/ • For tl1e La test Loeal and National News DIAL A NEWS at 678-2251. Stay in Distributed to mil~ ..a c!Tman po1&011Ml on ftlfte 'lad' Mlsslle Range. Published weekly by Las Cruces Citizen. Lu tmlc8S, N. M .. a private firm in no way connected with Department of the Army. Opinions expressed by publishers and Tune With the World. writers herein are their own and are not to be consldei-ed an offidal expression of Department of the Army. Appearance of advertisements in thla publication does not constitute an endorsement by Department of the Army of products or services. • Vol. XIII-No. 46 White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, Friday, February 16, 1968 8 Pages 'Operation Gold Mines' President Seeks Additional ' > Gets Underway on Post I Benefits~ JObs for Veterans President Johnson has asked Congress to approve f increased job opportunities and benefits for veterans, There's gold in them thar hills! So sayeth the U. S. including the expansion of existing Department of De- Army Test and Evaluation Command (TECOM), now TECOM To fense programs. · • conducting a special campaign, "Operation Gold Mines." In a special message to Congress Jan. 30, the Presi­ "Operation Gold Mines" is TECOM's three-month War Goods dent urged that recommended programs under the $7.3 billion veterans section of the fiscal 1969 budget be suggestion campaign which is being conducted during Hold Meet ------aimed at assisting veterans to the period of Feb. 1 through April 30 this year. During function as "free, upstanding this perio".l Loth military and civilian personnel are en­ Now Top Missile Range and self · reliant citizens" upon couraged to participate in th i s their return to civilian life. worthwhile and rewarding sug· two hydrolic combination c o ll· At Ft. Bliss DI ('I · / Among the President's recom. gestion program. struction and earth boring ma­ r 1ans 011ec1a mendations were the expansion And rewarding it can be. Cash chines for pole line construction. Need List The second Instrumentation T of two DOD programs, Project awards to White Sands person­ The machines eliminated heavy Materiel intended for use in Conference to be call!!d by the r ll r 100,000 and Project Transition. nel totaled $5,355. for fiscal year lifting and manually h o 1 d i n g Vietnam will take top priority Army Test and Evaluation LO eee LOUrses Also included was a new' "Vet· 1967, and with only hal£ of fiscal poles during backfilling. H i s at environmental test centers Command gets under way Feb. V erans in the Public Service Act" 1968 passed, awards to employes suggestion will save the govern· next year, the Army Test and 27at Jn. Bliss with the com- Several special courses along whic~ would ~rovidc special fi· have already rolled out to t h e :nent $12,205 annually in m a n­ Evaluation Command announc­ mand's Air Defense Board with regular in-service aca· nanc1al benefits for veteraM tune of ~4,780, with more to hours and repair cost. Mr. Ben­ ed recently. serving as host. demic courses of college-level ~vho agree to wor~ as t~acp.e~s. come. nett was awarded $560 for h i s More than 100 conferees at­ The four-day meeting wfll t . . h d 1 d f m poverty areas, m police del • · Accounting for a big per cent suggestion. Sp4 Richard A. Earl be conducted by the Instru- ~~ai~mg S ar: ~~ e. u e R or partments or in fire depart-j of the government savings at tending the annual TECOM mentatlon Division of the TE- ,, ._hite . an s iss~ 1e angde ments, and the expansion of a' These suggestions and others Environmental Test Planning * .If. . this spnng by Trauung dn £ l" .· WSMR thus far in 1968 is t h e have been rewarding to both the * * COM Logistics Directorate. ,,; •. program or counse mg ser\lce. suggestion that came from Ser· Coference here heard Colonel Th h f t Development Branch l1t ivil· men before and immediately af- geant First Class Paul W. Kra­ government and the suggestor. William D. Meara. chief of e t eme o he conference. Ian Personnel and. ·lt'.taini:ng d" h In the past year · and . a · half "Defining Instrumentation Pro- . . • · ter isc arge. mer, of the Atmospheric Science Test Analysis and Operations SP4 R. A. Earl Named Division. \ ··' p ·d t J h · d th blems," will be set by the key- 1 ' · ,,.r· resi en o nson praise c Office, U. S. Army Electronics alone, well over 200 ideas have Office, describe the impact of been accepted at WSMR, saving note speaker, Colonel Harry L. "The only thin!5'~~n01·e ex- results o! both Pr~~ect 100,?00 Command. Sergeant Kr a m e r the governm,,nt more than $200,· the war in Southeast Asia on Yerby director of logistics. pensive than trammg is no and ProJect Transition, statmg simply introduced the idea of 000 each year, and paving cash the test and evaluation pro­ ' training when it is needed," it is necessary to assure job op. replacing expensive, commer­ grams of the command. Soldier of the Afonth Some · 70-80 instrumentation explanied James M. Patton, portunities for the veteran who cially producec corner reflectors awards of more than $10,000. engineers and other guest are This is the 25th anniversary of The testing workload ls training chief, CPO. "How· has received a few other advan,. on balloons (used in tracking), growing steadily, he said, and W h i t e Sands Missile Range expected to be on hand for the ever, any administrator wor· tages from life." with good old household alumi· the Army Suggestion Program. opening sessions, about double TECOM's "Operation Gold the continuing manpower has awarded S o 1 d i e r of the thy of the title wm make every Pointing to Project 100,000, the num foil. The saving to the gov· drain, especialy among m!li- Month honors to Specialist Four Specialist Earl was cited for the number that attended the ernment is $94,167 annual· Mines" program hopes not only outstanding performance of du· first conference held at Aber­ effort to keep expenses to a President said that in its fir8t to meet, but exceed Department tary personnel, is having a sig- Richard A. Earl, of San Pe­ ly, while earing the sergeant a ties, exemplary conduct a n d deen Proving Ground, Md., minimum. That is the reason year the program reached 50,· of the Army objectives during nificant effect on capabilities. dro, Calif., a Hawk missile and more and more training is 000 "disadvantaged young comfortable $1,125. soldierly appearance and bear· last spring. In addltlon to TE­ · The top 1:uggestion of the 1967 this the silver anniversary year. To assure effective resource launcher repairman with t h e ing. conducted on post." Americans" who wo·1ld have management under these con- Hawk Missile Group here. COM personnel representing fiscal year came from a govern· Major General L. G. Cagwin, The specialist was assigned to the headquarters and the 15 In March, an Operations Re. otherwise been rdcckJ by t h e ment employe, Harry F. B e n­ commander of TECOM, has said ditions, COL Meara said, ac- The Soldier of the Month re· WSMR in October 1967. He is test installations and activities search Appreciation course armed forces because of educa- nett, of the Communications Di· that, "it is not only your respon­ ceptance of projects offered ceives a $25 U.S. savings bond will be given. Instructors for tional or physical limitations. Continued on Page 8) Continued on Page 8) rectorate, National Range Oper­ sibility but also your privilege to for arctic, tropic and desert and a three-day pass. the classes will come to ws. Of the 50,000 men under t h e ations. Mr. Bennett's suggestion play a key part in the sugges· testing in FY 1969 will have Earl, 21, attended the Army's MR from the Army Manage- program, Mr. Johnson said, .96 resulted in the procurement of tion program." to be handled on a priority 32-week Hawk Missile and Laun- ment Engineering Agency per_c~nt graduated from b a s 1 c basis. cher Repairman course at the (,A.MEA) Rock Island Ill. tra1rung and that some. h_a v e U.S. Army Missile Munitions Personnei from there gon_e on to Non . Comm1ss1oncd Six categories of materiel C t d S h 1 t Red t New Promotion Policy re~ently ha.ve been established by TE- en er an c oo a s one . Officer schools. Because of the of i in P[-i· _ Arsenal, Ala. He is also a 1964 com_pleted teaehmg .courses in success Project 100,000, th e Glenn Elder to Speak COM for use in ass gn g graduate or Sao Pedro High Des. and Analysi~ of Ex- President said, he is directing oritles. School and attended Los Ange. penments, and Staslical Qual· the Secretary of Defnese to en­ First place on the test line les Harbor College and UCLA Stresses Perform.ance lty Control. roll 100,000 men "in this vi t a I is reserved for materiel on the until his junior year. White Sands also has ar- program•· during its s e c on d Army's new accelerated pro- --- At Meeting of IEEE Defense Department's Master Now Taking Courses rangements with Frankford year. Urgency List even though all At present the Soldier of the motion policy for enli.sted men for E·5 and E·6. Arsenal, Pa., to provide in­ The President said he has al· Glenn E. Elder of Las Cruces, item listed may not be intend- Month is taking a course in psy· is expected to place more em· A similar promotion allowance :;tructors for onpost courses director of nuclear effects test· \I" .• * * * phasis on performance and po- is authorized for unilo; alerted so asked the Defense Secretary ed for the combat zone. chology at the White Sands in electronics and in compu­ to extend Project Transition to ing facilities at White Sands Second priority to standard b r an .? h of New Mexico State tential. for Southeast Asia duty and Approved last month by other Army commands, but the ter operation. all prbcipal troop installations Missile Range, will be guest production items needed for University and an English com· Other classes scheduled for Army Chief of Staff GEN Har- percentages are higher for the in the United St&U-s with hopes speaker at a meeting of the In· use in Vietnam, such as gun position course through the Uni­ this fiscal year include Man· stitute of Electrical and Elec· old K. Johnson, the policy in- alerted units and lower for the of reaching 500,000 servicemen tubes for arti)lery and tanks. ted States Armed Forces Insti- (Continued on Page 8) in the coming year. tronic Engineers, scheduled in The third category of ma- tute. He p l a n s to return to eludes special grade increases other commands. · El Paso. for personnel in Vietnam, or In school commands, com· "Project Transition gives a teriel covers items being de- school in September at UCLA, boost to disadvantaged men in The meeting of the El Paso veloped for use in Southeast where he has been accepted. those headed there, and in· mandants can promote some in· creased promotion opportunities dividuals as high as E·6 if they Early Release the six months before they re­ Section of the IEEE will be held Asia, including any off.the­ for personnel in service schools. are in MOS or non-MOS produc- turn to civilian life. Men without at 7 p.m. Thursday, Mar. 14, at shelf purchases that require a By June 30, the estimated ing courses. However, they must civilian skills and without edu­ Luby's Downtown Cafeteria. 1 Strength Totals military potential evaluation. "promotion potential" under the meet normal time in grade and cation receive a c o n c e n­ Elder will attend at the invi- I The remaining priorities are Defense Department has an· new policy will be about 90,000 service requirements if they are Plan Amended trated program of preparation," tation O'f Herman Gschwind, nounced total numerical assigned to other standard men to E·4, 62,000 to E-5 and 15,- in a non-MOS course. The early release program for the President said. "In c l a s s­ chairman. He will describe WS- i ' production items, development strength on Dec. 31, 1967 was 3,· 000 to E-6. In some cases, men attending enlisted personnel wishing to rooms and at work b e n c h e s, MR's Nuclear Effects Laborato· items and "everything else," 398,711, an increase from the ry facilities, some of which are In Vietnam, MACV and schools to increase their MOS enter college has been amended through counseling and job in that order. figure reported on the la.st day USARV may promote to fill va· skill level will be promoted to by the Department of Defense to placement services, they are unique. He also will show a mo­ of 1966. eancies in grades E-4 and E -5 E-4 when they enter the course, include those seeking a two- prepared for the road home." vie film made in his organiza­ The visitors were welcomed The totals for each service, in· without regard to DA quotas, and, if the course is 12 weeks or O· tion, "Nuclear Effects Testing by Brigadier General James F. year associate degree. Under the President's p r Hollingsworth, deputy com­ eluding regulars and reserves and all E-2s will be promoted to longer, they may be promoted Defense Department officials p:>sed "Veterans in the Public at White Sands Missile Range." I on active duty, officer candi· E-3 when they arrive. to E-5 when they graduate. said this the only major Service A<'t," a veteran would Indiana Native mander of the Army Test and dates, cadets at the Military and Evaluation Command. The Other commanders in Viet· , There is a similar policy for change to DOD Instruction 1332.· receive federal financial assist.. Native of Fort Wayne, Ind., Air Academies and midshipmen nam ·are authorized to promote candidates attending the Non· 15, which had been limited to ance should he decide to: ; group included representatives at the Naval Academy, are: Elder received his bachelor's ;;\•' men monthly to grades E-4 commissioned Officers Candi· candidates for a baccalaureate -Teach in poverty areas; • of the Army Materiel Com- Army, 1,463,002; Navy 746,617; degree in physics and mathema­ Glenn E. Elder through E·6, using a percentage date School's Combat Leader­ or higher degree. -Work in local hospitals tics from Indiana University. He mand, AMC commodity com­ Marines, 298,486; and Air Force, of the authorized strength of ship course, except that five per mands, project managers and Instructions on implementa- where skills are shOit; received his M. S. degree in phy· ...... 890,606. each grade to figure the allow· cent of the candidates may be tion of the change are being -Man understrength police sical metallurgy from the Uni­ ficer, Elder served ithe Army laboratories. Representatlvse The 1967 figure is about 65,000 ance. For E-4 the allowance is promoted to E·6 when they fin­ written by the individual mili· forces and fire departments; versity of Tennessee. Irom 1940 to 1946. He spent two of the. other services and othfir more than the 1966 year-end four per cent of strength, and ish the 12 weeks of formal train· tary departments who adminis· -Join VISTA, work in Youth As an antiaircraft artillery of· Continued on Page 8) Continued on Page 8) total. (AFPS l five per cent and two per cent ing. (AFPS) ter the program. (AFPS) Continued on Page 8) Small but Busy TV Section Serves all of Missile Range * By for Pershing, Lance, Hawk and Nike X * * * * * * * PVT Paul Baldridge missile systems and the Surveyer Moon In an area just northeast of the WSMR Craft project. Control Center is the small, archaic Three portable Ampex 660 Video building that houses the Television Sec­ Tape Recorders are used to tape differ­ tion of Communications Directorate. ent aspects of missile firings. The ma­ The outward appearance of this diminu­ chines have the capability of stop-action tive and unattractive edifice is har dly and slow motion. representative of the myraid responsi­ In addition to the maintenance of I •• ...1 bilities and functions which it is commu~ications equipment throughout . ' . charged with inside . the 4,000 square miles of WSMR, the TV .• · ij CW2 James G. Addington has com­ Section also installs Microwave links mand of 15 military and civilian person­ for the transmission of signals to remote nel in the T elevision Section which ser­ or control araes. vices, maintains and sets up communca­ Cable System tion systems from one end of the Range MSG Albert A. Solis. NCOIC, also to the other. h as directed his men in installing closed Remote Vans circuit television (CCTV) for experi­ The primary job of the Television m ents involving hazardous tests su ch as Section involves data collection, safety in the Nuclear ·F,ffpcf<: L aboratory. and security, gathering research infoi:­ Much of the WS]\,/r~ populace is fam­ mation, and television tracking for mis­ iliar with the TV Section only with sion support. respect to the housing a"e"l'S cable sys­ The TV Section has t h ree remote tele­ tem. The maintenance of the Commun­ vision van<: which it u ses for mission itv Antenna System is 11nofher of the su ooort. Each nf thP vans has the cap­ TV Section's responsibilitiP". However. abilitv to u se from five to eight cam­ the repair of tPlPvision sets does not fall eras. Durin!01 missile launches, the TV UnnPr it<: PllrVieW. remote camer;:is sccin the immediate vi­ WSMR also has a closed ch·"nit tPlp­ l'init" tn ;"'"'I " ' ' th ,~t thi:> range is safe for vision sv<:tt>m, oneratin~ on rhanne] fl. firine-. 'T'J, ~ Ceras, which are remotel'T W!=:MR-'l'V hr0ark11<:ts SlJPC'h•l n roi:rram­ confrollpri frrm the van, arP ~lso trained mini:t to the hon 'l'<>1pvfr::i"n 8"'C· Television Section, Communications Direc­ and installed, The 24-year old soldier's modifications add iri­ (U.S. ARMY PHOTO) FMno<; Trioed ti on. In aari;+;"", tn fl,,,;~ ,.,., ,,..,v other ac- crea.o;ed flexibility to recordings and playback of missile torate, 1oes over daily work schedule with The TV Section has provided support Continued on Page 8) 13unches and television production. (U, s. ARMY PHOTO) • R • l\Ulitary Housing Sched1:le of Rellgr9us A ctlvltes • WIN D & L'iA N D Chapel M OV .e ev1ew Construction Will at lVhite Sands Alissile Range Policies and statereents in the news and edltorlal co1umn1 I!Uature - For patrons 17 years, just one more dare beyond RED Top 13,000 Units e not nt:cessarily th1.se ot the Department ot the Army or Its old LINE 7000. CATHOLIC endorsement by the uepartment ot the Anny of the product.f Mature-Young People-For pa. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Construction'tary fan of·1y more hotisw· than g 13,··ts Sunday MASSES: 9:30 a.m.,' Post Chapel; 11:1!!> a.m .. Sierra 000 mill 11 servweio aery service (Post Nursery '.f.05 Twin Cities) durtn1 . . Tuesday at. 6_ p.m. m the Post WEDNESDAY around a?- outlaw trio who split 15, 1967, 1,101 units under the Sunday School and worsl1ip. ' uenecd h is every action. Chapel Acttv1t~r Room for re- after a big tobbery. James Far. 1966 program had been released , , 3 Most important were his unbounded faith in and de- hearsals. Additional voices of RED LINE 7000 · M - Red entino plays the part of the loner for construction and that the bal· SUNDAY SCHOOL: 9: 0 a.m., in the 0fol!O\vlng places: 1 Nu~ tion to the principles of foe Decleration of Independ- all ranges arc needed to com- Line 7000 is an exciting and Iwho tries to go straight, but falls ance would be released in \ ~ery t Depa;mtenbi- ~os~ Chap;J, R~om f • "· B_~gmnei Depart· ce. In speaking of the men who drafted that document, plcte the voice balance of the tense drama of stock car race back into his old ways, and, as monthly increments. He said his\ g~:leJ-- :tdg. 3;f.e Pn~~~ D~partn;rnf~? / ~a;tm~t 8~~st 2 ·ncoln1 once said, "They grasped not only the whole group. An:,·one, of dr1Yers and .the girls they love, masked lrnndit, leads a double office is .reviewing each of the I. 326. l:'rimary Department ( n.d grade) e_ Junior rcgardl~ss. ~ l 1 4 Bl~g. ~1~. 326o!~ ce of man th1.:n living, but they reached forward to Iscr~1~e, age, or rank is invited played agam~t actual . back- ltfe. Ex-pals Jack Lord an~ Don 1966 proJects but has found few pai1ment No. (3d and th grades) _ Building . . d th . h"ld d th . h"ld , h "ld d to JOlll the chorus. )!en of all grounds at Daytona, Darlington, Galloway slumble onto their old changes necessary. (AFPS) Junior Department No 2 f5th and Gth grades) Bldg l e eir c 1 ren an eir c 1 ren s c 1 ren, an 1. faiths arc included. Charlotte, Riverside and other crony and try to muscle in on his No. 326. Junior High D~partment - Education Cent;: Senlo; POST CHAPEL SEMINAR famous American speedways. well laid schemes to steal a big High Department ...:.. Education Center, room 10. Adult Class "If God is good and all pow· \.feet U1e speed breed - the spe· gold slrlpment. Melodie Johnson Ad /[ /"Y (Men and Women) - Education Center, Room 5. Adult Choir £ th h cial breed attracted only to provides the romantic complic· U L-OUTSe rehearsal. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Post Chapel. Youth Choir, ~~ar~· thea~xis~~c~~: s~n~aC:; speed - in the world that lies I tions. (Tel a t l\ T;1 KCTlj Thursday, 6 :30 p.m., Post Cha.pet. Junior Choir, I<'rlday, 3 :30 p.m . destructive forces of evil that i..)j J. Vi J"li..) ~~=~ ~:~!i.Activity Room, Cherub Choir, 3:30 p.m., \Vednesday, • seem to deny God's power and / WSMRites l nv"t d goodneRs?" This provacative Ch ap Ia1n • s l, e An adult education course "in DENOMINATIONAL SERVICES: and poignant question will be To Visit El Paso practic1l electronics begins Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints - Sunday, the central theme for a series Tuesday, Feb. 27, at New Mexi· Sierra Chapel. Contact MGS Woolf. 678-2143. of seminars which will begin at c Armed Services Y co State University. Christian Science Representative - Gordon R. Morse, im w e ll•.. '' the Post Chapel on Tuesday orner Cost for the 10 ·week class is Paso, 566·3782. evening, February zo, at 7:30 White Sands Missile Range $35 per person. The class w i 11 Lutheran Service _ Sunday, Po!'!t Chapel, 8 a.m. p.m. in the chap1:>l classrooms. single and married military per· meet once a week on Tuesday at Episcopal Service _ Sundays, 12:30 p.m .. Post Chapel. will By 6:30 in The seminar be conducted Cha.plain (LTC) ~on~teld atnd thekir dependents are p.m. the Engineer8ing PROTESTANT CHAPLAINS: by the Allred E. Kra- Frank C. Riley mv1 e o ma e use of services Technology Building·t · at" NMd £U. Chaplain wn capable mind and talents, carefully weighing each est those who have grave doubts me share the story with you. bersh1p fees. Some activities tronics and electricity. Qtrs: 678-5869. tion, each decision against the final outcome and the as to the existence of God; and A pollceman pounding his beat ~re free and some ha~e a. n,on:- All interested persons should ______... ______.....__ ost involved. challenge those whose faith in one night stopped at the alley mal charge. Al~~· this y is enroll with Professor Louis a l • Ignoring the violent, conflicting opinions that were God has not come under any door of a servicemen's club. To open only for military personnel Kleine, head of engineer· on~fiatu ations solllld intellectual scrutiny. his surprise the door opened. and their.. not the ing technology, before Feb. 27. rust upon him, recognizing his own deficiencies and d~pendcnts,. The discussion will explore Staring at him, he said, was a general The telephone number is 646· especting his own abilities, Lincoln followed his own ~1v1h.an popul.a~on. conclusions reached by some of "big burly man ready to jump You will fmd t~e Y. a rom- 2236. TO CAPTAIN - PeterH. ARMY C 0 M lll E NDATION dmonition to "think calmly and well •.." me ,: ' fortable place to Just sit, watch Miles, ORDC. "MEDAL (Second Oak Leaf Clus­ the greatest philosophers and · . color TV, eat a bite or grab a ·------, Once again, this Nation finds itseli " • •• engaged TO SPECIALIST FOUR - ter) - Master Sgt Arthur E. An­ theologians who have wrestled He drew his gun. The prowler refreshing drink in the restau- CounldOWD Richard E. Williams, A Co. a g· eat ••• war, testing whether that Nation, or any with this mystery. drew his. 'l'hey both fired. A rant. Not only that, but there dersen. ation so conceived and so dedicated, can long en- ARMY C 0 M M E NDATION The final weeks of the dis· full-length mi;ror an,d the pr~w- arc rooms or dormitory beds for MEDAL-CPT Richard P. Bo- <;t 0 0 D CONDUCT MEDAL UrP • , ." cussion will examine the definite ler - the pohceman s reflection rental by single personnel. Gov- Capers lick, CPT Harold M. Frost III, (First Award) - SFC Bertsy M. Lincoln's dedication to the principles upon which exposition of mankind's \\Test· - cr_ash~d to lhenoor. ernmcnt checks, plus traveler's CPT Harold F. Kelso, MSG Goodson, B Co.; SP5 Charles M. his great Nation was founded and his ability to intelli­ ling with this question as it is This kind of mistake has hap- check and money orders can be Leonardo Quiles, SFC John P. Surratt, B Co. ently apply his individual ability to the problems which set forth in the Book of Job. pened to most of us, but how cashed, and money orders and FRIDAY (February 16) Before a person makes up his man~ of us ha;·e .e~·er stopped traveler's checks are 'also sold. 8 p.m. Dance USO Hostesses Aaronson, ·SSG Elton C. Mc- GOOD CONDUCT MEDAT, onfronted him were a way of life. mind as to the question of the to trunk of the significance of it? There arc many other services. -THE APOLLOS Namar, SP 6 Arnold A. Nie· (Third Award) SP6 Hobart - It is a way of life that, in these precraious times, existence of God, he has an ob- How often have troubles seemed For the more active U1ere are SATURDAY (February 17) derhofer Jr. Taylor, B Co. ore of our c!tizcns would do well to follow. (AFPS) ligation to his own intellectual to loom large and menacing, dances, feature movies, basket- 6:30 p.m. Sports Films integrity to test his decision in then when we ~ace them ~our· ball area, table tennis, coffee SUNDAY (February 18) the arena of questions that have ageously, we find they disap· house, swim classes, and lots 10 a.m. Coffee and Doughnuts baffled and haunted men clown pear, insignificant as shadows more - all free. A heated swim· 2 p.m. Pinochle Tournament through the ages, namely: in a broken mirror? When we ming pool and pool tables are 2 p.m. Chess Tournament . feet that there's nothing we can il bl t · 1 f 8 p.m. Talent Call 1. If God is creator _and is do, then i"t's ti'me ~or us to real· ava a e a very nomma ees. New Baggage Limits h d 1 i· Located at 300 San Francisco MONDAY (Closed) good then w ere oes evi come ie that the best thing we can do Avenue_ only four blocks from TUESDAY (February 20) We gave Nat Simon from? is to seek God's help and then the center of downtown El Paso 7:30 p.m. Bridge Class Attention is directed to the new Government sa.Jty 2. Why is a person condemn· face the situation for what it is: _ the Armed Services YMCA WEDNESDAY (J<,ebruary 21) egulations issued by the Federal Aviation Administra­ ed to a meaningless life because turn on the light, rather than keeps its doors open 24 hours 8 p.m. Juke Box Dance 'Bring $580 to ion effective October 24, 1967, which limit carry-on bag­ of a birth defect? fear the "ghost" in the dark· every day for you. Drop in scion. Your Date' age and related personal belongings to items that can ness. THURSDAY (February 22) 3. Why is a promising young "For I am the Lord thy God WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY e stowe~ under a passenger's seat. life snuffed out before it has a who take thee by the hand, and Drive In banks were estab- 10 a.m. Coffee and Doughnuts fiddle with! ln general, such articles must not exceed the overall chance to achieve its promising say to thee: Fear not, I have llshed so that the cars could 2 p.m. Dart Throwing Contest imensions of 21" x 16'' x 8". Exempt from these regula­ potential? helped thee." (Isaias 41:13) see their real owners. 7 p.m. Shakey's Pizza Night ions are a lady's pocketbook, or handbag and a reason- 4. Why are there such terrify­ 1bl• amount of personal clothing, and reading material. ing killers as cancer and otuer All other items which military passengers have been incurable diseases? ccustomed to carry on board - such as a brief case, 5. Why are humans allowed to ·amera bag or music.al instrument - must conform to inflict cruelties and sufferings BENEFIT. .he under-seat requirement. on innocent people? • • While not specifically prohibiting pets, the new FAA The three classical expressions imits preclude pet containers in the passenger cabin. On of these questions are present­ he advice of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to ed in the Book of Job. An en· \nimals (SPCA), pets or other household animals will counter and exploration of these o longer be accepted in the passenger cabin of some questions may prepare a per· son to make up his mind if there Las Cruces Lions Sight .omrnercial aircraft. Pets and other such animals, in really is a God who is all-good ppropriaie containers as well as other items not meet­ and all-powerful. ng the physical dimensions for underseat stowage will We are very fortunate lo have e accommodated as baggage in the heated, pressurized such a dynamic and inspiring nd ventilated cargo compartments o~ aircraft subject theologian conduct a seminar o t~dff regulations. here at the Post Chapel. Young Conservation Progrc-m I At the present time, however, some carriers may adults of all Protestant denom­ rovide an exception to this rule. Please check the ap­ inations are cordially invited and strongly urged to attend this licable tariffs. 1 Over-size fragile items, such as portable television very pertinrnt series of semin- 1 ars. -eL, musical instruments and paintings, must be suit­ ble packed for shipment in the baggage compartment. Southern Fried They will also be accepted as blocked-seat baggage, at alf fare, if they ran be secured by seat belts.) Garment bags will be accommodated in the cabin coat racks nubject to space; this space is particula:ly ·Chicken imited in winter, so the bag must be capable of bemg olded under the seat or carried in the baggage com· We're music lovers too, so we got right In tune with artment. The regulations apply to both .domestic and interna- and French 17ries Mr. Simon's money needs. His loan Included enough to pay all his old bills, as well as cash to tional travel. fiddle with. Don't let We understand that people need money for all the low price all you can eat sorts of reasons. That's why we never put a name UINN&CO. on a loan. You name It-and we'll see that you get 0 sea re )"""' "Cf. MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHAHG£ the money right away. Like today? $1822.00 Thal .. the p1 .o " ' our new Volkswagen. Only the license Your First man will understand. and local tax are additional. e STOCKS • BONDS !Whitewalls and leatherette For sl.50 • MUTUAL FUNDS upholstery .optional at extra cost.) Listen Threo Times Dally Monday Thro What you don't get is frills. lfrlday for Latest Stock l\larket Reports And you don"t pay for 'l'he>t you don't get. LOANS UP TO $1000 Dlrt'ICt from the Offices of SATURDAY; FEB. 17th QUINN & COMPANY IN LAS CRUCES 5 p.rn. to 8 p.m. 10:30 a.m. KGRT·AM & KOR'.r·Fl\I (~~~~-~~"~] S:SO p.m. KGRD-FM £,,,..1,,1 ... ,.~: :t. ><>TI:·*>lf;»'if.lsili:;";r.m;.,,_ittr.;.;;~ 6:SO p.m. KGRD·FM GEO. KUPER Las Cruces High School Caleleria FINANCE COM PANY Suite 1 VOLKSWAGEN of Lu Crucss "Las Cruces' Only PLENTY OF FREE PARKING · 200 S. Main Street ••••••••• Phone: 624·281S First National Bank Tower Authorized VW Dealer" :Phone lSU-9688 1115 S. Truck By Pass Call Barley c. Ca.rpenrer, Mgr. P1'- 5Zt-S561 .· "'\ ...... - ' . . • income Tax Hints Be Jk Secretary McNamara Delivers 3: Wind & Sand - Friday, Feb. 16, 1968,, Military Should Note Review Military Posture Statement "I lappy I luntin{J . clus·1on _Editor's note: All b.ooks re· Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara has pre- with Pt•g Ex viewed here are available at sented his FY69 "posture statement'' to the Senate tary said, active duty officer by Peggy Platt !finished in that one. By the time Combat Zone t t the White 8antk lUissile Range Armed Services Committee, strongly urging Congress candidate training will continue s0 I've been up 0 my 0 Id I 1e ft a noon, I k new t h c waler (First of two articles prepared j' vidual's financial record!!. Post Library to provide a significant portion tricks again. ways of this part of the country by the Office of The .Judge Ad· 11ie income tax returns of mil- · to approve the requested $79.6 billion new obligational of the new officers required in Still can't figure out why the Ibetter than 95 per cent of the na- vocate General.) itary personnel who are entilled THE TWILIGHT STRUGGLE authority for Defense matters. FY68 and FY69. questions that run thru' my mind tives I betcha. Berau~c they to a combat zone exclusion and by William D. Rogers. The Al- In presenting the "posture" on the FY69-73 Defense It is expected that 34,000 new can't be answered by anyone I started m~ out with the work he- • · Armed Forces personnel who whose returns indicate a refund liance for Progress was fir 5 t officers will be obtained tlirough happen to ask' ing done today ancl finished with ~erved in a combat zone during due will be given special treat· agreed to by most of the West· Program and 1969 Defense Budget, Secretary McNamara these programs in FY68, 19,000 But the fact remains _ ;ifter an aerial map of all this area. the past year arc entitled to the Iment. To insure tilis special at· ern Hemisphere powers in Aug. gave an assessment on the ir.· being Army officers. In FY69, asking everyone who came in By the time I had wound in 'combat z'lnc exclusion" on tention, the words "COMBAT ust of l9Gl. To John F. Kennedy, ternati<.nal situation as it bears phy, Secretary McNamara said this source is expected to pr 0 • to visit, 1 went to the Chamber and out to the Foundations and their 1067 Peder al income tax ZONE" should be placed at th e who first proposed it in his inau· on military policies and pr O· the Soviet Union and the United vide 23,500 officers _ 10,000 Ar- of Commerce (by phone) for Materials (geologists, to you J return. Itop of the return. It is also ad- gural address, it was to be a grams, plus a breakdown of mil· Stales have the strongest possi· I my, 7,000 Navy, 3,500 Marine help _ as usual. and asked a few questions, I had Under this exclusion, all com- visable to write the same words "vast cooperative effort, unpa· itary concepts, operations, R&D, ble motives to avoid a strategic Corps, and 3,000 Air Force. The The manager sa~c' he couldn't the feeling of having gone back pensation received f o r active in each margin of the W-2 Form. rallelcd in magnitude and nobil· and manpower aud organization. nuclear war. ?enicor Res.erve Ohfficers Train- help but he would give me the in history of this country several sen·ice as a warrant omcer or The special treatment of these lty of purpose." The secretary delivered th c "To put it bltmtly," the secre· rng ~rps. 1s anot. er source of name' of someone \"ho could. 1 hundred years. enlistrd man and up to $500 of1 returns is available even if the seventh and final Five Year De· tary stated, "neither the Soviet commmaoned officers. So _ "'ound up to the 1 g~ing comprnsation for acti\'e service Iindividual is no longer in th e Now, nearly seven years la· fense Program and Financial un·on nor the United States 1 1 f " I wore my "Con.,ersalion ·11· R . th , i n t 1e area o pay, Secretary 1 U. S. Army Corps of Eng1·neers . " t ·r· as a commissioned officer is ex- combat zone at the time he files t er, W1 iam ogers reviews e Budget. He noted that a reduc· can now attack the other, even ~cNamara noted that the Pres· in the heart of the Ft. piece - a pc n ied wood pcud- cluded for ;,ny month in which' his return, as long as he quali- history and politics of the Al- tion o fabout $21. 7 billion from by complete surprise, without ident's FY69 budget, under gov- Worth "J'ungle ! ,, dant, so of com se that brought the sen·ice member served at fied for the exclusion during the liance. After the perilous post- the original FY69 budget, as re· suffering massive damage in ernment-wide contingencies, in- up the subJect - .ind Iuclians. l"ast, parl of th<' month in a I taxable year and as long as he war lull h in United States con· ques t e d b Y the services· and D e- retaliation." eludes the funds required to sup. What a wonderful day that Now I have locations of fossils, . com bat zonf'. is entitled to a refund for that cern wit Latin America, the f~nse Agenci~s'. wa~ made p 0 s- He pointed out that deterrence port the automatic July l, 1968 wtoas t-hefirbst.gor aClli·t'yl wAeLnLt doBwYn rocks, Indian camps, and miner. Also, this exclusion applies to year. the Alinza represents a rcvolu· sible bv elmunatmg the un . d f 1 als that won't quit. The only ·c on active duty and Individuals are cautioned that tion in U.S hemisphere policy. d d · d · 1 f 't' · remains the "cornerstone of our pay mcrease, enacte as part 0 MYSELF! Everyone thought I thing wrong is that I can't get • .;prvt <'mrn ' Mr. Ro g er s arct11".s tl1at e\•en nee e an n!argma ac ivi ies ' nuclear J)Qlicv." last year's pay bill. was crazy. But the bus dr1'ver th h' • . ·11ospitalizcd anywhere as a re· the law relating to the combat ., ~ :ind bv deferring whale\•er can 1 • ere - on t is trip anyway. But suit of wounds. and our allies." , o ea - an ere is w ere the W-2 Form, so no special cal· ceive the benefits of the .exclus- contemporary history and a ma· Committee to testify on 0~~ De· He said this is what provides The secretary noted that of the after row of help yourself ele· GOOFED! culations are required of the in· Iion, he should contact his local jor contribution to the develop· fensc prog~ams, the military Ithe d~terrent. appropriations required for vators! I didn't want to go too far dividual taxpayer. If the W • Z legal assistance officer. (ANF) ment of our policy as well. an~ economic str~ngth .of the As for ICBM, he indicated the F.Y69, the following amounts By the time the uniformed away from the Fecleral Buil1!- Form is incorrect. a corrected I -- ~mted States and. its allies has U. S. still b:;.s the same three or will be pre~e?ted sepe~rately: guard, or receptionist, or what- ing for fear I wouldn't be able c·opy ~houlcl be obtained fro m (Next: Tax laws on savings ONE OF OUR BRAINS IS m~,reased dramatically. . . four . to . one missile edge _ -$540 m11l1on for M1l!tary As- ever he was called officially to find it again. So after going ~ lhc local custodian of the Ind i· deposits, military univorms.) DRAINING by Max Wilk. How But so haye the diffieul- more than enough to deter any sistance and Foreign Military realized beyond tile shadow of a all around the block the only Symes fares once he leaves ty and complexity of the pro~- nuclear enemy. Sales. doubt that I was not about to go place I could find was the Ham- Grcat Britain as amember of a lems. we have l~~d to fac.e. ID He said in overall terms t h e -More than $Z billion for Mil· to the third floor alone on one burger Intemationale ! It'i; posh research and development !ranung our military pohc1es. missile forces being proposed by itary Construction and Family of tilese things - I was reany been so long since I've been out • "brain ateria" in Cambridge, The~e years have seen the accel· DOD for the FY69 . 73 period Housing (including the $82.6 mil- to turn around and say "the among strangers that I never Mass., and how he sokes his era.hon ?f a number of trends are essentially the same as dis· lion for payment of mortgage heck with it." But FINALLY one gave it a thought - I hought a complicated love life, is the sub· which will m~ke the world of the cussed last year - l,OOO Minute· principal and $11.8 million for of the oilier rr•.m took pity on hamburger witli ONIONS! stance of this hilarious spoof and 1970s very different from th e man 496 Poseidon and 1960 Pol· Homeowners Assistance. me and said ,1 ;J go with me. I Wl1en I went back to thank satiric commentary on b o t b world of the early l~s.'_' aris,' plus 54 Titan !Is. Within -$76.8 million for Civil De- am sure they wondered how far Mr. Craft for his kindnesses, Great Britain and America. 1:r. ~cNamara said this co~n- these overall numbers, however, fense. back in the "sticks" I lived. the poor man co•1ldn't get Symes is for all practical pur· try s m_ilitary pos~ure remams some changes in mix and pa Y· Also included in tile total of When we arrived at the right within six feet of me. w:i.s so poses, as he sees it, a failure. root.ea m a commitment to col· load are being proposed. new appropriations requested floor he told me which way to go embarrassed that I simpl} He l·s an 1·nconsp1'ci'ous teacher lccttve defense. · · for FY69 is $75 m'll'o f tl d 't' d th' h d"d bolted and ran ... "We and our allies are dem- No change is proposed mthc 1 1 n or 1ree - an i s a goo mg e i . Yott Are The Detective imagine my horror when I open· of the I!'ifth Form at an English onstrating this commitment manned bomber forces. ing submitted separately. That place is a slightly smaller I called today to thank every At 6:15 this cold winter even- ed the door and found Bob lying boarding school; he has been The fi'rst $34 mi'lli'on 1·s for an "ersi'on of the Pentagon 1'n one for an unforgettable two and ing yon arrive at the apartment there ... dead .•• that knife doing desultory research in The everyplaned. day in Vietnam," he ex· secretaryIn the area said of maximummanpower, cm·the increase ·in • the per diem• and 1Washington! · one-half hours, and haYe the that has been shared by two stuck in him!" Behavior of Sheep in Stress Sit· h · · 1 d 1 t travel allowances for uniformed The man who had invited me names of more places to go on d t. f. ld f · t· "But today, and tomorrow, P as1s is p ace on vo un ary re- l Oung men, Robert Sayers an You po1'nt to tl1e dark blood ua ions - a 1e o mves iga. our country must be prepared to cruitment programs. He noted , service members· dO\"n• there to beg1'n \v1'tb came on my way out of Texas. Philip Barnum. You are admit- stain on the right cuff of Bar- tion that seems to fascinate vir· cope with a complex range of because of the high enlistment The second, $23 million, is for out to tile reception desk, and Everyone with whom I've trd by t h e distressed-looking num's whitP. shirt. "Did yo u tually no one. Symes' solutionf, contingencies requiring forces levels, only the Army has had to an increase in Servicemen's thus began a day I'll be a long come in contact during the four Philip Barnum, and immediate- touch tl1e body?" accomplished by a great deal o and weapons systems with very resort to m· d uchon· d unng· t b e Group Life Insurance· · The third • t'1me f orgett' mg. weeks I've been here have· been ly you see the body of Robert "Oh I d'd" h d devious scheming and tend er t d h If $18 million, is to provide Feder· He took me to an office he the nicest people it is possible to ... yes, I , e a . . . t t' f 1 f b t' diverse capabilities." pas year an a a . Sayers lyinJ! on the noor, a nii'te. "I '"anted to see if possi· mmis ra ions o re ays o eau 1- al. employe_· status for the civil- tho't would be able to help me meet any. where. And today, to 't bbl d • f l · l t 11 ca ses Iler Dealing with missile philoso· In the officer corps, the secre· w i. c k e d · l~o ki·ng sw1 c a e bly he was still alive. I felt for a u gir s, even ua Y u · ian technicians of tile Army find my answers. From there he 1make thmgs absolutely perfect, l~.mfe ~rotrud1~g fro~1 his c!-ies: possible heartbeat . . . guess Majesty's government consider· ~-~· - ··- --=. ~- -.-----, and Air Force National Guard. would call to suggest that I be I I received my very first hon- h;~ white T-shirt stamed dark my sleeve must have brushed able concern. l ( (AFPS) escorted to another office when I (Conitnued on Page 7) \·:ith the blood !rom the death against some of that blood on SO LONG AT THE FAIR by I - 1...ound. . . his shirt." Janet Gregory Vermandel. Lisa The police medical exammer "Whose knife is that?" Bentham, who had come to i'.\0¢'~Slf:\;''.§'.S.0\:'/'.'~'\;.'\))'.zf ¥''. 'jji(';~'''";~·· · ""2 ~I:~,~fJ;·1~;~~1 ~~\~: ~~~:;~\!~~~:!~·:~g~f ~t~t~:~~~ 1¥~~t~ . llt~~1,~~1 ~~~fJ:~~~f:~~~~~~:~ 1~thYi~1vf!uff- ;r:~ !c c;~el~~~ :f ~t~stj\e~:! ~~!i~~~~::~~=~?i.:~~:~~! l~~'}.:,f · ;'; 'a· num. 1~ tiler~. You ~~llows ave a way morning Victoria said a casual i> re 0 "B 0 b was a good enough tracmg · · · . goodby as she left, apparently \;. roommate," he tells you. "Al· "Yes, we ha\'e a way of trac· just for the day. ,., · ways fair about sharing expen· ing all. so~.ts or. things," ~OU This stor1 of murder and ro· p~izctJ·c-a'11typerlect l;es and doing his part in keeping break m. One little clue 1 ve mance, set. against the fabulous e lhe place clean and nice looking picked up here .~~ads me to sus· background of Montreal's Expo 111 ... but he did have an explos· pect your story· '67 swings with suspense and ive almost uncontrollable tern- What is it that has aroused ''t t (R e Akers) ·a~ pe; .. , had a way of flaring up your suspicions regarding Phil· eXCI emen. os ar-ro -fl~r CfOft~'f 1~ drf8#Y.T~'f'9~ • '' over some of tile most trivial ip Barnum? ff• I.. ""' V.I.. J3ft,,,'_I l.;:J..f, "-" ':I.. .I.. r '9.1.L J3 matters. Earlier this afternoon s O LU TIO N Information 0 1cer . . . 1 think it was about two According to Philip Barnum's N t d o'clock ... he staged one of his story, he found Robert Sayers Shortages 0 e I tantrums just because I happen- dead at about six o'clock and The expanded requirements in i t. ed to be wearing one of his ties. had accidentally acquired t h e Vietnam and an increased re· · We exchanged a few words ... bloodstain on bis shirt cuff while tirement rate of World War II - then I left him here to cool off. examining the b 0 d Y at that veterans has created a shortage I went to the Peacock Cocktail time. But the medical examiner of trained Army information of· Lounge a couple of blocks away, has told you that Sayers has ficers . . had a couple of drinks, then I been dead for at least two hours, Departme.nt o! Army has noti- left there at about 3:30 and took and in that time theblood would fied field units that it has be· in a movie. I finally got back have congealed and could not come necessary to fill many in- ·ust a few minutes or so h a v e stained Barnum's shirt . h ff' here J formation positions wit o 1cers H. S. THOMAS, (left) manager of North American Rock­ before six o'clock .. · you can_:_e_uH_ . ______from one or two grades lower well at the AJ>0llo 8ite, presents the "Employe of the Year than required. Award" t-0 Julian Berval. Mr. Berval originally from Las Commanders, especially those Cruces, joined the company at thPJ Los Angeles Division and Scien~e Co•·ne•· of low priority units where in· returned to his home town for the A}lOllo testing program. The plaque is glvP-n the employe selected for the best co­ C.'HA..i.~GES IN PHYSICS hold students in the physics- cur. experienced officers must .so~e· job. operation and pride in doling a good Mr. Bervn.I, his wife EDUCATION- INTRODUCED Iriculu~. He think~ this is of ut· times be appointed to fill Ill· a.nd three cJilldren, live at 142 w. Go.llaghn, Las CruceR. TO ATTRACT STUDENTS most importance lil the face of formation positions, should · · d ry reports that there are as many look to Defense Information Poor instruct10n Ill secon. ~ I as 10 openings in various School's eight-week basic in· school physics and competit1on I branches of tlie discipline for formation officer course for for manpo':~r f:om ~losely .re- each qualified candidate. assistance, DA advises. LOOK lated scient1f1c ~ields 1~ causmg SATURN SOUNDS HEARJJ IN a constantly mcreasmg _and NEW l.'OURK AT THESE Give yourself a present e:'ery alarming shortage of Ame~ican Scientists at Columbia Uni· wow~ VALUES! phy~ici8t~. a Rutgers Umver- sity's Lamont Geological Ob­ month by buying U. S. Savmgs Bonds. $ sity scientist contends. servatory reported that tileir ~~~~~~~-- $ $ $ $ $ $ Dr. Peter R. Weiss, professor instruments north of New York and chairman of the Depart- City heard fue sound of tile Sa· York City an hour and a quarter 1966 J<'ORD CUSTOM, 2 Door, Radio, · ment of Physict at Rutgers Col- trun rocked launching at Cape later on its way to the Observa· lege, hoping to change the Kennedy, more than 900 miles tory in Palisades, N. Y. It was ...... trend. has ini;tituled chan~es ~n away. The air waves were "un.. picked up by sensitive micro· Hea~~iA~~~d~~'. ~.~~.~~--~~~~-~ $101 S both philosophy and practice lil expectedly strong" and "quite barographs, which measure the physics curriculum at Rut- sensational." changes in air pressure caused I 1965 CO:l\'.IET CALIENTE, 4 Door, S gers. Senior Research Associate, Dr. by the passage of sound waves Speed, Uadio, Heater, Power St.eerlng, "We rotate our faculty William Donn, said that U. S.D through the atmosphere. The through the various courses so AND Soviet nuclear explosions instruments record the waves I Air, ~~k~~~~...... _ .., ... .$116 s their outlook and presentation,; tlJe atmosphere are .the only in pen and ink on paper on a ro· of course material are,, fresh, man-made events w . . t~h have tating drum. . 1966 FALCON, 4 Door, 6 cylinder, Ra· Dr. Weii;s explained, and we produced stronger readmgs on. "We expect that tile ana1 ysis Get Your show our students that physics the Lamont instruments. Only of these sound waves will reveal dlo, ~~~~~n~~-~~--~~~~ .~~~ ...... $113 5 is a dynamic field in which two natural events created much about the nature of the at· FREE ideas are proposed, considered, stronger air waves - the erup· mosphere at high elevations," 1966 COllET, 202 Coupe, Radio, Heater, The high mileage motorist couldn't make a studied, refuted, defended, and tion of the ~ak~toa volcano lil said Dr. Donn. "Conditions in Copy of better choice. Here is a ruggedly-built 4-ply tire sometimes discarded. the East Indies m 1883 and the the atmosphere from the surface Stlc~~~~CE $10 8 0 "Also we are now putting fall of the Great Siberian 1\leter· of the earth up to about 100 Timely ••• top value at a moderate price. Compare more e~phasis on undergradu- orite in 1908. . miles are importand in the for· 1967 FORD HAI,AXIE 500, 2 Door, these additional features: Hardtop V-8, Radio, Heater, Automatic ate education. For a number of The sound of the Saturn lift- mation o! sound waves at great Tire Tips • For high mileage motorists. • "Hi-T'' nylon or years, graduate education was off at 7 A.:M. passed over New distance from tileir source. 8 stressed here and at other · - --· ------Tran~A[1~~E ~~~~.... ~~~...... $22 S 0 For valuable facts rayon cord to increase strength and stability. American universities, while un­ about tire pressure, •Wide, deep Gyro-tread for road-gripping safety, dergraduates were left partially riding comfort. • As strong as or stronger than TlllS IS A balance, rotation, ex- • unattended. Now that graduate •$100 most tires that come on new cars. education has been developed TAX SERVICES Lll\IITED SALE- SO tra mileage ... ask for we can once again focus more CASH DELIVERS this booklet at your lURRY! 650/ 600-13 rayon attention on tile undergraduate.'' FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE - Cooper dealer. Noth­ ANYONE OF THE ' DON'T WAIT cord WW Tubeless Helping to implement the ing to buy. changes in the program at .R.ut­ We'll be open from 5 p.m. ABOVE USED CARS! COME IN TODAY!! plus $1.80 Federal gers is a grant of $27 million Excise Ta.x! given to the Department of Physics over a year ago by tlie 'til 12 p.m.! •on Approved Credit! National Science Foundation as part of the federal agency's Sci. TIRE ence Development Program. Your Home-Town Dealer . . . One million of these "Centers of 0. B. HARRISON COMPANY Excellence" funds is being spent for faculty recruitme;it, POOLE MOTOR CO. 717 N. Main fellowships and scholarships TAX CONSULTANT • LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • l\IERCURY and the r~mainlng $1.7 million • l\IONTEGO *COUGAR •RENAULT Ph. 524-4661 is devoted to equipment. MYERS ARCADE, ROOM 3 grading program bis depart· 1100 N. Main LAS CRUCES Las Cruces, N. M. ment will be able to interest and Las Cruce'&, N. M. Ph. 524-7142 Dr. Weiss believes that by up· •

••• ,

Dear Subscriber:

The Las Cruces Citizen will cease publication in its present form with the issue of February 15th. The Citizen will then become a tabloid Sunday Supplement, each week inserted in the Las Cruces Sun-News.

This move will make it possible to expand and im- prove the paper greatly. The new name for the Citizen will be CitiSun.

If it's agreeable with you, we will transfer your present subscription to the Sun-News for equal value. We think that you will enjoy the new CitiSun and hope you stay with us. If this is not satisfactory with you, please call us at 6-5575, or write us, and we will make other arrangements.

Thank you for your past loyalty, and we sin- cerely hope to serve you with the new CitiSun.

Yours truly,

[:;s Cruces Citizen

CITISUN arrives in your . SUNJVE;WS . Sm:day; Feb. 2Jl

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I , ' • 5: Wind & Sand - Friday, Feb. 16, 1968 Buni Krlee;;, 4 Aces WSMR Third at las Vegas Bowling Classic White Sands Missile Range placed third in last week's Military Bowling Classic held in Las Vegas, Nev. One-hun<:Ired and eight teams participated in the an­ nual classic, including five teams from Hawaii and a team from Vietnam. More than 600 individuals took part in the tournament. I A Nqvy team from Port Hueneme, Calif., took first rrr;~,~t:.:~~;,~:l'.fixed Conple:; Lc~gue ,1!~~~la:st high for the Sports B~~~~~' at 508. 1111 S P0 RT s place with total pin fall of 2,- week won 8 g-ames this week Gene Yuliana set a new career 1111 1 949. Sunnyvale Air Force Ba~e 201 and 165 for a 558 series. and now hold a 3 ::rnmc bluge high, a 200 game, and paced 111 J.J1 was second with 2,813 and Gary Studdard rolled 220, 162 WSMR was third with 2, 785. and 160 for 550. Ike Hall lo~s~cl over two team~ tied for ~rccmd th.e Wheeler Dealers to a 6-2 .l l l~"1!ilm11 11 it II I Ill In ·'B" Divi~:nn action, where wm over the Go Getters. Norm; I The White Sands team con- a 540 series with 225, 1!i4 and 161 sistedof Manny Medeiros, B i I I games. Bill Richardson tos~cct the Four Ace~ once held a more an? Lene Piper took series hon-' t • T 1 ('1 C 1 • H • d C B 1· Ip Cl Richardson, Ike Hall, Al Fuku- games of 152, 200 and 168 for a lhan commancling leN!. l.ht>rf' ors for_ the Wheeler Dealers. ea quar~eIS o. JaCt\.pot OU' 1ng otarts 1...)00/l ' eps ose shima :ind Gary Studdard. 520 count. are ties for third, fifth and i ~orm with 188-530 and Lene with Holds Top Spot 4 2 The WSMR team bowled Listed below arc the f i u a l seventh position. The Four Ar·•·s ' .1.Gll- i:s . I Something new is coming to Roadrunner Lanes. against Langley Air Force Base, team standings of the first 30 Va., in the team total part of the positions. Bum_ J>ivisin 98?1.:.5457 No. Starting this Saturday night Jackpot Bowling will get ~~~~ h;:~~~t\~ea~~o~~t ~~ o~~: . ~e~~,,, I1!ie!~,a~?.!l~~~~n~- Ind ·10s EM tourney and came up with game 1. Port Huenemr, Calif. 2!!-19 Shooting Stars. IChvw Hound~ underway at 8 p.m. , In thl·s week's act1'on the Bum Sourdoughs 8i-57 1 is curretly holding down the Jackpot bowlin.,cr is based on the use of three differ- totals of !l67, !154 and 855 for to- I 2. Sunnyvale Air F'orcc B::ti.e tal wood of 2,785 aud t h 1 r d R l 82-621 top ~pot in Intramural Vollcy- 2813 Knees too!: all eight games from oa( runni~r~ ent colored pins. If one of these pins is in a spare notify I place. Lan~lcy ended up in a · _ ·ng the oni.'.' 7 & lO·s 68-'16 · ball with a 3-0 record. b f . t 't H h I d tile Puss~, B L Cats' Pulll three way tic for 19th place with 3. W.S.M.R. Army, 278::i. shutout of_ the evening. Frank_, Sn~akers 59-85 , Rec·apping- recent vol l ey b a II a spotter e ore attemptmg to Conver l · OW illUC ow ea and Mary Robinson paced the Neighbors 58-hG. action sho\\'s Company A win- money you win by picking a spare with a colored pin is 2,676 total wood. 4. Nellis Air l<'orce Dase. rary wi'th 9.492 and Sports 56-88 ning o\·er the Medics No. 1, determined by where it appears on the alley. Manny Medeiros p a c c d the 2782. Knees' l\ 18 ~.ood WSMR team with a 617 total for 52-92 t 1 d d f t · f t 'k League leading El lndio's are 5. Marine Air (Santa Ana) Fr ~nk wi'th• 163-478. ·r1gcrs 8-15, l.'5-12, J5-7 in the firs p nze· money is· am a.war e ors rmgs o s n es. the three games. · Manny h a d Theu Four Aces and the Road- Ic ourt esy p ays _ _ _ 48 -96 game on Febrna.ry sixlh. Me- E n t ry f ee IS· $2 . 50 per person f or three games and th e nearing a critical point in the games of 179, 237 and 201. Al 2767. runners split their match. Al 1 , "B" Divmon ' di:--s No. 2 won the second tournament is open to military personnel, dependents stta~d!ngfs,d dfuet to a rectenft Fukushima had games of 192, 6. Fort Huachuca, Ariz., f Fukushima pared the Aces at 1 Four, . Aces• 100-44 , game b y a f or e1·t as th e "'~ro • 1 an d r 1· v1. ians. res1·a· ing on post. s h rmg·. o t. e. eaht s, seven ou o 2758. • 0 92 52 1 f - d H t 7. Edwards Air Force Ba::;e, 185-521 while Ike· Hall led the IShootm . b Stars 89 --- I m lc t 0 s h OW lip. cad qnar- I There 1~. approximatelv· 50 different. pin com bin at- I eir. la 1> e1g games. Three T•Ie d F or Roadrunners with 190-490. Jams ,. -aa 1 t ·8 c " N 0 1 -111 · 'd · " . · I Tne top three teams of the 2734:. Cho ... irounds took si·x of ei'ght ~ok.crs \l, 1ld 86-58 ei ompan, · " PP< I t10ns and other factors that, 1£ successfully converted, "' ·t M 's League a e now p· O'L 11181 1 t . 8. Lake Mead Base Lakers, .. :i • 80 64 I Denhil in the third set, 15-7, d d 'th . . c c l en r 1rs In oop from the Splitters as Bill Sment Splitters - 15 . - ~ are rewar e WI prize money. I""sepc1-ated bv only three and a 2no. Wh I D 1 80 64 lJ- and fa-1.:.. For m 0 · . f t· J k t B l' · · . I tossed a 188-539 and Dottie Sam- ee er. ea ers - On the Seventh HHeadquar- ' ~ "1 orma 10n on ac po ow mg VISlt haJf games. El Indio's 50¥2 A look at the Officer's Bowl- 9. Bt!P ERS, Vl'ashington, D. ford a 193-476. Internat~on<\ls :~~~ ters No. 1 whipped the Nll.vy roadrunner lanes_ wins are followed closely by ing League standings reYeals a c., ~12fl. Jack find Lou Knight led the ~'t:·~y Cats 59_85 10_15, 15_11, 15_8 while ni the the Pepsi Peps and Head- three way tie for first place, 10. Andrews Air l•'orce. Base, Sourdoughs to a 6-2 win over · 48_96 second game ERDA dumped hunters, with 487.i: and 47 wina and a two way tie for the 2710, '· I the 7&1's. Jack tossed 208-501 Go Getters the MP _ . _ , _ _ respectively. twttom slot. 72 16 14 10 15 15 13 11. Lowery Air Fvrce Base, while Lou had l68-4 · H d t N 0 1 · d In last weeks action the then ; ·: c d H d 2710. The Shooting Stars, in second B b l/ c ea quar ers · game .1 TJ;'roop omman , ea quar- in "B" Division, cut a little ase a ets its third victory on the eighth eighth place Leftouts whipped ters Staff and the Mecl,i~•(ltre 12. El Centro "A'', 2708. more into the lead held by he of Febmary by whipping Me- the top place rollers three out in the lead with 1~-8 ttrfords. 13. Beaufort No. 1 MCAS Four Aces by taking six of eight UT!l Jerwarv at dies No. 2 15-6 and 15-2. ERDA of four games. This week the ARMTE stands 14~4'l • . SEN- s. c., 2697. from the BB's. Prezy Lazo took U~ J got a forfeit victory over Den- . Indio's suffered again this SEA 12-12, Na.tion\tl J:\.ailge Op- 14. Naval Training Center series honors for the Stars with JT/(1 ii !TD }Ti ;fa· ~ch J tal when they couldn't get a time at the hands of second erations 10-14, ancj,.ithe Mar- S. D. a 459 serie~ and Ding Dameg , ty Ji Ylil Yl j 1 1 full team on the floor. Dental Ra place Pepsi, losing all four aude1-s and Navy are tied up 15. North Island NAS No. 2, contributed a 177-453. subsequently dropped out of G nge Management ico on Frazer Mountain in the games. for the number seven spot, 6- 2695. T t th WSM1 The Jams and Courtesy Pays ryou s tor e R b ase- Intramural Volleyball and were roup Meets Snowmobile-Carson Nationalwill Forest. Changes in league standing 18. 16. Norton Air Force Ruse, split. Harn· and Babs Johnson ball team begin around March replaced by a team from SEN- .The 21st annual program of "" Join Force~ came when the Mets stepped 2694. Jed the Jams, Harry with 178- 1st but it is necessary to re- SEA. the Amel'ican Society of Range A Snowmobile trek this up out of la.st place at the ex- Lloyd Guy, of Troop Com- 17. Warren .Air Force Base, 457 and Babs with 16.9-428. Dar gisier your name wi'th the or- The final game of the eighth Management 1·s' in progress comi ng weekend, "the first pense of the st1ikeouts who mand, toppled 557 pL>i.s to take 2691. Shipe took honors for Courtesy ga izers prior· t o the s tar t o f saw the Navy trounce Head- now in Albu q uerque, F e b ruary 1arge-scale. exclusively New seem to have done just that. high scorer position for the 18. Luke Air Force Base, Pays with 189-482. practice. quarters No. 2 15-11 and 15-8. 12-15· Mexican Sno-fari," starts out The Leftouts too, have jock- evening. 2682. Paul and Lia Mc Manus led So far aout 15 men have Navy gained its second vie- The State Game Commis- at 9 :30 a.m. Saturday morn- eyed toward the rail and 'J;roop Command split the 19. Langley Air Force Base, the Internationals to a 7-1 win signed up and many have been tory on the 13th over Medics sion and the Department of ing. The meeting place is 12 grabbed off seventh position bill with ARMTE 4-4, as did 2676. from the Tigers. Paul tossed n heard to comment that they No. by the scor-es of _ and Game and Fish are well repre- miles east of Tierra Amarila f th 203-578 "'h1'Je L1·a threw 184-426. 1 15 5 rom e s 1eepers. the Medics with NRO. Sensea T. Moffett Air Force Base, " plan on playing but have not 15 7 At th 8 am t· H ad sented. In the orientation ses- on unfi11; ~,hcrl US J-TiH,,.hway th 2676. The Sne11kers took six from - · e e ime e - 0 Lee Witsman paced e took 6 out of the 8 from Navy, called. q arters No 2 was wh'pping sion on Monday, Dr. Frank C. 64. · h T. CINCPACFLT Hawa!l, 0 569 and Headquarters Slaff fol­ ~~~er:n:i~~7_D~~r~~o1:nJo~~~ Everyone with baseball ex- :i:edics No. -2, 15-7 and I 15-7 Hibben, commission chairman, Participants will take the Pe~~gs~:~~~ ;:~k :a:-e h~n­ lowed suit over the Marauders. 20. Kirtland Air Force Base, White of the Sneakers each pick- perience, as a coach or player, and Headquarters No. 1 was spoke on early man in the new highway to the Tierra ors for the Indios with 196, 2675. Other high scorers of the ed the 5-7 split. is ·urged to call SSG Medeiros beating ERDA 15-9 and 15-6. Southwest; and Samuel H. Amarilla Creek Pass, into the while Roger . Santos tossed a 21. Willow Grove Naval Air Gary and Luciana Studdard or SSG Smith at 8-2486 or Standings Lamb, assistant chief of game Carson National Forest, past 489 series. evening were Stan Givetz of Station, 2671. Paced the Neighbors to a 6-2 8-2619 at the earliest possible Headquarters No. 1 3 0 management, had as his sub- historic Hopewell Lake, where SENSEA with a 501, John 22. Offutt Air Force Base, d t Jozefowski of NRO with a 501 victory over the Good Sports. a e. Co. A 1 0 J·ec t s o u thwes t em game range they will be met by snow- Larry Siegfried'sthe 203-213-Head- 2667. also, and John Kiely of Head­ ERDA 2 1 improvement. mobilers from Tres Piedras. 213 games gave 23. Beaufort No. 2 South quarters Staff with a4.91. Headquarters No. 2 2 1 Lamb also has an unusual Proceeding to Tusas, tl1ey wlll hunters a 629 series, high for ------Carolina, 2659. Angels Wi:den 'A' Division Navy 2 1 leave their snow machines and the night, as he led his team . 24. Marinue Air STN (Cher­ Medics No. 2 1 2 exhibit <{ll display - products travel by bus to Taos_ to a three game victory over enough to put his team on the ry Point), 2657. - 0 of his avocation: 53 plates he the No Names. victory list. 25. Alameda Coast Guard, Lead, Stackers Lose in 'B' Medics No. 1 2 has made from that number Sunday morning the return No Names honors went to El ~dio 501h 29% 2649. SENSEA 0 2 of woods derived from trip takes off from Tusas for Joe Christoff with a 179 game Pepsi Peps 48% 31~1:! 26. Schofield Barracks Ha~ 259 MP 0 2 and shrubs of New Mexico. another 30 miles by snow- and Tom Kenny's series. IHeadhunters 47 33 wait, 2648. This week was position night 1 have to settle for a tie of sorts A slide show features wild- mobile. o. A. Washburn, the 551 No Names 44 36 27. Vandenburg Air Force in the Intramural League and in second place because the Golf Tourney Set life of New Mexico. This was Game Department's informant Al Nollner led the 7-8-9 to 7-8-S's 39%: 40 16 the Blue Angels took advantage Zappers won all four of their prepared by Jesse E. Williams, in this matter, says, "Every- a split with the Luckouts with Luckouts 37 43 Base, 2645. 28. Mt. Home Air Force of il to beat the second place contests this week and both For February 22 chief of information and edu- one who can beg, borrow or 187-550· Leftouts 36 1'2 43~,2 Base, 26H. Sprints four times, increasing teams have 54 and 26 records. So far 24 golfers have entered cation with the Game Depart- buy a snow-machine will be The Luckout's Gary Stud- Sleepers 3572 441h 29. Skaggs Island, 2629. their hold on first place in "A" The Rotaters however, have ac- the Member-Guest golf tourna- ment. handshaked backpatted a.nd

IOI tHi MAH WHO CAUi ' •

• 11.. 1 ETS@.· l nappy Husban is a big order, but here are The Untouchable Heart, an illustrated booklet just published 1 a fow ideas to traces cardiac surger.v from the ancients to heart transplants •• '. help us create reco~d~ th~ myth~. ignorance and frustrations which impeded the happy eli­ medical science, and show,; how Pxperimental work on animals m ate we a 11 By EDWARD DENZLER Richdale told us "How to provided many of the real breakthroughs. Single copies free on want. Area. Governor Evaluate." request; _additional copit>s lOc each. Write the National Society Welcome him. home at night. Open letter to the Publisher for Medical Res<."arch, 1330 Massachusetts Ave., N.W., Washing­ It was a close race for Best ton, D.C. 20005. Resolve that nnd Staff of the Citizen Speaker a.ward with five fine there'll be no Jn tbi'> our last colwnn in the speeches to vcte on. Ed Denz­ If !!hopping for furniture seem~ a task that's hard to face do a more half-hearted g1·eeting while you go right on stirring some­ ()ltize11 we would llke to ex· ler in a number five Leadrship little advance reading and-- learn ·what-- questions to ask when you're thing on the stove or putting the prP!'IS our l!;incere thanlts and Through Speech Project on in the store. Three booklets from Kroehler Mfg. Co. will give you the background you neerl on furniture: Let's Talk About Quality baby ·to bed. Tell him how glad :tppreciation to the Staff of the Art of Conversation spoke you are he's home and· he'll never • the Citizen. Tho splendid CO· m And Construction, Let's Talk About Upholstery Fabrics, and Let's on "Confucius Say!" Warren Talk About Furniture Styling, St>nd 25c to Kroehler Mfg. Co., get tired of hearing it. operation and assistance given Klein with barnyard vocal 1) No problem; 2) lllild to mr11e; JI bad to 1tV11re: 4) most 'ewre.. Plan a little while just to ~ CJ N0tst coastal air; I) inchlstrlal fallout; RI rDlld dttmk.lls; II) humldltJ. ltJ Dept. ASR, 666 .N. Lake Shore Dr., Chicago, Ill. 60611. t.o us by the paper since our together before the demands of variety completed a number DE TR 0 IT, MICHIGAN - areas in which moistme ·and deteriomt.es brake Jin.es and family living engulf you. And, be column first appeared in J955 fiv~ in Basic Training called The u. s. Department of Com- dirt can accumulate. And, U is steering apparatus, and some There are approximately 5,000 private clubs (country club!!, a. good listener. Often, just tell­ 11as bl.'cn indelibly etched in our "The Good Old Days." A num­ merce reports that corrosion now an accepted fa.¢ tl:lat most 11eets report that' 40 per cent athll'lic clubs, town and luucheou clubs, university clubs, etc.) in ing us how they feel helps men lei Toastmaster momentoes. The is begins of their brake lines are rust --·-- ber three in Basic entitled, loss.'in the United States rust from the inside. the U.S. and some 200 new ones are opening each year. Together, I oft' steam. excellent co\'erage of our spe­ "Why Ski?" was the question estimated at $10-billion annual· rather than from the outs!da c!Nnaged after two years of they make up a $3,00Q,000,000 annual industry, with a payroll of I Encourage him to change into cial evento;;. the willingness of put to the group by Mike ly and, perhaps 50 per cent Of as had been the popularly ac· service. $750,400.000. Jobs in private club management pay up to $35,000 , eomfortable clothes. Putting on this Ioi;s is 1n the automotive cept.ed theory. and there are more job!! than qualified people to :fill them. For a a sports shirt and slacks a nd a the staff to ruosist us in our The a,uto lndt.1,!try's advances Mutter. Introducing himself to field. It appears this :figure is &It, either' from the 'air in In surface rvst protectives, free booklet, Club l\lanagement-a Path to a Rewarding Future, pair of loafers is almost. like put· spe<'ial projects, will never be the club with his first speech on the rise. coa.stal regions or from <\& costly salt additives now in use write to The Club Managers Association of America, Dept. A, Iting l)n a holiday mood for most forgotten. was C. Y. Banegas, he called it One of the contributing tao- icing chemicals. has of~ by cert.a.in municipalities, and 1030 15th St., N.W.. Washington, D.O. 20005. men. tors is 1968 vehicle body design. been felt to be the principal \Ve know that these same simply "This is C. Y.". Round. undercoating w hi c h reaches Keep meal-times a~ peat!i!fUl as This, ·a 1 o n g with industrial culprit in speeding up rust only 12 per cent of a vehicle's possible. You can e\imin.atAl a lot efforts, <'a1 ri~d over into your ing out the oratory was Jim fallout and air pollution, moist destrucUon. However, recent The Gallery, free homemakers' guide to current wall decor, tells rust problem areas are all how to 8elect, arrange, and care for pictures, frames, and mirrors. of irritation by serving food that nrw Yt>nture - '.i'he Clti-At•n, Lyon with a number three Be­ and salty coast a 1 air, road studies, such as those con­ attempts to s o 1 v e the rust --·-- your whole :family likes, even if yond Basic. Jim's title was chemicals, heated gar a g e s, ducted by the Ontario CCan­ Wrire Picture and FrjUile Institute, P. 0. Box 3342, Chicago, this means repeating some dishes. will produ<'e a Sunday supple­ dilemma. Ill. 60654. mmt of the greatest magni­ "Enlighten Me." Denzler was snow and just plain water - ada' Highway ;Department, $re Still another, and probabIJ Let your children know what a • voted Best Speaker and Klein the principal causes of rust spr-eificallf r e p o r U n g that the most complete Of the rust. special man their father is. Their tude. and corrosion - points 1;oward "atm05Phere po)lutlon rather The lx>nefits of a good water supply in the home and how to respect and affection (like yo11r most improved. preventing activities, fS after· achieve this are illµstrated in a new eight-page two-color brochure, • • • continuing rust problems for tha1• salt is shaping up as the mark.et :rustproofing. own) will nourish him. car and truck owners through· real villain lD the rusting of Good Water Is A Family -Affair,· -reviews what conditioned watf'r When you bring up family fi· Chief Evaluator Phil Kalten­ The meeting was called to One firm (Ziebart Process can do to help improve washing, cooking and cleaning. For copies bach put evaluators, Val Ma­ out the U. S. automobiles." nances, watch your timing. Try order by Doyle Mathews of the Although auto companies Over New· York City alone, Corp, Of Detroit) US4lS patented write Bruner Corporation, 4767 North 32nd Road, Milwaukee, to learn something yo11-rself about and Executive Committee. George gallanes, John Tpmlin, Ted spend millions of dollars each almost 600,000 tons of sulfur equipment strategically Wisconsin 53209. savings plans and insurance, !'O Ryan, George Rueth and Bob year on rust preventives, an dioxide is in the air and a located access hOles t.o get to that ¥nducive to corrosion. lng ~ increa.5ing safety prob- Post O f f i c e Department, the. O!ten those curving lines lem. The Society o! Automo­ U. S. Army and Navy, auto and L.AIWEST STOCK WESTERN WEAK IN attracUve to the eye lead to tive Engineers (SAE> ha8 truck fleets and lDdividUal car THE SOUTHWEST conftned, · p o or l y ventilated stated that salt spray rapidly owners. ~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~- Beat 10-oz. csn "Very" Dutch Chocola:e Liqnid Diet Food in saucepan until steaming. Do J)Ot boil. Pour i11t'l mug. Top with marshmallow. (250 calories) Ambrosia Slirub Beat 10-oz. can chl1ltd "'Very" Ban11na Liquid 1· ' 14 cup orange sherbet until frothy. Garnish wi1 . n.t. Serve immediately, (291 calories) Buttencotch Frost I Whir lO·oz. can chilled "Very" Butterscotch Liquiu Diet l<'ood and 1h cup vanilla ice milk in a blender for a few eeconda. USN. MA.IN LA:S ORUCE!!I, N. M. Serve immcrliately. (285 calories) the existing nimmittee was in. structed to pursue additional I ------,--~-· -·-- avenues to effect a satisfactory agreement. I *STATEMENTS Leon Waskiewiez was Toast- : * LETTERHEADS master. Table Topics ":'ere i dh;pensed with, Three previous *ENVELOPES *HANDBILLS 1 Vacation w pay. week winners in the Serious 1 Speech Contest held runoff\ competition today. Those *TICKETS * cmCULARS t Rpeakers were Bill Steele, Sam j t I Bone Jr. and Jack Jones. Bill I t Steele was voted winner by • judges as well as popular ac· claim. Jack Jones was voted II alternate. Judges were Don Navrakal, I Robert Hagzman, George Ruff, Remy Leinbach and Larry Rios. 'T'!i,e meeting oprned wilh a r<.p<'rt. 011 the upcoming Char­ ter Night. This is to be a Ladies Night and will be held I in Las Cruces on March 6, 1968. DlgnitAA"ies .from the Dis- I trict and Area Offices as well u members from neighboring clubs have been invited. Pre· dident Cecil Hudson was Toast­ printing needs from labels md.ster and Lou Sala handled Table Topics. to business forms. We'll Acting as members of the United Nations Security Coun· do them promptly and ell, the Toastmasters 11resent I gave their countries views on economically to suit you! Eastern~ low fares help you the Pueblo incident. I Call today ••• let's discu$$ Wally Skidmore in giving a I make an inexpensive getaway number three speech in Basic your requirements. No Training F):' .,kc on "The Birds and the Bees." Skidmore was 1 charg11 for estimates. J a.warded the tcophy for ~est ~ch of the ;Jay. Bob U ._ ~r- 11:i.x followed with his number *OFFICE AND FACTORY FORMS four talk in Basic entitled "Mean Wnat You Say - Sny \Vhat You Mean." Visitor Ed * SNAPOUT FORMS * SALES BOOKS VI; Denzler lntronnced hLrself to ti;l. the rl11b with an Ice -R~e aker BUSINESS CARDS * REGISTER FORMS Round-trip daycoach within th~ i called "From VSMR to WS- ' * U.S. applies any time except Fn1 :MR.'' I day noon to Saturday noon/Sun'"! Chief Evaluator Ed Camp- I Your choice of special fares right day noon to Monday noon (ond1 bell was :ibly assisted by fel­ NO JOB TOO SIJIALL AND now! Either Eastern's low-cost low evaluators, F. Ecnw.bcl, \ other peak travel times). Good forj r:. Hall, and R. \Villoughby. , NONE TOO LARGE •.. FREE ESTl/JtlATES! tourist fare leffective the year maximum of 30 days, except you, "Shoulrl. Wf'. Put Pants on, around) Eastern's Round-Trip Ex· cannot return during the same cal., Zoo Animals?'' "How Corne' cursion Fare (25% off of reg ula r Only Mn.rrict1 Men Have Vc.1- t~··Pue;t~ R~co, Bermuda, The Bo· endor week. Note: 25% discount! round-trip, doycoach fare) or excursion fare not applicable to un teered To Go To the Moon?'' ! Eastern's money-saving "Family ha mas or Mexico I " ..;11, .1;1<1 Re:;t:mrants in New You can charge your whole vaca­ Youth, Family Plan, Air-Shutt!~ Mexico BP Allowed to Serve Plan" (a child - two through 21- Excursion or Military fares. Alcoholic Beverages on Sun­ l~as goes for VJ fare, Mom goes for % tion! With Eastern's Charge-A· day?" These were some of the fare, and Dad goes for full fare. Trip you can pay as little as $10 a Table Topics presented by J "Home of Triple A A A Printers" One week? Two weeks? Three month. And you can charge air CJ"l1.irman, Al Norlss, at this\ fare, hotels, meals, sightseeing, al­ PUBLISHERS OF LAS CRUCES CITIZEN AND WIND 8c SAND weeks? Four weeks with pay? ~ EASTERN wf'ek's meeting. The word of Make it an exciting vacation this most everything. For immediate ~ the week, "Hubris" as ex­ 114 S. Church St. Las Cruces, N. M. year. Let Eastern show you how to details, see Eastern or your Travel by We want everyone to_ f~ plained Henry Schippman end dull vacations with a getaway Agent. gave us a new word for our - Phone 6-5575 - :- 6-5576 - expanding vocabulary. The point of Emphasis by Harry • • __ 7: Wind & Sand- Friday, Feb.16, 1968 'WANT -Calendar Facts And Fancies- JV/odern Arnzy New York (NAPS) - If early Time, Seed Time and Harvest free, is the most asked-for and Pope Gregory XIII corrected Vietnam Vignettes ADS Mexicans followed the ancient Time .•• and this ancient cal· widely - distributed calendar in this by directing that ten days eLASSlll'JED RA'r~s c u s to m of naming calendar cndar remained the most accur· the world - proving that man be "dropped" ! r o m the calen­ Still Ifunts Minimum 1 cash> . . . . • . • $1.00 months after events that to o k ate until the middle of U1e 16th still expects his calendars t 0 • th h d th t Mmin1urn 1 charge1 ...•. Sl.00 place m· thci' · th p tu nar; en e announce a Who holds the record for quite, but Sgt. Tony \"ard Ads contaimn:: 10 word: use in the humid tropics. Green wit.h ma.telling Nile - over 6000 years ago. vidual items. These include dcc-1· a 365-day year. equal and all holidays on week- a foxl1ole in Vietnam? Not two-and-a-half by. one-and-a- The sandbaas, m a d c from 8 interior. air cond., pow- Their calendar had 12 months oratina tips fishing and planting Ho ev c • t' ends. That mi2'ht put a stop to by one and a half fee1., , . .,1 P1 as t' 1c, f1'b erg1 ass, and o th e r 0 erini:, bralH power.-s, power windows, steer- of 30 days each' and added five. mformation. " . • ( but no se.ason for of onew day<'r, inaesar four syears correc made ion those lovely "longu week-ends", E I sent to a 9th Infantry Divlsi._ n ~reated and_ untreaterl mater- days at the end of the vear for a "leading out the oxen") and t l e 1 d 1 ti but for once the world would be mp oyes Save officer rt Tan An. v1·etnam re- ials, are bemg exposed under er.power whltt·wall s<'at, radio, heat- total· of 36.5 days. The · year was even' recipes and household· thel yearca enof thear yearseasons onger _ which ian consistent in something! Pive Fi 1 i Pr' l' Pl t cently "Major Richard E. Crot- varyirg conditions to determim• tlr•·~.., Thi~ d ' 'd d · l th f hint Th · 1 d h' h et m mg an t • ffect. In 1582, consistency? Only time will tell. 2-!0 hours uf annual leave to . e.s an eac qua 1 <'rs om- . t d 1 · ous~s~ ------· 3d B · d 1.. · . msec s an rocents. car. T • • R •fl their creclit. They were Joseph 1pony, riga e, ~cen ed the , , . " . ,, ranung I e I N t d L d Butler, Albert Rivera, FetlcriC'O Icard from Amern. el I esters report no he>~t bag CACTUS On Helicopters 1, A1·nzy C'1 f l)Z11'ef 0 e ea ers Rivern,. . .' L awrence. R ocl uguez•' card frmo. American Legion hassults .been still selected, are incomplete although Some re- Space Jo1"n Marshall an

--SPECLU.NOr1'ICES-.-- launches scheduled from either Followin,!!" an Inc en ti v e The chief of Department of 1of the George C. Marshall Re- Three days or less of sick -- I ------______Kennedy Space Center, Fla., or 1 Awards suggestion by CPT Da- the Army's Command Informa· search Foundation. leave was recorded on the Two95 teams of officers from WANTED: Responsible pa.rty the Western Test Range at Lom- 1vid Price, a former instructor tion Program, Colonel Charles General of the Army om a r cards of tho folowing men at the th Civil Affairs Group at to take over payments on poc, Calif. at the Army Aviation School, a R. Thomas, Jr., will address N. Bradley, Foundation presi- the Printing Plant: Nick Nie- Fort Gordon, Ga., will travel to 1964 CA:C.ILLAC 1967 Singer full automatic 1 Th S . d . d single .50 caliber rifle has military and civilian personnel dent, s aid the additions in- to, Robert Miller, Michael Tal- U. S. Army lnstallations 4 DOOR SEDAN PIANO TEACHER RECENT- e urveyor senes, e.signe I been · instalod on training from Fort Bliss and adjacent lon and Roger Van Lankvelt. throughout the U. S. during the ly moved to Las Cruces. Still to analyze the lunar soil and I helicopters to replace the four military installations on Milita· creased the board's member· A1bert Rivera and Federico first half of 1968 to present lee· I DEVILLE hal'I some openings. _ photograph the lunar surface, J 7.62mm machineguns and the ry Information Tuesday, Feb. ship to 38. )fost of the members Rivera did not take {lny siC'k turcs on civil affairs. The three- cond., full power '17. 524 will make its final appearance 2 75 inch rocket pods for e l 27 at Fort Bliss were associated wi"th General leiwe during the a 8 t man teams will conduct training ~ I1 · · m r Y ' : P year. sessions for instructors in each and a.II the extra ac­ 7 Feb. 8-9-comb-lschg. as \\ill the Atlas Agena vehicle. used. After completing work on his :\1'arshall during his career, (CILR) continental U. S. Army area to cessories. A very ---- The hydrogen. fuel Centaur will · Before ~e adoption of the new master's _degree in journalism which included service as U.S. assist units in obtainino- quali- one owner car. OFFSET AND MIMEOGRAPH . ~, ·< tem, pilots had to learn the at the Umversity of Wisconsin in . . " work. Olhausen Printing Co. be used for future unmanned m- difficult art of firing rockets_ a January 1966, COL Thomas he· A.rm y Cluef of Staff durmg Limit Raised the civil affairs teams are C:::ACTUS Ph. !l-2085. Pickup and delivery terplanetary probes and high alr Imatter of aiming the aircraft came head of the Army's world· World War II and later as Sec· working in the First U. S .. Ar· on orders over $5.00. titude Earth orbital launches. Isince the rocket pods are fixed- 1wide internal information pro- Defenseretary of State and Secretary of ardThe for maximum men entering height the standU. S.- my. area, including Forts Bel- MOTOR CO. Citizen 12·28 lTNC Two unmanned tests of the by practicing with the rockets gram. COL Thomas also has a I · Army and u. s. Air Force has ' wwmd an

'67 Rambler $2595 ~ ;'l.LAC Amba'!sador 990 Sport Coup~. every ~~t~~ .. 11,000 mile~ . Cost $1300. DR. FLEETWOOD 2- '66, '64 Impala ...... $1495 up SEDAN Super Sport coupes, all extras, Extra nice. cond., power steer­ '65 Imperial Crown . ing, power brake!>, pow­ Hardtop Cou]Wi. All extras. er seat, power windows, '65 Rambler .. whitewall tires, radio. 660 Classic, 6 c)·il~d~~· ..;d~~- Uk~ ·~~~:· ...... heater. Very nice. Gold '64 T-Bird Coupe ...... $1995 with fawn interior. Factory air, low mileage, e..xtra clean. CALL SALLY '63 Pontiac ...... $1095 CACTUS Catalina 4 Door. Pull;\-" equipped, low mileage, MOTOR CO. THE SHOPPER 1601 N. \fain La,, Cntces, N. M. 524-9637 BLISS AUTO SALES TOLL FREEi 4730 Pershing 666-1616 ·------·------s: Wind & sand- Friday, Feb. 16, 1968 !Glenn Elder ~!:s ~;~:s ~~=::1 Small ·but Busy TV... JE(QM T0 President Seeks ... :; ' (Conti•u•• rrom ""' ,, Next Th':::sday (Continued from Pa~e 1) I President were: years in the South Pacific. He Gabriel G. Paz ·(Continued from Page l) highly versatile television control room. (Continued from Page 1) .. Opportunity Centers and in the • _ Increase Servicemen's was separated from active duty Vice-President or DAARC tivit ies t hey i nstall and maintain about Among the faciliti~ in the control room of the command, th~ group w1ll 1Concentrated Employment Pro- Group Life Insurance from_ ~ with the rank of lieutenant col- The Open Door Center, School 50 d iffer ent CCTV systems located in are slide and motion pict ure projection 1 include representatives of the a maximum of $10,000 to a mm1- onel. for retarded children, has sched- many areas of the Range, according t o chains, switching and m o nitoring eq up - . c C gr m . · h h' h Air Force, Manne ol'ps, om· ,. The President proposed th a r mum of $12,000 - wit ig. er He came to W11ile Sands in uled an open house from 9 a.m. Russell Brow n, civilian chief of the TV ment, an audio console, and an Ampex bn.t Developments Command, !veterans Administration coWl- amoWlts si:aled fQ ih-6 • .erv1ce- 195:1 from the Oak Ridge, Tenn., to 11:30 a.m. Thursday, Febru- Section. • VR 1000 Video Tape Recorder. Office of the Chief of Research Iseling service not only be ex- man•11 pay with a maxunum of National Laboratory, where he ary 22. Facilities Improved The Command Information Office, and Development, Anny Ma- Ipapded. but extended into th~ en- $30,000. was senmr metallurgist. Fro~ The center was established in One r eservoir of future communica- with the assistance of SP5 Fulton a n d teriel Command headquarters Itire system of military hospitals Increase the maximum guara- t19h55e two S1~9RhE~tecat~o~;:;~~~~~~c~~ 1_961 fby thRe Dodnad ACnha"ldAssocita. I tion s pote n tia l lies in the recent techn i- h is associates, has prod uced progr ams and Joint Taslt Force 2. and all of the nation's 257 mili- tee on GI home loans from $7,- . . tion or etar e I ren o . . f vVSM TV ' · Following a report on the tary separation points in order 500 to $10,00 a figure the Pres- Laborat~rie.s. He served as chief give the children an opportunity · ca1 reorgamza tion o . I - ~ eq~1p - of special interest which h ave b een • TECOM instrnmentation pro- to be certah1 that the estimated ident said is more realistic in to- of the Environmental and. Gen- to learn as much as possible I m ent. Throu g h t he creativ e eng m eer m g b r oadcast ove r WSM R-TV. gl'am by Lee E. Daviclson, 850,000 servic~men leavi.ng the day's housing market. e~al Branch, then as assistant since their I.Q. is too low to be geniou s of SP5 H enry Fulton of t he TV The many activities of t he Television other speakers and panelists armed foX:c_es Ill _the commg Ye~r -Expansion of vocational re- director for research. admitted to the public schools. ISc~ ~ion., Chann el_ 6 h as im proved cap- Section of the Commu nications Direc- \°\-ill address subjects of techni- are "fam1llar with the bene~:ts habilitation for veterans dis a- • ARMTE Directorate At the present time plans are ab1hly rn r ecording , p la yback a n d p ro- t orate serve to m a ke it a v ital compon- cal interct to conferees. that -await them as v~terans. abled while in uniform "'.hi ch Elder also served as project \being formulated to extend the Iduction of t elevision p r og r amming. ent i nmaintaining imrinrtant com muni- Scheduled presentations in- Other recommendations by the would all?w them to receive fed- officer for "Operation Plumb . l~arning fac.ilities t? other han- The 24-ye;:i !"-o]d televisi on engineer cations thr oughout the White Sands elude cli scus ~· ;ons of the combat eral t~amlng . ~Jlowan.ces f.o r j Bob," conducted at the govern- i d1capped children m the com- designed . fabrica t ed , and installed a Missile Rang\'. eITootinnu~ oour ~ ~cra~dw Goodspart-bme~mm~~~st1ll ~~~stilie~NH~a. moolt~a~~fu~re a wnthe, ------by the General Equipment Test ar holding a job. I center is being made indepen- ' Short Story l Activity, electronic trackin~ I - Increased veteran's prefer- : He became director of the dent with its own school board. I ("1 n AR A Top Engineer system technology, status of \ t· ct ence in Civil Service employ- ,Nu c 1 ear Effects Laboratory Three retarded children that . Contest Open I J£ Lf To be Honored UHF telemetry development, \Con inue from Page 1) ment to pro~ide the ~eteran who , :-Vhen it was establish_ed in ~959. attended the Open Door Center I The Armed Forc~s Writers , • • • • I. t' f 1 techni- : deYeloping agencies with re- needs expenence, skill and edu· ' rhe laboratory now is a d1rec· t d · bl' c h \ El p , E . f t h app ica io~ ; a~e~· b I quiremenl:; for testing ma- Ication with priority employment tor ate of the Deputy for Army 1as year ~ere enro11 e m pu I ILea gue has announcPd t e (Continued from Page 1) aso s ngineer-o - e- ques to ms ru_men a ion pro - , teriel untler environmental ex- Iin the first five Civil Service lev· 1 Missile ·resl and Evaluation. scho~l s this year. · : ~pening of its Am ateur Short I responsible for the repair, main· Ye:tr Award will be presented lems and the mfluence of me- t•·en1cu \•·ere also on hand. . . els, without having to compete 11 Elder i·s a viol1'nist and ama· It is_ t~e goal of the Dona Ar~a Story Contest for 19?8. . I tenance and operation of Hawk Thursday, F ebruary 22 a t the • thodology • ~ ' . b . t' Association for Retarded Chi!- The contest, ·which 1s open , missile launchers at Lc. . Interna tional Club in El Paso. . t . The annual planning session m t e regu1 ar examma wn, pro- teur photographer. He is active d d f t t ·1·t 1 d 32 Tl . d ·11 b t d More than a dozen op1cs ··d d h t . . . . rcn to open oors o oppor un- o m1 i ary pcrsonnc , epen· 1 To Receive Awards 1e awar w1 e presen e for panel discussion are also is conducted to rough out en- vi e edo caf u ri . Lutheran 5 ities, happiness, usefulness, and dents, civilian employees, Some of the special interests by the President of the Tex:ts pa~ a~~~s1 10 ~n Chur~h achvl ~f h d S b . t vironmental testing programs sue a · e u. na m Las Cruces and 15 a mem er encouragement for the Jess for and veterans is for unpublished f th s ld. f th M th · Societ'.' of Professional En- on t e agen a. u Jec s range t b onducted during the program under the GI bill. 1of a number of professional or· " . • . o c o icr o e on m· b 1 E. from considerations of instru- ? e c t t· J 1 1 -Enactment of 8 joint c 0 n- ganizations tunate children with limitations. I stories o.f 1,800 words or l~ss on ' elude track, water sports and gincers, H arry Bovay, Jr. mentation standardization, in- fiscal year s ar mg u Y YI · 1 l f · · I · The Dona Ana Association for any subJeCt. auto racing. of Houston. Mr. Bo\•ay will creased use of instrumentation TECOM:'s Arctic Test Centre ~~~!s~~~~st~e.s~ou ~:vi~:g;~~ p~~: I His wife is the for~er Eliza· Retarded Children invites all to There nre a $50 dollar first Specialist Earl will be present· a)so deliver an address. in service testing, and new at Fort Greely, Alaska, by the ority to ret~rnin: servic~me~. bet~ Goode of K~oxv1lle , Tenn. come to the open house at the prize and 25 other awal'ds. In- eel his savings bond and certiii- Admission to the affair will developments in photogram- Tropic Test ~enter Ill Panama I -Stepped-up training of medi· Their son ,_ Fred, is a st1;1dent_ at Open Door Center, located at the addition each entry will. be cate at the retirement review be by ticket only a t $5 per per­ metry to scoring miss dis- and by the desert test cen_ter cal specialists in the hope of Ne\~ Mexico State Umvers1ty. I Boy's Club on Las Cruces Ave- evaluated. for sales pot en~1al. tentatively scheduled for Feb. son. Cocktails will be served tances, CW velocimeter appli- opcr·at.od at Yuma Provmg training as many as 8 000 this j Their daughters are Mrs. Harry ! nue, Las Cruces, and see for All en1ries must be submitted 29. at 6 :30 p.m., followoo by din­ cutions, and low cost clnethe- Ground in Arizona. The con- year under the auspice; oft he IE. Mason, Mrs. Roland Her- I y?urselves the freedo~ and hap- 1on an official _entry form w_h~ch The Soldier of the Month is ner at 7 :30. Advance relierva­ odolites. Other panels will take fercnce plans for en.-ironmen- Veterans Administration. mann and Mrs. Murray Persky. , the retarded children can be obtamed by the son of Dr. and Mrs. Donald tions and payment for tickets 1 pmes~ ~re wr~ tmg up long.range planning prob- tal phases of engineering and In a companion move to the · ·------en)oym~ through the generosity to the Armed Forces Wn ~ers H . Earl of San Pedro, Calif. must be made by February . d t· service tests and for research, veterans counseli'ng plans the Iland Washi'ngton San Francis- 1 of chantable persons who care. League. George Washing- " 0 For· further m·forma t 'on !ems, lnstrument mg pro uc wn . • ' , . j St t· Al d . V The cash value of Series E and ~ . I t t t 'f ' a ; engineer design, production and President ordered the opening of co, Boston and Atlanta, w Ith ton a ion, exan ria, a. S S . B d t t d and reservations call Jim accep ance es s, spec1 1c - . . . . . • 22305 H u avings on s ou s an 11 d d t d t ather- post-production testing to be Veterans Assistance Centers in plans for similar centers m othr 1 There was a recort1 26 m1 1110n , . . . · · ~ th~ Goodrich at 678-303S (WSMR) i ons, r~l1 ~ ~n a a g d t performed or supported by the New York, Chicago Los Angel- er larger cities as soon as possi· j veterans in civil life in the Uni- 1 The contest ends Apnl 1, mg is rapidly approaching I or 751_0738 (El Paso). • ng, md et otgy, gro.unt_- o- , environmental test centers as es, "Philadelphia. , D~troit, Cleve- ble. (AFPS) ted States at the end of 1967. 1 1968. $52 billion mark. groun e1 eme ° ry app1 1ca ions . · and advancing education cap- a cutomer service. • ·1·t· ln addition to working out a1 1 1es. 1 . th ( A tour of the Air Defense tentative schedules, e con- p ras.a..tana• Board testing facilities has I ference . determines req~i~e- '-----5__ .___ • •--- 9 J1('en arranged for the last day j men_ts for troop and ctv1!11m of the conference. It will in- personn_el support, test and "lnde a demonstration of the I support items, : fu~ding ~nd ,-ulcan Chaparral air defense other nece8sary mforma tion -- ~· stem being tested by the for each recommended test ''<>ard. projects. NO UONtY After the conference work has been completed, the accu­ mulated data is compiled by i'Jllissile Range TECOM headquarters and submitted for approval by the DOWN! (Continued from Page 1) Army Mate1iel Command and 1' gement and Supervisory Techniques, Effective Writing, the Department of the Army. Records Management, Tech­ nical Writing, Report Writing Happy Hunting_--- and Position Management. (Continued from Page 3) "These latter courses will be est-to-gosh fan letter, !rom tnught by personnel from the Roscommon, Michigan of all ::>alias Regional Training Cen­ places. . t e 1·, U. S. Civil Service Com­ .:r1ission," Mr. Pa tton said, Today winds 11p this particu­ lar series of meanderings, but "imd each instnictor will be hope you will all enjoy the new outs,~~nding within his field:" set-up as well as you seem to 30 DAY PREE TBlllL ! 'r' .1;te Sarnia ranks high have this group. among Army installations for l All I can say is l ~ure hope Immediate Jet Delivery! on post training for both you'll go along with me for some civilians and military pereon- bigger and better SATISf ACTION nel. HAPPY HUNTING GUARANTEED!

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