6
FILE CDP1 ___ _ 1 '4IGrJ 5 4 AT 0304 4.6 AT 1533 :Jhe HOURGLASS lCM T WE 8/14/ 0 8 0936 8/J4/ 0 8 A1 2!28 Va to i No '191 9'JT ANE TRfJCK EXPLODES IN WRECK t./ A ... [ CENTER, TEXAS, AUG. 12 (UPJ )-- A euTANE AND A PiCKUP TRUCK COL- lAST NIGHT AT THE UNTERSECT 1 0N TWO DIRT FARM ROADS nN A fiERY EX- P_OS-ON, KILLING SEVEN PERSONS. WESLEY BOONE, 38, AND HIS DAUGHTER SHERRY JEAN WERE jDENT'FIED AS THE VICTIMS iN THE BUTANE TRuCK. BOONE wAS AN EMPLOYE HALE CENTER CO-OPo THE FIVE CHARRtD 6)D,£5 THE PiCKUP TRUCK AS MRo AND MRS. JOE OwENS, TWO DAUGHTERS AND A SON, AL_ OF ABERNATHY, TEXAS. THE TRUCK BELONGED TO GENE Of ABE'RNATH'f. IT TOOK POLiCE HOURS TO THE BODIES AFTER THE THUNDEROUS EX- PLOSiON SHOOK THE COUNTRYSIDE. BOTH VEHijCLES WER£ TURNED INTO MOLTEN HEAPS OF WAS BLOCKEDo FLIGHT THIS MORNING BRINGS FORTY-SIX PERSONS TO ISLAND rORTV-SiX peRSONS ARRiVED ON Al:'N MORNJNG, SOME RE- TuRNING FROM VACAT!ONS J NEW EMPLOYEES ARR!V!NG, SOME WITH FAMiLIES. THE LARGEST OF 23 REPRESENT 'leT. Jo .. iN PERSONNEL SUPER- SEVERAL OArs HE MET MRS, FENNESSY WHO HAVE COME HERE iN TiMC rOR SCHOOL. MRS. RICHARD F AND CHiLDREN ARE BACK. MR. AND MRSo ROBERT GRANDSTArF, NEW EM- FlOYEES, AND THEIR SON ARRIVED. RE- TURNEES INCLUDE CORNELIO FLORES, ROB- ERT KANEAKUA, JOHN CLAYTOR AND PEDRO FERNANDO. NEW EMPLOYEES ARE LEON Me FAqLANE, GiLBERT PAULS, HARRY AVILA, WILLIAM STARNES, CLARENCE ALEXANDER, H AND CARL JOHNSON. FROM PEARL HARBOR FOR TEMPORARY DU'Y ARE ADRiANE F. ANDERSON AND GEORGE SKEDELESKI. NEW ARR!VAlS FOR THE USN ARE NORMAN PITTS, ROBERT POSTltR AND JOSEPH KalEY. CLYDE SAFETY ENGINEER FOR USA IS HERE FOR A TEMPORARY STAY. NORMAN JENSEN (KENTRON HAWAi I, LTD,) \ HAS RETURNED. FOR RAYTHEON, COMING I FOR TEMPORARY STAY ARE GEORGE OSBORNE I AND GEORGE C OSBORNE. REV. ALLEN J CAMERON S J., HIGH SCHOOL PRiNCiPAL AT THE CATHOLIC MiS- SjON WAS ON THE MORNING FLiGHT, RE- TURNiNG FROM VACATION. RETURNING FOR RCA, IS JEROME SHATZ- KIN WiTH WIFE AND DAUGHTER. JOHN W. HERTEL, W!TH THE U.S. BUREAU, AND WIFE, ARE HERE FOR TEMPORARY DUTY. J. M LAN!ER (CV), MRS. LANIER AND THE!R THREE CHflLDREN ARE BACK IN TIME FOR THE SCHOOL TERMo ROBERT D. GIL- BERT (CV) fS A NEW ARRIVAL. PAUL Eo CALKINS, PROJECT MANAGER OF AMfLco-Ers HOK!N-GALVAN CAME POM HONOLULU FOR A TRIP. KAKAZY, MECHANIC FOR Al SlEEl CO., HAS RETURNED. A NEW ARRiVAL is JOSEPH K,NSLEY (ESTG). WE LCQME ABOARD! NO DRINKING AT RICHARDSON D. W DILLMAN, CHIEF OF SECURITY, CAllS ATTENTiON TO INSTRUCTIONS AS OF 30 1959 PROHIBITING THE USE Of!'" A l (OHOU C BEVERAGES, I NCLUD I NG BEER AT THE RICHARDSON THEATER. SECURITY HAS BEEN iNSTRUCTED TO ENFORCE THiS I REGULATiON AND TO APPREHEND ALL VIO- L_ tATORS KWAJALEIN, ______ .- __________ __ __ WILL DISCUSS BERLIN WASHINGTON, AUG. AMBASSADOR ANATOLY F. ASKED THE STATE DEPARTMfNT TODAY fOR AN AP- POINTMENT TO DISCuSS lHE G£RMAN ATijON WiTH SECRETARY OF STATE DrAN RUSK TOMORROW -- THE f!'"!RST ANNuVER- SARY OF THE BERLHN WAlL. MAY PROSECUTE FIRED OFFICIALS MAN I LA, Au G • 12 (U P! ) .. PH I L P P ti N r PRESIDENT DIOSDADO MACAFAGAl SAID HE WILL CONTINUE TO CRACK DOWN ON WEALTHY AND FOREiGN BUSvNESSMEN WHO HAVE GAiNED ASCENDANCY ILLEGAL SAID ThE DISPOSAL or THE DEPORTATION CASE MiLiONAIRE HARRY HAS THE JUSTICE DEPAR7MENT TPM[ TO LOOK AF1ER WHAT HE AS "EXPLOSIVE CASES." THE PRESIDENT SAID TriAT INVCST!GA- TSON Of!'" SOME FIL!PINOS WI L BE ED SOONo WHILe MACAPAGAL DECLiNED TO SiATE THE EXACT NATURE Of NCW CAS£S UN- DER iNV(STiGATiON, HE SAID THEY ARE BUG AND COULD Bf JUST AS TO THE iNTEREST AS CASE. MACAPAGAL EXPEl lED STONEHIlL AND HiS PARTNER, ROBERT BROOKS, fROM THE PH'L- LAST WEEK FOR A "NETWORK OF' CORRUPTION" AND ENGAGHNG "CONSPiRACY TO GAIN BuSthESS ASCEN- DANCY THROUGH E CO'iOM R C SABOTAGE." REGARDiNG 15 CiALS WHOM HAD ASKED TO RESiGN FOR "UNETHICAL REASONS" WiTH STONEH!LL, MACAPAGAL SA i 0, "WE ARE GO i NG TO F'I U: CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST THOSE WHOSE EVIDENCE WARRANTS SUCH PROSECUTiON." MEDICAL GROUP IN DISASTER CONTROL PLAN MEETS WEDNESDAY A MEETiNG OF ALL THE ISLAND PEOPLE WHO RECEIVED LETTERS A SHORT AGO ASSiGNING THEM TO MEOuCAL ELEMENT OF THE ISLAND DISASTER CON- TROL PLAN ARE ASKED TO BE PRESENT WED. 15 AUGUST AT !:P.Mo UN THE PEACH ROOM OF THE EXECUtiVE CLUBfl AT THIS MEET!NG THE ORGANHZATION Will BE DtiSCUSSED AND INDIViDUALS ASSiGNED A PLACE IN iT. ALSO, ON ABC WARrARE AND FIRST AiD TRAIN- ING WILL BE SHOWNo iSLAND PER- SONNEL ARE iNTERESTED iN JOiNING THIS GROUP WilL BE MOST WELCOME, IF FOR ANY REASON WULL BE UNABLE TO ATTEND OR PLANNING TO LEAVE KWAJAlEIN WITHIN THE NEXT THREE MONTHS, PLEASE NOTIf!'"Y THE HOSPliAl ADMiNBSTRATOR PHONE 2150. SCOUTS ENJOY OUTING RDCHARD GARCIA, SCOUTMASTER, SAYS A GOOD NUMBER or BOYS SATUR- DAY'S FISHiNG TRIP AND EXPRESSES AP- PRECIATilON TO CWO De V. SWEARINGEN FOR MAKING THE OUTUNG POSS8BLEo A HIGHLIGHT OF THE TRiP wAS ROBERT CATCHING A TUNA. YESTERDAY fH£ SCOUTS WERE GIVEN A CONDUCTED TOUR OF THE INDiA BEARo REG ISTf.R TON IGHT .,..... ..... u REGISTRATION FOR UNffVERSljY OF HAWAI. TONIGHT, 7-9 ROOM 12 OF THE GEORGE StilZ SCHOOL. TWO ASTRONAUTS ORBITING EARTH Moscow, AUGo 12 (UPI)--Two MANNED SOVIET SPACESHIPS ORBITED THE EARTH WITHiN SRGHT OF ONE ANOTHER TODAY THE SOVIET UNION AUDACijOUSLY LAUNCH- ED A SECOND ASTRONAUT AT 0802 GMT THiS MORNBNG TO JOrN ONE SENT UP YESTERDAY ON A rLiGHT THAT ALREADV All SPACE RECOF;D.lo By 1100 GMT THE SOYRET NtWS AGENCY TASS SAftD THE TWO SPACESHHPS HAO lOOP- ED THE EARTH TWBC£ TOGETHER AND WERE WITHIN V!SUAl QF ONE ANOTHER, MORE THAN 800 MilES IN THt SKY. By 3 THE TWO MEN HAD LOM- Pl(TED EIGHT ORBiTS AND THE FIRST SPACE CRAFT HAD 24 TiMES FOR A DRSTANCE OF MORE 602-fHOU- SAND THr SovnFT N[ws AGENCY TASS SAYS THE COSMONAU1S FEEL FINEo SOVIET SCIENTISTS THERe WAS NO MtCHANICAl REASON WHY FiRST SPACE- MAJOR ANDRKAN NftKOLAYEV, COULD ORBIT FOR DAYS OR MOREo A FEAT THAT WOULD FAR SURPASS fHE EN- DURANCt RECORD FOR SPACE ALSO COULD BE A G!ANT STEP TOWARD LANDING A MAN ON THE MOON. THE SECOND SPACESY!P US PILOTED BY PAVEL ROMANOV!Crl POPOVijCH AND WAS PUT UN AROLIND THE. EARTH Ai 0802 GMT, SUNDAYo THE Of!'"FICIAL SOVIET NEwS TASS SAYS THE. SECOND AND TYE ONE YESTERDAY wiTH NIKO. hi LAYEV ABOARD ARE iN ORBiTS CLOSE TO! EACH OTHER, TASS THE TWO ARE iN RADIO CONTACT EACH OTHE.Ro TASS SAYS THE TWO SHllPS WERE PUT UP WiTHIN 24 OF EACH OTHER "TO OB- TAIN EXPERiMENTAL DATA ON THE HTY OF ESTABLiSHiNG DiRECT CONTACT BE- TWEEN TWO SHIPSo" (CONTINUED PAGE 3 COL. 3) NUCLEAR TEST MORATORIUM WAS FIRST BROKEN BY THE RUSSIANS WASH I NGTON, AUG.. 12 (UP i )--U S. N- FORMATION DIRECTOR EDWARD R MuRROW SAID TODAY RUSSiA's VIOLATfiON OF THE NUCLEAR TEST MORATOR!UM "WiDELY UNDERSTOOD" AROUND WORLD. EVEN THOUGH THE UNiTED SlATES Rt- SUMED NUCLEAR TESTiNG FOLlOW!NG THE SOVIET UNiON'S ACTiON, HE SAID, CRiT- iCISM OF THE UNITED STATES WAS "TINGE.D BY THE KNOWLEDGE THAT THERE WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN ANY AMFRICAN TEST5 HAD THE RUSSIANS NOT BROKEN THE MORATORiUM." "I THINK THIS IS VERY WIDELY UNDER- STOOD," MURROW SAID IN A RADIO INTERViEW WiTH SEN. KENNETH B KEATiNG or NEW YORK. TRUMAN NEEDS PROOF! INDEPENDENCE, Mo., AUG (UPI)-- FORMER PRESICENT S TRUMAN SAID TODAY HE CONGRATULATED THE SOViEl UN- ION FOR ORBITING TWO MEN AROUND THE WORLD--"IF IT 8 S TRUE." "You LL HAVE TO PROVE IT TO ME," TRUMAN SAID, "AND I CONGRATULATE THEM IF IT !S SO. II "THEY NEVER TOLD ME lHE ALL I THE TIME I WAS DEALING WifH THEM." I RESCUED FROM VOLCANO CATANIA, SICILY, AUG. 12 (UPI)-.A RESCUE PARTY TODAY BROVGHT DUTCH TOURiSTS DOWN FROM VOLCANO MOUNT ETNA ONLY SLIGHTLY WORqt AFTER A hARROWING 36 hOURS ON -----------------------------------------

FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    17

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

FILE CDP1 ___ _

1

'4IGrJ r~DE 8/~41 5 4 AT 0304 8~14/ 4.6 AT 1533

:Jhe HOURGLASS lCM T WE

8/14/ 0 8 A~ 0936 8/J4/ 0 8 A1 2!28

Va to i No '191

9'JT ANE TRfJCK EXPLODES IN WRECK

t./ A ... [ CENTER, TEXAS, AUG. 12 (UPJ )-­A euTANE TRUC~ AND A PiCKUP TRUCK COL­~!DED lAST NIGHT AT THE UNTERSECT 10N O~ TWO DIRT FARM ROADS nN A fiERY EX­P_OS-ON, KILLING SEVEN PERSONS. M~LTON WESLEY BOONE, 38, AND HIS

F~VE-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER SHERRY JEAN WERE jDENT'FIED AS THE VICTIMS iN THE BUTANE TRuCK. BOONE wAS AN EMPLOYE O~ T~£ HALE CENTER CO-OPo

PO~iC£ !DENT!~bED THE FIVE CHARRtD 6)D,£5 ~N THE PiCKUP TRUCK AS MRo AND MRS. B~LlY JOE OwENS, TWO DAUGHTERS AND A SON, AL_ OF ABERNATHY, TEXAS. THE TRUCK BELONGED TO GENE ~CMASTERS Of ABE'RNATH'f.

IT TOOK POLiCE HOURS TO IDENT~FY

THE BODIES AFTER THE THUNDEROUS EX­PLOSiON SHOOK THE COUNTRYSIDE. BOTH VEHijCLES WER£ TURNED INTO MOLTEN HEAPS OF ~ETALo TRAFF~C WAS BLOCKEDo

FLIGHT THIS MORNING BRINGS FORTY-SIX PERSONS TO ISLAND rORTV-SiX peRSONS ARRiVED ON KWAJ~

Al:'N T~~S MORNJNG, SOME FAMIL~ES RE­TuRNING FROM VACAT!ONS J NEW EMPLOYEES ARR!V!NG, SOME WITH FAMiLIES.

THE LARGEST GRO~P OF 23 REPRESENT 'leT. Jo .. iN FE~NESSY, PERSONNEL SUPER­v~SOR, RE~UR~ED ~ROM SEVERAL OArs ~N

~ONOLULv W~£RC HE MET MRS, FENNESSY A~D T~O CH~LDREN WHO HAVE COME HERE iN TiMC rOR SCHOOL. MRS. RICHARD F ~!~ lE~ AND CHiLDREN ARE BACK. MR. AND MRSo ROBERT GRANDSTArF, NEW EM­FlOYEES, AND THEIR SON ARRIVED. RE­TURNEES INCLUDE CORNELIO FLORES, ROB­ERT KANEAKUA, JOHN CLAYTOR AND PEDRO FERNANDO. NEW EMPLOYEES ARE LEON Me FAqLANE, GiLBERT PAULS, HARRY AVILA, WILLIAM STARNES, CLARENCE ALEXANDER, IL~R£D H W!LL~AMS AND CARL JOHNSON.

FROM PEARL HARBOR FOR TEMPORARY DU'Y ARE ADRiANE F. ANDERSON AND GEORGE SKEDELESKI. NEW ARR!VAlS FOR THE USN ARE NORMAN PITTS, ROBERT POSTltR AND JOSEPH KalEY. CLYDE WaL~iTE) SAFETY ENGINEER FOR USA IS

HERE FOR A TEMPORARY STAY. NORMAN JENSEN (KENTRON HAWAi I, LTD,)

\ HAS RETURNED. FOR RAYTHEON, COMING I FOR TEMPORARY STAY ARE GEORGE OSBORNE I AND GEORGE C OSBORNE.

REV. ALLEN J CAMERON S J., HIGH SCHOOL PRiNCiPAL AT THE CATHOLIC MiS­SjON WAS ON THE MORNING FLiGHT, RE­TURNiNG FROM VACATION.

RETURNING FOR RCA, IS JEROME SHATZ­KIN WiTH WIFE AND DAUGHTER. JOHN W. HERTEL, W!TH THE U.S. ~EATHER BUREAU, AND WIFE, ARE HERE FOR TEMPORARY DUTY.

J. M LAN!ER (CV), MRS. LANIER AND THE!R THREE CHflLDREN ARE BACK IN TIME FOR THE SCHOOL TERMo ROBERT D. GIL­BERT (CV) fS A NEW ARRIVAL.

PAUL Eo CALKINS, PROJECT MANAGER OF AMfLco-Ers HOK!N-GALVAN CAME POM HONOLULU FOR A BUS~NESS TRIP. MASA~n KAKAZY, MECHANIC FOR TERM!N~

Al SlEEl CO., HAS RETURNED. A NEW ARRiVAL is JOSEPH K,NSLEY (ESTG).

WE LCQME ABOARD!

NO DRINKING AT RICHARDSON D. W DILLMAN, CHIEF OF SECURITY,

CAllS ATTENTiON TO INSTRUCTIONS AS OF 30 DtCr~B~R 1959 PROHIBITING THE USE Of!'" A l (OHOU C BEVERAGES, I NCLUD I NG BEER AT THE RICHARDSON THEATER. SECURITY HAS BEEN iNSTRUCTED TO ENFORCE THiS

I REGULATiON AND TO APPREHEND ALL VIO­L_ tATORS

KWAJALEIN, MAR~HA_L~l~'S~L_A~N.~D~S ______ .-__________ ~M~0~N~D~A~Y~13~A~U~G~~~~1~h~'9~6~2 __ __

WILL DISCUSS BERLIN

WASHINGTON, AUG. ~2 (UPI)~-SOV!Er AMBASSADOR ANATOLY F. DOB~Y~ijN ASKED THE STATE DEPARTMfNT TODAY fOR AN AP­POINTMENT TO DISCuSS lHE G£RMAN s~ru­ATijON WiTH SECRETARY OF STATE DrAN RUSK TOMORROW -- THE f!'"!RST ANNuVER­SARY OF THE BERLHN WAlL.

MAY PROSECUTE FIRED OFFICIALS

MAN I LA, Au G • 12 (U P! ) .. ~ PH I L ~ P P ti N r PRESIDENT DIOSDADO MACAFAGAl SAID SATURD~Y HE WILL CONTINUE TO CRACK DOWN ON WEALTHY FtL~PiNO AND FOREiGN BUSvNESSMEN WHO HAVE GAiNED ECO~OM~C ASCENDANCY TH~OUGH ILLEGAL MFA~$~ MACAPAGA~ SAID ThE DISPOSAL or THE

DEPORTATION CASE AGA~NST AMERi~AN MiLiONAIRE HARRY SrONEH~LL HAS G~VEN THE JUSTICE DEPAR7MENT TPM[ TO LOOK AF1ER WHAT HE DESCR~BED AS "EXPLOSIVE CASES."

THE PRESIDENT SAID TriAT INVCST!GA­TSON Of!'" SOME FIL!PINOS WI L BE FBN~SH­

ED SOONo WHILe MACAPAGAL DECLiNED TO SiATE

THE EXACT NATURE Of T~E NCW CAS£S UN­DER iNV(STiGATiON, HE SAID THEY ARE BUG AND COULD Bf JUST AS IMPORTA~T TO

THE NATnO~\S iNTEREST AS ~HE STC~EHilL

CASE. MACAPAGAL EXPEl lED STONEHIlL AND HiS

PARTNER, ROBERT BROOKS, fROM THE PH'L­!PP!~ES LAST WEEK FOR ESTABl~SH~NG A "NETWORK OF' CORRUPTION" AND ENGAGHNG ~N "CONSPiRACY TO GAIN BuSthESS ASCEN­DANCY THROUGH E CO'iOM R C SABOTAGE."

REGARDiNG T~E 15 GOVERN~tNT OFr~­CiALS WHOM H~ HAD ASKED TO RESiGN FOR "UNETHICAL REASONS" WiTH STONEH!LL, MACAPAGAL SA i 0, "WE ARE GO i NG TO F'I U: CRIMINAL CHARGES AGAINST THOSE WHOSE EVIDENCE WARRANTS SUCH PROSECUTiON."

MEDICAL GROUP IN DISASTER CONTROL PLAN MEETS WEDNESDAY A MEETiNG OF ALL THE ISLAND PEOPLE

WHO RECEIVED LETTERS A SHORT WH~LE

AGO ASSiGNING THEM TO T~E MEOuCAL ELEMENT OF THE ISLAND DISASTER CON­TROL PLAN ARE ASKED TO BE PRESENT WED. 15 AUGUST AT !:P.Mo UN THE PEACH ROOM OF THE EXECUtiVE CLUBfl

AT THIS MEET!NG THE ORGANHZATION Will BE DtiSCUSSED AND INDIViDUALS ASSiGNED A PLACE IN iT. ALSO, f~LMS ON ABC WARrARE AND FIRST AiD TRAIN­ING WILL BE SHOWNo O~HER iSLAND PER­SONNEL W~O ARE iNTERESTED iN JOiNING THIS GROUP WilL BE MOST WELCOME,

IF FOR ANY REASON !~DIVllDUALS WULL BE UNABLE TO ATTEND OR ~F PLANNING TO LEAVE KWAJAlEIN WITHIN THE NEXT THREE MONTHS, PLEASE NOTIf!'"Y THE HOSPliAl ADMiNBSTRATOR PHONE 2150.

SCOUTS ENJOY OUTING RDCHARD GARCIA, SCOUTMASTER, SAYS

A GOOD NUMBER or BOYS EN~OYED SATUR­DAY'S FISHiNG TRIP AND EXPRESSES AP­PRECIATilON TO CWO De V. SWEARINGEN FOR MAKING THE OUTUNG POSS8BLEo A HIGHLIGHT OF THE TRiP wAS ROBERT WALl~ CATCHING A TUNA. YESTERDAY fH£ SCOUTS WERE GIVEN A CONDUCTED TOUR OF THE INDiA BEARo

REG ISTf.R TON IGHT ~..... .,..... ..... u

REGISTRATION FOR UNffVERSljY OF

HAWAI. lOURSE~ TONIGHT, 7-9 G.~. ROOM 12 OF THE GEORGE StilZ SCHOOL.

TWO ASTRONAUTS ORBITING EARTH

Moscow, AUGo 12 (UPI)--Two MANNED SOVIET SPACESHIPS ORBITED THE EARTH WITHiN SRGHT OF ONE ANOTHER TODAY

THE SOVIET UNION AUDACijOUSLY LAUNCH­ED A SECOND ASTRONAUT AT 0802 GMT THiS MORNBNG TO JOrN ONE SENT UP YESTERDAY ON A rLiGHT THAT ~AD ALREADV BRO~EN All SPACE RECOF;D.lo

By 1100 GMT THE SOYRET NtWS AGENCY TASS SAftD THE TWO SPACESHHPS HAO lOOP­ED THE EARTH TWBC£ TOGETHER AND WERE WITHIN V!SUAl S~GHT QF ONE ANOTHER, MORE THAN 800 MilES IN THt SKY.

By 3 p$M~(EDT), THE TWO MEN HAD LOM­Pl(TED EIGHT ORBiTS TOG~lHER, AND THE FIRST SPACE CRAFT HAD ORBij~tD 24 TiMES FOR A DRSTANCE OF MORE T~AN 602-fHOU­SAND M~LESo THr OFFIC~Al SovnFT N[ws AGENCY TASS SAYS THE COSMONAU1S FEEL FINEo

SOVIET SCIENTISTS ~A~D THERe WAS NO MtCHANICAl REASON WHY T~t FiRST SPACE­~AN, MAJOR ANDRKAN NftKOLAYEV, COULD NO~

REMA~N ~N ORBIT FOR ~O DAYS OR MOREo A FEAT THAT WOULD FAR SURPASS fHE EN­DURANCt RECORD FOR MANN~D SPACE FL~GH1

TH~S ALSO COULD BE A G!ANT STEP TOWARD LANDING A MAN ON THE MOON.

THE SECOND SPACESY!P US PILOTED BY PAVEL ROMANOV!Crl POPOVijCH AND WAS PUT UN ORB~T AROLIND THE. EARTH Ai 0802 GMT,

SUNDAYo THE Of!'"FICIAL SOVIET NEwS AG£~ey TASS

SAYS THE. SECOND SPACESHB~ AND TYE ONE lAUNC~ED YESTERDAY wiTH ANDR~AN NIKO. hi

LAYEV ABOARD ARE iN ORBiTS CLOSE TO! EACH OTHER, TASS ~AYS THE TWO SPACESH~~S ARE iN RADIO CONTACT Wir~ EACH OTHE.Ro

TASS SAYS THE TWO SHllPS WERE PUT UP WiTHIN 24 ~OURS OF EACH OTHER "TO OB­TAIN EXPERiMENTAL DATA ON THE POSS~BiL~

HTY OF ESTABLiSHiNG DiRECT CONTACT BE­TWEEN TWO SHIPSo"

(CONTINUED PAGE 3 COL. 3)

NUCLEAR TEST MORATORIUM WAS FIRST BROKEN BY THE RUSSIANS

WASH I NGTON, AUG.. 12 (UP i )--U S. ~ N­FORMATION DIRECTOR EDWARD R MuRROW SAID TODAY RUSSiA's VIOLATfiON OF THE TH~EE-YEAR NUCLEAR TEST MORATOR!UM ~s

"WiDELY UNDERSTOOD" AROUND T~E WORLD. EVEN THOUGH THE UNiTED SlATES Rt­

SUMED NUCLEAR TESTiNG FOLlOW!NG THE SOVIET UNiON'S ACTiON, HE SAID, CRiT­iCISM OF THE UNITED STATES WAS "TINGE.D BY THE KNOWLEDGE THAT THERE WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN ANY AMFRICAN TEST5 HAD THE RUSSIANS NOT BROKEN THE MORATORiUM."

"I THINK THIS IS VERY WIDELY UNDER­STOOD," MURROW SAID IN A TElEV~S!ON­RADIO INTERViEW WiTH SEN. KENNETH B KEATiNG or NEW YORK.

TRUMAN NEEDS PROOF!

INDEPENDENCE, Mo., AUG ~2 (UPI)-­FORMER PRESICENT HARR~ S TRUMAN SAID TODAY HE CONGRATULATED THE SOViEl UN­ION FOR ORBITING TWO MEN AROUND THE WORLD--"IF IT 8 S TRUE."

"You ~ LL HAVE TO PROVE IT TO ME," TRUMAN SAID, "AND I CONGRATULATE THEM IF IT !S SO. II

"THEY NEVER TOLD ME lHE TR0T~ ALL I THE TIME I WAS DEALING WifH THEM." I

RESCUED FROM VOLCANO CATANIA, SICILY, AUG. 12 (UPI)-.A

RESCUE PARTY TODAY BROVGHT r~R(F DUTCH TOURiSTS DOWN FROM T~E VOLCANO MOUNT ETNA ONLY SLIGHTLY T~E WORqt AFTER A hARROWING 36 hOURS ON l~E ~OUNrAIN.

-----------------------------------------

Page 2: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

PAGE 2

PUBLISHED AT THE DIRECTION OF THE COMMANDING OFFICER, PACIFIC MISSILE RANGE FACILITY KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL ISLANDS, IN ACCORDANCE WITH BUREAU

OF WEAPONS CONTRACT NOAS-4176-c WITH THE TRANSPORT COMPANY OF TEXAS o

THE HOURGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAILY MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DEADLINE fOR NOTICES IS 4 P M DAY BEFORE PUB­LICATION DEADLINE FOR NEWS ITEMS IS 10 A M DAY OF PUBLICATION.

THE HOURGLASS RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT ALL COpy RECEIVED fOR PUBLI­CATION

EDITOR - H. EDW MCK,NNEY

FEW HAVE DROPPED OUT OF OVERSEAS PEACE CORPS

WASH I NGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI )--PEACE CORPS DIRECTOR SARGENT SHRIVER SAID TO~AY THAT ALL BUT 13 OF THE I, 123 VOLUNTEERS SENT OVERSEAS LAST SUMMER STILL ARE ON THE JOB.

SHRiVER TERMED THE FIGURES AN "IN­CREDIBLE SHOWING," BUT SAID IT WAS TOO EARLY TO PREDICT WHAT THE FINAL RETURN RATE WOULD BE.

Or THE 13 DROPOUTS, SHRIVER SAID SIX RETURNED BECAUSE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS, TWO BECAUSE OF ILLNESS IN THE FAMilY, TWO LEFT TO MARRY, ONE QUIT BECAUSE HE DID NOT FEEL EQUAL TO THE JOB, ONE RETURNED BECAUSE OF "PHIl­OSOPHICAL DIFFERENCES WITH THE PEACE CORPS "

ONE, HE SAID, RETURNED BECAUSE OF WHAT THE PEACE CORPS TERMED "A POST CARD I NC I DENT"--A REFERENCE TO A PEACE CORPS GiRL VOLUNTEER WHOSE POSTCARD HOME DESCRIBING CONDITIONS IN NIGERIA TOUCHED OFF A CONTROVERSY IN THE AF­RICAN NATION

RUBBER TIRE WITHSTANDS HEAT THAT WOULD MELT LEAD

lONDON, AUG" 12 (UPI )--THE DUNLOP RUBBER CO. WILL SHOW TIRES THAT ARE BUILT TO WITHSTAND 350 DEGREES CENT/­GRADE HEAT AT THE FARNBOROUGH AIR SHOW HERE IN SEPTEMBER

THE HEAT THEY ARE DESIGNED TO DEAL WITH WOULD BRING MERCURY ALMOST TO TrlE BOIL OR MELT lEAD. THE TIRES ARE PART OF A COMPLETE WHEEL AND BRAKE ASSEMBLY FOR THE HAWKER P 1127, THE WORLD'S FIRST VERTICAL TAKE-OFF AND LANDING COMBAT PLANE

THE TIRES HAVE TO FACE UP TO 350 DE­GREE HEAT WHEN SUBJECTED TO NOZZEl EXHAUST HEAT WHEN THE MACHINE /S HOV­ERING.

GROUND CARRIER PIGEONS

SINGAPORE, AUG. 12 (UPI)·",PRESIDENT SUKARNO HAS BANNED COMMUNICATING BY CARRIER PIGEON IN INDONESIA, ACCORD­ING TO THE INDONESIAN NEWS AGENCY AN­TARA.

OWNERS OF PIGEONS WERE DIRECTED TO REGISTER THEIR BIRDS WITH AUTHORITIES SO THEIR USE "FOR ILLEGAL PURPOSES DE­TERMENTAL TO PUBLIC ORDER AND SECUR­ITY" CAN BE PREVENTED.

ALL MOTOR VEHICLES REQUISITIONED

TOKYO, AUG. 12 (UPI)--RADIO INDONE­SIA INDICATED TODAY THAT PRESIDENT SUKARNO HAS ORDERED THE REQUISITION­ING OF ALL MOTOR VEHICLES IN JAKARTA.

IN A B~OADCAST MONITORED HERE, RADIO INDONESIA SAID:

"ONLY THE CARS OF CABINET MINISTERS AND MEMBERS OF THE DIFLOMATIC CORPS ARE EXEMPT FROM THE ORDER ON THE RE­QUiSiTION OF MOTOR VEHICLES IN JAKAR­TA.

FOUND--PlASTIC RAINCOAT IN VICINITY OF THE BARRACKS. CLAIM AT HOURGLASS OFf."ICE

HOURGLASS

BIRTH CONTROL IN JAPJ\~I ~AY COST TEACH~RST JOBS

TOKYO, AUG. 12 (UPI )--JAPAN'S BIRTH CONTROL PROGRAM HAS BEEN SO SUCCESS­FUL THAT SOME SCHOOL TEACHERS MAY SOON 8E OUT OF WORK, THE EDUCATION MINISTRY ANNOUNCED

THE MINISTRY SAID IT EXPECTS A DROP OF 3.6 MtLLION P~PILS IN THE PRESENT PR&MARY IND JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOL POPULA­TION OF 1804 MILLION OVER THE NEXT FaVE YEARS o

THIS, SAID THE MINISTRY, PROBABLY WILL SOLVE AUTOMATICALLY THE PROBLEM OF SHORTAGE OF SCHeOL BUILDINGS.

THE JAPAN TEACHERS' UNION IS ALREAD~

REPORTED TO BE DISTURBED BY THE THREAl OF UNEMPLOYMENT AND .S DEMANDING THAT THE GOVERNMENT NOT SACRIFICE 'TS MEM­BERS IN THEIR PLANS.

BEAUTIFUL LASS MUST WEAR LONGER KILTS AT CONTEST

LONG B£ACH, CALIFORNIA, AUG~ II (UP;)--Mrss SCOTLAND, WHOSE SHORT PLAID SKIRT DREW ~ROTESTS YESTERDAY FROM MEMBERS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S SCOTTISH COMMUNITY, WAS OUTFITTED TO­DAV IN LONGER KNEE LENGTH KILTS AS CONTESTANTS IN THE INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY CONGRESS POSED FOR A GROUP PIC­TURE.

ELiZABETH BURNS, A 20-YEAR-OLD LASS FROM ST. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND, CAME IN FOR CRITICISM WHEN SHE ARRIVED HERE DRESSED IN KILTS MUCH SHORTER THAN "KNEE LENGTH." . " .... UNIVERSITY OFFERS COURSE

IN USE Of SLIDE RULE

HERE IS A USEFUL COURSE FOR PERSONS ON KWAJALEIN. IT IS INSTIitUCTION IN USE OF THE SLIDE RULE AS A MEANS OF SAVING TIME AND ENERGY IN NUMERICAL COMPUTATION. ENGINEERS, STATISTICIANS ACCOUNTANTS, DESIGNERS, CARPENTERS ARE ONLY ~ FEW EXAMPLES OF JOBS WHERE THE SLIDE RULE IS HELPFULo

THE COURSE IS NON-CREDIT, OFFERED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII FOR 8 SESSIONS FEE IS $20 THE LOCAL UN­IVERSITY BOOK STORE HAS SLIDE RULES FOR SALE OR BRING YOUR OWN. THE IN­STRUCTOR HAS CONSTRUCTED A LARGE SCALE SLIDE RULE FOR DEMONSTRATION TO THE CLASS.

THE INSTRUCTOR IS ROBERT R MURREL, WHO HOLDS A M S. DEGREE FROM THE UNI­VERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND HAS DONE WORK TOWARD HIS DOCTORATE AT OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY. HE IS EMPLOYED BY VRSD. THE UNIVERSITY IS HAPPY TO WELCOME MR. MURREL TO THE FACULTY. To ENROLL CALL 604.

WANTS MORE TEST I N FORM AT tON

WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI)--A REPUB­LICAN MEMBER OF THE JOINT ATOMIC EN­ERGY COMMITTEE TODAY CHALLENGED PRES­IDENT KENNEDY TO TELL WHAT THE UNITED STATES HAS LEARNED ABOUT THE LATEST SOVIET NUCLEAR TESTS.

REP. CRAIG HOSMER, OF CALIFORNIA, ASKED KENNEDY FOR A "FULL IND COMPLETE DISCLOSURE" OF THE INFORMATION IN OR­DER TO PROVE TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE THAT If CONCESSIONS" MADE TO THE SOVIET UNION AT GENEVA ARE SAFE.

NEW CALCULATION TECHNIQUE Moscow, AUG. 12 {UPI)--A SOVIET

MATHEMATICIAN sAID TODAY THE OR81TING OF TWO SOVIET SPACESHIPS IN 24 HOURS PROVED THAT A "NEW CALCULATION TECH­NIQUE" HAS MADE SPACE FLIGHTS "A MAT­TER OF ROUTINE."

IT WAS BELIEVED THAT THE MATHEMA­TICIAN, LAZAR LYUSTERNtK, REFERRED TO GUIDANCE SYSTEMS, A FIELD IN WHICH SOVIET SCIENTISTS HAVE LONG EXCELLED.

MONDAY 13 AUGUST 1962

COSMONAUTS MAY ATTEMPT JOINING CAPSULES IN SPACE

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND, AUGo 12 (UP!)­BRITAIN'S BEST-KNOWN SPACE £XPER1 SAID TODAY THE TWO SOVIET COSMONAUTS NOW ORBITING THE EARTH WERE EXPLORiNG THE POSSIBILITY OF A "RENDEZVOUS" IN SPACE.

SUCH A RENDEZVOUS, HE SAiD, IS GEN­ERALLY BELIEVED TO BE THE 8EST METHOD OF GETTING SPACECRAF1 UNTO ORB!T AROUN[ THE MOONo

IN THIS TECHNIQUE, THE VAR~OUS SEC­TIONS OF THE SPACECRAFT ARE SENi !NTO THE OR81T SEPARATELY AND JOINED THER~,

RATHER THAN SENDING THEM UP IN ONE BIG PIECE.

THE TECHNIQUE INVOLvrS FANTASllCALLY ACCURATE GUIDANCE SYSTEMS AS TPE TWO CAPSULES TO BE JOiNED MUST BE IN EXACT Y THE SAME ORBIT AND TRAVELiNG AT ALMOST THE SAME SPEED WHEN THEY RENDEZVOUS

DENY ANY SECRET AGREEMENT BETWEEN FORMOSA AND RED CHINA

SINGAPORE, AUG. 12 (UPI)--CHiNESE CIRCLES HERE TODAY lABELL£D AS "GROUND-

If LESS REPORTS THAT THE NATIONAliST CHi-NESE GOVERNMENT HAS MADE A SECRET AGREE­MENT WITH RED CH~NA OVER FORMOSA.

THE REPORT, QUOTiNG SOURCES IN HONG KONG AND PORTUGUESE MACAO AND "CONFi­DENTIAL DOCUMENTATION NOW UN THE HANDS OF CERTAIN RESPONSHBLE OVERSEAS CHINfSE IN MALAYA," SAID THE TWO SIDES AGREED TO A TRUCE DURING CHIANG KAI-SHEK'S LIFETIME OR FOR A MINIMUM OF 10 YEARS3

CHINESE 08SERVERS HERE, INCLUDING A SOURCE CLOSE TO THE FORMOSAN GOVERNMEN , SAID RUMORS HAVE BEEN CiRCULATING IN HONG KONG FOR "QUITE SOME TiME" THAT THE NATIONALIST AND RED CHiNESE HAVE BEEN HOLDING PEACE TALKSo

THEY POINTED OUT THAT THE NATIONAL. ISTS CHINESE GOVERNMENT HAS REPEATEDLY STRONGLY DENIED SUCH RUMORS~

PROBABLY LACKED POWER TO PUT TWO MEN IN SPACE

NIEDERLENZ, SWITZERLAND, AUG. 12 (UPI)--THE FACT THAT THE SOVIET UNION SHOT TWO COSMONAUTS INTO ORBIT iN TWO DIFFERENT CAPSULES A~PARENTLY PROVES RUSSIA HAS NO ROCKETS POWERFUL ENOUGH TO LIFT A TWO-MAN CAPSULE, A SWISS EX­PERT SAID TODAYo

JOSEF STEMMER, ENGINEER AND SECRETAR~ GENERAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASTRONAUT­ICAL FEDERATION, SAID THE SOVIETS REACHED A VERY IMPORTANT SC!ENTkFuC GOAL BY ORBfTING TWO MEN WITHIN 24 HOURS.

BUT, HE SA 10, I T CAN BE ASSUMED THEY WOULD HAVE USED A TWO-MAN CAPSULE, If

THEIR ROCKETRY HAD BEEN UP TO IT, AS THE REACTIONS OF TWO MEN IN TH[ SA~E

CAPSULE WOULD HAVE BEEN EVEN MORE VAL­UABLE.

FAMOUS ATTORNEY DIES

WASH INGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI )--EL !SHA HANSON, FORMER GENERAL COUNSEL OF THE AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLiSHERS v ASSOCI­ATION, DIED HERE TODAY AT THE AGE OF

73· HANSON'S MOST FAMOUS CASE CAME WHEN

FORMER LOUISIANA Gov. HUEV LONG DIS­CRIMINATORILY TAXED LOUISiANA NEWSPAPEHS WHICH OPPOSED HIM HANSON ARGUED THE CASE SUCCESSFULLY BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, AND THE TAX wAS DECLARED UNCON­STITUTIONAL.

REPORT NEW FOREST FIRES

DRAGU IGNAN, FRANCE, AUGo 12 (UP! )-­NEW FOREST FIRES PLAGUED SOUTHERN AND SOUTH CENTRAL FRANCE 10DAY WHilE POLICE INVESTIGATED POSSIBLE ARSON IN THE THREE-DAY FIRE THAT DESTROYED 10,000 ACRES OF PiNELAND IN THE MrtDI VACATiON­LAND LAST WEEK.

-------~----------------~-----------------

Page 3: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

PAGE 3 HOURGLASS ------_. WEATHER iN STATES CAUSES STUDiES U .. S. LA3JR PRACTICES

• DEATHS AND PROPERTY DAMAGE Los ANGEL ES, AJG,IST 12 (UPI) --PH I L 1-

CHICAGO, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--AT lEASl PP~NE LABOR SECRtT,qy ~~~6ERT B. ROM-S~X PERSONS WFRE DEAD IN THE UPPER MID- UAlD~Z ~R. ARRIVED ~E~E SATURDAY ON A

WEST U S SATJRDAY BECAUSE OF HEAVY S~ATE D~~A~TMENl ~oC~SJRED CULTURAL RAINS THE WEST EXPERIENCED ITS SECONe EXCHANGE TOuR OF THiS COUNTRY TO STUDY RECORD CHILL OF THE SEA50N, AND THE L~80R PRACTICES. SOUTH SWEATED OUT A RECORD HOT SPELL. ROMUALDEZ, WHO JUST ~OMPLETED A TOUR

A LIGHT PLANE PLUNGED TO THE EARTH OF ThE SAN JOAGLIN VAL~EY IN CENTRAL iN A DENSE fOG AND HEAVY RAINbTORM 12 CAL!FORNiA) WAS SLATED TO VISiT FARMS MilES NORTH OF DULUTH, MINNESOTA. fou~ AND LABOR CAMPS IN THE AREA DURING HIS MEN DiED. WRECKAGE WAS SCATTERED OVER STAY. HE PLANNED TO lALK TO SOME OF A BLOCK-LONG AREA HiS COUNTRYMEN, WHO ARE USED EXTENSIVE-

AT LEAST TWO PERSONS WERE FOUND LV THROUGHOUT CALIFORNIA ON TRUCK FARMS SATURDAY TO HAVE DROWNED AT VELVA, ON HiS TOUR. NORTH DAKOTA, WHEN WATER HURTLED DOWN THROUGH GULLIES FROM THE HILLS AFTER A HEAVY RAINSTORM.

AUTHORiTIES CONDUCTED A "CAR BY CAR, HOLE BY HOLE, POOL BY POOL" SEARCH FOR MISS!NG PERSONS. Two 80DIES WERE FOUND. ANOTH~R WOMAN, WHO TOLD OFFICERS THEIR CAR HAD STALLED IN AN UNDERPASS, SAID HER H~SBAND WAS MISSING.

RESIDENTS SAID THE RUNOFF CAME THROUGH T~E MAiN STREET AND WAS KNEE H!GH TRAILE~ HOUSES WERE FLIPPED UP­SlDE DOWN, BASEMENTS FLOODED AND BASE­MENT WALLS COLLAPSED

TEMPERATURES SATURDAY NEARED 100 IN MuCH OF TEXAS, OKLAHOMA AND LOUISIANA. iN PHOENiX, ARllONA, IT WAS 104. IT WAS THE SIXTH DAY OF SUCH TEMPERATURES IN MANY AREAS

NEED BETTER METHODS Of EXCHANG~NG NEWS ABOUT DRUGS

GHANA BARS LAWYERS fROM APPEARING IN LOCAL COURTS

ACCRA, AUGUST 12 {UPI)--NEW REGULA­TIONS ISSUED BY THE GOVERNMENT LAST NIGHT BAR ATTORNEye OR ADVOCATES FROM APPEARING IN LOCAl.. COURTS. IN GHANA, THOSE ARE COURTS PRESIDED OVER BY LAY MAGISTRATES.

THE REGULATIONS DECLARE THAT THE PROCEDURE OF LOCAL COURTS WILL BE GOV-ERNED BY NATiVE LAWo

THE REGULATIONS PROVIDE THAT ANY PARTY WHO COMES BEFORE THE LOCAL COURT MAY BE REPRESENTED BY A HUSBAND, OR WIFE, OR A PARENT OR GUARDIAN, IF THE PARTY CAN NOT BE PRESENT HIMSELF.

THE LOCAL COURTS DEAL WITH CIVIL AND CRIMINAL CASES. THEY ALSO DEAL WITH THE OWNERSHIP, POSSESSION OR OCCU­PATION Of LAND AND INHERITANCE OF PRO-PERTY 0

STUDYiNG AMERICAN METHODS

WASHINGTON, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--DR. rRA~CES O. KELSEY SAID TODAY SHE HOPES 1~E fHALIDOM!DE TRAGEDY WILL SPUR CREAT JON or AN INFORMATION CENTER WETHER5FIELD, CONNECTICJT, AUG. 12 ~Q~IPP£D W!TH MODERN COMPUTERS TO FLASH (UP!)--THE DIRECTOR OF SPA N'S HIGHWAY ALERTS ABOUT HARMFUL DRUGS AROUND THE DEPARTMENT is STUDYING ACCOUNTING AND

WORLD EXISTING METHODS OF EXCHANGING DRUG

DATA ARE RAPiDLY BECOMING OUTDATED, THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION INVES­TIGATOR SAIDo THE MANUFACTURER OF A DRUG IN ONE COUNTRY MAY NOT EVEN KNOW THE RESULTS OF CLINCIAL TESTS WITH THE SAME DRUG ELSEWHERE, SHE SAID.

iN THE CASE OF BABY-DEFORMING THAL­IDOMiDE, SHE DISCLOSED, THE fOOD AND

DRUG ADMINiSTRATION WAS UNAWARE OF WAR~INGS ISSuED OVERSEAS THAT THE DRUG MIGHT CAUSE NEUROLOGICAL DISTURBANCES IN ADIJlTSo

iT WAS DR KELSEY WHO KEPT THE DRUG OFF THE AMERICAN MARKET.

CONT!NUE TO MOURN MARILYN

HOLLYWOOD, AUGUST I I (UPI)--MOURNERS CONTINUED THEiR VIGIL TODAY AT THE CRYPT OF ACTRESS MARILYN MONROE, A WEEK AFTER THE BLONDE MOVIE STAR'S UN­TiMELY DEATH FROM AN OVERDOSE OF BAR-B iTURATES.

A SPOKESMAN FOR WESTWOOD MEMORI~L PARK WHERE MISS MONROE WAS LAID TO REST LAST WEDNESDAY SAID THERE WAS AN "AL­MOST CONTINUOUS" STREAM Of PERSONS GOING TO THE ACTRESS' ABOVE-GROUND CRYP1. HE SAID THERE ARE ALWAYS FOUR OR FiVE CARS AT THE SITE OF HER RESTING PLACE.

THE MARKER FOR THE CRYPT WHERE SHE WAS ENTOMBED HAD NOT YET BEEN PUT IN PLACE, BUT THE CEMETERY HOPED TO HAVE IT READY BY MID-WEEK.

TOURED LONDON TONER

LONDON, AUG. 12 (UPI)--foRMER U.S. PRESIDENT DWiGHT D. EISENHOWER AND HIS FAMILY TOURED THE TOWER OF LONDON TO­DAY AND THEN ATTENDED CHURCH SERVICES IN ITS ROYAL CHAPEL

LARGE CROWDS GATHERED OUTSIDE THE FAMOUS OLD TOWER WHEN WORD SPREAD THAT EISENHOWER, HIS WIFE, M~M!E, AND THEIR TWO ~RANDCHiLDREN WERE HAVING LUNCH WITH THF" Govr;RNOR OF' THI=: TOWER

ADMINISTrATIVE TECHNIQUES OF THE ACC­OUNTING DIViSION OF THE STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT.

ENRIGUE JARA80-PAY WAS SENT TO THIS COUNTRY TO STUDY AMERICAN METHODS WITH A VIEW OF ADAPTiNG THEM TO CONDITIONS IN SPAIN.

OPERATOR REMAINED CALM

HUTCHINSON, KANSAS, AUGUST 12 (UPI) AT LEAST ONE MAN REMAINED CALM LAST NIGHT DURING THE TUMULTUOUS RIOT STAGED AT THE STATE REFORMATORY.

ANSWERING TELEPHONE CALLS FROM NEWS­MEN AND OTHER INQUIRINt CALLERS, THE MAN SPOKE WITH A STOIC CALM THAT BELIED THE SCENE HE DESCRIBED INSIDE THE PENAL INSTITUTION. SOME 75 YOUNG INMATES BROKE WINDOWS, SMASHED FURNITURE AND TRIED TO SET FIRES IN A SHORT-LIVED DEMONSTRATION

ASKED TO IDENTIFY HIMSELF, HE SAID: "I'M AN INMATE WHO OPERATES THE SWITCH­BOARD."

LONE SAILOR UNREPORTED

OSAKA, JAPAN, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--A YOUNG OSAKA MAN WHO SET OUT TO SAIL ACROSS THE PACIFIC ALONE HAS NOT BEEN HEARD FROM FOR TWO AND A HALF MONTHS IT WAS DISCLOSED SUNDAY.

HE IS KENICHI HORIE, 23, SON OF A AUTOMOBILE PARTS DEALER.

THE MAN'S FAMILY REPORTED HE SET OUT IN THE ONE-TON YACHT MERMAID MAY 22.

HE HAD EXPECTED TO TAKE ABOUT 80 DAYS FOR THE TRIP.

HOWEVER, MARITIME SAFETY HEADQUAR­TERS OFFICIALS HERE SAID IT WOULD BE NEXT TO IMPOSSIBLE TO CROSS THE PACIFIC IN SUCH A SMALL CRAFT IN THAT TlIME.

LONDON--BRITON COLIN JORDAN HAS WON THE TITLE OF "WORLD NAZI Noo lit AFTER A SQUABBLE WITH AMERICAN NAZI PARTY LEADER GEORGE LINCOLN ROCKWELL, A BRIT­ISH NEWSPAPER SAID TODAY

MONDAY !3 AUGuST ~962

AS1RONAUTS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE !) (IN BOOTH BAY HARBOR, MAINE, PRESi­

DENT KENNEDY HAILED THE SOVIET SPACE ACHIEVEMENT AS AN "EXCEPT~ONAL, TECHN­ICAL FEAT." HE SAiD HE SALUTED "THE COURAGE OF THE TWO NEW ASTRONAUTS" AND SAID THE AMERICAN PEOPLE "WHLL WISH THEM A SAFE RETURN.")

THE TWO COSMONAUTS COMMUN~CATED W!T~ EACH OTHER BY RADiO, AND ~N A CONTINU­iNG DEMONSTRATiON OF ANOTHER SPACE FIRST THEIR WFiGHTLESS MOvEMENTS iN THEIR SPACE CABINS WERE TELEViSED FRO~ TIME TO TIME ON RUSSIAN TV SETS o

THE SECOND SPACEMAN, LT. COL. PAVEL POPOVICH, WAS SHOT INTO SPACE TODAY TO JOiN ORBITING SOVIET COSMONAUT ANDRIAN NIKOLAYEV, WHO THiS MORNiNG BROKE THE 17-0RBIT SPACE fLiGHT RECORD SET BY ANOTHER SOVIET ASTRONALT, GHER­MAN TITOV, A YEAR AGO lHIS MONTH.

NIKOLAYEV, A BACHELOR, HAD REMAINED ALOFT AND SLEPT THROUGH PART Of H!S JOURNEY WHEN HE WAS JOINED BV PoPO­VICH, A MARRIED FA1HER OF A SIX-YEAR­OLD DAUGHTER. BOTH ASTRONAU1S ARE 32.

Moscow RADIO SAID B01H COSMONAUTS HAD LEFT THEIR SEATS DURING lPE DAY TO PERFORM ASS~GNED TASKS WITHiN THEllR CABINS.

NIKOLAYEV, WHO WAS BLASTED !NTO SPACE YESTERDAv MORNiNG, BROKE T!TOV'S ENDURANCE RFCORD AT 5:47 AuMo EDT W~EN HE BEGAN HIS !8TH ORBIT. T~10ViS SPACE TRIP CARRiED HIM 440,000 MILES.

POPOVICH, WHOSE WiFE is ALSO A P'LOT WAS HURLED SKYWARD IN VOSTOK IV AT 11:02 AoM. Moscow TIME (4~02 A~Mu EDT) APPARENTLY WITH PIN POINT PRECISiONo Moscow RADKO SAID THE ROCKET BOOSTED POPOVICH INTO AN ORBIT ALMOST iDENTi­CAL WITH THAT OF N!KOLAYEVRS CRAfT.

DEfiNITE PLANS TO PUT MEN ON OTHER PLANETS

MOSCOW, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--SOVIET COSMONAUT No. I, YURt GAGARijN, 10DAY SET A LESS THAN 20-YEAR TARGET DATE FOR MANNED FLiGHTS TO OTHER PLANETS.

fORECASTING WHAT SPACE EXPLOITS COULD BE EXPECTED 20 YEARS fROM NOW, GAGARIN SAID HE HOPED THAl "LONG BE­FORE 1981 THERE WILL APPEAR ON THE MOON THE fiRST ASTRONOM!C OBSERVATORY AND THE FIRST COSMODROME SUITED FOR FLIGHTS TO VENUS AND MARS."

RUSSIA'S PIONEER FIRST SPACE MAN GAVE NO DATE FOR MAN TO REACH THE MOON. BUT HE SAID HE THOU3HT TH'

OF COSMONAUTSo UNITED STATES PLANS ARE TO

MAN ON THE MOON BY 1970. GAGARIN PREDICTED THAT THE

PUT A

fiRST OBJECTS SENT TO THE MOO~ WOULD BE AUTO~

MATIC UNITS DIRECTED BY TELEVISION. THEY WOULD BRING EVERYTHING NECESSARY FOR HUMAN LIFE THERE, HE SAiD.

IMPORTANT STOP TO STARS

MOSCOW, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--A SOVIET SPACE SCIENTIST TODAY HAILED THE SO­VIET UNION'S BACK-TO-BACK ORBITING Of MANNED SPACESHIPS AS AN "iMPORTANT STEP" TOWARDS A TRIP TO THE MOONo

ANOTHER SCIENTIST TODAY SAID THE COMMUNICATIONS NOW GOiNG ON BETWEEN TWO SOVIET SPACE SHIPS AND lHE EARTH PAVED THE WAY fOR LINKUPS W!TH FUTURE MANNED PROBES TO MARS AND VENUSo

MoSCOW, AUG. 12 (UPI)--THE W~FE OF RUSSIA'S LATEST COSMONAUT WAS REPORT­ED KNITTING FURiOUSLY TODAY TO CALM HER NERVES WHILE HER HUSBAND WH~qlED IN SPACE AROUND THE WORLDo

THE OFFICIAL NEWS AGENCY TASS RE­PORTED THAT MRSe MARINA POPOVICH, 3!­YEAR-OLD WiFE OF SOVIET SPACEMAN PAVEL POPOVICH tt lS KNITTING ALL THE. TiMEo lI

Page 4: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

~~ E t _________________________ --.!JH~Ot;~'R~GL~A~SS~ ______ _.---------!M!::!:O::=.!:N~D:.!::.A..!..Y ....!1!-iL....!::.A~UG:.!U~S:..:.T__:...i 9~6::!:2:.-.----t

UNDERWATER SHRINt TO BE

RICE

GENERAL MESS MENU--TUESOAY

SUPPER NAVY BEAN SOUP BRUNSWICK STEW BUTTERED STEAMED POTATOES BUTTERED BRUSSEl SPROUTS STEAMED RICE SALAD BAR W/ORESSING FRUIT BARS &. ICE CREAM COLD DRINK

DINNER VEG:rA8t...E Soup ROAST RARON OF BEEF OVEN BROWN POTATOES BUTTERED ASPARAGUS STEAMED RICE COLD SLAW ApPLE PIE COLD DRINK

ATTRACTION fOR SKIN DIVERS PETOSKEY, MICH., AUG. i2 (UPI)--AN

II-FOOT MARBLE CRUCIFIX WIll BE lOWER-ED iNTO THE WATERS OF LiTTLE TRAVERSE

,.

BAY TODAY (SUNDAY) TO BECOME THE NATION' ~ FIRST UNDERWATER SHRINE.

DEDICATED TO SKIN AND SCUBA DIVERS, THE ONE-TON CRUCIFIX WILL REST ABOUT 65 FEET BELOW THE SURFACE OF THE BAY .,000 FEET FROM SHORE.

THE CROSS ORiGINAllY WAS INTENDED FOR ~------------------------------~-------r-------------------------------------'A CHURCH AT BAD AXE, MICH., BUT WAS DAM-

AID MAY PROVIDE TELEVISION AGED IN SHIPMENT FROM ITALY AND THE CH-

BREAKFAST CHILLED FRUIT JUICE CHiLLED FRESH fRUIT HOT & COLD CEREAL GRILLED BACON CURLS EGGS TO ORDER POTATOES -- STEAMED RAISIN MUfFINS TOAST-BUTTER &. JAM t'tilK &. COFFEE MilK &. COFFEE

AFRS RADIO SCHEDULE

tAILK &. COFFEE

13 MONDAY 5:05 b:OO

P.M ..

6! 15 6~30

AUGUST JIM AMECHE'S POP CONCERT NEWS THE LATIN QUARTER f AM I l Y THEATRE

7:00 ENCHANTMENT OF MUSIC 7:30 SPORTS DESK 7'45 R!CHARD HAYES 8~00 ONE NIGHT STAND 8:30 BROADWAY IS My BEAT 9:00 CONTINENTAL VARIETIES 9:30 Opus ONE 12:00 M!DN!GHT - SIGN OFF

T~ESDAY 14 AUGUST 6:00 A~M~ SIGN ON 6~05 DON THE DAWN BREAKER 6:30 NEWS 6:35 DAW~ BREAKER, CONT'D 7:00 NEWS 7~05 DAWN BREAKER, CONTtD 7~30 SEVEN THIRTY SPECIAL 8~00 DON McNEIll'S BREAKFAST CLUB 8~30 ARTHUR GODFREY 9:00 CONTINENTAL VARIETIES 9=30 WHISPERING STREETS

10:00 GARRY MOORE SHOW 10:30 JOHNNY BOND 11:00 TURN BACK THE CLOCK 11:30 IRA COOK SHOW (MUSIC) 12:00 NOON NEWS 12:05 PoM~ WEATHER AND STOCK REPORT 12:15 NA LEI 0 HAWAII 12:30 THE SWING IN' YEARS

I =00 NEWS 1:15 INTERVIEW 1:30 SHOP CONCERT 3:00 BASEBAll GAME OF THE DAY 5~OO NEWS

STOWED AWAY ON QUEEN ELIZABETH TO VISIT FAMILY

NEw YORK, AUG. II (UPI)--SCOTTISH LABORER JAMES HUTTON, 35, WHO STOWED AWAY ABOARD THE QUEEN ELIZABETH TWO MONTHS AGO TO VISIT HIS ESTRANGED WIFE WITH ONLY 113 SHillINGS IN HIS POCKET, lEFT FOR HOME TODAY ABOARD THE LINER MAURETANIA

HUTTON, FROM PAISLEY, SCOTLAND, GAVE HIMSELF UP JULY 2 ON HIS WIFE'S REQUES HE WAS ESCORTED TO THE SHIP TODAY FROM JAIL.

ON THE QUEEN ELIZABETH, HUTTON liVED ON CHOCOLATE BARS AND SLEPT IN TOilETS GOING HOME, HE HAS A TOURIST CABIN TO HIMSELF AND WILL EAT WITH THE PETTY OFFICERS. HE WILL NOT BE PERMITTED TO MiX WiTH THE PASSENGERS.

APPROVE GUAM PROJECTS WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI)--THE HOUSE

ApPROPRIATIONS COMMITTEE HAS APPROVED $4,854,000 FOR VARIOUS MiliTARY CON­STRUCTION PROJECTS ON GUAM, BUT TOLD THE NAVY TO BARGAIN HARDER ON A PRO­POSED lAND ACQUISITION AT AGANA.

THE COMMITTEE APPROVED ,4,688,000 FOF IMPROVEMENTS TO THE POWER SYSTEM AT THE PUBLIC WORKS CENTER, AND $166,000 FOR MODIFICATION OF THE ELECTRICAL DISTRI­BUTING SYSTEM AT THE NAVAL COMMUNICA­TIONS STATION.

GRASSE, FRANCE--A BELGIAN TOURIST BU~ CAREENED OFF A HIGHWAY AND CRASHED INT( A RAVINE ABOUT 18 MilES NORTH OF HERE YESTERDAY. POLICE SAID All 40 PERSONS ON THE BUS WERE INJURED. . . . . . .

TO UNDERDEVELOPED NATIONS URCH WOULDN'T ACCEPT IT. WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI)--U.S. KENNEDY GREY, PRESIDENT OF THE SUPEP-

fOREIGN AID OFFICIALS HAVE OUTLINED A lOR MARINE DIVERS OF WYANDOTTE, MUCH., $1,600,000 PROGRAM TO BRING EDUCATION- SAID MEMBERS OF HIS CLUB GOT THE IDEA Al TELEVISION TO THE PEOPLE OF UNDER- OF AN UNDERWATER SHRINE WHEN THEY HEARD DEVELOPED AREAS WITH BATTERY POWERED ABOUT THE DAMAGED CRUICIFIXo IT WAS OS-

SETS. TAINED FROM AN INSURANCE SALVAGE FIRM. THEY TOLD MEMBERS OF CONGRESS OF ONE ARM WAS BROKEN AND A SECTION OF

PLANS TO DISTRIBUTE 1,000 23-INCH SETS THE 5~ FOOT CROSS PIECE WAS DAMAGED. IN FIVE OR SIX AS YET UNCHOSEN NATIONS~ClUB MEMBERS SPENT ABOUT $900 TO BUY THE

REP. PORTER HARDY, CHAIRMAN OF A CRUCIFIX, TO HAVE IT REPAIRED AND TO HOUSE WATcHDOq COMMITTEE, IMMEDIATELY BUilD AN IRON STAND wHICH Will HOLD THE CALLED THE PLAN "ONE OF THE BIGGEST CROSS ERECT UNDERWATER.

I , It

PIECES OF FOOLISHNESS VE SEEN. THE CRUCIFIX Will BE lOWERED FROM A THE AID OFFICIAL WHO DEVELOPED THE COAST GUARD CUTTER WITH A ROMAN CATHOL!C

IDEA WAS DR GERALD WINFIELD, CHIEF OF PRIEST AND A PROTESTANT MINISTER TAKING THE AGENCY'S COMMUNICATIONS RESOURCES PART IN THE DEDICATION. THE MiNiSTER DIVISION. HE TOLD THE CONGRESSMEN HE AND THE PRIEST ARE SCHEDULED TO DIVE STIll THOUGHT IT WAS AN IMPORTANT PRO- WITH THE MEMBERS OF UP TO 70 SKIN AND GRAM THE U.S. SHOULD lAUNCH IN THE SCUBA DIVING CLUBS TO THE UNDERWATER UNDER-DEVELOPED AREAS. SHRINE.

•••••• THE CRUCIFIX AND IRON STAND Will BE SPACEMAN LOST HIS GIRL

BECAUSE Of HIS JOB Moscow, AUG. 12 (UPI)--RuSSIAN

SPACEMAN ANDRIAN NIKOl~YEV'S STORY IN-ClUDES A BROKEN lOVE AFFAiR BECAUSE HE DECIDED TO BECOME A COSMONAUT.

THOSE FAMiliAR WITH NIKOLAYEV'S lIFE STORY SAID THE 32-YEAR-OLD BACHELOR WAS DEEPLY IN LOVE WITH A GIRL AND WAS THINKING OF MARRIAGE WHEN HE ENTERED COSMONAUT TRAINING.

BECAUSE HIS SELECTION AS A COSMONAUT WAS SECRET, HE COULD NOT TEll HER OF HIS WORK Cq HIS MISSION. BUT HE ASKED HER TO WAir.

THE SEPARATiON AND SECRECY PROVED TOO MUCH, HOWEVER, AND THE GIRL MAR­RIED ANOTHER MAN.

IT WAS A HARD BLOW FOR NIKOlAYEV. BUT HE COMPENSATED BY WORKING EVEN HARDER FOR THE DAY WHEN HE WOULD BE CHOSEN FOR A SPACE MISSION. ......

SIGHT WRECKAGE Of ~JSSING PLANE CARRYING TWO AMERICANS

KATHMANDU, NEPAL, AUG. 12 (UPI)-·A NEPALI AIRLINER MISSING SINCE AUG. I WITH 10 PERSONS, INCLUDING TWO AMERI-

.CANS, WAS FOUND AT THE FOOT OF A MOUN­TAIN WITH NO SURVIVORS, UNCONFIRMED REPORTS REACHING HERE SAID TODAY

VillAGERS AT THE FOOT OF MT. DHAUlA­GIRl, ABOUT 150 MILES NORTHWEST OF KATMANDU, REPORTED SIGHTING THE WRECK­AGE WITH NINE BODIES LYING NEARBY, NEPALI OFFICIALS SAID.

THE AMERICANS WERE SIDNEY JACQUES AND OSCAR HOLDER, U.S STATE DEPART­MENT OFFICIALS

RETAIL SALES INCREASE WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI}--U. S.

RETAil SALES ROSE SHARPLY IN JULY, CHIEFLY ON THE STRENGTH OF BRISK BUY­ING OF NEW CARS, THE GOVERNMENT REPORT SHOWS. IT ALSO SAID PERSONAL INCOMES INCREASED MODERATELY TO ANOTHER NEW HIGH.

IN A THIRD REPORT, THE GOVERNMENT SAID THE AVERAGE FACTORY WORK WEEK DROPPED MORE THAN USUAL lAST MONTH, BUT STill WAS AT ITS HIGHEST JULY lEVEL SINCE 1950.

GIRL TO BOY fRIEND AFTER SELECTING ENGAGEMENT RING: "AINT IT ROMANTIC? OUR FIRST TIME PAYMENT!" . ....

BOLTED TO A LIMESTONE ROCK FORMATION WHERE THE BAY DIPS FOR 65 FEET IN DEPTHS TO WEll OVER 100 FEET, TO COMPLETE AN UNDERWATER SHRiNE WHiCH IS EXPECTED TO ATTRACT DIVING ENTHUSiASTS TO LITTLE TRAVERSE BAY FOR YEARS TO COME.

WITHOUT WALL EAST GERMANY WOULD BE PRACTICALLY DESERTED

BONN, AUG. 12 (UPl)--MORE THAN 12,000 PERSONS HAVE SUCESSFUllY ESCAPED FROM EAST GERMANY IN THE YEAR SINCE THE COM­MUNISTS ERECTED THE BERlHN WALL, iT WAS OFFICIAllY REPORTED TODAY.

BEFORE THE WAll WENT UP, CLOSiNG THE HITHERTO OPEN BORDER THAT RAN THROUGH BERLIN, UP TO 20,000 PERSONS lEFT EAST GERMANY AND FORMAllY WERE REGISTERED AS REFUGEES IN WEST GERMANY EVERY MONTH

THE NIGHT THE WALL WENT UP, THE MIN­ISTRY REPORTED THERE WERE 51,056 EAST

GERMANS IN WEST GERMANY WHO HAD JUST FLED THERE.

TO PARIS fOR WEDDING HOllYWOOD, AUG. 12 (UPI)--AcTRESS

FELICIA fARR lEFT ON A TRANS WORLD AIR­liNE JET VIA THE POLAR ROUTE FOR PARIS, WHERE SHE Will MARRY ACTOR JACK LEMMON ON FRIDAY.

LEMMON, 36, IS IN PARIS WORKING ON THE MOVIE "IRMA LA DOUCE." MISS FARR HAS BEEN WORKING HERE ON A "BEN CASEY" TEL­EVISION FILM.

IT Will BE THE SECOND MARRIAGE FOR EACH.

COULD LESSEN DISTRUST BELGRADE, AUG 12 (QPI)--PRESIDENT

TITO YESTERDAY TOLD AN AMERICAN NEWS­PAPER COLUMNIST IT WOULD BE GOOD FOR THE WORLD IF PRESIDENT KENNEDY AND SOVIET PREMIER NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV MET AGAIN.

"IN THAT MEETING THERE MUST NOT NEC­ESSARilY BE SOME GREAT AGREEMENTS, THE MEETING ALONE AND CONTACT WOULD CONTRI­BUTE TO lESSENING THE EXISTING DISTRUST,' TITO TOLD DREW PEARSON.

CAMBRIDGE, ENG., AUG. 12 (UPI)--CAM­BRIDGE SCIENTIST DR. BRIAN EDDY WAS FOUND DEAD IN A BIOLOGY LABORATORY AT THE lOW TEMPERATURE STATION HERE LAST NIGHT--THE SECOND DEATH OF A BRITiSH SCIENTIST IN lESS THAN TWO WEEKS. THE CAUSE OF DEATH WilL BE INVESTIGATED.

Page 5: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

---------------- - - ---------------------- -----.----------

SPORTS THE SPECTATOR

BY JaM CHRiS1ENSEN ROI NAMUR LED OFF THE WEEKEND MOUN!­

AI~BALL ACTION SATURDA~ BY SQUEEZiNG PAST THE CARDiNALS 6-5. No HOME RUNS WERE HIT DURiNG THE GAME, Bur ENO

1 __________________________________________________________________ :-__ IRoDILLAS DROVE IN THE CARDINALS' FIFTH

HO RGLASS SPORTS SECTION MONDAY I? AUGlJSl I 62 RUN!N THE FOURTH INNINQ WBTH A TR!PLE. PAGE U ~~..:..-.:...:::.:..::.. __ ---=...;:..:-----.:..aL--------1 SAMMY RAWLAND, SONNY KAPAHU AND EDD I E

AMERICAN LEAGUE ROUNDUP

NEW YORK, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--RoGER MARIS S8NGLED HOME THE WINNING RUN IN

THE 10TH INNiNG SATURDAY NIGHT TO GIVE THE NEW YORK YANKEES A 3-2 EVENING VICTORY AFTER THE DETROIT TIGERS HAD WON THE AFTERNOON PORTION OF THE DOU­BLEHEADER, 7-2, WITH THE HELP OF A PAuR OF THREE-RUN HOMERS BY ROCKY COL­AViTO.

MARIS, WHO EARLIER IN THE NiGHT GAME HiT HIS 26TH HOMER TO TIE THE SCORE AT 2-2 IN THE SiXTH INNING, SHOT A SINGLE PAST FIRST BASE WITH ONE OUT TO SCORE BOBBY RICHARDtON. RiCHARDSON HAD DOUBLED TO LEFT FiELD OFF RELiEVER TERRY Fox, WHO SUFFERED THE LOSS.

IN THE AFTERNOON GAME, COLAVITOuS TWO HOMERS DROVE IN SIX RUNS AND EASED ~HE WAY TO HANK AGUIRRE'S THIRD VIC­TORY OVER THE YANKEES THIS SEASON. AGUIRR£ GAVE uP SEVEN HITS, FIVE OF THEM D~RiNG THE LAST TWO INNINGS, AND STRuCK OuT SEVEN AS HE RAN HIS RECORD TO 9-5.

lH~ TiGERS JUMPED ON STARTER BOB

NATIONAL LEAGUE ROUNDUP

NEW YORK, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--lErT­HAND£R BILLY PIERCE PITCHED THE 2001H W~N OF HIS MAJOR LEAGUE CAREER SATUR­DAY l~ANKS TO A THREE-RUN HOMER BY P!NCHH!TTER WILLIE MCCOVEY, WHO ROCKET­ED THE SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS TO A 5-4 ViCTORY OVER lHE LEASuE-LEADING Los ANGELES DODGERS.

IT WAS THE SECOND STRAiGHT TRIUMPH fOR T~E GIANTS IN THE CRUCIAL SERIES AND MOVED THEM BACK TO WITHIN 3~ GAMES OF Los ANGELES.

MCCOVEyfS BLAST, HIS 15TH, WRECKED AN II-GAME WiNNING STREAK FOR DON DRYS­DALE, WHO WAS GOING AFTER VICTORY, BUT ASBORBED HIS INSTEAD.

HIS 22ND FIFTH DEFEAT

PiERCE, NOW 11-3, GOT OFF TO A ROCK START iN THE FIRST INNING WHEN HE FED ~ THREE-RUN HOMER TO TOMMY DAVIS THEN HE STRAIGHTENED OUT AND HELD THE 000-GEPS TO A TOTAL OF THREE HITS IN SIX iNNINGS BEFORl YIELDING HIS TURN AT BAT TO MeCOVEY WiTH TWO ON AND TWO OUT IN THE SIXTH.

TURLEY u~ THE FiRSl iNNING OF THE EVEN~NG GAME AND SCORED TWO RUNS.

MCCOVEY RAN THE COUNT TO 3 AND 2, WITH lHEN POWERED A 420-FOOT DRIVE iNTO THE

O~£ OU1, BiLL BRUTON WAS AWARDED FIRST BASE wHEN YANKEE CATCHER YOGI BERRA ~NTERfERED WITh HIS BAT. AL KALINE SuNGlED AND COLAVITO BOUNCED A DOUBLE TO LEFT TO SCORE BRUTON. NORM CASH'S SACRI-uCE FLY SCORED KALINE.

NEW YORK GOT BACK A RUN IN THE FOURTH WHEN MARIS AND BERRA WALKED AND DA~E LONG FOLLOWED WITH A TWO-OUT SIN­GLE. MAR'S~ HOMER OFF JIM BUNNING AS LEADOFF BATTER IN THE SIXTH THEN TIED THE SCORE.

COL/VITO HIT BOlH HIS AFTERNOON­GAME HOMERS OFF RALPH TERRY, WHO LEADS THE AMERICAN LEAGUE IN VICTORIES AND ~N HOME RUN PITCHES. THE BLOWS, EACH

WITH TWO MEN ON BASE, CAME IN THE FIRST AND FIFTH INNINGS.

TERRY, WiTH A 16-10 RECORD, HAS YIELDED 27 HOMERS THiS SEASON, AN ALL­TJME HiGH FOR A YANKEE PITCHeR.

IN ANOTHER AFTERNOON-NIGHT DOUBLE­HEADER, THE BOSTON REO Sox BEAT THE BALTIMORE ORIOLES, 3-0 AND 7-3. IN OTHER SINGLE NiGHT GAMES, THE WASHING­TON SENATORS SNAPPED A SEVEN-GAME LOSiNG STREAK BY BEATING THE CLEVELAND !NDiANS, 9-2, AND THE CHICAGO WHITE Sox DRUBBED THE KANSAS CITY ATHLETICS, ~ ! -2.

Bo BELINSKY SCORED HIS FIRST PITCH­iNG VICTORY SINCE JUNE 21 WHEN HE HELD THE MINNESOTA TWINS TO FOUR HITS AS THE Los ANGELES ANGELS WON, 3-0. BE­LiNSKY ALSO HIT A SINGLE DURING THE THIRD INNING WHEN THE ANGELS SCORED ALL THEiR RUNS.

• 6) ••••

AMERICAN LEAGUE STANDINGS

WON LOST PCT. GB NEW YORK 69 44 .611 Los ANGELES 66 50 .569 41.

MINNESOTA 64 52 ·552 ~ CHiCAGO 59 58 • 504 12 BALTiMORE 58 58 .~OO 121. CLEVELAND 56 58 • 91 :~ DETRO!T 56 gr .487 BO~HON 53 .46~ I~ KANSAS CaTY ~~ 65 .44 19 WASHINGTON 71 ·377 2~ ...... FOR SALE: 14-FOOT OUTRIGER CANOE, GOOD CONDiTION, $100 F.O.B. MAJURO. FOR IN-fORMATiON ON HOW TO CONTACT, CALL THE HOURGLAS~, 539.

RiGHTFIELD SEATS. STU MILLER PITCHED THE REMAiNING

THREE INNINGS AND WAS TAGGED FOR ONE R~N AND T~REE MORE DODGER H~TS WHILE PRESERVING PILRCE'S 200TH

TRAILING 3-0, THE GIANTS GOT BACK iNTO THE GAME WITH A FOURTH-i~NING RALLY WHICH SAW THEM SCORE TWICE WHILE COLLECTiNG THREE HITS OFF DRYSDALE. fEL!PE Alou SINGLED HOME WILLIE MAYS, WHO HAD DOUBLED, THEN CAME AROUND ON ANOTHER DOUBLe BY JIM DAVENPORT.

IN Twn Gr~ER AFTERNOON GAMES IN THE NATIONAL LEAGGE) THE P,TTSBURGH PIRATE SNAPPEO A FiVe-GAME LOSING STREAK BY BEATING THE CHICAGO CUBS, 10-6, AND THE P~ILADELPHIA PHILS POUNDED OUT THEIR SEASON HiGH OF 19 HITS IN DRUBB­iNG THE ST. LOUiS CARDINALS 11-3.

IN NIGHT GAMES, NEW YORK WAS AT CINCINNATI AND MILWAUKEE AT HOUSTON.

NATIONAL LEAGUE STANDINGS

WON LOST PCT. GB Los ANGELES 79 ~~ .669 SAN fRANCiSCO 75 .641 f CINCINNATI ~~ 46 • 603 PITTSBURGH 50 ·561 13 ST. LOUIS 65 51 .560 13 MILWAUKEE 63 54 .~~~ 15i PHILADELPHIA ~2 66 27 CHICAGO 74 ·368 35i HOUSTON 46 ~~ ·351 ~71 NEW YORK 30 .261 72 . . . . . .

RAIDERS TAKE CLOSE GAME

PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--VETERAN QUARTERBACK DON HEIN RICH, WHO CAME OUT OF RETIREMENT THIS SEASON, LED THE OAKLAND RAIDERS TO A 21-20 VICTORY OVER THE BOSTON PATRIOTS YESTERDAY IN AN AMERICAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE EXHIBITION GAME •

SOME 9,000 FANS, SHIVERING IN THE AUTUMN-LIKE WEATHER AT BROWN UNIVER­SiTY STADIUM, SAW HEINRICH SPARK A DRIVE THAT STARTED AT OAKLAND'S 17 AND ENDED WHEN FULLBACK ALAN MILLER PLUNGED OVER FROM THE 2-YARD LINE TO TIE THE GAME. JACKIE SINTSON THEN KiCKED THE LAST OF HIS THREE EXTRA POINTS FOR THE WINNING MARGIN.

WE U~ED TO WORRY ABOUT HOW MUCH SOME­THING COST-NOW HOW LONG IT TAKES TO GET iT.

SOARES HIT DOUBLES FOR THE ~iNNERS. MORADO AUGUSTiNE WAS THE W~NNijNG

PITCHER AND AL TSUTSUM~ THE LOSER THE SPOILERS STARTED OFF SUNDAY

AFTERNOON WITH A 8-4 VICTORY ~vrp THE MIXERS. CHARL!E HIQA H~r A HOME R0N FOR THE WINNERS TO DRIVE iN TEAMMATE SMILEY HINTACUTAN iN lHE TOP OF lHE FIFlH AND LITOL SLAMMED A HOMER IN THE T~IRD WiTH NOBODY ON FOR T~E MiXERS. HINTACUTAN HiT A DOUB~E ~N lHE SEVENTH FOR THE SPOILERS AND HENRY MOSES DOU­BLED IN THE THIRD FOR THE MiXERS. SAF­URO NAKASONE WAS THE WINN!NG PUTCHER, Lou GILSTER WAS THE LOSER.

THE FiRE COMETS CAUGHT FiRE SUNDAY AFTERNOON AND BLISTERED B~LLETiNG WITH A 19-3 DEFEAT. THE W~N~!NG rlRE COMETS v BATS REALLY BOOMED DUR~NG THiS ONE AS DON KANEAPUA HOMERED iN THE SAME INNING THAT OLLiE DAVIS AND ENG­LISH BRADSHAW TRIF~ED AND JAMES GOH!ER AND WILSON BALBDOY DOUBlED. THE BAlT­iNG BARRAGE IN THAT EIGHT RUNfORTH INNING STARTED WHEN SAM KAAPUNE DOU­BLED AND ATOSHi OSHiRO S~NGlEDo E~5E­

WHERE IN THE GAME, OLLiE DAVIS HuT THREE DOUBLES, GOH~ER ~~T T~O, INCLUD­ING THE ONE IN THE FOUR1H AND ERNE~T CHOY DOUBLED iN THE THIRD. ClijFF CLARK, THE LOS!NG P8rCHER, MUST GEl CREDIT. THERE WERE NO WALKS ON THE

SIDE OF THE FiRE COMETS, BU1 THEN THE WINNING P!TCHER GOHiER ONLY DELIVERED ONE WALK AND THAT WAS AGAINST ACE TH!RD BASEMAN HARVEY Apoo

THL CROSSROADS ~ERE ~OT 10 BE OUT­DONE YESTERDAY, SO THEy FOLLOWED JP THE FIRE COMElS WiDE MARGiN ViCTORY WITH A WIDER ONE OF THEHR OWN. THEY DOWNED CHANCE VOUGHT ~7-~. CROSSROADS GREG LANTAYAO, NAGATA, DON GREENBURG, HIGUCHI AND SATURNO DOUBLED" OhA DOUBLED TWICE FOR THE WINNERS

PAT LAN lAS WAS THE WiNNijNG P!TCHER, PETE WINTERS THE LOSER.

RICHARD SAMSON SLAMMED A HOMER iN

THE SEVENTH INNING OF THE LAST GAME YESTERDAY aUT HIS TEAM, THE f~L-AMER­ICANS, LOST 12-6 TO THE HOT DOUGLAS TrAM IT WAS CURTAiNS FROM THE FijRST INNING FOR THE FIL-AMERICANS AS THE DOUGLAS BATS SENT BALLS FlY~NG ~N

EVERY DIRECTiON. JOHN STEWART, BilL BEST, BILL KISSENBETH, HARRY BURROLGH AND NEIL CLUGSTON ALL HiT SINGLES iN THAT FATEFUL FIRST AND A~r NUOT!LLA DROVE IN THE SEVENTH RUN FOR THE iNN­ING WITH A DOUBLE. KISSENBERTH DOU­BLED IN THE FOURTH FOR THE W!NNERSo CEE HINTACUTAN DOUBLED IN THE TOP or THE FIRST FOR THE LOSERS

AL KISHI WAS THE WINNiNG PRTCHER, FRED CACHOLA WAS THE LOSEP •

LISTON NOT AfRAID

CHICAGO, AUGUST 12 (UPI)--HEAVV­WEIGHT CHALLENGER SONNY LISTON TODAY LAUGHED OFF A SUGGESTION ThAT CHAMP­ION fLOYD PATTERSON MAY BE 100 fAST TO CATCH WITH A KNOCKOUT BLOW IN THE~R

SEPT. 25 TITLE FIGHT. "PATTERSON'S SPEED DOESNir WORRY

ME," LISTON SAID. "THEY USED TO SAY JOE LOUIS WAS SLOW, BUT HE WAS ALWAYS FASTER THAN THE GUYS ~E FOUGHT.

LISTON SAID THAT iF ~E HITS PA1TER­SON "HARD ENOUGH TO KNOCK HiM DOWN, HE WON'T GET UP LijKE HE DiD iN H~S OTHER FIGHTS."

CHICAGO, AUG. 12 (UP!)--F~NANC~ER LO~IS WOLFSO~iS "ROYAL PATRltE" ~ON ITS FIRST STAKE VnCTORY O~ ITS CAREER YESTERDAY, AT ARLINGTON.

Page 6: FILE CDP1 '4IGrJ HOURGLASS

PAGE 6

NOTICES WANTED

SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS NEEDED FOR THE GEORGE SEITZ HIGH SCHOOL AND ELEMEN­TARY GRADES. POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN ALL SUBJECTS. CALL INDUSTRIAL RELA­TIONS OFFICE 2189-2190 OR MR. GLASS­COCK AT 60 I.

PART riME BARBERS TO WORK LATE AFTEf­NOON AND EVENINGS. CONTACT PERSONNEL OFF!CE, TCT.

· ..... CLERK TYPIST FULL TIME FOR RCA, ROJ

NAMUR OFFICE. CONTACT C. T. STUTZBAC. AT 9-8-343.

Two GOLF COURSE ATTENDANTS WANTED, HIGH SCHOOL BOYS, FROM 4:30 TO 7:30 MONDAYS THROUGH FRIDAYS AND FROM 9 A.M. TO 7:30 P.M. SATURDAYS, SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS REPORT TO JIM WEAVER, TeT's SP[CIAL SERVICES SUPERVtSOR, PHONE 331.

BABY SITTERS'? CONTACT--RoBERT WHEELER, TRAfLER

BI, EARL REDMAN, TRAILER 69, LOIS WAL ~ TRAILER 102 AND STEVE SURGES, TRAILER 134•

FOR SALE 8 - TRANSISTOR PORTABLE RADIO, 6

MONTHS OLD, LiKE NEW. SELL FOR $20. SEE DON GUIDA, ROOM 203 CORAL BOQ.

21" WiNDOW FAN CAPACITY 3200 CFM TRAILER 136. CALL 475 DURING WORKING HOURS

· ..... ONE LARGE PLAY PEN, $10.00 AND A

BABY STROLLER CALL 616 AFTER 5 P.M

SMiTP CORONA SCRIPT TYPEWRITER AND A RELAX-A-CIZOR BOTH IN EXCELLENT CON­DITION. CALL 2149 DURING WORKING HOU~S OR 2355 AFTER 5 P.M.

NEW WHITE BOWLiNG SHOES $15.00. SIZES I I CALL HARRY HAYNES 589.

FOUND MAN'S BICYCLE. CALL 2422 AFTER 5

P.M.

.. ." Two PLASTIC COVERED RELIGIOUS PIC­

TURES WITH PRAYERS PRINTED ON BACK. CLAIM AT HOURGLASS OFFICE.

CHILD'S SHELL NECKLACE FOUND ONE WEEK AGO. FOUND IN AREA OF QTRS 420 CALL 2258 TO CLAIM.

HOURGLASS

OCEAN VIEW -- SrlOWTiME 7~30 P.M "HOl'SE Of WGr1EN" B & W

MONDAY 13 AUGUST 1962

SHJRLEY KNIGHT, ANDREW DUGGAN--A YOUNG GIRL iN A CALIFORNIA PRISON FOR WOMEN BECOMES ROMANTICALLY INVOLVED WITH THE WARDEN AND TRIGGERS A RIOT. SHORT SUBJECT: "HARE ABIAN NIGHT"

RICHARDSON -- SHOWTIME 7:30 PoM. "GAZEBO" B & W

GLENN FORO, DEBBIE REYNOLDS--BASED ON THE BROADWAY STAGE HIT, IN WHICH A TOP TV MYSTERY WRITER BURIES A DEAD MAN UNDER HIS GAZEBO. SHORT SUBJECT: "PEDESTR IAN SAFETY"

YOKWE YUK -- SHOWTeMES 7:00 P.M. AND 9:00 P.M. "DAY THE EARTH CAUGHT FIRE" CS

JANET MUNRO, LEO McKERN--THE STORY DEALS WITH THE EFfECTS OF A MASSIVE THERMONUCLEAR EXPLOSION WHICH DISLODGES THE EARTH FROM iTS AXiS AND STARTS IT SPINNING TOWARD THE SUN, LEAVING THE WORLD ~ CEO WITH THE PROSPECT OF BEING ROASTED ALIVE. SHORT SUBJECT: "ST. MORTZ BLITZ"

ROXY -- SHOWTIMES 6:30 P.M. AND 8:30 P.M. "THE MIRACLE WORKER" B & W

ANNE BANCROFT, PATTY DuKE, VICTOR JORv--ADAPTED FROM THE BROAD­WAY PLAY OF TWf~SAME TITLE, THIS IS THE TRUE STORY OF A~PE SULLIVANsS DEDICA­TED EFFORTS TO HELP THE YOUNG HELEN KELLER EMERGE FROM A SIGHTLESS AND SOUND­LESS WORLD. SHORT SUBJECT: "SONGS OF AN NATION"

MAD CLUB -- SHOWTIME 7:30 P.M. "MURDER SHE SA ID"

MARGARET RUTHERFORD, ARTHUR KENNEDY--No SYNOPSIS AVA!LABLE.

GENERAL NOTICES BRIDGE AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB EVERY

MGNDAY AT 7:30 PoM.

WOMEN'S CLUB "GAMES DAY" HELD EVERY TUESDAY 1:15 P.M. AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB. BRIDGE AND MAH JONG ARE PLAYED.

BINGO AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT AT 8:00 P.M

BARGAIN BAZAAR PICKUPS

ARTICLES TO BE CONSPGNED OR DONATED TO THE BARGAIN BAZAAR WILL BE PICKED UP EACH TUESDAY MORNING. PLEASE CALL 646 OR 624 ON MONDAY.

ARCHERS TO ELECT

THE ISLAND ARCHERS MEET TONIGHT, B P.M., IN THE TERMINAL BUilDING TO ELECT OFFICERS FOR ANOTHER TERM. THE NEXT SHOOT WILL BE DISCUSSED AND ALL MEMBERS ARE EXPECTED TO ATTEND. J.F. RICE, PRESIDENT, SAYS VISITORS ARE WELCOME.

LEARN TO NAVIGATE

THE COURSE IN CELESTIAL NAVIGATION WILL NOT BE GIVEN UNTIL FEBRUARY BUT PERSONS INTERESTED SHOULD CONTACT DR. GRISINGER AT 476 OR JIM WEAVER AT 331

ROI NAMUR MOV~ES MONDAY 13 AUGUST 1962 8 P.M.

"KEY WITNESS" B & W JEFFREY HUNTER, PAT CROWLEy--A MAN

WITNESSES A T£ENAGE GANG KiLL!NG AND HE AND HIS FAMILY ARE SUBJECTED TO ALL SORTS OF HOODLUM TERRORISM AND RETALIA­TION TO KEEP HIM FROM TESTiFYING iN COURT AGAINST fHEM. POL!CE FINALLY RESCUE THE FAMILY AND CAPTURE THE GANG.

SHORT SUBJECT: "JUST WHAT ~ NEEDED"

TUESDAY 14 AUGUST 1962 a P.M. "HEY LET'S TWISTu B & W

JOEY DEE, TEDDY RANDAZZO--THE STORY IS ABOUT THE NEW DANCE PHASE CALLED THE "TWIST. tf IT ALSO TELLS ABOUT THE LIFE .F THE NEW TWIST DANCER, JOEY DEE. THE STORY TAKES PLACE AT THE PEPPERMINT LOUNGE WHERE THE TWIST FIRST STARTED.

SHORT SUBJECT: "MONKEY DOODLES"

U.N. STILL AWAITS LOAN

WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (UPI)--WHEN PRESIDENT KENNEDY SOUGHT CONGRESSIONAL AUTHORITY TO LEND THE UNiTED NATIONS $100,000,000 HE ENCOUNTERED A STUBBORN­NESS WHICH TO MANY MIGHT APPEAR TO BE OUT OF ALL PROPORTiON TO HIS RELATIVELY MODEST REQUEST.

TERRY CLOTH BEACH ROBE FOUND ON BEACH FRIDAY. OWNER MAY CLAIM AT GLASS OFFICE.

HOUR~ IMMEDIATELY SO THAT BOOKS, CHARTS, ET~ CAN 6E ORDERED IN ADVANCE.

ALTHOUGH HE SOUGHT A SUM BARELY ONE­FIFTH OF ONE PERCENT OF THE $49 BalLDON THAT THE UNITED STATES IS SPENDiNG THIS YEAR ON DEFENSE, KENNEDY STILL HAS NOT GOT IT--SIX MONTHS AFTER ASKING FOR IT.

LOST --rEATHER PIGSKIN BILLFOLD BELONGING TO ANITA SCHNEIDER. LOST IN VICINITY OF MACY'S OR POST OFFICE. CONTAINED $10. REWARD IF RETURNED TO TRAILER loB.

· ..... WILL FINDER PLEASE RETURN A BULOVA

ACCUTRON, "MICKEY MOUSE" (No FACE), WATCH THAT WAS LEFT IN THE WEIGHT LIFT~

ING ROOM, BACHELORS BARRACKS, BETWEEN 2145 AND 2200 HOURS, AUGUST 10, 1962. CALL 214B AND ASK FOR LESTER OR RETURN TO SECURITY.

WANTED TO BUY LADIES BICYCLE. CALL 2114 OR 539-

THE HOURGLASS.

A 16 FOOT BOAT AND MOTOR FOR WATER SKIING PURPOSES. CONTACT JAMES DUNCAN OR BOB PRICE AT 601 (SCHOOL).

NEWS ITEMS? CALL 2114 OR 539

MASONIC GROUP TO MEET

THE SQUARE AND COMPASS CLUB WILL HOLD ITS REGULAR BUSINESS MEETING TO­NIGHT, 7:30 P.M. AT THE SCUBA CLUB HOUSE. ALL MASTER MASONS ARE INVITED TO ATTEND.

TOASTMASTERS MEET TONIGHT

ALL MEMBERS OF THE TOASTMASTERS CLUB ARE REMINDED THAT THE REGULAR MEETING IS TONIGHT AT 7, AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB VISITORS ARE WELCOME, TOO.

SPEC IAL COURSE AVA IlABLE

THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI I HAS HAD SEVERAL REQUESTS FOR A COURSE IN VEC­TOR ANALYSIS. THIS IS A THREE UNIT COURSE IN VECTOR OPERATIONS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS, WITH A PRE-REQUISITE OF 4 SEMESTERS OF CALCULUS. THIS COURSE WILL BE OFFERED IF A SUFFICIENT NUM­BER OF STUDENTS ENROLL. CALL 604.

BOWLING CAPTAINS MEET TONIGHT CAPTAINS OF THE TeT BOWLING LEAGUE

ARE CALLED TO MEET TONIGHT AT 6:30 AT THE BOWLiNG ALLEY. THE MEETING WILL BE SHORT, SO IT IS NECESSARY THAT EVERYONE BE ON TIME.

CITATION FOR MACARTHUR WASHINGTON, AUG. 12 (uPi)--GEN. DOUG­

LAS MACARTHUR WilL BE PRESENTED A CON­GRESSIONAL CITATION AUG. 16 FOR HIS "UNCEASING DEVOTION TO DUTY, GOD AND COUNTRY."

SPEAKER JOHN W. MCCORMACK WILL MAKE THE PRESENTATION AT A LUNCH IN MAC­ARTHUR'S HONOR.

REP. L. MENDEL RIVERS (DEM.-S.C.), SPONSORED THE RESOLUTIONo HE SAID GET­TING THE "LONG-OVERDUE AND UNAN~MOUS EXPRESSION FROM CONGRESS" WAS ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS OF H!S CAREERo

_" o.cooo

"HEREDITY IS ONLY STORED ENVIRONMENT"