<<

r

[ ... HIGH TlOE lOW TlOE . 9-21-66 ~-21-66 3.9 AT 2154 2.4 AT 0312 3.1 AT 0830 2.5 AT 1354

VOL. 7 NO. 3109 KWAJALEIN~ MARSHALL ISLANDS TUESDAY~ SEPTEMBER 20~ 1966 INVERNESS, SCOTLAND (UPI}--AN AMERICAN PRofESSOR TODAY SAID THE FAMED MONSTER RE­ NEW MOON PHOTOGRAPHER ON TRIP PORTED TO INHABIT THE CHILL WATERS Of LOCH NESS fOR CENTURIES IS ONLY A GIANT SEA TO SELECT APOLLO lANDING SITES SLUG. PASADENA (UPI)--AMERICAN'S SECOND SURVEYOR SpACECRAFT RACED A BULLSEYE COURSE TODAY ROY MACKAl, PROfESSOR O~ BIOCHEMISTRY TOWARD A SOfT LANDING ON THE MOON TO PHOTOGRAPH THE LUNAR TERRAIN fOR A POSSIBLE ApOLLO ASTRONAUT LANDING SITE AT UNIVERSITY 7 ALSO SAID HE BE­ LIEVED "NESSIE" COULD BE CAUGHT If THE EXCEPT FOR A SLIGHT DELAY IN ESTABLISHING A TWO-WAY RADIO LOCK, TRACKING DATA INDI­ WATER COULD BE HEATED. CATED THE INITIAL FLIGHT pATTERN WENT SMOOTHLY. MACKAL ARRIVED LAST WEEK TO JOIN HIS "EVERYTHING LOOKS OUITE GOO~,'' A SPOKESMAN AT CALIFORNIA INSTITUTI:: Of" TECHNOLOGY SAID BRITISH CO-DIRECTORS Of THE LOCK NESS "PRELIMINARY TRA~ECTORV DATA INDICATES THE SPAC£CR~'T IS WELL WITHIN THE CAPABILITY OF PHENOMENA INVESTIGATION BUREAU AT HEAD­ THE MIOCOURSE MANEUVER." QUARTERS IN URQUHART CASTLE, PERCHED ON A THE CRITICAL MIDCOURS[ MANEUVER, IN WHICH THE THREE-~EGGEO MOON ROBOT WILL BE ALIGNED STEEP BLUfF OVERLOOKING THE 21-MILE LOCH. TO ZERO ON ITS PRE-SELECTED TARGET AREA, WAS SCHEDULED TO START A60UT 8 15 PM. SEVEN ------HOURS AFTER THE LAUNCH} SURVEYOR-2 WAS u. S. MAR I NES TRAP HUGE RED fORCE 55,529 MILES FROM EARTH AND CRUISING AT 'pi I TH AI D OF AI R RA I DS, ART I LLERY ~~~~6T:~L~~O:~R HOUR. IT WAS 180,143 MILES SAIGON (UPI}--U.S. TROOPS APPEARED TODAy TO HAVE SQUEEZED THE ELUSIVE NORTH VIETNAMESE "THERE'S A 50-50 CHANCE IT WILL HIT ITS 3246 DIV1SION OF 7,000 MEN INTO A TEN-MILE-WIDE CIRCLE OF THE OEMILITARIZED ZONE NEAR PREDICTED IMPACT POINT WITHIN THREE OE- THE COAST. U.S. riGHTER-BOMBERS) ARTilLERY, SHIPS AND MARINES ON THE GROUND eATTERED GREES, OR WITHIN A 30~MILE RADIUS, BASED TH~ CRACK COMMUN,ST fORCE. ON TRAC~ING DATA RECEIVED FROM ONE TRACK- U,S. MARINES CHARGED THROUGH MACHINEGU~ fiRE "ND SEIZEO THE FORTIFIED BORDER VILLAGE ING STATION," THE SPOKeSMAN SAID. OF AN DINH YESTERDAY, KILLING 53 NORTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS WITH THE AID OF AIR STRIKES THE PREDICTION, HOWEVER, MUST eE CORRE- AND ARTILLERY. MARINES TO THE WEST KILLED ANOTHER 15 IN AN ASSAULT ON A REO MOUNTAIN LAT(a WITH TRACKING DATA rROM AT LEAST ONE STRONGHOLD NICKNAMED "THE ROCK PILE." OTHER STATION TO ALLOW fOR AWl' DISTORTIONS, THE SAVAGE ASSAULTS "GAINST THE GREEN-UNIFORMED COMMUNIST DIVISION ~E~ BACKED UP BY HE SAID. 116 MISSIONS -- SEVERAL HUNDRED FLIGHTS -- AGAINST THE COMMUNIST NORTH. ONE GROUP Of SURVEYOR-2 BLASTED OFF THIS MORNING ATOP PLANES BLEW UP A F'REIGHT TRAIN I'LlKE A STRING OF fIRECRACKERS" ON THE RAIL LINE BETWEEN AN ATLAS-CENTAUR ROCKET FROM CAPE KENNEDY. HANOI AND COMMUNIST CHINA. MORE IMPoRTANT TO THE MARINES IN THE BATT~E TO CRUSH THE SEPARATION OF' THE BOOSTER WENT AS PLANNEO 3246 DIVISION WAS A SERIES OF AIR STRIKES (CONTINUED ON pAGE SIX) PERCY MEMORIAL HELD; AGAINST THE LOWER PART OF NORTH VIET NAM K~OW~ AS THE pANHANDLE -- THE MAIN SUPPLY DRAfT STANDARDS DROP NO LEAD~ TO KILLER ROUTE TO THE COMMUNIST DIVISIO~ CHICAGO (UPt)--H~R FAMlLY SAID GOODBYE TO THE AIR FORCE FLEW I I MISSIONS AGAINST TO ENlAR3E MILITARY VALERIE PERCY TODAY AS POLICE HUNTEO A CAT TROOP CONCENTRATIONS IN THE D[MI~ITARllED WASHINGTON (UPI)--MEN1Al STANDAROS FOR OURGLAR IN SEARCH Of HER KILLER. ZONE SEPARATING NORTH AND SOUTH VIET NAM INDUCTING MEN INTO THE ARMED .ORCES WERE ILLI~OIS REPUBLICAN LUMINARIES JOINED GOP AND 8-52 STRATEGIC BOMBERS RAINED TONS OF LOWERED SLIGHTLY TODAY IN A MOVE INTENDED SENATORIAL CANDIDATE CHARLES H. PERCY IN BOMBS ON THEIR 9TH OMZ RAID LAST NIGHT. TO MAKE 20,000 ADDITIONAL DRAfTEES AVAIL­ MEMORIAL SERVICES FOR HIS PRETTY, HONEY­ ONE F-I05 WAS REPORTED SHOT DOWN OVER ABLE ANNUALLY, HAIRED DAUGHTER, WHO WAS BEATEN ~~D STABBED THE NORTH; THE PILOT WAS LISTED AS MISSING. IN ANNOUNCING THE REVISED MENTAL STAN­ TO DEATH IN HER SUBURBAN MANSION HOME SUN­ U.S NAVY DESTROYERS AND A LANDING SHIP oN OARDS WHICH WILL BECOME Ef"rECT1VE OCT. I, DAY. THE COAST POURED FIVE-INCH SHELLS AND HuN­ THE PENTAGON SAID IT WOULD TAKE FURTHER VAL~R1E!S 1WIN SISTER WEPT THROUGHOUT THE DREDS 0 F ROCKETS AGA I ~JS T CO~MU N1ST POS I T IONS. STEPS EARLY IN 1967 TO QUALIFY ANOTHER SERVICE. HER YOU~G HALr-BROTHER AND HALF­ THE BATTLE AREA IS AeOUT 425 ~ILES NORiH O. 20)000 REGISTRANTS ~HO OTHERWISE WOULD BE S!STER ALSO CRIED. HER STEP~OTHER TRIED, SA!GON AT THE EDGE or THt SIX-MILE supPOS­ DETERRED IN THE I-Y CATEGORy. NOT ALWAYS SUCCESSfULLY, TO fiGHT BACK fHE EDLY-NEUTRAL ZONE AT THt NORTHERN TIP OF THE I-Y CATrGORY IS FOR MEN WHO WOULD BE TEARS. PERCY, TIGHT-LiPPED AND SOLEMN, QUANG TRI PROVINCE. "QUALIF!ED fOR SERVICE ONLY IN T[ME: OF WAR GLANCED CONSTANTLY I N CO~KERN AT HIS GR I EF­ (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) OR NATIONAL EMERGENCY" ANO COVERS OEFrR­ STRICKEN rAM!Ly. MENTS FOR 60TH MENTAL AND PHYSICAL R~ASONS. THERE WAS NO COFFIN IN THE KENILWORTH UN­ DEFINITION IS TROUBLE WITHIN THE PENTAGON, THE CHANGING O' ION CHURCH SINCE VALERIE'S BODY WAS DES­ STANDARDS FOR INDUCTION HAS BEEN REGARDED TINED FOR CREMATION. IN THE CHRISTIAN SCI­ IN CREDIT SUSPENSION AS A MEANS Of ENLARGING THE AVAILABLE MAN­ ENCE SERVICES, THE REV. WILLIAM R. HODGSON WASHINGTON (UPI)--HouSE TAX-WRITERS HAVE POWER POOL WHEN THE SERVICES ARE EXPANDING READ THE WORDS Of ST PAUL: RUN \NTO A THORNY PROBLEM, OEL~YING THEIR IN SIZE AND IN NEED Of GROWING NU~8ERS rOR 'WE ARE TROUBLED ON EVERY SIDE. YET WE WORK ON PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S PL~N TO fiGHT Vln NAM. ARE NOT DISTRESSED WE ARE DEEPLY PERPLEXED INrLATtON THE STEP TAKEN TODAY WILL AffECT MEN BUT WE ARE NOT IN DES?AIR, WE ARE CAST OOWN THE HOUSE WAYS &MEANS COMMITTEE HAD CALLED fOR fUTURE INOUCTION AND W!~L NOT aUT WE ARE NOT fORSAKEN, .OR WE LIVE IN THE HOPED TO WINO UP ITS WORK THIS WEEK ON THE REQVIRE THE NATIONAL SE~ECTIVE SERVICE GLORIOUS GOSPEL Of JESVS CHRIST." ADMINISTRATION'S PROPOSAL TO SUSPEND fOR 16 SYSTEM TO RE-SCREEN ANY OF THE APPROXIMATE­ (CONTINUED ON PAGE SIX) MONTHS TWO TAX INCENTIVES WHICH ENCOURAGE LY 2.4 MILLION MEN NOW CLASSifiED I·Y. BUSINESSES TO INVEST IN "'WDtRN PLAN15 AND ~ESSION EQVIPMENT. $3 BILLION AID 31lL U.N. OPENED THE PROBLEM IS TRYING TO DEFINE A "BINDING TO fACE GRIM AGENDA CONTRACT' WHICH COMMITS A BUSINESS TO MAKE IS OKAYED BY HOUSE UNITED NATIONS (UPI)--THE 21ST ANNUAL LARGE INVESTMENTS IN NEW EQUIPMENT. WASHINGTON (UPI)--THE HOUSE VOTED $3 SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL THE COMMITTEE PLANNED TO SPENO TODAY ON 61lLION IN NEW FOREIGN AID rUNDS TODAY ASSEMBLY WAS GAVELED TO ORDER THIS BLEAK THE SUSJECT. MOST Of" THE CLOSED SESSION OVER A BARRAGE O. COMPLAINTS THAT MOST OF' RAINY DAY AND CHOSE A DELEGATE FROM LITTLE YESTERDAY ALSO WAS INVOLV~D WITH IT THE RECIPIENT NATIONS HAD fAILED TO HELP ArGHANISTAN TO GUIDE IT THROUGH A GRIM UNDER ONE OF JOHSNON'S TAX PLANS, A BUSI­ THE UNITED STATES IN VIET NAM. AGENDA DOMINATED BY THE SHAObw rr THE VIET NESS WOULD NOT BE ENTITLEO TO THE SEVEN PER­ SENT TO THE SENATE BY A 234-1~ ROLL NAM WAR CENT TAX OISCOUNT -- CALLED THE INVESTMENT CALL VOTE WAS A $3.6 BILLION APPROPRIA­ VICE PRESIDENT HUBERT HUMPHREY HEADED AN TAx CREDIT -- IF THE rlRM p~AC£D AN ORDER TIONS BILL, MOST Of WHICH WAS EARMARKED ARRAY OF DELEGATES, STATESMEN AND DIPLO­ FOR NEW EQUIPMENT BETW(E~ SEPT, I, 1966 AND FOR ECONOMIC ANa MILITARY ASSISTANCE DUR­ MATS TO THE OPENING Of THE WORLD pARLIA­ JAN. I, 1967) BUT IF THE BUSINESS HAO A ING THE .ISCAL YEAR THAT STARTED JULY I. MENT. THE SESSION BEGAN WITH TWO RARE DlS­ "SINDING CONTRACT" BEFORE THAT 16-MONTH PER­ INCLUDED WAS $557 MILLION TO FINANCE PLAYS OF ALMOST UNANIMOUS APPROVAL IOD TO BUY EQUIPMENT, IT WOULD GET THE TAX SUCH RELATED ACTiViTIES AS THE PEACE CORPS THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY ELECTED GUYANA, THE CREDIT. ANO THE tNTER~AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK. fORMER SOUTH AMERICAN COLONY OF BRITISH AT LEAST ONE INDUSTRY -- STEEL -- WANTS BEFORE APPROVING THE MEASURE, THE HOUSE GUlANA, TO MEMBERSHIP. THIS GAVE THE U.N. THE SEVEN PERCENT TAX CREDIT TO APPLY IF A ON A ROLL CALL VOTE OF 187 TO 11:2 ADOPTED 119 MEMBERS, COUNTING INDONESIA. ALTHOUGH COMPANY HAS SAIO IT WILL BUY CERTAIN GOODS A REPUBLICAN AMENDMENT CUTTING THE ECONOM­ INDONESIA QUIT THE U~N UNDER PRESIDENT Su­ WITHOUT ACTUALLY SIGNING A BINDING CONTRACT IC ASSISTANCE SECTION OF THE AID BILL BY KARNO, THE WORLD ORGANIZATION NEVER RE­ eEfORE SE?T I $45 MILLION. MOVED THE COUNTRY FROM ITS ROLLS AND INDO­ T.F. PATTAN, BOARD CHAIRMAN O~ REPUBLIC THE REDUCTION MEANT THAT $2.2 BILLION NtSIA NOW HAS DECIDED TO RETURN. STEEL, TOLD THE COMMITTEE LAST WEEK THAT WAS ALLOTTtD fOR ECONOMIC ASSISTANCE IN As THE SESSION CAME TO ORDER, 117 NAT tONS HIS COMPANY HAD PLANNED TO SprND AS MUCH AS THE CURRENT 6UDGET YEAR. THE $825 MILLION WERE REPRESENTED THE DELEGATES ELECTED $200 MILLION IN AN EXpANSION PROGRAM IN THE fOR MILITARY AID WAS UNTOUCHEO BY THE AMBASSADOR ABDUL RAH~AN PAZHWAK O. AFGHAN~ CLEVELAND AREA. HOUSE. ISTAN PRESIDENT OF THE ASSEMBLY. THE SECOND PART OF JOH~SON'S TAX PLAN TOOAY'S VOTE CAME ONE DAy Af"TER PRESI­ HE GOT I I vOTES TO I VOTE FOR AMBASSADOR WOULD SUSPEND, ALSO rOR 16 MONTHS, THE DENT JOHNSON SIGNED lEGISLATION AUTHORIZ­ SALVADOR P. LOPEZ or THE PHILIPPINES AND ACCELERATEO TAX WRITE~Of. FOR DEPRECIATION ING $3.5 61LLION IN fOREIGN AID SPENDING. THREE NATIONS ABSTAINED IN THE SrCRET aAl­ ON COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS. THE fiNAL $3,046,065,800 WAS EXACTLY TEN LOTING. PERCENT BELOW JOHNSON'S REQUEST. f-IJU~GLA!)S

OPEN HOUbE A HIT MORE THAN 50J PERSONS ATTENDED SAT- URDAy1S N'KE-X PROJECT OPEN HOUSE co­ SPONSORED BY THE KWAJALEIN TEST SITE ANO THE KWAJALEIN FIE~D STATION IN SPITE OF AN orr-AND-ON DRIVING RAI~ WHI(..H OUMPE:D I, INCHES Of WATER ON THE ISLAND -- MOST OF IT ON TAE VISITORS. THE GUESTS WERE WELCOMEO AT IVEY HAL BY COL. FRANK C. H(A~Y, CO~MANDING, KWAJALEIN TEST SITE AND R.C. NEWHOUSE) DIRECTOR, KWAJALEIN FIELD STATION. THEIR REMARKS WERE FOLLOWED BY A SLIDE PRESENTATION ON THE ISLAND'S PAST, ESTS ON EACH OF THE THR~ PRESENT) AND fUTURE. Tour~S V:ERE WELCOMED BY COL. FRANK C. EACH OF THE SIX BUSLOADS 0, PEOPLE HEALY (LEfT) or KT~ AND R.C. NEWHOUSE WAS DIVIDED INTO TWO GROUPS WITH EACH OF THE KWAJALEIN FIELD STATION. GROUP HAVING A PROJECT REPRESENTATIVE AS GUIDE. VISITORS WERE GIVEN BUILDING TOURS AND SLIDE PRESENTATIONS AT THE JOINT TECHNICAL BUILDING, T~CHNICAL OPERA­

TIONS BUILDING, DISCRIMINATION RADAR, TAPE BRIEFINGS WITH SLIO~S ~o ~XPt~l~ TARGET TRACK RADAR #51 BATTERY CONTROL THEIR N,KE-X ACTIVITIES. MERE, GUESTS BUILDING, THE EC-12IK AIRCRAFT, AND WAIT fOR ONE TO START l~ -HF T~R~€T KENTRON-HAWAI I RANGE OPERATIONS TRACK RADAR. COMMUNICATIONS BUILDINGS.

,'. I I H~OQU~RfEAS BUILD­ ING - HoSfJI60B BAK­ tR, RIGHT~ DESeat ~MAT GOES,ON ~N THE UAR'tERS 60 rLD­ ING - OR JTO - FOR HANDOUT - A PRESENTATION AND TOUR Of HE KWAJAlEIN TEST THE BATTERY CONTROL BUILDING WAS HIGH­ SITE AND THE KWAJA­ LIGHTED BY A COMPUTER-ORAWN MAP OF LEIN FIELD STATION, KWpJAlEIN PREPARED BY NED SMALL ASSIST­ THE STOP ALSO rEA­ ED OY A 1,00 LINE-PER-MINUTE HIGH­ TURED EXHIBITS ANO SPEED PRINTER. REfRESHMENTS.

I CATIONS -

10 EQUIPMENT TO E5TS I N THE: KEN­ RON COMMUNICATIONS UILDING. THE KEN­ EC-12!K - YOUNG VISITORS TO THE EC-12IK TRON STOP ALSO IN­ AIRCRAfT - SUCH AS BRETT HEARL - WERE elUDrD A SPECIAL PICKED AT RANDOM TO HAVE A CHANCE TO ORIENTATION MOVIE. SIT IN THE PLANE'S PI~OTls SEAT. CZ~5~J;~ / -,..~ .

TION - CWO CArOGGIE OF [5TO

TWO SMAL~ HY" RAULIC UNITS DRIVE G I ANT TTR-5 RA­ He: S PART OF THE TEAM r MORE THAN 100 ROJeCT PEOPLE IN- I N HIE OPEN

'I COMPUTERS - H,GH-SPEED COMPUTERS WERE ON SHOW IN MOST A~~AS AND ATTRACTED CON ,sICC:1:ArLE kjTENTICIl ,'Y THE ~10RE: THAN )"l ... '~ITl'lS l"l Td~ :)ISCrnl1ll'{.11QIl C,V~L 0ERV1CE RECkUITl~0 eN KiJA1.l TO AI D FLAG! NGt> MR D HARRISON OF THE CIVILIAN PER­ SONNEL OFfICE, u.S. ARMY, REDSTONE AR­ SENAL, AND MR. K. YOUNG, Of THE CIVIL­ IAN PERSONNEL OFFICE, u05. ARMY, HONO­ LULU, WHO ARRIVEO ON FRIDAY'S NIKE-X FLIr.HT, WERE GREETED BY CAPT. D.L DE MENT, KTS INFORMATION OffiCER. MR HARRISON AND MR. YOUNG WILL BE ON KWAJALE/N FOR A WEEK TO ~NTERVIEW t'rr so~;~ I NTfRFSTED j N CU:R I CAL WORK lotWE' ,~. VI L "u v l cr STAT',S FOR KTS AR­ MY OFfiCES !N THE JTG ANO ~[~NINAL f\UILDINGS. \NTfRESTED PERSONS SHOULD CONTACT HOPEFULLY, BECOME LIVING PROOF ONLY A FEW YEARS AGO, SHE ONCE: WROTE, IT IS A VERY OLD AND KNOTTY SCIENTI'IC THAT RETARDATION IS NOT HOPELESS. SOME OF WHEN SHE AND HER HUSBAND SARGENT SHRIVER PROBLEM NOW BROUGHT TO A HEAD 8Y DRS. THE INSTITUTE'S GRADUATES ARt EVEN WORKING VISITED INSTITUTIONS rOR THE MENTALLY RE- T! DANIEL OrrER AND MELVIN SABSHIU OF THE IN GOVERNMENT JOBS. TARDED, A DIRTY BALL, INERT IN SOMEX"Dl'!NE:R, INSTITUTE rOR P"lI"ClttQ!)~TI~ !oN" PS"t'Cti1- "WE DONIT THINK OF THE CHILDR;~N AS MEN­ WAS OFTEN T~E ONLY EVIDENCE Ot A RECREATION ATRIC RESEARCH, CHICAGO. By COMPRESSING TALLY RETARDED," SISTER SUPER;IOR MARY ST. PROGRAM " IT INTo A WEIGHTY, TECHNICAL BOOK ( NORM­ ANNE OF THE INSTITUTE TOLD UPI. "THEY ARE THEY NOW HAVE O~ENED THEIR MARYLAND FARM ALITY, PUBLISHED BY BASIC BOOKS, INC., JUST CHILDREN, LIKE ANY OTHERS." AS A DAY CAMP FOR 80 RETARDED CHILDREN, NEW YORK), THEy'RE CALLING ON THE SCIENCES THE SISTER WORKS DAILY WITH THE Cm1tDREN. AND SHE LOOKS fORWARD TO THE DAY WHE:N A TO SOLVE IT. ALTHOUGH HOPEFUL AND IDEALISTIC ABOUT THE NATIONAL PHYSICAL FITNESS PROGRAM CAN BE THEY ANALYZEO THE FOUR COMMON SCtENTIFIC FUTURE Or MENTALLY RETARDED CHILDREN, SHE STARTED FOR THE RETARDED. CONCEPTS OF THE NORMAL AND FOUND ALL WANT­ WAS REALISTIC ABOUT WHAT THEY CAN AND CANNOT I SUCH CHILDREN, EXPLAINEO THE SISTER, ARE ING FOR ONE REASON OR ANOTHER, ONE IS BE EXPECTED TO DO. ! DESPERATELY EA~ER TO LEARN, THEY REALIZE "NORMALITY AS HEALTH." NORMALITY Tt-IEN BE­ IN AN INTERVIEW AT THE INSTITUTE, SHE HAD THEY HAVE SHORTCOMINGS, SO THEY TRY EVEN COMES ONLY THE OPPOSITE OF ILLNESS, AND A MESSAGE rOR THEIR PARENTS. HARDER THE NORMAL SURELY MUST BE MORE. "RETARDED ME"NS THEY ARE SLOWER," SHE SAID. WE VISITED AN ARTHMETIC CLASS. A BOY ANOTHER IS "NORMAliTY AS UTOPIA. II IT "IT TAKES THEM LONGER TO LEARN." ABOUT NINE RAN UP TO THE SISTER IN CHAR~E SEES THE NORMAL AS THE BEST POSSI8LE FUNC- i "YET PEOPLE "RE MORE WILLING TO ACCEPT OF THE CLASS WAVING A PAPER WITH SOME TIONING or A PERSON. "IT MAKEs TME NORMAL THE MENTALLY ILL. THEY SEE THE MENTALLY ILL ADDITION ON IT. MAN NOT ONLY A PERSON TO BE ADMIRED BUT PERsON AS A NORMAL HUMAN BEING WITH PROBLEMS "LOOK) LOOK~" HE GRIEO HE HAD ADDEO ALSO ONE WHO IS SCLDOM OR EVER SEEN IN

-- PROBLEMS WHICH At'ECT ALL OF us. 43 AND 62, aUT HE COULDN'T HAVE BEEN MORE FLESH AND BLOOO J " SAID OFFER AND SA8SHIN "RETARDATION~ ON THE OTHER HAND, NEEDS LOTS THRILLED THAN A NORMAL CHILD WHO HAD CONw THERE ALSO IS "NORMAL ITY AS AVERAGE" or CLARITY AND UNDERSTANDING." QUERED A COMPLEX MULTIPLICATION PROBLEM. IT's STATISTICAL. SHE SPOKE OF THE WIDESPREAD ATTITUDE THAT THEY ARE LIKE: THAT. THEIR DELIGHT IN PEOPLE ARE CHARTED BY MATHEMATICAL RETARDATION IS A PUNISHMENT OF GOD ON THE LEARNING SEEMED TO KNOW NO BOUNDS. ME:ASUREMENTS OF CHARACTE:RISTICS THOSE WHO PARENTS AND Ot THE GUILT THEY FEEL HAVING IN A READING CLASS, WE PASSEO A SMALL, FALL IN THE M'~OLE RANGE ARE CCNSIDEREO BROUGHT THE CHILD INTO THE WORLD. SHABBIL.Y ORESSED CHILD. THE SISTER SUPERIOR NOR~AL, AND THOSE WHO ARE AT THE .AR ENDS "THAT IS TERRIBLE,!! SHE EXCLAIMED. "SCIEN­ I SAID SIMPLY, "CULTURAL DEPRIVATION. No ONE ARE "DEVIANT" TlrlCALLY, THrRE ARE 'EW CASts CAUSED BY , WILL EVER KNOW IF SHE WAS BORN WITH NORMAL rINAl.LY THERE IS "NORMALITY'&'$ PROCESS" HEREDITY. IT IS NOT THE FAULT OF THE PARENTS. INTELLIGENCE" IT IS THE OTH(R TroREE PUT TO, ETf"(R WIT HTHEY SHOULD FEE~ GOOD, BECAUSE THEY HAVE THERE IS A ROOM WHERE SOME HIGH SCHOOL THE PASSIN OF TIME ADDEO ITS JUSTifiCA­ BEEN ENTRUSTED WITH A S?EC!A~ CHILD. THEY LEVEL CHILDREN ARE TAUGHT TYPING IN HOPES TION IS T AT "AS TIME PASSES TI E CONTENT HAVE BIGGER PROBLEMS BUT THE EMOTIONAL RE­ THEY CAN QUALI.Y FOR BUSINESS MACHINE OF STAT 1ST I CAL AVERA:;ES T, E RAN' E O. , EAL TH ~'ARDS FOR SOI.V ING THEM ARE A~SO GREATER." PUNCH CARD JOBS. AND THE COMPOSITION OF IDEAL VALUES MAY SISTER MARY ST. ANNE FEELS THAT NEARLY HBUT WE NEEO CONTRIBUTIONS TO HELP BUY ALL BE C AN('ED " ALI. THE PARENTS OF CHII.DREN AT THE INSTITUTE MACHINES AND rACILITIES," SAIO SISTE:R MARY YET SCIE'ITISTS STUOYIN SPECII.'- PHASES ARE HtLP.uL ~ND ANXIOUS THAT THE CHILDREN I ST. ANNE SADLY. itA CONTRIBUTION AS SMALL Of I'~MAN ,'I'> AV I OR SET UP "NORMAl.. CONTROLS" RCCEIVE THE TRAINING THEY CANNOT GIVE AT AS $100, YES, EVEN $10 CAN HELP ONE CHILO. A~AINST WHOM THEY COMPARE EXPERIMENTAl. HOME. WE ARE NOT AN ENDOWED INSTITUTION." SUBJECTS OrFER AND SABSHIN rOUND THAT "ONLY A VERY .EW," SHE SA 10, "aTlLL DO NOT IN THE BASEMENT WORKSHOP, THE BOYS LEA~N THE NORMAL ITY o. "NORMAL CONTROLS Ir WAS WANT TO ADMIT THE CONDITION IN THEIR CHILO." WOODWORK. THE INSTRUCTOR IS EXTRA CAREFUL NE:VER ESTA8LIS~EO BEYOND QUESTION -- AND SHE SAID TRYING TO DESCRIBE A TYPICAL RE­ WITH THE CUTTING MACHINES, BUT THE BOYS COULDN'T BE WHEN THERE IS NO UNCHALLEN E­ TARDED CHILD IS AS COMPLEX AS DESCRIBING TURN OUT SOME LOVELY PIECES or HANDI~ORK. ABLE DEFINITION Or NORMAL THE TYPICAL NORMAL CHILD. IN THE SAME BASEMENT, 60TH eoys AND GIRLS THE PUBLIC AS WELL AS BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE "SOt~E O' THEI~ ARE LIKE SEE-SA\JS -- SOME I LEARN CERAM I CS AND PAP 1ER MACHE WORK~ NEEDS TO "IMPRovE 115 UNDERSTANDINr, or !IT DAYS THEY DO WELL. OTHER DAYS THEY REMEMBER I HE PARE~TS ARE AMIZED AT THEIR HANOI- 1o.I0R:MALITY" IN Tf'EIR OPINION MANY PEOPLE NOTHING THEY LEARNED THE OAY BEFORE RE­ I WORK, n SHE SA 10. "T HEY ARE AMAZED THAT 2>CLIEVE SUCH TCRMS 4S "NORMAL" "AVERAGE" SEARCH WILL ONE DAY TELL US WHY THIS IS so. THEIR CHILD, WHO COULD NOT TIE HIS OWN "REGULAR" "USUAL" "NATURAL" AND "HEALTHY" "ANOTHER PROBLEM IS THAT SOME ARE .UNCTION­ SHOES AT HONE HAS PRODUCED THIS WORK." STAND FOR "THE IRIGHT,' 'GOOo, , 'SINLESS,' 1 ALLY REGARDED -- IN OTHER WORDS, IT MUST WHEN THE CHILOREN RE:ACH THE HIGH SCHOOL 'CON.ORMING , 'ouTER-DtRECTED' PERSON BE DETERMINEO WHETHER THE RETARDATION IS LEVEL, THEY LEARN A MARKETABLE SKILL, SUCH WHO CONSTRUCTS THE V"RIOUS VALU£$ O' OUR ACTUAL OR WHETHER THE CH,QD IS MERELY 'UNC­ I AS TYPING. THEY ALSO LEARN GOOD WORKING SOCIETy TIONING ON THAT LEVEL." HABiTS -- HOW TO GET ALONG WITH THE BOSS, "THE ECONOMY or ThE SOC I ETY WIT" ALI. ITS MASS PRODUCTION, ADVERTISING AND THE JOSEPH P~ KENNEDY JR. FOUNDATION SAYS PONCTUALITY, AND GETTING ALONG WITH rELLOw IN THIS RE:BPECT THAT SOME CHILDREN ARC MEN­ WORKERS. MOTIVATIONAL RESE:ARCH IS BUilT AROUND TAI.LY NORMAL, BUT ACT IN A MANNER WHICH WE ASK~ :MPLOYERS THROUGH QUESTIONNAIRES, HIM THE CHURCHES PREACH FOR HIM THE MAKES THEM APPEAR RETARDED BECAUSE OF EN­ SHE SAID, ABOUT HOW ~HE GRADUATES DO THEY MOVIES ARE MADE .OR HIS AMUSEMENT THE VIRONMENTAL FACTORS. SUM IT UP WITH A "GREAT JOB." LAWS 'IT HIS MORAL CONVICTIONS THIS CONCEPT OF THE COMMON MAN AS THE NORMAL "NEGLECT, POVERTY, POOR .000, NO CONVER­ (NEXT: WATCHING AND HELPING). --.------MAN HAS CHARGED THE TERM 'NORMALITY' WITH SATION ANO ONLY PLAYMATES WHO ARE LIKE MANY DIFFERENT CDNDTATIONS " THEMSELVES CAN CAUSE FUNCTIONAL RETARDATION~ MONSOON FLOOD0 ARRIVE SAIGON MIGHTY MEKONG RIVER AND YET SOME OF THE PUBL I C TH I NK "THE THE SISTER SAID. (U~I)--THE ITS SISTER, THE BASSAC, HAVE BEGUN THEIR 'NORMAL' IS A LOWLY TERM ASSOCIATED WITH BUT IS KNOWLEDGE ENOUGH~ ISNrT IT HARD TO MEDIOCRITY THE INTELLE:CTUAL SNOB CALLS MAKE PARENTS IN POVERTY CIRCUMSTANCES REALILE ANNUAL MONSOON RAMPAGE AND ALREADY THOU­ THE: 'NORMAL' MAN THE UNWORTHY CONFORMIST THAT LACK OF INTELLECTUAL STIMULATION CAN SANDS OF VIETNAMESE HAVE BEEN DRIVEN .ROM USING THE TERM 'NORMAL' TO FIT THE CAUSE THEIR CHILDREN TO APPEAR RETARDED? THEIR HOMES IN JUST TWO DAYS, THE MEKONG AND THE STANDARDS ANO EXPECTATIONS OF HIS OWN EN­ SISTER MARY ST. ANNE AGREED RELUCTANTLY. VIRONMENT THE MAJORITY, HOWEV[R HAVE NOT "YES, SO O.TE:N RETARDEO CHILDREN COME F"flOM BASSAC, SWOLLEN BY WATER SPtLLIN~ DOWN J fROM CAMBODIA AND THE TAIL [NO or THE ASSOCIATED NORMALITY WITH NEGATIVE VALUE LARGE FAMILIES WHERE THERE IS DEPRIVATION SOUTHWEST ~ON$OON, OVERLFOWED THEIR fOR THEM THE NORMAL IS THE SAFE AND SURE -- OTHERS IN THE SAME FAMILY O'TEN SHOW THE WAY OR THE WAY THAT IS NOT TOO DIVERGENT SAME OEFECTS. THE ONES MOST DIFFICULT TO BANKS IN CHAU Doc PROVINCE, ABOUT 110 MILES SOUTHEAST OF SAIGON. FROM TH E I R OWN " REACH ARE THOSE FROM A LOW SOCIOECONOMIC No ONE CAN PROVE ANYTHING. OFFER AND BACKGROUND. I SUPPOSE SOME Or THEM JUST IN SOME PARTS O' THE PROVINCE, IN WHICH ABOUT PERSONS LIVE, PERCENT OF SABSHIN ASKED THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES TO DONIT CARE." 450,000 100 THE RICE CROP HAS BEEN D(STROYEO ANO AS SUCKLE OOWN AND CH.NGE THAT. BUT WHAT IS BEING DONE NOW IS MORE IMPOR­ MUCH AS PERCENT OF TH£ HOMES DAMAGED TANT, SHE SAID. SHE TOOK HE ON A SHORT TOUR 80 OR OESTRO'tED GAI.VESTON, TEX. {UPI)--ArRAID HE WOULD OF THE INSTITuTE. GOVERNM[NT AuTHORITIES REPORTED THAT OUR FIRST STOP WAS THE GYMNASIUM. SOME 14 BE LATE rOR • «ATCH ON A NORWEGIAN THE WATER L~VEL OF THE MEKONG IN CHAU Doc 'REIGHTER IN GAl.VESTON BAY, ENGLISH SEA­ BOYS WERE THROWING AND CATCH I NG BALLS. PHYS ~ HAS ALREAO SURPASSED THAT Of WHEN MAN HERBERT LOWN, "BORROWEO" A CAL FITNESS IS MOST IMPORTANT, SHE SAID. IT 1961 19, $30~- PERSONS DROWNED AND MORE THAN 60,000 65-rOOT YACHT TO REACH THE VESSEL. TEACHES COORDINATION, COOPERATION AND GENER­ 164 000, WERE LEFT HOMELESS. POLICE tOUNO THE STOLEN BO.T flED TO ALLY AIDS THEM IN OTHER ACTIVITY. THE GOVERNMENT HAS SPENT EIGHT MILLION THE FREIGHTER AND LOWN .INISHEO HIS A WOMAN DRESSED IN LIGHT BLUE SLACKS AND PIASTERS RUSHING FOOD AND WATCH IN GALVESTON JAIL BLUE SWEATER TOSSED BALLS BACK AND FORTH ($80,ooo) BLANKETS TO THE HOMELESS. ARMY WITH THE BOYS, PATIENTLY INSTRUCTING THEM A U 5. ------MEDICAL TEAM MOVED IN AND BEGAN INNOCULA­ No MAN IS A H~POCRITE IN HIS PLEASURES. WHEN THEY MISSED. SHE INTRODUCED MRS. EUUICE KENNEOY SHRIVER, TING THE PE.PLE AGAINST CHOLERA, TYPHUS SAMUEL JOHNSON AND TYPHOID IN HOPE OF" PREVEIHING EPIDEMtcS. SISTER OF THE LATE PRESIOENT. MRS. SHRIVER " PAGE 5 HOURGLASS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 196( • LOCAL SPORTS YESTERDAY AT DA~~~TF~!~~HTIiE R'KAK'S BU~PED THE F'L-AMER,CANS FROM THE UNDEFEAT­ Spor t S 5 cflon ED RANKS IN THE MEN'S FAST P,TCH LEAGUE 4 r------r ______4TO 0 IN A WELL PLAYED BALLGAME NEIL CLUG- STON AND RAY NORTON'S BIG BATS, ALONG WITH TB~~n:V~~NQO~RTS PATROL OR I OlES DUMP ANGELS ~~~A~::\~'~~~~~:Y~F DENNY JUGAR LED THE NEW YORK (UPI )--ALL-AMER I CA rOOTBALL H['MO ON GRA NO SLAM HOME R CLUGSTON AND NORTON COlLECl'ED THREE HITS No I STEVE SPURRIER or FLORIDA, WHO NOW BALTIMORE (UPI)--WALLOPING FRANK ROBINSON EACH WHILE JAEGAR LIMITED THE FIL-AM TO T~O CAN BEAT YOU THREE DIFFERENT WAYS, HEADS DROVE IN FIVE RUNS WITH A DOUBLE AND HIS siNGLES AND STRUCK OUT TEN BATTERS UPI's FIRST BACKrIEUO-OF-THE-WEEK FOR THE 46TH HOMER YESTERDAY AS THE BALTIMORE ORI- THE RIKAKIS SCORED IN THE 5ECOND INNING 1966 COLLEGE FOOTBALL SEASON. OLES MOVED WITHIN FOUR GAMES OF THE AMERI- ON NORTON'S DOUBLE, DRIVING IN CLUGSTON IN NOTED AS A PASSER AND A RUNNER, THE CAN LEAGUE PENNANT BY OUTSLUGGING THE CAL- THE SIXTH INNING THE RIKAKIS DENTED THE FLORIDA PHENOM ADDEO A TOE TO HIS IMPRESSIVE IFORNIA ANGELS IJ-9 RUBBER THREE TIMES ON FOuR BASE HITS TO 1 ARSENAL IN THE OPENER AGAINST NORTHWESTERN WITH 12 GAMES LEfT TO PLAY, ANY COMB INA- CLINCH THE GAME SATURDAY AND BOOTED A PAIR OF FIELD GOALS TION OF FOUR BALTIMORE VICTORIES OR DETROIT JAEGAR WAS IN GREAT FORM AND AT NO TIME TO ADO FURTHER LUSTER TO A THREE-TOUCHDOWN DCF~ATS WILL GIVE THE ORIOLES THEIR FIRST THROUGHOUT THE GAME WAS HE IN TROUBLE PASSING PERFORMANCE PENNANT IN THEIR 13-YEAR MODERN HISTORY THE FIL-AM PLAYED A GOOD BALL GAME, BUT SELECTED WITH SPURRIER WERE HALFBACKS BALTIMORE BROKE AN 8-8 TIE IN THE SIXTH JUST COULDN'T OVERCOME JAE~AR'S PITCHING LENNY SNOW OF GEORGIA TECH AND MEL FARR OF INNING WHEN FRANK ROBINSON DOUBLED HOME TWO UCLA WITH DUKE'S JAY CALABRESE SPURRIER RUNS AND BROOKS ROBINSON'S SACRlrlCE FLY FAST PITCK SCHEDULE TOSSED SCORING PASSES OF 19. 10 AND 53 PUSHED ACROSS ANOTHER TALLY WED DAL1.. y F I (1.0 YAROS IN A DEVASTATING 43-7 ROUT OF NORTH- LUIS APARICIO STARTED THE INNING OFr LOS- S'IS PM, R'KAKIS VS KENTRON (KEATON & ALA­ WESTERN, SET UP A SAFETY WITH ONE OF HIS ER JACK SANFORO (13-7) WITH A SINGLE PAUL MEDA) LONG PUNTS AND KICKED THE FIRST FIELD GOALS BLAIR, WHO HAD rOUR FOR FOUR AND SCORED BRANDON FIELD OF HIS CAREER WITH SHOTS Of ~I AND 25 YARDS FOUR TIMES, WALKED IN FRONT OF FRANK ROBIN- 5 PM, NA ALI I B vs EBEYE BASKETS (SIEVERS & SNOW HELPED GEORGIA TECH fiND ITS lIP IN SON'S DOUBLE. FRANK MOVED TO THIRD WHEN BRAME) THE SECOND HALf AGAINST TEXAS A AND M , JAY JOHNSTONE THREW WILDLY TO THE PLATE THUR DAU Y FI ELD SCORING THR~E TOUCHDOWNS FROM INSIDE THE 10 TRYING TO NAIL BLAIR AND THEN BROOKS ROBIN- 5 15 PM, NA ALI I A vs HIGH SCHOOL (KEATON & IN A 38-j VICTORY WHILE fARR SCORED THREE SON HIT A LONG FLY HARVEST) TO HEL~ UCLA OVERWHELM PITTSBURGH 57-14 • CALIFORNIA HAD TIED THE SCORE IN THE TOP rRI DALLY FiElD CALABRESE PLUNG(D FOR THREE TOUCHDOWNS IN or THE SIXTH ON JOSE CARDENA'S TWO-RUN HDM- 5 15 PM, MlC VS ROl NAMUR (KEATON & HARDIN) A TYPICAL BATTERING SHOW AGAINST WEST V1R- ER CARDENA'S SINGLE DROVE IN ANOTHER RUN SAT DALLY FIELD GINIA AS DUKE WON 34-15 IN THE SEVENTH, BUT THE ANGELS WERE SHUT 5 15 PM KENTRON VS NA ALI I B (KEATON & QUARTERBACKS, AS USUAL, WERE THE KEY PER- orr THE REST OF THE WAY BY MOE DRABOWSKY HARVESTj FORMERS AROUND THE NATION BUT A FEW OTHER (6-9), THE LAST OF FOUR BALTIMORE PITCHERS BRANDON FIELD RUNNING BACKS PROVED PRODUCTIVE. fRANK ROBINSON'S HOMER) BESIDES INCREAS- 5 PM, COMMUTERS vs FIL AM (BURKE & BRAME) ARMY'S JOHN PEOUTO RAN rOR TOUCHOOWNS OF ING HIS LEAGUE LEAD, TIEo A CLUB RECORD 70 AND 31 YARDS AGAINST KANSAS STATE AND SET SET BY JIM GENTILE, WHO HIT 46 OUT OF THE FAST PITCH STANDINGS UP A THIRD TALLY WITH A 31 YARD RUN NAVY'S PARK IN 1961 ROBINSON BOOsTED HIS BATTING TEAM WOH LOST TERRY MURRAY SCORED TWICE AGAINST BOSTON AVERAGE TO 31 I AND TIED WITH TONY OLIVA OF ROI-NA~UR 4 (\ COLLEGE WHILE MICHIGAN STATE'S CLINT JONES MINNESOTA FOR THE LEAGuE LEAD IN THAT DE- Flt.-AM 3 I AND BOB APISA SCORED FROM OUTSIDE THE 35 PARTMENT MZC 3 I AGAINST NORTH CAROLINA STATE CALIFORNIA'S JIM FREGOSI SINGLED, RIKAKI5 2 I THREE QUARTERBACKS WHO'LL BE BATTLING STRETCHING OUT HIS CONS[CUTIVE ~IT STRING KENTlWN I I SPURRIER FOR ALL- HONORS ALSO OPENED TO EIGHT BEfORE DRABOWSKY STRUCK HIM OUT IN COMMUTERS 2 2 WITH A FLOURISH THE SEVENTH NA At.' I A I 2 GARY BEBAN OF UCLA STAYED IN THE GAME LONG THERE WERE NO OTHER AMERICAN LEAGUE GAMES NA AL I I B 0 I ENOUGH AGAINST PITT TO SCORE TWICE AND PASS SCHEDULED YESTERDAY ESEYE 8ASKETS a FOR A THIRD TOUCHDOWN PURDUE'S BOB GRIESE HIGH SCHOOL 0 ~ rfRED THREE SCORING PASSES AGAINST OHIO U SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)--BoB BAILEY HIT A AND KICKED SIX CONV[~SIONS GRANDSLAM HOMER IN THE 11TH INNING YESTER­ MEN'S VOLLEYBALL JON BRITTENUM, THE COOL COOKIE rROM AR­ DAY AFTER ROBERTO CLEMENTE OPENED THE FRAME THE ANIMALS WRAP~ED UP THEIR TENTH WIN IN KANSAS, LED THE RAZOR6ACKS FROM BEHIND TO A WITH A HOME RUN THAT STARTED THE SECOND A ROW LAST NIGHT BY DEFEATING THE ICHI-BAN 14-0 VICTORY OVER OKLAHOMA STATE 8Y PASSING PLACE P,TTSBURGH PIRATES TO A 6-1 VICTORY IN TWO STRAIGHT SETS, 15-9, 15-7 TO WIN THE FOR ONE TOUCHDOWN AND SCORING ANOTHER HIS OVER THE FADING SAN rRANCISCO GIANTS CHAMPIONSHIP IN THE B DIVISION WITH AN UN­ II YARD GAME-CLINCHING RUN CAME ~ITH 3 13 IT WAS BAILEY'S 12TH BLAST OF THE CAM­ D[FEATED RECORD STAN AKANA~ JONAH MAWA[, LEn PAIGN AND CAME JUST AfTER LOSING PITCHER HARRY TOMASELLI, JACK BAKER AND JOHN SMITH MAc WHITE OF SOUTHERN METHODIST SCOREO FRANK LINZY (7-11) INTENTIONALLY WALKED LED THE ANIMALS TO VICTORY TWICE AND PASSED 60 YARDS FOR A TOUCHDOWN BILL MAZEROSKI WITH ONE OUT PLAYING WELL FOR THE ICHI-BAN WERE DON IN A 26-7 VICTORY OVER ILLINOIS, BILL MILLER CLEMENTE'S 26TH HOMER Of THE SEASON BECAN SMITH, RON MAGI, ALEX GAHETON AND PAUL ALAS or MIAMI PASSED rOR TWO AGAINST COLORADO AND PULLING THE Roar DOWN ON LINZY, WHO HAC ATTENTION HANDBALL PLAYERS JOHN SCOVELL Of TEXAS TECH PASSED FOR TWO TAK~N OVER TO START THE NINTH INNING AND AT KANSAS GAVE UP EIGHT HITS ALONG WITH FIVE RUNS DON'T fORGET TO SIGN UP FOR THE ALL ISL­ BOB DAVIS OF V,RGINIA ACCOUNTED rOR A DURING THE THREE FRAMES AND DOIJBLES HANDBALL TOURN"'MENT BEGINNING PAIR AGAINST WAKE FOREST AND BOB BURRIS OF THE VICTORY WENT TO PETE MIKKELSEN, NOW SEPTEMBER 30 THIS WILL SE A DOUBLE ELIMIN­ HOUSTON DID THE SAME AGAINST FLORIDA STATE 9-7, WHO RETIRED ALL SIX GIANTS HE FACED ATION TOURNAMENT DEADLINE rCR ENTRIES WILL NEW NAMES TO WATCH INCLUDE SOPHOMORE ED ArTER COMING IN TO START THE 10TH BE WEDNESDAY, SEPT 28 CALL JOE KAULULUKUI PODOLAK Of IOWA, WHO SCOREO TWICE AND PASSED STARTER BOB VEALE WAS RIDING A ONE-HITTER AT SPECIAL SERVICES~ PHONE 420 FOR ANOTHER TOUCHDOW~ AGAINST ARIZONA, SOPH ANO HELD A 1-0 LEAD GOING INTO THE NINTH GENE WASHINGTON or STANFORD, WHO PASSED rOR WHEN THE GIANTS TIED THE SCORE ON W,LLIE ATTENTION ALL SWIMMERS TWO AND RAN fOR ONE AGAINST SAN JOSE STATE, MAyS' PINCH SINGLE THAT THIRD BASEMAN BAI­ SPECIAL SERVICES WILL SPONSOR AN ALL-Is­ AND GREG BARTON OF TULSA WITH FIVE SCORING LEY COULDN'T HANDLE THE SMASH BOUNCEO OfF LAND NEN'S SWIMMING MEET ON SUNDAY, OCT 23 PASSES AGAINST TAMPA THE PIRATES· INFIELDER ON THE SHORT HOP AT THE BACHELORS' SWIMMING POOL THE EVENTS AND INTO LEFT FIELD AS PINCH-HITTER DON WILL BE AS FOLLOWS MASON CAME ACROSS fROM THIRD WITH THE TYING I FOUR LENGTHS FREESTYLE RUN. 2 Two LENGTHS FREESTYLE MASON WAS RUNNING FOR JACK KlATT, WHO HAD 3 ON~ LENGTH FREESTYLE HIT INTO A FIELDER'S CHOICE AND TAKEN SEC­ ~ THREE LENGTHS INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY (BREAST­ OND WHEN MAZEROSKI MADE A WILD THROW TRYING STROK~, BACKSTROKE, FREESTYLE) TO COMPLETE A DouaLt PLAY MASON THEN TOOK FOR fURTHER INrORMATION CALL SPECIAL IOVER rOR HIATT AND MOVED UP TO THIRD ON JAY SERV I CES AT fl20 IALOU'S INFIELD OUT IN THE ONLY GAME COMPLETED AT PRESS TIME TOPPING LE~VL0 YMNK~tv TODAY, LEO CARDENAS DOUBLED WITH ONE OUT NEW YORK (UPI)-.OANIEL R TOPPING SOLD IN THE 13TH INNING TO SCORE VADA PINSON HIS LAST TEN PERCENT OF THE NEW YORK YAN­ FROM SECOND BASE AND SPARK THE CINCINNATI KEES TO THE COLUMBIA BROADCASTING SYSTEM REDS TO A 6-3 VICTORY OVER THE CHICAGO CUBS YESTERDAY AND RESIGNED AS CLUB PRESIDENT,

H,GH BOWLERS IN THE SATURDAY JUNIOR IN NIGHT GAMES 1 PHILADELPHIA WAS AT Los ENDING A 19-YEAR ERA LEAGUE WERE R,CKY BEACH WITH A 170-178-478 ANGELES, P,TTSBURGH WAS AT SAN FRANCISCO TOPPING'S ANNOUNCEMENT AT A MEETING Of SERIES, FOLLOWED BY SHARON COLLINS WITH A AGAIN, NEW YORK WAS AT HOUSTON AND 5T THE BOARD LEFT CBS AS THE SOLE OWNER 190-466, KEN WATERMAN, 440, AND GEORGE GUN­ LOUIS WAS AT ATLANTA MICHALE BURKE, A WORLD WAR 1 I NAVY HERO THER WITH A 411 PINSON BEAT OUT A DRAG BUNT rOR A SINGLE WHO ONCE WAS PORTRAYED IN A MOVIE BY GARY IN THE KWAJALEIN MEN's HANDICAP LEAGUE TO OPEN THE 13TH INNING AND STOLE SECOND COOPER, WAS NAMED SUCCESSOR TO TOPPING AS DANNY TOMAS AND GIS ~NNA TIED FOR HIGH BASE, THE FIFTH THErT or THE GAME FOR THE CHAIRMAN OF NEW YORK YANKEES INc, AND S£RI£S FOR THE NIGHT. TOMAS ROLLED A 234- REDS. DON PAVLETrCH WAS WALKED INTENTIONAL­ PRESIOENT OF THE CLUB 607 AND HANNA 231-607. [PH KAAIHUE WAS LY AND CARDENAS THEN CAME THROUGH WITH HIS IT MARKED A SAO ENDING FOR TOPPING, WHO NEXT WITH A 204-553 AND BOB PALOMA WITH A KEY DOUBLE BOTH CARDENAS AND PINCH-RUNNER HAD KNOWN ONLY YEARS OF GLORY SINCE HE ~UR­ 515 DICK SIMPSON SCORED ON GORDIE COLEMAN'S CHASED THE TEAM IN 1945 UNTIL LAST YEAR, PINCH SINGLE WHEN THE PERENNIAL CHAMPIONS FINISHED SIXTH A GAS STATION PROPRIETOR IN ENGLAND HAS BOB HENDLEY, WHD TOOK OVER FROM STARTER IN TH~ AMERICAN LEAGUE As THE CLUB CHANGES PLACED A MANNEQUiN BESIOE HIS PUMPS, SO FERGUSON JENKINS IN TI-£ TENTH, SUfrERED THE HANDS THIS TIME, IT IS DEAD LAST IN THE PEOPLE WILL THINK SERVICE IS AVAILABLE. LOSS. TEO DAVIDSON EARNED THE VICTORY LEAGU~ WITH 86 LOSSES, WORST SINCE 1913 PAGE G HOURGLASS '·:.~~L "T:1l:ET TerAY HOURGLASS STOCK LISTINGS New YORK {UP1)--PROF1T-TAK1NG AND AMERICAN AIRLINE5 59 LAC' 0' INiEREST TOOK THE IR TOLL IN THE AMERICAN PHOTO 7 1/8 ~TOCV MARKET TODAY TURNOVER SLOWED. AMERiCAN T &T 51 3/8 PRICES RETREATED STEADILY THROUGHOUT AMPEX 22 [/4 THE SESSION A FEW INDIVIDUAL ISSUES ANACONDA 72 AND ONE OR TWO SECTIONS FOUND SUPPORT BOEING 59 3/4 IN T~E LAST HOUR BUT THIS HAD LITTLE CHRYSLER 37 5/;8 EFFECT ON THE OVERALL TREND. DOUGLAS 5 [ I 4 -I T~E UPI STOCK MARKET IND!CATOR FELL FORD 43 1/2 -3/8 o 41 PERCENT Or THE I 389 ISSUES GEN ELECTRIC N/A TRADED, 724 DECLINED, 46 TO NEW 196b GrN. MOTORS 77 3/4 -I tOV!::;, \,.ti-l!U': !tOO ADVANCED, 6 70 NEW GEN. T & R 33 1/2 'i !GllS IBM 322 -7 Dow JONES INDUSTRIAL FELL 4 8)t TO LOCKHEED 59 3/4 806 01, REFLECTING TO A LARGE EXTENT LONE STAR 15 LARGE DECLINES IN GENERAL MOTORS, Du tlIGM 27 I/l~ PONT, UNION CARBIDE AND STANDARD OIL MfvM 79 1/2 (N. J ) ~10BI LOlL 41 3/8 THE ~YSE l~oEX SHeWED A LOSS EQUAL PAN AMERICAN ~t 1/4 -1/4 TO 29 CEt.. ... S ! N THE AVERAGE SHARE PR I ct: RCA -3/4 TRADING SLOWED TO 4,5GO,OOO SHARES FR~ SEARS t~/A 5,150,000 SHARES YESTERDAY AND THE StiEL ... OIL 60 //8 +1/2 LO~EST S~~CE SEPT. 6, SPERRY RAI'IjD 27 7/8 L L BROKERS SAID THAT 4LTHOUGH T~EY HAD SiD a! Of' CA 6c l/2 -1/2 HOPED FOR AN U?TRENO ON THE DAY, THEY S1"D OIl. ot'" N.J 6!l 3/8 -I 3/4 STIL~ rEl~ T~E SESSiON WAS CONSTRUC­ UNHED FRuiT 3; 7/8 -5/8 TlVE SOME ANALYSTS SAID THE ~ARKET U S GYPSUM ~, 1/4 -2 1/4 ~Av H4VE 70 BUllD A BASE TO SUPPORT WARNER BROS PJc. ANY NEW ADVANCE. THE PROFIT-TAKING WAS (LOS jNG GENERAL~Y EXPECTED IN VIEW OF THE DOd JONES SrOCKS CLOSE CHANGE SHARP RISE LAST WEEK j THE B,GGEST IN SEVERAL YEARS. 30 INDUS 806.0: SOME ISSUES WERE BUOYEO BY SPECULA­ TION OVER THE SrlORT INTEREST REPORT WHICH WAS RELEASED AfTER THE C~OSE S~OR~ INiEREST -~ SHARES BORROWED AND SOLD IN ANT!CIPAT!ON Of LATEh REPUR­ CHASE AT A LOWER PRICE -- STOOD AT 12,090,993 SH~RES, UP 707,527 SHARES tROM THE AUG. 15 REPORT THE MARKET OUTlOOK STILL REMAINED OPTIM!STIC BUT c~uTIOUS. SOME ANALYSTS FOUND BULLISH INDICATIONS IN THE POS­ SiBIL ITY THE HOUSE WAYS & MEANS COM- PAGE HOURGLASS TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 20 I 66 CONTRACT BRID G E "Divorce" - Hollywood sty Ie Is No Laughing Matter By B. Jay Becker By ARMAND ARCHERD US as A comedy WIth pain (Top Recorcl-liolder jln Ma ....rt, Individual Champlonlhlp Play) Central P1'e~8 AssoCiation correspondent He should know-the SC~lpt HOLLYWOOD-It's a new, and fadmg Image in the new and contain!; many of hIS p(,rwnal FAMOUS HANDS Unal phage or DIcK Van [lyke 8 actIng c:lre~r He's sedou!! expenences en route to hiS own We1lt deaJ~r clubs and A-K ot heo.rtl, and about :II. fIlm that started out to be a comedy-' Dn'orce AMER dlvo\'t'<' after 12 years of mar North South vulnerable then l"llI'fing clubs and diamonds ICAN Style nage Matter at fact th e pro NORTH back and forth until he had We were standmg Just outside the dIvorce courtroom on the ducel' dIrector team a"ked Co twelve tricks In the till • A QI04 movie JJ~t, that !s when we spoke to Van Dyke It was our lIec lumbla Studios to Include In the But South, [or reaBQna un­ 9AK94 ond vL>'.lt with him dmlng this p~od\lctlon You mlgnt cali It a credit ltst of per[ormer~, 'And known, at one pemt during the checkul' also co-starring-YOU'" We re +~ crollllruff elected ruff dum­ .A10875 to The first tlml' Dick tOld us he planned to reUre from a~! Ing all In there s>'>mewhpr'" said WEST EAST my s fourth hearl low and WM In flv," or s]x years He also adnlltted on the Inlt]al viSit that Lear lucky enough fmd Wut with .K7 to .2 the deuce at apadell instead of ~~n~::~e a::~ ~~:~c:d he d play In II fIlm With auch 9. t]tle MA YBE all are in there ex .873 • QJ 1062 the seVen, so that West was un­ .Now Dick conflrmed plans to quit acting at thl" concluaJon cept cast member Dick Van Dyk" .K63 +A942 able l() oven-uff ",KQJ963 .42 ot his rive-six year plan, and to Rlso tell U8, "The longer till ~ who Is happily wed to hl~ )llgh Despite his alarming m~thod school $weeLhNI,I't [rom Dan vtlle SOUTH film gOt!! on tile more serious U1 the former Marjorie WIUett .J98653 of play, South made the doubled 1-- --- contract tor a score of 1,660 and realistic ]t beComes It's a tertalnlng approach, WIll Show They have four chIldren Chns ,5 lot mot~ ser!OU!! than, I think the senOUs dIVorce problem In tlan 1 ~ (who VI' onts to be 9. QJI08 715 polnl!t The only tnck be lost + W4B to the king or spades any of us expected It te> be 1111" cOllnlTY m]mst~r), Barl'Y 13 Stac,,"y 10 ... ~ A slam W!tll reached at the come After DIck qUits actmg, he II and CarrIe Beth 4 The blddlOg other table also, the biddmg take on the full time job of ra,s 8 f t ng show ~Iz tor THE JUDGE on the set e are ex, 1 ... West North East Soutb haVIng gone and In lhe fllm Is John J An In!'; morals of the world-he his Do Good, non profit life 1 ... DNe Redble 4. West l'torth Esst hopes AS of now, Dick doesn I Dick hll!! a h@ity sch~dule set 5. Dble Pass I"", thony the rsdlo marriage coun know how he'lJ attack the lo.tte1 for himself meludlng tilree TV 6. 1, seller WIth sev;,ral decades of job but he s got five spectaculars, and feature fIlms Opemng lead-king of clubs ~ix y~9.rs 2, 3. expene-nce behmd 111m We asked to think about ]t mcludmg John Henry And This deal occurred In 1962 In Pass tNT Pass If he B happily marrtl'd-he Is rhe Do.Rlght Peopl" The the Cold Cup Bf/tatn a premier Pass 6 • The wHe whom Van Dyke team of four event South be Agrun the king". of clubs was In IS divorces the ilim Is DDg bid of one cluJ;> played the hand properly and edlan Shelley Berman, deter slon show His "WIfe t!':tnt the TraIn Robbery and a relUl'n and then bid (Ive club!! at his eastJy made hIS twelve trickS mll'led tu launch a serious actlng senes, Mary Tyler Moore, has A '-rIOIJ$ O"k VQn Oyk. to DI:mey S foe 'Thnll A Mm next opportumty Not havmg been doubled, how- career In films vIa thIS role But also found ;.uccells workmg In a ~ ute a9 one of three for Uncle West's blddmg ",ould have ever, his team lost 230 points hetv. een seenes he'll hIS usual fra ture 'Thoroughly Modern I!lOe 'and of rourse M~ ry Pop Walt heen Wl'Ill',",warded had he been on the deal hllarluu~ sell It wasn t easy to MIZIJe' w,tll Julte Andrew,~ ptn~' The role III Divorce Will also In~plred It 5uftl(::ienUy to lead No douht, reasons can be get serIOUS answers [rom DiCk Dick $ fal'mer film girl frlertd Thl~ plctllre 'Divorce de- show Debbie Reynoldq l!l a new trump agalOst the slam Had he found tor either West to have with Shelley a.round MI~~ Moo1"e contmu~~ from here rives ]t,; comedy from r"al mar -prOf~S$IOnal-hght 11'1 'DI done that, South undoubtedly led a trump to defeat the con· Van Dyke admitted he agreed 10 IOtaI' on Broadwily thIS fall Ila\ ~ltl1atloll9 But the tragic vore~ AMERICAN Style .he Would have gone down one tract, but then IS conSIderable to do thIs ol"ibeat Uor him' film Dlck'lI pr"vlou~ fIlms Ita",,., all c"medy In Il marrhlj(·e e~ rmlte admlt~ lhere may be some of But west led a club, as most doubt Ulat mare than a handful becaUde he Is In favor or MAR bfoen comedy-{lf one so!'t or to 011 Ol'('C hss more P!l.tho~ than hpr perwnal lIfe ~howlng too players would, and South lIhould of players-unle9.9 they !I!lW all have had no troUble maklllg tht four hands-woUld have selected RIAGEl and appalled to the 1another 'Sye Bye Blnlie humor Produc~r Norman Lear Bllt, a~ of thl!! moment she has moral state today tn the US Whal A Way To liD,' The Art partnered With dlr,",ctor BUT no plans to .etlre fNm show contract by cashing' the ace at a. trump All the opening shot He hupu tllis film, .,.Ia an en- Of Love' 'LI.,ut Robin eru ¥orlml,

00 the failing flgurel on the .Iotk I.cker tope for.casl a l'itcesslon? llV CHARLES W WHITE , Truman somelhmg to sh()w any W, ,/tnl R\IJfcwlly lor Cf'Htral Prell8 aud Th,s New~p(lptr lone who Wjlnt~ to argue \Vhllt WHE'>: FORMER PI(!sldent Barry S Tmman in a rare public r are the famous "leading indIca ~tatemel1t frtlm 111~ Indt'pendenc[> Mo, home waffled that If in I tors' of bUSiness showmg nOW? ter("t l'ltes keep gomg lip to fIght InflatIon 'we wlli bTI~g on a Arthur A Mertlll at Chap pI eClplt3 I frame ..... lIh 5 pee I a I ruhber l1t,tement lh&t he too Is concerned .. elf, hefor~ Labor Day It had al_ DI!:TROIT-Wh.m J W Cothran played the guitar In the four mounts Ad\laUy, ~ S Senal"r Vance Hartke of Im1l=9., was days ready reached proportions com man combo In his under gradw,te dr.ys at Rensselaer Pal)technJc 'The front mounta had cllf ahead of both Truman a~d par(lble to 1962, With losses to InstItute to earn money to get through engmeerlng school, he had f<:rent bounce or spnng rates Johnson \\ hen, at a Democrat Co.utlOU3' share owners estimated at $100 no Idea that his mUlllcal talent would play a VItal role In hiS than the rear mounts lind stat .. COl1ventlon ~t French Lu:k Regard/e.!! at caUJlei! (and n bIllIOn by US NeWB and World pr~sent j point" lth the A merl BaBf'd on an l'normOUI! amollll t the wllole thing mote than a by !loout 1/} decrbles oc more than 10 p~r cent and h .. h!ls been can publIC wtUJ !Ire "'" onderlng of stud)' that has never beell de duhbed the QuIet Man by nil! TO ,VAUEVE eve~ peater WE'I!, '" hat about It? cIslvely refuted, the National ;. ear ago sat~ ltdwou.ld ~ just colleagues make Cothran satd v,bration cancello.tlon tbe car 9 WLat has happened In the Bureau of EconomIc Res~arch ~a:(>suse m e oWn",al' pa \Ve use dozens at "pproaches Our tflsk !1o"",,ver la It !tttle "he.. t m .. tal Imtt.. ry radiator fl9- past tmcter ",m 1)"1 clrCllm~tanc has concluded lh at slack pnc""" ( III ferrel bIg out the causal! ot mot. comp/!' at"d tnllte"d of 80 'lembly waa thrown Inro the e, ? are con$l.!itent leaders' of bus Smce they VEl been rIght 80 unwanted lIounds and "'Ibra or 90 sound producing lnstru • mess condltlons (G H Moore far, one tends to rely on theIr battle to 0 f f set lhe frame s twns cot bran exphuns Ob ments we have to contend With tWUlbng \llbrations The result A SURVEY of ahstruse eco- Bu~mess Cycle Indicators 'Ithmkmg rather than that of the vlousLy It I" ImpractJclll-!t not 'OO'l1e 15000 sound producmg ot thiS th ree way battle among nOmIC It tel atu~e on the subject Vol t, NI3ER, Princeton lin! o,ptmusts Harry D Schultz, Impo~~.ble-\u ehmmate all lhe eompDn~nt!l In a car and we vlbrallllg components wall a leav~$ one with rtOt a te", bear : vl'rslty !'ress, Pnnceton N J (Ill.forma & WOIld an Intern a sounds from the car We try I., have t" tram our ears to recog­ very slgnlhco.nt reductIon In Sized qualms Moreover US 1961 page 619) tU)!Ial traveller who wrote the eliminate a$ many M poss.ble mze ~ources of the~e SOUnds It nOIse transmitted from these busmessmen i!~em to be iettmg , text Bear Markets" (Prentlce Insulate agamst others and then we are to locale and eliminate sources tf:> the car 5 passenger the message, according to Dun OR YOU can tnkl' a look at Hall, 196i) thinks we re no harmonize those that can t be them compartment and Bradstr"otl't'enle>lce tim Ism for three SUCC@8111Ve pnces and the Index ot mdus pand and by all means don't acuity whiCh mea.ns he must small combo' I The car ~ horn for Instance, quarters, the 1 ~24 bUSInessmen trial productIon start bUYlllg stocks thmklng be able to hear and dlstmg1llsh One of their more novel ap IS a harmonlou"ly tuned warn intervIewed in Dun and Brad Stock slumps defInitely pre they are' bargams, these beansb a. \~.'Ide vant'ty of sound~ that proaches in reducmg noise level I11lg device' he said "But the street s late~t survey tempered ceded and accompamed manu authorities advure would escap'" the untrained ear was to use anI!' Bet of vIbratIOns ~Ii['k of II lum .'lIgna) wall made their expedHlIJl1I; to~ the fourth factunng slides In 1929 Hi36, There are or course some liP A symphony con d II C tOt to oppose and cancel other vi 5hghtly h a r s h to make the quarter of 191\1\,' their report 1952 53, 195657, and 1961-62, tlnl,sts United Sualn~~11 Senlce, knows Immediately whIch of th", bratlOn" Cothran explamed It drIver aware It is operatmg says "In the face of Increased the stocks usually peakmg out Boston one of the largest and 80 or 90 Instruments in hl~ this way Similarly the sound of a start- action In Vlet Nam slo..... el' GNP before the prodm;llon index de- most respected advl90ry servo orchestra. ha" produced a wrong; 'Thl!> engine and frame ","'ere e-r motor Is IntentlonllJly hacgh growth hIgher prices anI! labor dilled Ices on August 29 aald 'We nato! be~ause fle has traine<1 a.ssemhl"d so that their natural to prompt the drIver to d':!Ien­ costa, tIghter credit, a mlld"r Ai! for trlterest rates they hit do ~ot see a receS.!llon commg himself to become an expert In vibratl executives ques- 1959, each tIme berore blJ,~lness thmk expansion will be a little tloner! were !latices bly mol'e trouble-apparently gl\lJng l\{l' slower • HOURGLASS TUESDAY, SEPTE~BER 20, I 66

ANNQUNCEIVENT0 PUBLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES AT THE PROTESTANT SENIOR CHAPEL CHOIR MEETS DIRECTION OF THE COMMANDING OFFICER, EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 7.30 PM IN THE KWAJALEIN TEST SITE, MARSHALL ISLANDS CLASSIFIED CHAPEL CONTRACT DA-O I-021-AMC-90004 (Y) FOR SALE THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLIS~ED DAILY DUPLICATE BRIDGE WILL BE HELD WEONES­ MONDAY THROUGH SAYURDAY. DEADLINE fOR BEITERS fOR pdRTABlE G E MIXER­ DAY NIGItT IN TltE YOKWE YUK CLUB AT NOTICES IS 4 PM THE DAY BErORE PUBLI­ NEW - $2 CALL 2241 7 15 SHOWTIME CATION AND DEADLINE 'OR NEWS IT(SM IS 7 II.. 9 15 10 AM THE DAY Of PUBLICATION MATERNITY CLOTHES - DiffERENT SOCCER ASSOCIATION INYITES ALL SOCC[R­ THE HoURGLASS RESERVES THE RIG~T TO S If!:S - 25¢ UP, MIN'S AQUAflNS - SIZE fOOTBALL fANS ANO PLAYERS TO THE EDIT LETTERS TO THE EDITOR fOR THE THURSDAY AfTERNOON pRACTICE rROM 4 30 SAKE Of B~£VITY ALL COPY, LETTERS 10-12 - $4, CALL 2349 Oft SEE AT DARLING 41BA, TO 6 ON THE SOCCER FIELD A AND PHOTOGRAPHS SUBMITTED rOR PUBLICA­ DRAM~ BLACK AND W~ITE TION SECOME THE PROPEATY or THE HOUR- MANY FINE ACCESSORIES fOR 16 MM KWAJALEIN AMATEUR RADIO CLUB WILL JULIE CHRISTIE, DIRK BOGAADE, LAURENCE GLASS REPUBLICATION Of MATERIAL CON- MINOLlA CAMERA - "Spy" - $33 - WILL MEET TONIGltT AT 7 PM AT CLUB STATION H.R1IEY TAINED HEREIN IS NOT AUTHORIZED WITH­ T~ROW IN CAMERA. CALL 9-515 DURING Kx6su A DOORPRIZE WILL BE GIVEN OUT THE PRIOR APPROVAL Of THE COMMA~D­ WORK HOURS ING OfFICER, KWAJAL£IN TEST SITE. FUN NIGHT IS TONIGHT AT THE YOKWE SHOWTIME If YOU HAYE NOT RECEIVED YOUR HoUR­ SUNBEAM fLOOR CONDITIONER WITH YUI< CLUB AT 8 PM 7 30 GLASS BY 6.15 PM, PLEASE CALL 539 BE­ THREE BRUSHES - $15 CALL 2257 TWEEN THE HOURS or 6 15 AND 6 45 A~D BARGAIN BAZAAR PICKUP DAY IS TOMO~ROW A COPY WILL BE DELIVERED TO YOU BErORE I PM CALL MA~DY KLAMT AT THE OUT01DEk AT 2458 .OR FURTHER jNFOR~ATION AND DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE EDITOR NtlL PHELPS-MUNSON VIOLIN OR VIOLA PLAYER rOR SHORT ASSISTANCE TONY CURTIS, JAMES FRANCI$CUS STAFf ADDIE JOHNSON CONSULTATION CALL 2349 ------NANCE BLAIS CATHOLIC w:JMEN'S RETREAT TAKE A RARE LYNN LlrF"ICII BoY's BIKE COASTER BRAKE - WILL BUY OPPORTUNITY ENJOY A DAY Of PEACE AND SPORTS EDITOR BRENT KeLLOGG fOR $5 TO $15 CALL 2472 TRANQUILITY THE: RETREAT fOR THE LI THOGRA PHER. RIC~ARO RUFfOLO WOMEN Of THE CATHOLIC PARISH IS SUN­ CIRCULATION To SUy - GI~~'S BIKE CALL 2452 DAY, SEPT 25 START WITH 7 AM MASS, MANAGER DANA OOGERS HAVE BRUNCH ANO LUNCH AND END TH( OAY AT ABOUT 4 PM f AT HE R ANTHO'~Y V K EANt YOUNG FHILAJlLPHIA~0 A WILL CONDUCT THE RETREAT, DON'T fOR­ DRAMA BLACK AND WHITE GIRL'S BIKE - IS" - RED - WITH GCT CALL NOW fOR INfORMATION CALL PAUL NEWMAN, BARBARA RUSH, ALEXIS SMITH TRAINER WHEELS - NO BACK fENOER - ONE Of THE fOLLOWING NANCY COHAN - REGISTRATION #1822 - LOST NEAR TR 5ryZ, CLEO COLLINS - 2274, BETTY COL­ P 639 CALL 764 LINS - 2383, Lucy WADDELL - 23 J4, OFFICIAL NOTICES PHYLLIS BILLUPS - 676, RAY ButBE - 567 SHOWTIME [lATE OFFICIAL BULLETIN REWARD - HEARTBROKEN CHILDREN HAVE 7 30 & 12 15 lOST THEIR THREE-~ONTH-OLD ORANGE THE MEN S CHAPEL FELLOWSHIP WILL MEET MAJ CHAN[Y AND WHITE CALICO K!TTE~ - REO COLLAR 20 SEPT 66 A,A 2313 TUESDAY, SePT 20 AT f 30 PM I~ THE - TAG #9SS48 CAel 692 21 SEPT G6 CPT F R KARCH 27" 6 TARO ROOM or T~( YOKWE yu~ CLUB Rev DRAMA COLOR WIDE SCREEN 22 SEPT 66 CPT J M. DULL 2214 fOUND ELDON SUCK WilL S~OW SLIDES 0, HIS RE­ MERLE OBERON, STEVE COCHRAN, CURT JUR­ 23 SEPT 66 LTC G,W FLI'JT 236) C[~T TRIP TO N~w CALEDONIA AND THE GE NS 24 SePT 66 CPT F R. K .... RCH 2 (':it.> LOYALTY ISLANDS WHERE ~E ANO MRS bUCK SWEATER AT TOUR or NIKE-X CALL 25 SEPT 66 CW3 F C BAKER 2142 ATTENDEO THE FIRST AS5EMDLY 0, THE 0 2b SePT 66 MAJ W.H GRISWOLC 503 9-43 CON.CREMer O. PACIFIC CHURCHES A CORDIAL IN\ ITATION IS EXTENDED TO ALL SET 0, KEYS C TSIO[ POST OfrlCE DUTY OrflCER IS KWAJALtfN TEST SITt MEN AND WOMEN Of THE PROTESTANT CALL 9-516 DURlrG WORK HOURS OR COMM.NDING OF.ICER'S REPRESENTATIVE CHAPEL REfRESHMENTS WILL 8E SERVED 2497 AfTER HOURS DWRING OTHER THAN NORMAL DUTY ~OURS l~JT IF TI'l:. _l:.uKt. T '''(It.j\,T~AT (,IIIIL 1\letf-,T -;- ,I EXPENSIVE SUNGLASSES AT BOTTO~ OF Spy COMEDY COLOR L_ I WATER TAXI #) TO (NNYLABEGAN IS SOIED- VARINA HARSOR C.... ,L )-516 DURING MARTY ALLEN, STEVE ROSSI, NANCY SINATRA Fl ,TI ll\LJ I~ L-~t\~l1\ I ULlO AS FOLLOWS JACKSON, MISS (UPI)--A fEDERAL WORK HOURS OR 2497 AfTER ~OURS ARR I DEP AR~ DE'" MOVIES ARE KEYED AS TO THE AUDIENCE JUDGE TODAY INDEfiNITELY POSPON"O THE , r::WAJ CARLOS CARLOS KI'IAJ ~ELl,;l "MIlOLS NEXT WEEK, TOOK THE ACTION IN VIEW or YES, CLAI~[D A GROUP OF RANK AND ; WOODWINDS POSSIBLE AR( NEEDED A PILE OF 20 DEfENSE MOTIONS H~ SAID 1'1 LEIlS COULD NOT PQSSIBLY BE HoARD AND ACTED THE DISPUTE BROKE OUT YESTEROAY AT D~ ElY MONDAY THE fiRST SESSION OF THE USW's 13TH Cox TOOK UND£~ ADVISEMENT A MOTION BlrN~IAL CDNVENTIOh AND CREATED A TO QUASH THE GRANO JURY'S INDICT~"NT M ItO UPROAR Of THE 17 WHITES ON THE GROUNDS THE IN THE END, EVERYBODY WAS HAPPY GRAhO JURY WAS CHOSEN FROM LISTS WYICH UO'lALD KARICK OF IRWI"I, PA ) MOVED 010 NOT INCLUDE A PROPER CROSS-StCTION THAT McDONALD, W~D fOR 13 YEARS OF TH~ MALE-rEMA,( ANO RACIAl CHARAC­ SERVED AS PRESIDENT OF THE UNION, SE TERISTICS OF THE AREA I~V1TED TO SPEAK COX CITED A JULV DECISION BY THE U,S, HIS DRQP05AL WAS IN THE FORM Or AN 5 TH CIRCUIT COURT OF ApPEALS IN WHICH AMENDMENT TO A RESOLUTIQ~ AND RULED THE APPEALS COURT SAID ANY JURY ~UST OUT or ORDER RARICK CAUGHT THE CON- PROPERLY REPRESENT ALL CLASSES AND VENTION OY SURPRISE SINCr HE U~SUC­ GROUPS IN THE AREA rROM WHICH IT WAS CESSfULLY OPPOSED ~CDONALD fOR THE PICKED UNID~ PRESIDENCY IN 1957 , IF THERE IS JUST ONE NAME WIIONG IN THE ROUTINE RESOLUTION WAS PASSEO iHE: (JURy) BOX, IT TAINTS THE \~ICIALS ALSO DELAYED THE START Of THE TRIAL TO THE CONVE~TION AND HEARING Of THE OTHER 19 MOT tONS McDoNALD, THC UNION'S SECONO PRESI­ FOR AN UNDETERMINEO PERIOD DENT, WHO WAS DerEATEO IN A BITTERLY CONTESTED ELECTION LAST YEAR SY ABEL, FORD R~I [0 FklCt~ RECEIVED A $25,000 ANNUAL PENSION DET~OIT (UPI)--THE FORD MOTOR Co A NEW MOTION WAS PRESENTED BY BueNA RAISED RETAIL FRICtS ON ITS 196( CARS T PARKER, ANO A VOICE VOTE WAS IN­ rRO~ $52 TO $347 PE~ MOOEL TODAY DE­ DECISVE A STANDING vOTE ALSO AP­ SPITE PRESIDENT JOHSNON'S APPEAL TO PEARED TO 8E SPLIT FINALLY, ABEL INDUSTRY TO HOLD THE LINE ON PRices CALLtD O~ THE 'NO" VOTERS TO CflANGt fORO SAIO THE I~CREASE5 INCLUDED T~EIR MINDS ~NO McDONALD WAS INVITEO fLAT PRICE RAISES AVERAGING $25 PER OV ACCLMIAT ION CAR, PLUS VARYING AMOUNTS FOR OTHER IM­ WHETHER fiE WILL ACCEPT IS NOT M" I~------~------t PROVEMENTS, INCLUOING SA'ETV fEATURES KNOWN fORD'S ANNOUNCEMENT APPARENTLY CAUGHT UBURY 1~HA T HATCH[ r r II F[~IN6 JE~GU~l£~ ~u~E THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRATION BY SURPRISE vIJKA.HNC n j Tt.,( JEt A.NJE J WASHINCTON (UP1}--IT WAS SORT OF LIKE TOKYO (UPI)--CDMMUNIST CHINA YESTERDAY A SPOKESMAN rOR THE PRESIDE~T'S COUNCIL JAKARTA (UPI)--Fou~ THOUSAND ANTI­ THE HATrl£LDS SHAKING HA~DS WITH THE DENOUNCED POPE PAUL VI AS "THAT MOUTH­ Of ECONOMIC ADVISORS SAID HE HAD NOT PICE Of THE REACTIONARY CLASSES" COMMUNIST HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS TODAY McCoys HE~RD ABOUT THE INCRE~SES AND HAD NO DEFIED A MILITARY BAN ON DEMONSTRA­ O~D FEUDS WERE rORGDTT[~ -- AT LEAST AN (OITORIAL IN REO fLAG, T~[ MAIN IMMEDIATE COMMENT TIONS AND OROVE THROUGH THE STREETS fOR THE TIME BEING --AS THE KENNEDYS IDEOLOGICAL JOURNAL or THE C~INESE COM­ fORO CIT(D RISING LABOR AND MATERIALS IN TRUCKS DE~ANDING THE OUSTER Of MADE UP P~ST fAMILY FIGHTS WITH T~E MUNtST PARTY J BRUSHEO ASIDE THE POPE'S COSTS AND LOWER PAOFITS IN 1966 AS PRESIDENT SUKARNO MCCOR~ACKS FOR THE SAME OF THE DEMO­ CRITICISM ON AUG 31 Or RED GUARO AT­ REaSONS FOR THE HIGHER PRICES IT SAID THE STUDENTS ALSO DEMANOED A TRIAL CRAT I C PARTY TACKS ON CATHOLIC NUNS IN CHINA THE THAT E:VEN WITH THE I NCRCAStS, "THE COM­ rOR SUKARNO'S SECONO WirE, MADAME THERE YESTERDAy IN SPE~MER JOHN W POPE SAID THEN, 'T~IS COULD APPEAR A SIGN PANY'S 1967 HODtL PROFITS AND RATES or HARTINI, fOR ALLEGEDLY CONSPIRING MCCORMACK'S OFFICE WERE HIS NEPHEW, Of DEATH AND NOT A SIGN OF LifE" RETURN WILL BE LOWER THAN fOR THE 1966 IN LAST OCTOSER'S ABORTIYE COMMUNIST EDDIE, ANO THE KEN~EOY BROTHERS, BOBBY THE EDITaRIA~ PRAISED MAO TSE-TU~G's MODELS " COUP AND TEDDY, TO POSE FOR PICTURES SHOW­ ZEALOUS REO GUARD TEENAGI!;RS AS "THE SHOCK IF OTHER CAR MAKERS FOLLOW fORD'S MILITARY POLICE DID NOT ENfORCE ING THAT ALL THOSE HARSH WORDS Of THE fORCE OF THE GREAT ~ROLETAAIAN CULTURAL EXAMPLE AND RAISE PRICES, AUTOS ALONE THE DEMONSTRATION BAN AND LET T~E PAST REALLY MEANT NOTHING THE AURA REVOLUTION" ANO "THE SYMBOL OF THE FUTURE COULD INCREASE CONSUMER SPENDING NtARLV STUDENTS PASS UNMOLESTED OF SWEET HAR~ONY IS tXPECTED TO LAST ANO THE HOPE OF THE PIWL£TARIAT " A SILLION DOLLARS DURING THE 12-MONTH TODIY'S RALLY WAS BILLED AS A MEET­ AT ~EAST UNTIL THE PRINCIPALS GET IT SAID, "THE REVOLUTIONARY ACTIONS MODEL YtAR, THE INDUSTRY EXPtCTS TO ING TO MOUR~ A HIGH SC~OOL STUDENT BACK TO MASSACHUSETTS TAKEN BY THE REVOLUTION.RY YOUNG FIGHTERS SELL A~OUT 9 MILLION 1967 MODELS. ACTION fRONT MEMBER KIL~ED IN THE WITH A STRAIGHT-fACEO MIEN, MCCORM~C~ ARE A SURE SIGN or FINAL OESTRUCTION rOR WEST SUMATRA CAPITAL Of BUKITTING SAID Of THE "DYNASTIC"STRUGGLE "IT THE CLASS ENEMIES AT HOME AND ABROAD" LAST WEEK N(Vt~ EX IST(O "