HIGH TIDE LOll TIDE 9/26 6.0 AT '722 9/26 0.2 AT 2334 9/27 507 AT 0538 9/27 0 4 AT I 145 9/27 5.8 AT 1755 RGLASS VOLo 3 No. 927 KWAJALE IN, MARSHALL ISLANDS TUESDAY 26 SEPTEMBER 1961

KENNEDY CALL~ ON U.N. UNIV Of HAWA I I STUl.) I £S KVJ ,.\J. JRAI~CH FOR "TRUCE TO TERROR" CAPTAIN PAUL A. HOLMBERG, COMMANDING OFFICER, PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE UNITED NATIONS, SEPT. 25 (UPI)-­ FACILITY, KWAJALE.N, ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT HE HAS APPROVED THE PROPOSAL OF PRESIDENT KENNEDY CALLED ON THE UNITED THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI' TO CONDUCT A SURVEY TO DETERMINE THE FEASIBILITY NATIONS TODAY rOR "A TRUCE TO TERRORo" OF THE ESTABLISHMENT OF A BRANCH AT KWAJALEIN. IN A CONFERENCE WITH A HE TOLD THE GENERAL AsSEMBLY THAT A REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNIVERSITY, CAPTAIN HOLMBERG STATED, "THE CHARACTER PEACErUL SOLUTION Of THE BERLIN CRISIS OF KWAJALEIN IS CHANGING RAPIDLY. IT IS DESTINED TO BECOME THE CENTLR OF IS POSSIBLE EVEN IF RUSSIA AND EAST THE EXPERIMENTAL AND INTELLECTUAL ACTIVITIES OF THE DOWN RANGE SECT10N OF GERMANY DO CONCLUDE A SEPARATE PEACE

THE PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE. THE ENGINEERS AND SCIENTISTS WHO ARE ARRIVING TREATY $ DAILY WILL BE INTERESTED IN A CULTURAL ATMOSPHERE WHICH A UNIVERSITY CAN KENNEDY WARNED THAT IF NECESSARY THE PROV IDE." WESTERN POWERS ARE READY TO DEFEND "BY DR. E. F. SPELLACY, DEAN OF THE COLLEGE OF GENERAL STUDIES, AND DR. J.A. WHATEVER MEANS ARE FORCED UPON THEMo" FLEECE, PROGRAM DIRECTOR, HAVE BEEN KENNEDY, MAKIKG HIS FIRST APPEARANCE STUDYING THE POSSIBILITY OF ESTABLISH­ $1.5 ~ILLION SUIT FILED BErORE THE U.N~ GENERAL ASSEMBLY, SAID ING A BRANCH FOR THE PAST SEVERAL I~ DEATH OF JEFF CHANDL[R THERE WAS NO NEED rOR A BERLIN CRISIS, MONTHS. THEY HAVE HELD EXTENSIVE BUT THAT THE WESTERN POWERS WERE CALMLY SANTA MONICA, CALIF., SEPT. 25 CONSULTATIONS WITH OTHER UNIVERSITIES RESOLVED TO DEFEND THEIR OBLIGATIONS (UPI)--A $1.5 MILLION DAMAGE SUIT TO DETERMINE THE EXPERIENCE IN THIS AND ACCESS TO A fREE WEST BERLIN. WAS FILED TODAY CHARGING CULVER C,TY FIELD. UNIVERSITY OFFICIALS FEEL THAT URGING OTHER NATIONS TO JOIN THE UoS. HOSPITAL AND SIX DOCTORS WITH NEG- THEY MUST EXPAND TNE INTELLECTUAL IN "DISMANTLING THE NATIONAL CAPACITY LIGENCE IN CONNECTION WITH THE LEADERSHIP WHICH THEY PROVIDE FOR THE TO WAGE WAR," THE CHIEr EXECUTIVE ALSO DEATH OF ACTOR JErF CHANDLER. STATE OF HAWAII TO THOSE AREAS OF THE OFFERED SPECIFIC PLANS FOR USING MILI­ ATTORNEY IRVING H. GREEN FJLED THE PACIFIC TIED TO HAWAI I BY CUSTOM AND TARY POWER TO KEEP THE PEACE PENDING A SUIT IN SUPERIOR COURT HERE AS A BACKGR~UNDo THIS IS THE FIRST STUDY START ON GENUINE DISARMAMENT. REPRESENTATIVE OF CHANDLER'S ESTATE. BEING CONDUCTED FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT KENNEDY RECOMMENDED THAT ALL MEMBERS IT ASKS DAMAGES FOR THE ACTOR'S TWO OF A BRANCH OUTSIDE THE STATE. THE OF THE UNITED NATIONS EARMARK SPECIAL CH I LOREN, JAM IE, 14, DANA, II, AND RESULTS Or THE SURVEY, TOGETHER WITH "PEACE-KEEPING UNITS" OF THEIR ARMED EDWARD M. ROSE, EXECUTOR OF THE RECOMMENDATIONS, W.LL BE PRESENTED TO FORCES SPECIALLY TRAINED AND QUICKLY ESTATE. THE BOARD Of REGENTS FOR CONSIDERATION. AVAILABLE, FOR U.N~ USE AGAINST BRUSH­ THE ACTOR DIED AT THE HOSPITAL THE COURSES TO BE OFFERED WILL BE AT FIRE WARS. JUNE 17 OF BLOOD POISONING COMPLI­ THE UNDERGRADUATE LEVEL AND WILL LEAD THE PRESIDENT MADE THESE POINTS: CATED BY PNEUMONIA FOLLOWING A TO A BACHELORS DEGREE. THE SUBJECT --HE FIRMLY REJECTED THE RUSSfAN SERIES OF OPERATIONS TO CORRECT A MATTER WILL BE DECIDED BY THE INTEREST "TROIKA" THEORY Of REPLACING THE LATE BACK INJURY CHANDLER SUFFERED WHILE AND NEEDS OF THE PROSPECTIVE STUDENTS U.N. SECRETARY GENERAL DAQ HAMMARSKJOLD FILMING A MOV'E IN THE PHILIPPINES. TOGETHER W1TH THE AVAILABILITY LOCALLY WITH A TRIUMVIRATE SUBJECT TO COMMUNIST IN R£f~~ TO TftE SVIT~~Oa. DAVID OF QUAL'YfED INSTRVCTOaa. CLASSES BLOC VETO. THE TROIKA SYSTEM, HE ~~ID, M. BROTMAN, MEDICAL DIRECTOR OF THE WILL BE HELD IN TK£ ~VENING. ALL WOULD "ENTRENCH THE COLD WAR IN THE HOSPITAL, SAID: COURSES WILL BE ACCREDITED BY THE HEADQUARTERS OF PEACEo" "TIfE CULVER C,TY HOSPITAL HAS UNIVERSITY OF HAWA11, AND WILL BE REC­ --HE WARNED OF "SMOULDERING COALS OF PUBLICLY DECLARED IN THE PAST, AND OGNIZED BY ACCREDITEp COLLEGES AND WAR IN SOUTHEAST AsiA," PARTICULARLY IN WILL CONTINUE TO STATE, THAT THE UNIVERSITIES ON THE MAINLAND. CREDITS LAOS AND SOUTH VIET NAM. THE PRESIDENT HOSPITAL HAS ABSOLUTELY NO RESPON­ WILL BE RECEIVED ON TRANSFER FROM SAID THE WORLD COMMUNITY HAD TO PROTECT SIBILITY IN THE DEATH OF MR. CHAND­ OTHER ACCREDITED COLLEGES AND UNIVER­ FRO~ LERo WE KNOW THE FACTS WILL CONfiRM SUCH SMALL AND WEAK NATIONS VIOL­ SITIES. ATION OF THEIR BORDERS AND THEIR INDEP­ OUR POS IT ION. It THE RADIO CORPORATION Of AMERICA, ENDENCE AND HE REJECTED COMPLETELY THE DOCTORS NAMED IN THE SUIT WERE BELL TELEPHONE LABORATORIES, INTER­ RUSSIAN THEORY THAT THESE ARE "WARS OF MERVIN A. KORBIN, PETER B. SAMUELS, NATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES, AND SAM GALINSON, KENNETH J. RICHL, AND LIBERATION." L,NCOLN LABORATORIES OF M.I.T. HAVE THE MOOD Of THE PRESIDENT'S SPEECH ALAN M. ROSENBERG AND MILTON ROSEN- EXPRESSED AN INTEREST IN THE PROGRAM, WAS CONCERNED MORE WITH THE POSSIBILITY THAL. ~ND HAVE OFFERED THEIR ASSISTANCE IN OF REDUCING EAST-WEST TENSIONS THAN IN THE CONDUCT OF THf SURVEY. ESTABLISHING A STERN POSTURE TOWARD THE MRS AuDREY C. O'SHEA HAS BEEN BRITISH FOREIGN SECRETARY SOVIET UNION. APPOINTED BY DR. fLEECE TO CONDUCT TALKS vvlTH GROMYKO HE REJECTED AS UTTERLY IMPOSSIBLE THE THE SURVEY FOR THE UNIVERSITY. FURTHER IDEA or CURRENT DIFFERENCES FLAMING NEW YORK, SEPT. 25 (UPI)--BRITISH INfORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED BY CALLING INTO MAJOR CONFLI~TJ SAYING NO MATTER FOREIGN SECRETARY LORD HOME, IN A MRS. O'SHEA AT 604, OR QUARTERS 205 A. HOW INTENSE THE CURRENT ISSUES, "MAN­ MINUTE TALK LATE TODAY WITH Sov­ 65 KIND MUST PUT AN END TO WAR OR WAR WILL •••••• IET FOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMYKO, PUT AN END TO f.1ANK'NO. 11 URGED THE RUSSIANS TO APPROACH THE U.N DELEGATES DISCUSS HE MADE THE SPECIFIC POINT THAT EVEN BERLIN CRISIS NEGOTIATIONS ON A PRESIDENT'S SPEECH IF RUSSIA SIGNS A PEACE TREATY WITH BROADER BASIS. UNITED NATIONS, SEPT. 26 {UPI)--THE EAST GERMANY, PEACEFUL SOLUTION OF THE LORD HOME WAS UNDERSTOOD TO HAVE SECURITY COUNCIL FOUGHT A MAJOR SKIRM­ BERLIN CRISIS IS POSSIBLE. WARNED GROMYKO THAT THE WEST DOES ISH TODAY IN THE DIPLOMATIC BATTLE OVER WHILE IT HAS BEEN ACCEPTED IN WESTERN 1 NOT INTEND TO NEGOITATE ON THE NAR­ CHINA S U.N. SEAT WHILE DELEGATES STILL COUNCILS fOR SOME TIME THAT A MORE OR ROW BASIS PROVIDED BY SOVIET PREMIER DISCUSSED PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S SPEECH LESS PERMANENT DIVISION OF THE GERMANIES KHRUSHCHEV's DEMAND THAT TALKS BE TO THE GENERAL AsSEMBLY. WAS INEVITABLE, THIS WAS THE fiRST TIME LIMITED TO HIS PROPOSAL FOR A SEPAR­ SOVIET rOREIGN MINISTER ANDREI GROMY­ KENNEDY HAD SPELLED OUT ACCEPTANCE OF A ATE PEACE TREATY WITH COMMU~IST EAST KO WAS LISTED TO ANSWER THE PRESIDENT SEPARATE SOVIET PEACE TREATY WITH EAST IN THE AsSEMBLY'S ANNUAL GENERAL DEBATE GERMANY. THE BRITISH OFFICIAL, IT WAS SAID, GERMANY. (ABOUT 1945 GMT) THIS AFTERNOON. "IT IS ABSURD TO ALLEGE THAT WE ARE THE WARM GLOW or ENTHUSIASM THAT WARNED GROMYKO IN CLEAR TERMS THAT RUSSIA WAS TREADING ON DANGEROUS THREATENING A WAR MERELY TO PREVENT THE GREETED KENNEDY'S 40-M1NUTE SPEECH TO SOVIET UNION AND EAST GERMANY FROM GROUND BY PUSHING UNILATERAL DEMANDS THE ASSEMBLY SLOWLY SETTLED DOWN INTO SIGNING A SO-CALLED tTREATY' OF PEACE," AN ATTITUD£ OF MORE CRITICAL APPRAISAL. AND SAID If THESE CONTINUED THERE WAS DANGER THE CRJSIS MIGHT ERUPT KENNEDY TOLD AN AUDIENCE THAT INCLUOED WHILE MOST DELEGATES APPLAUDED THE NOT ONLY THE U.N. DELEGATIONS, BUT A SALUTARY EFFECT OF THE PRESIDENT'S INTO HOSTILITIES NATIONWIDE, WORLDWIDE, RADIO AND TELE­ SPEECH, SOME FOUND THAT HE HAD DWELT A BRITISH SPOKESMAN, AEPORTING ON VISION AUDIENCE. AT LENGTH ON ONLY TWO PRIME ISSUES BE­ THE MEETING, WOULD SAY ONLY THAT To CUT OFF WEST BERLIN UNDER THE FORE THE UNITED NATIONS: DISARMAMENT HOME AND GROMYKO "0 I SCUSSED BERL I N GUISE OF A SO CALLED PEACE TREATY OR AND THE SELECTION or A SUCCESSOR TO IN PARTICULAR AND OTHER MAtTERS Or ESTABLISHING IT, AS SOVIET PREMIER THE LATE OAG HAMMARSKJOLD. CONCERN TO THE TWO COUNTRIES, IN­ KHRUSHCHEV HAS SUGGESTED, AS A "rREE • • CLUDING LAOS. HE ADDED THAT THE CITY," WOULD, ACCORDING TO KENNEDY, BE INVEST IN U.S. SAVINGS BONDS ATMOSPKER£ WAS "BUSINESSLIKE, fRAUOUL£NT AND INFAMOU~. COURTEOUS AND CORREcr." --~------~------~------~---;~~~ PAGE 2 HOURGLASS TUESDAY 26 SEPTEMBER 1961

PUBLISHED AT THE DIRECTION OF THE T'v'v'O ECUADOREAN MOUNT AIN CL tMBERS KILLED, TWO TRAPPED COMMANDING OFFICER, PACIFIC MISSIL( QUITO, ECUADOR, SEPT. 25 (UPI) A MIXED EXPEDITION Of JAPANESE AND ECUADOREAN RANGE FACILITY, KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL MOU~lAl~ CLIMBERS WHO TRIED TO REACH THE TOP Of CHIMBORAZO, A 6,300 METER HIGH ISLANDS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH BUREAU PEAK Of THE ANDES, MET WITH TRAGEDY WHEN ITS TWC ECUADOREAN MEMBERS DIED AND OF WEAPONS CONTRACT NOA~-~Q-4176-c A JAPANESE BECAME ENTRAPPED IN A CREVASSE. WITH THE TRANSPORT COWANY OF TEXAS. THE JAPANESE YASAMURI YAGAMUCH1, WHOSE ARMS WERE fROSTBITTEN AND WHOSE THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAILY SIGHT HAS,BECOME AffECTED, HAS BEEN ABLE HOWEVER TO DIRECT THE OPERATIONS OF MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY. DEADLINE RESCUE TO GET HIM OUT Of THE DEEP CREVASSE, AS WELL AS THE BODIES Of THE TWO FOR NOTICES IS 4 P.M. DAY BEFORE ECUADOREANS, WHICH LIE NEARBY. PUBLI CATION. DEADLINE FOR NEWS THE OTHER JAPANESE MEMBER Of THE ITEMS IS 10 A.M. DAY OF PUBlICATlON. EXPEDITION ARE YOSHINUBO SATO, TOSH+ CIUCCI HABEAS CORPUS DEN lED ICAZU ISHIHARA, YUMSEY SUSATO, MASHIRO THE HOURGLASS RESERVES THE RIGHT WADA, K1MIAZU YACHIKAWA, AND YOSHIMASA CHICAGO, SEPT. 25 (UPI) VINCENT TO EDIT ALL Copy RECEIVED FOR YAKEYASU. THE FIVE ARE IN GOOD SHAPE CIUCCI, WHOSE EXECUTION FOR THE PUBL I CAT ION. AfTER HAVING BEEN RESCUED fROM THE MURDER OF HIS SON HAS BEEN STAYED II AVALANCHE THAT ENTRAPPED YAGAMUCHI AND TIMES, LOST A BID TODAY fOR A HABE\S EDITOR - JOYCE RAWLES THE TWO ECUADOREANS, IT WAS REPORTED. CORPUS PETITIpN. ---~-----~-----~------~------~ THE GOOUP STARTED TO CLIMB CH1MBORAZO U.S. DISTRICT JUDGE JULIUS MINER RUSSIA TREADING DANGEROUSLY MoNDAY, SEPT. 18TH, BUT SATURDAY NIGHT DENt ED THE 33-'tE AR-OLD CH I CAGOAN THE A REPORT WAS RECEIVED AT THE TOWN OF PETITION, ASKED BY CIUCCI'S ATTORNEY SAYS JOHNSON AMBATO THAT THE CLIMBERS WERE IN ON THE GROUNDS THAT PUBLICITY PRE- NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, SEPT. 25 DANGER. VENTED HIM FROM GETTING A fAIR TRIAL. (UPI) VICEwPRES)DENT LYNDON B. A PATROL SENT fROM AMBATO WAS ABLE GEORGE LEIGHTON, CIUCCI'S LAWYER, JaHMSON SAID TODAY RUSSIA "MAY TO LOCATE YACHIKAWA AND THE REST OF SAID HE WOULD APPEAL MINER'S DECISION BLUNDER. INTO AN IRREPARABLE CATAST­ THE JAPANESE LAST SUNDAY. NEXT, TO THE UNITED STATES COURT Of APPEALS ROPHE" IF IT fAILs TOIJUNDERSTAND THE PATROL CLIM6ED TO A HEIGHT Of 6,000 COURT AIDES SAID SUCH AN APPEAL, AMERICA'S FIRM SUPPORT Of ITS OBLI­ Hl="p'"nC" TO LOCATE THE CREVASSE WHERE FOLLOWED BY APPEAL TO THE U.S. SUPREME GATIONS TO WEST BERLIN. YAGAMUCHJ AN~ THE TWO ECUADOREANS HAD COURT, COULD DELAY A fiNAL DECISION IN IN A SPEECH PREPARED fOR DELIVERY fALLEN. THE CASE FOR A 'tEAR BEfORE THE ANNUAL4S0U1HERN GOVERNORS CIUCCI WAS CONVICTED OF MURDER IN CONfERENCE, JOHNSON ALSO RENEWED THE THE SLAYING OF HIS SON, VINCENT JR., U.So PLEDGE TO OPPOSE ADMISSION OF IKE PLANS '62 CONGRESS CAMPAIGN IN 1953 HIS LATEST EXECuTION DATE COMMUNIST CHINA TO THE UNITED NATIONS. GETTYSBURG, PENNSYLVANIA, SEPT. 25 WAS LIFTED SEPT. 13 WITH THE FILING "WE ARE NOT PAYING ANY BLACKMAIL," (UPI) FORMER PRESIDENT DWIGHT D. Of THE HABEAS CORPUS PETITION WHEN HE JOHNSON SAID IN EXPLAINING THE U.S. EISENHOWER TOLD THREE TOP REPUBLICAN WAS ONLY 38 HOURS FROM THE ELECTRIC POSITION ON BERLIN NEGOTIATIONS. STRATEGISTS TODAY HE WILL ACTIVELY CHAIR. "FALSE NEGOTIATIONS ARE A WASTE OF PARTICIPATE IN THE PARTY'S 1962 CIUCCI'S SON, HIS WIFE ANNA AND T I ME. CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGNS. TWO DAUGHTERS, ANGELINE, 4, AND "WE ARE NOT f DE$ERTING OYR OBLIGA- VIRGINIA, 7 WERE FOUND SHOT TO DEATH ) EISENHOWER MADE THE PLEDGE DURING TIONS TO WEST BERLIN ••• WE WILL CARRY A CONfERENCE WITH REPUBLICAN NATIONAL IN THE RUINS Of A FIRE THAT SWEPT OUT ALL THESE OBLIGATIONS. THE CHAIRMAN WILLIAM E. MILLER, SEN BARRY THEIR HOME. LEADERS OF THE SOVIET UNION MAY GOLDWATER OF ARIZONA AND REP. ROBERT C I uce J WAS SENTENCED TO 20 YE ARS 6LUN~ER INTO AN tRREPARABLE CATASTROPH2 WILSON OF' CALifORNIA, CHAIRMAN Of THE IN PRISON FOR HIS WIFErS SLAYING, IF THEY FAIL TO UNDERSTAND THE fIRMNES~ GOP HOUSE CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE. TO 45 YEARS fOR THE SLAYING OF .. 'tHIS AMERICAN RESOLVE," THE GROUP TOOK TIME OUT fROM THE ANGELINE, AND--SUBSEQUENTLY-- TO JOHNSON: WHO VISITED BERLIN LAST MEETING IN EISENHOWER'S OfflCr HERE DEATH IN THE SLAYING OF VINCENT JR. MONTH, sAtm MANY "TYRANTS IN THE PAST TO LISTEN TO PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S HE WAS NOT TRIED IN THE DEATH OF HAVE MISJUDGED THE CHARACTER AND SPEECH BEfORE THE UNITED NATIONS. VIRGINIA. STRENGTH" Of AM8RICANS. MILLER, A REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMAN INDIA NOT FEARFUL OF "WE CHALLENGE NO ONE; BUT WE NEVER FROM NEW YORK, SAID T~ T PRESIDENT SURRENDER UNDER THREATS," HE SAID. KENNEDY "SUMMED UP THE HOPES, THE NEW FORIEGN AID PLAN "THE PATH Of REASON, Of DIPLOMACY, ASPIRATIONS Of ALL THE AMERICAN WASHINGTON, SEPT. 25 (UPI) INDIA, OF NEGOTIATION, OF HONORABLE SETTLE­ PEOPLE,1t AND TERMED THE PRESIDENT'S THE BIGGEST RECIPIENT OF U.S. MENT IS OPEN. WE WANT TO TAKE IT. THINKING "THE SAME AS GENERAL ECONOMIC AID, DOES NOT EXPECT TO "WE SEEK PEACE BUT WE SHUN APPEASE­ EISENHOWER'S HAD BEEN FOR EIGHT LONG SUFfER FROM PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S NEW t1ENT BECAUSE WE KNOW IT IS SURRENDER YEARS." POLICY Of GIVING AID PRIORITY TO ON THE INSTALLMENT PLAN AND THE SIGNAL ASKED FOR COMMENT ON THE PRESIDENT'S COUNTRIES WHICH SHARE THE U.S. VIEW FOR ULTIMATE WAR. OUR POWER IS A SPEECH, EISENHOWER SAID HE AGREED WITH OF THE WORLD CRISIS, INDIAN fiNANCE PLEDGE Of PEACE, NOT AN INCITEMENT TO KENNEDY THAT THERE IS NO ADDITIONAL MINISTER MORARJI DESAI SAID TODAY CONFLICT." SECURITY IN PURSUING THE SPIRAL Of DESAI WAS GREETED ON ARRIVAL AT JOHNSON SAID THE IMMEDIATE TASK ARMS RACING. WASHINGTON NATIONAL AIRPORT BY TREASURY BEfORE THE U.N. GENERAL ASSEMBLY IS TO SECRETARY DOUGLAS DILLON, WHO CALLED CHOOSE AN INTERIM SECRETARy-GENERAL HOUSE MAY CLOSE FOR THE YEAR DESAI "AN OLD FRIEND.tI TO SUCCEED THE LATE DAG HAMMARSKJOLD. WITHOUT AID AGREEMENT THE INDIAN FINANCE MINISTER, SOME- A TRUE MEMORIAL TO HAMMARSKJOLD CAN WASHINGTON, SEPT. 25 (UPI) HOUSE- TIMES CALLED A LIKELY SUCCESSOR TO BE BUILT, HE SAID, "ONLY BY MAKING SENA TE NEGOT I ATORS CLEARED AWAY ONE PR I ME MI N I STER JAWAHARLAL NEHRU, \JA~ THE UNITED NATIONS AN EFfECTIVE ADJOURNMENT ROADBLOCK TODAY BUT RAN iNVITED BY DILLON TO MEET THE KENNEDY GUARDIAN OF WORLD PEACE." INTO AN IMPASSE ON FOREIGN AID SPENDING. ADMINISTRATION. "THE PERILS Of FREEDOM ARE ALWAYS REP. OTTO PASSMAN, DEMOCRAT-LoUISIANA, HE TOOK A HOPEFUL VIEW OF THE THE OPPORTUNITIES Of COMMUNISM,," HE ONE Of THE HOUSE CONfEREES, SAID CONGRESSCURRENT CRISIS IN WESTERN-COMMUNIST SA I D. "THA TIS ANOTHER REASON fOR THE MIGHT HAVE TO QUIT fOR THE YEAR WITHOUT RELATIONS. "THE WORLD SITUATION HAS SOVIET UNION'S CAMPAIGN IN THE UNITED AGREE.I,NG ON fORE I GN A I D OUTLAYS AND NOT BEEN EASY FOR YEARS, YET SOMETH I NG NATIONS." RESOLVE THE ISSUE AfTER THE NEW SESSION ALWAYS HAS TURNED UP," HE TOLD RE- BEGINS NEXT JANUARY. PORTERS. PEACE CORPS REJECT KAMEN BUT OTHER CONfEREES SAID THE FIGHT ASKED WHETHER HE EXPECTED THE AID WASHINGTON, SEPT. 25 (upt) THE HAD BEEN NARROWED TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY KENNEDY ANNOUNCED DURING THE PEACE CORPS SAID TODAY IT HAS REJECTED Of $4 BILLION--MORE THAN THE HOUSE BELGRADE NON-ALIGNED NATIONS CONFERENCE CHARLES KAMEN, WHO WAS DE~lED DEfERMENl VOTED BUT LESS THAN THE SENATE APPROVED. WOULD BE APPLIED IN REDUCING THE BY HIS DRAfT BOARD AFTER HE CRITICIZED SEVERAL SENATE NEGOTIATORS SAID THEY PROMISED $900,000,000 U.S. LOANS TO THf HOUSE COMMITTEE ON UN-AMERICAN HOPED TO TRY AGAIN TOMORROW TO REACH A INDIA THIS YEAR, DESAI SAID. ACTIVITIES AND ITS CONTROVERSIAL MOVIE COMPROMISE. "I 00 NOT THINK WE ARE AFFECTED BY "OPERATION ABOLITION." THE WEARY LAWMAKERS APPEARED TO HAVE IT. 1 AM NOT ANXIOUS ABOUT IT WE THE CORPS SAID KAMEN HAD BEEN IN MOVED WHEN ONE CONfERENCE COMMITTEE ALSO FEEL THERE IS A WORLD CRISIS. TRAINING fOR A PROJECT IN THE PHILIP- AGREED ON A COMPROMISE PUBLIC WORKS I DON'T THINK IT (KENNEDytS STATEMENT) PINES. BILL. THE AID PANEL ALSO WAS REPORTED WAS MEANT TO LESSEN AID TO US." A PEACE CORPS SPOKESMAN SAID KAMEN'S TO HAVE SETTLED TENTATIVELY ON A ADMINISTRATION OFfICIALS HAVE SAID APPLIGATION TO SERVE THE CORPS WAS $3.9 BILLION MEASURE TO fiNANCE KENNEDY'S IDEA WAS TO REDUCE OR STOP REJECTED BECAUSE HE fAlLED TO MEET THE PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S OVERSEAS ASSISTANCE AID TO COUNTRIES WHICH TAKE THE STANDARDS REQUIRED IN THE PROJECT PROGRAM. SOVIET SIDE Of THE BERLIN AND OTHER fOR WHICH HE APPLIED. HE DID NOT BUT PASSMAN REPORTED AFTER A 2* ISSUES OR HOW THEY DO NOT STAND FOR ElABORATEo HOUR MEETING Of THE AID CONFEREES, DEFENSE Of fREEDOM. THESE OFFICIALS "THERE HAS BEEN NO PROGRESS." -~'lCURRED I N DE ..... • f S BEL IE F THAT KEN- lY PLANNED TO K OUT ON l~PIA AID. ,------page .3 HOURGLASS Tuesday 26 S _ mber 1961

UAW ENDS G~ STRIKEi THREI\TE~S FCRD MCTuR CO. -t-----tUII~.~AK I TK I TKO JEN KWAJALE I tl\.l~1---I' (EVENTS FPOM KWAJAlEI~) Detroit, Sept. 24 (UPI)-The United Auto Workers Union tonight ended the rURTHER DETAILS RECEIVED ON General Motors strike but immediately CHOLERA IMMUNIZATIONS SAR MEDICAL AIR DROP threatened another one -- against Ford Motor Co" CO~{ANDER PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE Last Saturday the HourGlass pub­ The Union's execut~ve board ordered NOTICE 62)0 dated 19 September 1961 lished a news story concerning an air all GM locals back to work -- includ­ states that due to the cholera epi­ drop of medical equipment by a SAR ing a handful without at-the-plant demic in the Far East cholera immuni­ crew at Wake Island to the ship Orcade~ agreements--thus off~cially br~nging zation is required for travel to and At that time informat~on concerning to a close a strike which started beyond Japan and the Philippines. the air drop was brief, however, a Sept. 11 and idled a quarter of a Cholera immunization may be obtained complete story has now been made avail­ million workers and closed nearly 100 at the Station Hospital. All person­ able. plants. nel w~o contemplate travel to or be­ The Detachment, from the Search and At the same time, the board granted yond Japan, Philippines, New Guinea, Rescue organization based on Kwajalein, strike authorization to the Union's the Solomons and New Hebrides should received a message at 11:20 p.m. Fri­ Ford bargaining committee, though it obtain immunization or re-immunization day stating the Orcades had a patient set no deadline for a settlement or a well in advance of commencing travel. on board suffering from acute glau­ walkout...... come, and that the eye spec1alist on The UAW said that at the t~me it MICKEY & JOAN TO BE ON AFRS board required necessary instruments voted to end the GM strike--effective and tonometer to perform iridectomye at midnight tonight--only two bargain­ This Friday at 7:45 p.m. !FRS, Between then and 1:19 a.m. Saturday ing units had not yet completed their Kwajalein will begin to reap the morning when the Navy SAR plane, a local agreements. These were Fisher harvest ~n its search for local talent UF-2, took off from Wake, many small Body No. 23 in Vetro~t and Fisher As­ The popular couple Mickey and Joan but important details were accomplishec. sembly in Atlanta, Georgia. Shannon w~ll be returning to the a~r The Wake Island D~spensary was con­ Two other key plants were settled with a weekly program starting this tacted and a tonometer (instrument to sometime th~s evening, according to Friday at 7:45 p.m. Mickey and Joan measure pressure), Loupe binocular the UAW. These were Fisher Body, are professional entertainers spec­ set, iris SCissors, eyelid retractor, Pittsburgh, and Delco-Remy at Anderson, ~alizing in American folk songs. They and needles were obta~ned$ Indiana. have also composed songs, including A message was sent notifying the These two were essential to full pro­ one about KwaJalein. SARCC at Kwaj and Pearl Harbor and duction at GM. The Pittsburgh workers ...... additional information was requested made metal stampings for all GM car on exact position of sh~~ and possible l~nes, and the Delco-Remy employees TOASTMASTERS AGENDA voice frequencies that could be used produce starting, lighting and ign~tion for communications. systems. The next meeting of the KwaJalein The plane was fully gassed for the In a brief statement the Union said: Toastmasters Club is scheduled for anticipated length of the flighto A "The UAW international execut~ve board Thursday evening, October 5th, 1961 rig of three flares and a canister to unanimously voted to terminate the at 7 p.m. in the Yokwe Yuk Club. carry the instruments was constructed. strike aga~nst GM effect~ve midnight The line-up of assignments for our When the a~rcraft was gassed and coming October 5th meeting is as fol­ tonight and to ~nstruct all local the instruments packed ~n a foam rub­ unions still on strike to withdraw lows: Toastmaster - Rawlin Spencer; ber pillow inside a parachute flare their pickets at that time." Introduction and Installation of new can, to protact them from sudden jolts, "Workers who have not already re­ officers - Fred Geisendorf, Outgoing the crew boarded the plauee turned to work should do so beginning President; Invocat10n - Joseph Mor­ Lt. Tom L. Blanchard (from Richmond, with the first shift on Monday, consis­ gan; Table Topics Master - Bud Boyd; Va.,) was pilot; with Ltjg Scotty Cain tent with operation needs." Main Speakers - Bill Howard, Manry (from Oakdale, La.) Aq co-pilot; and ...... Kramer, and Frank MorriS; Table Ltjg Gordon G. Heady (from Independ­ Topics Evaluator - Carl Wylie; Gram­ ence, Mo.) SINATRA, MARTIN WILL SPENO marian - Wayne Langill; Ah & Er The crew of the plane were: Plane $10 MILLION ON GAMBLING "PALACE" Meter Man - Tom Helton; Speech Timer - Captain Ray Wisner ADR2, (Ferndale, Hollywood, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Nearly Ward Rognelson; Evaluators - Bob Wash.), and Plane Captain Aviation $10 million will be spent by ow~ers Price, Sam Gaines and Austin White; structural Mechanic 3rd Class Kenneth Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Hank General Evaluator - John Coleman; B. Christensen (Deaver, Wyo.), J. L. Sanicola to build a new hotel and re­ Recorder - Larry Finn. Gavigan ATAN (Beaver Falls, N. Y.). furbish their Cal-Neva Lodge at state­ With the new system of evening Remaining at Wake were LeDR D. R. line, Nevada, it was announced today. meetings it is hoped that many pros­ Leaf, (Marshalltown, Iowa), as SAR Sanicola, agent of Sinatra, said pective new members will be able to Controller, Maurie Bahnsen AT3 (Helena, the lodge would become one of the attend the Toastmaster meetings reg­ Mont.), assisted in logging and sending gambling palaces of the west and sch­ ularly. All present members are re­ all the necessary messages. edule top-flight entertainment. minded to please br~ng a guest along Lt. Blanchard flew toward. the esti­ for the installation of new officers mated position of the ship at the time at the next mdeting on Thursday, they expected to arrive in the area. FRANK FAY GIVEN October 5th, 1961. After a sleepy but otherwise unevent­ LAST RITES •••••• ful flight Lt. Tom Blanchard spotted Santa Monica, California, Sept. 25 SS PRES. PIERCE DUE TOMORROW a light below the horizon. After a (UPI)-Frank Fay, former Broadway few minutes of observation the pilots comedian and radio star, was given the The SS Pres1dent Pierce, of Ameri­ and creW vere convinced that it was a last Rites of the Roman Catholic can President Lines, is due to ar­ ship and not another star. However, churoh today. rive at Kwaj's dock tomorrow, accord­ it wasn't until they arrived over the Spokesmen for St. John's Hospital ing to word received this afternoon ship at 6:07 a.m.; that they positive­ said the 64-year-old ex-husband of from the Marine Department. ly identified it as the Orcades. Barbara Stanwyck was suffering from an The ship, out of San FranCiSCO, Three low passes were made to judg the internal rupture of the abdominal will be carrying general cargo. sea state and speed of the vessel. aorta. The drop of instruments and float His cond~t~on was l~sted as cr~t~cal New York, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Steel pro­ lights was made on the fourth low pass and his chances of surviving were de­ duction last week totaled 2,114,000 at 6:23 a.m. The canister land d scribed as slim" tons, up 4 per cent from the 2,032, about a mile ahead of the ship and ~ t ...... 000 tons of the previous week, the altered course slightly to come along American Iron & Steel institute re­ side the canister. MILLICNS OF AMERICANS VIEW ported today. By 6:47 a.m. the aircraft was on its JFK1S ADDRESS TO U.N. Based on the estimated weekly cap­ way back to Wake Island and landed at New York, Sept. 25 (UPI)-About 20 acity of the industry steel mills 11:23 a.m. million Americans watched President operated at approx~mately 72.3 per ...... Kennedy's address to the United Nat~ons cent of rated capacity oompared w~th You may order flowers through Spec­ General Assembly on television, a TV 69.5 per cent in the previous week. network executive estimated today. ial Se"''1ri ~es for delivery in Honolulu Output for the year to date totaled or th~ Mainland. You pay only for the He said sets were turned on in approx­ 68,318,000 tons down 12.7 per cent imately 11 million homes. cost of the flow rs you choose to send. from the 78,243,000 tons produced in For complete information call Mrs...... the same 1960 period. Hunt at 331, Special Services O:;~oe • Page 4 HOURGLASS Tuesday 2~--_ptember 1961

GENERAL WESS ~ENU ADDITIONAL SPORTS MATCHES TO B[GI~ WEDNESDAY 27 September 1961 BREAKFAST New Delhi, Sept. 24 (UPI)-The United DINNER SUPPER States will have to beat AsiaRs hot­ Chilled Fruit Juice Minestrome Soup Beef Barley Soup test player to win the inter­ Chilled Fresh Fr~t Baked Swiss Steak Baked Pork Chops zone Dav~s Cup matches beginning here Hot Farina Oven Browned Potatoes in Mushroom Sauce Sept. 30. Grilled Ham Slices Creamed Peas Lyonnaise Potatoes Ramanathan Kr~shnan, a bull-should­ Hot Wheat Cakes Steamed Rice Buttered Spinach w/Eggs ered, scowling South Ind~an, is, at Maple Syrup Savoy String Beans Beet w/Onions in Vinegar 24, a tough man to defeat in India or Steamed Rice Sliced Tomatoes Salad Bar Assft Dressing anywhere else. A se~-flnalist at Danish Pastries w/Mayonnaise Steamed Rice Wimbledon for the past two years, Hot Toast Butter Iced Devils Food Cake Pumpkin Pie Jam Krishnan holds the Asian championship & Cold Fruit Punch Iced Tea wiLemon Slice and periodically mulls over invitatlons Chilled Milk - Coffee Chilled Milk - Coffee Chilled Milk - Coffee from Jack Kramer to turn professional. As captain of the Indlan team, NEWS BRIEFS FBI MAKES FIRST ARREST UNDER A Krlshnan is expected to play two of SECTION OF THE SKY PIRACY LAW the four s~ngles matches and team wlth Jacksonville, Fla. Sept. 24 (UPI)- vpteran Naresh Kumar in the doubles. A truck carry~ng 17 persons overturned Washington, Sept. 25 (UPI)-The FBI He is undefeated in Davis Cup play so and burned ~n downtown Jacksonville to­ Sunday made its first arrest under a far th~s year. day. section of ths\new sky-piracy law mak­ Although he lacks a big serve and Ten persons aboard the truck were ing ita crime to carry concealed wea­ sometimes appears heavy footed, Krish­ taken to the hospital. Police said pons on airliners. nan is a steady and sure shot maker. bodies of the seven victims, all FBI !Cents went aboard a Piedmont Just back from an extenslve European Negroes, were burned beyond recognit­ Airl~nes plane at Nat~onal Airport tour, he ~s reported to be ~n top ion. and arrested Elbert M~ller Brooks, 38, shape. of ~agle Rock, Virgln~a. The FBI said The Indian captain lost out in the Jone~boro, Ark., Sept. 24 (UPI)-A the planers purser found an automatic semi-f~nals at Wimbledon in straight Frisco fre~ght train and a Frisco pistol wrapped ~n a newspa~er on a sets to eventual champion . passenger tra~n collided tonight and seat near Miller. It was the first time in four meetings injured at least 19 persons. The discovery was made 10 minutes that the red-haired Australian has At least two of the passenger cars out of Washington on a flight to beaten him. were overturned, throwing the passen­ Roanok~, V~rg~nip, and Asheville, Krishnan and h~s Indian team mates gers from their seats into debris and North Carolina, agents said. are expected to rule as slight favor­ broken glass. Miller was released under a $250 ites to defeat the Amerlcanse The~r There were no re~orted fatalities. bond follow~ng hlS arraignment before advantages w~ll include a home town U.S. CommissJ.oner Stanley King. If court, home town weather (matches wl1l West Long Branch, N.J., Sept. 24 (U}I J convicted of the charge, he could be be played ~n temperatures reaching the Communist China will not be admitted fined a maximum of ~1,000 or given up low 90 1s) and a hard court, probably to the United Nations during its cur­ to a year in jail, or both. rolled gravel. The gravel J.S expected rent session, Carlos P. Romulo, Philip­ Miller, en route to Roanoke with his to take much of the steam out of the pine Ambassador to the U.N. predicted wife and 6-year-old son, was quoted Amer~can serV0S. today. as saying he had the gun for protect­ The rest of the tec:.11 ~nC'ludes court­ Speak~ng at the dedication of a new ion and was not aware of the new law. wJ.se Naresh Kumar, 32, Jaldeep Muker­ library at Monmouth College, Romulo Jea, 19, and PremJit Lall, 220 Kumar said Communist China should not be ad­ will join the team for the first time ~tted to the world organization be­ POLICE TURN WATER HOSES ON STUDENTS TO QUELL DEMONSTRATION this year for the .A.merl.c an matches ru.id cause nit started the Korean War." is expected to stre~gthen the Indlan Algiers, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Police He declined to comment on a successor doubles team. A m~qtache wearing, turned pressure hoses speuting blue­ to Dag HammarskJold. part-tJ.me fortune teller, K~~ar was dyed water on a mob of 300 students in But he urged small nat~ons to nst~ck chosen after his l~roved p~ay on thlS downtown Algiers today, to quell a together" to defeat the Russian pro­ yearrs European clrcUlt~ lt posal for a f1 troika," three-man sec­ ItFrench-Algerian demonstrat~on. MukerJea, who shows promlse but 1S retariat, to pres~de over the United The demonstratlon developed around still relatJ.ve ly J.nexL-;erlPnc»I"::' may Nations. (1515 GMT) on a day in wh~ch settler share s~ngles ass~gr...:.er: G,::" ,lltl1 Krlsh­ Romulo warned that It Russia is seek­ house-holders flaunted black" Secret nan. Armyr flags from buildings in Algeria1s ing to conquer the world, and it pro­ Indla ga~ned the J.nterzone Davls Cup vokes crJ.ses ~n ~ts efforts to do so." clt~es. matches by w~nning handlly over Thail­ When the students standJ.ng guard at and and then rock~ng Japan, 4-1. Al­ strateglc sectors had been congrat­ New York, Sept. 24 (UfI)-Pol~ce In­ though comparlson may not be fa~r, the ulat~ng themselves that the extre~sts spector W~ll~am Brown said tonight Ind~an v~ctorles were far more ~­ "Flag Dayn had been largely a flop, that a telephone call had been rece~ved presslve than the Unlted States~ shaky at least in Algiers. which threatened ~res~dent Kennedy be­ 3-2 w~n over Mexico. sect~on, fore the President arrived ~n New York. In the downtown only a few The w~nner of the three-day best of "There was nothl.ng to it,ll Brown black flags embroidered w~th the five matches w~ll meet Italy to declde sa~d. whi te letters n OAS" (Secret Army Or­ which countryvLll play 1'.. t,ls"t.ra1 ia In He added that no extra guard was ganization) fluttered from private the finals. assigned to Kennedy as a result of the balconies...... threat because the President always But ~n the port clties of Oran and has a heavy guard while in New York. Bone, the flag d~splayed was wide­ PGA FINES 6 OF ITS MEMBERS Brown did not say who received the spread and in Oran, unknown extremists Portland, Oregon, Sept. 24 (U1I)­ call, only that police had learned of hoisted an OAS pennant on the city The Professional Golfers AssociatJ.on it. hall. last n~ght announced ~t has flned SLX Whlte House Press Secretary Pierre ...... of its plaYlng members lncluding Sam Salingel said that he was no~ aWare KEN~EDyl~ CHAT WITH CHAIRMAN Snead $500 and suspended them for SLX of any threat havlng been made against OF PHILIPPI~E DELEG~TION months for playing in a Cincinnati Kennedy. pro-amateur tourn~ent Saturday w~th­ United Nations, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Am­ out permissJ.on. Moscow, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Huldah Clark, bassador Joaq~n M. Elizalde, Chair­ The actlon was taken because the two­ 14-year-old American Negro from Newark, man of the Philippine delegation, had day event at the Los Antiville Country New Jersey, arrived here last niJht to a br~ef chat with President and Mrs. Club ~n Cinc~nnati conflicted wJ.th attend school ln the Soviet Union and Kennedy at an informal reception fol­ the PGA-sponsored Portland opens 11 to he Ip fJ.ght segregation." low~ng Kennedy's speech to the United The other players disciplined by the Huldah was invited to go to school Nations today. PGA were Tommy Bolt of Crystal River, here by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush­ As El~zalde stepped up to shake hands Florida; Dick Mayer of La Jolla, Cal­ with the ChlC Jacqueline Kennedy, he chev, who had been contacted by her ifornia; Walter Burkemo of Frankl~n s ald to her, 11 I am Chairman of the father, Wlll~am Clark, when Khrushchev Hills, Michigan; Chic Harbert of Port Philipp~ne delegation, but my only viSited the United States last year. St. Luc~e, Florl.da, and Leltl Worsham marr~ed 11 There are many more who want to claim to fame is that I am to Susan Magalone.n of Oakmont, ~ennsylvania. come,lI Huldah sa~d at Moscow1s Shere­ Snead, the 49-year-old star who has metyova a~rport. "Maybe when enough IIHolal" Mrs. Kennedy said, with a smile. won more than 100 tournaments, told of us arr~ve, it wlll help fight segre­ PGA offic~als here by telephone that gation." he was w~thdrawing from the tournament .J Page 3 HOURGLASS Tuesday 26 September 1961

UAW ENDS G~ STRIKE· THRE~ TE~JS FCRD ~v,oT6R CO. -r-----tVI~.~AK I TK I TKO JEN KWAJALE I ~1U-1~--I' (EVENTS FPOM KWAJALEI~) Detroit, Sept. 24 (UPI)-The United Auto Workers Union tonight ended the FURTHER DETAILS RECEIVED ON General Motors strike but immediately CHOLERA IMMUNIZATIONS SAR MEDICAL AIR DROP threatened another one -- aga~nst Ford Motor CO e CO~1ANDER PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE Last Saturday the HourGlass pub­ The Union1s executive board ordered NOTICE 62)0 dated 19 September 1961 lished a news story concerning an air all GM locals back to work -- includ­ states that due to the cholera epi­ drop of medical equipment by a SAR ing a handful without at-the-plant demic in the Far East cholera immuni­ crew at Wake Island to the ship Orcade~ e agreements--thus officially br~nging zation is required for travel to and At that time i~ormat10n concerning to a close a strike which started beyond Japan and the Philippines. the air drop was brief, however, a Sept. 11 and idled a quarter of a Cholera immunization may be obtained complete story has now been made avail­ million workers and closed nearly 100 at the Station Hospital. All person­ able. plants. nel w~o contemplate travel to or be­ The Detachment, from the Search and At the same time, the board granted yond Japan, Philippines, New GU2nea, Rescue organization based on KwajaleinJ strike authorization to the Union's the Solomons and New Hebrides should received a message at 11:20 p.m. Fri­ Ford bargain~ng committee, though ~t obtain immunization or re-immunization day stating the Orcades had a patient set no deadline for a settlement or a well in advance of commencing travel. on board suffering from acute glau­ walkout...... come, and that the eye spec~alist on The UAW said that at the time it MICKEY & JOAN TO BE ON AF'RS board required necessary instruments voted to end the GM strike--effect~ve and tonometer to perform iridectomy& at midnight ton~ght--only two bargain­ This Friday at 7:45 p.m. AFRS, Between then and 1:19 a.m. Saturday ing units had not yet completed their Kwajalein will begin to reap the morning when the Navy SAR plane, a local agreements. These were Fisher harvest in its search for local talent UF-2, took off from Wake, many small Body NOe 23 in 0etro~t and Fisher As­ The popular couple Mickey and Joan but important det8.l.ls were accomplishec. sembly in Atlanta, Georgia. Shannon w~ll be returning to the air The Wake Island D~spensary was con­ Two other key plants were settled with a weekly program starting this tacted and a tonometer (instrument to sometime th~s evening, according to Friday at 7:45 p.m. Mickey and Joan measure pressure), Loupe binocular the UAW. These were Fisher Body, are professional enterta~ners spec­ set, iris scissors, eyelid retractor, Pittsburgh, and Delco-Remy at Anderson, ~alizing in American folk songs. They and needles were obtained@ Indiana. have also composed songs, including A message was sent notifying the These two were essential to full pro­ one about KwaJalein. SARCC at Kwaj and Pearl Harbor and duction at GM. The Pittsburgh workers ...... additional information was requested made metal stampings for all GM car on exact position of shi~ and possible l~nes, and the Delco-Remy employees TOASTMASTERS AGENDA voice frequencies that could be used produce start~ng, lighting and ignition for communications. systems. The next meet~ng of the KwaJalein The plane was fully gassed for the In a brief statement the Union said: Toastmasters Club is scheduled for anticipated length of the flighto A "The UAW international executive board Thursday evening, October 5th, 1961 rig of three flares and a can~ster to unanimously voted to terminate the at 7 p.m. in the Yokwe Yuk Club. carry the instruments was constructed. strike against GM effective midn2ght The line-up of assignments tor our When the aircraft was gassed and tonight and to instruct all local coming October 5th meeting is as fol­ the instruments packed ~n a foam rub­ unions still on strike to withdraw lows: Toastmaster - Rawlin Spencer; ber pillow inside a parachute flare their pickets at that time." Introduction and Installation of new can, to protect them from sudden jolts, "Workers who have not already re­ officers - Fred Geisendorf, Outgoing the crew boarded the planeo turned to work should do so begirming President; Invocation - Joseph Mor­ Lt. Tom L. Blanchard (from Richmond, with the first shift on Monday, consis­ gan; Table Topics Master - Bud Boyd; Va.,) was pilot; w~th Ltjg Scotty Ca~n tent with operation needs. II Main Speakers - Bill Howard, Manry (from Oakdale, La.) ~9 co-pilot; and ...... Kramer, and Frank Morris; Table Ltjg Gordon G. Heady (from Independ­ Topics Evaluator - Carl Wylie; Gram­ ence, Mo.) SINATRA, MARTIN WILL SPEND marian - Wayne Langill; Ah & Er The crew of the plane were: Plane $10 MILLION ON GAMBLING "pALACE tI Meter Man - Tom Helton; Speech Timer - Captain Ray Wisner ADR2, (Ferndale, Hollywood, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Nearly Ward Rognelson; Evaluators - Bob Wash.), and Plane Captain Aviation $10 million will be spent by ow~ers Price, Sam Gaines and Austin White; Structural Mechanic 3rd Class Kenneth Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin and Hank General Evaluator - John Coleman; B. Christensen (Deaver, Wyo.), J. L. Sanicola to build a new hotel and re­ Recorder - Larry Finn. Gavigan ATAN (Beaver Falls, N. Ye)e furbish their Cal-Neva Lodge at State­ With the new system of evening Remaining at Wake were LCDR D. R. line, Nevada, it was announced today. meetings it is hoped that many pros­ Leaf, (Marshalltown, Iowa), as BAR Sanicola, agent of Sinatra, said pective new members will be able to Controller, Maurie Bahnsen AT3 (Helena, the lodge would become one of the attend the Toastmaster meetings reg­ Mont.), assisted in logging and sending gambling palaces of the west and sch­ ularly. All present members are re­ all the neoessary messages. edule top-flight entertainment. minded to please bring a guest along Lt. Blanohard flew toward the esti­ ...... for the installation of new officers mated position of the ship at the time at the next maeting on Thursday, they expected to arrive in the area. F'RANK F'AY GIVEN October 5th, 1961. After a sleepy but otherwise unevent­ LAST RITES •••••• ful flight Lt. Tom Blanchard spotted Santa Monica, Calitorn1a, Sept. 25 S8 PRES. PIERCE DUE TOMORROW a light below the horizon. After a (UPI)-Frank Fay, former Broadway few minutes of observation the pilots The SS President Pierce, of Ameri­ comedian and rad~o star, was given the and crew vere conv~nced that it was a last Rites of the Roman Catholic can President Lines, is due to ar­ ship and not another star. However, church today. rive at Kwaj1s dock tomorrow, accord­ ~t wasn1t until they arrived over the Spokesmen for St. John's Hospital ing to word received this afternoon ship at 6:07 a.m.; that they positive­ said the 64-year-old ex-husband of from the Marine Department. ly identified it as the Orcades. Barbara Stanwyck was suftering from an The ship, out of San FranciSCO, Three low passes were made to judge the internal rupture of the abdominal will be carrying general cargo. sea state and speed of the vessel. aorta. The drop of instruments and float His condition was listed as crit~cal New York, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Steel pro­ lights was made on the fourth low pass and his chances of surviving were de­ duction last week totaled 2,114,000 at 6:23 a.m. The canister landed scribed as slim. tons, up 4 per cent from the 2,032, about a mile ahead of the ship and it ...... 000 tons of the previous week, the altered course slightly to come along American Iron & Steel institute re­ s~de the canister. MILLICNS OF AMERICANS VIEW ported today. By 6:47 a.m. the aircraft was on its JF'K'S ADDRESS TO U.N. Based on the estimated weekly cap­ way back to Wake Island and landed at New York, Sept. 25 (UPI)-About 20 acity of the industry steel mills 11:23 a.m. million Americans watched PreSident operated at approx1mately 72.3 per ...... Kennedy's address to the United Nat~ons cent of rated capacity compared w~th You may order flowers through Spec­ General Assembly on telev~sion, a TV 69.5 per cent in the previous week. network executive estimated today. ial Se,.~ri ces for delivery in Honolulu Output for the year to date totaled or th~ Mainland. You pay only for the He said sets were turned on in approx­ 68,)18,000 tons down 12.7 per cent imately 11 million homes. cost of the flowers you choose to send, from the 78,243,000 tons produced in For complete information call Mrs. • • • • • • the same 1960 period. Hunt at 331, Special Services Offioe • - L-_..... -r------Page 4 HOURGLASS Tuesday 26 ~ptember 1961

GENERAL WESS ~~NU ADDITIONAL SPORTS DAVIS CUP MATCHES TO BEGI~ WEDNESDAY 27 September 1961 BREAKFAST New Delh1, Sept. 24 (UPI)-The United DINNER SUPPER States will have to beat AsiaRs hot­ Chilled Fruit Ju~ce Minestrome Soup Beef Barley Soup test tennis ~layer to win the inter­ Chilled Fresh Fruit Baked Swiss Steak Baked Pork Chops zone Dav1s Cup matches beginning here Hot Farina Oven Browned Potatoes in Mushroom Sauce Sept. 30. Grilled Ham Slices Creamed Peas Lyonnaise Potatoes Ramanathan Krisrman, a bull-should­ Hot Wheat Cakes Steamed Rice Buttered Spinach w/Eggs ered, scowling South Ind1an, is, at Maple Syrup Savoy String Beans Beet w/Onions in Vinegar 24, a tough man to defeat ~n Ind1a or Steamed Rice Sliced Tomatoes Salad Bar Assft Dressing anywhere else. A sem1-f1na11st at Danish Pastries w/Mayonnalse Steamed Rice Wimbledon for the past two years, Hot Toast Butter Iced Devils Food Cake Pumpkin P~e Krishnan holds the AS1an championship & Jam. Cold Fruit Punch Iced Tea wilemon Slice and periodically mulls over invitations Chilled Milk - Coffee C~lled Milk - Coffee Chilled Milk - Coffee from Jack Kramer to turn professional. As capta1n of the Indl.an team, NEWS BRIEFS FBI MAKES FIRST ARREST UNDER A Kr1shnan is expected to play two of the four singles matches and team with Jacksonville, Fla. Sept. Z4 (UFI)- SECTION OF THE SKY PIRACY LAW v~teran Naresh Kumar in the doubles. A truck carrying 17 persons overturned Washington, Sept. 25 (UPI)-The FBI He is undefeated in Davis Cup play so and burned in downtown Jacksonv111e to­ Sunday made its first arrest under a far thl.S year. day. section of the~new sky piracy law mak­ Although he lacks a big serve and Ten persons aboard the truck were ing it a crime to carry concealed wea­ sometimes appears heavy footed, Kr1sh­ taken to the hospital. Police aa1d pons on airliners. nan is a steady and sure shot maker. bodies of the seven victims, all FBI Alents went aboard a Piedmont Just back from an extens1ve European Negroes, were burned beyond recognit­ Air11nes plane at Nat~onal Airport tour, he 1S reported to be l.n top ion. and arrested Elbert M~ller Brooks, 38, shape. of ~gle Rock, Virg1n1a. The FBI said The Indian capta~n lost out in the Jone~boro, Arks, Sept. 24 (UPI)-A the plane's purser found an automatic semi-finals at Wimbledon in stra1ght Fr1sco fre1ght train and a Frisco pistol wra~ped 1n a newspa~er on a sets to eventual champion Rod laver. passenger tra~n collided tonight and seat near Miller. It was the first time in four meetings The discovery was made 10 minutes inJured at least 19 persons. that the red-haired Aust~alian has At least two of the passenger cars out of WaShington on a flight to beaten him. were overturned, throwing the passen­ Roanok~, V1rg1ni~, and Asheville, Kr1shnan and h1s Ind1an taa~ mates gers from their seats into debr1s and North Carolina, agents said. are expected to rule as slight favor­ broken glass. Miller was released under a $250 ites to defeat the Amer~c~nsQ The1r There were no reported fatalities. bond follow1ng his arraignment before advantages w11l include a home town U.S. COmm1SSl.0ner Stanley K1Dg. If court, home town weather (matches wl.ll convicted of the charge, he could be West Long Branch, N.J., Sept. 24 (U}I 4 be played 1n temperatures reaching the up Communist China will not be admitted fined a maximum of ~1,000 or given low 90 1s) and a hard court, probably to the United Nations dur1ng its cur· to a year in jail, or both. rolled gravel. The gravel 1S expected rent session, Carlos P. Romulo, Philip­ Miller, en route to Roanoke with his to take much of the steam out of the pine Ambassador to the U.N. predicted w1fe and 6-year-old son, was quoted American serveS. today. as saying he had the gun for protect­ The rest of the te20 lncludes court­ ion and was nOl aware of the new law. Speak1ng at the dedication of a new wise Naresh Kumar, 32, Ja~deep Muker= library at Monmouth College, Romulo ...... Jea, 19, and FremJit Lall, 220 Kumar said Communist China should not be ad­ POLICE TURN WATER HOSES ON w~ll join the team for the f1.rst tl.me mitted to the world organization be­ this year for the l\..msr~~;;l. 1 matches alii 1I STUDENTS TO QUELL DEMONSTRATtON cause "it started the Korean War. is expected to stre~gthcD the Ind~an He declined to comment on a successor Algiers, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Police doubles team. A ID.".lSta(,11e wearing, Dag turned pressure hoses speuting blue­ to HammarskJold. part-t1me fortune teller, K~ar was dyed water on a mob of 300 students in But he urged small net10ns to "st1ck chosen after h~s 1mproved play on th1S downtown Algiers today, to quell a together" to defeat the Russian pro­ year's European c~rcult~ posal for a n troika," three-man sec­ "French-Algerian" demonstration. MukerJea, who shoW's prC',ffi1.se bu.t is retariat, to preside over the United The demonstrat10n developed around still relatl.vely 1nex.. erlenCE:iCl may (1515 GMT) on a day in which settler Nations. share sl.ngles as s 1 gr.,.."'"'" eLL C'? oJ] t.n Kr1sh- Romulo warned that "Russia is seek­ house-holders flaunted black It Secret nan. Army" flags from bU11d1ngs in Algeria 1 s ing to conquer the world, and 1t pro­ Ind~a ga1ned the 1nterzone Dav1s Cup vokes cr~ses ~n ~ts efforts to do so." c1t1es. matches by wl.nning handlly over Thail­ When the students standIng guard at and and then rock1ng Japan, 4-1. Al­ New York, Sept. 24 (UfI)-Po11ce In­ strateg1c sectors had been congrat­ though compar1son may nut be fa~r, the ulat1ng themselves that the extreID1sts s~ector W~ll~am Brown said tonight Ind1an victor~es were far more kffi­ that a telephone call had been rece~ved "Flag Dai' had been largely a flop, pressive than tne Unl.ted States U shaky which threatened Pras~dent Kennedy be­ at least in Algiers. 3-2 win over Mex1coo fore the President arr~ved 1n New York. In the downtown sect~on, only a few The W1nner of the three-day best of "There was noth~ng to ~t,n Brown black flags embroidered w1th the f1ve matches w111 meet Italy to dec1de wh~te sal.d. letters "OASH (Secret Army Or­ which countryv!ll play Lustra1 ia In He added that no extra guard was ganization) fluttered from private the finals. aSSigned to Kennedy as a result of the balconies...... tr~eat because the President always But 1n the port cities of Oran and has a heavy guard while in New York. Bone, the flag displayed was wide­ PGA FINES 6 OF ITS MEMBERS Brown did not say who received the spread. and ~n Oran., unknown extremists Portland, Oregon, Septe 24 (UrI)­ call, only that police had learned of hoisted an OAS pennant on the city The Profess10nal Golfers Assoc1at~on it. hall. last nl.ght announced l.t has f1ned S1X White House Press Secretary Pierre ...... of its plaYl.ng members 1ncludl.ng Sam Salingel said that he was nOli aWare KEN~EDylq CHAT WITH CHAIRMAN Snead $500 and suspended therrJ. for s l.X of any threat hav1ng been made against OF PHILIPPI~E DELEGATION months for playing in a Cinc1.nnati Kennedy. pro-amateur tourn~ent Saturday w~th­ United Nations, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Am­ out perm1ss10n. Moscow, Sept. 25 (UPI)-Huldah Clark, bassador Joaqu1n M. Elizalde, Chair­ The action was taken because the two­ 14-year-old American Negro from Newark, man. of the Philippine delegation, had day event at the Los Antiville Country New Jersey, arrived here last ni~ht to a br1ef chat with President and Mrs. Club 1n C~nc1nnati conflicted w1th attend school in the Soviet Union and Kennedy at an informal reception fol­ the PGA-sponsored Portland open. II to help f~ght segregat~on." low~ng Kennedy's speech to the United The other players disc1plined by the Huldah was invited to go to school Nations today. PGA were Tommy Bolt of Crystal River, here by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush­ As Elizalde stepped up to shake hand~ Florida; Dick Mayer of La Jolla, Cal- with the chic Jacqueline Kennedy, he chev, who had been contacted by her ifornia; W~lter Burkemo of Frankl~n father, W111iam Clark, when Khrushchev sa1d to her, 11 I am Cha1rman of the Philippine delegat1on, but my only Hills, Michigan; Chic Harbert of Port visited the United States last year. St. Luc~e, Flor1da, and Lew Worsham n There are many more who want to claim to fame is that I am marr1ed to Susan Magalone." of Oakmont, ~ennsylvania. come,l! Huldah said at Moscow's Shere­ Snead, the 49-year-old star who has metyova airport. "Maybe when enough "Holall' Mrs. Kennedy said, with a smile. won more than 100 tournaments, told of us arr~ve, it w~ll help fight segre­ PGA offic1als here by telephone that gation." he was w1thdrawing from the tournament. r---~------~ PAGE J 5 HOURGLASS SPORTS SECTION rrUESDAY 26 SE

THE SPECTATOR BY JIM CHRISTENSEN THE GARDENA iRES WON ANOTHER MoUNTAIN­ SPORTS BALL GAME LAST NIGHT BY DEfEATING SUPPLY 6-1. ThE GARDENAIRES BROKE r------~------~THE ICE BY SCORING TWO RUNS IN THE FIRST INNING ON A DOUBLE BY S. BADAYOS BASEBALL STANDINGS AND HELD SUPPLY SCORELESS UNTIl THE AMERICAN LEAGUE BASEBALL ROUNDUPS CONTrD THIRD INNING WHEN HAWKES SCORED FOR NEW YORK INNING, FOUR Of THEM ON ORLANDO SUPPLY ON A GARDENAIRES ERROR. DETROIT 8 CEPEDAnS HOME RUN, TO BEAT THE THIRD WAS THE BIG INNING FOR THE GARDENAiRES, DESPITE THE ONE AND ONLY BALTIMORE 14i THE L~AGUE LEADING CINCINNATI REDS, SCORE fOR SUPPLY BEING MADE DURING CHICAGO 19 12-5, SUNDAY. THAT INNINGo IN THE TOP Of THE THiRD, • CLEVELAND 29 THE REDS NOW NEED TWO WINS--OR TWO THE GAROENAiRES' R. KEHANO, OKUJUMA, BOSTON 3~ Los ANGELES LOSSES TO CLINCH THE H. BOBBY ALCOVER AND S. BADAYOS ALL MINNESOTA 3>4 PENNANT. Los ANGELES JACK SANFORD FORCED FROM THE GAME SCORED, TO BUILD THE 6-1 LEAD WHICH KANSAS CITY ~8 BY THE 9O-DEGREE HEAT IN THE SEVENTH REMAINED THE SCORE THROUGHOUT THE REST WASHINGTON 4~* INNING, PICKED UP THE VICTORY, HIS OF THE GAME. 13TH AGAINST EIGHT LOSSES. THIS PUTS THE GARDENAIRES WITHIN NATIONAL LEAGUE THE CARDINALS DEALT THE DODGERS J ONE GAME Of THE LEAGUE NO. I SPOT, TO CINCINNATI .607 HOPES A SERIOUS JOLT AS CURT FLOOD, KEEP AVIATION COMPANY. THE GAME BROKE Los ANGELES ~~ g~ ·588 BILL WHITE AND CARL WARWICK DROVE IN A TIE fOR THIRO PLACE SUPPLY WHICn WAS SAN FRANCISCO 82 66 TWO RUNS EACH AND BOB GIBSON WON HIS TIED WITH THE SPORTSMEN ARE NOW IN ·551 FOURTH PLACE WITH OCEAN VIEW. MI LWAUKEE 70 • 530 12TH GAME IN AN 8-7 VICTORY • ST. LOUIS +~ 71 .523 WARREN SPAHN ACHiEVED THE 12TH NEW BASKETBALL TEAMS PLAY FIRST TILT! I PITTSBURGH 20-WIN SEASON Of HIS CAREER WHEN HE 11 .483 FOUR Of THE TEAMS FROM THE FORTHCOM­ CHICAGO 62 .412 PITCHED A TWO-HITTER TO GIVE THE ~ ING BASKETBALL LEAGUE MADE THEI R FIRST PHILADELPHIA 46 0 MILWAUKEE BRAVES AN 8-0 DECISION, 1 3 ·3°9 PUBLIC APPEARANCE LAST NIGHT IN THE BUT THE CHICAGO CUBS WON THE SECOND FIRST TWO GAMES Of THE SINGLE ELIMIN­ ROUNDUPS GAME, 4-2, WITH THE AID OF HOMERS BY ATION BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT SPONSORED AMERICAN LEAGUE ERNIE BANKS AND BILLY WILLIAMS. BY SPECIAL SERVICES. SPAHN'S 12 20-WIN SEASONS TIE HIM (UPI) ROGER MARSS fAILED TO HIT NO. IN THE f1RST GAME, PMZ DEFEATED THE WITH WALTER JOHNSON AND LEAVES HIM 60 ON SUNDAY BUT STILL RECEIVED A No HUHUS BY A SCORE OF VINCE BEHIND Cy YOUNG, WHO HAD 1620-GAME 19-16. STANDING OVATION SUNDAY fROM A FENWAY B. WAS HIGH SCORER FOR THE GAME, HE SEASONS, AND CHRISTY MATHEWSON, WHO PARK CROWD Of 30,802,