8
eX) KWAJALEIN HOURGLASS VOLUME XXIV, No 41 U S ARMY KWAJALEIN ATOLL, MARSHALL ISLANDS SEARCH FOR NEW CIA CHIEF LAUNCHED; GATES OUT OF DIRECTORSIllP PICTURE By MERRILL HARTSON Associated Press Wnter WASHINGTON - President Reagan IS agam lookmg for someone to run the CIA, hiS nommatlOn of actmg chief Robert Gates a victIm of congressional outrage over the Iran- Contra affair Faced wIth the Senate Intelligence Comrruttee's deterrrunatIOn to stall the nomInatIOn pendIng further mvestlga- tlOn of the arms-and-money scheme, Reagan on Monday accepted Gates' offer to wIthdraw Reagan, alludmg to the climate on CapItol HIll, SaId m a statement re- leased Monday that "at any other tIme, I am certam he would easIly have been confirmed WIthout delay" The names of retIred Air Force Bng Gen Brent Scowcroft, former CIA deputy director Bobby Inman and NatIonal Secunty Agency chief Gen Wilham Odom munedIately sur- fdced as top-level prospects, along With former Sen John Tower and Vernon Walters, U S Ambassador to the UOlted NatIons Scowcroft and Tower were both members of the Tower commiSSIOn that mvestIgated the Iran arms deals The Washmgton Post reported toddY that Tower had been offered the job and turned It down Tower refused to comment on the Post report Newly Installed White House Chief of Staff Howard Baker SaId the admInistratIOn was on the verge of announcIng a chOIce to replace Gates, 43, as the norrunee for the job vacated by William J Casey last month Casey resigned as CIA duector Feb 2 follOWIng surgery several weeks earher to have a malIgnant tumor removed from hiS braIn The 73-year-old Casey was released Mon- day from Georgetown UnIversIty Hospital Baker told reporters m the WhIte House bnefIng room that the ongmal plan was for Reagan to appear before reporters Monday to make the announcement for the Gates WIth- drawal and of the name of a new nommee But he said that "when It didn't qUite come together that way, It was deCided that I would come down and do this" Sen Sam Nunn, D-Ga, told re- porters he thlOks there are at least half a dozen people In and out of govern- ment who would excel as head of the Central Intelligence Agency Danny Kaye By DENNIS ANDERSON ASSOCiated Press Wnter LOS ANGELES - Danny Kaye, the red-haired clown pnnce of musical comedy who worked hiS way from busboy to Broadway and Hollywood, died early today at 74 Kaye, who was hospItahzed Sunday, died at 3 58 a m of heart faIlure brought on by comphcatIOns of Internal bleedmg and hepatItIs, SaId Warren Cowan, chaInnan of Rogers and Cowan pubhc relatIons firm Kaye's Wife, SylVia, and daughter, Dena, were wIth him when he died at Cedars-SInai Medical Center, Cowan said Kaye's perfonnmg career spanned teleVIsIOn, Broadway, movies and the concert stage In addItIon, he was known as UNICEF's longtIme "ambassador to the world's chIldren" Kaye, the red-haIred rubber-faced star of such fIlm claSSICS dS "White Chnstma,>" and "The Secret Life of Walter MItty," was reported In extremely cntIcal condItIOn Monday nIght Kaye was released from the hospltalla'>t week after spendmg three weeks bemg treated for a leg condItion, spokesman Ron Wise said Capital Trying To Show Reagan In Command By TERENCE HUNT AP WhIte House Correspondent WASHINGTON - Battling sug- gestions that Pre"ldent Reagan IS los- Ing hiS gnp on hiS job, the WhIte House IS mountmg an extraordInary campaign to portray him as In charge, on top of events and not "an AWOL president" In hiS first appearance as Reagan's new chief of staff, Howard Baker volunteered "I've never seen Ronald Reagan more energetic, more fully engaged and more In command of difficult circumstances and questIOns man," Reagan SaId, "It IS clear that at thiS POInt contirmatIOn proceedIngs would not be In the of the CIA or the nation " Baker SaId the selectIOn of d cessor to Gates was "an urgent Item on the president's agenda" SpeculatIOn about possible cdndl- dates focused on both former NdtIon- al Secunty AdViser Brent Scowcraft and former Sen John Tower, R- Tex- as, both members of the Tower com- miSSIOn that Investlgated the Iran arms dffaIr, along WIth Bobby InmJn, a onetIme CIA deputy dIrector, U N Ambassador Vernon W dl and Army Gen WIlham Odum, head of the NatIonal Agency Tower, contdcted by The Assocl- dted Press late Monday, declIned comment on a report In toddy\ Washmgton that he had been offered the CIA post dnd turned It down When d new dIrector IS named, Gates WIll return to hiS job as the CIA',> deputy dIrector MeanwhIle, Reagdn Will deliver a natIOnally broadcdst speech from the Oval OftJce at 9 pm EST Wednes- day to answer the fmdIngs of the Tower commiSSIOn TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987 Dead at 74 Born DaVid DanIel KamInsky on Jan 18, 1913, Kaye began hi'> career at summer resorts on the Borscht Belt In New York state's Catskill Mountams The Brooklyn-born entertamer got hiS start as a clowOlng busboy on the Borscht Belt dUrIng the late 1920s and went on to Broadway, Hollywood and the concert stage Among hiS movies are "The Inspector General" m 1948, "The Secret Life of Walter Mmy" m 1946, "Hans ChnstIan Andersen" In 1952 and "White Chnstmas" m 1954 Denmark's Queen Margrethe knIghted the rubber-faced song-and- dance man m 198, for hIS portrayal of the DanIsh author Hans ChnstIan Andersen m the Hollywood mUSical The citation called him "the Pled Piper to the children of the world " Kaye won Emmy awards for televlSlon's "The Danny Kaye Show" In 1963 and best children's speCial In 1975 He received a speCial Oscar m 1954 He also has served as the offiCial permanent ambassador-at-Iarge for the Umted NatIOns InternatIOnal Children's Emergency Fund Kaye conducted some of the world's greatest svmphony orches- tras, once sang for Queen Elizabeth II and was awarded the American Symphony Orchestra League's gold baton for dlstmgUlshed service to musIc and the arts But he couldn't read musIc In a 1981 perfonnance of the New York PhilharmOnIC, Kaye entered wIth a qUiver of batons, occasIOnally cued the vIOlms wIth a leg kick and conducted "flight of the Bumble Bee" wIth a fleXible red flyswatter DUrIng one piece, he faced the audience, contortmg hiS rubber face to the musIc and wlsecrackmg m gibberISh German and In Bntlsh and BostOnIan accents Conductmg, he said afterward, IS "the greatest feelIng of neurotic power m the world" He's never been better" Meanw1"nle, the admlOlstratlOn pressed a search for a new nomInee to head the CIA after agreeIng to d re- quest by actIng director Robert M Gates to Withdraw hiS name Shultz Urges China To Remain Open Gates acknowledged there was a Widespread belIef In the Senate that action on hiS nomInatIOn should be delayed until the Sendte Intelligence CommIttee completes Its Inve"tlgatIOn of the secret sale of arms to Iran and the possible diverSIOn of profits to NICaragua's Contra rebels While praising Gates as "a re- markably talented and dedicated By BRYAN BRUMLEY ASSOCiated Press Wnter DALlAN, ChIna - Secretary of State George Shultz, In a strong call for Chma to remaIn open to foreign Ideas and mvestment, warned today that no closed market IS large enough to sustam a prosperous economy Shultz, the fIrst senlOl Western offICial to ViSIt Chma smce student Supreme Court AIDS Victims Protected Against On-The-Job By RICHARD CARELLI their Immune system and leaVIng Bias ASSOCiated Press Wnter them vulnerable to other diseases WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court, m a ruhng likely to help AIDS victIms fight employment dlscnm- matIon, SaId today a federal law aidIng the handIcapped protects people with contagIOus dIseases agamst on-the-job bIas By a 7-2 vote, the court ruled that all reCipients of federal aid, mcludmg government contractors and Virtually all public schools, may not dIS- cnmmate agamst people wIth con- tagIOus diseases If those people are "otherWIse quahfied" to work or take part m some actIvIty The deCISIOn, however, did not directly mvolve acqUIred Immune defiCiency syndrome, a VIral disease that can kill Its victIms by destroymg The rulmg reVived a laWSUit by former third-grade teacher Gene H ArlIne, fIred by the Nassau County, Fla , School Board because she was diagnosed as havmg tuberculosIs, an mfectlOus respiratory disease The court, led by JustIce William J Brennan, rejected Reagan admlOlstratlOn arguments that em- ployers do not VIOlate a 1973 law baITIng bIas agaInst the handicapped If they fire employees based solely on a fear that they may spread a disease 'It would be unfair to allow an employer to seIze upon the dlstlOctlOn between the effects of a disease on others and the effects of a dIsease on a patIent and use that distInctIOn to JustIfy dl,>cnmInatory treatment," Brennan wrote unrest led to the ouster of Commumst Party General Secretary Hu Yaobang on Jan 16, urged m a speech m the port City of Dahan that the Chmese contmue to mtroduce market mto their economy "Closed socIeties wIll fall behmd and Wither," Shultz SaId EarlIer, he met WIth Chma's pard mount leader, Deng Xlaopmg, and they assured each other that the poh- tIcal problems faced by theIr two countnes were largely overcome Shultz had sought to determme the extent to whIch the politIcal campaign agamst Western "bourgeOIs liberal- Ism" In Chma may undermme the natIOn's new economic poliCies Shultz, refemng to the Iran Contra scandal, SaId PreSIdent Reagdn hdd "had a rough patch but he's dealt With It very sWIftly" He said that wllh the appomtment of Howard Bdker :IS Reagan's chIef of stdff "he has a great person and a great team" Deng also said that "as for the troubles we recently encountered, they are also fmlshed " Shultz, In the DalIdn speech, Sdld, "Success reqUIres that an economIc system be open and fle,(lble enough to produce goods and thdt dre competitive 111 the global market place" It was hIS stronge"t publIc since dfflvlng 111 Ch1l1a on Sunday He spoke at a jomt US-ChInese center whICh has tra111ed more than 1,000 Chmese In Amencan manage- ment techlllques since 1980 and I conSIdered a beachhead for the mtro- ductlOn of Western bus1l1ess prdc- tlces On Monday, ShultL held seven of mtenslVe talks WIth an array of Chmese offICials, 111dudmg Zhao Zlyang, the premIer and aUlng Com- mumst Party general secretary, Pres- Ident LI Xlanman, LI Peng, a semor vIce premIer WIdely mentIOned as a nS1l1g star, and Defense M1111ster Zhang Alpmg "These hdve rem forced my confidence m the durability of our relatIOns and the of your commllment to the polICIes whIch have brought your country the unpar- dlleled of the decade,' Shultz Said Monday 111 a banquet to hIS Ch111ese counterpart, Wu Xueqwn Zhao told Shultz that a chdnge m these IS out of the " "Nor do the reforms dnd the open- mg of the country (mean that Chma WIll) abandon the leader"hlp of the CommunIst Party or the <;t road," Zhao s,ud m d distrIbuted by the offlCldl X111hua news agency Shultz warned that some action" by Beljeng could the confIdence of U S In Chlnd\ mod- ernlzdtlOn ,md thereby Jeopardize the supply of Amencan capnal and tech- nology whIch IS helpmg to dn ve the tran"formdtlon Amencdn firms have 111vested more than $1 5 btlhon m ChIna, Shultz, a rdte C'xceeded only by Hong Kong

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eX) KWAJALEIN HOURGLASS VOLUME XXIV, No 41 U S ARMY KWAJALEIN ATOLL, MARSHALL ISLANDS

SEARCH FOR NEW CIA CHIEF LAUNCHED; GATES OUT OF DIRECTORSIllP PICTURE By MERRILL HARTSON Associated Press Wnter

WASHINGTON - President Reagan IS agam lookmg for someone to run the CIA, hiS nommatlOn of actmg chief Robert Gates a victIm of congressional outrage over the Iran­Contra affair

Faced wIth the Senate Intelligence Comrruttee's deterrrunatIOn to stall the nomInatIOn pendIng further mvestlga­tlOn of the arms-and-money scheme, Reagan on Monday accepted Gates' offer to wIthdraw

Reagan, alludmg to the climate on CapItol HIll, SaId m a statement re­leased Monday that "at any other tIme, I am certam he would easIly have been confirmed WIthout delay"

The names of retIred Air Force Bng Gen Brent Scowcroft, former CIA deputy director Bobby Inman and NatIonal Secunty Agency chief Gen Wilham Odom munedIately sur­fdced as top-level prospects, along With former Sen John Tower and Vernon Walters, U S Ambassador to the UOlted NatIons

Scowcroft and Tower were both members of the Tower commiSSIOn that mvestIgated the Iran arms deals

The Washmgton Post reported toddY that Tower had been offered the job and turned It down Tower refused to comment on the Post report

Newly Installed White House Chief of Staff Howard Baker SaId the admInistratIOn was on the verge of announcIng a chOIce to replace Gates, 43, as the norrunee for the job vacated by William J Casey last month

Casey resigned as CIA duector Feb 2 follOWIng surgery several weeks earher to have a malIgnant tumor removed from hiS braIn The 73-year-old Casey was released Mon­day from Georgetown UnIversIty Hospital

Baker told reporters m the WhIte House bnefIng room that the ongmal plan was for Reagan to appear before reporters Monday to make the announcement for the Gates WIth­drawal and of the name of a new nommee But he said that "when It didn't qUite come together that way, It was deCided that I would come down and do this"

Sen Sam Nunn, D-Ga, told re-porters he thlOks there are at least half a dozen people In and out of govern­ment who would excel as head of the Central Intelligence Agency

Danny Kaye By DENNIS ANDERSON ASSOCiated Press Wnter

LOS ANGELES - Danny Kaye, the red-haired clown pnnce of musical comedy who worked hiS way from busboy to Broadway and Hollywood, died early today at 74

Kaye, who was hospItahzed Sunday, died at 3 58 a m of heart faIlure brought on by comphcatIOns of Internal bleedmg and hepatItIs, SaId Warren Cowan, chaInnan of Rogers and Cowan pubhc relatIons firm

Kaye's Wife, SylVia, and daughter, Dena, were wIth him when he died at Cedars-SInai Medical Center, Cowan said

Kaye's perfonnmg career spanned teleVIsIOn, Broadway, movies and the concert stage In addItIon, he was known as UNICEF's longtIme "ambassador to the world's chIldren"

Kaye, the red-haIred rubber-faced star of such fIlm claSSICS dS "White Chnstma,>" and "The Secret Life of Walter MItty," was reported In extremely cntIcal condItIOn Monday nIght

Kaye was released from the hospltalla'>t week after spendmg three weeks bemg treated for a leg condItion, spokesman Ron Wise said

Capital Trying To Show Reagan In Command By TERENCE HUNT AP WhIte House Correspondent

WASHINGTON - Battling sug­gestions that Pre"ldent Reagan IS los­Ing hiS gnp on hiS job, the WhIte House IS mountmg an extraordInary campaign to portray him as In charge, on top of events and not "an AWOL president"

In hiS first appearance as Reagan's new chief of staff, Howard Baker volunteered "I've never seen Ronald Reagan more energetic, more fully engaged and more In command of difficult circumstances and questIOns

man," Reagan SaId, "It IS clear that at thiS POInt contirmatIOn proceedIngs would not be In the Intere~t of the CIA or the nation "

Baker SaId the selectIOn of d ~uc­cessor to Gates was "an urgent Item on the president's agenda"

SpeculatIOn about possible cdndl­dates focused on both former NdtIon­al Secunty AdViser Brent Scowcraft and former Sen John Tower, R-Tex­as, both members of the Tower com­miSSIOn that Investlgated the Iran arms dffaIr, along WIth Bobby InmJn, a onetIme CIA deputy dIrector, U N Ambassador Vernon W dl ter~, and

Army Gen WIlham Odum, head of the NatIonal ~ecunty Agency

Tower, contdcted by The Assocl­dted Press late Monday, declIned comment on a report In toddy\ Washmgton Po~t that he had been offered the CIA post dnd turned It down

When d new dIrector IS named, Gates WIll return to hiS job as the CIA',> deputy dIrector

MeanwhIle, Reagdn Will deliver a natIOnally broadcdst speech from the Oval OftJce at 9 pm EST Wednes­day to answer the fmdIngs of the Tower commiSSIOn

TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987

Dead at 74 Born DaVid DanIel KamInsky on

Jan 18, 1913, Kaye began hi'> career at summer resorts on the Borscht Belt In New York state's Catskill Mountams

The Brooklyn-born entertamer got hiS start as a clowOlng busboy on the Borscht Belt dUrIng the late 1920s and went on to Broadway, Hollywood and the concert stage

Among hiS movies are "The Inspector General" m 1948, "The Secret Life of Walter Mmy" m 1946, "Hans ChnstIan Andersen" In 1952 and "White Chnstmas" m 1954

Denmark's Queen Margrethe knIghted the rubber-faced song-and­dance man m 198, for hIS portrayal of the DanIsh author Hans ChnstIan Andersen m the Hollywood mUSical The citation called him "the Pled Piper to the children of the world "

Kaye won Emmy awards for televlSlon's "The Danny Kaye Show" In 1963 and best children's speCial In 1975 He received a speCial Oscar m 1954

He also has served as the offiCial permanent ambassador-at-Iarge for the Umted NatIOns InternatIOnal Children's Emergency Fund

Kaye conducted some of the world's greatest svmphony orches­tras, once sang for Queen Elizabeth II and was awarded the American Symphony Orchestra League's gold baton for dlstmgUlshed service to musIc and the arts But he couldn't read musIc

In a 1981 perfonnance of the New York PhilharmOnIC, Kaye entered wIth a qUiver of batons, occasIOnally cued the vIOlms wIth a leg kick and conducted "flight of the Bumble Bee" wIth a fleXible red flyswatter

DUrIng one piece, he faced the audience, contortmg hiS rubber face to the musIc and wlsecrackmg m gibberISh German and In Bntlsh and BostOnIan accents

Conductmg, he said afterward, IS "the greatest feelIng of neurotic power m the world"

He's never been better" Meanw1"nle, the admlOlstratlOn

pressed a search for a new nomInee to head the CIA after agreeIng to d re­quest by actIng director Robert M Gates to Withdraw hiS name

Shultz Urges China To Remain Open Gates acknowledged there was a

Widespread belIef In the Senate that action on hiS nomInatIOn should be delayed until the Sendte Intelligence CommIttee completes Its Inve"tlgatIOn of the secret sale of arms to Iran and the possible diverSIOn of profits to NICaragua's Contra rebels

While praising Gates as "a re­markably talented and dedicated

By BRYAN BRUMLEY ASSOCiated Press Wnter

DALlAN, ChIna - Secretary of State George Shultz, In a strong call for Chma to remaIn open to foreign Ideas and mvestment, warned today that no closed market IS large enough to sustam a prosperous economy

Shultz, the fIrst senlOl Western offICial to ViSIt Chma smce student

Supreme Court

AIDS Victims Protected Against On-The-Job By RICHARD CARELLI their Immune system and leaVIng

Bias ASSOCiated Press Wnter them vulnerable to other diseases

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court, m a ruhng likely to help AIDS victIms fight employment dlscnm­matIon, SaId today a federal law aidIng the handIcapped protects people with contagIOus dIseases agamst on-the-job bIas

By a 7-2 vote, the court ruled that all reCipients of federal aid, mcludmg government contractors and Virtually all public schools, may not dIS­cnmmate agamst people wIth con­tagIOus diseases If those people are "otherWIse quahfied" to work or take part m some actIvIty

The deCISIOn, however, did not directly mvolve acqUIred Immune defiCiency syndrome, a VIral disease that can kill Its victIms by destroymg

The rulmg reVived a laWSUit by former third-grade teacher Gene H ArlIne, fIred by the Nassau County, Fla , School Board because she was diagnosed as havmg tuberculosIs, an mfectlOus respiratory disease

The court, led by JustIce William J Brennan, rejected Reagan admlOlstratlOn arguments that em­ployers do not VIOlate a 1973 law baITIng bIas agaInst the handicapped If they fire employees based solely on a fear that they may spread a disease

'It would be unfair to allow an employer to seIze upon the dlstlOctlOn between the effects of a disease on others and the effects of a dIsease on a patIent and use that distInctIOn to JustIfy dl,>cnmInatory treatment," Brennan wrote

unrest led to the ouster of Commumst Party General Secretary Hu Yaobang on Jan 16, urged m a speech m the port City of Dahan that the Chmese contmue to mtroduce market force~ mto their economy

"Closed socIeties wIll fall behmd and Wither," Shultz SaId

EarlIer, he met WIth Chma's pard mount leader, Deng Xlaopmg, and they assured each other that the poh­tIcal problems faced by theIr two countnes were largely overcome Shultz had sought to determme the extent to whIch the politIcal campaign agamst Western "bourgeOIs liberal­Ism" In Chma may undermme the natIOn's new economic poliCies

Shultz, refemng to the Iran Contra scandal, SaId PreSIdent Reagdn hdd "had a rough patch but he's dealt With It very sWIftly" He said that wllh the appomtment of Howard Bdker :IS Reagan's chIef of stdff "he has a great person and a great team"

Deng also said that "as for the troubles we recently encountered, they are also fmlshed "

Shultz, In the DalIdn speech, Sdld, "Success reqUIres that an economIc system be open and fle,(lble enough to produce goods and ,>ervlce~ thdt dre competitive 111 the global market place" It was hIS stronge"t publIc ~peech since dfflvlng 111 Ch1l1a on Sunday

He spoke at a jomt US-ChInese center whICh has tra111ed more than 1,000 Chmese In Amencan manage­ment techlllques since 1980 and I ~

conSIdered a beachhead for the mtro­ductlOn of Western bus1l1ess prdc­tlces

On Monday, ShultL held seven hour~ of mtenslVe talks WIth an array of Chmese offICials, 111dudmg Zhao Zlyang, the premIer and aUlng Com­mumst Party general secretary, Pres­Ident LI Xlanman, LI Peng, a semor vIce premIer WIdely mentIOned as a nS1l1g star, and Defense M1111ster Zhang Alpmg

"These dIscus~lOns hdve rem forced my confidence m the durability of our relatIOns and the fumnes~ of your commllment to the polICIes whIch have brought your country the unpar­dlleled succes~es of the pd~t decade,' Shultz Said Monday 111 a banquet tOd~t to hIS Ch111ese counterpart, Wu Xueqwn

Zhao told Shultz that a chdnge m these poliCle~ IS out of the que~tlOn "

"Nor do the reforms dnd the open­mg of the country (mean that Chma WIll) abandon the leader"hlp of the CommunIst Party or the ~oClall <;t

road," Zhao s,ud m d ~tdtement distrIbuted by the offlCldl X111hua news agency

Shultz warned that some action" by Beljeng could ~hake the confIdence of U S bU~1l1e"smen In Chlnd\ mod­ernlzdtlOn ,md thereby Jeopardize the supply of Amencan capnal and tech­nology whIch IS helpmg to dn ve the tran"formdtlon Amencdn firms have 111vested more than $1 5 btlhon m ChIna, ~dld Shultz, a rdte C'xceeded only by Hong Kong

LOCAL NEWS PAGE 2, HOURGLASS, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987

Computer Efforts Bring Quarterly Honors To GA Supply's Kabwij Bobo By MICHAEL TODD

When the Supply DIVISion of Globdl As~ocIJtes recently switched from ItS CDC 6400 computer to a more up-to-date CDC 810, the employees lD the Matenal Control Department were Llced with the monumental task of shiftIng over 40,000 lme Items and over 200 programs mto the new system In ad­dItIOn to Just moving thiS mformJtlOn, there were mternal differences between the machme~ that made the process more dIfficult

Dunng the switch-over, Commodity Manager KabwIJ Bobo and others m Matenal Control came to the fore After they had moved the mformatlOn, they essentlally did their normal Job tWice m one day -once on the old system, and then agam on the new system After that, the two results had to be checked agamst each other

"Dunng thiS penod," said Bobo's supervisor, H A, SmIth III, "Bobo had to start from scratch He devoted a lot of tlme and effort, some of which was hiS own time, m addmon to hIS normal duties Domg what he was dOIng, It IS m effect doubling your effort

"That's why I nommated hIm for Employee of the Quarter "

In a ceremony held at the Supply Department m mid-February, KabwIJ Bobo was named Global ASSOCiates Employee of the Quarter for the October to December 1986 penod

Global's new sIte manager, Bob Jeffnes, comphmented Bobo dunng the bnef ceremony "ThiS award IS very Important m the company's view because 11 recogmzes excellent work performance and a wlI1l11ng attitude Your Department Manager (Lew Larsen) was espeCially Impressed by your rapid progress on the new CDC 810 computer and other mvolvements while upholdmg your normal Job responslbIlmes Through these efforts you have made yourself more valuable to the Supply DIVISIOn and, therefore, to Global Associates"

Bobo has been WIth Global for 19 years, and with Supply "Just over 10 years" He started workmg for the company at Surfway, then transferred to Data Processmg before commg to Supply Matenal Con­trollS the data processmg arm of Supply

He IS a Marshallese CItizen HIS supervisor said

Religiously Speaking Protestant Lenten Service

Begm Lent WIth a service of pemtence and prayer at the Ash Wedne~day Holy Communlon servIce, March 4 at 8 p m m the Isldnd Memofldl Chapel

Community Choir Forms An ecumenIcal chOIr wIll begm rehe,U"sab March 5

lD preparatIOn for a speCl,tl Good Fnd ly service Members of the Kwaplem communIty regardle~s of their relIgIOUS preference, are ltlvIted to JOIn m learn­mg "A Service of Ddrkness" by D,tie Wood ThiS mUSical work IS based on ancient Tencbrae, combll1-mg song, scnpture and successive extll1gUlshlng of candles to conmlemorate ChrIst s cruCIfIXIOn

The ecumemcal chOIr, followmg the tradItIOn of communIty cantatas, wIll be directed by DICk Shields Rehearsals WIll be on Thur~day, Mdrch 5 and March 12 dt 645 pm The remammg five re­hearsals wIll be on Wednesdays from March 18 through Apnl 5 at 7 p m All reheJr~al,> wlll be held m the chapel

For more ll1fOmldtlon contJ.ct DIl\.. Jt 4527 or call the chdpLHn's offIce

Attention ROI Protestants Chaplall1 Todd LIBute wIll be VISItIng the ROI

Chapel thiS Wednesday, March 4 Coun~elIng wIll be held at Apdche 16 from 4 30-6 pm, with Bible study lD the chapel at 7 30 For further mformauon call 3505

World Day Of Prayer ThiS FnddY, March 6, IS the centennIal celebratIOn

of World Day of Prayer For 100 years thIS chall1 of prayer has enCIrcled the globe as people of fallh on every contlDent gdther to blend theIr prayers for peace and Ju~tlle

The church women of Kw,tjJlelf1 If1vlte you to celebrate World Day of Prayer with them on Fnday at 7 pm

Take time to add your prayer Come to the World Day of Prayer and reJoice'

Attention All Island ReSidents Some Island reSidents have lDdlcdted that mali

they sent out from USAKA dunng the flr'>t week of February has not reached Its destlDJtlon U SAKA postal personnel have attempted to trdce down thiS POSSlblhty wllh Honolulu and San Frdnclsco with no success to date If any reSIdents know of maIl they sent dunng the first week of February whIch has not reached ItS destll1atlOn please contdct the USAKA Post Office at 3461

thiS makes hiS expertise m the computer field a httle rarer "Not many MicroneSians have been exposed to computers, their workmgs But Bobo's learned everythmg here He's come a long way"

Proud and surpnsed were the two words Bobo used to descnbe hiS feellng~ on becommg Employee of the Quarter "I was Just domg my work, trymg to do my best," he Said of hiS wmnmg efforts

Bobo IS maITled and has SIX children 'Probably flshmg IS my mam hobby now," he Said, although he likes to play ball, also He Said hiS plans at thiS pomt mclude staymg WIth Supply

He IS the first Supply employee to wIn the award smce 1984 HIS name and department have been added to the permanent plaque, whICh wIll be diS­played at Supply until the the next Winner I~ named

AdulT Ed Adds SEwiNG, WEIGI-tT TRAINING CLASSES

Thlee addltlol1.ll dd~,e~ wtll be olfereo by the Adult Education Center WeIght Trammg

Dana Kahele IS offellng a weIght tI,lll11ng cour,e for men, women and ~tudenb over 14 (WIth parent,ti consent) As the hedd weIght tr,lIller tor the International FJtlle~s & Racquetball Cellter~, Kahele taught weight tl all11ng cour,e~ for the U nlver~Ity of HawaII ContInull1g Educ ltlon Dep,u1ment

ThiS class wIll1l1tlOduce the no\ ICe to gymna~nlln sdfety, proper use of gvm equIpment to dchleve cle~lled resuit'> ,md the type, of mu~ck de\elopl1lellt pOSSible for dlftelent body tjpe~ Indlvldu tl tl 11l1lllg progr,lm~ wtll be cILvclopeet K Ihele \\ ill Iho I1l If-e suggestIOns dbout nutrition, 'U[l[llel1ll-llt Itlon lllet food Int,lke

Weight TI,llnlng wIll beglI1 MITch <) ,It Ivq Gvm and be held MonddY Wedne~ddy dnd Flld,IY flOI11 4 530 p m The 10 week clJ\s wIll end I'vIIY 15 Co,t of thiS clJSS IS $21 per per~on Begll1l1111g Se\Hl1g Sen lI1g For The Home

Two "ewIng dd~~es by Roberta Coftee WIl! be offered 111 Aplll Coffee hd~ sewn for 17 ye,lrI, 2 1/2 of them .t~ d profe~~lc)I,.tl ~e Im,tres~ tor d wedding gown ~hop She te Iche" the BI~hop method of ,ewlllg

Beginning Sewing, for the pel,on \\ho hd~ lIltk 01 no expellence In ,>ewlng, begln~ A[lIlI2l .tnd \\Ill lun for SIX \\eel~ Student, \\tIl k.IIll b I\IC ,,,\\Inl': tec hlllq ue~ dnd complue d tote b Ig In (. 1.1 ,.,~ Con~trLlCtlOn of ,I CI.I~~IC ~lll t ,llld blou\c v. til be demon:,tr,lted

SewIng For The Home \\ III begin Apnl 23 Ind run for SIX ThursddY ses~lons Student~ will le,lfIl easy and cre,ltIve wa)~ to decorate theIr home WIth easy-to-obtaln m,lten,tl~ Ptllows, slip covers, t1bledoths dnd WIndow dres~lng~ WIl! be dell10nSlr,lIed

Each of thl- ~ewlng cl.t~\e~ wdl meet tor two hour ~e"slon~ .tnd wdl CO\t $')1 per per'>on A new ~electlon of LlbllC WIll be ,IV Illlble .It M ICY <;

S.ttulcl,IY, Feb 28, ,0 ~elect )OUI m,ltUI,tI, ,oon It you h,lve que~tlon, dbout the ,ewing cll"e~, c til Robelt I Cottee It 3')21

To ~Ign lip tOI WeIght TIIIIlIng, BegInnIng ~ewIIlg or Sc WIllg For The liome, come by thl- Adult Edul.ltlOIl Center ROOIl1 I, George 'leItz SLhool HOllr\ for the center drc Tues(hy \V~etne\d I)' ,lllet Fnd.ty, 8 am -1 pm dIld WCdnl\d 1\ 3 6 P 111

Honor In Supply Global reSident manager Bob Jeffries

shakes Kabwl] Bobo's hand after presenttng him With a personalized plaque and cash award for being named Employee of the Quarter Supply DIVISion manager Lew Larsen (back, L) and Bobo's supervisor, H A Smith 111, add their approval

Larsen IS shown holding the permanent plaque which will be displayed at Supply for the next three months (Photo by LARRY ALLEN, PRe Kentron Photo Lab)

Range Operation From GLOBAL RANGE COORDINATION

A rJnge operatIon IS scheduled for March 3 through Mdrch 13 In connection with the oper,itlon, CJutlon aleJS Will eXist 111 the ocean wtthll1 In drCd def1l1ed by the follOWing coordinates 1000N, 16620E, 1030N, 16700E, 1030N, 16800E, 0935N, 16830E, 0925N, 16728E

All personnel and craft must stay out of the above caution areas between the hours of 7 a m and 7 pm dally See the map below for ocean caution area

Surf and Sun AS OF 12 01 am Tuesday, MJrch 3 1987 Dally r,llnfdl1 0 03 Monthly rmnf.tll 0 12 Yearly total 5 53 TOMORROW ON KW AJALEIN Sunn~e 701 am Sun~et 7 00 P m Moonnse 10 35 am Moomet 1125 P m HIgh Tide 7 04 a m 5 1 '-7 09 P m 4 4' LowTlde 1248am 09'-1 12pm 11'

\.. FOR TOTAL FORECAST CALL 4700

COMMENTARY HOURGLASS, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, PAGE 3

AT WIT'S END: 'HEARTLINE' FOR MOTHERS By ERMA BOMBECK

I called my mother the day after I got back from my honeymoon 17 years ago, and I have been callIng her every day ever SInce

Before that time, weeks would pass and I would never have any cunosIty as to what the weather was lIke at her house (a mile away from my house), what she was havIng for dInner or what she was dOIng when I called

Sometimes she would ask me to spell my name slowly

SInce none of my kIds calls me "Just to talk," I can only assume this IS a condmon that goes with marned lIfe Once they find a mate, my phone wIll nng off the hook Nearly every woman I talk with says thiS IS so Not only that, once there IS a grandchIld there could be as many as two or three calls per day, dependIng on how

many times the chIld makes tInkle or poo poo

CallIng one's mother IS a phenomenon most men do not under­stand They regard It as a duty which they perform or somethIng evIl wIll happen to them I can honestly say I dIdn't know my mother at all untIl M.l Bell came Into our lIves Oh, I l-new her polItical preference, favonte per­fume and cold remedy, but I never really knew her

It took the daIly phone call to leam that her secret pie crust came from a secret box In the supermarket I had to discover by a slIp of the tongue that she hid her billfold In the vegetable cnsper of the refngerator because only Junk food addicts would rob a house In the first place and would never look under the lettuce

One day she surpnsed me by commentIng on how kIsSIng on tele­VISIOn bothered her She s.lld they

always look lIke they were cheWIng on a ham sandWich and bIt down on a pIece of fat they were tryIng to get out She admltted one day that when I was 6 months old, she was bathIng me and 1 fell off the table She never told anyone In case I wasn't nght and she dIdn't want to take the blame for

I know never to call her untIl the stove IS turned off, 1 have gone to the bathroom and have eaten WithIn three hours No matter that we have talked 24 hours earher, there IS always somethIng to say Some thIngs take longer than others

"There's nothIng gOIng on here" takes 45 mInutes

"I can only talk fIve mInutes, my soap comes on" reqUIres 18 mInutes

"SomethIng's burmng, I have to check the stove" takes 12 rrunutes

''I'll Just tell you thIS story and I've got to run" IS compressed Into 15

mInutes Neither of us has an answenng

machIne Technology Isn't ready for us yet

MY 17 REASONS TO SPEAK UP FOR IRANGATE By ART BUCHWALD

There are many cltlzens In the country who mSlst the Iran-Contra operatIOn IS no bIg deal Un­fortunately they are unable to put their thoughts Into words Perhaps I can be of help Repeat after me

"I'm keepIng an open mmd on Irangate until all the facts are In and the blame IS placed on JImmy Carter where It belongs"

"There are a lot more good people In Iran who need spare parts than there are bad people who want to cut off our legs"

"The Umted States wIll not trade arms for hostages, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't give It the old school try "

"OllIe North Will always be a natIOnal hero because he showed us that patnol1sm and Immumty are the same thIng"

"What would you have done If you

were PreSIdent and Congress said you couldn't gIVe any money to the Contras? You would have done what Reagan dId - screened 'Rambo' for the 17th time"

"POindexter IS mnocent until proven guIlty, but If It tuns out he dId somethIng wrong he deserves a much better pnce for hIS book"

"The PreSident had no Idea whdt was gOlng on In hiS own White House, and we should all be grateful for thIs"

"I belIeve when you get two Israeh arms dealers, one Iraman Joker named Ghorbamfar, a Saudi promoter named Khashoggl, a Manne hotshot called North, plus the head of the CIA, and you Issue each of them a SWISS bank account number, somethIng IS bound to go wrong In Nicaragua "

"People complaIn because we delIvered a chocol.lte cake and a Bible to the ayatollahs In Tehrdn It wa~ a lot cheaper than sendlllg them a dozen

roses" "Bu~h had nothIng to do with Iran­

gate, but I can undertand hiS wanl1ng to back away from the PreSident After all he IS the only Repubhcan preSIdentIal candidate who Isn't better off today than he was four years ago"

"I'm not for perjury per se but I would rather have It committed by our Side than theIrs"

"What Irangate bolls down to IS credIbIlIty We have to choose be­tween those who are tellIng the truth, those who are lyIng and those who are takIng the FIfth Amendment Personally I trust people who take the Fifth, because they're officers and 2"entlemen "

"The thmg that gets me the maddest IS when they call Irangate another Watergate Show me a moderate Iraman who was Involved In Watergate" -o "The worsf part about the Iran

scandal for conservatives IS that It turns people's attentIOn away from the real Issues of the country, which are prayers In school and confIscatIng Playboy from the blInd"

"The fact that the money from Iran arms sales has never been accounted for doesn't mean that It dIdn't go to orphans In Costa Rica"

"~ook at It thiS way By lettIng them sample our Hawk miSSiles we create a new hardware market In Iran Once they stop burnIng Amencans III effigy we'll have a new generatIon of satIsfied consumers"

"I ask you, who would you rather have III the WhIte House - a weak PreSident who had no Idea what hIS staff was dOIng, or a strong leader who knew everythIng that was gOIng on but had no Idea what anyone was dOIng?"

Copynght 1987 Los Angeles Times SyndIcate

Uneasy Calm As Blacks Return To School After Boycotts By LAURINDA KEYS ASSOCiated Press Wnter

JOHANNESBURG, South Afnca - Emergency decrees and the use of force have suppressed the most determIned student protests In South Afncan history, sendIng blacks back to school WIth lIttle to show for two years of boycott and nots

The curnculum they wanted changed remaInS the same, IncludIng Afnkaans language and whIte-cen­tered hIstory courses There are sl111 shortages of classrooms and a lack of traIned teachers The government's polIcy of segregated education IS unchanged

Above all, the prospect of the down fall of whlte-mInonty control, which some students had thought to be Immment, sl111 appears far off

"If It IS a victory (for the gov­ernment), It'S a very temporary one," said Nkosl Molala, preSident of the Azaman People's OrgamzatlOn, whICh oppposed contInUOUS school boycotts "Those gnevances are deflmtely gOIng to be approached from a much more matured anger, a much more conscIOUS and delIberate anger"

An unsettled calm has preVaIled In black schools SInce the academiC year began In early January Soldiers and polIce remaIn In black townships,

although In smaller numbers than before

Many students speak of personal diSillUSIOnment, waste and frustra­tIOn

"Every year my fflend would ask me what standard (grade) I was dOIng, and It was the same," said LIndy Mcelu, 18, who returned to schoolm Soweto, near Johannesburg after staYlllg away for most of the last two years "because I was afraId"

She said she had seen a fnend shot to death by black organIzers enforclllg a boycott, and had escaped from an attempt by soldiers to arrest every student at her school

She has hopes to be a lawyer but said she has fnends who gave up on educatIon "One deCided to leave school and do dressmakIng She wanted to be a doctor"

At their peak, boycotts Involved close to 300,000 of the 6 2 millton black students m South Afnca and ItS black homelands But the protests rocked the system untIl hundreds of milItant teen-agers were detaIned wIthout charge under a state of emergency

Attempts to Introduce commumty­developed "people's educatIOn" as an alternatIve were smothered under emergency regulatIOns making It

Illegal even to diSCUSS such Ideas Flllally, parents, clergy and leaders

of adult OlgdmzatlOns that had encouraged student protest - the UnIted DemocratIc Front AllIance, the NatIonal EducatIon Cnsls CommIttee - said It was time to call It off

"NothIng has been accomplIshed," said Ann Rathebl of the South Afncan CouncIl of Churches "At some schools, there IS some type of educatIon gOlng on At others, they Just go and congregate They are back at school, for what It'S worth"

"Every nght-thlnklllg person would decry and lament the fact that a year or two has been lost and that ObVIOusly It has led to some of the students completely forgettIng about gOIng back to school at all," said Molala of the Azaman People's OrganIzatIon

Judith Howerdon of Black Sash, a whIte women's aid agency said "The 'LiberatIOn Now, Education Later' call happened because the youth thought that change was around the corner When the message came through that It was gOIng to take a lot longer, school boycotts became coun­ter-productive The government would be delIghted to have less edu­cated blacks The black commumty was dOIng the government's dlfty work"

After student upnsmgs spread from Soweto III 1976, a government commisSion called In 1980 for equal

educatIOn for all races, settmg up a $2 billIon program to close the gap between standards for white pupIls and those for other races, and one educauon minIstry for everyone

It suggested that whIte schools WIth shnnkIng student numbers be allowed to admit some of the multIplymg populaton of blacks

The government reaffirmed Its pohcy of raCially separate schools and educatlOn departments, but set a goal of gradually achieVIng equal edu­catIOn The natIOnal budget for black educatIon was 28 tImes higher In

1985-86 than 1972-73 StatIstIcs from the government and

Independent mOnItonng groups In­

dtcate that blacks stIll receive a fourth­best educatIon among South Afnca's raCHU groups, Intenor to that proVided for ASians and people of mIxed race (coloreds), as well as for whites

Educanon IS compulsory for only 3 percent of blacks, IncludIng those In the 10 tnbal homelands, and free text­books are supplIed only III schools where attendance IS compuhory All white students must go to school and textbooks are free

IncludIng the homelands, there are 41 pupils for every black teacher, reflecnng a steady Improvement from before The pupil-teacher ratIO for whltes has worsened slIghtly In recent years, to 19 to one

The KwaJalem Hourglass IS an unoffiCIal pubhcanon authonzed under the provlSlons of AR 360-81 It IS pubhshed by Global ASSOCIates Monday through Fnday (excluchng hohdays) at the drrec tIon of the commandmg officer, US Army KwaJalem Atoll, Marshall Islands, under contract DASG60-82-C-0063 TIllS IS an offset pubhcanon, WIth a daIly clTculanon of 1,450 The views and opmlOns expressed herem are not neceSSarIly those of the Department of the Army CommUIll­canons should be addressed to the Hourglass, POBox 23, APO San FranCISCO 96555 or call 3539 (AUTOYON 254-3539) Matenals appearIng In the Hourglass rnaj not be repnnted Without the approval of the commandmg officer, US Army KwaJalem Atoll All want ads and notIces must be subrmtted on GA Form 8028 R-4 by 12 30 pm the workmg day pnor to pubhcatIon

Commanchng Officer Pubhc Affarrs Officer EdItor

Col RIchard G Chapman Jr Pat Robbms Brett Marsh

Roberta ConsalVl MIchael Todd

Copy EdItor Feature Wnter

WORLD NEWS PAGE 4, HOURGLASS, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987

5

POindexter RemaIns In The Navy By NORMAN BLACK AP MI!Jtary Wnter

WASHINGTON - Vice Adm John M Pomdexter, the WhIte House nauonal secunty adviser who re­signed m the Iraman arms con­troversy, has decided to accept a reduction m rank rather than leave the Navy, the Pentagon announced Tues­day

Robert Sims, the Pentagon's chief spokesman, said POIndexter "wIll revert as reqmred by law to a two-star rank and be assigned to the long­range plannmg staff of the chief of naval operatIons here m the Wash­mgton area"

"That Will occur as of tomorrow," Sims added "He'll stay on active duty as a rear admiral, servIng on the staff of the chief of naval opera­tIons "

Navy Secretary John F Lehman Jr, In dlscussmg Pomdexter's de­CISIOn, SaId hiS new assignment was selected WIth an eye to "where hiS umque expenence and expertise can really be of genume help In the strategic planmng of the Navy"

Lehman said Pomdexter s declSlon to remaIn m the Navy was "ennrely hiS declSlon " He saId POIndexter's future m the servICe "really depends on the fmal resolutIOn of all the Issues raIsed by the varIOUS mvestigatIOns "

The 50-year-old Pomdexter has been servmg smce hiS White House reSIgnatIOn as a speCIal adVIser to Adm CarlIsle A H Trost, the chIef of naval operatIOns

Youth Goes Beserk, Kills Classmate, Self At School By DONNA BRYSON ASSOCIated Press Wnter

DeKALB, Mo - Counselors were called m to help students cope today wIth the memones of a 12-year­old boy, often taunted as "Chubby," pulhng a gun from a bag, fdtally woundmg a classmate and kIlhng hImself

"It's totally devastatIng, totally shockIng,"saId DeKalb High School Pnnclpal Mark Harp~t

Cla-sses had Just begun MonddY at the rural school when Nathan 0 FarIS puBed a pIstol from a duffel bag and shot TImothy Pernn, 13, of RushVille, In the head As students ran from the SOCial studIes classroom, Nathan shot hImself once In the head, HIghway Partol Trooper Bob Ander­son said

Seventh-graders descnbed Nathan, who lIved In RushVille, as the object of relentless teasmg Some classmates called him fdt and a "walking diC­tlOnary" He earned four A's, two B's and a C on hIS recent report card, Harpst SaId

"Nobody really had anythIng agaInst hIm He was Just someone to pick on," said Jessica Lux, 12

Briefly WASHINGTON (AP) - The

dechne m the value of the dollar agaInst foreIgn currencIes has eroded the bUYIng power of U S soldiers abroad, who wIll begin receivIng finanCIal assIstance to ease the shock, the Pentagon SaId

A directive by Defense Secretary Caspar W WeInberger, SIgned last Fnday and released Monday, WIll produce a 10 percent to 20 percent Increase In the cost-of-hvIng ad­Justment payment that IS already paId to mlhtary personnel statIOned out­SIde the UnIted States

* * * ROME CAP) - Premier BettIno

CraxI, the ledder of Italy's 45th postwar government, today told the Senate he was resIgnIng after 3 1/2

Nunn OptimistiC On U.S.-Soviet Arms Accord In Europe By HENRY GOTTLIEB ASSOCIated Press Wnter

WASHINGTON - Senate Armed ServIces Commtttee Chairman Sdm Nunn says he IS optImIstic that an agreement can be reached wIth the Soviet UnIon to ehmInate medlUm­range mISSIles m Europe

Nunn, D-Ga , told reporters Mon­day that many of the potential obstacles bemg raIsed by the Reagan admInIstratIOn are "senous," but "none of them are show stoppers"

And two pnvate arms control ex­perts suggested that some offiCIals In the admlnI<;tratIon may have raIsed new concerns to dampen enthUSIasm for what appears to be a breakthrough offer by Soviet leader MIkhaIl S Gorbachev

Gorbdchev announced Saturday he has dropped hiS demand that the two SIdes settle therr dIfferences on PresI­dent Reagan's "star wars" missIle defense program before reaching agreement on the Issue of medlUm­rdnge missiles m Europe

The concessIOn appeared to pave the way for a separate agreement to ehmInate from Europe the 572 U S PershIng 2 and crUIse miSSiles now beIng deployed on the U S Side and the estImated 441 SOVIet SS-20s All these weapons can hIt targets at least 1,100 miles away

'Pizza Connection' By VERA HALLER ASSOCIated Press Wnter

NEW YORK - The "Pizza Con­nectIOn" trIal, marked by the slaYIng of one defendant and an attempt on another, ended WIth the conVIctIOns of a former Slclhan Mafia boss and 17 others as part of a nng that sold $1 6 bllhon worth of heroIn through pizza parlors

U S DIstnct Court Jurors who returned the verdIcts Monday after­noon had lIstened to about 400 wItnesses over 17 months, sorted through 15,000 exhIbIts, and studied a 41O-page book that charted eVidence agaIn~t what U S Attorney Rudolph GlUltanI said was the biggest U S heroIn nng to be smashed

"ThIS IS a great VICtory for InternatIonal law enforcement In ItS effort to smash the mob throughout the world," saId GlUham "Some people thought It couldn't be done"

Of 22 men indIcted In 1984, one was murdered, another was senously wounded In a botched "hIt," two pleaded gUIlty and one was acqUItted of all charges

One Juror was excused dunng dehberatIons after her family got a threatenIng phone call, even though all Jurors' names were kept con­fidennal to aVOId Interference

The former mob chIef, Gaetano Badalamenti, 63, of CImsI, SicIly, was conVicted ot ndrcOtICS consQlr-

years In a ndtlOndlly teleVised speech, the

53-year-old Soclaltst said he WIll ImmedIately subffilt the resignatIon of hiS Cabinet to PreSident Francesco Cosslga

The reSignatIOn, follOWIng months of squabblIng among the coalttlOn partners over power-shanng, could lead to parlIamentary electIons thiS spnng, a year ahead of schedule CraxI became premier m August 1983

**'" LOS ANGELES (AP) - Apple

Computer Inc IS hIttIng the market With two personal computers that can be run with programs wntten for IBM eqUIpment and which analysts say could gIVe Apple a huge boost

"Apple's been a hot company lately, and despIte some draebacks these products could, make It a super-

Under a tentdtIve agreement redched by Gorbachev and PreSIdent Reagan In Iceland last October, each Side would keep 100 warheads, but the SOVIet \\eapons would be put In ASIa and the U S arms would be brought home

Though the admlmstratlOn has praIsed Gorbachev's announcement, offiCIals have pushed to the forefront several new pOSSIble ImpedIments to an agreement Nunn referred to some of them

- VenfIcatlOn problems The Umted States wants on-Site inspec­tIOns to make sure the SS-20s are destroyed and moved eastward The SOVIets have tradItIOnally rejected scrutIny of theIr miSSIle sites

- What the mIx of the remammg 100 weapons would be The SOVIets want all remdmmg 100 U S weapons to be crUIse missIles, which travel at Jet aIrcraft speed The Umted States wants to keep some Pershing 2s, whIch travel at rocket speed

- The locatIon of the remaInIng 100 The United States wants the op­tIOn of puttmg them In Alaska, the SOVIets, who have Important in­stallatIons In Sibena, don't want them there

- How to deal WIth a seemmg SovIet supenonty In shorter-range mlsstle~

Finds 18 Guilty acy, carrymg a maximum of 15 years In pnson, and of runnIng a continUIng cnmInal enterprIse, which carries a maximum penalty of hfe m pnson

But Baddlamenu was extradited from S paIn under an agreement that hmIts any sentence to 30 years, GIUlIanI SaId

SIxteen others were also found gUilty of the narcotics conspIracy charge One defendant was cleared of the narcotic,> conspiracy charge but conVicted of currenc y VIOlatIOns that could draw a five-year sentence

Defense lawyers SaId they would appeal

Prosecutors said the drug nng took morphme from Turkey, turned It Into herOIn In SICIly and ~hlpped It to New York and other cItIes In the Eastern and Midwestern UnIted States Co­caine was brought In from South Amenca

The Indictment SaId that smce 1979, the nng Imported 1,650 pounds of heroIn wIth a street value of $1 6 biliton

The case was dubbed the "PIzza Connection" because prosecutors charged that the defendants used plzzenas m the Northeast and upper Midwest as fronts for the dlstnbutIon

BadalamentI's son, VIto Badala­mentI, 29, was the only defendant to be acqUItted on all counts He was also extradited from SpaIn and faces deportation, GlUhanI said

nova," said Stewart Alsop, publIsher of PC Letter, a trade publIcatlOn

'" * * A TLANT A CAP) - A bactenum

recently dIscovered In people suf­fenng from peptic ulcers and chronIC IndigestIOn suggests there may be a cure for the atlments, says a report released at a meetmg of the Amencan SOCIety for MicrobIOlogy

The bactenum, Campylobacter pylondls, was found m up to 70 percent of patIents \\ Ith gastrItIS and peptIc ulcer~ but was rarely found m patIents wlthollt the mflammatlOns, reported Dr George E Buck of LOUISVIlle, Ky

"Many mIght suffer from In­flammatIOn of the hmng of the stomach, perhap<; cau<;ed by thIS new germ," SaId Dr Barry Marshall of the UnIVerSIty of VIrgInIa

News Digest From The Western Pacific

HONOLULU CAP) - Two former U S trusteeshIps m the PaCIfIc have extended diplomatIc recogmtIOn to each other

The Federated States of MIcroneSIa and the Repubbc of the Marshall Islands establIshed formal dlplomatlc relatIOns dunng a ceremony here between the foreIgn mInIsters of the respectIve entIt1e~

Both the FSM and the Marshalls are located m the Western PaCIfIC ocean west of the InternatIOnal date­hne They have been part of the U S -mandated U S Trust Temtory of the PaCIfIC Islands SInce 1947, but achIeved self-government from the Umted States late last year

Under the new arrangement, the Umted States WIll contmue to proVide econormc aId to the Island natIOns and proVIde for theIr defense needs

The two neIghbonng MIcroneSIan natIons both were copra tradmg out­posts of the German empIre pnor to World War I FollOWIng the war, they were ruled by Japan as a League of NatIOns mandate They were captured by the Umted States In World War li

The sIgnIng ceremony took place Thursday

*** KOLONIA, PohnpeI, FSM CAP)

- NatIona1 Congress electIons WIll be held today m the Federated States of MIcroneSIa In the western PaCIfIC wIth one of the w1l1ners eventually becom1l1g the young natIon's second preSIdent

Voters from PohnpeI, Yap, Truk and Kosrae, the FSM's four state dlstncts, Will elect 14 senator" to 2-year-terms 111 the ulllc,lmeral legIS­lature

The focus wIll be on four at-large seats from whIch the Congress on May 11 by secret ballot WIll name a new preSident and vice preSident

After eIght years, Toslwo Naka­yama of Truk state, IS steppmg down as FSM preSident

Nakayama, 55, has preSIded over the FSM government smce Its beg1l1-mng In 1979

Last Nov 3, the Federated States achIeved self-1I1dependence through a Compact of Free ASSOCIatIon wIth the UnIted States after nearly 40 years as part of the Trust Terntory of the PaCIfIC Isldnds

Leadmg candIdates for presldent are VIce PreSIdent BaIley Olter, 54, Congress Speaker Bethwel Henry, 53, and Leo A Falcam, 50, FSM postmaster general and one-tIme gov­ernor of Pohnpel state

The Federated States are located west of the InternatIOnal date hne

The number of elIgible voters was not immediately known

An esnmated 91,500 people hve m the four state dlstncts ~pread across more than one nulhon square rmles of the PaCific

FinanCial News DOLLAR CLOSING

$ In Tokyo 15360 yen and m Zunch was Not avaIlable

CLOSING M[T AL) Gold Down $0 45 to $403 80 Silver Unchanged at $5 45 DOW JONES CLOSING AVERAGES

30 Industnab Up 605 to close 2226 52

20 1 r JnsportatlOns Up 0 73 to close 940 77

15 Utllttles Up 167 to close 21839

65 Stocks Up 2 43 to clo<;e 85078

Volume 149,240,000 See LIstmgs m

Grace Sherwood LIbrary

Negro League Star Awarded Hall Of Fame By FRED GOODALL AP Sportwnter

TAMPA, Fla - Ray Dandndge, who starred ill the Negro Leagues m the 1930s and 1940s, was selected today for entry to the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Commltee, WhICh agam bypassed PhIl RIzzuto, Leo Durocher and Joe Gordon

The mflelder, now 73 and a resIdent of Palm Bay, Fla , also played m the Amencan AssocIatIon and fmlshed hIS career m 1953 m the PacIfIc Coast League He never played ill the major leagues

Ed Stack, presIdent of the Hall of Fame and secretary of the Veterans Committee SaId others recelvmg support from the 18-member commIttee mcluded RIzzuto, RIchIe Ashburn, umpIre Al Barhck, Babe Herman, Tony Lazzen, Carl Mays, Red Schoendienst, VIC WIllIs and Mel Harder

All members of the Veterans CommIttee were on hand here today It took at least 14 votes for selectIOn to the Hall of Fame and only Dandndge was able to poll enough votes ill the two ballots allowed

Dandndge played for Mmneapohs of the Amencan ASSOCIatIOn from 1949 through 1952 and was the league's Most Valuable Player m 1950, when he hit 311 WIth 11 home runs and 80 runs batted m

He also played WIth the DetrOIt Stars, Newark Dodgers, Veracruz of the MeXIcan League, the

1

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AP Top Twenty Record Pvs

Nev -Las Vegas 30-1 1

North Carolma 27-2 2

Purdue 23-3 6

IndIana 23-4 3

DePaul 25-2 4

Iowa 25-4 7

Georgetown 23-4 8

Temple 29-3 5

Alabama 23-4 10

Syracuse 24-5 11

PIttsburgh 23-6 9

IlhnOIS 21-7 14

Clemson 25-4 13

Duke 22-7 17

TCU 23-5 15

New Orleans 25-3 19

Oklahoma 21-8 12

UCLA 21-6

MIssoun 21-9

Notre Dame 19-7

Newark Eagles, the New York Cubans and, m 1953, ----------------------------------;; Sacramento and Oakland of the PaCIfic Coast League

The Veterans CommIttee, WhICh mcludes Hall of Famers Ted WIlhams, Stan MUSIal, Roy Campanella and Monte Irvm, can elect up to two persons and has selected at least one ill Sillce 1951

Jill Landrettl retneves the ball as referee Bob Sholar signals a Spartans I throW-in

Spartans I defeated the Bull-Its 2-0 on Brandon Field last night and evened the season's serIes 2-2 (Photo by LARRY ALLEN,

PRC Kentron Photo Lab)

Local Schedule Soccer

Tomght 5 25 Out for Blood vs ROl Hackers

(Koemg/Sholar) Wednesday

5 15 TermInators v<; Spartans III (Koemg/Scally)

Thursday 5 15 Spartans II VS Bull-Its

(Zambon/JourdJn)

Indoor Soccer Today

3 45 Harvard vs GeorgIa Tech 4 30 Notre Dame vs Flonda

Thursday 3 45 Anzona vs Auburn 4 30 GeorgIa Tech vs Yale

Basketball TOnIght

6 00 Koba Maron vs ROl Rats (Coulon/Mendez) 700 Kanes vs Never Agam (LewlslEsten) 8 00 4Q's vs No Ko RI (Tucker/Cadoret)

Wednesday 600 Ebeye VIce vs Bootleggers (Beckham) 7 00 ROl Trackers vs Arrwolf (Montomo!Koemg) 8 00 EdItIOn vs Short CIrCUIt (Mende7/Sulllvan)

Thursday 600 Kanes vs Wamors (Coulon/Beckham) 7 00 Spartans I vs ROl Rats (Koenlg/Mcndcz) 8 00 4Q's vs Kanes (TBA)

Soccer Standings Men's DIVISion

W .b I Em. Spartans I 8 3 1 709 Terminators 7 3 1 682 ROI Hackers 7 4 2 615 Out For Blood 6 5 2 539 Spartans II 4 6 3 423 Spartans III 0 11 1 042

Women's DIVISion Spartans I 8 2 0 800 Bull-Its 8 2 0 800 Spartans II 4 6 0 333 Tungaru 0 10 0 000

Indoor Standings Small Fry

W .b I Pct Harvard 4 0 0 1 000 Georgia tech 3 1 0 750 Yale 1 3 0 250 Pnnceton 0 4 0 000

Pee Wee Alabama 3 0 0 1 000 USC 2 2 0 500 Auburn 2 2 0 500 Anzona 0 3 0 000

JUnior Notre Dame 5 0 0 1 000 USC 2 3 0 400 Flonda 0 4 0 000

Basketball Men's "A" DIVISion

Standings W .b Pct

Rockets 6 0 1 000 No Idea 3 2 600 Alrwolf 1 4 200 ROI Bay Trackers 1 5 167

"B" DIVISion ROI Rats 5 0 1 000 Koba Maron 3 1 750 Ebeye Vice 3 2 600 Spartans I 4 3 571 Bootleggers 2 3 400 HOOSiers 2 4 333 Hot 2 4 333 Fubar 1 5 167

"e" DIVISion

4Q's 4 1 800 Never Again 4 1 800 No Ko RI 3 2 600 Kanes 3 2 600 Spartans II 1 5 167

Young Warnors 1 5 167 Women's DIVISion

limited Edition 4 1 800 Short Circuit 4 1 800

Spartans 0 6 000

SPORTS HOURGLASS, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987, PAGE 5

'Bonecrusher' Won't Flinch For 'Iron Mike' By ED SCHUYLER JR AP Boxmg Wnter

LAS VEGAS - James "Bonecrusher" Srruth has been down m the hon's den tIme after tIme

The next tIme, a lot of people feel, he should take a whIp and a chair

Saturday mght outdoors at the Las Vegas Hilton, the 33-year-old SmIth WIll face 20-year-old MIke Tyson, who stnkes fear mto the heart of opponents before turnmg them to stone WIth crashmg left hooks and nght uppercuts

"All I need IS a chance," SmIth saId "I don't care how shm the chance IS I'll take advantage of It "

Shm IS one of two chances most bOXing people gIVe Smith of addmg Tyson's World Boxmg CounCIl heavyweIght champIonshIp to the World BOXIng AssocIatIon title he won WIth a one-round knockout of TIm WItherspoon last Dec 12

The other chance gIven Srruth, of course, IS none "Iron MIke, that's a lot of bull," Srruth saId "He

makes a lot of mIstakes He's never been m an ad­verse SituatIOn where he's had to survIve

"ThIS WIll be the SIxth tIme I've fought a world champIOn (current, past or future) Is there anythIng hke that on Tyson's record? Half of Tyson's op­ponents have been mtImIdated "

Maybe more Of Tyson's 27 victones, 25 have been by knockout,

mcludIng the second-round KO of Trevor Berblck, whIch made Tyson the youngest man to wm a heavyweIght tItle

Smith has scored 14 knockouts m postIng a 19-5 record

Last Night's Results Soccer Spartans I 2, Bull-Its 0

Goals Marnl Glade, Rochelle Cunning­ham - 1

Basketball Spartans I 42. HOOSiers 33

High scorers Scott Thomas (Spartans) - 13, AI Lagon, Hugh Larkin (HOOSiers) - 10

Young Warnors 44. Spartans II 30 High scorers Kenny Lucky (Warnors) - 16, Enc Loeak (Warnors) - 13, John NOrriS (Spartans) - 12

Island Sports Bits Youth Outdoor Soccer

The Youth Outdoor Soccer program IS scheduled to begm m early Apnl

There WIll be a Pee Wee league for ages 8-10 and a Jumor league for ages 11-14 Anyone mterested m partICIpatmg m thIS program needs to SIgn up at the Teen Center by March 14

Coaches and offiCIals are needed for thls program Anyone mterested m helpIng should contact Cathy Tate at 3754 or 3331 KRC

The KwaJalem Runmng Club Will hold a meeting on Wednesday, March 4 at 7 pm to dISCUSS thls spnng's events The meetmg WIll be held at Qtrs 105-B All offIcers, dIrectors and mterested persons should attend

You Make The Call ThiS play was captured dunng a game

between the ROI Hackers and Spartans I Is It dangerous play (high kick) on ROI's John

Elm (top) Dr obstruction on Scott Thomas (Spartans I)? Or no whistle at all? You make the call (Photo by BETH SHOLAR,

PRC Kentron Photo Lab)

FEATURES PAGE 6, HOURGLASS, TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987

Motives A Mystery In Wall Street Scandal By CHET CURRIER AP Business Wnter

NEW YORK - Amid all the whos, whats and whens of Wall Street's insIder trading scandal, the most puzzling questIon may be why

Why, as so many people are alleged to have done, would anyone cheat In a game he could wm, and wm big, plaYing StrICtly by the rules?

Given the promIse of a long, lucratIve career, wouldn't anybody who had gained a place In the rarefIed world of Investment banking take painS not to JeopardIze that posItIon?

Above all else, Wall Streeters are supposed to be clever at weighing nsk agaInst reward, at takmg calculated chances but shunnmg reckless gambles

Yet, according to accusatIons by government mvestlgators, some of the mdustry's most successful and respected IndlVlduals staked everythmg they had gOing for them against a penlous pOSSibIlity - the chance that they might get caught

For supertrader Ivan Boesky, the cost of lOSing such a bet Included paying $100 mtlhon In penalties, agreemg to plead gUIlty to an unspecifIed charge, and bemg barred from the securitIes mdustry for hfe

For mergers-and-acqUlsltlOns star Martm Siegel, It meant gUIlty pleas to felony counts of consprracy and tax evaSIOn, for which he could go to pnson, and a sImIlar expulsIOn from the bUSiness

ObVIOusly, there IS no SImple, blanket answer to thiS nddle Those charged and those who have pleaded gUIlty aren't offenng any public explanatIons at the moment, and no one else can know therr varIOus motIvatIons

Yet as the scandal has Widened, some observers see some common themes that link indIVIdual cases

To the ordinary CItizen, a dealmaker or trader who takes home $200,000, $500,000, $1 millIon or more a year might seem successful enough to satisfy anyone Blut people m the secuntles Industry say It doesn't always work that way

"For some people there never seems to be enough money," SaId Raymond F DeVoe lr at the firm of Legg Mason Wood Walker Inc, a veteran of the bUSiness

"But It'S not Just a question of money," DeVoe SaId "They get hooked on power and prestige They revel m the adoratIon they get"

Some old hands m the mdustry compare the generatIon of young Investment bankers that has arrived on the Street m the 1980s to profeSSIOnal athletes, wIth the amounts of money they can make and the style m which they can hve

To generalIze about thiS group, lIke any other, would be unfaIr But along WIth ItS outSized rewards, Investment bankmg offers some speCial problems and temptatIOns

As DeVoe put It" "Wall Street has a way of msulatmg people from reahty "

Your Individual Horoscope

===== fraftces Drake =====::::=:::::::= ARIES

FOR WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4,1987 SCORPIO

~ (Mar 21 to Apr 19) You may meet With resistance from

a close tie about a finanCial matter Why not compromise? Spend half the amount you were plannIng to spend and save the rest TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20)

Know the difference between determinatIOn and stubbornness New '>tam are favored If you keep ego Within bounds You 11 enJoy an evening get together \\ Ith friend" GEMINI (May 21 to June 20)

Don t count on the cooperation of (0 workers now You 11 get more work accompbshed on your own time than In the office Maintain a low profile CANCER (June 21 to July 22)

TenSion doe~ eXist WIth a friend but you can turn thiS SituatIOn around Don t overreact If provoked The evening finds others l1~tenIng to your advLLe LEO (July 23 to Aug 22)

You have extra push With career Interests, but It IS your al)J11ty to l1"ten to the subtle SIgnals that other" gIve off that puts you In the driver., seat VffiGO (Aug 23 to '>ept 22)

A partner remainS your best (on fidant Couples make travel plans AVOId being too dogmatic and refrain trom Ideologl( ,11 al gumenh With others LmRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22)

The money come~ ln, but what to do With It may be the tOPI( of (on( ern With C lo~e tIe~ Othp .. ., dre hard 10

(omInce now hut .,trJ\e lor (OOp(rd tlon

(Oct 23 to Nov 21) Some minor discord With others

can be easily overcome It s your ambivalence that could be the prob lem Evening, though, favors togetherness SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21)

Today s developments mean you re a step closer to achieVing your career goals You wIll find that extra momentum kepps you working after hour" CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to fan 14)

You re bold t'nough to go atter what you want In lovl, yt t .,In.,ltlvp enough to know how to g( I It FnJoy (reatlve activit IlS and It Isurp l vent" AQUARIUS (Jan 20 to Feb 18)

The home I~ liable to be up"et In

some way today It ~ your Job to see that change'> made are con"tructlve ShOPPing IS a plu., PISCES >!JIb' (Feb 19 to Mar 20) ~

You re forthright WIth your view" today, but give other~ the tIme to make up thplr minds Don t he df'mandlng, hut do ... tate your ( a.,e

IF HORN TODAY, you arC' practlc ,11 With a philosophiC or rehglou., bent When motlvatf'd by a cau~e you are truly a hard worker You have high Ideals, hut are JJ1 tor dIsapPOintment If you C'xpect evt ryonl to 11,,1' up to your ~tandard., A good eduLatuJn allows you to bf'come a spe( lall..,! In

your field You do hetter on your own than In partner.,hlp" Law edu( ,ltUIn and writing dre '>ome 01 the fit Id ... III whIch you II find fulfillment Hirth date of AntonIO VivaldI compo.,( r Knute Ho( knp, foothall (Oal h 1I1e1 Paula Prentl"", aelrp".,

© 1987 K,,'9 Features Synd,cate Inc

Ann Landers DEAR ANN LANDERS I read your

column all the time and when you pnnted thiS letter for another reader I chpped It out for myself

I am gettmg mamed soon and as you can see, the chppmg has yellowed wIth age I am wntmg to you to ask If you Will pnnt It agam so I can chp a new copy and save It for our years together The "Twelve Rules" are WIse words to keep m mmd always

Than you Ann Please smg me -COUNTING THE DAYS'

DEAR COUNTING Here It IS TWEL VE RULES FOR A HAPPY

MARRIAGE 1 Never both be angry at once 2 Never yell at each other unless the

house IS on fire 3 Yield to the Wishes of the other as

an exerCIse m self-dlsclphne, If you can't thmk of a better reason

4 If you have a chOIce between makmg yourself or your mate look good - choose your mate

5 If you feel you must cnticIze, do so lovmgly

6 Never bnng up a mistake of the past

7 Neglect the whole world rather than each other

8 Never let the day end WIthout saymg at least one comphmentary thmg to your hfe's partner

9 Never meet WIthout an affectIonate welcome

10 Never go to bed mad 11 When you've made a mIstake,

talk It out and ask for forgIVeness 12 Remember, It takes two to make

an argument The one who IS wrong IS the one who wIll be domg most of the talkIng

DEAR ANN LANDERS When, oh when, IS the TV mdustry gomg to stop that stupid canned laughter? On some shows the nerve-shreddmg fake ha-ha-ha IS used every five seconds It's gotten so bad I Just SWitch channels

Can't the sponsors do somethmg about thIS? Maybe If you pnnt my letter you Will put an end to the nonsense -HM INNY

DEAR H M I agree that canned laughter IS uksome, annoymg and an Insult to the intellIgence of the hsteners It also mdlcates a lack of confIdence m the matenal But don't blame the sponsors Lay It on the producers

For Ann Landers' booklet "Alcohohsm -- Hope and Help" send 50 cents and a SASE to Ann Landers, POBox 1\995, ChIcago, III 60611

Pension Or Lump Sum? INVESTORS' GUIDE By BILL DOYLE

Q When I retll'e, I will have the option of either receiving a monthly pension of $1,349 or taJung a lump sum of $147,900 In your opmlon, which chOice would be more benefiCial to me?

A My recommendatIOn IS to take the $147,900 lump sum and put It m a rollover indIVidual retIrement account, where It WIll remam tax sheltered untIl Withdrawn

Then, If you need some of that money to meet lIVing expenses and/or add a lIttle JOy to your retIrement, you can take money out of the IRA as you see fit The WIthdrawals, of course, will be taxable as ordmary mcome Assummg you're past age 591/2, there WIll be no tax penalty

Mter you pass age 70 112, you'll be reqUIred to make withdrawals based on your hfe expectancy or the Jomt hfe expectancy of you and your IRA benefiCIary

Until the wIthdrawals you make from the IRA exceed the amount It earns - m mterest, dIVidends and/or growth In value - the sIze of your nest egg will grow AB a result, you'll be able to gradually mcrease your WIthdrawals and have a happIer time m retIrement

On the other hand, If you take the $1,349 monthly penSIOn, you II get $16,188 a year for hfe, WIth no posslblhty of mcreased mcome from that source

True, $16,188 on $147,900 IS 10 9 percent - a relatively high return m these days of low mterest rates But the monthly checks would not be all mterest Part would be a return of prinCipal - the money m your pensIon plan

In your shoes, I d opt for the lump sum and the IRA rollover

Q I retIred 10 June 1986, took my pension money 10 a $30,000 lump sum and rolled It over mto an IRA With a ma.Jor brokerage firm $20,000 went mto GlOme Maes and $10,000 went mto con vertlble sec unties

I told the broker I need $200 a month for IlVmg expenses, but I do not receive the monthly check until I call up and ask for It I have asked the brokerage fUnD about the delay twIce but have received no answer The secuntles m my IRA have earned more than $200

every month except November Aren't brokerage firms set up to send out checks on a regular basl8 at a fixed time every month?

A Even though some aren't, It'S probably safe to say that most are It's also a fact and an unhappy experi­ence for customers that foul-ups are all too frequent at many brokerage fLrrns

And there might be a misunder­standIng between you and the broker­age house Unless the Investments m your IRA are generatIng $200 a month In dIVidends, Interest and - In the GInnie Maes - return of prInCIpal, some of your Investments WIll have to be hqUldated each month to fill up the check

Over a year s time, the $200 monthly checks amount to 8 percent on your $30,000 That's a reasonable Withdrawal rate, which your Invest­ments should prOVide on an annual basiS, even though that cash flow mIght fall short m some months

[t s time for you to go back to the brokerage fIrm, SIt down WIth the broker handlmg your account and have thIngs explamed In detaIl If that fIrm can't produce a $200 monthly check there's nothIng to prevent you from mOVIng your IRA elsewhere

Q On June 30, 1986, I was forced to take early retIrement After that, I had some part-tune Jobs and earned a lIttle over $1,000 for the balance of 1986 My WIfe 18 employed and has put $2,000 mto her IRA for 1986 Can I depOSit $1,000 10 an IRA for 1986?

A You can make a $2,000 IRA contrIbUtion for 1986, because your total earnings for that year - your salary before retIrement and your earnmgs from part-ttme work - were at least that amount

Anyone who had earned mcome of at least $2,000 m 1986 can put $2,000 mto an IRA for that year If you earned less than $2,000 last year, you could contribute your total earnings to the IRA You have until April 15, 1987, to make your 1986 IRA contrI­butIOn

Because your Wife had earned Income last year, each of you IS eligIble for the annual IRA contrIbu­tIOn, With $2,000 gOIng Into her IRA and $2,000 Into your IRA

© 1987 by Kmg Features Syndicate Inc

DOONESBURY Garry Trudeau

OH, BRAfJ MAY- IA/EU, We £J{3 YOU'RE RIGHT' HAve 8lZN MAYBE WE ARe 7lJ(;£7}{ER. FOR

• FINALLY REAfJY' NINE- YEARS, " '\ PARtING

~.---...

~

\ PEANUTS

OKAY, BUT RE­MEMBeR, We HAve 7lJ PRAC­T/CESAFe IA/HOOPf3[3 , ,

OFCOURSC, aRCNfJA,

OF (1)UR$C , \

I'U I'LL. CHf3.C1<. • r1"

MYWAt..- CU' lET' \

"

Charles M ~~------~~-. ~~--------~~ r-~------__ --~

GET OUT THERE, LUCY', AND IILL HIT

'{au A FEW

WHICH DO ,{OU WANT TO PRACTICE FIRST, FLY' BALLS OR 6ROUNDER5 7

COMICS HOURGLASS

TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 1987

PAGE 7

DENNIS THE MENACE

~~

3 3

''JUST SOME lAW \00 WANTED TO KNOW IF YOU'RE HOME II

HAGA Dlk B rowne ~--------------4 ~~~.---------------------~

THAI lZSMII'i[7S ME:-I'O [",11-'5 TO TA~e ToMorzrzow OFF

OTHER WOMEN NAG IORE)ER!

Crossword By EugmL Sheller ACROSS 40' -Nick 2'That-Is 19Mmers

1 Letter be Real all there quest fore ba 43 Word IS " 22 Vietnam

5 Wrestler s after 3 Roman road festival need cIvil or 4 Dell 23 Dance step

8 EllIpse secret dweller? 24 Tarzan 12 Composer 47 Tough 5 Middle extra?

Nmo noncom 6 Sweet, 25 June bug 13 wwn zone 49 Author pulpy fruit 26 Belgian 14 Peel Murdoch 7 High hili resort 15 . If - I 50 Arrow 8 Kitchen 27 Greek

Would pOison gadget mountam Leave You 51 Mauna - 9 ClIburn 28 Stately

16 Snake'S 52 Surfeit and tree 18 Preacher s 53 Turf Heflm 29 Cheese

talks squares 10 Comedian mixture 20 Begmmng 54 Pomted Johnson 31 Smger 21 Before tool 11 For fear Grant 22 Baby s diS 55 Cad that 34 Like

covery? DOWN 17 - Richard s nesses 23 San Diego I War god Almanack 35 Comfort

player 36 The heart 26 In close SolutIOn time 24 mms 37 Enrapture

order S L U M. 5 0 WI BAT E 39 Word after 30GI~ TOTE_IDE ENID gun or

address A V E 5 _ DEL A WAR E 'iheet 31 Likely RES A L E.DR AG 0 N 40 "ale tag 32 Caesars _SA H T P RO_ 41 (omedJan

')')) ILL I NO I 5 E G AIDI Jay 33 ( rane ~ N EO. D 0 M E S. I RIAl 42 Angered

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rm~IIM COSH KENTUCKIYI~W~ilier 1_ lOU'SIn _L 0 P SAL 5_ word

WIZARD OF ID Brant Parker and Johnny Hart ~~--------------------------~---.

WHAT" A~ YOU IiOIH(1 TO CO~T TH~ blMM~A ~I'-' I~ 7F-YlNb TO l-O~ ~RIO()~ lPA~ ~JvIT? OU~ ~TAN[A4fo?O OF ~VIH&A~ f~T AG;r: CAN

BC WHeees ALL- THe: GUys?

THe:y~ ALL-SPeAWU3.D­our CONN Ar f"rle:"L.ANDFILl,. Df(U~f(aJrOFrHeIRSKtJu.S I

36 'VIusclf> ADO BE SIJ.10 UP E E 44 f>Ies-knot COL 0IR~~~ R ELY 45 \.iuote

38 Flower 0 R L E ~~~ PAL E 46 (,f>rman RAY 5 £ii§ S LED donkey

48 (Ja ...

nelghhor

CLASSIFIED PPGE 8, POURClASS, lUESDPY, ~APCP 3, 1987

OFFICIAL NOTICES USAKA AIRCRAFT PASSENGERS are remmded that carry-on arucles are restncted to one arnclt' per person The arucle must fit under the seat All other articles must be checked m at least 30 mmutes pnor to scheduled mamfest close out time

(Global AViatIon)

ATTENTION ALL ISLAND RESIDENTS All Mld­Atoll Islands are closed to VIsItatIOn dunng range up time The Mid-Atoll Comdor IS defmed as the area bounded on the north by the hne drawn north of Boked Island on the east and Yabbernohr Island on the west, and bounded on the south by the lIne drawn south of BIgej Island on the east and north of the high tide mark on Nmm Island on the west reef

(US AKA PAO)

FINDING HIGH EXPLOSIVE AMMUNITION on KwajaleIn Atoll IS not an uncommon expenence VIntage WWlI ammumtIOn, whether uncovered by constructIOn crews or found whIle reefmg, IS a real and formIdable danger Handlmg these Items without extensIve, specIalIzed traIning needlessly nsks lIfe and limb If you find unexploded ordnance, DO NOT TOUCH' Mark the SIte so It can be found agam, then report the Item to secunty, x4445 Army explOSive ordnance disposal personnel Will be dIspatched to safely dIspose of the hazard

(Range Ops) VETERINARIAN ARRIVAL Pet owners deSIrmg Dr Palumbo's professIOnal services please contact Andy Sherwood at 2633 or 2163 as soon as pOSSible In addItIon to regular services, which mclude surgical stenhzatIOn, declawmg, dewormmg and phYSical exams, the new fehne leukemIa test and vaccme wIll be offered Calls for appoIntments after normal working hours can be recorded on 24-hour answenng service on 2633

HELP WANTED GLOBAL ASSOCIATES IS now accepting apphcatlons for a part-time tYPist, 20 hours per week, word processing expenence preferred Submit applIcations to corner of 9th Street and Lagoon Road, Bldg 781

GLOBAL ASSOCIATES IS currently acceptIng apphcatIOns for the followmg pOSitIOnS to staff KwajaleIn Atoll Pre-School (formerly KINS)

1 Directorffeacher (1) 2 Teachers (2) 3 Teacher Aides (5)

Drrectorffeacher must hold a valid teachmg certificate In one of the states of the USA With a strong background In elementary or early childhood educatIOn Teacher Aides should have a strong commitment to workIng wIth young children ExperIence IS preferred Persons Interested should submIt their applIcatIOns to Global Personnel on the Corner of 9th Street and Lagoon Rd no later than March 10

FOR SALE HITACHI VIDEO CAMERA and portable Video recorder Auto focus, solId state Image sensor, large color mom tor, bUllt In character generator, extra battenes, $1100 Call 2342 evemngs

IMMAUCLATE TREASURE 18" strand of cultured MlkImoto pearls, 14 ct gold charms, Amethyst dldmond nng, Emerald dIamond nng For a chance to see and own these fine Items call 4530 between 7-9 pm Plea<;e no calls after 9 p m

KENWOOD AUDIONIDEO RECEIVER, can handle 2 VCR's, one laser dISC, CD and more w/remote control SansUl top of the lIne double cassette deck w/many features Call 2160 a m tIll 4 15 pm Call 3743 after 430 pm

EXERCISE PRO PLUS SYSTEM, can be used wIth weights (lIke new) Cdll 2295 to see, best offer takes 11

YAMAHA CP25 ELECTRONIC PIANO One KasIno 200 Amp and stand for plano mcluded $700 fIrm Call 2695 Qtrs 438A

ZENITH 150PC with 640K, color mOnitor, 2-360K dnves, 20 MB external drIve, 8087, MS-DOS 3 1 WIth utIl package Lots of software, $1800 firm Call Mike W6630 H2614

WINDSURFER W/2 SAILS & traIler, $500 Pony scuba tank and regulator, $150 Call John 4246

LOST MENS PRESCRIPTION GLASSES with black metal frames Call 1522 or 3015

YELLOW SEA AND SEA UNDERWATER CAMERA (appro x 2 months ago) on ROI If found please contact Ken Baxley or leave message at 6191

FOUND MAN'S DIVE WATCH found underwater & stIll workIng Was lost several months ago Call 2713 to descnbe and claIm

ONE PIERCED EARRING post style with lIght blue stone found at Ivey Gym Call 2348 to claIm

CASIO POCKET CALCULATOR on OceanSIde plcmc table Call W3213

WANTED FOUR OR FIVE DRAWER FILE CABINET Phono cartndge WIth stylus for a Dual 1229 turntable Call 2675 before 10 pm

RUBBER TRAINING WHEELS for 16" bicycle Call 3585

SOMEONE TO TAKE LITTLE GIRL TO BOSTON a<; soon a<; school IS out We found someone to bnng her back to Kwaj

MEN'S SCOUT BIKE In working condwon would prefer one In need of some repair, so thIS may be your chance to unload that old bike' Call Tom W2165 H3181

UPHOLSTERED CHAIRS - two matching, either reclIners or rockers (earth tones) Call 2262

SERVICES OFFERED NEED A BABYSITTER? Cdll Jarru at 2581 anytIme'

MOTHER WISHES TO VISIT ISLAND July or Aug and needs a place to stay I Will take excellent care of your qtrs , pets and plants Call VIC W6109 H6559

COMMUNITY NOTICES AMERICAN LEGION MEETING tOnight, 1900 hrs, Vets Hall ReVIsed constitution Will be discussed PUFL stili aVaIlable'

DO YOU LIKE TO PLAY CHESS? Come JOin us on Wed mghts 7-9 pm at CRC Room 3 The chess enthUSiasts

YY WOMAN'S CLUB LUNCHEON Thursday, March 19 Corned beef sandWich and dessert $6 Guest speaker Rocky Caponigro Will speak on "Drug and Alcohol Abuse" SOCial hour 12 30 Call EmIly at 2406 for reservations by March 16

LASER DISC CLUB hours Mon -Fn 3 30-6 pm Sat noon to 4 p m Sun 3-6 p m

INDOOR SOCCER OFFICIALS Don't forget to pick up the new schedules for the rest of the season You may pick them up at the Gear Locker or the CRC

YY WOMAN'S CLUB EXECUTIVE BOARD meeting Thursday, March 12, 7 p m at qtrs 442A

COURT OF HONOR to be held for BSA Troop 314 at 7 pm m the Davye MultI-Purpose Room on Wed March 4 Parents and guests are mVIted

THE RICHARDSON THEATER wIll be reserved Fn March 6 from 8-10 30 p m due to World Day of Prayer festIvltles

KWAJALEIN AMATEUR RADIO CLUB meets Wed, March 4, starting at 7 p m What equipment do you feel the club needs? We'll be dlscussmg pOSSIbIlitIes at thIS month's meetIng, please attend

KRC DOWNWIND DASH one mIle run on the aIrport taxIway IS scheduled for Sun, March 8, at 5 p m PrIzes to the top fImshers Entry forms avaIlable on Macy's porch must be submitted by March 7 to aVOId late fee

WORLD DAY OF PRAYER observance for all Island women IS March 6, at 7 p m Island Memonal Chapel Make plans to attend now Fellowship and refreshments to follow For Into call JoAnn W1369 H2534

KW AJALEIN RUNNING CLUB there wIll be a meeting March 4, at 7 p m to diSCUSS thiS spnngs events The meetlllg wIll be at qtrs 105B All officers, directors and mterested persons should attend

EAC MEETING Wed, March 4 at 1 o'clock quarters 422A New members welcome

FRIENDS OF PAT KIRSCH He IS expected to amve March 6 Please come over and help us say "Glad you're home and well''' March 7 at Emon Beach between 7 30-10 00 p m QuestIOns? Call KnstIn at 2210 or 2212

ANNUAL SHRINE CLUB ST PATRICKS DAY PARADE, carmval, and corned beef & cabbage feed March 14 See Tom HIll, LeWIS Rowe or any Shnner

THE MONGOLS ARE COMING' Island favonte Mongohan BBQ at Vets Hall Apnl4 Contact Jerry 4540, Dick 2168 or any ChIna Post member for tIcket

ATOLL 8 SQUARE DANCE CLUB wIll meet to­mght at 7 p m at CRC, Room 1

I

Tonight At The MOVies Yokwe Yuk - RobInson Crusoe & The TIger

6 30 ------------------------------ G AlIens 8 30, 12 30 ---------------------- R

Tradewmds - Off Beat 8 00 ---------------------------- PG

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