Start Jobs Services Trio Takes Posts
Transcription
Start Jobs Services Trio Takes Posts
• Serving the Nation's Biggest Overland Missile Testing Center l'Ul!LISH?:D WEEB:LT NEAR 8.000 CIRCULATION Published in the interest of military and civilian personnel of WSMR l nd lo promol& a greu.ler guided missile progrcam for the nalion11l defen e, Publication O ffioe : Published by the LIUI Cruces Citizen, a private tlnn. Opinions ex p1·e~sed by the pllbllsher and wr1te r1 l1e1·•ln ar e tl 1<>lr o wn a nd are nat to be considered an official exp1·psslon by the Department of the Army, The B ppearance or Hdverllsement.s In this publlcallon doe.s not !'Ons t ltute an endorsement by the Department of the Army of the products or services advertised. VOLUME X - 114 S. Church, Las Cr uet's, N. M. EICTIT PAGES No. 21 50 Co-ops ~Cw Special Start Jobs Services Trio th• • Takes Posts More than 50 students from over the country received orientation lecBy PFC WILLIAM ZANDI tures last week at White A new tno has taken over top slots in White Sands Sands Missile Range on INSIDE STORY- Wind and the Cooperative Student Missile Range's Special Services, bringing a big backSand takes credit for uniting Trainee work-study program . grou11d of experience in troop entertainment to the The plan, sponsored b y the post a luug with pla n s for an accelerated recreational two form er school buddies who haven' t seen each other Training Branch, Civilian Per· program. sonnel office, provides the in almost 30 years. Bill Stev- Army with a continuous flow Capt. William S. Reinhard takes over as head of ens, Mission Plans and Operations, saw the front page picture and story about M Sgt. :Richard Bridgeman, a member of the WSMR Flying C lub, r eceiving his private pilot-license. A telephone call and the two school chum of 1930 a t Lincoln Elementar y School in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, were reminiscing with frequent " do you rem ember when's." Lt. Col. E. L. Tidwell, SMSA, is attending the Army Information School at Ft. Slocum, N. Y. Col. Tidwell was in Information Service several years and worked in \'adio and television in Los Angeles · and . overseas prior to his missile range assignment. Fran (Mrs. T .) and ch tldre n, Bruce and Lind11, are at home in the housing area . . . Remodeling storer ooms in the Wherry houses has brought sundry lost items and interesting things to light. One of the most surprising-·a litter of kittens secre ted under the quarters of Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Ingram . , . Now, if the offspfings of the straying mother could manage to get stolen .. • r At Range of Engineers, Physicists and ,. Mathematicians. The group started work here the last of July. They will work six months and return to college for six months I until they receive degrees. On receiving degrees they will work full time in tht: m issile .program at WSMK TWO WOMEN Two women were among the group of student-trai1wes . Judith L. He!nze, of El Paso, a mathemat1L:s student at Texas Western College, and Anita M. Clark of Albuquer que who will attend New Mexico State University. Texas Western College and New Mexico State University participate with WSMR in the academic phase of the - - . . training. The trainees receive ~. CAPT. W. S. REINHARD degrees in five years instead of the normal four. Heads Operation The work-study program makes it possible for students to apply the theory taught in college to practical work at WSMR. It also provides an excellent means for a slu- I dent with a limited income to work his way through college. ELECTION HELD A series of orientation lectures were held for tht:> n pw AHEAD OF TH EWS- co-op students, after which Inside information is that student representatives were Pfc. Roger Putzi, Det. 1, is elected. Those electe d were James on his way to Europe for a 30-day sightseeing tour . . . L. Hagler, Crane. T e x .. u stu },/1 ;:3·P Anny ru 11 wart fut dent of Texas Weste · ol1he tout· at Government ex- lege, who works for the Integrated Range Mission, Harpense. RECENT DEPARTURES- ley H. Ridgway, Las Cruces, Capt. and Mrs. R. B. Klein· attending New Mexico Sta te man and children, Caihie, University, IRM; Pau1 L . McCraig and Keiih. for Capt. Leod, El Paso, TWC student, Kleinman 's new assignment Ordnance Mission; James 0 .' with the Air Force Ballistic Miller, Corpus Christi, TWS, j ROSE AKERS Missile Division in Engle- OM; and John R. Buchan, Chief Librarian w ood Calif. Capt. Kleinman Hawkinsville, Ga., New Mexcame' to WSMR in 1957 and ico State University, attachwas exe cutive officer of ed to Signal Missile Support Me asurements Division, IRM Agency. Opening remarks and wel. .. Dr. A. H. Schendel, physicist with RID, for his native coming address were given G ermany after some fiv e by James M. Patton, Chief, Training Branch, CPO, and y ears at the missile range. Paul W. Welch, Deputy Chief, THE NCO WIVES AUX- Mission Plans and Operations. ILIARY is a busy group. Briefings on the operations Mrs. Salvator (Virginia) Jara. of WSMR activities were givmillo and Mrs. J. N. Floyd en the students by R. C. Han- ' w e re hostesses at a recent son, Chief, Control Office, m eeting. Mrs. W. J. Sogan Ordnance Mission; S. Wayne an d Mrs. G. V. Anderson won Bell, ~hi ef, Operations and I . door prizes, and Mrs. U. R. Analysis Branch, Integrated ' Kenny, Mrs. T. J. McCutchon Range Mission, and Lt. Col. · and Mrs. H . S. Malson we re Harold A. Smith, U . S. n ew m e mbe rs. Army Signal Missile Support WHAT THEY' RE DOING- Agency. FILM SHOWN Mrs. O. D. Radebaugh and A film "They Major in Mis- I daughter, Sally, Adj~ta_nt o.f- siles," describing the work fice , shopping and dmmg m done by student trainees a t El Paso ... Dorothy Waddell. C ountdown Service Club, WSMR, wound up the lec MURRELL WIGHT u sin g a cig arette lighter after tures. Carl Clift, CPO Training Directs Club finger burns from "gofer" (Continued on Page 8) m atches . .. Maj. and Mrs. W. H . DeBoy home from a California and Colorado vacation . . Dorothy McGourty, Civilian Per sonnel Office, vacationing in California and Tucson Ariz., where her da ught~r and family live .. Margaret Recovo, IG Offi ce, back from vacation .. . Dr. and Mrs. Andrew Ross of Huntington Long Isl and, N. Y v1siting Capt. K. M. Walsh. CO of D et . 4, and family in the housing area . . . Sfc John Maliull, Troop Informat ion m arried last w e ek to Len~ra Barrios of El P aso. I I..,__ 1 I NEW : At SMSA photo lab - Sfc James Brown, Sfc Nolan Wyatt and Sfc Edmu:id Walsh; Countdown Se~v1ce Club - Mrs. Murrel Wight: P ost D ispensary - Gertrud Reighley. S UGGESTION OF THE WEEK - Publish a special picture issu e of W &S, using only those "who w er e left ou t" such as M Sgt. Emmett Sheridan. StMSA; Augustin Veloz, motor t ranspor tation ; Mrs. A. F. Erickson, Br ow nie lead er· Nancy Lewis, Gigi Nivisoit and Lynnea Erickson, Br ow n ies; Mary Lou Debacher, Kay Beth Murphy. Evelyn Brillante and Nancy Roby, Girl Scouts, and recent VIP visitor, :Rogers Ashton. Roswell r a ncher-civic leader and board m ember of the Museum a nd A rt Center containing the G oddard Mem or ial Wing. W ORD TO THE UNWISE - Some men's ideas on " Operation Moon W at ch" h ave little to do with sa,tellites. special services and come:!:! to the job with years of experience in the entertainment field. Rose E. Akers, chief librarian, is here from Ft. Chaffee, Ark., and Murrell Wight is the new director of Countdown Service Club. Capt. Reinhard comes here from Ft. Polk, La., which was recently shut down. A 15-year veteran of military servke, he entered the Army in 1942. He was separated from the service at Ft. Dix, N. J., in 1946, and managed to come in and go out of the ~ervice on the same day of <he week, same month, and practically the same hour, and spent some time in the same barracks and in the same bunk at the same post. A f ter two years of civilian life, he re-entered the Army and has served continuously since. PROFESSIONAL MUSICIAN A professional mus1-c1an. Capt. Reinhard was a drummer with the Hal Macintyre orchestra and played the hotel circuit in Florida, onenigh ters across the -country a nd with big hotel bands in New York City. His World War II service was in Europe as an armored officer. After serving at Ft. Knox 3-:d Ft. Eclvo.i1, h.: went to Europe in 1950 as Special Spei;ial Services procurement officer of the European Armed Forces Professional Entertainment branch. Capt. Reinhard is interested in an active intramural program at WSMR on the unit level, providing participation opportunity for as many as possible. He also wishes to secure more biirname professional talent for (Continued on Page 5) -Tim e Hi Off- uty Term Set Sept. 20 The new semester for ---~---~ _ students in 1P. Anny Off- Duty Grou Study t.ll'o-, gram at the WSMR Army I Education Center will begin with enrollment dur· c ur e ing the week of Sept. 20 John J. France, supervisor of the . Educational Development Branch of Troop Com mand, announced this week. High school level courses and courses in vocational and 1 technical subjects are offered in this program, which i s open only to militciry personnel on aetive du t y <1t White Sands Missile Range, There are no tuition charg· es and all texlbooks and sup. plies are provided free o'f charge by the Army Educution Center. · Qualified instructors are employed by the center. Classes are held two or three evenings a week for each course. · Modern facilities, including laboratories, are available in the new Army Education Center buildine:, located at the corner of Rock Island Ave. and , Flagler St. Summer st:ssion classes 1 '(Continued on Page B) _.___as S art Sept. 9 By CHUCK POISALL ,An all-t ime reC'ord number of 29 difft'l'l'nt "olleg courses will lie cJfferecl when the l!b9-fi0 fall S<'mester opens on s, pt. 9 an"l 10 at the new Army F.d 1cation Center at Wh1tr SanJ3 Missile Range. B y the ti111e the ~ch l y ar is over n ext sp1·111i:r. anothrr all-ti me rt:Tord n111111Jer of 42 c ollege cuuri->t::> \\ill have been offered to WSMR mi1 tary, civil ian, f'ontr:i rtor nnd dependen t pcn;o1111rl. T he cour~t·s ::irt' offtrcd by the WSMR Anny r!<IJ ::ition Cen ter through ih c_ Hlp rntion of tlw uff earnpu program of Nt:w M1•xii:o SL1te University. Qunl 1f d instr uctors are e111pln) e<l by the u niversity, and all 1hi.! courses carry credits toward college d egrees. ENROLLMENT SET John J . FranL'C, .1.p 'tvi~ or of the Bducdion 1 D v elopment Brnnch of Troop Command, announced this w eek that enrnllment for the coll ege progr am wi 11 t ke place betwet'n 3 p.m. and 8 p.m., Tuesday thn11tgh Friday, Sept, 1-4. However, France ~::ii 1, ~h1- A ir Force Group Gets Top.Awgrd ~ Detachment .24, 4ih. Air Weather Group1 whid !wrves both White Sands Missile 1 Riange and I ollon n A1r Force Base, ·as p:·esented j recently with• he William 1 r1 111 i1I n 1 : Award as the '> · ·t;.rndi t~ U<'• sh ould visit the ~:du ::ition tachment in Air Wea ther Cen ter, Bu ilding 461, b .. Service. tween Au g. 24 ~mcl Aug. 31, This is the second conseto complete µrc'l1111i11:iry arcutive year that det achments ran gements. This e~p ri lof the 4th Air Weather Group 1 ly applie:; 10 milil~ty offihave won the plaque. cers and en l 1~t rl nwn rlt> irCapt. Ralph K. S t eely, ing government-p 1id tuition former detachment commanassist anrr or defL'J'f'Cl p:lyder received the troph y from m e nt arrangcmc·n ls. ('i vil!ut\ Maj. Gen. W. E. Laidlaw in stud en ts may c·omplC>te all ceremonies performed at· a rran gements cl u ring thr rnHolloman AFB. The presen tation was witnessed b y Maj. SUMMER SHENANIGANS-Summertime means time out for fun and anything goes roll ment period. The new Eduntion Center, when this trio of sisters se1s out to beat the desert heat at White Sands Missile Range. Gen. D. E. Hooks, commander of AFMDC; Col. A. T. Four-year-old Janie and six·year-old Debbie gang up on their two-year-old sister, occu pied last l\forch !'fl, is on th e rornrr of ltof'k I I:md Culbertson, Gen. Hooks' exe- Heidi. in their portable swimming pool for a backyard baptismal into the joys of be· cufore officer; Col. A. L. M ac- ing young. The whirligig sisters are the daughters of Capt. and Mrs. B. R. Gervais. and Fla~ler strN·ts, just Kusick, chief of Integr ated The captain is a missileman assigned with Integrated Range Mission. ( U.S. Army photo south of thf' Post 'l'lwater. It is df's igncd to lrnncl lc:> as 111nny Range Mission, and C ol. H. by SpS J. W. Tuckish) as 500 st udents in ii!: 12 C'lassH. Bedke, commander of 4th rooms and thrr.r. 1~11Joratmies Air Weather Group. a t anv onf' ! i nH'. C'asting for "Three Hits Detachment 24 is actually l.700 'S TUDENTS' SEEN Tonight," Special Service's split into two units, one lo· But by the mi1ldle 0f this selection of the best acts and cated at Holloman AFB and fall , betwf'en 1,700 nl'd 1,1100 songs from three Lerner and the other at the Army Missile persons are e.·pc'clPrl to he Leowe musical comedies, Test Center. The AMTC Air pa rti cipa tini~ in !l1P 1·ight difwill be completed this week- Weather Group furnish es fer ent pror:rnms off PrPd bv end. weather data to aid in stud ies Logistics Division - C apt. or t h rough the fur 1liliP~ of Special Staff OrganizaThe hits -::- "My Fair La- of missile behavior. Names of the organizJohn G. Gaddie, G -4 execu - the Education CPnler. This C:y," "Brigadoon," and "Paint The two un its usu ally op- ation chairmen who will tions Capt. \Russ ell A. Your Wagon" - are being erate as one for missile f iring direct t he . 1959 WSMR Burnett, assistant staff judge tive officer. H e will serv e would compare with :t total G-4, P ost Signal, Purchasing of 1.450 participa\inl(. in the combined into one show fea- purposes, but, in some cases, United Campaign Fund in advoca te. H e will serve th e & Contracting, P ost Quarter- eight prog ra1ns as ul' J11ly 31, turing the best vf each. thrv act innependently . Briefing Office, Inspector Costuming, secenery and Maj. William Moor e has t h e i r various missions. General, Post Chaplains, Post mas ter, Post Or dnance, Post in the midst of llH> "summ1~r Transportation and P ost En- slump" for ecluc.::ilional acagencies and divisions r eh earsals are underway succeeded Capt. Steely as Safety Office, M issile Flight tiv it ies. now. The show will be pre- commander of D etachment w ere announ ced this w eek by Sur veillance, Public Informa- gineer. F rance, a veteran ecluca~ Lt. Col. · M. L . Thax ton, chair· Personnel Capt. Carl J . ' sented in mid-September. 24. m an of the Execu tive Com- tion Office and Judge Ad- Trim, physical security offi- tion officer, forn1i>r Sl'h'.101 vocate's Office. mittee for the drive. cer at the Provost Marshal administrator, fur111• 'f c·ollege .Medical and Dental Divi- Division. He will serve PMD, professor um! n ti rfJ Army The organizat ion chairmen major, est uLlished the Army sions 1st Lt. Joseph R. were selected b y t he Execu- Muglia, pharmacy officer at Personnel (G-1), Civilia n Per- Education Center al WSMR sonnel Office, T roop Comtive Committee, with th e as- the U. S. Army Dispensary. mand and Post Adjutan t Di in 1947. He previously had sistance of the m ission and established the Anny F:du\'ision. d ivision chiefs. As the w eek cation Center at Ft. Bliss, COMPTROLLER ended , th e organ izat ion ch aird uring World W ar 11. m en w ere selecting th eir subOffice of th e Commandin g Fir st JS an Army officer chair men and k ey m en . General and Comp troller Di- and th en as u civiliu;1, France Sub cha irme n w ill d irect vision - Cap t . Carl N . Al- h as h eadf'd the WSMR center the dr ive at d ivision level in lain, assistan t intel ligen ce during five diffvrent tours of the p ost's m aj or missions, (Continued on Page 8) (Continued on P age B) su(;h as Ordnan ce M ission, Int egrated R anl!e Mission and th e Sign al M issil e Support A ge ncy, and a t branch level in di vis ion s su ch as Data R eduction, Syst ems T est, Com p troll erfi et c. KEY MEN "Missions of California" is the theme of the new In small C:' r of fices and in sections and u n its, one key watercolor painting exhibit currently on display at 1 m an will be n am ed for every the Post Library. The collection is on lonn from th;} 25 p ersons or less. Key m en Little Gallery by the Sea and is touring Fourth Anny will contact t heir em ploycs Installations after a successful sw mg through the and coll ect th eir contribuFifth Arm y a rea. tions durin g t h e t wo-m ont11 T he w a ter colors, a ll e x ed rive. cu ted b y Ma ude W allin g With a goal of $16.000, t he Wanker , depict the chain of WSMR campaign w ill open m issions established by Padr e on Tuesd ay, Sept. 1, and con J u n ipero Serra al on g the Cati n u e th rou!Yh Ort. 31. The lifornia Coast, geographicall y FUND DRIVEThe Ft. Bl i>~S Solcliern Chod rive w ill ben efit 10 l ocal, HEADS Lt. Col. Marvin L. Thaxton, star t ing with Mission S an state and n ational organ i7.a- above, deputy chief Ord- D iego de Alcala and endin g r us will slage a roncHt at t irms the Ameri can R Pd nance Mission at White with Mission San Francisco 8:15 p.m. 'l'uesd:..iy at the Countdown Sc1vi1 e Club. rross, Boy Scouts, Girl Sands Missile Range, has de S olano. The Chorus. with many ~routs, S ::ilva t inn Arm v. N ew KINGS HIGHWAY b een n am ed chairman of cred its to its nnme, is com~ M exico Rovs R a nch , Un ited The route t aken by the the installation's 1959 UnitWestern College, and Ridgway and Buchan attend New Service OrP'anizations, Unit- ed Fund Campaign. He suc- artist in h er study of th e mis- prisrd of 40 voiC'L'S Nir nber~ Mexico Staie University. Buchan. a former Army Para. ed SeamAn's Service, In ter- ceeds Lt. Col. Keith L. sions is known as E l Camio such as ''A11!urnn T.e \'es," trooper, is taking his college training under the GI n ation ::i l Social SPrvice, A m er Le wis, executive officer of Real, the K ing's High way or You'll Nevt>r \Vall· Alone," Bill of Rights. He is an electrical engineering student. ir::in H earinr>: Society and the Syste m s Test Division, better kn ow n as the "trail and "There is Nnlhing Like There are about 140 student trainees now at WSMR in Am E'rican Social H ygien e As- who directed the SE>cond of the padres." This is h is- a Damr" will he nmg. the work phase of their training. An additional 130 are T he Fort Bli:-:s sin11ers are h1:1lf of the 1959 campaign torically sign ificant in tha t attending college in .the academic training phase of the so'C'iation. the artist h as mad e the only eirected by Gp4 Alvin Bver, program. The plan is designed to provide WSMR with Col. Thaxton 1iste d the fol- and assisted in planning complete watercol or study of and the show is sponsored by engineers, physicists and mathematicians, (U.S. Army l nwi n i:t ori:tanization chair men the 19:>9 dxive. (U.S. Army (Continued on Page 5} Special Services. phcio( phoio j)z Frank On.iinras) for the drive: Casling Ends For Posl Revue 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fu d Chairmen Named As Kickoff Date Nears ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Missions Depicted In Library Exhibit Soldier's C Sels Posl CO· OP STUDENT REPRESENTATIVES - Following election of class representatives for 52 new students beginning work at WSMR. Carl Clift. r ight, counselor for WSMR's Coopera tive Student Training P rogram, informally cha ts with the electees. L eft to r ight are James L. Hagler. Harley H. Rid gway, James 0. Miller, Paul S. McLeod and John R . Buchan. T h ey are among the new group of student t rainees who w ill work one semester !il WSM:R and retutn to college the n ext 1em est er. Hagle:t, McLeod and Miller a±tend T e:i<:as Polirirs and ~;t.'ltrm <'nl!o' 111 1hr nrws ;in<I L'l l itfH ia\ c·0J tt1nns nrr nnt of th~ ~Jrnfl•wts 01 :--1•1vi1't'~ idl\P1 t isf• •l. l ~~~~~IJ~[1;~J~~·.·~ P1Jhll~hPrl . .vrf'kly ::is !"1 r 1vili:111 rn!Prprir:r in lhf' lntPrr~l of 1hP 1\Tilit~ry artl C1vili;1n pc• ·~ nnnrl of \.\'h ilr '~:1r 1 d~ M i:;~•li l' ft.mg•". New l\h•xko, by the Las C 1uce!' C1L1zen ot Las Cruces. Nn\· l\1C'x1"0 A.II nrws m 311rr for f>UhJ1nd1on ~h<111ld h1· Sf"lll lo lhr PulJ lir Inform<tlirrn I OHJ<'f'r, \Vhtte Sanft ~ /tl1!'sll<" HR11gr, NPV\ :Hr\.wn, T('IPphonp 4 ~lO;'i or .,:oa. This n C\\'Snaner rr1~ri\'f'S ArmNI l'nrrr" f'';t; c,('J \'IC'(' rn::ih•J'i:1I An~rrl FN<'<'S l'rPss SP.rViC'(I ni;tlt'rl:ll w hid1 1:-: 11<1! cnp~·l'ir:hl<'rl m s:-,· rHliqlfr·d nrny he ~Ppn11 f <'d or rrru nrJun·d wit lw11t fnrt hrr P"' r ff, i~s10 n , prn\·ir1<'r1 prrip<'t· crr<111 1s J::1YN1 I cai;~~. paprr j" n nt ttn Official 01' S"lnl ·Offki;i! J11'f•:11 f11wnt n( n('IPn:..;r> pul)li r1 2-Wind & Sand-Friday, August 21, 1959 ~ Get Tour Of Range _lives [Ip To Ifer Na1ne Civic officials frorn neighboring cities and general officers from the U. S. Army Air Defense Command at Colorado Springs, Colo., were among visitors ! o White Sands Missile Range last week. Lt. Gen. Ch::irles E. Hart, commanding general cf WASHINGTON (AFPS) - P robabl y no freighter plying the Seven Seas has been involved m more ca1go-handling operat10ns than a vessel under the "registry ' of the U.S. Ar my Transporlalion Trainmg Command. But th e cargo never goes anywhere. the Air Defense Command.' loured the launching area !I ,,·.··· ··~-·"""'"·············.···.•-~"~ and inspected N ike-Zf'us fa. cilitic~ at Army Launchinf, Area 5 on Thursday. Gen. Hart was accnmpanved by Maj. Gen. Philip H. Draper, chief of staff of the Air Defr nse Comma:i.d, and Maj. William J. Coonly, aidede-ramp. Maj. Gen. W. E. 1 Laidlaw, commanding gen- I rrnl of W~MR. led the tour <)f thp latmching area and was host to the visitors at a I h1nchenn in the Rocket Room of thp Officers' Cluh. ROSWELL VISITORS Dif!nit:nies from Roswell, T.;is C'rucf's, El Paso and New Mexico State University tour1 cd WSMR on Aue. 12, as ~uests of Gen. Laidlaw anrl Navy Cant. Francis D. Boyle. cnmmand<.>r of the WSMR Naval Facility. The Roswell visitors were Roger Ashton, a member of r;;±,b'.;\~.Wh'.Ji'ifW~~I the board of the Roswell Mu- r scum and Art Center, which contains a new wing dedicated as a memorial to Dr. Robert II. Goddard, father of modern rocketry; Mrs. Rog- LAU'{ ers Ashton. and Bert Ashton, father of Rogers Ashton and prominent Roswel.l rancher. Both Bert and Rogers Ashton are memhers of the board of the Southspring Foundation, a non-profit agricultural re. search organization. Visi1ors from Las Cruces were Mayor and Mrs ..Tames E. Neleiith. and from F.l Paso were M~"or and Mrs. Raymo:id K Telles. Reoresenti~P Ncw Mexiro Slate University was Dr. Roger B. Corbett, presidPnt of the university. Assisting Gen. and Mrs. l udlaw and Capt. and Mrc;. Boyle as hosts and hostE'sses during the day-long tour of WSMR, which includC'd a lunchPon in the nf>w Officers' Cl111) builrling, were other WSMR military and civi1ian officials and their wives. ..... . . AU '.'lrturr::; arc lJ.Y \\'hltc Sun<1s J'\'ti~~llP Raru::r p11ntoJ:rn plH'r~ unlcs~ othr1w1se ~ t r• I NI ArivertJ!;inq C<'lpy ~hott lrf hC" r.l" nt to: lot:: Cn1c"5 Clh7.rn, p .('"), ~ox 270. 114 ~ f"hurrh, Strrrt, J.tr•.; Cn1cr·. N'"w M .. xj(:O, PhO".'tr JI\ 6 .i; ..1·/_'l S nbi:-c"'iptl ons cH fi.,:,t $LOO P"r yrnr; :u. '.,O lot lhT"" monl!r .•.nh;tribntion on Ut" Post free. ----- Training Ship J\Teversail . m--~<'s ~i:ir 1l~_ tt101.;p of lhP f)<•p;1 rl m Pnl nf /\ 1 1~· nr it~ ;1;~1-11''lf'~. A d Y<'rl 1!'rmrnt s Jn thi s puhlH'-Al1n11 dn n ot rnn~:tit11 I •' ;in f' 111l"'"""mrnt by the OC'p~lt·tment or tlH' r"\tlll.) VIP Neighbors, Generals ---- What( uses ishaps? I \\Tha l cau srs tr;iff1<' acci<icnts·: B::itl weather? Brakr !;1ilurr'? Fat1g11C? None of lbf':il' in 1lw111srlvPs. ;wc<1rcl ing to the' Nri tional Sufc1y Counci l. Th<' No.1 ('<~1ts<' o[ traffic acc idents. it says, 1s thr man behind lhe wherl. That' ~ <"lc;tr from r c,•cnt ('01mf'il s l 11rlirs whl<'h sl1nw tl1ere were 77 violations for 1·vt·r.v 1110 drtVC'l'S 111 fala' traffic acndcnls. Many drivers vinla1cd ntPrc· t han 0110 law . 'Thi• violations tha1 occun·:•d most ofl<'n s pN·~mg failure lo keep. right. of the c<·n trr l in<', not h;1ving rigl1t· of-way and dr1v111g und<>r the 1nf111c'nc·0 of akoliol. . Other vi.olatwns: foilowin g 1no C"losc·ly. 11nriro1wr passing, 1111proj)cr turning, failing to s'gi i:il , disrei'ardlng stop sign~ and 1111proper parki ng. " Mode rn ('<ll'S ;rnct specia 1ly ·designed s u pNh i~hw;ivs a1.·c fine, of co urse," tlw CounC"i! s·1id. "n111 th0 lu·v '10 t he traffic accident problem lin with the driver himsel f." I INSPECT AIR DEFENSE Sl1 E-Lt. Gen. Cherie<; E. Iiart. commanding general of the U.S. Army Air D•densP Command at Co1o,.ado Spl.'ings. Colo.. (center), is shown a feature of the new Nike-Zeus mhsile fa r·iy at WSMR during his recent inspection tour. On the right is Mai. Gen. W. E Lai "law. commanding general of WSMR. and o"l. the lef~ is Maj. Gen. Philip H. Draper, chief of r.taff of the Air Defense Command. The ARADCOM officials tour:i the anii-'Tl:s ih faciEty, which is under construction on a high priori1y rush b<.sis. last we-.1·. ru.s. Army photo) I CIVIC LEADl~RS AT MJ.SSILE RANGE- 1cpc..r n J •o witness ihe scheduled test firing of a mi:<siJe a~ WSMR a•e somn of ihe civi.lian officials who iourP-d tho post l ast week. Front row, ldt to right: Mayor Jamrr. E. Nclcigh of Las Cruces. Dr. R. B. Corbett of New Mcidc:o State University a'lcl 'M yor R. E. Telles of El Paso. Back row: Mrs. Francis D. Boyle. Mrs. Ro,,crs A b'on of Roo;wcll. Mrs. W. E. Laidlaw. Mrs. Telles and Mrs. Nelcig h. On 1hc right is Navy c. pt. F. D. Boyle of the WSMR Naval Facility. (U.S. Army pholo) !VA7V f)iscloscs 1.S ovicl 1 New Army CINFO Armed ! orccs 1Stren{_1,·th 1 F~LLY ~O!t PRICE-Needless to say Mrs. Ella Price. WASHINGTON (AFPS)A rmv's new Chief of PARIS, France (AFPS) - Scw1C'1. sea, l<11Hl a11d i l r Informati~n is M;ij. Get. forces have undergone a drastic r c1rg<11ti7'1t11,11 in tlw Wil liam w . Quinn who as· past dC'cadc to hr.come a modern, wr•ll-l'quippcd :-;t rik- sumed duliPs on August 1. in g force capal>l0 of fightin g undC'r atnrnic <'nndit ions, GenNal Quinn suc~ecdcd arcorrlin« to thp NATO Tnformat;<lll SPrv1cE'. l\fa.J. Gen. Harry IP. Storkc SOP " . _ . . . . who wtll take command oi Th0 SovH'I lin eup 1 nc I udC's a 4.!1 rn 1ll1< n- r.i ;m ;irniy, the U.S. Army I Corps in a collect10n of operatmn a l 'Korea. Sto1kc h::id been Chief missiles, nearly 700 s ubm ar-1 The ri.<;hl lti nrl of .l fl'l'mor; c,f Information ;;ince 1957. ines and a lon g-ran ge a ir 1 is s hol't. hut 1t ,,t11J Ji:1s :i r;rnrral Quinn's last ac;striking force. l'.1ng n•adt in the rirlit d.1rc: signmcnt wa~ as D eputy As , t.on. p l · 1 T · d t srnlant Chief of Staff for In · 0 .0 P<'rG 1<' unr1"r r~mc c;ct into 1h(• ii<1hit or think- telligence in Washington. H e . uncra ~erv iccs were he\'1 1 in North Adams, Mass., this a tomic cond1t10ns, th e n ew ing p .c;is:rnt thou rili l · lh<:v bar! ::;ervcd as comma'1ding wrck for M /Sg t Richard s. Soviet a rmy musters three I may hr.t ak in''> word; :i11y ['.f' nrral of lhe 4th Inf . Div. Davis, who was assigned to 1million men, with the satcllttc minu lc. and Ft. L ewis, Wash. tlh' Office rs' Club here. I armies orovidina l ,500.00 I r:=·••.:,1:::mc,•:::::·:~· T 11e hody w as shipped to more. Obsolete equipment Nor.th '\dams, accompanied has been replaced by modern .I r / Sgt. t.corgc Sanders, ]Jet. weapons and vehicles. The Soviet air forre ha3 . Sg.t. D.avis su([cred fatal nearly 2800,000 m e n and 20,lllJttt ics in i\ truck acC'lde nt 000 operational aircraft. /\.11 =~iii~~;;,~~~~:.-.._ai' on th e D<'scrL Road Aug. 13 fighters, light bom bers and :_· ~:- ~1.1 a. rr~ 1 1.rn trip to Wh ' te th e majority of g"ow1d attack ~-;;;i:w~-;;;;£-:2lll!m!mll!.lll'l:§.'ZI .111cls M.1ss1le Range from El aircraft are now j et:p1·oi><•llP 11so. TT!, !nic k struck the I ed, NATO has disc•losrd, I ren.1: r,'f. ;i Ft. Bliss V<'hi.cle I The satellite air forces h:in d11~11~'. ,1 sudd (' n g us t of wind 2,500 operational planes, 7:, 1 per cent oi which arc jcl s. <1r1 ' s.111rt. Fan1ous for f;gL Davi 0 is s urvi\'C'rl hy Russia will have 700 s 11bh1s widow anr! three children marines hy Hl60 if th e presen t who re:;1derl on post. cons1rurl1on rate continues. Signal Missile _Support A9c_nl'y photo lab, was surprised wh n W. A. Lwberman. chief of Pktorial Division. pre· srnted her a parrot as a farewell gift from division per?~nnel. Mrs. Price resignad recC'ntly to accept a pf)s1hon at Redstone Arsenal. Ala. (U.S. Army photo ) Thc Home port of this unusual ship is Ft. Eustis. Va. Its name the N eversail. Of all-steel con struction and 312 f eet l'J'.'lg, the Neversail greatly resembles Victory ship of World ' r II, except that it Jacks both bow and stern. Costing more than $2,000,000 to build m 1954, this mock ;hip has paid rich div idends in realistic instruction for Transportation Corps terminal troops who must be trained to han.1le cargo in ports throughout the world wherever Army elements are stationed. The landsh ip is mounted on concrete. piers at Ft. Eustis. Instructions in ship-to-lighter and lighter-to-ship operations is therefore possible. To insure that students are trained to operate varying ty p es of equpipment, several different models of winches (steam and electric), booms and other cargo devices are availabl on the Neversail. Freighters have different designs and sizes of holds and hatches so tlw landship was constructed to provide loading instruction in the three most common models. Over 2,000 men arc trained aboard this facillty annually. It is also used extensively by visiting units from the Navy l.a•n•d•C .. o•a•st. G•u•a•r•d•a•n•d . . .b•y...A•r•m,..y•R,..es•e•r•v•i•st•s• ........ -. . . . . . . IDRIVE THE SUCCESS CAR OF THE YEAR RAMBLER · 100% FINANCING TO QUALIFIED MILITARY PERSONNEL BANI< RATES - 36 Mnnth~ You C;il'l Take 1' Oversees COME 11'1 to Pay 12 YPCJrs LC on CALL FOR DF.MONSTRATlON Mitchell Motor Co. lJl840 N, MAIN LAS CRUCES JA 4-7741 If you have an i\ccount at the First NalioMl Bank of Las Cruces, you can enjoy wockend banking at the White Sands Branch. A White Sands account lets you bank at the First Na.1ional, as well, weekdays, and Saturdays until 1200. ank WHITE SANOS BllANCH SE:F.: OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OF eld I I ll MAYFLOWER I 1· ui the JVorld! World -Wide Moving Have the Largest Selection of Back · lo · School Shoes in Our Hi.story. ••• The Season's Newest Fashions, plus the many all - time favorites. REMEMBER .•• If we fail to fit your child properly, we make no sale! SWIVEL STRAPS • YANNIGANS •RED GOOSE • R.)TARY Black, Brown and .Ard or FICAL BOY OF QUALITY AT BLISS AUTO SALES IO YEARS OF rAIR DEALING Easyl- when you move long-distance the Mayflower way. Expc1t packers and a trained driver relieve you of bother, work and worry. Mayflower takes fu II responsibility for your m<Jvc ... anywhere in th e world. GIRLS' We Moving & St6rage 225 S. Church JA 6-9761 SHOES LOW FINANCING RDAi·aTlLES 4730 Pershing Drive El Paso -n • 0 98 6 1616 Sizes 81/2 io 3 RED GOOSE FAMOUS NON~SCUFFSI Perfect For Long Wear! Ile Listens f,a J<~GReaT A_ to D Widths :;;rzES 11 to 3 - $8.95 SIZES 3 \ /2 to 6 - $9.95 s795 All Sizes and Widths 570 Boys and Girls! Be Sure to Get Your Free Golden Egg With Your Red Goose Purchase i - $5.95 and $7•• 95 SCOUT 3- 1957 Cadillacs, Fleetwood Sedan and 2 Sec!an D., V.iJJc,-;. Jhc best . . . .. ·$3095.iJO 1956 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, every possible extra. · perfect . . $2495.00 1958 Edsel Pacer, hard top coupe, ·~J"1 po·w~r and air-conditioned, likl:l new . .. $1995 .00 1959 Plymouth Savoy 6 sedan, R&H and automatic, perfect. a steal at ' $1895 00 2- 1958 Fords, Ciub Coupe and Sedan. equipped and lik<· new . .. .. . .... _ . $1695 .00 1.incoln Coupe. Chevrolet S~dan and Hillman Sedan, 12- 1957 Models- Cadillacs - Ford Station Wagon~ - Plymouth Belvedere Coupe-Buick Sedan- Chrysler Hard T op Sedan-Lincoln Coupe-Chevrolet Sedan and Hill-1 man Sedan. only the best .,, $1195.00 up 19:;6 Ford Fair!anc Convcrtibl<!, R&H. low mileage $1295.00 l 956 Mercury Custom Sedan. R&H and auiomatic, one own· er. perfect . $1095 O!l 2- 1955 Pontiacs. S•ation Wagon and Catalina Starchief , Coupe, nice .. .. $995.00 up , 1955 M<'rcury Montclair hard top coupe. C'quipprd. best m i I El Paso .... .. .. . ... $I C95.00 1958 Lloyd German Station Wagon. 40 MP gallon, a bar· ill ga; n .......... ... . . .. $i95.00 1954 Ford V-8 Victoria Coupe, R&H. clean, nice condition $695.00 1951 Plymouth Sedan. R&H, runs fine $250.00 1953 Pontiac 8 Sedan, standard shiU, R&H. I cleah, only .. .. . . . . ... . . . $?.SO.OD 1952 Pontiac Catalina Coupe. R&H and Hydramatic, n bargain $Hl5.00 '.j t We Have the All. New Nylon-Velvet Straps and Oxfords. All Sizes & Widlhs in Black, Red, Neutral and Gray. They're WASH ' N WEAR Trudy 41 ESTORE Big Enough to Serve You Baptist - Small Enough lo Be Friendly SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY - YOUR FAMILY SHOE STORE 118 S. MAIN • l is FIFTH CHAMPION OF LIBERTY-The late Ernst Reuter, coungcous Mayor of Berlin from 1948 to 1953, will be recognized in the }fliest of a new serfos of Americ11n stamps honoring "Champions of Lib. e-rty." Gen. Ouinb Named • MYERS ARCADE LAS CRUCES JA 6-9771 ~ Bridge Club • Moves To NCO The Desert D u p 1 i c a t ~ Bridge Club moved recently from the Countdown Service Club to its npw playing quarters in the NCO Club. The club is one of the few bridge circles comprised only of enlisted personnel. It now has a membership of 35 enlisted men of all services, and their dependents. Headed by M/Sgt. Dan N. H. Conley, the club is a member of the Las Cruces Unit and the National Contract Bridge Lcagw~. The Las Cruces Bridge Club and the Officers Open Mess Bridge Club 11re co-members of the Las Cruces Unit. A championship tournament dei;igned for all three cluhs is slated for August 30. All persons interested in joining thP rlub are urged t.o rnntact M/Sgt. Conley at 27140. Skill in plavin~ is not fl prerequisite to joining. • • SCOUT DAY CAMP-Making moss donkeys was class project for this. group of fifth graders al the recen~ WSMR Girl Seoul day camp. They are, from lef~, Sarah Mil~er, Wendy Mayfield, Christene Runyon, Jan Gerault, Carol Lee Kanakanu1, Debra ,Pier, Cindy Brown and Marsha Block. Some 125 scouts, leaders and senior assistants. attended the annual camp located on the slopes of the Organ Mountains near the target range. Mrs. D. E. Pier and Mrs. W. E. Gittleman were leaders for ibis. group and Anne Holder was senior assistant. Members of the group not in the picture include Mary Lou Debacher, Kay Beth Murphy, Evelyn Brillante, Nancy Steinbach and Nancy Roby. (U.S. Army photo by Pat Anaya) Chaplains Corner · ~--- THIRD GRADE BROWNIES-At their first Girl Scout day camp 'hese Brownies learned to make molds of plaster of Paris. They are, from left, Phyllis Frost, Marsha Jones, senior leader: Jannell Birdsong, Be-:ky McNuU, Rene Castaganoli, Charlene Miller, senior program aide; Yvonne Antley and Mary Gerault. Mrs. A. F. Eric;kson is group leader and members not shown are Nancy Lewis, Gigi Nivison and Lynnea Erickson. (U.S. Army photo) 1th Birthday COMP '· ..QUOTES Post Library nas announcBy BETTYE ed a renewed emphasis 011 Did you ever hear that gel- the Officers' Contemporary ting to heaven was easy'? It Heading Program. must be if we arc to judge Post Library is one of Management Services Offrom what Christ had to say three· in the United St:-ites fice welcomes Mrs. Belva about the problem lov-: designated as a Military Sci- Castleberry, who will be emGod, love your neighbor ence Reference Library. The J,lloyed in Management Supand you shall find life. Whal area covered· by the White port Branch ... Belva resides could be easier? Sands Missile Range opera- m Las Cruces; her husband What's so hard about lov- tion soans the whole wcstPrn lS also employed at WSMR in mg God? He's perfect, mer- I United States from the Mis- the Fire Department. Her son ciful without limits, kind al- sissippi River to the Pacific. is attending college. so withou.t any .fiounds. _He Gen. Maxwell Taylor, Congratulations and cigars gave me life,. keeps me going when chief-of-staff, set un are in order, Dave· Weddle rea~d even died for me on n list of 34 books on military ceived his Sp4 rating . . . . His cross -:----- no effort for. me science designed to broaden Understand "Buck" Buckley to love Him. And my neigh- Armv officers' h;ickgrounds. is performing a volunteer bor --: the guy 1r:1 . the next Books are available uoon rebun~ ts rny best friend - I quest from both individuals service as a diplomat, endon t .need a command k And stations and are distri- couraging good relations between US and Mexico. love him. b t d b ·1 How easily we forget. Our u c Y mai · Otis Gabbard is off for Indiana and Jack Stark has deneighbor is not only the man in the next bunk or the people' us then we are no better than parted for Ohio . . . Carl who live across the street the pagans. We call ourselve" Shuster is now working 2 Everybody is my neighbor. Christians. Love your enc- shifts a day, one here and The new man, the sergC'ant, my, do good to those wh0, the other housekeeping, due also those with rank on their hate and persecute you. Foe to the illness of his wife . . . shoulders. These are my this we have the command of "Keeps a man hopping," say3 neighbors and I mu&.i, love Christ and also His example. Carl•••• Christ's teachings are for thP. Comp Office is sorry to them. 11 Christ made it clear in the brave and the following of say good-bye to Micki Roun· J~rmmlem to JC'richo para- them can bring out the hero behler today. Miclci plans to ble· Everybody is my neigh- in all of us. stay home for awhile and The man who doesn't love get a good rest . . . we welbor. perially those in need. Th;it's th e parable i:1 a nut- his neighbor whom he sees come Irene Alarcon, transfersht>ll. He even said more. If will find it difficult to love red to Como from CPO, who we love only those wh-e love God whom he does not see. will take .Micki's place . . . . Irene resides in El Paso with her parents, and has been employed at WSM'R for over a year . . . Mr. Murphy has !!one to Ft. Churchill, know he will appreciate our climate when he returns. Washing1on (AFPS) - The Army Reserve 1;ilcntly mark~d its fourth anniversary under the provisions of the 1955 Rrscrvc l•'orccs Ad. More th;in J ~5 , 000 men have enlistrd for the siymonths training sinrc the ;ict became law or; Aug. 9, 1955. Chaplain T. K.Lightcap A W -~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 9• -just send in the coupon! ,That's right! Now you may borrow $100 ••• $300 ••• $500 or more by mail from HFC, without ever visiting our office. Just :fill in the coupon below and mail it to HFC. You'll receive prompt action on your loan request. What'~ more, when you borrow from HFC, you'll establish your credit . at all 1000 HFC offices throughout the U.S., Hawaii, @c!__Canada. Congress has eytended the Reserve enlistment program for another four years. President Eisenhower signed the new act on July 17, 1959. CHICAGO MISSES LEARN OF MISSILES-Vacationing in the Great Southwes' for :the first time, cousins Jacqueline Maurocki, center, and Dolores Kupetos, hear historical details of Hitler's V-2 Rocket at the Missile Park of the 4.000-sauare-male White Sands Missile Range, N. M. Explaining is their host. Sp4 Alfred W. Naurocki, Jacqueline's brother, assigned to Instrumentation Services Section, Measurements Division. of the range's Integration Range Mission. (U.S. Army photo) SMSA Wives NCO Wives Give Tea For Schedule Wife Of CO HawaianLuau The Signal Missile Support Agency Wives was hostess yesterday at a tea in the Officers Open Mess honoring Mrs. Paul W. Albert, wife of SMSA's commanding officer. Receiving with Mrs. Albert · were Mrs. J. E. Arm strong, Mrs. R. T. Barnes, Mrs. R. B. Pitts, Mrs. E. L. Tidwell, Mrs. H. A. Smith, Mrs .0. M. Covington and Mrs. G. A. Welde. Why Worry? Assisting at the refreshCannibal Chief: "What did ment table, which was laid with a yellow and talisman you do for a living?" Victim: "I was an associate glad i o I a centerpiece and editor." white tapers in silver holders, Chief: "ChPer up. Toniaht were Mrs. W. E. Laidlaw, you will be editor-in-chief.'' Mrs. F. D. Boyle, Mrs. F'. W. Roberts, Mrs. J. G. 'Redmon, Mrs. J. T. West, Mrs. E. P. Fahringer, Mrs. R. M. Burns and Mrs. Wilma Nichols. Mrs. Albert was presented a yellow glad corsage. Mrs. Smith. was chairman of the arrangements committee and members of the organization served as hostesses. The NCO Wives Auxiliary will be hostess Wednesday for members ana husbrnd:; nt a Hawaiian Luau at 6:30 p. m., in the patio of the NCO Open Mess. • Mrs. H. W. Decker is chairman of arran~ements and members of h0r committee are Mrs. M. J. Sherman, Mrs. C. R. Jones and Mrs. A. S. Perry. Sp5 Herbert Shiraishi will r.dp with preparing the food Fish nPts, sl1f'lls and flowers wil1 he used for decorations. Guests in Hawaiian attire will be presenter! leis at th0 patio door. and sit at a long low t::ihlP decorated with fl0wers and shrlls. Rerorned bflckground mus ic will be played throughout the evening, During the pa:ot four years the enlist<>d drill-pay strength of the R<>s<>rvr. has grown from less 1h<m 100,000 to more than 245.000. The 1o1al strcng than 245,000. The total strength of the A rm:v Reserve, offiecrs and <>nlisted men , is almost :mo 000-thc reiling approved by Con.~r<>ss. The siy-monl h program has become os popul<ir th;il many quotas arc c'xrc·cdcd. All commands now report lists of prospccttvC' cnl istN's. 18 pq)'mls 12 Paymls Whether for business or pleasuro ••• a trip to any part of tho United Stale~ or a tour of Mexico. Hawaii, or Europe, Dyal Traval Service can ' arrange all of the necessary details for you. Consult us about any travel problem. al 3% Mi oun D TR v l .. ~ 9:30 - 1:30 a. m. 1·zona ~;::. @~~{tl./'~1 Newe~tc:ind Finest ~-.->1tj:·· . ,·,·~~i•:·/'r' ~:'..~1fgi~.~Jl~ r· Hotel in }:'.f"·~;~:~ 'if(/!. In Scothdole-t~e "W11t's Most Woster" Tow"");:~f :(~ ·.,:;~. 12 mile< northeast of Phoen i1 i~ th• Camelbacl .~f! ·: 'l ~::Mountain r11ort areo. 100 luxury rooms and su ites, all ·lth privet• sull porch-many with kitchen faciliti1 Completely airconditioned and heoted-individu•ll co ntr~lled. Dining Room ond Cocktail lounge overlooking beaut!· fully landscaped Patio. Heated Swimr,,ing Pool. l Golf Couroes and horseback ridin9 avail•ble-1U ~ports and activities nearby. Meeting room accommodating up to 200 persons. Caft be sectioned off into smaller room• for Committee Moetings. Conferences, ate. EUROPEAN PLAN - OPEN YEAR AROUND ' RVICE GS y DOUBLE THE BUYING POWER OF YOUR DOT.T.ARS DURING THTS GRF..AT EVENT! AT POPULAR PRICES , They've Got All The Big Ones . FOR A FEAST OR .A SNACK MtET YOUR FRIENDS . AT THE TOWN & COUNTRY i I - ----'"--'--- _,, FILL OUT-MAIL COUPON T4oAYI on K-GReaT EL PASO. TEXAS WE ALSO CATER TO SMALL · PARTIES OR Ph. JA 8·2881 BANOU~TS Las Cruces 1400 N. Main ::::: · ;·'.trn=:.:r~~l~i::::::J1 --------------------~------ j J Saturday, Aug. 22 L FEATURING BREAf(FAST BEGINNING AT. 6 A. M. Ihat part 618 North Main Street-JAc~on 4-7763 I Las Cruces STAllTS MONDAY, (Hollie's Dinner House) OUSEHOLD RINANCE. ADDRESS--:.c..-_._....__ _ _ _ __ _ 1390 N. Main RALPH L. TODD, Ma11agN TOWN &'COUNTRY 6 AGE _ __ ZACK'S TOWN & COUNTRY COCKTAIL LOUNGE NF.W LOCATION SEE GREAT WESTERN AUTO EXCHANGE FIRST! H---(Jnf'~' o/fM ~~·-- NAME THE TRAIL BLAZERS 106 S. WATER TO BUY OR SELL pay111l1 $___:.[ l FAMOUS WESTERN BANO WILL BE AT 1015 NORTH MAIN - LAS CRUCES of schcrJulc.'i.m0>1lh/y balances Ml exceedtnR $300, and 1 "f on any remainder. • • • 1 would like to onan.. a loan of • We11 .'iake your car on consignment and get you tho most 'in· ihe shortest possible time. Dr~ve in for details. $5.90"" computed . JA 6-5432 or JA 6-2842 NOW IN GREAT WESTEllN AU·T O"·EXCHA GE $ 100 $ 7.27 $10.01 $18.451 300 17. 71 21.81 30.13 55.37 j 500 28.25 35.15 49.06 91.03 40.48 50.8~ 71.80 134.72 1 52.49' 66.39 94.27 178.13 (,)tars:es "'-ru Washington (AFPS) A $4.5 million contract for th0 production of the Tartar missile launching system has been awarded to North0rn Ordnance Inc. of Minneapolis, Minn. The Tartar will he installrd in cspcci;illy arlap1rd destroyers hy JflfiO, fH'rorrl ing to Rrnr Anm . Pf\111 n. Stroop, rh irf of the Navy's Bureau of OrrlnancC'. The :irtar is the N;ivy's surf;irc-lo-air missile drv0loped for us<' against low-flying or medium altitude targets. -- -WESTERN DANCE New 'Tartar' Contract Goes for $4.5 Million ./UST "JJY AL" YOUR TJlAVEL PROBLEMS WASHINGTON (AFPS) The def Pnse Department ha<.: asked the Selective Scrvic~ System to call 9,000 men during October for assignment to the Army. The Navy, Miuine Corps, and Air Force will not rrquPst selective service calls during the month. .THEN .SEE . MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS 24 . :}: ( p14yml1 Fort Belvoif, Va. (AFPS)Army engineers here set an unconfirmed world's record in tlicir. spcci;ilty-building bridges in a hurry. · .... ~ --·~ .,.. ...: .. ~ ~ cAsn for your CAR~ protection is provided on all loans witho11t extra cost to vou• f Mrs. M. J. Sherman was hostess last week at a fare\VCll coffee at her iwmc honoring Mrs. John Bayer. Mrs. Bayer, who was treasurc·r of the NCO Wives Auxiliary. is leaving the post this we ck c n d for California where she will make l1cr home while M/ Sgt. Bayer is on duty in Korea As a parting gift, guests presented Mrs. Bayer an eight-day clock. WANT TO GET THE MOST tife Insurance 0 Farewell Coffee IEngineers Build :::iietting Fetes Mrs. Bayer J:Sr1dge Possible Record RFA Passes ~ Post Library Booms Officers Reading List The 91st Engineer Bn. crew built an 80-foot long steel r: irder bridge in 39 minutes, 23 Vz second~. spanning a wide rreekhed. The feat shattered fl mark of over 44 minutes, set a few days earlier by the same unit. The new mark is known to be a post record, and is be1ieved from existing records also to be a world record for the construction of the 32-ton Bailey bridge. (' fI Ducats On Sale Undergoing Reduced Rate Remodeling Season t ickets for Texas Wes tern College footLull games are now availabl... to WSM R personnel a t a one th ird price reductio n. "Operation Kiekoff" cou pons, which wen t on sale A u gu st 18 for $12, a1e exch ange .. able for season tick e ts, which sell regu larly for $ 18. T he sa ving is avail abl e until Sep tem ber 8. The coupons are fo r seats be t ween th e 25 yu1d l ine and the goal and may Le ord e red by calling the Jaycee's Office in the Hi lton Hotel, IJhon in g KE 2 5911, or purchased f rom a ny m em ber of th e ~l Paso Cha m b er of Com merce. Exchanges of th e coupons for season t icke ts will tak e place at the T exas W estern boo th in the Hilton. The six season games a re: Septem ber 19 University of New Mexico; September 26 - Nor th Texas Stat e; Oct ober 10 - Wes t Texas Stat e College; October 24 - New Split I 11 eek~s A~tio11 u WSMH's Del. 1. now compet ing for th1' 41 11 /\ rn1y I Softball Cha rnp1on,,J1t ,> at Fort Sam Hous1 0 11, 'l'1•xa., crushed Sand1u B:1s0 7-11 Monduy lo tal< e lhl'ir f11·s! game of the st ric s. Behind 'plrys ici.st ' pi ti-l.1P1' j Verne Becku', W :--> Mll 1;tll11·d Organ Archers Win • Archers from New Mexico, 1 4-Wind & Sand-Friday, August 21 , 19;)9 llo~kets 1 PX Tavern Ttx.as, and California met al the Organ Bowr11en FidJ l:tangp or1 Aug. 9, fur llitc Or- 'l'he PX Tavern, under the mu11;,gtmen t uf Ol1ve:1 W. Gt11 t ry, 1:; being remodel t:J , Boo ths l 1nine the wall< have been repl aced Ly tabl1•-' and chairs and the iloor ha::; been retiled. Plans for the fulw·e intludt-> cash bin go games, :i 11u0Hlir11e lunch service, u11d furtht1 improvements of the frout and interior. The bar 1s to be reworke ~ t;i.11 Uow111 e u r'rt'IJ Fe:;tival. Four <.1n·lwr:; l'rntn WSMR µlactJ in tl1.- cut1lt::;t. Duane S di el l, Lwigld h.l1lis, I<'ic.nk Jun es, :.u1J H ... ltn Schell all b rOUl".h t home lroplties from 1_11·e1,I£ ~t. , and the~~gns over it will ~n clude the' Onl11anre and SH(nal 111s1gnia, the Navy ~nch01 anu A11 Force wings, and oth ,r sy mbol~ . •• Por convenient after-wor k banking. the First Nation al Bank of Las Cru ~es White San ds Branch is open two ' extra honrs on Fridays, from 1500 to 1700. ~mm~:::================ii Mexico No- ~ vember S7tate - University; Arizona State University; and November 14 ~·~~~.g;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;.;..;;;..;;......._________-1~jii:~ - A b ilene Christia n College. I CARRJES BIG STICK-Bobby V!ic~aro, Det, 4's hot corner m im for the White S and s M1ss!le l_'lan~e Rockets, has b"C'n slug;ring the b all with regularity in the last fe w s ames. Two singles in the Alamog~rdo game and two. more in the San J ose tilt helped his average a_dd some points. The third b aseman is one of the mam. stays in the s olid Rocket infie ld. (U.S. Army photo by Pvt. R. M. Pringle) • classes begin at 8. Cha-cha, Si.JrnLa, waltz, two-s leE:J, and olh.:1 d ances wi1J be taught, "Wher e A re You ,"· the gam that p roved so popula r last w eek, will be featured agai n th is Wednesd ay at 8 <. TOTE •... Then Back I~ School! ~ S Famous for perfect fit for over 50 years ~~ COMPANV cCORMICK on Tuesday and Thursday Call M EI Collect At KE 2-3693, El P aso We Welcom~ . Comparison • Oil THI~ MOS7' FUN ,,y l>OLLEll SKATING MILEAGE. 25% to J!"tb "9ore mileage. •· fitted by our · . · 6-point fitting plan ........ l 5 WAYS 'BETTER THAN CONVENTIONAL TIRES BUSTER: BROWNS OE S MO I N&s • . 1ow4 HIGH-SPEED ENDURANCE. 3 t imes safer by test . Conventional Tire. Note the long sidewall. As car weight presses down, sidewall flexes more than 700 times per minute on turnpikes. Heat reache1 above the deadly 240·. degree danger point. RN MAPLE FLOORS • HI· FI MUS IC • PRECISION RENTAL SKATE S Tu ,.. Wed. - Fri. - Sat. - Sun, Nights 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. the lower,. shorter side· . wall. Flex is not as great. :J"lre.works .less. Runs cool •. . cool . . . cool. Note 11l1olower center of grav• lty. "!'.his gives more sta· blllty. Tire .!lf:!ver..reaches, .?~O·degl"ef1!anger p<jlnt.: DU PONT NYLON t. A t rroon (2 Sessions) 1:30-3:00, 3:00 to 4:30 fund y Afternoon - 2: 30 to 4 p .m. EVLRY SESSION SU PERVISED ep In ±he Pink Safety Shape Tire•. Not& TURNING EFFORT. j 20% more 1tability, qn curves. --~----I/, - · $KID AND TRACTION, · · Raistd 5% to 10%, .A±Tommy's Rink ,: PUNCTURE-SEAL TUBElESS These tires serviced with Air Guard, . U.S. Royal's· extlusive- puncture-seal service. Prevents sudden oi!. loss.~ S-e-e : . 9 adabte Tirt:s SAMMY f(AYE for $4.98 lo $895 LIFE We Give INSURANCE GUARANTl!ED RE N EW AL. S&H H'.ospilal and S urgical Plana Green Stamps 90 6.70-15 TllBELE.SS MlJ1tll 717 N. JM.iii JA ..... JA 6 8101 704 N. REYMOND LAS CRUCES "\ j 2fo~ The SA FE· WAY NYLON . Pressure Tempered 10 give greater blowout protection. P. T. NYLON Is further safely·strengthened to give utm~~t perforll)ance. ·~ lQO E. Willo"?ghby, L a$ Cr u ces r:.. TURNPIKE GAS. EC~NOMY. { . 6-12 extra mtlea per tankft:_ 1:~ -· -·~~'\. ~ -~ '. Three generations have grown up in Buster Browns ... America's largest selection of children's shoes. Built over live- foot lasts. T hey fi t • • • really fit , . . if they 're Buster Brown, Amer· tea 's favorite children's shoet. MY'S Las Cruces ROLLER RINK • \ en ; Special Services Trio Takes Entertainment Slots Over .n l ie, ounc !' " r 1hisclv of Martin College! Pulaski, Tenn., and Harns School for Gll'ls, Miami, Fla. Her in~erests are in both entertain~ent and art and she has co~tributed to. all her dubs ~1th set ~es1gns and her piano playing. JY/(1 ~!TD YY i.Jj r.11 l , oi \(. "* IFLYING SERGEANT BACK ! ..,· _ / ,/ C'COUtS JOB WELL DONE-M/ Sgt. Stephen Crowley, classified message center, receives Oak Leaf Cluster for Commendation Ribbon with Medal Pendant from Lt. Col. Robert Reid, commanding officer, troop command. Sgt.,. Crowley was made the presentation for his outstanding job as post sergeant major for seven years. Prior to that, Sgt. Crowley had been Det. 2 first sergeant. A 17-year veteran, Crowley, is a native of Kansas City. Kan. (U.S. Army photo) ------------------~ Missions Depicted In Library Exhibit Talent Plan · Put To Work A new plan designed to dig up talent and provide entertainment for WSMR personnel is being put into effect by the Entertainment Section of Special Services. The plan features one event each month and talent show begins the cycle to find players for the revue and the variety show which follow. After the variety show, a new cycle will begin. Next month a revue will be held at the Countdown ServJowed in October by a talent show. Notes For Thought The teacher .was expiaining to the class that a number of sheep is called a flock, and a sm11ll number of quail is called a covey. . "Now," sh.e said, "what is a number of ca·mels called?" A nine-year-old ad reader had a quick answer: "A carton." (Continued from Page 1) the tamous mission chain. Padre Serra was a Franciscan missionary who traveled the whole southwest and wo,rked among the Indian tribes establishing churches and schools. He established the missions with the thought of eventually having them one-day's trnvel apart. The missions were secularized in 1834-1836 and went to the highest bidders, eventually falling into ruin and remaining that way for years. When California was admitted as a slate and Abraham Lincoln was president, he saw to it that ~e missions were transferred to the Catholic Church of California. At this time all except the Mission Santa Barbara were in ruins and it took many years before the people of the area realized the historical importance of the missions and be gan restoring them. SA~ DIEGO MISSION The series starts with the San Diego Mission and trav els up the coast to Mission San Luis Rey de Francia, Mission San Juan Capistrano known as the jewel of the missions, Mission San Ga- CONSOCIDATED .W .EBS.T ER COLLiiGii REFBR NCS ". DICTIONARY ;. ONLY f(Jfl!J. RETAIL. . V~.LUJl . WITH PURCHAS6 0' ANY, ·1 ..PERF~CT FOR .. TEENS! ·• " The Deluxe Clock RadJa Wake up for 11chool with this beautiful clock radio. Famous Long Di.stan~e A~ chassis. Radio alarm. Sleep Switch. Zehith · Quality SJJeaker. In French Beige, SI.ate Gray, or Sandstonit White Colors. Model 3519 I ,91 - A VALUE SENSATION I Only $39.95 THE MAJORETTE Zenith AC-DC Tabl• Model Radio. Famollfl Long Distance Reception. Automatic Volume Control. Available in White or Maroon Colon. Model 8508 Only $19.95 ,, . Portable Stereophonic Record Player THE FAUST- A complete stereophonic record . player with dual channel amplifier and remote ~~k11r4, all in one cabinet. Available in Charcyal and White two-tone combination. Mad11I DPS80C O~ly b.riel Archangel, the famous Mission San Luis Chispo, and Mission San Antonio de Pa dua which Padre Serra founded in 1771. His first mass said at this mission had a congregation of one Indian. CARMEL MISSION One of the most important sites is Mission San Carlos Borromio de Carmelo, known as Carmel Mission. This was the second mission in the chain founded by Padre Serra in 1770 and is the site of the grave of the famous missionary. The last mission on the tour is that of San Francisco d~ . Solano and marks the northern-most point reached by Padre Serra. The missions have often been referred to as the history not only of Padre Serra but of California itself as he has been known as the "Father of California." The exhibit contains interpretations of many more mis5ions and is slated to be shown until Aug. 25. Party Set For Summer Book Readers The Children's Summer Reading Program sponsored by Post Library will tnd with a party Aug. 28 for all participants. The party will feature awards for completing the program presented by Col. E. R. Gillespie, chief of personnel; G-1. Entertainment i::; planned along with the awards and refreshments The party will start at 1 p.m., the awards being presented at 2 p.m. Children who took (part in the summer activity are asked to turn in their "All Roads Lead To Alaska" booklets before Aug. . 26 The Alaska theme was used for thi.s year's i:irogram because of its entry into the union as the 49th state. Reading was not restricted to this m~ect~t~~uiswas in this area. Plans are already Z1tnlth All Transistor . Pocket RadJo. Superb. Styling. '.wor ld's Fine.st .Performance. Zenith Famous Long Distance Transistor Chassi!L Up to 400 hours oflistening pleasure on 4 Mercury batteries. In Ebony, Tan or White Colors. 14adel Royal 250 down to 30 inch lengths or smaller. Realizing that this problem faces the majority of fishermen, manufacturers have ~ome up with some new rods and improved an old standby. Fly, spinning and bait- casting rods made of fiber-glass that break down to two-foot lengths are now on the market. They don't come cheap, running from $50 to $100 for the best, but for the avid service fisherman who is often faced with a moving and packing problem, they help solve a big problem. As for the old standby, remember the telescopic steel rods that were the rage among the younger set 10 or 15 years ago? They're strn availa):>le and make a handy general purpose fishing rod. Instead of steel, they're now · made of fiber-glass, ·beryllium, copper and aluminum. Telescopic rods are inexpensive and ran(;!e .from fivefoot casting rods that close down to 11 inches (including 'h andle) to 20-foot surf rods that collapse to four and a half feet. For the budget-con- I being year's formulated program dueforto next the success of it this summer. Members are urged to register with Sp4 Harvey Pliner, treasurer, before Tuesday, August 27 for the cham pionship event. ----------- - VJP Frisco s Tour Faci·ii·ti·es Seven reserve officers anct one civilian official from the San Francisco C h e rn i c a l Corps District toured WSM}1 Monday for briefings and orientation on the missile testing program . On a tour arranged by the Briefing Office, the visitors insoected Redstone facilities, Electro-Mechanical Laboratories and the 500,000 pound Static Test Stand: The Chemical Corps reservists visited the Ft. Bliss and WSMR areas during an active duty tra ining tour. In lhe party wne Lt. Col J . M . Fouls. Lt. Col. H. D. F ey, Lt. Col. E. L. Jones, Maj. D. A. F . Charman. Maj. H. J. Staib, Maj . R. C. TomliM. Capt. W . G . Clark and civilian W. A. Irwin. .ht .. lttle •• $10 a lllOlllll roe CCIII purcfla1e aharea 111 , llJ.MILTON fUNDS. Hamilton II • lnwutmenl fvrid holdtn1 eommon atoclu of over 10 corporations, Hleded W " - • ancl 9rawth poulbUltl. . JA 6-6628 I•I llamlllon Management Corp, I Dept. 59000-4663 Montana El Paso, TeXCDI I ~ I ebn11a11""' I ..,.. I ,,.. ,._ ....... St., ............ cnr____.,,,,._ _,__ ~~ ~ .::'\\ \ '. l l~. · ~·~ '~ ... ..... " ~~ WE GIVE AWAY··· *Paint Paddles *Paint Pots /{Yard Sucks *Saw Dust *Advice *Goodwill TRY OUR REVOLVING BUILD ACCOUNT NO DOWN PAYMENT Laa CrucH MOORE"S HOP PAW To School •Small Loans on Anything of Value Headquarters II 1210 N. Malla JA 4-71582 La Cruc:u I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .I I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ . ) _~ 1f ... ~ . ATLAS LUMBER CO. MOORE'S PAWN SHOP ~ • ~I .ii.f.i11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Las Cruces • Military Personnel Welcome .......... ,,_ ••• padded •houlder and pleatecl trou••t typea wi/J wast• our tim• and thein by applyina. ·' PACKAGE STORE • We Sell Anything! whowants ·t omake .... -~~~~,.. ~,, Z~ck's Town & C~unlry 60 l W. Amador serve and was recalled to active duty as a pilot during the Korean conflict. He will retire in November of this year with 20 years service. He and his family p lan to live in L as Vegas, Nev. We're prepared to put on the back of the right young man a !uit with executive development qualities hitherto unknown. Man must be creative thinker ••• knowledge of and dissatisfaction with every-day menswear will help. He must know importance of olive-plu.>·navy, tha shepherd check, the &len, the vest for Fall '59. He'll want his own Trimlines shoulders, a shorter coat, slimmest trousers. He'll go far iQ our Cricketeer collection just arrived for Fall. All the new11 .•. suits $65 to $85 ... sportscoats $35 to $69.50. COLORADO BEER Quarts 37.c: - 6 Cans 95c Case $3.72 *Nail Kegs all enlisted pilots in the Air Force - in July 1948. Corley was separated from the Air Force and went into the Army as a National Guard advisor. In January 1949, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Army re- $10,000 a year before he's 30. WEEK-E·HD SPECIAL! *Smiles 1.-cm A. 1...oney, pilot-leader of the nation's first aircraft flight used for recovery of missiles, looks over the Lacrosse-Army general support, all-weather surface to surface missilea more recent member of America's familv of missiles than the reconstructed German V -2, and Corporal-shown in background-that his flight recovered in 1946 to 1948 on the White Sands ran9e. Corley was separated from the Air Force and went in the Army reserve. He was recalled to active duty in 1949 and is now NCOIC of the Aircraft Field Maintenance shop staHoned at Holloman Air Firce Base. (U.S. Army photo) YOUNG MAN PAY DIVIDENDS Gifts are th e ril?'ht thing for the holidays, but with a lit11e kindness mixed in with them the year around 1390 N. Main Plv~~~~.:.:il;~1~'t; r·rr-iuL~~••lt ~;1. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iii~~~ rriilliilU 111111111 11111111111111111111111111111l11illlllllillllillllllllllllllllll1l1lllllllililliillilllllililll· jo~fitirioiuibiilei.iiiiiiiiii••••mliailklle•s•thiieiml•b•e•tt•e•ri.iiiiiii JA 6-6623 Only $39.95 Las Crucee Field Maintenance Shop at' Holloman Air Force Base. pilots and observers - armIn October 1946, Sgt. Cor- ed with estimated impact ley, wh.o serv.ed as a . gltd~i· data - orbited at strategic and 11~1son ~~rcraft pilot. m I points on the. range to watch the Army All Corps .during for the m1ss1le in hopes of World. War. II, led a .flight of pinpointing its impact. OrdinL-5 a!l'cra~t from .Ft Riley, arily, all five aircraft were Kan., detailed to this des~rt used, each assigned to a spemstallat1on . then Wh1~e cific sector of tJhe area coverSands Proving Ground - m ing from 10 to 80 miles from support of the i:ation's first the Army blockhouse. rocket and missile programs "W'th t d then getting underway. l presen ay range The flight was made p of schedules, we would have u . been dead ducks," Corley . . f 1ve pdots - all serge.ants _in commented. "Then th i _ the All' Force - and fiv e air- . , :ee m s craft. Pilots and planes were s1les a week was considered a housed at Biggs AFB and h~av,y schedul~.. ~t was the flew to and from the missile pilots respons1b1hty to . st~y range daily Monda th 0 gh out o.f the way of the m1ss1le . · • Y 1: ~ • - and that wasn't always Fnday - . w.eather permitting easy. With the help of the ob· - for missile recovery, bal- server we watched . for the loon chase and other research missil~. then flew at boonaned t development assign- dock level until we found imm i{1 s., . . S t C pact and led the ground crew emin1scing, g . or1ey to it" marveled at changes and pro· gress made, especially in misDue to the vastne~~ of. the sile recovery. range and the changing llg~t "Missile Recovery in those and shadows on the sand, p1days was a far cry from thP lots l.ogged hundreds of. h~urs scientific procedures today," huntmg for spent m1ss1les. he said. Several were found ~ore Then, range optical instru- than a year after launchrr~g, ments were unheard of. In an~ the two-stage, ~44-mile fact, the original tracking te1- a~htude-r e c 0 r d-settmg V- 2 escape - grandfather of mo- fired F·eb. 2• l949 • was found dern day optics - was itself almost to-a-day two years being tested and devloped at later. the missile range by Clyde W As an incentive in the Tombaugh and a crew from needle-in-the-haystack proAberdeen Proving Ground, cess of recovery, cash awards Md. were given often for the re"We were given 'estimated' turn of particular missile impact co-ordinates, which parts. In November 1947, Sgt. were guesses. at best an~, Corley found a radio-equi·pmost of the time. one mans ment box from a missile P-uess was as good as anc:th~r. launched the previous FebruW_e watched for the missile ary and received the $25 with 01;1r naked eyes and lo- award offered by John Hopcated 1mpact by dead-reek- kins University. oning and the process of elSgt. Corley and the other imination," Corley recalled. four "flying sergeants" in the Before each firing airborne nation's first missile recov- - - - ' - - - - ery flight were taken off of flying status along with IDEAL SCHOOLMATE! Las Cruces·· Furniture Co. 207 S. Main The leader of the nation's first aircraft missile re::overy flight - and one of the last "flying sergeants" ·n the Air Force is back at White Sands Missile Range as a master sergeant in the Army assigned to Detachment 3. He is M!Sgt. Carl A. Corley, NCOIC of Aircraft STORAGE and portability of fishing equipment has been, and probably always will be, the main problem of a service angler. Although service fishermen are often stationed near .fishing hot spots, it's to no avail if they haven't got their gear along. Special Service activities a.t all bases, stateside or oversease, usually have fishing gear available for the use of the men at their . command. But veteran anglers prefer the feel of their town equipment rather than "borrowed" rods and reels. Reels, lures and other equipment are relatively easy to store and carry. Rods, how- scious service angler, these ever, pose a big problem, es- rods provide a maximum of pecially if they don't break enjoyment with a minimum $134.95 We Repair All Makes of TV6. RADIOS. STERO's and · HI-FI's ••• Right Out of OUR. OWN SHOP! HURRY I OFFER LIMIT£DI ~ Score Highest In Camporee SOP ~I ...d ........ -..... ''"": ui The Boy Scouts Camporee was held August 14-16 on the New Mexico State University Campus in Las Cruces. Patrol Tomahawk of Troop 73, WSM<R, proved outstanding among the 11 patrols present. Led by Captain R. E. Cooksley, scoutmaster, the patrol scored the highest number of points and won most awards for Scout Skills. Johnny Dollar of Troop 73 was superior in the methods of signalling and showed perfect technique in wig-wag. Tom and Dick Swonley of Troop 74, WSMR, were sel-ected as members of the Order of the Arrow. Friday, August 20, 1959-Wind & Sand-5 He Headed El:rst Recovery Crew I l (Continued From Page 1) post ent~rtainment. VE'l'ERAN LIBR1ARIAN Hose Akers is a ten-year veteran of government lib1ary service, much of it in large llbrary unils. A native of Colorado, she has a BA in Economics and ,Political Science from the University of Colorado. Her graduate work in library science was completed at Western Reserve University, Cleveland. Her career started at Camp Atterbury, Ind., as hospital librarian. From there sh<: went to Fitzsimmons General Hospital in Denver, Colo., as librarian. The years 1949-1951 were spent as head of the Field and Comm and Library, Guam, which serviced branches on Iwo Jima and in Saipan. A break in government services occurred in 1951 when she was on the statf of the University of Colorado Library. Camp Polk, I.a., to Ft. Chaffee, Ark., and then to White Sands Missile Range completes the duty tour o! WSMR's new head librarian up to the present time. DIRECTS CLUB Murrell Wig'ht, the new Service Clu•b director, hai; traveled most of the United States and much of Europe in her career. She started in 1942 at Camp Tyson, near ,Paris, Tenn., which was a barrage balloon training ·center. In 1946 she went to Welch Convalescent Hospital, a rehabilitatlon center, in Daytona Beach, Fla., and then to Ft. Moultrie - the Charlston, S. C. recreation center. Overseas duty came next as Miss Wight became Post Service Club director for all clubs in Berlin. She held this position during the allrlift and the las~ ctisis. She then went to Hefdelberg and held the same position. GIANT OPERATION Camp Polk was the next state-side stop and while there she participated in the giant coffee-doughnuts operation which catered to 10.000 troops in the field on maneuvers, a 24-hour duty lasting three days. Ft. Knox, Ky., and then Fourth Army service and Ft. Bliss completes her duty assignments up to White Sands. Miss Wight is a graduate " Back For the Particular Student 6-Wind & Sand-Friday, August 21, 1959 JVavy Contractors Play lJ!Iajor Role At WSlJ1R By V. PEARSON WOSIKA REPORTlNG AEROBEE - Shown are the Aerojet CoTporation's two resident representatives, Raymond F. Petracek, senior residen+ technical services engineer and administrator for Aerojei: and Charles G. Vaughn, resident technical services engineer for the, solid pro· pellant rocket plant. (U.S. Army photo) T ALOS DEVELOPMENT CONTRACTOR REPS-Pictured by the ship's bell in fron.t of the USNOMTF Headquarters are Talcs development contractor, representatives. From left. R. i'. Thompson, APL senior resid!!nt engineer on the Talcs project: Geol,'ge A. Helfrjch. APL resident engineer (Talcs); J. Robert Giles, APL's Talos test analyst; and Robert L. Smith, PSL data engineer. (U.S. Army photo) ~~~~~~~--'-~~- Hutchison Takes New Post In W shington Robert W. Hutchison, deputy personnel officer. CPO, leaves WSMR today for Washington, D. C., to become personnel director for the National Aeronautks <ind Spn~c Administration's Goddard Space Flight Cent<'t' nflw under construction at Greenbelt, Md. Tfo tchisCln, assistant to Milton E. Harris, Chief o~ Civilian Personnel Office , has bf'"n a t WSMR si!'lce 19fi5. H e is a career civi l SPnice e mploye with more tha!1 12 y ear s personnel experience. Until the new center is cuns tructP<l, Hutchison will b<' w ork ing in W ashington in NASA' ~ temporary offices. FAMILIAR GROUND Hutchison is no stranger to Washington. He previously served in the D ep artment o E Army's Office ,Chief of Ordnance. In his new job as personnel ceilings were raised from 3,000 to 5,000. His wife, Betty Ann, is a native of Havre de Grace, Md. They have three sons, Chris, 11, Kim, 9, and Dana 5. Hutchison was recently awarded a sustained superior work. performance award. EDITOfi'S NOTE: This is the fourth in a series of articles on resident contractors at White Sands Missile Range. Not affiliated w ith Ordnance Mission's Systems Test Division are those contractors w ith U.S. Naval Ordnance Missile Test Facility at WSMR. TALOS - APL Havmg been under various other contracts at White Sands since the proving ground was founded, the Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), Silver Spring, Md., sponsored by ,Johns Hopkins University, has held the technical direction prime contract for the Talas missile development since 1952 at WSMR. (Immediately fo llowing the APL coverage on Talos, i~ Bendix, the prime production contractor for the Talos.) More recently, in addition to the N'avy's shipboard Ta. los, APL and Navy pPrsonnel at USNOMTF foste r ed the land-based Talos unit operation until the unit was officially turnrd over to th1:. Army on Octoher 15, 1957. However, the shinbo;ird TaJ0s Of)i>ration cit the "Desp•·t ~hip" hPrP continU!'!; by th"! Navv with the A·PL and Bendix contracts in assistanre. Prior to th0 Ta los appearance at W~MR. APL worked in perfectin<>' thf' Terrier missile hPrP. The Terrier is now widelv used aboard Nav;:il vf'ssck APL has only three rPsi0.cnt personnel at WSMR hut these are augmented with occasional groups of visiti n g nersonnel from the Silver Soring Laboratory for special Talos !;hoots, accordin g to R. F. Thompson, APL's TRlos rP.sident engineer, USNOMTF. Also, APL is assisted by four resident employes from the Physical Science Laboratory, New Mexico State University This sub-contractor, under Bureau of Ordnance, not the first time mentioned in this series, also assists the Navy here in the tracking operation with Talos' camera and computer equipment. T ALOS-BENDIX As mentioned in the first of this installment, the Missile Section of the Bendix Products Division, whose home office is located at Mishawaka, Indiana, ha::: the prime production con- , tract for the Talos missile Talos' air frame is first made under separate con- , tract by the MacDonnell Aircraft Corpor ation of St. Louis, Missouri Bendix then takes it and complete~ the rest of the missile at the home plant before Talos is shipped to WSMR and other destinations. Although Bendix started here with APL in 1945 in joint-contract experiments on predecessors of the Talos missile, the two Talos contractors, now under separ- ate contract, naturally work I closely together in common interest in Talos.i Bendix has participated in all Talos f irings at WSMR since its f irst firing here in the spring of 1951. Bendix has t welve resident personnel at WSMR which, similar to APL, are temporarily increased from time to time by visitor engineer parlies from the home laboratory almost every week. The Bendix group here is supervised by Walter G. Johnson, WSMR activity su pervisor for Bendix, USNOMTF. OTHER CON'I'RACTORS The last installment's coverage of warhead contractors failed to mention that the Sandia Corporation of. Albuquerque, sponsored by the Atomic Energy Commission, also has a special adaption warhead kit contract for the Navy's Talos as well as for the Army Ordnance's Lacrosse. Another special warhead kit for Talos is under contract to the Naval Ordnance Laboratory of Corona, Californ ia. !Needless to say, these special warhead projects are h ighly classified. The Sperry Gyroscope Corporation, Division of Sperry-Rand, of Great Neck, New York has the responsibility for the radars and computor maintenance and operation for the Talos. Another sub-contractor, important to the Talos operation, is the Vit.ro Corporation's Laboratories Division, located at Silver Spring, Maryland. A small resident ·group of five here is responsible for the systems engineering on the Talos weapons system. Formerly, Vitro engineered the l aunching site for the Hawk facili ty here. The Vitro group is supervised by A. R. Fredette, section leader in charge. AE R OBEE-AEROJET Another Navy family of rockets is the Acrobee also under WSMR's USNOMTF. Since 1948, Aero- bee's development has been sponsored by the Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, D.C. However, the first and prior sponsor for the Aerobee development program was the Applied Physics Laboratory for only a short time, beginning in 1957. While still under APL, long-term government contracts were awarded January 1947 to the Aerojet Corporation of Azusa, Cali· fornia for Aerobee's Manufacture with State College of New Mexico (the Physical Science Laboratory) under contract for the technical services in conjunction with the actual firings. This arrangement has continued at WSMR under the soonsorship of the Naval Research Laboratory. During the International Geophysical Year, which closed at the end of calendar year 1958, Aerobee, "the workhouse for upper atmosphere research," made several very outstanding world records. The first of these for Aerobee-Hi was attained June 29, 1956 with an altitude record of 16-1 miles, carrying a payload of 136 lbs. And, on April 30, 1957, this single stage high altitude rocket eclipsed its own record of less than a year before, by attaining an altitude of 190 miles, traveling at a rate of 7,200 feet per second. RECORDS AT SANDS Both of these high altitude world records were attained at White Sands. Other firings of Aerobce-Hi took place at Fort Churchill, Canada, the IGY center with WSMR personnel participating - also Aerobee firings have been accomplished at Holloman A ir Force Base, Raymond F. Petracek, senior resident technical services engineer for Aerojet said. While much Acrobee activity st ill takes place at Fort Churchill, Aerohec proeress continues al White Sands. The Acrobec> program here call s for the correl ating of local upper at- I• 2-PC. SOFA BED SUITE PRODUCTION CONTRACTOR F I GURES-A casual discussion shows from left, Walter G. Johnson. Bendix field supervisor; R. T. Malloy, Ben d i x operation supervisor: George W. Sullivan, Bendix Test evaluat ion su pervisor; Russell L. Vaughn, Bendix test equipment maintenance supervisor; and Dou gl as C. R. Telking. Bendix missile test consultant, (U.S. Army photo) mosphcre data with that I from other geographical lo cations, the senior Aeroje~ engineer said. / It was also explained that one chief difference which distinguishes a rocket from a missile, apart from the guidance system aspect, is well demonstrated by the Acrobce rocket. Aerobe~ contains its own oxidizer, or ozygen supply whi<ch assures more satisfactory travel into outer space the p u rpose for which it was designed. Aerojet has the distinction of being one of th& only manufacturers to have its name-abbreviation incorporated into the rocket's name, "Aerobee." THRUST CHAMBER Other past and present accomplishments of Aerojet include its building of the thrust chamber for the Nike-Ajax. Acrojct is a lso under separate contract for the solid rocket propellant motor for the Hawk. Th,, Aerojet group continue to itive liaison service to Fort Bliss in conection with Hawk. A ir Forre contracts at Holloman Air Force Rase include Acrojct's buildin/l the f'olid propellant motor for the Gcni, an air-to-air missi le of Douglas Aircraft. Annther Air Force contrac~ of Aerojct's is a 3-chamhcred arid engine for the highspccd test track at Hol!u- I This contest, Its rules, and texu of advcrtl<t'ml>.'1ts herein, Copyright 1939 by B. Rclnharrlt. All rights re•~rved. Where to Look for Cluea: • , , Clues may be hidden .tn ANT ad In thll 1ectlon. When a star appeara in any or these ads, It mel\nS that additional arlver· tlslng ot that rirm appears elsewhere In this lsc1Je of thft. paper, and additional clues , ~ may be hidden In any o! those ads also! Clues will be scattered .•• there may he from one to tlve clues In any ad - or none. This Is a contest of skill - and we lntcml to do our best to outwit you. We Invite you to do your best to outwit ua l C o N T E S T R U L E 8 1. This ls a tamlly run contest! One en- BAKER DRUG STORE No. 1 514 N. Main 6-2416 Ph. JA 6-5556 try per person (fa•nlly or four roul<I sub· mlt four entries). Anyone may enter UN· LESS a member or your hmlly I• employ· cd by the LAS CRlJCF..S CITTZEN or hy the merchant whose Ad Is heAvlly !>ordered this week (this Applies ox;,y rlnri'11!' the week his .td Is hnrdcrcd), Employos o! other Sponsoring Merchants ARE ell:tlhle. 2. Nothlna to h11y u·. e •ny slip or ~ ·' paper ror entry blAnk. Not nerl'ssary lo hr present lo win. Nnt nl'<'Pssary to ho A subsrrlhcr to the LAg CRUCES CITIZEN or WIND & SA';'D lo enlcr. 3 . WHO'S WHO mRy be anyone In Dona Ana County. Clues tor hi• (nr her) Identity will be hidden ON!.Y In Aris of Spons<1rlng Merrhants (see "Where to Look J\" IKARD'S FURNITURE Right on t he Cornerl Right on fhe Price! Corner Main and May --PaJ'kln<I' in Rear-- ____.,..._, WARREN LUMBER CO. Ph. JA 6-5528 Super Kem Tone - Kem Glo Corner Griggs at Water Floor Coverings - Draperies Carpets Paints city commissioner 1418 Solano Ph. JA 8-2601 TURRENTINE CHEVROLET - !Jiui1!JJieat ............... IOi3S S. Main JA 4-7887 Comm ancl('rs we r e adv ised lo issur ponc h o~ to tr oops who hav<' on ly f llf' nrw nyhm r a inwea r. Wf~c·n l he syn thei c rubber ra inco;1t is no longer available t h e poncho w tll be the oniy a ut hn rit:f'd n1inwea r for fat ipuP anct ficlrl u se. The Armv sa id it real ized lhe new pol icy will cau se tr oo ps on dctnils to have mixer! rni nwr:n', hlll noted I hat tlrn; s•t11al ion o ftr n !'Xis ls wh en an n lrkr itr m is beil'lg phasNl ou t o f the system. HAVE A FINE PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN BY MATHIEU STUDIO CALL JA 6- 8571 FOR AN APPOINTME NT End wookend banking worries! Take care of checking, savings, deposits, loans during the week at the White Sands Branch of the First Nationdl Bank of Las Cruces. open Monday :through Friday. trat ~attonal ank W!flTE SANDS BRANCH AAMVA I H $C Subscribe to the PIZZA TIME FINANCE PLAN Loans on Real Estate, Furniture, Auto, Signature $10.00 - • TO • • $1.000.00 two children 200 S. Main - Ph. 6-2411 Large Fan-Tail Shrimp Fried to Preserve all Their succulent goodness at HIEBERTS 2401 N. Main Curb Service After 4:00 p. m. a.ooo PEOPLE ricky READ THE WIND & SAND Call JA 6-5575 for Ad Raie1 I LAS CRUCES CITIZEN 114 S. Church - JA 6·5575 SOUTHWESTERN GIFTS AND CURIOS Frank Homa Pottery Gifls from the Southwell golfing 113 S. Main FASHION SHOE STORE Home of Red Cross - .Fool flairs Child Life - Jumping Jacki Freeman and Edwin Clapp 109 S .Main - JA 6-9422 GARDEN CENTER NURSERY Have Shrubs - Will Plant Landscape Estimates JA 4-0321 - Mesilla Park MAGIC CARPET GOJ,.F COURSE Have fun on Southwest'• Newest, Finest Golf Counel W. Hwy 80 - JA 4-0421 fr~turrc1 ml'rrhAnt Yon may put An <'ntry Into PArh frnlurcrl plnr.c of bu•lneM. '1. There Is no nlher pl•l'f! where entrle• will he 8C'Crpl.PC1. Any member or tlle fnmlly may bring In All the entrlr.s for lhAt. faml!y. Children un<ler 12 must be arrompanled by an adult. fi. This wcrk's contest st•rts when you rrrPlve this Issue and rloses at 5 p.m. Tues· r!a)' of t.he following week. 7. At. thlll lime (~ p.m. next Tuesday) A <lrnwing will IJe hPld at the store where rnlrll's have been rerrlved for this week's rontrst, The first entry drawn that rm·· re<'tly ldentHles WHO'S WHO Wiil win .~710. Ir THAT entry also list• the rnrrPrl totAI numhpr of clues hidden In all Ad• nr Sponsoring :lfrrchanls, a BONIJS of $17.70 STORES THIS SPACE FOR SALEI CALL JA 6-5575 CA' NOT c:11A RANTJ.:ll:D RI•: or t he I.AS ju<ll(f' In Al fllfcstion:;, An<l his dPf'i ~ inn I" flnAT . Vrimlly f'\~rt i rl p:1 ti on J!i "·r s yn11 n hr.tirr rhRn<'~ tn win th" .IM·kpn f • . ynn r wit_.., hustnuul , nr .i;onH' hr lj! t1t "Y £"<1 yn ung111~T ~nnt ~ rl1 ;r t h;1t .vo•l mi .>;.tt! (;of Any Pf'rry i\'f:l f;nt1 In yoq? . , . Thlnlr YOU rnn nut wit 111,.. f"o nf f',1? . . . RPm~cn· bPt ynu r a n' t win H yn u fJ n n'l rntf'r l MA\'" Everything from Carda to Catalogues LAS CRUCES CITIZEN 114 S. Church - :19' 6· 5575 1195 Solano Ph. JA 6-5325 Frigiking Southwest 1ince 1888 marsh a 137 S. Main - L.A5 CRUCES CITIZEN 114 S. Church - d a lla s Air Conditionor1 Kamp King Koachoa JA 6-5571 WEDDING INV ITA TIO NS . *For Comfort Rnd Economr RAMBLJ-~n The Snlcs Suc:cci.sl MITCHELL MOTORS 1840 N. Main - JA 4-7741 JA 6·5575 HOFFMAN'S TRAILERS STULL'S HARDWARE CENTI:R AND BOATS Hunting and F1shmg License• baylor . Mobil~ Homes. Vacation Trailers. Sporting Goods. Haro ware, Paint, Twin Hulled Power Cal ·Boats, Electrical Supplies. Appliances Mercury Ot1iboard Motors P.O. Box 8 american colleg" of su rgeons North Main - Ph. JA 6-9718 1210 Foster Ave. L&M AUTO SALES Buy and Sell New and Used ' Cars and Trucks Financing and In11uranee 602 N. 7th-JA 6-9532 Featuring Nationally Advertised Home Furnishings pingpong Appliances and Auto Supplies. WHITE STORES, INC. 435 N. Main - JA 6-6608 typogrorhy Chy n11ynr""). Thr. P11 hl·:..h <" r ('P.! T('J';s ('JTJZl•;N W ' l l hr I M TOMMY COX'S TEXACO JA 6-9898 SIMPSON TEXACO The best friend your car ever had. kentucky 601 N. Main Ph. J A 6-8471 might llf' mlslrtkf'"', rnr <"l llf' S , hllf Pr rorlP.!011 FRANKO. PAPEN & CO. Insuring the growth of the NEMESH STUDIO AND CAMERA SHOP Why Pay More? 3-5 x 7 Easel • S7.00 120 W. Griggs - will hr •rlrlrd. Whonrvr r this BONUS I• not won, JI will h1• il(l<lrrl In n r xt wr r k't RONllS whlrlJ wlll ..·nntlnu<' tu ll'r<.w until it J1\ wn=t' R, J<~vf'ry f>OSN1hl f" p tr,·autlon wlll be IMken tn p1P\'Plll typngr " nlllr•I r rroNJ th• t PRINTING POOLE MOTOR CO. Mercury-Edsel-Lincoln Sales and Service Safe Buy Used Cars 1100 N. Main - JA 6-2481 married Your Clothes Beat Friend In Your ALAMEDA LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS 452 S. Alameda-JA 6-2542 The Southwest's Finest CHICKEN - lor Clues," above). I!, hy rolnrlclrnre, thl' nHme or the WH'>'S Wl!(l (or other fart. ahnut hirnl h11ppcn tn appcol tn new• ltt>ms, r<lltorlHI mnltC'r, nr nlhPr plar•1 In !hi• newsp•pt>r, thrsc wlll not count aA rlurs In this rontest. 4 Tn onlrr, write <lnwn the nAmc you think WH(l'S WHO I:; ArM the total numI r I fl d I Al L lh rt >rr " l' urs yn11 <'an n n ' · " 8 s of :;pon<nring Mrrchants in this Issue. You rln ont h;ivp t.n Jlst all thosP riurs - just. give thr tntnl numhrr nf thrm. nnn'I fnr::rt lo mlrl yniir nome an<I arlrtrrss. Th<'n, rlrnp YllU" rntry In lhc nox lrwalrd 11! the Spron.<nrlng Mri"<'hant, whose arl I• bnrllere<l In this lssur. Som~ wrrks thr.rr w111 he mnre th11n nn'.l SOLANO FOOD MARKET 900 Solano Dr. McKINNEY GROC. No. 2 Mesilla Park SERV-ALL FOOD STORE university louisville 403 East Lohman FOR LOCAL NEWS JOHNSTON'S HARDWARE Try Johnston's First HARDWARE ~AINT 470 el prado HOUSEWARES 1002 W. Picacho: Ph. 6-9401 so WASHINGTON (AFPS) The Army has issued a warning to troops against wearing the new nylon taupe raincoat on fatigue and field duty details. "This raincoat was designed to be worn only with thG service and dress uniforms," circular 670-37 points out. As a substitute the synth<>tic rubber raincoat is to hP worn on fatigue and !IPld duty details as well as for garrison and informal off· OBEY SIGNALS Your Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Dealer in Las Cruces 2301 5. Main 6-5153 550 N. Church Regular 6 foot $129.50 SALE PRICE Raincoat Use du ty w erir. I SI:LLMAN MERCANTILE La Mesa fishing McKINNEY GROC. No .1 Highway 85 North SHAMROCK DRIVE·IN SHRIMP SA E $30.00 Army Defines • Who's Who 1n Dona Ana County Cont t STRYKERS, INC. Wide Selection of Attractive Nylon Covers ••• Set Includes Sofa Bed and Matching Platform Rocker 190 man Air Force Base. Because of the AF contract activities, the Aero· jet represen ta ti v es, of which there are only two, reside at Holloman Air Force Base, commuting to WSMR as necessary to the Aerobee activity. But, as with the Talos contractors, their represen ta ti on here i::; au g m e n t e d by visiting groups of as many as twelve to the group, which come to White Sands on occasion of special firings. Also, th• Physical Science Laboratory group in assistance, consists of five permanently assigned personnel at WSMR's USNOMTF. The next contractor coverage in this series will feature the resident mcint.. nance contractors at WSMR. FRANKFURT, G ERMANY (A'• PSl- A sw n;ing sold ier ~ex l et f1·nrn 111'' :lrd A rmorer! . D iv. h<'1e romrJPtrd in th!'? lntcrnation;'ll clazi F est ival, held this yc"1r in Relgium. Th P ~.pca r hraci Division n rlega l ion, rerm·senting th e U. S . Arrn"d F'o1 ccs in E urope. prrfon11r·d trnmbon.:'· lr- lro m hqne with jqzzmen from 2D cnuntri"'" T h<> Ch~t BakPr qu 11d( t. was lhe only oth er m usic;il cou1bo to rep1csr:1t. th r U.S. Spra1 he<>r!';; "'1·oup , ca Ile · he M el lo Tn11f';.;, 1.;; c·nmroseci o[ six m u ;it'all.v-01 iented f'F Cs. T hey are Bill B yer s, r; ,,orgn Yates, Prrry OwPn <:, '\ l T in. Icy, Ectrlie R oberts and L e Hoy Wailers. Th ey w0r e ch osPn to play after !hei r pprJ'nrn1ance at th e 8 er man-J\ m('ric<rn Jazz F esl ival at P. nd Nr11hc im . • Sherwin· Williams PAINTS IAL PURCHAS Tankers Toot At .fa== Fest MODEL CLEANERS BOB'S PARK: TEXACO Box 543 brown h a ir Me::"lla Park. N.M. The be ~i friend your car ever had. "Dry Cleaning "Without Odor" 120 W. Picacho-JA 4-4141 ! WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE Everything for Your Auto and Home brown eyes 424 N. Main - JA 6-5420 BAKER DRUQ STORE No. 2 -- * 130 W. Picacho Ph. JA 6·2493 DOYLE LEE'S TEXACO Ouality Service Free Pickup and Delivery 1695 W. Picacho Ph. JA 4-0691 -- ---------- SAMFORD'S NURSERY 840 El P asco Rd. Complete Landscaping and Yard Maintenance Servic;e (hospi) Phone JA 6-9611 * ARCXDE SHOE STORE 118 S. Main Home of the National· ly advertised John C, Roberts, Grace Walker and Red Goose Shoes. NO HIDDEN COSTS AT RELIABLE MOTORS The Best Deal in Town 745 N. Main-Ph. JA 4-0351 e· I ·Wind & Sand-7 To PLACE F ridaY A ug-u:t 21, 195 9· YOUR A D T) I J\ T,, Ji\. s.5;,75 or JA 6 5576 "'' "' t - - -- - - - - - - - - 37 38 39 DIRECTORY ! 4 3 8 7 40 AUTO RE PAIR EQUIPMENT RE NTALS INSU!ll!.NCE DlRECTOJIY ANN OU NCEJ\<t:•H S RUMMAGE S ALES APPRECIATION IN ME MORIUM CARD OF THA NlU LOST AND FOUND AUCTION SALES LOANS llANXING BUTANE RUG CLJC:ANING SEWING MATERIALS FLORIST LIVESTOCK IMPLEME NTS, NEW IMPLEMENTS, USED SWAP HOUSEHOLD GOODr APPLIANCES. NE W APPLIANCES, USED REAL ESTATE JOB PRINTING FOR RENT SERVICE S WA'l'ITED HELP WAJn'ED MOVING & STORAGE ID 11 12 14 15 16 17 18 18 ID U l2. 13 24 15 86 27 18 19 ID 31 32 33 34 35 3~ BUSJNtSS OPJ:NINGS EMPLOYM'CNT WANTED FOR SALE AUTQMOBJl.CS, NEW AUTOMO Bll.ES. USED PHOTO E UIPM E NT TRUCKS. U5£D T ll.A VE L AGENCIES 5PECIAL NOTICES 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 MOVING & STORAGE Dl.:,-J'INCTI VE ODru~~ Yon ' ll like cnu 51 CLASSIFIED RATES Minimum (co.;h) .................. SJ.OD Minimum (c ho1 9 e) ....... ......... SI.DO Ads contlanlng 10 wo1dti or more, o.,e time only IOc p e r WO • d Two times ... ............. 9c p e r word \ Tl\rcc times or more Be per wo d l.lasslUf'dS charged and billed lo Individuals who are not on regular dis· play advertising accounts, I 0% add· itional. Display Advertising on Classlflc d Page al Regular Prevailing Space Rates All Classifieds must be scheduled tor n dcflnlle period. Any claims for addltlonal Insertions All Furniture Sanitized and Moth-Proofed Tort 11sia~ . ~E~C~l~ A~ l .~N~O~T~ IC~E~S:;;.;...;""---~ \\'E Wl l.L BUY, SELL AND TR AD ~ Any l hl11g or l'ol u e. J oli e~ Trn d ln~ Pos t. :i mi \Ps nort h n n lliJ?hvrny 87'1. If nr Phn nr .JA fl .n:111 w A""NTl::D:-Ex' u s. AJR FORCE PF:n SONNEL t o Jc:!n !..as CP '"eS' Al: Fnrre RPsPn' ~ Jtn !t. Help Jh e Al• F'or rc RcRrn·r. and he1p yoursrh lo promot Ion , P'lY. a ncl rC'tlrr m e111 benefits. C'onlart Flight Com manrl rr at .JA 4-~ 151 : Flight Prr•<>n n el Officer at .J A 4·7022 or lnforma 11 on servlrr o rricr r at .JA 41_ MISCE L!:_ANEOU.;., S_ I' I A N 0 ~VANS ~-·------ AUTO REPAIR 2 rn11 AUTOMOBILES, US ED. ;,;, CHF V RO l,ET l'ICKllP HA LF TON. $1ii•O. Manuel Luera, JA G-:ma I p JI UTO REP JI IR l rf t:a!-- 41 1 or tor credit duo to our error mus t be made before dale of next publl· cation. I la t f'!st p r ln t 111~. ano ,_ LESSONS, .JA 1-706!1. : . n-2~07. If ·nr _ _ _ __ REGTNN!mS. :lt1 -~ Packing • Crating • Storage WRECI(? - Las Cruces Moving & Storage LET US ESTIMATE - Call ROY'S AUTOMOTIVE Lae Cruces' Loading Aut Body. Frame• and Front End S()rvice • Bear Wheel Alignment 255 E. May - JA 6-2474 Las Cruces • Baked Enamel Refinis hing F0.11 RE NT 31 1800 Block W. Picacho - JA 6-3063 Las Cruces ~-------~ J-Bl.lJtlUUM HOUSE FURNJSllE:D downtow n area. Couple on ly. 3 INSURANCE DIRE CTORY 3 INSURANCE DIRECTORY Gov'I Employees Finance to c Ft. Worth. Te xas Auto Financing and R efinancing Availa ble lo O Hicers And Top 5 Grades. Civil Serv ice E m ploy ees • • • • Substantial Savings in Total Cost Imm ediate Service Special Privileges Stateside and O'Seas Insuran ce Sec or Call Las Cruces JA 4-7022 CALL WRIGHT AGENCY furn is h ed. Souu1 ol Las Cruces, AD :;-:tll9. l IC 2-BEDROOM HOUSE FURNISHED Down town A r ea cou ple o nly, Inq uire JA 6·5471. l tc TliAIJ,E ll S PACE: J<'O R RENT, .JOllN-1 SON'S Trailer Cou r ~ on MrClu re Road. Ple nty of space for ch ild ren a n rl Pe t s arce pled. Call J A 6 -91 :.!5. 220 S. MAIN ST. LAS CRU CES. N .M. H . P . DERMODY J . ROY WRIGHT 39 Optometrists EYES EXAMINED GL ASSES FITTED NEW LOCATION 302 N. CHURCH PHONE JA 4-4351 J OB PRINTING r: .om !:. of all kinds Envelopes Leiter Heads Business Forms • Business Cards • Circulars • Weddings • Catalogs Las Cruces Citizen 114 S. C hur ch 'RALPH T. OGLE PIANO TECHNICIAN AND TUNER Over 25 Years E xperien ce Best Refer en ces Dial JA 6· 6731 Box 961 F WPollard,D.C P almer Gradual& Chiropraclor 939 N. Main Las Cruces O Uice Phone: JA 6-6401 • Resid en ce Phone JA 6-2316 JA 6·5575 1ioii1 6iii;iL~O~AiN~Sii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 6iii~L~O~ft-N~Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij $ L ife Insurance Included Free $ Valley Loan & Finance Co. ACCOUNTS CON SOLI DATED - REFINA NCING R eal Est a t e • Autom obiles • F u rniture - Applia n ces Supervised by the S t ate Bank ing Departme nt "It's Easy io Pay Our Finance Way" OLDEST IN LAS CRUCES 122 W. Griggs 17 BANJCING E STABLISHED IN 1938 Dial JA 6·5731 L as C ruces 17 - BAN KING OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT NOW at the Friendly Bank J s r Farmers & Merchants Bank M e mber FDIC 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS COLLEGE HEIGHTS BRANCH SOLANO at F OSTE R RD. . . . 4-B;,~~ 'f:tt~)j:;Af.Wie\..Ji·°"""': """"""'a» sl1<1<l c. F OR S ALE fll l<:E R00.\1 CA BI N CO~l PJ.ETE with k i lch en, 2 l'l nsrts, wi n •d (111 d e ~rlc d lot in Ruidoso. $12;;0.00. Tal a t Max Loya, J A 6 -!167•1. 2tc-R 27 1V50 CHEVROLET 5JMOTOR, O VE RHAULI-:D .June 5!1. exce!l{'nt con <lll ion. 1435 N. Tornillo, .TA ·1-131f. WEATHER DAT A RESEARCH- And it wouldn't be any problem at all down at Daytona Beach. F la.. where such tan and te rrific beauties as T anya Graef grace the blue skies and provide stuff reports a re made of. l tc-A ug l:J-20 :' 19~,:, J. IRERTY MOTU T,E HOME 32• j .. A 1 Sl1ap e, m ust. go, term s. See at ' , Dr Varcas T rn ilrr Park Mai n a t · El HUNTING & FISHING LICENSES; Sporting Goods. Ammunition GI' S FlRSl" :l GRAl)~.:S UP, CIVIL SERV ICE NO MONEY DOWN Olli a ppr o, ·rd credit n ew 1959 Larks, Ope ls , up to 35 mllcs per g allon r pgul• r g A<. Call, spe, w rit e at on ce JHck S mith, 7067 Becky, PR 2-3120, E l Pa..o, Texas. DOWNTOWN at 411 N. MAIN PRICE BOO-K SA-ND J\ lthr:ugh l1r ee!r·lll'a· h1rthd<1\' Sert. 20, D~\C' Grq~g, ·.1 COIN holders. A rmy Surrtus, 321 N. Main. tf-nc JUST A FgW LEFT, E L ENCANTO homesttcs: Near college. FHA n nd G. I. Financew A. T. Cox, Ren! tor, 220 S. Main. JA 6·2.381. lf- nc FOR SALE BY OWNER: NEW 3 BEDROOM, red b rick h ome, 1 ¥., ha th, cPn t ra l heating a n d a ir cond ltfo nl n q, G. !. Loan , fence, l arge stnr age room or 4th bed room. Call .TA 6-2:~88. 2tc tcs his ~ 1 1th Worlrl W;ir I pi lot c>ngineer. still holds a val i cl pilot license and fl ies his own plane. · Gregg, whose accomplishments arc seC"ond to ft·v·. h as a reco rd of some 4fi years flying; holds nHir·c· than 100 issuC'd riatcnts on mechanical cq'uipmrnt such as su perchargers, automati · en~i n c con! rnls, h ,vctraul ic NJ.uipment, ct!' i ·c er s and pressur ized fly ing suits for spacr t ravel; is listed in five Who's Who - inc luding W h o's Who in Engineer. ing', Aviat:on, Transportation , World Av iation and in th e Southwcsl-and lt<ts STAMPS written and published num James C . Stamps . SMSA erous t echn ical a rticles. m a in tC'nan cc sect ion ch ief, ARRIVED IN '52 w as a wa rd ed $55 for his s ug-1 Now slaff assislanl anrl gcst ion for a special c loscdcirc u it TV svstrm for u se chief scientific consultant with the T V maintcnancf' for Intcgralcd Range Mission, Gregg came to the un it. miss ile range in 1'152 from Tcterboroup-h, N ..T., whcrr' he had been c-11 id research engineer for P.C'nciix Aviafion for some Jli yN1rs. He SNvect as t C'rhnical ctir<'clor of E lec tro-ME'ch anic;il L::tb· oratories u n lil 1 fl!'i4 and t h en movroct to IRM as civilian chief. Gregf! is a na live of C' ambrid~e. Mass., anct made his d('but in the aviation \\-oriel test fl:vinP. l!lidns in 1910 and 1911, and in 1912, flew a B u rgess-WriJYht hvrlrnp lan0 at MarblehC'ac'I, Mn:;:':. At that time, lhc only ;ii r DE LA 0 borne plan<' hC' h::ici ever J O E D E LA 0, SMSA casren was thC' one he was binet maker , received $25 by flying himself. su ggesting the design and He was one of the first fabrication of a new sugges- group of American pi lots to ti on box. l'O overseas durin!! Worlrl rW::ir I and w::is :issi!fn<'d with the Rfith Squ~cirnn, :Royal Flyinf! Corps. AftN 1he w<ir and his return to the United Stat<'s, hr rereivrrl h;s Exncrt Avintors Certificate - No. 2!12 issurorl -from the Af'ro Cluh n.f AmC'r ira, and civilian firing per mit number :l0'1 from thf' frc'IC'rn l f'nvcrn-1 m cn t. With th0 cr0:ition of 1he C ivil AC'rona11ti< <: minist rat ion. ir rf'CC'i\'<'ci his pi lo t lie<'nse with lan<l ::in w<iler ratinrrs whi1•h he holc'ls lorlav along- with a British 'F'cdcrat ion A0ron<1utique Internationale coM .. Robert A . G etz. tnen mecha ni c with the Systems Test pc1itive licC'ns£', U. S. Air wings and UFC Division (now with SMSA's Fore" m issile geophysics) received winr,s. RECALLS RAID $25 fo r his s u ggestion for an A-frame adaption fol' use in "One night rluring early j' Nike Assembly Area No. 3 spring of lf)J8 in a 7.eppi I ir. d ur ing ch eck-out for assmcblraid nn Lonrlnn, I IirNI a ing m ore easil y the nose sec- warning burst from my mati ons to the adapter rings on the missile man body. 0 PH•M. COIN I Job Printing . 1 .. W a tson Chevron Station Mesilla Park JA 6-6231 30 TFN-C HOUSI;; O N • II sc twol a nd White Sand s bus lin es. Soll wat er an d natu ral gas n FOR INSURANCE Check the In- Tra ns,>ortallon lo WS:VIR. AM 7·1i:IG or write J oh n M . S L .Jo hn. Car· rirld. :itr-8 6-8 20 Leslie J. Byron Agency 409 N. Main q uire .IA 6-7"171. .B1'DROOM MODERN JN HATC H - UN F URNISHED, ROO~J . m odern ho use wilh 36 Months F inancing on New Cars • . • 6 % Financing For Inform a ti on 2 INC~~11J E i;;en, 114 S. Church. liUAHD YOUR DOG AT P U HAR h. J!;NNEl....'i, Hn:,hW<iY i». :-;out11 u. !llesllla Cl ean Concrete ru ns . cnv<?red. JA 6-2213 41p THE METllOPOLlTAN FIOSPlTA I. Surgical Plan ls non-cance llabl e _'.'_n~149lll up _a~ge 6~ t l -nr VAN LINE S AI'PLIANC£ - REPAIR r BOfES!>IONAL - SERVIC&I TV SALES M£ATS COLLECTIUNS YOU 0 1ir <1 1:,;,p la y n f rra.'ionab le p 1ices. Las Cruces Cll M l~C:E LLA NE OUS 49 &O l.ETTEfl ll EADS 1 ntPrE>~tf"l rl i n sa111plc~, sl!O\\lllg w i ll be MOTORING WITH DOGS By Bon Rartos MR nager, FrlsklPs RPR~nr~h Kenn~!• Most rings love to rirle In the :ar and will lrnpplly h op Into 1the rar t h e mi m t\e t he rloor is opened, w ith or without an In· vitation. chine guns. The synch roni- I If you own such a fellow, he's zer broke, and my bullets an odds-on favorite to be In· sh tered the propellor on cluderl in t h'! fam ily's summer my own aircraft. I made a "dead stick" la'1ding from 18,000 feet altitude, which in th ose days was quite a feat · especially at night,' Gre;:(g recalled. "An other exci t ing time, that coul d have b<'e n my lRst. was wlwn GC'rma n 1 spies cu t the wing stru ts at I the fititngs on th ree o f our - - - - - - - - - - - - pl anes and then fi lled tlw vacation motor trip. If, on the cracks with sawd ust a n d other hand, your pet Is a fraid, or is prone to car sickness, he varn ish . For some rcaso:i, may be h appier left with friends all th ree pla nes cut- out on or b oa r de d a t k enn e ls, even take off and we made pan- though motion s ickness pills or cak e la n dings, doing li ttle> tranquilizers prescribed by your dam age except to the un vet erinaria n m ay relieve most dcrcarriagc. Had we got air- of the problems. borne, the p lanes wou ld Regardless of what type travh avr collapsed in manou- eler your pet is, h ere are som& vers." tips to make m otoring more G rcg_g was grac'luatect pleasant for all con cerned. fro m H arvard University Make him s it In t he back !!Mt. in 1!JJ R anrl did graduat" It' s safer for the dr iver. Don't w0rk in military acronau- let him hang h is h ead way out tics at Queens Collf'r:re in the window, as t he constant E n gland. He dE'signed and rush of air may Irrita te his eyes. developer! thr: first super rry to stick to his r egular feedcharger C\'cr use<l on a car Ing s chedu le and stop often and was in charge of d evC'l- enough to give h im a run. Carry opinir the t urbo-supcrch 1 r-1 wate.r with you so t he dog ca n _ger for the A ir Force a t Mc- be g ive n a drink when you stop Cook Field in Dayto'1, Oh io or in an emergency. Late r he was e ngi n r er w it!. Never lcav7 your pet In 8 AC S park P lug Co., anc! closed or partially closed car In then chi<'f research en!!; - hot weather, for the Int erior SERVICES 32 I ·~=~=----=-=_::;:..:=-= I 1 9 1 8 M 0 D E L - D avid G"e;rn. a darin g a viat or who made his C.ebu t flymg ghclers m 1911 and 19 12, vras one of the first American pilots :to go ov erseas during W orld War I and served with the 86th Squadron. Royal F l yin g Corp<;_ Alfhough he celebrates his 64th birthday n' xt month, Gregg-slaff c;ssis:lan ! and chief scien · tific consultant for Intcqrat.:d Range Mission st!ll holds a v alid p ilot licen~e and flies his ow n plane occasionally. s~ lected b~ AFPS f rom dog m a y suffocate. Be sure h e's wea ring all the d i 1 11 t proper ere ent a s .. - cense ag a nd name tag with your n ame, addr ess a nd phone number in ~ase he strays. ' =-~~~~~~~~~~~~~ = DOUBLE BREASTED COATS Converted Into MODERN SINGLE BRE ASTED All K inds of Alterations S a t isfaction Guaranteed OK Tlll·z0 r Sliof'J JA 4·1432 132 E. Organ Las Cruces, N .M. Earl's Safety Sales ~"(, HENSLEY TALON Hcn!!lcy Fie.Id NA5 ,JW"'a An-I ~:::~ ~1/~~~iy~;::rs~~~y;~~ nee>r wit h B0 nrl ix-GP.ne1:a;1 Motors where h0 d0s1g~H'r. th e rotor dnve mechanism for auto-Pyros. DEVELOPS ENGIN ES . Prior to coming to the missile ranr.e he was with C ur tiss-Wright, deve loping rocket engines. He was a lie u tenant commander in t he Navy r cscrv0s a nct during W orld Wa r U serv<'d as a mcmbrr of fhe adviso ry committee of th e Society of A u tomotive F:ngi ncers a nct chairma n o f tbe pump group. H r Rnd his wife anrl two sons make th"ir home in I as Cruces and for more than seven yea r s hf' h as served on the arlvisory committee of th e Sfate Sf''ectivc S ervice Board. D istributors of F IRE E XTINGUISHERS AND EQUIPMENT Ph. J 4-4075 Box 521 Las C r uces, N. M . ANTHONY ~PORIJ To BUY SELL t RENT orTR E (Complclo Realty S e rvice) DIAL 6-6661 Real Estate Insurance DRIVE A LITTLE. SAVE A LOTI Our prices start $1995 for a 6 passen ger sedan. NEW Ill USED CARS llufhori:a:ed Ford Dealer Phone WA 8-2132 THE LOG Q·UALl·TY HOMES , . " . 1700 North Main LAS CRUCES by Alice R Upholstering CHAIRMAN RETURNS Ge n. Nathan F. Twining, who unde rwent m a jor surgery in M a y. h as retur ned to his desk in .the P enta gon. The Cha irma n of the Joint Chiefs of S t af f. 62. had the uppe r lobe of his left lung removed. Work mansh ip Guaranteed OFFICE OF THE CHIEF: vacation is Margaret C Lt. Col. W ilson and Al Ala- Kelly of Suppl y. M aria L. JA 4 0061 436 E. L ohm an con spent a couple of·days c:t Redstone Arsenal presenting Portillo is visiting in Califor· Las Cruces, N . Me x. ou r "pride and joy" to the nb, and Carl V . Freshour i· N oth ing Dow n , U p lo 24 CG, AOMC. Also, Capt. Roby cit Washington State cnjoyini:; M onths t o P a y on spent this last week on TDY the beautiful scenery. S ofia A pprov ed Cred it in San Francisco, Calif. Mercado suys she can't mak e Farewells to: Maj. Sobey Venetian Blinds R e p rd r ed (who was treated to a "ad- up her mind where lo go but • U p holst ery S u pplies ios' party by the Log family) plans lo enjoy her vacation - S gt. H . Brown and Sfc anyway. Daniel S. Diaz and • Canvas R epair R olen Sample. and _KermH Pearce off to Germany. · wife are on vacation sight• R e-U p holst ery B. Wheeler , engmeermg a id B b R · · · · A · d h and missile enginee r ing tech.o ose held a farcwC'll scemg 111 nzona an nort n ician respectively, both of patio bar-b-quc at h is h ome crn New Mexico! the Electro-Mechanical Lab-1 m ~l Paso 111 honor of deCongratulations to Edward oratory, jointly received $25 parting M/Sgt Brown. L. Patterson on getting his fo r their suggestion that Happy Birthday to Bob stripes; also for wmnmg two plates be installed under all Rose and Sam Scott! trophies (he belongs to WSX:E 2· 7380 El P aao. T e x. clcctronic instrument cabinets Congratulations to- Man- MH. softbal l ch amp ions !09 E. M1tin S t. having casters in order that uela Whi'.loclt on the attain - ll'arn). Cn-. 0 ralulations arc in For the best In m uid e r eproducJlon, l t u• these cabinets may be moved me n t o( a superior perform- order for Ma:,k~l V. Gallegos U.S. ROYAL without danger of capsizing. I ance award; Flo Johnson on who received a cash award h elp y ou s elect High Fldeliiy component• (Sample 'has since retired her incentive award and last for sustained super ior peror add Stereophon ic sound to y our pres&nl from civil service.) but not least ,our new E -8formance; also for Denito S aCua I choln·drive tread d• • Ti res M / Sgt "Bill" Boyd. lazar and Rex C. Rodgers. ,;gn for po1ltiv• lrD<I... All Sii at system . - q uick -1top a ction. A speedy r ecovery to Sgt. who split a cash award for a High Fide lity is our busin ess; n o t a 11lde llne. AmeTson's w ife who recently very worthwhile suggestion, underwent major surgery at and Roy Hite on his r ecen . Open Weekdays, Noon-9 p.m. - Saturday• I a.m- • 8 p.m. WBAH. promotion. Double cong rntulations to 1atpw HTRA HTRAHT TH1 Sp5 Philipp H. Heer. inspecSupply & Storage extends lion branch, who was sckct- a warm welcome to the foled as "Soldier of the Month" lowing new employcs: Jua n W as h ing t·o n (AFPS) IN A HURRY - WHE N YOU WANT IT "What Is a Modern Army?" for August! This is 1he ser- i'.a P. Clark of Las Cruces: is the theme of th ts :year's 1 ond time Sp5 Hen has won and Mc:rtina E. Nava from E: convention of the Association t h is hoonr thf> first in !!nd Martina E. Nava from El TO SUIT YOUR P U RPOSE ;:,CJL L>lt..ri, 19b5 V LRSlON Paso, both assigned to Loca- The sold ier of the future of the U.S. Army s lated for March. 19!'i!J. will be garbed something Aug. 3-5 at th e Sheraton-Park POST ORDNANCF.: con - tor Unit : Gracie V. Sanch ez TE RMS TO SUIT YOUR PURS E like this, if Qe has lo figh t Hotel here. . f>'ratula t ions to Pfc Lloyd G. from • Mesilla working in The three day. meet wi ~l Finley, Post Ordnance mcsa n u clear w ar. T h e A rmy's Las Cruces t urc Army Chief of StaJf . Voucher; and Mary Pen.z asF OR WORK OR PLAY Comb a t D ev elopment E x· fca Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer ~cnger. oi: his rec0nt prom.o- signed to Requisitio n ing. 717 N. MAIN JA 4-4661 perimenta t ion Center d e 15 with th e topic of "Wh y We hon. . M aJ. Jo.rdan repm Our sympathy is extended s igned lhe uniform. Need a Mode rn Army" and socn?mcr an e'1JovablE' w!'e1<- to Mr. a'1d Mrs. Louis A. The man who insists n oth - Army Secretary Wilber l\II. "~rl. m Glenwood. N. M . CWO Fisher on the recent loss of 220 W. Griggs. Las Cruces, N. M. P hone J A 8· 635J i n g is too good for him usual - Brucker, whose subject i.:; Bivins is exp ertcc'! back Tl<'.'t their 2 1,.2. year old daughter. a Modern Army." of! wr.<'k from 01.::lahoma. Welcomed" ly finds out anything is good "This Sen. IsJohn J. Sparkman Maintenance Technical The AsBest wishes to the. newl y- ,_ _ _ _"Military _ _ _ _ _ _Personnel _, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. , enough for him. Alabama a lso wil l address "ic:t~nrP Te'lm cornnoc:"rl of weds~ Mr. and .Mrs. G~lbert.C. 2S- RE AL ESTA TE 2 9 REAL ESTATE 1 the convention on ''Ground 'r/Sqt n11uqherty. Sfc W<>o~. Rodriguez. lb.ert is w ith Power and Diplomacy." Pete Chaparro, Hosea Hall, the Storai:e Section. Congrat- 1 The most recent develop- and Llovd EphHn rcce,,tlv ulat1ons 1.0 Mr. and Mrs. men ts in science and industry rcturn<>d from Stalliol1 Site I Louie .M~ese, ~appy parents for military use will be on ::ire alre::idv making p l::inc: to of a bab~ b?y, an~ Mr. and d ispl ay in 122 booths. Th ey vi~it Oscura this cominJI Mrs. Antonio Cahx._ proud I Near College. 3 & 4 Bedrooms in cl ude the Armv's l atest WPP1< parents of a hahv girl b01"1 equ ipment and mode ls of MaintPnancP Branch wP! - July 27. Be;;! wish_es to H azel weanons and "hardware" still comf'c: Mrs. N. H. F~ancis, Lonqstreei who will be trans- 1 in th e experimental stage." newlv assirrnerl to Simnlv. fcrring to G3 tbe last of A u Jus t a fe w lots left. Alrn . thn fnllowin_g ~'.M : Pfc gust. GOOD AND BAD Jos<>nl\ A. LaJllen :>nd Pvt. C. August birthday grcclings You can't get the true mea- J . LaRose assi_gned to Hollo- to Marg.aret Wallace. Joe Sal •rnrf> of ::i rn:rn wh\'n .-.nlv 011" m:in, :11111 nrw m"s~en ~c r, c2nr. Iris c.~l::lk. Ruben Fl?r· 515 N orth M ain St. Las Cruces J A C·Sl25, JA 6 -8712 220 S . M a in. Las Cruce. Phone JA 6-i3Bi • JA 6-6755 sid e of 111111 is t:1kt:n into ac- 1 Sp4 ~. M . Edwards! es, Frank Le<lesm.~, Bern1ce count. Back from an enjoyable .:nil Ernesto Tru1 1llo! ~---------~---------------• 4 .NEW I TIRES •500 ~~Np~: EL J>ASO AUDIO CENTER DOWN Ail.~ lUSA Weighs Modern Army MONEY. M0 NEY . M0 NEY . MONEY. STATE FINANCE COJJJPANY SDf)OK TIRE CO. I EL EHCAHTO HOMESITES I I ? lUILIT ARY PERSONNEL AUTO INSURANCE CI - No Down Payment A. T. COX, Realtor FOR ALL RANKS 1 GIDDINGS AGENCY, INC. Friday, August 21, 1959... 8-Wind & Sand- 50 Co-ops Start Jobs (Continued from Page 1) Branch , is ~tudcnt coord inator and counselor for the WSMR Cooperative Student Training Progn1111. There are approximatdy 110 student trainees now at WSMJ{ in the work phase of theu· training. An additional 130 are attend:11g college ir~ the ac::idemic training phase of 1he program. The 1ww student ! ni i nce~ startillg work at WSMR and enrolled in Texas Wcstcrr1 Colll'ge or Nc•w MPxico State Univ("rsity include· ROSTER OF CO-OPS Ifonry Allen Jr., OM; Larry I. Boulden, OM; James D. Brur1 r , IRM ; Jim W. Cartel Jr., OM; K en ndh W. Christ"'nse11 , JHM; J a mes E. Cooke. SMSA; George L. Davis, SMSA; Jamc·s A. Davis, MFSO: Fred V. Engelhardt, IRM Brnce G. Gal loway, IRM; Merle A. Germu11, IRM , Hob ert M. Gr!.!ensl a lt', OM; Clarence E. Grov('r. SMSA: Paul E. Guthl'it>, OM; Rub•·rt A Harrison, 01\[; Wendell E. Hawk, SMSA ; DeWl'V It Henderson, SMSA; Arthur C. Uowg, OM; Ji mmie L. Johnson, IRM; Gany E. K elly, IH.M; Leonard P . Kod1, IHM ; A1'111 ando L . Lopez OM; James B. Mason, SMSA ; Donald W. Mt'tcalf, JRM; RulJt>rl S. Nithuls, IRM ; Davit! P . Nolte, IRM: Bobby E. Nonis. SMSA; Denms R. Olsvn, IKM; William E . Perry, SMSA; Hil'li:;rd L . Pollard, OM; Colman M. P olvado, IRM ; Archie E. Proctor, OM; John H. Reese, SMSA; R ithard E. Siemens, IRM; Haymond S . Smith, IRM; Tom B. Thomas Jr., IR.M. ; Jiin D. Wallace, OM; Joseph D. Wallin, IRM; Thomus N. Wa1-rt·n, IHM; John L. Whitmire, OM; Dun ald E . Your , SMSA; Eug<•ne P. Cowgill, hankin A. Curtis, Richard K Davies and lJonaid W. Thras her. ---- e e .. , a SEVENTH ARMY A WARD-Sfc W. L. Paul. Det. 4. assigned to QM, is presented Seventh Army certificate of achievement by Maj. Russell C. Stenson, executive offi~er,. T1·oop Command. Sgt. Paul. newly arrived on post from Germany. received the awarcl,' for duty performed while serving 8Ji platoon sergeant. 96th Transportation Company;'. from June 19, 1956 to June 26, 1959. ,Especially significant was the zeal di!iplllyed .'whe.n . Sgt. Paul assumed the dual responsibility of acting platoon leader and platoon sergeant and without the benefit of a commissioned officer in the platoon he achieved superior ratings on the annual General Inspection in Sep.t ember, 1959 and the Command M.aintenance Inspection of Seventh Army in January. 1959. Sgt. .Paul is married and lives in Las Cruces with his wife and o~e child. (U.S. Army photo by Frank Ontive~1~ • I By OSCAR OTIS ·-. I f 1 c AOM . Con·.d'u''c·ts Ji' ,, . '. ~ J J. EDGAR HOOVER but I think they have been pretty .."Yell eliminated, but perhaps the racing P®Ple al'e over sensitive on this subject. You can take it direct from the FBI that no human activity of consequence that is organized has been free from scandal. We've had crooked lawyers, doctors, bankers, most everything. Racing seems no worse tban anything else. But then, again, look at 1t this way. The wonderful people who are in racing. <At this moment, the familiar eton; blue and brown cap flashed by the wire in :front, the man smiled, and said, 'Good, first1 winner I've had all day). You tak~ C. V. Whitney. He's aone a lot for the sport. And Lawrence Welk was up just a few minutes ago to say hello. A great band leader, and I else~" · understand he ls becoming active with Rci~i'rig Has No Monopo1y on Betting thoroughbreds. Through the years, I've ..:Question: "Then you don't feel the wager~ gotten to know many race people personally Ing aspect of racing is objectionable?" An- 1 and have found them just wonderful people. awer: "Not if it ls used by the individual in / I'm pretty well acquainted in Washington moderation. Racing has no monopoly on . with Sonny Workman, a really great rider." Question: "Mr. Hoover, I believe you did betting or the desire to win a little some.. thing. People buy stocks because they hope something for racing in setting up the inves· the. s~:>ck will rise in value and they can tigative arm of the TRA, the TRPB?" Anea.in. reople bet on a horse because they swer: "Yes, I was given an inkling of certain have hopes the horse will win, and they will problems that racing was racing a number gain something. Many church groups find of years ago and recommended Spencer bingo· a fine diversion and one that also Drayton as the man to solve those problems. 4fo.uld be .c lassified as gambling. But here From my observations, Drayton has done a again the approach - temperance - is the terrific job, so good in fact, that maybe at factor that makes this also a diversion. times he has stepped on somebody's toes. Actually, from a law-enforcement stand- But any time you do a really good job at p·otnt', a well conduct~d race track is a h elp anything, that is bound to happen. Drayton t<> a community if only for the reason that has put a lot of people out of racing who ·t.he people at the track are finding an outlet didn't belong in, and in so doing, he has f.or .t heir emotions, are enjoying a diversion, at times been damned. But at the FBI, we ·~ if ·you will, which, if they weren't at the as often judge a man by who is damning track, they might use this time for less him rather than by who the people are laudable escapes." who praise him. An exampic, the more the Question: "What about the so-called Communists damn the FBI, the better the scandals of the past in racing?" Answer: job we must be doing in fighting this, Amer"There have been some bad people in racing ica's No. 1 menace." a. I ·. in'.: Pf' I ,_ .-DELMAR, Calif., Aug. 7.-The setting: The turf club enclosure at Del Mar. The visitor: J. Edgar Hoover of the FBI and his senior lieutenant, Clyde Tolson. The ocC*1sion: For the first time in history, Hoover consented to chat with a turf writer on why he is a thoroughbred racing fan in particular, and on the sporting-moral-business aspects ot thoroughbred racing in general. Question one: •'Why are you a race fan, Mr. Hoover?" Answer: "I go to the races most every Saturday that I can, and, here in Del Mar, certain afternoons in the week while I get my annual medical check.:..up mornings at nearby Scripps Clinic in La Jolla. I have found that an afternoon at the races c~n· give me complete relaxation from a •ruelling week of WO!'k in the FBI. It is an absolute change of pace and has the adv~tllg~ of being a. colorful sport and out of door$, I have :found racing to be a whole~ine :diversion.•• Question: "Are there any ~oral issues involved ln thoroughbred racµli,Q! which you are aware?" Answer: "No, I ~p npt believe there are any moral issues inYolved. This is a. well supervised sport as to lt$ })eing a clean one and the various states · wh,\ch have racing exert every effort to keep ~t. that· way and on a high standard of com.p.e,tltive operation. The only moral issue ,t hat I .can see is not one of racing itself but ·o t; the individual. Personally, I think any~.04y; who overbets on the races is a fool. But tJ.;nY one who overdoes anything is a fool, 'e-V.en to over exercise. One pays the penalty. Temperance and moderation in everything is"the best policy, and in this respect, racing is ·in the s:lme category with everything 1 . Heproduced by permission from August 8 issue of Daily Racing Form Modern, scientifically superv.i sed horse \. ·:racing will come -- for the first time -- to the ,. . Su~land area starting October 9, at beautiful \t ";" ~ JM .RIDE· I. ..·: ~. 0 .. '.· · ' f 4' ~ • "''.I .,., • €-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ H?over Sees Sp?r.t as Big Atd to Commun1t1es Through f~pvio_ing Emotional Out~~~-, , in • Promote 1-awfulness in Cities (Continued from Page 1) (Continued from Page 1) gram, open to military Ptr-. officer. He will serve the Of- have been under way in Bf- sonnel regardless of "w~xe fice of the OG, the Comp- ginning Algebra ,1, Begih- they are stationed. , . .. . ,•.' troller Division, Intelligence ning Algebra II, and adThe General Educational Office (G-2), Mission Plans vanced Algebra, all high D~velopment and end,-of.k and Operations (G-3) and the school level courses. These course testing programs, open Ballistic Research Laborator- courses have been taught to military personnel . ~;Ylbo ies Annex. continuously at WSMR since can come in to the ·center fo'r 51,5th Ordnance Company the Education Center was es- written tests. , ·, - Maj. Robert H. Blackburn, tablished in temporary buildThe On-Duty Group Study commanding officer. ings in 1947. They will be program, required by ·Arm)' U. S . Naval Ordnance Mis- continui!d during the fall se- regulations to bring . educa·sile Test Facility - Lt. Cdr. mester. tional levels of deficient perWilliam Nivison, assistant Also scheduled for the fal1 sonnel up to minimum 'Aimy test and operations officer. semester are courses titled standards. Integrated Range Mission R1eview of Grammar, Review The Military Occupation~l - Mnj Harold B. Wetzel, of Arithmetic, General Scichief of the Data Reduction ence, Elementary Spoken Specialty and 'Proficiency Div i s i on, South Range Spani.s h, Business Manage- Pay testing programs·, iidmin~ Branch, IRM. ment, Elementary Photogra- is~ered by Tr:o?~ . Coml'Ilan~,1 Ordnance Mission Lt. ·PhY and Use of the Slide Rule. with study facilities Eltld bac~ Col. Keith L. •L ewis, execuThe Slide Rule course i3 ground materials provictf~ t ive officer of the Systems fieing . offered for the first by the Army Educatfoh Cenr . ·~;L~ ~·c ! . Test Division. He will serve. time at WSMR, to fill an in- ter. OM and the contractor or- creasing number of request~ . . ganizations. for .$UCh instruction. I.t is ex(Contin~t•'d. f1 om Pare 1) SMSA CHAIRPMEN . petted to prove. particularly duty. While ~n t '.1e Army, h~ Signal Missile " Support useful. to all military person~erved tours m Gc•1111a!1y an A~ency _ Lt. Col. Shannon nel who have duty asflignm ~apan belween stu~ts ~t D. Brown chief of the Elec· ments in the missile program . " White Sands. Under his di- tro nic W~rfare Division of and have not previously had rePt on, tile program at SMSA. He also will serve as the opportunity to obtain inWSMR has h::.1 Llt' eu11,;1ste11tly · t 10n • · f or struction in use of the slide L' . . , . . t 1 orgam7a ch airman h ig11 par 1c1pa 1011 percen - th e lOOth A.rmy Security ru.le. ages. Af!ency. 1'he 10 courses in the Ar1 LAB COURSES NEXT Members of the Executive J my Off-Duty, Group Study He pon.1t~ out tbat this fa'.l, Committee headed bv ·cokl program will bring to 39 the for th e !1 rs t ltn\e, la.boratory Thaxton are Col. Lewis Cdr. number of courses offered in courses a re u e 1ng oCfered at N' . M . W t 1 ' C 1 classroom programs at the .r qu'pped 1v1son, aJ. e ie, o .. ..., 1 WSMR· 'l'f . iree u 11 Y e 1 . Center during the Br own Chaplain (Maj.) JPs- .i:,uucat;on laboraton ...s electromcs, enh v' W atterson Capt. Ri- .fall. semester. Twenty-nine physic~ :ind c·hrm 1.s tcy rhard E . C'ookslev' of G-l.. and co1.1;rs¢s are. scheduled in the were m rorporalcu rnto the Ch 1 P . 11 f PIO College , Group , Study pro! t ar es msa o . . ' , .. . r· N . . ~.. b .th. Ed ne~ P <Jn • . A m eetin!! of all the ori;ran- ~'.am . cpn.,.uct,cu Y'. }! . u-.: So now we arP offering · t ' h · b h · .catfo'n· Center Tl . t iza 10n c airmen, su -c au·- · . .. . i'p . .cooperatibn . . cours0s on. _a m1 i ary pos men and k ey men has been wi.th. New-, ·M~x2ci:FState tJm~· which m 1l1lal'y personnel sPhed nled at' 3 p.m . Monday, :ver~~Y.- f'~e .. c~p~~e pro$,r~. normally c:an11ut take unless Auf'. 31 , in the Post Theii+Pr. '11'Jit'Q., . enro~enL . s;.ch~tile<( . . .. , . .. , they can atten~. d~sses on a At that time. final plans ' for, S:e?.J:l-4, ~~pptm 10 JUlht~rl\ .. sA.yi:s $90;QOO, ;,:-:IJ'h'ii.t~:. collei;:e campus, France says. th d . . b t~A. c~\'.lhan, ... C!)nt),'actor ,anlf <l,e~ , :• c . L _,,._. , · ·w;.,, ...,.'D' ·.i...n .: "W re aware of the ace rive w1 11 e comp1e .,µ. "·a . t . ;..,,. l . .., . . . . . .. ' m.,.,,.,, .a : ;o;n.••n> Ill"'"' ' e a . . A motion pict ure film con- pen en perso... ,e • " •. .· .. . 'iervtc:e emplbye. •h&s'. AA'Ytd' celerated . m1~sile prograr,n cerning one of the United; .. .s~x . other , pz:ogra~s · ·are r ·~hli governmim!,7'$8(1,'l)uo u and ~he r?·1Cl ( ard e:nph~s1: Fund organizations, th e ava·1labled thrn;ughc ' the WSM'fhn . year by devi,s~g ,; ·~· ®'al,, on ~c t en,; ic an c~g1~;e1 in American H earing Society, Army E ucahon e.nter. .e I· f~rm . to , promole · C!>!~~con• subiects, . he ~dd~. .w hile will be shown. A sneaker staff; of the Ec,lucail~mal Der :::·11:~oi1°$)u!ss •. and ' e.~ic~r: we canot precl H'l th Ptr ef- from the Dona Ana Count velopmeryt I!r~nch urges per~ -_in· ~he op1nati<>n•''.;pn?lM:' feet on our total enrollment, U 't d C . F d y sonnel interested in any of WSMB · Post - Engintf'.i'.~'a,C"'' we are prepared to handle m. e t' ami;tahif!hn dun tor- the· programs to visit the of~ tivities'· He receiv"-t'a S.n · k 1 d,, garnza 10n, w1 ea quar ers . . . . h · . • . · ~~· ·:....• ..s: a pea on · in Las Crures will be on the fie.es. m ., Building .464 at t e . cash .mc-:n1,ve aw-c$1•-,a·, FLEXIBL.E PROGRAM nrogram Th~ meetin has earliest, opportunity. . , recently fr.o m ,,pot ·E~~~France pomts . out l.hat thr hP hd 1d t 1 1 . ln - additio~ to . the Army - p; Fahringer•. i:>o~~ ',ll~g~•: pro~ram at YfSMR. 1s verv ab~~t s~!'i e muineutes~ as on Y and · college· ' group study neer. The aY"ard .W~~-~· flexibl e. It . is d esigned to MEETING SET . programs, · others are:· ~nder the Arm'(s inC!Jllo mePt ch anging educatwnal D . t . The Alarhog-0rdo Commun- hve award progr~m: ;whicb< . l d' 1 GAL 2All-ti111e W&S , .rive. ma ena s, me u mg ity College program ·open· to rewards .employes' .for•.*.• requirements, due to the a~s Hmahon. cards, leaflets, personnel stiitioned at Hol- eficial suggestions•. ~or~o•_ t urnover of personnel. It is wrnrfow stickers and pled~e 1 . · is a program coord1na~f d esigned to serv.e person~el rards, are exnected to. be m ~~~·JJp-~~nge Gr~up Study !n the .offict 9f,. the· cJ)T·!;" from every s tat<> m lhl' umon t~e han~s of key men ~y th.e program, open to personn~l 1.0 n . ch~e~. Po5 t .~nt!~'-'-i:.. and many fol'eign countries, trrn e th " Aui;r.. 31 m.eetmg .1s stationed at Stallion Site, (U.S. Army, ph01o) · · , .. ~ representing ever.v type and held. The . drive w:n begin NOtth ·ascU1a Peak and bs· · · ·'<'.· .~.., .: • '··~ ~ l evel of e<luc.:alional back- the foll~wl~g mornmE!: . . cura Range Camp. . ground. As this issue of '!Vmd & 'l,"he u : ·s." Armed • Fo~es For example, eight . differ- ~and went t~ press, ~nform~- Iilstittite cor.r!spondehce prO- . · · . · , · " . :~~.".,.', ~1 ·1 ).' ent courses in four different ion con<'er~mg a c an~e. U) . - " ' .. . ~ ·a·'r' ·1e · .·se• '\.:ia{'/r ·.,· . l anguages are on the curricul- the . rPP'ulatwns w~s · ·bemg natians in ··plain W'hite enum for the foll sem ester. ;ece1ved on post. This chane:e veio1>"es proVided ·by themThere are' fo ur separa te Eng- 1 ~ l'xp~ted t~ alter t~e p;o- seive~. :or may1 tum 'eash . l ifµNi,'SVlL~E:'.,\.\~~tJ~T~~ lish courst:·s For the first cedur<> mvolvmP' contnbuhon or lchecks to· their key' men · · time, th er e ·a re courses in envelopes. S~ch. envelone;; witnout· enve'lopes. · KeY-. 111:en Ai·my ·Ont_nan<:e."MJ~s~t'tf.~' three different foreign Ian- m_ay not be distnbutf'd .. Con- ·will gi'Ve Written · receipts ta rna.ncl.. is icondu~ti1.1j~,':lt1.1Jl~r guages _ Spanish, German tnhutors may place their do- thos.e· contribut!ng·· qis~. · if flight and. landing, re~earc.4 · · r~·questecl· -- · · · 'for.·'the' Natfonal '&e.r.·o.·n."'aufic~. an d R uss ian. sessions will be three hours ' "'. . · · · d•t · r The col il'ge courses average each. · · -Name.s · ·of _sub:c'hairmen and Space A miriist~ation 1 th re~ semester.. hours of France urges all students and, key men.will be a~i:ioun- l.lnder. a $l50,000 conti;a'Ct. '. credit cat:h. Tu1t1on charge.: planning to take laboratory c:e.d . later. · The stud~es, ·~~w' t~ir ar.e $ 12 per sem ester ~~u1, courses to be early for en·-· · early stages, wjll·:mv~ii~te wi th Army personnel eligibl e rollment. Facilities are limi·Soft landings 'o n the. mooti for ass1stant:e a l the ra le of ted and demand is certain to from,. v·arious approachJ!~ with $7 50 per semester hour. be gr eat. Enrollments will be hath . stationary and ..Oving DEFERRED PAYMENTS accep ted on a first-come, paylo.qds. . .. . ·. · Deferred payment of tui first-served basis. Demand NASA has also. ia°"~gnf,d tion balances m ay be ar- for the chemistry course esAOMC certain inv~st:fgftions ranged for military person- pecially is expected to be exin regard to manned' citcumn el. The only other charges necled to be heavy. navigation of the mOliln• .,, are for texthooks a nd , for COURSES LISTED The work is \..:. C1eirig .cin'i~!ll thosP wlio h;:iw not previous Following is the list of O!,lt und~r the. direc'tion.~f ly m ::i I rH'u lated a t N MSU, nourses scheduled for the Ernst Stuhlinger,' dfrecto't' 'tif th e tm iversi ty's ref'ular ma- fall sem ester in the college the Rese_a r_ch P'rqjec~.tti>:·L.·a.·h.tr ie11lati on fee of $!'i Civilian ... • stud en ts ar e not eli gibl e for program: 1 oratory, Army Ballistic' .MisEnaJish 101, En~ish 102, sile ~gency. _· .. -. ·. '·i,,, Armv tuition assi~tance. anc'I English 261, English 253, · • the Anny Eclul':1tion Center S·panish 112, German 111, is not :-i11l1111riz1'd to arranl"f' 'R.usi;ian l 11, Russian 112. Ed• dPf Prred p:.iyrnen ls for ci neat ion 101, Psvchologv 215, vi 1 "ns. Psvchology 320, Sociology stNGU.:~ 'T'l1f' r·l;issroom sr>ssion s are " 1\1 , History 101, Government h nld rlmin~ off uutv hours 201: ·F.~I,-' Chemistry 101, Phvsics 110, 1't:ir1in'! nt 4:15 pm. Pnch '\.·' ., .. ,., dav, fivP cl;nr,: n wePk. H ow- Math n111atir' 110, Mathemat, , ever ,0,.,...- r l ns-;es m PPt onl v ics 131, Math em i:itics 132, A REDEYE . DEADEYE Ii ..~ 0n Monrlws :mri Wf>dnes- Math P111"ti<'~ 231. Mathem::it- ·A Marfne marksman lak'es -..1 (l;w0 wli lP other~ rn ept onlv ;,.~ ?1?, Mathematirs 310, 1\ifP- · ai'm w.illi .tlfe 'l\~d~Eye; a ,...., '1'11 n<•l:ivs and Thur•rhv haPi<'al Enl"inE'PrinE!' 211, new guided missile to. 'be · ~·;11 " 'h Pr.~ are rr>nnur•tprl 'Ru sinpss .Anministration 104, · used by -ground -troops ·to e:>rh Mond:w \Verlnesrfav 'Rusiness Ac'lministration ~17. . blas.t strafing enemy planes. · and Friday. Moi;t Ph'~room B usiness Administr<1tion 3·32, . The weapons system is be· . sessions are •rh ec'l ul ed for Economics !Cl, EcQ'Ilomi~s ing dffeloped for the Army · ·.:·:.:.·..::°;"'.:····.....·...~.·:· · . .. . . . two hours, while laboratory 254. , -~ _, .....__ ·and ~a:ina Co:rps.-. ~ . Lu'·n' If you really want the facts, read these forthright answers froni ,A.nierica's leading autho~ity on criine-- · f 81 Chief Avers Racing He ps Fund Drive Qff~Duty Term Slate·d Kickoff lVear . '.:For. .Sept. 20 Opening·~~, : Classes sta r t Sept. 9 Is a tho~oughbred race track good or bad for a community?· Are racegoers hoodlums or highbrows, criminalP or good cittzens? • ,. '· IN NEW MEXICO · THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN EL PASO Member Thoroughbred Racing ssociation e·