Gets Underway Today - (WSMR) Historic Newspaper Digital Archive

Transcription

Gets Underway Today - (WSMR) Historic Newspaper Digital Archive
For tlie Eatest Local
and National News
DIAL A NEWS at
678-2251. Stay in
Tune With the World.
Distributed to military and civilian personnel on White Sands Missile Range. Published weekly by Las Cruces Ciilzen. Las
Cruces, N. M .. a private firm in no way connected with Department of the Army. Opinions expressed by publishers and
writers herein are their own and are not to be consldeTed an official expression of Department of the Army. Appearance of
advertisements in this publication does not constitute .an endorsement by Department of the Army of products or services.
1
Vol. XITl -
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico, Friday, September 29, 1967
No. 26
Eight Pages
4th Army WAC Adviser rW~~d·f;~~-ih~·y~~1 Post Federal Campaign
Visits Missile Range
Gets Underway Today
We af Whlfe Sands Missile Range are preparing for
!he 1967 Combined Federal Campaign which supports
11 National Health Agencies, four International Service
Agencies and more than 35 United Fund organizations
in the counties of El Paso, Dona Ana, and Otero. Actual
With
Chairman Bob
fund drive is scheduled fo start 29 September and end 7
Courtney at the wheel, the
November 1967.
.I am faking this opportunity to remind each of you White Sands Missile Range
Federal
of the worth of this drive and to ask that you consider 1957 Combined
the benefits fo be derived from your donations by the Campaign hit the road today in quest of funds to
many community aid and service agencies.
"I am well pleased with
the White Sands Missile
Range WAC Detachment
and the work persounel
are doing,"
commented
Lieutenant
Colonel E.
Marie Baird,, WAC Adviser from the Fourth U. S.
The ~ederal activifles in this. area have combined
!he annual United Fund Campaigns and the several ·
Heal!h and Service Crusades into a single drive in res·
ponse to many requests from the federal employes, ineluding military. All of !he recipient agencies have
agreed µpon a budgeted share of donations.
To make it easier for you to donate, we have arranged for payroll deductions which may be spaced
over a year's time and not seriously affect your take-
Army Headquarters at Ft. Sam
Houston, Tex., during a visit
to the national missile range
last week.
LTC Baird explained that
the Secretary of Defense has
authorized a 35 per cent increase in personnel strength for
the Corps and that personnel
will be utilized in across-theboard career fields. She continued by saying that a full
WAC Detachment is now on
duty In Vietnam, filling highly
specialized assignments in communications, cryptography and
other fields.
A native of Texas, LTC Baird
e n t ere d military service in
1943 and served until 1946
when she left the Corps to get
married. She was recalled to
duty as a reserve officer in
1951.
The Fourth Army officer
made the official visit to the
range to discuss WAC Detachment activities and personnel
utilization. She was escorted
on a tour of the post by First
Lieutenant Nancy Jurgevich,
comanding officer of the White
Sands WAC Detachment.
home pay. However, cash donations or p 1edges may be
made to the organizations of your choice.
In response to the bqdgefs of :the various receiving
agencies, !he WSMR goal is to fry to exceed last year's
drive because I feel that you, as responsiblle citizens of
your community, will support those activities which
make your community a better place to live: and I am
certain !hat everyone wanfs to help !hose less fortunate
than themselves.
I urge you fo contribute genermisly fo the WSMR
Combined Federal Campaign.
H. G. DAVISSON
Brigadier General, USA
Commanding
---
Pers~ing
Successfal,
Athena Set Thursday
THIS IS IT - Lieutenant Colonel E. Marie Baird (left),
WAC Adviser from the Fourth U. S. Army Headquarters
at Ft. Sam Houston, Tex., looks over Missile Park with
First Lieutenant Nancy Jurgevlch, Whlt.e Sands WAC Detachment commander. The Fourth Army officer was on au
official visit to the missile range to discuss WAC acti\'lties
and personnel utilization. (U. S. ARMY PHOTO)
~-~-~~--~-~----
US Plans New 'Light'
• Anti -ballistic ilfissile
Troops from Ft. Sill, Okla., . - - - - - - - - - - - - - successfully launched two of impact areas in the vicinities
the Army's long-range Persh- of La Sal and Monticello, Utah,
ing missiles from the White and Magdalena. and Datil, N.
Sands Missile Range launch M., will be required to leave
site at Bliµiding, Utah, Wed- thP.ir homes again on Monday.
nesday morning.
All three of the Air Force
Both two-st.age ballistic mis- re-entry missiles were prosiles impacted in the target grammed to impact on White
area at the range, some 400 Sands Missile Range, with
miles away.
White Sands Monito1·ing the
The United States plans to - - - - - · - - ·-·- - · - -- -- __.. ____ ·- ... - ....-- - -- -· ------Firing units were from the firings and providing range
1
be~ production by the end of gree of reliability against a tal missile by !j.IlY one of the 2nd Battalion, 79th Artillery, support.
this year of a Chinese-oriented Chiense attack1 than the much nuclear powers."
Ft. Sill.
anti - ballistic missile deploy- more massive and complicated
The two missiles had been
ment that h~s a number of ~d- system that some have recomPenetration Aids
originally scheduled for Friday,
vantages besides defense again- , mended against a possible SoHe noted the Soviets are now September 15, but were postst a possible missile attack on viet attack_"
deploying an anti-ballistic mis- poned until today awaiting ret'his country by Communist
Nucear Blackmail
Sile system; however, the sys- suts of the investigation into
Chi~a.
"
Preliminary estimates place tern does not presently affect the malfunction which allowed 1
Bisclosure of,, light deploy- the cost of this deployment at in any signif.icant manner the a Pershing to overshoot the
ment of U.S.
anti-ballistic about $5 billion over a five to United States' assured destruc- range and impact in Mexico
Missiles and weather support
missiles was made September six year period.
tion capability.
Tuesday, September 12.
equipment are on exhibit this
~8 b b~ SS~r~ary of b ~efense
Such an ABM deployment,
He explained t h e United
Studies of recovered missile week at the First Annual
o ·terd P. c I amt arati e olreEda~
the secretary noted, "would States has already taken the hardware revealed that an elec- Southern New Mexico Fa.ir in
1
Um e
ress n ema ona
"d
ddT
· d'
trical short circuit caused the Las Cruces.
tors and Publishers meeting in P_rovi e ai: a 1 !Ona1 ~ ica- steps necessary to assure that
San Francisco.
hon to As1az:.s that we intend this country's land-based Min- malfunction.
The Naval Ordnance Missile
S
t
M N
said to deter Chma from nuclear uteman missiles nuclear subPrior to today's firings, ad- Test Facility (NOMTF) has on
li h~credarr
ct ai:~ra ABMs blackmail, and thus would con- I marine launched' new Poseidon ditional preflight electric cir- display three major Navy mis., g Id hep oymen h h. h d
tribute toward our goal of dis-1 missile; and the strategic cuitry checks were made on siles - Talos, long range surwou
ave a muc
ig er e- couraging nuclear weapon pro-1 bomber' forces have the re- the two missiles in order to face to air system; Terrier,
llferation among the present! quisite penetration aids. He preclude a similar malfunction. medium range, and the short
non-nuclear countries."
1 added that the missiles and
• • •
range Tartar. A watch list
The Chiense-oriented ABM, bombers constitute a force of
Three ATHENA miss Iles keeps sailors available for safeso named because of its pri- such magnitude, "that they were scheduled for launch last ty of the equipment and to
The Department of Defense ~ary purpose, v:ould also pro- guarantee us a force strong night from the White Sands answer questions.
has requested the Selective vide the U.S. with further de- enough to survive a Soviet at- test site at Green River, Utah,
Army Electronics Research
Service System to provide 22,- fense of Minuteman ICBM sites tack and penetrate the Soviet when Wind and Sand :vent to and Development Activities
000 inductees in November 1967 against Soviet attack.
ABM deployment."
press early Thursday. night.
(ERDA) displays data collecto be assigned to the U. S.
.
If v:eather condih~ns wer_e tion activities used in support
Additionally, Secretary McNamara pointed out that "such
The Uruted ~tates ha~ .h.ad not smt~ble for meeting opb- of range programs including
Army.
The request, 5,000 more than a reasonably reliable ABM botdh tthet ~echdm:a1b.Pl.otss1bf1hty cal requ.1rements, the two mhis- impact prediction. The display
the October call, will assure a system would add protection of an s. ra egic es1ra 1 I y o an siles, with flares .are re-sc e- consists of photographs of
timely flow of replacements for our population against the im- American ABM d;pioYn:ent dued for Monday mght, October various equipment used in pro.
viding missile support.
men completing their terms of probable but possible acciden- under constant review smce 2.
tal launch of an intercontinen- the late 1950s. (AFPS)
People evacuating booster
At
.
service. (ANF)
another locat10n ERDA
has outdoor equipment used to
give immediate and re a I
weather information to the
audience. This includes balloons and other instruments.
These exhibits are provided by
the White Sands' Atmospheric
Sciences Office, Atmospheric
Science Laboratory of Ft. MonA branch of the White Sands mouth, N. J.
Federal Credit Union will be 1 Aso representing WSMR acopened in Las Cruces next Mo?- I tivities is the Americanism
day according to Bert Leslie, booth. The booth is provided by
1
1president of the Union. The the WSMR Rocket Chapter 28Z
. branch, located at 1255 South of the National Sojourners In1 Main, will be managed by Mrs. corporated. Here literature and
Lind.a. McCafferty. . .
: information free to the public
I Military and civ1han em- on Americanism and its broadployes of the range, Dona ~a est meaning is available.
County workers and retired
military personnel are eligible
to join the Credit Union.
Operating hours for the branch
will be 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. weekOnly one more opportunity
days and 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on remains f'or persons interested
Saturdays.
in enrolling in a refresher
All credit union services course for the Engineer-inavailable at the range will be , Training examination in New
offered branch members. These Mexico December 2.
include savings facilities with
Men in practice and engiinsurance provisions, low cost neering students are invited to
automobile loans and personal enroll in this class which meets
an exceptional cha.meter. By his quick acSCOUT CITATIO~ Explorer Scout
loans.
weekly in Jett 183. Another
tions, attributed largely to Scout training,
Jame Orkins receives a certificate of rec"We are extending an invi- opportunity to register will be
he extinguished a fire in a neighbor's storognition, from Colonel John J. Kiely, (left),
tation to all Las Crucens to offered tonight at 7.
age room and in·eyente1l a gTeat loss of
deputy commander of the national ra.nge.
visit our branch. Free coffee
Currently enrolled students
property. He is a member of the White
Sergeant First Class and Mrs. Gerald Orkins,
and a welcome hand will be at NMSU will pay a S5 regisSands Explorer Scout Post 74. (U.S. ARMY
parents of the honoree, witnesses the presyours when you drop in to see tration fee. All others will pay
PHOTO),
entation. Young Orldns was cited for the
us," said Mr. Leslie.
.~10.
perJorma.nce of an outstanding service of
1-------------.
•
Missile Range
Boasts Displays
At Annual Fair
I
I.
November Draft
Pegged at 22,000
•
!
I
WSMR Credit
•
•
•
Union Opens
Cruces Branch
Final Chance
*
*
*
*
*
*
support 11 National Health
Agencies,
four
Iternational Service Agencies
and more than 35 United
Fund organizations in El Paso,
and Dona Ana and Otero counties.
"After White Sands Missile
Range workers learn of the
need for the funds and the
worthy organizations arid agencies that wlll benefit from their
donations, r doubt that we'll
have any trouble meeting our
HEAD START - Officials of the Range Englneerlug Dirfair share," Chairman Courtectorate get a head start on the rest of the range perl>onney said.
ne} by making early pledges to the Combined Fedetal C'!.lmpaign. l\faking pledges are (seated from left to right): EdPalnl!'ss Way
ward Hehnan; Pt·ojects Office, George Perldus; Systems
Chairman Courtney noted
Development, Nathan Wagner, Director, RE, Edward
that the 1967 Combined Fed;Noble; Instrumentation Development, Bemert Ferdie· Faeral Campaign is a one-time
cilities Plans, arnl R. C. Barto, Plant Engini>erlng. Ran),'8
solicitation and will be the only
Engl~el'ing Keyman, Ken Day, watches clo:sely to sco that
fund-raising camp a i g n for
the fonns are fl}led out correctly. The conibl11t•d fc1foral
health and welfare agencies
campaign opened today at WSlUR. (U. S. AR:.\1Y l'HOTO)
this year.
"The Federal campaign will
aid more than 35 agencies of
the United Fund and organizations of the National Health
Agencies an d International
Service Agencies," he pointed
out.
Chairman Courtney emphasized the convenience 0~ m~kPresident J ohnson has vetoed HR 11089, a bill
tng one annual contnbuhon
h' h
ld
'd 1
·
·· · · ·
and doing this by payroll de- w ic wou
prov1 e arge mcreases m life insurance
ductions.
, coverage for government employes, officials, and mem"We are completing plans 1 bers of Congress.
with personnel officers in or- 1
He said: "I am returning this bill because it places
der that more Missile Range too h~avy a burden and levies too heavy a charge on the
workers can contribute through 1 American taxpayer by providing private insurance out
the payroll deduction plan," of public funds."
Courtney said. "h few pennies
He added that the bill would set an
·
each pay period is a very pain- I dent at a "critical time in our '
unwise, prece~
less v;_ay to contribute a fair j history. Today," he said, "we .
share.
dare not divert our resources fuel the fires of inflation and
Other contributions plans in- for unnecessary demands when to impose an unwarranted burclude person-to-person solicita- there are many more ~rucial den on the taxpayer.
tion and the use of pledge needs which urgently require
He recommended an o t h e r
cards.
our support,.
modest measure in June, askGenerous Gift
Pro.ud to Sign
ing. for a $13 million program
In a message to military perThe p re s 1 d en t announced which would make ~he lnsursonnel and Federal employes, that he has asked the Chair- I ance system actuarlly sound
Presdient Lyndon B. Johnson, man of the Civil Service Com- 1a?~ rcmov? ~n inequity by pro•
said in part: "Once a year mission and the Director of the v1dmg add.1t10nal coverage.
through the Combined Federal Budget Bureau to begin work. Siphon Funds
Campaign these voluntary ing immediately with the ap- 1 The bill passed by Congress
agencies solicit contributions propriate Committees of the :md vetoed by the President
from Federal Employes and Congress toward an acceptable j 1vould have cost $61 million in
members of the Armed Forces. program.
the first year..
Through the combined cam"I hope the Congress will ·
------paign we have the opporunity, take my comments and recomwhich comes in a free society, mendations into account," he
to show on an individual basis said. "I hope the Congress can
0 l
our compassion an~ conc:rn send to me _ this year _ a
The U. S. Army's NIKE-X
for others. The combined drive I wise, fair, and well-justified Project Office has awarded
saves time and expense and 1 bill - a bill that is both res- $231 million in contracts to the
through its payroll deduction ponsive to the needs of the Western Electric Company for
feature makes possible a gen- Federal employe, and respon- work on the missile defense
erous gift.
sible in light of America's eco- system.
"By your participation in· nomic needs," he added.
The largest aw a r d was a
this year's campaign you will
"I woud be proud to sign $215,270,329 modification to a
be continuing the proud tradi- . such a measure," he said.
contract for continued research
tlon of responsible citizenship 1 After recommending mea- and development on NIKE-X.
which has always characteriz- ~ sures to strengthen and imWestern Electric Co. also
ed those who serve in the Unit- . prove the life insurance pro- received a $13,168,631 modified States Government."
l gram, the President last year cation to a contract for deilisappro,.,d a bill on the poyment planning activitle11 for
grounds tlmt it threatened to the NIKE-X system.
President Vetoes
Insurance Bill
I
Nike-X Contracts
l\'l d'f• d b A
le
Y rmy
I
1
Post .Employ~
rr
p
1 o __ resent
I
Paper at Meet
1
New Mexico State University's Department of Biology
will host the fall meeting of
the New Mexico Branch of the
American Society for Microbiology October 7.
All interested persons are
invited to attend the 9:30 a.m.
meeting in Foster 206 on campus. Several papers will presented. Dr. Robert T. O'Brien.
professor of biology, is general
chairman for the meeting.
Dr. Owen B. Weeks, research
professor of biology, will present a paper on "Investigation
of Structure and Biosynthesls
of Bacterial C50 Carotenoids." I
Graduate Assistant D. J. Hes- 1
t<Cr will present "Taxonomy of
Yellow Pigmented Gram Positive Bacteria,' a paper which
he co authored with Dr. Weeks.
Two papers co-authored by
Dr. E. E. Staffeldt, bio1og'y 1 ~il (f''.
professor at NMSU, and 0. W. ,
Calderone, microbiologist at J 1:i::.'"·"'' ' """'' °' ' ' '"' ""''·"''''''''''"''°''"·"""".'""'''..,,,.,.,.,..,,,,.,.,,,,,.
White Sands Missile Range,
BffiTHDAY PARTY - At the Non-commissined Officers
will be presented. They are
Ladies Auxiliary 14th Anniversary celebration Septeu1her
"Microorganisms in So91s from
16, Mrs. Jack Wilson president and Colonel John J. Kiely,
Deciduous Forests in the Canal
<leputy range commander, served the birthday cake. FolZone" and "Depositions of Milowing the buffet, at which husbands and conm1and 5 taff
croorganisms on Missiles and
members and their wives were special guests, club memRelated Equipment Exposed to
bers presented a program and modeled fashions of the past
Tropical Environments."
100 years. (U. S. ARMY PHOTO)
I
I
-------------------...-----~~--~-- -- - ------ --
, .WJNJJ &
~-ANLJ.
Policies and statements tn the news and erlitorlal columns
&re not necessaruv tl1<1se ot the Uepart.ment ot the Army or lt.E
agencies. Advertisements tn this publication do not constitut•
an endorsement by the Department at the Army of the products
or llervices adYertlsed
Published weekl:y as a clv111an enterprise in the interest ot
the Military and Civilian personnel of Whfto Sa11ds Misstle
Hange, New Mexico, by the Las Cruces Citizen ot Las Cruce~.
New .Mexico.
All news matter for puoncat.ion should be sent to the
Information Off!cer, White ::sands Missile Range, New Mex;lco.
• <llephone 678-2716.
Press service material m not copyrlghted or syndl!!ated,
may be reprinted or reproauct!d without further permission
~rnvirled proper credit ts given.
This newspaper 1s not an official or semi-official Department of Defense publicatlor•.
All pictures are by White Sands Missile photographers
unless otherwise stated.
Advertising copy snouicr tie sent r.o: Las Cruces Citizen,
P. 0. Box 220, 114 S . Church Street, Las Cruces, New Meic1co.
Phone 526 5575. Subscriptions orf Post. $4.50 per year; $1.ISO for
three months. Distribution c.n the Post free.
2: Wind & Sand - Friday, Sept. 29, 1967
U.S. Commitments
United States commitments to provide military assistance to other countries in the event of armed attack
are the subject of increased public attention l:lecause of
the Vietnam conflict.
Following is a summary of the U. S. Government
position:
• The United States has bilateral or multilateral
agreements for collective defense with 42 countries.
Under each of its multilateral treaties, the commitment
to extend assistance in the event of an armed attack is
individual - it requires no collective finding or decision by a multilateral organization.
• The same is true of the bilateral treaties with the
Philippines, Korea, Republic of China, and Japan.
There is an individual obligation under each of these
treaties which is independent of any collective action.
• All our defense treaties call for consultation in
the event o.f a threat other than armed attack - such as
externally supported subversion. Thus, when the
threat takes the form of subversion rather than armed
attack, each multilateral treaty calls for consultation.
No individual obligation of unilateral action is imposed.
• The same is true, by virtue of similar language,
under the bilateral treaties with the Philippines and
Korea. Under the Japanese treaty consultation is called
for "whenever the security of Japan or international
peace and security in the Far East is threatened."
• President Johnson and his three predecessors
have affirmed the interest and concern of the United
States in supporting the political independence and
territorial integrity of the countries of the Near East.
This is a statement ,o f policy and not a commitment to
take particular action in particular circumstances.. The
use of armed forces in the Near East can have especially
serious consequences for international peace extending
far beyond that area. Thus, the United States has stated
its position in an effort to use its influence in the cause
of peace.
.
..................
• With regard to the Congo, the Umted States has
no specific commitment to supply military or economic
resources in the event of aggression or a threat to the
integrity of the Congo. We have extended military and
economic assistance to the Congo as a part of the implementation of our foreign assistance legislation.
• The United States has no commitment to come to
the defense of Nigeria in the event of armed attack or
subversion. We hope that the current fighting in that
country will be brought to an early end, but we have
maintained that the crisis is an internal matter and
have refrained from any action that could be interpreted as interference in Nigeria's affairs, such as the sale
of U. S. arms to that country.
• The language of the agreements with Liberia and
Libya does not create a commitment by the United
States to supply military or economic resources in defense of those countries.
'
-+-
With Open Arms
Evidence of the effectiveness of the
Open
Arms
(Chieu Hoi) program of the Government of South Vietnam is seen in the increasing numbers of returnees who
give themselves up to South Vietnamese authorities.
In the first seven months of this year the total number
of returnees (Hoi Chanh) exceeded the total for all of
1966 -
20 398.
Altho~gh
automatically
exempt
from
military
clra f t f or. one year, a Ia;~e percentage of !~turnees .have
voluntarily entered military and pararmlitary uruts of
the Government of South Vietnam.
More than 600 currently are enrolled in tne Saigon
Government's Revolutionary Development Training
Center at Vung Tau, and 30 of the returnees recently
were recruited for the first time in special mobile
teams trained to assist in the resettlement of refugees
.
.
.
Th~ Saigon C?-overnment conducts an extensive mformation campaign to attract returnees. Leaflets, radio broadcasts, loudspeaker announcements, drama
teams, and folk singers are a few of the means used to
spread the Chieu Hoi message.
Within the areas controlled by the Saigon Government, the citizens are asked to welcome any Viet Cong
who wishes to give himself up and to take him imme1
h
·
h
h
b
.
d. 1ate
~ to t e nearest _recepti.on center w e~e e ca~ e
interviewed and provided with food, clothing, housing,
and medical care.
Recently the 17-year-old daugther of a high-ranking Communist provincial leader, Nguyen Thi Mat, deserted the Viet Cong for the Chieu Hoi program after
working with them for four years.
.
Most defectors are from Viet Cong guerrilla units
and political cadre. Regular North Vietnamese units
have few defections. These regular units from the North
are under closer control, and they are not allowed to
listen to South Vietnamese broadcasts or to read informative leaflets. Also, North Vietnamese soldiers hope
someday to return to their families in the North. This
is impossible after desertion.
f
DOWN
MILL
t
News
./Jllovie Review
Picture Clas"lficatlon
''l\lature" For patrons
over 17 years old.
"l\lature - Young People''
- Patrons over 12 years.
"Family" - Patrons of all
ages.
FRIDAY
GRAND PRIX (M) ~ontlnues
to race across the WSMR post
- t emationth eat er screen. Th e m
al cast is led by James Garner,
Eva Marie Saint, Yves Montand, Tashiro Mifune, Brien
Bedford, Jessica Walter, Antonio Sabat a and Francoise
Hardy.
SATURDAY MATINEE
THE WORLD OF ABBOTT
AND COSTELLO (F) I
- f you
like to laugh, you'll love the
wonderful, whacky, wild world
of fun waiting for you in "The
World of Abbott and Costello."
It's all of Abbott and Costello's
funniest films rolled into one.
SATURDAY
'Valt Disney's THE GNOMEMOBILE (F) . A lumber baron
takes his two grandchildren to
one of his forests, discovers
some lonely gnomes, and helps
them find another gnome-infested forest. Walter Brennen
plays the dual role of the kindy grandfather and the waspish,
irascible little old man. There
are many finely eicecuted special effects in this fantasy.
Schedule of Religious Actlvltea
at White Sands Missile Range
UTechnical Library
~
News
CATHOLIC
Sunday MASSES: 9:30 a.m., P ost Chapel; 11:15 a .m., Sierra.
Chapel.
DAILY MASSES : Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday•
PROTESTANT WOMEN OF
11:30 a.m., Sierra Chapel, Saturday 8 a.m., Post Capel.
Saturday 10:15 a.m., Post Chapel.
THE CHA.PEL - Tuesday, OcCONFES ~ION S : Saturday 6 to 7 p.m., P o s t C h a pe I;
tober 3, is "Circle Day" for
Sunday morning, 9:00-9 :25 a.rn., Post cnapel, 10 :45-11:00 a .m.
Protestant Women of the ChaSierra Chapel. Confession any time upon r equest at.Post ChapeL
pel. Scheduled Circle Meetings
BAPTISM: Sunday, 10:1ey a.m., P ost Chapel. Call 678-2615 for
on that day are as follows:
arrangements .
Circle I meets at 1 p.m. with
CHOI R : Rehearsal every Tuesday, 7 p.m., P ost Chapel.
Mrs. Hicks, 507 Sergeant; CirFree nursery service during Sunday Masses (P ost Nursery, 105 •
cle Il meets at 9 a.m. with Mrs.
Twin Cities ). Choir R ehearsal, Tuesday, 7 p.m., P ost Cha~el.
Snyder, 231 Polaris; Circle III
pany reports, and patents. Bibli- Catholic Chaplain (MAJ) L eon A. Harter , Office 678-2615; Qtr s.:
meets at 7:30 p.m. with Mrs.
ographic data for each item ab- 678-2959.
stracted is located at the be-•Bates, 410 Pershing. Newcomginning of each abstract. All
ers are especially invited to atEditor's Note: All books
abstracts found in the CumuJEWISH
tend these meetings and beIative Computer Abstracts have
J ewish Services are held at Chapel # 3 at F ort Bliss at
come a member of the circle reviewed here are available
previously appeared in the In- 8 p.m. each F r iday. WSMR perr:oonnel desiring transportation
they choose.
at the Wb.ite Sands Missile
formation Processing Joum.a.I. to attend these services are requeste<t to contact t he P ost ChapCOMMUNION SERVICE - Range Post Library.
The Cmnulative Computer lain, 678-3537. .Jewish chaplain at Ft. Bliss, Chaplain (CPT)
A Communion service is held
• •
Abstr.i.cts is updated by the I saac Celnik, m ay be contacted a t 568-5805.
at the 11 a.m. Protestant Servcumulative r eprinting of its en-•A WOMAN NAMED ANNE
ice on the first Sunday of each
tire cont ent s. At the end of
PROTESTANT
month. This service w!ll have by Henry Cecil. All the usual
special significance next Sun- Cecil humor plus a twist to the
each year, the abstracts that
SU NDAY MORNI NG WORSHIP: 8:30 a.m., Sierra Chapel:
day, October 1, since it is World plot which nobody can possibly
have appeared during that 11 a.m .• Post Chapel. J unior Chur ch (Grades 1-6), 11 a.m.,
year are reissued toget her with Sunday w orship.
Wide Communion Sunday in guess. Mrs. Amerly, who ownall the abstracts that have apSUNDAY EVENING WO R S H l P : 7 p.m., P ost Chapel.
Protestant Churches. A 24-hour ed a number of very successful
peared anytime previously in Free nursery s er vice ( Post Nursery, 105 Twin Cities) during
Prayer Vigil for Peace in con- retail dress shops, was suelng
Cumulative Computer Abstr- Sunday School and worship.
nection with World Wide Com- Mr. Amberly for divorce, and
acbt.
SUNDAY SCHOOL: 9: 30 a.m., in the following places: N urmunion will be observed in naming Anne Preston as corIn addition t h e abstracts s ery Depar tment - P ost Chapel, Room No. 5. Beginner Departmany churches throughout the espondent. Anne was so beauthat appear during the current ment - P ost Chapel, Room No. 8. P rimary D~partment (1st
tiful that every man was atworld.
SUNDAY AND MONDAY
d )
BI"
"'g. 326. P ri mary Depart men t (2n d g ra de ) - Bidg.
Beginning Sunday, October tracted to her including Mrs.
THE
Y ear in Information Processing gra e GREATEST
STORY
'
· D eJournal are issued in cumula- 326· P r irna 1·y Depar t men t (2n d gra d e ) - Bldg. 325· J uruor
1, Lutheran Services will be Amberly's so11-citor' Coven t ry.
However Coventry was deter- EVER TOLD (F) . The birth of tive form every other m onth partment No. 1 (3d and 4th grades ) - P ost Chapel Activity
held each Sunday at 8 a.m. in mined
to win his case.
Christ is forecast by ancient
room . .Junior Department No. 2 (5th and 6th grades ) - Bldg.
the Post Chapel. Holy Comprophecy, and despite the ef- as part of Cumulative Compu- No. 326. .Junior H igh Department - Education Center. Senior
munion will be celebrated this
•
•
•
- forts of King Herold to prevent ter Abstracts. Thus, the user High Department E ducation Center, r oom 10. Adult Class
coming SundaY)
THE SHELTON CONSPIR- 1his presence by having all male need consult only two sources (Men and W omen) - Education Center, Room 5. Adult Choir
Chaplain (LTC) Frank C. ACY by Elinor Denniston. Four ba.bies executed, he Is born to to locate both past and cur- r ehearsal, Wednesday, 7: 30· p.m., P ost Chapel. Youth Choir,
Riley, Post Chaplain, will re- months after their wedding, Mary and Joseph. Time passes rent references.
I Thursday, 6 :30 p.m. P ost Chapel. J uninr Choir, Friday, 1 p.m.
th
Hi9 f 0 11
The Cumulative C_o mputer Post Chapel Activity Room.
,
d .J
turn thi! weekend from Fort
Robin Masson, one of the most an
esus ga ers
ow- Abstracts contains fifteen sec- DENOMINATIONAL SE RVICES :
Ham!lton, N.Y., where he has decorated
soldiers of the war ers and the word spreads that
Church of J esus Christ of Latter Day Saints - Sunday,
attended a refresher course at in Vietnam, and his young w1-fe He is t he son of Go d. Many tions• all Of Which Cont ain abthe United States Army Cha- Lillian, were found shot to' disbelievers become belivers as s t rac t s rela t ing t o c ompu t er s . Sierra Chapel. Contact MGS Woolf, 678-2143.
Christ ian Science R epresentative - Gordon R. Morse, El
plain School.
death in their home in Shelton. they witness the wonders of Thi s ref erence t ool b r ings t o- Paso, 566-3782_
CONCERT PLANNED-The When the news of the double His faith and His powers. gether abstracts on Gen eral
Luthera n Service _ Sunday, P ost Chapel, 9 a .m.
Protestant Children's Choirs tragedy finally reached Hall Charlton Heston stars.
T 0 Pi cs involving computers
E piscopal Service - Sundays, 12 :30 p.m., P ost Chapel.
will start rehearsals this Sat- Masson in Egypt, he returned
TUESDAY
(Section 0), Comput er Logic PROTESTANT CHAPLAINS:
urday for a concert to be given at once to search for his
GENTLE GIANT (F). A and Switching (Section 1,),
Chaplain (LTC) F rank C. Riley, P ost Chaplain, Office 678in the near future. All mem- brother's killer. Three weeks young boy adopts a cub bear, Digital Computers (Section 2) 3537 -- Qtrs: 678-5440.
bers of the Youth Choir and had passed, but there was not (Gentle Ben) which has been Computer Hardware (S.ectlon
Chaplain {MAJ) Pa ul W, Lembke, Off ice: 678-2725 - Qtrs:
l ft 1
in th
ld h
3 ) , Digital Storage (Section \ 678-2181. .
.Junior Choir are requested to
a
clue
to
the
murderer,
not
a
e
a
one
e
wor
w
en
4),
Programming
and
Coding
?
.haplam (CPT) Andrew D. McGown, Office: 678-5325 be at the Post Chapel Activity
hint of motive. Although Robin poachers shoot its mother. The of Di,,.it al Machines (Section Qtr_s. -~7_8_-?869.
Room on Saturday, September had
been the town's great hero bear grows up and town senti"'
------30, at 1 p.m.
apparently no one wanted th~ ment runs egainst the bear 5 ) , Human Communications,
is t
d 1
. th Documentation and Humant les
i1 ;f"
•
d B
CATECHISM CLASSES crime to be solved. A tense, an
en
urne oose m
e (Section 6), Behavior Science
Classes will start Saturday, nerve
tingling book about a wilderness. Dennis Weaver and
t)
September 30, 9:30 a.m. and conspiracy of silence and the Vera Miles star ln this film and
Artificial Int elligence
conclude at 10:30 a.m. There startling reasons that lay be- that is the basis for a new T-V (Section 7), Mathematics (SecWarrant Officer a nd Mr s. ceremony at the Calvary Bap•
will be a Mass before classes hind the strange resistance to series.
tlon 8) , Probability, Informa- Emerson V. H arbester of Whit e tist Church in Las Cruces.
at 9 a.m. All children are ask- the truth.
WEDNESDAY AND
I t ion Theory and Communica- Sands Missile R ange announce The bride is a student at New
ed to attend.
THURSDAY
tion Systems (Section 9) and the marriage of their daughter, Mexico State University and a.
•
CA.moue WOMEN OF
THE HO NEY POT (M). Science, Engineering and Medi- Ruth Dorothea, to Second Lieu- member of Zeta Tau Alpha and
WSl\IR - The first meeting of
MEDIC by Eolise Katherine Pretending to be dying, bache- cine (Section 10), Analog and tenant William Stone, son of! the Spurs honor society. The
the fall-·winter program will Engle. America's Medical sol- Ior Cecil Fox (Rex; Harrison) Hybrid Computers (Section Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Stone of groom, who is serving in t he
be held on Friday, October 6, diers, sallors and airmen from summons three women from ll ) , Real-Time Systems and Dexter, N. M. Vows were ex- U. S. Air Force, is a graduate
at 9 :30 a.m., First Friday, The the Revolutionary W a r to his past. One he says will be- Automatic Control, Industrial changed September 18 in a of NMSU.
women are asked to attend Vietnam. Few men display come his sole heir. A very in- Applications (Section 12), - -- - -- -- - -- -- - - - -- - - -- - -First Friday Mass at 9 a.m., more quiet heroism in Ameri- tricate plot develops, reveal- Applications (Sections 12) , Gov- ...............~
and the meeting will start af- ca's armed eervlces than the ing Fox's real motives, and ernment, Military and Transter Mass. Coffee v,.ill be served. medics - the .Army's and the someone ts murdered. There is portation Applications (Section
First Friday Masses, 9 a.m. Air Force's medical techni- a lot or satire and suspense, 13), ~d Business Applications
Post Chapel, 11 :10 a.m. Sierra cians, the Navy's hospital which leads Mr. Fox's little (Section 14).
Chapel.
The abstracts are orga nized
corpsmen. Of the seven Medals joke to a climax quite differ(Continued on Page 12)
of Honor awarded Navy men in ent from what he originally in·
I the Korean War, five went to tended.
;-=:==================================================================~
non-combatant hospital corpsmen. Their mortality Is freModern children have a hard
quently higher than that of time bringing their parents upcombatants.
to-date.
Book
Review
•
If your
are interested in
computers, the Technical Library, Buildi' ng 1304, has a reference tool of value to all
persons interested in the literature of info1mation processing.
Cwnuatlve Computer Abstraets in Book Form is a col1ection of abstracts of journal
articles, boks, conference programs, government and com·
I
•
I
I
Announced
1r1arr1aPe
I
•
I
•
II
Buy U.S.·Savings Bonds
Chaplain's
"World W 1 d e Communion
Sunday" will be observed 1n
most Protestant Churches on
Sunday, October 1. This Communion reflects the unity of
the Church. The unity that we
experience is owed to the fact
that "God created the Church
around and through the Life,
death and resurrection of .Jesus
Christ." We fix; our eyes on
Christ, on whom our faith depends from start to finish.
World Wide Communion cuts
across political disargeements,
economic dislocations, racial
tensions, and all other d!vlsions and misunderstandings
that separate men from one
another. It Is a service that
•spans the ages. "Through the
observance that b e g an at
Christ's own table, Christians
are able to sense their union
with the earliest disciples, with
the great figures or Church
history, with all who have partaken of the sacrament through
the ages."
PRAYER - "0 God, our
Father, as we gather at the
Table of the Lord, may Thy
Spirit quicken our awareness
of His presence in our midst.
In whatever distant clime
the bread is broken, in whatever humble shrine t~e cup is
poured, there may His grace
bring cleansing and comfort
and peace to human hearts.
As He walked in the towns
and villages of Galilee so
may He walk in all ' the
places of the world, ever
seeking to bring Thy love to
the hearts o.f men."
(Repnnted from
Ministe1:_!1anua·l-~66)
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MILL
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Chapel
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Las Cruces, N. M.
•
Wino'& Santi-Friday, Sept. 29, 1967: 3'
..•
~
News of Interest to Federal Emp!~y~s
Federal Government. Employes
256,000 Handicapped Persons
Nation9.l Emµ!Jy the Physically Handicapped Weck
will be observed, for the twentieth year in a row. durDrill is Menace
ing the first full wee:.;: in Odober this year (Octc,bcr 7).
The President"s Committee en Emnlovmcr.t of the
'To Patient's Cool
(the v;ord "Physically" lias ·been d~ll'!ted
I Medical i1we:;tigators have Handicapped
to incorporate the mentally handicapped and mentally
reported that the dental drill
restored) reports tha1, during two decade5.
1
is a menace to the patient's
- l\fore than 1.8000.000 han---"cool," according to Health dicapped men and women ha \'C Administralion and the Post
been rehabilitated through 1 Office Department initiated na~nsurance News.
The dental drlll, e\·en whl'n Federal-State program:;.
tional recog11ition for oulstand1
- Before rehabilitation, their·
its image is on!~· on a molionIng
handicapped emplo_res.
1 pictm·e screen, can
cAuse ps.v- incomes averaged $7.92, a week,
The Veterans Fcdernl Emfor mo~L wer·e unemployed. But
!chological stress, the report after rehabilitation. their in- ployment Representali1·e in
said.
Ins ti- comes rose lo an average of each Civil Service Region is in
The Health Insurance
reg\rlar contact with Stale Vo$·16.09 per week.
lute said researchers proved
cational Rehabilitation Centers
In
20
years.
more
than
6
, their point by showing a moAnd similar organizations. pubmillion
liandicapped
\\·orkers
. tion picture >iound film of a
lic and private . He p1·ovic!es inha
Ye
been
placed
in
jobs
drill in aclion to 28 male volunformation on Federal job q11ateers, 1'1 Yiewing it from I\ rle- throug·h S t ate emplo~·ment lifica lions, e.nd eYaluates l he
services
and
nea
rl:-·
800,000
tached third person ' 'iew and
training conducted in these
the others I.ls it would be seen disabled veterans have been re1
centers. He invite:; appointing
h\• a patient.
h11hililated by the \'eterans
officers to visit the centers
.
'Olldt1cta11ce Administration.
DISCCSSIO~ Aud Darr, (left} llirector of Xew ::'llrxic:o
Through s 1un
~
with hint and observe the
mensurccents. a definite psy- Some 2fi6.000 handicapped trainee.~.
Dhi<;lon of Yorational lll'habilitation, wa"I a l'N'f'Tlt visitor
1o "'hit1• Sancls .Ui~'lile Jfaugr whf.'rf' he Yl!>if~(l ;\UssUe \ chological slres" was noticed pen;om; have been emplo~·ed b.''
He also condi;cts trainin.g
Park ancl dlsf'll~Srcl rrhabllltatlon 1n·o1:-r111111t "Ith )lichat>l 1i1mong those seeing the "pati- the . Federal go,·ernment. 111courses :llor agency officials in
1.eni;-al (Tight) FP!ll>ral Coordinator of tile Ph~· si<'nl Hnndlenl"!ll ''le\\'" flim. Stress was , cludmg more than 3000 mensupervision of t he handicapped
('appecl Program.;; at "'S:\ffi. Katlonal l'}mj)IO.V till' Physie;;pecially evident among 1hose tnlly ret3 rded persons_. man:v and OYersees the furni~hing of
rall~· Handkapped "'f"(•k \\·iJI br oh'lf'rYrd, for thr twenti('tl\
with kno,n1 "high dental an- of whom haxe found ]Obs for
joh information and placement
1·on<oe>{·utiH1 ~·i-nr, at thP. Xationnl Rang·e from October 1 to
:det~'." 1PNCS)
the first time in their Jives.
7. (r. ~. AR:\ff PHOTO)
ThiR, then. is a current re- assistance to handicapped a pport on how Federal ag-encies plican ts through Interagency
Boards and agency coordinahavt- demonstuted leadership
tors.
in a key national program.
Last year, Federa.1 agenC'ies
The Civil Service Commishil·cd 17.123 physicall>• hnncli- sion believes that these acth•iC'apped men and women. 3506 ties are re~ponsible in la.rg-e
more than in calendar yea1· measure for progni.m advances
196:5.
if'. recent years.
As of .Tune 30 of this vei1r.
Urging strong suppol't of
3344 placements of specially National Employ thi- Physic·altrained mentally retarded per· l~' Handicapped V.' eek this
I sons l1ad been ma.tie in 64 dif- year, Chairman John '"''· Mac.\",
Did you know that the 1967 leave :vear will consist feTent occupa.Uons in 36 Fed- J1·.. of the Civil Service Comof 27 bi-~eekly pay periods? It began Sunday, January e1·al depaHments and agencies. mission sAid:
1, 1967, cind ends Saturday, January 13, 1968.
, In this program. Yocational re- ''The Commission is proud
Here are additional facts on leave for Federal em- habilitatlon experts learn of of its program to promo te employes:
i1gency needs, train retarded , ploymen t of the handicappert
Annual Leave, for vacations er other personal bus- 1indi\·irlual~ to meet those ne~ds, in the Federal civil sen·ice. anrl
.
.
'
b
h · d · and cerbfv them as bemg will continue to seek new ways
iness. Excepl for emerg~ncies, .must e a~t onze 111 trained. No. fo1mal examination to improve and expand it. ·vve
is giYcn. l\fanager11 prononnct' ue even prouder of the c:rcdilMidsummer reports indicated vance, generally by the immediate supervisor.
Annual leave is earned at the following rates. Full- them excellent workers.
able pcl'fonnance demons trated
that Federal agencies would
time employes with less th1rn ,
1
Federal agencie!'I have been dAily b)' hanclicApped member~
exceed the summer hiring goal 3 years. of ~cn·ice, 13 days a ~er\' ice.
j engaged for many years in an of the Federal fa mil~·. (FNCS I
Annual leave. may be taken evolving progTam of hiring
in the President's Youth Op- year; with 3 but less than 15
yeat·s sernce. 20 days a year: all at ?nee. or m parts. at :he qualified citizens who i1re coppo1"lunity Campaign.
\nlil 15 or more years, 26 da,vs I d1scretwn of the employing ing with reverses forcrd on
As ot June 30, Federal agcna year.
agc~cy.
.
them b~· physiclll impairment.
c·1es had hired 75,000 youngGenerally, part-time employSwk I-enw., for medical. den- a hi!'torv of mi-nlal i!ln!'sf'.
sters, including 4 2,000 needy es with less than 3 )'ears of tal. optical and ?tiler appo.int- mental ;.etardation, or olhel'
youth~ appointed under special service earn 1 hour of annual ments for physical exam ma- , i::evere handicap.
,
:reatment, and for
Prime elements in the pro:o uthorities issued by the Ci\'il lea\'e for each 20 hours in a ~ion and
pay status; 'with 3 but less than illnes 01' lllJnry. Advanc-e llll- 1oTam ha Ye been medical re-·
Service Commission.
15
years, 1 hour for each 13 thorization . re q ll est e d for ~iews of standards and speciMore than 11,000 hires h11cl
hours; with more than 15 years, known appomtmenls. sche<ll~led fie "obs, refinement of admin- ·
bE'E'n made in the Washington,
surger:.-. ~tc. :Absence requir~s istr~Live procedurei1, issuance I Anno11ncing- a new exflmin11D.C., are a, including 8.8'n 1 hour for each 10 hours.
A nnual leave ma>· be acc11- proof of mabil!ty to . work .. 1 ~ of special hiring and examining . tion for accountants . . a11dito1·~.
~·oung people employed b~ Fedmulated
within
limitations. the form of a doctors certifi- authorities, and the designa- 1 and Internal Revenue Agents.
1.'ral and District of Columbh
Certain ovcn;eas employes may cate oi· other evidence accept- tion of agenC)' coordinators to I the U. S. Ch·il Service Commi~­
11i:-encies under Lhe Youth Opaecumulale 45 clays. other em- able to the .agenC)'·
i11 at ch handicapped persons sion said the Federal GO\·ernportunity Campaign.
plo~·es 30 days. Additional anFull-time employes earn 13 "-ith vacant jobs the.v can fill. n 1 ent 1111licip11te~ a ne<'d for
Agencies. who had been m·g- nual leil\'e cannot be accu11111- rla~·s of sick leave a year, partIn 1967 the Federal AYiation more than 3.500 new people
l'd to hire one extra youth fol' lated. Employe~ must use all time emplo»es 1 hour for each
with college degrees or equiC'\'ery 100 regular employes the leave earned each year, or 20 hom·s in a pay status. There such purposes as education of valent experience in lhe:>e posithroug·hout the United States lose the unused portion.
is no ceiling on accnmulation. benefit to the agenc». recovery tions next year.
find three extra youths per 100.
Con rt and Jury Le:wr. E111- fl om illness or disabilit~'. pendThe Commission emphii ~ize<l
Thitt~· days, or t he amount po~·es .s11111111011ed to court as ing final disabilit)' retirement
regular employes in the Dif;canictl
fon,·ard
at
the
beginwitnesses
for
the
United
Slates
llppl"OYAl
o1·
final
disability
that
theRe are entry-level posit rict of Coltm1bia area, indicattions in which appointees ca~
ed that additional appoint- ning- of the leave yeat· I if more or District of Columbia GO\•- compensation action.
A1h·ance1l Lra,·e. Some a uen- i;et the training and exp.ennient s were likely to be made thnn ~O diiys) is the maximum ernment, or to serve on any
h~tween June 30 and the end for which lump-sum pa:-1J11ents Feder·al or State jury, may cies grant annual or sick !;aye 1 ence necessar)r for profess1oncnn be ma.di- on leaYing Federal take lea,·e ,,·ith pay, with no in ad\•ance of its being earn- al development and P.r~~r?~s to
of summer.
charge against annual leave. ed. some do not. Under certain higher le,·el responsibiht1cs.
but maj• not take fees for such circumstances, up lo 30 days
Salaries sta.rt at $6,387 and
dut~·.
of sick lea,·e may be advanced ~7.303. Agencies may pay trR)filltnr~· LPll\'f' ma~· be given in case of seri~us illness or vel costs and moving expenses
'rilh pay for not more than 15 disabilitv.
for appointees and their imday.s in a11~· calendar yeflr to ' Admi~l~trat h ·r r,ea' fl 111 a y mediate families lo the first
I permanent Ol' idefinite emplo.v- bl.' granted by agencies to em- post of duty.
1
1
PS in the National Guat•d or ployes \\·ithout charge to anM;ost of the jobs are with ,
1
one or t11e m!litary resen·e or- nual leave under special con- the Internal Revenue Service.
ganization.s when called lo ac- dilions. Examples to vote. the General Accollnting Office.
Presidenf Johnson has named six career officials as live duty or tmining with the to donate blood. to altend job- nnd the Department of Defense.
winners of the 1967 President's Award for Distinguished Armed Forces.
related meetings. DndPL' this but there are openings in ncarFederal Civillian Service, the highest honor that can be
L1•a ,.,,. " 'lthout Pa)r may be category. too. come excused Jy all Federal departments and
conferred on a career employe of the Federal govern- granted on 1·equcst at tlle em- tardiness ;ind earlr closing agencies. There al'e opportl!niP lo Ying agency's discretion \vhen weather conditions are ties in major cities, inclnrting
ment.
Recipients who were presented gold medals and whether or not thel'e is a C'- · c x tr em e and or hazardous. \Vashington, D. C.. and other
locations nationwide.
certificates by Vice President Humphre~r at a formal crncd annual or sick JeaYe. for fFNCSl
I
I.
END OF MONTH VALU°E5 !
( 'har;:·e purdrn"P" lllndP hnhuwe of month pn~·­
able in No,rniber. '.l'al;.p a(l\antage of thl' many
sa\ in;:·._ Jn11'll .fin1I t111·1111;:-ho11t. durlni:- our J•;nd ut
::llonth t"\'Pnt. Al~o extra savingi. wllh ;your :-iS: H
G1·r1·n Stnm1•s.
BOOKS
CLOSED
No Carrying Charges
That's
Expen.~ive!
I
Leave Picture For
Federal Employes
('vmparr .;;tJling, tallorini;- aml Inhrlc<;. "'" don't t hirll,; ~-,)u'Jl
find a better i.uil 'aluc in Amrrica. )lakt> ;vour ~ckction
from our lari:-e :-toe-Ii of the""' famous hran<l "ult~ now 1l11ring our End Of Month l~\'rnt. You'll !'f't more h11nrst value
fOl' your mone~'. Shorti", Jon;.:·"· extra long~, :.touts; short
short stouts and i·E'gulars.
Regular 69.95 ..................................
.Surnmer Hire
Regular 79.95 ................................
Goal Topped
•
Civil Service
Heeds 3 ~QO
New Employes
o:·
•
I
Career Employes
Win Top Honors
I
ceremony in the State Department in August, wer e:
•
•
•
M:Yr1 E. Alexancler, Director,
F'ed~ral Bureau of Prison,;. Department of Justice. ""·ho hali
earned inlcmational recognition in the fiC'ldR of crime pre\'ention ~nd rehabilitation."
Arthur E. Hess, Dirertor.
Bureau of f.fcalth In~m·:mce.
Social Security A<lministn1ion.
Department of Health Ed1wation. :rncl ,\.elfar·c. who ha~
hrought extraorclinnrr t•n1•r;,":'·
i>.nd 11ncommo11 common !'ensr"
to ma king M'.cdica ,.e :t g·oin~·
concern.
Sherman Kent. Director of
N'atlonal Estimates and Chairman of the Boarcl of Nationa l
T%timatc,,;. Central Intelli~cnce
Ag-ency, ""·hose ~ophistiNiter!
<le\·clopmenl of I lrn Eoorrt of
"N"a.tional Estlm:i.tes has proYiclcd 1m·al11ahle tool:< for our intelligence communit~· and thus
enhanced our national securi-
counln· l'll home and abroad ."
Carl. 1". Homne>-. Seismologist. Department of the Air
FOl'c<'. '""·hos<> contrilmtiom; to
the :-;ciencc of seismolog~· lmve
;:;-rea tly ~enNl the buil<ling of
woYlcl pe.ace." and "one \\'hO
hns long been lnteresled in test
hf'n trenlies and the capacity 1
to propel'ly supel'\·i~e them and
to prm·ide ndequate mf'pection
nncl control."
On naming- th e 1967 winner:;. 1
Pl'csident Jolurnon said:
I
'"'l'hese six remarlrn.ble men
a l'P modern pioneers. \Ve Ii Ye
todaY in a " ·orld of such rapid
chan·~·e in science. i11terna tiorn11
affair;;. and soc10-eeono1111c pal- 1
ternR tJia t tn:1ditiona1. inherited
lrnowledg·c i:; no long·t>r suffi- 1
l'ie11l to ,;oh"e urgent problems.
''i'e must seek new ans\\·ers
from people who haYe sought '
1111d mastered new lmowledge,
ty."'
from people unafraid to voiC'e
C. Payne Luc~s. Dcput.' Di- constl'llctiYe discontent with
rector, Africa Regio11, Peace tried but no longer tru e meCo1·ps lo nc"· height~ of nc- thodi;. from people with the en<"rptance and achievement in erg~· and lhe initiative to break
the deYeloping countties of tJ1roug-h the lo n g accepted
.Af1·1ca."
bo1mdarie,,; of action. Such are
'Villiam J. Porter. Ambassa- the six ~elected for this high
rior to the Republic of Korea, C'il·ilian honor. and "e a re boll\
Department of Slate, "who has fortmrnte and proud to ham
f11ltllled so man~· difficult and them in onr Nation's public
ieDlltive assignments for his scr\'icc." lFNCS)
I
Regular 85.00
ANNOUNCEMENTI
While Sands Federal Credit Union
. ..
MONDAY, OCTOBER 2nd
WILL OPE'f\'
Las Cruces, N. l\'1.
1255 S. Main
Providing Low Cost Loans To F'ederal Eniployes
at WSMR, Dona Ana County and Contractors at
. .. .. . .. . . .
59B8
64 8 8
698.8
V(.•p Our Special 90 Day
Payment Plan
1/3 NOW Balan<'t" ln ,Jan. -
1/3 IN DEC.
No C'flrrJing- ChnrA1'1
Special Purchase:: Men's Corduroy Coats
A <;mart st,\·Ji-cl 1·orduroy sport roat. Th1·rr button front lap ..,eam~. h•rol~
Yf'nt, ln Will!' wall' c"orcluro~· with timt>J~· !ltyll;,h-fanr~· linini:-. In a Joden
.:;:reen nnd lwl;;e color to chuo~e from. 'I ir ,•·" r;·ou<·t1on<; arp on for o,1r i;nu
Ol .\lonth E' ent only.
Reg. 22.50 ............. 18.8&
Reg. 24.95 ..............
19.88
Shop thP ot ftp1· C'on t Yalu<'~ "•"n" grouped toget her to ckar during our
End of )lonth ennt. You'll N<l\C nw1wy.
END OF MONTH SALE
Short Sleeve
Sport Shirts
We' ve regrouped and repriced this selection of
short sleeve shirts from a famous known manufacturer In fancy and solid colors. Plenty of sea·
son ahead yet for these.
Formerly
Formerly
Formerly
Formerly
5.00
6.00
7.00
8.00
EOM
EOM
EOlVI
EOM
1.88
2.48
2.88
3.48
END OF MONTH SALE
Short Sleeve
Knit Shirts
In short sleeve assorted patterns and in all cottons
and cotton blends. Famous make We made a spe·
cial on these. You' ll find stripes, and solid colors
in the group to clear.
Regular 4.00
Regular 5.00
EOlVI 1.88
EOl\I 2.88
END OF MONTH SALE
END OF MONTH SALE
Men's Sweaters
Short Sleeve
Western Shirts
We' ve made a special purchase on these from a
famous manufacturer and wev've pas1ed these savings on lo you. You'll find many styles lo choose
from. In all wools and wool blends. Shop these
early as quantity is limited.
Whitt> solid and fancies - in all cottons including easy care cotton s. Famous for their Jong tail
and fit. We've a limited supply to clear at these
reduced prices.
Regular 12.00
Regular 14.00
Regular 17.00
Regular 22.00
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
EOlVI 7.88
EOM 8.88
EOl\I 11.88
EOl\'.I 15.88
SORRY -
3.98
5.00
6.00
7.00
EOM
EOlVI
EOM
EOlVI
1.88
2.48
2.88
3.48
WE CLOSE 6 O'CLOCK
Shop The Many Unadvertised Items That We've
Made Reductions On Throughout The Store.
lVSMR!
HOURS: MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
SATURDAYS -
9 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Lynda iW:cCafferty, Branch JI/gr.
DRY GOODS CO. INC.,
LAS CRUCES
WE GIVE S & H GREEN ST AMPS
\.
•
...
•
.·
•
LAS CRUCES CITIZEN
ART POINT .;
.
INVITATIONS RATE B.OUQUETS ....... ,
:
\
'
••. Nothing SaYi You're Going To Be Married
As EleQantly As An Art Point Wedding Invitation! .
.
!. ' .'
'
.
1• • •
...
. .·" ·.'. . -
..
.. ...
. .. ...
"'"
~
·.
Your ~Dayl
•
.,
•
I
Whether you plan a simple service or an
elaborate ceremony there is an Art Point
wedding invitation or announcement
styled for you.
'
LAS
. ·
CRUCES
CITIZEN
feahuw
all 171*1 oi Job pr!ntm;I
•
Frclm. a callla.g card to a atalogue •••
all orclers glftll · oUr nry
Let us have all the details ·of your wedding plans and at the same time
look over our complete selection of Art Point invitations, announce·
ments and wedding accessories•
.......
IP9daJ
attemlcml
:
••
PRINTERS • PUBLISHERS
Established 1902
I
114 S. CHURCH STREET
Ph. 52~·5575 -?26-~7§
•
•
- - - - - - -.....- - . , _....PUBLISHERS OF WIND & SAND - White..Sands Missile Range N e w s p a p e r - - - - - - - - - - - -
•
'
I
Friday - sat.urday
S~ptember 29 -30
Friday; September 29th
MAYFIELD TROJANS
VS.
EL PASO HIGH TIGERS
Bulldogs
Have Open
Date
This Week?
7:30 P.M. -· AGGIE MEMORIAL STADIUM
Saturday, September 30th
The sport and civic minded
merchants, here listed, urge
you to support your team
by attending the games •••
This page is made possible
through their cooperation!
NMSU AGGIES
vs.
UTAH' STATE AGGIES
8:00 P.M. -AGGIE MEMORIAL STADIUM
•
r·
"Southwest's Most Complete Carpet - Drapery Carpet Cleaning Specialty Store" - Free Estimates!
State Farm Insurance
401A EL PASEO
••
(l)arpetWorld
520
Phone 524-3061
N. MAIN
State Farm Insurance
DRUM APPLIANCE
"YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER"
910
El
Paseo
PHONE
524·8008
2 Stores io Better Serve U - Las Cruces and Alamogordo
BURKE OUTDOOR ADVERTISING, INC.
BURN CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
"Aggie-Bulldog-Trojan Booster"
"The Best of Luck To Our Fine Teams"
1101 Del Rio Ave.
Phone 524-7233
=~
Bulldogs -
Trojans with • • •
TODD TRAVEL
•
I
Ph. 524-2861
106 S. Water
Ph. 526-2465
*Packing
*Storing
*Crating
Phone 524-1931
HAYDEN'S HARDWARE -CENTER
* HOME SUPPLIES
Ph. 526-3559
v SPORTING GOODS
1210 Foster Road
Cocktail Lounge - Restaurant - Beauty Salon - Stcalc House
105 Large Beautiful Room - 1\1, O. "Tommy" Tomson, Managing Partner
"Good Luck Aggies -
Bulldogs -
555 W. Amador
Ph. 526-6891
WEINREICH BUICK & PONTIAC CO.
"Autorized Sa!es & Service"
Ph. 524-77l'7
848 N. 7th
Don Huband, Owner
W.
.........________________________________
235
Organ Ave.
(After hours call 526-6986)
CONCRETE -
SAND -
GRAVEL -
Dial 524-8691
Las Cruces, N. M.
DEPENDABLE DODGE, INC.
DODGE AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE
Cars - Trucks
955 S. Truck-Pass
Phone 524-7723
BUILDERS BLOCK & SUPPLY COMPANY
"Buiiding A Better Las Cruces''
Phone 524-3633
"WELCOME TO THE PANCAKE HOUSE"
DEPENDABLE CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
"Peaturing Pancakes to satisfy the most discriminating tastes"
Plckup and Delivery
.
Ph. 526-6605
"SchooL Supply Headquarters"
833 N. Church St.
;
* Washers
2151 N· Main
* Dryers
* Open
24 Hours
Phone 524-9955
---=~·._.__________________________...______________
ATLAS LUMBER COMPANY
Ph. 524-9676
ROCK
316 N. Main
"Try Our Buffet Dinner"
ECON-0-WASH COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
Complete Building Products Headquarters
North across street from Surplus City
215 W. Mesquite
Ph. 524-8423
1765 S. Main
Ph. 526-8122
601 W. Amador
OFFICE SUPPLY COMPANY
"Everything for your lawn & garden"
BALLARD'S PHOTO SHOP
Ph. 526-8501.,__
VALLEY TRANSIT MIX
1020 E. Kansas Ave.
NELSON'S NURSERY
...___________________,_,,..,,,...,..-.- -
123 S. Main
DON'S SHEET METAL SHOP
P. O. Drawer L,
T1·ojans"
WHITFIELD BUS LINES
"Your QuaHty Camera Store"
.....
._....,_________________________________
__
2405 W. Picacho Ave. - Indian HandicraftsPh. 524-1953
--~-..,,.._
"The Company With The Candy Stripe Trucks''
GRAHAM'S
Home Entertainment -
...........-..
PALMS MOTOR HOTEL-RESTAURANT
H-K MAYFLOWER MOVING & STORAGE
*Moving
1400 Hernandez
Phone
524-7778
"100% Boster For AlL Our AthLetic Endeavors"
Amador Ave. & Compress Road
Ph. 526-6647
- ---------------------------------·------·
2335 E. Lohman
,.-xw------------=
-
....
Follow the Aggies -
Me1gnca"'
LAS CRUCES REXALL DRUG COMPANY
"24-Hour Prescription Service"
-···,--------------------------103 S. Main
Ph. 526-6241
LAS CRUCES LAUNDRY & CLEANERS
AND
AMERICAN LINEN SUPPLY
500 N. Main
Ph. 526-6641
TG & Y STORES COMPANY
35 Loretto Shopping Center
"Your Best Buys Are At TG & Y"
Phone 524-0351
Ph. 526-2426
Ph. 524-1929
·--www_... .,.....,--~-~..,....,.,---------------------EL ENCANTO
(INSIDE THE LA POSTA)
SPICES - TEAS - CANDIES - GIFTS
Mesilla, New Mexico 88046
•
Wind & Sand -Fridav. Sent. 29.1967: 7,
P0 RTS
"
'~·
I
'HHC No. 2 Takes 'A' Bo\vling Lead1
•
•
I
I
~WINGING GOLFERS Members of the Championship
Inhamural Golf team show off their trophies at a Company
'.A" awards banquet. They are (left to right): John Willenborg Yoshi Kawaoka, and team captain, Louie 1\-farraccinl.
Other members of the Company .'A" team not picture<l are
Bob Kitaji, Dick Kaneko, Bill Hyde, and Bob Newman.
(U.S. ARMY PHOTO)
Headhunters Hold First
In EM Bowling Action
Three teams in the Tuesday 7-8-9's. Tom Smith was top
Night Enlisted Men's Bowling man for the losers with a 180
League swept series with their game and a 485 series.
opponents In action this wee!•
In the only other games rollat Roadrunner Lanes.
ed the Pepsi Peps took three
The Headhunters held on to out of four from the Strikefirst place and remained unde- outs. Jim Hinman was number
feated by shutting out the one on the Peps with a 193
Mets. Stan Brown topped the game and a 567 series. Norm
Headhunters with a 182 game Piper paced the Strikeouts
and a 496 series. The Mets star with a 192 game and a 490
bowler was Richard Sweeny series.
who rolled a 186 game and a! The Leftouts will make-up
three game set of 501.
their bowling sometime this
Andy Andrion took the high · week with the newly formed
game and high series (231 and team that ?rings the league up
579) honors for the league and to ten entries.
rolled his team, El Indio, into I TUESDAY NIGHT ENLISTED
second place by knocking down . MEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE
the Sleepers four to nothing.
STANDINGS
1
The Sleepers got some good Headhunters
8
0
bowling out of Jim Purcell who El Indio
6% 1%
rolled a 204 and a 577 series.
Luckouts
5
3
The Luckouts moved into Pepsi Peps
4
4
third place by scoring the only Strikeouts
4
4
other shutout of the evening. 7-8-9's
3
5
Led by Jay Brunner (200 game Mets
1% 6%
and 533 series), the Luckouts Sleepers
0
4
took four in a row from the Leftouts
O
4
I
I
•
•
•
I
Co. A Undefeated
In Flag Football
Second week action in
the White Sands Missile
Range's Intramural Bowling League saw the HHC
No. 2 team remain undefeated. and take sole possession of first place in the
"A" Division.
The top
notch in the "B" Division is
held jointly by "A" Co. #1
and ERDAW # 1, both with
records of six and two.
Gary Smith led HHC # 2 in·
to the number one position with
a 193 game and a 529 series as
the leaders took four in a row
from HHC # 4. George Jones
(200 game) and Larry Leutziner (505 series) were top
bowlers for HHC # 4.
Nayy #l dropped from a
first place tie to second place
in this week's action and it
only took one loss to do it.
The sailors took three of the
four games from the Hospital
# 1 entry. Al Andrion led the
seaworthy sailors with a 200
game and a 501 series. Al Robinson was tops for the medics
with a H6 game and a 401
series.
Last week Nike-X #l was
tied for third. This week
they're filling that slot alone.
Bob Trueblood (523 series) and
Tom Manning (190 game)
teamed up to lead the X #l's
•
rt
Manny Medeiros (left) presents the Soft-
7·8-9 Club Friday evening. (U. S. ARMY l'HOTO)
Officers League Opens
With Three Teams Tied
#1 could only manage a sp 1
and instead of holding first
place all alone they now share
it with "A" Co. #1.
"A" co. #1 took three out
of four from the Nayy #1 entry. Manny Medeiros led "A"
Co. to its three wins with a
194 game and a 541 series. The
sailors top bowler for the evening was Juan Lazo with a
195 game and a 491 series.
It was another "A" Company
team ( # 3) that helped make
I
----------
The Harmon Football .Forecast
------------·-··--- - _ _
Hippies. Tigers Pace Chick's League
I
Scheduled at
Bell Gym
WSMR Golfer,
Crucen Win
Club Tourney
•
"B" Division, ERDAW
GOOD SPORT -
ball Sportsman Award to Ron WarrlC'lc. The presentation
was made at a Company "A" awards banquet held at the
Mixed (/ouples League Action Underway
GAME & Ladies Night
•
Coln~~~
it possible for the "A" #l's "200 Club" were Donnie Herto tie the former leaders. ER- rington, Paul Kramer, George
DAW # 1 could only manage Jones a nd Al Andrion. Picking
a split with the # 3 representa- up difficult splits and being
tive from "A" Company. Paul added to the "Railroaders ColKramer was high man on the umn" are Bob Dislter (6-7-10),
ERDAW #1 team with a 202 Rufus Bradley (5-7), Tom Kengame and a 487 series. H igh ny (5-8-10), Ike Hall (6-7-10),
series for "A" Co. #3 was 462 Jerry Zschach (5-10), Don
by Jo Silva. He also had the Wendt (5-7) and ·Dennis Kramhigh game (166).
er (5-8-10).
Norman Livingston led NikeWSMR INTR.AM:URAL
X #2 out of sixth plac\ and
BOWLING LEAGUE
into third by helping his earn
STANDINGS
to a four to nothing shutout of
the Hospital # 3 team. Norm
"A" Division
bowled a 553 series and a 194
0
8
2
game. The number 3 medics HHC #
7
'1
Navy
#l
were led by Bob Distler with N'k x # 1
2
6
l e3
5
a 437 series and Winston Arzu "A" Co # 2
with a 165 game.
MP c
#
4
4
o.
1·
4
4
HHC #3 took three games Hosp. #4
from the MP Co. #2 on the "A" Co. #4
2
6
2
6
strength of a good perform· HHC # 4
ance by Bill Sment. Sment had ERDAW #2
1
7
a 492 set and a 186 game. Jo Hosp. #1
1
7
Vail led the MP's with a 412
"B" Division
series and a 171 game.
"A" Co. #l
2
6
Closing out the action in the ERDAW #1
2
6
"B" Division the Hospital # 2 Nike-X #2
3
5
team took three out of four HHC #l
4
4
from HHC # 1. The winners Hosp. # 2
4
4
got good pin action from Bob Navy # 2
4
4
Liberti (522 series) and Larry MP Co. #2
4
4
Morey (186 game. HHC #l's
5
·
"A"
Co.
#3
3
Dar Busick rolled a 537 series
5
3
and a 191 game.
HHC # 3
7
1
This weeks members of the I Hosp. # 3
The White Sands Missile series for the evening went to
Range:'s
Officers
Bowling Homer Rogers with a 407 and
League opened last week and Bob Shub took high game honat the end of the evening's ac- ors with a 163.
tion three teams were tied for
John ' Yepsen led the Troop
last and the remaining two Command team to a six-two
teams wera tied somewhere in win over the Headquarters
between.
Staff bowlers. He had a 183
Navy's representative out game and a 494 series. Stan
bowled the NRO team six to Vose took high game for staff
two. The sailors were led by Ed officers with a 187 and tied Cor
Troxel with. a !'.i03 series and high series ( 440) with How.i.rd
Fred Sargent with a 205 game. Sanders.
The NRO team's high bowlers
Brand X and ARMTE split
---------------------------------------------------·-·-- ·---- wnedre Fred Ruff (197 game) eight
ponits with Bill Thomas
a
John Jozefowski
(459
series).
of Brand X taking high game
The No Names took six out (183) and high series (499)
of eight from the Medics with honors. Frank Jones was high
The White Sands Missile saw the teams bunch up fairly games from the Ne!ghbors. ies to guide the Sourdoughs to Greg Markovich leading the (169 game and 439 series) for
Range Mixed Couples Bowling even in both division.1 Only one Grayson Miller was the Neigh- a six-two win over Team # 9. way with a 181 game and a j the ARMTE team .
(Continued on Page 12)
League action got underway at team, the Shooting Stars in 1 bors' top bowler with a 481
480 series. The Medic's high WSMR Officers' owling Leai;-ne
the Roadrunner Lanes this the "B" Division, managed to series.
week. The Thursday night lea· shut out its opponents.
Team #7 took the measure
gue has two ten team divisions
In the "A" Division four of the Roadrunners in six of
with the championship to be teams are in first place with the eight games rolled. Sam
decided by a divisional playoff records of six wins and two Samford rolled a 515 series for
at the close of the regular sea- losses. The 7 and lO's, behind the lucky 7's and Ike Hall copson.
I the strong bowling of Paul ped a 499 series for the losers.
TOP .20 TEAMS (Forecasting Average: 278 Right, 92 Wrong, 14 Ties •.•.•.•..• 751)
The first night of league play I Bugbee (523 series), took six'. 1 Lou Knight rolled a 484 ser·
. ......
1-NOTRE DAME
$--FLORIDA
11-ALABAMA
1B-MICHIGAN
2-HOUSTON
7-WYOMING
12-FLORIDA STATE
17-MISSOURI
8-TEXAS
3-SOUTHERN CAL.
13-MEMPHIS STATE 1B-COLORADO
4-GEORGIA
9-PURDUE
14-NEBRASKA
19-NORTHWESTERN
5-U.C.L.A.
10-TENNESSEE
15-SYRACUSE
20-GEORGIA TECH.
The R oa d run n er Chicks
As things look now there ls could be the difference between Bowling League's third week
no resemblance between the 1the championship and second of action saw the No Name
American League pennant race place for the officers. Last "5" and the 1st National Bank·
and the race in the WSMR Flag Thursday the Officers came out ers whitewash opponents and
Football League. The Company on top in a high scoring game move into a tie for third place.
Phyllis Oliver led the No
"A" entry is pulling away with Headquarters Company,
from the field with only the 36-26. This week the Officers Namers to eight straight wins
Officers showing any signs of put their defense and offense over the eighth place Creepers
trying to catch up.
together to totally smother the with a 180 game and a 457 serlies.
Last Thursday's action saw MP's. 36-0.
The Bankers shutout the Un·
"A" Company walk all over
WSMR FLAG FOOTBALL
the ERDAW team, shutting
STANDINGS
touchables on the strength of
them out 20-0. In actibn this Company "A"
5
0 Dee Smith's 187 game and 472
3
2 series. The Untouchables have
week the Medics got a little Officers
2
2 now lost 24 straight games and
closer to winning but the "A" Medics
1
team pulled out a 20-14 win.
ERDAW
2 are firmly implanted in last
1
3 place.
The Officers have scored 72 HHC
1
4
points in their last two games, MP Company
This scribe has noticed one
but two early season losses
------thing that may be responsible
for the Untouchables po o r
showing so far this seas~n.
While watching tlevision Monday evening, I noticed that
Robert Stack (Eliot Ness of
Untoucaole fame) was making
"The Scene" with the hippies
on the Danny Thomas Show.
' Renate Harris was the Un
Big-Game Honors Badges
Starting October 9 Bell gym- touchables top bowler with a
Offered
Field and Stream, a national nasium will be reserved every 178 game and a 454 series.
The Hippies continue to hold
magazine, calls attention to its Monday evening between 5:30
honor badge program and in- p.m. and 9:30 p.m. for women's on to first place with a .record
vites participants. To date, 44 workout classes. The classes of 20 wins and four losses.
badges have been awarded to will be open to all women mili- These week's action saw Lee
New Mexican hunters, for tro- tary personnel and dependents. Medeiros (182 game, 502 serphies in these species: deer,
Interested personnel should ies) lead the Hip Ones to six
elk, antelope and bear. Badges call Mrs. Jones (678-5179) of wins over the Spacettes. Janare also available for one other the Officers Wives Club, Mrs. ice Purcell was high bowler
species found in New Mexico- Wilson (678-3549) of the NCO for the space girls with a 156
bighorn sheep.
Wives Club, or lLT Nancy J. game and a 386 series.
The Paper Tigers are stayApplicants for the honor Jurgevich (678-5627),
c'Oln·
badge need not be subscribers manding officer, WAC Com- ing with the Hippies and seem
to Field and Stream. Honor pany, for further information.
badge requirements and appliAll of the gym's facilities
cation forms may be had by
will be open for the Ia.dies use
writing Field and Stream Big·
but they must supply their own
Game Honor Badges, 383 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. equipment. A major requirement is that shoes worn in the
10017.
gym must be of the non-markBenefactor Dies
ing sole type.
· George Deardorff McCreary
died on September 10 in Silver
City. To bird lovers who own
copies of Florence Merriam
Bailey's famous book, Birds of
This ts the 16th Annual Shrine Cir·
New Mexico, Mr. McCreary's
cus for El Maida Temple.
Wednesday, Oct. 4th •• ,
name wm be familiar.
Thru SUNDAY, Oct. 8t h.
White Sands Missile Range
The book, still in demand 40
El Paso Coliseum Building
years after publication, could Navy Warrant Officer Joe
El Paso, Texas
WED. 4, THUR. 5, FRI. 6th •• ,
never have been produced by Marshall and his Las Cruces
Matinee 4:00 P.M.
the Department of Game and partner, Tom Cambell, took
Special Matinee: SATURDAY 6th
Fish without Mr McCreary' s first place in the best ball golf
10:00 A.M. and 2:30 P. M.
participation. He a d v a n c e d tournament at the Las Cruces
SUNDAY ONLY at 1:30 and
5:00 P.M. ONLY •••
many thousands of dollars to- Country Club Saturday. Their
(No night performances)
ward cost of pub,lication, and winning score was 60 strokes
Evening Performances:
canceled out a substantial por- counting the team's handicap.
WED., THUR., FRI., AND SAT.
tion of the indebtedness as
8;15 P.M.
Army Lieutenant Jerry Hanfunds came in from sale of the digen and Carl Ahlgren came General Admission tickets go on
Sale at all Gunning Casteel Drug
book. Though requests for the in second with a score of 62.
Stores Sept. 15th. or from any
book still come in to the DeShrine Office, 126 N. Campbell St.,
Three
teams
notched
scores
partment, no further copies are
El Paso.
of
63
to
tie
for
third
place.
Advance BOX SEATS on sale at the
on the open market. Dealers in
Temple ONLY ••• or at the
Shrine
rare books occasionally receive They were: Sailor Paul Bugbee
Coliseum ticket windows prior to
and
H.
W.
Cosgrove,
WSMR
a copy, and it sells for a very
each performance.
high price. The book that takes civilian William Bates and General Admission : ADULTS $1.50
the place of the Bailey book Phil Dupuy and Army Special- each - CHILDREN 75c each.
terful book, New Mexico Birds ist Mike Burke and his part- Box Seats are $1.00 each in Addi- .
tion to a General Admission ticket.
ner, Jim Unrue.
and Where To Find Them.
FISH NEWS
home over MP Co. #1 three
games to one. Allen Tisman
came up with a 196 game and
a 510 series for the MP's,
"A" Co. #2 pulled its way
into fourth place with a shutout win over the ERDAW #2
team. Donnie Herrington (203
game) and Ike Hall (533 series)
were tops for "A" Co. Frank
Grusling (457 set) and Roy
Privitt (178 game) led ERDAW
bowler:::
Hospital # 4 moved from a
tie for last place to a tie for
fifth place on the strength of
its shutout bowling over "A"
Co. #4. Bob Rogers was the
top bowler for the winners
with a 193 game and a 555 series. Erbie Hilbert (lW game)
and Wayne Sowers (497 series)
were the top keglers for "A"
I
200 game of the seal!lon for the
Roadrunner Chicks.
Alyce Cushnie managed to
knock down the 3-7 split twice
during the evening's action.
ROADRUNNER CIHCKS'
STANDINGS
4
20
Hippies
6
Paper Tigers
18
8
16
1st Nat'l
8
No Name "5"
16
Bottoms Up
12 12
Sandpipers
12
12
12
12
Spacettes \
Sneakers
7
17
Creepers
17
7
Untouchables
0
24
to be waiting for a chance to
sharpen their claws on the
leaders. The Tigers, on the
basis ot their six wins over the
Sandpipers, are only two games
behind the bowling beatniks.
Carol Robinson (149 game) and
Lori Montez ( 421 series) were
the Tigers• top bowlers.
Rounding out tht. action in
the Roadrunner Chicks League,
the Bottoms Up cruised by the
Sneakers to win six of the
eight game series. Bottoms Up
top bowler for the evening was
Sumi Kita with a 200 game and
a 454 series. This was the first
·--~---
LAMAR'S
FOOTBALL STUMPERS
WIN $250 For Perfect Score
Win
)
( )
[ )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
(
Win
New /1t.ex. State
California
Georgia Tech
New Mexico
Michigan State
Oklahoma
Utah
Nebraska
Louisiana State
Purdue
Tennessee
Florida State
Rice
Kentucky
Texas
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
vs.
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
(
Tie
) Utah State
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
( )
(
(
(
Michigan
TCU
(
Iowa State
Southern Cal.
(
Maryland
(
(
Oregon
Minnesota
(
{
Texas A&M
(
Norte Dame
Auburn
(
North CaroHna St. (
Navy
(
(
Mississippi
Texas Tech
(
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
Nothing to buy! All Dona Ana County residents over 21
can try except our employees. limit of 5 entries. All entries must be brought into either store not later than
midnight Friday, September 29th.
GOOD LUCK
IN CASE OF TIES ••• MONEY WILL BE DIVIDED!
Saturday, Sept 30 - Major Colleges
Other Games -
Alabam• ................ _ JO
Arizona State ··-- 14
Arkansas · - - - 20
Army ····· - - - · - · 33
Boston U ...........- . 20
Bowling Green ...-. 20
**Brigham Young -· 19
Buffalo ••_ ...........__ 20
Citadel ....20
Colgate - - - · 30
Cornell ·· · · - - 24
Dartmouth · · · - - " 20
Duke .............._ _ 21
Eut Caronna - - · · 27
Florida ..........._ _ 30
Florida State ___ 21
Georgia .........._ _ 23
Georgia
- - 28
Harvard Tech.
.........___
28
South'n Miss. - -· O
Wisconsin ·······-·-·-- 10
Tulsa ..................,..._
8
Boston College ...... 7
Temple ........................ 7
Dayton ........................ 15
Western Michigan -·· o
Virginia - - · - - 19
Maine ....._ _ _ 17
Columbia · - - 12
Bucknell ........._
14
MassachUsetts - - 8
South Carolina ...... 19
Davidson ...............-. 6
Mlssis!lppl State _ '7
North Carolina St. _ 14
Clemson ••••_,,__ 7
T.C.U.
.......
·-··-·8
Lafayette
__
,,_ o
Holy Cross _
**Houston · · - "
Idaho ........Illinois _
Indiana ................_
Memphis State - ·
**Miami. Fl11. __
Miami (Ohio) · - - ·
Michigan , , _ _ _
Misslsslopl _ _
Missouri ···-·;··-··-·
Nebrt1sk11 · · · - New MP.xlco · · - - ·
North Carolina --·
North Texas ......- · Notre name · - - ·
Ohio state - - Ohio U. ······---·
Oklahoma ···-- Oregon ...........____
nreizon State - - ·
l'ennsvlvanle " ' - Princeton ......· -- ·
Rhode Island •. ··-·
Rice ...............- <;outhem Cal. _ _
~tanford · · - - - ·
<;yr11cuse · - ·
Tennesse11 ·-..- rexa9 ..... .. .......___
Texa~ A & IA ·--··
roledn ............._ _
U.C.L.A. .............,_.
Utah State - - - · ·
Vanderbilt ----·"
VIiianova ··-·--·-V.M.I. •............- · ··V.P.I . ..............- ...· •'lashlnQ'ton .....--··
We!<t Texas ...·-··-·
Wlchlta ...........-.--...
Yale ..............._ _ _
Wake Forest _
Idaho State - - Pittsburgh - - - · Kansas ......--··-·
Cincinnati Penn. state - - Xavier ......._ _ _
California · - - - ·
Kentucky ····· · · - Northwestern - - ·
Minnesota · · - Iowa State - ·
Tulane ····- loulsvllle - - Purdue .....· - · - · Arizona .....- - - ·
Kent State - "
Marvland · - - Utah .....·-·--·-·Iowa ·· - - · - ·· Lehigh _,,_____
Rutgers ····--·-·
Brown .•.- ........_,_..
Navv .......................Michliran !\late - ·
San Jo9e State __..
West Vil'l!lnla · -..-"
Auburn ...........·-·Texas Tech. -·-·-·
l.S.U ........................- ..
Mat!:hall ................Washington ~fate _
N1Jw Mexico StAte ....
Wllllam & Mary .......
OelAware .............._.
l'!lchmond ........-..
Kan••s ~tate ............
Air Foree .................
Pacific .............-·-··
Ort1ke .................---·
'""~"''n"
...............
13
44
22
27
15
31
14
26
21
21
17
21
14
20
13
31
17
21
15
ln
23
20
16
20
15
21
24
21
14
21
14
22
42
14
24
19
15
20
21
21
17
27
Other G"mas Arkansas A & M ••• 14
Arkansas State """" 33
Arll ngton ..............-.. 20
Chattanooga ............... 22
Concord ........................ 48
**Eastern Kontucky •. 23
Elon ............................ 15
Emory & Henry ··- 18
Florence ............"·-· 21
Howard Payne - - · 23
Jacksonville ..._ _ 19
Lamar Tech. ---· 17
Lenoir·Rhvne _""- 24
Martin ......." - · - · 26
Morehead · - - - · 27
Ouachita ···-·-"·- 27
Presbyterian .......,._, 20
Randolph-Macon .... S2
S. F. AU!tln ......"_" 17
Sam Houston ······-· 31
Southern State ·"-"' 20
Southwest Texas ··-· 22
rexas A & I ····-- 21
Texas Lutheran ·-·- 27
West Liberty ........_ 16
Western Carolina -· 21
1¥P•tern Kentucky _,, 17
10
O
6
8
14
O
10
in
8
fl'
6
7
14
16
7
17
14
15
8
S
7
18
13
0
6
!I
6
14
R
1n
South & Southwest
13
14
6
21
0
7
14
7
6
30
34
20
23
24
45
20
19
19
20
22
19
21
17
13
15
30
17
23
25
14
~~~~~~~~8 Te·e-;;:···::::. i~
Ashland - · - Ball State " - - ·
Bluffton ......- ...--··
Carroll ...........................
Central Methodist ....
Central Missouri _..
Coe ...................,__
Defiance ···········-·-·
Denison ...................
Ea!!t Centrt1I Okla ••.
**Emporia College ..
Flndlav ...................
Fort Hays - - · · ·
Friends .............Grinnell .................._.
llllnols Wesleyan _
Kansas Wesleyan -·
Kearnev ..........- ....Lawrence ··-·--·-Macalester · - - M•nchP•ter -·---·
Mldlanrl .......· - -····
Milwaukee ···--··-Muskln<?um ..............
Nebra•ka Weslevan
New Me'tlcn H'l~nds
Nort'1ern lllinoi• ....
lllnrthern Michll!8n ..
N"rthwnod ...............
n•hko•h ............""···
nttawa .....................
P•rsons --···-.......
Pitt•burp: ....................
l'ln!IA
....................-..
<;t. r.toucf .................~+. ,.homas ............_
~E Oklaho.,,e .........~nut~"'" Illinois •.••
~w nkl~homa .........
<:nuthwe•t"rn. Kan.
•tt~vP.ns Poi nt ........
T3ylor ... . . ...............
Wheaton
.
32
26
15
22
16
15
18
20
19
17
21
14
19
3'16
14
20
45
30
20
lR
10
1~
42
2?.
21
?.1
2R
27
30
33
?.4
21
27
1q
14
l~
'n
2~
1R
1R
15
,,
Adrian ..........,..,___..
Evansville - - · Wiimington - - · Elmhurst .......- - .
Tarki o .............- Emporia State ---·Belolt ......................_
Alma ........................-Washington, Mo. -Langston ..................._
Baker .....................Central State ...--Colorado State -·Reihe!, Kansas - ·
Cornell. low" ····-··Aueustana. Ill. .....Rethany. Kansas ......
Peru .......................".Carleton ··-·---·Hamline ...............Franklin ....... ·····Concordia. Neb. ""
W•vne. Mich. ····- nttMbeln ................
Dana ............................
PanhandlP A R. M ··Indiana State . .....
CP.ntral Michigan -·
Mllt<>n ...................!'>tout ......................- ..
Sterlinll ................lo~ An~eles .........NF Missouri .......Mls•ouri V~ll•V .......
Michigan Tech .......
t::1tot•vus
..........-..
NE Oklahoma ........
Uncoln .......................
NW Okl•homa •......•
Me"her•on ................
1 3Crossa ...................
AndPrson ...................
Hor~
Other Games -
o7
8
7
14
6
12
8
6
15
0
19
14
6
6
O
9
O
East
Hobart ............- ...Coast Guarcl -···-Sprin~ield ..._,___
Norwich ....,,_,,.__
Lock Haven ........._
Geneva .........- .......Vermont .......- - c. W. Post ··--···Upsala .........·-·-King' s Point _ _
Tufts ........,_.____
Urslnus · · · - ·
Colby .........- ••· Bridgeport --··-·
Hamilton - - · - Edinboro ---..........
Trenton · · - - - ·
Williams ···-·-·····Mldcllebury ...........East Stroud!burg Moravian ............_.....
~~!~~r,;anna ·•••••··••
Other Games - Midwest
B
7
12
7
14
7
19
14
10
l~
fi
Cnlnr~lftl c;t~tp ........ 0
Miss. College ..,._,
Tennessee Tech. •••
East Texa, ............_.
Middle Tennessee _,,
West Va. State ...Austin Peay -··-·-·
Appalachian ""'"·-·
Catawba - - · - Livingston '"_,__
Angelo .................Carson-Newman _
SE Loulsi~ne ·· Newberry ...... - SE Missouri - Murr11y
Harding · - - · - Wofford ...................
Washington & lee "
Delta State ··········-"
Tarleton ............._
Arkansas Tech. · - ·
Sur Ross ..........- · Trinltv .........-·-·-·
Bishop ..................-·West Va. Tech. .......
Gullford ....................
East Tennessee ........
Alfred ........... .....-...
American lnt"I ,.,_..,
1\mherst ..............-.
Bates ........................
Californla St ate .....
Clarion .............,_
Connectlctr. .........._ ..
Cortl and ..............-..
Delaware Valley __
Gettysburg ·······--··
Ithaca ..............- Muhlenberg ......_
New Hampsh ire - Northeastern ....- .
Rochester ...................
<;Hppery Rock ............
<;outh'n Connecticut
Trinity ......................
Wesleyan ..........·--··
**West Chester --···
Wilkes .................-
Central Oklahoma ... 21
Colorado Mines ...... 14
Colorado Western •... 2~
Eastern .Vashlnizton 20
lewis & Clerk ....... 20
••Long Beach ··-· 21
Montana State ·-· 27
Northern Arizona __ 36
Occidental ·······-· 16
Pomona .........- - 33
Puget sound ·--·-" 2~
Riverside ........- - · - 12
Sacramento ....--·-·· 22
!';•n Oleizo ................ 44
~an F"'nci•co State "1
~ant~ Barhara ..
33
Southern Cotorarl~
1<>
(*"Friday
7
o
15
13
13
o
9
7
14
16
6
13
6
O
8
1~
14
7
O
8
O
J
O
7
O
6
li
13
15
10
7
l~
1?
13
14
O
12
6
l~
o
7
15
14
6
0
0
C
~
20
10
F
l?
f
21
1•
17
1'
10
F
0
1.1
7
fi
0
6
Far West
Eastern New Mexico
Colorado College ..•.
Fort lewis ..... ....
Central Washington
Hawaii ....... ................
San Fernando -·-·-Fresno State - Whittier ..................
Davis ...................-..
Claremont .....-......
Cal WestPrn ................
La Vern~ .. ................
Cal Polv (Pomonal
Cal Potv (S.L.O.l ...
~•nta Clara .... .
Nevada .....................
w~-•--n New M•xlco
Games)
20
7
l!
14
lP
1r
f
~
l?
£
1
f
lP
~
1•
P
ir
Before The Game ••• Afier The Game •••
- MOTORCYCLES -
LAMAR LIQUOR STORES
And Lounges
*Yamaha
Is The Place To Go!
540 Notlh Waler . . . . . . . . . . 524-9944
1200 Fosler Road ......... . 524-1201
1750 W. Picacho .......... . 526-9910
Aztec, 1175 W. Picacho
524-4252
COURTEOUS SERVICE
Name.......................................... Address...}'···················
*Triumph
*BM\i\~
SALES! SERVICE! PARTS! ACCESSORIES!
New - Used - Trades
(ruces (Jcle (enter
416 N. MAIN
Las Cl'.Uces, N. 1\1,
l'h. 524-8626
~ave
Clip and
'>: Wind & Sand -
This WSMR Calendar
_t'riday, Sept. 29, 196~
:·············································································r4·
•
••
:•
•
Community Affairs Coun~il
Month OCTOBER
W SM R
•
•
•
SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
•
•
WEDNESDAY
A~tivities
GENERAL SUNDAY SCHEDULE:
•
worship, B:30 a.m.-Sierra Chapel
THURSDAY
FRIDAY·
SATURDAY
•
•
•
Worship, 11:30 a.m. -Post Chapel
Junior Church, 11:30 a.m. Post
•
Chapel Act Rm
Organizations and/or clubs deslr-
Kitchen delivery service Is Thurs-
Dress on dance nights at the NCO
day thru Sunday nights at the NCO
5 p.m. to B p.m. Minimum order $2.
Club ballroom Is coat and tie for
men and appropriate dress for ladles,
67B-4076.
Delivery charge 20c.
except on western nights which can
We have free Babysitting Service
Episcopal Services, 12:30 p.m. -Post
•
Chapel
•
•
LOS Services l p.m.-Sierra Chapel
•
Film Service, 7 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
•
Lutheran Services,
Chapel
•
•
Note additional activities on appilcable Sundays.
•
•
ing to have activities listed on future
calenders contact PFC Grace-Phone
'
be appropriate western dress or sport
shirts and slacks fo men.
•
Teen Club Open 7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Teen Club Open,
NCO Ladles Auxiliary Board Meeting
7:30 p.m. NCO Club
7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Movie
at the Post Nursery on all dance
Juke Box Dance, 8 p.m.
Service Club
nights from B:lS p.m. to 1 a.m.
Dance to "The Brothers 6"
•
•
•
6:30 p.m. Service Club
•
-
8:30-12:30 p.m. NCO Club
H
H
t
N~~YClu~ur, 6 p.m. o 7 p.m.
Bar opens
9 a.m. NCO Club
•
Breakfast served
9 a.m. NCO Club
•
•
•
•
8:30 a.m.-Post
Junior Choir, 3:30 p.m.
Post Chapel
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
5
I.
2•
3•
4•
•
•
Coffee & DoNuts
10 a.m.-Service Club
Kitchen Closes
12:30 p.m. -NCO Club
Boy Scout Troop 74, BSA
6:30 p.m.-Bldg. T-353
•
•
•
Patio Picnic
5:3$ p.m.-Servlce Club
Breakfast Served
9 a.m.-NCO Club
T -Bone Steak $1.75
NCO Club
Explorer Scout Post 74
7 p.m. Bldg. T-353
Pool Tourney
B p.m.-Service Club
Monthly District roundtable
6:30 p.m.-Chapel, Act. Rm.
Cherub Choir
3:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
Adult Choir Rehearsal
7:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
6
•
•
'
7
•
•
•
•
•
-
•
•
•
•
Den B, Cub Pack 79
Mrs. Luke 4 p.m.
Soldier's Chorus
Post Chapel
PWOC Circle Meetings
Post Chapel
Regular Games
Junior PYOC 5:30 p.m.
Post Chapel
·es Aux. Games
Ladl
2
p.m.
T-Bone Steak $1.75
NCO Club
Card Tourney
2 p.m.
Service Club
.•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
8
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
~2gg Jackpo~CO Cl b
:
p.m.Quiz
1e~~~~
,
9
•
Coffee DoNuts
lO a.m.-Service Club
Ladies Aux. Games
2 p.m.
NCO Club
Patio Picnic
I
·
5 :30 p.m.-Serv1ce
C ub
•
'
Rifle & Pistol Club Meeting
7:30 p.m.-Small Arms Range
Kitchen Closes
12:30 p.m.-NCO Club
Sirloin Steak $l.50
NCO Club
Junior PYOC
5:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
•
•
Senior High PYOC
5 ' 30 p· m. -P0 st ChapeI
•
.
•
•
•
•
•
'
Card Tourney
2 p.m.
WSMR Service Club
Patio Picnic
6:30 p.m.
Service Club
15.
16.
Coffee DoNuts
10 a.m.-Service Club
Patio Picnic
•
5:30 p.m.-Service Club
•
•
Breakfast Served
9 a.m.-NCO Club
•
Junior PYOC
5:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
•
•
..
Se~~~~
Club
11
•
Boy Scout Troop 74, BSA
6:30 p.m.
TOeen CiMub
R'dl
1
rgan
ounta1n 1 ng Cub
Meeting at Club House
Soldier's Chorus
Post Chapel
Den 8 Cub Pack 79
Mrs. Luke
4 p.m.
Regular Games
7:30 p.m.
S200 Jackpot
NCO Club
Country Music Time
6 pm
· · Club
Service
Brain Teasers
7 p.m.
Service Club
Sports Movie
8 p.m.
Service Club
•
•
•
23.
24.
•
TOUR, Carlsbad
7 a.m.-Service Club
Pack 79 Meeting
7 p.m.-Elementary School
Boy Scout Troop 74 BSA
6:30 p.rn.-Teen Club
•
Coffee & DoNuts
Kitchen closes
•
10 a.m.-Service Club
12.30 p.m.-NCO Club
Toastmasters Club
Officers' Open Mess
1 1:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
•
Breakfast Served
9 a.m.- NCO Club
•
•
Junior PYOC
•
530 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
•
•
•
•
.
•
Rib Steak $1.50
NCO Club
Card Tourney
2 p.m. _ Service Club
,
•
•
29.
30.
Co-Star Time
7 p.m. - Service Club
Sports Movie
8 p.m. - Service Club
31.
•
Breakfast Served
•
9 a.m. NCO Club
Junior PYOC
, p.m.
5 30
Post Chapel
•
•
8
•
R~gular Games
7:30 p.m.
"Tell Tale Heart"
S200 Jackpot - NCO Club
6 p.m. _ Service Club
Coffee Call
· Ci ub
lo a.m. - Serv1ce
Prof. J. J. Teriot
•
Scientific Hypnosis
2 p.m. - Service Club
•
•
Patio Picnic
5:30 p.m. -
Sports Movie
7 p.m. _ Service Club
Scavenger Hunt & Witches Brew
8 p.m. _ Service Club
"NCO Club."
•
•
•
•
•
•
I
•
•
8
Off
I3
•
14
•
•
•
•
Card Tourneys
7 p.m.-Service Clu'i
Youth Choir
Post Chapel
6 pm
· •
Games
8 p.m.
Service Club
o
Junior Choir
3:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
Teen Club Open
7 :3 p.m.-l1: 3 p.m.
Checker Tourney
7
Se~~~e Club
o
o
o
Explorer Scouts Post 74
7 p.m.-Bldg T 353
Den 2 Cub Pack 79
241 Jupiter
4 p.m. -Mrs. VanDoorne
EM Council Meeting
6 p.m.-Service Club
Cub Pack 79
Weblos Den
7 p.m.-MSG W00If Bidg T ""'59
Den 3 Cub Pack 79
4 p.m.-Mrs. Rowland
Den 5 Cub Pack 79
4 p.m.
Mrs. Lembke
Coffee House
7 p.m. -Service Club
Youth Choir
6 p.m.-Post Chapel
Kitchen Special
All you can eat (Spaghetti) $1.25
NCO Club
Chess Tourney
7 p.m.
Service Club
CHERUB Choir
3:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
Teen Club Open
7 p.m.-10 p.m.
Crazy Poker
6 p.m. - Service Club
p IT
Western Night
Dance to the "Western Rangers"
0
"0 a.m.
"' 30 p.m.-12 '-'
NCO Club
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
20.
21.
.
H
H
appy our
b p.m. to 7 p.m.
NCO Club
Junior Choir
Game TimP
•
•
•
- -·---
•
3 p.m.-Service Club
Bar Opens
9 a.m.-NCO Club
3:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
•
•
..
Ping Pong Tourney
7 p.m. - Service Club
Dance
"The Motivators"
8 p.m. - Service Club
•
•
•
•
•
.
--
26.
•
•
'
Toastmasters Club,
11·30
am
·
· · to 1 pm
· .- NCO Club
Den 2 Cub Pack 79
241 Jupiter
4 p.m. -Mrs. VanDoorne
Den 5 Cub Pack 79
4 p.m.-Mrs. Lembke
3:30 p.m.-Post Chapel
CHERUB Choir
Teen Club Open
7 p.m.-lO p.m.
Smoker Porker
7 p.m. - Service Club
"Mr. Entertainer''
8 p.m. - Service Club
EM Council
6 p.m. -Service Club
Cub Pack 79
Weblos Den
7
p.m. -MSG Woolf Bldg T-359
Youth Choir
6 p.m. -Post Chapel
f
28.
H
appy Hour
6 p.m. 7 p.m.-NCO Club
3 p.m.- Service Club
Junior Choir
3:30 p.m.- Post Chapel
9 a.m. -NCO Club
Teen Club Open
p.m.-11:30 p.m.
o
Den 3 Cub Pack 79
4 p.m. - Mrs. Rowlan
EM Council
6 p.m . ....:... Service Club
"Mr. Entainer"
George Gilbert
Stallion
Rhodes
6:30 p.m. Games 8 :30 p.m.
e
27.
7:3
Mosaic Motifs
6 :3 p.m. - Service Club
Dance
"The Apollos"
Service Club - USO HOSTESS
o
Game Time
Bar Opens
•
•
Show and Dance
"Th A
"
e xemen
8:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m.
Free Buffet
•
•
•
~c'Omcl~b p.m.
ie;3
:
•
•
•
•
•
Club 0/~
p.m.· ;
p.m.
1
•
•
•
EQUIPMENT ISSUE POINT
.
Tei. NR B-5730
Bldg 1421
T d
& F 'd
12
2
ues ays
n ays
noon· p.m.
AUTO CRAFTS
•
•
•
'
•
•
•
'
•
ARTS AND CRAFTS
GOLF COURSE
Tel. NR B-5820
Bldg 4&4
Tel. NR 8-5321
Bldg 1425
Tel. NR 8-1759
Mondays - Fridays
Noon 10 p.m.
Sundays
Mondays
1 p.m. 5 p.m.
CLOSED
Monday, Wednesday,
Thursday
Noon
9 p.m.
Sundays & Holidays 2 p.m.- 10 p.m.
BELL GYMNASIUM
Tuesday, Thursday,
Fr.iday
Wednesdays
Bldg 236
Sunday, Saturday, Holidays
1 pm 5 pm
11 . .·5 . .
a.m.- p.m.
Tei. NR 8-3465
Bldg 234
Monday-Fridays &
11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Holidays
9 a.m.-ll p.m.
Saturdays
Mooni1ght Bowling Every
Saturday
5 P m 10 Pm
· .•
· ·
12 :30 pm
· .-10 pm
· ·
5 p.m.-10 p.m.
Saturdays & Holidays 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Tuesday, Friday
Saturdays Sundays,
Holidays
Ladies' Day •
Bldg 133B
8 a.m.-Dusk
Noon-Dusk
7 a.m.·Dusk
Wednesday Morning 8 a.m.-11 a.m.
HOLLAND SWIMMING POOL
COUNTDOWN SERVICE CLUB
Tei. NR B-41-34
Mondays
Sundays &
Holidays
Tuesdays •
Bldg 250
CLOSED
10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Saturdays
1 p.m.-
Tuesdays-Saturdays
l p.m.-10 p.m.
Tel. NR 8-2860
Bldg 231
Saturdays & Holidays 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Tuesdays • Sundays 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Monday
CLOSED
Swimming Classes
Beginners and Intermediates
Tuesday •
Friday
8:45 a.m.-10:45 p.m.
·~
BRAIN
TWISTERS
Tel. NR 8 _5800
Sunday$
Mondays
T uesdays • Fn'days
Saturdays & Holidays
Bldg 1712
l pm .5 p m.
CLOSED ·
1 p.m.-5 p.m.
9 a.m.15 p.m.
POST THEATER
Tel. NR B-2090
•
•
•
•
•
•
Bldg 254
All Pets
The answer to each clue in
this list is a word or expression beginning with "PET," as
for ex a mp 1 e in "PETRO·
LEUM." Now, do you know
what PET-word is1. A valve?
2. A formal request!
3. Trifling !
4. A stitching!
5. To benumb!
6. Peevishness!
7. An aquatic bird?
8. Little and cute?
9. Sly trickery?
10. A flower?
11. Feminine garment?
12. Explosive device?
One Plus One
Add one word to another
word, rearrange all the letters,
and come out with a brand new
t h 1 r d word. For example,
"BRED" plus "CLAMS" wtll
combine and arrange 1nto
''SCRAMBLED."
1. MARE plus REST.
2. DREAM plus SUE.
3. TERROR plus PES.
4. GIANT plus SITE.
5. REAL plus PALL.
6. SUET plus FEAR.
7. BLUSH plus PIER.
8. SCAN plus ROOT.
9. ERE plus GRAND.
10. STffi plu!'l WET.
11. GIVEN plus RANG.
12. BADE plus CLAN.
Snail's Pace
At the bottom of a wen,
which is 28 feet deep, there ts
a. snail. This snail begins
climbing toward the top of the
well in a 1rertical line. If the
snail climbs 3 feet each day,
but slides back down 2 feet
each night, how many days
will it take for this poor snail
to each the top of the well?
•
..
•
Explorer Scouts Post 74
7 p.m.-Bldg T 353
Mineral & Gem Society
7:30 p.m.-Service Club
Tei. NR B-3374
•
•
•
•
Service Club
Saturdays
•
1 PYOC
un or
5 :3 p.m.-Post Chapel
October Fest
Dance to the Rythmaiers
B 30 Pm 12 30 am
NCO Club
Movie · ·• :
· · 6 30
;
p.m.
J
o
Teen Club Open
7:30 p.m.-11:30 p.m.
•
•
•
~~
B p.m. -
'ands of years; it's affected
· people· books have
been written ab~ut it. Yet almost nothing is known about
what happens to marijuana
once It enters the body. Where
does it go? How does it alter
the mind to produce the eup·
horia that gives it its popular•
ity? Is it capable of doing
damage? These questions cant b
d ith
t i
no
e answere w
cer a nty.
One reasdft is the taboo associated wtih marijuana, which
means that most researchers
are reluctant to be associated
with It. Another reason is that
the chemistry of marijuana ts
so complex.
Marijuana is essentially the
resin, leaves, and stalk of the
female hemp plant. It's been
known since 1940 that the ingredients responsible for marl•
juana's intoxicating effects be·
long to a class of chemicals
c.a 11 e d tetrahydrocannabinols
known to be active.
But the real task was to
synthesize these tetrahydrocannabinols in the laboratory;
that is, to produce synthetic
marijuana ingredients just like
the ones the plant makes. This
is important for two reasons:
(1) it's almost impossible to
isolate these ingredients from
the plant iself, and (2) pharmacologists, who study what
hapens to drugs in the body,
need pure materials to tnterpret their results properly.
This year, the synthesis of
these intoximating ingredients
w a s achieved. Israeli an d
American chemists reported
their success in separate com·
.municatlons to The Journal of
the American Chemfoal Society.
Their achievement should
open up a new phase of med!·
cinal chemistry enabling chem·
ists to put together marijuanalike drugs endowed with the
benefits of marijuana and having none of the side effects.
For example, scientists have
t d th t
'j
repor e
a mar1 uana can
relieve pain, that it is an ex•
cellent sedative, and, oddly
enough, that it can relieve the
withdrawal symptoms of heroin and morphine addicts.
•
~
19.
•
Bar Opens
9 a.m.-NCO Club
Lear a New Game
. 7 p.m.
Service Club
··-·-· ..·-··-·-· - -
•
Movie
6:30 p.m.-Servlce Club
Dance
"The Apollos"
Service Club
6 p.m. Club
Service
-
Teen Club Open
7 :3 p.m.-n: 3 p.m.
M'
I d G S I
Fl Id T I
inera an
em oc ety e
rp
Game Time
3 p.m.-Service Club
Happy Hour
b p.m. to 7 p.m.
NCO Club
I
M d
F 'd
on ay • ri ay
BOWLING ALLEY
Service Club
•
Executive Council
(Parents Association) Meeting
EM Council
POST LIBRARY
•
8
•
18.
Bowling
Officers Wives Club
"Sorry Wrong Number''
6 p.m. - Service Club
LUAU 8 p.m.
Herb Reington & the Beachcombers
Student Nurses
Service Club
12
.25.
Sr!~:;s·c~/~;s
Dance to the Lou Barton Orchestra
9 p.m.-12:30 u.m.
NCO Club
•
•
•
•
·- · - - · · - -..---~--·--
•
Officers' Wives Bowling
Den 8 Cub Pack 79
4
M
L k
p.m. - rs. u e
Soldiers' Chorus
Post Chapel
9:30 a.m. -
•
•
•
•
•
Teen Club Open
7 p.m.-10 p.m.
••
•
Bar opens
9 a.m.-NCO Club
Teen Club Open
7:30 p.m.-11:30 p.m.
Breakfast served
9 a.m.
NCO Ci b
u
•
Mineral & Gem Society
7:30 p.m. _ Service Club
Country and Music Time
6 p.m.
22.
•
•
I
Post Chapel
Adult Choir Rehearsal
7:30 p.m. Post Chapel
~~
•
6:30 Movie
Service Club
s Star Competition Run
3:30 p.m. -
-
Junior Choir
3P:Sot Cph~p· el
Teen Club Open
7:30 p.m.-11:30 p.m.
~hess Tourney
WSpM.mR. S
Cl b
1
erv ce u
Camera Class
6 p.m.-Service Club
Pool Tourney
8 p.m.-Servlce Club
Sc. Beer Night
4 p.m. to 6p.m.
NCO Club
CHERUB Cholr
Den B Cub Pack 79
4 p.m.-Mrs. Luke
Come & Practice
7 p.m. -Service Club
Soldier's Chorus
Post Chapel
OWC S
d R
T
ponsore
ange our
Officers Wives Club
Sports Movie
B p.m.
Service Club
Name the Song
7 p.m.
Card Tourney
2
p.m.
Service Club
Kitchen Special all you can eat
CLasagne> $1.50
Explorer Scouts Post 74
7 p.m. Bldg. T 353
Toastmistrees Club Meeting
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. - NCO Club
Boy Scout Troop 74, BSA
6:30 p.m.
Teen Club
Toastmasters Club,
Officers' Open Mess
11:30 a.m. to l p.m.
Officers' Wives Bowling
Kitchen Closes
12:30 p.m. -NCO Club
~~~v~c~~i~;tors"
6 p.m.
Post Chapel
4:30 p.m., NCO Club
Teen Club Open
7 p.m.
Game Marathon
7 p.m.
Service Club
17.
•
•
•
•
Club
Happy Hour
Drinks half price
6 p.m. to 7 p.m.
NCO Club
Dance
8 p.m.
Youth Choir
Den 2, Pack 79
Mrs. Lembke, 4 p.m.
Whiskey Games
u
~ports Movie
IO
~r~a~~astNg~rC~b
•
I
Officers' Wives Bridge
Games Service Club
The Riddle of Marijuana
Probably no drug has had a
~ountless
•
•
SCIENCE
CORNER
:• i ··1:~:~;~.s~:!~l'rnu~~a~r~~~:
•
•
•
•
•
•
One Evening Performance
Sunday Thru Saturday
7:15 p.m
Matinee Saturday & Sunday 2 p.m
•
•
WATCH DAILy BULLETIN & WIND
AND SAND FOR ANNOUNCEMENT
•
•
OF SPECIAL EVENTS
:
~··············································································"
ANSWERS
ALL PETS: 1. Petcock. 2.
Petition. 3. Petty. 4. Petit
point. 5. Petrify. 6. Petulance.
7. Petrel. 8. Petite. 9. Petti·
foggery. 10. Petunia. 11. Petticoat. 12. Petard.
O:SE PLUS 011."E: 1. Stream·
er. 2. Measured. 3. Reporters.
4. Instigate. 5. Parallel. 6. Features. 7. Publisher. 8. Cartoons.
9. Gardener. 10. Twister. 11.
Engraving.
SNAIL'S PACE: 26 days.
The snail gains a net of 1 foot
per day, and at the end of 25
days is 3 feet from the top of
the well. He makes these final
3 feet on the following, or 26th
day.
•
•
•
National 4-H Club
Wc2k~
•
September 30th Through October 7th
4-11 j'Jlore Than Blue Ribbons 1·
I
4-H is more than champion 1 rlesigned to encourage other Ana County. Local leaders do
not need to be specialists in ·
steers, sewing lessons, cooking youth to join 4-H.
1
school3 and blue ribbons, says
Locally, the 4-H Week ob- the projects that they lead but
Janet Paz, Dona Ana. County servance will relate the im- should enjoy working with boys
Assistant Home Agent. It is a ' portant contributions made to and girls between 9 and 19
way of life for more than 214 1the 4-H program by volunteer years of age. The 4-H Club
million boys and girls across leaders and encourage capable agents will train volunteer
the country, she states.
I men and women to lead 4-H leaders in project work and orDrawing participants from '. Clubs.
ganization.
the 9 to 19-year-old age group.
Statewiae and nationally, the
If you have a special interest i
4-H combines the best of learn- 1 week's observance will include in gardening, home beautiflcaing and fun. It offers a wide a 4-H Report to the Nation, tion, electricity, cooking, sewvariety of projects and activi- ; recognition of Friends of 4-H Ing, or livestock, why not share ;
ties which emphasize "Learn- , and a drive to expand the 4-H your knowledge with our boys
ing By Doing,' and rewards program.
and girls. These are only a few
the boy and girl for personal
Internationally, the vitality of the many projects that are
growth and achievement.
i of 4-H is demonstrated through available to 4-H club members.
Young people may choose the International Farm Youth
Regardless of the project,
their own individual 4-H proj- Exchange program which has 4-H'ers learn skills they can
ects from some 50 to 100 of- operated in 68 •countries, 4- put to use immediately, as well
fered. These range from the H'ers now in the Peace Corps as in later life.
traditional beef calf, poultry, and tbrough 4-H sister clubs
Recreation, too, is stressed
gardens, foods and clothing to and pen pals activities.
through talent shows, picnics, jj
automotive, career exploration,
Volunteer Leader11hlp
camping, club parties and
photography and baby sitting.
Key To 4-H Success
tours as well as at social hours
The young scientist may choose
Does your community or at each monthly meeting.
I
a project in entomology, elec- neighborhood have a 4-H Club?
I
'l
I tricity, conservation or others. If not, you may want to conThe
United
States
output
'
. And there are projects too, for tact your 4-H Club Agents in
the young owner of dogs and the Courthouse and join the of amphetamine tablets, a
strength-sapping synthetic stiI horses.
4-H movement.
Boys and girls like 4-H for
Sixty-six volunteer a d ult mulant, is 13 billion a. year SU. They participated In the various con•
DONA ANA COUNTY 4-H'ers - These are
many activities and projects it leaders are now working with about half of which are sold
tests and activities throughout the week.
the 4-H Senior Members who attended
offers groups and club, Ag-ent MO 4-H Club members in Dona illicitly.
Stat.e 4-H Camp during August at the NM.Janet Paz, indicates. Clubs may · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,.. - - select such worthwhile activi4-H HARVEST: CITIZENS OF TOMORROW
ties and projects as - com.
.
munity beautification, safety.
health, recreation leadershin
lrienclship
and conservation. Volunteer
By Marlene Nichols
adult leaders help guide and
The three years rve been in advise members of community
c1t1zenshtp
A special invitation to Dona Foods and nutrition, clothing
Ana County youth to join a and home lmprovement-family- 4-H, I've found it most inter- and neighborhood 4-H clubs.
leodersh;p
local 4-H club has been issued living are some of the choices eating and educational. Its 4-H A World Of Opportunity
taught me many things and
What do 2'%, million Ameriby Assistant County Agent, for girls.
0
wn,ersh;p
Larry A. Brown, with the Co"The 4-H club program is helped me to become better ac- can boys and girls have in
quainted
with
other
people.
common
with
you
on
six
conoperative Extension Service of changing to keep in tune with
New Mexico State University. the time," Brown says. "Some I've learned a great many tients? The answer, says Janet
Boys and girls between the example: Career exploration, things I need to know for the Paz, Dona Ana County Assist- '
ages of 9-19 are eligible to town and country business, en- future and that have helped me ant Home Agent, is 4-H. She
join. Contact a local leader, a tomology, automotive care and In the past. While learning also points out that 4-H and
4-H member, or the County Ex- safety. Family living and pre- I've found the most enjoyable 4-H-like programs are benefitting 75 countries throughout
tPnsion Office fc r information paring for marriage, and pub hobby that helps me in life.
My 4-H story is not complete the world. ·
at-out joining or organizing a lie affairs are other areas beNational 4-H Week to be obnew club.
ing tested on a pilot basis in if I didn't include my parents.
I think they're worked as hard served in the United States.
some
counties.
"Learning by Doing" in a
Aiding Dona Ana's 4-H Club at this as I have. My mom is a September 30 - October 7, wlll
''ariety of projects ls the heart me m b er s with 4-H Weelt good advisor for cooking, sew- salute 4-H'ers everywhere.
of the 4-H ~rogram, the counEvents are 66 4-H Local Lead- ing and other kinds of house- With its theme - 4-H, a World
ty agent says. But members
ers, who guide 4-H · work in work, not to mention the help Of Opportunity, activities will I
also have the fun of taking
their communities throughout I get when I collect insects. focus on local, state, national
part in recreational activities
4-H is a word that really and international achievements
I
the county.
and of meeting young people
means a lot to me. A word that of the head, heart, hands and
More information on 4-H ts gives me and hundreds of other health program.
their own age.
1
.
.
.
't\\\'\''~\\\{ t\~\\
I
.
..
~.... ·,
4· ~
•
...
e·Lu·e·
'WE Ek·
.
··-.
.
.
'
.·· . '.
•:, · ···
. .
...;.·. ~·.· ;;_:.
-;.··
..- \-'-•, . '
·1
..
'
'
.,.:
·,
'«'·.
'
.
...
.
.
;
.
.'
.....
·,.'
••
.
._..
'<.i'
•
•
.
SE PT. ~O :-. OCT. 7
4-H boys and girls take an eager lnt.erest In making their home attractive and comlortable ••• and
i~s a result bring joy to their parents and themselve!I. Through 4-H Club work tlley learn skll1:1
of lasting value in lat.er life.
During 4-II Club Week, Sept.ember
/
4-H Life
lnvitatio1• To Youth
Join r.fhe 4-D Club
.
~
October
3f1 -
7, we salut.e them for tbe•r many accompltshments
In the home, on the farm, and In leadership and
citizenship.
f.
FriP1ul of 4-H
D·ona
Ana Gin Co.
DONA ANA, N. M.
I
Taking at least one project
is a requirement for 4-H members. Members may choose
what they will enjoy most from
a widerange of projects offered in conservation, safety,
health, electric, shop, garden-
kids a chance to live, learn
and have freedom. I owe a lot
to 4-H and I only wish other
children had the same kind of
gratification that I do.
Larry Brown, Assistant CounTo make the best better with
ty Agent by phone, 524·7756, four h's on a clover is really
available from the Dona Ana
County Extension Service. You
may contact Mrs. Janet Pfl.z,
Assistant Home Agent or Mr.
~_·:_~_'_e~_s_a_kw_i:_~_1 in_a_~-~-·~-~-~~-~-!p_e'._~_i;_~-~r-:_i_~r-thv1_e_s_l~-o-~-~t-eh_o_~_:_:~-ns-io-n I
_a_as_nd
__
my kind
LeadersMp experfonm lead way to fulur. op.
po rtun itiei •• .chaIle n&el ••• aoals..,I th itvtmtnL
;s;m
~
Locally, Agent Janet Paz,
says, 4-H Week activities will
emphasize the opportunities
4-H offers the boy or girl 9 to
19 years of age. Exhibits and
displays will feature the work
of current 4-H members. Sev-
I
~..::r:·_____ -~ral -~~~n~s
and
:I_ .
C·H leadership goes beyond
tlub activities. Youth take on
I ·-.. ~
Friend of 4-H
.,,
__________,
•
Picacho Co-operative Assn.
ac~iviti~-~~re , FAIRA::~
PJL 526-15132
----------
N ...: :
I
I
111
..
I
.~£~,--·. ,
- l duties that benefit community's
· I ufety, heallh, welfare.
-
·~J
-,
. :-;
. •
"'......
TO OBSERVE
NATIONAL _4-H
CLUB WEEK
':41 fIVESJMM '" 4-ff
IS AN HIVESTMENT JN .
6000 CITfZEHSUIP" ,
National 4-H Club Week
- September 30th thru October 7th -
SEPT. 30 - OCT. 7
I
To the future homemaker, farmer and craftsman, we
say good luck, good health and may your future always
be filled with the bright hope and great promise pf living and working for a better nation. A well deserved
"Congratulations, 4-H'ers" ••• and keep up the good
work!
WE SALUTE NATIONAL 4-H
CLUB WEEK- SEPT. 30-0C-T. 7
We are proud of the young people ac:t"oss the nation
who are preparing themselves for adulthood
through their 4-H training. The skills learned are
valuable, but more so are :the dealings with their
neighbors. 4-H leads the way to better character.
better citizenship, and better leadership. We salute
4-H for their fine progress wiih American youth.
Just a line to say we think you are lops.
Keep up the good work. We'll back you all
the way. Good luck for the coming yearl
Friend of 4·H:
For The Finest Names
Friend of 4-H
In Western Wear
!Ti!Yo!i!f!llJ
FARMERS
ro1c
MAIN OFFICE AT 411 NORTH MAIN
0
\.
Friend of 4- H
MERCHANTS BANK
WfMBUt
\ .e
•
Branches:
Unlve•slty Hei9ht1 1t Solano ind Californli
·• West Plucho 11 1360 West Picacho Aven111
• Melilf1 Park If 602 M1pl1 Avenue
LAS CRUCES CITIZEN
Dial 524-8081 for 24 Hour
Up To The Minute NeWL
116 N. Main St.
114 S. CutmCB
•
( ..'
- HOME OF AAA PRINTERS -
Phone 526-5544
PBS. 528-55'75 -
!28-5576
Las Croces,'N. M.
-----------------------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;iiiii;...------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1·
Toa~tmasters
New two-door hardtops with sporty, sweeping roof lines highlight the Mercury for
1908. The design theme underscores Mercury's relationship to the Lincoln Continental.
The fine-car family resemblance starts with a crisp new forward-thrusting die-cast
grille, wrap-around bumper with functional air slots and power dome hood. The classic
appearance is emphasized further by distinctive new vertical parking lamps that also
serve as side marker lights at night and as turn signals designed as Wl'ai>-around elements
in the front fenders. In addition'to the new low crown roof in the Montclair, pictured
above, and in the Monterey and Park Lane two-door hardtops, Mercury offers a more
fo?1llal roof in the top-of-the-line Marquis two-door hardtop. The 16 new models go on
sale in Lincoln-Mercury dealerships on September 22. Ford Motor Comp,•11y's Lifeguard
Design Safety Features, including energy-absorbing steering column and iteering wheel,
are incorporated in the new Mercury.
ROTC s~holarship
Date Set Bv Army
High school senior boys interested in applying for fouryear Reserve Officers' Training
Corps (ROTC) scholarships for
school year 1968-69 must apply before Jan. 15, 1968, according to spokesmen at Headquarters Fourth U.S. Army,
Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Tex,
It 1s not necessary for applicants to have participated
in the junior (or high school)
· ROTC program. They may attend any college or university
offering the four-year Army
ROTC Program if accepted by
that college.
Nationwide there will be
800 four-year scholarships this
year, ranging in value from
$5,000 to $9,000, depending on
the tuition charged at the college selected. Each scholarship includes all tuition and
.
al
// oc •
Bus1ness
By Edward G. Denzler
Area Governor
Come to the Fair! The Southern New MeKico State Fair!
While at the Fair be sure to
visit · the Toastmasters Booth
In Building 8. At the booth, the
general public will be given an
opportunity to sign up for a
Speechcraft Course given by
the Las Cruces Toastmasters.
The course in Public Speaking
will begin on Tuesday, October
17 1967 at 7:30 p.m. in the
U~iversity Methodist Church
and will continue for eight
consecutive Tuesdays. 'A minimal fee is charged to cover
the cost of materials. This Is
an excellent course, prepared
by· experts, with qualified instructors, for those who wish
to Improve their public speakI ing abilities. Sign up now before the class becomes filled.
For further information contact the writer at 524-3251.
NEW~=M-~!2CLUB
I
I
"august". George Gadney got
the "whitewash" award for going overtime in the evaluation
portion of the program.
Las Cruces - 1938
I
For the second week in a I
row, Jon Panlener captured J
the trophy for Best Speech
with an impromptu e11titled
"A Philosophy that Changed :
the World". Tom Ryan giving •
a number two in Basic Train- '
ing, Being in Earnest, asked
"Why do we Condone Riots". ;
"So I took out my Black P.e n .
and Blasted Him", was the
title of a num.ber two, leadership ttJ,rough speech, talk given
by Ed Denzler. John Dicldnson handled the weekly Poetry
Assignment w it h Dodson's :
"Jabberwocky". An extemporaneous speech by Jim Lyon advised Toastmasters to "Follow
your Footsteps" Chief Evaluator was Val Magallanes assisted by Phil Kaltenbach, Irwin
Bauerkamper, Stewart Whittler, Jesse Almon and Blll Kilby.
Toastmaster of the D a. Y 1
George Rueth introduced Table 1
Topics Chairman Al Ortega. i
WSTF Toastmasters
(Apollo)
Toastmaster of the Day Bob
"Bombigator" Uebersax conducted this weeks program.
Table Topics Chairman Jack
Arnold presented a Spanish/
American theme that had
everyone thinking. Neal Luca~
won Speaker of the Day award
wtlh a talk entitled "Back
Home". Also giving their introductory talks were Ben Ingles and George Pendell. Ingels
talked on "Censored" while
Pendell spoke on "My Long
Road to Apollo".
Chief Evaluator w a s Ed
Campbell and Timer, Chris
Grisham. Wally Sidmore was
selected Best Speech Eva,lu11-tol'
in a close race over Wilbur
Sitze and Frank Palermo. Dean
Stoddard did some fast talking to win the award for Best
Table Topic.
VISIT THE TOA:STMASTERS BOOTH AT THE SOUTHERN NEW MEXICO STATE
FAffi!!
I
CHARLES PI11."EAU (right), secretary for
the Las Cruces Chamber Broncos, extends a
hearty welcome to two new staff members
at New l\fexico State University. Broncos
welcomed new faculty and staff at NMSU
·Friday with a coffee and door prizes from
local merchants. Chatting with Pineau here
fees, books, m1lltary uniforms
The meet in g of WSMR
and a $50 monthly living allowance, for the period of the
Changes in economic and so- Toastmasters Club was featurscholarship. The pay is higher cial conditions often convert I ed by a "round r~bin~' evalu:;
during summer camps. There luxuries into necessities. Occa- tlon in which eva ua ors we
were about 100 scholarships sionally the opposite is true.
aske~ specifkic qtuhestlonsrecnono~
cermng spea era ey we
awarded in the Fourth Army
Old-time necessities become originally evaluating.
area of Texas, Arkansas, luxuries in an affluent society.
Al Allen gave the invocation.
Louisiana, Oklahoma and New
The horse is ·a good exam- Joe Silva acted as ToastmasMexico last year.
pie. Logically, he should have ter of the Day. Jack Jones gave
Selection for the scholarships disappeared with the automo- a short speech advocating
is based on the results of the bile and tractor. But the horse through the use of complicated
College Entrance EKamlnation is flourishing, in a new social long "Gobbledegook" words
Bo a rd (Scholastic Aptitude situation. He has become a that simple memoranda with
Tests), high school academic common-place luxury.
simple words be used.
Work tools which once had
Dick Dale followed with a
record, participation in extracurricular activities and per- meaning to the craftsman as topic session asking the !ndisonal interview.
an aid in earning a living are vidual Toastmasters to define
Application kits and f u rth er now i n d.e mand by men of all words used in Mr. Jones' speech
information on the Army kinds who use them for leisure such as "repute", "eg'"'eg!ous"
ROTC Scholarship pr 0 gram· ,time hobbies.
. i'sUbUme", "grand", ant "'high''.
are available by writing Com- • The recent resurgent of the
Sam Bone started df the
mantling General, Fourth U. S. sewing machine is a special speakers session with a # lO
Army, ATTN: AKAAG-RR, example. The style conscious speech (Special Types) asking
"Are We Concerned?" concernFort Sam Houston, Tex., 78234. young lady of today may regard a personal sewing ma- ing our activities in our Toastchine as a more classy gift masters Clubs and their functhan a new television set. Her tions. Leon Waskiewicz then
grandmother looked 'ijpon the followed with a #3 speech
sewing machine as a necessity (Building a Speech l on "Preas fundamental as the cook destination Paradox". He gave
JERUSALEUM CRICKET stove.
evidence both for and against
Calle1l "nino de la tierra" or
Rather than considering sew- the doctrine of predestination.
"child of the earth" it often
ing dnidgery, the modern girl This was followed· by an LS-2
gives peo11le quite a start.
regards it as a satisfying art (Evaluation and Analytical
However, they are l1a.rmless
which can provide her with ori- Listening) Speech on "EvaluaThe growth of urban popu- to man.
ginals in the latest styles at tlon as I see it", asking that !ations is much higher prolow cost.
the evaluator check whether portlonately than . the 'world
1-Day Servlc.e OD Shtrta
The result is a new boom in the speaker was "making his population. 'In the 1950's the
And Dry Cleaning
the sewing machine business. sale" before assessing the seri- world population increased by
• md.JviduaJ LaundrJ
Retailers in large cities have ousness of errors. The "Sout~: j 19%, whereas urban populaService
been quick to recognize the ei;n New. Mexico State Fair . tion in the same period in•
ALAMEDA
new demand. However, in was descnbed by Oscar Seyfert creased by 42%. Continuing
most smaller cities sewing ma- in an unnumbered speech: Ball rapid increase in city-dwellers LAUNDRY & CLEANF.R~
chines are not available in Chin then proceeded to wm the - accelerated by migration 645 S. Alameda Ph. 524-2888
Las Cruces, N. M.
variety, if at all. Meanwhile "Speaker of the Day" trophy from the country's rural areas.
the large city draws a large with a #4 (Hands Up) speech ::::__:::_==:::..:...:.:=...::.::::::=..:~~~~~~~~~~~~~
new market into metropolitan on "Sex Appeal in the New
centers.
Model Home".
Thousands of small-city girls
The evaluation Program was
carried portable sewing ma- conducted by George Gadney
chines to college this fall. Most with the help of Bob Hageman, .1
of the machines came from Art Carreon, George Buchan- ·
metropolitan centers, either be- an, Bill Steele, and Bob Helcause. they were ~ot av~ilable. ton. After the original evalua80% LOSE
or not advertised:locally.
tions · were given, Mr. Gadney ,
• You're worth more than you think!
then asked specific questions .
1
How much more are you worth based
oonce
. rning speeches not ori- 1
The largest European plant. giI}.ally assigned to the partion property and possessions you've
accumulated?
for desalting sea water .will' be cular evaluator.
.
built in Spain's Canary IsBill Steele won the "Topics
• MORE THAN 80% OF THE FAMILIES
lands at a cost of $7.5 million. Award" for his definition of
IN THE LAS CRUCES AREA ARE UN-
Act now ~or money ~.2lp.
See HFC
If you need extra money to pay bills, buy a
better car or to take care of some other
important money obligation, see Household
Finance, now!
When you come to HFC, you'll be told in
advance what your loan will cost. There'll be
no hidden extras or surprises, either. If you
have any questions, the ·HFC Manager will be
glad to answer them, so that you'll clearly
understand everything about your loan
from Household Finance.
Every year, thousands of servicemen,
like you, come to Household, because they
know they can borrow with confidence.
I
DER-INSURED.
LARGEST STOCK WESTERN WEAK IN
THE SOUTHWEST
AERIAL ARTISTRY ALOFT - Twenty-year old Athena's
abWty to accomplish the difficult and haza.rdous head stand
on the sWinging trapeze is a.ma.zing even to fellow perfonners. She was figuratively "born 1n the circus," and at the
t;ender age of four displayed, to her circus performer parents, an Incredible sense of balance. Constant practice and
a driving determination led to stellar abllity by the time she
was fifteen. Now, at twenty, she Is a real circus star. Athena's display of her aerial artistry Is one of the many new
features of the 1967 El Maida Shrine Circus, produced by
the Hubert Castle International Circus, showing Jn the
Coliseum from Oct. 4 to Oct. 8.
are Mrs. l\farlene Kopp, junior mathemati•
clan at Physical Science Labora.t.ory, formerly with Union Carbide 1n Oakridge, Tenn.,
and Bill Johnson, associate professor of educational administration, formerly with Ball
State University.
Caoh
MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS
You Chi
36
[laymts
so
[/d:Ytnts
u
24
P111mt1
p11y•ts
s 100
$5.90 $10.04
300
17.41 29.87
500
1$23.62 27.73 48.57
800
35.65 42.29 75.71
1000 38.02 43.53 51.84 93.64
11.lmie payments inc(ude both principal
and inJBl'e!I, baied on prompt 1BPayment.
COMPLETE ARRANGEMENTS BY
MAiL
HOUSEHO.......
FINANCE
r-----~tlfM~
I
618 N. Main St., Las Cruces, N. M.-JAckson 4-7763
• An inventory review can protect
you against unforeseen losses. Ask for
a free inventory booklet.
• • •
I would like to arrange a loan o r $ - - - - - - - -
MAX FREUDENTHAL
RANK:----------------
NAME a:
RESIDENCE ADDRESS:_..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
OOa!ley ClxJuMHce G4gencp
OF LAS CRUl;E$, NEW t.1EXICO
524-7117
llDLITARY ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
180 East Griggs
PHONE NUMBER:
116 N. MA.IN
AGE:-
FILL OUT-MAIL COUPON TODAYI
LAS CRUCES, N. M.
I
I
Phone
JA 6-557&
'
Las Cruces Citizen
and the
Wind & s·and
.ASSURES YOU OF A COMBIHED CIRCULAT!OH OF OYEB • • • • •
11,000
I
I
L.----------'"'""~,...~..,.,..--~-:-::~-=,...~-~-~
Phone
•
I -
• WANT!
rArmy Nurse
Wins ,Award
Washington Afemos
ADS
~
,.Q h I mf
°"-\
·---....----------------------..J
I
i
capers
••
1
STRICOM, Turks
Conduct E r •
I
NEWGMC
V-8 PICKUP
•
I
VA nubl1.she"s
Bz.// Benep.ts
I
•
I !:~ ~:ro:::~:ti~:-.
..... ~::..tat
II
BY
C GOn
counIdown
•
1tle and Idly you read the
on it: "For lnducfnS pr..m
and restful sleep, two dcmft
1
0
An Army nurse, CPT JerTy
~
' •
A.
Matthiesen,
has
w
0 n an
CLASSll!'IED &ATES
Award of Merit, Second Place,
~\ '
"¥
Minimum (cash) ....... $1.0-0
(Armed Force;; Press Service)
in the McGaw Writers' Contest
.
\
adults only."
Minimum (charge) ..... Sl.00
held by the American AssociaJack Harrington then cries
Ads containing 10 words or 1
tion of Nurse Anesthetists.
I
'.iii ~A
IQQN
out ngnin. "I have a. terrible
more·•
/ WASHINGTON MEMOS , • . , mitted to hospital August 30. ~current address· address inHis paper, "Intravenous R eg- ·1·
~
· ·
I"\.!
_ I feeling of guilt about this .••
One time only ... lOc per word
SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
., ,.. ,.
quiries
to
VA
~egional
office
ional
An~sthesla
by
the
Nurse
the fact that I gave her the
1
Two tim~s ....... !Jc rer word I l\fcr1torious Civilian Service ' NEVIT CONCEPTS IN trans- I that serves veteran's iltate. Anesthetist" was one of three
You Are Tho Detc«tiYc
' with a horrified expression al m1>ans of taking her life this
Three d tlffies or n1 ore Sc per Medal has been presented to portation are expected to be Otherwise \\Titc: Conta('t nnd awarded prlzeil.
.
You have been su111m:in·d to the still figure on the bed.
:~~! s~e ji_i~t .~annot figure out
wor '
I Dr. Harold \Vool, director of discussed, along with emer- Liaison Division, Veterans Ad- AANA has a membership of the apartment of show girl Ar- "Arlene . . , what'i; wrong
Classifi_eds charged and billed t(J I Procurement Policy, Office of gcncy transportation planning I ministration, Washington, D.C. more than 13,500 Certified Reg- Jene Fay, who has clit:d, appar· \Yith her . , . the apartment 1 "I'm not too convinced this
individuals who are not regu- the Assistant Secretary of De- and progress in defense trans- (20420)
istered Nurse Anesthetists who enlly as a suicide. from an manager phoned me that some- WAS a suicide," you break In.
lar ,display accounts ~0% ad- fense (Manpower). Dr. Wool portation field, when annual
are eligible to submit papers. overdose of sleeping pills. The thing had happened. but , . " "And if it was, we can forget
dithonal.
is recognized "as a national transportation and logistics ~~ I The award to CPT Matthie- police officer, Tim Conners,
"The girl ii; dead," you in- about any ovet'dose of thol'e
Display Advertising on Class!_ authority on military manpow- forum of National Defense'~
sen was accepted by COL Ruth who phoned you of the tragedy form him bluntly.
sleeping tablets. We'll have to
fied Page at Regular Pre- er procurement."
Transportation Association is
P. Satterfield, A~C, Walter tells you he had. been called by
The young man looks hard wait to see what the police
vall!ng Space Rates.
• • •
help In Los Angeles in OctoReed General Hospital.
the chambermaid who found at you, then glances at the girl , medical examiner hn.s to say
All Classifieds must be ~cheARMY ENGINEERS RE- ber. Adm. Ulysses S. G. Sharp ~
CPT Matthiesen is now a st u- the beau~iful young girl stretch- and points to the bottle of pill~ as to the caiise of her deatll."
duled for a definite period.
PORT conventional high ex- Jr., Commander - in - Chief, Pa- (
dent in the Career Course at 11ed out m her bed this morn- , \•.•hich you have replaced on tlie
Why ha\'e you caneC'lled 011t
All claims for ad<lltional inser- plosive cratering experiments cific, will deliver keynote adID
Brooke. Army Medical Center, I' Ing . . . dead. "It couldn't have table. "Those pills ... she must the sleeping p. ills as the cause
tlon or for credit due to our are not a complete substitute dress October 4.
FR AY (September 29 l
Ft. Sam Houston, Tex.
been money problems that have taken an overdose of l of Arlene Fay's dcath?
7 p.m. Smoker Poker
error must be made before for nuclear cratering experi• * •
drove her to this," remarks them .. suicide' She was very
SOLUTION
pm
Dance
("The
Apo!
·
·
8
d a t e 0 f next pub lication.
ments. Conventional explosives
ARMY MOBILITY Equip· ·
, Conners as he nods his head despondent'
these· past week~
The label on the bottle statSPECIAL NOTICES
were used at Ft. Peck. Mont., ment Command's Engineer Relos" and USO HostI to the luxurious furnishings of complained of. not being abi~ J ed .u 1at it originally cont~ined
in a test to dig a ditch 640 search and Development Laesses)
the apartment.
to sleep . . . I bought the pills "two dozen" tablets. You countDESERT GEl\I SHOP
feet long, with an average boratories, Ft. Belvoir, Va., has SATURDAY (September 3 0)
Xe CISe
You now pick t~p in your for her : . , I didn't dream she ~d t"'.'°enty-three tablets remnin3 p.m. Game Time
900 w. Plcacho
depth of 50 feet and a width developed new mixture of apA U.S. STRIKE Command handkerchief the httle bottle was gomg to use them this mg m the bottle - only one
6 3
: 0 p.m. Movie
Las Cruces, New l\Mexlco
of 200 feet.
plication to equipment and fajoint task force and Turkish of sleeping tablets that rests way!" He shakes his head sor- 1missing - and therefore no
~
SUNDAY (October 1)
Cutting & Polishing Grade, Ma• • •
ci!ities which will blend into
military units will conduct a on t.he bedside table and, after rowfully, then continues. "By overdose.
10 a.m. Coffee Call
terials, Agates, Deming, MexlARMY LTG Harry W. O. snow-covered landscape. Defield training exercise October spillmg its contents out in your the way, I'm Jack Harrington.
------2 p.m. Card Tourneys
h d
A 1
.30
can Foreign,
Cornellian & Kinnard has accepted Presi- signed to replace whitewash in
P ti Pi 1
2-S in north central Turkey.
an , you musingly count the r ene and I had been going
The day's troubles are us5
0
. t"ions, mat ena
· 1 MONDAY
·
p.m. (Octa b r en
c
i
Others: Jaspers, Onyx, Wonder dentlal Unit Citation f rom P re- cert an
app1ica
The exercise, called Deep t went y- three p ills b ack into t ogether f or over t h ree months ually such trifles you can't re2)
0
Stone, Woods, Quartz Crissa- sident Johnson for 1st Cavalry dries within half-hour and is
Closed
e
Furrow 67, will involve para- the bottle. At this moment, a .•. and now ... " he falls Into member them a day later: I
c 0 la, Turquoise, Rhyolites, Division. LTC Kinnard was resistant to abrasion, moisture TUSSDAY (October )
troop units and air forces from nattily dressed, but white-faced a chair and buries his face in you don't think
w ha
3
others too numerous to mention. commander of division when it and moderate heat.
both countries, and the U.S. young man strides into the his hands. .
bothered you so
so,
Tumbling material, cornellian. was cited for action in Viet* • •
~ ~::: ~~~ts Movie
Sixth Fleet.
room, stops short, and gazes
Your gaze returns to the bot- I day?
other agates, woods, apache nam during battle with enemy
EXERCISE "BOLD SHOT WEDNESD
The unlts will be under the
AY (October
tear drops, moonstone, peridots forces Octob er 23 to November 2-68," a Strike Command joint
7 pm Game
Marath 4)
operational command of NA26 1965
airborne assault training opera· ·
on
and other florescent mater·
•
·
• • •
ti
h Id in
th
t
8 p.m. Pool Tourney
TO's Allied Forces Southern
ials.
on, was
e
sou wes
Europe, with Col. James G.
ARMY TANK AUTOMO- area of U.S. between Septem- THURSDAY (October 15)
7 pm Chess To
Owens, USA, heading the joint
Crystals, minerals, garnets. fos·
Warren, ber 7 and Hi. Participating
· ·
urney
8
c ash Bingo
task force.
sils, cutting and polishing TIVE C 0 mm an d.
Mich., has awarded a $5.4 mil- forces included elements of USp.m.
e11uipment.
lion modification to a previous- STRICOM headquarters, MiliThe paratroopers will supOpen 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sundays
port an airborne operation conly
awarded
contract
for
fivetary
Airlift
Command,
Tactiducted
by elements from the
1 p.m. to 8 p.m.
ton truck engines to Contin- cal Air Command and 82nd
£ 1
NATO Southern Europe Area,
and the Sixth Fleet, in its
YOU'LJ, LIKE OUR PRINT- ental Motors Corp., Muskegon. 1 Airborne Division. During exING AND OUR REASON- Mich.
erclse, parachute air assaults
NATO role of STRIKE Force
• • •
were made on Ft. Carson,
ABLE PRICES. LAS CRUCES
PULITZER PRIZE WIN-' Colo., and Ft. Hood, Tex., and
I' South,
will hold amphibious
CITIZEN, 114 SO. CHURCH.
operations in the Aegean Sea.
NING war -correspondent Jim an alrlanding assault was made
The Veterans Administration
US A
tr
in th
Lucas will be main speaker at I at Ft. Huachuca, Ariz., and has published a new, up-to-date
· · rmy oops
e e~the awards dinner of this Cannon AFB, N. M.
brochure (VA P11JY1phlet 20-67- erclse will come from units m
STUDENTS
Special Prices for
year's Armed Forces Chess I
• • •
1 Aug. 67) which outllnes the Eur~pe. The Air Force w~ll
'
.
provide troop and cargo airYear Book Photographs:
Tournament in Washington, D.
MANNED AIRCRAFT, com- benefits of the new GI Bill re- craft from the Military Airlift
c.
GEN
David
M.
Shoup,
remerical
and
military,
will
be
cently
signed
into
law
by
the
C
d
ri t nk
f
MATHIEU STUDIO
tired Commandant of the Ma- in use "for a long time to President
omman ' ae a 1 a ers rom
648 N. Alameda.
rlne Corps and honorary chair- I come" and therefore represent
It incl~des a state-by-state SAC and tactical fighter airPh. 1126-8571
man of the American Chess I a national priority" second to VA regional office address list craft from the Colorado Air •
National Guard.
I
Foundation, will present the none," Vice President Hubert of where to go for assistance.
championship awards. Master H. Humphrey told aerospace
The pamphlet also reminds
Other units will be the 64th I
of ceremonies will be Dr. Carl industry and military officials veterans in and out of uniform I Tactical Airlift Wing from 1
F. Hawver, president of the at the Air Force Association's of the duration of eligibility.
Stewart AFB, Tenn., an Air
D.C. Chapter, Public Relations annual meeting in Washing"Eligibility ceases at the end Force headquarters from TAC's
Society of America.
ton.
of eight years from the date 19th Air Force, Seymour John- I
• * *
• • •
of the veteran's last release son AFB, N.C., and an AlrmoGEN EARLE G. WHEELER
FASTER ACTION on vet- from active duty after Jan. 31, bile Combat Communication
was released from Walter Reed erans benefits can be assured if 1955 except that veterans re- Unit from STRIKE Command's
AS LOW AS •••
General Hospital September 13. senders of letters to Veterans leas~d from active duty before support element at MacDill,
His condition was described as Administration can be recogn· March 3, 1966, have eligibility AFB, Fla, (AFPS)
good, and Department of De- lzed Immediately. Veterans are until May 31, 1975," the VA
fense officials said "he is ex- urged to include file number Information brochure stated.
Month
MEDALS PRESENTED - Mrs. Ellis McA country can raise its inlUilton (USA. Rt>tlred) looks on. Second
pected to resume his duties af- ii' already doing business with (AFPS)
Bride receives the Bronze Star and Purple
Lieutenant l\IC'Brlde, killed In Vietnam in
tellectual standard no faster
ter a few weeks of convales- VA; include full name, service
Heart Medals a.warded her late husband
l\lay, was graduated from New Mexico
than individuals within raise
cent leave." Chairman of the number, dates of enlistment
posthumously from BrigadJer General R. (1,
State Univ.-rsity In June 1966 and at the
theirs. What are you doing to
Davisson (left), con:unander of 'Vblte
Joint Chiefs of Staff was ad- and discharge, and complete
same tiffie re('ei\'ed lm1 commission 1n the
Improve your mind?
Sands .l\Ilss!le Range. Major General Hugh
U. S. Arm,\·. (l'. K AUJfY l'HOTO)
Analytical Quality Assurance
course is being offered by the
Dr. James N. Pepper has left
Office of Continuing Education,
his post as professor of educaNew Mexico State University.
tion, Miami University of Ohio,
Classes will meet Tuesdays and /
to become superintendent, deThursdays from 6 p.m. to 8 .
pendent schools, Pacific school
p.m. In Jett Hall room 208.
area, which has been vacant a
Prerequisites for the course 1
year.
are Math 106, GT 161 or per- 1
The Department of Defense mission of the instructor. The
••
Nearly 50,000 dependent chilf
•
dren are attending classes this appropriations bill, which sets curriculum offers three credit
I
FY68
military
fun
d
In
g
at
hours and tuition is $48 payyear in what is believed to be
the largest geographical school slightly less than $70 billion, able on registration. Interested
zone area in the world. Attend- has been sent to the President persons may register Saturday
ance is comparable to a city for signature. The bill, approv- morning, September 30 at the
High Performance
ed by the House and Senate Office of Continuing Education.
the size of Norfo,lk, Va.
VS's, Ru'gged V6's
The course covers introducSeptember 12-13, totaled about
$1.6 billion below the amount tion to the analytical theories
Economical Tooll
necessary to the ImplementaIf you buy one $50 Serles E reque~ted in the . budget.
Ma1or appropriations In the tion of a quality assurance proSavings Bond each month (pur- bill include: $21.8 billion fol:' gram.
chase price $37.50) for the next pay and allowances of military
For further Information call
17 years, your 204 Bonds will personnel; $22 billion, procure- the Office of Continuing Edube worth $10,964 at the end of ment; $19 billion, operation and cation 646-3526.
these 17 years-assuming that maintenance and $7.1 billion, yards, thus prohibiting DOD
the present 4.15 per cent in- research and development.
from giving British shipyards
848 N. 7th
LAS CRUCES t
t
t will be in effect
The bill also includes funds opportunity to bid on seven
~=:::::==========-.:..-=-e:.::r.:_e_s::...._ra
_e____
for these military projects:
wooden - h u 11 minesweepers.
• $147.9 million for eight (AFPS)
F -111B fighter aircraft for the
Navy.
printing needs from labels
• 55 million in R & D for
the Air Force F-12
to business forms. We'll
fighter interceptor.
'63 Olds F-85
'63 Cadillac
'65 T-Bird
• $11.9 million to keep B-52
do them promptly Qnd .
Sedan, V8,
Sedan DeVWe
Coupe every
strategic bombers In inventory
perfect cond.
The Best
Extra, save $500
. at present levels.
economically to suit you!
Joint ra.te operation of
• $47 million for developInsured Transporters, Inc
Call today ••• let's discuss
ment of the Advanced Manned
& Keal Drlveaway Co.
Strategic Aircraft (AMSA).
Provides
ICC
regulated
'63 Plymouth
'66 Chevrolet
'66 Ford
your requirements. No
service • .at ICC regulated
Congress limited funds only
Fury Sedan
Impala. 4 dr.
Fairlane 500
rates. Dellvers cars to or
to
the
AMSA
project.
auto & power
hardtop ,a.Ir, vs
XL coupe, all
from any city nationwide.
charge for estimates.
• $269 million for procurevery clean
automatic
extras, like new
Have your car delivered
ment of Nike-X Antl-Ball1stlc
the Insured way or drive
Missiles (ABM) w i t h the
money again limited only to
this project.
'65 Poniiac
'60 Mercury
'61 Olds 88
Retained in the elgislatlon is
Hardtop coupe
Starchlef 4 dr.
Hardtop sedan,
the House amendment which
every extra
air, power,
auto & power
stipulates that none of the
,perfect
sacrifice
Best in town
funds can be used for building
naval vessels in foreign ship1
I
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-·1
Wind & Sand - Fric!ay. Sept 29, 1957: 11
I
I
$66
!
i
Quality Assurance
Course Now Open
Super Named
Defense Bill
Sent to LBJ
By Congress
r============· ----·-- - --··- ···-- ---
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Las Cruces
I
Res1•dents
IN
OW y OU
'67 GMC
PICKUP
* LETTERHEADS
* STATE1\1ENTS
*ENVELOPES
*HANDBILLS
*TICKETS
* CffiCULARS
I
l
• ,• h
.We1nre1c
Can Call
The
Buick ·Pontiac
GMC
Opel Kadett
-======::·=
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I
$200-$400-$600
Insured
Driveaway
System
$1895
$2195
$895
$1995
I $1995
$795
In El Paso
Toll-Free!
*OFFICE AND FACTORY FORMS
El Paso, Texas
Ph. 532-7284
$445
$395
$1795
'62 Buick
Electra 225 Sed.
Cost $5200
Extra nlce
'66 Dodge
Polara hardtop,
4 dr. every
extra, liko new
'63 Imperial
$945
$2295
$1595
4 dr. hardtop
all extras,
like new
'62 Cadillac
Sedan DeVllle
all extras
A-1 condition
'63 Chrysler
'65 Rambler
800 hardtop
coupe, extras
perfect
American
Club coupe,
extra nice
$1295
$1295
$995
/
BLISS AUTO SALES
4''780 PERSHING
EL PASO, TEXAS
When in Juarez, Mexico
ALCAZAR
Restaurant Bar
The House of The
Porron
Spanish 1'radltlon
* SNAPOUT FORMS
* BUSINESS CARDS
DIAL
524-9637'
*SALES BOOKS
* REGISTER FORMS
NO JOB TOO SMALL AND
NONE TOO LARGE ••• FREE ESTIMATES!
Our Specialty
• STEAKS -
SEAFOOD
The Popular in El Paso
• MEXICAN FOOD
• SPANISH FOOD
The Finest of Mixed Drlnka
2 Blocks South of Santa Fe
Bridge - One Right
(Juarez)
Telephone 2-4984
RAFAEL SAMPEDRO, Mp.
"MIKE"
Real Flamenco Music
Every Night
Manolo
Vero
Guitar
Singer
CLOSED MONDA'f'S
--·-
is as near as your phone.
Use this toll-free servlc:e
soon ••• Just dial 5249637. and the Popular's
Sally the Shopper will
fill all of your shopping
needs.
Las
Cru~es
Citi.:
"Home of Triple AAA Printers"
PUBLISHERS
OF
LAS CRUCES CITIZEN AND WIND &: SAND
114 S. Church St.
Las Cruces, N. M.
Phone 6-5575 - : - 6-5576 -
Vietnaal~
12: Wind & Sand - Friday, Sept. 29, 1967
V ignette£
·Mixed Couples. . .
· NOW PffCHING FOR
, UNCLE SAM!
Bob Trueblood had high series 1540 series to help the Four
tor the team on the short-end Aces take six from the Jokers
of the score with a 451.
Wild. Even with six losses on
The Courtesy Pays team, led 1 their record the Jokers may get
by Dar Shipe with a 494 ser- the last laugh. Tom Manning
ies ,took six out of eight from was the Jokers top kegler for
the Bum Knees. Nick Robinson the evening with a 205 game
was high bowler for the Knees and a 533 series. If these two
with a 468 set.
bowlers stay hot, watch the
Rounding out the action in Jokers and Aces.
the "A" Division, the Tigers
Closing out the action in the
took five from Team # 5. "B" Division the Wheeler·wayne Sanger was high for Dealers took six from the
the Tigers with a 500 series Jams. Lene Piper was •top
i'nd Hank Beall rolled a 516 bowler for the Wheels with a
set for Team # 5.
202 game and a 489 series. HarThe Shooting Stars shot ry Johnson led the Jams with
right into first place in the "B" a 402 set.
Division by stopping the No
WSMR MIXED COUPLES
Getters eight straight. :Tuan
BOWLING LEAGUE
Lazo was the brightest ShootSTANDINGS
in~ Star of the evening with a
• Division "A"
496 series. Bill Payne was high
21
6
man for the No Getters with a The 7 and lO's
2 AMERICAN BEAUTY 6
Team #7
471 series.
2 Kathy u:n<try was Miss Ne6
Following close behind the Sourdoughs
2
va.da In the Miss American
6
Stars al"e four teams deadlock- Courtesy Pays
3 Beauty Contest In L o n g
5
ed for second place with iden- Tigers
5 ' Beach, Calif. The statesque
3
tical six and two records. The Team #5
6 redhead is a dancer in Las
2
Splitters took six from the In- Bum Knees
6 Vegas.
2
ternationals in spite of Ed Hy Neighbors
6
2
ser's 212 game and 535 series. Roadrunners
6
2
The Splitters top pin toppler Team #9
Division "B"
was Larry Siegfried with a
0
8
Shooting Stars
three game series of 490.
2
6
Team # 16 whipped Team Splitters
2
6
#15 six out of eight. Cliff Team #16
2·1 The Army Education Center
6
Given (480 series) was the high Four Aces
6
member of the winners and Wheeler-Dealers
2 will ofer a course in Math 477.
2
6 Numerical Analysis, (3 semesSue Dean rolled a 434 series for Internationals
2
6 ter hours) in conjuctlon with
Team #15
Team #15.
2
Lee Medeiros burned up the .Jokers Wild
6 New Mexico State University,
2
6 if sufficient enrollment is oblanes and wound up the eve- The Jams
0
8 tained. Classes will meet from
ning with a 206 game and a No Getters
- - - - - 4:15 p.m. to 6 p.m., Mondays
'iK?OBERT WILLIAM (&QB) FELLER
HAS BEEN APPOINTED BY f;ECRErARY
OF THE IREA5URY HENRY H. FONLER.
A5 VOLUNTEER GTATE CHAIRMAN FOR
THE 5AVING6 BOND PROGRAfy\ IN 91l10
***
808 F'CLl.ER IS ONE
OF TllE MANY
THOIJ5ANl15 Of!
AMERICAN!!> WHO
PARTICIR4TE IN THE
SAVIN6S 'BONDS CAMPAl6H&.
L!l<.E Mil.LIONS OF HIS
FE/.l.OW CITIZENS JIE. KJ./OWS
'r11Ar 8UY/N& /30NfJ5 UEl.PS
Af'?ERICA WJ.l!LE IT I/El.PS
ml l>JIP YOUR.FAMILY
Ed Center
Math Course
Now Offered
-ConPratulations~
!sports Qui··
6
TO PRIVATE FIRST CLASS
Robert W. Croucher
USAERDAW
David E. Pringle
USAERDAW
GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL
SSG Edward E. Fudge
(Second Award)
A Co.
GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL
(First Award)
259th MP Co.
SP4 Roy S. Hall
SP4 Lewis R. Boyer
PFC Carl E . Smith
PFC William L. Monroe
SP4 Jerry L. Jones
PFC Robert B. Helverson
PFC Lester V. Miiler
SP4 Harry L. Raymond
PFC Ronald D. Hammond
PFC Bruce R. Byrer
PFC Kenneth R. Davidson
PFC Fred N. Carson
PFC Ronald J. Hopkinl!I
SGT Douglas R. Meszaros
SP4 George M. Strider
SP4 Thomas E. Dunn
PFC Jefferson J, Josephs, Jr.
PFC James A. Dunn
PFC McCoy B. Curtis
PFC Allen J. Bratzel
SP4 Robert L. Dale
SP4 Freddie L. Whitmire
SP4 Ronald L. Solberg
PFC Richard B. Forbes
SP4 Fred L. Paller
SP4 Jack L. Storms
PFC Gordon D. Singer
SP4 Timothy J. Cole
PFC George G. Simpkins
PFC Herman E. Rice, Jr.
SGT Richard T. M!halovich
PFC Dennis E. Smith
PFC James P. Angel
SGT Ronald J. Smithmyer
SGT Kenneth 1\1. Smith
PFC Darrell L. Boyd
PFC John W, Glazer
PFC Ronald J. DeKlep
SGT Bruce S. Lee
PFC Marvin E. Wilson
PFC Billy G. Reynolds
SP4 Richard L. Moore
SP4 Stephen J. Giss
PFC Ronald J. Gibbs
PFC John J. Clemens
PFC Vernon J. Goetz, Jr.
SP4: Johnny M. Alford
SP4 Warren L. Sample
PFC Keith J. Anderson
SGT Clay R. Batey
Headquarters Co.
(First Award)
SP5 Gordon C. Rowell
SP4 Ro~er 0. Heaston
SP5 Joseph M. O'Connor
SP4 Lorurle P. Boyer
"A" Co.
SP4 Russell D. Bowling
PFC Dwight Wiley
SP4 Donald A. Neslund
SP4 Alexander Demydenko
SP4 Raymond R. Hitney
PFC Richard L. Hester
Headquarters Co.
SP4 Loweel R. Flekher
SP4 Damon A. Wisham
SP4 Manuel 0. Tapia
"B" Co.
SP4 James W. Collyer
Forrestal Arrives
The aircraft carrier USS
Forrestal is back in the U.S.
following the tragic July 29 fire
in waters off the coast of Vietnam.
The Forrestal ls now at the
Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Va.,
where it is expected to take
about six months for the carrier to be made operational.
Navy listed 134 men killed
because of the fire (AFPS)
SIGN UP. FOR U.S.
SAVINGS BONDS/
•:•.;;
FREEDOM
~~
.-
SHARES
I
( AFPS) Feature)
1. Wh·a t pitcher holds the
record for hitting the most
home runs during his lifetime?
2. When was the first baseball diamond used?
.
3. Who are the three new
coaches making their debut in
the National Basketball Association this season?
4. What pro football player
holds the NCAA major league
record for most field goals
kicked in a season?
ANSWERS
•g96I UJ UO'.J001Jf.ld .IOJ
Sf1l0~ PJ0JI 99I P0lf0p( SUp(spau
0q1 io 111110.:too 0n.1'tnlo •t
'8010.ll
·UV SO'{ l'll 1JOJI 'Bpa.Ig: U'8A
IUU puu :am1r.>S 111 JllaUUJa IV
:Jl'8UUJaUJO f8 .19lfan.t Ptil'S
•9t8I UJ U0Jf
-oqoH iu muu.lf u UJ pasu !JS.IJJ
S'841 !JI •ruu.:t11w v 1>"11'10 ·~
,
~1
--::r
c:ncials
Begin Christmas
Planning Now
•
-1:ly
l 'echnical Libra')·
1
News
A JOB on I The Army's Military Traffic
LOOKING FOR
(Continued from Page 2)
t
d T ermina 1
·ce
cream
route?
The men M
an l
s ana_gemen
h
ban
by subject in accordance with
of the 3rd Ba,ttalion, 39:h.
m~-r;:;ce De::mbe~gu~ ~rog{r~r;:; the classification system shown
fantry, 9th Infantry D1v1s1on movements to overseas assign- in the Table of Contentl!I. Abhave just such a job on their ments in an effort to permit a stracts can be located by using
20-mile rout_e between 1:an An maximum number of personnel the Table of Contents or the
and Rach ~1en. The vehicle for to be on leave during the Subject Index.
the route is a converted %,-ton Christmas holidays without
The subject classification
truck with a kitchen f:eezer jeopardizing the defense effort. system used i;n tbe Cumulative
mounted on the baak. Tfie inAlthough personnel move- Computer Abstracts is the
ventor, Chief Warrant Officer ments are normally prorated same as the one used in the
Raymond Stward of Chesa- evenly throughout the month, Information Proceslng Journal.
peake, Va., put the wagon to- MTMTS officials are working However, the journal has an
gethefl to speed delivery of out schedules so that they wili author index, which the Cumubulk frozen foods to the for- be concentrated in the first lative C o m put er Abstracts
ward base camp. The major three weeks of Dec e m b e r lacks.
frozen food . • . ice cream.
wherever practical.
The Technical Library staff
• • •
BaseO on Army require- wil attempt to locate any lit•
BASKETBALLS were not ments, MTMTS is schedul!ng erature item abstracted in
designed to be dribbled in mud, passengers outside the holiday these publications. If the rebut sometimes it can't be help- period to allow Army installa- quested item is not available
ed ..• and then again it can. tions to grant leave to military in the library it can be purThe men of Company E, 3rd personnel and not require them chased or obtained on Inter•
Battalion, 39th Infantry, 9th to be in a transient status.
Library Loan,
Infantry Division thought so.
While some travel is unavoid- - - - - - - - - - - - Choosing the only piece of able, the intent of the Army
ground available to them, a program is to reduce the nummud hole, they built a wooden ber of personnel actually movcourt out of empty 4.2-!nch ing, eliminating the transient
LAS CRUCES
mortar e.mmunition boxes. population at Army Personnel
Having conquered the elements, Centers during the holiday seaCOLISEUM
they now try to conquer their son.
304 W. Griggs
respective teams. From time
A similar effort last ye.11.r
Music By:
to time, they even play the brought total Army transient Bobby and the PremJeN
sport to see who will perform personnel down t o 289 at the
SAT•• SEPT. 30th
the company details.
three Army Personnel Centers
9 P.M. to 1:00 A.M.
from the normal in-house popuAdm. $1.25 per Person
lation of 3,000 during the twoday period of December 24-25.
I (AFPS)
9
!n-
DANCE
BARNEY'S
and
TheFridays.
course content will inelude "evaluation of functions,
polynomial approximation and i
interpolation, numerical differ- I
entiation and Integration, and
numerical solutions of differen· i
tial equations, with emphasis .
on numerical techniques used
in conjunction with digital
computers. Pre-requisite: Math ,
392.
The course will give either ·
graduate or undergraduate credit. Cost will be $16 per semester hour plus matriculation
fee and textbooks. Tuition assistance is available for military personnel,
Anyone wishing to enroll
must contact Mr. Busby at
678-5425 prior to 4 p.m., Oc- .
tober 2.
•
8
A-1
•
•
•
SERVICE
L. D. "Barney" Barnes, Mgr.
PH. 524-9932
509 S. MAIN
I
WELCOMES
'
•
Firsl Rational Bank
Tenants!
NEIGHBORS -
COMPLETELY SERVICE YOUR CAR
duty from April 1965 to September 1967.
He is retiring from active Army duty the
last of this month from 22 yea.rs service. He
and his wife, the former Mary J. Stephenson, planl to live in Las Cruces. They have
three children, Stephen Andrew, Andrea
Gall and Jeanne Yvonne. (U. s. ARMY
PHOTO)
•li.J:l)WOq
-'8 lJll '.ree.iw en.:t-001 .zofmu
Sfl{ ~UJ.lDp llllJ"OOi fll.lllAl)tJ .IOJ
paqo:nd OqA\ 'Illl.U0.JI S0Jkl 'I
LET US PICKUP AND
AND DELIVER SAME TO YOU •••
EXPERT WORK, TOP QUALITY Enc:o Products
r------I
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1
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t
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HE'S A LITTLE
YOUNG TO READ
'""·I
I
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BUT ...
.i~··I
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:i;
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THE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
I
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I1
I
lEltTUCKT HIED CHICIEll
I
I
PLAYS AN IMPORTANT
PART IN HIS LIFE
--..I
L.--
•
Mothers and Fathers who read the Cltlsen
every week are well-informed on many subJec:ts •••
that may effect baby's health and happ!neu
.through news stories and spec:lal fea·
'.Buy<
.,t: • . .J •
. ~l1icke:n ~.~ retlular
price $1.10 ~et ~ ~d b1>x at Va J?ricel
tures covering child care. medicine.
finances, education. etc. Read the Las Cruces
It's a banquet !n a box-3 pieces tender, tatty
chicken; plus all the trimmin's! Take home a
couple of boxes of Colonel Sanden' Recipe
:Kentucky Fried Chicken today. Take it from
the Colonel ••• "it's finger ~' goodl"®
(And the service is sudden.)
Citizen every week -
Informed parents
are geerally better parent&.
•
Friday -Salurday -Sunday
Seplemher 29-30,
Oclober l, 1967
We fix ::iunday ainner
seven da_ys a 1JJee·k ·
~
Subscribe Today to the •••••
•
- .. 0NEL SANDERS' REt;i .~ c:
~nt11ckv fried
Ckicktn.
750 S. Solano
Las Cruces, N. M.
Phone 523-1356
~
I
·LAS CRUCES CIT,IZEN
-NEW MEXICO'S LEADING WEEKLY-
114 S. Church St.
Phone 526-5575
•