8
, HIGH TIDE 4-11- 65 .4.2 AT 0218 5.0 AT 1419 .. 'OURGlJa\SS LOW TiDE 4-11-65 1.8 AT 0807 I. I AT 2049 VOL 6 !975 SAIGON, APRIL 10 (AP)--AMER!CAN OFFICIALS ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT AS OF MARCH 31 THE STRENGTH OF U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL IN SOUTH VIET NAM WAS 29,000 WITH THE NEW CON- TINGENT OF 3,000 MARINES LANDING AT DA NANG, THt FIGURE CURRENTLY IS ABOUT 32,000 U S AUTHORITIES ALSO SAID THAT THE FIRST LOGISTIC COMMAND IS BE- ING TRANSFERRED TO SOUTH VIET NAM KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL iSLANDS SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965 PROWLING UNMARKED MIG JETS APPEARED FROM HAINAN AREA SAIGON, APRIL 10 (AP)--COMMUNIST MIGS WHICH JUMPED U.S. NAVY PHANTOMS NEAR CHINESE HELD NAINAN "CAME FROM THE EAST AND RETURNED TO THE EAST" LT HOWIE WATKiNS, WHO TOOK PART IN THE DOGFIGHT, SAID TODAY. WATKiNS SAID HE SAW NO MARKI TO INDICATE THE MIGS WERE CHINESE AIR FORCE CRAFT FROM HAINAN, BUT THAT ISLAND NEAR TO THE COAST OF CHINA WAS VISIBLE WHEN THE FIGHT STARTED. ONE MIG WAS SHOT DOWN BY ONE OF THE FOUR NAVY PHANTOM JETS. THE TOP SPEED OF WHICH IS CLASSIFIED BuT THEY FLY FASTER THAN CONVENTIONAL BULLETS AND FIRE ONLY MISSILES IN COMBAT ALLIED TROOPS MOVE TO BERLIN AS BERLIN AUTOBAHN REOPENS FRIDAYvS ENCOUNTER STARTED ABOUT SIX MILES IN THE SKY OVER TONKIN GULF, WATKINS SAID BERLIN, APRIL 10 {AP)--THE FIRST OF FOUR CONVOYS CARRY!NG HUNDRfDS OF AMER- ICAN COMBAT TROOPS REACHED BERLIN SATURDAY ALONG THE AUTOBAHN AFTER ONLY ROU- TINE COMMUNIST CHECKS. "THE MIG WERE S I L VERY AND HI GHL Y POLISHED WHEN SIGHTED,l1 WATKINS SAID, lIONE OF THE FOUR JETTISONED HIS TANKS AND GOT IN AN ATTACK POSITION ASTERN OF ME I TOOK EVASIVE ACTION." IT WAS THE FIRST LARGE-SCALE ALLIED TROOP MOVEMENT SINCE THE SOVIETS AND THE EAST GERMANS BEGAN HARASSING THE VITAL LIFELINE S!X DAYS AGO. THE FOUR CONVOYS CONSISTED OF 452 MEN IN 103 VEHICLES THEY WERE UNDER THE COMMAND OF LT. COL. EDWARD J GEANEY JR THE THREE OTHER GROUPS WHICH ENTERED THE AUTOBAHN AT HELMSTEDT THIS MORNING NEW AIR FORCE UNIT TO DA NANG AIR BASE WERE REPORTED MOVING NORMALLY ALONG THE 110-MILE HiGHWAY THAT CONNECTS WEST BERLIN WITh WEST GERMANY THE SOVIET UNION DID NOT TRY TO STOP THE TRIP THROUGH AN AREA CRAWLING WITH DA SOUTH VIET NAM, APRIL 10 COMMUNIST SOLDIERS DESPITE EAST-WEST {AP)--THE U.S AIR FORCE SOON WILL TENSION OVER BERliN BRING IN A SQUADRON OF FI04 INTERCEP- TORS IN AN EFFORT TO INSURE AIR SU- PERIORITY DURING STRIKES AGAINST NORTH V I ET NAM, I T WAS LEARNED TODAY. THE Fl04 ARE EXPECTED TO ARRIVE AT DA NANG AIR BASE WITHIN A NUMBER OF DAYS, A MILITARY SOURCE SAID THE 18 104s MAKING UP THE SQUADRON WOULD REPLACE SIX FI02s AND PROVIDE HIGH ALTITUDE COVER FOR AMERICAN JETS CAR- RYING OUT STRIKES ON TARGETS IN THE COMMUNIST NORTH. IT WAS ASSUMED THAT THE DECISION THE COMMUNISTS HAVE NOT CLOSED THE AUTOBAHN SO FAR TODAY BUT THAT COULD HAPPEN AT ANY TiME SINCE JOINT SOVIET- EAST GERMAN MANEuVERS ARE STILL GOING ON. A CLOSEDOWN wHILE THE COMBAT TROOPS ARE EN ROUTE COULD PUT THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION IN A TEST OF WILLS BECAUSE THE WESTERN POWERS CLAIM THE RIGHT OF ACCESS TO BERLIN (CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN) MBOYA WARNS AFRICA WATKINS SAID IT TOOK HIM ABOUT FIVE MINUTES TO SHAKE THE MIG OFF HIS TAIL. ONCE HE HAD SHAKEN THE MIG OFF HIS TAil, WATKINS SAID HE JOINED OTHERS IN THE CHASE OF THE ENEMY CRAFT WHICH lIHEADED BACK TOWARD THE EAST." (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR) DOGFIGHT WITH MIGS CALLED ACCIDENTAL WASHiNGTON, APRIL 10 (AP)--U.S OF- F!CIALS TODAY ASSESSED WHAT MAY HAVE BEEN THE FIRST U.S.-COMMUNIST CHINESE AIR ENCOUNTCR OF THE VIET NAM WAR AS A PASSING BRUSH RATHER THAN A DELIBER- ATE COLLISION BETWEEN THE TWO POWERS THE POSSIBILITY THAT COMMUNIST CHINA MAY COME TO NORTH VIET NAMvS AID IN A BIG WAY LATER HAS NOT BEEN RULED OUT, BUT FRIDAY'S SKIRMISH WAS NOT RE- GARDED HERE AS A SIGN OF PORTENDING MASSIVE CHINESE INTERVENTION THE OFFICiAL U.S. VERSION: FOUR u. TO THE 104s WAS MADE FOLLOWING THE SHOOTING DOWN OF TWO FI05S BY COMMUNIST MIG JETS EARLIER. THE AMERICAN MILITARY WAS KNOWN TO BE HIGHLY EMBARRASSED AT THE SUCCESS OF THE COMMUNIST AIRCRAFT IN THEIR BLOWS AT U.S. PLANES OF DANGER FROM RE DS S NAVY JETS PATROLLING THE TONKIN GULF WERE ENGAGED BY FOUR UNIDENTIFIED NAIROBI, KENYA, APRIL 10 MIGS 35 MILES OFF CHINA'S HAINAN Is- BESIDE BUILDING UP THE INTERCEPTOR CAPABILITY OF THE AIR FORCE IN THE DA NANG AREA, THE l04s ARE FAR FASTER AND MORE MANEUVERABLE THAN THE 102s AND SHOULD PROVIDE FAR BETTER COVER- AGE FOR THE FIOO AND FI05 FiGHTER BOMBERS AS THEY MAKE LOW PASSES ON TARGETS PAN-AM STRiKE IS SETTLED 1500 TAKE THE AIR WASHINGTON, APRIL 10 {AP)--THE U.S NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD SAID TODAY THE STRIKE OF PILOTS ON PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS HAS GEEN SETTLED. WORD OF THE SETTLEMENT WAS GIVEN OUT BY LEVERETT EDWARDS, A MEMBER OF THE MEDIATION BOARD NEGOTIATIONS HAD BEEN UNDER WAY AL- MOST CONTINUOUSLY SiNCE FRIDAY NIGHT IN AN EFFORT TO ACHIEVE A SETTLEMENT, EDWARDS SAID TERMS OF THE SETTLEMENT BETWEEN THE AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION AND THE AIRLINE WERE NOT IMMEDIATELY DISCLOS- ED. PAN AMERICAN HAD SAID EARLIER THAT IN EVENT OF A SETTLEMENT ITS WORLD- WIDE FLIGHT OPERATIONS WOULD BE RE- SUMED PROMPTLY OUT-BOUND SERViCE IN 24 HOURS AND INBOUND FLIGHTS TO THE U.S. WITHIN 48 HOURS MINISTER FOR ECONOMiC PLANNING AND DE- LAND ONE MIG WAS REPORTED SHOT DOWN VELOPMENT TOM MBOYA SOUNDED A WARNING THE OFFICIAL CHINESE VERSION. THE TODAY AGAINST THE THREAT OF COMMUNISM AMERICAN PLANES WERE MET BY CHINESE TO AFRICA'S FREEDOM. llMERELY BECAUSE EASTERN COUNTRIES HAVE NEVER HAD A COLONY IN AFRICA THIS DOESN'T MEAN THEY HAVE NO COLD WAR DE- SIGNS UPON AFRiCA,1t HE DECLARED. llWE HAVE MADE IT CLEAR WE REJECT THE IDEOLOGY OF COMMUNISM. IT IS JUST NOT GOOD ENOUGH FOR PEOPLE TO GO AROUND PRETENDING EVERYTHING FROM THE EAST IS FOR THE GOOD OF AFRICA AND EVERYONE FROM THE EAST MEANS WELL FOR AFRICA" SAID MBOYA THE MINISTER GAVE NOTICE KENYA WAS NOT ABAILABLE AS A TESTING GROUND FOR COMMUNIST IDEOLOGY IIWE MUST BEWARE OF THOSE WHO TRY TO BRUSH ASIDE COMMUNISM AS A POSSIBLE THREAT TO OUR FREEDOM,1t HE WARNED llCOMMUNISM IS A FACT iN WORLD POLITICS AND IT IS A FACT IN THE IDEOLOGICAL AND COLD WAR STRUGGLE IT DOESN'T DO ANY GOOD TO ADOPT OSTRICH TACTICS AND TO PRETEND IT DOESN'T EXIST 11 WATER REPORT CONDITION WATER DISTILLED 4/9 WATER PUMPED FROM BARGE RAINFALL 4/9 WATER USED 4/9 Loss BY EVAPORATION WATER IN STORAGE TODAY ORANGE !76,300 ° ° 206,300 25,000 7,080,000 CRAFT AND FLED IN PANIC IN THE CON- FUSION, ONE AMERICAN JET WAS HIT BY A lIGUIDED MISSILE ll FIRED BY ANOTHER U.S. PLANE AND lICRASHED IN THE AREA OF HAI- NAN 11 As SOON AS THE CHINESE ACCOUNT CIR- CULATED, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ARTHUR SYLVESTER ASSEMBLED NEWSMEN AND TOLD THEM THE NATIONALITY OF THE MIG FIGHTERS HAD NOT BEEN DETERMINED. THE AMERICAN PILOTS, HE ADDED, llHAD VERY fiRM INSTRUCTIONS ON THIS PARTIC- ULAR MISSION TO AVOID CHINESE AIR SPACE MARINES HAVE LANDED DA NANG, SOUTH VIET NAM, APRIL 10 (AP)--A U.S MARINE BATTALION LANDED NEAR HERE TODAY AND GOT A GOOD VIEW OF WAR VIET NAM STYLE. As THE MARINES STREAMED ASHORE IN ASSAULT BOATS AND LANDING CRAFT, AN ESTIMATED TWO SQUADS OF VIET CONG AT- TACKED A VIETNAMESE RANGER COMPANY SEVERAL MILES AWAY THAT WAS SECURING THE AREA FOR THE MARINE LANDING. VIET CONG SNIPERS WOUNDED SEVEN RAN- GERS IN THE FIGHT THAT LASTED MORE THAN SIX HOURS THREE MILES SOUTHWEST OF THE BEACH WHERE THE MARINES CAME ASHORE. V lET CONG LOSS ES, I F ANY, WERE NOT KNOWN.

SS - University of Florida

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: SS - University of Florida

, HIGH TIDE 4-11-65

.4.2 AT 0218 5.0 AT 1419 .. 'OURGlJa\SS LOW TiDE

4-11-65 1.8 AT 0807 I. I AT 2049

VOL 6 !975

SAIGON, APRIL 10 (AP)--AMER!CAN OFFICIALS ANNOUNCED TODAY THAT AS OF MARCH 31 THE STRENGTH OF U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL IN SOUTH VIET NAM WAS 29,000 WITH THE NEW CON­TINGENT OF 3,000 MARINES LANDING AT DA NANG, THt FIGURE CURRENTLY IS ABOUT 32,000

U S AUTHORITIES ALSO SAID THAT THE FIRST LOGISTIC COMMAND IS BE­ING TRANSFERRED TO SOUTH VIET NAM

KWAJALEIN, MARSHALL iSLANDS SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

PROWLING UNMARKED MIG JETS APPEARED FROM HAINAN AREA

SAIGON, APRIL 10 (AP)--COMMUNIST MIGS WHICH JUMPED U.S. NAVY PHANTOMS NEAR CHINESE HELD NAINAN ~SLAND "CAME FROM THE EAST AND RETURNED TO THE EAST" LT HOWIE WATKiNS, WHO TOOK PART IN THE DOGFIGHT, SAID TODAY.

WATKiNS SAID HE SAW NO MARKI ~GS TO INDICATE THE MIGS WERE CHINESE AIR FORCE CRAFT FROM HAINAN, BUT THAT ISLAND NEAR TO THE COAST OF CHINA WAS VISIBLE WHEN THE FIGHT STARTED.

ONE MIG WAS SHOT DOWN BY ONE OF THE FOUR NAVY PHANTOM JETS. THE TOP SPEED OF WHICH IS CLASSIFIED BuT THEY FLY FASTER THAN CONVENTIONAL BULLETS AND FIRE

ONLY MISSILES IN COMBAT

ALLIED TROOPS MOVE TO BERLIN AS BERLIN AUTOBAHN REOPENS

FRIDAYvS ENCOUNTER STARTED ABOUT SIX MILES IN THE SKY OVER TONKIN GULF, WATKINS SAID

BERLIN, APRIL 10 {AP)--THE FIRST OF FOUR CONVOYS CARRY!NG HUNDRfDS OF AMER­ICAN COMBAT TROOPS REACHED BERLIN SATURDAY ALONG THE AUTOBAHN AFTER ONLY ROU­TINE COMMUNIST CHECKS.

"THE MIG WERE S I L VERY AND HI GHL Y POLISHED WHEN SIGHTED,l1 WATKINS SAID, lIONE OF THE FOUR JETTISONED HIS TANKS AND GOT IN AN ATTACK POSITION ASTERN OF ME I TOOK EVASIVE ACTION." IT WAS THE FIRST LARGE-SCALE ALLIED TROOP MOVEMENT SINCE THE SOVIETS AND THE

EAST GERMANS BEGAN HARASSING THE VITAL LIFELINE S!X DAYS AGO. THE FOUR CONVOYS CONSISTED OF 452 MEN IN 103 VEHICLES THEY WERE UNDER THE

COMMAND OF LT. COL. EDWARD J GEANEY JR THE THREE OTHER GROUPS WHICH ENTERED THE AUTOBAHN AT HELMSTEDT THIS MORNING

NEW AIR FORCE UNIT TO DA NANG AIR BASE

WERE REPORTED MOVING NORMALLY ALONG THE 110-MILE HiGHWAY THAT CONNECTS WEST BERLIN WITh WEST GERMANY

THE SOVIET UNION DID NOT TRY TO STOP THE TRIP THROUGH AN AREA CRAWLING WITH

DA ~ANG, SOUTH VIET NAM, APRIL 10 COMMUNIST SOLDIERS DESPITE EAST-WEST {AP)--THE U.S AIR FORCE SOON WILL TENSION OVER BERliN BRING IN A SQUADRON OF FI04 INTERCEP-TORS IN AN EFFORT TO INSURE AIR SU­PERIORITY DURING STRIKES AGAINST NORTH V I ET NAM, I T WAS LEARNED TODAY.

THE Fl04 ARE EXPECTED TO ARRIVE AT DA NANG AIR BASE WITHIN A NUMBER OF DAYS, A MILITARY SOURCE SAID THE 18 104s MAKING UP THE SQUADRON WOULD REPLACE SIX FI02s AND PROVIDE HIGH ALTITUDE COVER FOR AMERICAN JETS CAR­RYING OUT STRIKES ON TARGETS IN THE COMMUNIST NORTH.

IT WAS ASSUMED THAT THE DECISION

THE COMMUNISTS HAVE NOT CLOSED THE AUTOBAHN SO FAR TODAY BUT THAT COULD HAPPEN AT ANY TiME SINCE JOINT SOVIET­EAST GERMAN MANEuVERS ARE STILL GOING ON. A CLOSEDOWN wHILE THE COMBAT TROOPS ARE EN ROUTE COULD PUT THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION IN A TEST OF WILLS BECAUSE THE WESTERN POWERS CLAIM THE RIGHT OF ~REE ACCESS TO BERLIN

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN)

MBOYA WARNS AFRICA

WATKINS SAID IT TOOK HIM ABOUT FIVE MINUTES TO SHAKE THE MIG OFF HIS TAIL.

ONCE HE HAD SHAKEN THE MIG OFF HIS TAil, WATKINS SAID HE JOINED OTHERS IN THE CHASE OF THE ENEMY CRAFT WHICH lIHEADED BACK TOWARD THE EAST."

(CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)

DOGFIGHT WITH MIGS CALLED ACCIDENTAL

WASHiNGTON, APRIL 10 (AP)--U.S OF-F!CIALS TODAY ASSESSED WHAT MAY HAVE BEEN THE FIRST U.S.-COMMUNIST CHINESE AIR ENCOUNTCR OF THE VIET NAM WAR AS A PASSING BRUSH RATHER THAN A DELIBER­ATE COLLISION BETWEEN THE TWO POWERS

THE POSSIBILITY THAT COMMUNIST CHINA MAY COME TO NORTH VIET NAMvS AID IN A BIG WAY LATER HAS NOT BEEN RULED OUT, BUT FRIDAY'S SKIRMISH WAS NOT RE­GARDED HERE AS A SIGN OF PORTENDING MASSIVE CHINESE INTERVENTION

THE OFFICiAL U.S. VERSION: FOUR u. TO SE~D THE 104s WAS MADE FOLLOWING THE SHOOTING DOWN OF TWO FI05S BY COMMUNIST MIG JETS EARLIER. THE AMERICAN MILITARY WAS KNOWN TO BE HIGHLY EMBARRASSED AT THE SUCCESS OF THE COMMUNIST AIRCRAFT IN THEIR BLOWS AT U.S. PLANES

OF DANGER FROM RE DS S NAVY JETS PATROLLING THE TONKIN GULF WERE ENGAGED BY FOUR UNIDENTIFIED

NAIROBI, KENYA, APRIL 10 (AP)--KENY~S MIGS 35 MILES OFF CHINA'S HAINAN Is-

BESIDE BUILDING UP THE INTERCEPTOR CAPABILITY OF THE AIR FORCE IN THE DA NANG AREA, THE l04s ARE FAR FASTER AND MORE MANEUVERABLE THAN THE 102s AND SHOULD PROVIDE FAR BETTER COVER­AGE FOR THE FIOO AND FI05 FiGHTER BOMBERS AS THEY MAKE LOW PASSES ON TARGETS

PAN-AM STRiKE IS SETTLED 1500 P~LOTS TAKE THE AIR

WASHINGTON, APRIL 10 {AP)--THE U.S NATIONAL MEDIATION BOARD SAID TODAY THE STRIKE OF PILOTS ON PAN AMERICAN AIRWAYS HAS GEEN SETTLED.

WORD OF THE SETTLEMENT WAS GIVEN OUT BY LEVERETT EDWARDS, A MEMBER OF THE MEDIATION BOARD

NEGOTIATIONS HAD BEEN UNDER WAY AL­MOST CONTINUOUSLY SiNCE FRIDAY NIGHT IN AN EFFORT TO ACHIEVE A SETTLEMENT, EDWARDS SAID

TERMS OF THE SETTLEMENT BETWEEN THE AIR LINE PILOTS ASSOCIATION AND THE AIRLINE WERE NOT IMMEDIATELY DISCLOS­ED.

PAN AMERICAN HAD SAID EARLIER THAT IN EVENT OF A SETTLEMENT ITS WORLD­

WIDE FLIGHT OPERATIONS WOULD BE RE­SUMED PROMPTLY OUT-BOUND SERViCE IN 24 HOURS AND INBOUND FLIGHTS TO THE U.S. WITHIN 48 HOURS

MINISTER FOR ECONOMiC PLANNING AND DE- LAND ONE MIG WAS REPORTED SHOT DOWN VELOPMENT TOM MBOYA SOUNDED A WARNING THE OFFICIAL CHINESE VERSION. THE TODAY AGAINST THE THREAT OF COMMUNISM AMERICAN PLANES WERE MET BY CHINESE TO AFRICA'S FREEDOM.

llMERELY BECAUSE EASTERN COUNTRIES HAVE NEVER HAD A COLONY IN AFRICA THIS DOESN'T MEAN THEY HAVE NO COLD WAR DE­SIGNS UPON AFRiCA,1t HE DECLARED.

llWE HAVE MADE IT CLEAR WE REJECT THE IDEOLOGY OF COMMUNISM. IT IS JUST NOT

GOOD ENOUGH FOR SO~E PEOPLE TO GO AROUND PRETENDING EVERYTHING FROM THE EAST IS FOR THE GOOD OF AFRICA AND EVERYONE FROM THE EAST MEANS WELL FOR AFRICA" SAID MBOYA

THE MINISTER GAVE NOTICE KENYA WAS NOT ABAILABLE AS A TESTING GROUND FOR COMMUNIST IDEOLOGY

IIWE MUST BEWARE OF THOSE WHO TRY TO BRUSH ASIDE COMMUNISM AS A POSSIBLE THREAT TO OUR FREEDOM,1t HE WARNED llCOMMUNISM IS A FACT iN WORLD POLITICS AND IT IS A FACT IN THE IDEOLOGICAL AND COLD WAR STRUGGLE IT DOESN'T DO ANY GOOD TO ADOPT OSTRICH TACTICS AND TO PRETEND IT DOESN'T EXIST 11

WATER REPORT CONDITION WATER DISTILLED 4/9 WATER PUMPED FROM BARGE RAINFALL 4/9 WATER USED 4/9 Loss BY EVAPORATION WATER IN STORAGE TODAY

ORANGE !76,300

° ° 206,300 25,000

7,080,000

CRAFT AND FLED IN PANIC IN THE CON-FUSION, ONE AMERICAN JET WAS HIT BY A lIGUIDED MISSILE ll FIRED BY ANOTHER U.S. PLANE AND lICRASHED IN THE AREA OF HAI­NAN 11

As SOON AS THE CHINESE ACCOUNT CIR­CULATED, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF DEFENSE ARTHUR SYLVESTER ASSEMBLED NEWSMEN AND TOLD THEM THE NATIONALITY OF THE MIG FIGHTERS HAD NOT BEEN DETERMINED.

THE AMERICAN PILOTS, HE ADDED, llHAD VERY fiRM INSTRUCTIONS ON THIS PARTIC­ULAR MISSION TO AVOID CHINESE AIR SPACE

MARINES HAVE LANDED DA NANG, SOUTH VIET NAM, APRIL 10

(AP)--A U.S MARINE BATTALION LANDED NEAR HERE TODAY AND GOT A GOOD VIEW OF WAR VIET NAM STYLE.

As THE MARINES STREAMED ASHORE IN ASSAULT BOATS AND LANDING CRAFT, AN ESTIMATED TWO SQUADS OF VIET CONG AT­TACKED A VIETNAMESE RANGER COMPANY SEVERAL MILES AWAY THAT WAS SECURING THE AREA FOR THE MARINE LANDING.

VIET CONG SNIPERS WOUNDED SEVEN RAN­GERS IN THE FIGHT THAT LASTED MORE THAN SIX HOURS THREE MILES SOUTHWEST OF THE BEACH WHERE THE MARINES CAME ASHORE. V lET CONG LOSS ES, I F ANY, WERE NOT KNOWN.

Page 2: SS - University of Florida

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

PAGE 2

PUBLISHED BY GLOBAL ASSOCIATES AT THE DIRECT!ON OF THE COMMANDING OFF!CER, KWAJALEIN TEST SITE, MARSHALL ISLAND CONTRACT D~-0!0021 AMC-90004 (Y)

I tN123 01 5o) 35 133A PMR WITH GLOBAL I t,SSOC! ATES I 1HE HvuRGLASS IS PUBLISHED DAILY ,MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DEADLINE , ~OR NOT iCES is l[PM THE DAY BEFORE

1

PUDL!CATION AND DEADLINE FOR NEWS 'TEMS IS iOA~ THE DAY OF PUBLICATION

, T~E ~OuRGLASS RESERVES THE RIGHT I TO E~IT coPY RECEiVED FOR PUBLICATION

AND TO EDIT LETTERS TO T~E EDITOR FOR THE SA~E OF BREVITY ALL COPY, LET-

I TERS ArJ[' PHOTOGRAPHS SUBM I TTED FOR PUOLICAT!ON DECOME THE PROPERTY OF THE \-10uRGL.ASS

EDITOR t,SST EDI TOR

STAFF

NEIL PHELPS-MuNSON DORIS vJALLIN tv! i CHAEL LEV! TT R UTI-I LONDON RON NELSON AUDREY STRATMANN

HOURGLASS

GALBRAITH AS APPEASER DURHA~ N C APRIL 10 {AP)--FoRMER

AMBASSADOR TO INDIA JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH BELIEVES THE U S AIR AT­TACKS ON NORTH VIET NAM ARE THE PROD­UCT OF A II'")AST GENERATION" OF FOREIGN POLICY THINKING

'~E KNOW FRO~ WORLD WAR I I THAT THE TENDENCY Of AIR ATTACKS IS TO STRONG­LY STiffEN THE RESISTANCE Of THE PEO­PLE DEING ATTACKED," GALBRAITH SAID IN A DUKE UNIVERSITY SPEECH FRiDAY NIGHT

GALBRAITH, AN ECONOMICS PROFESSOR AT HARVARD, SCRAPPED HIS ORIGINAL SPEECH ~N ECONOMICS AND ASSERTED THAT U S FOREIGN POLICY MUST BE GEARED TO "PRACTICAL ACCm-1MODATION" DASED ON SELF-I NTEREST WI TH Russ I A AND RED CHINA.

THE COLD WAR THEORIES OF "IMPLACABLE I CO~Fl..ICT" WITH THE COMMUNIST BLOC HAVE I I BEEN OUTMODED BY CHANGING EVENTS, HE I SAID, AND BELONG TO ANOTHER GENERATION i O~ POLICY PLANNERS

ALTHOUGH CRITiCAL or MANY RECENT

SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

FROM THE EDITORIALS I

NEW YORK, APRIL 10 (AP)--HERE ARE EXCERPTS fROM EDITORIALS PRINTED IN SATURDAY EDITIONS OF U S NEWSPAPERS

THE NEW YORK TIMES ON MONETARY

t

I REFORM ! "IN HIS FIRST SPEECH SINCE TAKING I

OFF I CE, SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY HEN-I RY H FOWLER HAS RE-EMPHASIZED T~E

ADMINISTRATION'S PROGRAM OF VOLUNTARY ! RESTRAINTS EDSIGNfD TO ELIMINATE THE fiG AND NAGGING DEFICIT IN THE NATIONS DALANCE OF PAYMENT MR FOWLER S RE-ASSURING PLEDGE TO MAINTAIN A STRONG DOLLAR CONTRASTS WITH HIS AMBIGUOUS­NESS ON THE ISSUE OF INTERNAT!ONAL MONETARY REfORM I N THE PAST ~ I NTER­NATIONAL MONETARY REFORM HAS AlWAvS COME ABOUT AFTER BITTER DISAGREEMENT BETWEEN THE GREAT fiNANCIAL POWERS HAS PRODUCED UTTER CHAOS THE RECORD SINCE THE END OF WORLD WAR!! HAS SHOWN AN IMPROVEMENT, ALTHOUGH IT HAS TAKEN EX1~AORDINARY EMERGENCY AID TO AVERY A BFEAKDOWN THE THREAT OF CRI-, FOREIGN POLICY DECiSIONS, GALBRAITH

I PRAISED PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S SPEECH

~====================================~, EARLIER THIS WEEK IN WHICH THE PRESI-

SIS REMAINS CONSTANT, IT WiLL NOT DE OVER UNTIL REFORMS ARE MADE WASHiNG­TON MUST REINFORCE ITS EFfORTS TO PRO­TECT THE DOLLAR, AND WE URGE SECRETARY FOWLER TO TAKE THE INITIATIVE AND PRESS FOR NEGOTIATIONS NOW TO ADAPT THE PRESENT MECHANISM 'TO THE CHANGING REQUIREMENTS OF AN EXPANDING FREE WORLD ECONOMY'"

OFFICIAL BULLETIN DENT OFfERED TO ENGAGE IN IIUNCONDITI~ DU1 Y OI=""F I CER FOR KWAJALE I N TEST SITE I AL DISCUSS IONS II

DATE HCXv1E PHONE' HE SA I D THE UN I TED S TATES SHOULD lOA (5 tAA J I.~ R T * 628 ~PR v VI 'v, HAYER I RECOGNIZE THE RED CHINESE AS ONE OF I i A 05 CAPT R M B * 2344 PR AKER- : THE TWO MOST POWERFUL SPOKESMEN OF THE 12 A 05 CAPT M C WINEBARGER (,Co4 PR v COMMUNIST BLOC AND SHOULD BARGAIN WITH :~ ApR 65 CAPT R M BAKER 2344 THEM HE ALSO SAID RED CHINA PROB-

APR 65 cwo J D KEELING 644 ABLY SHOULD DE ADMITTED TO THE U.N THE NEW YORK TIMES ON US-SOViET ~ELATION ! 5 APR G5 HAJ J 0 SAMMONS 2289:" IF NOTH I NG ! S DONE, HE CAN BE AS-

iG ApR G52/LT 0 W OLIVER 602 SURED NOTHING WILl.. BE DETTER AND "DESPITE FISING SOVIET-AMERICAN TEN­SION ON SEVERAL FRONTS, PRESiDENT JOHN­SON ACTED ADROITLY IN ANNOUNCING THE APPOINTMENT OF A SPECIAL COMMITTEE TO STUDY T!-IE POSSIBLE EXPANSJON OF TRADE HITH THE SOVIET UNION AND EASTERN Eu-

*/ND'CATES wEEKENDS AND/OR HOLIDAYS t-10ST LIKELY EVERYTHING WILL BE WORSE," DUT~ OF~iCER IS KWAJALEIN TEST SITE GALDRAITH S~ID

CCOMMAND'NG OFFICER'S REPRESENTATIVE ------DuRING OTHER THAN NORMAL DUTY HOURS --

RUSK DISAPPOINTED WASriINGTON, APRIL 10 (AP)--U S

ISECRETARY Of STATE DEAN RUSK SAID I TODAY "i !--lAVE LEEN DISAPPOINTED I WI TI-' FIE R[SPONSE SO FAR" fROM NORTH

\ I'::T NAt"! AND COt~~~UN 1ST CH I NA TO PR ES­IUENT JOHNSO~ S PEACE PROPOSAL ON

SOUTHEAST ASIA. Rus~ ALSO SAID THAT AMERICAN FLIERS

ARE UNDER CLEAR ORDERS "NOT TO GO OV­ER tv1A 11\jI_AND CH! NA OR I TS A I R SPACE "

HE 3AID THAT ORDER ALSO INCLUDES HAINAN, THE COMMUNIST CHINESE ISLAND iN T~E GULF OF TONKIN U S JETS AND POSSIBLY COMMUNIST CHINESE FIGHT­ERS CLASHED NEAR THE ISLAND FRIDAY

Tf-lE SECRETARY OF STATE SPOKE TO NEWS! E~ AT ANDREWS AFB UPON RETURNING FROM , WEE~iS TRIP TO A CENTRAL TREATY ORGANIZATION MEETING IN IRAN HE ALSO STOPPED IN GENEVA EN ROUTE HOt-lE

PEKING RADIO HAS DENOUNCED JOHNSONS OFFER FOR "UNCONDITIONAL DISCUSSIONS" ON A VIET NAM PEACE SETTLEMENT AND A $1 BILLION U S CONTRIBUTION FOR SOUTHEAST ASIAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT T~E PRESIDENT MADE THE PROPOSAL IN A WEDNESDAY Nl~HT SPEECH

RADIO HANG! FRIDAY TERMED THE JOHN­SON OFFER A "DECEITFUL PEACE ALLEGA­TION "

STATE WATCHING EXECUTIONS \JAsHINGTON, APRIL 10 {AP)--THE U S

STATE DEPARTMENT SAID FRIDAY IT HAS BEEN IN CLOSE TOUCH WITH THE SOUTH VIE, ~AM GOVERNMENT ON THE DEATH SENT ENCE HA~DED TO A VIET CONG TERRORIST, WHICH COULD DRING ABOUT THE EXECUTION OF A HIGH U SAID OFF!CIAL HELD BY THE Cm-1MUN I STS

THE VIET CONG HAVE HELD GUSTAV HERTZ, A PUDLIC ADMINISTRATION AD­VISER, SINCE HE wAS CAPTURED FEB 2

ION TH[ OUTSKIRTS OF SAIGON

I EARLIER THIS WEEK, HANOI RAOIO Tr"~EAT[NED TO EXECUTE HERTZ IF THE

leONG TERRORiST WERE E~ECUTED

LINDA DARNELL CRITICAL CHICAGO, APRiL 10 (hP)--AcTRESS LIN­

DA DARNELL, THE GLAMOROUS HEROINE OF ROPE HIS ACTION REMINDED COMMUNiST

MANY MOVIES, WAS IN CRITICAL CONDITION LEADERS THAT THE ROAD TOWARD CONSTRUCT-TODAY WITH BURNS COVERING 80 PERCENT IVE COOPERATiON WITH THE UNITED STATES OF HER BODY REMAINS AVAILADLE MANY COMMUNIST LEAD-

THE 1~3-YEAR-OLD STAGE AND SCREEN STAR ERS HAVE INDICATED THEIR UNDERSTANDING SUFfERED SECOND AND THIRD-DEGREE DURNS Of WHAT NORMALIZED ECONOMIC RELATiONS

OVER THE UPPER PART OF HER DODY FRIDAY IN A FIRE AT THE SUBURBAN GLENVIEW HOME OF MRS RICHARD CURTIS, HER FOR­MER SECRETARY WITH WHOM SHE HAD BEEN VISITING

MISS DARNELL WAS TAKEN TO COOK COUN­TY HOSPITAL'S ULTRAMODERN BURN TREAT­MENT CENTER, WHERE FLUIDS AND BLOOD PLASMA WERE ADMINISTERED A TUBE WAS INSERTED INSERTED IN HER WINDPIPE TO AID BREATHING

FIREMEN HAVE NOT DETERMINED THE CAUSE OF THE FIRE, IN WHICH THREE OTHER PERSONS ALSO WERE INJURED CURTIS, A MANUFACTURING EXECUTIVE REPORTED TO BE MISS DARNELL'S AGENT, WAS IN Los ANGE­LES WHEN THE FIRE BROKE OUT

Wi TH THI S COUNTRY v/OULD t1EAN TO 111 E SOVIET DLOC GREATLY INCREASED TRADE WITH THE UNITED STATES WOULD ENSUE J

AND ALSO THE WAY WOULD BE OPENED TO COMMERCIAL CREDITS AND RELATED FORMS OF ECONOMIC AID THE PRESIDENTiS ~CT-

ION IN SHOWING HIS CONTINUED INTEREST IN EXPANDED ECONOMIC COOPERATiON PRO­VIDES IMPORTANT AMMUNITiON f<R THOSE INFLUENTIAL COMMUNISTS WHO WANT IM­PROVED RATHER THAN WORSENED POLITiCAL RELATIONS WITH THE UNITED STATES It

THE NEW YORK HERALD TRIBUNE ON SOViEl RACIAL TROUBLES "THE RUSSIANS MAY NOT LiKE T!-IE IDEA,

BUT THEY MIGHT DO WELL TO INViTE AMER­ICANS TO HELP THEM WITH THEIR RACIAL PROBLEMS, PARTICULARLY THOSE INVOLViNG

SPRAWLED ON THE LIVING-ROOM fLOOR, AFRICANS THE UNITED STATES, WiTH ALL WHICH WAS RAVAGEr BY THE DLAZE THEY THE VIOLENCE AND BLOODSHED, IS MAK!NG

FiREMEN SAID THEY FOUND MISS DARNELL

SAID THE FIRE APPARENTLY HAD STARTED IN PROGRESS AGtlNST RACIAL DISCRIMINATION, THE SOFA WHERE WHE WAS SLEEPING IT EVEN IN ALABAMA IN THE SOVIET UNiON, CAUSED AN ESTIMATED $4,000 DAMAGE TO HOWEVER, THE SITUATION IS GOING FROM THE TOWNHOUSE IN THE NORTHWESTERN SU- BAD TO WORSE, FROM DISCRIMINATION DURB AGAINST JEWS AND OTHER SOVIET MINOR1TY

SCHOOL AID PASSES WASHINGTON, APRIL 10 (AP)--THE U S

SENATE PASSED AND SENT TO PRESIDENT JOHNSON FRIDAY NIGHT THE FIRST BROAD BILL FOR FEDERAL AID FOR GRADE AND HIGH SCHOOLS IN AMERICAN HISTORY -- A $1 3 BILLION BLUEPRINT TO HELP DETTER EDUCATE THE CHILDREN OF POOR PARENTS

THIS CLIMAX TO A 20-YEAR BATTLE CAME AFTER ADMINISTRATION FORCES DE-FEATED ALL EFFORTS -- MOSTLY BY RE­PUBLICANS -- OVER THREE DAYS OF DEBATE

GROUPS TO ATTACKS ON THE RELATIVELY SMALL NUMDER OF AFRICAN STUDENTS WHO ARE SUPPOSED TO BE GUESTS n~ THE SOV­IET GOVERNMEm THE RACIAL OUTDREA~3

IN THE SOVIET UNION SFEM TO DE DUE TO AT LEAST TWO FACTORS -- A COMBINATION OF STINGINESS AND STUPIDITY ON T~E

PART OF THE SOVIET GOVERNMENl BURE~UC­

RACY, ON THE ONE HAND, AND INGRAiNED DISCRIMINATION A~ONG SOVIET PEOPLES, ON THE OTHER

HONG KONG \PRIL 10 {AP)--U ALEXIS JOHNSON DEPUTY U S AMBASSADOR TO

TO CHANGE THE 81LL PASSED BY THE HOUSE ' R 263 153 M 29

SOIJTH VIET NAM, TODAY SAID A!R RAIDS OF EPRESENTATIVES TO ARCH. ELEVEN AMENDMENTS WERE DEFEATED BY AGAINST NORTH \/IET WERE EFFECTIVE AND

THAT THE WAR EFFORT AGAINST THE VIET SOL I D r-1ARG INS CONG IN THE SOUTH WAS IMPROVING

"

Page 3: SS - University of Florida

PAGE 3 HOURGLASS SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

Around EXCHANGE TOURS CONDUCTED

PRESS PERSONNEL VISITED THE USNS H H. ARNOLD AND WERE GIVEN A GUIDED TOUR Of THE FLOATING MISSILE TRACKER, THE GEN. ARNOLD, ONE OF TWO OEST EQUIPPED SPACE TRACKING SHIPS AFLOAT, IS ANCHORED OFF KWAJALEIN IN BETWEEN MISSilE TRACKING ASSINGMENTS. THE MULTI-MilLION DOLLAR COMPLEX Of RADAR, COMPUTER, ELECTRONICS AND COMMUNICATIONS GEAR IS COMPARABLE TO THAT FOUND AT A LARGE TRACKING BASE ON LAND. RCA SERVICE COMPANY (MTP) HAS RESPONSIBLITY fOR THE MAiN­TENANCE AND OPERATION OF THE ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT ABOARD OPERATIONS DIRECTION IS RECEIVED FROM PAN AMERiCAN WORLD A,RWAYS. PRESS PERSONNEL WISH TO THANK THE PERSONNEL OF THE GEN. ARNOLD FOR AN INFORMATIVE TOUR OF THEIR FACillTYo

SEAL OF APPROVAL AWARDED THE EDITOR OF THE HOURGLASS ANNOUNCES

WITH A SIGH OF WELL-FED CONTENTMENT, THAT THE HOURGLASS SEAL OF APPROVAL FOR TODAY HAS BEEN AWARDED TO THE PACKAGED DANISH PASTRIES, BUTTERHORNS AND DOUGH­NUTS THAT WILL BE AVAILABLE TO THE PUB­L I C COMMENC I NG MONDAY, APR I L 12, INS! DE THE REAR ENTRANCE OF THE PACIFIC DiN­ING ROOM J FROM 7 TO 10 AM, MON -SATo

THE HOURGLASS SEAL OF APPROVAL IS AWARDED ONLY AFTER EXTENSIVE TESTS HAVE BEENCONDUCTED ON THE PRODUCT IN QUEST­ION BY AN OFFICIAL BOARD OF TASTE TES­TERS. ONEOF THE MORE IMPORTANT TESTS IS THE CAREFUL AND CRITICAL SAMPLiNG OF THE PRODUCT IN ORDER TO ASCERTAIN WHETHER OR NOT IT IS UP TO THE HIGH STANDARDS SET BY THE BOARD

THE BOARD OF TASTE TESTERS HAVE NOW COMPLETED THEIR TESTS AND HAVE ISSUED THEIR COMBINED OPINION THAT THE PACK­AGED BREAKFAST GOODS TO BE SOLD AT THE PACIFIC D,N,NG ROOM VIA THE BACK DOOR ARE LIGHT AND FLUFFY I N TEXTURE, I NO 1-

CATIVE OF RECENT ASSOCIATION WITH AN OVEN, THE TASTE IS DELICATE AND SUBTLE, OBTAINABLE ONLY BY THE USE OF THE BEST INGREDIENTS. THE BOARD WAS ALSO MUCH IMPRESSED WITH THE SHAPES AND CONTOURS OF THE VARIOUS ITEMS.

THE DOUGHNUTS, FOR INSTANCE, ARE OF AN ALMOST PERFECTLY CIRCULAR CIRCUMFER­ENCE, WITH ALL THE HOLES NEATLY CENT­ERED. THE BUTTERHORNS AND PASTRIES ARE SHAPED ALONG THE PRINCIPLES DEMANDED BY GOOD DESIGN FINALLY, THE CLEVER PACKAGING OF THE PRODUCT REALLY DECIDED THE BOARD THAT HERE WAS A PRODUCT WOR­THY OF ITS HIGHLY SOUGHT AWARD.

S,MPLICITY ITSELF WAS THE KEYNOTE OF THE PACKAGING - STARK TRANSPARENT PLAS­TIC, UNENCUMBERED BY ADVERTISING OF ANY SORT How MANY COMPANIES HAVE SUCH FAITH IN THE QUALITY OF THEIR PRODUCT TO FEEL THEIR NAME NEED NOT BE BLAZONED

KWAJALEINRS POST OFFICE PARCEL POST INFORMATION

MANY PATRONS ARE UNDER THE IMPRES­SION THAT PARCEL POST AND SECOND OR THIRD CLASS MAil ARRIVES ON CONTRACT CARRIER, NORTHWEST AIRLINES FLIGHTS ON MONDAYS AND THURSDAY ALL CLASSES OF MAIL ARE AIR-LIFTED BETWEEN HONO­LULU AND KWAJALEIN, BOTH INCOMING AND OUTGO I NG HOWEVER, I NCOM I NG MA! L ON NORTHWEST FLIGHTS CONSISTS OF AIR MAIL AIR PARCEL POST, AND FIRST CLASS MAIL ONLY. PARCEL POST, SECOND OR THIRD CLASS MAIL IS FLOWN IN ONLY BY CARGO PLANES C-124's, WHiCH ARRIVE ON TUES­DAYS AND FRIDAYS AND AT OTHER UN­SCHEDULED TIMES, ALONG WITH ADDITIONAL AIR MAiL, AIR PARCEL POST AND FIRST CLASS MA I Lo

CONTRARY TO THIS FACT, THE CONTRACT CARRIER, NORTHWEST AIRLINES OUTGOING FLIGHTS ON TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS CARRY PARCEL POST, SECOND CLASS OR THIRD CLASS MAIL IN ADDITION TO AIRMAIL, AIR PARCEL POST AND F,RST CLASS MAIL. IN ADDITION TO THIS, OUTGOING CARGO FLIGHTS C-124's AIRLIFT PARCEL POST AND OTHER CLASSES OF MAIL AT UNSCHEDU~

ED TIMES, AS ANNOUNCED BY RADIO AND POST OFFICE SPECIAL NOTICES. SHIPS ARRIVING AND DEPARTING DO NOT CARRY MAIL

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN)

CORRECTION, PLEASE IN TUESDAY'S HOURGLASS REFERENCE

WAS MADE TO THE COMPANY, REMINGTON RAtIO UN I VAC

WE HAVE SINCE BEEN INFORMED THAT

DATA PROCESSING COURSE B~S 315, AN INTRODUCTORY COURSE IN

HIGH SPEED DATA PROCESSING WiTH EM­PHASIS ON BUSINESS APPLICATIONS OF INTERNALLY PROGRAMMED DIGITAL COMPU­TERS, I S ONE OF THE COURSts OFFERED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI I KWAJALEIN CEN­TER FOR THE SPRING SEMESTER START~NG

APRIL 19 THE COURSE IS ROUGHLY DIViDED INTO

THREE PHASES THE FIRST PORT~ON, CON-SISTING OF AN ORIENTATION TO THE FUN­DAMENTAL ASPECTS OF COMPUTERS, WijLl BE FOLLOWED BY A BRIEF PRESENTATijON OF PATTERNS OF DATA PROCESSING COMMONLY ENCOUNTERED IN BUSINESS APPLICAT!ONS THE LAST PORTION OF THE COURSE Will DEAL WITH PROBLEM ORIENTED LANGUAGES SUCH AS COBOL, AND IF T!ME PERM~TS, FORTRAN.

THERE ARE NO PREREQUISITES BEYOND HIGH SCHOOL ALGEBRA AND A FAiR DEGREE OF INTELLECTUAL MATURITY. SEVERAL FIELD TRIPS WILL BE ARRANGED TO THE PROJECT PRESS COMPUTERS AT ROI-NAMUR.

(CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN)

JUN I OR CLASS PLAY AUDIENCES ATTENDING THE THREE PER­

FORMANCES OF THE HIGH SCHOOL JUNIOR CLASS PLAY, "A COMEDY OF ERRORS," BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE, THOROUGHLY ENJOYED THE CLEVER AND WELL-PERFORMED PRODUC­TION

MR JAMES RAYMOND, ABLE DIRECTOR OF THIS LIGHT COMEDY, MOVED THE SETTING OF THE PLAY TO THE "MOST EASTERLY OF THE HAWAI IAN ISLANDS!" WITH COSTUMES TO CORRESPOND. THIS PRODUCTION CHANGE

THE PROPER DESIGNATION FOR THE COMPANY PROVED MOST EFFECTIVE, ESPECIALLY iN NOW IS UNIVAC. REMINGTON RAND, IT VIEW OF THE FACT THAT THE PLAY WAS SEEMS, HAS BEEN DISSOCIATED WITH THE PRESENTED IN THE GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL UNIVAC OPERATION HERE FOR SOME TIME. COURTYARD BENEATH A TROPICAL SKY

MARK DETCHEMENDY AND BILL ADDY EACH MAIL CALL 3,856 POUNDS OF MAIL ARRI- HANDLED HIS DUAL ROLE OF IDENTICAL VED LAST NIGHT VIA A C-124o (CONTINUED ON PAGE FOUR)

Page 4: SS - University of Florida

PAGE 4

THAT JUST MIGHT BECOME A BEAR OF ANOTHER COLOR

AN AP NEWS ANALYSIS-VIET NAM BY ARTHUR L. GAVSHON

LONDON APRIL 10 (AP)--SOVIET SOURCES ARE QUIETLY SPREADING THE WORD IN LON­DON THAT THEIR COUNTRY WANTS TO H:LP THE UNITED STATES END THE WAR IN VIET NAM

BEFORE AND AFTER PRES!DENT JOHNSON!S OF~ER FOR TALKS, RUSSIAN IN~ORMANTS

HAVE BEEN SUGGESTING TH~T NEITHER Mos­COW NOR WASH1NGTC~ WANTS T~E VIET NAM WAR EXTENDED THEY SAY BOTH COUNTRIES RECOGNIZE THAT COMMUNIST CI-INA, I~

RAMPANT IN SOUTHEAST ASIA, COULD IM­PERIL WORLD PEACE AND THAT SOMETHiNG NEEDS TO BE DONE TO CHECK PEKING'S POSITION IN NORTH VIET NAM

To ACHIEVE THESE GOALS, SOVIET SOUR~ ES IMPLY, Moscow AND WASHINGTON MUST FIND WAYS TO COOPERATE THE JOHNSON PEACE PLANS SEEM~ TO APPRO~CH SUCH A BASIS ALTHOUGH THE RUSSIANS SEEM TO THINK IT NEEDS TO BE REVISED AT LEAST SO THE NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT (REP­RESENTING THE VIET CONG GUERR'LLAS !N T~E SOUTH) CAN BE REPRESENTED AT ANY PEACE TALKS

THIS IS A BIG DIFFICULTY THE UNIT-ED STATES IS UNLIKELY TO AGREE TO DEALING WITH THE VIET CONG BUT THE RUSSIANS MUST -- TO BACK UP THEIR O~N

OFT-REPEATED PLEDGES -- GET THE SOUTH VIETNAMESE COMMUNISTS INTO THE NEGO­TIATIONS PICTURE, OR RISK CONDEMNATION BY COMMUNISTS AROUND THE WORLD

ST!LL, THE~E ARE IMPORTANT IMPLICA­TIONS IN THE SOVIET HINTS, WHICH SEEM TO POINT TOWARD A Moscow YEARNING >OR SOME SORT OF TACIT UNDERSTAND!NG BE­TWEEN THE SUPER-POWERS TO DEFUSE TilE SOUTHEAST ASIA SITUATION -- AND PER­HAPS EVEN CONTAIN THE COMMUNIST CHIN­ESE

THIS SORT OF RUSSIAN THINKING IS BEING OUTLINED IN INFORMAL CONTACTS ON A VARIETY OF LEVELS AMONG DIPLO­MATS, POLITICIANS AND NEWSMEN

IT APPEARS TO FIT INTO INFORMATION REACHING KEY WESTERN GOVERNMENTS THROUGH THE OFFICIAL NETWORK OF COM­MUNICATION WITH Moscow A H!GHLY PLACED SOVIET DIPLOMAT DISCUSSING V!ET NAM RECENTLY WITH A BRITISH COLLEAGUE REMARKED IN Moscow

'~HEN FIRE BrEAKS OUT FIREMEN DONIT ARGUE ABOUT Tt- E IR DUT I ES "

IN LONDON, RUSSIANS HAVE BEEN SEEK­ING OUT BRITISH ACQUAINTANCES TO AM-PLIFY THEIR IDEAS NOBODY FAMILIAR WITH SOVIET METHODS OF COMMUNICATION BELIEVES ALL THIS TO BE ACCIDENTAL

AT ONE TETE-A-TETE THIS WEEK A Russ­IAN DREW THIS PICTURE

"OUR COUNTRY IS IN A VERY DIFFICULY POSITION

"WHILE THERE IS FIGHTING IN VIET NAM WE MUST REMAIN READY TO hELP OUR FRIENDS IN THE NORTH TO SUSTAIN THEM­SELVES AGAINST ATTACK

"NATURALLY THIS HOLDS UP THE PRO­CESS OF EAST-WEST DETENTE WHICH SUITS THE CHINESE FINE

"IF \vE DO NOT REMAIN SOLID WITH HANOI THEN WE WILL BE ACCUSED OF BE­TRAYING THE COMMUNIST CAUSE WHICH WOULD SUIT THE CHINESE EVEN MORE"

ONE SOVIET INFORMANT RELATED DETAILS OF THE EPISODE IN WHICH COMMUNIST CHI­NA SUPPOSEDLY BLOCKED SOVIET PLANS TO SEND MASSIVE MILITARY AID TO NORTH VIET NAM DESPITE PEKING DENIALS OF THE AFFIAR, THE SOURCE INSISTED THIS VERSION IS ACCURATE

THE STORY HE TOLD PREMIER ALEXEI KOSYGIN VISITED HANOI

ON FEBRUARY 6-10 AND, AMONG OTHER THINGS, ARRANGED FOR THE SUPPLY O~ NEW MODERN ANTIAIRCRAFT DEFENSE WEAPONS -­INCLUDING GROUND-TO-AIR MISSILES AND

(CONCLUDED IN ADJACENT COLUMN)

PLAY rn l1TfG LASS

(CONT I NUED FROM) PAGE THREE

TWINS EXCELLENTLY JANICE GIBBS AND NANCY COHAN AS ADRIANA AND LUCIANA) RESPECTIVELY, WERE VERY EFFECTIVE AND CONVINCING ACTRESSES IN THE LEADING FEMALE ROLES. TOM SMITH AS PINCH, THE DOCTOR, AIDED BY DOUG GIBBS, PROVIDED AN EXTRA FILLIP OF COLOR AND COMEDY iT SHOULD BE MENTIONED THAT DOUG GIBBS, BEING SOMETHING LESS THAN OF HIGH SCHOOL AGE, WAS THE YOUNGEST AC­TOR IN THE CAST.

ALL THE MEMBERS OF THE CAST ARE TO BE CONGRATULATED ON THEIR FINE PER­FORMANCES

AFRICAN EMERGES NAIROBI, KENYA, APRIL 10 (AP)--KEN­

YA'S PRESIDENT JOMO KENYATTA TODAY FORCED A PUBLIC SHOWDOWN WITH HIS MOST VOCIFEROUS PRO-COMMUNIST CRITIC, DENOUNCING HIM TO HIS FACE

KENYATTA TOLD A PUBLIC RALLY AT MURANGA TOWNSHIP, SOME 40 MILES FROM NAiROBI, HE HAD HEARD TALK OF A REVO­LUT ION I N KENYA

"I CAN ASSURE YOU THIS IS RUBBISH BECAUSE WE HAVE STRONG FORCES TO DEAL WITH ANY UPRISING," SAID KENYATTA.

"I FOUGHT COLON I ALS WITH ALL MY STRENGTH AND IF ANY AFRICAN WANTS TO FIGHT WITH ME LET HIM TRY," HE STATED.

ANGRILY POINTING HIS WALKING STICK AT LEGISLATOR AND FORMER ASSISTANT EDUCATION MINISTER BILDAD KAGGIA, KEN­YATTA TOLD THE CROWD "THIS MAN HAS BEEN TELLING YOU LIES."

SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

THIS WEEK IN WALL STREET NEW YORK, APRIL 10 (AP)--THE STOCK

MARKET CAME TO LIFE TH!S WEEK AND SOME OBSERVERS BELIEVED IT WAS EMBARKED ON A TRADITIONAL SPRING RALLY.

FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MORE THAN TWO WEEKS, THE Dow JONES INDUSTR!AL AVER­AGE ROSE ABOVE THE 900 llVEl. THE TRADING WEEK ENDED WITH A STRING OF THREE STRAIGHT ADVANCES.

THE GENERAL ATMOSPHERE OF OPiNION CHANGED RADiCALLY STATEMENTS BY SOME ANALYSTS WERE QUITE GLOOMY AS THE WEEK STARTED, A FEW FREELY PREDICT!NG A SHARP "CORRECTION." By TODAY, HOWEVER, THE MARKET TECHNICIANS HAD RAiSED THEI~ SIGHTS AND LOOKED FOR AT LEAST AN IN­TERMEDIATE RISE OF HEALTHY PROPORTIONS

THE Dow INDUSTRIALS THIS WEEK ROSE 7.91 TO 901. 29.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS AVERAGE OF 60 STOCKS ADVANCED 3.3 TO 336.9, THE~R BIGGEST GAIN SINCE THE WElK ENDiNG FEBRUARY 27 WHEN THEY ROSE 3 7

AFTER A COUPLE OF DAYS OF HiGHLY UN­CERTAiN MARKET ACTION AND ON RELATiVE­LY SLOW TRADING, STOCKS BEGAN TO PiCK UP A LITTLE SPEED. THEY ROSE MODERATE-LY ON WEDNESDAY THEIR GAINS WERE SHARP ON THURSDAY AND TODAY WHEN THE PACE OF TRADING QUICKENED TREMENDOUSLY TODAY'S VOLUME OF 6.58 MILLION SHARES WAS THE BEST SINCE MARCH 4 WHEN TURN­OVER STOPPED SEVEN MILLION.

THE WEEK'S VOLUME OF 26,351,970 SHARES COMPARED WITH 23, !79, lO! THE PREVIOUS WEEK AND WAS THE LARGEST SINCE THE WEEK ENDED MARCH 20 WHEN 26,674,97C SHARES CHANGED HANDS.

llHE HAS NOT BEEN TELLING YOU THAT 1

SACKED HIM FROM HIS GOVERNMENT JOB BE­CAUSE HE WAS LAZY. INSTEAD OF STAYING IN HIS OFfiCE HE WENT AROUND TELLING PEOPLE HOW BAD THE GOVERNMENT IS "

BLUE CHIPS AS WELL AS A HOST OF "SEC­ONDARy lI ISSUE PARTICIPATED IN rHE RISE.

OF 1,537 ISSUES TRADED THIS WEEK ON I----------------------------------~ THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE, 886 ROSE

AIRCRAFT WHICH v.oULD HAVE REQUIRED T~E PRESENCE OF RUSSiAN ADVISERS, TRAiNERS AND TECHNiCIANS

LATER IN PE~ING HE ADV!SED CHINESE LEADERS OF THE ARRANGEMENTS MADE IN HANOI AND ASKED FOR RIGHTS OF TRANSIT ACROSS CHINESE TERRITORY FOR THE EQUIPMENT HE SEEMED SO SURE THOSE FACILITIES WOULD BE GRANTED THAT HE TOLD A PUBLIC MEETING IN THE NORTH KOREAN CAPITAL OF PYONGYANG THAT AM­ERICAN AIR RAIDS ON NORTH VIET NAM HAD 8ROUGHT RUSSIA AND COMMUNIST CHI~ CLOSER TOGETHER

KOSYGIN ~ETURNED TO Moscow ON FEB­RU~RY 14 ORDERS WENT OUT TO ASSEMBLE THE PROMISED EQUIPMENT AND SPECIALIST CREWS Q

AROUND THE END OF FEBRUARY CHINA STILL HAD NOT GRANTED THE NECESSARY OVERFLYING R!GHTS REMINDERS WENT TO PEKING, WITHOUT RESPONSE

EARLY IN MARCH KOSYGIN ORDERED A NOTE SENT TO PRESIDENT Ho CHI M!NH'S HANOI REGIME, SAYING THE MATERIAL AND MEN WERE READY BUT WERE AWAITING CHIN­ESE TRANSIT RiGHTS NOTHING HAPPENED, AND A SECOND NOTE WENT TO HANOI

By ABOUT MID-MARCH THE NORTH VIET­NAMESE RESPONDED IN A WAY THAT AMOUNT­ED -- THE INFORMANT ASSERTS -- TO A VIRTUAL REPUDIArlON OF THE ORIGINAL AGR EEMENT HANO liS R EPL Y SA 10 SOPH I S-T!CATED WEAPONS NO LONGER WERE NEEDED RUSSIA COULD HELP BEST BY SENDING ALONG MEDICAL SUPPLIES AND WEAPONS, PRESUMABLY SMALL ARMS, THAT WERE EASY TO USE SOVIET SPECIALISTS WERE NOT WANTED

"THE WORDS WERE THE WORDS OF HANOI," COMMENTED THE RUSSIAN SOURCE, "BUT THE VOICE ~AS THE VOICE OF PEKING"

TOWARD THE END OF M~RCH OFFICIALS IN Moscow BEGAN LEAKING THE STORY OF WHAT THEY SAID WAS CHINESE OBSTRUC­TIONISM

COMMUNIST CHINA ON MARCH 31 DENIED THESE REPORTS WHICH, BY THEN, HAD GOT-

AND 495 FELL BOEING WAS BOUGHT HEAVILY ON NEWS IT

WOULD GET THE MAJOR SHARE OF A BiG BRITISH PLANE ORDER WHilE DOUGLAS AiR­CRAFT FELL IN DISAPPOINTMENT. LATER I N THE WEEK GRUMMAN AND GENERAL DYNAM- : ICS WERE STRONG ON NEWS OF PLANE ORDfR~ FROM BRITAIN

THE FIVE MOST ACTIVE ISSUES THfS WEE~ ON THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE WERE~

RADIO CORPORATION, UP 3 3/8 AT 35 L2 ON 481,000 SHARES, COMMONWEALTH Oil, UP 3/4 AT I I 1/8; AMERICAN TELEPHONE, UP I 1/4 AT 68 3/8, GENERAL MOTORS, UP 3 1/2 AT 105 !/4, AND WOOLWORTH, UP 2 1/2 AT 30 3/d

THE FIVE MOST ACTIVE ISSUES TH!S WEEK ON THE AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE WERE:

SIBONEY, UP 7/16 AT 7/8, BANFF' Oil, UP I 1/4 AT 5 1/8, BRAZiliAN TRACTION, UP 1/2 AT 6 3/8; FOTOCHROME, UP 1 1/2 AT 10 7/8, AND SEABOARD WORLD AIRLINES, UP 3/4 AT 9 7/8.

M I GS (CONT I NUED FROM PAGE ONE)

WATKINS, FROM THE CORAL SEA, WAS ONE OF THREE NAVY PILOTS BROUGHT TO SAIGON TODAY FROM SEVENTH FLEET FOR A PRESS CONFERENCE

COMMANDER PETE MONGILARDI TOOK PART IN THE RAID ON A BRIDGE AT KIM CHUONG ABOUT 10 MILES FROM THE LAOS BORDER

"w E K N 0 C KED 0 U T THE C EWE R 0 F T H [' " M " HIGHWAY BRIDGE, ONG~~ARDI SAiD IT

WAS DOWN INTO THE WATER " MONGILARDI SAID HE SAW NO ACTIVITY IN

THE AREA OF THE BRIDGE WHICH WAS IN A MOUNTAINOUS AREA AND A DIFFICULT TARGET

ASKED IF HIS TEN MISSIONS OVER NORTH ViET NAM IN A PHANTOM LED HIM TO BE­LIEVE AMERICAN BOMBING WAS IMPROVING, THE 39-YEAR-OLD PILOT REPLIED "BOMBING IS LIKE GOLF THE MORE YOU BOMB THE BETTER YOU BECOME" HE ADDED "i THINK OUR BOMBING IS PRETTY DAMMED GOOD II

COMMANDER TAYLOR BROWN LED FRIDAY'S

TEN INTO PRINT AROUND THE WORLD ATTACK ON A RAILROAD BRIDGE AT TAM DA

RUSSIAN SOURCES INSIST THEY ARE TRUE IN NORTH VIET NAM

Page 5: SS - University of Florida

r-----------------------------------------------~.------'

PAGE C) HOURGLASS SATURDAY 10 APR I L 1965

5 po rts S E eTI ON co~~~~~~~~:~~~~~, w~~~ I~~~r~~~~ N~~~:~U:~RE ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~FRIDAY NIGHT AND SAl) AFTERWARD "THAT ONE FELT GOOD "

THE OBSERVER THE RECORD TOSS OF 67 FEET, I I~ INCHES WITH A 16 POUND BALL WAS MADE BY RANDY

MATSON, A STUDENT AT TEXAS A&M COLLEGE IN A FOUR-SIDED TRACK AND FIELD MEET WITH THREE OTHER SCHOOLS, BAYLOR, TEXAS AND SOUTHERN METHODIST

Bv PAT LANIAS THE THROW WIPED OUT FORMER OLYMPIC COMPETITOR AND SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GRADUATE DALLAS LONG'S RECORD OF 67 FEET, 10 INCHES, AND SET A HIGHLY PARTISAN CROWD OF

LAKERS SINK CELTICS 37-15 3,000 PERSONS HOWLING WITH DELIGHT THE LAKERS, AFTER HAVING A DIFFICULT THE RECORD CAME ON MATSON'S SIXTH AND

TIME PENETRATING A STUBBORN CELTICS' DE LAST THROW ON THE EARLIER TOSSES, HE FENSE IN THE FIRST HALF, FINALLY BROKE HAD PUT THE SHOT 66-8, 62-2, 65-3, 66-10 IT WIDE OPEN ~ THE SECOND HALF TO REG- AND 66-9i ISTER A 37-15 RUNAWAY VICTORY OVER THE A MAROON COLORED LINE INDICATED LONG'S CELTICS YESTERDAY AFTERNOON INTHE OPEN- EXISTING MARK AND WHEN MATSON'S FINAL ING GAME OF THE THIRD AND FINAL ROUND OF PLAY IN THE JUNIOR BASKETBALL LEAGUE

THE CELTICS, WHO HAVE BEEN HAVING TROUBLE WITH THE LAKERS STINGY FULL­COURT PRESS, FOUND THE LAKERS GOING AT IT AGAIN THE LAKERS, WITH 2.05 REMAIN-ING IN THE SECOND QUARTER, WENT INTO THF FIJI I COURT PRESS DEFENSE AGA IN, AND USED IT ALL THE WAY THROUGH THE THIRD AND FOURTH QLlr\RTERS IT WAS EFFECT I VE AS THEY HELD T~E CELTICS TO ONLY 3 DIG­ITS IN THE SECOND QUARTER, 7 IN THE THIRD AND ONLY ONE FIELD GOAL IN THE FINAL QUARTER IN THE MEANTIME, AFTER THE LAKERS HAD TAKEN A 15-6 LEAD AT HALFTIME, TaM \JILEY AND JIMMY QUINN, THE LAKERS' STEAD I EST SHOOTERS, BROKE LOOSE IN THE THIRD AND FINAL STANZAS TO PRODUCE A 22 POINT HARVESr IN THE SEC­OND HALF

QUINN LED ALL SCORERS FOR THE EVENING WITH 16 AND TEAMMATE WILEY FOLLOWED WITH 12 OTHER LAKERS WITH FINE CON-TRIBUTIONS WERE LINDEN CRAIG WITH 5 AND MIKE CARLIN WITH 2

MIKE CLARK PACED THE LOSlRS WITH 8 POINrs, GREG GURNEE WAS NEXT WITH 3, WHILE JOHN BLACK HAD 2 AND MIKE COHAN AND DAVID MOSER EACH TALLIED I

CAGE ALL-STARS THE EAST-WEST ALL-STAR GAME WILL BE

PLAYED THIS TUESDAY AT 6 PM ON DALLY COURT AND IT SHOULD BE A REAL THRILLER THE FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF ALL-STARS THAT HAS BEEN UPDATED WEST ALL-STARS RAY NORTON JIM DUNCAN Lou HORSTMAN TED TAYLOR PAT LAN lAS AL COLIN STAN AKANA JOE THIGPEN GENE STEVENS J H-1 NELSON TOM COHAN BOB CHIPINSKI FLO ASUNCION JACK SWAJKOSKI

EAST ALL-STARS FELIX CLEARMAN JOHN STAVOLE ANDY VIERSTRA AL HOENIG BOB COSTA VINCE BRAGADO EDDIE COSTORIO CEE HENTACUTAN RON NELSON BILL ELLINGTON WALLY KEAO BOBBY IHA

RIKAKIS RIKAKIS RIKAKIS NA-AL I I "A"

NA-AL I I "A"

NA-AL I I "B"

NA-AL I I "B"

BURNS & POE BURNS & POE HIGH SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL HIGH SCHOOL FIL-AMERICANS F I L-AMER I CANS

WECO vJECO

' C" "C II

Ro I-NAMUR ROI-NAMUR IMUA SPRINTS IMUA SPRINTS FIL-AMERICAN "B" F I L-AMER I CAN "B'1 FIL-AMERICAN "B" KENTRON KENT RON JOMAKA J

JOMAKA J

HEAVE SA I LED PAST IT, THE CROWD WENT WILD

BUT THE CALMEST PERSON IN THE STADIUM WAS MATSON, A 20 YEAR-OLD GIANT WHO STANDS 6 FEET 6 INCHES TALL AND WEIGHS

260 POUNDS "THAT ONE FELT GOOD," HE SAID "THE

FIRST FIVE DIDN'T FEEL LIKE I RELEASED THE~ PROPERLY ACTUALLV, 1 FELT BETTER O~ MY WARMUP THROWS THAN I DID EVEN ON

THE RECORD THROW " ALL RECORD-CERTIFYING REQUIREMENTS

WERE MET BY MEET OFFICIALS AND THE MARK WILL BE SUBMI1TED FOR WORLD RECORD REC­OGNITION

MATSON ALSO HAD THE BEST DISCUS THROW OF HIS CAREER, THROWING IT 190 FEET, 7 INCHES, WHICH IS LESS THAN THREE FEET UNDER THE NATIONAL COLLEGE RECORD

CLAY TALKS OF RETIREMENT Los ANGELES, APRIL 10 (AP)-CASSIUS

CLAY, SPEAKING FROM MIAMI BEACH, FLOR~ FRIDAY INDICATED HE MIGHT RETIRE AFTER HIS NEXT FIGHT WITH SONNY LISTON

CLAY, SCHEDULED TO MEET LISTON MAY 25 IN BOSTON, TOLD Los ANGELES RADIO STAT­ION KNX IN AN INTERVIEW I JUST MAY RE­TIRE RIGHT AFTER THE LISTON FIGHT I HAVE SO M/NY THINGS GOING FOR ME 11

BUT WHAT IF CLAY SHOULD LOSE THEBOur? /lIF HE WINS I PROBABLY WOULD RETIRE TOO,II SAID CLAY IIBUT 1 DON'T THINK HE WILL"

"I DON'T THINK OF DEFEAT I MIGHT QUIT--I DON'T KNOW I'M FIGURING ON RETIRING AFTER WINNING"

ASKED AGAIN ABOUT QUITTING ON A LOS-ING NOTE, CLAY REPLIED "YES, I BE-LIEVE I WOULD I'LL CROSS THAT BRIDGE WHEN 1 GET TO IT I MIGHT WIN IT BACK OR I MIGHT QU I T I DON'T KNOW BUT I NEVER THINK OF DEFEAT"

FAST-PITCH ALL-STARS THERE IS A PRACTICE GAME SUNDAY AT

4 30 PM ON DALLY FIELD AGAINST EBEYE PLEASE BE PROMPT

TENNIS LESSONS CHANGED OTHER SPORTS ACTIVITIES, POOR LIGHT­

ING AND LACK OF SPACE DO NOT PERMIT US TO CONTINUE THE TENNIS LESSONS AT THE DALLY FIELD COURT EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATE-LY THE 5 O'CLOCK TUESDAY AND 7 0 CLOCK WEDNESDAY CLASSES FOR BEGINNERS WILL AGAIN BE HELD AT THE YOKWE YUK TENNIS COURTS

BECAUSE OF THE LACK OF QUALIFIED IN­STRUCTORS, TIME AND COURT SPACE, THE CLASSES MUST BE RESTRICTED TO BEGINNERS ONLY THE LACK OF COURT SPACE MAKES IT IMPERATIVE THAT ALL CLASSES START PUNC­TUALLY AND ARE TERMINATED AT THE END OF

ONE HOUR STUDENTS ARE THEREFORE RE-SMILEY HENTACUTAN FRANK RUIZ HOWARD PANG (REFEREES FOR THE McKEAGUE & GILL)

NA -ALI I "C" NA-AL I I "c' ALL-STAR GAME

QUESTED TO APPEAR ON TIME AND TO RELIN­QUISH THE COURTS AFTER THE LESSONS TO

WILL BETHOSE WAITING TO PLAY

CLASSICAL TOURNAMENT

CAGE PLAYOFF GAME BETWEEN ROI-NAMUR AND THE RIKAKIS HAS BEEN SET FOR SUN-DAY AT 6 PM OFFICIALS WILL BE Mc-KEAGUE AND PINHO

JUNIOR BASKETBALL LEAGUE SCHEDULE SATURDAY 10 APRIL- 4 45 PM DALLY COUR'

HAWKS VS KNICKS (UNGERECHT & HORSTMAN) MONDAY 12 APRIL- 4 45 PM DALLY COURT­

ROYALS VS LAKERS (NORTON & GILL)

C T"ESDAY 13L\A pRIL 7. 4 4t.') PM DAL.L.yCOURT-,

ELT,CS VS rAWKS tUNGERECHT & HORSTMAN)

N~CKLAUS LEADING WITH 202 IN MASTERS TOURNEY

AUGUSTA, APRIL 10 (AP)-JACK NICKLAUS SCORED A RECORD-TYING EIGHT-UNDER-PAR 64 SATURDAY FOR A 54 HOLE TOTAL OF 202 IN THE 29TH MASTERS GOLF TOURNAMENT

NICKLAUS, AN AMERICAN, BOOMED CANNON LIKE DRIVES DOWN THE AUGUSTA NATIONAL'~

BROAD FAIRWAYS AND PUTTED LIKE A DEMON IN MOVING SEVEN STROKES AHEAD OF HIS CLOSEST PURSUER THERE SEEMED NO CHANCE OF CATCHING HIM IN SUNDAY'S i8 HOLE SHOWDOWN

DEFENDING CHAMPION ARNOLD PALMER AND SOUTH AFRICA'S GARY PLAYER, THE OTHER TWO MEMBERS OF GOLF'S BIG THREE WHO WERE TIED WITH NICKLAUS AT THE HALFWAY POINT AT 138, WERE UNABLE TO MATCH NICKLAUS' SIZZLING PACE

PLAYER WAS ONE UNDER THROUGHT THE 14TH AND PALMER WAS ONE OVER PAR THROUGH THE 12TH HOLE PLAYER NEEDED TO PA~ OUT TO TIE SIKES FOR THE RUNNER­UP SPOT

MEANWHILE, MASON RUDOLPH, WHO HASN'T BROKEN 70 ALL YfAR, CHARGED IN WITH A 66 FOR 21 I, NINE SHOTS BACK OF THE LEAD

NICKLAUS' SCORE OF 202, THE BEST EVER SHOT FOR THE FIRST THREE ROUNDS IN THIS 31 YEAR OLD EVENT, PUTS HIM IN A GOOD POSITION TO BREAK BEN HOGAN'S 72 HOLE RECORD OF 274 SET IN 1953 NICKLAUS CAN MATCH IT WITH AN EVEN PAR 72 IN SU~DAY'S FINAL AND CAN SMASH IT WITH ANY SCORE UNDER THAT

THE BEST PREVIOUS SCORE FOR 54 HOLES WAS 205 HOGAN MADE THAT MARK WITH 70-69-66 IN HIS BIG YEAR, 1953 AND PALMER MATCHED IT IN 1962 WITH 70-66-69 NICKLAUS' FIRST THREE ROUNDS HAVE BEEN 67-71-64

PHILADELPHIA SQUEAKS BOSTON PHILADELPHIA OUTLASTED BOSTON 134-131

FRIDAY NIGHTTO EVEN THE EASTERN NATION­AL BASKETBALL FINALS AT TWO GAMES EACH. HAL GREER'S FIELD GOAL AS THE FINAL BUZZER SOUNDED TIED THE REGULAT ION GAME AT 118 APIECE AND THEN WILT CHAM­BERLAIN DID THE IMPORTANT SCORING IN THE EXTRA PERIOD TO SPARK PHILLY TO THE VICTORY

BULLETS SQUARE WITH LAKERS THE BALTIMORE BULLETS EVENED UP THEIR

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAY­OFF SERIES AGAINST THE Los ANGELES LAKERS OVERCOMING A SIX POINT DEFICll AFTER THREE QUARTERS, THE BULLETS BEAT THE LAKERS 114-112 TO SQUARE THEIR BEST OF SEVEN SERIES IN THE WEST TO TWO GAMES EACH

CASSNER KILLED IN LEMANS TRIALS LEMANS, FRANCE, APRIL 10 (AP)-LUCKY

CASSNER, RACE DRIVER FROM MIAMI, FLOR­IDA, WAS KILLED SATURDAY WHEN THE MAS­ERATI HE WAS DRIVING IN TRIALS FOR TH[ LEMANS 24 HOUR AUTOMOBILE RACE SKIDDEC ON THE WET TRACK AND CRASHED

THE CAR LANDED ON THr GOLF COURSE BORDERING THE TRACK AND WAS VIRTUALLY DEMOLISHED CASSNER WAS TAKEN TO A CLINIC IN LEMANS IN SERIOUS CONDITION~

ALTHOUGH REPORTS CIRCULATED AT THE TRACK IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE ACCIDENT THAT C\SSNER HAD BEEN KILLED, A SPOKES MAN AT THE CLINIC KEPT REPEATING THAT HE WAS "IN VERY SERIOUS CONDITION" THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF HIS DEATi CAME ABOUT THREE HOURS AFTER THE ACCIDENT

Page 6: SS - University of Florida

PAGE 6

NOTICES FOR SALE

LA~Y!S SUNBEAM ELECTRIC R~ZOR, $1 I. SuNBEAM WAFFLE IRON, $20 BOTH ITEMS ARE NEW SEE AT TR. 536

CRYSTAL PUNC~ BOWL AND LADDLE, STAR PATTER~. CALL 474 OR SEE AT TR 515

PO~ARO!D CA~ERA, MODEL 850 WITH CASE, ~!NK-L!GHT AND FLASH ATTACHMENT SEE AT REEF 105 OR CALL 9-202

Two RED PLAID PULLMAN SUITCASES, USED O~CE, $10 EACH CALL 691 OR SEE AT QTRS 434-A.

CALL 361.

E30Y s 26" AND 24" MURRAY BICYCLES, ~ ~G'THS 0_0 CALL 2781.

TRAILER AW~ING 14' X 10 1• GIRL

SCOUT 0NI~ORM, SIZE 8 Boy SCOUT UNlfOP~, SiZE 12 LADyiS TWO PIECE DRESS, SiZE () LADY'S THREE PIECE COTTON KNIT DPESS, SIZE 10. CALL

523

LOST

Rrn P~ASTIC ~IRE ENGINE, 2 YR OLD S~ZE CAl L 691 OP RETURN TO QTRS. LY"_A

E"'S ~~'j KEy-BAK tI CHAIN WITH KNIFE. C~LL Al CLAR~ 412

WANTED

MAN'S 26" BICYCLE. CALL 2134 DURING WORKING HOURS OR 2753 AFTER 4 30

BIRD CAGE OR SIMILAR RECEPTACLE FOR INJURED SANDPIPER. CALL 2341 OR CONTACT QTRS 426-B.

UKULELE LESSONS CALL MARyLOU AT

691

CURTAINS OR DRAPES FOR 2 BEDROOM QUARTERS LADY'S BICYCLE IN GOOD CONDITION CALL 2393 (WILL THE LADY WHO CALLED WITH A BICYCLE FOR SALE PLEASE CONTACT ME AGAIN.)

BICYCLE RACK CALL 2446.

FOUND

GIRL'S BLUE SWEATER, ABOUT SIZE 8 OR 10, FOUND ON THE GEORGE SEITZ PLAYGROUND CALL 2161 OR SEE AT TR. 559 A~TER 4 30

KEY WITH NUMBER 9960 ON IT AT HOURGLASS

CLAIM

MACY'S HAS A COLLECTION OF NORMAL AND PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES THAT HAVE BEEN FOUND IN THE STORE AND ALSO A SET OF KEYS IN A LEATHER CASE IN-QUIRf AT THE OFFICE

WORK WANTED

WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN WHILE PAR-ENTS ARE ON VACATION CALL 2446.

PERSONALS

To THE YYWC COOKING CLASS. ! APPRECIATE YOUR KIND INVITATION,

\/H I CH WAS PROMPTED BY SOME OF MY AS­SOCIATES, BUT I MUST DECLINE TO AT­TEND COOKING CLASSES AT THIS TIME THE PRESS OF BUSINESS AND PERSONAL OBLIGATIONS MAKES IT IMPOSSIBLE

R S M.

HOURGLASS

CLUB NOTICES

CHESS CLUB WILL HOLD ITS REGULAR SUN­DAY AFTERNOON SESSION TOMORROW BEGIN­NING AT 1 PM AT THE SCUBA CLUB HOUSE. VISITORS ARE WELCOME

SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

SHOWTIME 7 & 9 YOKWE YUK THE LAST BL! TZ­

KRIEG YOKWE YUK BUFFET FOR TONIGHT IS. VAN JOHNSON, KERWIN MATHEWS

BROILED ROCK LOBSTER TAIL WITH LEMON- WAR DRAMA * BW BUTTER GRILLED NEW YORK CUT STEAK

PHIL CHING AND HIS NAUTICAL HAWAIIANS WILL PLAY FOR DiNING ANt DANCING.

WOMEN'S PROTESTANT CHAPEL FELLOWSHIP­How MANY OF YOU WOULD INVITE AN UTTER STRANGER TO BE YOUR HOUSE GUEST FOR MANY DAYS OR WEEKS'? liTHE STRANGER IN My HOUSE,1l AS PRESENTED BY ENID MCKAY TO THE WOMEN'S PROTESTANT CHAPEL FEL­LOWSHIP WILL GIVE YOU BACKGROUND IN­FORMATION THAT WILL BE HELPFUL

MRS MCKAY WILL SPEAK TO THE FELLOW­SHIP ON TUESDAY, APRIL 13 AT 9:30 AT THE CHAPEL A CORDIAL INVITATION TO ATTEND IS EATENDED TO ALL INTERESTED WOMEN SYLVA BAGLEY WILL PROVIDE BABYSITTING AT TR 544

NIKE FLYING CLUB WILL HOLD A BUSINESS

SHOWTIME 7030 RICHARDSON FIVE GUNS TO

TOMBSTONE JAMES BROWN, JOHN WILDER -WESTERN - BW PETER PAN WILL PRECEDE REGULAR FEATURE.

SHOWTIME 7 30-12015 OCEA N V I EW BABY THE RA I N MUST

FALL LEE REMICK, STEVE MCQUEEN BW DRAMA A •• GOOD Y .MATURE C. NO

TRADEWINDS SHOWTiME 8 NIGHT WALKER NEWS & SPORTS

BARBARA STANWYCK, ROBERT TAYLOR HORROR DRAMA A GOOD Y .MATURE

PARENT'S MAGAZINE MOVIE RATINGS

C

EACH FILM IS RATED AS TO QUALITY AS

NO

WELL AS SUITABILITY FOR PERSONS OF VAR-MEETING TUESDAY, APRIL 13 AT 7 PM. 10US AGES. THE AGE SYMBOLS USED ARE. THE MEETING WiLL BE HELD IN THE THIRD A .ADULT Y .YOUNG PEOPLE 12-!6 C FLOOR CONFERENCE ROOM OF THE TERMINAL B I N TO REGUL AR BUS CH I LOREN

U!LDING N ADDITIO - OTHER SYMBOLS USED ARE AS FOLLOWS INESS ITEMS, NEW MEMBERS WILL BE WEL- * NO RATING C •• COLOR BW •• BLACK AND COM eO INTO THE CLUB. ALL MEMBERS AND WHITE WS. WIDE SCREEN PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS ARE URGED TO AT-TEND.

SUNDAY IS MOV I ES YOKWE YuK-----BABY, THE RAIN MUST FALL

SOCIETY OF PHOTO-OPTICAL ENGINEERS-- RICHARDSON---------------------4-D MA~ THE NEXT MEETING OF THE SOCIETY OF OCEAN VIEw-----FIVE GUNS TO TOMBSTONE PHOTO-OPTICAL ENGINEERS (SPIE) WILL TRADEWINDS--INVITATION TO A GUNFiGHTER BE HELD AT THE BANYAN ROOM OF THE YOK-~ ______________________________________ _

WE YUK CLUB ON MONDAY, APRIL 12, AT 7 PM GUEST SPEAKER OF THE PROGRAM WILL BE MR PETE HOWES, KWAJALEIN SITE SUPERVISOR FOR AVCO CORPORATION. A LECTURE AND SLIDE PRESENTATION WILL BE GIVEN ON AIRBORNE OPTICS' ROLE IN MODERN INSTRUMENTATION PHOTOGRAPHY MEMBERS ARE URGED TO ATTEND AND BRING A GUEST ALONG. OTHER PERSONNEL IN­TERESTED IN THIS FIELD OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND

MICRONESIAN HANDICRAFT SHOP --NEW HOURS OF OPERATION ARE MONDAY TUESDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY 10

AS FOLLOWS 7 - 8 30

9 - 11·30 9 - II 30

30 - 12' 30

ANNOUNCEMENTS

PM AM AM PM

SECURITY NOTICE--SECURITY HAS BEEN RECEIVING COMPLAINTS OF DOGS BARKING DURING THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT, RUN­NING IN PACKS HARRASSING PEDESTRIANS, AND LOITERING AROUND THE DINING ROOMS AND CLUB AREAS THESE ANIMALS ARE CONSIDERED A NUISANCE AND WILL BE IMPOUNDED AT THE OWNERiS EXPENSE

HELP WANTED

SECRETARY FULL-TIME ApPLY AT THE GLOBAL ASSOCIATES IN­DUSTRIAL RELATIONS OFFICE, LOCATED IN THE TERMINAL/ADMINISTRATION BUILD­ING, GROUND FLOOR.

THE KWAJALEIN AREA OFFICE OF THE CORPS OF ENGINEERS HAS AN IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR AN ENGINEER DRAFTSMAN. THIS POSITION OFFERS FULL CIVIL SER­VICE BENEFITS QUALIFIED AND INTER­ESTED APPLICANTS ARE REQUESTED TO CONTACT MRS. KELLY AT THE CORPS OF ENGINEERS OFFICE, 2187.

LAW COURSE OFFERED AT KWAJALEiN CENTER

THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI I KWAJALEIN CENTER IS HAPPY TO ANNOUNCE THAT FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE ITS ESTABLISHMENT I A LAW COURSE IF OFFERED FOR THE COMING, SEMESTER. THIS IS LAW 300, PRINCIPLES OF BUSINESS LAW, A 3-CREDIT COURSE RE-QUIRED OF ALL BUSINESS MAJORS iT DEALS WITH THE AMERICAN SYSTEM OF JUR­ISPRUDENCE, ELEMENTS OF TORTS, CRIMIN­AL LAW, PROPERTY, TRUSTS AND ESTATES, LAW OF CONTRACTS AND AGENCY.

INSTRUCTOR IS DONALD F. JOST MR JOST RECEIVED HIS LL.B IN LAW FROM FORDHAM UNIVERSITY IN NEw'YORK AND IS CURRENTLY EMPLOYED WITH BELL TELEPHONE LABORATORIES HE IS A STIMULATING IN­STRUCTOR AND THE KWAJALEIN CENTER IS INDEED FORTUNATE TO HAVE HiS SERViCES

THE NEW SEMESTER IS SCHEDULED TO START APRIL 19 AND REGISTRATION WILL TAKE PLACE NEXT WEEK. FOR DETAILED IN­FORMATION, PICK UP A COpy OF THE CAT­ALOGUE AT THE SPECIAL SERVICES LIBRARY

REQUEST FOR BOOTH PARTICIPATION IN KWAJALEIN CARNIVAL, MAY 29-30-3!

NAME OF AGENCY OR ORGANIZATiON ________ _

NAME OF BOOTH CHAIRMAN ----------BUSINESS PHONE HOME rrlONE ------- ---------PLEASE INDICATE THE FOLLOWING BOOTH REQUIREMENTS NAME OF BOOTH. _________________ ~~~7 NUMBER OF OPEN SIDES REQUIRED 1,2,3,4 FRONTAGE ____________ ~ __ ~----------DEPTH _________________ HEIGHT ___________ __

INDICATE ANY OTHER SPACE REQUIREMENTS

TYPE OF ENCLOSURE (WOOD, CANVAS,ETC.)

ELECTRICAL REQUIREMENTS LOVE, WHILE MERELY AN EPISODE IN THE NUMBER AND TYPE OF 110-115 VOLT OUT­

LIFE OF A MAN, IS THE ENTIRE HISTORY OF A WOMAN'S LIFE BYRON LETS ,

210-~22~0~-----------------------------

Page 7: SS - University of Florida

.. PAGE 7 HOURGLASS

PROGRAM SCHEDULE AFRS KWAJALEIN SUNDAY

9:00 AM NEWS 9:05 -- SOUNDS OF SUNDAY

10:00 -- NEWS 10: 15 -- SPORTS 10:30 -- SOUNDS OF SUNDAY Ic~OO -- NEWS 12 05 -- BOLERO TIME

1.00 PM NEWS I 05 -- S,LVER PLATTER 1·30 -- BAMBO CURTAIN 1:35 -- SOUNDS OF THE 60s 2:00 -- NEWS 2:05 -- SMALL WORLD ~:OO -- NEWS 3 15 --3:30 --4000 --

HEf£S TO VETERANS HAWA I I CALLS NEWS

4~05 -- FOOTLIGHTS AND SauNDTRACKS 5:00 -- NEWS 5:05 -- FOLK MUSIC OF THE WORLD b:OO -- NEWS 6:05 --6:30 --7. 00 --7:05 --8:00 --

BEST FROM INTERLOCHEN CONTINENTAL VARIETIES NEWS SOUNDSTAGE 65 NEWS

8:05 -- CBS RADIO WORKSHOP 8:30 -- MR. PRESIDENT 9:00 -- NEWS 9:05 -- JOHNNY DOLLAR 9:35 -- SUSPENSE

10:00 -- RADIO NOVELS 11:30 -- DREAMSVILLE

MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 6:00 AM MIKE HAMLIN

HEADLINES (6:30) NEWS & SPORTS (7:00)

-- BREAKFAST CLUB -- AMERICA'S POPULAR MUSIC

9: 00 9=30

10:00 --10:05 --10:30 --10:35 -­II :00 --11:15 --12.00 --12: 10 PM 12:30 .. -

TALES OF THE NORTHWEST PACIFIC THEATRE 5

1:00 -­I: 15 -­I: 30 --2:00 --

2:05 --3:00 --3:05 --4:00 --4:05 --5:00 --5: 15 -­b:OO --6:05 --

1220 SPECIAL ARTHUR GODFREY NEWS SOUNDSTAGE 65 NEWS, STOCKS, WEATHER ALBUM OF THt DAY WORLD OF SHOW BUSINESS NEWS SPORTS PAGE IRA COOK NEWS PAUL COMPTON NEWS RON NELSON NEWS

SHOW

MONITOR NEWS SOUNDS OF ANALYSIS JIM AMECHE NEWS

THE ISLANDS

-- NEWS 7: 00 7:05 --8:00 --

TEENS BEAT JIM DENNY

9· '5 9:30

-- SPORTS PAGE -- JIM DENNY

II :00 11.05 II: 35 12:00

-- NEWS -- JIM DENNY -- TONITE (JOHNNY CARSON) -- SIGN OFF

SATURDAY 6:00 AM MIKE HAMLIN

HEADLINES (6:30) NEWS SUMMARY (7:QO)

-- BIG JOHN AND SPARKY 9: 00 g:')5

10:00 12:00 12:05 --12·30 --

-- 1220 SPECIAL -- YOUR MIGHTY LEADER -- NEWS

I: 00 --I: 15 -­I: 30 --1:45 --2:00 --2:0') --3:00 --3: 15 --3:30 --

ALBUM OF THE DAY BOLERO TIME NEWSMAKERS SPORTS PAGE SERENADE IN BLUE THE NAVY SWINGS NEWS RON NELSON NEWS TENNESSEE ERNIE FORD POLKA PARTY

(

4·00 -- NEWS 4:05 --4:30 --5:00 --

ARMY HOUR MARTIN-LAMM NEWS

5:05 -- COUNTRY CORNER b:OO -- NEWS 6·05 --7:00 --8:00 --9:00 --9: 15 --9·30 --

10:00 --10:05 -­II :00 --11:05 --

LAWRENCE WELK Top 10 REV I EW JIM DENNY NEWS SPORTS JIM DENNY NEWS JIM DENNY NEWS JIM DENNY

12:00 -- SIGN OFF

SHOW

POSTAL (CONTINUED FROM PAGE THREE)

IN VIEW OF THIS INFORMATION, POSTAL PATRONS MUST ACCEPT THE FACT THAT THE RECEIPT OF PARCEL POST AND SECOND OR THIRD CLASS MAIL IS SPORADIC IN NA­TURE, A FEAST OR FAMINE PATTERN, AVER­AGING ABOUT TWO LARGE DELIVERIES A MONTH, COORDINATED WITH ARRIVAL OF SHIPS IN HONOLULU

IT IS RECOMMENDED WHEN ORDERING MERCHANDISE FROM A COMMERCIAL FIRM, WHICH IS NOT EXCESSIVE IN WEIGHT, TO REQUEST THE FIRM TO SHIP EITHER AIR MAIL, AIR PARCEL POST OR FIRST CLASS MAIL, AND CONSEQUENTLY THIS MERCHAND-ISE WILL BE ENTITLED TO ARRIVE ON NORTHWEST AIRLINES FLIGHTS ON MONDAYS OR THURSDAYS AND PRECLUDE EXCESSIVE WAITING FOR DELIVERY HOWEVER, WHEN MOST COMMERCIAL FIRMS ARE NOT REQUES­TED SPECIFICALLY BY CUSTOMER TO MAIL BY EITHER AIR MAIL, AIR PARCEL POST OR FIRST CLASS MAIL, THEY GENERALLY MAIL BY CHEAPEST RATE - THIRD OR FOURTH CLASS, REGARDLESS OF HOW LIGHT THE PARCEL IS AND THEREBY DELAY DE­LIVERY

THE FOLLOWING IS THE PRIORITY OF DISTRIBUTION OF MAIL AT ALL POST OFFICES

(I) AIRMAIL (AIR PARCEL POST) (2) FIRST CLASS (3) NEWSPAPERS (WHEN IN DIRECT SACK~

WHEN IN MIXED SACKS #4 PRIORITY) (4) PARCEL POST (FOURTH CLASS) (S) ORDINARY PAPER (SECOND CLASS) (6) CIRCULAR, CATALOG (THIRD CLASS)

PA T A COURSE (cON~l~~E~H~~~) ERIC KORNGOLD, THE INSTRUCTOR, HAS

BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH MIT LINCOLN LAB SINCE 1957, WHERE HE HAS BEEN ENGAGED IN A VARIETY OF DATA SYSTEMS DEVELOP­

MENT AND DESIGN PROJECTS BEFORE HIS PRESENT ASSIGNMENT TO PROJECT PRESS PRIOR TO JOINING MIT HE WAS ENGAGED IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF INDUSTRIAL APPLICA­TIONS OF DIGITAL COMPUTERS WITH THE MANAGEMENT SERVICES DIVISION OF ARTHUR D LITTLE, INC HIS EARLIER EXPERIENcr IN THE DIGITAL COMPUTING FIELD WAS OB­TAINED AT NORTH AMERICAN AVIATION, INC. IN SCIENTIFIC AND ENGINEERING APPLI­CATIONS STARTING IN 1953

MR. KORNGOLD HOLDS A BA FROM CCNY AND AN MA FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, BOTH IN MATHEMA­TICS HE HAS PURSUED ADDITIONAL GRA­DUATE STUDIES AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY AND AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO WHERE HE WAS A READER IN MATHEMATICS HE HAS TAUGHT SUCCESSFULLY AT THE KWAJALEIN CENTER SINCE FALL 1964

FOR INFORMATION ON DATES OF REGIS­TRATION, ETC, GET A COpy OF THE CATA­LOGUE FROM THE SPECIAL SERVICES L,BRARY

TROIS RIVERES, CANADA, APR 10 (AP)­AT LEAST ONE MAN WAS KILLED, TWO WERE REPORTED MISSING AND I I HURT IN A COL­LISION OF TWO FREIGHTERS ON THE SEAWA~

BERLIN SATURDAY 10 APRIL 1965

(CONT I NUED FROf'.'I PAGE ONE)

A U.S. ARMY SPOKESMAN SAID THE BAB­ELSBERG PROCESSING TOOK 30 MINUTES, A COMPARATIVELY SHORT TIME HE SAID THE OTHER CONVOYS ARE REPORTED MOVING NOR­MALLY TOWARD THE C'TY

THE FIRST GROUPS LEFT THE HELMSTEDT END OF THE AUTOBAHN AND ARRIVED AT THE AMERICAN CHECKPOINT IN A NORMAL TIME FOR THE TRIP

THE TROOPS HAD BEEN IN WILDFLECKEN, WEST GERMANY, FOR ABOUT THREE WEEKS OF FIELD TRAINING

AUTHORITATIVE SOURCES SAID THEY WERE ORIGINALLY TO HAVE RETURNED TO THE COMMUNIST-SURROUNDED CITY NEXT MONDAY

THE RETURN APPARENTLY WAS MOVED UP TO ENABLE THE WESTERN ALLIES TO TEST WITH A BOG CONVOY THE ACCESS ROUTES TO BERLIN AFTER A WEEK OF SEVERE COM­MUN I ST HARASSMENT OF TRAFf" I C, I NCLUD­ING SIX TEMPORARY BLOCKADES OF ALL

TRAFFIC DURING THE BLOCKADES, EVEN ALLIED

MILITARY VEHICLES WERE NOT ALLOWED TO ENTER EAST GERMANY, A CLEAR VIOLATION OF ALLIED RIGHTS OF FREE ACCESS ESTAB­LISHED AFTER WORLD WAR II OTHERS WERE HELD UP FOR THREE HOURS EN ROUTE.

PAKISTANI BUILDUP NEW DELHI, APRIL 10 {AP)--INDIAN AR­

MY TROOPS HAVE BEEN MOVED INTO TENSE AREAS ALONG THE EASTERN INDIA-PAKISTAN BORDER, THE GOVERNMENT ANNOUNCED TODAY.

A DEFENSE M,NISTRY SPOKESMAN SAID THE ARMY WAS TAKING OVER FROM POLICE UNITS WHICH CLASHED WITH PAKISTANI FORCES IN RANN OF KUTCH FRIDAY

HE CLAIMED 34 PAKISTANIS WERE KILLED IN THE INCIDENT.

FOUR PAKISTANIS WERE TAKEN PRISONER AND FLOWN TO NEW DELHI FOR INTERROGA­TION, HE SAID.

INFORMATION GAINED FROM THEM IND!CA­TES 3,500 REGULAR PAKISTANI TROOPS, COMMANDED BY BRIGADIER MOHAMMED AZHAR KHAN, HAD BEEN MOVED INTO THE AREA, HE SAID.

GINA'S JEWELS IMPOUNDED HOLLYWOOD, APRIL 10 {AP)--"I FEEL

NAKED," SAID GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA, AFTER CALIFORNIA STATE TAX AGENTS STRIPPED HtR OF HER JEWELS

THE GORGEOUS ITALIAN ACTRESS OFTEN COMES TO HOLLYWOOD, BUT THIS WEEK, SHE FEELS, SHE SHOULD HAVE STAYED IN ROME

"F,RST IT RAINS ALL WEEK IN SUNNY C " " ALIFORNIA, SHE SAID, AND NOW THE TAX MEN SNATCH MY JEWELRY BOX FROM THE HOTEL SAfE, WITHOUT ONCE CONTACTING ME I NEVER KNEW lOWED ANY TAXES IN CALIFORNIA

"EVEN THE MAFIA GIVES AT LEAST ONE WARNING"

THE CAL I FORN I A FRANCHI~ TAX BOARD CLAIMS MISS LOLLOBRIGIDA OWES THE STATE MORE THAN ~13,000 IN INCOME TAXES DATING BACK TO 1959, WHEN SHE MADE A MOVIE HERE WI TH FRANK S,NATRA.

AGENTS SEIZED HER JEWEL GOX FRIDAY AT THE BEVERLY HILLS HOTEL THEY SAID THEY HAD NOTIFIED ONE OF HER LAWYERS, BUT GINA SAID THAT THE LAWYER NEVER TOLD HER ABOUT IT

THE ACTRESS FIRST LEARNED ABOUT THE MISSING JEWEL BOX FROM HER APOLOGETIC HOTEL MANAGER M,SS LOLLOBRIGIDA CALL­ED THE TAX MEN.

"I OF F ERED TO PAY THE TAXES BY CHECK~r SHE SAID, rl BUT THE TAX MEN WOULDN'T ACCEPT IT UNTIL MY BANK OKAYED IT

'\1HAT IS SO INCREDIBLE TO ME IS THAT THE TAX PEOPLE WOULDN'T GELIEVE I HAVE ASSETS 11

TAIPEI, APR. 10 (AP)--U.S. SENATOR THOMAS DODD SAID THE PRESIDENT'S OFFER OF DISCUSSIONS DOES NOT SIGNIFY A SOFT­EN I NG POI i r;y ON V lET NAM.

Page 8: SS - University of Florida

PAGE 8 HOURGLASS SATURDAY 10 APRIL I c 65

BO\JLING ALLEY MONDAY 12

0930 - 233 0 TUES 13

0930- 233 0 \JED 14

0930 - 2 33 0 THURS 15

0930-2330 FR I 16

0930-2330 SAT 17

0930-21WO SUN i8

0930-2330

DEPENDENTS POOL 1000-1900

BACHELOR POOL

MARINA

1000-1900

0700-2100

0930 -1 845

0700-2100

0930-181~5

1000- 1900

0700-2100

0930 -1 845

1230- 1730 1830-2130

1000-1900

0700-2100

0930 - 1845

1230-1730 1830 -2130

1000-1900

0700-2100

0730- 181t5

1230- 1730 1830- 21 30

1000-1900

0700-2100

0730-! 8 45

1230-1730 HOBBY-CERAMICS SHOP

1 2 30- 1730 18 30-2 !30

1230-1730 1830-2130

LiBRARY

SPECIAL SERVICES GEAR LOCKER

0900-2330

0830-1730

0900-2 330

0830- 1730

0900-2 33 0

0830-1730

0900- 2 330

0830 - 1730

0900-2330

0830-1730

0900-2330

0830-1730

1300-1700 i 800-2230 0830-1130 1200- j 1~30

PHOTO LAB

GOLF COURSE

TENN I S COURTS

1630-1930

0730-2200

1530- 1830

1800-21 30

1630- 1930

0730-2200

1800-2130

1630- 1930

0730-2200

1800-2130

1630- 1930

0730-2200

1530-1830

1800-2130

16 30-1930

0730-2200

1530- 1830

1800-21 30

0730-1930

0730-2200

1200-1900

0730-1930

0730-2200

0930 -1 8 30 E~10N BEACH L 1 FE­GUARD HOURS

1530- 1830 1530- 1830 0930 - 1830

RICHARDSON THEATER

CARRY ON REGARDLESS

STRANGERS GOLDFINGER TOPKAPI \..J I LD HERITAGE

Boy TEN FEET TALL

I T TE~ROR

FROM SPACE ~J HEN \<J E M E E T

YOK\<JE YUK THEATER

TOPKAPI CARRY ON REGARDLESS

Boy TEN rEET TALL

IT' TERROR FROM SPACE

STRANGERS WHEN \<JE ME E T

W, LD HERITAGE

GOLDFINGE~

OCEAN VI E\<J THEATER

\-1 I L D

HERITAGE IT' TERROR F~01'-1 SPACE

CA~RY ON REGARDLESS

STRANGERS WHEN WE MEET

TOPKAPI GOLDFINGER Boy TEN FEET TALL

TRADE\<J 1 NDS THEATER

GOLDF"!NGER TOPKAP! ItJ I LD HERITAGE

Boy TEN FEET TALL

IT' TERROR FROM SPACE

CARRY ON REGARDLESS

STRANGE~S

WHEN WE MEET

TOPKAPI-120 MIN CRIME COMEDY COLOR MELINA MERCOURI, MAXIMILIAN SCHELL

MISS MERCOURI CONSPIRES WITH HER LOV­ER TO TAKE THE EMERALD-STUDDED DAGG(R OF THE SULTAN AND REPLACE IT W!TH A FAKE THEY ACQUIRE FOUR AMATEURS WHO, LIKE THEMSELVES, HAVE NO POLICE RECORD ONE, PETER USTINOV, ACCEPTS $100 TO DRIVE THEIR CAR ACROSS THE TURKISH BOR­DER WHERE HE IS CAUGHT BY POLICE Now HE MUST SPY FOR THE TURKS OR GO TO JAIL THE ACTION IS SWIFT T~E PER­FECT CRIME IS ACCOMPLISHED - ALMOST A - VERY GOOD Y&C - NO

AND F"LOWN ACROSS THE ATLANTIC A - VERY GOOD OF KIND Y&C - NO

A BOY TEN FEET TALL-88 MIN DRAMA EDwARD G ROBINSON, FERGUS MCCLELLAND

LEFT ALONE WHEN HIS PARENTS ARE KILL­ED, 10 YR OLD rERGUS DECIDES TO GO TO DURBAN FIRST HE MEETS A FRIENDLY SYRIAN PEDDLER THEN HE IS FOUND BY A RICH AMERiCAN TOURIST AT LAST HE IS FOUND GY AN OLD DIAMOND SMUGGLER, WHO ADMIRES THE BOY'S SPIRIT AND TAKES HIM ALONG COLOR A&Y&C - EXCELLENT

WILD HERITAGE-78 MIN WESTERN COLOR WILL ROGERS, JR , MAUREEN OiSULLiVAN

THE FATHER OF A FAMILY TREKK~NG WEST IN A COVERED WAGON IS KILLED GUT THE FAMILY ESTAGLISHES A SUCCESSFUL CLAIM

STRANGERS WHEN WE MEET-i 17 MIN DRAMA KIRK DOUGLAS, KIM NOVAK COLOR

A LONELY HOUSEWIFE AND A STAiD AND CONVENTIONAL NEIGHBOR FALL IN LOVE AND HAVE MANY CLANDESTINE MEETINGS SOON THEY REALIZE THE UNPLEASANTNESS OF iN­

FIDELITY

CARRY ON REGARDLESS-87 MIN COMEDY

GOLDFINGER-I08 MIN ACTION DRAMA ITi THE TERROR FROM BEYOND SPACE-68MI~ KENNETH CONNOR, SIDNEY JAMES B&W ~EAr~ CONNERY, HONOR BLACKt-1AN COLOR MARSHALL THOMPSON, SHAWN SMITH S F. THIS ONE IN THE "CARRY ON" SERiES

\ j HEN THE B R I TIS H SEC RET S E R V ICE LEA RNS I N I 968 THE FIR STU Ssp ACE S HIP HAS TO DOW I T HAD 0 M EST I C AGE N C Y W Hie H

THAT A SADISTIC MILLIONAIRE NAMED GOLD- REACHES MARS BUT FAILS TO RETURN YEARS BOASTS OF ITS ABILITY TO CARRY ON RE­FINGER IS SUSPECTED OF STEALING ENG- LATER ANOTHER SHIP LANDS AND F"INDS THE GARDLESS OF ANY REQUEST OR ASSiNGMENT LAND'S GOLD RESERVES, AGENT 007 IS AS- LONE SURVIVOR, \vITH ALL HIS COMPANIONS HILARIOUS COMPLICATIONS OCCUR AS THE SIGNED TO INVESTIGATE HIM IN FLORIDA MURDERED DURING THE TRIP BACK TO AGENCY ATTEMPTS TO LIVE UP TO ITS DE HE CATCHES GOLDFINGER'S SECRETARY AID- EARTH THE CREW SCOFF AT HIS STORY OF PUTATION THE t-1ILLIONAIRE TO CHEAT AT CARDS A MYSTERIOUS CREATURE WHO KILLED HIS A & Y - AMUSING IN SPOTS C - NO

LATER HE FOLLOWS GOLDFINGER TO HIS COMPANIONS HIDEOUT IN THE ALPS, WHERE HE IS DRUGGIT BLACK AND WHITE NEWS & SPORTS WITH CARRY ON REGARDLESS

RICHARDSON - THE SHOWS WILL START AT 7 30 AND ANYONE MAY ATTEND A DOUBLE FEATURE WILL BE SHOWN SATURDAY NIGHT YOKvJE YUK - THE SHOWS WILL BEGIN AT 7 AND 9 PM FOR YOKWE YUK MEMBERS ONLY. CHILDREN POSITIVELY MAY NOT ATTEND. OCEAN VIEW - THE FIRST SHOW BEGINS AT 7 30 AND THERE IS A LATE MOVIE AT 12· 15. FOR MALE ADULT PERSONNEL ONLY

KWAJALEIN SUNDAY CHURCH SERVICES CATHOLIC

FATHER FEY 7 AM AND 9 15 AM IN THE MEMORIAL CHAPEL AND AT II 20 AM ON ROI NAMUR DAILY MASS 4 45 PM IN THE BLESSED SACRAMENT CHAPEL MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY MASS SATURDAY MORNING AT 7 25 AM CON F E S S lor ~ SAT U R DAY FRO 1'-1 7 TO 8 P t-1

CHURCH OF CHRIST SERVICES WILL GE HELD THIS LORD'S

DAY AT 10 15 IN ROOM #25 AT THE GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL BIGLE STUDY AT I I 00 AM SERVICES ARE ALSO HELD SUNDAY EVENING AT 6 PH

EPISCOPAL EVENING PRAYER SERVICES WILL BE CONDUCTED EACH SUN­

DAY EVENING AT 6 00 PM IN THE MEMORIAL CHAPEL

PENTECOSTAL vJORSH I P SERVICES WILL BE HELD AT 7 PM IN THE

CHAPEL SUNDAY

LATTER-DAY SAINTS SERVICES ARE HELD IN ROOM #13 OF THE

GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL PRIESTHOOD MEET­ING AT 8 30 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL AND

SACRAMENT MEETING AT 9 30 AM

PROTEST !,NT WORSHIP SERVICES WILL DE HELD AT

THE WORSHIP SERVICE ON ROI NAMUR WilL BE HELD AT 7 00 PM IN THE COM­MUNITY BUilDING AND WILL BE LED BY CHAPlA I N MAR KVE.

A SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE WILL BE HELD AT THE CHAPEL AT 8 30 PM THiS SERVICE IS LED BY LAYMEN AND IS IN­

FORMAL IN NATURE. EVERYONE IS WELCOME 8 10 AND 1 I 00 AM AT THE ISLAND MEM­

ORIAL CHAPEL CHAPLAIN MARKVE WILL LEAD THE SERVICE AND PREACH THE SER-MON ENTITLED "GOING DOWN TO DEATH" SINGAPORE, APRIL 10 (AP)--S!NGAPORE GASED ON THE TEXT OF LUKE 22.54- 62 • STATE PREMIER LEE KUAN YEW HAS SUGGEST-

A NURSERY IS PROVIDED IN THE ISLAND ED THAT AN AFRO-AsIAN PEACEKEEPING DAY NURSERY FOR 80TH SERVICES FORCE MIGHT HELP EASE HOSTILiTIES GE-

SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASSES FOR ALL AGES TWEEN iNDONESIA AND MALAYSIA ARE HELD AT THE GEORGE SEITZ SCHOOL THE SUGGESTION WAS MADE DURING A AT 9 1~0 AM ADULTS ARE PRESENT TO RADIO AND TELEVISiON INTERVIEw HERE ASSIST NEWCOMERS IN FINDING THEIR WiTH THE AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTiNG CORP CLASSROOM SUNDAY SCHOOL AT ROI NAMUR A TRANSCRIPT OF THE FRIDAY RECORDING IS AT 9 00 AM IN THE COMMUNITY BUllD- WAS RELEASED TODAY LEE DID NOT SAY HOW ING. SUCH A FORCE MIGHT GE ESTAGl!SHED