WASHINGTON (AP)--The U.S. Commission on report, said President Nixon still opposes Marijuana and Drug Abuse has proposed that the legalization of marijuana. The commission jail terms and fines no longer be imposed for report brought qualified approval yesterday smoking marijuana in private. from young people and some But smoking pot in public local officials. still would be subject to But many law enforcement such penalties. And growing M aijuana officers opposed the recom- marijuana, selling it for mendations as too lenient or profit or possessing it with Report Debate impractical. Some officials intent to sell would remain even questioned Congress' felonies, right to legislate in an area The commission does not recommend legaliza- previously reserved for the states. And the tion of marijuana. At the White House, Deputy commission's proposal to not prosecute mari- News Secretary Gerald Warren, asked about the (Please see Par, page 2)

U.RSNAVAL BASE GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA AFL-CIO Bosses Quit Pay Board

WASHINGTON (AP)--Three AFL-CIO members of President Nixon's Pay Board resigned yesterday, saying they could no longer co- operate in a control program they viewed as slanted against the nation's workers. "In the guise of an anti-inflation policy, the American peo- ple are being gouged at the supermarket and squeezed in the THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 paychecks," said the executive council of the 13.6 million member labor organization. The announcement was made by 77- year-old AFL-CIO President George Meany that he, United Steel Workers President I. W. Abel and Machinist President Floyd Smith were quitting the board immediate- ly. Meany said he had informed the other two labor members of the Pay Board of the AFL-CIO decision, but did not know whether they might also resign. The other two are United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock and Teamsters Union President Frank E. Fitzsimmons, who were invited to but did not attend yesterday's meeting of the AFL-CIO ex- ecutive council. Meany said Woodcock told him by tele- phone from Detroit the Auto Workers ex- ecutive board will consider the matter. The Auto Workers and the Teamsters are UAW President Leonard Woodcock, left, confers with not among the 129 unions in the AFL-CIO. AFL-CIO's George Meany and ste elworkers' I. W. Abel. (Please see LABOR, page 2) Page 2--LATE NEWS ROUNDUP Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, March 23, 1972 LABOR-LABOR from E"page one Meany, reading the statement of the 35-member AFL-CIO GAZETTEER Executive Council, said the Pay Board was stacked .a digest of late news against labor and that only wages were being controlled while prices, profits, rents and other business income continued to climb. "Meanwhile, millions of American workers remain un- employed, their wages frozen at zero, with no real pro- spect of relief," he said. Meany charged that the Nixon administration was moving House passed a sickle cell The anemia prevention toward complete government control of the nation's bill yesterday after rejecting an amendment that would economy unless labor can stop it. have brought Cooley's anemia under the legislation to "The Russian worker is controlled by government and battle blood disease. Sickle cell anemia is a chief kil- Russian business is controlled," Meany said. ler of blacks. Cooley's anemia affects those of Italian, "This is the road this administration is traveling," Greek and Spanish backgrounds. he said. The AFL-CIO walkoff from the Pay Board followed its Adam Clayton Powell, 63, former New York recent rejection of a 20.9 per cent wage hike for West congressman , yesterday remained on the critical list at Coast longshoremen and an earlier rejection of an 12 a hospital in Miami. Two women, each claiming to be per cent hike for aerospace workers represented by the Powell's wife, were near his bedside Tuesday. The former machinists and automakers. The business and public mem- U.S. House of Representatives member is in a coma. bers of the Pay Board said the aerospace workers could have a raise of about 8 per cent this year and that named a 53-year old Britain yesterday career dip- longshoremen could have one of 14.9 per cent. lomat, Anthony Golds, as its first ambassador to the newly-appointed state of Bangladesh. Golds, now serving as ambassador to three African countries, has previously one served for two years in Calcutta and New Delhi. POT- from page juana users but to not legalize it either was, in the barricaded himself in a second- A young man mind of Alabama Public Safety Director W.L. Allen, like floor apartment and began shooting into the street early "trying to follow the line of being just a little preg- yesterday. He held Albany police at bay for more than nant." five hours before apparently turning a gun on himself, Allen said he was in total disagreement with the com- authorities said. mission and he described the recommendation for ending criminal penalties of users as "another incidence of A tanker went aground on a reef in Long Island national assininity." Sound Tuesday, spilling a 10-square-mile slick of home But many student leaders around the country said the heating oil, the Coast Guard said. It was the second national commission "had taken a step in the right major oil spill in the sound in 15 months. A Coast Guard direction." said it would be "almost impossible" to con- spokesman "I agree with the commission's report," said Mary tain the slick so it could be cleaned up. Scifres, student body president at Indiana University. "For too long young men and women have been penalized isno longer just another pretty Burt Reynolds for using a drug whose effects are not as harmful as Cosmopolitan magazine's first face. The brawny actor is alcohol, in my opinion." male nude, unblushingly sprawled out in the centerfold Alan Fong, co-president of students at the University of the April issue, an unadorned Adam for ogling by a of California at Berkeley, said the commission did not readership of Eves. go far enough. is needed, including sale," Fong announced today the launch "Full legalization The Soviet Union said. of Cosmos 479 the latest in its series of secret un- The commission recommended that felony penalties be manned satellites. Tass said Cosmos 479 was launched continued for growing and trafficing in marijuana. yesterday irto an orbit with a high point of 341.1 miles and a low point of 321.2 miles.

Stateside Temperatures Guantanamo \% Gazette Atlanta clear 50 fa. arianMeanley Capt. Heb Alford Boston cloudy 47 eman,,der coaneding officer snow 25 d. . r I.,Mhite Afftaie Officr Chicago Jo3 Allan Smith. . Edito Dallas clear 64 Local Forecast d. Hich. iant Editor JUN Vie-e it.ey. .Pr ctio Tehnii Denver clear 52 JZN Keith Sandl. . sprt. Editor -N Irank Kutl .Staff -tist snow 28 Mostly clear with scattered showers L/Cpl. David BaieyH. e As.ttat Detroit WCpl. Pat Hoare . ditorial Spcialist Jacksonville clear 50 this afternoon. Visibility unrestric- Los Angeles clear 56 ted. Winds easterly 8-12 knots, gust- 66 ing to 20 knots,becoming northerly Miami clear ru.e and eulations for hip and station n.erra partly cloudy 40 4-6 knots this evening. Today's outlined tn Nh-m 115 and under th. dirottio New York Hf the Naval pahli affottak officer. It is int- cloudy 45 high 88, tonight's low 70. Bay con- ed foa days a mak at goe.rment epnse on gwOrn- Norfolk mnt aepi n the opinion, , state in ew partly cloudy 42 p.m. it-e thet appar herein ar. not to be.constmed as Philadelphia ditions 1-3 feet. High tide 4:30 official or . reflecting the iews of C anage or San Francisco clear 50 low tide 10:42 p.m. the Mertment of the Nag. Seattle cloudy 41 S Washington cloudy 44 Thursday, March 23, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette LOCAL NEWS--Page 3 Club Movies CLUB IGUANA Fewer Thefts, Caution Linked TODAY--"Priest Killer" George Kennedy, David Huddleston, NRA A significant drop in vehicle thefts on base recently FRIDAY--"The Collector" Ter- has been attributed to increased caution among motorists rance Stamp, Samantha EggatNRA by Cdr. Dean Stocklmeir, base provost marshal. SATURDAY--"Beneath the Planet Only one attempted theft of a civilian car and three of the Apes" Charlton Heston, thefts of military jeeps have occurred in the last four James FranciScus. GP weeks, Stocklmeir said. SUNDAY--matinee: "Cat Ballou" That compares with nine vehicles stolen in the first Jane Fonda, Lee Marvin NRA two weeks of last month. evening: "Walk About" Jennie Augar, Lucien John. GP TUESDAY--"Bed and Board" Gene Pierre Leaud, Claude Jade. GP COMO CLUB '' Set SUNDAY--"Cat Ballou" Jane Fonda Lee Marvin. NRA TUESDAY--"Dirty Harry" Clint Eastwood, Harry Guardino. R WEDNESDAY--Bingo For June Production THURSDAY--"When Eight Bells Toll" Anthony Hopkins, Natha- Plans are under way for a Guantanamo Bay lie Delon. GP Little Theatre production of the rollicking Broadway musical hit "Guys and Dolls" to be CPO CLUB presented the first part of June. Director Bob Chimini issued a production SATURDAY--"The Railway Chil- crew and cast call today, noting that there dren" Dinah Sheridan, Bernard will be many jobs for all kinds of talented Cribbins. G people. He said auditions for SUNDAY--"Dirty Harry" Clint the production will the first Eastwood, Harry Guardino R week next month. Specific dates MONDAY--"Priest Killer" George Clean All Property will be announced later. Re- Kennedy, David Huddelston. GP hearsals are scheduled to be- TUESDAY--"When Eight Bells Before Shippilg It, gin in mid-April. Toll" Anthony Hopkins, Natha- Chimini stressed a need for lie Delon. NRA "new faces and talent" for the WEDNESDAY--"Cat Ballou" Lee Australians Say production. He noted cast re- Marvin, Jane Fonda Australian customs and quar- quirements for male and fdmale THURSDAY--"The Collector" Ter- antine officials are taking a dancers and singers in a chor- rance Stamp, Samantha EggarUNRA dim view of personal items not us. FRIDAY--"Tht Battle of Britain" cleaned to their liking, M.L. Tryouts will be open to the Harry Andrews, Michael Caine Sutton, base receiving officer, public. NRA says. "Guys and Dolls" is based Officials "down under" are on a story and characters by delaying such items as mowers Damon Runyon. Music and lyrics with lawn cuttings, brooms and are by . mops with dirt and food parti- Memorable tunes like "Luck cles, bicycle tires clogged Be a Lady," "A Bushel and a with dirt, food and dirt in Peck," "Sue Me," "If I Were a Get involved furniture and underneath cush- Bell" and "I've Never Been in ions and vacuum cleaner bags Love Before" are included in containing dirt particles. the show. for good! Sutton warns that local per- The story deals with Miss sonnel moving shipments to Sarah Brown, who is in charge Australia clean all property of the Save-A-Soul Mission before packing it in order to near Times.Square andNathan. Give to CFC today avoid delays by officials in Detroit, who operates a float- that country. ing crap game. Page 4--ENTERTAINMENT Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, March 23, 1972 Cine Scene

SAT IN MON TUE WED THU FRI Naval Station 1/8 3 4 5 6 7/9 Naval Air Station 10/9 1 2 3 4 5 6/8 Marine Site 11 0 1 2 3 4 5 Naval Hospital 12 1 10 1 2 3 4 Camp Bulkeley 13 11 10 1 2 3 EM Leeward Point 14 12 11 10 1 2 NAS Leeward Point 17/18 4 13 12 11 10 1/15 BOQ Leeward Point 16 5 14 13 12 11 10

TEN NORTH FREDRICK: Gary Cooper, Diane 1. SOMEONE BEHIND THE DOOR: Jill Ireland, 10. 50-year-old Gary Cooper falls in love Anthony Perkins. Young neuro-psychiatrist Per- Varsi. roommate but decides that kins performs a "memory transplant" on an am- with his daughter's for a lasting nesia patient who thinks he killed his wife. their age difference is too great dies with a broken DRAMA COLOR 95 min. GP relationship. He later MELODRAMA B&W 102 min. NA 2. SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION: Paul Newman, heart. 11. THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS: David Niven, Lola . Logging is the lifeblood of the Albright. Distinguished psychiatrist Niven Oregon community in which Fonda and family be- experiences parental difficulties with his come involved in a strike, eventually taking teenage daughter and her boyfriend's. COMEDY his and his son's lives. DRAMA COLOR 115 min. COLOR 98 min. G GP 12. COME SEPTEMBER: Rock Hudson, Gina 3. THE MUSIC LOVERS: Richard Chamberlain, Hudson vacations with Glenda Jackson. Gifted pianist Chamberlain Lollobrigida. Millionaire sweetheart (Lollobrigida) for one month in his leads a promising life which is doomed to dis- Italian villa. Hudson learns that his villa aster with his wife leaving him and his bene- keeper runs the villa as a hotel the other factor withdrawing her financial support. HIS- 11 months. CONEDY COLOR 113 min. NA TORICAL DRAMA COLOR 124 min. R 13. WILLARD: Bruce Davison, Elsa Lanchester. SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH: Zobra Lam- 4. LET'S Factory cashier Davison conspires with friendly pert, Barton Heyman. Jessica is released from rats to,-win back his father's factory and a rest home after a nervous breakdown. She and mansion. After exterminating the rats Davison her husband and friend become besieged by soon learns that they are raising a new army HORROR DRAMA COLOR 89 min. GP vampires. of rats against him. HORROR COLOR 95min. GP 5. 13 WEST STREET: , Rod Steiger. 14. LOVE STORY: Ryan O'Neal, Ali MacGraw. by a gang of teen-age boys Ladd is accosted Alone after the death of his young wife (Ali to catch the gang. DRAMA B&W and decides MacGraw), Ryan O'Neal reminisces over their 80 min,. NRA life together as he sits in wintry Central 6. DAY OF THE EVIL GUN: Glenn Ford, Authur Park. DRAMA COLOR 92 min. GP Kennedy. Ford returns home in the 1870s and 15. MAN CALLED SLEDGEs John Marley, James learns that his wife and two daughters have Garner.The old man and a notorious gunman been kidnaped by the Indians. WESTERN COLOR Sledge team up to steal a gold shipment locked 94 min. NRA in a federal prison vault and guarded by 40 THE OUT-OF-TOWNERS: Jack Lemmon, Sandy 7. gold riders. Sledge finally loses the gold to Dennis. Lemmon and Dennis arrive in New York old man. WESTERN COLOR 92 min. R for a top executive position. the to be interviewed 16. SCANDALOUS JOHN: Brian Keith, Alfonso Arau They soon learn the city is against them. Keith as an old man living in the western past COMEDY COLOR 98 min, GP his and neighboring ranches from being 8. BARABBAS: Anthony Quinn, Silvana Mangano. saves over for a dam project. COMEDY COLOR This is the story of Barabbas, the thief whose taken on the Cross, 114 Min. G life was spared when Christ died 7 E Gre orv Peckc David and his tortured search for faith. DRAMA COLOR L - T Or'JN '*v "--- on an impossible mission 133 min. NA Niven. Six men embark Da WESte AlORe 17 o NA e. DRAMA 9. HUSH, HUSH SWEET CHARLOTTE: . to the Allied held island of Navarone. Olivia DeHavilland. A wealthy southerner stops COLOR 156 mi. NA his daughter from running off with a married 1 McLINTOCK: John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara. man. Later the man is found dead. The true Marital duel between a rough-and-tumble John who has more state of affairs is revealed 37 years later. Wayne and Maureen O'Hara agent reservations than a Comanche real estate HORROR DRAMA COLOR 134 min. NR 0 WESTERN COLOR 127 min. NA Guantanamo Gazette Sparkling Channel 8

Week of March 24-30

4:30 Sea Hunt: with Lloyd 10:00 News Brief W 4:30 Addams Family Bridges 10:05 Governor & J. J. E 5:00 Peter Gunn 5:00 Animal Kingdom 10:30 MOVIE: "Dark Alibi" D 5:30 Green Acres 5:30 Big Picture (Featuring Charlie N 5:55 Notes of Interest & 5:55 Notes of Interest & Chan) E Movie Schedule Movie Schedule: With 11:30 MOVIE: "Two Flags S 6:00 Panorama Tom Hatch & Chick West" D 6:30 Flip Wilson: (Along Dazey A with guest stars - 6:00 Panorama S 10:39 Music & The Spoken Y the Pat Boone family 6:30 My Favorite Martian U Word Sugar Ray Robinson 7:00 Naked City: "A Suc- N 11:00 The Christophers and comic George cession of Heart- D 11:15 sacred Heart Carlin) beats" A 11:30 This is the Life 7:30 Men From Shiloh: 8:00 High Chaparral: "Ten Y 12:00 The Truth About Time "Experiment at New Little Indians" (OTO Religious Life" (When John Cannon Special) 9:00 Marcus Welby: "Sound- feeds hungry Apache 12:30 Camera Three ing Brass" children orphaned 1:00 Game of the Week 10:00 Tenth Hour News by Pima Indian 3:00 U. S. Pro Golf Match 10:10 Twillight Zone attacks, his ranch 4:00 Information Specials 10:30 MOVIE: "Force of is threatened by 5:00 Black Frontier Evil" (A Smart young the two tribes). 5:55 Notes of Interest & lawyer for a New 9:00 Ironside: "Desperate Movie Schedule York syndicate de- Encounter" 6:00 News Brief vises a plan to take 1 0:00 Tenth Hour News 6:05 Glen Campbell over the flourishing 1 0:10 Bracken's World 7:00 Wild Wild West "numbers" racket). 1 1:00 MOVIE: "War Italian 8:00 Style" 8:55 Notes of Interest T 4:30 Barney Google 1 2:30 Boxing 9:00 Mission Impossible H 5:00 Andy Griffith 10:00 News Brief U 5:30 It was a Very Good 9:30 Sesame Street 10:05 Best of Broadway: Year: (Remember 1964? 10:30 Sparky "Young Rebel" Host Mel Torne goes 11:00 You Are There D back in time when 11:30 Pinpoint 4:30 Colonel Flack A the Beatles were on 12:00 MOVIE: "They Must 5:00 Here's Lucy Y tour in America). Not Die" 5:30 Special: Interview 5:55 Notes of Interest & 1:30 Alternatives with Master Chief of Movie Schedule 2:00 Roller Derby the Navy, MCPO 6:00 Panorama 3:00 World of Skiing Whittet 6:30 Bill Cosby 3:30 Billiards Champion- 6:00 Panorama 7:00 Laugh In ship 6:30 Age of Aquarius 8:00 Gunsmoke 4:30 Grambling Special: 7:30 Name of the Game 9:00 Mod Squad: "Call (An unknown Negro 9:00 Jackie Gleason Back Yesterday" college until re- 10:00 Tenth Hour News (Anita Louise guest cently, Grambling 10:10 You Are There stars as Pete's came into national 10:30 Tonight Show mother, who re- prominence in the enters her son's past few years by 4:30 Partridge Family life when the the exploits of its 5:00 Bill Anderson squad investigates football team). 5:30 Mayberry R. F. D. an attempt on the 5:00 Wide Wide World 5:55 Notes of Interest & life of a family 5:30 My Three Sons Movie Schedule friend). 5:55 Notes of Interest & 6:00 Panorama 10:00 Tenth Hour News Movie Schedule 6:30 Nanny & Professor 10:10 All in the Family 6:00 News Brief 7:00 Daniel Boone 10:30 Dick Cavett: (The 6:05 First Tuesday Special 8:00 Kraft Music Hall Attica State Prison 7:00 Untouchables 8:55 Notes of Interest riot is a topic 8:00 Bold Ones 9:00 Alias Smith & Jones under dicussion 9:00 Annie Special:(Fea- 10:00 Tenth Hour News with Gary Walker, turing the many 10:10 Charlie Chaplin correction officer talents of Anne Ban- 10:30 Combat of the prison in croft). New York State). Page 6--NATIONAL NEWS Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, March 23, 1972 Illinois Victory Spurs Muskie Campaign CHICAGO (AP)--Sen. Edmund S. Muskie captured 59 Illi- Eighty-seven delegates to the Democratic National nois delegate votes for the Democratic Presidential nom- Convention were elected uncommitted to any candidate. ination yesterday as the last ballots were counted in a Almost all of the uncommitted delegates are sure to contest that put some momentum back into his campaign follow the lead of Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago. for the White House. Control of that bloc of delegate votes, and a con- The Senator from Maine outdistanced Sen. George McGo- mention seat for himself, were the only things Daley ern, who wound up with 14 Illinois delegates, after won in a primary that saw his Cook County organization swamping Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy in a seperate Presi- battered as never before by the state and county vic- dential preference vote Tuesday. tries of two Democrats who challenged the mayor. Ed- ward V. Hanrahan, who won renomina- tion for state's attorney, and Dan- ---NATIONAL NEWS BRIEFS--- iel J. Walker, who won the Demo- cratic nomination for governor, were Daley's challengers. The delegates were apportioned *Machine Challengers among 24 Congressional Districts, CHICAGO (AP)--Edward V. Hanrahan and Daniel J. Walker, the two insur- the ballot was complicated and the gents who shattered the myth of invincibility surrounding Mayor Richard count was slow. It dragged through J. Daley's Democratic organization, may be the first in line to try to put the night, and it together again. The regular party was embarrassed when the candidates with 97 per cent it endorsed were beaten in the governorship and Cook County state's~at- of the precincts torney races, but with a common enemy, the Democrats must soon close ranks. counted, Muskie's 59 to 14 lead appeared solid. *Antibusing Dispute That showing WASHINGTON (AP)--President Nixon's antibusing program ran into heavy op- boosted him position yesterday from leading House Democrats, indicating a tough road back into the ahead for it in Congress. Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., Chairman of the lead in chosen Judiciary Committee, said Nixon's proposal for a moratorium on new busing and committed "appears unwise, impractical and unconstitutional" and promised to hold delegates to extensive hearings on it.* the National Convention that opens in Miami *Jackson State Probe Beach, Fla., EDMUND S MUSKIE BILOXI, Miss. (AP)--An all-white jury yesterday rejected all damage July 10. claims in the $13.8 million suit against Mississippi highway patrolmen and Muskie had a total of 81.5 dele- Jackson city police in connection with the 1970 Jackson State College gate votes, Alabama Gov. George C. shooting in which two young Negroes died. The jury had been deliberating Wallace had the 75 he picked up in since Monday night. It was the first test of the shooting at the predom- the Florida primary March 14, Mc- inantly black college May 15, 1970. Federal and state grand juries had Govern was third with 28.5 dele- investigated the incident. gate votes. In the Illinois preferential pri- mary, with 99 per cent of the pre- *Revenue Sharing cincts counted, Muskie had 747,887 WASHINGTON (AP)--The House Ways and Means Committee agreed tentatively votes, or 63 per cent, to McCarthy's yesterday on a $5.3-billion annual program of federal aid to states, 438,888, or 37 per cent. cities and other local governments. A substitute for President Nixon's It was a landslide margin, but it revenue sharing program of comparable scale, the committee measure would came over a candidate who is not a use formulas generally more favorable to large cities, especially those real contender in the crowded De- with substantial proportions of poor persons in their populations. mocratic White House race. , McCarthy, the former Minnesota Sqnator who was first to challenge *Ohio Prison Break the renomination of former President CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP)--Twenty-four prisoners, including four men charged Lyndon B. Johnson four years ago, with murder and four women, overpowered guards and escaped from the Ham- said he was satisfied with his show- ilton County Jail in downtown Cincinnati Monday night. Chief Deputy Sher- ing. iff H. D. Culler said two men and three women were back in custody Tues- Muskie said it was a clear cut day afternoon. There was some initial confusion over the number of escap- victory in "the most accurate wea- ees, with jail officials and local authorities reporting the figure at thervane state in the nation." 27 then 25. But Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Wash- ington, one of the rivals awaiting Muskie in the Wisconsin primary *Tax Reform Bill April 4, said in Milwauked he didn't WASHINGTON (AP)--A group of Democratic senators Tuesday denounced the think any conclusions could be drawn idea of a value-added tax and introduced a tax-reform bill aimed at rais- from Illinois. ing $16 billion in new revenue in 1973. One sponsor, Sen. Hubert Humphery, '"McCarthy wasn't even a serious D-Minn., said the tax-reform plan "goes directly after the accelerated candidate," Jackson said. "I think depreciation range system, capital gains at death, the oil depletion al- the question you can ask is why lowance, the hobby farms, the tax shelters of the estates of millionaires." wasn't the Muskie total greater?" 0 Thursday, March 23,1972 Guantanamo Gazette WORLD NEWS--Page 7 Cambodia Recovering After the Storm CAMBODIA (AP)--)azed Cambodian survivors were still finding the charred corpses of relatives and friends yesterday in a rocket-shattered capital residential area known as Tak Laak. U.S. sources said 62 persons were killed and more than 100 wounded in the devastating North Vietnamese shelling early Tuesday. But the(Cambodian count was 102 dead and more than 200 wounded. Fires started by rockets razed a three-acre shanty- The victims of bombings in Indochina clear the bodies town in Tak Laak, less than a mile from the city's of the slain from the charred wreckage of their homes. center. Many of the 495 families left homeless were already refugees from fighting out- side the capital. Watched by a silent crowd of their more fortunate neighbors, women Cambodia gathered shards of pottery in the S. Viets Drive into ruins. Their menfolk planted stakes SAIGON (AP)--A new 2,000-man South Vietnamese task force crossed into to mark their property boundaries. Eastern Cambodia yesterday, swelling to 10,000 the number of government Children begged five riel notes. troops operating there in a drive to destroy enemy base camps. Those who paid were mobbed by gangs South Vietnamese headquarters reported the first phase of a drive there of urchins. by 8,000 troops, mounted March 10, had ended and resulted in 743 enemy sol- One small group of survivors gath- diers killed, including 583 by artillery and air strikes. ered bones in one ruined dwelling. South Vietnamese casualties were given as eight killed, 65 wounded and A nearby hospital has erected one missing, leaving observers to believe that enemy losses were exag- tents to house some of the wounded, gerated government casualties minimized. but there were not enough. A booth * The new 2,000-man task force, led by 30 armored vehicles, was headed to- manned by Cambodian Army soldiers ward the Cambodian town of Krek, along highway 7. The other 8,000 troops solicited donations from passers-by. opened their second phase in the spoiling operation in an area roughly 85 Coffins were stacked up at a near- miles northwest of Saigon and 10 to 15 miles inside Cambodia. by pagoda. Saffron-robed monks No major fighting was reported as the South Vietnamese began their new burned sacrificial logs for the spir- pash against Krek. its of the dead. The pile of coffins was still growing. Although it was the worst North Vietnamese shelling of a city in the Indochina War, the attack was be- Wrecks Hotel lieved to have been carried out by Belfast Bomb less than two companies of North BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP)--A massive bomb planted in a stolen truck Vietnamese soldiers. wrecked Belfast's biggest hotel and main railroad station yesterday, send- "They had the element of surprise," ing 70 people to the hospital. said one Cambodian commander. "there The bomb damaged more than half the rooms in the new $9-million Europa was no way we could stop them. It Hotel and caved in the roof of Great Victoria Street Station, shattering could happen again. This time I hope two trains. "It was like an earthquake," said a woman who was in the hotel. we will be ready." It damaged ,stores and offices within a 100-yard radius, including the Glengall Street headquarters of Prime Minister Brian Faulkner's rul- ing Unionist Party. Anderson Claims Chile Meddling Many of the injured, who were WASHINGTON (AP)--The Nixon administration reportedly was prepared to do treated for shock and cuts, were all possible short of armed intervention to prevent the 1970 election of young girls on the kitchen staff of Chilean President Salvador Allende, according to a memo attributed to two the 13-story hotel which opened last ITT officials. August. The memo released by columnist Jack Anderson said the State Department, The Europa had been the object of on Sept. 15, 1970, authorized U.S. Ambassador Edward M. Korry "to move in two previous bombing attempts blam- the name of President Nixon." ed on the outlawed Irish Republican The memo, said to have been written by two officials of International Army. Both bomb were defused safely. Telephone & Telegraph Corp., Hal Hendrix and Robert Berrellez, declared This time the bomb, estimated by the State Department gave Korry "maximum authority to do all possible-- the army at more than 100 pounds of short of a Dominican Republic-type action--to keep Allende from taking power." gelignite, was placed in a stolen delivery truck in a parking lot be- The State Department refused comment on the allegation but Chairman J. w. D-Ark., of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee said that dur- hind the hotel. Fulbright, Rogers denied The explosion was the sixth major ing a closed session yesterday Secretary of State William P. blast since Monday. any U.S. intervention in the Chilean election process. Page 8--SPORTS Guantanamo Gazette Thursday, March 23, 1972 Next Superbowi Site Picked0 Sand Trap LOS ANGELES (UPI/AFRTS)--Los Angeles will host Superbowl 7, Jan. 14. Houston was awarded Superbowl 8 in 1974. by Keith Sandier Los Angeles was host for the'first Superbowl in 1967, but the crowd then was a little over 62,000 and th.e city fell out of favor with NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle. So subsequent games went to Miami and Hospital plays against MCB- New Orleans. Miami made another big 74 in Inter-Command action at pitch for the game, but owners were Cooper Stadium at 7:30, to- leary of legal entanglements there. Ar night. local attorney, Ellis Ruben, made some Good news for all oys that waves al-out the television blackout are still interested in regis- some years ago, and though he was un- t tering in the Guantanamo Bay successful, that burned Miami. Los Peewee, Little or Pony League Angeles boycotted the first Super- but missed tne official regis- howl b ecause of the TV blackout, but tration day. You can register losing that television market now by contacting George McGuire apparently doesn't mean so much to anytime at the bank. Be sure commissioner Pete Rozelle. Dallas you bring proof of age at the the next Pro Bowl next year. Henceforth. tine Sauerl-owl time of registration, as it is will move from city to city. mandatory. 'Guantanamo Bay, I'm proud to -- SPORTS SHORTS-- say, is sending another All Star team tor. San Juan SPORTS April 13 forSP R ] *Hockey competition in the Comten Bowl- BOSTON (UPI/AFRTS)--National Hockey League President Clar- ing Tournament. The team of ence Cambell has suspended Wayne Cashman of the Boston Brains piniusters is composed of such and Dennis Texdell, of the Minnesota North Stars for three standouts as Richard Allard, games. The players were involved in a big fist swinging ince- Dale Parker, Russell Bauer, dent in Boston on Sunday. Cambell said that in his opinion, Ronald "Bowie Kuhn" Wolf, John there is no difference in the degree of fault attributed to Horton and Charles Streamer. Texdell or Cashman, and that they both can be greatful that The team is expected back about neither sustained or inflicted any serious injuries to them- March 21, if not de_1ayed in selves or other players or officials. some way in San Juan-. One final note, interested bowlers who would like to par- *New Stadium ticipate in a couples league, BALTIMORE (UPI/AFRTS)--Maryland Gov. Marvin Mandell said contact Ruby Ward at 991b1. that a new stadium will be built in Baltimore and it will be All commands are reminded ready for 1975. The sports arena will house four sports, base- that today is the last day ball, football, hockey and basketball. Owners of four Baltimore that teams may be registered teams were present at yesterday's conference which included with Special Services for the Carrol Ros'enblum of the Colts, Jerald Hosburg of the Orioles, upcoming bowling league slated Jerry Sachs of the Bullets and Daniel Krager of the Clippers. to begin on April 5. Mandell said the arena will be financed by private funds and Points toward the Admiral's will not cost the state anything. Trophy will be awarded to com- mands entering teams in this league. * Three dependent swimming NEW YORK (UPI/AFRTS)--Eighteen of tre 24 major league clubs events are featured in the In- have voted to strike when the current contract expires March ter-Command swimming and div- 31. Marvin Miller, the excutive director of the Player Associ- ing meet Saturday, at 9 a.m. ation, got a strike vote from all the clubs training in Florida The three dependent events and now Marvin in working the West. After getting California's include the fifty yard free vote yesterday, Miller goes after the remaining six clubs, San style, backstroke and breast- Francisco, Chicago, San Diego, Cleveland, Milwaukee and Oak- stroke. That's sports' land. 0