Unknown LT. COL. WHITE IS NEW G.I. Helper DATA REDUCTION

Transcription

Unknown LT. COL. WHITE IS NEW G.I. Helper DATA REDUCTION
•
PUBLISHED WEFKLY
STRIBUTED ro A!.L SERVLCE A.ND
IVILJA.N PERSONhEl ON W.S.M•.rt.
Pu ished by La~ Cruces Cthzen, La~ Cruces.
Now Mexico a pnvate tum in no w .. y connected with the Departmen1 ot t.be Army.
Opinions expres:;ea by thF publishers and
writers herein are their own and are not to be
considered an ofhcral expression by he De
partment ot th1 Army. The appearance ot advertisements in th1& publication does 001 constitute an endorsement by the Deparhr,ent of
tha Army of the products or servicGs ad vertised.
.
-
VOL. VIII - No. 11
Serving the Nation's Biggest
Overland Missile Testing Center
Published iJI the interest of military
and civ ilian personnel of WSMR and
t o promote a grea ter guided missile
program for the national defense.
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WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, NEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1962
Countl~ss
Hobby Opportunities
At lapidary And Jewelery Shops
Min er als like black obs'.dian and honey onyx are
. ansformed into dazzling
jewelry by soldier-hobbyists
at WSMR's Arts & Crafts
Lapidary and Jewelry Shops.
Started in 1960, both the
Ll :
ary and Jewelry Shops
o
free oi extra charge
ountless hobby opportunities in silver smithing,
met al work and stone craft.
"The Lapidary and Jewelry Shops offer rock, gem
and metal-working enthusiasts a multitude of hobby oportunities," em p ha size d
onald C. Harris, Arts &
Crnfts Director for over half
a decade.
Both the Lapidary and
Jewelry Shops feature the
latest modern grin di n g,
polishing, shaping and molding equipment.
"Participation in our Lapidary and Jewelry programs
increases in the cold months
and is high during the period
preceding Ch ristmas," Harris
added.
Director Harris noted that
" A lot of people can, with
our facilities, produce birth- J
day, Christmas and special- J
occasion gifts, such as brace. ts, ash trays, rings and I
""Tl:
comparatively small
and lapidary pieces."
ne Lapidary and Jewelry
Shops are loca~ed in the Arts
& Crafts, R1dg. No. 1425,
telephone 5181.
The hours of operation are
- Tue~day thrnugh Friday:
1730-2100 hours and on Saturciays and SunclaY.s from
1300 to 1630 hours.
8 PAGES
Ordnance· NCO Career
Program
.
LT. COL. WHITE IS NEW
G.I. Helper DATA REDUCTION CHIEF
Is Hunted
Local 158 CRUCES BUS
To Meet SCHEDULE
CHANGES
In Cruces
3 WS.MR
Officers·
Selected
Unknown
The new chief of the Data
Reduction D iv is i on, Integrat ed Range Mission here is
Recently, an unknown Lt. Col. Lawrence L. White,
White Sands Mis s i 1 e Air For ce officer.
Range serviceman administered first aid to an injured accident victim near
the m issile range. Efforts
are being made to locate
the serviceman.
This division, one of the
largest data reduction centers in the world, is responsible for con verting and compiling electronic flight data
collected during a missile
M/Sgt. William C. Falzett flight for the final engineer(r etired) wrote the foll owing ing report.
letter to the Commanding
Colonel White Succeeds Lt.
General:
Col. J . R. Bo~well, USAF,
Dear Sir: on June 5th, al who left WSMR recently for
approxi mately midnight m y an assignment in Rome, N. Y .
I
son had an accident on
The new chief transferred
Whiie S ands road, and one from Holloman Air Force
of your soldiers adminisBase where he was special
tered first aid t o him. One assistant to the chief of the Lt, Col, Lawrence L. White
of my son's buddiei; drove Computing Division for over
up and look him to Wil- a year.
Tryout Will be Held
liam Beaumon t H ospit al for
During h is military career
treatment of a shoulder inFor Parts in Play
jury plus a lacera ted left of 21 years, he has had ex"The Pajama Game"
tensive
experience
in
the
ar m. A t the time, no one
computing
field.
Prior
to
his
thou ght i o ask his name. It
The Pajama Game, second
is quite possible that this assignment at Holloman, he
longest
running show on
was
at
the
Pentagon
for
three
soldier saved my son's life,
therefore your help in lo- years in the Air Battle Anal- Broadway, carries parts for
cating this man will be ysis Division, Plans and Pro- almost any type o.f performing talent and provides a
greaily appreciated. M y grams.
Fr~m 1954 until 1957, he chance ;or the comedy in
wife and I would like t o
was stationed at Weisbaden, each player to come to the
thank h im personally,
Germany. He was assi." ned fore. Songs such as "Hey
T hank you.
to Wright Field for eight There," "Steam Heat," and
William C. Falzeft
years
before that.
"Her Is" help to make this
M/Sgt. Ret'd,
While at rwr~ht fl d he show one ot the finest t1nd
9201 Roanoke Dr.
attended the Institute of most fun productions to
El PasQ, Texas
Anyone having knowledge Technology there and studied come off the boards. For
an interesting and enjoyable
of the mentioned serviceman aeronautical engineering.
During WWII he saw com- summer join THE PAJAMA
should contact the Troop
bat in the European and GAME.
Comamnder.
Try-outs for the Pajama
African theater of operaGame, this summer's offering
tions.
Col. White is a graduate by the Special Services Comof St. Thomas College at St. munity Theatre, will be held
Paul, Minn., where he re- at the Entertainment Workceived a bachelor in chemis- shop 19 through 22 June
from 1900 to 2100 hours. The
try.
The June meeting of the
He and his wife, the form- call back auditions will be
Society of Photographic Inheld in the Post Theatre on
strumentation Engineers will er Marjorie Davis, are both
(Continuea on Page 7)
natives
of
Minneapolis.
They
be held on Wednesday, 20
June 1962, in the NCO Club have six children, Lawrence,
at WSMR. This meeting will Jr., who is attending St.
deviate from the usual in Thomas, Barbara, Robert,
that it will involve a field Mary, James and Thomas.
trip to an operating instruCol. White is the son of
mentation station.
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. White,
The p e r s o n n e 1 of the
A f t er a short business Rockford, Minn., and Mrs. WSMR Finance and Accountmeeting, and coffee and White is the daughter of Mr.
ing Office and guests, particidoughnuts, in the RCO Club, and Mrs. E. J . Davis, 4719pated
in a brief ceremony
6th
St.
No.,
Minneapolis.
members and guest will
commemorating the 187th
proceed to Nan Site for a
combined briefing and quesAnniversary of the establishtion and answer session conment of the Army Finance
cerning the BC-4 phototheoCorps. Major J. W. Moher
dolite data system.
presented his office staff
The general description and ,II,
~
with a birthday cake, baked
demonstration cif the pur~:~e~;:;_ated by his wife
poses and functions of the
new synchronization and con'
Honored guests included
trol system for the BC-4
New Mexico's Governor Mr. Samu e 1 T eitelbaum,
p•hototheodolite will be pres- Edwin Mechem will present WSMR Comptroller, and Mrs.
ented by Mr. John Davies, the National American Lewith the help of Mr. Harold
...
Shoppach, the System Chief, gion "Employ the 0 1 d e r
and station personnel at the Worker" Award to Captain
site. Mr. Davies is well C. L . Bennett, USN, comqualified to give an authora- mander of the Naval Test
tive presentation of this Facility next Monday . night
nature, having been employat a special banquet sponsored at WSMR since 1955 in
ed
by the Joe Quesenberry
various phases of optical in-
GEMS-Stones and gems are polished and finished at
ihe Aris & Crafts L apidary S hop. Sp 4 Don P angborn
finished a stone that will be later cut and mounted on
silver. T he L apidary Shop offers rocks and gem enthusiasts a wealth of hobby opportunities.
(U.S. Arm y photo by Warren C. Weaver, Civ.)
Jr. Rifle Club
To Present
Cerlificales
SP/ Engineers
Tio Meet June 20
- MR's Junior Rifle Club
-~resent badges, certifi~tes and diplomas earned
for six months riflery training.
The presentation ceremonies will take place at the
White Sands Community
Center at 1900 hours next
Monday evening.
Recipients of the presentation are 25 boys and girls
ranging in age from 8 to 16.
The Junior Rifle Club is
sponsored by the National
Rifle and Pistol Club.
All interested personnel are
invited to attend.'
Officers of the WSMR Junior Rifle Club include, president, Capt. C. E. Straughn, ARTISAN-Sp4 Don Pangborn, an Aris & Crafts instruc:tor, hammers a design into a piece of silver jewelry.
and secretary, Charles FarAll types of small silver piece jewelry is made at the
Jey. Members of the AdvisArts & Craft Jewelry Shop by WSMR military and
<>ry Committee include: Maj.
civilian post personnel.
L. E. Childress, L. B. Bletch(U.S. Army photo by Warren C. Weaver, Civ.)
er and SFC D. M. Black.
Local 158 of the National
Federation of Federal Employees will hold its regular
meeting next Tuesday at the
American Legion Hall, 330 S.
Main, in Las Cruces at 1900
hours.
A guest speaker will explain to all those interested,
Presidential Executive Order
10988 which becomes effective 1 July.
The National Federation of
Federal Employees (NFFE)
has started a membership
drive to recruit new members here at the Wh1'te Sands
Missile Range according to
Mrs. G. H. Hicks, President
of the NFFE Local 158 of
Las Cruces.
Founded in 1917, the NFFE
is organized to: "Advance the
economic welfare and education of the employees of the
Unitd States and to aid in
the perfection of system that
will improve the efficiency
of the various services of the
United States."
Membership in the NFFE
gives its members representation and information from
Washington about matters
affecting Federal employees.
Las Cruces NFFE officers
are: President, G. H. Hicks;
vice-president, Steve Benavidez; second vice-president,
Samuel L . Barba; and Secretary-treasurer, Mrs. Doris M.
Mawson.
GoverDOr
...
, 0 ff"nor
Canl. Bennell
~
I
Com bined commer cial
and govern ment transpor·
taiion lo White Sands Mis·
sile Range from Las Cruces will become effective
Monday, July 2.
The inira-ci!y iransportai ion char ge lo ihe transfer point located between
Lohman Ave. and Kansas
s t. on Bellamah L oop in
Las Cr uces will be 15
cents, Gov ernme nt fare t o
WS MR will be 10 cents.
Bus coupon books for the
new far e will be on sale
during t he w eek of J une
25 at t he tick et boot h at
White S ands.
G overnment bus drivers
will distribute inter and
intr a city bus schedules
during the week of June
25.
Personnel resid in g in
H atch, Anthony, D 0 n a
An a, La Mesa, Vado, S an
Miguel and Alamogordo
will con tinue to use gov·
ernment transportation.
Three WSMR Non-commissioned Officers have been accepted for the Ordnance Noncommissioned Officers Career
Development Program newly
inaugurated by the Chief of
Ordnance.
M/ Sgt. Edwin C 1 ark,
S/ Sgt. Henry Hunt and Sgt.
Donald Fincher have been
selected from White Sands
for training in the program.
M/Sgt. Clark is NCCIIC of
Consolidated Supply. After
entering the Army in 1946,
he served in Germany, Austria and as a Military Assistance Advisory group advisor in Iran and Belgium.
Both S/ Sgt. Hunt and Sgt.
Fincher are members of Consolidated Supply's Liaison
Team which aids WSMR
units and neighboring military installations in solving
supply problems.
S/ Sgt. Hunt entered the
Army in 1948 and served in
Okinawa, Korea and as a
l\"AAG
adv1·sor i· n Fr~unce. H e
·i
came here in Jnne of last
year.
Sgt. Fincher s er v e d in
Japan, Korea and Germany
after enlisting in the Army
in 1953. He was stationed
here in January of 1961.
The program, not affected
by the current Army reorganization, is de~igned to
(Continued on Page 8)
...
:::;:=:::::=:=========~-...:......------...::.-..:_
Senate Commillee Okays
Ouarlers Allowance Bill
Washington (AFPS) - Further hearings on the
quarters allowance legislation now in Congress have
been held and a step closer to final action reported.
The Senate Armed Services Committee in executive session, reported favorably on the bill ;fter hearing earlier testimony by Secretary of Defense Robert
S. McNamara.
J
-
said: "I am appearing before the committee this
morning in support of HR
11221. This bill has mod~fied
to some extent, in the case
of enlisted grades, the legislalive proposal originally
submitted by the Department
T~itelbaum; Mr. John Murof Defense.
phy, Deputy Comptroller; and
"However, the changes do
Lt. Col. Morton Jaffe, WSMR
not alter the basic principles
Staff Judge Advocate.
which the Department's proTl.he span of years since the
posal sought to incorporate
establishment of the Finance
jn the allowance structure.
Corps has witnessed the rise
of th United States of AmerWe support the House bill."
ica from a struggling rebel
At this point Mr. McNato the foremost nation of
mara went into the history
the world.
of basic allowance for quarThe soldiers paid by the
ters and told the lawmakers
first paymasters r e c e iv e d
how in September 1961 he
$7.00 per month and were
had established the Advisory
required to furnish their own
Panel on Military Family
uniforms and arms.
Housing Policies and Prac1 tices.
•
He said the panel finally
accepted a Federal Housing
Administration report refleeting the housing expenses
of civilians according to their
incomes as the best possible
source for comoutation of
;:;-':.:,' ;·;;;'·§·'~~-ji·i),i'.(ifi·!- j:)ti~ the BAQ rate structure for
the following reasons:
* The analysis directly reflects current cost conditions
rcqmrmg no comparisons
with cost data of a preceding
period.
• It includes the informa, tion necessary for establishing a graduated allowance
for all ranks in that it reflects expenditures for hous'ng by income groups.
• The data is regularly
'.Vai!ab!e an dean be used for
"uture BAQ adjustment stu1ies at no additional cost
'o the goverment.
In his statement Mr. Mc\famara also made these
points ". . . I consider adeWHY?- Poor control caused this little girl to die under the wheels of a driver who quate housing for our servdidn't iake the time to consider speed and braking distance. We say it every year ice families to be of vital imth is time we hope you hear. Make safety your code when you're on the road. Braking portance in our efforts to
and stopping demonstrations will be held here during the pre-holiday safe driving make military careers sufficampaign for WSMR personnel by the Post Safety Office 27 through 3 July, (This, ciently rewarding to enable
fortunately, is a posed picture, but fhe real thing could happtn!)
us to attract and retain high
(U.S. Army photo by Pfc Neal Roetzler)
(Continued on PagE 7)
Finance and Accounting Office
Celebrates 187th Anniversary
••
.:.
The committee added an
·a mendment, however, in the
nature of a substitute bill,
HR 11221. The legislation is
expected to be considered on
the Senate floor in the near
future.
The amendments were (1)
to make the effective date of
the bill Jan. 1, 1963, and (2)
to delete that section which
would have made permanent
the Dependents Assistance
Act.
A spokesman for the Senate Armed Services Committee said it was too early yet
to determine if the package
would have to be referred to
a joint committee for ironing out.
Secretary McNamara, in his
statement to the committee
..,.,. . .,. .
r;:=~:~~;~*~·~~;~~:::;=,;w-~-: : :;w;:~.;~~IB!~~~,
;~·
r\ ·
Publication Office:
114 S. Church. Las Cruces, N. rd.
/A
··=
<·
:;~
{, strumentation devlopment in
i the Measurements Div!sion
and Ran ge Instrumentation
D eve 1 o pment Divisions of
IBM. Mr. Davies educational background includes a
i BSEE from the University of
Nebraska and a MSEE from
New Mexico State Universitv. He is a member of
Si~ma Tau and Pi Nu Epsilon.
Further deve.looments and
1 additions to station instrum entatio n to be discussed
1
...; will be the sky
screen di . ~~~ r ector and com):mter, and the
.,_ _..w...,.,,. ' " -7, orientation system. A'so to
be desc.ribed will be the total
WEST POINTER AT WSMR-Col. John C. Bane (lefi), 'White Sands Missile Range data tic-in which includes
e..commanding officer, and Brig. Gen. Richard G, Stilwell, commandant of cadets at such · information as meteoroWest Point discussed Nike-Zeus when they paused during a tour of over 500 Wesi logical data, station and mis. ,int cadets to the range. Genral Stilwell, son of the famous "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell, sion identification, time corW accompanying the cadets on their summer training program which takes them to relaton, plate and dial informilitary installations throughout the country.
mat'o n, etc. An informal
(U.S. Army photo by Sp5 Rober W. Meinen)
(Continued on Page 7)
11
I
I
Post.
The banquet, held in the
Town and Country, is sched7
m
d f
u 1e
or
p.
·
Mel Bashner, Post Cammander, extends an invitation to all interested to attend. Tickets will be available :it the r estaurant.
wa·ge
Increase
A three cent per hour
wage increase will be effective l July. The in·
crease will affect approxi·
mafely 2,000 Wage Board
employees,
l
I
/
I
I
\VIND A
~Lalt.:.1ucln.t
, .•• u-.;ue 11Jiu .r'll•Jnilll .:nJurnil.b an 001 o&:c••
tht Oc-pa1·!mt:n1 uJ A.rm~ 01 I!~ agt:n<'les
A.dvertts~menll lD
thJa DUbJkaUon a~ Out c'OnslltUlt ~n ~ntl11'ti..ment b) lhP l)Ppitrtment nf h•
lrtn)' ot th., ilrodUi ·\!- Ill iCJ"\.'ll'e} advcrll~l·d.
rubJ:;;,n~d -VePkl.\ U I 'IVtllar tWlt!!r1Jrbt- 'n tnt IDlCfell UJ i.fit 1)1.lutar~
and Ctvthar• pcraonneL OJ \.Vhtt.f' ..;anrti- Mthalle Range Ne"' MexlC'O b)' t.h,.
LAs Crut·e~ l!ltt:1er. of L..11.Jo ....!rUl"t!i.. NI!'\\ l\lr.'<lto
AU new.!! mKllt'1 Co1 publlr·ttuo11 •huulo oti aent to tht t'l.l.Jllt· rnturmaUor
Polirleb d.JHJ
1a~tl,y those 01
Olfl<'O!. \Vhtl• 'Sands M!Ull• R•nge
fh1.s newspape1 tet·e1ve1' A.rmed
NPYI ~l~xl<O relep~nne 4'.!rnl 01
F'nn·e~ 1>1es"' '-;ervtn~ mater1a1
Som
'52<l:i
Armco
F'orcea Pre~~ '-;ervtl'f' materlal whir'h 11 not t'npyrtghted or syndl<'&lt"O ma}
be reprlnLed or ,.eo..-od11red wlthnut f'urthipr o.-rmh~lnn ornvltiPrl or'1D,.'
credll le given
thts oaper \1 n01 a..n uttlf~lw or 1em1-ort1rta1 L>~partment oJ Oden.a• oubtl
·~e
oallon.
All picture• are by Wh1u Sandi MlMll• ttanre ohotoeraphert unlee•
otherw!H stated
ll.dTertl1ln9 cop' 1b tlO O• aent to; Len Crucea Ctttzea, • 40. 8011 J70. ,,.
I. Church Street. Loa Crucea New Mexico. Phone J A 6-5575 ioub1cn1111ons
oil Poat $4.00 oer fear: $1.50 tor three months. Dlltrtbullon on the Pot0t fr ....
••
•
Print - - -
2 -WIND & SAND- Friday June 22, 1962!
Wit Relieves Stress:
Research Proves It
1
How o.ften have you hea~·d it said of a man that'
"he's a character-always making with the wil;c-1 NEW SFC-SFC Joseph N. Pindell, Nike Zeus Test Branch. is promoted by Capt. George
cracks even when things go badly" -or words to that W. Stannard. (L) ARADCOM officer and Maj. James F. Workman, Nike Zeus section
eI.fect'! The implication seems to be that wit is reprc-1 head. SFC Pindell is a Target Intercept digital computer technician. He came to WShensible to certain Limes, and ipdeed it is. Nobody MR in 191l0 and was a graduate of the first Nike Zeus contractor cour~e held here.
(U.S. Army photo by Louis Reinhardt, Civ.)
laughs at a funeral.
I
"OUTLAWS" booked for New Mexico State Fair. Two
of the featured stars of the weekly hour-long television
western series. "The Outlaws." have been booked for
star appca1·ances on the final wo days of the 1962 An·
niversary New Mexico Siate Fair in Albuquerque Sept.
13-23. The two arc Slim Pickens. let!, and Don Collier,
who will appear in Tingley Coliseum on Saturday and
Sunday, Sept, 22-23 •.
The fact is, though. that the perennial "comedia~1"
in a group-say a military unit in combat or a detachment living under conditions of semi-isolation-very
often is a valuable functionary. This is currently
being borne out by the field studies of an Air Force
·:.:::r~
psycholog~st, Dr. Ewart E. Smith, who is rescarcMng ~~.f · ~~ . .. ;:.=.~.,Z~~·~~~·~.1ttf?J)11n~·Ki~,·:;;:,F·,~~~~~~:iitt:'
the function of humor and the role of the w1t m 1 ,....-:~ . ~ •.,,-..:. • .
. • ~: (I) lt
.
grou;:r~~:,·:, s:i~:s~ome as no surprise to men who I;.~:;.\·:',
~:.~·-~r:\ ~· ;~- :·
I
TAGS
BILLS
CHECKS
DRAFTS
· .· .
have survived harrowing experiences in combat that I~/.·
<"
the deliberate wit consistently was found to be the I
.... ",,/_
For M tmotrs
t
1
of Int
Arme d Forces of the United Stotu
more active and self-confident individ1.lal. Also, that '. -~he is .present in gr~ups whose efficiency and morale ::·~
I am an Ame1'ican fighting man. I u:m~ in the forces
are s1gmf1cantly higher under stress than exist in , . .. ,<
which guard my country and our way of life. I am pre·
0
other groups.
pared to give my life in their defense.
•
•
BADGES
DODGERS
BLOTTERS
I
BOOKLETS
PLACARDS
VOUCHERS
CIRCULARS
PROGRAMS
BILL HEADS
PAMPHLETS
PRICE LISTS
PRIZE LISTS
POST CARDS
STATEMENTS
INVITATIONS
.•
MENU CARDS
SCORECARDS
MEMO BLANKS
MEAL TICKETS
LETTER HEADS
LEGAL BLANKS
SHIPPING TAGS
Mr. Berns, who died recently, was an army en- 1
li::;tee in WWII. A Scot by birth, he left a will naming
"the Treasurer of the United States of America" as
beneficiary of his estate of $250,000, "to be used and
applied for the general governmental purposes of the
United States." The estate will go to the Treasury on
the death of Mr. Berns' mother.
LAUNDRY LISTS
WINDOW CARDS
VISITING CARDS
Enjoy
[il ani s h Cos ropolit ar, m o d e l
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FM AM radio optional. Magnavox
:iOth Anniversary Special.,,
What prompted this unsual bequest? :rvrr. Berns'
will gives the answer. "I make this bequest," he wrote, :
"in appreciation of the freedom and liberty afforded
in this country to all citizens, irrespective of race,
<:reed or color."
MENU BOOKLETS
AT HOME CARDS
~
fP'
BUSINESS CARDS
NOW ONLY
This is, to be sure, a highly special case of one
American's response to the President's call. Very few
of us in the Armed Forces could follow Mr. Berns'
example even if we were so disposed. But what is interesting about his bequest is that it was made by a ·
naturalized citizen who did not take for granted, as '
some of us do, the "freedom and liberty" we enjoy. J
••
FUNERAL CARDS
Al the
Truest
Rendilion
He did not, obviously-again as some of us doregard the Treasury as a tax-hungry behemoth with
1
an insatiable appetite for the money we can earn. In
the astronomical area of government revenue Mr. I
Berns' quarter of a million dollar is, of course, a drop I
in the bucket, but the patrotic devotion that prompted
it is somethng to think about, especially when tax
time rolls around.
99.9
Megacycles
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11
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138 S. Main
141 S. Main
125 S. Main
Las Cruces Citizen
Phone 6-5575 -
•••
1 Mutual Building & Loan Assn.
Ill X. Church
Lu Cruces, N. M.
No Money Down - Free Delivery
Right On The Corner -
Righi On The Price
6-5576
Las Cruces, N. M•
Frida y, .June 22 , 19G2 -WIND & SAND-3
JU E
IS
0 OS
MONTH
ann ua l rcpcir t.
I\hs. C::irter L. Bennett, 1
wife of the command ing off1c;cr ol the Nava! 0 , dn ince
Missile Test Facility al White
Sand;;, was lhe install ing of- 1
f icer. Mrs. W . G. Skinner is '
t he. new presid en t. Other or-
at
i
I
•
I
MRS. W. G. SKINNER
f ic;c t·s ate Mrs. J . F. New-1 treasurer.
M:
m::i~, ~v i ce~pre~i~cn t ;. ,M.1·s.
Committee Chairmen
I. J< o,,el, t cco1 d ng scctetaiy,
New committee c hairmen
Mrs. R. G. Hill, correspond-, were named by the new p resing ~ec;1·etury; Mrti. J ohn Sin- iden t. They are: Mrs. H . P .
•
clairc, Jr., .lrC<tsurcr and Mrs.
J . A. Berner, assistant treasu n ·r.
Outgoing ofiic;ers arc Mrs.
B anc, prPsident, Mrs. Ru<lolpb Agan ski, recordin g secretary; Mrs. F. S. I ngraham,
c orr esponding secre tary; Mrs .
J obn P. Broderick, treasurer:
and Mrs. J. E. F ulp, assistant
Gardiner, program; Mrs. WilJiam o. D onner. publicity;
Mrs. C. L. Beaudl'y. membership; Mrs. J. II. Brill, n ursery
with Mrs. w. L. Comer as
sch olastic an ci citizenship
achievements. An other ims pecial act ivities; Mr s. H . A. porta n t contrib ution was t he
Nelson, community affairs; donation of d ecorations for
Mrs. G . P . Mich ael, h ospital- the White Sands' h ospital.
al ternate; Mrs. W. F. Crews,
rokec tribal lands lo individual Indians. Allhou~ h \he
Ch ic; and his daughter Gloria Talboll. p rotest lt 's innoccnse, a ll a\ ail able evi d ence ind icates h is guilt.
F acing t he th reat of rm Ind inn u prising if the Chief is
hanged b,v a whilr man's
An n;cs of Tm'Jcrial P.omc.
cou rt. District Attorney Bill
ONE SHOW ING NIGHTLY Williams, son of the legcnSTARTI NG AT 1!"00 HBS. d ary Sam Houston, neverthePLUS A S UN. MATINEE less prosecutes the case and
AT 1400 H'RS. AN D ONE wins a conviction. While the
EVENING PERF ORMANCE Ch ief awaits execu t ion, Wil1
AT 1900 HRS.
'Iiams is reproached by the
AD MI SSION : 50c - Adult:;; local n ewspaper editor for
25c - C hild ren.
try ing to turn his legal
DATE: Thur. 28 June 62
tri umph into a strong bid Ior
TITT ,E: I BOMBED P EARL t he governor":; scat.
CAST: Yo~ulse Watsuki
and To8hiro M ifunc.
AUDIENCE SUIT '\BILITY·
MATURE AN D Y O U~ G
P EOPLE- P ATR O NS OVER
1'.l YE ARS OF AGE.
_This iS th: SfOl',V Of ( h C
pilot s who d ied for the Em-
ROARK
ChevroletOldsmobile Co.
We Are Going
ALL OUT
Club. sealed from left: Mrs. W. G. Skinner. p resident; Mrs. J. F. Newman. vice-presi-
I dent; Mrs.
M. I. Fogel, recording secretary: standing fr om left; Mrs. John Sinclaire. J r ..
treasurer an d Mrs. J . A. Berrier, assistant treasur er. Mrs. R . G. Hill, cor r &epondin g secre1ar y. is n oi shown.
(U.S. Army photo b y Louis Reinhardt, Civ.)
I
I
· 1
l "d Grow th
s....,0 l
I
To Make This
the
WOMAN'S CLUB OFFICERS-Newly in stalled officers of the White S ands Woman 's
..
~
....
L 00 kS G00d
I
0 n C/1arts
I
•
·~-:
i.~
.~
•
«'"
..
~
~
SUPER
88's
88's
NINETYEIGHTS
STARFIRES
PA-1 :
A Primer On Communism
The Depal'tment also re.
. ..
I years. The report said
furportcd \hat 130 tnd1v1duals I ther that 47 Soviet officials
j 300,000 trained officers serve in 11 free- world countries, I have been expelled from
in the 27 intelligence and se- includ ing 13 in the United free-world countr ies and the
curity services of the Sino- j States, h ave been convicted U nited Na tions for "cspioSoviet bloc 3tatcs."
of Soviet espionage in recent nagc and sllbvcrnion."
the
most
important
day
It Lool<s Even Better At Main And Lohman !
Growth, progress, advancement .. . no matter how you say it
you'll be talking about the all-new First National Bank. The
corner of Main and Lohman is a fitting symbol of good solid
growth with the striking Fir st National building setting the
pace for an expanding Dona Ana County. Steel and concrete in
the foundations provide a physical base for this growth . . •
along with the confidence and integrity of look-ahead men behind the First National. Glass and stone adorn the outside o.f
the multi-storied structure that is destined to be a landmark for
all of south-central New Mexico. Until July 1, you'll have to
take our word for it that the i.nside is even more superior. But,
even before you view the new facilities you're invited to come
along and grow with the First National ... THE GROWINGest
BANK IN THE SOUTHWEST.
of
your life!
..
"Vi
LAS CRUCES CITIZEN
Of The
YEAR!
F-85's
I
(Part of a series of questions and answers from A
Primer On Communism by
Gcorge W. Croyn, edited by
Howard Oiseth. Reprinted by
AFPS with the permission of
the publisher.)
QUESTION-Has presentday communism changed its
aims?
ANSWER - A change in
emphasis and tactics - but
not in final aims - was proclaimed at the 20th Congress
of the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union (CPSU),
held in February 1956. The
new CPSU "line," as announced by Party chief Nikita Khrushchev, pictured
tbe acceptance oI communism by the "br oad masses
of working people in the capitalist countries" w it ho u t
necessarily resorting to "violence and civil war."
Khrushchev declared t hat
the "transition to socialism
(communism) can be accomplished by winning a stable
parliamentary majority backed by a mass revolutionary
movement of the proletariat."
Emphasis was thus shifted
for the time being from reliance on tactic;; of violence to
\~
Communist support of "popular front" poli tical coalitions.
Whether you plan a simple service or an elaborT he large-scale mob actions
provoked by Japanese Comate ceremony there is an Art Point wedding invi·
munists a n d lcftwingers, '
ration or announcement styled for you.
prior to Pres ident Eisenhower's scheduled \ isit to
Let our sociecy editor have all the details of your
Tokyo in June 1960 a gain
i llustrate a key principle of ,.,,,,..
wedding plans and at the same time look over our
communism : to talk of
complete selection of Art Point invitations, au•
"peace" while instigating acts
of violence.
nouncements and wedding accessories.
In addition to political
Free! with our compliments,
rnaneu vcrs, the Commu nist
Virginia Courtenay'• etiquetto
reg i me s maintain a vast
booklet. Ask for )'OW' copy.
worldwide espionage network.
The U.S. State D epartment
on June 13, 1960, issued a
report which satd in part: "It
has been reliably estimated
that within the Communist
s_._c_H_U_R
__
C_H_________________________P_H
__O_N_E_S__6_-5_5_7_5_0_r_6_-_ss_1_s__
bloc and the free world some ---1-14__
OLDS
MONTH
1
p eror in 1he bombing att:1ck
on P earl H:.irbor, br in<>:in g the I
U.S. into v1rorld W 0r IT.
DATE: Fri. 2q Jun 62
TITLE : T HE COL OSSUS
OF 'RH ODF:S.
CAST: Rory Calboun and
L ee Massa1·i.
AUDIENCE S UITABILITY:
MATURE AND Y O UNG
P EOPLF: - PATR ONS OVER
12 YEARS OF AGE.
Tile Ancient P h ocnic::an s
plot lo i nvade th e 1~l.,nd
k in~dom of Rhode'> ;rnd 1h us
th1caten Greece b)" mcmH'ing
llw trl'ld c l'O L11M of t he Meditcrranc:m. Th c climnt ic
earthquake and dcstruc\'on 1
or a eolo:;sal statu e is only
one of manv spectac ular
scene,; in this vivid 8nd action-fi Jlcd fcatllre of h i~to ri­
cal eonflic:'.
DATE: Sa±. M at in ee 30
June 62
TITLE: OKLAH OMA TERRITORY.
CAST: Bill Wi'.liams and
Gloria Tal bott.
!''AUDIENCE SUITABILITY: •
FAM I LY FOR ALL
TRONS.
Chief Ted de Corsia is ac- ·
TOURS ZEUS FACILITIES-The commanding general of the Army Air Defense Command, Maj. Gen. W, W. Dick, Jr., l eft toured Nike Zeus facilities h ere, Wednesday.
Zeus is the only weapon this country has under advanced development to meet the
t hrea t of attack by enemy intercontinental ballistic missiles. Explaining a model of the
powerful Zeus missile is Col. John C. Bane. WSMR commander.
(U.S. Army photo by Louis Reinhar dt, Civ.)
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_L_A_s~c_R_u_c_E_s~~~~w_H_I_T_E~SA~N_D_s_M
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~·-F_I_R_s_T~B-A_N_K_E_R_"_ _~_M_E_M_B_E_R~F_D_I_c 1 ...__________________•
WSMR Helmen
Advance Al
41h Army Meet
4-WIND & SAND-Friday, June 22, 19621
In the opening day of the
open division singles, in the
1962 Fourth U.S. Army tennis tournament Tuesday, Lt.
Richard Butler and Capt.
Glenn Jones came through
with victories. Lt. Butler won
6-0; 6-1 and Capt. Jones 6-1;
6-1.
'
The other two White Sands
representatives were defeated, Pfc Lexie Peacock 6-2;
6-1 and Pfc Bob Armstrong
6-2; 6-0.
Five matches of the second round were completed
before play was stopped by
rain.
Lt. Butler was one of the
five winners that will be advancing into the third round.
Sports World
Richard (Pancho) Gonzalez, world professional tennis
champion eight times and twice the National Amateur king,
has been named to coach the U.S. Davis Cup team ... Roy
Campanella, former Brooklyn Dodgers catcher, will head
a new sports board of National Paraplegic Foundation.
Campanella was injured in an automobile accident in January 1958. . . . Doug Harvey resigned as playing coach of
the N. Y. Rangers of the NHL.... Pro Sam Snead qualified
for his 22d crack at the U.S. Open Golf Championship, the
one major tournament he has never won . . . Ethiopian
Abede Bilka, winner of the 1960 Olympic marathon gold
medal, beat the established world record for the one-hour
run when re ran 12 miles, 993 yards in 160 minutes... Joe
Abbenda of Lon Island, N. Y., won the 1962 Mr. American
title . . . . The AAU has selected Tammy Davis, 14, for the
AAU all-American women's track team. Tammy, who set
a record in the 1961 National Girls Championship 50-yard
hurdles, is the youngest athlete ever named to the team...
Virgil Yelkin, veteran baseball coach at Omaha, U., is the
National Assn. of Intercollegiate Athletics baseball coach
of the year.
ARMY-Sgt. Ralph McNamara of the Caribbean Advanced Marksmanship Unit took top honors in the Tenness ee State Rifle Matches . . . Lt. Walter Imahara won the
AAU 132-pound weightlifting championship . . . Lt. Col.
Emmett C. Townsend will replace Lt. Col. Stuart Hoskins
as USAREUR sports officer . . . MSgt. Lou Bartalone won
West Point's Invitation Handball title •.. Ft. Ord, Calif.,
WAC's are volleyball champions of the Western Women
Inter -service Recreational League ..• Cadet Joe Almaguer
will captain West Point's 1963 track team.
AIR FORCE-Tony Miles, Anderson AFB, Guam, won
the singles crown at the Pacific AF bowling tournament ...
Scott AFB, Ill., won the pistol division in the 1962 MATS
pistol and rifle tourney •.• AIC Earl A. Richart putted his
way to victory at Bermuda's Riddells Bay Golf Club. Richart was awarded the club's Sandy MacDonald Cup . . •
The Charleston AFB, S.C., W AF bowling team won the
MATS Wome~s bowling tournament ... Seventh Air Division won first place in the SAC pistol meet. .•. Air Training Command at Randolph AFB, Tex., won the annual
worldwide AF Bowling Championship,
BEST-Lt. Richard Butler (L), WSMR Judge Avocaie, is congratulated for winning
the WSMR tennis eliminations by Maj. William Reinhard, Special Services Officer. Lt.
Butler :ran the guantlei of the tennis eliminations here recently to be named best :tennis
player on post.
{U.S. Army photo by Warren C. Weaver. Civ.)
Boating Safely
Education Urged
Fishing Report
Santa Fe. - With an average of 500 boats a month being registered for a total of
9,000 as of June 1, New MexELEPHANT BUTTE LAKE
ico will have the largest Water good, has been
number of boat recreationists windy. Results - bass fair
in history on its 30 "boat- on b1ack eel jigs, minnows
able" waters this summer, and shallow running plugs.
according to Superintendent Catfish fair to good in upper
end of lake. Crappie fair on
of Parks, Eastburn R. Smith. minnows and flies. Pan fish
With more and more peo- good on worms and minnows.
ple taking to the water for
RI o GRANDE BELOW
fishing, skiing, racing or just
ELEPHANT BUTTE- Water
relaxing, the State Hea:th
Department joins with the clear. Results - trout fair
Parks Department in urging on eggs, lures, and worms.
that owners and potential
RIO GRANDE ABOVE passengers a 1 i k e educate Catfish best on worms and
themselves in the safety as- cut bait.
pects of boating as well as
CABALLO LAKE - Conin the skills.
ditions-;water clear, weather
Dr. Stanley J. Leland, di- windy. Results - not many
rector of the Health Depart- fishermen. Fishing should be
ment specifically recommends fair to good with better
that 1) every owner carry a weather.
first aid kit in his boat and
RIO GRANDE BELOW know how to use it! 2) that Water clear and high. Results
boating enthusiasts review
their first aid if they h :we
had training or get instruc- COULD WE SURFACE L.ONG
tion if they have not espe-1 ENOUGH f'OF? ME 1V GET
· 11 ·
· 1
'. t
MY LE'TieR O<=F TO
c1a
y m ar t'f'
1 1cia
resp:ra
.on;
FREEDOMS FOUNDATION
3) that all boat recreationists
AT VALLEY FORGE, PA.,
learn ;what to do if their boat DEADL.l·N
· E', NOV.j.51? -))
NAVY-MARINE-Jack Renfro is Navy's first National
Collegiate Pistol champion. . . . Leatherneck Franklin D.
Miller, stationed at MCB, Twenty-Nine Palms, Calif., won
t he Mr. Junior National Health title last year . . . Capt.
Wiliam W. McMillan of Camp Matthews at San Diego won
the coveted Lauchheimer Trophy for being the Marine
corp's top rifle and pistol shooter •.. WM Rose J. Franco
has been awarded two trophies for outstan.ding performance
in the Women's Division, Third Naval District Bowling alarm.
Tournament. She placed second in the contest. . . . Coach
of the Quantico trackmen, Lt. Richard Jackson's next station will be at Camp Lejeune with the 2d Mar. Div.
that there must
- white bass on minnows,
catfish on cutbait.
WALL LAKE _ Conditions - water clear. Roads
dusty. Best results on worms,
eggs and spinners.
1 - - - - - - - - - - -
; '
=:~~:::·::~~~::~,"~;~::;~?,.~! ~~~!~~; ~:;~,::;, ·~i1::;~1~t~~:
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\i;:;;',·:1\l I ,'
(AFPS Weekly Feature)
1. J ake Wood of the Tigers
led the m ajors last season
w i Lh 14 triples. When was
the last time a player in the
AL and the NL hit 20 triples?
2. Which of these golf tour-·
n o.ments is closed to amat eurs? (a) The Masters (b)
The PGA (c) The U.S. Open.
3. The largest crowd in
boxing history (135,132 saw
this middleweight champion1o-be knock out Billy Pryor
on Aug. 18. 1941. Who was
h e?
Answer :to Quiz
1. Willie Mays h ad 20 triples in 1957; Dal e Mitch ell of
the Indians hit 23 in 1949.
2. (b) The PGA.
3. Tony Zale.
4. With what sports are
these terms associated? (a)
divot (b) western roll (c) 710 split.
5. What player l ed his
leagu e in home runs for the
most consecutive seasons?
4. (a) golf (b) track and
field (c) bowling.
5. Ralph Kiner of the Pirates l ed the NL for seven
straight seasons (1946-1952).
Babe Ruth holds the record
in the AL witlh six consecutive years (1926-31).
FM
IS HERE'
FM
Starting From
RADIOS
FM
TUNERS
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AT •••
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Sales & Service
RCA Authorized Dealer
230 S. Main
Phone 526-2232
· · '
· i
· ::: ,,_.., .V-o:
~---r
~
~!tee~~: r~:~t·i·~~e ~::se~:~~~ I::-- _ _ ':~ /
LOWER GILA - Catfish
fair, trout fair on worms and
eggs.
GIL IT A - Water good,
roads fair, fishing good on
lures. Not many fishermen.
WILLOW CREEK- Stocked, fishing good.
WHITEWATER ABOVE
CATWALK _ Stocked.
NEGRITO CREEK- Roads
poor, water improving,
Should be good on worms,
eggs, and lures.
G I L A WILDERNESS
STREAMS - Good.
PENASCO AND TULAROSA CREEKS - W ate r
warming, should be stocked
this week.
High
Rally
SCHOFIELD BARRACKS, June 8-Army SP5 Lyle D. Gustaveson reenlists for four
years du:ring a quick trip from Johnston Island, where he is working with Army el•·
ments in the current nuclear weapons tests. Capt Daniel Kaopuiki, of the U.S. Army
Garrison Personnel Center at Schofield, does the honors. Gustaveson flew from John•·
ton, Tuesday {June 5), reenlisted. and flew back yesterday. His home station is th•
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico.
(U.S. Army photo)
%',,
A Rolling Hi g h Rally,
sponsored by the Pan American Region of the Sports
Car Club of America will be
held from 14 to 15 July.
The two day rally will
highlight a run between El
Paso and Springerville and
will feature sports cars entered from Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.
Winners will receive eight
trophies for the four top
placing cars.
For further information
write: Rally Secretary, 711
Robinson Blvd., El Paso, Tex.
Entries close 1 July.
White Sands' Little League
White Sox breezed to a 11-1
win over the Conlee Athletics in Las Cruces last Wednesday in four innings of
play.
Ernest Warden pitched for
the Sox and struck out nine,
allowing only three hits.
Randy Smith was the outstanding hitter for the Sox,
getting three hits, a double
and two singles. Warden,
Skinner, and McMillen also
got two hits apiece. The best
defensive p 1 ayer for the
White Sox was Ricky Rando,
Softball
Standings
Team
Det #2
52nd ASA
Western Electric
SMSA
Det #4
Navy
Det #1
Officers
w
9
8
7
7
6
4
3
0
their catcher.
Cambra, Ma thews and Bayne
Last Friday's game saw got two hits apiece.
the White Sox Little League
team defeat the Mesilla Park
Blues, 12-0, in three innings
in Las Cruces. The game was
stopped due to the ten run
rule at the end of the third
inning of play. Randy Smith
pitched for the Sox, allowing
one hit, while striking out
six of the Blues.
Outstanding hitter for the
Sox was Ernest Warden who
got four for three, two doubles and one single, while
driving in five runs. Bittmar,
We have the 100% Everglaze•
Broadcloth Wash/Wear shirt
with the CAREEZE button down
L
2
4
4
4
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8
12
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CAREEZE T.M••
-.
{j
~
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•
WSMR White Sox Whitewash Conlee In Little League Tili
~
on the water.
YOUR ALL
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Now you can have this exceptioriatT,f
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HANDLED
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SERVICEMEN: You'll feel confident borrow~
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that is now filling the needs of over 100,000
servicemen with care and understanding.
Over 1,200 HFC offices are staffed with serv·
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offices is always
Cash
nearby and ready You Gol MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS
18
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12
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to serve. For the
paymts p,;ymts p.,ymts p,,ymtt ·
most convenient $ 100 $5.90 $ 7.27 $10.04 $18.45
location, see below.
or FM
BEAR CANYON LAKE Water good, fishing slow.
Some nice trout taken on
flies early a. m.
UPPER GILA - Trout fair
to good.
Rolling
•
a life
Ancient Age and Old Granddad with a little Squirt for
those who do not know how
. chaser."
a to swim would be wise to
a life belt at all times. '
; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I wear
Both Dr. Leland and Mr.
Smith emphasize that know!-
SP 0 r t S Q U I z
•
'
300
500
800
1000
-
17.41
27.73
42.29
51.84
21.53
34.65
53.40
65.75
29.87 55.1()
48.57 90.53,
75.71 142.82,
93.64 177.481
An automatic GAS range brings "gourmet cooking and convenient house·
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518 N. Main St.-JAckson 4-7763
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LAS CRUCES UTILITIES PROMOTION BOARD
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Customers!
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Loans made to residents of nemt>y tol01IS
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Abooe payments include both principal
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Hours: 9:3D to 5:30 Monday thru Friday-Oosed Saturdays
$4.50
#'fO~N M•Rc,.,4
Plenty of
meals. GAS does so many jobs in the home. and does them all well for
•
00
~>.
Merchants
Lot,
Corner of
/
(AUTO
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.~ .
,01'
"'"'o Asso"'"'1
Grigsis
St
Water
•
~~~~~ e•
f01 THI MAH WNO CAUi
113 N. MAIN
PH. JA 6·8131
LAS CRUCES. N. M.
•
liberty &Communism
HAPPY REUPS-Capt. L. W. Albro, new Adjutant of the U.S. Army Signal Missile Supp ort Agency hands official
records to four soldiers of the Command who have reenlisted. From left, :they a re: SFC William Clark , SP6 Calvin
Cotton, SP5 Charles Symonds, and SP5 Robert Lasiter. SFC John E. Allen, th e SMSA Reenlistment Counselor, is at
left of C apt. Albro.
(U.S. Army phoio)
I
ures up.
Sports Car Run
Dedication to service, duty
• •
and country must come first. On Tw1shng Road
H is many skills are comple- To Springerville
mentary; his technical skills
must be identified and deA two day sports car rally
veloped in our modern Army, I will feature a run. betw_een
but the b:isie ingredients of El Paso and Sprmgerv1lle.
the soldier's makeup are the ' This run is part of the Rolling
foundation upon wh ich his
THING \'{!!;LL
special skills are built and
HE IS A TEAM PLAYER
without which his technical
AND, AS SUCH, UNDERcompetence may prove un- STANDS THE NECESSITY
reliable or uneffective at the FOR DISCIPLINE
crucial moment in battle.
HE p R 0 Mp TL y AND
High Rally sponsored b y the
Pan American Region of the
Sports Car Club of America.
The Ra lly is to be held from
14 to 15 July.
The run will feature sports
cars entered from Texas, New
Mexico, and A rizona with
winners receiving eight trophies for the four top placing
cars.
Entries close on July 1 and
further information is avanable from the Rally Secretary, 711 Robinson Blvd., El
MOS
WILL I N G LY ASSUMES Paso, Texas.
(Military Occupational
THE RESPONSIBILITY OF
The fellow who is overSpecialty)
LEADERSHIP
anxious is more apt to
SOLDIER
HE PLACES COUNTRY reach the goal than the one
HE IS A PATRIOT, IS BEFORE SELF.
who is over-confident.
HIGHLY
MOTIVATED, --------,,,,-,,,,,,-,, ,-, , ;-·:::,,-, , , ,-, , ,.-, ,.,.-, , , -,,,,,,:-,:,,-,.....-...,.-...,.-.,., ,.-.,.,,------AND HAS INTEGRITY.
.}}{c':::::':':':'::,:::o:::::';:(:':n::
ot·.,"
.,.,.,..
~~~~~~~ "';'>
HE HAS IMAGINATION ii(
(i
S ERGEANT S TWO-Tw o newly-promoted SFCs: (1) Joyce E. Hurst and William R.
Dillard (cente r) are congra tulated by missile officer L t. J oseph F. S pitz. All th ree
missilemen are technicians with the Nike Zeus missile project here. Nike Zeus is the
only anti-IC:BM m issile now u nder development in the free world.
(U.S. Army photo by Louis Reinhardt, Civ.)
I
A~ I~~TiA1I~ILLIN G ]j
:r=
SPIRIT, AND WILL NEVER
GIVE UP
:i)
M~~ ~::RSN~i;~A~T:~~
:1:::
A~~ ~~~Tr:'I
NG LY EN- ::;
DURES HARDSHIP IN
WAR AND PEACE
:i"i
HE UNDERSTANDS HIS '\
JOB AND HIS WEAPONS
i\it
HE IS VERSATILE AND =g
there ~s a single list of candidates, all of whom must be
endorsed or selected by the
Communist Party. The Communists seek to keep themselves in power by force; the
Socialists do not.
NEW ROCKERS-Johnny R. Highful of the Missile Electi:onic Warfar e Division re·
ceives his new "rocking chair" staff sergeant stripe from Col. William G. Skinner,
Commanding Officer of the U.S. Army Signal Missile Support Agency.
(U.S. Army photo )
Army Allowing
Some Hikes lit
Frozen MOSs
CHERRIES
CHERRIES!
SWEET AND SOUR
:::·!
pen House
F.H.A. • Conventional
Sunday, June 24 -1 to 7 p.m.
See this beautiful furnished 3 bedroom,
brick veneer, 1 and 3/4 baths, q uality
carpeting throughou t, with a rubble
stone fireplace and paneling in family
room.
All this for less than $18.000
C. B. SMITH & SONS, INC.
120 SOUTH WA T ER STREET
JA 6-5411
JA 4-1301
Early Ameri<an Style- TUBULAR OVAL CONSTRUCTION
WOOL BLEND UCiS
By popular request we repeot these sensational rug values. These rugs ore designed, constructed and imported exclusively for C. R. Anthony Company. Tubular
ova l wool blend ot 35% wool , 35% rayon ond 30% miscellaneous textile products
of undetermined fiber content. Will odd charm ond beauty to any room in the
home. Compare q uality, compare price. Choose from qrown, red, mush room beige,
charcoal, spice and green. Pion now not to miss this outstanding volue,
SI Z E 20" x32"
EXPECTED SEASON
4 to 5 WEEKS!
AUTO LIABILITY
CADWALLADER
ORCHARDS
INSURAN CE
Mountain Park, N. M.
• ALL RANKS AND AGES
Highway 83 - 13 Miles
East of Alamogordo
• LOW RATES
Evans-Maddox Medical Group
"(J)i1li.a.m!JJ1JJUJ- II
(No green, red or blue sfa m ps give n aw ay
bu:t we will give a n ice 14' x 32' swimming
pool in your back yard, if you act n ow!)
SEASON BEGINNING
JUNE 12th
ANNOUNCEMENT
JlvL
1125 N. Mesilla Si. · Parker Manor
• IMMEDIATE COVERAGE
Continental Insurance U ndewrl.a.ers
49
•
29~
69.5 1 95•
SEE: I RENE BAYLIS,
BIG ROOM SI ZE
..nnnounce the Association of
White Sands Missile Ran ge, N. M.
8'-6" x 11 '-6"
General Pactices
29?
SIZ E 66" x102''
Communiiy Cen ter Bldg. 122
Richard J. Giever, M.D.
SI ZE 26"x44"
SIZ E 42"x66"
217 West Court
Hours 8:00 • 4:00 Daily -
P h one 7129
Just tell us how much money
you need to pay old bills, for
car repairs, home improve·
ments, for all -your seasonal
expenses! Phone before noon
to arrange for your money
the same day • •• Do it now!
starting at $18,000.
* * *
• NATIONWIDE SERVICE
e·
lffarh 2ffilaiw t
t···:
COUNTRY ESTATES
FINE ST WE DDING
PHOTOGR APHS
wi:th :the new minimum FHA downpaymen:t
-
~tCWzilfo
ON~ ii~
l
The Stalinist Constitution j ·
of 1936 contains a so-called
bill of rights, wh!ch pretends
to define the rights of citi- ·
zens, in imitation of demo- I
cratic constitutions. But the
Soviet Constitution is largely ·
A PLEASANT SURPRISE
-Maj. Leonard B. Bergl und of ihe USASA here
was on leave when he received notification of his
promotion. So Maj. Astor
A. Morris, his commanding
officer, did the honors when
he returned and pinned on
the new major's leaves. (U.
S . Army photo by Louis
Reinhardt. Civ.)
DO MORE THAN
gentsia. Thus the Commu- false propaganda designed t o
1
nists claim that they have deceive _foreigners as well as
abolished c 1 asses in the the Soviet people.
U.S.S.R. is false.
The interpretation and enforcement of these rights are
The Communist deny that entirely in the hands of the
there are any inherent or Communist Party.
natural rights of men as asserted in the Amer ican DeThis series is taken from
claration of Independence
Ideas in Conflict, Liberty and
(1776) or the French Decla·communism (DOD Pam 3ration of the Righ ts of Man 11), published by the Direcand Citizen (1789). They call torate for Armed Forces Inthese ideas mere myths or formation and Education, Dedeceptive legen ds concocted partment of Defense.
by the rulers of the bourgeois state in ordr to delude
the masses.
Wash ington (AFPS) - It
•
now possible for Army eny stecl personnel to be prom oted t o grades E-7, E-6 and
even though they a rc
serving in an ovcrstrcngth
MOS.
A newly-announced Army
policy, effective in July, wm
per mit commanders to promote a small percentage of
those best qualified in frozen
M OSs.
'
In Communist doctrine,
Th e number to be prom oted to any o.f these grades whatever rights the citizen
will be computed on the fol- may possess are implied in
course, belong to the intclli- the Socialist (Communist)
state. But the interpretation
of the powers of this Com- j
munist state, as well as the
rights of citizens, is in the '
h an d s of the Communist
Party.
.
· -5
:AN
!I
UP TO $JOOO
5
:,:;.
•
11 LAS CRUCES (N.M.) CITIZEN: Thursday, June 21. 1962
ASTRONAUT MAY TAKE
LESSONS FROM SNAILS
TINY SNAILS living in a
New Mc xi co hot-wuter
spring may teach astronauts
how lo withstand the extreme heat of outer space.
Dr. Austin Phelps, Univer
sity of Texas zoologist, gathered the snails-Jess than
an eighth-inch in diametcrfrom thermal streams as hot
a::; 144 degrees F. If the biochemical balance that provides the snails and their invertebrate neighbors with
1:hcir resistance to high temperatures can be discovered,
Dr. Phelps says, the information may help man sustain
long space flights in comfort
JET AIRCRAFT load as
much as 18,000 gallons of
f uc1 f or a fl 1.ght to Eur·ope
from O'Hare Inlern::itio_nal
Airport, Chicago.. The Jets
b t 2 300 g ll
consume a ou
•
a ons
an hour, compared lo 98 gaJ.
· t
lons for a 1argc pis on-en· d
ft
grne era ·
'BUY GHANIAN' dr' e
iv
has opened in the West Afrid
can country which gaine its
independence from Britain in
1957. The government is attempting to discourage the
commonly held opinion that
imported goods arc automatically superior to those
made in Ghana, calling this a
"colonial mertality."
A BOOST in citrus consumption reminiscent of the
1920's when canned juices
were new is expected from a
process that removes 90 per
cent of the water from
SUNLAND PARK PICKS PONTIAC as their official track car for 1962-63 racing season- Proof again that PONTIJ._C
is number one. This Catalina tw.o·door Hard-Top is white with red interior.
orange juice without affecting the flavor. Votator vacuum-drying experts say the
juice of 40 average oranges
can be concentrated down to .In.tcrstate .h ighway_ tr a vel- wit_h t!J.e Ne w Mcx_·ico S late , butto_ n lh_at sets th e con0cl
a pound of crystals and later e1s m a hurry may ::someda.~ I Universny Extens10n Sel'v- heating t,ime for that food.
n:constituted to a gallon of be able lo buy and cook t hen ' ice.
Th c "'restaurant" offers
own meals al oil station stops
.
dtlicious juice.
.
t'
th
't t k
t
These "au tomatic restau- more than two dozen food
LICHENS one of the Hard- 111 1ess ime
an i a es 0 rants" are already being tried varieties, based on research
'
"gas up" the car.
iest forms of plant life on
F d
d'
h'
along some Ohio interstate as lo the kinds of food:; the
oo
ven mg mac mes .
earth, have been used since
.
highways. A food company traveling public prefers. The SUNLAND PARK PRESIDENT, RILEY ALLISON (L) accepts keys from Lloyd Weinreich of Weinreich Buic:k·
.
f
h .
and cleclromc ovens make I .lh
t t·
f
h. ·1 b
kf
f
h
antiquity or t cir curative th is
ossible, says Miss wi . a repu a ion or ig '.\- rea " ast menu o fcrs sue
Pontiac Agency of Las Cruces. following delivery of the Pontiac Catalina to Sunland Park.
values. ln the Middle Ages, a L . PG
tt
t .t. . l quality food prepares, pack- thmgs as rolls, French toast - - - - - ------arre , nu r: ion1s
·
. .
.
oUJse
bite from a rabid dog was
ages and freezes foods m m- 1 and hot cakes. Foods ava ilaj first a ll-Indian radio station
usually treated with a serv- effect can Lt! properly con.- dividual containers or plat- ble for other meals include
broadcas ting from 5 a.m. to
ing of lichen mixed in warm !lolled.
tcrs. The foods th en are de- soaps, eassrolcs, hot sand10 p.m. in the Navajo langu;
milk with black pepper. A
REN 'I' ER S
outnumber livered, stored and vended at wiches and.complne dinners.
T 11 e Witliam Beaumont I profc,;sional posit.on, applicahandbook recently iss ued by home owners in only three r!rigerator temperatures.
Machines also offer be\ er- Gcmcral 11osPila1 h as a I' lions will be accepted only
I1 ag;· h n Dormdn, general
0
the Smithsonian Institulion states: New York (2,898,445
Customers pop t he food ages, ice c1·cam and candy. vacaney for a Clin!cal Psy- from pprsons who quality as
j manage!' oI K.i.~DE AM and
!'eports that extracts of some rented to 2,350,265 owncr-oc- packets from the coin-op- , Other food and oil com- chologist, at $75GO or $8955 such.
FM in Aztec, say::s that lo hi~
1
lichens acts as powerful anti- cupied dwellings); Alaska erated vending machines into , panics are watching these per year depending on the
Further information may
M
. t d . .
th
h knowledge the station is the
biotics. A lichen salve is used (29,571 to 27,679), and Ha- electronic o ve n s. Cooking first installations closely to experience. Since \his is a be obtained from the Per·
tohtons ~ nvMing . roug first in the nation to operate
in Finland to treat external waii (90,127 to 62.937). In the times vary from six seconds see how customers re:ict to
sonncl Offiee at the hospital nbor ern. dew h exico ma:v exclusively in an I nd i 8 n
burns and cuts. The big country as a whole, the Cen- for rolls to 90 seconds for a them. It's speculated that start a national trend.
, or from this office. Applica- f c s urpnsc to ear an ~n- i l~nguage.
problem remaining, accord- sus Bureau reports, owners complete dinner. Euch food such a combim1t!on of speed
"These ~amc 'instant' meab 1 tions will be accepted until ami1iar 1anguage commg
__
ing to the report, is to pro- exceed renters by a wide packet comes in a colored m service, good food and may someday be available the poEdtion has been filled , from their radios.
Don't th.iow sand in your
duce a water-soluble lichen margi n - 32,796,720 lo 20,- p lastic wrapper matching the reasonable prices for the Li long New Mexico h :gh- j bu!. not later than July 31,
Charn.:cs arn they will be own eyes by blaming your
extract so that its antibiotic 227,155
color of the electronic range quality offered may well , way.,;.'' says Miss Garre1t.
' 1962.
listening to New Mexieo 's mistakes on someone else.
Instant Meals For Travelers
I
I'
I
II
Civm. Serv1ce
•
1
Have
xams [Jndl.BDS
Language
Wft
0
RadJ•O Program
I
I
·--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --
-
- -- - - ·-
~ -----------
Factory Trained Mecha ics At
Gillett Chevrolet Co. At Anthony
Observation proves
the fellow who s tems
tide is the one who continually keeps tiring
keep up s tea11 •..
CHRISTHl.N
REALTY
Has A
NEW LOCATION
1103 LOHMAN
Phone
...,4-2834
A way from ~owntown
Traffic Snarls - Plenty
of Free Parking.
C~me
and See Our New
Office - and our New
Listings,
u1LL:t:.1 r Ch.L:. \/ fi.01..ET Ccmpany at Anthony offers 24 hour wrecker Service
and will repair any malce of car in the paint and body department,
Plan your nex t mo1·e care- I
fully - it's easy to get the
other fel low to compromise ,
if he realizes you have the
best oI it.
I
I
tR·d!trte
,p
AUTO INSURANCE
Gillett Chevrolet inc:ludes,
besides the new car showroom and the used car lot, a
garage and body shop.
The fou1· mechanics in the
main garage and the three
mechanics in the body shop
are all experts, factory trained men Under the managership of Stanley Sharp, who is
widely known throughout the
area, these men are able to
expertly repair your car.
The garage features the
btest equipment, including
Sun testing equipment. The
Sun machines com pletely diagnose the ills of vour car,
though the. finer points still
have to be played by car.
Gillett Chevrolet offers ::!4
Hours of operation of the
hour wrecker service and ' garnge and body shop a r e
...-_
will repair any make of car 17:30 to 5 :30 Monday through
AUVl!.l!TISJ;.MCNTS l!NIJER BUS!l\1'SS
--~.
in the body and paint. depart- Friday, and 7:30 to 1:00 on Rl!;V!EW DO NOT CONSTlTUTJ,; AN
And Dry Cleaning
,
!';:'l>ORSEMF:NT ISY THE DEPART·
• Individual Laundry SerTice
ments. The body department ::iuturdays.
Exceptions to m:iw OF rHE ARMY OF rim PRO·
1
ALAMEDA
feature;; fine body mechanics these hours are made for spc- •>ucrs on ~1t_v_1c_L!_A~~ERTtSED
t LAUNDRY & CLEANERS
and paint men. Burr Mc- cial jobs.
I 452 S. Alameda
Ph. 524-2888 I
Las Cruces . N M
Kinney is in charge of the
The sales deo:Jrtment. un~
Body Shop.
der the managership of CurtThe gara 0 e is so localed as .
.
"'
.
.
is Heard , is open every day
USE OUR
to be able to f~rn1sh its faci- except Sunday from 7 :30 to
BUDGET FINANCE fLAN
Ou Repairs ct Accessoriea
lities to the middle valley as B:l)O .
Ask Usl
2113 N. MAIN
well as other areas. For greatAlso in the sales departDllve a sale Carl
er customer convemcnce, the
J
M d ·d A J
Pay as you rldel
The house of
.
ment arc oe
a n , .
RALPH'S GARAGE
Dutch Oven Bread.
garage has direct telephone Lightfoot and o. H . Char821 E Amado1
fA &·748'
l1ncs to both Las Cruces and
• WEDDING CAKES
les. Service manager is Stan.
El Paso. Jn Las Cruces. the
• SPECIAL BREADS
number to call is AD 3-3161; :==:'.;-=-.=..::..;__:~========. I
• FINE PASTERIES
in El Paso, the number is KE I
• PIES
You Will Enjoy A
3-5511.
-- -
BIJSl'H'S
All Ages -
BAKERY
I
DID YOU
LARGEST STOCK WESTERN WEAR IN
THE SOUTHWEST
STANDARD RATES
All Grades -
Privates to Generals
KNOW?
YOU CAN BUY A
CHARCOAL BROILED
STEAK FOR ONLY ••.
8
New Mexico Licensed Standard Companys!
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES FINANCE CO.
2.25
WHERE? AT
:FORT WORTH. TEXAS
Your local representative: HARRY MILLER
ORGAN
MT. LODGE
116 N. MAIN
--- --- --
LA"3 CRUCES N. M.
ORGAN
N. M.
I
- - - - - -- --0. K.
USED CARS
YOU WILL ALWAYS
FIND GOOD ONES
AT . ..
COCl<TAIL
From The
Organ Lodge Bar
GILLETT
Chevrolet Co.
ORGAN
MT. LODGE
Anthony, N. M .:x. · Texas
ORGAN. NM.
Phone
JA 6·5575
Phone
JA 6-5576
L·s Cruces Citize
And The
ind And Sand
--
ASSURES YOU OF A COMBINED CIRCULATION OF OVER •••••
•
••
IINecessary Steps Li.sled
l~~ ~:~;~~~ ! For Prompt Postal Service
j
CLAS.>IFII;O RATES
Minimum
(cash) .....
.. ss11·.00°D
Minimum (charqc)
Adds
con tain!'>
T:~eti~~r:;
10 words
only ·.·.....
Thre• timP& or more
c;1a~s Uiod s
I
Friday, June 22, 1962 -WIND& SAND- 7
or more, 1
Water Lawn
"Just Ri·ght"
Sc per word
char ged and billed to indi-
ITime of Year
viduals who are not regular di•·
"America is a 1 an d of I delivery, get in t ouch wi th
play
odv e r1i&inq accounts.
10~0 1r ap1'd ly ex p a nding suburbs . I the post office immedia tely
additional.
Dl•n!ay Advertising on Cla•llied 1
d
Paqe a• Regular Prevailing Space l JS our desire to furnish a l'\ ascertain wher e and how
Too much w a l e r is a bou t
H ome gard eners and
1
Rates.
I
th
ese
ne
w
residen1ial
areas
you
may receive mail. Usual- as b ad as not enough when , mcrc1al
.
co m
A11 c1a"'1!leds mu•t be scheduled for
··
g r o w ers a r c bci
'1ga dclinite period.
. th
ly, it is necessary that you
d
1
An• claim' !or a<lditional Insertions I w1
prompt, acc urate mail ins tall a rural-type m ail box it comes t o ir rigating y ou r a erte
to w a tc h o ut for I
ar tor cra~lt due to our error. must service.''
s a ys Postmaster
lawn, sa y s Doug Bryan t, 1h ar mful insec ts that co u ld
bea"ti"o'na.de before date of next publl· S o loi1ion G. Alva i·cz.
at
t_he neares t po_int in the
I d
- ---carrier's regular lme of trav - horticultu r is t with the N ew se vere Y amage crops. Th is
' l1e pos t
l
l
ti
M~
·
St t u ·
·
E
is the ti m e of t he year wl1e n
'l
FOR SALE__
__ ,
.
m a: er . ias
1e el, bu t it may be necessa ry,
<XICO
a e
ni ve r s1t:v x• 100 , t;.rr n
.oTs ~~1> uowN. $1U fo llow m g advice for
those u nder cer tain circums tances t e n sion Serv ice. To k ee p billions o f pests alt<lck ne ar1
1
""' ""'"'h Phnne lft 4.y;;~~ .. rt .., li »i n " in new ly co r» tructcd ' } t
.
·
' your g r ass g ro w ing goo d a ll ly all g r owi ng things. F<i r m
., o m
~la) .'6 rF:-i c
,.,
, • ia y ou icce ivc y our m a il
<lnim~l s, pou ltr y a n d eve n
Rl'1'o~:>J·:,;s1;0 SINGE R SEWING MA· homes:
' tt'mpor arily th r ough genera l s umm er. wat er at th e pro -ic r hu man s arc n o ex cep t io n .
CHIVE in """ lnur. 1·nnsolc. lll<c
1. If ) ou occupy a n e w delivery. Notify the pos t of- limf' and a pply enough b ut
""" r;qu iopcd tn zig-zag. mnkes
.
.
.
no t t oo n cl
at
T he v;1st arm y of i n se ct~
hutt1inliole; ~"nd ,,.,, on >-u1tori " 11o me on a str ee t already r e- fi e A immediately wh e n "OU
I u · 1 w· e r.
cau: e
bill ions
of
d o lla r s
G11oramc~d. Total bolance _S3?:~1., eC'iving mail delivery ins tall cire r eady for serv ice to beThe re ar c t w o s'mplc ways
o.- tn kr over p:iymrnls ol :'io .. :O •
'
.
'
worth of dam age a nnua l Iv.
nrnnlhl). ca1: JA G-~~11.
y our ho use n umber and a p- ' gin.
.
to te ll if .v o ur la w n nec 'ls d
.
. d
·
1
Jui"' H 13 "l "" "T Como c11"
c~p1 le ma n s cc larati on of
propri a te m a il re ce pta cle or
.
Unkss a
ri,e
d t 1 wa t eri n g, Bryan t says. O n e scie n t ifi c warfar e on the i n·
. .,
. FOR SAL;E
..
id o o r s Io t im mediately .
~w
r esi Pn is to check !he colo1· of the
111 c ~IODhKi\ HOi\IJ::~. o :-.E Fl 11- 1Sl
ld .
b
t d
meets the requireme nts for "l'aSS Ju • t bc (o
'l l. " .t sect w orld . And no o ne rcal;o.;1s11 r:r , bo111 for ~7 .~00.
A. T.
l OU
:i,ou c 1oca c on a ' .
r e VI'
in,.. . I
.
ll . b tt
11
d
c~;.,, rcaltor. :.:20 s. ~1 ::in sr. .. ,J.\ mounted route (se rved by o c llvery to a box or other t akes on a d arker color, ol"t<n izcs i is e er rnn bu d ing
6-•..s 1
.June - 1- TF:->- C
reccpt~clc
propei·ly pla"cd
.
4-H e ntom o logists.
m o tor veh icle) y ou w ill be
... ·
~
a b l u 1sh green. The fine
63 000
1
\\"fl.I. '!'.\ KE ~~.!>OO FOR '.\lE:-!'S required t o fu;·ni sh a rural- «nd
installed,
his m ail is gras•es a nd clo ver sh o w Coo tS o me
·
strung. they
·
'
'· . d ·
CLOTHING STOHi'; w ilh AILcrnll11n 1
. J d 1·
.
t
. '
'
are activ e in 4-H clu bs in
0
SIH11>. good lornlion. inq utrc 1:13 I' lype mail box_ o r ot he r s uit- p .•i1.;e
ID .,,en e ia
e ivcry a p r m ts a nd don't r cc o \"er
~- ;'"~}'an da) 0lu~~ ~;i:'';;;. al~~P able r eceptacle e r ected at t he the
main pos t office or s ta- q uick l y fro m tram pling. T his more th a n h a lf the rou nt c~
10 or b
h f
h. h
in the U.S .. doing t he ir sha re
curblinc 01·dinarily the ty pe t 11
ranc
rom w i c
is th e _li me t o w:itcr.
- ·
o11.P.~5c,.111:.1
0 r 1"f y ou a re no.t sue I1 a n stot ruprev
e nt says
o r lcs~cn
the dr.__, , n;ctotRo ~·;,
, 11~asc~~1:-;~;;. ,, T:t~i~ of' r·ecep.lacle bc1·n g' u sed by ' h is_ a dd 1css is ser ved, w h ere
ction,
Dorman
C.
us 0 o~na ld Will o~ghby. Box 3'.!1. your n eitthbors would. be the a is held for 10 days (or fewi:mwrslty
Park. N. '.\!. or Yllrra
,,
.
. .
as t u t e o b ser ver, ·. g rve y ou r Brook ey, s t a t c 4-H c lub
1a wn .th e se~·ew d 1:i ver t e,s t · l { l eade r wit h th e N ew M ex co
caoullllo. T c,
.. '.1
er_
currecl one. l£ y ou llave any
e r ifti the se·1
nd er tl
so ·)spcc1!1e_s
p.1 ._:i~'*'·
m
June
21rt-'.lJ-r.
·
Aft
.
-fllll'~tion as t o the t y p e of box o11
1e m a 1 m a e1 .
er the giound i s moist , you 11 be I State Univer~ i ly Ex tens io n
_ _ _ __FOR RENT
or a s lo w here a nd how it lhis p e r iod, th e m ail will be abl e to poke the screw d ri ver Service.
o :-ii:: FURNISHED APT. ~1J.OO. o;.; ~; I s hould be ins t all ed
get in e ndorsed "Unclaimed"
and into the so il. But when it
tou ch w ith the pos t 'office at rnturne d to send e r or other- goes down on ly 3 or 4 inch es,
.~;,,:,.ou.
. Juno 21 --T F J\ once w hen y ou a re ready for w ise a p propri a tely dis posed y ou' ll know th e lower leve ls
I· ·
For Insects
Ne,v Cai·
I
'"l~1·ades
II
"
-
•
-
· -
- ·
-
$1295.
I
Au torn a lH: 4 D r. Sedan
1960 FALCON
$1295.
"
0
•
4 Dr. "700"
S tand ard Tran $mis6ioa
I
I
•
1960 CORVAIR
1960 FORD
Staiion Wagon
I
&·
6 cy l. standat·cl. A n ice one .
I" .. .
I
$1495.
1957 CHEV. 4 DR.
F adory Air C ondi ti~nc d
P uwPrglid e
FOUR SADDLES TO BE GIVEN AWAY-This saddle is being eyed by Susan and Sid
Templeton wit h much anticipation. The saddle is on dis play at the Farmers and Merchant 's Ban k . who donated the saddle. The four top riders in t he Kids Rodeo this
week-end will b e awarded the four saddles. Susan and Sid. both :top contest ants in
71
~~~D~~iiDR~'~c~.- ~~~~~d, a~~i-~~rr~;.~
ITRI p
I
Iservice lo begin.
I
1
Off• ·---- lee 8 Pace
1
sl~\ oETp.R\1J1f'20NLlT~:urcHhOSSPtITALn'_N I
;,:
I
"' •
=·
Tl!Surgical Plan ts non-ranee.Jiable
and paid up at age a·~
' o· r
• RC!!; P b:R
W~~:f~EL. i;;At - 0; s .n ALaIR· ~ruces Al;
~'"'
• "
0 ' 01
Force Reserve
Unit. Help the Air
Force
Reserve
and
nelp,,.uremcnt
yourseU
to promotions, pay. and
.• SGeorvvtl.cecocnotnrtarcatcotro•,,
I•
Ottlcer
at
JA 4- 7022
Occupy ofll~•· finished to your
space and layout requirement> In
Northeast
Paso;.,. away
conqested El
areas,
closefrom
to
4
your and your employees homes.
• Sh~rt term leases acceptable
or 1ntnrmatlnn
·~~ ~~ dll~~
White Sands-Hollornan·
Ft. Bliss
:~n~~it~A c~:._~~~; F~·'iT;~t c~-::::::,~~~;
·.•·.CJ
oJ.
u=
• Turnl<ey Job for a room or "
1uite
tROFEl:iSIONAL SERVICES
:rcou· u 11~0 prl<.:ea
ou1 printing
and ow
reasonable
La• Cruces Cltl·
s Chnr~n
or P.O. Box 4043 Sunrise
EL PASO. TEXAS
REBUILT MOTORS
n
CHEVROLET "6"
$1 59.50 installed
FORD & CHEVROLET
'56 to '59 V-8 $225
BONDED BRAKE JOB
D
fte· nne 4 wheels . labor and shoes
,
lrnm•di;:,t•Ei~·;;:~ioa
CALL OR SEE .. ,
VERN KRUGER
AND ASSOCIATES
I
j
Main
Suite
I
$14.95
Ph.
nt:-.6 \Jh..T
AU f0MAT1C TRANSMISSIONS
.llAh'.Ei:i
!;;1::1'. l:S A:-iD SA\11!;
,\LL
office:
126,
8601
--- -
PORTER LUMBER CO.
(West Of Depot)
800 W. Organ JA 6 -2461
E 4's AND UP
G00-D
-Ory Lumber
1--
50 CARS
TO CHOOSE
le to 8c 1 Board Ft.
Cheaper by the Bundle!
Credi t By Phon e
C & C Bl.DG.
MATERIALS
ALCAZAR
R£A~ E~TATE
Best Food and Reputation
In The World
lNSU:ANCE:
SEABURN
COLLINS
AGE:VCY
I
LAS CRUCES. N. t.t.
LO 6-2969
1
THE HOUSE OF THE
PORRON
Our SpeciaUy
•' t lt!t
SPECIALISTS • REPAIRING
• REBUILDING
•EXCHANGES
• PARTS
Written Guarantee.
4.000 Miles or 90 Days
f\l 1g:n o:i a t...a Cha mp! ~ 1 ysse 1
New \'ot k Cut Especial
Pa!!l la A
La
Tcnd c~ loin
V a l cnC'lana
Roast
Fre nch :;,t y le
Cl1atcu Briand St rnsh urg otse St .vi•
l..obster A.ny Slylr And The Best
Jel Automatic
ti. IPx w a n Fond
l'wo Blu<'l<S South of Bridge. 1 Right f Juarez) - Tel. 2-4!t84
RAFAEL S AMPE DRO. M gr.
CLOSED MO ND A YS
A
I
J> 6 -6662
1700 N. Main -
JA 6 -6661
Fl EC
1
_
~..:;:~;d.'.':%'.OJl.M.,:>;o.ill,.<v,;:;j;d~
All Furniture
Sanitized and
DIoth-Proofed
GUARANTEED!
I1962 CADILLAC. 2400 Miles
. .. .. .. ... ...
$4995.00 '
L 0 A N
s
1961 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE.
Air, Like New
$4495.00
1960 CADILLAC COUPE DeVILLE,
13.000 miles in El Paso
$3995.00
OF
VALUE!
1959 C A DILLAC SEDA N DeVILLE
The b est in town, NOW O N LY
$2295.00
1960 LINCOLN PREMIERE SEDAN
All extras. cos t $6800
MOORE'S
PAWN SHOP
$2995.00
1961 FALCON WAGON 4 DR. SEDAN
Like n e w, all extras. ONLY
$ 1995.00
ON
I
I
ANYTHING
1210 N. MAI~
JA 4-7611S
·SPORT CAR
SPECIALIST
/ ,as rruces
Movin#- & Storage
JA 6-2474
..,.. ,, .,.~ ,,er
IF YOU NEED A
TOP QUALITY USED
CAR SEE THESE
NOW AT •••
WEINREICH
• 1
$
I
BLISS AUTO SALES
4730 PERSHING DRIVE
EL PASO
DIAL LO 6 -1616
LOW FINANCING RA TES
'
'
•wsMR Figures, WIND & SAND. May lL 1962
In salaries being spread annually over El Paso, Las Cruces, Truth or Consequences, Socorro, Carrizozo, Tularosa, Hatch, Alamogordo and other areas.!
MR. MERCHANT, LET US GIVE YOU RATES AND DATA ON AN EFFECTIVE NEWSPAPER AD PROGRAM FOR YOUR NEEDS!
Las Cr uces. N. M.
~~VANS
LAS CRUCES
$495.00
When the wages portion of the Army Budget is added to the wages of personnel
of al,l services and contractors using White Sands Missile Range ... The sun1 is
an estimated . . . • .
1--·--·- -·-
1960 FORD V -8 COUNTRY SEDAN
Wagon. all ex tras
$1595.00 · - - - - - - - - - - - ·
1958 LINCOLN SEDAN;
$1495.00 i
Fully equipped, A -1 Condition
1959 CHEVROLET IMPAL A.
$ 1495.00
All e x tras. NOW ONLY
FOR
1958 C H EVROLl;'.:T IMPALA COUPE
IMPORTED
CARS
$1195.00
Clean. A - 1 condition ..
VAN LIN ES
(Dom estic T o o )
1957 MERCEDES BENTZ 190 S EDAN.
$ 995.00
• F actory Trained
A r eal d a ndy, a nd priced a t only
M echanics
1960 OPEL 2 DR. S EDA N.
You m u st see 1o app r eciate
... $ 895.00
• Automotive Clinic
1957 BUICK SEDA N. Air & Powe r. Clean . Only
. $ 745.00
• Parts a nd S ervice
Stoi-age 1953 C A D !LLAC FLEETWOOD SEDAN.
Packmg • CratinL
Hones t Priced Ser vice
Air , A n other E l Paso "Best" ..... ................... .............. ... $ 495.00
1956 GMC \/2 TON PICKUP
- Free Consull:al:ion$ 495.oo I
Runs r eal good , ONLY ....... .. .
$ s45.oo
1959 F IAT 1100 WAGON, Save $200, NOW
$ 395.00 I
1955 M E RCURY STATION WAGON, Clea n
225 E. MAY -
4 Dr. Hardtop,
O ne O wne r
G FIGURES
J ack T hompson
E d Gauthie r
Corne r Pershing & Copia
3600 Pershing
El Paso
f!Dlid~W
{9'
1957 BUICK
FUTURE BRIGHT FOR WSM R FOR DONA AN~ COUNTY FOR THE ENTIRE SOUTHWESTI
COMPANY
~ ~
N ellr uth Isa acks •
recrc:.ttion
Tran~mission
Q~~lll:Y:.tO:>MES
. ..· ... ' . ' ..... .,.
~
9,000-acre
I
I
~
. . .
5900 Dyer
AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
••• OUR ONLY
BUSINESS
Resiaurani Bar
I
TV In e w
I
I
t
EL PASO. TEXAS
Mo t ot Exchange & Trans mission
rexas
IC!; 2-2251
to
R aton. on U. S. Highwa.v ll:i, 1 se1s.
::irea and Lake Maloy a , Here.
j u,;t ~even mi le~ south ol the , Now a community " ith one can enJo.v good t r out
Colo rado bordc1.
\\"Ide._ pav cd str eets, modern fi~hing (lhc Jake ha,; been
"
b uildmns, ch u rch cs and
.
l he coun t y spat of Colfax
"'
'
• stocked with legal -sit:c trout
C
d
·
~c
h
ools,
R
a
lon
offers
p
le
nty
1
.
. .
.
R
·
18~~0m 1) '. '.1. o~. ··1 1u un c1~ Im to the visi tor in t he w <1y of I this year), h ikrng lh1 ough
., . 1' p1 1mLn1y a catt e,
d
lush
. d t 1.
1 .
railroading and ,;1 inin« ce;n- :n o ern _ acco1~moc at1on~ a nd I
.' ver u11
on;~'l an d
Molorama
Cornet P1cac bo & Truck S\ Paaa
DURJ-BUILT
?.3 ?.~
guns
Call Mr. Little
Dyer,
COLONIA MOTOR
HOTEL
755-5521 or 755-76 21
EL PASO. TEXAS
Icu5lom- m ade
REAL BUY
· ·
wh en y ou hav e a n inch of
1,
wa te r 1·n the can.
, -
II
- -- -----
°.
I'=-=::=:;:::;=:;::;::;::==:===='. I'-------------'
':=::w: s:=M~: =l=>~=-~=~=·~=~=s!=~=;=~:=v~=u~s:~~=ea=.:::_I -;omes- & Rentals
to
I
Visit Our Bargain Shed
Odds PO.Inti.
& Ends of
Lumher,
Furmture
Al Bargain Prices
•'ur111st1ca ' ana t ccdroom.
University OAvenue.
t\'11n ute~
I '· "·
$995.
1
RATON
t . It . t· bl .
I
.
mtcres tmg l hmgs lo do and carnpmg o u t. Ncurby is the
ei.
s s <1 c a nc piogies- sec.
R t
S .·
. .
.
·
·
New M e xico is fo m ous for , ~1 vc econ omy bas b cc• n
a on
k1 A1ea, wl11<:h ofc n o u ,..nh . to last a. w eek,
al
/
.
.
[
I
. ,.· " . ha v mg variet y a n d contrast boost ed even tnOl'f' rece n tly
Lake Malaya
{er:; spcctac.:ular s1.;cnc1·y and
th ou gh m t h e earl y so ? 1n l,.,, i t a s 1.t s spice
·
f 11.Je fo r t ounsls
.
' w .it 11 A . R . F . F.leclronics
.
o
Ea:;t
fro
m
R
alon
8
m
ile;;
r c:.·r cation such a:; horseback
m av last a s long as ~ 0 4
d
.
• .
.
.
I . .
. .
BUICK-PONTIAC
A n.sw e rs to quest ions abo ut we~ks
. in hot s u m mer l o spc an e n.1 0.v _each . ~car. C om pany_ a,nd h .<.u ser St_cc l on Slate R oad 72, t hen north ndmg, h 1kmg, and c.:amping
01
848 N. 7th Ph. 4-7707
1 I 11
I
"
A
d
b
ti
d
t
C
t
K
I
1
M
' :.11 a spects o f t he pos ta l wea th er no l m ore than 4
n
o
le~e m gr e ien s . orpora 1011 s OP 1 er 1r.e, for t wo miles, over a spe- dunng the summer ; skiing, OPEN EVENINGS TILL 8 P.M.
SUNDAYS ID • 5 P.M.
service c a n
be obt a ined d
varie ty a n d co ntras t - .1ust sou th of town , pl u~ te n cially b u ilt ro<ld across John - 1of cour;;c, during the winter
1
quickl y by calling 524_2841 aT
y s. b
p 1 y are to be found w hen v1s1tin g sm all er fi r ms ranging from son M esa, takes yo u t o the season.
o e s um yoo ap
,-~-~~~~-~~~====~===~~~~==============~===============~~~~~~~~~~~~
or 524-2842 .
e noug h water, set a co [fce
~
can under the spl"inkler . Stop
For Information
Patio A pariments
91"
Ianyou ms pchr inkle.
of water each ti m e I
Th ;s is usual ly I
addrcs.; every
·r
h ·
ay OJ tw o lo s r.e l he as
b
·
Jd
·
.
. 1
J ma1 1
e m g 11e
in gcn e1a
d e ' ; v-crv
CALL 755-5521.
MR. KRUGER
zen. 114
Nea1 Un!ven tl)' -
serving h is
Jct·
· ·
4 Dr, HT, New Yorker
Power <lnd Air Cond.
A Sha r p. Sharp Car.
ton .. Bob is chairman of the Sheriff's Posse Kid's Rodeo commiitee this year.
(Photo by Math ieu )
OF T E W_E_E_K
_
are dry a nd need a goo d I (Editm"s No le : Tn is is a n J ~~~~~ i~~.;;.r:~. ~;,sPc?,~;~~L!., ft~~
2. If y our new home is on
I t is the refore m ost Im - 1soakin g . The screwdi:ivc_r test other of s u ggested one-d ay or
by Canlyn Joyce Cullen" crrcctlvc 1' a stree t not r e ceiving m ail porta nt that any
re side nt ~ ay n ot be . a tr ue rndicator 1weekend ll'ips in N e w M exthis dale Jun e 20, 1962 Robert I
m sandy soil sm ce p c nctra- 1·
'fl
t .·.
11co.
EasrE Rcvu 1c1cE·n~
CIL-ll-J> •I who h as not ins tall ed a mail r ·
.ll b
1e m a eiia1 was pre. :
.,
r eceptacle in accord a n ce w ith mn W I
e m uc 11 fLls. er re- pare d by 1he To u r ist D iv1ost office de livery require - ga rd less of mo isture.
I sion or . the Dcp~rtment of
~LL KI N L>:S ol' ALTEHATIONS,
.P
B
t
.
1
~amta«tlon !{uaranteed ni; ra n
mcnls call at the pos tal unit
ry :int s u gges s app y rng D evelopme n t).
_ _ _ __ N
_o_T_I_CE
in any event they might enter. are the daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Temple-
$895.
1957 CHRYSLER
Automotive
Import
Phon e 532 -6935
2316 Myrtle
E l Paso
LAS CRUCES CITIZEN
ANDTHE
I
W ND AND SAND
Combined Circulation of Over11,000!
114 S. CHURCH ST.
PHONES: JA 6-5575 -
JA 6-5576
8 -WIND & SAND-Friday, June 22, 1962
Career Program
NCO's Chosen
Chaffee and Polk Retained
As Active lnslallalions
Fort Polk, La., and Fort Chaffee, Ark., reopened
last year during the Berlin crisis, will be retained as
active Army installations after release from active
duty in August of Army Reserve component units,
the Department of the Army announced today.
Both installations come under the jurisdiction of
Fourth U.S. Army, commanded by Lt. Gen. Carl H.
Jark.
Plans have been approved to open an Army
Training Center at Fort Po1k effective this month,
. with the first trainees scheduled to arrive early in
Ju1y. The trainee population is expected to number
eventually between 17,000 and 20,000 men.
Approximately 9,00Q active Army troops will be
phased into Fort Chaffee during and after departure
in August of the Army Reserve Components stationed
there. Types of units to be stationed at Fort Chaffee
has not yet been determined.
Fort Polk was closed in , - - - - - - - - - - - 1959 as excess to military fee is Kentucky's
needs. It was activated in Training Division with an
August last year to house authorized strength of 3,000.
and train the Reserve Component units called to active
duty. Major unit there is
Texas National Guard's 49th
Armored (Lone Star) division.
No significant change is ex(Continued from Page 1)
pected to result in the num·
ber of civilian personnel em- question and answer session
ployed at the installation be- will follow.
The dirt access road to
fore and after the action beNan Site turns north off
ing taken by the Army.
Fort Chaffee, an Army Highway 70 approximately
training camp during World three miles east of the
War II, was listed as surplus WSMR access road. It is
to military requirements in marked with a station desig1959 and closed in June of nation sign, and the lights
that year. It was reopened of the station can be clearly
last September for use as a seen from the highway. Only
training center for Army Na- members and guests with
tional Guardsmen and Re- proper clearance and identifiservists called to active duty cation from WSMR, of
course, can have access to
by the President.
Largest unit at Fort Chaf- Nan Site.
SPI Engineers
ToMeel June 30
Drinking Drivers
Released By JACK GILLIAM,
Traffic Safety Administrator, Sania Fe, New Mexico
(Continued from Page 1)
select and assign qualified
NCOs to key Army Logistics
system positions in the U.S.,
and overseas to make full
use of their specialized skills.
Through t.pis p r o g r a m,
NCOs will benefit in career
development and incentives.
The objective of the program
includes providing a replacement framework of qualif'.ed
Ordnance NCOs for stateside
and overseas technical duties.
Requirements for the pro: gram include: the candidate
1
: must be fully
qualified in
his Primary Military Occupational Specialty and not
Ihave a skill digit level of
less than .6, he must have a
high school education, must
be free of any military or
M-1-4 Th!STRUCTION Is given civilian court conviction, unto Secretary of the Army Elvis der 45 years of age and have
J. Stahr, jr. ·{above) by MSgt , at least 10 years remain_ing
Raymond Ruel, Co E, 13th Inf, I before separation or ret1reFt. Riley, Ka n. Left, Mr. Stah r ment from the Army.
NCOs in g.r a.des E-5
is briefed by Col. Lloyd Hanes,
CO, 2 8th fnf, during his recent through .E.-9 wishing to bevisit to ft. Riley. About the come e!Ig1ble for the ~ro­
M· 14 Mr. Stahr said: "I've fired gram may submit a DA Form
a lot of rifles in my time. This
one is light. It's well ba lanced.
,Jt handles well and it has fi re·
'power beyond what one wou ld
,expect of a rifle. I thought it
.was terrific," D!)fing WWII Mr.
(Continued from Page 1)
Stahr was an Infantry offi cer
Saturday,
the 23rd of June.
and weapons instructor at the
Once
again
we urge all
Infantry School, ft, Benning 1
who are interested to take
'Ga.
an active part in either the
production or the performing
Buses to WSMR
of The Pajama Game. There
is a need not only for acTo Change Schedule tors
dancers, and singers, but
Beginning in July
also' for lighting, make-up,
Commercial and govern- and audio technicians, as well
ment transportation facilities as stage crew.
for White Sands personnel
and many TV shows, in adwill be combined effective
di tion to his regular role m Monday, July 2.
the "Outlaws."
.
, The intra-city transportaCollier, who plays Deputy tion charge to the thansfer
Marshall Will For~an in the point located between Lohshow, was born m Holly- man Ave. and Kansas St. on
wood, but _didn't ~hink about the Bellamah Loop in Las
actmg until a varrety of car- Cruces will be 15 cents. Govecrs-including ~anching m ernment fare to WSMR will I
Oregon, seaman m the Mer- be 10 cents. Coupon books j
chant Marines and the poul- for the new fare will be on
try and fis~ b1:1sincss in sale during the week of June I
southern California - had 25 at the ticket booth at
been tried. He was screen White Sands.
tested in 1959 and signed for
Government bus drivers
the role. He. has appeared in I will distribute inter and
several movies and many TV intra city bus schedules durrolcs.
ing the week of J une 25.
The "Outlaws'' pair will be
Personnel res i d i n g in
featured in a specialty pro- Hatch, Anthony, Dona Ana,
gram on Saturday and Sun- La Mesa, Vado, San Miguel,
day, Sept. 22-23, the final and Alamogordo will contwo days of the 11 day 1962 tinue to use government
Anniversary Ne w Mexico transportation.
State Fair in Albuquerque.
There's nothing new under
Destructive
critcism
Is 1
the sun- and the same old comparatively easy - the 1
stuff is gomg on under the constructive kind requires
I rots of thought.
moon.
Senate Okays
Cluariers Bill
TOOT-TOO T-TOOTSIE JULY- July. the summer
m onth, is a good time for jumping. Paratroopers of the
82d Airborne cou ldn't agree more. Nicknamed the "All
American" D ivision. they have selected another "All
Amer ican," Anita Gillette. who stars in the Broadway
hit musical " All American," as the girl they would most
like to jump with. Miss Gillette see.ms to be pondering
whether to take such a big step.
•
(Continued from Page 1)
caliber personnel in both the
officer and enlisted rank
structure ...
"We owe to those military
per sonnel for whom we cannot provide housing, quarters
allowances more in line with
current costs in the civilian
com '11 Unity.
"We consider the proposed
increases to be very modest
and request your favorable
consideration."
The committee also voted
t o postpone until "early next
year" consideration of t he recomputation of military retired pay.
1049 (Personnel Action) and j applicable to the
appropriate material through MOSs:
command channels to Chief
763
of Ordnance, Washington 25,
639
D. C. Attention: ORDHP.
419
Pr·esently, the program is
411
•
'Pajama Game'
Holds Tryouts
Entertainment Signed
For N. M. State Fair
The entertainment lineup
the 1962 Anniversary
New Mexico State Fair was
completed today with the
signing of two stars of the
popular "Outlaws" television
series for the final two days
of this year's exposition.
The two arc Slim Pickens
and Don Collier, who have
been booked to head-line
championship rodeo shows in
Tingley Coliseum on Sa turday and Sunday, Sept. 22-23.
Other stars signed for the
1962 rodeo shows are: Paul
"Wishbone" Brinegar and
Shcb Wooley of the "Rawhide" TV series, Sept. 15-16;
Pat Boone, TV, movie and
record star, Sept. 17-18-19,
and Homer and Jethro, hillbilly comedy record stars,
Sept. 20-21. Popular singer
Jimmie Rodgers and The
Fairmount Singers will back
all nine days of star shows
in the Coliseum.
Pickens, who plays "Slim"
on the "Outlaws" show, is a
former rodeo star who broke
into motion pictures in 1950.
Since that time he has appeared in about 50 movies
for
Twenty-one out of 48 of the May traffic fatalities
involved a drinking driver Unusually high? Not
necessarily. Study after study has shown alcohol to
be a factor in 50 to 80 percent of fatal traffic accidents.
Accidents caused by a tire blowout, or some other
unpredictable mechanical failure, might be viewed
with some sympathy, but drinking and driving is a
willful act on the part of a driver. The only possible
excuse is ignorance of the facts or just plain ''don't
care.' 1
Negligent homicide with a gun or any other lethal device is not condoned by society. But just count
the number of people who go to j ail for manslaughter
with a motor vehicle. At the present tim e no driver
in the State has his license revoked because of a manslaughter conviction. Maybe it's because so many feel
that "there but by the Grace of God go I.''
There are some well established facts about
drinking and driving. About 72 percent of American
adults imbibe intoxicating liquor in some form. Those
who boih drink and drive can be grouped in there
categories: The chronic alcoholics who drive, the pyscopotic driver who drink, and the so-called "normal
drinkers" who are "normal dr ivers." It's the last
group :that: causes most of the :trouble.
At least half of all drinking situations occur at
places which require some form of transportatjon
after the drinking- mostly automobiles driven by
persons whose driving ability is impaired.
The effects of alcohol on driving behavior is well
known to scientists, medical authorities and the p~lice.
It may not be so well known to the average dnver.
The question then is, what happens to a person when
he drinks and how much does it take?
The medical experts in this field are in agreement
o nthe answer to the first part. Alcohol reduces vision, increases reaction time and releases inhibitions.
Released inhibitions not infrequently result in driving too fast and the exercise of p o o r judgment
which, at a time when vision and reaction time is impaired, sets the scene for a serious accident.
How much liquor is required to r each a dangerous point may vary to some extent between indivi- 1
duals, but one thing seems certain. Impairment of ,
driving ability begins almost as soon as alcohol enters
the blood stream even though it might not be noticeable after one drink or one bottle of beer. Positive
deteriorations begins at the relative low level of .03
• .05 percent of alcohol concentration in :the blood.
For the average person this point is reached aftar
only two drinks in one hour. Anyone who consumes
four or five regular size drinks in a two or :three hour
period is in even greater danger if he attempts to
drive afterwards and is definitely in the "under the
influence" range.
The consequences of driving "under the influence" are serious. A convic~ion means. a stiff fii;e. or I
jail sentence and automatic revocat10n of dnvmg
privileges for at least one year. Frequently, the pen-
, ·
SAViHGS
_
BONDS
..ow i>w
'2' 3/c(
LOW
I
SHOOK TIRE CO.
AS. •••• •
111 N. MAIN
PH. JA 4-4681
LAS CRUCES. N. M.
:..................................--............ ............................._,
•
LIVING COSTS
GOING
SKY-HIGH?
e
•
1
READ AND USE THE
1
CLASSIFIED ADS
'
0 ·
FOR BIG SAVINGS ..
o
L~ 4L~
.95
ARE YOUR
Jj'
,
j,
~
u5
AS
--;:==========.
e
Dr. Alfonso J . Rios
Cedula No. 81841
-------------------------
Re 9 • s.s.A. 2055
257 Juarez Ave.
Ciudad Juarez. Chih.,
Phone 2-3881
Mexico
When YOU hit the "zero countdown" on cash ...
Don't tense up like 01' Sarge here - come in or call
Texas Public Finance.
THERE ARE SPECIAL MONEY PLANS FOR ARMED FORCES PERSONNEL
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We invite you to visit .•.
We assure you that you
will be completely satisfied!
~
TEXAS PUBLIC FINANCE
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SA VE MORE ""ONEY! The classified c olumns are
chock-full of ads that offer you bigger and better buys!
Whether il's a home or a car. a washer or a mow er.
business equipment or fa rm m achinery ; or any and
eYery type of service. you'll alw ays H Ye m ore if rou
check the classified columns F IRST!
GET MORE MONEY! S mart families raise r.x:tra caah
by seling unused clothing, musical instruments fw:nilure, appliances, or what have you! An inexpensive.
result-getting classified ad converts excess belongings
into ready money, r(!11is spare rooms in 110 lime llail
Call fQ.r an ad-taker lodayl
Citizen -Wind And Sand
Ads Bring Quick Results I
•
~~~m~~h&~~~~~m~~~~.
The Motor Vehicle 'Department is required by ~~~==~~====~~~~~L~~~·=·~~~·~Re~p~fu~~~d~a~d~E:~:m~l~M~d~l:•~~~e~St~m~e~&:n~~=~~D:•~~~·~~:m=t~~~
~
---- - - -- ··- - ·
1
law to revoke the license of any person who is con-
victed of DWI and there is no recourse. There has
been an increasing number of convicted drivers who
have tried to save their license by appealing their
convictions to a higher court hoping that a good lawyer and Jong delays will result in dismis~al. B~t the
Motor Vehicle Department has broad d1scret10nary
suspension powers and uses it in such cases.
The Director of Driver Improvement has been
instructed to suspend the license of any person upon
receipt of an official report that the driver has been
convicted or charged with DWI, regardless of whether
the conviction is final or an appeal is pending. The
D ivision has the authority to suspend a license anytime there is cood reason to believe the operation of
a motor vehi~le by a person is inimical to public
safety. There does not have to be a conviction.
Fair warning is given that drinking drivers have
been and will continue, but on a larger scale, to lose
their licenses. Tales of hardship will gain little sympathy. The Division's concern is preventing accidents
and saving lives. If it means taking more irrespon- I
A WONDERFUL NEW SURBURBAN STORE
TO SERVE YOU •••
Citizen • Wind 8c Sand Ads Give You A Double Barrel Punch(
MR. MERCHANT, LET US GIVE YOU RATES AND DATA ON AN
EFFECTIVE NEWSPAPER AD PROGRAM FOR YOUR NEEDS!
Las
PDPULAn~EASSETT
C!NT!n
EL PASO, TEXAS
• Shop by Mail or Phone when you can't leave hom e.
Write or call Sally the Shopper at KE 2-7711
will be done.
'
\.__ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ,
sible drivers off the road to do the job, that's what .
Cru~es
Citizen
and the
Wind· And Sand
COMBINED CIRCULATION OF OVER 11.000
114 S. Church Si.
Phones J A 6-5575 • JA 6-5578
l---------------------------------------------.•
•
e

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