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Anwar Accuses Of rNltplcklng' WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Egyptlan comma" In peace proposals lowlng the Palestlnlan people an alarmlst. I am not glven Presldent Anwar Sadat sald to­ He sald Israel's proposed to exerClse "self-determlnatlOn" to despalr or lmpatlence. I day the Israell posltlon on Solvtlon for the West Bank and and provldlng for the necessary npver lost hope ln the face of Mlddle East peace is h~rden- Gaza "lS slmply lnadequate" guarantees for the securlty of dlfflculties. To the con­ , 1ng rather than softenl ng and and that the Israell posltlon Arab states. trary, I take thlS as a chal­ lt lS up to the Jewlsh state "1 S hardem ng rather than The Unlted States, Sadat lenge. I am a flghter, and to make the next move to re­ softemng as we go along ... " sald, had more than a go­ when I say that I mean It.'' open stalled peace talks. "The Israell government, he between role ln helplng resolve "We are anXlOUS to stop He accused Israel of "a sald ln hlS strongest comment the deadlock and must contlnue the ," Sadat sald. V1C10US cHcle" of nltplcklng on the openlng of Jewlsh com­ to work wlth both partles to "We are looklng forv'Jarrl to the In the negotlatlons. munltles ln occupled lands, accelerate the process. day when our acqulsltlon of In prepared remarks for a "cannot hlde behlnd fanatlc Sadat took hlS case to the arms lS mlnimal ... but that luncheon speech at the Natlonal groups WhlCh are beatlng the Amerlcan people today. Flrst, cannot be a unllateral act on Press Club, Sadat sald efforts drums of war ln thelr feverlsh he met wlth Jewlsh leaders and our part. If we are to de­ "wlll have to be doubled lf campalgn to bUlld these settle­ then appeared before the Press emphasize armament, the other we a~e to re-afflrm the falth ments." C1Jb audlence to state Calro's party must do the same." of many people In the area After outllnlng what pos it lOn. R~fErrlng to Carter as a that peace lS attalnable." was wllllng to accept to brlng "It lS true that I am rather man of "wlsdom and courage," Sadat, who dlscussed the about permanent peace, he sald dlsappolnted. but I am de­ the Egyptlan leader sald he talks wlth Presldent Carter "I trust that you wlll agree termlned to persevere," he told to 1d Ca rter US. efforts "wlll over the weekend, accused wlth me, dear frlends, that lt the Press Club of stalled have to be doubled lf we are Israel of gOlng back to the remalns for the other party to Israell-Egyptlan talks on the to re-afflrm the falth of many "V1C10US clrcle of argulng reclprocate" by wlthdrawal forelgn mlnlster's level. people In the area that peace over every slngle word or from all Arab terrltorles, al- "I am neither a pessimlst or lS attalnable." Riots Erupt At New Airport TOKYO (UPI) -- R10t police flrlng tear gas and water cannons today arrested student radlcals and farmers entrenched ln a fortress bUllt to block fll 9h t sat the s 1te 0 f Tokyo's _V.:...;O:.:;L;.::.U;..;;ME,,---=1,;:..5 ____-.:....;.K'-"-,! Ac,:.J.;...;A=L Ec..c:I-'.N-'.A-,-T-,-O.:...;L L~,,--,-,-r1t1-,-R=S.;..;.HA;...:.:L=L,--,,-I S:..;;L:.-A-C. ND_S-,-,_M_O_N;..;...D_A Y-",--F E;;;..B_R..;;..;UA...:..R.;..;.Y--,,-,6 ',--=,l-,-Q 7;...:8'-- ___.;...;Nc..c: ll.;..;.M.:...;BE::.;..R:.....;.::.::..2 5 new lnternatlonal alrport, pollce reported. REPUBLICAN TASK FORCE SAYS. About 40 opponents fiercely fought back by throwlng fire bombs, rocks and other objects DEFENSE POLICIES I NADEQUA TE as pollce armed wlth steel shlelds stormed into the four­ WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A-Republican National Commlttee task force today condemned the Admlnlstra­ story steel-framed concrete tlon's defense policles as lnadequate and dangerous in Vlew of a Sovlet milltary bUlld-up of structure. "Undlmlnlshed lntenslty " Pollce sald 36 opponents, A defense subcommlttee of the commlttee's Advlsory Councll reported that Carter's defense POllCY lncludlng flve women, have been In hlS flrst year and ln his flscal 1979 defense budget of $115.2 blllion "has been characterized arrested on charges of ob­ by cancellatlons, deferrals, cutbacks of systems and forces crltlcal to future securlty and structlng pollce dutles and stablllty." vlolatlng the flre arms control Republlcan Natlonal Chalrman Blll Brock and Robert Ellsworth, former Ambassador to NATO, ex­ law. plalned the Republlcan POS1- They sald 22 pollcemen were tion at ~ news conference. lnJured, two senously, In Middle Atlantic Seaboard Hit By Ellsworth sald members of flghtlng wlth protestors. the task force applauded Pollce sald three more Carter on hlS moves to bUlld stucents were reslstlng on a Another Potential Blizzard Today up NATO, and he stressed that 20-meter steel tower bUllt NEW YORK (UPI) -- A snowstorm carrylng a potentlal bllzzard Republlcans were "not asking atop the fortress, WhlCh the punch hlt the Mlddle Atlantlc seaboard today. It snarled trafflc for a maSSlve across-the­ opponents bUllt ln from Vlrglnla to New England, forced the New Jersey Leglslature board lncrease" ln defense agalnst the openlng of the new and Supreme Court to cancel seSSlons and closed New York Clty'S spendlng. alrport at Narlta, about 70 schools. But the Repub11can policy mlles southeast of Tokyo. Forecasters predlcted bllzzard condltlons and more than a foot statement charged the Adminis­ The government has already of snow In New York Clty and lnland sectlons of New Jersey. tratlon wlth dangerous over­ notlfled lnternatlonal air­ "We're thlnklng ln terms of a foot or more," sald NatlOnal concl11atlon and under-compe­ llnes that the $2.6 blllion Weather SerVlce spokesmen in New York. "It's a slow-movlng sys­ tltion In U.S.-Sovlet ml11tary alrport wlll offlcially be tem and wlll probably last well rel atlOns. opened on March 31. 1nto toni ght. " An addltlonal outlay of The radlcals held about 800 New York Clty offlclals $2 bl1110n to $3 bl111on, Ells­ rlot pollce at bay for about sent 3,000 men lnto the streets PLANES CRASH worth sald, would allow the 17 hours, hurllng flre bombs to battle the Clty'S second LAS VEGAS (UPI) -- Experts to contlnue vltal and rocks. major snowstorm In 17 days. had to remove llve rockets be­ research and development on Flghtlng flared early thlS "We're afrald thlS one lS fore they could recover the new weapons systelils, restore mornlng as rlot pollce equlp­ gOlng to be a rough one to bodles of two of four Alr Force Shlpbulldlng and accelerate ped wlth two large cranes flght," sald Bill Horne, a offlcers kllled In plane development of the MX movable moved ln to tear down the Sanltatlon Department spokes­ crashes, whlle near-bllzzard mlsslle weapons system. steel tower man. weather condltions temporarlly The report emphaslzed the Pollce sald two pollcemen Rush hour motorlsts ln the halted the search for a C1Vlll­ lack of defense lnltlative by suffered serlOUS burns when Washlngton and Balltmore areas an surVlvor of a thlrd crash. the Admlnlstratlon. thelr car was hlt by flrebombs. met two lnches of snow on the The three alrcraft all went * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * expressways and several more down wlthin a flve-day perlod * * lnches were expected before In a southern Nevada area. * SURF & SUN * E·SYSTEMS ACCUSED the day lS over. LTC Rl11y Helton, 46, * AS OF 0001 HOURS 6 FEB. '78 * WASHINGTON (UPI) -- South In the Mldwest, a new win­ wandered In the mountalns for * WEEKEND RAINFALL' 4.01" * Korea pressured a U.S. defense ter storm dropped heavy snows several days before he was * MONTHLY TOTAL' 4.02" * contractor In 1973 to help In on northern Indlana and llght­ rescued Saturday. He was re­ * YEARLY TOTAL' - 17.91" * paYlng the cost of Longresslon­ er amounts on the Chlcago ported In stable condltlon yes­ * TOMORROW * al 10bbYlng done by Tong- metropolltan area. terday at a nearbv Alr Force * Hl Tlde 0447 5.3'1700 6.2' * sun Park, the lndlcted Korean In northern Callfornla, a hosplta1. * Lo Tlde 1042 0.2'23190.1' * rlce trader ln the Capltol sudden storm wlth wlnds up to Near-bllzzard condltlons * SUNRISE. 0710 SUNSET 1857 * Hlll lnfluence-buYlng scandal, 50 mlles per hour yesterday, halted the sparch for Helton's * MOONRISE 0626 MOONSET 1741 * the Wash~ngton Post reported caused mudslldes, felled trees, son, Michael, 21, who was hurt * * * '* * * * * * * * * * * * * today. tore ShlPS from thelr moorlngs In Thursday's crash of a Plper * * The company lnvolved was and capslzed two boats, splll­ Cherokee ln 4al1ace Canyon. * FINANCIAL NEWS * ldentlfled by the Post as lng eight persons lnto San Ground crews, four-wheel * DOW JONES AVERAGES * E-Systems Inc., of Dallas. The Franclsco Bay. drive vehlcles and 20 Alr Force *30 Indus. off 3.46 at 767.50* newspaper sald offlcers of Major commuter rall llnes alrcraft conducted an all­ *20 Trans. off 0.92 at 212.07* E-Systems say the company re­ reported half-hour delays this nlght searcr for the younger *15 Utlls. off 0.23 at 105.28* fused to make the suggested mornlng ln the New York Clty Helton before weather con­ * 65 Stocks off 1. 09 at 270.35 * payments to Park ln exchange area. The New York Stock dltlons forced a halt. * Volume' 11,630,000 shares * for Park's alleged help In Market closed early today and In addltlon to the other * Closlng Gold Prlce $175.95 * wlnnlng a contract for the the New York Cotton, Coffee and four alrcraft WhlCh crashed * Closlng Sllver Prlce: $4.90 * company to manufacture radios. Sugar Exchanges were all closed. a hellcopter also went down. * MARKET CLOSED 2 HOURS EARLY. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * PAGE 2 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 Searelt Con,inues for Core All· Volullfeer Military Is Range Operation A range operat1on lS scheduled for Of Sovie, Spy S,,'elli'e Expensive, Say Inves,igators Tuesday, February 7. EDMONTON, ALBERTA (UPI) -- Canadlan and WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Congresslonal In connectlon w1th th1S operat1on, U.S. SClentlsts concentrated thelr search lnvestlgators sald today the all-volunteer hazard areas wlll eX1st 1n the ocean for the nuclear core of a Sovlet spy mllltary has cost $18.4 bllllon more than wlth1n a 200 naut1cal m11e radlus of satell1te on the Thelon Rlver area of the the draft system lt replaced, but a Pentagon KwaJale1n and ln the KwaJale1n Atoll Northwest Terr1tor1es today, an Amerlcan offlclal sald that estlmate lS at least north of a llne JOlnlng, but not lncludlng spokesman for the search teams sald. $3.7 bll110n too hlgh. B1geJ and Gea Islands, and south of a llne Several pleces of the nuclear-powered Elmer Staats, Dlrector of the Con­ JCln1ng but not 1ncludlng Ennub1rr and satell1te, lncludlng a chunk that punched gresslonal General Accountlng Offlce, said Yabbernohr Islands. For th1S operat1on a crater when lt hlt the lce at Wardens the lncreased costs -- calculated from there are "take cover" requ1rements for Grove, were recovered there yesterday. 1971 when the sWltch began -- were dUe to Legan Island. Unless spec1f1cally author- Reconna1ssance planes, uSlng navlgatlonal the prlce of recrultln9 and to mllltary 1zed, all personnel assigned to duty or equ1pment that can plnpolnt an object on lmprovements such as hlgher pay, bonuses 11v1ng on the above 1sland must e1ther, the ground wlthln 30 feet, are patrolllng a and better houslng. "take cover" 1n an approved shelter when 500-mlle corrldor between Great Slave Lake But John Whlte, Asslstant Defense Secre­ dlrected or rema1n out of the hazard area and Baker Lake along WhlCh the crlppled tary for manrower, sald the GAO estlmate between the hours of 1700, February 7 Cosmos 954 showered debrls as lt re-entered lncluded a 1971 pay ralse for Junlor and 0300 February 8. Unless spec1f1cally Earth's atmosphere two weeks ago. personnel -- whlCh would have been glven authorlzed, no a1r or sea craft w11l enter Members of a Canadlan armed forces even lf the draft had remalned. or be 1n the KwaJale1n Atoll hazard area PlOneer un1t are erectlng a "tent Clty" at For that and other reasons, he told a between the same hours. See the map below Wardens Grove on the Thelon R1ver, 240 mlles Senate Armed Forces Subcomm1ttee, the GAO for the KwaJale1n Atoll hazard area. west of Baker Lake, to asslst searchers. A estlmate lS at least $3.7 blll10n hlgher bulldozer was alrdropped today by a Canadlan than the Pentagon's calculatlons. Hercules C-130. Whlte sald, however, that the Defense "PlOneers are bUlldlng the camp so that Department lS looklng at alternatlves to sClentlsts wlll be able to spend more tlme the current system to see where money can there 1nvestlgatlng," sald Davld Jackson of be saved. the U.S Department of Energy. "Untll now He dld not elaborate, and gave no In­ due to weather cond1tlons, they have only dlcatlon the Pentagon wants to return to the s pent two or th ree hours on the ground draft. Whlle there has been dl SCUSSl on of before belng flown out." that posslblllty, the Admlnlstratlon's posltlon lS that costs can be reduced 1n other ways and lt lS not necessary to re­ Czeelt Hijaeis Plane To West lnstate compulsory mllltary serVlce. FRANKFURT, WEST GERMANY (UPI) -- A Czech eng1neerlng speclallst clalmlng he had a llve bomb ln hlS brlefcase hlJacked a It's Raining In lio, Tool Czechoslovak Jetllner over East Germany RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL (UPI) -- urench­ today, forclng lt to fly to West Germany, lng ralns fulfilled a prophecy, ran some where he surrendered to pollce. mascara and bedraggled some sequlned gowns, Ladlslav Molnar, 24, left the alrplane as but 20,000 damplsh but undaunted samba soon as lt landed at Frankfurt and turned dancers shlmmled thelr way through the 1978 WORLD NEWS BRIEfS hlmself over to pollce, a spokesman sald. R10 Carnlval grand parade today wlthout KARACHI, PAKISTAN (UPI) -- Dr. Thor Pol1ce sald that shortly after the Czech mlsslng a step. Hyerdah1, world renowned explorer and plane left East Berl1n carrYlng 41 passengers The world-famous march of R10 de sC1ent1st, sa11ed 1nto Karach1 1n a w1nd­ and a crew of flve on a fllght to Prague, Janelro's 10 greatest samba schools, the powered boat of reeds fash10ned after a Molnar told the p1lot he had a bomb 1n h1S hlgh pOlnt of the four-day carnlva1 hollday, 5,OOO-year-old Sumer1an vessel, port brlefcase WhlCh he would explode unless the started an hour late because of a drenchlng sources sa1d yesterday. plane changed course and flew to Frankfurt. flash flood that deposlted more than an Hyerdahl and h1S crew of ten sal led The pllot complled, landlng hlS Sovlet­ lnch of raln on the C1ty ln an hour and a from Al-Qurnah, an Iraq1 flsh1ng town at bU1lt TU-34 at Frankfurt about 20 mlnutes half. the mouth of the Tlgrls Rlver late last after call1ng the tower to announce hlmself. But by the early hours today, R10'S November 1n the 60-foot T~gns. Pollce sald lnspectlon of Molnar's brlef brand-new 800-yard-long "Sambadrome" was The reed sa1lboat was bU11t by a case showed the bomb to be non-exlstent. dry except for a few shallow puddles and Bol1v1an sa110r 1n Iraq, where slm11ar Molnar nevertheless wlll be charged wlth the 70,000 spectators who pald $60 aplece vessels stlll are used on Lake T1t1caca. "an attack on alr trafflc" and held for to Slt ln the rlckety wooden grandstand Hyerdahl lS sa111ng the boat through trlal, the Frankfurt publlC prosecutor sald. along the route had already seen thousands what he belleves are the sea routes of West Germany ma1ntalns that hlJacklng lS of wrlggllng hlPS and heard hundreds of the anclent Sumerlans ln the Arablan Sea a Crlme no matter where an al rcraft comes hlgh powered percuss10nlsts machlnegun the and across the Indlan Ocean. from, and that hlJackers should be trled troplc nlght wlth barrages of sound. *** elther ln the country from WhlCh the plane The parade, a marathon 16-hour costumed MOSCOW (UPI) -- The Sovlet robot supply came or 1n the country where lt lands. competlt10n among the 10 schools was ex­ capsule Progress 1, 1tS mlSSlon completed, pected to end somet1me before noon, but was separated from the Salyut 6 space street dances and other m1nor league laboratory today, and headed toward a Sovie,s Taie Hard Line On parades wlll last unt1l Ash Wednesday when flery death ln the upper reaches of Human Rigltts At Belgrade the 1as t weary and hungover "carn lVa 1escos" Earth's atmosphere. stagger 1nto the Lenten season. The offlclal Sovlet News Agency TASS BELGRADE (UPI) -- The Sovlet Unlon took More than 20,000 dancers were partl­ sald the Progress 1 capsule, emptled of a hard llne today ln talks on a flna1 report clpat1ng ln the parade, paY1ng an average supplles and fuel and fllled wlth used up for the Belgrade Conference revlewlng the of $48 aplece for costumes and floats to equlpment and garbage from the space lab, Helslnkl Agreement, and delegates sald the compete for prlzes 1n nlne categorles and was separated at 8 53 am today, seven-month meetlng could end ln deadlock. recognlt10n as the greatest set of samba TASS sald Cosmonauts Yur1 Romanenko Sovlet Ambassador YU11 Vorontsov bluntly dancers 1n the world. and Georgy Grechko had completed unloadlng told negotlators that hlS country wlll not supplles and fuel from the capsule and accept compromlse human rlghts provlslons had transferred old gear and equ1p~ent drafted by Europe's neutral countrles, lnto It. dlplomats sald. Notice To All TASS sald Progress 1 un docked and went "The t1me for negotlatlOns on the sub­ onto automat1c fllght controls for a stance of proposals was last year," Vorontsov 'Silrer Ci,y' Residents serles of fllght tests before lt reenters sald after a flrst round of lnformal talks. The present and forecast re­ Earth atmosphere and burns up. "But some countrles dldn't want to negotlate duct10ns of KMR resldents over the *** --they wanted to make speeches on human next 12-18 months dlctate that a ALGIERS (UPI) -- The hardl1ne Arab rlghts. \~ell, now lt'S too late." number of temporary quarters should "Front of Fl rmnes s" has fall ed to announce He charged that Western and neutral pro­ be surplused thlS flscal year. any new concrete steps at a three-day posals to strengthen the He1s1nkl Pact's Presently under ser10US study 1S summ1t but Algerlan Fore1gn Mlnlster human rlghts clauses were dlrected only at the poss1b111ty of clearlng "Sllver Abde1 AZZ1Z Boutef11ka hlnted at secret the SOVl et Bloc. "We cannot accept th 1s ," Clty" by ellm1nat1ng or movlng measures to f011 Egypt's peace talks wlth he sald. trallers located there. Untll com­ Israel. The neutral proposal, suggested last week pletlon of the study, and the full "All that can be made publlC has been as a posslble compromlse draft for the 1I'1pact of the plan on res1dents lS announced," Boutef11 ka sal dyes terday. report, calls for fewer restrlctlons on known, all Sllver C1ty trallers "Some dec1s10ns, by thelr vpry nature, emlgratlon but stops short of Unlted States belng vacated wlll rema1n vacant. cannot be made publlC." and Western European human rlghts sug~ Further, no new constructlon of The conference, attended by Algerla gestlOns. pat10s or add1t1ons w111 be per~ Llbya, Syr1a, and the Pales­ A neutral dlplomat sald the tough Sovlet m1 tted. Res 1dents of S11 ver Cl ty tlne Llberat10n Organlzatlon (PLO), ended posltlon could prevent the 35-natlon meetlng tra11ers w111 be not1fled, at the late Saturday by dec1arlng that Egyptlan from agreelng on more than a short, lnslg­ complet1on of the study, of the de­ Pres1 dent Anwar Sadat has "no mandate, nlflcant flnal report. C1Slons made. Res1dents are assured no rlght and no prerogatlve" to speak ln "They were unusually frank," he sald. that maX1mum conslderat1on com­ behalf of the Palestlne people. "It was not encouraglng." mensurate w1th budgetary constra1nts The summ1t also rejected "any agree­ The conference was orlglnally scheduled to wll1 be glven to m1n1mlzlng personal ment reached to the detrlment of the Arab end Frlday, but delegates sald lt wlll con­ 1nconvenlences and hardshlps. nat1ons' hlgher lnterests and condemns tlnue at least untll the end of February. any accord WhlCh would harm Pa1est1n1ans." MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 PAGE 3 We All Get Callous Tomorrow The World by Art Buchwald by W~ll~am F. Buckley, Jr. I guess the worst thlng about llvlng In Washlngton lS how cal­ Old you ever see a lle walklng? lous a person becomes about money. ThlS was demonstrated once Well I d1d. And so d1d everybody who read the New York T~mes agaln last week when Presldent Carter's new budget was revealed. or any other Journ~l quotlng the pres1dent of the Amer1can Federa­ The day the flgures were announced, I ran lnto Doubleday at tlon of Radlo and Televlslon Artlsts (AFTRA) on January 20. Sa1d Class Reunlon, a bar and restaurant. Mr. Sanford Wolff about the resolut1on of a seven-year legal flght "Old you hear that Carter's 'lean and tlght' budget wlll be between me and Mr. M. Stanton Evans on the one hand, and AFTRA on $500.2 bllllOn?" I sal d. the other: "It I S a Vl ctory for us (AFTRA) because 1t got them out "No klddwg," sald Doubleday. "I thought lt would be some­ of the damned courtroom. We d1dn't glve up anyth1ng, but Just af­ where around $505.3 bllllon." f1rmed what already was law. Buckley and Evans always had the "~ut that means we're gOlng to have a $60 bllllon deflclt." rlght to reslgn. That's not new, and they dldn't galn anythlng." "Well, you can't make an omelette wlthout cracklng some eggs," You heard what the gentleman sa1d? That I "always" had the he replled. r1ght to reslgn membersh1p 1n AFrRA? "What exactly does that mean?" I wanted to know. Mr. Wolff's agent, one Kenneth Groot of the New York local of "Beats me, but people always say that when a new budget comes AFTRA, wrote to me on September 3, 1964, "Slnce AFTRA has a un10n out." shop 1n all ltS collect1ve barga1n1ng agreements, lt 1S necessary "Do you reallze," I sald, "that ln 1962 the federal budget that persons who appear on rad10 or telev1sion 1n AFTRA-covered hlt $100 bllllon and everyone was shocked? And then lt doubled employment be members of AFfRA." ln 1~72 to $232 bllllon. Now It's gone over the half a trllllon And two months later, Mr. M. Sage of the same off1ce wrote to doll ar mark." me, "Please be adV1sed that ou are re u1red to be a member of "1'11 admlt lf you call lt a half-trllllon lt sounds bad," AFTRA 1n or er to appear on rad10 or te eV1S1on • Uoubleday sald. "But why can't you say It'S $500 bllllon llke ------These letters are not fragments from my fam1ly album. rhey are everybody else and let lt go at that?" court exh1bltS. And they are as fam1l1ar to Mr. Wolff, who in I shrugged. "It seems llke so much money." fe1gn1ng 19norance of them 1S 1ndulglng h1S constltut1onal r1ght Doubleday took a handful of peanuts. "How do you know It'S to lle to the Un1ted States press, as they are to me, to the dozen a lot of money?" lawyers who have rev1ewed them, to the Dlstrlct Court of the Sec­ "What do you mean, how do I know?" ond Clrcult that consldered them, to the Court of Appeals, and to "Have you ever seen a bllllon dollars?" the Nat10nal Labor Relat10ns Board, all three of Wh1Ch agenc1es "No," I sald. "Ive never seen a bllllOn dollars. I don't over a perlod of seven years heard Mr. Wolff and hlS attorneys thlnk anyone has ever seen a bllllOn dollars." hufflng away, but loslng pound after pound of arrogance as, b1t by "So how do you know lf It'S a lot or a llttle?" he asked. b1t, they retreated from the pos1t1on of 1964. "It sounds llke a lot," I sald defensively. The1r retreat came 1n several stages. "Aha," Doubleday sald. "It sounds llke a lot so you automat­ They began by 1ns1st1ng that everyone who wanted to appear on lcally thlnk It'S a lot. Let's take $100 bllllon as opposed to rad10 or telev1s1on had to be a member of AFTRA. Moreover, to be­ $200 bllllOn. WhlCh would be more?" come a member of AFTRA 1t was requ1red that one execute a comm1t­ "Two hundred bllllOn dollars, of course." ment to a llfe of servll1ty to AFTRA that Kunta K1nte would have "If you I ve never seen a bllllOn doll a rs, how would you know blushed to slgn. But AFTRA was collect1ng such contracts from the dl fference between $100 bllllOn and $200 bllll on," Doub 1pday such emlnences as Walter Cronklte and Harry Reasoner and other sald. proud men who are st1ll numbed by those archa1c superst1t1ons that He was startlng to get me mad. "You'd know because $200 bll­ glve labor unlons those marvelous lmmun1t1es by Wh1Ch men and wom­ llon would have to be blgger than $100 bllllon." en are depr1ved of fundamental llbert1es. In ltS heyday, AFTRA wa "You would thlnk so," sald Doubleday. "But I have a theory. was deprlv1ng the entlre country from t1me to t1me of the profes­ Once a thlng reaches a bllllon lt no longer has any Slze to It. slonal serVlces of newsmen and newswomen who are supposed to be Slnce no one has ever seen a bllllon dollars they cannot posltlve­ protected from harassment by the First Amendment to the Const1tu­ ly state lt lS smaller than $2 bllllon. (hey can only surmlse It.'' tlOn. " What are you drlVlng at?" I wanted to know. Then, after a couple of years and a stunn1ng defeat 1n the "That," sald Doubleday, "there 1S no sense gettlng exclted D1strlct Court, AFTRA surreptlt10usly dropped the requ1rement that when you flnd out the flscal budget lS gOlng to be $500 bllllon. we JOln the1r unlon, so long as we contlnue to pay money to It. A bllllon here or a bllllon there doesn't make that much differ­ Thelr dOlng so surreptlt10usly was prec1sely the p01nt of the ence. I always say, lf you can't see lt, lt can't hurt you." argument durlng Phase Three of the legal flght. It does no good "I guess you're rlght," I told Doubleday. "I shouldn't let for a unlon to admlt prlvately to you that you need not be a mem­ the word bllllOn bug me so much. Would you llke to buy me a beer?" ber--whlle fa111ng to advlse the employer who refuses to hlre you "I would llke to," he sald. "But lt costs $1.5C." because you don't come ln w1th a unlon card. That prec1sely was "What are you belng so cheap about? You Just sald a bllllon happenlng as late as last summer. dollars dldn't bother you." Flnally, on January 16, 1978, the unlon cap1tulated, and pro­ "It doesn I t. But when you have to pay $1.50 for a gl ass of m1sed the Court to send a letter wlth1n thlrty days to all ltS beer, It glves you somethlng to thlnk about." slgnatOrles 1ncludlng the spec1flc sentence, "Under preva1l1ng law such persons are not obllgated to accept membershlp 1n AFTRA." That lS a very concrete vlctory. Under problng by the New York T~mes reporter, the presldent of AFTRA leaked h1S apprehen­ Slons. "The Unlon pres1dent sa1d ... there was cause for concern lf =Jim=B=ish=op=:R=ep=ort=er the un10n could not requlre employees to adhere to 1tS rules and =~ regulat10ns or to be bound by str1kes." Well, I have news for Mr. Mr. Wolff: Thanks to the Natlonal R1ght to Work Legal Defense Whom Have You Saved, Anita? Foundat10n, Wh1Ch flnanced thlS case, and thanks to the br1ll1ant Dear Amta Bryant My needed orgamzatlon and stand for the rights of my legal work of attorney C. Dickerman W1lllams, employees are pre­ purpose IS not to poke fun at because 1 think America's children" What rights? As 1 c1sely not bound to obey the un1on's rules any longer, and the you We can leave that to the children need protection" recall, you took a stand op­ comecilans on the networks What happened to parents? pOSIng the rights of homosexu­ Flrst Amendment has won a slgnlflcant vlctory. Credlt lS also due You have wntten to me askmg What happened to school als You won They have no to the Amer1can C1V1l Llbert1es Un10n WhlCh reversed ltS h1stor1c for funds to "Protect America's teachers? And where are all the rights m Dade County, FlOrida posltlon ln support of compulsory unlonlsm and f1led a brlef aml­ Children" Two of my mmJSters, priests and rabbIS? I cannot sob for them or for cus cur1ae 1n support of Mr. Evans and myself. daughters have received Have you become the sole hope you On the other hand, 1 feel a I am left wlth a slngle regret that, now that Walter Cror.k1te Similar appeals of the nation to explain sense of Pity for Mrs LUCille We want to ask how you homosexuality to our young? Brooks Her letter arnved the can stay on the alr, we w1ll never agaln hear an execut1ve of CBS, propose to protect the little For God's sake, why were you day after yours She wntes "I substltutlng for the professlonals durlng a str1ke, and announc- ones Are you gomg out to all the silent when the femmlSts were am the mother of the Knight 1ng--as on one famous occaSlon one d1d--that, tomorrow, there Gay bars m the nation, mto the pasSIng a measure endorsmg brothers who are m Dade woul d be "mosterly easterly Wl nds." public rest rooms and lesbians In Houston? Why didn't COimty Jail charged With the especially mto the slum areas you fly out there and wrest the first degree murder of John H where the Sick homosexuals podium from them and explam Slme - after a homosexual Fancy Food In A Banquet For The Eye abound? If the answer IS yes, how mlmoral It IS for women to act " by Gregory Jensen how do you propose to stop make love to other women? SbamedtoKW LONDON (UPI) -- On one table stood rhe Last Supper carved ln them? Have you made a study of She says her sons did It for salt. Nearby was Ch1ef Sltt1ng Bull ln brown and wh1te chocolate. I'm seriOUS and I hope you homosexuality? Somewhere money Mrs Brooks pleads that Half of one wall was fllled w1th a three-panel mosa1C 18 feet are, because soliCiting money IS between three and five percent her boys were "so ashamed" a dangerous busmess unless you of our young Will grow up to be that they killed the homosexual long made of t1ny squares of llght and dark toast. A lacy w1nd­ can prove that you are savmg homosexuals That comes to I sunruse that thIS mIght have mlll sat next to a wlckerwork blplane, both made of potatoes. our children Can you protect about fIVe million little ones been done for additIonal money London's annual "Salon Cullnalre" lS a feast of the unbel1ev­ yours? The best the rest of us I'm sure you know that, Prostitution has many faces able. It lS an extravaganza of fancy food creat10ns WhlCh look can do IS to tell them right from psychologically, feelmgs about "And what has AlUta Bryant too good to eat. wrong and hope they Will grow sex are thrust upon us We do said?" she concludes "Did she to become religiOUS, law­ not choose We are chosen really want to save our Entr1es came from allover the world, and the tr1p was hard on abldmg CitIZens If you can fmd a creep children? Or Just publiCity? We some decoratlve foodstuffs from the Unlted States and Canada, from Belief Turned Off prowlmg for little boys, I'm on need help - God help us " Well, New Zealand and beh1nd the Iron Curtaln. We hope We never really your Side Nail him and send how would you have saved those A dellcate spun sugar galleon from arrlved as a sad rUln. know MISS Bryant, you are a him to prISOn But there, see - boys? They were out there, m A butter sculpture lay ln fragmented chunks. most attractive YOlmg woman we're now m police work 1 did a your town, lookmg for trouble When I see you on teleVISion, I series of articles on the New and they found It You may But more than 400 concoctlons rema1ned to prove that 1f you believe m you and your product York Police Department and presume that the boys will fmd can th1nk of 1t, somebody can make 1t out of something ed1ble. You straon my credulity when was surPrised to learn that 23 more homosexuality inSide A llfe-slZed pheasant 1n marz1pan. The "Death of Nelson" 1S you open a letter sent to policemen were known prISOn walls than outside sculpted ln butter. A church from Harsw1nkel, Germany, four feet thousands With "I have been homosexuals Permit me an opmlOn, MISS tall and made of sugar. thlnkmg of you a great deal My feeling IS that you will not Bryant, and that's all It IS 1 these past days and mghts " stop anything In FlOrida and think you're up to your nostrils There lS no great purpose behlnd thlS extravagant d1splay, You haven't been thmkmg of elsewhere, your work has In obscure psychology I would held every year--war years excepted--slnce 1883. It 1S strlctly a me on any days or nights We solidified the homosexuals and like you to brmg one child to me banquet for the eye. have not met In the letter you brought them out of the closet and let rum explam how you Apprent1ce chef Stephen J. Webb entered a w1cker basket over­ ask me to sign a paper which They are now organized saved him flow1ng w1th roses. Every b1t was marz1pan. Chef J.S. Evetts won states "Yes, I Will support Your letter states "You are Just once I'll be happy to 'Protect America's Children' already aware of the per­ publiCize the story a gold medal for three argumentat1ve tramps on a park bench, made because 1 believe this IS a secution 1 suffered when 1 took a of butter. There were no less than 105 separate compet1tions. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 Clip and Save Adult Education Non-credit Courses Spring Semester J978 AMATEUR RADIO LICENSE, meets Thursdays 7-9 pm beginning Feb. 23 1n Room 203. ASTRONOMY, meets Tuesdays 7-9 pm be­ glnn1ng Feb. 28 1n Room 205. GOURMET COOKING, meets Thursdays 7:30- 9:30 pm beg1nning Feb. 23 1n Home Ec Room. BEGINNING GUITAR, meets Mondays 7:30- 9 pm beg1nning Feb. 27 1n the High School MUS1C Room. U.S. HISTORY, meets Mondays and Wednes­ days 7-9 pm beg1nninq Feb. 20 in Room 201. LIFE IN THE TROPICAL SEAS, meets Tues­ days 7-8'30 pm beginning Feb. 21 in Room 102. (NOTE CHANGE OF ROOM)

Organ~zed Japanese res~stance on KwaJale~n Island ceased Feb. 4, but mop-up opera­ CONVERSATIONtL MARSHALLESE, meets Mon­ t~ons cont~nued through the follow~ng day. A total of 206 pr~soners were taken, ~nclud­ days and Thursdays 6:30-7:30 pm begin­ ~ng 127 c~v~l~an Korean laborers; nearly 5,000 Japanese were k~lled. ning Feb. 13 1n Room 206. MICRONESIAN H1STORY AND CULTURE, meets Battle Of Kwaialein Ends In U.S. Victory Hednesdays 7-9 pm beginning Feb. 8 1n by Pat Cataldo (Cont~nued from Column 1) Rooms 203-206. Th~s ~s the last of a ser~es recount~ng lagoon (around -the present 9th Street and the capture of KwaJale~n 34 years ago by LaQoon Road). NEEDLEPOINT, meets Thursdays 9-11 am men of the 7th Infantry D~v~s~on, the Today, for the first time Slnce the beg1nninq Feb. 23 in Tr. 943. "Hourglass" d~v~s~on. Our KMR newspaper ~s landings, the enemy has surrendered 1n named ~n honor of these men. cons1derable numbers. Many have been 1s01a­ RECORDER AND EARLY MUSIC, meets Wednes­ ted, w1thout water, for the past two days. days 7'30-9:30 pm beg1nn1ng Feb. 22 in FEBRUARY 4, 1944 Th1rty-one Koreans and a Japanese scur­ Elementary School MUS1C Room 19. The battle of KwaJale1n 1S over. r1ed out of one bU11d1nq after the 184th At dusk today, men of the 32nd Reg1men­ brought up a loudspeaker and N1se1 1nter­ SOFTBALL TECHNIQUES, meets Hednesdays tal Combat Team surged across the last 150 preters who broadcast a promise of food, 5-6:30 pm and Saturdays 8-9 am begin­ yards of the 1s1and, over-runnlng the water and 1mMunity from harm. More than 90 n1ng Feb. 15 at Coral Sands F1eld. one remaininq bunker and gun emplacement pr1soners were taken by the 184th dur1ng (now known as "[Junker H111", near ntrs the mornl ng. BEGINNING WOODWORKING, meets Mondays 223) • In another area, men of the 32nd covered 6:30-9'30 pm beg1nn1ng Feb. 6. First Across the laqoon, two and a half m1les f1ve Korean pr1soners with BARs and moved class at Ivy School Room 101. to the north, U.S. troops can see where them from shplter to shelter wh11e the another Amer1can victory was won today. pr1soners persuaded others to surrender. 'NOTE: Reg~strat~on for the above non­ Ebeye was declared fully secured at 1537, In less than an hour, 33 pr1soners were cred~t courses ~s now CLOSED. after the'17th RCT made a fast, almost un­ taken. I ------1 opposed advance from the p1er to the By 1300, the 184th had reached its ob­ Baffle Of Kwaialein ... north shore. Ject1ve at the foot of the p1er. After cut­ The f1nal act10n on KwaJale1n began at t1ng off enemy w1thdrawal across 6th Street, (Cont~nued from Column 2) sunr1se, shortly after 0700, when the 32nd 1t turned 1tS attent10n to a Jhorough mop pushed off from last n1ght's blvouac (near up of areas to the rear. By ~30, all en­ location of Bachelors' Pool) for an ad­ emy act10n had been overcome on the lagoon vance along the ocean to 6th Street, where slde from land1ng beaches to the p1er. the team was to fan out for a sweep over The 2nd Rattiif6n, 32nd RCT was 1n posi­ the entlre 1s1and to the north end. t10n north of ~ Street at 1345 to begin Almost immed1ately there was heavy f1re its final assault, throuqh what 1S no\'l the from Japanese who had been hypassed yester­ Dppenaents' Hous1ng Area. The ground was a day (near the Pac1f1c BQ). The advance was tangle of debr1s 1nterlaced w1th tr~ches, stalled for nearly three hours, as un1ts many of Wh1Ch contained lonq-dead bod1es. turned aS1de to clean out pos1t10ns f1r1ng The stench of decay an~ ~ acrld odor of on them. burned palm wood f111e~e a1r. At the same t1me, the 184th RCT was en­ Wlth satchel charges, qrenades, and counter1nq pockets of determ1ned res1stance ult1mately w1th flame throwers, the 32nd in the area between the Admiralty and the cleared dugouts and st111-act1ve plllboxes (Cont~nueti next column) and blockhouses. When the weary vlctors reached the northern t1P of the 1s1and at 1920, organ· Battle of KwaJale~n monument ~s located 1zed res1stance had ceased. near the ru~ns of a Japanese bunker at the west end of the ~sland. The tablet reads: FEBRUARY 5, 1944 IrOn th~s spot, the 7th Infantry D~v~­ The Southern Invas10n Force today com­ s~on, Major General C. H. Corlett, U.S. nleted occupat10n of southern KwaJale1n Army, Command~ng, made the f~rst land~ng Atoll from Ennugel1ggelap 1n the west to ~nc~dent to the capture of KwaJale~n Is­ Gellinam 1n the east. land by Amer~can armed forces, Febru­ Amer1can losses for the operation 1n ary 1st, 1944. Th~s tablet ~s ded~cated southern KwaJale1n were: 142 dead, 2 m1SS- to the brave men who fought and d~ed here." 1ng 1n act10n, 845 wounded. The best est1mate of enemy losses is 4,938 dead and 206 pr1soners, includ1ng 127 Koreans. FEBRUARY 6, 1944 After a day spent mopp1ng up and bury­ ing enemy dead, the men of the 32nd and 184th Infantry Re~llments turned KwaJ a 1eln Island over to garr1son and defense forces. By February 7, when the 4th Mar~ne D~v~s~on had occup~ed 55 ~slands ~n the north, the KwaJale~n Atoll operat~on was completed. ~e battle ~s over. A 7th D~v~s~on ~n­ U.S. losses ~n the Northern Invas~on ~tryman, carry~ng a souven~r of the Mar­ Force were 190 dead, 547 wounded. Japanese shall Islands, stands on the p~er and casualt~es were 3,472 dead and 91 pr~son­ takes a last look at battle-scarred KwaJa­ ers, ~nclud~ng 40 Korean laborers. Javanese cemetery ~s located beh~nd the le~n before board~ng a troop transport. (Cont~nued next column) KMR Photo Lab. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1978 PAGE 5 Your Individual Horoscope TONIGHT ANN ==== Frances Drake====::::::::!::;;:!,.~=== RICHARDSON-- RECORD CITY------PG FOR TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1!r78 IVEY HALL--- CITIZEN'S BAND------PG What lund of day will SCORPIO 1ft '*<'_ YOKWE YUK--- CLOSED LANDERS tomorrow be'! To find out what (Oct 24 to Nov 22) "vntr TRADEWINDS-- CLOSED the stars say, read the forecast Face up to OPPOSltion but do given for your bJrth Sign not let It IJlC1te you to useless TUESDAY argument or lmtablhty - with RICHARDSON-- CLOSED DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband died 10 =21 to Apr 20) -v';::!t little accomplished con- IVEY HALL--- 6'30 - RACE FnR YOUR LIFE, years ago. He didn't leave me much money Slow down to gather forces struct1vely CHARLIE BRnWN------G but I have a lovely home with many nice more compactly, to conduct SAGlTrARIUS ~J,A. 8 30 - A STAR IS BORN------R antlque pleces WhlCh we collected over the activiUes more adroitly. Don't (Nov 23 to Dec 21) ltd" YOKWE YUK--- THE SUSPECTS------PG years. deviate £rem a pre-planned Handling your own or others' TRADEWINDS-- THE STORY OF ADELE H.----PG scbedule for no good reason. affairs may brmg new or In- Lately, rather than buy wedding and TAURUS creased problems Be ready f

goal 1n the f1rst half. The Panthers J led h1S 13th PGA Tournament v1ctory by beat1ng by the defens1ve efforts of R1Ck L1ston B1ll Kratzert on the second hole of a sudden­ and Jenn1fer Afr1cano.stooped many scorlnq death playoff. The two had f1n1shed the reg­ attempts by the Cosmos 1n toe second half. ulat10n 72 holes t1ed w1th 14-under par 274s. If the ra~n holds off there w~ll be plenty Green had led most of the tournament but Peter Landrett1, Sean Carlton, Scott of act~on on the basketball courts ton~ght sllpped a blt on the f1nal round and carded Adams and M1ke Bla1r of tne C1ngoes scored beg~nn~ng at 6:00 pm. Come out g~ve your a 71. That allowed Kratzert to force the a goal each to down the White L1ghtnirg favor~te team some of your support. playoff by shoot1ng a 68. But on the second 4 to 1, Saturdayo John W1lson played an ex­ Photo by Terry Ell~ott extra hole, Green was 1n charge, slnk1ng a cellent defens1ve game break1ng up several seven-foot putt for a par wh1le Kratzert dr1ves by the Wh1te L1ghtenlngo m1ssed from f1ve feet out. Bret Bechtold scored the only goal for Basketball Sclle"ule That meant Green's name went on the the L1ghtn1ng, the only goal scored aga1nst TONIGHT $50,000_f1rst place check wh11e Kratzert got the D1ngoes 1n the season. Br1an Cross 6:00 Harem Globetrotters vs Bayou $28,500 for f1n1sh1ng second. Th1rd place made several good saves at the goal1e POS1- Bombshells (Change) honors were shared by M1ke Morley, Bob Wynn tlOn and teammate!' KeV1n and Ke1th All as 7:15 Meck Blue vs What's Left and Hale Irw1n. stopped several scor1ng attempts by the 8:30 Paqo Paqo vs Local 13 D1ngoes. TUESDAY 6:00 Harem Globetrotters vs Afternoon College Basketball Dell ght NEW YORK (UPI) -- South Carol1na Coach Soccer Sclle"ule 7:15 Leftovers vs The Loop Frank McGU1re may have spotted a glar1ng TONIGHT 8:30 Spartans I vs Chargers def1c1ency 1n the game of college basketball 5:00 Da Klne vs Ball Belters WEDNESDAY yesterday, and McGu1re would probably llke TUESDAY 6:00 Sun Devlls I vs Warr10rs to forget the ent1re afternoon. 5:00 Rackers vs Panthers 7: 15 Ch 1cago vs Leftove rs f A nat1onw1de telev1s10n aud1ence watched WEDNESDAY 8:30 Chase vs KwaJ Kats as No.2 Marquette fought back to t1e the 5:00 Eagles vs Astros THURSDAY stubborn Gamecocks 49-49 at the end of regu­ THURSDAY 6:00 SS vs Spartans II lat10n play. In the f1rst overt1me, the 5:00 Sea Hawks vs Wh1te L1ghtn1ng 7:15 Sun Devlls I vs Hook Em Warr10rs went 1nto a stall and, after an 1n1- 8:30 What's Left vs Warrlors t1al warn1ng, SC was slapped w1th a techn1- FRIDAY cal foul for staY1ng ln a zone 1nstead of Men's Soccer Results 6:00 SS vs What's Left presslng the ball. In Men's Soccer act10n th1S weekend 7'15 The Loop vs Meck Red Butch Lee h1t the free throw and the game the R01 Hackers beat Ebeye 3 to 2; and 8:3G Bad Company vs Afternoon was forced 1nto a second overt1me w1th the the Warr10rs beat the Spartans II 2 to O. • teams deadlocked at 54-54. Wh1le V1ewers No other 1nformat1on was avallable to the Men's Handicap bl1nked to make sure they were not wltness1ng HourGlass. an 1nstant replay, the Gamecocks agaln were assessed a technlcal 1n the second overt1me SUNDAY Singles Tournament and agaln Lee converted. South Carol1na, 1:00 R01 vs Spartans I The M.I.B.A. has another Bowllng Tour­ accordlng to the off1clals, had fa11ed to 2:30 Warr10rs vs Ebeye nament 11ned up Saturday. ThlS one has a venture from thelr zone. d1fferent tW1St: A Men's Slngles Only wlth The Warr10rs went on to grab a 69-66 V1C­ a TV style play-off to determlne the Wln­ tory, w1th Gary Rosenberger scorlng e1ght Twiligllt Golf Sclle"ule nero There wlll be three rounds, quallfy­ p01nts 1n the second overt1me. TUESDAY lng, el1mlnat1on and the flnal round. 4:45 Mar1ne Dept. vs SWASD Here's how the tourney works. For ex­ 5:00 924 vs Fasc1nat1on I ample, 1f there are 30 entrles, the top lentud,y Plays Dirty? WEDNESDAY seven scores (w1th handlcap for four games (UPI) -- The natlon1s top ranked college 4:45 M1ss-Isles vs Kentron bowled) w1ll advance to the Ellm1natlon basketball team, Kentucky, has been charged 5:00 Cold Ducks vs F1re Dept./Safety Round. The top flve scores for two games by many of ltS v1ct1ms wlth plaY1ng d1rty. THURSDAY bowled here wlll advance further to the Kentucky Coach Joe Hall pleads 1nnocent. 4:45 NIS vs GETS flnal round. The best score draws a bye Says Hall, "We1re not dlrty. Just tough." 5:00 Scramblers vs SlX Packs and w1ll play the W1nner of a step-by-step Hall 1S an advocate of press1ng and non­ FRIDAY playoff. F1fth bowls fourth, thlrd agalnst stop defenslve basketball. He descr1bes 1t 4:45 AV1at10n vs Fasc1nat10n II second and the Wlnner aga1nst the top seed. as "aggresslVe man-to-man defense." He con­ 5:00 MZ vs Leftouts Two games w1ll be bowled. cedes players don't llke to get bumped around Entry deadllne lS Thursday nlght. tntry the court, and when they do, they and the1r fee lS $1(.00. You can enter more than coaches cry brutal1ty. IWGA Coral.Spalding Open one tlme. QuallfYlng rounds are 3:30 and Hall expla1ns h1S emphas1s on defense 1S March 1S sneak1ng up on us and that 1S 5:00 on Saturday. an attempt to make up for what he says lS an the month for the KWGA sponsored Coral­ Use your hlghest handlcap as of January absence of a real super player and for the Spald1ng Open. So golfers get out on the 28 and enter at the KwaJaleln Bowl1ng Cen­ W1ldcat's lack of qU1ckness on offense. The drlv1ng range and get yourself ready for a ter. Pay prlor to bowllng. ldea lS to make lt dlfflcult for the other tournament of a 11fet1me. We prom1se you team to play ltS game. double the fun and plenty of the low gross As a result, the Wlldcats are constantly low net pr1zes. Our fr1ends, pro J1mmy Bowling Results harrass1ng the Opposltlon when 1t has the Ukauka and B111 Blalr w111 be back w1th us In the Ball and P1n Club League on 9all. They push and bump thelr opponents too. Remember 1tS a two week-end event. Frlday Jeanette Parton bowled a h1gh game around, and are always trY1ng to grab the Th1rty-s1x holes. March 11th and 12th and of 201 and a hlgh serles of 488. L1Z Denny ball away. Any Kentucky player who lets up on March 18th and 19th. rolled a 194 second h1gh and Allce Watts defense for a moment, lS qUlckly out of the converted a 6-7-10 Spllt. game, gett1ng a lecture on the bench. Hall 1S Listen To AfRS for Sports Fr1day nlght D1Ck Stoddart rolled a h1gh not shy about that. Portland Tra1l Blazers vs New York Kn1cks game of 224 and a hlgh ser1es of 597 on the Kentucky standout Jack Glvens lns1sts Tuesday at 12:30 pm STP "B" fl1 ght. Don Jensen pl cked up a nelther he nor hlS teammates are out to de­ 6-7-10 spllt. llberately hurt an opponent. H1S explanat10n Denver Nuggets vs Seattle SuperSon1cs On Saturday the k1ds came up w1th some lS that be1ng phys1cal lS Just part of Ken­ Fr1day at 4:00 pm good scores. Sam Sonderman rolled a 155 tucky's game. Hall Obv1ously lS preparlnq h1gh game and a 260 h1gh ser1es. Pete Yates hlS players for what lles ahead after col­ Kentucky vs L.S.U. had a 138 game and a 249 ser1es. lege -- the Nat10nal Basketball Assoc1at1on. Saturday at 1 :30 pm For the glrls Den1se Eastman rolled a 131 game and a 225 ser1es, Nancy Patton had Llsten to AFRS on Saturday to hear the SUPPORT KWAJALEIN SPORTS!!! a 125 game and K1m Bass a 212 ser1es. Kentucy vs L.S.U. game at 1: 30 pm. p I WAS GOING TO SAl.{ iHAT THIS WAS, QUITE e SIMPLY, THE BEST BOOK 0. I HAVE EVE/( READ. "u t s

THE WIZARD OF ID W. ------.. FOUR,FIVS,SI)( t, AND seVEN O'cLOCt:: AND AL.L IS WE:LL. .. -­ z UNL55S YOU H5RR'> a TO THE CONTJ2ARY r d .. by Johnny hart o

KNa:K 1\ OfF, oJCHN, "I D-'DIVN'r S-SAY NOTHIN' ... ITS so G-COLV MY 'R 1M Fl

by Garry Trudeau

IOON'T/(/Q4//UHAT lAEU,fCs J1JST HHH SOUNOS LIKE lie's [ 5AY, ~/e, I HAl) 7lJ 00, 1lM:JR I 7Ht: '-YING IN HIS eeP 8EI3N our SJIOPPING I/XA'tTSIJP- 7lI, Z(NKI D. t&t:llIIE ST«T5 IN AN tufTH A Slt/.Y riRlN NOIII, MiIltR£ IJO YOI/ f{)St; '((KJ PAIl) II/S MfJl}{l!R HOfIl, lIN/) ~ f/NCle ON HIS FJ!,Q; I AN/) SlJPPOsE HE eor lHE HIM IN AP- NEE/JI:I) AN IS IN A 7lJT.4l STl/PrR I 7HE PLACE MONet70BW ~ce? ~ \ iii \ /?161fT AfIJItY I 1.. ~ , >- //A: l' u ~~1" r 'I r--=~.r==1 L /1 II ANDY CAPP by Reggie Smythe ,------, They'll Do It Every Time

A CASSANORA SPENOS 3 f{()(jRS ANO MtlCHO MOOLA ShOPPfNG FOR, TrWIGHT'S OIN'NE"R C a p p

H A G A R PAGE 8 ------MO~nAY, FEBRUARY ~, lq78 FOR SALE COMMUN,ITY NOTICES ·• .. ·",·Iv!.::J "ou•• ""_ .... '<-""- "r~OREY BOOGIE" - Hhat lS a "Boogle" you BICYCLES HELD BY POLICE - Blcycles wlth The HourG/o .. " publ"hed by Globol A .. oClo'e. Mondoy ask? Well, thlS one can be used by a Chlld the followlng numbered decals are belng 'hrough friday 0' ,h. direction 01 ,h. Commander, Kwolal.," up to age 8-10 to rlde small waves to shore held by the Pollce De~art~pnt and may be M,ss,'. tonge, Marshall Islands l under (0""0(1 DASG or Just float around ln the water. Made of clalmed by the owners upon proof of owner­ 60-75-C-0001 The Ylew. ond op,n,on. expre .. ed In ,h. soft pllable coated foam, 36"xI6", $15, Shlp. Any such blcycles not claimed by newspaper or. no' necessarily 'hOI. of th. D.partm.n' of th. llke new, call 83648. 25/2t Feb. 24, 1978, wlll be sold at public Army ThIS n.wspap.r, an unoffICial publ'caflon authorl~.d auction on Saturday, Feb. 25, 1978. under 'he prOYlSlon. of con'rocl DASG60-75-C-0001, SMALL BOAT LADDER - $10; karate SUlt, 0003, 0118, 0162, 0236, 0340, 0708, 0739, IS r.produc.d by olls.t prln"ng small $6, sle2veless wet SUlt top, small, 1122, 1242, 1600, 1648, 1725, 1797, 2155, $2. Call 83613. 25/2t 2245, 2318, 2388, 2424, 25~4, 2708, 2782, Commuftlcaflons Should b. addr.ss.d '0 'h. HourGlass, 2851. 3349, 3527. 35°7, 3809. 4222. 4483. 80x 1733, APO Son FronclSCO, Col,fornlo 96555, or by TELE-GAME CARTRIDGES f/Sears or Atarl 4573. 5050. 5128. coilIng 8-3539 vldeo arcade. "TANK-PLUS" and "OUTER SPACE" dupllcates received ln error. Wlll sell FOUND PROPERTY - The below llsted found Ma'.rla/s app.arlng In 'h. HourGlass may no' b. for c~talog pr1ce. Call 84302. 25/2t property lS in custody of the Securlty Department. Owners may clalm the items r.prln'ed Without 'he approwol of 'he Command.r, Kwa,al"n CAL 20 SAILBOAT MENEHUNE, exclnt ccndt., upon identiflcatlon. All ltems not clalmed M,ssil. lanll' All Wan' Ad. and no'lC.s must b. subm,,,.d new bottom palnt and lmprovements, flve by Feb 24. 1978 wlll be sold at public on GA Form 8028 48 work,ng hours pllor '0 pub/,co"on salls, head, outboard motor, marlne radlo, auction Feb 25, 1978. Owners may claim compass, ladder, cushlons, canopy and these ltems ln the Securlty Offlce on the JIM WATT, Ed,lor other accessor1es. Fully equ1pped f/dav or 1st floor of the KwaJaleln Air Termlnal , PAT CATALDO, AIIOCIO'. Ed,'or, overnlght crulslng, dlvlng, flshlng, or phone 83449/82134: 1 golf glove, 3 eye­ SHARON BECHTOLD, Spor'" SANDRA llOYD, TyplS' trlps. Avallable soon. Can glve salllng glasses cases, 1 muslcal lnstrument, 1 lessons 1f needed. Call 82413 or 82537 pen, 1 key on rlng, 1 necklace, 1 knife ------even1ngs. 25/2t w/keys, 2 watches, 1 hlgh school rlng, (COMMUNITY NOTICES CONTINUED) 1 camera, 1 set keys w/case, 2 purses, MEN'S WESTERN long sleeve sh1rts, sllm sz 1 pro shower shoes, 3 COln purses, 1 TOASTMISTRESS MEETING THIS EVENING ln 14-33 and 15~-33 stlll ln orig. packlng. man's rlng, 1 head set, 1 snorkle, 1 George Seitz School Library. Soclal at My cost $21 each, yours f/$18 each. Please SWlm fln, 1 Sollgor lens cover, 1 cable 7:30 pm, meeting at 8 00 pm. 23/3t call 83490. lock, 1 flshlng pole, 1 umbrella, 1 tackle box, 1 seat cushlon, 1 soccer JUNIOR RIFLE ASSOCIATION lS havlng an Jacket, 1 warm-up Jacket, 4 ponchos, 3 awards ceremony Tues. Feb. 7 at 7 pm LOST ralncoats, 2 face masks and 1 pipe. JCP SNEAKERS, blue nylon w/whlte strlpe, ln the Scout Hut. All members and thelr mlsslng from glrl's P.E. locker room. Call famllies are lnvlted to attend. For COME A~n ENJOY THE LORD with us. CharlS­ further informatlon call Kathy Martin at Kammy, 82709, 469-A. 24/3t matlc Prayer meetlng and Blble study every 82241. Tues. evenlng at 403-E, 7'00 pm. 25/2tpw WANTED PRE-LENT Shrove -Tuesday Pancake supper EDUCATIONAL ASSISTANCE COMMITTEE of the SCOUT TROOP needs materlal scraps f/pro­ will be held by members of the Church of YYWC meets Tues., Feb 7, 9 30 am at the Ascenslon (Episcopal) at the Communlty Ject, small pleces flne. Call Ragan, 82709 436-B. All interested YYWC members are and we wlll plck them up. 24/3t Center, Feb, 7 at 6 pm. Brlng Famllles welcome to attend. Call 83521 for lnfor- and frlends. Please call Jlm Bull at 82682 mation. 25/3t PACKAGE or even portlon of package of for reservations. 24/3t "SUNDROPS" 100% nylon plle face shag car­ YY CLUB DAILY SPECIALS pet tlles. ThlS color/type no longer MON CLOSED KWAJ ART GUILD--Island resldents are in­ stocked by Macy's. Call MR. or MRS Hargus TUE PORK CHOP SUEY $5.00 vited to a Glass Blowlng Demonstratlon days 99405/99587, evenings 82625. 23/3t WED STEAK AND A BREW 6.50 by Rick Di Genova, Feb 7, 8 pm, at the THR LAMB KABOBS 6.00 KAG Bldg. 1051. A GUlld meeting wlll be BABY BOUNCING SWING. Call Cookle. W-82148, FRI LOBSTER THERMIDOR 7.50 at 7 30, prlor to the demonstration. H-84633. 23/2to SAT STUFFED BELL PEPPERS 4.50 Persons lnterested ln the Art GUlld clas­ SUN MEXICAN PLATE 6.00 ses, which begln Feb 13, may reglster at MORE WORKERS F/YYWC popcorn and Ice Cream thlS tlme. 24/3t booth at the KwaJ Karnlval Feb. 17, 18, EVENING DUPLI CATE BRI DGE \lm'NERS' Jan 25' 19, & 20th.No pay, short hours, nlce 1st-Jonathan James/John Leeper, 2nd-Jerry work1ng condts. Call Sunnie Van de Houw KWAJALEIN KARNIVAL RELAY entrles should and Anne Resnlck, Jan. 29' 1st-Hank and be turned ln by Feb. 17 to allow time to at 83648 to slgnup. 22/3t Jpn Sheehan, 2nd-Jlm Wright/Howard MauriCE compute handicaps. Detalls ln an upcoming Feb l' Ist- Joan Shannon/Ila Lambert, 2nd newspaper article. For lnformatlon or aid SOUVENIR SILVER SPOON vl/KwaJ lnslgma that - MarVln Felt/Max Sahl. 25/1to ln formnq teaM, call Ken Puqh H-99607. was sold at Macy's some years back. Would or Leslle Kllleen 84643. 23/3t llke to buy one f/a small collection. Call TENNIS SINGLES TOURNEY starts Feb 11. All Sunnle at 83648. 22/3t island players are lnvlted. There wlll be HOUSING RESIDENTS are remlnded that thelr TWO DIVE TANKS, used. One w/"K" valve, one open dlvlslons, l)advanced, 2)lrtermedlate quarters wll' be pre-1nspected and PM 3) nOVlce. and a women's dlvlslon. Women scheduled by Fred Muramoto, on a pre­ w/"J" valve, or both "J". Call 82831 after may compete ln one of the open dlvlslons 4 pm. 22/3t arranged schedule llsted below. Tenants or the women's dlvlslon but not both. To are encouraged to llSt ltems requlrlng qualify for the nOVlce dlvlslon you must malntenance on the forms provlded and to PIANIST TO PLAY w/vocalist. Please call have never played ln a slngles tournament dlSCUSS them wlth Fred. Thls will enable 82322 after 5 pm. 25/3t or lf you have played, never won a match. the PM team to detect and perform cor­ An entry fee of $1 wlll be charged. The rectlve malntenance and assess the need SEAMSTRESS wanted f/alterations on men's tournament w1ll be slngle ellminatlon, but for major repalrs lf the work exceeds the shlrts. Call 84621. 25/3t w/a consolatlon bracket for flrst match team capablllty. losers. Rules wlll be posted at Yuk TUE, FEB 7 WED, FEB 8 Courts. Call 77382 or 99592 days or 81q24 207 AB 0730 208 AB 0730 SERVICES OFFERED evenlngs to slgn up. Please state pre­ 211 AB 0830 222 AB 0830 BABYSITTING AVAILABLE Mon-Fri, 7:30-4'30, ferred d1vlslon. Cut off lS 5 pm Thursday, 213 AB 1000 224 AB 1000 hourly, dally and weekly rates. 404-A or February 9. 25/1to 209 AB 1230 call Molly at 82669 for more lnformatlon. 212 AB 1330 25/3t GLOBAL WOMEN'S CLUB Valentlne Luncheon 214 AB 1430 12 30, Saturday, Feb. 11. Please call 210 AB 1530 BABYSITTING, rellable and experlenced 16- Bea Duncan 82303 f/reservations by Thurs. , year-ola wants a Job, available anytlme. Feb. 9. 25/3t SPECIAL COMMUNICATION of Emon Lodge #179 Call Candy at 82840 after 6 pm. 25/3t F&AM Monday Evenlng, Feb. 6. All Master KWAJALEIN WEIGHT CONTROL GROUP wlll hold Masons are requested to attend. Bus ser­ its weekly we;gh-ln at the KwaJalein Vlce beglns at 1850 wlth the last pick- Hospital from 6 J5 to 6:30 Wed night. up at 1900 at Macy's Bus Stop. 24/2t Y 0 K WE ADVANCED BEGINNERS ADULT sWlmmlng lessons OUTGROWN CLOTHES? Dl scarded toys? Bargal n sign-up ;s Feb. 9 at 5 pm at the Depen­ Bazaar needs any household goods ln us­ -I-- dents' Pool. Class wlll be starting Feb. able condt. To arrange for pick-up call C L U B 13, Mon-thru-Thurs. 5 to 6 pm dally. Stephanie Upton, 84728; Edna Hatchell, Slgn-ups are llmlted. 25/3t 82785; Jerre O'Dowd, 82233; or drop-off DINNER at Pat Galpln's patio, 485-C. 24/2tpw V.F.W. POST 10268 meets Feb. 9 at 7 pm DAN C E in the Banyan Room, YY Club. MaXlmum PRE-SCHOOL STORY TIME wlll be held Tues., I membershlp attendance lS desired. 25/3t Feb 7 at 10 am at the Grace Sherwood Saturday, February 11, 1978 Library. All 3-, 4- and 5-year-olds are TREAT YOUR SWEETHEART to a sweet heart. lnvlted. 24/2tpw mus 1 C by "LOCK, STOCK, AND BARREL" ! I Come to the KHS National Honor Society Bake Sale Saturday morning, 11 Feb., ALL MEMBERS of the old and new YYWC please call 83419 for table reservat~ons 9-to-Noon. Macy's Porch. 25/3t Executlve Boards will meet Thurs., Feb 9 at 9'30 at the home of Melba Garrison. TURN IT OFF, lf you don't use lt, KwaJI I 105-A. 24/3t