S~.~ R~POR~r~ THEW ~ll~ED AN £5-TiMA'ED 2)0 CO~~u~\S:S W~ L~ S~~fEq!N~ u~ODE:Rtt."'E c r SLlft. 'rlt~SO~ ~~~p;A)~~ V£S

THE 30~T~ V~~·~~~!SE GO' ~~~ERFUL HE ... P "-~O,", G S, P'~. rOR'~ .... :~S 1'''11\1-

SWOOPED DOw~ CO~3E '0 T~E G~0uNC THROUGH ~A,' ~ Al\li:) .O.,J ( ... O,'D ,. '-ID PA.<:U

~HE CO~Mu~rs~ .O~CE"

T~E SJoPQ~T~N~ At' O~ tOS~ -HF 0.5. ONE ?LA~E5 A B-57 pa~BER DC.NEO BY ENEYy ~ R£ ON~ (FlW~P~ ~AS q[SC0[~,

AND ~HE StCOND Who t 'S~ED AS MISSING IN "CT~ON G1A~T ~ $, 8-523, SLOg~R~ ~G -~l

MAR! I"JES .4>"1) S::;;l'-''-' V ~ Eflv~ .. :E'.sE ~~OO?S, LAST M'G~T WI~ ~O~Th ViErN~~ESE SUPPLY

A~D SrO~AG~ 4q[?~ NOR1~ Cf TwE BORDER FOR ~HE YOUQ~~ ~ ~E IN 16 DAYS uS. AiR ~ORt[, ~~ " ~~o MA~~N[ p~.O-S f~£~ A TO""'A. Dr HA,,"<)s:C''lS AGA;r.:::,r NORTH

VIE"!" NAM YESt~RD!,.f" "").J"J0JNG 1'AR,:1'S

NEAR HANOl A~O riA~~~O~G, foND ~E?~tRING

THE CO~ML~IS1S SO~:~ER~ ~tN~/~DlE sup­PLY ROJT£ fO ~~c 50L~~

\l\ S,1I.1GO"v p - vi,,::; ~r·)q-E;-' .~ ... ~ t- .. F'ORl S Of ,4 ill I", -1:. ~r"?r -:- 0"< .. ~ ,-', -,: RC~ COM­

M~SSION 1~A~ ~o L~' 'T GA·~ _~l'7~RV

ACTuVP'Y "!\J 1"'E 5-11 .. -JYl11."E' \..{,[;.i' ;)[1<'11 1-

TAPiZEC ZO~E Aa?E_qED 0 ~~,: CDLL~oSED

!T ~'S LtIR~£~ .~~ ~~Eo .C.~ SOURCES CONSIDEqE' -Hl COL' ~-SE A 5[~'OUS 5E·­BACK" ~hE U S ~~O ORDE~£D 4 c~uSE I~ THE BO~a NG CF ~~E EAS~E~~ st(-OR or THE zo~£ fa O(R~ ~ ~Wf ~CC O~CRA~~ON,

BUT IT ~A5 REgC~TED 2Ej0rr~D B~ 4ANO'. AMtR1CAN SOURCES ~_~ ~)P~D -~E N.

SPECT10N ~lG~l rVCN1Ub~~Y P~~F ~k~

TOWARD :>05'),BI..I: PEA\..[ NE.GO-rU~ ~ON5

(CON r • ~v J r""orv' JCW~00j'v '" ~G=;)""E)

LATEQ, IN A PO~jT!(AL SPErCM .~ N~~­ARK, NoJ,~ JOhNSON t~~RGtD ~~f q[PuB­L!CANS WERE RUNNiNG '~EiR ~966 c-~­PAiGN ON ~ ~E.~ T~EME

tiTHE" H!.vE JVO CONS'~u:- vE_ PR.0C~A"iS 10 F!Gh~ IN-,,,A'"lON II JO.iNS~,"l '-OL;) <\

RALLY OF NE~ JERS(Y CONGRE~SIONat ct~-

OIDAlES Iifi-lE:v fo'ENT'ON NO ;-°OGR .... II TO EASE RAC'AL l[~SjONS

u"rHEY DDN r '<NOw wPAT '0 00 ~eovr CRIME (~ THE S'Rrr.iS OR HOw 10 EN9 THE wAR ,N lIit"l' NAI-' -·n'" co KNOtJ

,

HOWEVER, TrlAT 'r rH~ CAN SC~~[ PEo~,r: THEY MA.Y WIN A. FEw VOTES 'I

~~ H~S NEW YOR~ SP(tC~, JO~NSOU AN­NOUNCED HIS ADM1N~STR~~HON wOulD RE­DUCE I1EXPORT CONTROLS ON [t>ST-.... ,ESOT

TRADE WiT~ ~ESPECi TO HU~Dq(DS Of NON­ST~ATEG!C !TE~S.~ W~i1E ~OUSE AIDES SAID ~HESE tNCLuctD TEXTILES pND SOME MACHINtR~; ~(TA~ PRODUCTS A~D CHEMICALS.

THt PRESICENT ~tSO ANNouNCED THES£ ACTIONS TO lNC~E~5E u,S,-CO~~UNJS1

TRADE". --Hl rl~O SiGNED A DErER~~NAT!ON TO

~ALLOW T~E EXPCRT- ~MPORT g.NK TO GUAQ­AN1EE CO~MERCIA~ L~EDI~ fa FOUP ADDI­TiONAL EA51CRN EuqOPEpN COUNTRIES -­POLAND) HUNGARV, BuLGARiA AND CZEC~C­SLOVAK iA""

-DSECR(1Ap. Of STATL DEAN Rus~ WAS REV~Ewt~G THE ~oSS!B~l~lV or EASING THE "BUROfN OF POL rs~ DEB~S TO THE UN!TEO STA~ES THROUGP £x~rNOITURES or OUR Po~ Sh CJhR[~t~ HOlDlNGS WHiCH WOULD Bf. t-lJTUIl..LlY DE.NET- ~ ': !'!\.L TO BOTH

COUNjR~E-S 1

• ... THE Eye-OPT. lMPO~; SAN!'.: WAS PREPARED TO rjN~Nt( AMC~i(AN EXPORTS FOR AN AUTOMOB!LE F~AN~ R~SS'A 1S BUILDING IN COOPERAT~ON w~T~ f 1~r, AN t~4L!AN COM­PANY.

JOHNSON ~~ J ~~~T THESf SrE?S, PLUS ErF'ORTS y~ '-C'f J j;7' i> i.l' t.;R

.= ~~~ TnE ~Ct~lTT[r SAID IT WA~ tTA5LE T~AT THE ~ECRETARY Cf

AGRtEM '/("'H,1', Ar,u'l L" eE~4. i lA~ I T!ON o~ _~.rE:... '10 (.o"'-"'!'I."l.,"'~l~"': rj'''' THE blLL1S ;lNAl TOTAL WAS ~tG01IA!ED I

I-l C TrOt'l5. .C'~ r/O'l,Fo't bt)!. / I i..-______________________________________ ~y----U-S---~-l-N-A-T-l---0-~-f_~E_R_r_E_S __ y_E_S_T_t __ RO_A_y __ o __ -+ ______________ . -----~----------------_i

- _ . _ '" ,,,::, FOR D T A.KE Sl; .. 5 p

. BRiDGES __ ,_ u.sr fiN' ,,"-.~ _

THE MARSHALLS AND THE PACIFIC, No. I HOURGlASS SPEC IAl

PACIFIC GEOGRAPHY MADE EASY BY E.H. BRYAN, JR.

THIS IS THE f'~ST IN A SERIES Of A~TICLES CQHC[AHIHG LirE IN TH[ MA~$"ALL ISLANDS, AGAINST A BACKGROUNO Of TH[ PAClrlC OCEAN AS A WHOLE THEY ARE BE­ING WRITTEN ey E.H. BRYAN, JR., WITH THE ASSISrA"CE OF THt STAff Of THE PA­CIFIC SCIENTifiC INFORMATION CENTER, AT BERNICE P Bls~oP MUSEUM IN HoNO­LULU, or WHICH HE IS THE MANAGER

THE PAClf'C OCEAN COVERS ABOUT ONE-THIRD THE SURFACE OF THE EARTH. IT STRETCHES FAOM THE ALEUTIAN ISLANOS ON THE NOATH TO THE ICV SHORES OF ANTARCTICA, A DISTANCE OF 8,500 STATUTE MILES. A LITTLE NORTH OF THE EQUATOR, ONE CAN SAIL WESTWARD ACROSS IF FROM CENTRAL AMERICA TO THE CELEBES SEA, A DISTANCE OF 10,500 MILES. WATER CONTINUES TO THE WEST, BUT THESE SHALLOW SEAS ARE NOT CONSIDERED TO BE PART Of THE PACIFIC. ITS WESTERN BOUNDARY IS MARKED BY THE EASTERN SHORES OF A GREAT ARC OF ISLANDS WHICH BE­LONG TO ASIA. fROM NORTHEAST TO SOUTHWEST THESE ARE: THE KURILE ISLANDS, JAPAN, THE RYUKYU ISLANDS, TAIWAN (FORMOSA), THE PHILIPPINES, AND lNOONESIA, ONCE CALLED THE EAST INDIES. SOUTHEAST or THESE ARE NEW GUINEA AND AUSTRALIA, ENDING WITH TASMANIA. THE A~EUTIAN ISLANDS, FRDM KAMCHATkA PENINSULA TO ALASKA, MARK THE NORTHERN LIMIT, BEYOND WHICH IS THE SHALLOW BtRING SEA. THE COASTS Of NORTH, CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA fORM THE EASTERN BOUNDARY. THE OFr-SHORE ISLANDS ARE INCLUDED WITH THE AMERICAS.

As THUS DEfiNED, THE PACifiC COVERS 63.8 MILLION SQUARE MILES. Jr ~HE BORDERING SEAS WERE INCLUDED THE AREA WOULD BE INCREASED TO 69.4 MILLION SQUARE MILES. THE SURfACE OF THE EARTH HAS AN AREA Of 197 MILLION SQUARE MILES, Dr WHICH 139.5 MILLION SQUARE MILES ARE WATER, WITH A TOTAL VOLUME or 329 MILLION CUBIC MILES. THE VOLUME Of WATER IN THE PACifiC IS 170 MILLION CUBIC MILES, WITH ANOTHER fOUR MILLION CUBIC MILES IN THE BORDE~ING SEAS. THUS VOU CAN SEE THAT MORE THAN HALF (51 ANO TWO-THIRDS PER CENT TO BE EXACT) or THE fREE WATER ON THE EARTH'S SURrACE IS ,~ THE PACifiC, WITH AN AVERAGE DEPTH or 14,468 fEET.

THERE ARE A LOT Of ISLANDS IN THE PACIFIC, MORE THAN

10,000 BUT THEY ARE NOT EVENLY DISTRIBUTED AND THEIR COM­BINED AREA IS SMALL COMPARED WiTH THE GREAT EXPANSE Of WATER WHICH SURROUNDS THEM. A LINE DRAWN DIAGONALLY ACROSS THE PACIFIC fROM NORTHERN JAPAN TO CENTRAL CHILE

t

WOULD DIVIDE THE AREA INTO TWO QuiTE DISSIMILAR HALVES. IN THE NORTHEASTERN PORTION THERE ARE FEW ISLANDS, ONLY

THE HAWAIIAN CHAIN RISES ABOVE THE SURfACE or THE SEA,

U S.S.R

AND THE DEPTH 15 RATHER UNIfORM. THIS DOES NOT MEAN THAT THE rLOOR Of THE OCEAN IS rLAT. EVERY OCEANOGRAPHIC SUR­VEY WHICH TRAVERSES THIS REGION DISCOVERS MORt AND MORE SUBMERGED MOUNTAINS. SOME rORM GREAT RANGES, OTHERS ARt ISOLATED SEAMOUNTS. NO~E REACHES THE SURfACE AT THE PRESENT TIME. IT IS A CURIOUS rACT THAT ALONG MANY STRETCHES or COAST LINE, SUCH AS THE ALEUTIAN ISLANDS ANO MUCH OF SOUTH AMERICA, IT IS DEEPER NEAR SHORt THAN FUR­THER SEAWARD. THESE MARGINS or THE NORTHERN AND EASTERN PACIFIC ARE rAMOUS AS AREAS Of EARTHQUAKES AND VOLCANIC ACTIVITY.

IN CONTRAST, THE SOUTHWESTERN HAL~ Of THE PACIFIC HAS MANY ISLANDS, MOST or THEM IN ARCS AND ARCHIPELAGOes, SITUATED ALONG RIDGES OR PLATEAUS, SEPARATED BY TROUGHS OF GREAT DEPTH. THE GREATEST DEPTH OF ALL, 37,800 fEET, WAS rOUND IN 1960 IN THE MARIANA TRENCH AND NAMtO CHAL­LENGER DEEP. PREVIOUS TO THIS THE DEEPEST SOUNDING HAD BEEN 36,058 FEET, IN THE SAME TRENCH. OTHER fAMOUS DEEPS INCLUOE: THE PLANET DEEP, BETWEEN NEW GUINEA AND NEW BRITAIN

30,865 FEET THE NERO DEEP, SOUTHEAST Of GUAM

321177 FEET THE RAMAPO DEEP, EAST OF THE BONIN ISLANDS

,34,626 FEET THE MINDANAO DEEP, EAST or THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS

35,400 FEET THC KERMAOEC-TONGA TRENCH 1 DEEPEST PLACE rOUND TO 1957

35,567 FEET NEARLY ALL Of THE ISLANDS IN THE CENTRAL PORTION Of THE

PACIFIC LIE WITHIN THE TROPICS. THIS AREA IS BOUNDED ~ THE NORTH BY THE TROPIC Of CANCER (23 27 1 N.) AND ON THE SOUTH DY THE TROPIC OF CAPRICORN (23 27' S.). THESE ARE THE LIMITS AT WHICH THE SUN CAN APPEAR TO BE DIRECTLY OVERHEAD.

ALL Of THE ISLANDS LYING TO THE EAST OF FIJI TONGA ARE THE SUMMITS OF CHAINS OR GROUPS or tOMPARATIVELY "VOUNG" VOLCANIC MOUNTAINS WHICH RISE ABRUPTLV fROM THE FLOOR OF THE OCEAN. MANY or THESE HAVE BEEN CUT Off NEAR SEA LEV­EL AND CAPPED 8Y LIM[STONE REEFS WITH LOV SANDY ISLETS. MoRE WILL BE SAID ADOUT THESE IN CHAPTER 4, TITLED '~HAT IS AN ATOLL?" A rEV 0' THE LIMESTONE-TOPPED IsLANDS HAVE 8EEN ELEVATED BY GREAT EARTH FORCES TO FORM RAISED LIME­

STONE ISLANDS. THE VOLCANIC SUMMITS or THE REST HAVE BEEN WEATHERED TO FORM GOOD SOILS WHICH SUPPORT LUXURI~NT VEG­ETATION WHEN CLIMATIC CONDITIONS PERMIT.

IN THE WESTERN PACifiC, ESPEtlAlLY IN THE SOUTHWEST,

, BERING SEA Oi

~ \. ~·I..E'"UTlA~~~"'" -­• '/. ~'f\' _ :"';'.-- £,t4 C""

-" /. #f...?-~ ALEUTIAN 1'R

~~ /,+-\J~.\\..

,} %& ...Q .. tJ //lrv~ ~

~ ~~ y

SOUTHEAST _ ,'RYUKYU I 0 tJTA.J.WAN \ ~_ ./ _ TROPIC oF CANC£R_

~ 1/ ....(\ '·;'-0 HAWAII

! OII7"H PHllIPPlr')I,~ ,(I/! ./ ' : CHINAA'.' ISLAN8SAM( ,0 • SEA' ~ MARSHALL (1 0 'M AVd N MICRONESIA <

~• I ~' CAR OUNE 180· CHRIST-.. r A.

"\ ~ ~ ~ ~..,..<'"' GILBE.A T I MAS 'V ~ .~~~ ~~ PHQENIX ,-

~L:~ '~~"''.'l~g;,.,t<... E~':E TOKELAU MARQUE:¥'S WALLACE'5 q P" . fl... ~ ~ _ <. SAMOA /

LINE NEW4t FIJI. ....... :. COOK TUAMOTU -<1 HEBR I~~ S 4". . i <q" 3"

I NO fA N N~ ~.,I11 SOCIETY

CALEDONIA r; 0 ~l~

'l7/~1 o~ '~TASMANIA (J NEW "'V

ZEA~AND ~

OCEA N

.ST PAUL

~"(jATOH

_ _ .!!!EPIC OF ~RICCRN PITCAIRN

EASTER

~ROZ£T KERGUEL.EN

...

ANT A R

THERE ARE ISLANDS COMPOSED or MUCH OLDER ROCKS. IN THEM rOSSILS HAVE BEEN rOUND, ESTIMATED BY GEOLOGISTS TO BE AT LEAST A HUNDR(D MILLION YEARS OLD. ISLANDS OF SIMILAR OR GREATER AGE OCCUR ALL THE WAY TO THE SOUTHEASTERN CURVE OF ASIA. So CLOSEL~ A~t SOMt OF THtSt ISLANDS SPACtD, ANO SO SHALLOW IS THE OCEAN BETWEEN THEM, THAT GEOLOGISTS HAVE BEEN LED TO BELIEvE THAT IN THE PAST THERE MAY HAVE BEEN AN EXTENSION or ASIA SOUTHEASTWARD AS FAR AS fiJI OR PER~ HAPS TONGA. THIS GREAT LAND MASS HAS BEEN CALLED THE HMELANESIAN CONTINENT. H IT MAY NEVER HAVE rORMED A CON­TINUOUS LAND MASS. IN fACT, DEFINITE GAPS IN IT, SUCH AS AT THE WALLACE LINE, WHICH MARKS THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN TWO MAJOR ASSOCIATIONS Of PLANT AND ANIMAL LifE, ARE KNOwN TO EXIST. AT LEAST, IN foRMER EPOCHS, LAND WAS MUCH MORE tXTENSIVE AND CONTINUOUS ACROSS THiS GREAT AREA THAN TODAY, AND COULD HAVE MADE POSSIBLE THE MOVE­MENT Of PLANTS AND ANIMALS. TODAY THIS EXPANSE Of AN­CIENT LAND IS BROKEN UP INTO NUM£ROUS ISLANOS. MORE RE­CENT VOLCANIC ACTIVITY AND REEF BUILDING ORGANISMS, 80TH PLANT AND ANIMAL, HAVE ADDED MOR£ LAND. IN CHAPTER 3 THE PREStNT DIVISION INTO lSLAND GROUPS WILL BE NOTED AND PORTIONS WILL BE DESCRIBED.

IT IS AN INTERESTING FACT THAT THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN THE AREA or ANCIENT LAND AND REGION Of YOUNGER VOLCANIC ISLANDS TO THE EAST fOLLOWS A SERIES Of VERY DEEP

TROUGHS ALONG MUCH OF ITS LENGTH. SOME GEOLOGISTS CALL THIS THE "ANDESITE:. LINE,1t OTHERS THE "SIAL LINEn. ITS LOCATION AND THE NAMES Of THE DEEPS IT fOLLOWS ARE SHOWN ON THE ACCOMPANYING 'MAP.

AN IMPORTANT FACT ABOUT THE PACI~IC AREA IS THE SMALL AMOUNT OF LANO IN RELATION TO THE GREAT EXPANSE Of SEA. A TABULATION Of PACIFIC ISLAND GROUPS, TO BE GIVEN IN CHAPTER 3, WILL GIVE THE AREA OF EACH. SUMMARIZING THE APPROXIMATE TOTALS HERE, fOR COMPARISON, WE H~V£: POLY­NESIA 10,000 SQUARE MILES Of LAND, MICRONESIA 1,200, MEL­ANESIA 60,500, AND NEW ZEALAND AND NEARBY ISLANDS 105,000 A TOTAL OF 176,700 SQUARE MILES Of LAND. DIVIDING THIS BY 63,800,000 SQUARE MILES OF OCEAN (WITHOUT ITS BORDER­ING SHALLOW SEAS) WE GET 0.00277 OR ABOUT ONE-QUARTER Of

ONE PER CENT LAND. If WE WERE TO ADD THE SHALLOW $EAS, WE ALSO WOULD HAVE TO ADD THE LAND IN THEM. THIS LATTER (IN ROUND NUMBERS) WOULD ADD TO THE SQUARE MILES OF LAND AREA: NEW GUIN£A 310,000, INDONESIA 733,500, THE REMAIN­DER Of BORNEO 75,600, THE PHILIPPiNE ISLANDS 114,000, TAIWAN 13,900, RVUKYU ISLANDS 1,300, JAPAN 147,700, SAK­HALIN 28,600, AND THE KURILE ISLANDS 4,000, TOTAL 1,429,-100 SQUARE MILES. AODING THIS TO THE PACifiC ISLANDS WOULD BRING THE LAND ARtA UP TO 1,605,800, WHICH DIVIDED BY 69,400,000 SQUARE MILES Of WATER WOULD GIVE A PROPOR­TION Of 0.0231 OR 2.31 PER CENT LAND TO WATER, NEARLY TEN TIMES AS MUCH AS THE OCtANIC ISLANDS TO THE PACifiC WHICH SURROUNDS THEM.

CLIMATE IN TH[ PACIFIC AREA

THE CONDITION OF THE ATMOSPHERE AT ANY PARTICULAR TIME AND PLACE'S CALLED THE ~EATHER. THE USUAL SUCCESSION, THROUGH THE YEARS, OF TYPES OF WEATHER CHARACTERIZES THE CLIMATE OF A REGION.

If ONE CONSIDERS THE PAClrlC AS A WHOLE) FROM ANTARC­TICA THROUGH THE TROPICS, TO THE STORMY AREA ALONG THE AL(UTIAN tSLANOS 1 QUITE A RANGE or CLIMATE IS ENCOUNTER­ED. HOWEVER, THRDUGHTOUT MUCH OF THE PACIFIC, PARTICU­LARLY THE TROPICAL PORTION WHERE ISLANDS ARE rOUND, THERE IS MUCH UNIFORMITY, WITH COMPARATIVELY SMALL RANGE IN AIR TEMPERATURE, BOTH DAlLY AND THROUGHOUT THE YEAR, AND IN MOST OTHER CLIMATIC FACTORS. THE GREATEST VARIA­TION IS IN RAINfALL. OYER MUCH OF THE CENTRAL PACIfiC AREA, TEMPERATURES NEVER aECOME VERY HOT NOR VERY COLD AT SEA LEVEL. THE REASON rOR THIS IS THAT THE OCEAN WA­TER IS ABLE TO STORE MORE HEAT THAN THE LAND, AND RADIATE IT HORE SLOWLY. THE MOISTURE-LADEN AIR OVER THE EQUATOR­IAL PACifiC SECOMES HEATED, EXPANOS ANO RISES, ALLOWING THE DENSER, HEAVIER, COOLER AIR TO fLOW IN FROM BOTH SIDES, NEAR THE SURrACE, TO TAKE ITS PLACE. THE ROTA­TION OF THE EARTH FROM WEST TO EAST, WITH A SPEED Of MORE THAN 1,000 MILES AN HOUR AT THE EQUATOR TO NOTHING AT THE POLES, MAKES THE AIR APpEAR TO DRIFT WESTWARD, GIVING RISE TO THE TRADE WINOS. NORTH Of THE EQUATOR THESE BLOW fROM NORTHEAST TO SOUTHWEST; IN THE SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE THEY BLOW FROM SOUTHEAST TO NORTHWEST. BOTH SySTEMS BLOW WITH GREAT REGULARITY. THEY CONVERGE A SHORT DISTANCE NORTH Of THE EQUATOR, THE EXACT LATITUDE VARYING WITH THE S~ASON, AS TH~ SUN APPEARS TO MOVE NORTH AND SOUTH. HERE THER~ IS A BELT OF LIGHT AIR MOV­ING WESTWARD, OR Of CALMS, CALLED THE DoLDRUMS.

THE WARM, EXPANDED AIR, WHICH HAS RISEN IN TROPICAL RE­GIONS, rLOWS POLEWARD IN BOTH DIRECTIONS AT HIGHER AL­TITUDES, FORMING THE ANTI-TRADES. THESE eODIES Of AIR COOL, CONTRACT AND SETTLE BACK TOWARD THE SURrACE or THE EARTH. HERE tHE EARTH IS ROTATING MORE SLOWL~ THAN TH£ WINOS, WHICH HAVE THE VELOCITY OF EQUATORIAL ROTATION, AND THE~ APPEAR TO PASS OVER THE MfDDLE LATITUDES IN AN EASTERLY OR NORTHEASTERLY DIRECTION, DEPENDING UPON THE SEASON Of THE YEAR.

IN THE WESTERN PACIfiC THE TRADE WINOS ARE REINFORCED

OR MODIFIED 8Y SEASONAL WINDS CALLEO MONSOONS. WHEN IT IS SUMMER TIME IN THE NORTHERN HEMISPHE~[ THE LAND IN SOUTHEASTERN AND CENTRAL ASIA IS HEATED SO MUCH THAT THE AIR BECOMES WARMER AND LIGHTER THAN THAT OYER THE EQUA­TORIAL SEAS. AT SUCH TIMES THE WINDS BLOw fROM THE WEST­ERN PACIFIC AND INDIAN OCEANS TOWARD THE LAND, BRINGING WITH THEM MOISTURE WHICH fALLS AS TORRENTIAL RAIN. EN­TERING A BELT OF SLOWER ROTATION, THE AIR MOVEMENT TAKES A NORTHEASTERLY DIRECTION, AND THESE WINDS ARE CALLED THE SOUTHWEST MONSOON. IN WINTER THE LAND 15 COOLER THAN THE WATER, AND THE WINDS BLOW IN THE OPPOSITE DIRECTION, FROM ASIA TOWARD THE INDIAN OCEAN, AND ~Rt CA~~ED THE NORTHEAST MONSOON. IN THE NORTHWESTERN PAClrIC, THE WIND DIRECTION IN WINTER IS SIMILAR TO THAT Of THE NORTHEAST TRADE WINDS.

THE MONSOON WINDS NORTH OF THE EQUATOR ARE AUGMENTED BY ANOTHER SET SOUTH OF THE (QUATOR IN THE AUSTRALIAN RE­GION. THE SEASONS BEING REVERSED, WHEN THE WINDS BLOW TOWARD HEATED ASIA THEY ARE BLOWING OUT or COOLER AUSTRAL­IA. WHEN ASIA IS COOLER, T~E INTERIOR or AUSTRALIA IS WARMER. THEN WINDS BLOW ToWARD AUSTRALIA, BUT MOR£ fROM THE EAST THAN FROM THE NORTHWEST. HOWEVER, INDONESIA GETS THE rULL rORCE Of THE WINDS FROM THE NORTHWEST, RE­SULTING fROM THE NORTHEAST MONSOON.

VIOLENT STORMS ARE NOT fREQUENT IN THE PACIFIC, BUT TROPICAL CYCLONES (POPULARLY KNOWN AS TYPHOONS) OCCUR AT TIMES IN THE CENTRAL AND WESTERN PACifiC, BOTH NORTH AND SOUTH Ot THE EQUATOR, BUT SELDOM NE~R IT, AND ALSO IN THE EXTREME EASTERN PACIFIC, OfF THE COAST or MEXICO. WINDS, ESPECIALLY STORMS, HAVE HELPED TO DISTRIBUTE SEEDS, SPORES, AND INSECTS

RAINFALL IS THE MOST VARIABLE rACTOR IN THE CLIMATE or THE PACIFIC, AND EXERTS A GREAT INfLUENCE ON THE TYPE OF VEGETATION AND RELATED ANI~Al LifE. WATER ~ICK[O UP BY AIR, AS IT ~OVES OVtR EXPANSES or OCEAN, IS DROPPED WHEN WHEN TH~ AIR COOLS, AS IT 00(5 WHEN IT RISES OVER LAND MASSES AND AIR "FRONTS", OR AS A RESULT or CONVECTION. THUS, OTHER fACTORS BEING EQUAL, RAINrALL IS LIKELY TO BE HEAVIER ON HIGH ISLANDS THAN ON LOW ISLANDS, AND ON THE WINDWARD SIDES Ot HIGH ISLANOS MORt THAN ON THEIR LEEWARD SIDES. BUT THERE ARE ALSO RATHER DEFINITE WET AND DRY ZONES OR BELTS ACROSS THE PAClrlC ~OUGHLY PARAL­LEL WITH THE EQUATOR. FOR EXAMPLE, THERE IS A WET ZONE LOCATED A LITTLE NORTH or THE (QUATOR. THIS RUNS THROUGH PALMYRA, WASHINGTON AND FANNING ISLANDS. To THE NORTH Of THIS IS A DRYER ZONE. To THE SOUTH, NEAR THE (QUATOR, IS ANOTHER DRY ZONE THROUGH JARVIS, MALDEN, BAKER, How­LAND, THE NORTHERN PHOENIX ANO GILBERT ISL~NOS. THERE ARE PRONOUNCED SEASONAL CHANGES ON MANY ISLANDS, AS WELL AS VARIATIONS fROM YEAR TO Y~AR IN CYCLES NOT AS YET FULLY UNDERSTOOD

OCEAN CURRENTS

PROPELLED, AT LEAST IN PART, BY THE WIND SYSTEM, WELL­ESTABLISHED OCEAN CURRENTS CIRCULATE IN THE PACIFIC. THE NORTH PAClrlC CQUATORIAL CURRENT CROSSES FROM EAST TO WEST, WITH ITS CENTER ABOUT 15 DEGREES NORTH Of THE EQUA­TOR. IT MOVES TOWARD THE PHILIPPINES, TURNS NORTHWARD PAST JAPAN AS THE KURD SIWO OR JAPAN CURRENT, CIRCLES NORTHEASTWARD, AND CROSSES THE NORTH PACIFIC WITH THE 'WEST WINO DRIFT. INTERMIXING WITH A COLO CURRENT fROM THE BERING SEA, IT BRINGS A ZONE or fOG TO THE ALEUTIAN REGION. To SOME EXTENT IT WARMS THE SHORES OF THE GULF OF ALASKA, AND CURVES SOUTHWARD PAST THE HAWAIIAN ISLANDS. NEAR THE WEST COAST or THE UNITEO STATES THERE IS AN UP­WELLING Of COLD WATER, WHICH MOVES SOUTHWARD AS THE CALI­rORNIA CURRENT. THIS ACCOUNTS FOR THE CLOUDS SEEN DURING THE FIRST fEW HUNDREO MILES Of A TRiP fROM SAN FRANCISCO TO HAWA I I.

SOUTH Of THE EQUATOR, THE SOUTH PACIFIC EQUATORIAL CUR­RENT CIRCULATES IN A COUNTERCLOCKWISE DIRECTION. IT IS WARMED AS IT ~OVES WESTWARD IN THE VICINITY or THE (QUA­TOR, AND GRADUALLY TURNS SOUTHWARD, MAINLY BETWEEN TH( TUAMOTUS AND NEW ZEALAND. ONE BRANCH WORKS fARTHER WEST AND CIRCLES THE TASMAN SEA, BETWEEN NEW ZEALAND AND Aus­TRALIA. TURNING EASTWARD AND PROPELLED BY THE "ROARING FORTIES," IT GRADUALLY COOLS AS IT INTERMIXES WITH THE WEST WINO DRIFT, PART or WHICH TURNS NORTH ALONG THE COAST OF SOUTH AMERICA AS THE PERU OR HUMBOLDT CURRENT THIS COOLS THE W~ST COAST Of SOUTH AMERICA AS fAR NORTH AS THE EQUATOR, TURNING WESTWARD SOUTH Of THE GALAPAGOS ISLANDS.

THE T~O EQUATORIAL CURRENTS CARRY A GREAT VOLUME or WATER TO THE VICINITY or NEW GUINEA AND THE PHILIPPINES. THE SOUTH EQUATORIAL CURRENT HAVING NO PLACE TO TURN SOUTHWARD, CIRCLES TO THE RIGHT AND RETURNS ACROSS THE PACIFIC, PARTLY ON THE SURfACE AS THE EQUATORIAL COUNTER CURRENT, AND PARTLY BENEATH THE SURFACE FROM WEST TO EAST. THE UPWELLING Of THIS LATTER IN THE EQUATORIAL REGION BRINGS TO THE SURFACE NUTRI~NT MATERIALS ON WHICH rEED A VARIETY OF ORGANISMS, AND MAKES THESE EQUATORIAL WATERS A PLACE RICH IN ANIMAL LIFE. THESE CURRENTS NOT ONLY HELP TO EQUALIZE HEAT AND COLD, BUT ALSO DISTRIBUTE MANY KINOS or PLANTS AND ANIMALS FROM ONE PART OF THE PAClrlC TO AN­OTHER.

PAGE: 7

I CRO£S'WORD

I l. ~

It.

IS

~ ~ ~ !ol U. 2.~

l..

31

"}to

041

~ ~ 45

... 1 -.Ife.

54

51

HOBIZONTAL 1 seeret agent -I, disgrace 9 -- Rogers

lZ genus of grasses

13 arrives 14 female

sheep 15 sanctions 11 stitch 18 exut 19 examma-

~ 4- 5

~ I~

It>

1&

~ U

32- ~ ~3 11 ~ 42.

~ 4-9

~ ISS

~ seo

~5 approach 46 l!<llck 47 animal JI

souncl 49 paraSites Sol tlqulp !iri OV<E!ract 56 c'Jlor 57 bom 58 priced 59 lyriC

poem

By Eugene Sheffer I to 1 a.

~ I' 10 II

~ L4

~ 17

~ 1'1 zo tij/. ~

~ t<t- tr t~

t.7 ~ ~O

?I<t ~ M·

!-I 119 ~

4-0

~ 43 4""

~ 4b

~ ~ ~ 50 "51 S2 S?O

r0 5t>

~ VEBTIOAL

1 health reaort

2 father IcoUoq )

:1 onf' of CArohn~ Island!l

4. tallied 5 flutter"d 6 candlenut

tree

I"

-7 diSSOlVes 8 ancient

ascetic 9 checks

JD be In debt 11 evergreen

tree 16 knock ZD vaccme

cleveloper 21 metal

tlOn Answer to yesterday s pUI:2;le

fastenlng~ 22 fo reign e r 23 timekeeper 25 heatmg Z1 Impede

Zt traps ;n beverage 28 cavern 30 delight 31 perches 33 god of

lower world 35 sympa­

thetic 36 South

American dictator

3S wooden pm 40 annoy

lamps 26 grassy 29 pmch 32 pamful 34 conceal 37 tidier 39 l!Ihone 42 stage play 44 fuss 47 male 4S metalhc

rock 50 cooking

vessel 41 disturbed

the mght 43 elegant

A t'er.,e it me of .,0] uUon :!" m.J a '" tf.1

(0 l~ K!ng :Feature. S)nd Inc)

51 Greek leU,.,!' 52 sticky earth 53 perceive

CRYl'TOQUIPS

RJRFKXUPK R nWGZU JRY

KWRK VI IUZYGX D~VKKUP GP.

Yesterday's C'Joyptoquip CAN THAT LONELY GRAY­BiilARD BE THE ONCE-GAY Br.ADE"

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker

(Top bCltrd-H .. lder In Ma.t.n' Individual ChaMpionship PIIIy)

,AMOUS HANDS North dealer Nmther Side VUlnerable

WE8'l' • J 'l'5 .6 +KJ9U .J963

NOKm .KQ2 .101$32 +Al(l3 "AS5

EAST • A 109 8U .9 +QTZ .Q10(

SOtlTB .3 .AKQJ8H +65 .. K72

The bldchng North East South 1", Pall!l 1. 2. Pass (NT 15. PaIlS 6,

West Pass Pass

Opening lead-three of clubs

time !I b)t of! more than be could chew

VI'est led a club and it was now up to the doctor to try to make the .Illam This was a taU order. but the doctor found the solutidn in his usual rapid fashion

He won the club lead III dum­my with the ace. playmg the seven from his hand His next play was the two of spades' ThIll play took no tzme at aU

It IS hard to blame East for playln,g the ace It was diffICult to mlagme that Fnschauilr W3JI leading a low spade from dum­my towards the three III hili hand Ea.st credited him wd:.h the jaCk, which Wag not un. reasonable. and, being afraid that the jack was a singleton, East went up With the ace That \va.! the end of Ute party, mnce Frischauer now had twelve tncks

Fnschauer had qmckly de­One ot the fJne.:JIt card players ternuned that If West had the

1 ever met was the late Dr ace of spades the slam could Edward FnsChauer, of Los An· not be made It would do nl) geles The doctor's fame m hiS good to lead It spade towanb native Austria Blld throughout the K-Q-2, smce Weill (a good the bridge world was well es- player) would not go up with tabllshed long betore he fled the ace If he had It A cillb and Hiller and Cll.me t() America a. dlamund would then hav,., to twenty-five years ag'I:l be lost

A hand the doctor once play· Fnsc.hauer's only hope was ed in Switzerland ill typical of that East had the ace Without his brilliance The final contract the Jack and would play It when was a poor one, but it was not It low spade was led from dum. at all rare to find the doctor my And, in true ~lOryboo" swimming' beyond his depth fa.shion, everything worked olit Optimistic by nature, he many just all the doctor ordered.

(C 1 .... Kins- F,.,.tul'ell 53 ndlc.t. Inc)

HOURGLASS fRIDAY OCTOBER 7

FIT FOR A PRINCESS On~ of I" L nook IldlL~ ,~r\ing <" U)()(iLj, III In 1n\ClnlhQ!ul ,fu", to bUle!rl the Sf)hh~!~ ...... nhH.... r~n(j Annl\"'!l..., (\ub

H~ ~f'W \ nt li p, Lnrl'~"'·-. C~I J'J

llllc "mdlic h (,·"d" ',f Au,­tn. \\ !lk, do 'I Il the I UIl\" I,

,t AI( ... \Ildel , lntull .llOn 11 H 'lite I QlItmc She JS II l,tr

mg klllckct,> by TJ7hUn

FOLINO BY COPTER Found two nllle'> fr "m h(>1 home by I hell( ()pt"r pilot" h() 'potted h~ { rn 1. ([c}(f PUIi;"'.J\4 C,irn

(j on 2 ,,110 h ,J b"-"II Inl'"

mg III ml,ht 'll Cmcmndt1 OhlO J<t 1 rUIllLo,)J \\lth hel p"ll ent~ Ml and Mn Don lid ClmC'r()n F"xcept for (old feet P tmela " .. em"d 10 be In

[me condl\ ]l)n

DIES IN COMA (ull.)l C1ll­

.... ~ r 11 rqt nl~ I· pT"t~.;"uknt of Tm ke', <11",1 111 1 mlllliry h'''T"t tl m Ank ,I I '.\here he h j(1 b~ t n 11\ ~ d~ (p. {Om l

'>Ime "\I[lIlh He WI, IWdd of mlhtclry Junl I Ih It

",,,tNI the Ilnp"I,ullt Plemle! "'-tin III McndLH', III 1 blood I~ -,., «()up In ]·~hj~ ~nd I..,ut

feT! d • "'llIJKt .... holtl).· 1ft..."

Britain's Oldest Working Theater Celebrates 200th Anniversary

8~ STEVE Ll88Y CeHlral Press A SilDcwtWtl

Correspondelll HARD BY the river bevern

m wuthwestern England IS the city C>t Bristol a bustlmg com munlty With 1\ long lind vItal Illstary With many Impo"mg bulldlllgi dating back through the centUrieli

This year however, It Isn I Isambard Kingdom BruneI <! great Iluspenslon bnclge which Will draw the mam attentlon nor WIll It be the splendors Of St Mary Redcllffe Church . . .

RA THER It is King Street Il

nanow thorough(ar" IIdlr thl! docks. receiving the spotlight ACI·osi! trom Llandoger Row nn ancient t!mberecl Inn, Iltands a small buUdmg known through out the world-Brltam 1$ oldest working theater, the Theater Royal, this year celebrating 113 200th annIversary

Almost all the great names In the British theater appearM

N&arly all Ihe IIIreats of Ih& arHl~h theater have appelllr.d on 11-1, Theater Royal s stglll"

her<l during their caree;s I Almost every plonnnent Hilt \\hlch 11"1"11(1<0: ~ gl(J.t lll\~ l'~ Thanks to the Bristol Old \-IC l~h actor of th~ 19th cel1tut~, hJrth fLlr rho' nl'('J!lC DIll thea Company the theater's lnflu appeared at the Thf'dter Royal I tel ence on London's West End ha3 Edmund Kean follow~d William Whrn In HI63 the Old VI( .. also been COllslderable Pov.ell Garnck s great rival bo I ga\'(. \\1\j to thi) X'ltll)1111 Th"d

Bristol has long been one of did Kale and Ellen Tel r; tet III TAll ,1"'1 the BII,tol ut, the most theater-conbclous com Charles Coghlan, Madge Robert- i councIl bel. ,l!rl~ ten ,nt'! of the munl!leg In the world, thanks son {Mrs Kendall) :tllll a hOot I Th".!t"t p..()\ til. at nonllnnl lent to Tlle~ter Royal, the Llitle of others The tradll1un stIll con- I al an,1 Ihe BI htol Old \ Ie Theatt:l', \lie Old VIC s schOOl, Unu<!s Peter 0 toole, the [ur I C(;mpd!l} \.unl\1l\l\;l\ lind a lively dramatJClI, dt'part- rent motlOll plCtll1'e Idol \\ as a'i The ClOlIlp.,[n OI)('latc8 not rrH!nt at the LmIVerslt} I[ S a ~tar here In the ht~t deca{\<! (111\ Th,at<'1 P,'),;!I but al-o II ~tage onel!t~d City Just a~ It • • • ,-, was in 1164, when the eifcrl~ , .W \ ear old ~(Iloo! and Little of sev~ral local cItIzens resulted INSID E the The:} ler ROJ ai, Thedtel \~ Ill! on 1\ '>611 ,<'at ~ 1'1\ t"'- 0 t!ars later In the bUlldmg tile auditorIUm retalnS all intI \\ Oll~lllg Hi dQ<,e ,0 OP""lt Ion of T~eater Royal But, during maey appreciated by actol s and I WIth Bn'ltol I n 1', erslll s dl am I tllose 2l months, a gusty sLornl audiences allke Small "'lth but department of 120 students of conlrover~y arose among 681 seats, it has b~en little Bustol" lung nl'tol} a.' th e {'IIIlN' clmnged - exceptmg felt' more, (\tama ~~lltt:l of Btltdlll contln

• romfoltable seat~-It1 its 200- ues EVENTUALLY, ha.,.;ever, the year hIStO!1, though some of: Thos/! "Iw ['1ccd .>J~ch h[,ISIl

m..:mey tor the $15000 blllldwg the al1gll1al Georg~an seats aro I u ltJu~m ~O(l j til." ago) I\ould W3.lI r!l.laed, mostly th~ough retamed III the gall,,! y The ex I t>e Llellgh!~d ',·.Ith tll<.. results money .!Iubscrlbed locally In terior marquee 18 r"latlvely new, rhea tel R", d ~ a\cr 1ge audl small sums Each subscriber and looks LondOnl~h to the CUl ence I;' 85 [1"1 cent of capaclt\, was given a silver tIcket, ad tam tune audIences a tribute to the lugh ,tandal ds mlttlng him and hts succe8sor~. In 1914, an attempt was made mamtame{\ by the Old VIC wlth()ut charge to a sight-but I to form a repertory company, I '\ext )ear Ihe Lnltet! States not a !leat-at every perform- but thIS was un"uccessful be \\111 have oll'l Oppoltumt~ to ~ee allce SomB were wId, SOme rallSe of the war Thl'aler Ro) 1 and enloy Bristol ~ Old VIC were forged. a.nd a few were 1'.1 )'uffC'red shght damage from I (ornpdlljl 111 J.muar", 1967, stol~n, and 1111 Itttempts to reg. bombS In 191.1 In 19'16 the Bril> II Liley "Idl t <l ~I) wo:"k tour a! I3ter tne tickets properly fall.:!,l tol Arts Couneil 8.l'I'angetl for Amefl.:a, prc~{'ntlng H[lmlet' One was In dispute as late 811 the Old Vic to pl'oVlde a r('SI- Romeo aud JulIet" and' \tea" the tu),n of the 20th century dent BI1'ot,)1 compaI1Y--'1tl event me f()l J',f"lh<lle '

Capitol Dome 8V JONATHAN IDWARDS (''',,/rod I're~8 ASSO('wtlOU

Corre~r(J"dellt

\ .... A:iHINGTON - The dolllE of the U S Cap' tal, lofty SYIll bol Of AmetIcan democracy WIll soon ~hme brIghter than e\ er befor~

A four-month tahk of apply lng " thousand gallons of new p lint to the lOl-year old C&,,\

I f('n ~trllctUi e IS under .... a~· The white paint belllg used 19 con­SIderably bghtel than that u'cd previOusl)

Thomas F Clancy, the sup~r \ Ismg engl1leer for \lie tasl( sa,d the pamt \\11I match more dosely the white marble of the n ...... front of the Capitol com pleted In WS2 Heretofore the pamt ha~ b~en more In keE"plng wi 111 the graYIsh color <If the t!IlI'I!@r 1I1lIldstone front

As a result, said Clancy thc dome VI hleh weighs 8 909 200 pounds Will stand out more clearl y than before

Th!~ Is the fIrst pamtmg thc dome h~s received In 1>1X ye"t's Clancy cllsdosed that "'- hen the dome .... as l.1st pamted m 1\160 "a.bout 32 coats of pamt Wel·C aendbla~ted off"

The ru~t I>pots were then cm.;red '-'<lth a primer and it

fimsh~d coat of paint * •

Gets Paint Job

'THIS YEAR," said Cla.l)C'~'. The Capllol5 dome-It II be prelll.1 !hlll" ever \\ e re COt ermg the rust spots lind appl,,·mg just a fllllshmg' r I"eedom IS 1\\ 0 ) ~UI 0 oycrdue too young {or h"r age coat The primer 19 no longer Unlll e the .l(,ml" hmHH"r Su nll ,he> s t;dtmg IS a bilth regarded BS necessllry MI~~ Freedom 1\110 stands 19 WI[II IU)":!lI'aIT'1 '\;'1 1;) T, not eun

Th,; :S4rS,QO{I job Will be com feet ~IX mche~ hlg-I! \\ III Ilwe saap pleted m No\ember Tlrere:'lfter to be s~tlsrH?d \llth a rather Howeler, Mls)l F!eedom's the dome v.111 be pam ted agam Cllr~ory cleaning bht ~ made of h!,htmng t'"ds are gettmg ne\\ once e\ery faur years as It .... as bronze and dutlng hf'r IOi } ears alummum tips And her jomh prIOr to 1960 (she s t",o HilS oldE'r th'ln the I (she \\ ill, put togethcr ,n 1863

In addltton to painting the dome) she s become cOHred m ine pI~ce~) are getlmg dome .... o!kmen are also giving With p ... tma the gr .... n fIlm I cleaned nn,l c:lulked bhe II be till- l!td>, on top her first balh which farm~ on brunze lIn fmt) shape Ugilln _ all 14 ~85 In SIX ~'e!\r8 LIke the dume, the '''1\ e call t 1 (; Illf,\ ~ the pa, pouml, -- f')f e\ l'f) one to IObk' III clean up Job on the Statue of 11M s~ld Clilmy "he,l 11'01(, nnri admllt'

--------------------------------------------~~--------------------~----------------------------------------------_.---------------

PAG.E 8

QASSIFIED FOR SALE

Go-KART - $2)0 773 OR 774 DAYS OR 311

CALL DA~ CURRIE AT S~[ AT SANDS, Roo~

STYROfOAM !URrBOARD • $2, CUSTOM ELECTRDNIC5 S~tAKER S[LECTOR UNIT -ATTRACTIVE ~ATCHING COMPANION UNIT FOR FISHER AMPLlrlER - ALLOWS SWITCHING AMPLlrlER OUTPUT INTO ONE TO FOUR SPEAKERS SYSTEMS - $25. STEREO HEAD­SETS"- SUPEREX MODEL STS - ReCENTLY PURCHASES - A STEAL AT $5 CALL 370.

B~LOWIN SPINNET PIANO - ALMOST N&W -DA~P CHASER - WALNUT FINISH, PATIO ROOF - 20'xI0', 25-GALLON TANK AObAR­IUM CALL 487 ArTER 5

GIRL'S 20" OR 24" IIIKE

GIRL'S CAOETTE UNifORM - SllE 12 OR 14 CALL 2454 -------

WANIED

SENIOR GIRL WILL BABYSIT

RAI~COAT WITH WHITE HOoe IN ET PLEASE CALL 585 AFTER 3 PM

HAND sorTBALL GLOVE LAST FRI­- NEEDED BADLY 'OR BALL OAMES.

LEASE RETURN TO 402·A OR CALL 2259

Trl£ TRIAL lHVISIDrJ OF THE HI(;H COUR1) TRUST TER~IT0RY Of THE PACI.IC 15-lA~DS, WILL SIT AT ~WAJAL~IN AND E~(Yt

1'"110'1 \fO'Ef1l-Ei< S, !;£(., TO DN OR A60ur r'~"ErIC£R 16, 1;60 A 0 AT TliH TIHE t, E: elICH, (CURT I, TELHlS TO lIQUIOA,E C ',,[ "I'" THE fGriTA P,'E eASEl:' lH K J/lJA­LE i ~

YOKWE YUK OUFFET WILL aE C.NCELLEO THIS fRIDAY AND SATURDAY DUE TO

Tflt PLAY

\1~1l'\"'s

on LEnSES! Top qUnllty

YASHINON AUTOiIATIC LENSES

\lill open neH YJ..stas for you1

35 mm f 2 8 dlDE ANGLE LmS :::£1. $47 70 ~ $29 g')

13:,> I!IIll f 2.8 TELEPHOTO LENS ~ $54 10 !12.:!. $35 90

200 run f 4 TEr£PH0'ro LZNS ~ *76 20 !!2:!. $49 SO

Desi&ned for the YASHICA,HONEX­WI:LL & ASAHI PLN'lJ'IX Cameras Don't miss theGe terrific savings

at our CAMERA COmmR

CoRK, IR[~ANO (UPI)--ANGRY IRISH FARMERS TODAY BEGAN AN II-DAY MARCH ON DuBLIN TO PROTEST AGAINST FALLING INCOMES. ~T THE END or THEIR 220-

MILE TREK THEY PLANNED TO PRESENT A PfT1TION TO AGRICULTURE MINISTER CHARLES HAUGHEY. ABOUT 20 MtN WILL COMPLETE THE MARCH, 6UT THEY WILL 6t JOiNED AT ALL STAGrS or THeiR ROUTE BY LOCAL FARMERS, ACCORDI~G TO A SPOKESMAN fOR THE NATIONAL FARMER'S ASSDClolTIOtl.

IVEY ~LL MAilN[[ SATURDAY, OCT, 8 AT I ~M Will IlE "ELEPHANT Boy."

ANNOUNCEMENT~ JR CHOIR WILL MEET SATURDAY AT 10 IN T~' CHA~[L

~EMON LODGE.NQ 179.F4A1f

THERE WILL 8E A 3PECIAL H(EtING o~ EMON LODGE 1179 f & A M, MONDAY, OCTOBER 10 AY 7 PH IN THE ZAR CON­rERENcE ROOM. ALL [As AND FCs ARE INVITED TO ATTEND

WOMEN'S CHAPEL FELLOWSHIP N[W orFI­CERS ARE Lucy BLOEDEL - PRES } VIVIAN HALL - V P , AUOREY SELL -SECRETARY, PATTY ARNOLO - TR<A5URER. JEAN GUHN - HoSPITALITY CHAIRMAN, RHEA AUSTIN - PUBLICITY CHAIRMAN, AND B[TTY SCHAEI'"FER - TEL[f'HONE CIfA I R14AN

Do YOU LIKE TO WORK WITH GIR~S AGES 9, 10 JoND 111 ADDITIONH GIRL SCOUT ADULT VOLUNTEERS ARE URGE~TLY NEEDED BECAUSE OF THE MANY GIRLS IN JR SCOUTINC PREVIOUS rXPERleNCE NOT REQUIRED WE WILL TRAIN YOU PLCASE HELP "AK[ SCOUTING POSSIBLE rOR ~ORE

GIRLS ON KWAJALEIN

THE HOLY NAME 50CIETY Will HOLD A CO"MUNION BREAKFAST AT THE PACIF!C DINING HJoLL, FOLLOWING 7 AM MASS, SUNDAY OCT 9 FATHER SUCHAN Will aE SP(ol~ER ALL CATHOLIC ~EN ARE INVITED

NURSERY SCHOOL AT TRAILER START ON MONDAY, OCT 17 Tlo~ WILL BE FROM 9 TO II OCTOBER 14 THE CL~5S IS

770 Will R(G ISTRA­

AM FRIDAY, OpEN TO

.OUA AND fiVE ytAR OLD CHILOREN TI"1EfI( ARE A F[W VACANI; IES LEFT I~

YOU ARE INTE~ESTEo CALL BA~eARA S SM I fH AT 724

ALL BROWNIE, JUNIOR AND CADETTE GIRL SroUT LEADERS AND MEMB[RS OF THE SERVICE TEAM WilL HAVE THEIR Mo~rHLY NEIGHBO~HOOD MEtTING TONIGHT .1 7 30 IN Ti'I( FINE ARTS BUILDING

GLJ3AL WIVES LUNC~EUN IS SC~EDULEG fOR SATURDAY, OCTOBER C, ,,, ~-E bA'JYAN ROOM or THE YOKWE Y~K CL~f ~~-~~5T

:O~KTAIL S[R,'C[ WIL~ ~O~ME ,CE AT I! )' AM AND LU~CH WILe ~E 5ERVED AT 12 ,,00"< ';tJ RING A S"'(lRT 8.J S I NESS

MEET I~r MEW Orf Icr~s rCR THE EN5Uj~0

SIX MO~THS W'LL 5E ~DUI jAr~O ~ND

ELECTED ~ESERVATI~NS fOR 'HE LUNCH­

EON SHOULD ~E MADE l.rER rHA~ TH~~s­O~" aCT 6 6Y C_LL I~G ~.RE~ MATTS~~ AT 2343, LEE EVA"-lS H 23111,$i 9nT"r

JORJA"-l AT 2252

OFERATION DIPLOMATIC PA~~~QBT DAAMA BLACK AND WH I TEA 1 ROGtA HANIN, CHRISTI~NE MINA1ZOLI

ALSO SPORTS

CITy OF ;:;.IN DRAMA BLAC~ AND WHITE VINCE EoWAROS, CAROL OH"ART

TOkYO OLYVPJAO

S>lOWTIM(

730

AT

ATC CoLOR WIDE SCREEN

SHO .... TIME 7 30 8. 12 15

THE 0EkGEAI\jT ViA".> A LADY A TC COMEOY BLACK AHo WHITt M~RTIN WEST, VENETIA STEVENSON

TH IIIjG~ TO COME AT 5CI[NC[ FICTION BLACK AHO WHITE RAYMOND MASSEY, SIR RALP~ R1C"AROSON

MOVIES ARE KEYED AS TO THE AUDIENCE FOR ...... ICH TMtY AR[ SUITABLE THE 5Y~­

SOLS A, T, A~D C REPRESENT ADULTS, TEENS AND CHILDREN, RESPECTIVELV THE PRESENCE OF ANY or T~[ T .. Rtr SYMBOLS I"DICAtES THAT THE FILM 15 CONSIDERED SUITABLE ro~ THE AUO,(NC[ Q~OuP REPRE­SENTED BY THE Sy~aOLS

PUBLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIAT£S A.T THE DIRECTION Of THE COMMANDING OFfICER, K'WAJALE I N T£ST SITE, ~RSHA LL ISLANDS CONTRACT DAAG 43-67-C-0001

THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAILY MONOAY THROUGH SATURDAY. DEADLINE rOA NOTICES IS 4 PM THE DAY B~~ORt ~U8LI­CATION AND OEADLI~E FOR NEWS ITEMS IS 10 AN TRt DAY or PUBLICATION.

THE HOURGLASS RES£RVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT tE1TERS To THE EDITOR rOR THE SAKE OF BREVITY. A~l COPY, LETTERS AND PHOTOGRAPHS SUBHITTE& .OR PUBLI­CATION BECOME THE PRePERTY OF THE HoURGLASS, R[PU6LICATION or MATERIAL CONTAINEO H£REIN IS NOT AUTHDRIZEO WITHOUT THE PRIOR APPROVAL OF THE COMMANDING OFrICER, KWAJALEIN T[ST SITE.

Ir YOU HAVE NOT R[CElv[O YOUR HOUR­GLASS BY 6 15 PM, PLEASE CALL 539 BE­TweEN THE HOURS OF 6 15 AND 6'45 AN~ A COpy WILL 8E DELIVERED TO YOU.

EDITOR ASS T • EO !TOR

STArF

LITHOGRAPHER C IROJLAT ION

MANAGER'

NEIL PHE~~s-MuNSON DORIS WALLIN NA~JCE BLAIS Aoo I E JOHNSON JOAN KALAHIKI L 'nIN L I fr I , .. R I 'HARD Rl'rfOI.D

OFFICIAL NOTICES DATE OFFICIAL BULLETIN Pf«)NE

~ oCT.66 CPT. J.J DoRSEY 627 oC1.66 MAJ C.W BURCHETT 245Z

9 oCT.66 LTC L.H. OGOEN 2~7 100CT.66 LTC J.G. WATERMA~ 2 7 II cCT.66 MAJ w,G. HALL 90 12 Ocr 66 MAJ R S. AUSTIN 2393 13 OCT .66 LTC L.H. OGOEN 2497

DuT~ OrtlcE~ IS K~~~ALEIN TEST SITE COMMANDING OrFICER'S RtPRESt~TATIVE DURI~G OTHE~ THAN NoRMAL DUTY HOURS

FIRE DEPARW[l'tT PROGRI\M NATIONAL FIRE PREVENTION W[~K WILL

BE OCTOBER 9 THROUGH OCTOBER 15 T~E KWAJALt IN FIRE DEPAR"MEM"WILL BE PR[­SENTING flR( APPAR4TUS DISPLAYS, FIRE DRILLS AND AH OPEN HOUSE OU~ING THIS PERIOD

51,11>. OCl 9 9 JoN TO 4 P,",

MON , OCT. 10

fiRE ST~TION - OPEN HoUSE AT THt FIRE ST~~ TION, corFEE, SOrT DRI~KS AND OONUTS ~ILL at SERVED

10.30 AM TO 12 30 PM 4 p,", TO 5 PM

DISPL.AY AT THE CoMHI3!1~RY 500 GPM PUMPER WITH EQUIPMENT 0-10 CRASH/FlflE TRUCK WITH EQuIP­"ENT

WED, OCT 12 II A~ TO I PM

4 PM TO '5 PM

F.u • OCT 14 II AM TO I PM 4 PM TO 5 Ptot

SAT ,OCT 15 9 AM I .. \04

4 PM

DISPLAY AT MACY'S 0-10 CRASH/FIRE TRUCK WITH [OU IPME"T 750 GPM PUMPER WITH EQUIPMENT

DISPLAY AT TH[ J.T.O. BUILOING 500 GAM PUMPER VITH EQUIPMENT 0-10 CRJo~H/fIRE TRUCK WITH EQUIP~(NT

SIMULATED AIRCRAFT CRASH AT THE fiRe OE­PAATN[NT ORILl AREA, USING PIT rIR[S AND SIMULATED RESCUES WITH THE 0-10 AND MB-I CRASH/FI~E TRUCKS.

ROBBERY RECOUNTED LINSLJoDE. [HGLAND (UPI)--A POSTAL

~~-------------------------'----------------------------~----~~~~-W'ORKER, THOMAS KETT, RECOUNTEO TO A

HURRICA~E VICTIW~ FOUND MIAMI (UPI)--A BRITISH fREIGHTER

FOUNO A RArT IN THE GULrSTREAM TO­DAY CONTAINING THE BODIES Dr EIGHT CueAN Rt'USEES WHO PERISHED WHEN THEIR 23-FOOT eO~T SANK IN HURRI­CAN. INEZ

ALSO ON T~t RArT WERE TWO SURVIV­ORS WHO TO~O THE CoAST GUARD THERE POSSIBLY WERE MORt SURYIVORS FROM THE SINKING OF THE aOAT.

THE CoAST GUARD SAID ANOTHER V[S­SEL FOUND THE BODY OF A WO"AN IN THE WATtR NOT FAR FROM WHERE THE RAFT WAS rOUND SH( APPARENTLY WAs ALSO A VICTIM or THt rOUNDERING or THt REFUGEES' BOAT

Two CoAST GUARD HELICOPTERS WERE LAUNCH(O TO SEARCH FOR NORE SUR­VIVORS, 6UT THE CoAST GUARO SA1D IT WAS NOT CERTAIN HOW MANY REFUGEES

D~Z PROBE COLLAP~E~ SAIGON (UPI)--RELIA6LE SQURC(S SAID

TODAV THAT ErFORTS BV AN INTE~NATIDNAl CONTROL CoMMISSION TtAH TO INVESTIGATE ALLEGED CoMMU~IST ~ILITARY ACTIVITIES IN THe DEMILITARIZEO lONE APPEARED TO HAVE COLLAPSEO

THE UNITED STATES HAO SUSPENOED 60MB­ING RAIDS ON THE [ASTERN SECTOR Of TH[ aMZ, DIVIDING NORTH ANO SOUTH VIET NAM, IN HOPES THE ICC TEA~ WOULD 6E ALLOWED TO CARRY OUT AH INSPECTION or THE RtGION

THE DMZ WAS SET UP AS A NEUTRAL ZONE BY THE G(NEVA CONFER[NCE ON IHOOCHINA BOTH NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAM WERt rOR-61DDtN TO SET UP MILITARV INSTALLATIONS O~ STATION TROOPS IN THE STRIP

THE SOURCES SAID CHANCES OF AN IN­SPtCTION or THE OMZ APPEARED SLIM.

AM[RICAN SOURCES CONSIDERED TM£ tOLL~P OF THe INSP[CTIO~ EFFORTS A SERIOUS SET­BACK

COURT ~ERe TOOAY EVENTS IN THE MAIL TRAIN ROBBERY WHICH ~ETTEO SOME 2.6 MILLION POUNDS FOR THt ROBBERS IN 1963.

KETT, O~t OF FIV[ MEN IN THE 81G NON­tY COACH, RECALLED THAT HE HEARD A WIN­DOW BREAK.

"I CALLED OUT THE WARNING, "IT'S A RAIO' ANO STAATEO TO MAKE SURE THAT THE DOORS litRE LOCKED," HE SAID.

"I HEARD A CRY 'ROM OUTSIDE THE COACH. THERE VAS A LOT Of NOIS[ GOING ON OuT­SIDE THE COACH., 501Ol[ONE SHOUTED, 'TH'Y ARE LOCK INC TH[ 000 itS; GET THE GUMS '

"A. MAN nll:N ENTERED THE COACIi, iii S rACE DISGUI!ED WITH WNAT AP'[ARED TO at: A LADY" SILK STOCKING. THREE IOIOR( ~[~ CA~E IN TNROUGH TNE SMALL WINDOW ALL WITH DISGUISES OVER THEIR FACES.

''\IE WE Rt: ALL NIT BY VAR IOUS WEAPONS AND I WAS lilT ACROSS THE SHOULDER AND ELBOW. WE WE~[ ALL HERDED INTO A CORN­ER Dr THE COACH AND MADE TO LIE DOWN."