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VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

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VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller's fortune Will Have To Be Checked Says Congress WASHINGTON, (UPI)--Congress' confirmation hearings Into the nomInatIon of Nelson A. Rockefeller are lIkely to focus as much on hIg money as on hIS qualifications to serve as VIce president. But Rockefeller told reporters Tuesday he did not thInk hIS vast wealth WIll raise any insurmountable problem. He saId he was ready to do WIth his money what Congress 'deemed necessary. The chaIrmen of the two which WIll conduct the hearIngs saId they would lasist upon thorough investigatIons. The confIrma- tion process of Gerald R. Ford last fall reqUIred two months. And Involved an exhaustive look at his income tax returns and hIS rela- tIvely modest finances. Chairman Peter 'W. RodIno, Jr. of the House JudiCIary CommIt tee saId the Rockefeller hearIngs could take as long. "We'll do everythIng we're supposed to do," he said. "The governor has said he wants thIS process to work carefully and I applaud him for that." Sen. Howard W. Cannon, chairman of the Senate Rules CommIttee saId he would ask Rockefeller to provide copIes of hIS tax returns. Rockefeller shares part of a family fortune. Cannon saId he dId not expect to be "investigating every Rockefeller," but added, "We expect layout before the AmerIcan people ... possible conflict of Interest SItuatIons." Rockefeller paid courtesy calls on the two chaIrmen Tuesday, then saId, "I'm here to present whatever Information they want." As for sellIng ,off some stocks or puttIng his money In a blInd trust--in WhICh his investments would be handled by a trustee who would not dIsclose them to anyone--Rockefeller saId, "I've got no problem. I'll do anything that seems correct from the commIttees' pOInt of VIew." No date was fIXed for the start of the hearIngs but Senate DemocratIC Leader Mike Mansfield says he wants them completed before the Congress adjourns for the year--whlch he hopes WIll be before the November electIon. Cannon saId he hoped Senate hearIngs would begIn by Oct. 1. RodIno saId he had already Issued Instructions to set up a staff "to work rIght aw,ay on an InvestigatIon." JudgIng from the InItial reactIon ,to the nomInatIon, Rockefeller 3?peared assured .of confIrmation. There was some grumblIng from conservatIve RepublIcans who saw Rockefeller as too much a bIg spender, but this raIsed no real threat. Sen Barry M. Goldwater, RepublIcan-ArIzona, saId he would have no trouble supporting the nomInatIon but he saId Rockefeller "won't go over" WIth rank-aad-flle RepublIcans. He suggested Ford mIght do v]ell to choose another runnIng mate If he o:;eeks the preSIdency In 1976. Goldwater's complaInt was that Rockefeller "ducked out of at least two preSIdentIal races"--refuslng to work hard for the 1974 tIcket Goldwater headed or RIchard M. Nixon's 1968 candIdacy. In t I - Fin q n ci a IRe port DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES 30 IndustrIals 711.59 off 15.26 20 Transports 149.22 off 15 UtllItJ,es 64.90 off 65 Stocks 217.86 off VOLUME 11,650,000 shares NYSE data Advances 341 DeclInes 976 Gold SLIver $155.75 (London) 4.33 1.12 1.24 3.82 Go,ernment Begins Repair of Roads MANILA, (UPI)--The PhIlipPIne government began repaIrIng qpmaged ,roads In metropolitan today in the wake of th£ country's worst floods In two years. In the "RIce Bowl" prOVInces In the Central Luzon PlaIns north of Manila, however, the aIrlIft of relIef supplIes for 967,392 refugees went on for the thIrd straIght day. Disaster agenCIes reported seven more persons dead from the floods today, brIngIng the overall death toll to 78. U.S. mIlItary helIcopters JOIned PhIlIppIne AIr Force planes for the past three days In aIrlIfting relIef supplIes to the flood ravaged areas. The mISSIons were concentrated in the worst hIt provinces of Zambales, Pangaslnan, Bataan, Pampanga, Bulacan and Tarlac. The relief headquarters in ManIla reported that 935,000 pieces of "nutrlbuns," baked in ManIla WIth funds supplIed by the U.S. Agency for Inter- national Development, have been aIrlIfted so far to disaster areas. The Ford confIrmatIon hearIngs set the precedent of examInIng closely Into the nomInee's politI- cal phIlosophy. But Rockefeller's P')l1tlCS arE' well known and offer no probleill. Police Capture 'Alpllabet Bomber' High Degree of Suee 5S to Determine Unborn Baby's Sex HONG KONG, (UPI)--Doctors in ChIna have reported a hIgh degree of success In the sex of unborn by the middle of a normal pregnancy perIod. A report In the Chinese Medical Journal sald doctors were correct 1n 45 of 50 exper imental cases of prenatal sex detprminatlon. The report appeared months ago but a translated copy haS_Just been made availahle here. The experiments were conducted by the Department of ObstetrICS and Gynecology at the Tletung HospItal of the Anshan Iron and Steel Company, the country's largest iron and steel company in Northeast China. The predictions were made on the basis of studying sex chroma- tin from cells of the amniotic fluid withdrawn after 16 weeks of pregnancy. , "Of the 17 predicted as males. 16 were correct and one was a female monster. Of the 32 as females, 29 were correct and three were normal male babies." LOS ANGELES, (UPI) --PolIce Tuesday captured the alleged "alphabet bomber" who claImed responsIbIlIty for the deadlIest CIVIl aIrport bombIng In U.S. history and had threatened a wave of terror. ASSIstant PolIce ChIef Daryl Gates IdentIfIed the suspect as Muharem Kurbegovic, 31, a Yugoslav who entered the UnIted States In 1967. Gates and WIllIam SullIvan, aSSIstant Federal Bureau of InvestIgatIon (FBI) director In charge of the Los Angeles offIce, saId Kurbegovlc was allegedly the "Isaac Raslm" who had planted at least two bombs. They saId he would be charged WIth murder In the explOSIon at Los Angeles InternatIonal AIrport WhICh kIlled three persons and InJured 35 on Aug 6. The dther bomb was left In the Greyhound QU6 termInal last FrIday, but was found--an a tIP from "Rasim--by the bomb squad and removed. The detonator went off ,In a, bomb truck but the bomb Itself did not explode. Gates said Kurbegovlc had entered the UnIted States legally and had a preVIOUS arrest for a sex offense. The nature of the offense was not revealed. The bomb squad, with explosives-sniffIng dogs, was repurted going Kurbegovic's Hollywood apartment, hunting more bombs and bomb-makIng materials. The FBI saId he also would be charged with destruction of an aIrport, a federal offense carrying a pOSSIble lIfe term In prison. The voice on the tapes had identified himself as "mIlItary cOUD1lander of the Aliens of IAmerica." and was given the name "alphabet bomber" because to "write ou;t' name In blood across the face of America." The airport bomb stood for "A," the first letter in the group's name, the taped voice said, and the Greyhound bomb was In a locker --standing for "L," and also for "life" because he "ent a warning where it could be found. "Rasim" had demanded repeal of all federal ll!II11igratlon and naturalization laws, all sex greater separation between church and state and punishment tor two police offlcers, now retired, who killed two Mexican illegal aliens by mIstake during a raid several years ago, and were subsequently cleared of wrongdoing. Rasim was first 'heard from on June 24 in a tape cassette sent to Grant Dillman, vice president in charge of the Washington Bureau of United Press International. Wednesda 1974 VfW Against ford's Amnest, Proposals CHICAGO, (UPI)--Delegates to the NatIonal Veterans of ForeIgn Wars' convention have answered PreSIdent Ford's proposal of amnesty for VIetnam draft evader& WIth resounding opposition. The convention's more than 4,000 delegates voted unanimously Tuesday to adopt two resolutIons reaffirmIng the 1.8 million-member organizatIon's stand against any sort of amnesty for draft resisters. "This is our answer to PreSIdent Ford's feeler," said James Van Zant, a former RepublIcan congress- man from PennsylvanIa and a past VFW cOUD1lander. Not one delegate stood to speak for Ford's suggestlon£ that young men who chose to becoQe expatriates rather than fIght In Vietnam be allowed to return to work their ways back to their homeland. "We sustain total oppOSItion to general and selectIve amnesty for draft dodgers and mIlItary deserters and (believe) that they should be reqUIred to stand trIal for their crImes and shall pay such penaltIes upon conVIction as laws prescrIbe," one of the resolutions stated. The other saId the VFW would continue "total commitment to pursue theIr 'no amnesty' doctrIne through our membershIp to congressmen and to the Amerlcan people and to be fIrm In our stand and not to relinqUIsh, dilute or compromIse theIr positIon. " The discussion on the floor of the conventIon was conSIderable, but one-SIded. Some delegates pOInted out that clalffis that PreSIdent Lincoln had granted general amnesty after the CIvil War were mIsleadIng. Selassie figllts to Preser,e Tllrone ADDIS ABABA, (UPI)--Emperor Halle Selassle has begun a determIned fIght to preserve hIS hold on EthiopIa's anCIent throne in the face of renewed army attempts to strIp away hIS power, dIplomats said today. The EthiopIan government IndI- cated for the fIrst tlIDe It may be WIlling to begIn talks WIth Erltrean rebels, attemptIng to halt a l2-year-old guerrIlla war in the empIre's northernmost prOVInce. In the last few weeks, the army has stripped Selassle, the 82- year-old "conquering lion of Judah," of virtually all the powers he has enjoyed for more than a half-century of imperial rule. It jailed his closest aIdes and frIends. Diplomatic observers saId the emperor now seemed aware of his danger and was attempting to consolIdate h's pOSItion from further attack by the army. They saId the emperor encouraged the leader of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Abune Tewolfos, to issue a recent state- ment attacking a draft constitution. The statement, which was espe- cially critical of a provision removing the emperor as head of the church. may lead the patriarch to a showdown with the army.
Transcript
Page 1: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS

Rockefeller's fortune Will Have To Be Checked Says Congress

WASHINGTON, (UPI)--Congress' confirmation hearings Into the nomInatIon of Nelson A. Rockefeller are lIkely to focus as much on hIg money as on hIS qualifications to serve as VIce president.

But Rockefeller told reporters Tuesday he did not thInk hIS vast wealth WIll raise any insurmountable problem. He saId he was ready to do WIth his money what Congress 'deemed necessary.

The chaIrmen of the two committe~s which WIll conduct the hearIngs saId they would lasist upon thorough investigatIons. The confIrma­tion process of Gerald R. Ford last fall reqUIred two months. And Involved an exhaustive look at his income tax returns and hIS rela­tIvely modest finances.

Chairman Peter 'W. RodIno, Jr. of the House JudiCIary CommIt tee saId the Rockefeller hearIngs could take as long. "We'll do everythIng we're supposed to do," he said. "The governor has said he wants thIS process to work carefully and I applaud him for that."

Sen. Howard W. Cannon, chairman of the Senate Rules CommIttee saId he would ask Rockefeller to provide copIes of hIS tax returns.

Rockefeller shares part of a family fortune. Cannon saId he dId not expect to be "investigating every Rockefeller," but added, "We expect ~o layout before the AmerIcan people ... possible conflict of Interest SItuatIons."

Rockefeller paid courtesy calls on the two chaIrmen Tuesday, then saId, "I'm here to present whatever Information they want."

As for sellIng ,off some stocks or puttIng his money In a blInd trust--in WhICh his investments would be handled by a trustee who would not dIsclose them to anyone--Rockefeller saId, "I've got no problem. I'll do anything that seems correct from the commIttees' pOInt of VIew."

No date was fIXed for the start of the hearIngs but Senate DemocratIC Leader Mike Mansfield says he wants them completed before the Congress adjourns for the year--whlch he hopes WIll be before the November electIon. Cannon saId he hoped Senate hearIngs would begIn by Oct. 1.

RodIno saId he had already Issued Instructions to set up a staff "to work rIght aw,ay on an InvestigatIon."

JudgIng from the InItial reactIon ,to the nomInatIon, Rockefeller 3?peared assured .of confIrmation. There was some grumblIng from conservatIve RepublIcans who saw Rockefeller as too much a bIg spender, but this raIsed no real threat.

Sen Barry M. Goldwater, RepublIcan-ArIzona, saId he would have no trouble supporting the nomInatIon but he saId Rockefeller "won't go over" WIth rank-aad-flle RepublIcans. He suggested Ford mIght do v]ell to choose another runnIng mate If he o:;eeks the preSIdency In 1976.

Goldwater's complaInt was that Rockefeller "ducked out of at least two preSIdentIal races"--refuslng to work hard for the 1974 tIcket Goldwater headed or RIchard M. Nixon's 1968 candIdacy.

In t I -Fin q n ci a IRe port DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES

30 IndustrIals 711.59 off 15.26 20 Transports 149.22 off 15 UtllItJ,es 64.90 off 65 Stocks 217.86 off

VOLUME 11,650,000 shares

NYSE data Advances 341 DeclInes 976

Gold SLIver

$155.75 (London) 4.33

1.12 1.24 3.82

Go,ernment Begins Repair of Roads

MANILA, (UPI)--The PhIlipPIne government began repaIrIng qpmaged ,roads In metropolitan M~nlla today in the wake of th£ country's worst floods In two years.

In the "RIce Bowl" prOVInces In the Central Luzon PlaIns north of Manila, however, the aIrlIft of relIef supplIes for 967,392 refugees went on for the thIrd straIght day.

Disaster agenCIes reported seven more persons dead from the floods today, brIngIng the overall death toll to 78.

U.S. mIlItary helIcopters JOIned PhIlIppIne AIr Force planes for the past three days In aIrlIfting relIef supplIes to the flood ravaged areas. The mISSIons were concentrated in the worst hIt provinces of Zambales, Pangaslnan, Bataan, Pampanga, Bulacan and Tarlac.

The relief headquarters in ManIla reported that 935,000 pieces of "nutrlbuns," baked in ManIla WIth funds supplIed by the U.S. Agency for Inter­national Development, have been aIrlIfted so far to disaster areas.

The Ford confIrmatIon hearIngs set the precedent of examInIng closely Into the nomInee's politI­cal phIlosophy. But Rockefeller's P')l1tlCS arE' well known and offer no probleill.

Police Capture 'Alpllabet Bomber'

High Degree of

Suee 5S to Determine

Unborn Baby's Sex HONG KONG, (UPI)--Doctors in

ChIna have reported a hIgh degree of success In pr~dictlng the sex of unborn childr~n by the middle of a normal pregnancy perIod.

A report In the Chinese Medical Journal sald doctors were correct 1n 45 of 50 exper imental cases of prenatal sex detprminatlon. The report appeared ~everal months ago but a translated copy haS_Just been made availahle here.

The experiments were conducted by the Department of ObstetrICS and Gynecology at the Tletung HospItal of the Anshan Iron and Steel Company, the country's largest iron and steel company in Northeast China.

The predictions were made on the basis of studying sex chroma­tin from cells of the amniotic fluid withdrawn after 16 weeks of pregnancy. , "Of the 17 predicted as males. 16 were correct and one was a female monster. Of the 32 ~redicted as females, 29 were correct and three were normal male babies."

LOS ANGELES, (UPI) --PolIce Tuesday captured the alleged "alphabet bomber" who claImed responsIbIlIty for the deadlIest CIVIl aIrport bombIng In U.S. history and had threatened a wave of terror.

ASSIstant PolIce ChIef Daryl Gates IdentIfIed the suspect as Muharem Kurbegovic, 31, a Yugoslav who entered the UnIted States In 1967.

Gates and WIllIam SullIvan, aSSIstant Federal Bureau of InvestIgatIon (FBI) director In charge of the Los Angeles offIce, saId Kurbegovlc was allegedly the "Isaac Raslm" who had planted at least two bombs. They saId he would be charged WIth murder In the explOSIon at Los Angeles InternatIonal AIrport WhICh kIlled three persons and InJured 35 on Aug 6.

The dther bomb was left In the Greyhound QU6 termInal last FrIday, but was found--an a tIP from "Rasim--by the bomb squad and removed. The detonator went off ,In a, bomb s~uad truck but the bomb Itself did not explode.

Gates said Kurbegovlc had entered the UnIted States legally and had a preVIOUS arrest for a sex offense. The nature of the offense was not revealed.

The bomb squad, with explosives-sniffIng dogs, was repurted going 'ove~ Kurbegovic's Hollywood apartment, hunting more bombs and bomb-makIng materials.

The FBI saId he also would be charged with destruction of an aIrport, a federal offense carrying a pOSSIble lIfe term In prison.

The voice on the tapes had identified himself as "mIlItary cOUD1lander of the Aliens of IAmerica." and was given the name "alphabet bomber" because l1~'t1\r'Biit-eried to "write ou;t' name In blood across the face of America."

The airport bomb stood for "A," the first letter in the group's name, the taped voice said, and the Greyhound bomb was In a locker --standing for "L," and also for "life" because he "ent a warning where it could be found.

"Rasim" had demanded repeal of all federal ll!II11igratlon and naturalization laws, all sex law~, greater separation between church and state and punishment tor two police offlcers, now retired, who killed two Mexican illegal aliens by mIstake during a raid several years ago, and were subsequently cleared of wrongdoing.

Rasim was first 'heard from on June 24 in a tape cassette sent to Grant Dillman, vice president in charge of the Washington Bureau of United Press International.

Wednesda 1974

VfW Against ford's Amnest, Proposals CHICAGO, (UPI)--Delegates to

the NatIonal Veterans of ForeIgn Wars' convention have answered PreSIdent Ford's proposal of amnesty for VIetnam draft evader& WIth resounding opposition.

The convention's more than 4,000 delegates voted unanimously Tuesday to adopt two resolutIons reaffirmIng the 1.8 million-member organizatIon's stand against any sort of amnesty for draft resisters.

"This is our answer to PreSIdent Ford's feeler," said James Van Zant, a former RepublIcan congress­man from PennsylvanIa and a past VFW cOUD1lander.

Not one delegate stood to speak for Ford's suggestlon£ that young men who chose to becoQe expatriates rather than fIght In Vietnam be allowed to return to work their ways back to their homeland.

"We sustain total oppOSItion to general and selectIve amnesty for draft dodgers and mIlItary deserters and (believe) that they should be reqUIred to stand trIal for their crImes and shall pay such penaltIes upon conVIction as laws prescrIbe," one of the resolutions stated.

The other saId the VFW would continue "total commitment to pursue theIr 'no amnesty' doctrIne through our membershIp to congressmen and to the Amerlcan people and to be fIrm In our stand and not to relinqUIsh, dilute or compromIse theIr positIon. "

The discussion on the floor of the conventIon was conSIderable, but one-SIded.

Some delegates pOInted out that clalffis that PreSIdent Lincoln had granted general amnesty after the CIvil War were mIsleadIng.

Selassie figllts to Preser,e Tllrone

ADDIS ABABA, (UPI)--Emperor Halle Selassle has begun a determIned fIght to preserve hIS hold on EthiopIa's anCIent throne in the face of renewed army attempts to strIp away hIS power, dIplomats said today.

The EthiopIan government IndI­cated for the fIrst tlIDe It may be WIlling to begIn talks WIth Erltrean rebels, attemptIng to halt a l2-year-old guerrIlla war in the empIre's northernmost prOVInce.

In the last few weeks, the army has stripped Selassle, the 82-year-old "conquering lion of Judah," of virtually all the powers he has enjoyed for more than a half-century of imperial rule. It jailed his closest aIdes and frIends.

Diplomatic observers saId the emperor now seemed aware of his danger and was attempting to consolIdate h's pOSItion from further attack by the army.

They saId the emperor encouraged the leader of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Abune Tewolfos, to issue a recent state­ment attacking a draft constitution.

The statement, which was espe­cially critical of a provision removing the emperor as head of the church. may lead the patriarch to a showdown with the army.

Page 2: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

Wednesday, August 21 , 1974 HOURGLA.§.S

Jul, Price Increase S'i,.t', Lower WASHINGTON (UPI)--Retall prIces Increased agaln In July, but the increases were smaller

than In the prevIous two months, due ch1efly to a mla-SU"1lller drop 1n some grocery prlces, the Labor Department sa1d today

The Consumer Pnce Index, the best measure of changes ln the cost of hVlng, Jumped 0.8 per cent last month.

Increases In automobIle prIces and the cost of restaurant meals, medIcal care and housIng led the July aJvance, but here part1ally offset by lower prIces for clothIng and such food Items as fresh frUIts anJ vegetables, beef and dalry products.

The July Increase waS smaller than the I per cent Tlse In June and 1.1 per cent In Mar But 1t was sUll large by 11lstoTlcal standards and offered no rellef to President ~ord In hIS search for ways to beat the natIon's soarIng InflatIon.

The Labor Department's report was released shortly after General Motors Corp. announced It waS bOWIng to pressure from the Wh1te House and was trImmIng $54 from ItS planned $500 prIce Increase on 19 7 5 model cars and trucks

The cost of lIVIng has Increased by nearly 12 per cent In the past 12 months, the Labor Department sald. .

The prlce Index In July 5tood at 148.3 compared to 100 In the 1967 base year. There was a modest dose of good news 1n another Labor Department report WhICh showed

that real spendable earn1ngs--what an average blue-collar worker has left on hIS weekly pa)check after payroll deductlons--rose 0.2 per cent from June. Ho~ever, thIS fIgure was st11l down 5.3 per cent over the past year

Coup'e Pa ,5 $24,000 for Do, SYDNEY (UPI)--A S,dney couple has paId $24,000 for a dog, and one of the owners saId

today 1t lS worth every dollar V1C and Marga COlIC of suburban Mona Vale pald the money for a German Shepherd WIth a

pedlgree datlng back to the turn of the century, and the flrst of ItS breed to be Imported Into AustralIa In 44 years

The canlne ar1stocrat, Ingo von Hafen10h~dl, l'ias bought by the Collcs a year ago In Germany, spent 12 months 1n quarantIne 1n En,c lc<nd and now must spend a further three months quarantIne In Sydney under Australl~- ·e~ulatlons.

Breeders of German Stepherds, the COllCS ~~ld the prIce dld not concern them. "When ,,;e saw Ingo he was everythIng ,\ to nad been lookmg for and we dId not qUlbble at

the pnce," sald Marga Collc after the dog had arrIved from London by Jet ancraft. "Ingo IS the best. If you want the best you have to pay for It," she saId WIth the 11ftlng of the 44-year-old ban on the ImportatIon of the breed lnto thlS

countrY In 1973, local breeders are eager to pay blg money to Improve the local breed. The 1929 ban was Imposed by the Australlan government, through pressure from sheep

farmers, for fear that stray Shepherds coule cross WIth the DIngo, an AustralIan wlld dog classlfled as a pest, that attacks sheep and partIcularly new born lambs.

Continued Inflation forecast CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI)--Nobel PrIze WInnIng economIst Paul Samuelson of Massachusetts

InstItute of Technology forecasts rl~lng unemployment and contlnued prlce lncreases ln the UnIted States and other developed capItalIst countrIes durIng the next year.

Samuelson says the SImultaneous eXIstence of a stagnant economy and perSIstent InflatIon, or "stagflatIon" as It IS called In today' s economlC Jargon, IS "unorthodox" but hardly a mystery.

"It IS unor:. C_0X because the orthodox POSItIon IS a narrow one," Samuelson told UnIted Press InternatlOJ1al In an Intervlew "It's not somethlng that happened overnlght."

Samuelsort saId the phenomenon has been developIng SInce World War I In the U.S., Western Europe, Japan, Australla, NeH Zealand and some LatIn AmerIcan countries.

"WIth each paSSIng decade you progresslvely have moved toward a mIxed economy," he saId, "and I thlnk the new kInd of InflatlOn, not the demand-pull Inflation, but the se ller' s InflatIon, lS bUll t In ven' deep to the nature of the market." A mIxed economy IS one In whIch both the government and prIvate producers produce goods and services.

"In partIcular, It's very hard to get downward rIgIdIty of prIces In a modern mIxed economy," he saId. "That wasn't true In 1921, even 1931, as It was In 1951 and 1974."

Samuelson sald part of the breakdown lS due to the prevlously lronclad relatlonshlp between unemployment and Inflatlon to SOCIal advances.

'Wa'''ing Tall' S.eriff lille" SELMER, Tenn. (UPI) --Buford Pusser, a cTlme-busting sherlff made famous by the mOVle

"~'lalkIng Tall," was kllled late Tuesday In a traffIC accIdent. The Tennessee HIghway Patrol saId the 36-year-Old former lawman was kIlled when hlS

new automobIle careened off a hlghway, crashed Into an embankment and burst into flames. The lnvestlgatlng trooper saId Pusser was thrown clear of the wreckage. "Walklng Tall" told the story of the McNalry County, Tennessee, shenff' s flght against

gamblIng, prostltutlon and moonshIne along the Tennessee-MisslSsiPPl border. The mOVle grossed more than $50 mlillon, maklng It one of the all-time champions at

the box offIce and Pusser a rIch man

Cigar Manufacturer's Dau,.ter Ab",cte" THE HAGUE (UPI) --KIdnapers Tuesday abducted the 5-year-old daughter of a mlllionaire

Dutch clgar manufacturer and demanded a $40,000 ransom, polIce said today. CarolIne Pessers, whose father WIllIam Pessers heads the Hofnaar CIgar Factory, was

abducted from the famlly manSIon In Waalre, Southern Holland, as she trlcycled around the dTlveway.

A man w~th a local accent telephoned the pollce statIon three times durlng the day, offlcers sald. The fIrst tIme the caller asked for a ransom of $20,000 but in the thiTd call, when he sud "the glrl 1S well," he doubled the ransom.

The kldnaper saId he would contact eIther the pollce or the glrl's parents today wlth further InformatIon.

Pessers told polIce he IS wIlllng to pay the ransom and asked them to take no rIsks WIth her lIfe.

Page 2

Move to Cut Defense 8ill Defea'ed

WASHINGTON (UPI)--The Senate today narrowly defeated a move to cut $150 mlillon from the already sharply reduced defense approprIatIons bIll

The senators voted 47 to 44 agaInst an amendment by Sen WIllIam Proxmlre, Democrat­Wlsconsln, whIch would have reduced mliltary ald for South Vletnam from $700 mlillon to $550 mlillon.

The Senate acted after Sen. John McClellan, Democrat-Arkansas, read a letter from Defense Secretary James R SchleSInger warnIng that the proposed reductIon would seTlously hlnder the South VIetnamese' abIlIty to defend themselves,

Proxnnre argued that the South VIetnamese have been dOlng well and would contlnue to do so wlth $550 mIllIon In mIlItary ald-­the same amount extended last year

The Senate voted down the Proxmlre effort to cut the defense blll after defeatIng a maneuver, 71-21, by Sen. Barry Goldhater, Republlcan-Arlzona, to delete mllItary dId to South VIetnam entIrely

Goldwater had argued that the UnIted States should eIther lIve by Its commItment to prOVIde mIlItary aId to the SaIgon government, or elImInate It entlrely

Sen. Thomas F Eagleton, Democrat­Mlssourl, announced he would move to set a ceIlIng of $81 bIllIon on the defense budget.

McClellan Tuesday presented the $82 bIllIon bIll, whIch had been pared dOhn In commIttee by $5 bIllIon from the orIgInal admInIstratIon request of $87 bIllIon He clalmed there \,as a move afoot "to make across-the-board cuts--meat ax cuts"

Sovie, Vessel Unable To Dock on Guam

HONOLULU (UPI)--The State Department saId Tuesday that a SOVIet crUIser CarryIng 700 Japanese bUSInessmen and tourIsts ~dS denled permisslon to dock on Guam because of the top-secret mllltary faCllltles there

The Japanese ~hmstry of ForeIgn AffalTs In Tokyo receIved a message Aug. I refUSIng the t'ermlSSlon for t:1e llner Fedor Shaiayapin. The vessel saIled from Yokohama Harbor Aug. 12 and had been due to stop at Guam late last week

Instead, the Fedor Shalayapln went to Salpan. Other stops WIll Include Rabaul, New GUlnea, and the PaCIfIC Trust TerrItory Island of Truk.

State Department offICIals saId the orIgInal deCISIon agaInst the shIp's dockIng came after consultatIons WIth the Defense Department.

A government spokesman saId the declslon was reached "because of the presence on the U.S Island of Important mliltary Install­atlons."

The Navy sald lt was the fIrst tIme SInce a detente between the UnIted States and RUSSla that a commerCIal Sovlet ShIP had been barred from enterIng an AmerIcan harbor

The RUSSIan ShIp was chartered by a Japanese tourIst agency The voyage was advertIsed ln Japan as an experIment aImed at fIndIng new PaCIfIC vacatIon spots.

'Walter 'he Werewolf' Sltot '0 Dea,.

IVER, England (UPI)--Walter the Werewolf's 24-hour flIng at freedom ended today when a polIce marksman shot hIm to death near here.

Walter, a Canadlan tImber WOlf, escaped early Tuesday from a cage at the set for a film in WhICh he was appearIng. The fllm was called "Legend of the Werewolf."

Pollce, anImal SOCIety offlclals and film men searched for Walter WIthout success until thIS mornIng hl,cn local reSIdents spotted the blg g1 a, arumal sIttIng In a garden.

Walter took off before polIce arrIved, but they caught up WIth hIm near a nearby hIghway and Constable Stephen Vlncent finlshed the wolf's Jaunt wlth a shot from a .22 nfle.

Page 3: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

Wednesday. ~Uqust 21. 1974 HOURGLASS page 6

"'CHOLAS VON HO'fMAN NEW YORK (KFS ) --Jamec; Montgomery Fl agg'..S', c lassie enlistment

poster of W~r1d War I~ showlng Uncle Sam pointing a determfned fore-finger at thE· vlewer and captlOned, "I Want You!" made a snappy about-face this past year. So many young men and women flguratlVe1y pomted at Unc1 e Sam and said "We Want You!" that Secretary of the Army Hnward H. Callaway was able to announce early thlS month that the new volunteer Army is rousing success.

Few be11eved that was posslb1e when the draft ended at the close of the war ln Indochlna. The consensus at the time was that the only volunteers would come from the ranks of the mlnorltles, the poor, school dropouts and the business c~unity's Jobless misflts. And, even then, the ranks would not be fllled.

Not so, Secretary Callaway repo(ted with pride: "The volunteer 1-rmy proved that lt was a success by ending

(ltS flrst fiscal year) ln excess of ltS authorized strength of 781,600. ThlS was achieved through a record of enlistments over 199,000 vo1unteer~, and the unusually hlgh reenl istment of nearly 58,000 men and women., ,

"Our qua11ty l~, good and wlthin established standards, our combat readiness 1S up, we are on target with strength, and our d1sclp11nary rate is withln acceptable 1imits ... I'm proud to be a part of It.''

Some 26,000 enlisted durlng June. Seventy per cent of them were hlgh school graduates. Almost tWlce as many women (15,000) slgned up last year as the year before. The Army is now 21 per cent black and of Hlspanic-American orlgin.

The National Guard ended the year wlth 413,000, or 9 per cent above the authorlzed mark; the U.S. Army Reserve stood at 2-38,000. two per cent above authorized drill strength.

"As for readiness," Secretary Callaway's report concluded, "The Army readlness posture has lmproved from four dlvls10ns belng combat ready shortly before the draft ended in 1973 to 13 dlvlsions ready to fight today."

It's a new Army notably ln the way lt tralns and cares for ltS members. The drafted Army of World War II was paid coolie wages. Though lnfinite1y larger, it was paid less and provided wlth less than today's Army. About $43 b~111nn, half the Defe~se Department's whopplng peace-time budget, 1S now spent on salarles, better housing and educational opportun 1 tles for the volunteers and thelr familles. Pay is up 30 per cent since the peak manpower level of the Vietnam war.

Old Army hands agree that there are as many reasons for the unexpected flood of volunteers

Skl11 tralnlng and educatlonal opportunltles; A deslre on the part of the volunteer to become more mature and

self-reliant, Cholce of statlons or locatlons durlng the enllstment perlod; Chance to declde what to do later ln 11fe; Travel; Leadershlp tralnlng; PatrlOtlsm, Belng wlth people one can respect. The attractlveness of the new Army was perhaps epitomized

most clearly last month by an unusual "buddyen11stment." Buddies have been enterlng the armed serVlces together since the days of the flrst voluntary Amerlcan army -- the Continental Army that was formed June 14, 1775, two years before lt even had a flag.

Well, 199 years after the creatlon of the Contlnental Army (ten companies of rlflemen), a 38-year-old man named Raymond Park accompanled hlS 19-year-01d son, Wllliam, when the young man went to a recrult1ng stat10n to f1nd out what the new Army had to offer. Sgt Ed Smlth, the recrulter ln charge that day, must have done a remarkabl e Job.

When the recltatlon was flnlshed, the boy said, "That sounds flne. I III slgn up."

"So wlll I," the father said. They entered together June 27, at Harrlsburg, Pa. It's the second t1me around for Raymond Park, whose famlly lives

ln Eagles Mere, Pa. He had been out of the Army for 11 years, and had been worklng as a machinist wlth L1tton Industries, Wlll1amsport, Pa., s 1 nce 1966.

Raymond Park JOlned under the Army's Strlpes--for Skl11s optlon, WhlCh glves hlm 1mmedlate advanced rank for hlS experlence. He started as PFC, E-3. Next month he w111 be assigned to Fort Sill, Okla , and be ellg1b1e for promotlon to Sergeant, E-5. Since Park left the serVlce 1n 1963, the monthly salary for E-5 has jumped from $186 to $486. plus allotments for housing and dependent care. Mrs. Park and thelr young daughter wl11 j01n him at Fort 5111 .

Except for love of country. lt lS not 11ke1y that Gen. George Custer -- or Gen. George Washlngton -- would have understood any of the above.. . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~ ~ * * * * * r * * * * * *

ALMANAC Today lS Wednesday. Aug. 21, the 2J3rd day of 1974 w1th 132 to

foll ow The Moon TS approach1ng ltS flrst quarter. The mornlng stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn. The everll ng sta " 1 S Mars. Those born on th1s date are under the slgn of Leo. Brltaln's Prlncess Margaret was born Aug. 21, 1930

ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY: In 1940. Leon Trotsky, a prlme bUl1der of Sovlet Communism. was

assassinated ln Mexico City where he had lived ln exile for three years.

In 1951. the UnIted States ordered constructl0n of the world's flrst atomic submarine.

ON THE LINE by Bob ConsldiAe

NEW YORK. (KFS)--For all practlca1 purposes, the late great Dizzy Dean's baseball pltchlng career ended on ~ preposterous note. He wasn't even paid to play that day. He was hlt on hlS rlght toe by a blow from the bat of Earl Averl11 ln the 1937 All-Star game 1n Wash1ngton. That was back 1n the days when the nation's capital had a franchlse in the natlonal past1me.

Diz shook lt off and remalned 1n the game. But the toe cont1nued to be as sore as a bOll 1 n subsequent games. It hurt hll1l part1cuTarly when hlS right foot slammed down on the pitcher's mound as he let go wlth a p1tch and the f~llow-through. So Oiz declded to change the pltchlng style the Lord had lnvested hlm wlth, and changed hlS motlon to ease the paln 1n the rlqht toe.

One day, somethlng went "plng" 1n hlS mlghty arm. The speed of hlS dellvery slackened forever thereafter. Hltters who had dreaded the thought of hav1ng to bat agalnst hlm began taklng a toe-hold at the plate. He lost hlS Job wlth the Gas House gang and wound up wlth the Chlcago Cubs the next season and carried hlS slow-ball lnto the 1938 World Ser1es d~alnst a great Yankee team. He baffled the 11kes of OlMagglO, ~:E"nr1ch, Dickey and Gehrlg for seven flne lnn1ngs. But theh he was driven out of the box ... and when the crowd stood up to cheer for hlm, that was his last curtaln call.

There was nobody llke OlZ. He got marrled at homeplate one nlght ln Houston. He burst off the bench ln the 1934 World Series before manager Frank Frlsch could stop hlm, and put h1mse1f ln the game as a plnch runner. On the next pitch he broke up a double play. With hlS head. 01Z went lnto second stand1ng up, and shortstop B111y Rogell of the Tlgers crowned hlm.

The day before that series opened ~t Navln Field, Oetrolt, D1Z accompanled a bunch of baseball wrlters to the park to watch the Tlgers work out. He was dressed In a buslness sUlt. But after a b1t. he couldn't abide be1ng a bystander. He grabbed a bat. pushed a unlformed Tlqer out of the battlng cage, and lashed out at the otferlngs of ,"'le star tled Detroit batting practlce pltcher. 1n the proc.ess, he dropped his watch.

Dean thre\i a pltch too close to a tough batter's head, in h1S prime The hItter got up, strode out to the mound and flattened 01Z.

D1Z compla1ned, "that aln't fa1r." "You dusted me. didn't you, the 1rate h1tter blazed. "Sure. II 01Z said "but It ' s not falr to begln a flght by throwing

punches. You should argue for a whiT e." .. H1S classic, of course, came the day Grantland R1ce vlslted

him 1n the locker room, near the end of Diz's pitchlng life. "Howls the old armr gentle Granny asked. "Not what 1t used to be, . Dean sald. Then he added, after a

~i~./~u~ ..\1n~t.,. lP; + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + -1>-+ + + + + + +

Quirts ,. T.e News BEVERTON, Oregon--The flre distr1ct ' s new rescue unit got ltS

baptism under fire before lt was even parked ln ltS flrst statl0n. Fireman Vern Bartley was dr1ving the unlt from Grand Prairle,

Texas. to its new home when he came upon ar alJtomobil e accident near Evanston, Wyomlng.

Bartley drove the 1nJured, Mr. and Mrs Harry McCrea, Hi1lsborouqh. California, and their two children, to a hOsp1ta1.

The fireman sald Thursday that the only problem with the new rig was that there wasn't any flrst ald equlpment In It.

Page 4: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

lJ,LASS Wednesday, August 21, 1974

SDecial Services' SwiG' Show

P'Z-cturc ~ al)()(\', ClPf~ Lume of~ the J {v(- ;1; !lfj "_)(1 C?-(-Jht~;I_r~CI)(Jn specta­tors wh'J cn,}o! 'd th,~ p,how.

L3b~ Slturday nearly SlX hUlldn 1 "'pectaLors observed Spec101 S~rvlces' annual Water Show at the Dependents SWlmtn1ng Pool. A cast of el~h i-three performed twelve various Sk1tS to the show theme, "There's No B.lt,lness Llke Show Buslness."

Durlng the next week several plctureb w1ll be publ1shed deplct1ng var10US performances from the h1ghly successful show.

DuplIcate Brid~c: KwaJale1n Dupl1cdte Br1dge

Club presents: Introduct10n N1ght

Fnday, August 23, 197q, 7:00pm Banyan Room

1. Introduct1on to dupl1cate scor1ng.

2. Introduct10n to dupl1cate play.

3. Superv1sed play and d1SCUSS1on.

4. Party br1dge. Club members w1ll be there to

ass1st you. Free refreshments.

Keep KwaJale1n clean. Bury seashells or use the

freeGe and thaw method for effec­tlve fly control.

~ib'~ .)t ,1, (' J • _ e) •

Kwaialein Center 'University of Hawaii The folloVling courbes wll: nc ufFered dt the KWBJctle ~ Center

,rlng the fall semester WhlCh commences on September 9 and ends December 19, 1974. All courses w~ll be conducted at the KwaJaleln Hlgh School

CO'.rc;e No. Tltle and No Credlts

F1 101 H1St 281 M~t 341 S~'an 101 Eng 252 '. :an 102 Acct 202 EE 251 EL 251 aath 134 EdEF 445 Law 300 Psych 100

Course No

Fr 101 H1St 281 ,1gt 341 S?an 101 Eng 252 S;:lan 102 Acct 202 EE 251 EL 251 '~a th 134 EdEF 445 L21,; 300 Ps. ch 100

Elementary French (4) lntroductlon to Amerlcan Hlstory (3) Human Relatlons 1n the Organlzatl0n (3) Elementary Spanlsh (4) Major works of Brlt1sh and Amerlcan Llterature (3) Elementacy Span1sh (4) Elementary AccountIng ]1 (3) Intr02uctory Computer Methods In PL/l (3) I (3L) HJSpanlC Clvil~zation (3) Pre-Calculus Mathematlcs (4) Educatl0nal Socl0logv (3) Legal EnV1ron~ent of Bus1ness I (3) Survey of Psychology (3)

Meet lng Day

Monday Honday Monday t10nday Tuesday Tuesday Wednesoay Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Thursday Thursday Thursday

Instructor

Mrs Jackie Hara ~1r s SylVIa Hossack LTC Lee Gllbreth Mr. WIll la" Hooper Mrs Sandra Hedlund i'lr Wl111aJll Hooper -'r F D Folette I1r Gre& Robbl.ns [~rs J ac kie Hara :1r John ~~lth

CS jerll)11 Pang Capt .. ;2\ dannlng Mrs. raulette Schwartz

\, ~ed1t-hour courses have been scheduled to meet fr07 6 ::::J-tl., and four credIt-hour courses, 6.00-9.00pm However, the meet1ng t1me for any course may be changed after the t1rst meetlng by mutual agreement between Lnstructor and students Roef" aSSIgnments wlll be announced

TL] TION TUlt10n Will be $72 00 for a three credlt-hour course and $96 00

for a ~our cred1t-hour cOJrse UnIverSIty pOllcy reCUires that audltors pay the full tUItlon. TU1t10n and textbook costs are payable at the tlme of regIstratIon preferably by check or '11one} order ~ade out to the UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII To facllItate and exped1te bookkeep1ng, se~arate checks or money orders should he made for tU1t1on and books

REGISTRATION ROI Namur: Dr Jay Sklar, PRESS reFresentatlve, wlll conduct a

spec1al reg1stration on R01 Namur on Monday, August 26, 1n the PRESS Conference Room, located 1n the PRESS bU1ldlng, from 11:30-12:30

KwaJaleln' Mrs. Sylvla Hossack, KVlaJaleln Center coord1nator, Vl1ll conduct reglstrat10n ln the Adult Educat10n Off1ce on the

The Chapel Adv1sory Board of the Protestant chapel congregatl0n sponsor1ng two weeks of 1ntenslve B1bl1cal Stud1es to be51n on Wednesday, August 28, and continue through Thursday, September 5. The courses are being offered on Kwa]ale1n as an extens10n of the Hawai1 Lutheran f1ble Inst1tute. They are open to all KwaJale1n

lS followlng dates: August 22 (Thursday) - 6:30-8:30pm August 23 (FrIday) - 6.30-8.30pm August 24 (Saturday) - 1:OO-3:00pm August 25 (Sunday) - 1.OO-3.00pm

res1dents The f1rst course, "Joy of D1scovery Through B1bl1cal Studies," l.S

des1gned to help persons d1scover how to study the B1ble. Students are 1ntroduced to the var10US methods Wh1Ch w1ll help them learn how to observe, interpret and apply the truths 1n the B1bll.cal message. Pract1cal exper1ence w1ll focus on a study of the book of James.

Th1S course w1ll be offered at two d1fferent t1mes. Those 1nterested may take the class from 9:00 to 11:OOam Wednesday through

• Frlday of the f1rst week, and Monday through Thursday of the second week The class w1ll also be offered even1ngs of those same days, 7·30-9:30pm.

The secand course, "Let t er to the Hebre\-1s," w111 be a detailed study of that New Testament book Hebrews has a V1tal message for Chr1st1ans 1n our generatl0n. Th1S class w1ll be offered from 2'00 to 4.00pm, Wednesday through Fr1day of the f1rst week, and Monday through Thursday of the second week. Class locations w1ll be announced

For the spec1al KwaJaleln extens10n, Hawa11 Lutheran B1ble Inst1tute 1S offer1ng the courses at half pr1ce. The cost w1ll be $17 each, for both of the two-cred1t courses. Cred1ts are lssued by the Seattle Lutheran B1ble Instltute and may be transfered to other 1nstltutes, colleges and universlt1es, dep( jent on the policy of the 1ndlvldual school.

Instructor for the courses to be taught on KwaJaleln wl.ll be the Reverend Robert E. Jones, pastor of the Tr1nl.ty Lutheran Church, Wah1awa, HaVla11, and professor 1n the Hawal1 Lutheran Blble Institute Rev Jones rece1ved his BA and M D1V. degrees from Concordla Theological Sem1nary, St. Louis, and has done graduate work at the Unlverslty of Mlssour1. He has served churches 1n Texa~ and Louls1ena, and as a Navy and Marlne Chaplal.n in the U.S., fdpan and Oklnawa lor a per10d of three years, he taught on the "TV Bible School," stat10n KRLD-TV, Garland, Texas.

Persons lnterested ln enroillng in one or both of the offered (our~e~, should contact the chaplain's office, telephone 83505. The dI3plaln'~ office IS open 7 30 to 1l:30am, and 12:30 to 4:30pm ,Lilly, ]n( ludlng ~aturday.

Anyone Vlho IS unable to reg1ster on the dates glven above should contact the coord1nator for reg1strat10n materla1s

Notice The Launderette Vll1l be closed

for steam llne repa1rs on Satur­day, August 24, 1974 •

The hours closed w1l1 be from 0600 unt~l approx1mately 1600.

To the Kwaj Community Slnce the 1nceptlon of the

KwaJalel.n Shr1ne Club ~n July, 1969, the club has forwarded 1n excess of $9,000 to the Cr~ppled Chlldren's Hospltal 1n Honolulu for the beneflt of ~ts pat1ents.

The members of the KwaJaleln Shrlne Club w1sh to express the~r

Slncere and warmest appreclatlon for the support glven by the KwaJa1e1n commun1ty. W~th ~ts

unself~sh support, many unfor­tunate ch~ldren have been helped to recover from cr1ppl~ng phYS1-cal condl.tl.ons.

=------

'l'uL PZ,ANT NURSE,'RY i. 0t-en each Saturday aJ t21"nOOn ii'om 1300 to 1530. You arc urged to pLck up only what you are able to plant ancl care for.

J r .-Sr High Girls Invited All KwaJaleln glrls 1nterested

ln Cadette or Sen~or G1rl Scout­lng are ~nv1ted to a Coke Pdrty on Saturday, August 31, at lpm ln tne Scout Hut. M~ss L1nda LeShanna, profes­

slonal scout from the Nat~ona1 Glrl Scout Off~ce 1n New York Clty w1ll be our guest. rl1SS LeShanna lS currently complet1ng a tr~p through all the d1str1cts of 11~crones~a where she has been worklng w~th G~rl Scout groups updatlng tne~r tra1n­lng. At the Coke Party, M1SS LeShanna plans to speak to the k.waJale1n g~rls on "W1der Opportunlties," a spec~a1 program ava1lable to teen-age scouts.

Th~s 1S an ~nformal gatnerl.ng and all g~rls are 1nv1ted. Grab a fr~end and come on down. Save this date NOW to welcome 111SS LeShanna to kwaJaleln!

For further 1nformatl.Oll, call Lucy Bloedel, KwaJ a] e1l1

Glrl Scout co-ord1nator.

Page 5: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

Wednesday, August _l, 1974 ')URGLASS page 5

Ann Landers lON,~;HT'S TONIGHT'S MOVIES VIDEO TA~'tE SCHEDULE RICHARDSON - MACON COUNTY LINE R

Dear Ann Landers: What do you think of a 17-year-old boy

who cries every tIme he gets Into an argu­ment WIth hlS glrl and he sees he IS IQsing7

RaI NAMUR--S:OO CBS SPORTS

SPECTACULAR

Y.Y.CLUB--5:00 COLUMBO ' STAR TREK

CROSSROADS--5:00 ABC MOVIE:

PRAY FOR THE WILDCATS

MEDICAL CENTER

OCEAN VIEW--S·OO ABC MOVIE:

7:30 Alan VInt •• Max Baer Drama •• Color

OCEAN VIEW -7:30 &

12:30 YOKWE YUK

7:00 & 9:00

ASH WEDNESDAY R

G Jack Lemmon •• Sandy DennIS Comedy •• Color

I'd really like to ditch this dude but whenever I mentlon Spllttlng, he staTts to bawl. My knees turn to rubber and my heart melts. The last tlme I told him I wanted to stop seelng hlm, he buried his face in his handkerchlef, crled until it was sopping wet and then announced that the doctor had just told him he had a brain tumor and probably wouldn't llve another year. I couldn't lop hlm off after that. Well, two days later he sald the doctor had misread the X-rays and everythlng IS O.K.

TEEN CENTER--3:30/7:30 CBS SPECIAL REPORT:

THE ITALIAN JOB WORLD OF DISNEY

IVEY HALL 6:30

- GIANT G Rock Hudson •• Ellzabeth 'l'::lylor

only D~ama •• Color

I don't want to get in any deeper with thlS crybaby. As It IS, every guy in school thInks I'm hIS prlvate property and 1 haven't been asked out in a year. Can you help?

PRE-PRESIDENTIAL RES IGNATION COVERAGE

ALL IN THE FAMILY MASH

TRADEWINDS - THE HOODLUM SOLDIER PG 7.30 Shlntaro Katsu •• TakashlI"O 'famura

DrdJIla •• B-W W-S

Movle reVlews provlded by Boxofflce and Motlon Plctu~e Herald.

--/1adellne FOR THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1974 LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE

Dear Mad Look m the sectlon m WhlCh .. your blrthday comes and fmd

Put on a ra1,ncoat and h1,p boots. Ten Mr·whatyouroutlooklS accordmg Great Lakes that ifOU are not going out with to the stars ' him again and the decision is final. Let ARIES cy'~ h1-m float out of the room if necessary, and (Mar 21 to Apr. 20) don't let h1-m cry his way back or you 'n be Normally, you are not easlly stuck indefin1-tellf. decelved, but keep especially '* '* ... alert now or you could fall for

some slick salesmanshlp

Dear Ann Landers: May a hus~and ~dy a word about how it is

to look at a wlfe In the morning, before she has had a chan ce to put on the extras and get glamorous?

I love my wlfe and have for many years. We are both 47. ItJe decided long ago that early morning IS '10t the best time for look­Ing or communicatlon. Wlthout putting it Into Ivords we agn:ed that morning IS the tlme to look at t1e kids Instead of each o the r. The teen - agers are a pleasure to behold, eyes brlg1t and hair shining. The younger ones absolutely sparkle! I eat my eggs and slurp do'tlI1 my coffee. My wife and I exchange a few lnaudlble sentences. I stumble off to work and she struggles Into gear for the day.

At nlght when [ come home, the 11ttle woman looks mlghtv good to me and we get along great. Besldes, looking, whether it's mornlng or nlght, Isn't the whole game--as any bllnd man wlil tell you.

--F rom Chicago

Dear Ch1,c Le t 's hear it f' or the coup le who has

learned to hve together. Sometimes the highest leve l of (Jorrmunication is no ao17Ul7U­n1-cation at aU.

'*

Dear Ann Landers:

TAURUS t1cfu,1 (Apr 21 to May 21)

AVOld tendencles toward haste, emotionahsm Study proffered plans, proposals New advances mdicated, but don't lose mterest m current projects GEMINI D "·:h,,~-

'-?"7/ (May 22 to June 21) "

Through sheer personality, you can be an effectIve m­fluence m areas where stum­bling blocks have been ralsed Your SPlrit of enterprise stlmulated CANCER 8t:;f (June 22 to July 23)

You grasp ldeas easlly, see benefits to be gamed where others only note the obstacles Use your mstmcts NOW-and

'go forward I

LEO J2~~ (July 24 to Aug 23)

Not a good day m WhlCh to mlX busmess wlth pleasure Rosy promlSes made m an aura of congemality could prove deceptive

VIRGO npt~ (Aug 24 to Sept 23)

Some stram m key assoclatlOns mdicated Probe deeply to fmd the cause, the better to cope wlth lt ef­

'fectIvely In any case, keep your sense of humor mtact LffiRA .n..Jl~:I, (Sept 24 to Oct 23) -

Pay no heed to glowmg reports or sensabonal rumors­especially if fmances are m­volved Keep on an even keel and you shoJlld do well

SCORPIO rrt. *<'"-(Oct 24 to Nov 22) f'II1

Be ready to face competltion You usually enJOY the stlmulatlOn of thlS, but don't burn the candle at both ends m your deSire to get ahead Easy does lt' SAGITTARIUS >l', ~ (Nov 23 to Dec 21) ~v

An associate wlll offer some unexpected asslstance Be receptive The proffered help wlll be genume, the motive smcere CAPRICORN (Dec ryry to '

L Iy bore J It ,j Idle time a'o\dy Ge, J un one of your pet creative projects AQUARIUS .-A0. (Jan 21 to Feb 19) -~~

If you've been mterested m a new project but have postponed takmg actlOn, NOW lS the tlme ' But be sure you have the know­how and enough data to go on PISCES )( ;):-:v (Feb 20 to Mar 20) 'CA

There are tendencles now to take off on tangents and to ease up m effort just when more perslStence IS needed Don't fall yourself by Yleldmg to such mclmatlOns

~~~L_l._.l_.l_J~~;~~tJAJ/~ F"',.,W{Z.(!" 8'l1J(J

38N3::! 6 '13NOAlt8 L'S3H81m:!8 9 '11'9'8 8Nl1M08 8 '3NV1d!::!IIt G - UMOa 1138 ~ ~ 'lNVHd313 OL

'Nn8 9 '83M 9 'H8V3d v 'NIt::! ~ - SSOJ:)~ S!::!3MSNV YOU BORN TODAY are extremely versatile Leoltes have attamed great heights m politics, the mllitary, literature {he 'New You' Mailbag ~ and mdustry, also as poets,

mUSICians and pamters You De [m'lly W·lke are generous, alinost to a fault, ar I ns· '-a.: are always wllling to share your· =====' =(~ assets wlth loved ones, ~b sometimes, however, use thlS as a "hold" over them In order to get your own way Don't ' You Mask Oily Skin Problem have great prlde m all that you Dear Emlly I enjoyed usmg do but lt sometimes becomes your TurkiSh recipe for re­ex~esslve, so be alert, smce the movmg hair on legs and under­arrogance you dJ.splay at such arms wlth a mlXture of lemon times ahenates others Brrth- jwce and honey A fnend and I date of Samuel P Langley, tned It and the results were US plOneer m aVlation, Claude temflc Do you have any more Debussy, Fr composer Turkish beauty secrets to

• share? - G,P.

Needs to ExerCise

Several months ago you printed a letter from a nlght-onented person who had a dif­f~cult tlme In hlS dorm because he enjoyed doing hlS school \,lOrk (or his thing) late at nlght and arranged hlS schedule so he could ~~:s-BelievQ It or Not! sleep In the morn Ing. But '·crack-of-dawners" .r-..... _....,., .... ----. ___ ®

Dear G P I have some great centurles-old TurklSh beauty reclpes that work beautifully

Try thlS marvelous olly skm mask

Dear EmIly I have lost 45 pounds In the last two years and have slimmed down beautifully I now weigh 130 poundS-Just rlght for my helght My doctor tells me I need to exerClSe I am not a young woman so he suggested yoga as a method that would not be too strenuous Where can I obtam some yoga exerClSes that wIll help me shape up all over? - Vera

made It imposslblE' for hIm to sleep. Will ~ •. \_.' you please give equal time to a member of the "Dayllgh t For. es"?

Every campus hds an obnoxious group that HORSES operates after mldnight. This includes WERE SOLD Ir-.l smoking pot (Whldi creates a peculiarly dis- AUSTRALIA gustlng odor), en! ertaining the boy (or girl) IN 1924 FOR fnend overnigh tat the inconl1enience and 19 EACH embarrassment of their roommates, indulging In loud drlnking parties with the stereo gOlng full blast, and going out and leaving pets In a room to howl dlsconsolately for hours.

The worst of ~t IS that the administra­tlon refuses to do anythlng about it. So please don't compound the felony by coming out In favor of a selfish group of spoiled brats who have had things their own way too long. College begins in a few weeks. Be fair.

--Revenging Angel

Dear Ang e Z • I can't believe the administration would

1,gnore such complQ~nts. Go--en masse--raise the roof, and you'll get results.

tJEAR. Dt~PASAR, BALI, SERVED AS A MONASTERY FOR 800 YEARS

Josef'MBER~IER (1852-1934 )

WAS A DEEP-SEA CAPTAIN AT THE AGE OF 17

MlX 1 tablespoon of honey, 1 egg whlte, 1 teaspoon of kaolin powder (avallable m drug­stores) and 2 teaspoons of plam yogurt untll thlck and masklike m conslStency Apply to face, aVOlding eye area Leave on until skm feels tight and seems to draw Rmse off wlth lukewarm water, then flnlSh by spongmg on rose water (also available m pharmacles)

A good deal of cosmetic lore was passed on to me by a TurklSh woman who told me some of her grandmother's beauty secrets One adds reddlsh hlghhghts to halr Here's how

Pour bolling water over a small handful of bay leaves Let thlS "tea" steep for several mlnutes, then apply as a fmal rlnse before settlng harr

'* 8-:11

I found It InterestIng that, m anClent times, TurklSh beauties used alum and water as an anti­persplrant Alum lS still used m most modern deodorant pre­parabons There's really not

OKo"'r .... Q ..... ~,. IK ",. w.,,' ...... -.I. that much new under the sun I

Dear Vera My favorlte yoga exerClses can be done by everyone I've collected them m a booklet, "Ten Llttle Yogas" They mclude routmes that work on all parts of your body and, happlly, give good results m falrly short order They can keep you limber for the rest of your life To obtam a copy of my booklet, send 25 cents and a self­addressed, stamped envelope to Emlly Wilkens Yoga Booklet, care of thlS newspaper

CocktaIl Calones Dear Emily I'm trying to

wet but because busmess in­

volves me m a great deal of soclalizmg, lt'S not easy. Cocktallmg makes my cal one count hlgh What can I order Instead of an alcoholic drink? -AG.

Dear A G Ask the walter for a Bloody Shame - that's tomato jU1Ce sans vodka Or order mlneral water (by brand name) on the rocks . ,

EMILY WILKENS welcomes let lers but cannot undertake '0 answer each one She will use questions of general Interest In her column Ad dress your leiters to Emily Wilkens care of thiS newspaper

Page 6: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

Wednesday, August 21, 1974

UPI SPORTS BRIEfS (UPI)--The Nat10nal League's Eastern D1v1sion leaders have had

the1r troubles w1th Western D1V1S10n clubs the last couple of days. The flrst place St. LOU1S Cardlnals suffered the1r second

stralght loss to the Braves Tuesday n1ght ... dropping an 8-6 deC1S10n at Atlanta Stadlum. Clnclnnat1 made 1t two in a row over Phlladelphla as Johnny Bench and Joe tlorgan homered ln a 7-1 vlctory for the Reds And, Pittsburgh lost ltS second stra1ght to San Franclsco ... 10slng 8-7 1n 10 1nn1ngs when Juan P1zarro walked ln the wlnn1ng run.

In other NL games, Dave Lopes clubbed three home runs as Los Angeles routed the Chlcago Cubs, 18-8 ... Wlllle McCovey's three-run homer sparked San Dlego to a 3-0 shut out over Montreal and Houston downed the New York Mets, 6-2.

In the AL ... Nolan Ryan turned 1n another sensatlonal 19-strlke­out performance Tuesday night but lost to the Detro1t Tlgers on Blll Freehan's run-scorlng slngle ln the 11th 1nnlng. Desp1te the loss, the Callforn1a Angels' r1ghthander broke h1S own major league record for most str1keouts ln three surceSS1ve games, 114.

Elsewhere, Boston trounced the Chlcago Wh1te Sox, 8-3 ... Balt1more nlpped Texas, 2-1 ... Kansas C1ty blanked Gaylord Perry and the Cleveland Ind1ans, 2-0 ... the New York Yankees tr1pped M1nnesota, 2-1 . Gene Tenace belted a grand-slam homer and J1m Hunter tossed a three-h1tter as Oakland beat Milwaukee, 7-1.

(UPI)--L1ttle League World Senes ... won by NatlOnal1st Ullnese team the last three years ... 1S off to another roar1ng start in Wlll1amsport, Pennsylvania.

On Tuesday's opening round play Talwan battered New Haven, Connectlcut, 16-0 while Tallmadge, Oh10, stopped Athens, Greece, 8-0

Esqu1malt, B.C. meets Red Bluff, Callforn1a and Maracalbo, Venezuela takes on Jackson, Tennessee 1n today's play.

(UPI)--The S1rm1ngham Amer1cans take thelr perfect WFL record on the road ton1ght aga1nst the slump1ng JacksonV1lle Sharks. ~lthough the Sharks have won only two of S1X games, B1rmingham coach Jake Gotta has expressed concern that Jacksonvl11e could be flred up under new coach Charl1e Tate.

In other \~FL games, Hawall lS at Memphls ... F10nda entertalns the wlnless Portland Storm ... Southern Callfornla 1S at Phl1ade1phla, and Houston meets the Stars 1n New York * * * * * * * ~ + * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Kwai Sports Announcements BOWL! NG NEWS

The flrst poslt1on nlght for the Leftovers Bowlers produced so~e pretty good scores as the teams fought to move up 1n their standlngs or, In some cases, to hang on to where they were. The second pcsltlon n1ght game ton1ght should pretty well put everyone In thelr places, provldlng they bowl good.

Among the leaders last week wer~ R. Mor1kawa who surprlsed everyone by hltt1ng a h1gh game of 237 and h1gh ser1es of 610. R OSh1 ro had a 239-602 game and Goro 1 ed h1 s team to a four gaf'le sweep by bowl1ng a 216-600. G. 19awa hlt a 251-576 gal'le but got no support from hlS teammates as they lost all four.

Other hlgh rollers among the men were, H. Nuuhiwa w1th a 217-545, rl Puulel w1th a 209-546, and T. Chun w1th a 208-554.

Among the women, only one name stands out. K. Nlshlmura f1red a respectable 198-516 See you tonlght at 6:00pm.

Wl th seven weeks to go 1 n the Thursday ~ll te KAC League, DOM+2 have taken sole posseSS1on of flrst place. The hotshots of DOM+~ have won 15 out of the last 16 points.

L lttle John set a new league hlgh game mark wlth a blg 227 game along wlth a S97 serles, W. Toma had a 201 game,D. Gruenberg had a 193, G. Mlnerva had a so11d 531 serles H1gh rollers for the womer.wereJ-9 Cox's 171 game and D. Amador's 443 for high sen es

JUNIOR BOWLING PROGRAM. League bowl1ng for both Juniors and Bantams wlll commence on Sept. 7th. Reglstratlon will be held on Saturday, 24th of Aug at the Spec1al Serv1ces Bowling Lanes.

Junlors (ages 13 - 22) wll1 reglster from g'OOam t1ll 10:OOam; Bantams (ages 8 thru 12) from 10:30am - 11·30am. For further lnformatlon, contact elther Mrs R F Sulllvan, 83565 or J. Rechner 82671

Boaters Notice

As part of the boat llcenslng procedures requ1red by KMR Regulatlon 28-2 and Global Procedure 1090, a boat1ng safety orlentatlon must be attended prlor to a boat 11cense belng lssued.

There wlll be two orlentatlon sessions conducted th1S month, one wlll be held 22 Aug at 7'00pm at the Termlnal Brieflng Room, and the second seSS10n wlll be held 23 Aug. at 1 'OOpm at the Communlty Center

All persons who are currently worklng on or plannlng on gettlng a boat llcense should attend one of these seSSlons. Famll1es are lnvlted as boat1ng safety lnvolves all members of the boat1ng party, not Just the operator.

All presently llcensed boat operators and thelr fam1l~es are lnvlted to attend. ThlS lS not requlred to keep your 11cense.

If you have any questlons, please call 83506 dur1ng worklng hours

ATTENTION GOLFERS

The Golf Course wlll be closed tomorrow from 1200 hours to 1600 hours., due to the KMR "Duffer" Tournament.

______________________ ~P.a~

GRAY-LEWIS TAKES A GOOD CUT AT THE BALL IN SLOW-PITCH ACTION ... * * * * * * * * * * * * ~ • • ~ • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Kwai Sports Results In SlOW-P1tch actlon yesterday, Raytheon held on to defeat the

famous CBE team, 11-8. Marston had 3 hltS for the Wlnners wh1le Danko and Knock had 2 hltS aplece for the losers.

Kentron defeated Kamaalna S-3 In Fast-Pltch act10n on Brandon. Jones and Melfl had 2 hltS apiece for Kentron while Bolkelm had

2 for the losers In 6 Man Volleyball act1on, R01 Namur took two out of three

sets from the Menehunes 15-S and 11-9.

KWAJ SPORTS SCHEDULE 6 MAN VOLLEYBALL

Aug. 21 - Wed. - 7 OOpm - TEEN CENTER VS. ROI NAMUR (MAKE UP)

8 OOpm - MENEHUNES VS. HAWAIIANS Aug. 22 - Thur. - 7'OOpm - ANIMALS VS. EBEYE

8'OOpm - EHUKAI VS. BOSTON BEANS Aug. 23 - Fr1. - 7 OOpm - BOSTON BEANS VS. ROI NAMUR

8 OOpm - ANIMALS VS MENEHUNES

SLOW-PITCH

Aug. 21 - Wed. - S 15pm - SHIRLEY'S VS. KWAJ KOPS ~Ug 22 - Thur. - 5'lSpm - RCA VS. LEFTOVERS .

Aug. 23 - Fr1. - S 15pm - MZC VS. ENTERTAINERS Aug. 24 - Sat. - 5 lSpm - HAMBURGERS VS. ROGUES

Aug. 21 - Wed. Aug. 22 - Thur Aug. 23 - Fn. Aug. 24 - Sa'!:.

. . - . ~.""",---~ ~.,,--, ~ .... ;... ,-

-~ ~: .' •. ..=.' .

FAST -PITCH

- 5.1Spm - TEEN CENTER VS. V.O. - S lSpm - CATSAF VS. KAMAAINA - 5 15pm - TEEN CENTER VS. SOTH STATE - 5 lSpm - KAMAAINA VS. V.O.

VALDEZ OF SHIRLEY'S LOUNGE MAKES THE OUT AT SECOND BASE ..... .

Page 7: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

wcdnesd~/, Augus, Ll, lY/~

p e a n u t s

w

z a r d

I WA'rf A REAL J HE. MIIN 1A.TTC:O '

---y---

THIS 15 THE BAL~ THAT JOE HIT ilJHEN f.{~, GOT HI.q BLOOP SINGLE IN THE NINTH INNING WITH HIS TEI-IIII

LEADING FIFTEEN TO THREr:

r

cl-, ~~ ~ / l/jrrc;o ~

_ L _CRLL R. ,\

----~ _______________ ~fZ~'

e 7 HJUl, G!~ ·' ... h... -;;:;===;;;;=====...-r;;;;======;;;;;;;;;~,,-----~~~~------------ .

~ 8-21

'6u::,.; CAN PtAI' fA'l,OAU Al\f) .' IOU CM K/LLA WHOlE 1)\Y C IMf, TREES to ') JUST LI~N'TO I-IER •

They'H i.Jo It E ver'" Time

s t e v e

NEIT~ER DID I I -~:;::LN-"(~'~ \) I r::..:;:~~J.' -AND r DIDN'T L/'<E DON'T (OW, 1'1 1 ..

c a n y o n

a n d \I .J

C d n p

a r c h I e

ARCHIE, STOP BOTHEFI.lNG ME

I'M TOO BU~,y TO COME TO YOllR. E.XHIBITION GAME'

TO BREAK INON T~ROlJ61\ Ihf MA'N PRIVATE THOUGHTS lJt\Tt=., I ,£'1 ~0KrA

n :;:1,,,J5 WHE: i':[ ALL ;He NICE FLOWERS

60 SOQU\'K'

GEE.' I W'OUL.DNIT TREAT A DOG THE WAY YOU T~EAT U~/

WHO WAS THE CilRL YER WERE WITH

LAS:'N/GHT?: r

'~Jr--

CI"OSSWOrc/ By Lugene Sheffer ACROSS

1 Maple genus

5 Greek It-.tar

8 Bede, fur one

It French Oalnter

].1 Lamprey 14 Opera

herome 15 Shame 11- MInor l~ PIers '9 City m

"Kubla Khan"

21 BIJIDpkm ;, .loke ZS 1< ren..:b

.-l.UL'lOr

2Y !\g;avt; IfDPf

t.\..J J eJ

34 S1'Va., rielt

3;, ~~J.J,",~

wmg 2f .:)ance

:;, 1!t~l,

Jr one ~i: OOle

39 SP:'Ullstl gold

n Salamander 43 MeXlcan

bl;,.nket 46 Appeanng

eaten 50 ('overs 51 Seoarate 54 Well'

~()(1

~S ~ lave 5S Map of

,'Wf. SIte l! ~ '.,rl

bt';>n 58 Fltowe:

tw Ie !i9 Atua

20 Culture medIum

22 Javanese tree

23 Glganhc one

25 Breach 1'6 MIss

ClaIre 27Dlness 29 Ancient

mantime City

31 French ISland

32 Jungfrau, for one

34 Road sign 38 DIVests 40 Clvethke

ammal 42 MOISt 43 Cabbage

salad 44 Ireland 45 A cheese 47 Sole 48 Read

metrically (9 Dmunutlve

suffIX 52 CIty m

Peru 53 Enclosure

on farm

Page 8: VOL. 13, No. 81014 KWAJALEIN MARSHALL ISLANDS Rockefeller ...

Page 8

Classifi d

For Sa~'e WURLITZER PIANO $750, Yamaha electrlc organ wlth amplifer $300, 2 ea. 10/0 fish­Ing reels wlth 80 lb. rods $75 ea., 16" gul's bike with hlgh handle bars $10, 26" glrl's blke wlth rear bask~t $5, underwater mInl case for Kodak pocket In,,tamatlc camera wlth flash $25, pogo stlck $5, side­walk shoe skates, Slze 6 $5, Chrlstmas tree $10. Call 82285.

4 SCUBA TANKS $25 each, playpen $5, 2 paddleball rackets $5 each.

.. EW CARABELA SEMI-PRO 10-SPEED RACING BICYCLE. Recelved wrong frame size. Phone 84527 or see at Tr. 827.

GOOD USED CORONET for beglnnlng band. Call 82383 after 5pm.

STEREO TAPE DECK, AKAI Model GX-285D w/ bUllt-ln Dolby, 4 glass & crys~al Ferrite heads, 3 motors, auto reverse, total auto shut off, sos, mlke-line mlXlng facliltles. Mlnt condltlon, 3 months old $425. Many accessorles for thlS deck also avallable. AKAI 7" metal reels, spare parts klt, serVlce manual and AKAI SRT blank recording tape. Phone 84120 or 77377.

. Lost MAN'S GOLD RlNG WIth black star sapphlre and four ruby ChIpS. Please call 81330, Don Mldklff.

ONE PAIR BOY'S BROWN LEATHER SANDALS , tlre tread soles. Lost at the Rlchardson Theater Saturday nIght. Call 83759.

Want d HO}ffi FOR D.C. DESPERATELY NEEDED, a black and whlte spayed female cat; Present owners PCS August 23. Call 82910 or 99686.

GUITAR TEACHER for beginnlng student, age 10. Call 82537.

CROCHETERS your help is needed to make slmple projects (pot holders, chIldren's purses, bookmarks) for HolIday Bazaar. Yarn WIll be prOVIded. Please call Sharon Raschke at 82426.

CAT LOVERS, 3 kittens need a home. SlX­weeks old, no pedigree but good character and references. Call Mandy at 82864.

Com m u nit y An n_o ." n.c e m.e n t s

GLOBAL WOMEN'S CLUB MEETING WIll be held August 24th at the Yokwe Yuk Club at 12:30 In the Banyon Roomo All new members are welcome. The prIce IS $3.50. For reservatIons call Fran KobylInskI at 82677, TeddIe Holloway at 82860 or Marllu McKee at 84627 before August 22nd o

ISLAND NURS~RY goes to Coral Sands Beach every Thursday at 8:30am. The nursery WIll be open for anyone who doesn't want to go to the beach,

SEVENTH GRADE STu~ENTS are InVIted to a special orientation assembly on FrIday, August 23 at 10:00am In the hIgh school MP room. Came meet your teachers, find your classrooms, and be ready for the openIng of school on August 26.

rtAIR NOW? Top quallty men·s·hairpleces-~~ow 'prlces. Call Ray Runyon for appOIntment to see sample halrpieces and/or consultations. No obllgatl0no

KEEP. tWAJ CLEAN

HOURGLASS

Community Announcem nts THERE'~ILL £E-A BOATING SAFETY ORIENTATION session Thursday, 22 August 1974 at 7:00pm at the term1nal briefIng roo~, and on Friday, 23 August 1974 at 1:00pm at the Communlty Center. Attendance at one of these seSSlons is required for dll persons obtalnlng a marina small boat license.

KSC Sm~DAY DIVE - Boat will leave the dock at 10:30 hrs. and return to KwaJ at 16:30 hrs. Divemasters will be Harry Johnson and Steve Metzner. Flotatlon vests are mandatory and subject to perIodic inspec­tl0n. Call Steve Metzner at 77379 (days) for reservation&. Should be a fun day, so don't lQJ.SS it.

FOURTH THUR5DAYI Come browse ilnd buy at the Bargaln Bazaar, ThurSday nlght, August 22 from 7:00-8:30pm.

NATIONAL MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION - The Global Chapter, National Management Associa­tion, wl1l hold a regular board of dlrectors meeting on Thursday, 22 August, at the teachers lounge, Kwajalein High School. The meetIng WIll start at 7pm and all NMA members are invited to attend.

ADULT VOLUNTtERS are still needed for the Kwajalein Glrl Scout Program. Mom, young wlves, high school age scouts, call Lucy Bloedel at 82657, evenIngs to see what you can do to help us out. There IS also a need for a man who lIkes to do carpentry work. We have some small Jobs that only a person WIth carpentry skIll can help us WIth.

NEIGHBORHOOD MEETING for all adult Girl Scout volunteers. ThIS IS our first get together of the 74-75 school year. Do not miss this meetlng on Monday evenIng, August 26th, at 7:30pm in the Scout Hut. Plans need to be formalized for the ViSlt of MISS Linda LeShanna, professIonal scout from the National OffIce. If you cannot attend, call Lucy Bloedel at 82657 no later than Friday, August 23rd.

EMON LODGE NO. 179 F. & A.M. wll1 hold a speclal communlcation, ThurSday at 7:30pm, 22 August 1974. All Fes & MMs are cor­dially Invited to attend. For Informatlon call 84104.

BSA TROOP 314 - Troop 314 wlll hold ItS regular meetlng at the dependent's pool on Wednesday, 21 August '74 at 7pm. Scouts will work on the SWlmmlng Skill Award, Swimming Merlt Badge or Life Savlng Merit Badge. Read your require­ments and bring necessary clothlng, etc.

A NEW YYWC BABYSITTING LIST is now being compiled. Babysitters Interested In having their names Included should con­tact Sharon Raschk~ by August 30.

NEED A BABYSITTER? Cdll 82657 and ask for Lindy.

PROTESTANT CHAPEL CRUSAlU\ CHOIR for Jr./ sr. high school studenl~, meets Wednesday nlght at 6: 30 In room if 19 of Ge.drge Seltz School. ThlS cholr IS practlclng modern, interestlng muslc, so come out Wednesday night.

PROTESTANT CHAPEL ADULT CHOIR wl1l meet at 7:30 Wednesday night at'the Chapel. If you like to sing, you are cordially invited to attend.

ALL PERSONS GOING ON pes BEFORE NOV~ER: If you are Interested In purchaslng the KwaJalein Cook Book annually sold at the Holiday Falr, call Alma Gelzinis at 82641 and plaee your order. The bOOK will be $4 and an addltional 50C must be charged for packing and shipping.

KWAJALEIN HIGH SCHOOL will be open for the reglstratl0n of new students (those not in the Kwajalein School system last year) the week of August 19-23 between 8:00-11:30 and 1:00-3:00pm. For addltlonal Information, call 82011.

Wednesday, August 21, 1974 ..

~--------------------------------------~--

~ f F J C I A L 0 -U i Y R 0 S T E R

Date Duty Offlcer tiome Phone

21 Aug LTC SULLIVAN 83565 22 Aug LTC GILBRETH 81531 23 Aug LTC OBERG 82867 24 Aug CPT CAPE 84432 25 Aug CW4 WHEATLEY 84261 26 Aug MAJ SHORT 82496

Medlcal/Dental Duty Doctors 82224

The KMR duty offlcer serves as the Commander's ~epresentatlve durlng the other-than-normal duty hours. Durlng the hours 1130 to 1230 Mondays tnrough Frldays, the Commander's representdtlve may be contacted at the telephone number 81419.

If tne duty offIcer C<lnnot be reacned at the number 11sted above call Securlty, 84445, to obtaln the Juty ufflcer's temporary nun.ber.

&M~ HAJ. AGe ADJUTA1,<T

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

'1HourGlass The HOurG.l<1-:;S -LS t'U'.' Isrted OJ Global

Assoclates aunaay lnrJugtl Saturday at the directl0n of the Commander, KwaJa­lein MIssile Range, Marshall Islands under Contract DAHC60-70-C-000l. The Vlews and opln~ons expressed In the newspaper are not necessarlly tnose of the Department of the Army. ThIS news­paper, an unofflclal publlcatlon authorlzed under the prOVISlons of AR 260-81, IS reproduced by offset prlntlng. Communicatlons should be addressed to the HourGlass, Box 1733, APO San FranCISCO, 96555, or by telephonlng 82114. rldterlaJs dPpearing in the hourGlass may not be reprinted without approval of the Commander, I\.WaJaleln MISSIle Range.

EDITOR: Larry F1ntonj OFFICE STAFF: Pat TiRP~t, Lisa Buck and Bonnle Wendt.

World Records LARGEST AND HEAVIE~ ANIMAL

The largest ana heavlest anImal In tne world, and probably the blggest creature WhlCh has ever existed, IS the blue or sulphur-bottom whale, also called Slbbald's rorqual. The largest accurately measured speclmen on record was a female taken near the South Shetland Islands, off Scotland, in March, 1926, whlch measured 109 feet 4 1/4 Inches In length. Another female measurlng 96 3/4 feet brought Into the shore station at Prlnce Olaf, South GeorgIa, Falkland Islands, off Argentlna, In c. 1931 was calculated to have welghed 183.34 tons, Inclusive of blood, Judglng by the number of cookers that were filled by the an~mal's blubber, meat and boneso The total welght of the whale was belleved to have been 195 tonS. On the prlnciple that the weight should vary as the cube of the lInear dlmenslons, a lOO-foot blue whale In good condltl0n should welgh about 179 tons, but in the case of pregnant females the weight could be as much as 200 or more tons.

LONGEST ANIMAL The longest animal ever recorded IS the

giant Jellyfish, which is round In the northwest Atlantic Ocean. One speclmen washed up on the coast of Massachusetts, c. 1865, had a bell 7 1/2 feet in dlameter and tentacles measuring 120 feet, thus givlng a theoretical tentacular span of some 245 fee t.

TALLEST .AJ.~IMAL

The tallest 11vlng animal is the glraffe, which IS now found only In the dry savannah and semi-desert areas of Afrlca south of the Sahara. The tallest ever recorded was a Masal bull shot in Kenya before 1930 which measured 19 feet 3 inches between pegs (tip of forehoof to tip of "false" horn with neck erect) and must have stood about 19 feet when allve.


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