U.S. NAVAL BASE GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA Nixon Calls Rogers Home THURMONT, Md. (AP)--President Nixon summoned Secretary of State William P. Rogers home from Europe yesterday and called a National Security Coun- cil meeting for today a pair of indications that a major decision on 'Viet- nam is rapidly approaching. The White House made the disclosures while Nixon worked and relaxed in the seclusion of his Camp David retreat, near here.

Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the chief executive asked the secretary, who was in Bonn for meetings with West German officials as Monday, May 8, 1972 part of a series of talks with European allies, "To come back for a Na- tional Security Council meeting tomorrow and for other consultations." Warren provided no information on what prompted Nixon's moves. "I 6an't give details on the meeting or say what they be discussing," Warren responded to a question. Air Wa But it was clear the President was at the point of decision on N vy Jet Three MIGs future U.S. s Iown diplomatic steps and on SAIGON (AP)--Carrier based Navy jets shot down three North Vietnamese ways to cope MIG interceptors 80 miles south of Hanoi, the U.S. command announced yes- with the con- terday. Other American aircraft knocked out scores of enemy tanks and sup- tinuing North ply trucks attempting to breach South Vietnamese defenses around Hue. Vietnamese of- Command spokesmen said a Navy A7 attack plane was shot down by a sur- fensive which face-to-air missile Saturday in continuing air raids over North Vietnam, threatens Hue. and the 7th Fleet Destroyer Hanson was hit by shore batteries white bom- Before Rogers barding the North Vietnamese coast from the Gulf of Tonkin. left Bonn an aide said the The pilot of the A7 was reported missing. The U.S. command said there talks "will were no casualties aboard the Hanson, and damage was "minor." include the Hanoi claimed three U.S. aircraft were shot down in North Vietnam. situation in In a delayed report, field sources said a U.S. F4 Phanton fighter-bomb- Southeast ROGERS er hit a South Vietnamese village by mistake Friday and killed nine Sai- Asia." gon Marines and wounded 21 at the northern defense line at My Chanh, 20 miles north of Hue. The Security Council, whose staff ( please see SAIGON page 2 ) is headed by Presidential Adviser Henry Kissinger, includes the sec- retaries of State and Defense, the Vice President, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Di- rector of the Central Intelligence Agency. The group:meets infrequently and its sessions sometimes coincide with major policy decisions by the Presi- dent.

Warren said the exact time for the - NSC meeting had not been set. He said it is anticipated that Rogers will return to Europe after the White House consultations and resume his schedule.

Rogers was recalled from Donn even before he had talked with West Ger- man Chancellor Willy Brandt. The re- turn forced indefinite postponement 1-46%_ _ of planned visits to Paris and Rome. Page 2--LATE NEWS ROUNDUP Guantanamo Gazette Monday, May 8, 1972

SAIGON- from page one GAZETTEER A South Vietnamese military spokesman said such an .a digest of late news incident occurredbut referred all questions to the U.S. command. The command said it had no reports of Marines being killed but added that a ground commander report- ed some of his troops had been "dazed" Friday when I bombs from a U.S. plane were dropped too close to South Vietnamese lines. While the South Vietnamese defense lines north of Hue Delays continue to plague rescue efforts at the held firm, North Vietnamese forces threatened to tumble sunshine mine in Idaho. Forty-seven miners still are three frontier base camps in the Central Highlands to missing in a flash fire which broke out deep in the sil- the west and northwest of the Provincial capital of ver mine last Tuesday, killing at least 35 men. A mine Kontum City, itself said to be a target of the North official said yesterday that rescuers are still 24 hours Vietnamese offensive that began March 30. away from operating the hoists they hope will carry the miners to safety. A new tank threat was reported for the first time in the populous coastal lowlands 75 miles to the east. The White House has announced agreements with The Saigon command reported that three armored vehicles Japan and seven European countries aimed at curbing fur- were sighted in the southern part of Quang Ngai pro- ther import inroads into the American steel market. The vince, 90 miles south of Da Nang. new agreements, climaxing a year of negotiations, cover The Saigon command said South Vietnamese bombers at- foreign steel shipments over a three-year period. tacked the tanks and a large column of North Vietnamese tanks and killing 50 of the enemy. There was specula- Thousands of former inmates of the Nazi concen- tion that the tanks were American-made vehicles lost tration camp at Dachau marked the 27th anniversary of by the South Vietnamese when they abandoned the north- their liberation by the U.S. Army yesterday. Protestant, ern part of Bin Dinh province just below Quang Ngai. Roman Catholic, and Jewish sevices were conducted in the walled camp outside Munich to honor the thousands The three Soviet-designed Migs shot down Saturday of victims who died in Hitler's most infamous concen- marked the biggest single kill this year, on April 16 tration camp. southwest of Hanoi. The last previous time American pilots downed three Migs in one day on Oct. 26, 1967. The first Soviet delegation ever to visit Jordan The aerial engagements swirled over the Bai Thuong arrived in Amman yesterday. The 15-man party will dis- airfield, northwest of the coastal city of Thanh Hoa, cuss with Jordanian officials the establishment of cul- around the 20th parallel, 215 miles north of the De- tural and tourism cooperation between Jordan and the militarized Zone. Soviet Union. In one engagement, two Navy F4 Phantoms from the 7th Thirty-three Jews in three Baltic cities began Fleet carrier Kitty Hawk tangled with a flight of four a three-day fast and prayer-reading yesterday designed Mig 21's, the most advanced Soviet model in the North as a "symbolic appeal to God to help them get to Israel," Vietnamese Air Force. Jewish sources reported. The American pilots fired missiles at the enemy flight and reported sending two of them down in flames within Five hundred Chileans were left homeless yester- minutes. day by driving rain that inundated shanty town settle- ments, flooded roads and disrupted electric and tele- The two other Migs headed north for Hanoi, the pilots phone service. The rains, caused by a cold front sweep- said. They pursued them for a time, but had to turn ing in from the Pacific Ocean, began Friday night and back to the Kitty Hawk because they were running out continued through yesterday. The rain was accompanied of fuel. by near-freezing .temperatures, f.ignalling the advent of winter in this south-of-the-equator country. Stateside Temperatures

Local Forecast Guantanamo Partly cloudy through out the Gazette period with scattered shower New York 83 activity during the afternoon Philadelphia 83 and early evening. Visibility C&. V.PVVVIV Offk.V Norfolk .dtt,, unrestricted. Winds N 4 knots J~, vc,,~ Atlanta 75 V.B~t.UitV, becoming SE 8-12 knots gusts L.~VpI, O.VIVV'iI.y.t.t,,tZdtt,, 82 VV DVV) ,,4V.kt. Jacksonville to 21 knots in afternoon Miami 81 returning to N 4 knots after Chicago VVVI.VIV,.f.V.hCp.,d.tt ,, .p.,.,. V. V.tII.d sunset. High today 86. Low V*VflcV V-dSV.V,,d.th. Vt.~st,, Vt Vt. ,.V.1fl. Dallas 70 VVV.i,. .tfTh.~. V. V. ,.VV.d (V. d.y.VV ,V.V~.VV tonight 74. Bay Conditions IV V.tV.V .pn, I V.1, V. V.1 IV IV VVV~tVV~d Cincinnati 75 Itt VIVVV Vt VVVt. .TVLVV 1 foot except 2-4 ft. during IVpVVV Vt Vt IV. V~Vy. Detroit 55 afternoon. High tide 1747, 0 New Orleans 80 Low tide 2344. Los Angeles 68 NEWS ,Page 3--LOCAL Guantanamo Gazette Monday, May 8, 1972 Page3--LOCAL NEWS Guantanamo Gazette Monday, May 8, 1972

By JOC Brad Durfee

Perhaps during your travels throughout the base you have seen lifeboats in various states Rescue of repair or neglect and have become curious as to how they got there.

If you inspected them closely, you have also noticed that, if they have remained in their Lifebouts Are Reminders original state and have not been re-painted, they bear the marking, "Viking Princess."

For our readers' edification the Gazette did a little research and we will pass it along to you. On April 8, 1966, the luxury cruise SS Viking Princess, a Norwegian flag vessel, oper- ating to the Caribbean Islands out of Miami, caught fire about 70 miles southeast of the base.

Near by civilian freighters and numerous Na- vy from Guantanamo sped to her assis- tance, and the base made speedy arrangements to receive large numbers of survivors.

Once part of the luxurious Norwegian cruise ship Vi- A total of 484 were received during the day king Princess, a surviving lifeboat lies abandoned and accommodated at Bay Hill barracks, from at Guantanamo Bay. which the enlisted men occupants had been quickly evacuated.,

Rescuing ships hoisted the lifeboats aboard and brought them here .along with their newly (Please see LIFEBOATS, page -4)

LOCAL BRIEFS DoD Authority to Survey *Council Meeting The Jamaican-Cuban Civic and Recrea- tional Council will hold its regular general meeting tonight at 8 p.m. in Wages in Kingston Market building 742, Bay Hill (old dental clinic adjacent to CCPO). The U. S. Defense Department's Wage Fixing Authority will conduct a wage- All council members are expected to change survey of the labor market area in Kingston, Jamaica, beginning to- be present. Visitors are welcome. morrow, the base civilian personnel officer reports. "Results will be used as a guideline in adjusting pay-rates 'for non-U.S. citizen employees at the Naval Base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba," *Tea Shoppe Gerald W. Bankes, acting CCPO said. The wage-change survey will update The Navy Exchange is looking for wage data gathered in a full-scale hostess-cashiers, waitresses and a survey of Kingston last year. sandwich-salad girl for the soon-to- "This is the first time that a Water be-opened Tea Shoppe. survey of this type will be conduc- Call 85307 or 85669 for details. ted in the local labor market area in less than two years time from the *Helping Hand last survey," Bankes reported. James Brady of the DOD Wage Fixing The Community Helping Hands will Authority, Washington, will provide provide emergency services such as on-site technical assistance to mem- baby sitting, hospital transportation bers of the survey team and coordi- and housekeeping help when the mother nate matters with the naval base, is hospitalized, Medivaced or com- U.S. embassy and Jamaican government pletely bedridden. officials. Call 97270, 97293 or 97252. Some 60 firms will be contacted. Page 4--LOCAL NEWS Guatanamo Gazette Monday, May 8, 1972 LIFEBOATS- acquired passengers. Rear Admiral Bulkeley, then base commander, led a large welcoming delegation at the piers. Ambulances stood by to rush about 25 minor in- Cap'n's Column jury cases to the hospital.

Base Chaplain, Commander Henry C. Duncan, using a public address sys- tem, offered a prayer of thanks for Electricity for the next two years is going to be one of our chief the safe deliverance from the sea. problems in Guantanamo. However by 1974, three new steam boilers will (The prayer was so deeply appreciat- be on the line helping give us a more dependable supply of power. ed that numerous survivors later asked for copies of it. Chaplain Unfortunately the three boilers presently operating at the Desalin- Duncan had delivered it ex tempore, ization Plant are old, worn out, and at the end of their productive and had difficulty later writing a life. But we've got to keep them going until the new equipment is on prayer as impressive as the first the line. one.) Last week, two feed pumps burned out leaving only one pump to do the Lines of buses took the survivors job of three. Feed pumps supply pure water to the boilers. The boilers make electricity and distill sea water to Bay Hill barracks where Gray in turn convert it to steam to Ladies and military personnel dis- into drinking water. pensed hot food, clothing and other comfort items in generous quantities. If there's a big demand for electricity, then more steam must be Rear Admiral James W. Kelly, chief devoted to making power, and we get less water production. On the of chaplains, flew in from Washing- other hand, if we have a big demand for fresh water, there's less ton to assist. steam for running the electric power turbines.

By midnight successive jet air- So the problem is, we have one feed pump now operating which can craft from Miami, sponsored by the only sustain two of the boilers at about 75% of their normal capacity. ships's owners, were landing at Lee- Without that third boiler, we can just barely meet Guantanamo's elec- ward and taking survivors home. By tricity demand. the following morning they were all evacuated and the Base returned to So we set water condition BRAVO in order to save enough steam to normal. make electricity. In other words, we're saving water to make power. The abandoned lifeboats may appear as only boats to us but we imagine, Appliances Devour Rectricity to the survivors of the Viking Princess, the term "lifesavers" But we also have to conserve electricity too. Air conditioners and would be more appropriately and af- major appliances (washers, dryers, and dishwashers) use about one- fectionately used when referring to half of all power generated in Guantanamo. particularly between the them. hours of 11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. Here's what we've got to do. During the day when everybody's working and not sleeping, shut off air conditioners in bedrooms, BOQ and BEQ rooms. Turn them on at night or only when you need them.

Tke GQt 3 e44e_ Householders can save electricity at night by turning off air con- ditioners in kitchens, living rooms, and other rooms not occupied when everybody's asleep. If desired you can run the fans to keep JveecJ-vo.Lvo ~jee fresh air circulating in these rooms. Running the fan oaly uses 10% 0II of the power normally needed to run an air conditioner.

Housewives can ease the load by running their washers, dryers and dishwashers before 11 a.m. and after 7:30 p.m.

Everybody can help save electricity by turning off unneeded lights and other electrical equipment. ct. Y. P.S. New Power Lines Continuing on the subject of electricity, we're taking steps to pre- vent power outages in whole areas of Guantanamo. c~C)ecreV By now, everybody has noticed the new poles and power lines being ( please see POWER page 8 ) Monday, May 8, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette NATIONAL NEWS--Page 5

Young Challenger's Lead W ace Warns Elderly Democrats WASHINGTON (AP)--The strong first-primary lead of a 43-year-old challenger to 75-year- Governor Now Second old Sen. B. Everett Jordan of North Carolina is a clear warning signal to two other el- In Delegate Votes derly Southern Democrats, Allen Ellender of Louisiana and John McClellan of Arkansas. RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)--Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace has moved into second place in the race for Democratic dele- Ellender, 81, and McClellan, 76, the two gate votes by piling up more votes than all his opponents senior Democrats in the Senate, both face combined in North Carolina's first Presidential primary. primary fights from challengers half their age. Both appear to be in serious trouble. Wallace's victory Saturday pushed him ahead of Sen. Hu- bert H. Humphrey as the runnerup to Sen. George S. McGo- In North Carolina Saturday, Jordan fi- vern in competition for delegates to the party's national nished some 35,000 votes behind Rep. Nick convention in Miami Beach this summer. Humphrey and McGo- Galifianakis in the Democratic primary, bare- vern did not run in North Carolina. ly making it into a runoff on the basis of late rural returns that dropped the congress- The Wallace triumph over former North Carolina Gov. Ter- man's total under SO per cent. ry Sanford also gave his campaign to shake up the Democra- tic Party additional momentum. It came three days after a Many politicians believe that an incumbent runaway victory in Tennessee. who fails either to win or come close in the first round is doomed in a runoff primary. The Alabama governor is on primary ballots in West Vir- The major issue between the moderate young ginia and Nebraska tomorrow, congressman and his more conservative oppo- but is not expected to win nent was Jordan's age. either. The North Carolina victory is expected to en- hance his chances in May 16 primaries in Michigan Angry Environmentalists and Maryland, where forced school busing is a major is- Take Plans to Voters sue. The loss may have killed SACRAMENTO, CALIF. (AP)--Angry with a state Sanford's Presidential bid. government they say has bowed to special in- With 2,243 of the state's terest groups, a former used car dealer and 2,255 precincts reporting, six college students are taking a sweeping Wallace had 51 per cent antipollution plan directly to California vo- to Sanford's 37 per ters. cent. Wallace's vote total was 408,785. It's titled the Environment Initiative on the June 6 California Presidential Primary GOV. WALLACE Ballot, and one of the state's biggest ad- vertising agencies is running a $1 million campaign to defeat it.

That's about the same amount of money the Sgt. York's Son Found Shot major Presidential candidates plan to spend in the California primary.

Near Arrested Man's Dead Body The initiative proposal would ban DDT and JAMESTOWN, TENN. (AP)--Tom York, a constable and the youngest related long-lasting pesticides from Cali- son of World War I Sgt. Alvin York, was found shot to death fornia, phase out lead compounds in gasoline, early yesterday beside the body of a man he had arrested and was offshore oil and gas drilling and taking to jail, authorities reported. place a five-year moratorium on construction of new nuclear power plants in the state. They said York died of a single shot in the head from a .38-ca- liber derringer. The other man, who had been involved in a car Opponents, financed primarily by the accident and was to be charged with drunkenness, was struck twice state's big power and oil companies, say the in the arm and once in the chest by three shots from York's ser- measure is a simplistic and unworkable solu- vice revolver. tion to complex technical problems.

The bodies of York, -34, and Will Gibson, a used ear salesman They claim the plan, if approved by a ma- from Albany, Ky., were found beside York's car, parked with its jority of voters, will wreck the state's e- engine still running along a rural Fentress County road. conomy, throw thousands out of work, lead to York's father captured 132 WWI German soldiers single-handed. (Please see POLLUTION, page 8) Monday, May 8, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette WORLD NEWS--Page 6 Drugs WRid Castro Pays Freetown A Surprise Visit Waldheim Critical FREETOWN, Sierra Leone, (AP)--Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro was to arrive in Freetown yesterday afternoon in a surprise visit from neighboring Guinea, the Sierra Leone radio announced. The radio gave of Some Publicity few details of the visit but called on the capital's residents to turn out in the streets to greet the Cuban head of state. UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)--Secre- tary-General Kurt Waldheim, in a wide-ranging study of the world's Turnout Massive For Italian Vote drugs and crime problem, says that ROME (AP)--A massive turnout of Italians voted yesterday to crucial the wrong kind of publicity against parliamentary elections which may shift Italy's government back to the drugs may turn people onto them. center after ten years of coalition with the socialists. A bitter pol- He proposes itical campaign that started with bloody street rioting between left preventive ed- and right extremists ended Saturday with the alleged kidnapping of a ucation aimed Neo-Fascist candidate. at reducing the interest in dependence Ulster Considers U.N. Intervention producing BELFAST (AP)--A well placed source in Belfast says British authori- drugs and the ties are seriously considering the possibility of U.N. intervention if demand for Northern Ireland slides closer toward civil-war. The source says the them. intervention would come if militant protestants go on the offensive as they've been threatening. The source also said sichi an-intervention But he cau- would come at the request of Irish Republic Prime Minister Lynch tions: "spe- and not the British. cial care must be exercised in this con- Honduran Troops Seek Hijacker nection not HONDURAS (AP)--A detachment of Honduran army troops searched an iso- KURT WALDHEIM to arouse un- lated mountain region yesterday for a hijacker who parachuted from an due curiosity Eastern Airlines jet Friday with $303,000 ransom. The Honduras govern- and unwittingly encourage experimen- ment, at the request of the U.S. Embassy, dispatched 180 soldiers and tation." eight aircraft to search for the air pirate.(Please see below) "These.campaigns," he says, "should, rather, seek to disseminate Executions more accurate information, dispel- Uganda Radio Reveals ling widely held myths concerning KAMPALA, Uganda (AP)--The government-controlled Voice of the Revolu- aspects of drug misuse, helping to tion radio announced the execution of a number of Burundians for their make it unfashionable to try drugs." alleged part in last weekend's attempted coup against the government of President Michel Micombero. - The study indicates that, among the common dangerous drugs, only the amphetamines and cocaine are in them- selves causes of criminal behavior. It will be taken up in the new U.N. Committee on Crime Prevention and Control, to begin a nine-day session here today. Weekend IHijackings Over The committee also will consider whether an international strategy MIAMI (AP)--This weekend's two flight from the west coast of the for crime prevention is practical and cliff-hanger airline hijackings have United States. The plane returned if so what it should consist of. come to an end. The skyjacker who later to Miami, still carrying the ,The group, a subsidiary of the got more than $300,000 in ransom 61 persons who were flown to Cuba Economic and-Social Council, has 15 money from Eastern Airlines parachut- with the hijacker. members. ed into Central America before dawn Saturday, apparently leaving little The plane's passengers said the "4 direct relationship between am- trace. hijacker had told them, over the n'betamine abuse and aggressive be- The crew of the plane landed safe- plane's public address system, he havior, violence and crime," Wald- lv in Mexico after an exhausting 21- would sneak back into the United heim says, "Pas been scientifically hour ordeal which began Friday in States to take over more planes, to documented" in Sweden and the United Pennsylvania, After resting it pre- dramatize his opposition to U.S. States. "Tn many cases the false en- pared to head for Miami. involvement in Vietnam. ergy, the need for activity and the They also quoted him as saying he pathological self-confidence induced The young man wh'o hijacked a belonged to an anti-war group called by the drug lead to forms of vio- Western Airlines plane landed in Ha- "Down With Imperialists." lence," he said. vana Saturday after a hop-scotch Monday, May 8, 1972 Guantanamo Gazette SPORTS--Page 7 *Derby

Riva Ridge Easily Wins Kentucky Derby

LOUISVILLE, Kentucky (AP/AFRTS)--The favorite Riva Ridge easily won the Kentucky Derby Saturday. With rider Ron Turcotte merely flicking his whip at the son of Irst Landing in the stretch drive, he pulled away from No Le Hace and won with daylight to spare.

No Le Hace had moved up quickl at the end, but not quickly enough as Riva Ridge, last year's 2-year-old champion, was outdistancing the field. Hold Your Peace, who had challenged Riva Ridge for the first mile of the 1 -mile derby, finished third with Introductivo fourth.

The victory of the Chenery family's Meadow Stable was worth $140,800, second richest pot in the history of America's most famous horse race. Riva Ridge's time was 2:01.4. Turcotte sent Riva Ridge to the front in the first jump from the gate and had the lead going past the stands the first time. But Carlos Marquez moved Hold Your Peace, flying the colors of Mrs. Maribel Blum, into contention after the first three furlongs and the two White Sox were several lengths ahead of the rest of the 16-horse field NEW YORK (AP/AFRTS)--The pitching Perry brothers both posted in a head and head battle victories Saturday, Gaylord firing a three-hitter as the Cleve- through the backstretch. land Indians routed the Chicago White Sox 12-0 and Jim needing eighth inning relief from Dave Laroche before the Minnesota Twin's could edge the Boston Red Sox 3-2. The Indians backed Gaylord with an 18-hit attack, including Quarry Ranked No. 2 three each by Alex Johnson, Graig Nettles, John Brohamer and Tom McCraw. Johnson started the scoring with a two-run homer in the first inning off Tom B radley. Jim opened the Minnesota Contender For Crown Twins-tie breaking two run rally in the eighth inning NEW YORK (AP/AFRTS)--Jerry with a single and Rod Carew Quarry and George Foreman, doubled him to third. Harmon high-ranked contenders for Joe Killebrew, who lso drove in Frazier's heavyweight crown, -BULLETi-- the first run, doubled; both headline this week's boxing runners in, offsetting Tommy Bos- program, which also includes Harper's home run in the a World Boxing Association ton eighth. Featherweight championship fight. The San Diego Padres, who Quarry, the number 2 ranked Marines 6 had never beaten New York's contender behind Muhammad Ali, Tom Seaver while losing 10 meets Larry Middleton an arc- times, jumped on the Met's hitectural student at Howard ace for four runs in the eigh- University who is moving up th and a 6-2 triumph. among the heavyweights, in a Nate Colbert, who tied the bout at-Wembley, to- 3 game with a two-run double in 10-round All Stars morrow. the sixth, slammed a two-run had Foreman, ranked fourth among home run after the Padres the World's heavyweights, meets taken a 3-2 lead on Enzo Her- Miguel Angel Paez of Argentina nandez' single and Leron Lee's in a 15-rounder Thursday. double. Page 8--BEELINE Guantanamo Gazette Monday, May 8, 1972

BEELINE found POLLUTION- from oane 1965 Lambretta, blue and white. gasoline rationing, trigger power 98178 AWH/85416 DWH. blackouts and leave the state's 20 95-1247 million people defenseless against 1961 Willys 4-J commercial Jeep. epidemics and vast agricultural TONY RADOMSKI See lLt Halee at Bldg. M-612 w/proof blights. of ownership. "Your very life will be endangered," editor says one pamphlet paid for by the beeline power and oil companies. POWER- from paqe four Ed Koupal, a 46-year-old former used car dealer who is one of the installed along Sherman Avenue. This leaders in the imitative, condemns is part of our new Circular Power the opposition statements as "scare Distribution System or electric pow- for sale tactics" er loop. and "lies". 1960 Plymouth, good condition, $250. He says state government has bowed to special interests and ignored an BOQ ext. 215 after 4 p.m. ror years we have had a linear air and water pollution crises that power system. That is, the power threatens to make the nation's most Couch and chair, both need reuphol- lines run from the generating plant populous state uninhabitable by man. stering; 12'x15' rug (for den or as out into the community and stop at rug pad); new thermal drapes, 150x the last house or building. 90: kitchen cabinet; pair of table Koupal and his college students who live with him and his family in the lamps. 96178 AT. If we have a break along any part West Los Angeles headquarters of this old system, the power lines of a group called "People's Lobby" put U.S.Divers single tank back pack, go dead in areas on the outboard the issue on the ballot by organ- used. 3 times, $10. 64449 AT. end of the break. The only areas izing student and ecology groups who got power were those between throughout the state and gathering Akai X-2000 SD tape recorder. 85767 the generating plant and the break. DWH/99204 AWH1. signatures of 328,235 registered voters. With the new loop system, if a They raised $172,368, mostly in 8000 BTU Fedders a/c, $50; 10,000 break occurs, power will continue contributions of $10 or less, to BTU Fedders A/c, $75; 11,000 BTU to flow up to the break from both run the initiative campaign. Whirlpool a/c, $75, all three avail- directions.Therefore, only a small able May 15. 98139 AT. area will be temporarily out of Their campaign statements show power in case of a break. 12,000 BTU Fedders alc, $120; Skill they have spent $4,000 so far for the production of television adver- orbital sander, 6 mos. old, $18; So. .we're trying to make Guantan- tisements, and they have about $90, sturdy carpenter bench, $5; asstd. amo a better place to live. Within 000 to pay for air time in the mahogany lumber. 95413 AT. two years our traditional electrical closing weeks of the campaign. and water problems will be much less The 12x15 light brown rug, $35; Sears annoying; our systems much more re- opposition campaign is head- lawnmover, $10; man's and woman's liable. quartered in the San Francisco of- bicycles, $10 ea.; 7' sofa w/slip fice of Whitaker & Baxter Advertis- ing Agency, one of California's cover, $75.or best offer; 19" RCA In the meantime, please save water, hpqt known political campaign man- b&w TV, $100; 2 Fedders 12,000 BTU save electricity, and smile at your agement firms. a/c, $110 ea.; 1 Fedders 10,000 hard-working utilities gang. BTU a/c, $100 or all 3 for $300, available first part of June; sheer white fiberglass curtains, $15; set Suday Night Baseball of gold drapes, $15; 16' Snipe sailboat, new paint job. 64345 DWH/ 64449 AWH. *Detroit 12,000 BTU Fedders a/c; 11,000 BTU DETROIT (AP/AFRTS)--Bill Freehan's Fedders a/c; Whirlpool 8000 BTU a/c; two-run single triggered a five-run fifth 1966 Rambler Rebel, 2-door hardtop inning that powered the Detroit Tigers to a 7-4 triumph over the Tex- as Rangers and gave 327 cu. in., 4-speed, best offers. Mickey Loloch his fifth victory of the season. 96294 AT. *0ukload Complete SCUBA outfit, incl. all OAKLAND accessories, $235. 64259 DWH. (AP/AFRTS)--Mike Epstein delivered a key two-run single as the Oakland A's took advantage of four New York errors in the fifth inning yes- terday and beat the stumbling Yankees 1971 Honda CL-175, many parts and 7-5. tools, $550. 64395 DWH. *New York Wizard washer, $100; 24,000 BTU NEW YORK (AP/AFRTS)--Tommie Wizard a/c, $150. 85690 DWH/99261 Agee singled home the tying run in the ninth inning and AWH. then lined a two-run homer in the 10th as the New York Mets scored all their runs in the final three innings and beat the Sam Diego Padres 8-6 in baseball yesterday.