a I Drive on Base rn - White Sands Missile Range Newspapers
Transcription
a I Drive on Base rn - White Sands Missile Range Newspapers
• PUBLISHED WEEKLY DISTRIBUTED TO ALL SERVICE AND CIVILIAN PERSONNEL ON W.S.M.R. ublished by Las Cruces Citizen. Las Cruces, New Mexico a private firm is no way connected with the Department of the Army. Opinions expressed by the publishers and writers herein are their own and are not to be considered an official expression by the Department of the Army. The appearance of ad· vertisements in this publication does not con· siitute an endorsement by the Department of the Army of the products or services advertised. • Serving the Nation's Biggest Overland Missile Testing Center Published in the interest of military and civilian personnel of WSMR and to promote a greater guided missile program for the national defense. Publication Office: 114 S. Church, Las Cruces, N. M. WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, NEW MEXICO, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1962 VOL. VIII - No. 23 • United Fund Prepa rn 8PAGES aI Drive on Base • Optical Data-Pickup Capabilities • En anced by Changes Bemg ~ million-and-a-half dollar velopment programs at the IRIG • e-lifting .is giving even greater optical data-gathering capabilities to White Sands Missile Range. Thirteen of a 15-unit highspeed Contraves Cinetheodolite system have been installed and are in operation on the south portion of the national missile range. The instruments, modified to meet s'pecial technical requirements at the all-land missile center, supplement the ex is ti n g $200-million range optical facilities which have made White Sands the best instrumented range of the Free World. The prec1s10n Contraves C'inetheodolites were bought from J. W. Fecker, Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa. - the American distributor of the Swiss made optics and a division of American Optical - at a cost of $1,128,847. Additional funds w e re expended for range site facilities. The new photo-tracking • struments were modified by J. W. Fecker, Inc., in accordance with specifications rn a de by WSMR instrumentation engineers. Some or the instruments replace obsolete and less-precise implements, and the en tire complex brings instrumentation capabilities to the progress-level of missile de- • rmy Keys • To Counter Insurgency The soldier you see in your community today may be enroute tomorrow to a foreign land to become a counterinsurgent. Fourth U.S. Army, comprising Arkansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas, is advising each of its soldiers in mandatory troop orientations to prepare for a sudden call to use his ~kills for this purpose. "No man," says the Army, "can sit back with an 'it can't happen to me' attiude. Each skill held by the American soldier is needed in counterinsurgency and the skills needed for this fight range ver the full military oc. .upations scale." The U S. Army's primary effort is to apply its vast array of skills and all of its resources to countering communist instigation or perversion of insurgency movemen ts. "There is an often-blurred distinction between counterguerrilla and counterinsurgency," said a Fourth Army spokesman. "Counterguerrilla means measures, both active and passive, against actual guerrilla forces. In counterinsurgency, the target may be a sick man without a doctor, a farmer who has no road to his market, a woman (Continued on Page 7) • At 'r'our ~'ervice Club With the swimming season ~slowly com in g to a close, . .Countdown Service offers all enlisted personnel the best in leisure recreational activities. Music, games, tournaments and dances await you after duq. desert center. "This is the largest effort ever made at WSMR to modernize range optica1-datagathering capabilities," said William C. Russell, chief of Cientheodolite Instrumentation, Measurements Division, Integrated Ran g e Mission. "The primary purpose of this system is to improve missilelaunch data coverage." In addition to providing a higher degree of accuracy in trajectory coverage, the Contraves optics arc anticipated to save the Government thousands of dollars a year in man-hours expended in gathering missile flight information. The instrument simultaneously records, on 35mm film, the object being tracked, azimuth and elevation shaft-angle position, frame count and time correlation data. The system js basically photo-optical recording devices used !or missile launch, and is entirely different from t'he ballistic camera system, Wild BC4 phototheodolite, now being installed at the range for tracking satellites. The new Contraves samples ~s much as six times as fast as existing equipment and is adaptable to projected programs for the national missile range as well as for meeting current requirements. The electronic control mechanism in these cinetheodolites was especially designed to meet needs at White Sands and to utilize the Meet Will Kick-off Campaign Civi~ Se~vice Leg1slallon Made Moving Ahead (Inter-Range Instrumentation Group) designed timing-signal format authorized for inter-range use by the Department of Defense. Another outstanding feature of the sleek, compact ultra-modern instrument is that one man can operate it by means of a joystick control. This, according to Russell, is comparable to power steering on a car. It enables one operator to control both azimuth and elevation movements in following a missi:e in flight whereas a manual(Continued on Page 8) Herc's how pending employee legislation shaped up as of late August: PAY REFORM. H.R. 9531 provides for improvement in the statutory salary systems of' the Federal Government and adopts and applies the principle of Governmentprivate enterprise s a 1 a r y comparability. Reported to I House; pending on House calendar. Pay hearings com- ' pleted in Senate. White Sands Missile Range will kick off its an nu a 1 United Fund Campaign on September 28. The drive will commence with a kick-off meeting at the Post Theatre on September 28 at 0930 hours and will c o n t i nu e through November 5. Contributions will go to the United Fund area designated by the donor. Or the • • • donor may have his oontriLIFE INSURANCE. S. 1070 bu tion sent to a particular and H.R. 5162 amend the I United Fund charity. Federal Employees Group Contributors are urged to Life Insurance Act to providP. make their donations by UNITED CAMPAIGNERS-Members of White Sands Missile Range's 1962 United Fund Executive Committee iJOSe for for an additional unit of life Sergeant Blasts Off insurance ($1,000 more for the camera. ;rhey are, left to right, standing, Capt. Winston Comer, Plans & Operations; Capt. R. L. Paterson, Ord- check whenever possible in order to reduce the amount employees eaning less than nance Mission; Lt. Richard George, Troop Command; drive treasurer Charles Gordon, Comptroller; Marvin Jones, of cash to be handled. All Under :the Control Ordnance Mission; Lynn Patterson, Personnel; SFC D. H. Porter, Logistics and SFC Robert Stevens, ERDA. Seated, Of Army Personnel $10,000; $2,000 more for those l·r, Mrs. Joy Torpenning, Ordnance Mission; drive chairman, R. E. Latourrette, Mrs. B. L. James, and L. R. Buckman, checks should be made out earning $10,000 or morP.). to "WSMR United Fund." (U.S. Army photo by Louis Reinhardt, Civ.) The Army today conducted Passed Senate, hearings com- Post Engineers. This will permit deposit ot another successful test shot pleted by House Post Office the check in the local bank of its fast-firing, mobile Ser- and Civil Service subcommitand provide the contributor geant missile, which will be tee. a record for income tax dein the hands of overseas • • • ductions. However, a controops early next year. tributor may make his check POLITICAL ACTIVITY. S. The current test series with 919 and H.R. 12661 amend payable to any specific or~ the 34-foot-long solid propel- the Hatch Act to repeal thP. ganization desired. lant SergP.ant combines Army provision which requires the White Sands' United Fund engineering and service tests Civil Service Commission, in White Sands Missile Range White S an d s Missile Executive Committee inA new system, to encour- responsible for clarifying the in a single agency. Normal· case of violation, to assess tt has contributed to the trainRange's Electronics Research eludes: chairman, R. E. Laly, such tests are conducted penalty of not less than 90 ing program of future missile nge personnel to submit con- information, checking it for and Development Agency's tour1·ette. Mrs. Beatrice L. separntely and consecutively. dal•'s susp~nsion without pay cicntists by: donating three structlve ideas was started npproprialc content and for- journalistic eyes and ears- James, Fred Ingraham, Lt. •roday's fest was conducted Permit the Commission to jet engines to the Mccnamcal li1;s \lit'!!!'I... u~ ,.·:;:M:a CumBob McLean-has been writ-1 Joe B. Thompson, Lt. Rich~ by Army personnel. All test impose a lesser penalty if it Engineering Department, m::ind. The plan, called Tele- warding it to the respon~ible ing for over .30 years. ard George, Lt. Harry Scarfe, phone Suggestion Progi·am organization for evaluation. objectives were met. were deemed more in keep- School of Engineering, at McLean came to the south(Continued on Page 2) permits personnel to teleUpon l'eview by the evaluThe Sergeant, which can ing with the nature of the New Mexico State Univerern New Mexico missile phone their suggestion to a ator, the Action Officer will propel a nuclear warhead offense. Passed Senate, pend- sity. about 75 miles, is a 34 footcentral office (Mgt Services call the suggester and inform testing center in 1955. In ing on House calendar. The excess englnes, techaddition to his informational long solid fuel replacement nically referred to as Office, . Car:1p) where the him of the action taken. duties at SELWS, he writes • • • suggestion is recorded, re- I . . for the surface-to-s u r fa c e PROMOTION. H.R. 1010 "power plants,'' arc used by viewed for feasibility and This plan will supplement technical reports and historCorporal missile, which has Target Missile Project, Ord- referred , to the applicable !he Incentive Awards Pro- ies. He has co-authored numbeen overseas for s e v e r a 1 amends the Classification Act nance Mission, for target organizat1on for evaluation gram, although it is not a erous scientific papers on of 1949, as amended, to proyears. The rugged Sergeant missiles. and possible implementation. part of that operation. Ideas varied fields, including mecan be assembled, aimed and vide that upon promotion or Doctor Quentin Ford, head transfer to a position of a fired much more rapidly Suggestors submit their accepted in the Telephone teorology, radar, communicahigher grade an employee of the ME Dept., NMSU, and ideas for improving housetions and technical photo· than the liquid-fueled CorSEE would receive not less than Doctor Milan H. Cobble, ME keeping, health, morale, safe- Suggestion Program will not graphy. poral. •'THE BALLOT generally be considered for Newspapers reporting is The Sperry Utah Company a 2-step of the grade in- professor, came to the na- ty, policy, and operations. Suggestors can call Exten- monetary awards nor honor(Continued on Page 2) is the prime contractor for crease from which he is pro- tional missile range to accept BOX" Lt. Col. Theodore L. En· the development of the Ser- moted. Passed House, pend- the engines and familiarize sion 7258 and present their ariums. teles, chemical liaison officer on Page 3 The program eliminates the proposal. The idea is then (Continued on Page 7) (Continued on Page 8) geant Missile System. assigned here for the past recorded and the name and filling-out of lengthy forms year, is leaving White Sands telephone extension of the and often the time delay in Missile Range for the Army getting the idea on paper. It suggestor is noted. Chemica! Center at EdgeThe· suggestion is then sent provides a fast service which wood, Md. to the Action Officer who is should encourage people to Col. Enteles, as liaison ofget their suggestions to the ficer !or the Army Chemical proper authorities for evaluMajor Willis H. Knight re- Corps, has assisted in the ation. cently returned here for his evaluation and analysis of Personnel are advised that chemical items of interest to this plan MUST NOT be used second tour of duty as Adthe corps being tested at ministration Office Chief of !or complaints or vague sugWSMR and also directed spe. gestions. The proposal must Integrated Range Mission. 'Longe~t He first came here in 1954 cial tests. be specific and of some value The new chemical l iaison and was assigned to the Corto the Command. NEW YORK - A benefit has not b e e n anofficer poral Project, Systems Test preview of "The Longest nounced. Division. He later was reasDay," the film version of Col. Enteles, a native of signed to Aberdeen Proving Cornelius Ryan's p o p u 1 a r New York City, graduated Grnund, Md., then studied at book about the events of from the City College of New the Intelligence School in June 6, 1944, will reunite York with a bachelor of Wc;shington, D.C., the Army many of the leaders of the (Continued on Page 2) Language School, Monterey, beachhead assault in NorCalif., and served at the mandy. American Embassy in MosThe .film will be s h o w n here Oct. 3, with tickets at a Mrs. Doris M. Mawson and cow. Before coming to White $100 top and proceeds going Mrs. Ethel K. Anderson, Sands for the second time, to the International Rescue civilian employes of the Maj. Knight went to the Committee which assists re- Naval Ordnance Missile Test General Staff College, Ft. fugees from police states and Facility here, returned yes- Leavenworth, an. Major Knight first entered resctUcs them in the Free tcrday from Phoenix, Ariz., THINKING PAYS-SFC Billie H. Tiller, center, U.S. Garrison Detachment 2, White Sands Missile Range, N. M.. re- World. where they attended the the Army jn 1943 as an enceives checks totaling $230 from Col. Martin Cunningham. left. WSMR's Chief of Staff, as Def 2 Commonder, Capt. Upwards of 60 veterans of biennial convention of the listed man and went to West Glenn W. Jones, looks on. Sgt. Tiller was presented four cash awards and certificates and a letter of Commendation the D-Day landings, ranging National Federation of Fed- Point, graduating in 1947. He for suggetsions he submitted under the Army's Incentive Awards Program during dut yat Fort Richardson, Alaska • from a five-star general to eral Employes. served in Korea and with The imaginative soldier came to :the missile range in July from the Alaska installation. He is the son of James M. privates, will be guests at the Mrs. Mawson, employed in the 24th Division as an artil(U.S. Army ' photo by SP5 Robert Meinen) event. General of the Army the Facility's Test Depart- lery officer. Tiller, Appalachia, Va. Omar N. Bradley is serving ment, is secretary-treasurer He and his wife, Dorothy as chairman of the benefit of Local No. 158 of the or- and their two children KathAid For Iranians committcc. ganization. Mrs. Anderson is ryn 14 and Julia 10, live on In addition to Gen. Brad- Chief of the Navy Industrial Post. lcy, D-Day leaders at the Relations Office at White l' enefit will include Gen. Sands. QUOTE OF THE WEEK ,;..:..~ ... Ideas paid off this week Commendation four certifiMaxwell D. Taylor, Gen. Heading the White Sands "I am here to talk with LT.COL.T.L.ENTELES for an Army enlisted man cates and four checks rangMatthew B. Ridway, Gen. delegation to the meet was you about science, art. here. ing from $15 to $150 for his Anthony McAuliffe, Gen. J. Glenn H. Hicks, Post Engi- athletics. great music and SFC Billie H. Tiller, U. S. suggestions which will save Lawton Collins, Adm. Arthur neers, president of the local of course poetry. We can Army Garrison Detachment the government a considerD. Struble and Lt. Gen. branch of the federation. talk about :these things 2, received $230 in c ash able amount of money and Washington (AFPS) Army and Air Force Clarence R. Huebner. Speakers at the meeting because there is no rivalequipment and ope rating personnel were flown to "The Longest Day," much included Sen. Olin D. John- ry ••• Great nations adawards for adopted sugges- improve equipment. tions he submitted through The 16-year-service soldier Iran from Europe shortly alter the earthquake of of it filmed on the actual son, chairman of the Post mire each other and don't A docket of 28 cases, 14 the Army's Incentive Awards came to the national missile Sept. 1 struck, killing and injuring thousands and wip- bea ches where the Allied Office and c iv i 1 Service take pleasure in belittling in a 13,600-square- 1 anding s took place, has Committee·, Senators car 1 each other." - Poet Ro- military and 14 civilian, was Program. range in July from Fort ing out many towns and villal!es ~ dozens of screen personali- Hayden and Barry Gold- bert Frost speaking to a heard recently in front o! In an office ceremony Richardson, Alaska, and is mile area. WSMR Chief of Sta.ff Col. assigned with the Zeus BatEquipment from U. S. Ar- lion units, 1,000 squ ad tents tie>s enacting the leaders of water; Gov. Paul Fannin of ;iroup of Russian poeis in U. S. Commissioner, L. J. Maveety. T went Y ·seven Martin Cunningham pres- tery Test Group, ·Systems my in Eu:opc included m~di - J for th c homeless, 10,000 t he inva~ion and the German Arizona and Mayor Sam Moscow. cal su~lies.. water puriflca(Continued on Page 7) laefenders. Mardian Jr. of Phoenix. !,_____________. bonds were posted. ented Sgt. Tiller a Letter of (Continued on Page 8) I WMB Donates Jel Engines 0 SU Depl. Suggestion System Done by Telephone McLean is a Veteran of Journalism Enteles to Leave for Edgewood Major Knight Back at Sands For Duty Tour D-Day Chiefs Will Preview Day' Women Return From Meeting Of Employees Army Enlisted Man Gets Cash for, Ideas Mirtary p· ( es in to Aid Earthquake idims I Commisswner s Court I WIND A Si\ND IA 0 Primer c Poltrte.. &Jld at.AL~~nlb .J •..ut Ut:Y'I'• ct.O.U e""llVl1LI .."'t•llJ.JIUlb &.rt: 001 nrU,11 tltose OJ the l)eputmen1 j)/ 11.J'my OJ l!.8 agenrtea thlJo p11bllcat1on do not c'OnallLUtt! •n enaul'bement b.11 th• &.rm,11 ol th• producL• oJ •erVl<'e• •erllsed. PubU1n•d Neet<I\ u 1 <' ctvtllar t:Olrrort1t n ommun1sm Ut:\:h AovertJs~mento !II ' nf .Ji• Qeoartment ID tnc 1ntetea\ 01 Ul• Mllltar> Goldie Left United Fund Last Friday lo Annual Drive (Continued from T'a c 1) .foin S111okey .Jr., Navy Lt, D:.tvid rt. Capt. Winston ComI Goldie. Smokey's bl'idc-to- Strunk, er, L. R. Buckman. I 8 I and Civ1Jlan perso'nneJ ot \\/hilt ;and• ~11~;;Jle Rure NeYI Mexico. bl' th• Laa Cruce• Citizen nt t..a.t t:ru,.... Ne>' Mexico. All 11ew1 mallrl [OJ publlratton shouta be aent LO tll• t'l.•Ult UllUrm&tlOI Offk.r. Whit• Sands ~h..ll• R..nge. NP" M•xtr<>. r~1ephone 4200 or 5~ Thia nel'.'ID&Per rec·e1,·e11 Armed Fore-ea Presa s~r,•kt mater1a1 Armel. 01 (Nineteenth of a series of . . questions and answers lrom ! A Primer on Communism by J 1 ~faj . be, left last Friday Sept 7, r.,rcea Press Service ma1er11J "'h!~h 11 n01 rooyrtghled or 1yndll'&ll!<l ma) George \V. Cronyn. edited b.v Samuel S. Mattill, Capt. flo· be reprinted or rep;odured "lthout rurther oernils•lnn. orovld•d .,,.,,,,~. Howard Oiscth. Reprinted to join her fiancc at his bert L. Peterson. Mar\' 1n crtdlt la 111ven. Thi• P&D•r 1• not &11 omcta1 « aemH>tnMa1 Department or L>efen.tt oub•• b:-' A FPS with the pennisl;omc in the National Zoo, Jones, ~ynn T. :atlerum, •ation. · All plcturea are 11, \Vhtt• Sando MlaeU• Hang• ohotograpbrra 11111... swn oJ' tlie pu bl.I ~ licr ) . Washington, D. C. Cabe Bnllante, MaJ. Lee H. etilenrlu 1tated Q . ·1011 - A le · tilel·e gen- \ lldnrtlalng COJIJ ... lid De ant lei Laa Cruc111 CtUHD, , .o. •ox 171. ••• uest In making this announce- I Shcri:ian and Lt. George B. L Chutrll Street, Laa CrueH. N1w M1X1eo. Pllone JA 5·5575 3uaacnpttoaa rral or otl1cr elections in Grenier ett Poat S4.00 aer rear; SI .so tor three month.a. D!Jtrtbotlo11 on tile ' " ' tree. 1 mcnt, Southwestern Region- I United Fund 1rca·rnrcr hc1c Communist countries? al Forester Fred H. Kennedy is Charles Jordnn St:ifr As2 -WIND & SAND-Friday, Sept. 14, 1962 Answer - Local, regional said that Goldie was schcd- sistams arc SFC D. H. Portand general elections occur uled to depart by plane from er, Mrs. Merry Sl·lrnctz and frequently in Communist Santa Fe Municipal Ail'port Mr~. Joy Torpcnnin.:. t:Ountrics, where •;oting is at 9:00 o'clock on Friday praelieall.v compulsory. Unm 1Jrning. On hand to wish der the single-slate elcclornl 1 her bon voyage was Governor system, official election reEdwin L. Mehem; State Lancl turn~ always show a "vie-, 1 tory" for the (Communist) 1 Commissioner E. S . "John1 government party by a ny" Walker: New Mexico De(Continued from Page ll ''It must be of the spirit ii we are to save the margin of 97 pc.r cent or p<:rtment of Game and Fish flesh,'' said General of the Army Douglas MacArthur. 1' mol'c. Directot· l''rcd L. Thompson; science in chemistry. He hJs There couldn "t be better words to sum up the fortiIn a 1i elections. whether· Regional .J.<'orester Kennedy; al~o completed the Chen1ieal tude of two Americans after almost a year and a half !or trade-union ofiichils or a Arthur Pck and Bill Carr, Corps Officer Ad v a n c e d of brutal imprisonmentby the Pathet Lao Commun- general election the ComrnuGhost Ranch Museum, Abi- Course during his mililiiry service. ists. nisls strive to obta:n apquiu, New Mexico; Mayor His assignment before d• Both Maj. Lawrence R. Bailey and Sgt. Orville Ip a 1· en t ''unanimity." This WSMR HONORS EMPLOYES-In ceremonies at White Sands Missile Range this week, 74 civilian employes were Pat Hollis of Santa Fe. New at White Sands was with R. Ballenger were subjected to a variety of harrass-1 rliminalcs an.v wgc;e lion of honored for having completed an aggregate of 1,500 years in Government service. Among those from Las Cruces tlexico; Department of DeArmy Chemical Center. me1:ts and humiliations. The major was confined in d1s~cnt .or op.position. . receiving 20-year Service Pins and certificates were, from left, Nathan 0. Nix. John K. Mudge, Willie E. Wilson, Welvelopment Director Jack LaHe is married to the forma pitch black room for a year. The sergeant was parElections m Commun J st ton w. Watson. Dorothy o. Burke. Earl C. Morrison. Phillips L . Shannon. Benjamin Twyeffort. Charles Winchell and cy; and many other prominer Ida Louise Fletcher and aded through villages on a leash like an animal. Of states arc designed to give Bon Burt. (U.S. Army phot by Louis Rinhardt, Civ.) ent New Mexil:o citiiens. they have two children Recourse there was a motive behind th~ sad~m. The the imp1cs~on of populru· ~--~-~-~~--~--~~~-~~~~~~~-~~~~~~-------~~~~~~~-~~Enroute to Washington, becca 5 and Joel 3. H c ;~ Reds were determined to break the spirit of these support for all the govern- H· . . . Goldie made personal ap- the son of Mr. and Mrs. Americans and g~t them to conde:nn _U.S. support of men rs. policies. ~nd . to gil·e 1 lS Songs Raise Millions 1 pearances at Oklahoma City, David A. Entelcs of 333 West the Southeast As1a Treaty Orgamzat10n. the c1t1zcns the 1llus1on u.iat j Indianapolis, and Pittsburg 20th St., New York City. But it didn't work. The two brave men held out. they are taking an active where special programs were For them the Code of Conduct was something mean-j ?art in government, although I arranged by the State Foringful, deserving of more than lip service. When the m fact they have no con- I esters of those slates. Arrival chips were down, it gave them strength. As President ' trol over it. at National Airport in WashKennedy said in presenting Maj. Bailey the Bronze Irving Berlin, who, in his famous WWI song,' White Sands Missile Range'5 Fire Department wi.11 ington was scheduled for 1:00 hold a special Fire Prevention Week demonstration Star Medal at Walter Reed Army Hospital (the serthreatened to murder the bugler, to amputate his re- 1 P.M., Sept. 8. 1 gcant received his at the Ft. Bragg, N. C. hospital), I 'C eall S veille, and to spend the rest of his days in bed, is back from October 7 .through .the 13. The demonstration, After brief wekoming cerhis cold war ordeal was in many ways "a more exact• to work after 12 years of semi-retirement. In October, only a part of the Fire Prevention Week program will emonies at National Airport include a display and use of the latest missile fire ing test of a man's courage than the battlefield." he will be back on Brod way with his latest show, by District of Columbia offifighting equipment, burning a discarded building and There are others like the major and the sergeant "Mr. President." His last cials, a police motorcycle eswho, under savage Red mistreatments, do honor to (Continued from Page 1) show "Call M M d ,, I earned $339,100.10 !or both, an actual rescue operation. White Sands has maintaincort accompanied Goldie to the. tradition of the Am~rican fighting man. Each of I riot ~cw _to McLean. After 1 ' • • ~ a am, l organizations. I ed an outstanding 17 ·year fatality-free fire record. 0 the National Zoo for her first us is sworn to uphold lt and when we read their: study mg Journalism ot Dart- opened 12 yeais abo. B . , "I K' I 1959 PLYMOUTH ' I · u ·J 74 t d er1m s Threw a iss meeting with her husband. story we tell ourselves w~ could do no less without mouth. he entered the da1l.v .uci m, now , at empte . .. . i ' DOOll LoUded. J'actory air, Goldie, like Smokey, is a letting them and their brave breed down. newspaper field, rising from · lo retire, but could find oo- I m the Ocean ls earmarked • • • NOW ONLY gift to the school children of copy boy to police reporter, thing as pleasing as hi~ for the Navy Relief Society. Prevention Of Bb,ndness Society Booklet on the New York World work If he comes up with I It has so far earned $20,105.Every parent who has four-page booklet just pub- America. 1 Telcgram. In addition, he · . . . . His "Angels of Mercy" I tried to search :llis memory lished by the National So. . a patro1llc song it will p1·0. . . . was an advcrt1smg copy .. ' . . I song, dC;Chcated lo the Amer- Ior the date when Tommy c1ety for the Prevenl10n of writer. bably benefit some patnotw Iican Tied Cross, has earned had bis last polio shot will Blindness. 1961 TEMPEST Ile spent l:l years as a organization, as other great I $10,502.17. Three other songs, want to avail himself of a Th is healtli record has . 4 I>OOJI •CLEANERS EQUALITY Of ECONOMIC classes and the creation ol' ~·ports columnist .. powlicc .and j songs have done before. In 1 '.'A1:;ns ~·~Ar the BLove of Amer_: fHreelthoffeRr of d"~our Child's space to record the child's 1 StandC1Td Transmudoa, :SPECIAL .. ........ .... ........•POLISHERS OPPORTUNITY the Communist society. i fraturc rcport_cr .11~ _ as~1rng- kct, he seem~ i_o 11avc made, ~ca, " . ~Y onds Today ca ecor , a handy name, da te of birth, blood •SALES • SERVICE The declaration of Inde- 1 . ,, . 1011. D.C. Fm six }Cats he :i. hobby of g1vrng a1"ay the and I Paid My Income Tax I type _ his immunizations By 1919, Lemn flequently \\ dS • a 1·a d'10 pro · d u c:er 1·01• , m1lhon · · · · · j T o d ay " arc · 11 earma1 · ·ke d I $9 ,34161 Th e "P1esi · "dent' s test~ allergies surgery' I en de nee (l 776) declared that b lus patnotic songs a . . P oasted t 1iat c1asses h ad been · ·b . . d' · l "D 1 f 1 A .· . o1dnance · Birthday · " · "'. ' ' •·all men are created equal." b 1.• d Pitt:; urg 1a io stations "- -,have netted. 01 t le meucan Ball has contnbut- 1physical examinations inCLAIR DILLON a o i~he . But the Commul{A d WCAE " . ' I A . . d I 1· d $1 2 2 ~6 h I . ·1 By this declaration of po1iti· . t p h an . This ls the Army ' was ssoc1at10n an iave to ar e , 1 .1 to t e nfanti e eluding eye and dental exnis arty as never ad. d · . 1 j · ' · I .. $ · " · · · · · · 326 W. MOUNTAIN cal faith, the founders of our 'tt d th t 1 S .· . McLean ctn 10.710.74. lhs Fiee- Pa.J.alys1s Fund. All of thr ammatwns. rt will prove an 1958 CADILLAC m1 e a t 1c ov1ct Union 1 • ·ch 1 s ,,. \H•l·t · the WWII soldier show wnt-, ea111ed d T · ,, · f · · I • b PH. 4·7300 SEDAN DEVlt.LE Republic meant that all men 11 .. d • .• . 1. ,;:nown anis 1 wi e. r :1111 :i, ten and p1·oduccd by Berlin. om mu, written or the copynghts 1iave ecn given invaluable aid in registering Loczded and priced wiry don to . B O\\'en Rd ., El f l Am encan . II en. t o t h e respective . . LAS CRUCES, N. M. arc equal under the Jaw and ' ias passe Hom ~oc1a ism to llvq at so-7 iJ ' The entire proceeds went to b cne f'•t 1 o tie beneI'ic1ara child for a new school or only ............................· ' comrnumsm. . as asserted in the Fourteenth I T d tl . d . . Paso. the Army Emergency Rclic.f, tagc Foundation, has earned .1cs. when changing physicians. o ay iis 1eger ema1n 1s . . Amendment (1868), posses I s t'll and ll tops the list of the i th e l ame excuse o f ti1e the "equal protection of th e dictatorship for failure to J · Comedy Presented nine patroitic contributions laws." fulfill the Marxian promise By Catholic youth I lll<i.dc by the composer, with I . . They did not mean that all $9,535, 625 turned over to the j 1958 FORD of cqua1ity of mcomes. Even . A delightful 0 n e - act men should possess equal · d . Lund by June 1955. ' 1>0011 V·t worse t 1ian this, urmg the 1 comedy, "Antic Spring," "God Bless America" beWith onrdrl·n. er :becrutf --amounts of property or re- present period of "tr:msit!on will be featured at Countccive equal wages or profits. fi·om soci"aliom to comn1 usides almost becoming second " down Service Club at .2000 I nuther, all men should have to ou1· nationnl anthem, connism," the Communist Party hours next Sunday night. 1 equal opportunities, under bas repudiated the principle The new and unusual tributes hundreds of thouthe: law, by their industry of equality · of w~ es. show is sponsored by the sands of dollars to a special and thrift. to improve their members of the Catholic Lund for the Boy and Girl 1957 OLDS 1 CONVJCJITllLE economic or social status. This series is taken from Youth Organiza'ion. Scout of America. Up to A white llecruty, Clea '"''" 'J'.he founders l~ad no in ten- Ideas In Conflict, Liberty I Dec. 31, 1961, the song had Special ..............................PLUS ti on of e~al1tauan regunen- 1 and Communism (DOD Pam X RECAP ABLE tation as to _property. _ \ 3-11 ), published by the DiTUBELESS TIRE! PLUS TAX Many critics of the capital- rec:lorate Cor Armed Forces PLUS TAX ist system condemn the ine- Information and Education, quality of income and so- Department of Defense. OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY 1958 OLDS called swollen fortunes. ExSUPER t Door tt. .lltr condltl..... tremely heavy taxation. Good luck comes oftener to :SllTO mcrny dollcna howev.er, has .g~eatly lessened the people who use common the~e rnequahhes. sense In most democracies, in- I r~·.1c.· ig t'1c United States and j 600-16 4ply ............ ll.95 Great E. ain, large fortunes have been sever ely curtailed 1959 FORD PLUS TAX b)• p1·ogres:\ ·e income and 1962 CHRYSLER % TON PICKUP inherit a nee U.t ·es. In the up3 Speed, for >ounllnf, yar' w•k All other sizes priced NEWPORT etc. XOW ONLT ............. ~ per brackets, the income tax in proportion 4 Dr. Stn. Wagon fakes 85 per cent of a man's 3200 Actual Miles income, and the inheritance When YOU hit the "zero countdown" on cash ... tax -almo~t as 1\1uch of an Don't tense up like 01' Sarge here-come in or call inherited fortune. Texas Public Finance. All democratic countrie;; THERE ARE SPECIAL MONEY PLANS FOR ARMED FORCES PERSONNEL 1959 EL CAMINO - You can get almost any amount up to $1200 quickly, on guarantee civic equality unI CYLINDER a sensible plan - with payments you can afford. Standard Trmumlulea. der law to al l citizens. In Jleducod to ··········-COAST·TO·COllST CREDIT CARD - Ask for yours when you get cJecd. U.S. law goes even your loan. It will identify you in times of emergency, transfer, further. guara nteeing thi s leave or liberty, at more than 700 affiliated offices coast-to-coast. CLEANING ACTION c- q u al i t y to all persons SERVICE AT YOUR CONVENIENCE- quickly and privately. If you're 10-24 4 ply............ 39.45 in a hurry, phone first, and we will have every thing ready when Double-angle design of tracwhether citizens or aliens. tion bars adds greater pulling you get here. 'I'his promise, however, does power even in the stickiest 200 SAN FRANCISCO STREET not include e q u a 1 it y in soil. Bars fling mud free with The Mart Buildlni • Liberty 2·1901 10-28 4 ply ........ . 45.19 • I>OOJI every turn of the wheel. waizc_, income or wealth. Automatic, teed clecm. \'011 1111111 ~~ ... to Qpreetate. xow....-·-MOTOR COMPANY Under the free enterprise s~~tem, all citizens may com- Chrysler • Plymouth 11-28 4 ply.. ........ . 51.55 COltl"OltATION pete in business. and also. as Imperial· Valian:t workers or entrepreneurs, JA 4-7766 10-38 4 ply .. ..... .. 57.9I may increase their savings 2223 N. Main SERVICE Licrn:~ed, lt,eguln:ed and 'E'(ami11ed b.'' tht State BanJ.:i113 D~parl!nttat (capital) by frugality and Quality-built throughout of 1958 FORD the finest materials. FARM care. In bu5incss competiFL SDO 12.4-38 ply . ....... .. 65.83 HAND tractor tires stand up 3 J>oor. • real buy at 411llT · tion. all bu~inessmen arc year after year under· the protected by laws requ irin g roughest operating condiA WONDERFUL NEW SURBURBAN STORE tions. Continuous Bar Anchor honest practices. 12.4-38 6 ply .. ..... ....75.62 design provides easy-riding Marxian socialism a I) d TO SERVE YOU • • • surface, reduced highway · communism have gone much wea1. I' TRY OUR DEAL ON 13.6-38 6 ply ........ .. 79.95 further in promises, pledging ANY OF THESE not only civic equality but ' CARS PLUS 150 al!'o economic equality in the 1 13-38 6 ply ...... .. 91.50 OTHERS form of equal wages and I sa larics for all workers. ALSO Tn other \\'ords, Marxian I 15.5-38 6 ply .. ....... . 99.00 A FEW 62'S AT s0ciali~m and communism RE.AL SAVINGS! hr,vc held out the pr9mi~e PLUS TAX tha t all workers, whether AT ••• common laborers or factot-y 1 m~nagers. go\'ernment offiEL PASO. TEXAS cials or Party members, woiil<l. receive tbe same inBuick-Pontiac: I Editorial I i Reds Couldn't Crack Their U. S. Captives Lt. Col. Enteles To Leave WSM/l I I I I I ML Fire Prevention Week is Coming Tireless Irving Berlin: Armed Forces' Friend Clean Sweep J of Journalism vet I NEW CAR TRADE-INS I I Liberty &Communism '===============---======:::-=:...=_ I 121. $1095 Electrolux I I I I $1695 I I ' I . $1895 I $795 I * * * I 670 15 Nylon I ===·==========-.::: s795 750 x 14 Nylon S)Q95 Front Tractor Tires SAVE $l,OOO ------------------------- -· $995 $1095 BETTER Rear Tractor Tires TEXAS PUBLIC FINANCE •• $995 $1095 $795 BETTER 4 $695 l ! I ~ ome. There is a hall-concealed I trick in this sweepin g prom- , lse: the equality would come 1 P~PULAH~EASS!TT CENTER • Shop by Mail or Phone when you can't le•v• home. Write or call Sally the Shopper at KE 2-7711 8'8 N. 7th • JA 4-7707 Laa Cruces, N. M. • Friday, Sept. 14, 1962 -\VIND & SAND-3 ! I BALLOT BOX •AROUND POST • By BARRY M. COX LOOKING FORWARD TO Inasmuch as the 1962 General Elections arc on ly about eight weeks away, we are beginning detailed information by state on ho~ to apply for an absentee ballot. This week's " Ballot Box" gives information for the states beginning with t he letter "A" and continuing through the letter "D." Next week's feature will be a continuation of this information. There are several general items to keep in mind: Remember-this information is only for the 1962 General Elections which take place in November 6. Keep i n m in d- the registrat ion laws for y our Staie when you're thinking about the length of time left before the absentee ballot deadline. In some states registration is automatic when an application for an absentee ballot is received. You must be sure in these cases that your application reaches the proper authority by the date stated in the registration l aws. This dat e may precede the dateline for requesting an absentee ballot. All states-accept the absentee Federal Post Card Application CFPCA). S tandard orm 76, as an application for an absentee ballot. A separate Fo1·m 76 must be filed for each eligible voter. Foll owing is information, by st ate, pertaining to application for absentee ballots by Armed Forces personnel : ALABAMA: Send FPCA to Count y Registrar In Equity. city of residence, as early as 45 day s pl·eceding the election, but not later than the 5th day before election. (Check poll t ax requll'ements) ALAS KA: Send FPCA to District Magistr ate or Deputy Magistrate oI your election district, or Lo the Secretary of State, Box 971, Juneau, Al aska. Application must be postmarked not more than 90 day s nor less than four days before the el ection. ARI ZONA: Apply by FCPA to Count y Recorder, county of residence so that application is received within t he 30 days preceding the elect ion. ARKANS AS : Mail FPCA t o County Clerk, county o.f residence, within 60 day s before the election. CALIFOR NIA. You may apply by FPCA any time up t o the five days preceding t he election by sending your application to t h e City Clerk, city of residence. COLORADO: Send FPCA to the County Clerk, county of residence (Election Commission, iC a resident of Denver) as early as 90 days before t h e election, but not later than noon on Saturday, November, 3. CONNECTICUT: Mail y our FPCA Lo the Clerk o.f your municipality no earlier lhan two months before election. DELAWARE: FPCA may be forwarded to the Department or Elections, county of residence, any time before the election. Rememb er- allow time for the processing of yo:.ir application, the forwarding of the ballot t o you and your return of the ballot by the deadline established by your State for absentee voting. -Army N ews Ser vice Feature Nineteen months have passed by and here I am, still AROUND P OST. Surviving here as long as I have r eally seems to be quite an accom plishment, considering the many, many times I have travelled the desert road t o El P aso in my trusty old Ford .. . It is becoming my strong opinion that many people are unaware that their h eadlights can be dimmed to lowbcam, or that they can adjust the beams of their headlights when they are out-of-lin e. Have you bee;.1 blinded lately by an on-coming vehicle? Many times • in th e past nineteen month I figured that I was lost and sor . :how strayed onto a runway at Biggs Air Force Base, for zooming objects kept flying past me. One day I realized I wasn't lost. One of the zooming objects came to a quick halt. I recognized the remains -it was a car and not an airplane! Speed seems to be the main cause oC accidents. How .fast do you ~drive? Many of our happy motorists also enjoy playli*g games on the way to El Paso, such as "Watch me W r addle the center line" or "Look how close I can come to you at 60 mph." And do you drive after you've; bet;!n drinking? When you do this you are not driving a car, but brandishing a murder weapon . . . The highway is no p lace for games, for cars in poor repair, • or for careless, sleepy, drunk or inefficient drivers. Death has ridden the desert road more than once and more than one person has ruined his car, and sometimes h is life, by being g uilty oI one or some of the above infractions. There is a sign that one can hardly miss while coming out of Holloman AFB onto highway 70. It reads something like this: You are now entering the most dangerous area on earth-the open highway. Drive carefully ... Heed this sign. If you don't you might be approaching your final ETS soon· er than you think! . . . Sp5 Frank D. Watters of the U.S. Army Electronics Resaerch and Deevlopment Activity (ERDA) here has received the Army Commendation Medal for outstanding services as an instructor in photography dur~ ing a tour of duty in Viet Nam. Specialist Watters is a scientific photographer with the Photo Instrumentation Group of ERDA's Pictorial Division. The Medal was presented by Colonel Wiliam G. Skinner, Commantling Officer of the Electronics R&D Activity, at • a troop formation of Headquarters Company. In the new Army reorganization the name ERDA replaces SMSA... Capt. Wiliam T. Coburn and Capt. Aris R. Cole, • rho graduated together from Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning, Georgia, in J anuary '1945, are now both working at Troop Command, as Executive Officer and S-4 Officer respectively. Except for going overesas to Guam on the same ship in 1945 and a brief tour at Fort Meade, Maryland in 1952, the two captains never served together. Now they will be retiring on the same post, working und~ th.~ same command, early next year . • . Segars welco~es all .to attend. . 1st Lieutenant Kazen will soon be leavmg t11e A very mter estmg and worthwhile class, EleArmy ar.i word has it that Lieutenant Barnes, the ' ments of Geography , w~ll begin next Tuesday, 18 NAF Officer, will take his place as commander of September, at the Education Center. Only a few openthe Honor Guard. ings left. .• 1 A A delightful one-act comedy, "Antic Spring," will Thanks to donations- especially from the WomW'e featured at Countdown Service Club at 2000 hours, an's Club and NCO Ladies Auxiliary- the WSMR next Sunday night, 16 September. The new and un- Army Hospital is a pleasant place to visit. Attract ive I usual show is sponsored by the members of the Ca- wall accessories, flowers, plants and pictures, bought t tholic Youth Organization •. , Every Sunday morn- with the donations accent the new window curtains ing at 0930 hours a co-educational Sunday School dis- and interior color theme in the waiting rooms, offices cussion will be held at the Countdown. Chaplain and wards. • • • i I Speaks Of Defensive Problems A Monday locker room session with Bulldog coach Ed Boykin showed that the coach wasn't making excuses for the Bulldog loss a t the hands of the Highland Hor nets last week; but, on the other hand, he seemed to feel that the team "knows they can play better ball than hey did last Friday." Boykin, who last w eek in practice emphasized pass defense, said "we expected them to p ass but they didn't have to." When ask ed wher e the weakness w as, the c o a c b stated that it was between the ends. "In our d efense VVH~ I OPEN AIR ART SHOW SCHEDULED I I ! t\\~ \\\\\\ ... ~~ HIS~ k An Open Air Ar t E xhi bit, I first of its k ind in L as Cru- I ces, will be h eld on Satur· INTERNATIONALLY day an d S un d ay, September FAMOUS 15-16, in the forecourt of S t. ORCHESTRA Geneviev e's C h u r c h , 200 North Mai n. FRIDAY, SEPT 28th Why "All· El ectri c"? Beca use FLAMHES!l Power and FLAMELESS Appliances in your All-Electric Kitchen, serve you best. Every6ne strives for better living. FLAMELESS Electric Kitchen App Ii· ances bring you right to your 1oal of 1011d home-making, good cookinf, &ood living ••. faster, m"re efficiently and more economiealry, too. • iwlst&r~. hx.poymc e lectnc eoMpa ny EL PASO ELECTRIC COMPANY US CIU>LI • AlllllllY • IHUS · llATCll · SIEW JI.AIU • WI IKti · YSLHA • ClllLNONI UOWIHOWI EWSO The ex hibit is being sponsoreq by the L as Cruces Ar t s and Craft Associ ation and is open to a ll ar t ists and craftsmen , profession al and noninofessional, i1\ t he L as Cruces area. 1st JAZZ ARTISTS SERIES CONCERT ALAMEDA JR. HIGH Enh·an ce fee is $3 for r eserved sp ace for a gr o up of paintings, or $1. per p icture in the unreser ved section. Any ty pe o! media will b e accepted. TICKETS: Box 909 Las Cruces, N. M. AUDITORIUM Season Member ship $10 (5 concerts) and the MUSIC BOX 206 S. Main CURTIS MATllES The Leader In Television and Sound 13" TV Consolette Lower Than the price of A Portable 95 $ In Curlis Mathes You Gel ••• • THE FINEST IN ENGINEERING! In l\lahogan:r With Qua lified • THE FINEST IN CONSTRUCTION! '.l.' rade l"or Lim ited Tim e A vailable In Waln ut 169.95 • THE FINEST IN DESIGN! Genuin e mahogany, modern finish cabinet w:ith a 4x6" speak- • MADE IN AMERICA. er, front mounted, 23,000 volt picture power, hand-wired, - and ALL this at a LOW, LOW PRICE! power transformed chassis, and "Stay-Set" volume control. Family Entertainmen,t Center l C 131 The And - r e\\TS ,,, CUUIS IUTHEi 13" TV··· AM -FM Radio and Hi-Fi Stereo • Four speed high fidelity and st.erf>Ophonlc rf>C!ord player team from scoring against t h at te am spirit is not b ad 1 u s, we'll win the ball game. and that they will be work- ' We could ·have done it Fri- ing io improve th is week. j day night but our defen se Boykin stated th a t some was too weak." sh akeups may be n ecessar y Boykin a greed that the but that it "is all experiBulldog defensive ends kept mental at th is time." their sectors bottled up pretWhen asked about t be bety well. n eiit of game movies, BoyLook ing fo l' wa rd to this kin assured that m ovies Friday's game with Aust in h elped a lot. especiall y in High in El Paso, Coach Boy- sh owing the players t he cali- 1 kin reflected that Austin was b er o! their pl ay and le tting 1 p icked to be t op do g in their them see thefr o wn faults. 1 leagu e this y ear so he did n ot A lso, th e B ulldogs are on an I ex p ect, in any sense of the i ndividual gr ading system 1 wor d, to have an easy week- th a t enables each player t o I end. A s Boy kin puts it "We keep track of h is p eTformdon't have an easy week- an ce from week to week a nd . end until w e hit an open a ttem pt to i mpr o ve it ' date." wherever possible. Austin High , according to Boykin, can be ex pected to tbt Mesi txplosivt force l1 Jm , run a Wing-T with a defense very sim ilar to that of the Bulldogs. The Bulldog mentor says I I Ic 1&1 CURTIS MATHES In Mahogany Bulldog Coach Explains Lqss we expect the linebackers to do the bulk o! the tackling. Movies show that this didn't come through ·for u s Fr iday night." Boykin was asked i! his linebackers did any cr ash ing and the coach said th a t "we are using an Oklahoma type 5-4 defense with t h e linebakers keepin g th e i r ground and going afler that ball carrier ." "Our best player s on d efense Friday night inclu ded halfback. Pat Barela who cut down their big fullb ack (Bill O'Neill) several t imes. B arela weigh s 135 pounds soak ing wet. Joe Sellers started a little slow but turned in a very good second half. Fullback J ames F in ger also pl ayed a good game." Boykin said. The only footba)J philoso. phy that the coach imparted was "if w e k eep the other OPPORTUNITY DAYS at • A.lumini:r;ed 28" picture tnbe - overall di•g-011al measure • Hand wired cha!lsls power transformer, laomont&l • !?S,000 volts of picture power, two 1tage Htih Fidelity Video Am plif ier with 21'' Operating • Stay-Set loudness control "\\'Ith uparate bus and treble control Tr ade-In • Dl&mond stylus equipped for multiplexink Ir:. Walnut .................. 329.95 • High F:ldellty AM a nd full Fidelity FM radio with Trade-In i'l'JIPPJJA lhe Leader In Hom e Appliances The Fabulous ''400" Electric Range "fahvlo;:;s"" d..criDes- tfiis -- •·-~ ~ei,.,. tante", coniplete with a ll t he dromatic styling of the fomovs "400" Toppan faniily-the inff i•itated range on the 111orket. This feofut!e.fult "Debutal'lte,. installs on the wall or Oft a t4"art •chi11g bas• cabinet with lazy 9'1$011 storoge Clf'ea. Automatic electric clock, cook chart, afl-porc~oi" cwen interior with solid oven door, chrome broiler insert, hide-away cooking top, hinge·ty1>9 top u"its with seven separate heat positions. See this falwlous "Debu• tonte" soon I - -- $ 95 Complei• WUh Stand Easiest Terms Anywhere THREE STORES TO SERVE YOU No Down Paym•nt On Approved Credit FURNITURE $10 Monthly Payments 138 S· Main Use Our Budget Plan 30-60-90-120 Days Ro Carrying Charges BONANZA 125 S. Main Right on the Corner - APPLIANCES lU S. Main Right on the Price Free Parking Back of Furniiure Store • ' 4-WIND & SAND- Friday, Sept. 14, 1962 SIBERIAN IBEXES ARRIVE Four Siberian ibexes (wild goats) have an-ived at the Albuquerque zoo as the first step toward introduction of a new non-native game species in New Mexico. The animals were bought by the Department of Game and Fish for the Rio Grande Zoo in Albuquerque. The seller, a dealer in Hamburg, Germany. had them there in captivity. They were shipped by freighter early in August and spent a month in quarantine in Clifton, New Jersey. On September 7 they were flown to Denver, where Leo Martinez and Joe Olonia of the Department picked them up and transported ihem by truck to Albuquerque. The shipment originally comprised six of the beautiful, shy animals. One died of tetanus on the ship before reaching the Un i t e d States. Another was accidentally killed while in quarantine in New Jersey. Both w:n be replaced by the seller. The remaining four were released from their crates Into the zoo pens on Sunday morning, in excellent condition, according to the zoo director, Dr. Ivo Poglayen. There they will be available to public viewing, and will be a permanent adjunct to the Rio Grande Zoo. Their offspring will be turned over to the Department of G ame and Fish for release or for experimental purposes. There are a male and a female about two years old, and two juvenile females. The horns of the young male are already about 30 inC'hes long, Dr. Poglayen says. NEW FISHING WATERS IN GILA FOREST Twenty-seven stock-watering tanks on the Gila National Forest were planted with fish last month, in a cooperative project by the Department of Game and Fish, the Forest Service and the Fish and Wildlife Service. Danny Regan, the Department's area fisheries biologist, made a survey of the tanks and recommended whiC'h were suitable for tr out and which would support warm-water fish. The Hot Springs Station of the Fish and Wildlife Service plant ed 1,820 largemouth bass fingerlings and 16,200 bluegills in the 27 tanks which total 17112 ac::-es. Tthe tanks that are suitable for trout will be planted this month with fingerlings from the G ame Department's Glenwood hatchery. All these waters, being on National Forest land, are open to public fishing. However, anglers are cautioned to be mindful of fire hazard, and to pick up their litter and not interfer e with Jivestock use of the water s YOUNGSTERS INVOLVED IN VIOLATION Twenty doves, three guns end one license led to arrest of a man and two boys last week. Information Officer MEN'S INTRAMURAL LEAGUE STANDJNGS Bowlers Are Deadl.ocked in League Play WON Det 2 "A", 52nd ASA, and ERDA No. 1 found them~elves in a three-way tie for first place after the first John Shaul of the Game De- night of bowling in the Mer..; J partmen• checked the Las Intramural League. ' Cruces man with 8 doves Stuemphly's league hi g h over the limit, and observed series of 573 paced Det 2 "A" that each of the young com- to a 3-1 victory over Det 1, panions carried a gun. whose high man was Scarfe Judge Schifferle fined the with 559. Scarfe also rolled offender $25 plus $5 court the league high game of 234. cost, and suggested that li- 52nd ASA won 3-1 over TPC censes be bought for the and ERDA No. 1 took the boys. same amount from Navy. The Department deplores High men were Beitz with ~ituations of this kind, espe- 519 for ASA, Gray-445, for cially in view of the pres- TPC, Crockett-563 for ERDA ence of youngsters in a vio- No. 1, and Sedillo-504 for lation. Good sportsmanship Navy. I can so easily be inculcated All the other teams in the in a youngster taken afield. league split, 2-2. High men Conversely, the impulse to were Roeder-505 for ERDA cheat can also be easily com- No. 2, Whennen - 456 - RPA, municated. Olienyk-527-DeL 4, ConverseDEPARTMENT HAS BIG 499 for the Medics, SamsSHOW AT FAIR 531-23rd Ord, and TrumpVisitors to the State Fair 433 for Det 2 "B". at Albuquerque this year can satisfy the urge to sit by a beaver pond and watch the Flag F ooiball Opening trout swlm by. The Department of Game and Fish has Shows Six Teams in built the beaver pond, fur- Round-Robin Action nished with beaver and Detachment 2 defeated Detrout. tachment 1, 14-12 in the The pond, complete with opening game las t Tuesday dam, aspen, pines and a of WSMR's flag football running stream, is almost season. lifesize. A special walkway O ther scores of games permits visitors to walk around the dam and watch played here are: 52nd ASA 8 the trophy-size trout. This Navy 6 is a semi-permanent exhibit, Detachment 2 16 the most ambitious ever Detachment 4 12 presented at the State Fair 4 18 Detachment by the Game Department. ERDA 8 It is housed in the recently 3'! ERDA completed Hobby and Out52nd ASA 8 door Life building. The D epru:tment also has Six teams have entered an information desk and a this year's action-packed display of big-game trophies flag football. Two rounds of New Mexico. Literature will be played this season available for distribution in- giving all teams a chance cludes a brochUTe on the with all games beginning at beaver, and copies of "New 1700 hours. Mexico Wildlife," the De- ;:::::===========, partment's bimonthly magazine. Fair dates are September 13 through 23. I Spo1·ts SPECIALS Standard Transmission, Heater, Afr conditioned 1959 CHRYSLER Register for the title of Queen of Sunland to reign over Sunland Park's 1962-63 races. A fabulous opportunity for fun and fame. A new outfit free every month of the racing season. Must be 18 or over, aUractive, poised, and well-groomed. Must be available every Friday for Queen of the Turf ~eremonies. Register al Sunland Park Publicity office. Sept. 17-22. • WSMR Women's League Standings PINT-SIZED PLAYERS-Captain Carter L. Bennett, Naval Ordnance Missile Test Facility commander, auotgraphs bats for members of the Talos baseball team who played in the Peanut League All-Star game at White Sands last month. Receiving the bats were (left :to right) Teddy Long. Ricky Brotski and Duane Glas· gow Jr, (U.S. Navy Photo) · · ·. ,I Moon-Bound Men May Return As Fabled Weaklings Remember the 97-pound weakling who built himself into the Mr. Muscles who • could then kick sand in the other guy's eyes? · Well our muscular moon pioneers are in danger of going exactly the opposite route - returning miserable weaklings. The danger arises from extended periods away from the earth's force of gravity. On the moon, a lunar colonist will feel a gravitational pull only a sixth as strong as on earth so he will weigh only a sixth of his earth weight. The dangers of this lighthearted, lightweight 1 u n a r living are many, according , to Dr. B. Dwight Culver, NETTED BEATUY-Sonya head of the Life Sciences Cordeau would be a prize Department of Aerojet-Gencatch in any fisherman's eral Corporation. net. The former star of her Man's senses, his bones, own television show in muscles, internal organs and Holland, she is now play- all else depend on earthing an impor~ant support• lype gravity for normal, proing role in the Hammer per function. When fiveFi Im Produdion, "The sixths of t hat gravity is removed, all those functions Phantom of the Opera.'' • Flag Football Intramural League Standings WON DET 2 DET 4 DET A ERDA NAVY DET 1 2 1 1 1 0 0 LOST TIED 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 may be drastically affected. "Wizard of Clubs" Exercises, it is believed, might be devised to give the Appears At WSMR body of the moon man the Paul Hahn, "The Wizard of conditioning he'll need to Clubs" will present his golfstand full gravity on his re- ing talent and comedy routurn to earth. tine at WSMR's golf course And among the exercises on Sunday, September 30 at under evaluation are those 1500 hours. known currently as "I.C." A former golfing pro be(Isometric Contraction), in fore WWII, Hahn has since which the person simply toured six continents and 37 strains his muscles against different countries entertainImmovable objects for secing sell-out crowds with his onds at a time, with o u t golfing repetoire. movement. I.C. is being u sed widely And it is very much, coinnow by football and baseball cidenta!ly, like that old 97tcams and outstanding ath-1 pound weakling's secret of letes in almost every sport. muscle success. The Exclusive STA·R.ITE®COLLAR l?Y <txcello (A Most Ingenious W~y To Look Neat All D.a¥) • • Knot your tie as usual Radio, 1. What college football team did Baltimore Colt fullback Alan (The Horse) Ameche play for? 2. Who was the first 20 game winner in the American League this year? 3. Was Babe Ruth a left or right-handed pitcher? 4. Name the team that won professional football's eastern crown six years in a row. 5. If a professional boxer weighs 133 pounds, what is his fistic classification? 6. Who was the youngest man ever to coach a big league baseball team? 7. What college football team does Wayne Woodrow Hayes coach? (Answers io Quiz) 1. Ohio State. 2. Ralph Terry, New York Yankees. 3. L eft-handed. 4. Cleveland Browns. 5. Lightweight 6. Lou Boudreau who took over the Cleveland Indians at 24. 7. Ohb State. GIRLSI 3 3 3 4 DOOR '1788 ATTENTION DET 2 "A" 52nd ASA ERDA #1 ERDA #2 RPA 23rd ORD DET 2 "B" DET 4 MEDICS DET 1 TPC NAVY 1961 TEMPEST Quiz I LOST 1 The current dispute between the NCAA and the Amateur Athletic Union over control of amateur sports in the 1 Umtcd S tates has been labeled "devilishly clever and dia1 bolic" by Colonel Donald F. Hull, Exec utive Director of the 2 2 AAU. Colonel Hull, for many years Armed Forces Repre2 2 sentative to the AAU, recently was named to the AAU post 2 2 6. on retirement from the Army. He outlined the AAU-NCAA 2 2 7. dispute in an exclusive AFPRTS interview and went on to 2 2 8. say that "There is nothing that the schemers of the NCAA 2 2 9. say they want that cannot be easily and effectively accom10. 1 3 plished by the AAU through democratic procedure. 11. 1 3 "The provocateurs of this present revolt," continued 12. 1 3 the Colonel, "have been devilishly clever and have audaciously invented abuses that simply do not exist. "They say they (NCAA) cannot get representation. This is absolutely a falsehood. AAU is and always has been WON LOST serving American youth," said the AAU official. 1. TURKETTES 3 1 When asked what the reasons for the revolt were, 2. SMASH HITS 3 1 Colonel Hull said that a "lack ol understanding of inter,3. 4 SPARES 3 1 na tional rules and responsibility of the AA U could be some 4. TWISTERS 3 1 o:f the reasons." "But," he continued, "some o:f the p€rpe5. BOUNCERS 2 2 trators of this diabolic sch eme knew the facts, but they 6. MISSES 2 2 thought the full weight of the NCAA would crush the AAU 7. 8 BALLS 1 3 and tried t o gain support for the revolution without dis8. DUDDS 1 3 closing their knowledge that the International group was 9. ODD BALLS 1 3 clearly behind the AAU. 10. SPRITES 1 3 "Should the new Federation force an athlete t o comIndividual High Game-Culver and Block-169 pete in an unsanctioned meet, which makes them ineligi~ Individual High Series-Ava Block-462 for the Olympics, it will be a crime against our youth." W Team High Game-Turkettes-667 was the Colonel's view that in light of the "NCAA malTeam High Series-Turkettes-1823 practices" of the past, the newly constituted federa tion can never be recognized by the International body. Colonel Hull emphatically stated that "AAU cannot accept for accreditation or membership, athletes who take part in un-sancti.o.nal meets." 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 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Main - Day-long neatness, cleverly concealed 820 x 15 whiie..............................57.60..................................................... 28.80 81088 Chrysler - Plymouth Imperial· Valian:t • JA 4-4661 Las Cruces, N. M. /l.."1-~'l#kllldll. M a N" 8 A .... A R • I. IOl THI MAN WMO CAlU 113 N. MAIN PH. J A 6-6131 LAS CRUCES. N. M. F•Irst Woiiia Co-v . Community Chorus tol Hold Try-outs N e::ct Wednesday at Section .e • A Jnitial try-outs and pracof WSMR; Community Chorus next Wednesday at 1900 hours at the Entertainment Section, on Dyer and Aberdeen. The interdenominational chorus will practice :for t.he forthcoming Christmas program here. Practices will be held every Wednesday. The Missile Rangers, an iall-male chorus under the diirection of Pfc John Puschinsky, presently is being organized. Practices for the Missile Rangers are held each Monday :rnd Tuesday evenings at the Entertainment Section. • ~=-=-=-=--=-=-=-:..:======~ DISCUSSION GROUP ..... Every Sunday at 1000 hours a co-educational Sunday School kids discussion will be held at Countdown Service Club. .S. Army Hopes to Up Votes A winsome miss has scored a "hit" at White Sands Missile Range. She is Sherry Shanks of 1109 Jett Ave., Las Cruces, rthe first woman to graduate from college under the unusual work-study program underway at the national range. S h e r r y has completed work for her bachelor's in mathematics at New Mexico State University. The formal ceremony of receiving her diploma will not be until next winter, but as far as \he government is concerned she is a qualified bona fide mathematician. She begins her career with a good salary and many opportunities for advancement. The Co-operative WorkStudy program with began in 1952 has produced 121 graduates. At the present time, 236 future missile scientists are enrolled in the program with 106 in the school phase and the remainder working in the laboratories at WSMR. Under the program, a student is employed full time as a government employee for six months and goes to school the other six months. Sherry says, "I doubt if I would have gotten through college without the program. I don't see why everyone is so excited .about my being the first woman to graduate as a co-op; I'm glad I was able to do it." In spite of a full curriculum, the yoimg mathematician was able to participate in college activities and was also elected to Phi Mu Tau, honor society for the Colleeg of Arts and Sciences. Sherry came to W h i t e Sands in February 1960 as a sophomore fr o m Hendrix College at Conway, Ark. She was assigned to the Flight Simulation Laboratory of Ordnance Mission in the computer area where she remained all through her work phases. She is still with the branch, but is taking on added responsibilities. As for future study, Sherry plans to take a "vacation" f.or a while and next spring will begin work on a degree in physics which had been her first choice as a career. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Shanks of 422 N. Main, Ben~on, Ark. A goal of at least double the number of Army voters who cast their ballots in the general elections of 1960 has been set for the five-state Fourth Army area in 1962. The effort to get out the Army vote has moved into high gear, with a major campaign io provide eligible military personnel an easy route to the voting booth. At Fourth Army military installations, voting officers • have been designated at each company level, and have been issued pamphlets, in. , auctions, and .regulation~ in . er to explam to soldiers their voting rights and privileges. The local point of the "get <>ut and vote" campaign for military personnel is Armed Forces Voters Day, Sept. 25, when commanders and voting officers will make a concerted effort to encourage all eligible personnel to apply for November election absentee ballots from their 'home states. . .n a recent letter to Fourth W my Headquarters, Department of Defense explained ihat 736,000 servicemen and • women - about 40 percent voted during the 1960 presidential election out of the 1.8 million that were e 1 i g i b 1 e. This year the Armed services hopes to record ballots from twice that many. To make it easier for eligible service members to apply for absentee ballots, a special application post card form has been printed, and issued by the government to all U.S. military installations throughout the world. The Defense Department set Sept. 25 as the deadline for issuing the cards to prospective voters in order to give them 42 days in ad- \ vance of elections to fill in and mail them. It was explained that this early mailing will give state voting officers time to honor all ap- PAYDAY LOANS $5657 rad at Stays Here The Resi?1ve Ofiicers Association of the United States and the Reserve Officers Association Ladies will hold a joint dinner mcefing on Thursday, 20 September 1962 at the Community Cenier. Refreshments will s!art a! 6:30 and dinner will be served at 7:30. All Officers and their ladies are cordially invited. 1 l:lriday, Sept. 14, 1962-WIND & SAND-5 Navy-Marine Officers Wives Club Participates in Fmr, Holds Party As part of the Women's Club County Fair on August 25th, USNOMTF Officers wives sponsored three activities at the Fair. With the able assistance of their husbands, Navy wives in the Sno Cone Booth served tempting treats, while in the popular Ball Throwing Booth youngsters and oldsters alike tried to find the hole in the clown. ~===========' The Jeep Ride, with Navy plans were made for a dinner Girl Seoul Planning Board Meels on Blh The first meeting of the 1962-63 Senior Girl Scouts Planninl?,' Board was held on Saturday, September 8th, at the office of the Rio Grande Girl Scout Council. New officers are Susan Phifer, president, Nancy Jdhnslon, vice president, Eva . Antone, corresponding secretary and Pat Haden, record1ing secretary. The Planning B oar d is composed of two S en i o r Scouts from each of the Sen\; ior Scout troops in the Rio - Grande Scout Council which 1 includes Las C r u c e s and White Sands. Mrs. Joe Falconi is senior advisor. Reports were given of various troop trips during the summer including the Roundup at Button Bay, Vermont, and a trip to the '""-, Seattle World's Fair. / The girls volunteered to 1 .,i distribute posters to the various shopping centers and the downtown business district announcing the TV program on the Girl Scout, Roundup, sponsored by General Foods, which will appear on CBS-TV Monday night, September 24th. KROD-TV will carry the program in the El Paso area at 7 P. M. on that date. · .I STUDENT-Sherry Shanks. first woman io graduate from college under a special work-s!udy program at White Sands Missile Range, falks over a math problem with her boss. Dr. Gunther Hinfze. director of the Flight Simulation Branch of Ordnance Mission, WSMR. Sherry, a math major. attended New Mexico State University six months out of a year and worked in the laboratories at White Sands the remaining six months. She now works full time at the national range as a mathematician. (U.S. Army photo by Robin Broun, Civ.) Pholograper Wins Nalional Conlesl Prize A scientific photographer of the U S . Army Electronics Research and Development Activity here has won a naiional contest. Julius Haris, a photographer at W SMR for nine years, won over thousands of entrants. His prize: A fully ;;utomatic color camera recently developed by a California manufacturer. Julie plans to give the camera to his wife, an artist who knows nothing about photography. She won't have to know anything. The camera even loads and threads set its opening shutter without human attention, and recharges the flash battery by plugging in a wall outlet overnight. Harris won the contest by suggesting uses for the cam- SHE'S NOT PUZZLED-Don't let the puz:.:led look fool you. the tough mathematical problems of missilery :really don't ruffle pretty Sherry Shanks, recent math graduate from New Mexico Staie University. Sherry, the first woman to graduate under an unusual work-study program here, is now employed a! ihe national range as a full-fledged mathematician. (U.S. Ai:-my photo by Robin Broun. Civ.) Jazz rfsl Counl Basie To Play ere The appearance of Count Basie and his orchestra in the opening Jazz Artists Series concert marks a "£int" for L::is C r u c e s. Al the ugh other "name" groups have played in the area. no jazz band of this stature has been brought here until now. An all-jazz concert series itself is unique in Las Cruces, if JULIUS HARRIS not in the nation. Because the series isn't part of a national program, each attraction must be booked individually to provide the best in jazz. The Las Cruces Arts and The Basie concert on SepCrafts Association will meet tember 28 is the first of five at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, Sep- to be presented this season. tember 20 in the ballroom at Town and Country. Business of the meeting will inclu de elect!on of officers and approval of bylaws. Refreshments will be served. Arts, Crafts Meeting Set Local Symphony Votes To Join NMSU Group PENNEY~S FRIDAY, SATURDAY LAST 2 DAYSI • Mutual Building &Loan Assn. UO N. Churcb Laa CrucH, N. M. THERE'S STILL TIME TO TAKE YOUR PICK! BUT-HURRY ••• WE ONLY HAVE Convenient • • • • • Downtown Parking Spaces Penn regula. Gaymo nylons reduced I Now Available 11 to LEFT! . 3 CORVA!RS 700 • 4 Doors I Corvair Manza 2 Dr. Coupo 2 Corvair Manza 4 Doors CHEVY 2's I • 2 Door. 4 Cy! Sedan I • 4 Door. 4 Cy!. Sedan 4 • 4 Door 6 Cyls. Sedans MONTHLY I 60 th ANNIVERSARY the BEST possible HOME LOANS for you - on the BEST possible TERMS! WE'RE CLEARING THE WAY FOR '63! REASONABLE men at the wheel, gave many to be held on Navy Day, a thrill to the excited young- with Mrs. J. F. Newman and sters and kept the drivers Mrs. J . D. Harris as co-chairbusy throughout the Fair. men. An official chairmans' Most of the Navy families gavel was presented to Mrs. enjoyed box suppers and it L. A. Short as she b~gins the season as new Chairmal'l of was genera·11y agreed th a t . .· •r· .. ' a goo d t·ime was h ad h v a 11 ., ur· the Navy-Mo 1 1 n e o, 1ce.s Cl 1 on A ugus.t "~oth a t a· H n1·1 "i\·cs - u ). ----and Farewell cocktail paoty. Navy officers and their wi\'e5 J bid farewell to LT and Mrs. D. E. Ames, LTJG H. G. Herz ing, and ENS J . P. Schneider. We lcomed aboard were LT and Mrs. Kennedy and ENS and Mrs. Allen. The The Las Cruces Symphony Hail and Farewell continued at the Officers Open Mess Society held a special meetwith a Splash Party spon- ing Sunday afternoon in the sored by the wives and host- auditorium of Alameda Junessed by Mrs. C. L. Bennett, ior High School to determine Mrs. J. R. Jackson, and Mrs. the future status of the orF. S . Irby. The Navy fami- ganization. J. D. Weir, presilies swam, grilled hamburg- dent, presided. The ballot r es u l t e d Jn ers, and watched movie reels of last season's Gay 90's choosing the first alternative: Party. Entertainment w as to coordinate the Society's provided by the very talent- functions and purposes with ed family of CWO and Mrs. the F ine Arts Department of New Mexico State University L. B. Ragan. September's business meet- in a University-Civic Syming, hostessed by Mrs. L. phony. Wells, Mrs. G. T. Balzer, and FINEST WEDDING Mrs. R. F. VanCurran was PHOTOGRAPHS held at Mrs. Wells' on SepMade At ••• tember 6th. Mrs. Short conMATHIEU STUDIO ducted the meeting which 648 N. Alameda was devoted mainly to plans Ph. JA 6-8571 for Christmas. Tentative , REGULAR CHEVROLET$ I Bel Air 4 Door Sedan 2 Impala 4 Door Sedans with Air Condition. I Bel Air Stat ion Wagon SALES ARE POPPING FOR LASTMINUTE SHOPPING! F es·s 2 - 4 Door Deluxe Se dans with Air Condition 3 DYNAMIC 888 I with Air Condition, 4 Door Sedans 3 Super 88s, 4 Door Sedans, both Air Conditioned. S CHEVROI.ETS PICK UPS. V-8. S's. 3 Speeds. 4 Speeds, Short or Lanq Bed. . pazrs COUNT ON PENNEY'S GAYMODES RATES! Several Low Mileage-Demos. & Executive Cars! BE ST FOR INFORMATION CALL •• • • LAS CRUCES CITIZEN FINANCE COMP ANY of Las Cruces • 200 South Main Street Phone: 524-2816 114 S. CHURCH ST. PHONES: JA 6-5575 - DEALS ARE sTl LL CHEVROLET MADE AT ••• OLDS JA 6·5576 2301 S. MAIN LAS CRUCES. N. M. JA 6-5595 for a raft of quality features in a variety of styles! TWIN-THREAD STYLES .•. tho' one thread may break, the other thread will stay intact, reducing run-risk! ACTION SHEERS WITH TWO-WAY AFTER WELTS ... that stretch up and down . . . let you bend and stretch comfortably! SERVICE WEIGHTS WITH COOL COTTON FOOT .. . a dainty treat for summer •.• for any gal on-the-go all day! MICRO-MESH KNIT ... almost invisible and delightfully sheer .•• they belie their practicality! DEMI-TOE AND NUDE STYLES FOR EVENING AND SANDAL WEAR ... for perfectionists who insist on fashion rightness! I •• Indian Su111nier in '/\1ew Mexi·co By George Fitzpatrick Editor, New Mexico Magazine You can stal't an argument Mexicans prefer lo make the al lhe drop of an aspen leaf to urs on their own. starting, if yov claim Autumn is the stopping returning when mo~l exciting time of the they please. The Aspcncades year in New Mexico. For may start as early as Scpihere arc skiing e n thusiasts tcmber 38. depending on who prefor winter, and the weathC'r conditions, but usub as e b a I 1 bug~ who live ally arc during the first two through the winter months weeks in October. only !or the opening of the Story of :the Aspens Each Oclober, New Mexico baseb al l season. But for me - I'll take Oc- Magazine, published by the tober. This is the most ex- State of New Mexico, feac iting, dramatic, spectacular tures the story of the aspens. month of the who le year in This year the Magazine will New Mexico. This is In-' describe some of the tours d1<.n Summer month. This is j available to motorists in tm. time when the aspens on various parts of the State. the mounta insides turn to Frank R. Hunter, Albuydlow gold, and the cotton- querque geographer. writing woods in the valleys sparkle under the tile, "Indi an Sumwith magnificence undel' the mer Holiday" for the Oclndian S ummer sun. tobcr n u mber, to be publishGolden Monih , ed September 20, declares Thi~ is the month when that "Few scenes in nature 1trings of red chiles hang are so splendid as mountainfrom porches to dry, and sides ablaze with aspen pumpkins and squashes gold." crowd each other on the flat One of the most popular roofs of old Spanish villages. aspen areas is Aspen Basin, This is the mon th when the above Santa Fe. "Above the b:irvest is over, the golden Basin." Hunter writes, "rises month of transition before the symmetrical and domelhe cold of winter like Aspen Peak, coverf'd Camping and tou ring arc almost entirely b y golden florious experiences in Oc-1 trees. The sky overhead is tobe1· in New Mexico. There's otten sprin kled with t h oua champagne tang in the sands of leaves from these a ir. The sky is bluer than trees - countless tiny bits .at any other time. There's of color aimlessly fluttering just enough chill to require 1high on the m o u n ta in a bit of a blaze in the fire-1 breezes." place . . . just enough to Other Tours Desi;ribed enjoy the little warmth and Other As pen To ur areas the never - to-be-forgotten d escri bed b:v Hun ter are: f ragrance of burnin g p inon Cumbres Pa~s: North from wood. Vhama over the Rugged San October is the month of Juan range into Colorado. "A the Aspencades. Some of m ount:i.in drive of surpass.i n g these are organized motor beauty of hig h mountains caravans to the mountains to and meadows sprinkled with view the aspens. Most New f I o we rs of tumbling and I I (Edito1"s Note: This is another in a series of stories outlining a one-day or weekend tl'ip in New Mexico suggested by the Tourist Division or the Department oI D evelopment.) , \'idecl into two segmcnls - 1 bcfo t·e ci:cli ng the latter and Old Town, on the west. ancl starting back a g a i n. 'fh c the new town of Las Vegas. main street is lined on both on tho cast. Is:dc~ by old buildrngs ol a In the new Las Vcg·1s, I bygone era. and houses made evidence of modern, evolu- 1of adobe. stone and \\"cod • tionary changes arc cvery- 1that ila\·c w i t h s loo d the where. The city has wide ravages oJ time. SANTA FE. N. M. Las street;, a modern d owntown Located north of tbe city. Vegas, located 60 mile: cast se.clion.. and suburban dis- 1about eight m iles, arc Storr:l'' of Santa Fe on U.S. 8.>. has tr1c ts with ho u s es of the and MacAllisler Lakes. Storone of the most colorful latest design and architec- rie Lake is tne largest o f pasts of any city in New ture. Highland University the two. Beaches and boat Mexico. sprawls on grassy lawns. near docks have been built 11t F irst, it was from a roof- the center of town, and stu- Storrie Lake for those w i:o top near the plaza in what dents and teachers fill the love summer recreational acis now "Ol d Town" that Gen- town during school terms. tidties. A modern restauera l Stephen Watts Kearney Old Town, however. is rant overlooks the lake from read his proclamation in 1846 much di! fer e n t. A main State Road 3. and the De- technically tak;ng pOSYCS- street leads to it from new partment of Game and Fi2h • sion or Las Vegas. then a Las Vegas. coursing down a has stocked the lake wilh WORLD'S HEAVIEST SCUFFLER: Haystack Muldoon, who has put in appearances on the wrestling card 11.t the provin ce of Mexico. for the sloping hill into the heart, legal-size trout for the seaL as Cruces Colliseum, is undisputed as world's heaviest wrestler. The man weighs 475 pounds. " Haystack" is 11. United States. He was later or the plaza, of Old Town, sonal fishing enthusiasts. friend of children. He has visited some 200 children's ho5pitals and talked to approximately 10,000 children since h e to rout Mexican troops in started wrestling. Before beginning his career of wrestling eight years ago. he mentioned thai he used io wresile Apache Canyon and march sharks. including Mako, Hammerhead, and blue sharks. He also was a shark-walker. A shark walker walks a suffo- triumphantly into Santa Fe. cated shark though water afier he has been captured and forces water through his gill to revive him. He is pictured Next, during the unsettled, ro ugh and rowdy era or the here with children of two families of tourists who were passing through Las Cruces and happened io meet him. The Santa Fe Trail. and the Linchildren are those of the Paul Welsh family and the A. W. Hannahan family of California. (Citizen Photo) coln County War, Las Vegas 1 was known as the "City o! r ush ing st reams, o f forests " A few m iles northest of I 37 passes t h rough pine forSeven Banks," and the "end The fou rth annual All- I be A 1 be l' l vary from splashed with aspen gold." Taos. St at e Ro ad 230 reache:s I ests on the shoulde rs of the o' trail" for cattle drives. Breed Dog Show. is schcd-1 Sterling, Ill., and Derrick J emez Rim: ''Th e fa ll col- ~P through Hondo Cany on Sierra Blanca between RuiF 0 RT LEAVENWORTH, Centrally located in U1c 1 j ' 30 ors of the J emez country are m to the heart of lhe Sangre . . j KAN. (AHTNC) Army cattle country of north-cen- u ed !or September at the Rayne from Carmel, Calif. best seen in the moun t ain de Cristos. The road win ds doso and Alto, wh ile side National Guard Capt. Donald tral New Mexico, Las Vegas, National Guard Armory in Some 80 breeds of doss r im that encir cles the Valle nin e miles between steep' roads lead to Monjca u Lo ok- R. Perkins, 35, son of Mr. in 1880, offered the main rail Las Cruces. The show will will be shown from all ove" Grande. and in t'he Va lle it- rock wal ls along a tu mbling : out, Sklinc Campground and and Mrs. Alfred M. Perkins, junction for cattle being be sponsored by the Mesilla the west and mid-west b,v self. • State R oad 4 is a lei- creek, then arrives at the' Eagle Creek offer wide views 322 L inda Vista, Las Cruces, shipped to Abilene. Kansas, Valley Kennel Club and the owners and professional surely windin g rou te extend- location or Taos Ski Val ley, of aspens and avergrecn for- is attending the 26th asso- and Chicago. It remained a show is open to the public. handlers. More than 400 ing throu gh t he rim west Colorful aspen groves sur- ests. Dominating the area is ciate course at The Com- prosperous town until the Every one is invited t o at- dogs are expected to be from Los Alamos and Ban- round t he valley and climb 12,003-foot Sie rra B 1 an ca mand an d General Staff Col- drought years of 1930-1945, tend, and also to enter their entered. delier National Monument. the steep foundations of New P eak. w h ich r ises consiclcr-, lege, Forth Leavenworth, when it closed all but two pure-bred dogs. Local entries include such its banks and became a Entry information may be breeds as the German ShepW ith in the Va lle it closely Mexico's hi ghest moun tain .'' ably higher than an y other Kan. fo llows the edge of the forest Ru id oso: "Autumn colors mo untain so far so uth in the The associate course i~ de - small. peaceful community obtained from Mrs. Will T. herds. Collies, Dalmatians, w here asp en s, pines and fir s in southern New Mexico arc continental United States." signed to prepare select of· of 5,000 people. Pugh 6-2213, or Major Don- At g ha n Hounds, Poodles. r each down i nto othe grassy especially beautiiul and casiA writer [or New Mexico ficers from all components Today, Las Vegas. thanks aid Sower, 210 Possford Miniature Pinschers, Pekingbowl of the an cient volcanic ly accessible near Ruidoso Magazine once described Oc- of the Anny for duty as com- to Highlands University, is . Ave .. at White Sands Missile ese, Lhasa Apsos, Dachscaldera." I and Cloudcrort (or staring Lober as "the Technicolor manders and general start a community of over 14,000 Range, 2-1297. hunds, Chihuahuas, KeesH on do - Twinir.g Canyon, from Capitan). State Road days of Fall." officers. people. and the town is di- 1 Judges for the show will hondens and Bissenjis. I • ANNUALDOGSHO\ IS SET SEPT. 30 In The Service of I -------- ~ - --- I --- - - - - . • Factory Trained Mechanics At Gillett Chevrolet Co. At Anthony Civil Service Briefs Supervisory Librarian (cataloging) GS-9 at $6435.p l a The United Stale~ Army Air Defense Center at Fort Bliss is accepting ap-?lication~. from aualiflecl applicants, for the position of Supervisol'y L ibrarian (Cataloging), GS-9 at a salary of • e wee SUF ERIOR AUTO REPAIR SERVICE OUll WOllK GUAi:J\l"<TI:I:DI MOORE AUTOMC..'TIVE SERV. 1 81~ W. Plcacho fA 6-51 Cl 56435. per year. Tl1e position is at Fort Bli~s. Information and applii.:ation forms may be obtained from Mrs. L . B. Hammerick at the Cicilian Personnel Office, Building No. 8, Fort Bliss. Texas, or f 0·om the Board o[ U. S. Civil Service Examinel'S. B l u m e n t h al Building. El Paso, Texas. I This recruitment is under cpen Announcement No. 81 32-11(60). BUSCSE, San Antonio, Texas. Gillett Chevrolet includes, hour w1·ecker service and in El Paso, the number is KE besides the new car show- will repair any make of car 13-5511. room and the used car lot, a in Lhe body and paint departHours of operation of the garage and body shop. ments. The body department garage and body shop ue 7:30 to 5:30 Monday through Friday, and 7:30 to 1:00 on Saturdays. Exceptions to these hours are made for special jobs. The sales department, under the managership of CurtAUV t;l!t'ISEllu:NTS UNDER llUSIN.l!:SS Rl!.VlE\\' DU lfOT CONSTITUTE AN ENDURSEMF:N'I llY THE DEPART· MT.NT 01" l'HE AR."1Y OF rHE PRO· DUCTS OR S!:l<VICU ADVERTISED • Free Pick-Up And Dehnryl is Heard, is open every d ay except Sunday from 7 :30 to 6 :00 • Also in the sales depart· ment are Joe Madrid, A. A Lightfoot and 0. H. Chles. Service manager is Stanley Sharp. Owner Sam Gillett is proud ot his garage and body shop, and he is proud of t he product he has to sell: Chevrolet is America's favorite car. One out of every four new cars sold in the U. S. m 1962 have been Chevrolets, Mr. Gillett announced. I • USE OUJI l 'ODC ET l'rNANC£ fL AJI Oa 11epa1rs & Acc111orlt1 Ask 1111 Drln o 11111 Carl ' "' en f OU rid.I I RALPH'S GARAGE CHRISTIAN REALTY Has A NEW LOCATION 1103 LOHMAN Phone 524-2834 DID YOU BUSCH'S BAKERY U l3 N. MAIN The house of Dutch O•en Bread. • WEDDING CAKES SPECIAL BREADS FINE PASTEIUES • PIES • • 0. K. USED CARS YOU WILL A L W AYS FIND GOOD ONES AT .•• GILLETT Chevrolet Co. An th ony. N. M_x.• Texas l'.D 3-3161 ICE 3·5511 1• I AUTO INSURANCE KHOW? LARGEST STOCK WESTE RN WEAR IN T H E SOUTHWEST YOU C'"AN SUY A CHARCOAL BROILED STEAK F OR ONLY • • • STAND ARD RATES I All Grades - All Ages - P r ivates to Generals 8 New Mexico Licensed Standard Companies! GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES FINANCF CO. WA 6-2121 Phone JA s. 5575 Ph. JA 4- 1891 Las Cruces and See Our New Office - and our New Listings. ORGAN MT. LODGE 116 N. MAIN LA$ CRUCES. N. M. _ ORGAN N . M. 1 ,~bj]]]~· J Ama dor You Will Enjoy A COCKTAIL From The Organ Lodge Bar C~me WHERE? AT F ORT WORTH. TEXAS Your local representative: H~.RRY MILLER 1317 W. Picacho 2.25 Away from Downtown Traffic Snarls - Plenty of Free Parking. 121 E. Dor othy Christian • 6-5179 Betty SioH •• 6-2246 Mike Guerra • 4-4633 '(· :~ ORGAN MT.LODGE ORGAN, N M. Phone JA 6-5576 las Cruces Citizen And The Wind And Sand ASSURES YOU OF A COMBIRED CIRCULATIOH OF OVER • • • • • 11,000 ·- •• CL(~~~i~IE~---~~~.:~.... 'flai8\um !llJtiJllu111 (ellln:ge1 $1 .00 I-;=.======= ===::- WE PAY CASH FOR CLEAN USED . MOBILE: HOMES JENSEN CONSTRUCTION CO. ..... ........•...... $ 1.DD : Udo cont<1111a 10 "ord• o r more. Olll lim e onl• ··-- I Dc per wo rd l'wo ttmea .. ·····-······ ec per ..ord rm.. tlm•• or more 8c per word Clcn1iHeda charge d and bille d to tndl· "lducrl• who ne not reqular dis· play advertising a ccounts, 10% crdditlonal. · Dispta1 1"dnrtlslng on Clasllled Pcrqe crt Re gular Prevailing Space Ratet. Ab Clas11flod1 mu.t b• s cheduled for er definite period. lay claims for addltlonarl tnu rtton1 or for C'Jed.lt due to our enor, m ust bt made before dat e of next publi· cation. Civil Service Legislation Moving Ahead I . (Continued from Page 1) I I : j Star Rt. A. Box 42!1 ANTHONY, N. M . Te!. WA 2·2715 • ExcarYatlng and Gr ad ing · • Wr~cklng & l>omo!ltlo11 I 1 -============. ,- ROME JIEMODELlMG Friday, Sept. 14, 1962 -WIND & SAND-7 mg before Senate Post Office and Civil tScrvice Committee. (Note: This would also b e a feature of both the Morrison Pay bill and the Administration's Federal Salary Reform Act.) Army Prepares Soldier To Counter Insurgency CACTUS MOTOR CO. 1655 N. Main JA 6-8131 Lu Crucez, N. M. -=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I' * • • I Jl'or .Accurate, :Durable and Fmt Copy Sen1ce hy PHOTOSTAT equipment cmd materials, bring your recorcls to Laa C.RUCES PHOTOCOPY SERVICE, 123 Wei t Griggs An. Some Things I We Print - - I I (C ontinu ed from Page 1) mote country in hasty, l'Ough DUES WITHHOLDING. T. with a hungTy child. It may or temporary construction of R. 11830 and S. 3555 would be an individual who uses ,. rnad and foot bridges, in ·t u · Jl'01'1 SALE 100 w. ot D•P;i 5. 2451 his farm as a guerrilla hide- clearing and laying or minepcrm1 . 1e withholding of lOO • 1:so - Lo- s·- o<>\'~' •to t t · · employees' union dues as re.. . ,. •w " ' · ., ·- - - - - - - . - - - - - - · 1ro~~~~~~~~~~~ o . u , .a erronst with a bomb \ fields and in the installat1·on on m <>nth. !'hone JJ. 4·9582 after .: · 5 o m. May 2tl TFN-C _-;-;,;-;;;-;.;;; - ;,;;;;,,;-,; - ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;, m h1s pocket, a political ad- or removal of booby traps, commen de d b Y th e P resiWHITE SANDS visor to a native village or a and demol ition activities. dent's task force on employT\\'D ~IUD ER~ HmTES. O~E FUR· P ERSONNEL - . • man unh~ppy with the gov- I The Field Radio Repairee-managemcnt cooperat ion. ' '.'!!S HEi~ both for $7.GOO. A. T. ernment in pov: er. man and the Ammunition Pending before Post Office 'I Co; r~a ltor. 2'.10 S ~fain St. . JA , 6-'.!181 Juno '.!l -TF?-!-e I We Specialize In It may also be a member Helper teaching f 0 reign and Civil Service CommitGuaran:leed Rebuilt of a guerrilla band, or a full I troops all the duties expected ' tees. ~---r_o_•_sA_L_E • • • Transmissions scale guerrilla outfit. Or it of men holding these mili1 \\'CnU T'/.F.R SPI!\ET PT.i\:\0 t l A· 1 l!OGA:\Y finish, cx,.ello.•nl condi· may be all these co~nbine~. tar.v o~cuoationa1 specialties. RETIREMENT. S. 2937, H. I tlon. Trleal for military family. le to le • Board All of these are the mgred1The Camouflage Specialist R. 10706 and related bills Ph. :;'.)G-87l.J. All Makes and Models Cheaper by the Bundle! Sept. 6-7-13·14·'.!T Chg. Como. ents for internal insecurity. 1showing native soldiers or a ' amend the Civil Service Rc1 Day Service if Desired I All of these are the P'rey of small village how to erect I tirement Ac:t to provide for USED CARS FOR S~E_ _ , C 8r C BLDG. You Can Save Money Here the com mun is ls who Ll~e all and p lace decoys. nels and ..::_ ; increases in annuities, eli• CHEVROLET CON\"l-:RT!BLE. I Bondura ..; Ma ro on with BlaC'k In- ; Your Credit is MATERIALS these targets lo their own screem to di~guise and ob- k:;)k!&if ·' minate the option with res- \ t crior, standard lnin!nni~sion, 3~'i Ceraer r1~11cho & l'rucl< I ) • Always Good d t Th 11 ,. tl pect to certain survivor an- 1 \1.8, Da d d Pearce :;'.!nd ASA a van age. us, a O.L iese I scure outlines and shadows PHYSICAL F I T N E s S. LAS CBUCJ:S. N M W::l~!R Duty Phone 3J.89. must be the targe1s t'or counof military materials and . A NYONE ? _ D eborah An n nuitics, and provide for in_ _ _s_c_pt_._l3·'.!l Comll. '.!T c11g. 1·~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AB AUTOMATIC terinsurgcncy measures." ::;hcltcrs. , B abbitt. Miss Rhode Island, terchange of credits between FOR !IENT j "°: Primar ily the American I A 11 these men 11pu y _ if 1!!62. goes throu gh her ac· t he civil service retirement TRANSMISSION O:\E FURNISHDJ APT. S3J.00. ONE Homes 8c Rentals ~oldier may be working w:th the sit uation worsens - find zob a iic dance r outine in I system and the insuran::e ~-BDR~l. unfurn ished. $6;;.oo, and EXCHANGE on~ l BDR;\l ., stove and rctrig., the native ann~d for ces or ! themselves teaching these I p reparation for the Mis& sy stem established under $35.0U. June :?1-TFN Immediate Pouesllioa KE 2.,959 c.fCecled cotm1nes. but he ,;ame men to fight guerrillas. I A m erica Pageant 10 be title II of the Social Security ID El Paso l 'ERV ICES I 2200 Texas El Paso may also be asked to work W h c n insurgency oper a- I h eld at Atlantic City iR Act. Reported to Sen a te, CALL OR SEE .• , ill. g 1 N o s o:r ALTEllATIUNs, with both the native and \ tions have progressed to I Se 1 b amended to delete the intcrVERN KRUGER · · . . . p em e~ StU&!arllon 11ua ranteeo Ul> l'aU· ,· mencan Cl \ "l 1ian age11e1cs of open guerrilla warfare it be- 1 - - - - - - - - - - - change provisions; pending or Stiop, l l!l N. Church St. TFN A AND AS SOCIA TES the host countries, it was ex- comes necessary to initiate \ helicopte1· support for in- on $enate calendar. Heari ng:; Main OtfiCll 1601 Dyer. TllE. ~IETRUl'v1..n-Al'l HUSPITAL 1 co unterguenilla plained. operations, creased mobility m this type completed in House Comm1tSu rg!cal Pl1.n Is non-cancella b.le Suite 121, COLONIA MOTOR 1.nd ~•hi up at age 65. t!.~< Counte1·insurgenc.v ranges such as arc being conducted operation. tee. HOTEL W.U.Titl>; O.· U .S. AlR FuRCE PER· frum humane aclivit"es to today in Viel Nam, whereby -;=;=======================. E 4's AND UP Ph. ?55·5521 or 755·?621 i;o!'l;lll!:L lO J<>ln Laa t;rucea Alt J'orc• Re.erve Unit. Help t ho Alt battle actions. Examples of American soldiers are used EL PASO. TEXAS ATLAS LUMBER COMPANY Force Reserve an d hel p youraelf the former are: as advisors to train tbc V iet- I to prom otions. pay. an d N!tlrement JA 1·6623 50 CARS benefits. Contact Flls ht Command· The Medic a 1 Spcci'.11"st lnamese Army and to provide J soi w. AM.II.DOil •1 &l JA 4 ..&451; Fll&hl l'ertonnel tcachinq natives lo aclminisANNOUNCES • . • t ll• arrha l e l t heir new atock ot JllFLES, O!hce r Ill J A 4·7022 or Info r m ation TO CHOOSE ter medical treatment in hos: SHOTGUNS. & THE EXCITING NEW WINCHESTE!I "MA!IJ[ V" u rvlce olfice a t JA g .:2507 U -nc pitals. dispensaries and clin1959 AMMUNITION. You'te lrlw• y• welcome to coin• In and 1nowael LOANS PJIOFESSIOl'IAL SERVICEll ON ANYTHING Credit By Phone ics which the Combat Engihu'lJ lilt.• our printing and ow reuonable orlcN . Lu Crucea Ctu· I OF neers have helpeu to build. THUNDERBIRD %en. U 4 S. Church. Call Mr. Little VALUE! He al so may find himself adFully equipped, aLr conministering dru~s to relieve ditioned, power steering, MOORE'S · Patio Apartment• oain and to prevent infecpower brakes. power fUrntsned .l an l1 ~ cedroom. tion, dispensing med'c:1tions PAWN SHOP COUNTRY ESTATE-TYPE HOMES 915 Unlve n!t y Avenue. windows. . • REASONLO 6-2969 5900 Dyer for minor injuries and inNeu Unlversl t) - 3 Minute• te $18.000. to $(0,000. 1210 N. MAU! ABLY PRICED! WSMR, City a nd Sehool Bus1u. 1<.H.A. V.A. CONVENTIONAL specting villages for unsaniEL PASO. TEXAS Pt>.oae JA 1 -9175 JA C-76H 1628 Stull. Las Cruces Las Cruces, New Mexico tary conditions so that he llarch ;u . wa:s-Tni Lu Cruces. N. M. car. cont1·ol and p r e v e n t Phone JA 4·001 9 di5eases. ~ ~-~~~~~~~~The Water Supply SpecialREBUILT MOTORS •·l<l:!trt focttr:r.s iu Cl!onstrudion 1111(1- ~rsi.sn.. Theo V. Nelson ist establishing and oper- 1~----------'"is CHEVROLET "6" ating water supply points in NO CASH $159.50 In stalled Call 526-2714 Collect, F or Guide Servicel FORD k CHEVROLET J. T. RUEBUSH areas which have never had Civilian-Military ' 111 te 'II V· I $22~ lrnly healthy w at cl' and • Good Selection! aoN.OED BRAKE JOB Optometrists where the water supply gen• • Minimum Credit . . .llM t wlooell. Jal)er and 1haeJ ' erally used for drinking also ALCAZAR THE HOUSE OF THE Required~ Slt.95 EYES EXAMINED PORRON serves the people as a bath, Best Food and Reputation U-IUILT PHONE FOR CREDIT! GLASSES FITTED &VTOllATIC TRANIMllSIOJCS a latrine, a laundry and a In The w or ld WE WILL APPROVE AU. MAKES garbage disposal. SEI. US AND SAVE 302 N. CHURCH BY PHONE! Restaurant Bar Most of all. i t is cm1)haFor delails call PHONE JA 4-4351 sized. American soldier s must I Our Specia l11 ROGER PLASKET Motot Excha n ge & Transmlu loa be able to communicate wilh 1323 rexaa ll:E 2·2251 KE 3-4948 the natives. And if they ~'ll•l M1Jnon a La Cl\a.mps El) Hff l'\ew \'o.-k Cut E•P•clo.J AUTOMATIC truly understand these peo- , TRANSMISSIONS ple - a prime requisite for l'aolla A I-" Valenciana. !toast 1 " MI KE" REAL ESTAT E lNSUBANCE Tenderlo in Frenrh S.ty!e • • • OUR ONLY success in counlerinsurgency Real Flamenco Music BUSINESS Caa.leu !Irland S:ra.sbu.-go!se St~-.e SPECIALIS TS _ - they must not only know j LObst er Any Style Anll The Be st Every Night Moxir·an Food • REP}.IRING how to communicat e with 3326 Alameda • REBUILDING them but also know how i El P aso. Texas rw,, Bl0~k• South <ti andie. l Rlsht <Juarez ) - TeL 2-4984 • EXCHANGES they think and feel and know Open 8 A.M. _ 8 P.M. VAN LIN -ES RAFAEL SAMPEDRO. Mgr. CLOSED MONDAYS • P ARTS their bel\efs and cultu res. ~~~~~~~~~~~.-: Written Guaran tee. Examples o( counterinsur~-~-~-~!!"'-~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.000 Miles or 90 Days gency read·ness to fight are: A L i ght Infantr yman training the Vietnamese sol- I diers in combat patrolling, Packing - Craiin i. , S torage : 'hasty fie 1 d (ortif'cations. / maintenance of weapons and C 0 MP AN Y equipment , laying of fi eld Jack Thon: pson wire and operation of radio Q'· UA(ITY HOMES Eel Gauthie~ Corner P ershing & Copia and teleobone equipment. 3600 P ershin g El Puo ·T he C o m b a t Engineer Nellruth Isaack• • Jll. 1· 6662 225 E. MAY - JA 6-24,74 ·~~~~-~-~-~;..;..~~~~~", !supervising natives of a re1100 N. Main - JA li·&&&l LAS CRUCES Let u1 lltlp you with Prablemal 7on r PORTER LUMBER CO. <~r~:,., I GOOD I Dry Lumber I 1 rt. I I TAGS I BILLS I CHECKS DRAFTS I I BADGES DODGERS No Cash Down I BLOTTERS 1 BOOKLETS I I - · - · - · - - - PLACARDS PROGRAMS 1 VOUCHERS 1---·- CIRCULARS Molorama lb_ • •••••••••,..· BILL HEADS PAMPHLETS PRICE LISTS PRIZE LISTS tintcrick ~~mue ~uilu£rs, ~1tt4' POST CARDS STATEMENTS I All Furniture DURI-BDIIJT Sanitized and BELAIR Moth-Pr[)ofed MOTORS SEABURN 1 I COLLINS ~. VANS AGE2VCY I.as rn1ces . Moving & Storage A Dr. Alfonso J. Rios !¥Wt Cedul a No. 81841 Reg, S.S.A. 2055 259 North J u arez Ave. Ciudact J uarez, Chih., Mexlco Phonli 2-3881 .. GIANT SALE FINE CARS 1961 CADILLAC COUPE PeVILLE ...................... WAS N OW Lik e new .. ......................... $4795 $4295 • • JeI Aul omaIIC Transmission 1960 LINCOLN SEDAN P REMIER Perfect .. ................ ......... $3195 $2795 1959 CADILLAC SE DAN DeVILLE A· l condition ........ ..... ......................... . $3195 $2795 1961 BUICK CONVERTIBLE 14.000 miles $2495 1961 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible, A· l condition 1962 FORD V-8 F AIRLANE 500 Sedan, excellent condition .. $2895 $2795 $2495 $2395 $1995 1958 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD SEDAN White. a real dandy . ............................... $2495 $2195 1960 BUICK SEDAN. Low mileage ............................. $2195 $1895 1960 FALCON PI CKU P, Like new ... ........................ $1205 $1095 195B PONTIAC SEDAN. A-1 condition .. .......-........ . $ 995 S 795 1958 BUICK RIVIERA COUPE .. .. ················-·-·············$ 995 $ 795 1957 MERCURY SPORT COUPE. AIR ............. ...... $ 895 S 695 10 FOREIGN CA RS - VOLKSWAGON. PUEGEOT. METROPOLITAN. RENAULT, MERCEDES. PRICED L OW! PLUS 45 OTHER FINE CARS! BLISS AUTO SALES '730 PE!\SHINQ DRIVE EL PASO DIAL t.O 6·1616 LOW FINANCING RATES SCORECARDS MEMO BLANKS MEAL TICKETS LETTER HEADS LEGAL BLANKS SHIPPING TAGS LAUNDRY LISTS \VINDOW CARDS VISITING CARDS FUNERAL CARDS MENU BOOKLETS I BUSINESS CARDS lMilitary AT HOME CARDS GUMMED LABELS Gives GREETING CARDS To Help . Quake Victims I (Continued from P age RECEPTION CARDS STORE' SALE Bll..LS l) AUDITOR'S REPORT the most l UNGUMMED LABELS important day ~I POSTERS, ALL SIZES ADMISSION TICKETS AUCTION SALE BILLS of your life I SOCIETY STATIONERY WEDDING INVITATIONS ~f~ie~d~!~~~~~=~~ Aulomolive Import MENU CARDS I bl anket s and a 100-bed field hospital. Also dispatched for use in • UNBREAKABLE disaster relief w ere two A r P LATES ! my helicopters based at • BEST PRICES S tuttgart, Germany. I N TOWN! U. S. Air Force, Europe, • MODERN CREDIT pro-one C-124 transport to SYSTEM Air-lift men one C-124 transWe invite you Jo visit ... por t lo lift men and equipWe assure you that you ment to the stricken counwill be completely satistry. The C-130's canied m en and supplies while the C-124 tran sported the helicopters. Scheduled to make 39 SPORT CAR sorties in the operation, SPECIALIST named "Helping Hand," th e FOR C-130's and the C-124 were IMPORTED CARS commanded by Col. Charles (Domestic Too) W. Howe of the 322nd Air Division, USAFE. The 322nd • Factory Trained .is the same unit which p arMechanic• ticipated in the recent Con•• Automotive Clinic 1 go air lift. • Parts and Service In addition to the Europe1 Honest Priced Service based personnel, the Air -Free ConsultationForce and Army had stateside units standing b y for i additional assistance if i needed. , Army activities in Iran ar e under the command of Maj. \ Phone 532-6935 I Gen. John B. Hayden, head 2316 Myrtle El Paso .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, ' of ARMISHMAG. All Dental Work Guaranteed! INVITATIONS FINANCIAL STATEMENTS Wheth<"r you plan a simple sen-ice or tn. elabor· ate ceremony there is an Arc Point wedding invi· tation or announcement styled for you. _, ___ ,.,; Let our society editor have all the details of your wedding plans and at the same time look over ow: complete selection of Art Point invitations, an• nouncements ind wedding 1tceuories. Free! with out compliments. BY -LAWS & CONSTITUTIONS You Name II - We Prinl II Call Us for Free Estimates ·Las Cruces Citizen Virginia. Courtenay's etiquetCll bQoklct. Ask for: JOIU ccn. Phone 6-5575 - LAS CRUCES CITI ZEN 114 S. CHURCH PHONES 6-5575 or 6-5576 6-5576 114 S. Church St. Las Cruces. N. M. 8-WIND & SAND-Friday, Sept. 14, 1962 . QUESTION: "What are the best safe driving tips you thinl' should be emphasized?" DATE: S un., 16 Sept. TITLE: A Very Private Affoir CA ST: Brigi ~ te Bardo t, · M:ucc1lo Mastroianni Classiiication : Mature · P atrons Over 18 Yrs. Age DATE: MoR., 17 Sept. TITLE : Mighty Urs us CAST: Ed Fury, Cristine Gajoni Classification : Matu r e Young People-P a trons Over 12 Yrs. Age DATE: Tues., 18 Sept. TITLE: The Trojan H orse CA ST : S teve Reeves, John Drew Barrymore Classification: F am i l Y All P atr ons DATE : Wed. & Thurs., 19 j - - - & 20 Sept. TI TLE: Advise and Consent (Columbia) CAST: Henry F o n d a, Charles Laughton. Classifi~ation : Mature Patrons Over 18 Yrs. Age. The President's choice for Secretary of S tate is a man with powerful political enemies. Their attempts to bring out the n ominee's former brief association with Communism boomerang on the upright chairman of the investigating subcommittee and this crusading young Senator fin ds himself in a blackmail trap for a homo•• • sexual episode in his youth. The question is raised as t o RADIATOR HOSES! whether a man's fitness for I service is to be judged by I HEATER HOSES! h is present worth, or by some HOW ABOUT ANTI-FREEZE? indi screet or objectionable association in his p ast. FOR YOUR COMPLETE WINTER DATE: Fri., 21 Sept. AUTOMOTIVE NEEDS VISIT ••• TITLE: Damon and P y thias Classification: Mature Patrons Over 18 Yrs. Age. DATE: Sat. night, 22 Sept. TITLE: Hey Let's Twist 600 N. Main Las Cruces, N. M. Ph. 526-5531 (Paramount) CAST: Joey Dee and the I SpS J une Zentz, Transportation Motor Pool Dispatcher: "Take all safety precaution s. You drive several cars, your s and the other man's. Maintenance can save l ives. Be sure to check your vehicle's safety devices. (U.S. Army photo by Robin Broun, Civ.) 1 OpticafData-Gathering Enhanced (Continued from Page 1) hides such as the R edeyc and Shillelagh. The others ly-operatcd wheel-type con - are spotted across t he sou th tr ol r equires two operators. end of the 4,000-squ are-mile Movement of the joystick r ange in s u PP 0 r t of both controls t~e speed of t he ground and air launched vem ount - d r 1 .v en by el.ectric hicles includ ing the Army's motors - m both azimuth Sergeant Nike Zeus and and elevation. . ., Redstone'. "Due to the v aried missile . T t' programs carried on here al F or ma.x.u:ium uh iz~ ion White Sands, requirements ~n d capabilities, the sensitive for ootical instrumentation . mstrum~nts require stable are u~iquely diff icult," R us- fou ndations and complex fasell explain ed. "To m eet ci1ities. Therefore, all of the units are housed in 10 foot these needs, th e Contraves diameter astrodomes w ith telescopic recording system is equipped with a bi-p ower- rollback ports. The astroed tr ackin g telescope se- domes provide a controlled environment :-- essen tial for lectable b y the opera tor. The accurate dnta recordings m ain phot ographing t elescope and protect the instruments employs both refracting and from direct sun heating and reflecting elements." wind buffeting. T he two focal length optics "Looking much like giant - 60 and 120-inch - allow mushrooms popping from the prop er magnificat ion of a desert floor, t he domes rest p articular missile being fired atop 10 and 20-foot p edestals, dep ending upon its size, or on equally tall mounds of speed, behavior, altitude and ran ge. A ccording to Russell, an H onest John missile ph otographed with the 120-inch focal length optic, at approxim ately a h alf-m ile distance, will cover the entire width of a 35mm film frame. F our of the new instrumen ts arc l ocated at the Small Missile R ange in support of short-range test ve- I Master Sergeant Millard Rust, Assistant Transportation Motor Pool Non-commission· ed Officer-In-Charge: "In today's Age of Speed, men hesitate to fly in fast planes and yet race hubcap to hubcap down our nation's highways. Drive defensively. Be alert and observe the rules of the road. (U.S. Army photo by Robin Broun. Civ.) Sgl. Tiller Receives $230 (Continued fr om P age 1) Test Division of Ordn ance Mission . H is citations were for suggestions m ade during his d uty dessignment at Fort Rich ardson. They include a $15 check for a su ggested me thod of lubricating pins on seat assemblies at a Nike Battery tracking station; two checks f or $35 each for a recommended m e t h o d of storing equ ipm ent and for using a single cab le to replace three cables between a radar control van and a r adar frequency test set; a L etter of Commendation and $1 50 check for an improved method of r e-wirin g and renumberin g termin als on magnetic a mplifiers. T he imaginative soldier is the son of J ames M. Tiller of App alachia, Va. He ent ered the Army there in 1946 and h as served in Kor ea, Germ any and th r ou gh out t he Cal Forr ester, Transportation Motor Pool Operations Officer: " Safe driving all boils down to proper driving. Drivi ng on hot, monoton ous stretche s of d esert roads is te dious and tiring. You must constantly be on the alert." (U.S. Army photo by Robin Br oun, Civ.) S tates includin g Alaska. Am ong awards and decorations, Sgt. Tiller hol ds the National Defense Service Medal, Korean S er v i c e Medal, United Nations Service Medal, Good Conduct Medal, Army Commendation Medal, A r my Occupation Medal (Germany), Merit Unit Citation, Letter of Commendation and five Let ters of Appreciation. He and his wife and two ch ildren l ive at 10,000 Jamai1 ca St., El Paso. if your plans WSMR Donales ;,~'~;~;£;'~:~:;:.;!£ C~L· FOit Jel Enttines Jj , To HMSU I I (Con tinued from Page 1) chief of Target Missiles Proj- · ect, made the pres en ta ti on and assisted with the br iefing. themsel ves with this partiThe jets cost approximatecular type of jet engine. The ly t wo thousand d oll ars each and consist of the engin e ite ngines are made by Con- self and a remot e-contr ol tinen tal Aviation and Engi- box. n eering Corp., and used by According to Dr. For d, the R yan Aeronautical Co., civilengines will be invaluable in ian contractor for target misteaching theory to engineers iles at WSlVIB. ing students, for scientific Contr actor person nel dem- research in jet en gines, and onstrated t he turbo-jets and for gr adua te study. If Y ou Are Tired A fter A 1Vights Rest. ' If You Are Nervous & Irritable. d\SH, . ._ _FC 100,000 SERVICEMEN have arranged cash for traveling, paying bills, shopping and other purposes by simply getting in t ouch with the nearest of our 1200 Household Finance offices. There' s one locat ed close to most every military base. And each office is staffed with military loan specialist s who understand your need s. Your loan is made promptly and in privacy. There are no need· less delays. Drop in for fair, helpful service wh en you need cas h to put your plans into action. Cash DR.LATHROP If You Have Pain Chances Are 9 To I Your Spine Is Dul Of Line SEE YOUR CHIROPRACTORS DR. LATHROP and DR. PAKOZDI North of Town on Dona Ana Road Office Hours: 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. and 2 p·m. t o 8 p.m. ' earth. T he concrete pedestals min imize vibrations and atmospheric turbul ance tha t affe ct focus and the quality of photographs. Con stru ction of sites for the instrumen ts started more than a year ago. T hirteen of the units are installed and operative, and the r emain ing two - ·ordered r ecently are scheduled for delivery by March. The n ew s ys t em is a powerful aid in gathering trajectory data on the more than 2,000 test missions each year at WSMR, and it provides greater capabilities for future n ational defense programs. Although the instruments represen t the ultimate in optical tracking devices, they are capable of being modified in order to keep pace w ith missile development progress at the landlocked range. 18 Z2 24 paymt < Paymts Paymt< - - - - -- YOU HAD YOUR CAR CHECKED? I DO YOU NEED. I Mesilla Motor Co. ~ou~~l~NCE 518 N. Main St.-JAckson 4-7763 llllurs: 9:30 to 5:30 Monday thru Friday- Closed Saturda)'S Loans made to residents of nearby 1owm • I BIG FIGURES • When the wages portion of the Army Budget is added to the wages of personnel . of all services and contractors using White Sands Missile Range .•. The sum is an estimated. • • • • ., $ ' ' •wsMR Figures, WIND & SAND. May 11. 1962 In salaries being spread annually over El Paso, Las Cruces, Truth or Consequen.. ces, Socorro, Carrizozo, Tularosa, Hatch, Alamogordo and other areas! MR. MERCHANT. LET US GIVE YOU RATES AND DATA ON AN EFFECTIVE NEWSPAPER AD PROGRAM FOR YOUR NEEDS! LAS CRUCES CITIZEN AND THE paymis - . . . . Speciai service to Armed faeces Personnel • HAVE 6 $ 100 $5.90 $ 7.27 $10.04 $18.45 300 17.41 21.53 29.87 55.10 500 27.73 34.65 48.57 90.53 800 42.29 53.40 75.71 142.82 1000 51.84 65.75 93.64 177.48 Above payments include both pri11cipal and interest, based on prompt repayment.' • FUTURE BRIGHT FOR WSM R FOR DONA ANA COUNTY FOR THE ENTIRE SOUTHWESTI MONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS You Got • Movie Revues -- PFC Raleigh Courtney, Transportation Motor P ood Driver: ":Po not follow other vehicles too closely. Always watch the car behind the one in front of you." (U.S. Army photo by Robin Broun. Civ.) agers al ike. As one of the sons, Joey Dee leads h is Starlitcrs in six numbers featuring the Twist and is one of the more active of a vea Starlighters, Teddy Randaz- active lot of Twisters. Zoh. , zo Lampert as a socie ty columnClassifica t ion: M at ure - ist wit h a momentary interYoung Peo rile-Pa rons O v er est in the o! "ler brother and 12 Yrs. Age. I K c;y Armen a~ a isood sensiHow the Twist tu rned a I ble widow with her eye on fa il ing pizza parlor in to the father p rovide a bit o<f disnow f a mo u s Peppermi nt t ruction from the film's main Lounge makes a story tha t emph asis, which is, of course, supports a fu ll song and the d ance of the hour. dance program. Business 1s DATE: S at. ma tinee, 22 ba d a l an Italian rcsl:rnr ant Sept. and the widowed owner Is TITLE: Days of Thrills and Laugh ter having a hard time meeting his two sons' colle ge bills. C lassification: Fa m i 1 y • The boys ~olve his problem All P atrons by leavi ng school (which A collection of old-time they don' t like anyway) and comedies feat uring Charlie transforming his du ll "Italia n Chaplin, La urel and Hardy Gardens" into a Twis t shrine and others. Also Episode 'l of for cafe society and teen- "T he Sea Hou nd." IND AND SAND Combinod Circulation of Over11~0001 114 S. CHURCH ST. PHONES: JA 6-5575 - JA 6-5576 •
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