FA R YEAT WATEBravo ill)

U. S. NAVAL BASE, GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA

Phone 9-5247 Friday Date August 4, 1967 Radio (1340) TV (Ch. 8) War Causes Tax Increase 177th Anniversary WASHINGTON (AP/AFNB) PRESI- to ASKED Congress S mposeENT JOHNSON a ten percent surcharge For Coast Guard on most individual and on cor- pdrate income taxes because of GITMO (By Ellis Baldwin) BACK IN 1790 when our nation was the high cost of the war in in its infancy and was recovering from the American Revolution, Vietnam. President George Washington assigned the task of financial re- At the same time, the Presi- newal to Alexander Hamilton, the first Secretary of the Trea- dent told Congress he is autho- sury, which he created. rizing an increase of at least In order to enforce the Pro- 45,000 more troops for the Water System tective Tariff ,Law, needed to Vietnamese war. bring the nation out of bank- The President said, "the ruptcy from the war, the Trea- ited States must and will Condition Bravo sury established the "Revenue W nor its pledge that all the GITMO--DUE TO REPAIRS and Marine" to prevent smuggling necessary arms and equipment modifications" of the Base along the nation's many miles will go to helpfight the war." water system,Condition "Bravo" of coastline. This would raise the total will go in effect today at Today, that same "Revenue authorized commitment, by the 6 p.m. until Wednesday, August Marine," which started with a end ofthe current fiscal year, 9th at 6 p.m. little force of ten ships, is to 525,000. During Condition Bravo, all celebrating its 177th year of The President proposed that lawn sprinkling, watering of proudtradition as the United the extra taxes should become plants and trees and washing States Coast Guard. effective on individual in- of private vehicles is pro- During wartime the Coast comes on October 1. WIthi hibited. Guard, under the auspices of holdingg rates would go up at Cooperation by all hands is the Navy,hasfought privateers, at time. required to get Condition slavers, pirates and fleets WThe of surtax on corporation Charlie back by Wednesday. various enemies. During World taxes would, under the Presi- All Base personnel are re- War I the Coast Guard lost a dent's proposal,be retroactive minded that keeping dependents greater percent of its men than to July 1. informed of these water regu- any other United States armed Under the President's pro- lations is'their responsibility. forces, its major duty was posals, a family of four. with Base Police have been lin- sinking German U-Boats. an income of $10,000 (Cont'd 2) structed to monitor all areas. In 1965, the service was given a difficult new assign- ment: Patrolling the coasts of Vietnam. Change Of Command At ComSta In peacetimethe Coast Guard, under control of the Treasury GITMO -- YESTERDAY Department, has a wide variety MARKEDTHE end of a 27- of assignments that range from month stay iniGuantan- leading planes andships safely ambfor LCDR C.W.Jauss, to their destination in all USN,Commanding Officer, types of weather, to manning U.S. Naval Communica- LORAN (Long Range Navigation) tions Station. In:, systems which guide ships all ceremonies held out- over the ocean, and man the idethe Administration most powerful radio station in ilding, LCDR Jauss the world, a Vocie of America s relieved by LCDR ship in the Mediterranean. A.W. Cleveland, USN, Coast Guardcmen in Gitmo, Mr. Jauss(Cont'd 2) three officers and (Cont'd 2) Page 2 Gitmo Gazette Friday, August 4, 1960

GITMO (Cont'd from page 1) ten enlisted, operate in the Fleet Training Group assisting in refresher training of Navy and Coast Guard ships, as well as foreign ships. In celebration of the 177th anniversary, the ComNavBase RADM E.R. Crawford Coast Guard in Gitmo plans a family picnic at Public Affairs Officer LT Paul E. Lamey Deer Park this afternoon. Editorial Advisor JOC William A. Liedtke Editor CTl F. Rogers SAIGON (UPI/AFNB) COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS Layout V.L. Griffeth YESTERDAY bombarded a key U.S. Navy base and News SN L. Long a major fuel dump near Saigon, wounding 34 Sports BM3 C. Maddocks Americans, damaging six ships and exploding The GIThO GAZETTE is published according to the rules about 50,000 gallons of oil in a blast that and regulations for ship and station newspapers as out- up the pre-dawn sky. The guerrillas in lined in NAVEXOS P-35 and under the direction of the Naval Base Public Affairs Officer. It is printed four 20 minutes lobbed 30 to 40 mortar rounds in days a week at government expense on government equip- the sprawling Nha Be Navy base and the adja- ment. The opinions or statements in news itmes that cent fuel dump seven miles south-southeast o appear herein are not to be construed as official or as Saigon. The Viet Cong then raked the areV reflecting the views of ComNavBase or the Navy Dept. with small arms and recoiless rifle fire, Ads and notices will be accepted between the hours of wounding 12 Vietnamese as well as the Ameri- 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. MON thru FRI only and willbe publish- cans. ed in either Monday's, Tuesday's or Thursday's GAZETTE. Brigadier General John Freud,Commanderof No ads or notices--except command notices--will be pub- lished more than once a week nor will they be run in the Army 199th Light Infantry Brigade in the Friday's paper. area,told newsmen bad Communist aiming and good winds prevented the stunning attack from WASHINGTON (Cont'd from page 1) would have becoming "a major catastrophe." Freud's troops to pay $9.25 extra taxes each month, a total and Navy men got the fire quickly under con- of $111 a year. trol by rolling burning oil drums into Taxes in the lowest income brackets would Fha River. Men were sprayed with water c be exempt completely from the surcharge. tinually while they rolled the super-heated A married couple with two children with an income of less than $5,000 a year,for example, handscorching drums of oil into the river. would pay no surcharge. American spokesmen announced that 400 miles About 16-million tax-payers would be exempt. horth of Saigon, U.S. Marines had launched new major drives, *Pike and Kangaroo Kick, against GITMO (Cont'd from page 1) has the distinc- Communist forces in the strategic northern tion of being the first commanding officer of provinces. the Communications Station as it was commis- In the air war, American jet pilots flew sioned October 15, 1966. Prior to that time the various local commands had handled their 161 missions,the most since July 13, against own general service communications functions. North Vietnam Wednesday. The pilots ra* LCDR Jauss has been assigned to the USS Val- and power plant targets near Hanoi, spokesm ley Forge (LPH 8), where he will serve as Com- said. munications Officer. LCDR Cleveland reports to us from the Office of Commander, U.S. Naval Forces, Vietnam. LCDR CAPE KENNEDY (UPI/AFNB) ONE OF THE nation's Cleveland is married to the former Irene original seven astronauts, Commander Scott Zygmont and has four children. Carpenter, is leaving the space program to do During the change of command ceremonies,LCDR deep-sea research for the Navy. The U.S. Jauss said the new concept of a communications Space Agency and the Navy said Carpenter will station which he commanded could not have come help prepare for Sealab-three, an experiment about without the cooperation and assistance that will put men 600 feet below the ocean of all Base commands. He said all credit for all accomplishments of the CommSta to go to surface for two months next year. the officers and men, "to you men goes my pro- found respect and gratitude." ********************************************* Commenting on the first few months of exis- *WATER STATUS REPORT AS OF MIDNIGHT AUGUST 3* tence of the Naval Communications Station,Rear * * Admiral E.R. Crawford, Commander Naval Base, GALLONS* said, "LCDR Jauss,you and your staff have done *PRODUCTION 2.156 MILLION an outstanding job." *CONSUMTION 2.036 MILLION GALLONS* *IN STORAGE 12.474 MILLION GALLON The Navy Exchange Cobbler Shop will be closed *TARGET 14.700 MILLION GALL for painting, Monday, August 7. ** ** * *** * ************* *** * ** * ***** ** ** ** * ** Pages Missing or Unavailable * idav. August 4, 1967 Gitm o Gazette Page 7

The Gitmo Little League All-Stars will meet the undefeated Tigers at Zaizer Stadium at 3 p.m.on Saturday, August 5th. THE The following is a picture of the All-Stars:

The Majors--Joe Torre and Clete Boyer each hit two home runs, leading Atlanta's barrage of seven homers--one less than the major league record--as the Braves clouted the Chi- (Front row L to R) Bat Boys, J. Shelhan and cago Cubs 10-3 in the only game in the Nation- T. McGaha; (2nd row L to R) John Ebany, Bob al League yesterday. Burleson, Mike Shehan, P. McCaw, Larry McLeod In the American League Mike Andrews drove in and Jeff VanDuzer; (3rd row L to R) Dexter Mc three runs with a homer and two-run single Gaha, Dave Bechtol, Evan Baily, Mary Grant and Bob sterday and led Boston to a 5-3 victory over Johnson; (4th row L to R) Walt Safely, Bob Athletics moving the second place Red Sox Blake, Rex Call, Les Johnson; (sack row L to R) within two games of idle Chicago. Lew McLeod and R. Bechtol. McLain picked up his thirteenth win against twelve defeats for Detroit with 5-0 decision over Baltimore in a game that was called after NAS who won the-Men's Softball League Cham- pionship eight innings because of rain. Baltimore was with a 20-2 record will meet the All- Star unable to even get a man to second base for team excluding the NAS players at field Dillman who picked up his fifth lose of season one at 8 p.m. on Sunday, August 6th. against five victories. This will be an excellent opportunity for Gitmo Bay community to see the players who NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS: will compete in the ComTen Softball Tournament at. San Juan beginning August 11th. The ComTen All-Star 4a m Won Lost Pct. GB team will inturn compete in the re- Louis gionals for the navy Softball Championship to be Chicago 59 48 .551 6 held at Norfolk. Cincinnati 57 50 .533 8 The following is the Gitmo All-Star Team: San Francisco 56 50, .528 81 John Bryent Atlanta 53 49 .520 9 1 FMF Floyd Jacobs PWC Philadelphia 50 51 .495 12 Mickey Taylor NSD Tony Gechele NAS Pittsburgh 49 53 .480 Gary Newcomb SecGru Gerry Appelhans FMF 131 James Crawford Los Angeles 46 57 .447 17 FMF Don Fate NAS Houston 47 60 .439 18 Jim Bland NAS Ron Poirier FMF New Bob Bryant MarBks York 40 62 .392 221 Shelton Johnson NavSta Chuck Fryer PWC Gary Kellner VC-10 AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS: Jim Frith NAS Jack Oshinski FTG (Mgr)

Team Won Lost Pct. GB Alternates: Chicago 59 -T- Boston 58 46 .558 2 Borkoski NAS Kuhn FMF Detroit 56 46 .549 3 Gullic FTG Barfield PWC Minnesota 54 48 .529 5 Ainsworth PWC Francek VC-10 California 56 50 .528 5 DeBolt CommSta Washington 52 54 .491 9 Cleveland 47 57 .452 13 PHILADELPBIA (UPI/AFNB) HAWAIIAN-BORN DICK timore 46 57 .447 131 Kenney,the barefoot kicking star from .1York Michigan 45 57 .441 14 State, was released by the Kansas City 46 61 National Football .430 151 League Philadelphia Eagles. Page 8 Gitmo Gaz-ette Friday, August 4, 196 *

Club Movie Schedules BOSTON (AP/AFNB) THE obtain- ed veteran catcher Elston Howard from the New COMO Club York Yankees yesterday for an undisclosed a- mount August 5 Dancing on the Patio-Swing set of cash and two players to be named later. August 6 Clarence, The Cross-eyed Lion-Mar- The 38-year-old Howard has been with the sha Thompson and Betsy Drake Yankees since 1955. He has seen limited ac- August 7 "Duplicate Bridge" tion this year and is batting .197 with three August 8 Desperado Trail-Lex Barker homer and 17 runs batted in. August 9 Rampage at Apache Wells-Stewart Howard was named the American League Most Granger and Pierre Brice Valuable Player in 1963 after collecting 28 August 10 Eight on the Lam-Bob Hope. homers and 85 RBI and producing a .287 batting August 11 How to Succeed in Business Without average. After Really Trying-Robert Morse batting .313 in 1964, Howard underwent right elbow surgery for the removal of bone chips the following year and missed six weeks CPO Club of the campaign. He wound up with a .256 August 5 Dancing-Gary Thompson average. August 6 Cast a Giant Shadow-Kirk Douglas At the start of this season, Howard, August 7 How to Succeed in Hosiness without Whity Ford and first baseman Mickey Mant1W Really Trying-Robert Morse were the only Yankees left from Manager Casey Stengel's August 8 Marriage on the Rocks-FrankSinatra fabulously seccessful era which end- ed in 1960. Ford retired last month. Howard's August 9 Eight on the Lam-Bob Hope annual salary is estimated around $50,000. August 10 "Bingo" 11 August Rampage at Apache Wells-Stewart Pitcher Cal Koonce will join the Mets in New Granger and Pierre Brice York tonight. He was obtained from the Chica- go Cubs for the $20,000 waiver price. Koonce SPORTS IN BRIEF had a 2-2 record in relief for the.Cubs.

Billy Casper led a field including Arnold WINNIPEG (UPI/AFNB) THE UNITED STA Palmer and Jacki Nicklaus into the first round shelled five Cuban to score a conviW of the Western Open at Chicago Yesterday. cing 8-3 win in the opening game yesterday of Casper seeks his third straight Western title. the best-of-three Pan American Championship Only one other golfer---Ralph Guldahl----ever final. won three straight Western Opens. Palmer won Twice defeated by the same Cubans in regular the event in 1963---the last time. it was held round robin play, the Americans got a measure on the 6,867 yard Beverly Country Club Course. of revenge with a 13-hit attack. Only three U.S. batters were called out on strikes. The United States has boosted its games- leading total of gold medals to 96 at the Pan- WASHINGTON (AP/AFNB) THEI SENATE JUDICIARY American Games :in Winnipeg. The United States Committee has approved P'roeident Johnson's captured five of six track and field events nomination of Thurgood Marshall to the Supren Wednesday. Only a victory by a Cuban in the Court by a vote of eleven to five. Women's Long Jump prevented a United States All fi votes against the appointment sweep. Distance runner Van Nelson completed a of the first ne- "double" by winning the 5,000 Meter Run.and gro Court member were cast by Southern members Bill Toomey took the Decathlon. of the committee. Committee chairman James Eastland said the A United States District Judge in Houston nomination will not go to the Senate until two has refused to give former Heavyweight Champi- weeks from next Monday--to give time for pre- on Cassius Clay permission to leave the coun- paring majority try for a fight in Japan. Clay is presently and minority reports. appealing a five-year prison term for draft evasion. He needed court permission to leave NASHVILLE (AP/AFNB) A NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE the country. police captain told a Senate committee invest- igating riots Thursday that a civil rights All seeded players, including Wimbledon group in Nashville is teaching negro children Champion Billie Jean King and Rosemary Casals, *hatred of the white race in a summer have reached the quarter-finals of the Eastern school subsidized Grass Court Tennis Championships at South Or- by the Federal government. ange, New Jerdey. Charles Pasarell and Clark Captain John Sorace said the Student Non- Graebner advanced in men's play. violent Coordiniting Committee is running the school under a $7,700 grant from the office of A thirty-four-to-one shot---"Idealistic"--- Economic Opportunity. And, said the Captai won the featured Schuylerville Stakes at New negroes who took part York's Saratoga in Nashville's rioti W Wednesday. The Winner paid last April $70.00.23.40.9.00. are among teachers at the schools.