t-P SH T' I)~ LOW TIDE ~ . I') .' 3- 15-66 2 ;) A, 1-:",) 2.1 AT 2048 3 J 1 i, -' 2 9 AT 0548

VOl 7 No 29')2 KWAJAlEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1960

MIAMI (UPI)--PREMIER FIDEL CASTRO bE~! I ~J I - 8 POSTPO;·JED 24 HOURS BITTERLY DENOUNCED RED CHINA'S LEAD­ ERS TODAY FOR USING RICE TO "BLACK­ em THE U. MAIL" CUBA AND WARNED THE UNITED Kl'''EO~~upR~PoUBR~Eg~} t~H ~!f?~nR lO~~~~~~BOO OF STATES HE HAS "MAGNIFICIENT WEAPONS S SPACE ~ROGRAM POSTPONED FOR AT LEAST 24 HOURS THE SCHEDULED BLASTOFF TOMORRO OF GE~IN,-8 ASTRONAUTS DAVID SCOTT AND NEIL ARMSTRONu ON A RENDEZVOUS AND SPACE­ TO FIGHT ANY KIND OF WAR, CONVEN­ TIONAL OR NON-CONVENTIONAL" WALK MI:;,~i

1\ -- [ry::RESPONDENT SEES CHANGE H~IP~~NG SEAL A~KED MANSFlllD SEES S~LVER LINING I I N ~ T111UIJ~ TJ~ARD PEK I NG WAL1ERBORO j s. C(UPi)-~REPo MENDEL !N DE GAULLE'S NATO ~TANCE BOSTON (UPI)--STEWART HENSLEY, CHIEF RiVERS~ (D~Mo-S.C.), SAID TODAv A WASHINGTON (UP;)~-SENATE DEMOCRATIC DIPLOMATIC CORRESPONDENT FOR UNITED SOVIET FREiGHTER IS EN ROUTE TO THE lEADER MiKE ~ANSF iELD SA~D TODAY FRENCH PRESS INTERNATIONAL, SAID TODAY U.S. NORTH VIET NAM PORT o~ HAIPHONG CARRY- PRESilDENT CHARLES DE GAULLE MAY HAVE LEADERS IN WASHINGTON HAVE BEGUN SE­ ING ~ LOAD Of HELiCOPTERS FOR USE iN DO~E NATO A FAVOR BY FORCiNG MEMBER RIOUSLY TO TALK OF CHANGING AMERICAN THE V,~T NA~ W ~. ~~~iONS iN'O AN EARLY REAPPRAiSAL OF THE POLICY TOWARD COMMuNIST CHINA. "T HiS ! S A. FA CT ," SAW R i V E R S, CH A I R- ALL! A til CE 's S T Rue T u R E ADDRESSING THE FOUNDERS DAY CONVOCA­ MAN OF THE HOUSE AR~ED SER~iCES COMMiT- HE TOLD 1~l SENA1E T~AT SuCH A REVIE~, TION AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY, HENSLEY TEE. "i THiNI<' THE AMERICAN PEOPLE WrHC!-- SHOulD COI\1E SOOi\J, i'JiiGHT PERMIT U.S ALSO DISCUSSED THE MASSIVE CHANGES IN SHOULD KNOW IT " R[5PONS1B~L~TY A~D BURDENS iN WESTERN COMMUNICATIONS NOW APPARENT IN THE HAiPHONG 1'3 THE CH1Ef PORT O~ NOR1H EUROPE fO BE ilREDuC,ED CONSiDERABLY ••• WORLD. VIET NAM. ESPECi~llY ilN VIEw o~ OUR COMMiTMENTS iN HENSLEY SUBSTITUTED AS CONVOCATION "I HAVE URGED THE PRES I DEN"" TO ~AVE VIEr !\JAM. SPEAKER FOR FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW, THE PORT RENDERED INOPERABLE~II RiVERS rlE URGE.D AN E.ARkY MEETuNG OF NATO NA- CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF UPi, WHO WAS SAiD. "THERE. ARE A tvlJlUON WA,YS THiS liONS TO SEE.K: SPE.cnF'iC~LlkY INi-iAT PiE UNABLE TO ATTEND CAN BE DONE WITHOUl KjLllNG A PERSON FRENCH PRESIDENT ~~S iN MiND. IN MANY INSTANCES WASHINGTON HAS "THE M1LqARY IVWWS HOW TO DO iT," MANSFiELD Et.APHA.SijZED THAT DE GAULLE, COME TO SERIOUSLY DISCUSS RED CHINAiS RIVERS SA~D. "ALL iT NEEDS IS THE ~N ASSERTiNG liE WAN"FS WiTHDRAWAL Of All ROLE IN VIET NAM AND OUR ATTITUDE TO­ AUTHORITY, AND I SUSPECT iT Will GET FRENCH FORCE5 FRO~ NATO AND REMOVAL FROM WARD RED CHINA, HE SAID IT BEFORE LONG." FRANCE OF HEADQUARTERS AND BASES NOT UN­ "THERE IS MORE REALIZATION THAN YOU R~VERS, !N WALTERBORO FOR A SPEA.K~NG DER FRENCH CONTROL~ WftS NOT UP5ETTiNG MIGHT THINK ~N WASHiNGTON Of THE POS­ ENGAGE~ENT~ ~4"D ~[ COubD G~vt FEW DE­ THE NoqT~ AtLA~T~C TREb- Y , ~M ~~ REMAiNS SIBLE VALIDITY IN TESTING CERTAiN NEW TA!lS OF T~E t.AOVEMENT OF THE HEl~COP­ ~ NUl-- £: t r Ul'i~ l ! 9700 ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT RED CHINA, HE SAID TERS. "T'1~ [)I! GA'W'lbl:' J>~N00"lCE.ivjtNr 5HOULD BE HENSLEY SAID SUCH IDEAS AS ADMITTING "~ ill SAY THIS -- THEY ARE NOT OVER TAKEN i~ STRiDE,!! lVi,'i5FiElD s~mo "WHAT RED CHINA TO THE UNITED NATIONS, ESTAE~ THERE FOR Ii PLEASURE RAID," 7HE CO~­ !S DoREtTlY iNVOLVED iN lHE STATEMENT OF LISHING DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS AND EVEN GRESSMAN SAiD. PRESIDENT DE GAJLlE IS l~E NATO MiLiTARY TRADING WITH PEKING HAVE COME TO THE ORGANiZATiONAL STRUCTURE WHiCH HAS GROWN ~ooAND THEY CANRT BE WRONGl FOREFRONT IN RECENT WEEKS. UP UNDER fl-'t NORTH A'LA.NTit TREATY" HENSLEY TOLD OF COMMUNICATIONS ROAD­ PARiS (UPl)--A RiDDLE. FOR MEN ONLY MANSF !llD ~0INTED OUT TH_T THE UNiTED BLOCKS HE EXPERiENCED DURING 32 YEARS WHO is is i~AT liES TRANQU!lLV ABED STAlES ASS~MED T~E ~AiN B~RDEN OF NATO OF COVERING THE DIPLOMATIC NE~S FOR UNTIL BREAKfAST is MADE AND WOULD i5 YE.ARS AGO BECAUSE EUROPE WAS "FAR UPI IN 50 NATIONS. HE SAID IT ONCE RATHER TAKE PiANO lESSONS THAN WASH FqOM rUi..lY RECOVERED FROM WORLD WAR i I" TOOK TWO WEEKS FOR ONE OF HIS CABLED A 0 iSH? AND STAl~~~RUlED RUSSIA HELD EASTERN STORIES TO REACH PARIS FROM KABUL, FRENCHMEN. EUROPE !N A RjG~D GR~p. AFGHAN I STAN. RiGHT~ FRE~CHMEN RED-BlOODED~ ~E- lIir MAY BE, THEREFORE) TrlAT REGARDLESS Now, HE SAID, EVEN SATELLITES ARE MEN, WiNE-DR~NK!NG FR[NC~MEN WHO HAvt OF PRE~IDENr DE GA~lllSiS STATEMENT, THE

BEING CONSiDERED fOR POSSIBLE NEWS RiSEN TO NEW HE!GHTS TO AFFiRM T~AT A llllljE I1A~ [3~~O~t. .-(~c.: J I Rl-EVAlUATE, !N TRANSMISSiON. MANiS HOME IS HiS CASTLE AND T~AT THE a r~NDAME~TA.L SENSE, T~E ~RUCrURE OF

"' HOPE OUR ADVANCES IN COMMUNICA- CASTLE KiTCHEN is TO BE E~TERfD ONLY NATO. 0 'ME NE.fD F OR DE H RRENtE. OR DEFENSE TIONS WON'T MERELY BE QuiCKER WAYS FOR WHEN THERE is fOOD TO BE E~rEN. OBV~OuSlY REMAiNS TODAY ~N WESTERN EUROPE, " NATIONS TO DiSAGREE," HE SAiD. A FRENCi-i GOVERNMENT RE.SEARCi1 iNSTU- HE SA W. HENSLEY, DiSCUSSING THE CHANGING TUTE DID A SURVEY OF THE bivl~G H~B~T~ M~~~~IELD 5_ 10 PRlS!DENT JO~NSONIS ATTITUDES TOWARD THE VIET NAM DEBATE, OF l74 COuPLfS P~C~ED AT R4~DOM FRO~ RE.SPOI\!SE TO DE GA.J:LlE WAS "pER~ECTl.Y SA I D "TWO YEARS AGO, I F you OPPOSED THE PA R i S ARE ~ PROP[\:l' AND CORRECT" A"lD '"'AS 'iiS rUll AMERICAN POLICY IN VIET NAM, YOU HAD A THE SURVEY SHOWED rO~C~uSiVElY THAT :SUPPORT. BEARD AND NO BATHTUB. DISHE'3 ARE FOR WOMEN. PROFESSIONAL "NATO is NOT GOING TO FAll APART," "Now WE ARE ACTUALLY COMMUNICATING MEN CONSiDERED i1 ENTIRH.Y BENEATH MANSFiELD SAiD,9 "AND 10 PtA.l END •• oIT WITH EACH OTHER IN THIS DEBATE." THEiR DiGNITY TO APPROACH THE SiNK. WOULD APPEAR MOST DES~RABLE THAT THE ONLY BLUE COllAR WORKERS ADMijT7ED TO S[ MEMBE R,) o~ NATO ME ET PROMPTLY. 11 MaR[ U.S. AID TO VIET NAM OCCASiONAL, REPEAT, OCCASIONAL, DISH- NEEDED TO CURB INFLATION WASHERS. EARLY &ETTLEMENT SOUGHT WASHINGTON (UPI)--FOREIGN AID CHIEF FURTHER, THREE-QUARTERS OF ALL TI1E TO BOSTON PAPER STRIKE DAVID E BELL SAID TODAY ADDITIONAL FRENCHMEN POLLED -- THINK. OF iT, 75 6'::STON (lP~)~-MASS.AChJSE.TrS Gov. JOHN U.S. ASSISTANCE WOULD HELP COUNTER A PERCENT, THREE OUT OF fOuR -- SAiD THfY A. VOLPE CONfERRED FOR Nf4Rl~ AN HOUR "THREAT OF RUNAWAY INFLATION" IN SOUTH NEVER "!NTERFERED IN THE K.iTCHEN !N THE. rODA'" Wi'l"ri FEOERAL ~ND SlATE. i'JiEDiAToq<; V lET NAM. MORN I NG. TRY i NG TO SETTU: THE E! GHT-DAY BOSTON

BELL, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE AGENCY MOREOVER j FRENCH HUSBANDS TEND TO NEWSPAPER STRiKE VOLPE EXPRESSED HOPE FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, TESTI- SPEND WHAT THEY CONSIDER A WEll-E.ARNED THE. CONTRACT DiSPuTE WOULD BE RESOLVED FlED BEFORE THE SENATE ApPROPRIATIONS 10 TO !8 MINUTES IN BED EACH MORNING !liN THE NOT TOO DiSTANT FlJTURE. 1t COMMITTEE IN SUPPORT OF A $415 MILLION WHILE THE WOtvlAN GETS UP TO MAKE BREAK- VOLPE MET WiTH MEDiATORS IN HIS STATE- SUPPLEMENTAL AiD APPROPRIATION. PART FAST. ~00SE O~FiCE 24 HOURS AFTER ONE OF THEM OF HIS TESTIMONY AT THE CLOSED MEETING EVEN WHEN BOTH HUSBAND AND WiFE ARE HAD PRED!CTED THE STR~KE BY PRiNTERS AND WAS MADE PUBLIC WORKING, THE MAN SELDOM TAKES A SHARE MAiLERS COULD lAST LONGER THAN THE 114- BELL SAID THAT OF THE $275 MILLION IN RUNNING THE HOME. DAY NE\.o-'"'APER STRIKE ~N r--.~j" YORK CiTY EARMARKED FOR SOUTH VIET NAM, $175 ONE IN FOUR MEN iNTERViEWED SAID TH~ IN 1962-63. MILLION ~OULD FINANCE AN EXPANDED NEVER, REPEAT, NEVER, HAD ANYTHING TO WRLLiAM R ROSE, A FEDERAL MEDiATOR, COMMERCIAL IMPORT PROGRAM. DO WITH HOUSEWORK. SAiD HE AND HiS PANEL WOULD MEET DAilY BELL TESTIFIED THAT 75 PERCENT MORE A WEAKER 25 PE.RCENT CONFESSED TO WITH BOTH SiDES, JOINTLY OR SEPARATELY, MONEY WAS PUT IN CIRCULATION IN SOUTH DOING AN AVERAGE OF 50 MINUTES WORK iN AN EFFORT TO END THE WALKOUT THAT HAS VIET NAM DURING 1965 ON TOP OF LARGE AROUND THE HOUSE A DAY -- BUT NEVER STOPPED T~E PRESSES AT T~E MORNING AND BUDGET DEFICITS IN THE PREVIOUS YEAR. DISHES. EVENING GLOVE. THE MORNING HERALD, THE LOCAL BUSINESSMEN NOW EXPECT A "LONG THE WOMEN INTERVIEWED ALL :;o'\ID THAT EVENiNG TRAVELER AND THE BOSTO~ RECORD- WAR AND INFLATION" RATHER THAN AN PREPARING DiNNER FOR THEIR HUSBAND WAS AMERiCAN. THE wAL-

____I·

BROWNIE TROOP #7 ...• MEETS EVERY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON AT JUNIOR GIRL SCOUT TROOP 18.o •• ARE GIVEN A DEMONSTRATION BY THE COUNTDOWN CLUB UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF PAT MITCHELL TROOP LEADERS DELORES REHDER (LEfT) AND DONNA FRIESZ ON (LEFT) AND JUDY ANDERSON. THE TROOP IS CURRENTLY WORKING THE CORRECT WAY TO WRAP COOKIES fOR MAILING. THIS IS A ON A SEWING PROJECT IN WHICH THEY ARE LEARNING HOW TO PART OF THEIR SERVICE IN WHICH THEY WILL BAKE APPL I UE." COOKIES AND SEND IT'S NOT THE RAINY SEASON THE HEMLINE AT MID-CAP TWO BABIES ARRIVE ON wEEK-END THE PERSISTENT RAINS FALLING ON KWAJ ~AY TEXAS DESIGNERS Two BABY GIRLS ARRIVED AT THE KWAJA­ ALEIN SUNDAY AND TODAY HAS GIVEN RISE DALLAS (UPi}--SOUTHERWESTERN FASHiON LEIN HOSPITAL THIS WEEK-END BRINGING TO SUPPOSITIONS THAT THE RAINY SEASON DESIGNERS BOLD~Y SUGGESTED TODAY KHAT THE NUMBER OF BABIES BORN AT THE HOS­ HAS ARRIVED SOMEWHAT EARLY THIS YEAR. 30 SHOULD BE THE AGE OF THE ItGREAT PITAL SINCE JULY l, 1959 UP TO 198 A SPOKESMAN fOR THE WEATHER STATION DiViDE" BETWEEN THE YOUNG AND MORE MA­ SATURDAY, MARCH 12, AT 4:28 PM A STATES, HOWEVER, THAT THiS IS ONLY A TURE STYLiNGS. BABY GIRL WAS BORN TO ALTHEA AND LEN SHORT PERIOD OF UNUSUAL WEATHER, AND THE TEXAS FASHION CREATORS ASSOCIA­ JOHNSON tHE BABY WEIGHED 7 POUNDS IN ALL PROBABILITY WEill BE BACK IN TION, OPENING A THREE-DAY SUMMER SHOW­ 2 1/2 OUNCES. THIS IS THE FOURTH THE DRY SEASON NO LATER THAN NEXT iNG iN DALLAS FOR FASHION WRITERS, CHILD FOR THE JOHNSONS ANO THEIR SE­ WEDNESDAY. As A MATTER Of RECORD, STRESSED THAT YOUNG iN AGE AND BODY COND GIRl. LEN IS A CIVIL SERVICE, THOUGH, THE TOTAL RAINFALL FOR THE SHOULD THROW OUT OLD TABOOS BUT THAT CORPS OF ENGINEERS EMPLOYEE, AND THE MONTH OF MARCH, 1965 WAS .18 INCHES THE MORE MATURE FijGURES SHOULD DRESS fAMILY L~VES AT QTRS. 493-A. WHILE THE RAINfALL FOR MARCH AS Of THEiR AGE. THE SECOND WEEK-END BABY WAS BORN THIS MORNING AT 6 AM HAS BEEN 1.91 IN TRYiNG TO ANSWER THE DilEMMA BE­ SUNDAY, MARCH 13, AT 5:18 AM TO CATHY INCHES TWEEN THE DARING AND YOUNG OR THE AND ABE SANCHEZ. THE BABY GIRL WEIGH­ "WE ARE NEARLY UP TO THE 10 MILLION CLASS I C AND It SAfE", TH E DES i GNERS EN DE ED IN AT 4 POUNDS 3 1/4 OUNCES. ABE MARK,t' REPORTED F .A. BALDWI N, GLOBAL THE BATTLE OF THE HEMLINE ijN A DRAW -­ IS EMPLOYED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES. OMC MANAGER WHEN QUESTiONED ABOUT SETTiNG fOR THE MID-KNEE CAP. THE WATER STORAGE FIGURES AS A RESULT OF KNEE-TOPPijNG SKiRT WAS SHOWN ONLY FOR A YEAR'S SUPPLY Of TARPAULINS WAS THE HEAVY DOWNPOUR. THE LIVELY UNDER-TWENTY SET. MADE FROM A SURPLUS NAVY BLIMP ENVEL­ THE RAINY SEASON GENERALLY STARTS OFfERED FOR THIS SET ALSO WAS THE OPE FOR THE LONG BEACH NAVAL SUPPLY IN MAY AND CONTINUES THROUGH DECEMBER. BARE MijDRiFF, THE' CUT OUTS, CRAZY CENTER, ELIMINATING THE PURCHASE OF PRiNTS, CULOTTES AND BELL BOTTOMS. CANVAS TARPS. THE NEW COVERS, FOR ORIENTAL CORN ADDED TO THBS GROUP WAS THE COMPLETE OUTDOOR-STORED ITEMS, ARE WATERPROOF, "KNOW WHY THEY DON'T HAVE TELEPHONES JUMP SUIT WiTH BRASS BUTTONS, AND THE WHILE CANVAS SEEPS SOME MOiSTURE. IN CHINA? " i ANKLE PANTS, KNEE SKIMMERS, JAMAICAS SAVINGS EXCEEDED $6,000 fROM AN IDEA BY HAROLD M. LIEDAHL, ASSISTANT NSC "No , WHY , K AND SHORT SHORTS. "BECAUSE lHLI~h.. SO MANY 'HONGS THE WESTERN lOOK IS STilL AROUND. STORAGE DIVISION DIRECTOR. AND WINGS THERE, THEy'RE AfRAID THEY A "DOWN ON THE RANCH" FLAVOR IS STRON MIGHT WING THE WONG NUMBER. 1t ER THAN EVER, WITH PANTS AND SHIRTS LACED UP WITH "RAWHIDE", TOP STITCHING A WifE, COMPLAINING TO HER RETIRED iN DUDE COLORS OF RED AND BROWN, AND HUSBAND TOLD HIM THAT SHE HAD MARRIED SKIRTS AND PANTS SLUNG FROM HIP BELTS. HIM "fOR BETTER OR fOR WORSE, BUT NOT MATERIALS RUN fROM DENiM AND CANVAS fOR LUNCH .If TO BANDANA PRINTS AND COUNTRY PATTERNS ------" 1,300 POUNDS Of MAIL -- MOST AIRMAIL AS WELL AS RAILROAD TICKING. ARRIVED YESTERDAY. SOME DESIGNERS HAVE GONE SOUTH-OF­ THE BORDER WITH A FLAiR FO~ PONCHOS, BALL fRINGE, SERAPES, SPANISH LACE AND THE HAND-LOOMED LOOK IN FABRICS. OTHER INFLUENCES INCLUDE PAISLEY AND ORIENTAL RUG ?RINTS AND THE HAWAI IAN PRINTS, GRANNY JAMS AND FISHNETS. THE CITY COUSINS WILL STILL fiND THEIR SPORTY LOOK IN THE "DO-IT-YOUR­ SELF-SUIT-WARDROBE," THERE IS A REVIVAL OF THE MIX AND MATCH STORY. WIN A BET •••• GEORGE GUNTHER, HIGH THIS GIVES THE FASHION INDIVIDUALIST CHOOL STUDENT, SWAM TEN MILES NON-STOP THE OPPORTUNITY TO COORDINATE HER OWN ECENTLY IN ORDER TO WIN A STEAK DINNER JACKET, PANlS AND SE VERAL SK I RT SHAPES EN MILES IS l,320 LAPS OF THE WIDTH OF FOR A UNIQUE LOOK ALL HER OWN. THIS HE POOL, AND GEORGE SWAM FROM II AM TREND MAY BE fOUND NOW IN THE PRESTIGE NTIL 6 PM IN ORDER TO COVER THE RE­ COUTURE LINES AS WELL AS THE TRADITION UIRED DISTANCE. IT IS UNDERSTOOD SPORTSWEAR HOUSES. HAT GEORGE ATE THE STEAK IN MUCH LESS tME. MOOSE by Bob W bar

40-POUND WAHoo •••• PULLED IN SUNDAY BY DORIS WALLIN. THE PHOTO ABOVE SPITES THE NASTY RUMORS BEING CIRCULAT ED BY CERTAIN ENVIOUS INDIVIDUALS TO THE EFFECT THAT THE FISH WAS SEV~RAl POUNDS LIGHTER THAN REPORTED j\N~ WAS CAUGHT BY SOMEONE ELSE. PAGE 4 HOURGLASS MONDAY, MARCH 14,1966 GRlAT DECISIONS OF 1966: PART THREE OF A SERIES ONLY SECONDARY BY GOOD WORKS. IF JAPAN IS EMBARKING, THE~ ON A POL. ICY Of PEACEFUL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT JAPAN RESURGENT WHAT KIND OF ALLY? iN THE FAR EAST, AND If IT IS~GOING TO By KIM WlllENSON WORK OUTSIDE THE FRA~EWORK OF THE U.S. TOKYO (UPI)--NoT MANY MONTHS AGO THe UNiTED STATES WAS ON ITS UPPERS IN POliCY OF MiliTARY CONTAINMENT OF ~OM- JAPAN OVER THE WAR IN VIET NAM. MUNiSM~ SOONER OR LATER IT IS GOING TO THE FO~EIGN EDITORS OF ONE OF THE NI'TIONIS~ MAJOR DAiliES WENT TO HANOi AND COME iNTO DIRECT CONFLICT WITH THE REPORTED THAT THE UNITED STATES WAS ENGAGED IN BOMBING HOSPITALS AND LEPER AMERICANS ON QUESTIONS OF PRACTICAL COLONIES. POLICY. ANOTHER BIG DAILY SURVEYED THE JAPANESE PUBliC AND SAID 75 PERCENT Or THOSE BASiCAllY, THERE ARE THREE AREAS IN IT ASKED WAS AGAINST THE AMERICAN BOMBING OF NORTH V~ET NAM. It W~iC~ TH~S is LiKELY TO HAPPEN, AND DEMONSTRATORS SNAKED THROUGH THE STREETS CHANTING YANKEE GO HOME AND i'GET BOT~ JAPANESE AND AMERICAN SOURCES HERE OUT OF VIET NAM." ~ECOGNiZE AND IDENTIFY THEM EASilY. A HIGH-RANKING U.S. OFFICIAL, WALT 'N. ROSTOW, CAME HERE TO TRY TO GET AN IN~ THESE ARE THE TYPHOON DANGER AREAS. SIGHT INTO POST-WAR JAPAN AND WOUND UP SPENDING THREE WEEKS DE~ENDING U S. THE iSSUES ARE VIET NAM POLICY VIRTUALLY MI~TE-BY-MINUTE. -~ THE STATUS OF O~iNAWA, EVEN THE GOVERNMENT WAS PUBLICLY EXPRESSING ITS IRRiTATION WiTH YANKEE -- POLITICAL RECOGNITION OF AND EX- STUBBORNESS OVER THE VIET NAM SITUATION, PARTiCULARLY THE BOMBINGS AND U.S. PANSiON OF TRADE WITH COMMUNIST CHINA, MILITARY CARELESSNESS ABOUT INVOLVING JAPAN IN THE WAR EFFORT wHEN IT DOES AND NOT WANT TO BE. -~ U.So~JAPAN MUTUAL SECURITY ARRANGE- AFTER THE U.S. AIR FORCE FLEW B52s FROM OKINAW~ TO SOUT~ VIET NAM FOR A MENTS. BOMB RUN AGAINST THE VIET CONG, FOREIGN MINiSTER ETSUSABURO SH! INA TOOK TH[ OBVIOUSLY THE THREE ISSUES ARE TWINED FLOOR OF THE DIET TO DECLARE HIS GOVERNMENT WAS E~BA~ASSED BY THE AMERICAN TOGETHER,ll OF T~EM, THE fiRST IS THE ACTION. MOST D~NGEROUS. THE SITUATION IS NOW MUCH DIFFERENT. By 1955~ JAPAN HAD REACHED 10 YEARS THE STATES, WHiCH TOOK OKINA­ JAPAN AND THE UNITED STATES SEEM TO OF AGE AND THE U.S., AT 15, WAS NC U~ITED HAVE FINISHED SAILING THROUGH THt LONGER TOfpl BOSS. WA FROM JAPAN BY fORCE DURING THE SE­ COND WORLD WAR AND EXERCISES FULL YEAR-LONG SQUALL CAUSED BY THE AMERI- IN 1960, 15 YEARS AFTER THE WAR, JA~ RijGHTS iN T~E ONETIME JAPANESE PREFECT- CAN BOMBINGS OF NORTH V,ET NAM. PAN WAS ABLf TO FORCE A GOOD MANY CON- URE~ SHOWS ABSOLUTELY NO SiGN OF GIVING THAT SQUALL WAS SO SERIOUS AT TIMES CESSiONS OuT OF ITS OLDER BROTHER, T~IS COU~TRY T~f ACCOMMODATION, C IS THAT A NUMBER OF FOREGIN POLiCY ANA- THEN 20, iN RETURN FOR PERMITTiNG THE GOiNG TO REQUiRE fHlRE WilHit THE NEXT LYSTS IN THE UNITED STATES APPARENT- U.S TO RETAIN BASES HERE. THREE TO FiVE YE~RS. LY TOOK IT FOR A TYPHOON THAT HAD SET ~OW JAPAN HAS REAC~ED 21, THE AGE Of "SOONER OR LATER," SAYS ONE HIGH­ THE TWO NATIONS DRifT INC APART. !NDEPENDE~C£, AND IT IS REASSERTING LEVEL JAPANESE OffiC~AL HERE, T I~ PEO­ THEY WERE WRONG. THE TYPHOON LIES iTS NAT i ON HOOD • ! T HAS COME TO THE PLE Of O~INAWA ARE GOiNG TO STAKT ASK- AHEAD, NO BEHIND. REALiZAT!ON THAT ~T NE~THER WANTS NOR iNG THEMSELVES -- AND US -- WHETHER LOOKED AT COLDLY, MOST OF THE ALLEG-NEEDS T~E TOTAL PROTECTiON Of T~E UN!T­ JAPAN i~TENDS TO OfFER UP THEiR ISLANDS ED "DRIFT" iN JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELA- ED STATES,ll THOUGH n is WilLING TO RE­ AS A PERMANENT SACRifiCE TO ITS OWN SE- TIONS OVER THE PAST YEAR STEMMED fROM MAiN ON fRiENDLY TERMS If THE TERMS CU!:"'TYo GENUINE FEARS IN TOKYO THAT THE UNIT- ARE ADVANTAGEOUS. IHEN THAT QUESTiON IS ASKED IT WILL ED STATES WAS EMBARKED ON AN AGGRESS- lHE JAPAN£SE SEE AS!A AS A VAST AND BE ONLY A MATTER Of TiME BEFORE WE IVE POLICY Of ESCALATION TO THE flN- PRESENTLY UNHAPPY POOL OF RESOURCES, HAVE TO GET OKINAWA BACK. EVEN iF WE ISH IN VIET NAM -~ A POLiCY THAT HUMAN AND MATERiAL. «ONSERVATiVES) DON'T WANT TO HAVE WOULD LEAD INEVITABLY TO ALL-OUT WAR HAV~NG THfMSELVES BEEN ABl£ TO DE- l~OuBlE WiTH THE UNiTED STATES, THE IN ASIA INVOLVING JA~AN. VElOP A HIGHLY INDuSTRiAlIZED,ll CON5UM- PRESSURE WilL BE TOO MUCH fOR US TO THE JAPANESE DO Nor WANT WAR FOR PROSPEROUS SOCiETY FROM ER-ORiENTED~ BEAR." MANY REASONS THEY TRIED IT ONCE lHE RU~NS Of THE LAST WAR iN 50~ETHING AND DIDN'T LIKE IT, AS THE SAYING UNDER 20 YEARS, AND HAVING EXPERIENCED INDIAN PRIME MINISTER GOES. THE JAPANESE PUBLIC HAS A THE RELATiVE PEACE AND STABILITY IT HAS WOULD TALK TO VIET CONG BETTER EXPERIENCE OF WAR'S FOLLY BROUG~T THEM~ THEY ARE ANXIOUS TO HELP NEW YORK (UPI)--INDiAN PRIME MINISTER AND HORROR THAN MOST. JAPAN HAS SPREAD A SORT Of 'PAX JAPONiCA' TO THE INDiRA GANDHI SAiD YESTERDAY SHE SAW SPENT THE PATIENT LABOR Of 20 YEARS REST OF ASIA. LITTLE HOPE FOR AMERiCAN EFFORTS TO BUILDING HERSELf INTO ONE OF THE IT is NOT HARD TO SEE WHY THE JAPAN- BRING NORTH ViET NAM TO THE CONFERENCE WORLD'S TOP INDUSTRIAL POWERS, BUT ESE ARE IN AN EASY AND PEACEFUL MOOD. TABLE, UNLESS THE INVITATiON ALSO IN­ THERE WAS MORE INVOLVED iN THE JAPAN- THIS IS WITHOUT DOUBT THE DAWN Of THEIR CLUDED THE VIET CONGo ESE IRRITATION WITH AMERICAN V,ET NAM GOLDEN AGE. THEIR ECONOMY HAS BEEN IN AN INTERViEW WiTH THE AMERICAN POLICY THAN MERE HATRED OF WAR. GROWING, GOOD YEARS AND BAD INCLUDED, BROADCASTING CO. PRiOR TO HER FORTH­ IT WAS NOT REALLY UNTIL PRESIDENT AT AN AVERAGE RATE OF AROUND 9 PERCENT COMING U.S. VISIT, MRS. GANDHI SAiD SHE JOHNSON STOPPED THE BOMBING FOR 37 FOR THE PAST DOZEN YEARS. HAD NO NEW SOLUTIONS TO OFFER FOR THE DAYS AND SENT NOT ONE BUT TWO HIGH- GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT AT $73 BILLION SOUTHEAST ASIA CONFLICT. LEVEL PEACE ENVOYS TO JAPAN, V,CE- AND NATiONAL INCOME AT $56 BILLION ARE WHEN ASKED I F SHE THOUGHT THE V I ET CG.Ic. PRESIDENT HUBERT HUMPHREY AND AMBAS- AT RECORD HIGHS. FOREIGN TRADE IS RUN- SHOULD BE REPRESENTED AT ANY NEGOTIA­ SADOR • AVERELL HARRIMAN, THAT THE NiNG AN ABSOLUTE SURPLUS FOR THE FIRST TIONS TO END THE WAR, MRS. GANDHi OPPO~ITiON TO AMERI~AN POLICY REALLY TIME IN YEARS, AND AT A RECORD LEVEL REPLIED BEGAN TO DIE OFF. Of OVER $16 BILLION BOTH WAYS. CONSUM- "WELL, i DON'T THINK YOu'LL GET HANOI ONE HIGHLY PLACED SOURCE HERE PUTS ER SPENDING IS ALSO SETTING RECORDS. TO THE TABLE WITHOUT GETTING THEM ALSO. IT QUITE NEATLY ~VERAGE FAMILY INCOME IS UP TO AROUND THE MAIN DiFFICULTY, I BELIEVE, IS THAT "WELL, HARRIMAN AND HUMPHREY COMING $2500 ANNUALLY. HANOI WiLL NOT ACCEPT THE SOUTH VIET­ HERE, THAT SATISFIED OUR 'AMOUR ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES ARE SO WIDELY NAMESE GOVERNMENT. Now THIS IS A MATTER PROPRE' IT IS IN FRENCH, I DON'T KNOW DISPERSED THAT THE HOME MARKET HAS OF SOMEHOW TO GET ACROSS TO THEM THAT WHAT IT WOULD BE IN ENGLISH. OUR REACHED THE SATURATION POINT. THERE IT IS BETTER IF EVERYBODY DISCUSSES IT PRIDE? \I[ FELT THE AMERICANS OUGHT ARE TELEViSION SETS, REFRIGERATORS, TOGETHER." TO CQtlS' L T liS Oi~ \oJHAT THE Y 0 10 I N WASH i NG MACH I NES, VACUUM CLEANERS AND THE DAUGHTER OF THE LATE PRIME MINIS­ THIS REGION, AFTER ALL, WE ARE ASIANS HOSTS OF OTHER HOUSEHOLD HARD GOODS IN TER JAWAHRLAL NEHRU ADMITTED SHE BEARS AND WE UNDERSTAND WHAT IS HAPPENING 80 TO PERCENT Of HOMES ACROSS THE 90 "CERTAiN RESPONSIBiliTIES" IN THE CON­ IN THIS PART OF THE WORLD, MAYBE BET- NATION. Now JAPANESE FAMILIES ARE BE­ FliCT IN HER CAPACITY AS CHAIRWOMAN OF TER THAN YOU DO. GINNiNG TO GET WITHIN REACH OF INDIVI- THE INTERNATIONAL CONTROL COMMISSION IN THERE IS, THEN, AN ELEMENT OF PRIDE DUAL AUTOMOBILES, ALBEIT SMALL ONES. VIET NAM, WHiCH WAS ESTABLISHED BY THE BEGINNING TO GROW UP IN JAPAN, AN THE JAPANESE BELIEVE THAT IF THEY 1954 GENEVA AGREEMENT J "BUT I DON'T ELEMENT THAT WAS LACKING FOR MANY OF THEMSELVES HAVE BEEN ABLE TO ACHIEVE SO THINK THAT JUST BEING THERE is REALLY THE 20 THAT HAVE PASSED SINCE MUCH IN SO SHORT A TIME WITH CONSiDER­ ~EARS HELPiNG US (THE COMMISSION) TO BRING JAPAN LAY PRONE AT THE END OF WORLD ABLE AMOUNTS Of TECHNICAL AND FINANCIAL THE PEOPLE TO THE CONFERENCE TABLE ON WAR ASS! STANCE FROM ABROAD THERE I S NO REA- II THE BASiS OF THE GENEVA AGREEMENT, BUT THERE ARE MANY ANALOGIES THAT HAVE SON THEY CANNOT HELP OTHER NATIONS IN WE SHOULD CERTAINLY KEEP TRING." BEEN APPLIED TO THIS. PERHAPS THE ~SIA TO DO THE SAME, WHETHER THE) ARE MRS. GANDHI SAID SHE SUSPECTS THE BEST IS THAT OF THE YOUNGER BROTHER. COMMUNIST OR CAPITALIST. UNITED STATES MADE A FALSE STEP IN IF THE UNITED STATES WAS FIVE YEARS SO FAR AS COMMUNISM IS CONCERNED, THE SOUTHEAST ASIA AT THE START BY NOT OLD AT THE END OF THE WAR, JAPAN WAS JAPANESE APPROACH IS MUCH CLOSER TO THE SHOWiNG NORTH VIET NAM "GREATER UNDER­ AN INFANT. THESIS PUT FORWARD BY FORMER BRiT!SH STANDiNG" AND BY NOT MAKING A GREATER WHEN THE KOREAN WAR BROKE OUT IN PRIME MINISTER HAROLD MACMiLLAN THAT EFFORT "TO ESTABLISH THEIR INDEPENDENCE. 1950, THE U.S. WAS 10 ON THAT SCALE, THE ONLY DANGEROUS COMMUNIST !S A HUN­ AND JAPAN STILL NO MORE THAN A FIVE- GRY ONE, THAN TO THE AMERiCAN APPROACH "n THiNK THAT WOULD HAVE BEEN A VERY YEAR-OLD OBEDIENT CHILD. OF CONTAINMENT PRIMARILY BY FORCE AND STRONG BULWARK AGA!NST CHINESE ENCROAC~ ME NT THERE," SHE SAiD. HOURGLASS MONDA'r MARCH 1966

Fltk~T TOP KAkTE~ AT THE LAST MEETING Of THE MID-PACI­ FIC KARTING ASSOCIATION, THE MEMBERS ELECTED THE FOLLOWING OFFICERS TO A 5 rts section SIX-MONTH TERM. JIM fiERST, PRESI- +-______~ DENT, NORM WILLIAMS, VICE PRESIDENT, JUDY GILLIS, SECRETARY AND ~IKE HASLER, TREASURER SALUK I S HIJMES AtJD rvtC~JE I L THE iMMEDIATE AREAS OF WORK FOR TOP ~MALL COLLEGE STA~~ THE NEW OFFICERS INCLUD RACE ORGANIZA­ " JOF G~~GEN TiON, POINT-SCORING SYSTEM, AND PRO­ r~fW Y0R'\ I·~..PJ)-~r~ GH-SCORijNG LARRY HUMES 01=" EVANSVul.-l.E AND STEADY GUARD POSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS, GEORGE MC~E J~ OF SOUTHERN ~lLijNOIS TOPPED THE SEkECTJONS fOR THE 1966 UPU SMAll (OlLEGE A,I -A~ERRCA BASKETBALL TEAM AI\!I\IOUNCED TODAv ATTENTION HANDBALL PLAYERS 11U~ES, THE ~N~'( REPEATER FROM LAST YEAR S SQUAD, AND ~CNEYk -- BOTH SENIORS THE DOUBLES HANDBALL TOURNEY SPONSOR- -- WERE JOINEC ON T~E F!RST TEAM BY SEN~OR FORWARD vOrlNNv CO~EAUX Of GRAMBliN ED BY SPECIAL SERVICES WILL GET UNDER- SO~~OMOR[ ( NTfR HA'~ BOO~ER OF' CHEYNEY STATE AND ~JNIOR FOR~ARD PH~L JACK- WAY THURS., MARCH 3!. FOR FURTHER SON Of N0(P'~ [ol>\()q INFORMATiON CALL JOE KAULUKUKUI AT 1HE TEAM ~~S C~OSEN BY THE 35-MAN UP~ BOARD OF COACHES, W~iCH RATE THE SMALL 420 COlkfGES ~~ROUGHOUT THE SEASON EACH o~ THE FIRST-TEAM SEkECT~ONS LED HIS '[A~ Nl0 POST-SEASON TOURNAMENTS JOMAKAJ MOUNTAINBALL PRACTlCE THE ~ECONC T[A~ WAS CO~POSED OF C~ P AND RANKED A~ONG THE TOP ~O THE JOMAKAJ MOUNTA~NBALL TEAM WILL ALB'E ~R~~' J lO~~ LAN: J , LONNIE RE60UNtERS II\! lH S COuNI~Y WUTH A HOLD PRACTICE WED, MARCH 16 AT 5 PM HUGHEv 0- rQE~NC SI4~(, T~r' JACKSON ~9-P~0S AVERAGE IN lEAD~NG CHE~NEY ON BRANDON FIELD OF CO~ ... EGF 0" ,I L.¢. ... C, ,,,,ERR" NEWSO,",E Of TO AN ~NBEA~EN REGUlAR SEASON AND THE INDIP~A S~ ~E ~~G ~(N W~LBuRN Of FONA~S Of THE NCAA EAS1E~N REGfONAL JUNIOR BASKETBALL PLAY-OFF CENTRAL !OMlol ~r~PE JAC~50N WAS PlA~O"'FS TODAY AT 4:45 PM THE FIRST GA~E IN A ~EM8[R OF THE ~£COND TEA~ A YEAR JAC~SON, A 6-~OOT-8 PRODUCT OF THE JUNiOR BASKETBALL PLAY-OFF BE- AGO W~lL STON, N De, lED THE NORTH CENTRAL TWEEN THE WARRtORS AND HAWKS WILL BE DON CAR_OS 0F OTT[RBE~N HEADED THE CON~ERENCE LN SCOR[NG, REBOUND~NG AT DALLY COURT. TH~S WilL BE A BEST T H H~ C, TEA IV y.f ~ ,,"'c A il ~ 0 r N C l U 0 E 0 GUY AND F~ELD GOAL PERCENTAGE HE AVER- TWO OUT OF THREE SERIES THE SECOND MANNHNG OF PR~ ~\E VIE~, CHARLES AGES 20 6 POLNTS, 12 ~E60~NDS AND GAME WILL BE PLAYED ON WEDNESDAY CLEE~ O~ AB kt~E ~nR ~TnAN, GENE SHOT .536 FROM TWE rlllD ~N lEAD~NG AND THE THIRD GAME Will BE PLAYED ON SUM~ERS or N~R'~ERN ~jCh ijGA~ AND THE SIOUX 10 A 2'-3 REGULAR SEASON FRIDAY EARL ~ONQOE o~ WLNSTON-SAlE~ RECORD AND THE RUNNERUP SPOT BEH~ND HuMES, w.... O<:)( ~Eftt-'l 'AII\.. ED ~N !"fS SOuTHERN ~ll~NOllS ~N ThE FiNAL NATiON­ BASKETBALL SCHEDULE B~D FOR A ~H~QD CONSECUTIVE NATijONAl A~ RAT~NGSo HE WAS PARTICUlARLY DE­ itA" DIVISiON TITLE, WAS THE TOO VOTE-GETTER BY A VAS1ATilNG ~N THE NCAA M~DWEST REG~ON­ TUESDAY, MARCH 15 WiDE MARG-N OVER RUNNERUP McNE~l AlS WuTH A 44- o 0fiNT EFFORT AGAijNST 7 PM P M.Z VS PROJECT PRESS (NORTON THE 6-r001~4 HJ~ES, A SLIM ~80~POUNDER VA'l.PARA1S0. & NESS) FRO~ MAC:50N, ~~C , RAtES AS ONE OF "B" DIViSiON THE F~~EST S~OOlERS nN THE COLLEGE 6 PM NA All I VS KENTRON (HORSTMAN & RANKS, SOURCES CLOSE TO THE ED~- NESS) HE AVERAGED 31 ~ POINTS PER GA~E rOR OF AN iMPORTANl LOCAL HI0 HONOk LL~00 0TAFF TI1 l S SO· SON, A St n ~I-t 1 DROP FROM LAS 1 PUBLijCA.TijON SA~D THERE WAS IN FOCT8ALL ulJ~lL, YEAR ~~t~ ~E TO~SED 32 5 PER GAME. NO TRUTH TO Ru~ORS CONCERN- HE hAS SCORED 2J2~1 ~or~TS IN HIS iNG 1hE ANT!CIPAlED DEPART­ NEW YORK (UPI)--THE CITY HAL~ dRESS CAREER FOR A SCHOOL RECORD AND HAS ~RE Of ITS ASSUSTANT EDiTOR CORPS GAVE MAYOR JOHN V LINDSAY IMPRESSED PRO SCOU~5 AS WELL AS FANS ~T HAS BEEN REPORTED -- ER­ AND MEMBERS OF HIS ADMINISTRATION VI\ T'1 r> " '" ~ .~ t r~ J ~} L'" AND lEA PIN GAB ~ - RONEOUSLY ACCORDijNG TO THESE THEiR LUMPS SUNDAY IN A TOUCH FOOTBALL

L I' '. USUALLY RELiABLE SOuRCES -- GAME THE NEWSMEN WON BY A SCORE OF i ~i\'LiI A~T~(.uG,", A.VERAGfNG ONLY 1~Ar HER DEPARTuRE HAS SOME 8-6 ~ j ""J N 1 S P l:. R GA tv1 E, ISO NE 0 f THE CO~NECT~ON WITH THE FACT THAT'S RIGHT, 8-6 fP"E.~~ TWO-~'A'( PkAYERS ~N THE NATION lHAT SHE CLAr~S TO HAVE LAND­ THERE WASN'T A REPORTER PRESENT WHO THE .85-POUNC ~CNE ~, A NATIVE Of ST ED A 40-POUND WAHOO ON SUN­ FAILED TO SEE THE TWO-POINT CONVER­ LouIs, QUARTERBACKED T~E SALUK~S TO DAY SION PLAY WHICH GAVE THE PRESS CORPS THE NO I RANKiNG ~N ThE LAND AND EX­ "~F SHE LEAVES, n WiLL BE THE VICTORY MARGIN. CELLED IN DEFENSE ENT"RElY HER OWN CHOiCE," FEW TOOK THE POLITICIANS -- WHO THE LANKY GU~RD ~S PERHAPS THE THE SOURCES SAID IiSHE CLAI~ THE GAME WAS A 6-6 TIE -- AT FiNEST SHOOTER IN SOuTHERN ILlINO!Si M~GHT CHOOSE 10 GO fUSH!NG " THEIR WORD HISTORY ~N !965 HE CONNECTED FOR LINDSAY, SPORTING CHINO TROUSERS, 50 PERCENT Os:" ti~S FIELD GOAL ATTEMPTS K~lILlI~l r-IJI l\OP~ HONOR WHITE SNEAKERS AND A RED SHIRT, PlAY- AND ~ISSE~ 0NlY 15 OF 130 FREE THROWS JOE KAULUKUKUI WON THE Low GROSS ED ONLY THE FIRST HAlP. HE WATCHED FOR AN bd5 FERCENTAGE "GREAT AT HONORS fiN THE 36 HOLES QUALIFYING THE REMAINDER, HIS FACE AND HIS CLOTHE BOTH ENDS OF THE COURT,n WAS THE ROUND fOR fLJ GHT PLACEMENT WITH A STREAKED WITH 0 I RT CAPSULE DESCRIPTION OF ONE COACH. 79-76 - 155 TOTAL TiED fOR SECOND IN HIS 24 MINUTES Of PLAY, THE 4 3- COMEAUX BECA~E ThE f~fTHI DIFFERENT PLACE W!TH 16, WERE JOHN JONES AND YEAR-OLD LINDSAY THREW ONE PASS THAT GRAMBL!NG PI A'£R TO ~AKE ALL-AMERICA MiKE DULL THE CUT-OFF SCORE FOR HIT THE INTENDED RECEIVER IN THE BACK IN THE L~~T ~ IVE YfARS WilBUR THE lOW !6 PLAYERS IN THE CHAMPION- AND WAS PENALIZED 15 YARDS FOR ROUGH- FRAZ~fR WA~ A • RST-TEAM SELECTION SHIP fLIGhT WERE ~73 WiTH FOUR PLAY- ING AN OPPOSING PASSER A YEAR AGO, W'lliS REED WAS CHOSEN ERS, GEORGE EpSOM, TOM HIRAMOTO,SONNY THE MAYOR ALSO WAS VICTIM OF A HARD

IN ~(m4, H~RS!-'!: !. WEST WAS A ~963 KOA AND DONN En,tAN T~ED fOR 16TH SPOTo TACKLE BY A NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE t-1l' f)1 I' :: ,,) (-1,1<. 'E HARDNETT WAS VOT- A PLAY-OFF WilL BE HELD TOMORROW AT i REPORTER. HIS HONOR LANDED fACE

lu 1(' • "l ~ '< r FA ..... I fIJ 1962 4 30 ?f'w1 TO DfT ERtvt, NE WHO ENTERS THE DOWN I N AN AREA WHERE SEVERAL HORSES • 10" f l ~~ ... '- '1 'I [ 0 F THE BE S T P lAY ER S CHAM P ! 0 N5 HiP F l i GH T WE RES TAN DIN G BE fOR E THE GA ME. ilVt lVe ,(~ ... H[D,II SAID fRED HODBY MATCHES ON FLIGHT PLACEMENT WILL BUD PALMER, FORMER PRO BASKETBALL OF ~ ~ J I J01-~ SEfIJ~OR "HE1S A GOOD APPEAR 1N THE HOURGLASS ON WED., MARCH PLAYER AND THE CITY'S OFFICIAL GREET- SHoon" AS H C; AVERAGE {3! 0) iNDI- 16 lHE FIRST MATCH PLAY GETS UNDER- ER, SCORED THE ADMINISTRATIONiS TOUCH- CATES, BUT ~O~E ~MPOPTANT TO US, HE1S WAY SUN, MARCH 20 DOWN ON A PASS FOR SID GARDNER, EXECU- A FINE ll:.AM lE~DfR, REBOUNOER, PASS- TIVE SECRETARY Of THE COUNCIL AGAINST ER AND 8E T 1ER THAN dVERAGE ON DE- WOMENS GOL~ POVERTY fENSE ~NOw HE ~~s THE MOVES TO DEADLINE fOR ENTER~NG THE WOMENuS THE NEWSMEN GOT THEIR TOUCHDOWN ON MAKf ,T ~kOFE5SI0~A(kY ~'M HONORED GOLF TOURNAMENT SPONSORED BY SPECIAL A 40-YARD PASS FROM JOHN REillY OF HE WILL 8[ AN AlL-AMERijCA IT S A SERVICES WILL BE THURS , MARCH 17 weBS-TV TO JOE BREU OF WABC-TV, MAYOR F~TTIN~ fH OuTE TO HIS AB!LITY I' Al PRESENT, 12 WOMEN GOLfERS HAVE AL ASSISTANT BARRY GOTTHERER TRIED TO At THOUCH ONLY A ~OPHOMORE, THE S!GMED-UP FOR THE TOURNAMENT, IF BLOCK IT, BUT BATTED THE BALL INTO O-f001-9 800"ER HA~ l ED T~E N_TIONiS YOU HAVlN 1 ENTERED AND WISH TO DO SO BREU'S HANDS ALTHOUGH THE CENTRAL SMALL (Ol~EGE P~~~E~S eN F~E~D GOAL (ILL JOE KAULUKUKUI Al SPECIAL SERVi~S PARK GAME WAS UNDER THE RULES OF Il TWO - PfRCf\jT4C,f I=OR TWO SUCCESSIVE YEARS PHONL 420 HAND TOU~H" ALMOST EVERYONE FROM EACH As A FRESHM~N LASl YEAR, Hl SET AN Of THE EIGHT-MAN SQUADS HAD A TURN IN NCAA RECOQD BY CONNECTu~G ON 72 7 D~lP~ ~CHAYfS, VETERAN ~[MBER Of THE THE DIRT.

PfkCENT O~ H~S ATTEMPTS FROM THE SYRACUSE ~AT IONALS, BRO!{E THE L !FET BME "THE PRESS PLAYED CLEAN F'OR A I FLOOR NATIONAL BASKElE3All ASSOCIATION REGU- CI1~GE,tt SAID LINDSAY AfTER THE GAME I 1 ~__:_-I-N-'~9~6-0--B-0-0-K-E-R--S-H-O-T--A-T--A--,7.:....0....:.5:..-.- ___----=----.;5~ALR..r.C'.A;..rx~LE~~;.J.?..c~i..bNLs_C_O_R_!_N_r;_R_E_C_0 __ R_D_I_N __ r_H_E_'..:.9~5~7~-~-_'_1 B_U_T_T_H_E_Y ___ W_E_R_E_R_O_U_G_H_o_ _'______fI PAr E 6 HOURGLASS MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1966

f I (CONT I NUED fROM (CONTINUED fROM .. (CONTINUED fROM f PAGE ONE) Gt- I ~~ VI ET NAM PAGE ONE) NATO PAGE ONE) " I T III Ll nE PuSH I NG, BUT WE TH INK THE TROOPS HAVE ENCOUNTERED ONLY LIGHT IN BONN, AN OFFICIAL WEST GERMAN TW C~,Ar.f CAN BE MADE IN T I ME fOR A CONTACT HE SAID. GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN SAID NATO IS 11 D. To DATE, THE SPOKESMAN REPORTED 15 \JEDHl:>r-A Y LAUNCH, ONE SOURCE SA I ABSOLUTELY NECESSARY TO WEST GER~AN THE LlAK IN THE ATLAS WAS CAUSED ~Y VIET CONG KILLED IN THE OPERATION, SECURITY. ~VE' -L\ W Of THE HIGH-GRADE KEROSENE WITH U S AND AUSTRALIAN CASUALTIES A NATO WITHOUT FRANCE IS BETTER THAN rU~L INTO A PRFSSURE LINE DRIPPINGS DESCRIBED AS LIGHT, BUT NEARLY 300 NO NATO AT ALL," STATE SE.CRETARY KARL­ WE~E ~I_COVERED AT THE BASE Of THE TONS OF VITAL RICE HAVE BEEN CAPTURED GUENTHER VON HASE TOLD A NEWS CONFER- HUGE 111 ')_ : I E BY GROUND CRn/ ' ~l LATE fROM VIET CONG STOREHOUSES AND TONS l \ 'J -;- i ,IT Of OTHER COMMUNIST SUPPLIES SEIZED. SIMILAR SUPPORT FOR NATO CAME FROM TI-'l ~ T',Ol;3LE WAS EXPECTED TO BE EL IM­ LATE TODAY, AN ELEMENT OF AMERICAN BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY MICHAEL INATlD I~ PLENTY OF TIME FOR A WEDNES­ PARATROOPERS MOVED IN ON TWO VIET Co~ STEWART, SPEAKING IN GLASGOW, SCOT­ DAY TAKlOFf BUNKER POSITIONS COMMUNIST SMALL lAND STEWART SAID DE GAULLE.'S DE­ ARMSTRONG AND SCOTT WAITED OUT THE ARMS FIRE SLOWED THEIR ADVANCE BRIEf­ CISION STRIKES AT THE WHOLE STRUCTURE TROU.'L.E-SHOOT I NG, THE FEDERAL SPACE lY, AND fOUR CLAYMORE MINES WITH THEIR OF WESTER~ DEfENSE. HE SAID, HOWEVER, AGENCY SAID, "PLAYING IT BY EAR UNTIL THOUSANDS OF NEEDLE-LIKE FRAGMENTS THE ALLIANCE WOULD SURVIVE EVEN WITH­ THl. SITUATION IS CLARIFIED WERE SET OFF AS THE PARATROOPERS MOVED OUT, PANCE THEY HOPED fO BE ABLE TO lEAP ALOfT CLOSE. "I TRUST THAT FRANCE WILL IN DUE AT I I 41 AM, ON WEDNESDAY, AN HOUR AND THE AIRBORNE UNIT CALLED IN ART,~­ COURSE COME TO REALIZE HOW MUCH IT IS 41 MINUTES AFTER THE ATLAS BLASTS OFF LERY AND EXPLOSIVE SHELLS SMASHED THE IN HER OWN INTERESTS TO REMAIN AN CARRYING THE AGENA INTO ORBIT AND 24 ENEMY BUNKERS THE PARATROOPERS RE- ACTIVE AND EFFECTIVE MEMBER OF THE HOURS AFrER THE ORIGINALLY SCHEDULED PORTED THE ARTILLERY SET OFF SEVEN ALLIANCE AND OF THE ORGANIZATION," TAKEOFF TiME THE WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR SECONDARY EXPLOSIONS STEWART SAID. WEDNESDAY WAS GOOD, BOTH AT THE lAUNCH WAR ZONE D IS AN AREA OF ABOUT 600 THE MONDAY MEETING OF I -iE 14" WAS SITE AND IN LANDING AND RECOVERY AREAS SQUARE MILES OF LOW TREES AND EXTREME­ "INFORMAL" AND DID NOT CQNSTITUTE AN AROUND THE WORLD lY THICK JUNGLE UNDERGROWTH. OFFICIAL COUNCIL SESSION BECAUSE BEFORE THE LEAKS DEVELOPED, PREPARA­ A SPOKESMAN SAID 1ST INFANTRY DIVI­ FRANCr '''AS NOT REPRESENTED OFF I C I ALS T IONS HAD GONE SMOOTHLY FOR TH! t'A­ SION TROOPS ALONE HAD DESTROYED 173 SAID "IHE 14" WOULD MEET REGULARLY TION'S SIXTH TWO-MAN MISSION SINCE TONS OF RICE, 800 GALLONS OF FUEL, A TO DISCUSS STRATEGY AS WELL AS TO THE GEMINI PROGRAM ENTERED ITS MANNED BUNKER COMPLEX, AN EMPTY HOSPITAL, OFFER A SOLID FRONT TO DE GAULLE. FLIGHT PHASE LAST MARCH 23 WITH THE AND SIX BASE CAMPS IN MEMORANDA TO ALL NATO MEMBER THREE-ORBIT F~IGHT OF ASTRONAUTS IN DA NANG, A U S. MILITARY COMMAND­ COUNTRIES MADE PUBLIC SATURDAY, DE VIRGIL I GRISSOM AND JOHN W. YOUNG lR :~In TCDAY TI E ~ORTH VIFTNAME5E GAULLE GAVE NO TIMETABLE FOR THE WITH­ IN GEMINI-3. FRANK BORMAN AND JAMES HL')sr ,HE BETTE.R PART OF A REGIMENT" DRAWAL OF FOREIGN TROOPS AND BASES LOVELL WERE ALOFT IN GEMINI-7 IN DURING THE BATTLE FOR THE A SHAU AND THE TRANSFER OF TWO-AND-A-HALF DECEMBER FOR ALMOST TWO WEEKS. SPECIAL FORCES CAMP FRENCH DIVISIONS AND THREE TACTICAL ARMSTRONG, THE 35-YEAR-OLD CIVILIAN LT. COL, KENNETH B. FACEY, COMMANDER AIR FORCE WINGS IN GERMANY FROM NATO COMMAND PILOT FOR THE THREE-DAY OF DETACHMENT B-1, FIFTH SPECIAL FOR­ TO FRENCH CONTROL. GEMINI-8 FLIGHT, AND 33-YEAR-OLD AIR CES GROUP, SAID HIS OPINION WAS BASED FRENCH OFFICIALS SAID, HOWEVER, THE FORCE MAJOR SCOTT PASSED THEIR FINAL ON INTElliGENCE REPORTS AND FROM DE­ FIRST MOVE WOULD BE THE WITHDRAWAL OF PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS FRIDAY AND COM­ BRIEFING THE 12 U.S. "GREEN BERET" FRENCH OFFICERS FROM THE COMBINED PLETED THEIR MISSION REVIEW AND PRAC­ SPECIAL FORCES TROOPS RESCUED FROM NATO COMMANDS -- A MOVE THAT COULD TICE SESSIONS IN A CAPSULE MOCKUP THE CAMP COME WITHIN THE NEXT FEW WEEKS. DURING THE WEEKEND FACEY SAID THE TWO COMMUNIST REGI­ WITHDRAWAL OF THE FRENCH FORCE IN ONCE INTO SPACE, ARMSTRONG AND SCOTT MENTS IN THE AREA APPARENTLY WERE GERMANY AND EXPULSION Of U.S. AND FACE AN AMBITIOUS SCHEDULE THAT CALLS SETTING A TRAP -- SIMILAR TO THE ONE CANADIAN FORCES AND BASES FROM FRANCE FOR TWO SEPARATE RENDEZVOUS WITH THE AT PLEI ME LAST OCTOBER WHICH BACK­ WAS EXPECTED BEFORE THE END OF THIS AGENA SATELLITE AND F0UR ATTEMPTS TO FIRED AND LED TO THE BLOODY IA ORANG YE.AR INSERT THE NOSE O~ THEIR SPACECRAFT VALLEY BATTLE DEPARTURE OF THE OVERAll NATO AND INTO A CO~F-SHAPED OPENING ON THE HE SAID ONE ENTIRE REGIMENT SUR­ CENTRAL EUROPEAN MILITARY HEADQUARTERS AGENA ROU~IDED THE CAMP, AND THE SECOND WAS EXPECTED TO TAKE A LITTLE LONGER THIS WOULD GIVE THE UNITED STATES A APPARENTLY WAS DEPLOYED TO CUT DOWN BECAUSE OF COMMUNICATIONS AND LOGISTIC~ NOTABLE FIRST AND BE ANOTHER STEP REINFORCEMENTS THAT MIGHT BE SENT IN PROBLEMS INVOLVED. THE OFFICIALS SAID ALONG THE PATH TO THE MOON. SURVIVING DEFENDERS OF THE CAMP DE GAULLE WANTS THE HEADQUARTERS OUT OUTSIDE THE GEMINI CAPSULE, SCOTT STILL WERE BEING PICKED UP. ~THESE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. WILL CLEAN THE SPACECRAFT'S WINDOWS, WERE THE ONES WHO STAYED BEHIND TO FLOAT AT THE END OF HIS "UMBILICAL" LAY DOWN A COVERING fiRE WHILE WOU~Dfn TAKEOVER (CONTI~~~~ ~~~) TETHER TO THE AGENDA SATELLITE TO COMRADES WERE EVACUATED BY HELICOPTER GEN. SOEHARTO, THE DEFENSE MINISTER ACTIVATE A MICROMETEORITE MEASURING LATE FRIDAY. WHO ASSUMED THE POWERS OF GOVERNMENT DEVICE ON IT, AND TRY HIS HAND AT FACEY SAID A POSSIBLE REASON FOR FRIDAY, HAS SO fAR ARRESTED 23 PRO­ LOOSENING AND TIGHTENING BOLTS WITH THE NORTH VIETNAMESE FAILURE TO PURSUE COMMUNIST GOVERNMENT MINISTERS, RE­ A SPECIAL BATTERY-POWERED TOOL DEVEL­ THE LAST DITCH DEFENDERS WAS THAT THEY PORTS SAID TODAY. OPED FOR USE IN SPACE SUFFERED SO MANY WOUNDED AND KilLED THE fATE Of SUBANDRIO, THE LEFT­ AFTER THE SPACEWALK, ANOTHER RENDEZ­ THEMSELVES. LEANING FOREIGN MINISTER AND DEPUTY VOUS AND THREE MORE LINKUPS WITH "THE COMMUNISTS TRADITIONALLY CLEAR PREMIER, REMAINED UNCERTAIN AGENA ARE SCHEDULED BEFORE THE ASTRO­ L~ T~~IR DEAD AND PREPARE TO LEAVE THE CLANDESTINE VOICE OF FREE INDO­ NAUTS BRING GEMINI-8 TO A LANDING IN THE BATTLEFIELD AS QUICKLY AS POSSIBLE NESIA, AN ANTI-SUKARNO RADIO WHICH THE \JESTERN ATLANT I C NEAR THE END OF AFTER THE SHOOTING ENDS, " HE SAID. CLAIMS TO BROADCAST FROM SOMEWHERE IN THE THIRD DAY OF THEIR MISSION FACEY SAID HE BELIEVED THE SURVIVING WEST JAVA, SAID SUBANDRIO HAD BEEN TROOPS HAD TO BE PRESSED INTO SERVICE ARRESTED. TO CARRY DEAD AND WOUNDED AND STRIP BUT JAPAN'S KVODO NEWS SERVICE DA I~J JG (UPI)--BuDDHIST-BACKED STU­ THE CAMP OF WHATEVER USABLE MATERIAL REPORTED FROM JAKARTA THAT SUBANDRIO DlNTS PROTESTING THE DISMISSAL O~ POP­ THEY COULD FIND WAS WITH SUKARNO AT 60GO PALACE, THE ULAR GEN NGUYEN CHANH THI DEMONSTRA­ GEN WILLIAM C WESTMORELAND, COM­ PRESIDENT's SUMMER RESIDENCE ABOUT 40 TED FOR THE FOURTH CONSECUTIVE DAY MANDER OF AMERICAN FORCES IN V,ET NAM, MilES OUTSIDE JAKARTA. THE PALACE WAS TODAY THEY DEMANDED THE OUSTER Of TODAY COMMENDED AMERICAN PILOTS FOR HEAVILY GUARDED BY TROOPS LOYAL TO SOUTH VIET NAM'S MILITARY GOVERNMENT THEIR BRAVERY AND HEROISM IN SUPPORT­ SOEHARTO, BUT NEITHER SUKARNO NOR "WE WANT NEW ELECTIONS," ONE OF THE I~G THE DEFENDERS IN THE BATTLE OF SUBANDRIO WERE UNDER ARREST, THE NEWS DEMONSTRATING STUDENT LEADERS SHOUTED THE SPECIAL FORCES CAMP. SEVEN PLANES AGENCY SAID. '\JE WANT A GOVERNMENT ELECTED BY THE WERE LOST DURING THE ACTION OTHER FIRST-HAND REPORTS FROM JAKAR­ oEOPLE II liTHE AIR SUPPORT PROVIDED BY MARINES, TA SAID ARMY OFFICERS INVESTIGATING 1HE DEMONSTRATIONS DISRUPTED NORMAL U.S. AIR FORCE, NAVY, ARMY AND VIET­ SUBANDRIO'S ACTIVITIES CLASHED WITH LIFE IN HUE, DA NANG AND HOI AN, THREE NAMESE AIR FORCE UNITS AT THE RECENT 22 MEMBERS OF HIS INTELLIGENCE STAFF BATTLE OF THE A SHAU SPECIAL FORCES MA JOR CIT I fS IN, L nORTHERN PART OF AND WOUNDED TWO OF THEM TODAY. ALL SOUTH Vilf fJM1 AND THE BREEDING ~~I ~ WAS EQUAL TO ANY IN AVIATION WERE ARRESTED, THE REPORT~ SHID. GROUNDS FOR BUDDHIST PROTEST MOVEMENTS HISTORY," WESTMORELAND SAID IN A MES­ SUBANDRIO, FORMERLY HEAD OF THE \O/H I Ch HAVE LED TO THE OVERTHROW OF SAGE TO PILOTS AND CREWS. NATION'S INTELLIGENCE SYSTEM BEFORE THhE[ r0f'MlR VIETNAMESE REGIMES. "THE REPEATED HEROIC DEEDS OF THE THE MILITARY FORCED HIM TO RELINQUISH SCHOOLS \.JERE CLOSED HERE AND I N HUE, TRANSPORT, FIGHTER AND HELICOPTER CPEWS THE JOB SEVERAL MONTHS AGO, HAD ESTAB- AOOUT 50 MILES TO THE NORTH DOCK WORK­ AND THE FORWARD AIR CONTROLLERS, AC- llSHED HIS OWN INTELLIGENCE NETWORK TO EI S W\LKED OFf THE IR JOB- "'j-it.RL" dAL T­ COMPLISHED UNDER EXTREMELY ADVERSE COOPERATE WITH THE COMMUNIST CHINESE, ING ~LL PORT TRAfFIC EXCEPT ES~~NTIAL CONDITIONs ~EFLECTS THE UTMOST CREDIT THE REPORTS SAID MILITARY CARGO WHICH WAS BEING HANDLED ON THE CREWS THEMSELVES AND THEIR r---Y______IlllTARY STEVEDORES, -l ______RESPECTIVE SERVICES" __ ri( IJRGLASS

JL'~ I ~ I AL I N'-tU I RY 0CUGHT c I WASHINGTON (UPI)--~OlY NET GUN' HERE I~TO C~N\CIAN 0C~NCAL _ .... ACE <.h rtR, HOUSTON (UPI)--AT WORK CO~E THf RIOI-BUSTING HELICOPTERS OTTAWA (UPI}--PRIME MINISTER LESTER T Pt A'r' WITH WINGS OR WITHOUT, NEIL WITH A MARCHING BAND SENT INTO ACTION B PEARSON SOUGHT TODAY TO PUT CAN­ SOARING THROUGH THE BY THOSE 1 INY MICROPHONES HIDDEN IN ADA'S SEX-AND-SECURITY SCANDAL BEFORE THE STOR~ DRAIN A JUDGE AND TAKE IT OUT OF AN EXPLO­

~LY! _\..I ,~ H,S WORK. THE WEALTH OF Is T THE CAPED CRUSADER AND THE SIVE HOUSE OF COMMONS VIAr'ON KNOWl EDGE CRAMMED INTO HIS BOY WONDER MARSHAL NG ANOTHER MISSION? OPPOSITION CONSERVATIVES WERE PRE­ L0ND ~lAD MADE HP~ A NATURAL SECLEC­ No, V'RGIN,A, ,T S THE NATIONAL CRIME PARED TO DEMAND THAT PEARSON'S JUSTICE ION ~~ CO~~AND PilOT FOR PERHAPS THE COMMISSION, AND If 5 ALL PART OF AN MINISTER FIRST SUBSTANTIATE HIS ATION S ~0S· AMB1TIOUS fLIGHT INTO EFFORT 10 (PACK DOWN ON CRIME. CHARGES Of MISBEHAVING TORIES OR QUIT PACE -- rlq VO'fAGE OF GEMINI-8 rHE COMMlSS,ON BEGINS THIS WEEK TO THE HOUSE

If.;, I j 'J H e.. C H fAT iON WH EN ASP ACE - CULL NEW IDEA~ iN CRIME FIGHTING WHICH PEARSON OPENED A WILD SESSION OF HIP Ol~ A 1-i0 JET TRAiNER IS NOT RANGE fROM A GUN THAT SHOOTS A NET PARLIAMENT WITH AN ANNOUNCEMENT OF A VAIlAOlE, ARMSTRONG MAKES HIS WAY OVfR A SUSPECT TO THE M'CROPHONES, JUDICIAL INQUIRY INTO THE ALLEGATIONS LOFT 'N A ~INGlE-ENGINE AIRPLANE WH~CH WOULD CARRY CRIES f(~ HELP TO Of JUSTICE MINISTER ROUND HOUSTON, OR PERHAPS IN A GLIDER POLICE STATIONS THAT AT LEAST TWO MEMBERS OF THE IN THE MOUNTAINS OF COLORADO. WiTH THE A~D OF THE !NSTITUTE fOR CABINET OF CONSERVATIVE FORMER PRIME iT OtCAStONALLY IS HIS DANGER. ARMS­ DEfENSE ANAl YS,S, THE COMMISSION HOPES MINISTER HAD ROMAN­ RONG, WHO LOOKS ABOUT 10 YEARS YOUNGER TO FIND THIS AND "YET UNiMAGINED CON­ TIC LIAISON EIGHT YEARS AGO WITH tI rHAN H'S 3) HEARS, FLEW COMBAT MISS:ONS TR:BUT10NS WHICH WilL HELP POLICE GERDA MUNSINGER, SHAPELY DIVORCEE lJ. ,'lie KOH£AN WAR -- AND LOST ONE JET IN THE R EFFORTS TO CONTROL LAWBREAKE~ fROM GERMANY. o lNE'1Y F,Re.. f-IE CAME CLOSE ON A SE- If T~f ~S1 ITUTE fINDS ANY IDEAS rO\RDIN SAID THE AFFAIR WAS "A BONA __.~~FEAS'B~E -- SUCH AS THE NET GUN -- THEY fiDE ([CURITY CAS('" WiLL BE INCORPORATED IN THE CRIME MORE THAN 3,500 CANADIANS TRIED TO COMMISSION REPORT TO PRESIDENT JOHN- JAM INTO THE GALLERIES TO WITNESS SON, WHO LAST WEEK CALLED FOR CONGRESS- THE DEBATE, WHICH WAS EXPECTED TO IONAl ACTION ON ANTI-CRIME MEASURES LAST INTO THE NIGHT MOST WERE TURN- ~ THE NET GUN IS BUT ONE OF THE NOTION ED AWAY BY GUARDS TO BE CONSiDERED PEARSON OPENED THE SESSION BY WARN- ONE IDEA ADVANCED fOR RIOT CONTROL I NG" "WE AR E I N A fR I CHTEN I NG S I TU­ ~ IS THE USE OF HELICOPTERS TO FLY LARGE ATION AS FAR AS PARLIAM~NT IS CONCERN- "~, TELEVISION SCREENS OVER THE COMBATANTS ED " .­ IN HOPES THE RIOTERS MIGHT BREAK IT UP HE SAID IT WAS THE "CULMINATION OF ~v0"" v4 WHEN THEY SEE WHAT THEY LOOK LIKE ---EXTREME PARTISANSHIP •• BITTERNESS, .y(r,)l<.-.:-"",,¥,~~ v""~ ANOTHER PLAN WOULD USE THE SCREENS TENSION AND SUSPICION .. TO SHOW THE RIOTERS DISTRACTING PIC­ HE PLEADED WITH MEMBERS TO HONOR TURES WITH AN EYE TO TAKING THEIR AT­ THE TRUST IMPOSED UP THEM BY THE TENTION FROM THEIR VIOLENCE. PEOPLE YET ANOTHER WOULD SEND A MARCHING THEN HE ANNOUNCED THAT JUSTICE BAND INTO THE RIOT ~CENE ON THE PREMIS W,SHART F SPENCE Of THE SUPREME THAT THE MARTIAL STRAINS MIGHT TURN COURT OF WOULD HEAD THE IN­ PEOPL E FROM MUGG I NG Ot£ ANOTHER TO QUIRY INTO CARDIN'S CHARGES MARCHING. STATE AS SOLEMNLY AS I CAN," NEIL ARMSTRONG " I To CUT DOWN STREET CRIMES, THE IN­ PEARSON SAID BEFORE A HuSHED HOUSE, ARMS TRONG WA S BORN AUG, , TO STITUTE WILL EXAMINE ~ PROPOSAL THAT "THAT IF WE CAN NOT ,~ THIS HOUSE AND MRS. STEPHEN ARMSTRONG OF TINY MICROPHONES BE INSTALLED AT STRA­ DO SOMETHING EFfECTIVE, AND DO IT HIS PARENTS STILL TEGIC SITES WELL TO CHANGE THE ATMOSPHERE AND THE IDEA IS THAf THE MICRO~~ONES ATTITUDE WHICH DISCGRACES PARLIAMENT FLYING,RAP DLY BECAME A WAY OF LIFE COULD PICK UP CRIES fOR HELP WHICH AND DEMEANS DEI"IOCRACY, WE ALL WILL i fH YOUNG NEIL AT THE AGE OF 16, HE COULD BE HEARD IN POLICE STATIONS HAVE BETRAYED THE TRUST AND HOPES Of AD EA~NfD HIS PR.VATE PILOT'S LICENSE THOSE WHO SENT US HERE " - EVfN U[rORE HE HAD LEARNED HOW TO THE SPEECH WAS MET WITH CALLS OF RIVE CAR "HEAR, HEAR'It FROM PEARSON SUPPORTERS T WAS OfF TO PURDUE UNIVERSITY, WHEN THE DAY CAME IN 1962 THAT NEIL THE DECISION TO APPOINT A JUDICIAL _~f ~E R[CEIVED A BACHELOR Of SCIENCE ARMSTRONG TOOK HIS PLACE AS ONE OF INQUIRY WAS MADE IN AN EXTRAORDINARY lGRll 'N AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING NiNE "SECOND GENERATION" ASTRONAUTS MOqNING MEETING Of PEARSON'S CABINET, IT WAS THERE HE MET ANOTHER STUDENI, ADDED TO THE U S SPACE PROGRAM, HE \ I ANET SHEARON OF EVANSTON, ILL SHE. HAD ALREADY GAINED FAME -- AS A PILOT OUlD BECOME I~RS NE I L ARMSTRONG Of THE NAT,ON'S X-15 ROCKET PLANE KOREA INTEREFERED WITH ARMSTRONG's WHILE W,FE JAN WATCHED .... fROM THEIR As A 21-YEAR-OLD HOME IN THE MOUNTAINS NEARBY, ARMSTRON LA80R ~HCR TA~E Ot..N 1[0 VY PILOT, HE FLEW THE FIRST OF 78 SEVEN T,MES TOOK THE CONTROLS Of THE WASHINGTON (UPI)--LABOR SECRETARY WAR -- AND MeR E X-15 AS IT DROPPED FROM BENEAiH TME W WILLARD WIRTZ SAID TODAY IT WAS HAN ONCE RISKED LO~,NG H!S liFE IN W~NG Of A B-52 BOMBER AND PUT THE COCKEYED FOR SOME ECONOMISTS TO HE PROCESS CRAFT THROUGH tTS PACES " " WORRY ABOUT UNEMPLOYMENT FALLING TO ARMSTRONG RECALLS THE WAR DAYS WITH NEIL ARMSTRONG, AS AN X-15 PILOT, YPICAL SHYNESS ALREADY HAD REACHED THE FRINGES OF 3 7 PERCENT. HE SAID THE JOBLESS RATE SHOULD BE CUT FURTHER AS RAPIDLY "I DIDN'T DO MUCH," HE SAYS SPACE LONG BEFORE HE DONNED THE OFFI­ AS POSSIBLE WHEN PRESSED, HE MENTIONS A DAY IN CIAL GARB Of AN ASTRONAUT WIRTZ SAID THERE WAS NOT GENERAL EPTEMBER, 1951, "WHlN FLAK HIT THE WHEN HE I S NOT AT WORK AND NOT AT LANE I WAS STRAFING TRUCKS THE HOME WITH HIS WIFE AND HIS TWO SONS, MANPOWER SHORTAGE ACROSS THE COUNTRY ALTHOUGH SUPPLIES OF SKILLED CRAFTS­ LAK WAS PRETTY UAD AND THE PLANE'S ERIC, 6, AND MARK, !, ARMSTRONG liKE MEN AND PROFESSIONAL WORKERS WERE ONTROl SYSTEM WAS KNOCKED OUT I AS NOT CAN BE FOUND AT CLOVER FIELD, VERY TIGHT IN SOME AREAS. IN THE AtR, BUT I COULDN'T A SMALL AIRPORT ABOUT 5 t'oULES fROM THE itT HOUSTON MANNED SPACECRAFT CENTER, PAS­ HERE IS AMALE MANPOWER IF WE TRAIN THEM", WIRTZ SAID. T BACK TO SOUTH KOREA AND SING THE HOURS IN SMALL PIPER, CESSNA ~A YS "THE PARACHUTE AND BEECHCRAFT AIRPLANES "w E DON ' T HAVE A SHORTAGE Of PEOPLE If NOT THERE, LOOK FOR HIM SOME­ BUT WE HAVE SOME SHORTAGE Of SKILLS." ON ANO'Hln DAY AND ANOTHER RUN DOWN WHERE IN COLORADO, PUTTING A ONE-SEAT HE SAID AN UNEMPLOYMENT RATE OF ABOUT PERCENT WOULD PROBABLY AL­ NAR~OW vALLEY, ARMSTRONG'S PLANE GLIDER CALLED A SCHWEITZER 1-26 THROU 2 5 LIPPED A METAL CABLE lHE CHINESE COM­ ITS PACES WAYS EXIST BECAUSE OF JOB-CHANGING STRETCHED AS A BOOBY TRAP IN FACT, HIS DREAM IS TO TACKLE ONE AND THE PROBLEMS ENCOUNTERED IN SEASO AL INDUSTRIES Of THE MOST DifFICULT OF FEATS Of H[ BABIED .HE CRAFT BACK TO A SAfE GLIDING -- A CROSS-COUNTRY TRIP Of AT HE SAID A RATE Of I TO I 5 PERCENT ANDING ON THE DECK OF THE AIRCRAFT LEAST 300 MILES COULD BE REACHED BEFORE A COMMUNITY WOULD HAVE "REAL TROUBLE" IN fiLLING ARRIER US~ ESSEX, DESPITE THE LOSS SPACE, AS FAR AS ARMSTRONG IS CON­ JOB VACANC I ES. F A W' NGT \ P CERNED, IS GREAT, BUT HE IS WILLING THE CABINET OFfiCER MADE HIS COMMENT 'T WAS Th S COOLNESS UNDER STRESS TO SETTLE FOR SPEEDS '70 TIMES SLOWER HAT LED THE BLUE-EYED PILOT FROM THE THAN A FIVE-MILE-A-SECOND GEMINI SHIP WHILE APPROVING A $521 287 CONTRACT FOR PRE-APPRENTICESHIP TRAINING Of A~PuS OF W_RDUE INTO TEST FLYING Of As lONG AS IT WILL TAKE HIME SOME­ IGH PERtORMANCE JET AIRPLANES IN THE WHERE INTO THE SKIES I,Boo JOBLESS AS MACHINISTS AND TOOL­ AND-DIE MAKERS. AST l~t50S HOURGLASS MONDAY 14 MARCH 1966 I 'll ISHED BY G,IJBA.l ASSOCIATES AT THE. '~ Nt ! I t ~ \ 'J~ f 'I\J Ii S )C r. ILL leN ); r,r ( T I ~ or TH[ COtvlMAND I NG OFF' CER WALL STREET TODAY I K.WL JAI t IJ HSl S Tf, tvlARSHAll ISLANDS BY JOHN D PARRY NEW YORK (UPI)--LoSERS OUTNyMBERED I (ON1~A.C' OA-Ol-021-A~C-90004 (Y) PARiS (UPI)--PRESIDENT CHARLES DL GAINERS BY MORE THAN 4-TO-I ON THE NEW THE HOURGl ASS ,IS PUBLISHED DAfl Y GAULLE MAY WANT ALL AMER CAN BASES OUT YORK STOCK EXCHANGE TOD~Y DESP~TE THE ~(NDAY THROUGH ~ATURDAY DEADLINL FOR OF FRANCE BY THE END OF THE YEAR, BUT FACT THAT THE TRADING pACE WAS THE NOTlcrs IS 4 p~ ,HE DAY BEFORE PUBLICA­ THfRE ARE. PLENTY OF OTHER FRENCHMEN lHIRD SLOWEST SINCE THE BEGINNING OF TION AND DfADl Nt FCR NEWS ITEMS IS 10 WHO Wi l ~jE SO~~v TO SEE THEM GO THE YEAR AM Tt-If DA'I' (F uSi CAT ION THE CONT~IB0T ON OF THE 54 U 5 ARMY PRICES BEGAN PLUNG'NG AFTER A FEEBLE THL H0U~GLASS RESER~L~ THE RIGHT TO AND AjR rORCE BASES AND OTHER rNSTAL­ FiRST-HOUR ADVANCE FA!LED Te ATTRACT llwT lfTHRS TO THE EDITOR FOR THE LATIONS IN FRANCE TO THE LOCAL ECONOMY ATTENTION AND STAYED ON THl n~ SAKE. OF BREV Tv ALL COPY, LETTER5 IS CONS'DrRABlE O.~,ClALS ESTIMATE THROUGHOUT THE DAY SOME BARGAIN HUNT- AND PHorOGR~~HS SuBM~TTED FOR PUBLICA­ $J50 M ~t JON A YEAR is SPENT IN MAIN­ ING WAS NOTED IN THE FINAL HOURS, BUT TION BECOME. THE PROPE~TY OF THE HOUR- TAINfNG THE OPElRAl 'ONS BY THE GiS Wt-40 HAD NO EFFECT ON THE DOWNTREND R£PULl (Al ON OF MATERIAL CON- SERVE iN THEM DOW-JONES INDUSTRIALS PLUNGED JO 86 TAINED HERe N 5 NOT AUTHORIZED WITHOUT UNL IKE , FRANCE DOES NOT TO 9i7 09 AND RAilS SOLD OFF 5_62 TO T~~ PR l ~o~qOV~~ OF THE COMMAND NG G VE THE UN TED STATES A REBATE BY 248 78 STANDARD AND POOR'S 500 STOCK OFF cr~, ~Wi\JII, t N h.ST S,TE US'NG SOME OF THE MONEy GAiNED TO BUY jNDEX RETREATED I 00 TO 87 85 IF TOU H~Vl NOT R£CE;VED YOUR HOUR­ AMERtCAN M L TARY EQUIPMENT THU~ TRADING TOTALED 7,400,000 SHARES COM­ GLA~~ 0' 6 5 OM, Pl'ASE CALL 350 BE­ THE MOV"NG OF THE BASES WOULD, IN A PARED WITH SEVEN MILL'ON SHARES FRIDAY TWEE~ TW~ ~OJqS OF 6 5 AND 6 45 PM WAY, REO~tStNT A CONS DERABLE DOLLAR OF THE ~,419 ISSUED TRADED, 997 RETREA~ AND 4 COL.., IN I L BE DEL VERf D TO '(OU SAV NG FOR THE US, BUT FOR MANY OR­ ED, 77 TO NEW 1965-66 LOWS, WHlLE 223 D NARY FRENCH MEN AND WOMEN THE CLOS£ ADVANCED, NINE TO NEW H'GHS ..... y f'~ '\,(. c PI-' E L ,;>5-MU/l,JSON NG 01=" THE. BASES wOULD REPRESENT ~ BROKERS POINTED OuT THAT TODAY 5 DE­ AS~~ £DITCR DoqlS WALL IN Rf~l H~RDSHijP ABOUT 9,000 FRENCHMEN Cl ~Nf WAS THE SHARPEST ON SUCH L"GHT BE.TTT DION ARE EMDLOYED AS MECHAN"CS, CLERKS, VCLU~E IN SEVERAL yEARS AND SAuD THIS S"'<\~vN NANN' SALES PERSONNlL N POSl EXC~ANGES, BA~ ~O NTED UP THE FACT THAT MANY TRADERS PG ~r ~'ME .. uDY GILL'S MEN, WA TERS AND CHAuF~EuRS HAD W THDRAWN THE R B~DS FROM THE MAR- "'\-tOG~A,':;Hfq ~ ('HARD RuFF-Ot 0 THE U 5 ~ORCES EMPLOY MORE PERSONS ~ET BIDD NG is THE SYSTEM WH CH HELPS f:======:==j:- THAN AL L BUT FOUR OF Tt-lE B, GGEST FREN'_--i hOLD PR ~ CES STEADv 'NDUSTR1AL COMPAN~tS, BUT THE F JGUR( THE ANALYSTS SAID THERE WAS NO SPECu- OFFICIAL NOTICES 5 DOWN FROM WHAT qT ONCE WAS IN FlC REASON FOR THE DECl~NE AND S~ID DATE" err ,e ~_ B0~,-:"'oN p .... ONr ~955, FOlLOWI~G COMPLET ON OF THE THEY BELJEVED IT WAS MERELY A CONTiNUA- ILL M"r~66 ell ,::> r A A (4ANEt 233~ BUiLDUP OF NATO FORCES iN EUROPE, ABOUT TiON OF THE NERVOUSN[SS CAUSED BY LAST '5 MAR66 t T CC-l G W ~ L • NT 236 132,000 FRENCHMEN WERE WORKING FOR THE WEEK'S INCREASE IN THE PR ME jNTEREST 16 M~q66 CIl.CT .. v1 00 ~s f'" 627 ' U S GOVERNMENT RATE THE EXPERTS ALSO SAiD THE FACT 'J MAR66 lTc':hu ~ t-1 OGDEN 2497 I ALTHOUGH THERE ns ONE MAJOR U S 'N- THAT VOLUME HAD BEEN !NCLINED TO CON- I MAR66 MA.., w G H~LL 690 i STAlLATijON NEAR PAR~S -- U,S EUROPEAN TRACT iNDIC'TES THAT MANY TRADERS HAVE 19 MAR66 cwo F C BA~fR 2~42 I COMMAND HEADQUARTeRS AT CAMP DES LOGES, MOVED TO THE SIDELINES TO WA~T FOR THE I 20 MAR66 MAJ R W SPECKfR 2240 I NEAR ST GERMAN-EN-LAYE, ~N THE WEST- LiST TO LEVEL OFF BEFORE MAKiNG ANY I ERN SUBURBS -- MOST OF THE BASES wHiCH SUBSTANTiAL COMMITMENTS OUTy O~~ (CR 5 ~W"~~l[ N TEST S TE I WOULD BE CLOSeD DOWN ARE I N THE PRO- AMERiCAN MOTORS RETURNED TO THE TOP COMMAND ~G OFF CE~ ~ REPRESENTATiVE i VINCES OF THE ACTIVE LiST 1T FELL I TO ~2 DUR'NG OTHER T~AN NORMAL DUTY HOURS i THEY RANGE FROM SPRAWLING AIR BASES, 3/8 ON 131,800 SHARES THE DECLiNE I SUCH AS TI-IAT AT EVREUX ,N NORMANDY, TO APPARENTLY WAS CAUSED BY PROFiT-TAK NG ~~f ~O~T CF> C~ NOW HAS ~ED(R~L AND I SUpPLY DEPOTS COVERING THOUSANDS OF ON LAST WEEK'S RUNUP. HAwA J .:>"T ~TE 'NCOM£ TAX FORMS ' ACRES AT LA ROCHELLE ON THE ATlANT~C COLLINS RADIO TUMBLED 4 7/8 TO 65 3/4 WAll:. R REPORT CO~ST AND CHATEAUROuX SOUTH OF PARiS, ON 86,100 SHARES IN SECOND PLACE IN THE COND 'T ON YELLOW I AlL THE WAY DOWN TO TINY RADAR STA­ ACTIVE LIST TEXAS GULF SULPHUR DROP- WATER D :'T'LlfD 203,200 T'ONS WITH ONLY A HANDFUL OF MEN PED 5 3/4 TO 107 1/4 ON 78,600 SHARES RA NI=" Al I 3/ 3 I 46" I ALL, HOwEVER, EMPLOY LOCAL LABOR IN THIRD SPOT WAl ER uSED 3/ \ 3 264 ,200 j VILLAGeS WHICH PREVIOUSLY HAD TO STRUG­ AUTOS WERE DEPRESSED STUDEBAKER lO~S Bv EVAPORAT~ON I GlE FOR lp-lE' R EX !STENCE HAVE TURNED SKJDDED 3 1/4 GENERAL MOTORS GAVE UP WA1ER N ~TORAGE TODAy 9,,)00,000° I j NTO BOOM TOWNS AS A RESUL T OF THE ! 5/8 , CHRYSLER 7/8 AND FORD 3/8 Du I PRESeNCE OF Afv1ER1CAN G~s -- AND THEIR PONT PACED A LOWER CHEMICAL SECTiON Wi~ L.ONr'-~\ 1~\VOSl \\ lAAHFI ~ AGE I MONE y A DECLINE OF 4 STEELS WERE MOSTLY S • _ ~HLY W)\ i NG ALONG I THE TOWN COUNC i L OF CHATEAUROUX AL- FRACTIONS LOWER LUKeNS, JONES & LAUGH- Moscow lUP')--JUMPY AS A GIRL ON HER! READY HAS EXPRESSED CONCERN THAT THE LIN AND NATIONAL WERE DOWNSIDE LEADERS FIRST DATE, CHI-CHI THE ENGLISH PANDA! DEPARTURE OF THE SEVERAL THOUSAND AjR­ WiTH LOSSES OF MORE THAN! EACH PACED HER Moscow CAGE TON!GHT AND TRI- I MEN AND SOLDJERS STATIONED THERE, ELECTRONICS AGAIN PROVED TO BE THE ED TO SETTLE DOWN IN HER TEMPORARY NEWI ALONG WITH THEIR DEPENDENTS, MAY PRO- MAiN TARGET OF THE SELLING FAIRCHilD HOME I DUCE A RECESSION IN THE TOWN'S ECONOMY CAMERA DROPPED 8 5/8, MOTOROLA 6 3/4, CHI-CHI, A 235-POUND SPINSTER G~ANT I LANDLORDS WOULD BE B4G LOSERS, TOO ADM!RAL 6 1/4, ZENITH 5 7/8, MAGNAVOX PANDA, FROM THE LONDON lOO, WAS FLOWN I ALTHOUGH THE ARMY MAKES AN EFFORT TO 4 1/4, TEXAS INSTRUMENTS 3 1/2 AND HERE LAST WEEK fOR A MATING WITH AN- I HOUSe AS MANY PEOPLE AS iT CAN IN ITS L IrTON 2 1/8 AN, THE Moscow ZOOfS BACHELOR PANDA. OWN BUJLD NGS, MANY G!s HAVE TO LlVE, AiRL 'NES WERE ANOTHER WEAK SPOT THE HOPED-FOR RESULT ONE OF THE FIRST I AS THE SAYING GOE.S, "ON THE FRENCH NORTHWEST DROPPED 5 3/4, NATIONAL 4, BABY G j ANT PANDA S BORN I N CAPT I V I TY II ECONOIVI'f " Th j 5 MEANS THAT MARR I ED PAN AMERICAN 2 1/8, DELTA 2 1/2 AND PHOTOGRAPHER~ WHO WENT TO THE ZOO MEN BELOW THE RANK OF SERGEANT WHO AMERICAN 2 3/8 POINT-SIZED DECLINES TODAv WERr ~HuOtD AN~V BY OFFICIALS I WANT TO BR NG THElR FAM!L ES TO LIVE WERE REGISTERED IN BRANIFF, CONT!NENTAl, THERE, AND O~ VER GRAHAM-JONES, LONDONI WITH THEM MUST USUAlLY FIND THEIR OWN UNITED AND WESTERN KLM BUCKED THE ZOO VETER N~RjAN wHO ACCOMP~NjED HER OFF-BASE HOuS'NG ONLY OFFICERS AND DOWNTREND WITH A GAIN OF 3 1/4 HERE, SA D HE WAS WORK NG HARD TO CALM SENiOR NON-COMS ARE ENTITLED TO ARMY CIGARETTE STOCKS FOUND SOME SUPPORT CHI-CH, DowN HOuS,NG, WHiCH MEANS LANDLORDS WITH FROM SPECULATION AROUSED BY WHOLESALE APARTMENTS FOR RENT CLOSE TO U 5 BASES PRICE INCREASES PHIL P MORR!S WAS THE "SHE S::>T Ll J 0 5ET r"ROM HER FLIGHT,"I CAN CHARGE PAR,S-STYLE RENTS TO LESS BiGGEST BENEFICIARY, RISING 4 LORIL­ GRAHAM-JONfS .)1\ D "AND WE'RE MOST I FORTUNAT[ AMERJCANS LARD TACKED ON 1/8 AND REYNOLDS TOBACCO ANXiOUS TH~T SHE SHOULD SETTLE IN W(TH NO DISTuRBANCES ALL TH"S W lL CHANGE WhEN THE AMERl- ADDED 5/8 AMERICAN TOBACCO, WHICH IN!­ "AFTER SPEND NG MOST OF HER LIFE IN CANS GO THERE AREN'T MANY PROVINCiAL TIATED THE PRICE INCREASE, GAVE UP AN ONE PLACE, SHE NOW MUST BET uSED TO FRENCHMEN WHO CAN AFFORD $200 A MONTH EARLY POINT-SIZED GAIN AND WAS UNCHANG­ NEW SuRROUND NGS," HE SA~D "SHE STILL FOR A TWO-BEDROOM, FURNiSHED APARTMENT ED AEROSPACE ISSUES RETREATED, WiTH I~ BOEING AND DOUGLAS LEADING THE DOWN­ IS VER~ SEN~ijT\VE TO STRANGERS AND WE IN A SMAll TOWN -- EVEN THEY WANTED ARE. HAV NG TROUBLE SETTLJNG HER IN " IT TREND WITH LOSSES IF 5 5/8 AND 4 1/4 Y. CH!-CH WA~ MOVE.D INTO AN-AN'S OLD BAR OwNERS AROUND THE BASES WILL BE RESPECT! VEL.. PRICES WERE ALSO LOWER ON THE AMERi­ HOME N l~E ZOO, wH'LE HE. WENT TO A B G LOSERS, TOO SO WILL AUTOMOBILE NEW HOUcH INSURANCE AND F,N~NCE COMP~NIES CATER- CAN EXCHANGE VOLUME SWELLED TO 3,280,- "SO FAR," GRAHAM-.JONlS SA' 0, "SHE S ING TO U S SERVICEMEN LOSERS, TOO, 000 SHARES FROM 2,950,000 TRADED FRI­ MOSTLY JuST SITTING lHERE CONTEMPLAT­ W lL BE THE LOCAL COMPANIES WHiCH SELL DAY OF THE 886 ISSUES TRADED, 492 DE­ ING "'[R F,JluRE " FOOD AND OTHER PRODUCTS TO THE PX FOR CLINED, 202 HELD UNCHANGED AND 192 AD­ VANCED "SI-It. ':l [a,T NG WEll AND SLEEPING D'~TR,BUT"ON TO Gis AND THE!R FAM!LIES Qu lE "L r, AND 'NVlsr GATING HE.R NEW HOM~,' Hf ~AID, "BUT SHE HASNiT MOVED OuT~ Df lHf HOUSE IN ThE. SUN YET" ------'--- HOURGLASS MONDAY ~RCH 1966

GOP ORGANIZES NEW ACTION GROUP ANALYSIS OF INDONESIAN UPSET WASHiNGTON (UPl)--THE GOP IS TRYiNG TO SET UP iTS OWN AN­ ~D TJR ~ NOTE R E STANNARD, JR., WAS UNiTED PRESS SWER T0 THE AFL-CiOis COMMITTEE ON POLITICAL EDUCATION, INTER~AT ~ONAL BUREA~ MANAGER IN JAKARTA, iNDONESIA, UN- WHICH PROVIDES MOST OF THE ORGANIZATION AND MUSCLE FOR THE , : LAST JtN~ARY W~EN HE AND ALL OTHER AMERiCAN CORRES­ DEMOCRATIC PARTY ',~tNTS WER£ EXPELLED BY PRESIDENT SUKARNO STANNARD is IN AN AGE OF AlP~ABETjCAL AGENCIES AND ORGANI ZATiONS, THE N IW ~ MEMBER O~ THE uPI TOKYO STAFF HIS ANALYSIS Of THE REPUBLICAN PRO~ECT IS CALLED MORE, FOR MOBILIZATiON OF SITUAT ON \~ ~~DONES!A TODAY FOLLOWS REPUBL~CAN ENTERPRISE IT FUNCTIONS FROM ThE PARTyiS NA­ g .... ~ ~ ST~NNARD, JR~ TIONAL HEADQUARTERS' DIV~SION OF POLITICAL EDUCAT{ON AND

J )>\ .. ,) ",JPt' )--WHAl HAPPENED IN INDONESiA SATURDAY -- THE TRAINING UNDER THE DiRECT~ON OF RAYMOND V. HUMPHREYS. I /Dr"' ...... AlIC 51"' fT IN COMMAND FROM A LEFT-LEANING CHAR SMATIC THE DIVISION is NOW PREPARING, STATE BY STATE, ESTIMATES IpO~~LAR ~EADER TO AN ANTI-COMMUNIST ARMY GENERAL -- MARKS THE OF THE REPUB~uCAN VOTE NEEDED TO WIN STATEWIDE RACES IN BOI~ ,f\3 OvER or- A POT THAT HAS BEEN SIMMERING SiNCE LAST OCT- THE STATE AND CONGRESS,ONAL ELECTIONS, Nov. 8. THE FIRST OBER FACTS NEEDED ~RE THE VOTING TURNOUTS IN THE PAST PRESIDENT­ ON OrT I, CO ...... UNIST IRREGULARS WITH A SPRINKLiNG OF SUP- IAL AN: Ot~-':A~ E_ECT10~S, AND STATE POPUkATION TRENDS. PORT FRO~ THE ARMY AND AIR FORCE REVOLTED AGA!NST PRESiDENT THE PRO~ECTED TURNOUT CAN A~SO BE AFFECTED BY WHETHER AN SU~ARNO, T~E ~AN WHO LED INDONESIA TO ITS fREEDOM FRO~ THE EXC~TING OR A DU~L CAMPA~GN ~S iNDICATED Fffi THE STATE NETHER~ANCS AF·ER WORLD WAR I I AND WAS OFFIC:AlLY ijTS PRESI- THESE STATE EST~~ATES, ALONG W~TH RECENT COUNT( VOTiNG

DENT FO~ l FE STATIST~CS, THEN GO TO THE STATE GOP ORGA~kZATIONS, PREFER­ THE COUP-ATTEMPT LAUNCHED ON A FLIGHT TO POWER AN ARMY ABLY IN WORKSHOP MEET~NGS LiKE THOSE HELD RECENTLY IN NEB­ L,EUTENANT GENERAL NAMED SOEHARTO WHO WAS LITTLE KNOWN OUT­ RASKA, WEST V~RGjNIA AND WiSCONSIN. SIDE I~DONESIA BEFORE THE COMMUNISTS TOOK TO THE STREETS. IF THE PRO~ECT WORKS AS INTENDED BY HUMPHREYS, STATE PAR­ SOEHAR~O, BAC~ED BY THE TOUGH RED-BERETED PARACOMMANDOS HE rv LEADERS TME~ WDLl SET COUNTY V01£ QuOTAS NEEDED TO WiN LED, CRuSHED THE COUP IN A DAY AND SUDDENLY BECAME A POWER TO AND LOCAL GOD C~~~R~EN W~Ll SET PRECiNCT QUOTAS FOR STATE­ BE RECKO~ED W~lh IN THE WORLD'S FIFTH LARGEST NATiON W~ DE V ~ CTOR ~ ES, THE QUOl AS fOR "SAF E' RE PUBl I CAN COUNT I ES SATURDAY, SOEHARTO APPARENTLY TOOK THE REiNS FRO~ SUKARNO, MAY CALL FOR ~ORE GOP vOTES lHAN ARE NEEDED JUST TO CARRY WHO NO ~ONGER COUlD GRiP THEM FIRMLY HIMSELF, ~N THE FACE OF THOSE COUNTbES SO AS 10 OFfSET REPUBl~CAN WEAKNESS ~N OTHER GROWING UNREST, COUNT!ES. YET IT is BETTER FOR THE MOMENT TO SPEAK OF SATURDAyiS WHEN THE PRECkNcr QU01AS ARE SET, THl lOCAL PARTY LEADERS CHANGE OF COMMAND AS A "NEAR CLIMAX" TO THE SUKARNO SAGA AND SHOULD HAVE A G00D tDEA OF HOW MANY VOLUNTEER WORKERS THEY RESERVE ANY MEASuRE OF F~NALITY FOR SOME OTHER liME W~EN THE NEED TO REGISfER ANC GET OUT T~£~R VOTERS SITUAT~ON ~S MORE CLEARLY DEFINED THE MORE CA~PAIG~ ~A~uAL fOR W'SCONSiN WAS LAID OUT LIKE SUK~RNO is AS WiLY AND AGILE AS POLITICIANS COME. HE HAS A SALES MANUAL fOR A BuS~NESS FiRM. EACH PRECiNCT IS SUP­ SURVIVED MORE TH~N ONE ATTEMPT TO UNSEAT HIM ~E !S A MAN POSED T:I !-fAVE A "'£A"'1 Of HSALESMEN" UNDER A "SALES MANAGER" WHOSE MAKEUP DEMANDS THAT HE BE STAGE CENTER, ALL SCENES, AL~ fAM~LHAR NOT ON~Y W~j~ 1~E VOT~NG H!STORY OF THE PRECiNCT ACTS, AU Pl,AvS BlJT n5 iNDUS1R ES, ns Ef!-1NUC AND RACIAL GROUPS, ~TS SUKARNO MAY NEVER STOP TRYING TO REGA~N fULL AND ABSOLUTE CHURCHES AND ITS ORGANUlATUONS POWER IN ~NDONES~A. SO LONG AS SUKARNO REMAINS WllHiN ~NDO­ THE PREC i NCT is At-SO DESCR ~ BED AS THE IIM~RKETu Wi TH RE­ NEStA'S 10,000 IS~ANDS AND AMONG ITS 105 MiLLiON PEOPLE THERE PUBLICANS CLASSED AS IrREGULAR CUSTOMERS,u POSSIBLE CONVERTS IS ALWAYS THE POS5fB~lITY -- INDEED THE PROBABiL~TY -~ HE AS " PROM~SING PR05 P ECTS, " ~ND D~E-HARD DEMOCRA1S AS " NO WILL TRY iN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER TO REGAiN WHAT HE CONS~DERS PROSPECTS II HIS GOD-GiVEN RIGHT TO RULE. "CU:::;rOMER RfC~RJ"" ARE SuGG£:JIED ON A t10USE-BY-HOUSE BAS­ IT IS EVEN POSSiBLE THAT SUKARNO HAS MERELY DELEGATED SOE­ IS WiTH VOTERS AND PROSPECTiVE VOTERS LiSTED BY ADDRESS, HARTO TO RULE TE~PORARILY AND TO CARRY OUT SOME NASTv TASKS, OCCUPATfON, PARTY A~Fll~A~~ON, wHETHER THEY ARE REG~STERED SUCH AS BANNING THE COMMUNIST PARTY, WHICH THE PREStDENT-FOR­ AND IND!CATiONS Of uNlENSITY Of !NTEREST iN POLiT~CS UFE C~D NOT WANT TO SOIL HIS OWN "REVOLUTnONARY" HANDS WHH" HUMPHREYS fiRST TESTED H~S PRECINCT QU01A PROJECT IN 1958 THiS lATrS! "NEAR-CLIMAX" IN INDONESiA WAS BROUGHT ON BY IN A HEAV~lY DEMOCRATijC COuNT v ADDED BY CONGRESSIONAL REAP­ WHAT WAS PERhAPS SUKARNO'S FIRST MAJOR POLITICAL ERROR iN 45 PORTiONMENT TO THE DISTRgCT OF REP CHARLES Ro JONAS OF YEARS AS A REVOLUTiONARY -- 25 OF THEM SPENT AS LEADER OF THE NORTH CAROLINA, WhE~ JONAS WAS RE-ELECTED, HE lOST THAT NATiON HIS ERROR WAS TO TRY TO FLY IN THE FACE OF THE POP- COUNTY BUT ThE REPUBLICAN SHARE OF THE VOTE WAS ABOUT :ULAR SWING TO THE RiGHT THAT BEGAN AFTER THE COMMlJN'ST COUP 30 PERCENT CO~PARED W~TH SIX PERCENT iN THE CONGRESSiONAL WAS CRUS~ED BOTH THE ARMY AND LARGE SEGMENTS OF THE PUBLIC ELECT,ON Of ~958 \HAVE DEM~NDED S~NCE THE COUP THAT THE COMMUNISTS BE OUTLAWED A FORMER WEST V'RG!N~A BUS~NESSMAN, HJMPHREYS JOiNTED lAND T~AT LEFT~STS BE CLEANED OUT OF POSITIONS OF POWER THE STAfF OF T~E GOP CONGRESS~ONAL CAMPAIGN COMMiTTEE iN I NOT ON~Y DiD SUKARNO RESIST THESE DEMANDS, BUT HE ACTUALLY 1961. OUSTED DEfENSE MINISTER GEN HARIS ABDUL NASTUiON -- SYMBOL Hss PROJECT CARRIES THE BLESS!NG OF GOP NATIONAL CHA!R­ OF POWER FOR THE RIGHTWING FORCES SINCE THE COUP -- TWO WEEKS MAN RAY C B~iss, WHO ~S LESS iNTEREST THAN MOST PARTY AGO IN A CABiNET RESHUFFLE. CHAIRMEN IN NATHONAl ISSUES AND MORE INTERESTED IN WHAT AT THE SAME TIME, SUKARNO VOWED HE WOULD NEVER ABANDON HIS GOES ON ~N THE PRl~~NCTS LONG-TIMf CRONY, FORflGN MINISTER SUBANDRIO, PRINCIPAL ARCHI- BLISS NOTABLE SUCCESS AS STATE CHAIRMAN OF THE OHiO TECHT OF INDONESIA'S SWING TOWARD AN INFORMAL "AXIS" WITH PE- PARTY FOR SEVERAL YEARS, QUALiF!ES HIM WELL TO JUDGE KING AND HANOI, AND HE BROUGHT AN ARRAY OF LEFTWING POLITICAL AND GUIDE SUCH A PROJECT, AUTHORiTATIVE OBSERVERS FELT. HACKS OUT OF THE WINGS TO FILL POSITIONS FROM WHICH HE HAD OUSTED OTHER RIGHTISTS. WHEN THE STUDENTS TR~ED TO BLOCK INSTALLATION OF OF THE OBSERVERS OUTSIDE INDONESIA WERE STUNNED BY THE ANNOUNCE- NEW CABINET BY MASSING iN THE STREET OUTSIDE SUKARNO'S IMENT OF NASTUION'S OUSTER, AND FRANKLY PUZZLED BY THE NEW CABINET WHICH SEEMED AT BEST A FEEBLE ATTEMPT BY THE PRESI- GLEAMING WHiTE MERDEKA (FREEDOM) PALACE, HE ORDERED THl IDENT TO GO BACK TO HIS OLD PRE-COUP GAME OF DIVIDE AND RULE PALACE GUARD TO FIRE ON THEM. AT LEAST FIVE WERE KILLED OR I SUKARNO HAS ALWAYS DISPLAYED A TACTICAL INTUITION SECOND TO WOUNDED. SUKARNO DENOUNCED THE STUDENTS, SAID THEY WERE INONE IN HIS ORCHESTRATION OF THE DOZENS OF BICKERING FACTIONS "GOING TOO FAR," BANNED THE UNIVERSITY STUDENT ACTION COM- 'WITHIN THE INDONESIAN BODY POLITIC. MAND (KAMI) AND SHUT DOWN ~E UNiVERSiTY OF iNDONESIA , HE HAS RULED FOR YEARS BY BALANCING OFF THE RIGHTWING ARMY ALL HE SUCCEEDED ~N DOING WAS BRiNGING MORE STUDENTS INTO :AND RELIGIOUS ELEMENTS AGAINST LEFTWING NATIONALISTS AND COM- THE STREET TO iNVADE RED CH~NESE CONSULAR AND TRADE OFFICES IMUNISTS. HE EVEN INVENTED A WORD FOR THIS, "NASAKOM," WHICH AND THE FOREiGN MiNiSTRY AS WELL, AND IT MAY HAVE BEEN THE MEANT RULE BY AN ALLIANCE OF NATIONALISM, RELIGION AND COMMU- RAID ON THE FOREIGN M@NISTRY LAST TUESDAY THAT DID THE MOST NISM, BUT ALL CHANCE OF REGAINING THAT "NASAKOMIt BALANCE DIS- DAMAGE. STUDENTS OCCUP~ED THE BUILDING FOR TEN HOURS BEFORE APPEARED IN THE LAST TWO MONTHS OF 1965 WHEN THE ARMY STOOP THEY WERE DRIVEN OUT, AND THEY RANSACKED IN THOROUGHLY BE- BY WHILE THOUSANDS OF CIVILIAN VIGILANTES SYSTEMATICALLY FORE THEY LEFT. SLAUGHTERED COMMUNiSTS THROUGHOUT INDONESIA, DESTROYING FOR- EVEN A GOVERNMENT SPOKESMAN ADMITTED THAT THE RANSACKiNG EVER THE STRUCTURE OF CELLS AND CADRES THE PARTY HAD BUILT UP SEEMED WELL ORGANIZED, AND THAT MANY "IMPORTANT" DOCUMENTS OVER THE PREVIOUS 18 YEARS. WERE MiSSING. THERE WAS SPECULATION THAT AMONG THOSE DOCU- PERHAPS IT WAS SUKARNO'S FATAL BLINDNESS, AT LEAST SO FAR MENTS MIGHT HAVE BEEN JUST THE PAPERS THE RIGHTWING FORCES AS RETAINING HIS POWER WAS CONCERNED, THAT HE DID NOT RECOG- NEEDED AND HAVE SOUGHT EVER SINCE THE COUP TO INCRIMINATE 'NIZE THIS -_ OR CHOSE NOT TO SUBANDRIO AND GET HIM OUT OF OFFICE. I THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE NEW CABINET ON FEB 21 BROUGHT OPEN AT ANY RATE, THE REPORTS FROM JAKARTA SATURDAY SAiD SUKAR- :HOSTILITY AGAINST THE PRESIDENT PERSONALLY INTO THE STREETS NO WAS STANDING AMID THE FOREIGN MINISTRY RUBBLE WHEN HE FOf{ THE FiRST nME SINCE HE TOOK OVER DIRECT RULE OF THE NA- GAVE SOEHARTO THE ORDER TO DO WHAT WAS "NECESSARY" TO BRING TiON iN THE LATE FIFTIES. THE SITUATION UNDER CONTROL. THAT ORDER ~S NOW BEING INTER- THOUSANDS OF STUDENTS HAVE BEEN IN THE STREETS VIRTUALLY PRETED AS SOEHARTO'S CALL TO POWER IN INDONESIA EVERY DAY SiNCE THEN, REPORTEDLY WITH AT LEAST THE TACIT CON- WHAT DEVELOPMENTS THE NEXT fEW DAYS -- OR WEEKS -- WiLL SENT OF THE MILITARY, AND SUKARNO SEEMED TO BE GOING FARTHER BRING IN INDONESiA IS, Of COURSE, UNKNOWABLE, BUT IT SHOULD AND FARTHER iN HIS EXCESSES A~AINST THEM, APPARENTLY HEEDLESS BE RECALLED THAT THE RESiliENT SUKARNO HAS MORE THAN ONCE OF WHAT STUDENT OPPOSITION HAD DONE TO OTHER ASIAN DICTATORS EMERGED UNSCATHED FROM WHAT FOR A LESSER MANIPulATOR MIGHT SUCH AS 5YNGMAN RHEE AND NGO DINH DIEM HAVE BEEN A CERTAIN fiNiSH, PAGf ~O HOURGLASS MONDAY 14 MARCH 1 aASSIFIED CLUB NOTICES .. OR SAL E *EMON LODGE,U.n.,F.A M

Mi~ACORD 10H AUTOMATIC TURNTABLE AND THERE WiLL BE A SPECIAL MEETING AT R£CORD CHANGER, ELAC STEREO STS 322 7 00 TONrG~T AT THE COUNTDOWN CLUB FOR C~RT~jDGE w'THOuT STYLuS, EXTRA PLUG­ THE PUR P 0SE OF CONFERRING THE 2ND DE­ ,N TONE ARM HEAD, TEAKWOOD BASE - $90 GREE. Al_ F.e S AND MASTER M~SONS ARE SHOWTIME (~I L qA~MOND AT 2221 OR 754 • Nvnl='"O 7: 0 0 & 9:00

~'jb ZENeTH STEREO - $65 - 4 MOS.OLD - DUPLkCAfE BRIDGE RESULTS fROM WEDNES- EXCELLENT CONDtTlON - ALWAYS iN HOT DAY, MARCH 9 whiCH WAS MASTER POINT A LOCI([~ wHEN NOT ~N uSE - REASON fOR NIGHT Aq[ AS fOLLOWS. ANTHONY PERKINS, JANET LEIGH SELL NG - BOUGHT NEW GARRARD CALL NORTH-SOUTH. DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE CUN~INGHAM AT 552 OR 382 I BRUCE LINDER AND ROGER SWANSON--63.2 2 GLADYS RONE AND BESSIE FULTZ----56 COLLINS TRANSCEIVER KWM-2 - 180 WATTS 3 JANE CLARK AND B LL CORDOVA-----56 PEP - COMPLETE WITH POWER SUPPLY -$800 EAST-WEST u 1/). I I SHOWTIME CAll 2757 AFTER 5 PM I JOHN Gi L L! 5 AND LARRY GLOBus----73 9% Ktchard60n 7:30 2 Russ WADD£~L AND DON PASCOE-----57 8% SONt TR-827 RADIO RECE!VER - 8 TRAN­ 3 VANCE. AND GEORGE SHELHORSE------54 0% ""\~

~I-f! MONAuRAL AMPLIFIER, PRE-AMP THE MICRONES~AN STUDY GROuP WOULD LIKE AND SPEAKER COMBINATION - $50 (OR TO INV!TE ALL WHO ARE INTERESTED TO A SEPARATELt) - L.P. RECORDS - $1 EACH MEETING AT THE SCHOOL ON TUESDAY, SHOWTIME ORiGiNAL CAST "CAMELOT", "GIGI", MARCH 16, ROOM il5 AT 7.30 PM fOR AN "GyPSY", "MUSIC MAN", "How TO SUCCEED IMPORTANT BUSINESS MEETING REGARDING 7~ 30 & 12~ 15 IN Bus~NESS", "M., FAIR LADY", "MILK FUTURE PROGRAMS AND THE CLUB CONSTiTu­ AND HONEY", "PAJAMA GAME", "OKLAHOMA", TION. CiTy GF FEAR AT "SOUTH PACiFIC", "CAROUSEL", ALSO ~NNOUNCEWENTS ViNCE EDWARDS MATHiS, SINATRA, BELAFONTE, ALAN SHER­ DR'MA BLACK AND WHITE MAN, CHRiSTMAS, ETC. - SIX ROLLS Of BARGAIN BAZAAR PICKUP DAY IS WEDNESDAY. DISPOSABLE PLASTIC BOTTLES FOR PLAYTEX CALL BARBARA GRAVES, 2485, BEfORE 8~45 NURSER - 75¢ EACH (ALSO EXTRA BOTTLES AM WEDNESDAY fOR fURTHER INFORMATION AND NIPPLES) - MATERNITY CLOTHES - AND ASSiSTANCE f:'7 I IJ I I. I SHOWT IME SIZES 10 AND 12 - $' TO $3 (6 TOPS, Jrad. Wind6 8:00 3 DRESSES, 5HO~TS AND SLACKS) - MADRAS FUN NIGHT WiLL BE HELD TUESDAY AT THE BLUE DOUBLE BEDSPREAD - $2.50 - WHITE YOKWE YuK CLUB BEGINNING AT 8.00 ~~HE.N fill UCy;:) ,.~Ll AND CHROME 3-WAY WALL DISPENSER (FOR THE. L l ~ L~ ATC fOIL, PAPEq TOWELS, WAX PAPER) - $2 - GoS~J~CoP" IS HE'iE THE GEORGE SEITZ CONNiE FRANCIS, HARVE PRESNELL ADvUSTABlE 3-TIER CHROME SHElf (POLE JUNiOR CLASS PLAY - "You, THE JURY" ~ MUS!CAL COMEDY COLOR WIDE SCREEN TYPE) - $2 50 - PAIR COTTOM THROW PIL­ MARCH 28, 29 TICKETS WILL GO ON SALE lO~~ (AQUA/BLUE) - $1 - KWAJ. BARBECUE TUESDAY, MARCH 15 UNTIL MARCH 26, AND MOVIES ARE KEYED AS TO THE AUDIENCE GRILL - $2 (LARGE, SQUARE-TYPE WITH WILL BE SOLO IN FRONT OF MACY'S AND FOR W~ICH THEY ARE SUITABLE. THE SYM­ LID) - MARSHAlLESE "COCONUT DOLL" AND DOOR-TO-DOO~ ADULTS - $1.75 - STU­ BOLS A, T AND C REPRESENT ADULTS, TEENS SHEL~ PICTURE fRAME (LARGE) - $2.50 DENTS - $1 25- AND CHILDREN RESPECTIVELY THE PRESENC EACH - BLENDER - $3 - SET SIX SMOKE OF ANY OF THE THREE SYMBOLS INDICATES WATER GLASSES - $1 - BOTTLE WARMER - THE ADULT EDUCATION COURSE, AN INTRO- THAT THE FILM IS CONSIDERED SUITABLE "ROSE OF _ II; if jl CORAL - OFfER - INfANT DUCT ION TO DiGITAL COMPUTER PROGRAMMIN~ FOR THE AUDIENCE GROUP REPRESENTED BY SEAT - $1 - TWO BLACK RUBBER DOOR MATS WILL COMMENCE TONIGHT 00 IN ROOM THE SYMBOLS - $1 EACH - BABY BATHTUB - $1; AVAIL­ 13 OF THE GEORGE ABLE APRIL I - SET (5 PAIRS) SEARS SElTZ SCHOOL GOLD HOPSACKING SHORTIE DRAW DRAPES FOR MEDIUM LIVING ROOM TRAILER - $8 - THE SCHOOL BOARD PAIR Of SEARS SLIDING DOORS (fRUITWOOD) wiLL MEET TUESDAY fOR LIVING ROOM S~ElVES - $10 - OUTDOOR AT 3:30 PM IN THE INfANT ~WING - $1 CALL 614 OR SEE AT CONFERENCE ROOM AT TR )22 THE AIR TERMINAL BuiLDING FOuR PAIR ~HiTr FIBER GLASS DRAPES - 72" x 54" - NEw - $6 -10 A PR CALL 722 TENNIS LESSONS-REM I IS BACK AND TENNIS lOST LESSONS FOR BEGIN­ NERS Will R~SUM£ ONE WiNSUM WILLIE HOARE PUTTER - NEXT WEEK. WOM~N­ FINDER CALL 752 MONDAY, MARCH 14 - 7 TO 8 PM, MEN - REM I NDER. I F YOU HAVE MADE RESERVA­ TUlSDAY, MARCH 15 - TIONS FOR THE TUESDAY LUNCHEON MEETING 7 TO 8 PM Of THE YOKWE YUK WOMEN'S CLUB AND ARE uNABLE TO ATTEND, CANCELLATION IS RE­ PRIVATE BOWLING QUIRED BY 9 AM TUESDAY OR A REGULAR BAGS NOW STORED IN LUNCHEON fEE MUST BE CHARGED. THE OffiCE Of THE BOWLING ALLEY MUST To HAVE rNOUCH IS GOOD LUCK, TO HAVE BE REMOVED BY FRIDAY, BAGS WHEN WE ARE HAPPY WE ARE ALWAYS GOOD MORr THAN ENOuGH IS HARMFUL THIS IS REMAINING IN THE OFFICE AFTER THAT DATE ~UT WHEN WE ARE GOOD WE ARE MOT ALWAYS TRuE Of ALL THINGS, BUT ESPECIALLY Of WILL BE PLACED ON TOP OF THE LOCKCRS liAPPY MONE.Y IN THE LOBBY, WHERE THEY MAY BE LEFT CHUANG-TSE OSCAR WI LDE