Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

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Hourglass ----- - --------- VOL XXI, No 137 U S ARMY KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, MARSHALL ISLANDS MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984 Remains Of Eight MIAs To Be Returned By Hanoi MANILA, Phlllpplnes Offlclals ln Bangkok (UPI) -- A U S C-130 sald Sunday the Amerlcan transport flles to Hanol delegatlon to Hanol wlll Tuesday to plck up the be led by Col Joe Har- remalns of elght mlsslng vy, head of the Hawall- Amerlcan soldlers ln a based JOlnt Casualty move that may slgnal re- Resolutlon Center, and conclllatlOn between wlll lnclude an honor Vletnam and the Unlted guard to accompany the States remalns back to the The Vletnamese Embas- Unlted States sy In Manlla sald lt had One offlclal descrlb- glven Vlsas to a group ed the turnover as a of 15 Amencan serVlce- "welcome qesture from men and MIA speclallsts the Vletnamese " WhlCh wlll fly to the The offlclal, who Vletnamese capltal from asked not to be named, Clark Alr Base In the expressed hopes technl- Phlllpplnes Tuesday cal meetlngs on MIA lden- A Clark spokesman tlflcatlOn would "get sald the C-130 plane back on the track " would depart for Hanol Vletnamese offlclals early Tuesday to plck up have dlsclosed the lden- the remalns and return tlty of only one of the to the base 60 mlles remalns, Sgt Domlnlc north of Manlla later In Sansone of New York Clty the day Accordlng to U S rec- From Clark, the flag- ords, Sansone was kllled draped remalns wlll be Dec 10, 1964, when a taken to the U S Central Vletnamese-plloted C-123 Identlflcatlon Laboratory transport plane he was In Hawall where technl- In crashed lnto a moun- Clans Wlll try to estab- taln near Da Nang llSh ldentltles and send The elght sets of re- them to relatlves malns orlglnally were It wlll be the flrst scheduled to be handed hand-over by the Vletnam- over to an Amerlcan del- ese of Amerlcan remalns egatlon Aprll 18, the In more than a year U S offlclal sald U S offlclals are Accordlng to advance hopeful lt could lead to publlClty, Presldent Rea- a thaw In bllateral re- gan had planned to take latlons and resolutlon possesslon of the remalns of the fates of 2,490 In a ceremony Aprll 22, Amencans stlll llsted but Hanol abruptly post- as mlsslng In actlon poned the presentatlon REPOR T Condltlon Code Ralnwater Cauqht Reverse Osmosls Productlon Yesterday's Consumptlon Dally Target Percentage Over Tarqet Trend From Precedlng Day POOR o gallons 40,000 gallons 265,000 ga 11 ons 180,000 gallons 47% DOWN WELLINGTON, Ne,,' Zealand -- Pr1.me M1.n1.ster Robert Muldoon, who told a news conference l.n late June he was "not concerned" that a publ1.c Opln1.0n poll favored the OPPOS1.t1.on Labor Party, de- feated Saturday 1.T1 h1.s bId for re-elect1.on (UPI Photo) IN UNUSUAL HARMONY DEMOCRATIC PARTY OPENS 1984 CONVENTION SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The Democratlc Party opened ltS 1984 conven- tlon today In unusual harmony, prepared to nomlnate Walter Mondale for presldent and Geral- dlne Ferraro as the flrst woman Vlce presldentlal candldate Mondale, the preach- er's Chlld from Mlnnesota who was Jlmmy Carter's Vlce presldent, arrlved In the conventlon town for a maSSlve noontlme rally wlth Rep Ferraro Just before the openlng gavel banged down at 2 p m PDT The Democrats have put aSlde most of thelr In- ternal squabbllng after party chalrman Charles Manett was flred and re- hlred over the weekend Only a peace treaty be- tween Mondale and hlS rlvals, Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson, appeared to stand In the way of unlfYlng the party for the uphlll battle agalnst Presldent Ronald Reagan In the November electlon Hart and Jackson have vO'ved to press thel r can- dldacles even though Mon- dale has 109 more than the 1,967 delegates need- ed for a flrst-ballot nomlnatlon Both rlvals have pledged to support the eventual nomlnee The openlng seSSlon was hlghllghted by a speech by Carter, the on- ly llvlng former Demo- Space Week 1984 Off To Roaring Start CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (UPI) -- Space Week 1984 got off to a roarlng start today wlth the launch of a model Saturn 5 rocket at the Kennedy Space Center, 15 years to the day after the Apollo 11 astronauts be- gan thelr fllght to the moon Members of the Alr Force's 6555th Aerospace Test Group launched the 3-foot-tall scale model at 9 32 a m EDT, the same tlme Nell Armstrong, Edwln Aldrln and Mlchael Colllns blasted lnto space July 16, 1969 Four days later Arm- strong and Aldrln walked on the moon "That's one small step for man, one glant IN NEW ZEALAND leap for manklnd," sald Armstrong as he stepped onto the moon's surface, the flrst man ever to do so The model Saturn 5, standlng on a detalled repllca of the orlglnal rocket's pad, was launch- ed from the Kennedy Space Center press slte In front of NASA's blg countdown clock, WhlCh was synchronlzed to the 01 aswff More than 100 U S Alr Force and space agency offlclals wltnessed the launch and cheered when the rocket shot away from the pad It parachuted back to earth none the worse for wear Space Week began ln 1972 Shultz Meets Muldoon, Attends ANZUS Council WELLINGTON, New Zea- land (UPI) -- U S Sec- retary of State George Shultz met today wlth outgolng Prlme Mlnlster Robert Muldoon before enterlng the flrst ses- Slon of the defense al- llance grouplng Austral- la, New Zealand and the Unlted States Muldoon's Natlonal Party was defeated ln a general electlon Satur- day by the Labor Party led by Davld Lange, but by trad 1 t lOn, Wlll not hand over power for about 12 days Lange has sald he would ban V1SltS to New Zealand ports by U S nuclear-powered and nu- clear-armed warshlps and seek to reVlse the ANZUS Defense Alllance, WhlCh llnks Australla, New Zealand and the Unlted States Shultz told the open- lng seSSlon New Zealand and the Unlted States had an "unshakeable rfl- latlonshlp " But Australlan offl- clals told reporters thelr U S counterparts were concerned that a nuclear ShlP ban could threaten ANZUS and sour relatlons between Wash- lngton and New Zealand U S offlclals have sald V1SltS by U S ShlPS are vltal to ANZ- US Shultz has decl,nBd to comment on Labor's defense pollcles ratlc presldent, and a keynote address by Gov MarlO Cuomo of New York The 3,933 votlng del- egates gathered In a gl- gantlc underground con- crete conventlon hall named after late Mayor George Moscone The spa- C10US 3-year-old bUlldlng lS close to downtown San Franclsco, occupylng a Clty block Some 50,000 peace ad- vocates trled to galn the attentlon of the del- egates by matchlng the hoopla lnslde the hall wlth a glant rally wlth mUS1C and speeches out- slde Flve hundred organlza- tlons were expected to take part In the rally Women Del gat s Exult Over Choice Of Ferraro SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -- Democratlc women leaders say they are offended by Presldent Reagan's sug- gestlon congresswoman Geraldlne Ferraro lS on- ly a token candldate, and are confldent she wlll avold polltlcal Plt- falls between now and November Women delegates to the Democratlc Natlonal Con- ventlon and other female leaders met together Sun- day to exult over the cholce of Ferraro as Wal- ter Mondale's Vlce presl- dentlal runnlng mate and to plot strategy Numberlng 49 5 percent of the conventlon dele- gates, the women are al- so happy about gatherlng In a Clty run by a fe- male mayor "I haven't been thlS exclted Slnce I don't know when," Betty Fnedan, a ploneer of the U S women's movement, sald Llke many women's lead- ers, she shrugged off sug- gestlons the outspoken New York congresswoman lS vulnerable to crltl- Clsm for lnexperlence and for not welghlng her words carefully, a ref- erence to Ferraro's state- ment questlonlng Reagan's commltment to rellglon "Of course she'll make mlstakes She's not per- fect," sald Kathy Wllson, head of the natlonal Wom- en's Polltlcal Caucus "She Just has to be bet- ter And she lS " Wllson took offense at Presldent Reagan's re- marks to a group of GOP women that the cholce of Ferraro smacks of "token- lsm" and "symbollsm " "That was very lnsultlng to women," she sald

Transcript of Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

Page 1: Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

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Hourglass ----- - ---------

VOL XXI, No 137 U S ARMY KWAJALEIN MISSILE RANGE, MARSHALL ISLANDS MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984

Remains Of Eight MIAs To Be Returned By Hanoi

MANILA, Phlllpplnes Offlclals ln Bangkok (UPI) -- A U S C-130 sald Sunday the Amerlcan transport flles to Hanol delegatlon to Hanol wlll Tuesday to plck up the be led by Col Joe Har­remalns of elght mlsslng vy, head of the Hawall-Amerlcan soldlers ln a based JOlnt Casualty move that may slgnal re- Resolutlon Center, and conclllatlOn between wlll lnclude an honor Vletnam and the Unlted guard to accompany the States remalns back to the

The Vletnamese Embas- Unlted States sy In Manlla sald lt had One offlclal descrlb-glven Vlsas to a group ed the turnover as a of 15 Amencan serVlce- "welcome qesture from men and MIA speclallsts the Vletnamese " WhlCh wlll fly to the The offlclal, who Vletnamese capltal from asked not to be named, Clark Alr Base In the expressed hopes technl-Phlllpplnes Tuesday cal meetlngs on MIA lden-

A Clark spokesman tlflcatlOn would "get sald the C-130 plane back on the track " would depart for Hanol Vletnamese offlclals early Tuesday to plck up have dlsclosed the lden-the remalns and return tlty of only one of the to the base 60 mlles remalns, Sgt Domlnlc north of Manlla later In Sansone of New York Clty the day Accordlng to U S rec-

From Clark, the flag- ords, Sansone was kllled draped remalns wlll be Dec 10, 1964, when a taken to the U S Central Vletnamese-plloted C-123 Identlflcatlon Laboratory transport plane he was In Hawall where technl- In crashed lnto a moun-Clans Wlll try to estab- taln near Da Nang llSh ldentltles and send The elght sets of re-them to relatlves malns orlglnally were

It wlll be the flrst scheduled to be handed hand-over by the Vletnam- over to an Amerlcan del-ese of Amerlcan remalns egatlon Aprll 18, the In more than a year U S offlclal sald

U S offlclals are Accordlng to advance hopeful lt could lead to publlClty, Presldent Rea-a thaw In bllateral re- gan had planned to take latlons and resolutlon possesslon of the remalns of the fates of 2,490 In a ceremony Aprll 22, Amencans stlll llsted but Hanol abruptly post-as mlsslng In actlon poned the presentatlon

D~/lY W~TER REPOR T Condltlon Code Ralnwater Cauqht Reverse Osmosls Productlon Yesterday's Consumptlon Dally Target Percentage Over Tarqet Trend From Precedlng Day

POOR o gallons

40,000 gallons 265,000 ga 11 ons 180,000 gallons 47% DOWN

WELLINGTON, Ne,,' Zealand -- Pr1.me M1.n1.ster Robert Muldoon, who told a news conference l.n late June he was "not concerned" that a publ1.c Opln1.0n poll favored the OPPOS1.t1.on Labor Party, ~as de­feated Saturday 1.T1 h1.s bId for re-elect1.on

(UPI Photo)

IN UNUSUAL HARMONY

DEMOCRATIC PARTY OPENS 1984 CONVENTION

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) The Democratlc Party

opened ltS 1984 conven­tlon today In unusual harmony, prepared to nomlnate Walter Mondale for presldent and Geral­dlne Ferraro as the flrst woman Vlce presldentlal candldate

Mondale, the preach­er's Chlld from Mlnnesota who was Jlmmy Carter's Vlce presldent, arrlved In the conventlon town for a maSSlve noontlme rally wlth Rep Ferraro Just before the openlng gavel banged down at 2 p m PDT

The Democrats have put aSlde most of thelr In­ternal squabbllng after party chalrman Charles

Manett was flred and re­hlred over the weekend Only a peace treaty be­tween Mondale and hlS rlvals, Gary Hart and Jesse Jackson, appeared to stand In the way of unlfYlng the party for the uphlll battle agalnst Presldent Ronald Reagan In the November electlon

Hart and Jackson have vO'ved to press thel r can­dldacles even though Mon­dale has 109 more than the 1,967 delegates need­ed for a flrst-ballot nomlnatlon Both rlvals have pledged to support the eventual nomlnee

The openlng seSSlon was hlghllghted by a speech by Carter, the on­ly llvlng former Demo-

Space Week 1984 Off To Roaring Start

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (UPI) -- Space Week 1984 got off to a roarlng start today wlth the launch of a model Saturn 5 rocket at the Kennedy Space Center, 15 years to the day after the Apollo 11 astronauts be­gan thelr fllght to the moon

Members of the Alr Force's 6555th Aerospace Test Group launched the 3-foot-tall scale model at 9 32 a m EDT, the same tlme Nell Armstrong, Edwln Aldrln and Mlchael Colllns blasted lnto space July 16, 1969

Four days later Arm­strong and Aldrln walked on the moon

"That's one small step for man, one glant

IN NEW ZEALAND

leap for manklnd," sald Armstrong as he stepped onto the moon's surface, the flrst man ever to do so

The model Saturn 5, standlng on a detalled repllca of the orlglnal rocket's pad, was launch­ed from the Kennedy Space Center press slte In front of NASA's blg countdown clock, WhlCh was synchronlzed to the 01 aswff

More than 100 U S Alr Force and space agency offlclals wltnessed the launch and cheered when the rocket shot away from the pad It parachuted back to earth none the worse for wear

Space Week began ln 1972

Shultz Meets Muldoon, Attends ANZUS Council

WELLINGTON, New Zea­land (UPI) -- U S Sec­retary of State George Shultz met today wlth outgolng Prlme Mlnlster Robert Muldoon before enterlng the flrst ses­Slon of the defense al­llance grouplng Austral­la, New Zealand and the Unlted States

Muldoon's Natlonal Party was defeated ln a general electlon Satur­day by the Labor Party led by Davld Lange, but by trad 1 t lOn, Wlll not hand over power for about 12 days

Lange has sald he would ban V1SltS to New Zealand ports by U S nuclear-powered and nu­clear-armed warshlps and

seek to reVlse the ANZUS Defense Alllance, WhlCh llnks Australla, New Zealand and the Unlted States

Shultz told the open­lng seSSlon New Zealand and the Unlted States had an "unshakeable rfl­latlonshlp "

But Australlan offl­clals told reporters thelr U S counterparts were concerned that a nuclear ShlP ban could threaten ANZUS and sour relatlons between Wash­lngton and New Zealand

U S offlclals have sald V1SltS by U S ShlPS are vltal to ANZ­US Shultz has decl,nBd to comment on Labor's defense pollcles

ratlc presldent, and a keynote address by Gov MarlO Cuomo of New York

The 3,933 votlng del­egates gathered In a gl­gantlc underground con­crete conventlon hall named after late Mayor George Moscone The spa­C10US 3-year-old bUlldlng lS close to downtown San Franclsco, occupylng a Clty block

Some 50,000 peace ad­vocates trled to galn the attentlon of the del­egates by matchlng the hoopla lnslde the hall wlth a glant rally wlth mUS1C and speeches out­slde

Flve hundred organlza­tlons were expected to take part In the rally

Women Del gat s

Exult Over Choice

Of Ferraro SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -­

Democratlc women leaders say they are offended by Presldent Reagan's sug­gestlon congresswoman Geraldlne Ferraro lS on­ly a token candldate, and are confldent she wlll avold polltlcal Plt­falls between now and November

Women delegates to the Democratlc Natlonal Con­ventlon and other female leaders met together Sun­day to exult over the cholce of Ferraro as Wal­ter Mondale's Vlce presl­dentlal runnlng mate and to plot strategy

Numberlng 49 5 percent of the conventlon dele­gates, the women are al­so happy about gatherlng In a Clty run by a fe­male mayor

"I haven't been thlS exclted Slnce I don't know when," Betty Fnedan, a ploneer of the U S women's movement, sald

Llke many women's lead­ers, she shrugged off sug­gestlons the outspoken New York congresswoman lS vulnerable to crltl­Clsm for lnexperlence and for not welghlng her words carefully, a ref­erence to Ferraro's state­ment questlonlng Reagan's commltment to rellglon

"Of course she'll make mlstakes She's not per­fect," sald Kathy Wllson, head of the natlonal Wom­en's Polltlcal Caucus "She Just has to be bet­ter And she lS "

Wllson took offense at Presldent Reagan's re­marks to a group of GOP women that the cholce of Ferraro smacks of "token­lsm" and "symbollsm " "That was very lnsultlng to women," she sald

Page 2: Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

-W-or lid./ Local New§ PAGE 2, HOURGLASS, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984

Ebeye Checkpoint Resumes Operations

By JIM WITTMEYER, KMR PAD ThlS headquarters has been notlfled by

the RMI Immlgratlon Offlce and the Depart­ment of PubllC Safety on Ebeye that as of July 13 the RMI Dock Securlty Checkpolnt on the Ebeye pler has resumed operatlons

All KMR resldents enterlng Ebeye must be ln possesslon of elther the green entry permlt lssued by RMI (wlth an endorsement from the Ebeye lmmlgratlon offlce), or a valld Ebeye vlsltor's pass lssued by the RMI Llalson Offlce on the flrst floor of the Alr Termlnal BUlldlng The green entry permlt wlth endorsement wlll authorlze overnlght stays, but the Vlsltor's pass wlll not

Personnel not ln possesslon of elther of these or those clrcumventlng the check­pOlnt for entry or to remaln overnlght "wlll be held and sen t back to KMR or conflned for prosecutlOn," accordlng to an Ebeye pollce offlclal

KMR resldents are remlnded that, ln ad­dltlon to the above, they must have wrltten KMR approval to remaln overnlght on RMI lslands

News Briefs WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Presldent Reagan

today sa 1 d the Unl ted S ta tes "da re not" and "wlll never" overlook human nghts abuses In ltS quest for peace At a Whlte House ceremony marklng the start of Captlve Natlons Week, Reagan demand­ed Moscow provlde a full accountlno of Sovlet phYS1C1St Andrel Sakharov and hlS wlfe, Yelena Bonner

* * * WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Twelve Western

natlons -- lncludlng the Unlted States, Bntaln, France, West Germany, Italy and Japan -- ended secret talks ln Luxembourg last week by agreelng to strengthen controls over exports of nuclear technology to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, Whlte Youse of­flclals sald today

* * * LOS ANGELES (UPI) -- Hundreds of

Olymplc athletes arrlved durlng the weekend and lmmedlately got lnto the Southern Callfornla splrlt, gOlng to the beach, plaYlng vldeo games and gettlng thelr halr done

The Clty'S two Olymplc vlllages at the Unlverslty of Southern Callfornla and UCLA were opened to the athletes Saturday and by Sunday nlght an estl­mated 600 to 800 competltors had checked ln

* * * LONDON (UPI) -- Dockworkers at Brlt­

aln's last major port to operate nor­mally today JOlned a week-old dock strlke and Prlme Mlnlster Maroaret That­cher met wlth her Cablnet to revlew the country's mountlng labor troubles

* * * LONDON (UPI) -- The Brltlsh ambas­

sador to Nlgerla returned home today ln an attempt by Brltrlln to ease tense re­latlons wlth Lagos ln the wake of the fOlled kldnapPlng of former Nlgerlan Cablnet Mlnlster Umaru Dlkko

* * * PEKING (UPI) -- Chlna today relter­

ated lts Opposltlon to formlng an al­llance wlth Washlngton or Moscow, saylng to do so would "reduce us to a pawn" ln the superpower rlvalry

The lnfluentlal theoretlcal Journal Red Flag sald In ltS latest lssue that Chlna would contlnue to "flrmly oppose hegemonlsm" and to support the resumptlon of nuclear dlsarmament talks between the Unlted States and the Sovlet UnlOn

* * * LOS ANGELES (UPI) -- A former school

teacher who lost the use of her arms and legs ln an automoblle accldent has been awarded $7 5 mllllon ln one of the larg­est compensatory damage verdlcts ever returned ln the Unlted States

A Superlor Court Jury made the award Thursday to Marllyn Reaglns, a former SClence teacher from New York, who was lnJured ln a van accldent durlng a fam­lly vacatlon near New ~exlco, ln 1978, and who now llves ln Callfornla

"Suicide Squad" Defies Curfew, Marches On Golden Temple

AMRITSAR, Indla (UPI) -- Talks between Slkh leaders and the Indlan government to free the Golden Temple of army troops broke down today, promptlnq a fOlled bld by a mostly women's Slkh "sulclde squad" to march on the shrlne

Soon after the talks falled, the "SU1-clde squad" tned to defy the cltywlde curfew and march from a local Slkh shrlne to the Golden Temple a short dlstance away

Pollce rounded up the 74 women and 14 men marchers as soon as they left the heavlly guarded temple

Those arrested lncluded the group's leader, former lawmaker RaJlnder Kaur, head of the women's branch of the Slkh's Akall Party, who had earller declared "We may face bullets but we wlll 00 for­ward "

No lncldents were reported ln the ar­rests

The government had taken elaborate measures to thwart the "sulclre marches" WhlCh the Slkh hlgh command had sald would be launched every day from today untll the army wlthdraws from the shrlne

Pnflle ~lnlster Indlra Gandhl's govern­ment ordered the army to storm the Golden Temple ln June to flush out terrorlsts uSlng the shrlne to wage a bloody battle for autonomy ln northern Punjab state

Durlng the two-day battle, nearly 600 people were left dead, mostly Slkhs, offlclals sald

On Sunday nlght, the government lm­posed a curfew ln Amrltsar ln a bld to head off the "sulclde march" and lnltl­ated neqotlatlons wlth Slkh leaders to flnd a long-term Solutlon

Syrian Troops Take Control In Lebanon

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) -- Syrlan troops took control of embattled vlllages ln northern Lebanon today where two pro­Syrlan mllltlas clashed for flve days be­fore laYlng down arms under pressure from Damascus

Resldents of the reglon sald the 1,500-man prlVate "marada" army of former Presldent Sulelman FranJleh and the rlval 1,000-strong mllltla of the Syrlan Soclal Natlonallst Party were abldlng by the cease-flre desplte an occaslonal burst of machlne-gun flre

The artlllery, rocket and heavy machlne-oun battles, WhlCh began Wednes­day, left at least 30 people dead and wounded some 150 others before endlng Sunday, the respected An Nahar newspaper reported

Chrlstlan radlc ln Belrut reported that as many as 40 people had dled ln the flghtlng ln the rlch ollve-growlng reOlon 40 mlles north of the Lebanese capltal

"All 1 s qu 1 et, roads have reopened, but mllltlamen can stlll be seen"

Secretary Wins Largest Single Lottery Jackpot

BRAINTREE, ~ass (UPI) -- A secretary who bouoht her Massachusetts meqabucks lottery~tlcket on Frlday the 13th, won $15 6 mllllon Sunday, the largest slngle lottery Jackpot 1 n ~Iorth Amen can lottery hl story

Marcla Sanford, 45, of the western Massachusetts Clty of Westfleld, won the Jackoot by plcklng the correct SlX num­bers between 1 and 36, lottery spokesman Davld ElllS sald She had played the state lottery only once before

She chose the numbers 8-13-27-28-30-36 by comblnlng her famlly's blrthdays and the number 13, plcked because she bought the Jackoot-wlnnlng tlcket for $1 on Fn day the 13th

"You hea r about other peop Te Wl nnl ng and what they flllq/1t do," Sanford sald "But we'll put 1 tall 1 n the bank and thlnk about lt "

She was whlsked away to state lottery headquarters to clalm her prlze

Ira~ Steps Up Contacts With Gulf States

KUWAIT (UPI) -- Iran reportedly lS stepPlng up contacts wlth gulf states ln an effort to stem escalatlon of ltS war wlth Iraq amld concern wlthln the Reagan admlnlstratlon over Brltlsh plans to sell ShlPS to Tehran

The Kuwaltl government spokesman Sun­day sald the "Iraman Forelgn Mlnlstry's undersecretary" recently vlslted Saudl Arabla and Qatar for talks "to paclfy the sltuatlon and avold the escalatlon of the Iran-Iraq War"

"The most lmportant of these results was that the Iranlan slde has become well aware of the serlOUS nature of the confllct ln the reglon, where lt has begun contacts wlth some states ln the reglon to reduce tenslon and halt the escalatlon of events," JaSSlm Al Marzouk sald

Boy Used As Shield Against Gunfire

HOUSTON (UPI) -- A woman trYlng to es­cape her gun-wleldlng boyfrlend grabbed a toddler plaYlng ln a front yard and used hlm as a shleld when the man opened flre, fatally woundlng the llttle boy, pollce sald

The couple orglnally were allowed to leave the scene ln Houston's tough 5th Ward after they told pollce that 2-year­old Shaun Glvens, shot ln the abdomen, had been hlt by a car

After lt was dlscovered the boy was hlt by the gunflre, an anonymous tlDster told authorltles where the nalr had fled

F-14 Tomcat Crashes Into Sea

r~ArjILA, Phlllpplnes (upI) -- An F-14 Tomcat crashed lnto the sea whlle approach­lng to land on the U S alrcraft carrler Amerlca, but ltS two pllots ejected safely before the Jet hlt the water, a Navy spokesman sald today

The spokesman at the U S SUblC Bay Na­val Base outslde Manlla sald the pllot and radar lntercept offlcer of the F-14, from VF-102 based at Naval Alr Statlon, Oceana, Va , suffered mlnor brulses ln the lncldent Sunday ln the North Arablan Sea

Identlty of the aVlators was not dlS­closed

The spokesman sald a search and rescue team from the hellcopter antl-submarlne squadron, based at Naval Alr Statlon, Jacksonvllle, Fla , plcked up the aVlators

The F-14 was "on ltS flnal approach to the Amerlca when the alr crew ejected Just prlor to thelr alrcraft's crashlng lnto the sea," the spokesman sald

Financial News Dollar closlng ln Tokyo was 241 25 yen and ln Zurlch was 2 3825 SW1SS francs CLOSING METALS Gold up 5 10 at 350 10 Sllver up 0 055 at 7 535

DOW JONES CLOSI~GS 30 Industrlals up 6 96 at 1116 82 20 Trans off 2 67 at 460 60 15 Utllltles up 1 11 at 126 88 65 Stocks up 1 51 at 433 75 Volume 73,420,000 shares SEE LISTINGS IN GRACE SHERWOOD LIBRARY

Surf And Sun AS OF 12 01 A M Monday, July 16, 1984 Dally ralnfall 0 00 Monthly total 1 44 Yearly total 16 38 TOMORROW ON KWAJALEIN Sunnse 6 38 a m Sunset 7 12 p m Moonn se 11 01 p m Moonset 10 31 a m Hl Tlde 7 03 a m 5 1'-7 30 p m 4 3' Lo Tlde 12 44 a m 1 4'-1 28 pm 1 3'

FOR TOTAL FORECAST CALL 84700

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Chariots of Mongolia By ART BUCHWALD

It was adm1ttedly a body blow to the West when the Sov1ets pulled out of the 01ymp1cs, but 1t was noth1ng compared to what happened when the news reached Mongolla

Wh1le the Sov1et athletes had to accept the1r government's dec1slon whether they llked 1t or not, 1t wasn't easy to persuade Outer Mongol1a's only 10ng-d1stance runner that he wasn't gOlng to Los Angeles

Gheng1s Kahn was Jogglng out on the GOb1 Desert when hlS track coach, Yurt TemuJln, rode out on h1S camel 20 m1les to break the t1dlngs

"How am I dOlng 7 " Gheng1s asked, hardly puff1ng "You're d01ng f1ne But we Just got word from Ulan Bator that

Mongol1a 1S w1thdraw1ng from the 1984 01ymP1CS " Kahn was flabbergasted "You're putt1ng me on " "I'm not, Gheng1 s We Just got orders from the KGB to tell

you to stop runn1ng The Russlans are pull1ng out, and they told us we have to support the1r boycott or else"

"You mean I've been poundlng barefoot on thlS hot sand for four years for noth1ng?"

"What can I tell you, Gheng1s? The Kreml1n says they're d01ng 1t for your own good They were afra1d 1f you went to Los Angeles your llfe would be 1n danger"

Kahn sa1d, "Who would want to hurt a Mongol1an 1n Cal1fornla?" "Ghengls, lt 1sn't for us to quest10n the dec1s10ns of Moscow

But 1f the Russ1ans don't held thelr team, we can't send ours" "Why not? We don't have any quarrel w1th the Umted States" "If we showed up and they d1dn't, lt would be a slgnal to the

West that the Soc1allst nat10ns are 1n ferment" "Good Let's go " "It's not that slmple They won't fly us out of the country" "Maybe I could run to the Casp1an Sea and p1ck up a fore1gn

fre1ghter? It would be good practlce for me " "I'm sorry, Gheng1s, but you're gOlng to have to llVe w1th

the 1dea that you won't be compet1ng th1S year" Tears formed 1n Kahn's eyes "Th1S means I won't see Lana

Turner You prom1sed me 1f I tra1ned real hard I could meet her 1n Cal1forn1a My dream for four years was that she would be 1n the stands cheenng for me when I crossed the hnlsh llne "

The coach dlsmounted from h1S camel and put hlS arm around Kahn "I know exactly how you feel I was hop1ng to meet Clau­dette Colbert I loved her last mOV1e, 'It Happened One N1ght,' Wh1Ch Just showed 1n Mandal Gob last week But there 1S noth1ng we can do about 1t The Pol1tburo 1S gett1ng even for what the Unlted States d1d to us four years ago 1n Moscow"

"If they weren't gOl ng to Los Angeles, why d1 dn' t they tell us In 1980, so I wouldn't have calluses all over my feet?"

"I can't answer that quest10n, Gheng1s You know the Kreml1n never te 11 s Mongo lla anyth 1 ng "

Kahn put h1S head 1n h1S hands er I could have won a gold medal I mlght have even been 1nv1ted by Mall bu "

"I could have been a contend­I could have seen D1sneyland

Joan Crawford for a weekend 1n

"You must never mentlOn those cap1tal1st thoughts when you get back to Ulan Bator"

"Why do I have to go to Ulan Bator?" "The Sov1et M1nlster of Athlet1cs wants you to hold a press

conference for Sovlet telev1s1on tell1ng the Russ1an people how happy you are that the1r Sovlet leaders have chosen not to partlc­lpate 1n the Games 1n Los Angeles He wants you to profess SOll­dar1ty w1th all the work1ng peoples of the world who w11l not com­pete aga1nst the cap1tal1st lackeys who are threaten1ng world peace 1n every part of the globe If you say what they tell you to, they w1ll glve you a spec1al 01ymp1c gold medal they've mlnt­ed for every athlete who doesn't compete 1n Los Angeles"

"It's not the same as see1ng Lana Turner," Kahn sa1d "But 1t w111 st1ll be better than tra1nlng for the next Olym­

P1CS 1n a Ulaan Goom Gulag for four years"

Mon y market mutual fund income INVESTORS' GUIDE By WILLIAM A

Q Is the Income from a money market mutual fund considered to be Interest or diVidends as far as reporting on an income tax return Is con­cerned?

A It's dIVidend Income When you Invest In a money market mutual fund you buy shares of the fund Like stocks and other mutual funds, money market mutual funds pay dIVidends - not Interest

You report the mcome from your money market mutual fund as dIVidends on your In­come tax return However, you are not allowed to take the $100 dIVidend exclUSion - $200 for a married couple filIng a Jomt return - on money market mutual fund dIVidends

Please, dear readers, do not confuse tlus With money

market deposit accounts at banks and saVings and loan assOC18tions Many banks and s&Ls use the word "fund" m the names of therr money market deposit accounts But banks and s&Ls do not have money market mutual funds

If you are confused, the easiest way to tell the dJ.f ferencelS to look at the Form 1099 you received In January If It says "Dlv ", report It as a dIVidend

• • • Q I looked In the Sunday

newspaper for price quota­tions on a mutual fund In which I had purchased shares the previous week The listing read "High, $6 49, Low, $6 47, Last, $6 41 " Why did I pay $7 02?

A Because you Invested m a "load" mutual fund on which

DOYLE you were charged a commIs­sIOn

The weekly mutual fund quotations liSt the "asset value per share" - the actual dollars-and cents value behind each share When you buy shares of a load fund you pay asset value, plus COffiffilS­slOn, which can be as much as 93percent

That COffiffilSSlon IS spelled out In the fund's prospectus, which the broker or sa\eper­son was reqwred to give you before you made your pur­chase

If you had Invested In a no­load mutual fund, on which there IS no COIIUJUSSIOn, you wouldn't have been In for such a big shock when you read the Sunday paper

C) 19801 King FHlu'H Syndic." Inc

EditorIal HOURGLASS, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984, PAGE 3

Voices ... from around the atoll Do you th1nk educat10n after the h1gh school level 1S needed

1n today's soc1ety? Why or why not?

"Deh nl te ly needed Depends on f1eld you're work1ng 1n Advancement 1n any fleld requ1res a h1gher level of educatlOn " Ke~th Coberly, sh~p capta~n

"Yes and no Some people are born 1nto th1S world of ours w1th certa1n glfts and talents that can be shared w1th others These very glfts can carry them through all the days of the1r llfe So for them college would be a waste of tlme But there are some who are less fortunate, who must work very hard and the1r f1eld requ1res a more techn1cal background So to them 1t would be more benef1c1al But 1n the end we all do try to ach1eve the same goal of success So do what one feels r1ght 1nSlde " Omar A Hansen, fl~qht eng~neer

"No You don't have to go to school after h1gh school to get a Job that you can be sat1sf1ed and fulf111ed w1th It 1S 1mportant, however, to keep your m1nd act1ve and explore new and exc1t-1 ng horlZons " Chr~st~ne Mayhan, future college

"For most people 1t 1S an eaSler, surer path, but there are plenty of ex­cept10ns People who are not tempera­mentally sU1ted for college or who are happy ln work that doesn't requ1re 1t " Tom Welsh, eng~neer

"Yes, but not 1n a sense of avo1d-1ng respons1b111t1es 1n choos1ng career obJect1ves A well-rounded educat10n 1S good 1n determ1n1ng a career f1eld A techn1cal school also offers spec1f1c career traln1ng that would benef1t some 1nd1v1duals, enabl1ng them to be em­ployed wh11e pursu1ng college work Otherwlse (they) m1ght drop out of a college because of lack of career-or1-ented goals, Wh1Ch a good techn1cal school can provlde for some 1nd1V1du­als " Paul W Lobr~e, sen~or commun~cat~ons

"Absolutely' If not, all of soclety may end up 1111terate, 19norant, and low ach1evers " Dan Wallace, mar~ne eng~neman

"Yes The world 1S chang1ng at a very fast pace To keep up and be pro­duct1ve, you need to educate yourself beyond h1gh school If you don't you w111 be left beh1nd wh1le you see oth­er people move up 1n the world" Dels~e H~ll, housew~fe

(Photos by MEGAN STEGMANN)

The Hourglass lS an unoff1C1al publ1catlOn authorlZed under the provlslons of AR 360-81 It lS publlshed by Global Assoclates Monday through Frlday (excludlng holldays) at the dl­rectlon of the command1ng off1cer, U S Army KwaJaleln Mlsslle Range, Marshall Islands, un­der contract DASG60-82-C-0063 Thl~ 1S an offset publlcatlon, w1th a dally clrculatlon of 1,950 The V1ews and oplnlons expressed hereln are not necessarlly those of the Departme~t of the Army Communlcatlons should be addressed to the Hourglass. Box 23. APO San Franc1sco 96555, or call 83539 (AUTOVON 254-3539) Materlals appear1ng 1n the Hourglass may not be re­prlnted w1thout the approval of the command1ng offlcer, U S Army KwaJaleln Mlsslle Range All want ads and not1ces must be subm1tted on GA Form 8020 R-4 by 12 30 p m the worklng

Commandlng Offlcer Publlc Affalrs Offlcer Edltor Feature Wnter Copy Ed1tor, C1rcu'at1on Sports Wn ter

Col Wlll,am A Spln Jlm Wlttmeyer

Courtney Danko Patnc1a Everett

Joan Skoglund Ruth Horne

day prlor to publ1catlon

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ILocal ./ ~ or ldl New§ PAGE 4, HOURGLASS, MONDAY, JULY 1984

ROCK STAR ANDROGYNY AND NEON COLORS

Music Is Influential (. Force In Fashion

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- Pop stars are rock­lng the teenwear market w1th a force not felt Slnce the Brltlsh lnvaSlon of the '60s As was the mode two decades ago, h1gh school h1psters are uSlng top-of-the­chart performers as cues to what they should wear

The message lS hard to mlSS "Probably the most lnf1uentla1 force In

fashlOn today lS muslc," says Ilene Abato, fashlon dlrector and Vlce presldent of Woodward & Lothrop, the Washlngton, DC, department store chaln

"Wlth vldeo, lt'S an era of lnstant com­munlcatlon Klds see what the stars are wearlng tonlght, and they want to wear lt tomorrow "

"Teen-agers look up to the slngers and try to be llke them," agrees Rosle GUlxens, 17, a hlgh school senlor "Rock stars are the ldo1s for our generatlon "

Often these ldo1s glve off unlsexua1 emanatlons

Lockheed Donates Bicycles To Queen Of Peace Band Androgynous looks teens are tunlng In

to are Mlchae1 Jackson's red leather Jack­et, shlmmery pants and lone glove. Boy George's Hasldlc rabb1-street urch1n look, complete wlth blg overcoat and slgnature hat, Cynd1 Lauper, hlS female alter-ego, wlth her thrlft shop threads drlpplng wlth scarves Bursts of neon color are lnsp1red by the breakdancers, a throwback to Carna­by Street

Lockheed A~rcraft Corp's fleet of 17 KwaJ-cond~t~on b~cyc1es, ma~nta~ned by the company for use by TDY personnel, was donated to Father Hacker and h~s Queen of Peace Boys Band as Lockheed prepared for phas~ng-out operat~ons on KwaJa1e~n Lockheed Log~s­t~c Support's Tom Akeman presented Hacker w~th the b~kes, collected from both Meck and KwaJa1e~n, Saturday, July 7, ~n front of Akeman's home

Above, Hacker (left) observes as Akeman checks the ~nventory l~st of reg~strat~on and ser~a1 numbers, and exp1a~ns how to dec~pher lock comb~nat~ons John Bush, s~te manager for the HOE program, and Father O'Br~en look on Vendors are hlP to the changlng tune

next season Wlth 1045 Park, Jun10r mlsses come away In Jackson-style band leader Jackets and tlght, shlny pants Aprlorl cloaks young men In vldeoesque fleece slashed wlth wovens and lndustrla1 zlppers

AT THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

Inner Ear Implants To Be Tested

SEATTLE (UPI) -- SClentlsts at the Unlverslty of Washlngton have announced they wl11 begln c1lnlca1 tests thlS month for an lnner ear lmp1ant that wl11 provlde some hearlng abl1lty for deaf patlents

Although the devlce wl11 not allow pa­tlents to hear normally, lt wl11 serve as an ald to IIp-readlng and lmprove thelr speech, Dr Robert Doble, the UW assoc1ate professor of otolaryngology who wl11 dl­rect the tests, sald

The e1ectronlc devlce, called the coch­lear lmp1ant, wl11 be tested In half a dozen patlents from the Seattle area durlng the next year

"For the patlent who hears nothlng at all, the flrst beneflt they recelve lS audltory contact wlth the envlronment," Doble sald, such as a honklng horn or a car motor

"Contact wlth those sounds lS somethlng we take for granted," he sald

Although cochlear 1mp1ants already have been used In about 500 people wor1dwlde, 1nc1udlng some at Stanford Unlverslty Medlca1 Center 1n Ca1lfornla, Doble sald the UW's c11nlca1 program lS the flrst based on years of research wlth prlmates

Researchers spent elght years at the unlverslty's Reglona1 Prlmate Research Center test1ng electrode 1mp1ants In the ears of Rhesus monkeys Use of the mon­keys allowed sClentlsts to measure hear-1ng thresholds and hear1ng dlscr1m1natlon ab11lt1es

By testlng the devlce on anlma1s, SC1-ent1sts also were able to determlne for the flrst tlme the long-term med1ca1 ef­fects of the lmp1ant, Doble sald

"Baslcally these 1mp1ants do work," he sa1d "They are baslca11y safe and effec­tlVe "

The lmp1ants work by stlmu1atlng the 30,000 audltory nerve cells w1th mlnute e1ectrlc currents They are called coch­lear lmp1ants because they are placed In or near the cochlea, a bony structure 1n the lnner ear The patlent wears a mlcro­phone and external slgna1 processor, about the Slze of a c1garette package, In a shlrt pocket or on a belt The devlce col­lects sound waves and translates them 1n­to e1ectrlca1 lmpu1ses, then transmlts them to a Wlre cOl1 placed behlnd the ear

(Photo by BETH SHOLAR, Kentron Photo Lab)

Can't See Business For The Trees

OREM, Utah (UPI) -- Orem po1lce be­lleve a dlsgrunt1ed buslnessman has been destroYlng trees planted by the state along Interstate H1ghway 15 so motorlsts can see h1S estab1lshment

But Slnce a ha1f-ml1e stretch of trees has been destroyed, they don't know Wh1Ch buslnessman has been dOlng lt

Detectlve Ron Allen sald that more than 50 plne trees had been topped to stunt thelr growth and that rlngs had been cut around numerous elm trees to kl11 them, resu1tlng In an est1mated $20,000 damage

Allen sald off1cers were questlonlng owners and employees of buslnesses In the three-block area In an effort to ldentlfy a suspect

Bugle Boy trumpets nylon parachute pants and Jackets wlth fancy seams, color blocks, puckers and sexy rock-and-ro11 flt Yu-No, 1tS Junlor counterpart, cuts slml1ar gear for her

Colors permeat1ng many maJor teen co1-1ectlons are unabashedly brlght

A path paved by New York's Stephen Sprouse, who tlnts hlS '60s-lnsplred c1oth­lng wlth Peter Max brlghts, lS now stalked by a handful of other co1orlsts caterlng to teens Overslzed layers 1n gutsy hues are conJured up for Junlors by Iss1a, Anna SU1 and Frans Haers Mlchae1 A1esko's Interna-tlona1 News Group for Young Men starts w1th subdued Japanese co10ratlons, then e1ectrl­fles the pleces wlth chrome ye,low, flery orange or shocklng plnk H1S gear lS so popular wlth the boys that thelr glr1-fr1ends are bUYlng ,t, too

RCA Contributes To Kwaialein Scouting Program In the photo above r~ght, RCA Corp Adm~n~strat~on Manager Lee Morton (r~ght) pre­

sents an annual corporate contr~but~on check to M~ke Furman, Cub Scouts of Amer~ca ~n­st~tut~ona1 representat~ve, for the Pac~f~c Bas~n Scout~ng Program Henry Lum (left), Boy Scout coord~nator, ~s also present for the July 6 contr~but~on RCA serves as the ~nst~tut~ona1 representat~ve for Cub Scout~ng on KwaJale~n

In the photo above left, on behalf of the G~r1 Scouts of KwaJa1e~n, Cathy Koyanag~, ne~gb~orhood cha~rperson, accepts RCA's corporate contr~but~on from Lew Nelson, RCA s~te manager

The same day, Lum presented Furman, Morton and Nelson the Aloha Counc~l Benefactor Member Award The plaque, presented on behalf of the KwaJa1e~n Boy Scouts, recogn~zes a decade of support g~ven by RCA to the Cub Scout~ng program

(Photos by JACK SHIPMAN, Kentron Photo Lab)

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Baseball Roundup NEW YORK (UPI) -- Damasco Garcla, Cllff

Johnson and Wlllle Upshaw homered durlng a flve-run slxth lnnlng and Jlm Clancy broke a personal four-game loslng streak at Oak­land Sunday, leadlng the Toronto Blue Jays to a 6-3 vlctory over the A's

Clancy, 7-10, notched hlS flrst vlctory Slnce June 17 He entered the game wlth a 5 45 ERA but carr1ed a flve-hltter lnto the elghth before tlrlng wlth two out He gave up a two-out slngle to Donnle Hlll and walked Dwayne Murphy before allowlng Dave Klngman's 25th homer Roy Lee Jackson got the last four outs for hlS seventh save

Wlth the score 0-0, the Blue Jays rocked Curt Young, 2-1, and two rellevers ln the slxth GarCla hlt Young's flrst pltch of the lnnlng lnto the left-fleld seats for hlS thlrd homer Lloyd Moseby was hlt by a pltch before George Bell drove hlm home wlth a trlple, chaslng Young

Kelth Atherton relleved and Johnson hlt hlS flrst pltch for a towerlng home run, maklna lt 4-0 One out later, Upshaw homer­ed to rlght, knocklng out Atherton

The Blue Jays added a run ln the elghth off rellever Chrls Cod1roll when Johnson hlt hlS second homer of the game

In other games In the Amerlcan League Sunday, Baltlmore defeated the Chlcago Whlte Sox 6-4, Detrolt topped Mlnnesota 6-2, New York beat Kansas C1ty 4-1, Callfor­nla edged Mllwaukee 7-6 and Boston routed Seattle 11-3 In a n1ght game, Cleveland topped the Rangers 5-4 ln 11 lnnlngs at Tex­as

Saturday 1n the Amerlcan League lt was Chlcago 3, Baltlmore 2, New York 4, Kansas Clty 1, Toronto 2, Oakland 1, Cleveland 5, Texas 0, Detrolt 6, Mlnnesota 5, Callfornla 2, M11waukee 1, and Seattle 5, Boston 4

Frlday 1n the Amerlcan League lt was Cleveland 5, Texas 0, New York 7, Kcnsas Clty 1 - flrst game, New York 8, Kansas C1ty 1 - second game, Balt1more 7, Chlcago 5, M11waukee 5, Callfornla 4, Detrolt 5, Mlnnesota 3, Boston 9, Seattle 5, and Tor­onto 6, Oakland 3

Sunday ln the Natlonal League It was Ch1cago Cubs 4, Los Angeles 1, P1ttsburqh 9, San FranC1SCO 3, ClnClnnat1 3, Montreal 2, San Dlego 6, St LOU1S 1, Atlanta 8, New York 3, and Houston 3, Phlladelphla 2

Saturday 1n the Natlonal League lt was Los Angeles 8, Chlcago 0, Plttsburgh 6, San FranClSCO 2, Montreal 6, C1nClnnatl 2, New York 7, Atlanta 0, St LOU1S 7, San Dl­ego 6, and Phlladelph1a 4, Houston 3

Fr1day ln the Natlonal League lt was New York 5, Atlanta 4, Chlcago 7, Los Angeles 5, Montreal 7, Clnclnnatl 2, Houston 7, Phl1a­delph1a 3, St LOU1S 7, San Dlego 4, P1ttS­burgh 8, San Franc1sco 2 - flrst game, P1ttsburgh 4, San FranClSCO 3 - second game, 18 1 nm ngs

Sports On AFRS fhere's baseball actlon com1ng up later

on thlS week on AFRS Frlday, July 20, you can hear the New

York Mets play the Clnclnnatl Reds at 11 30 a m

Saturday, baseball actlon contlnues as the Texas Rangers meet the Detrolt Tlgers That game wl11 be a1red at 11 30 a m

New Sport

For OlympIcs

SEATTLE -- Candy Cos­t~e (L) and Trac~e Ru~z w~ll represent the Un~ted States ~n synchron~zed sw~mm~ng at the 1984 Sum­mer Olymp~cs ~n Los Angel­es, the f~rst t~me the sport has been recogn~zed ~n Olymp~c compet~t~on

The two Seattle g~rls are heavy favor~tes for the gold medal

(UPI Photo)

Stars Take USFL Championship

TAMPA, Fla (UPI) -- Chuck Fus1na, re­turnlng to the scene of hlS Natlonal Foot­ball League years, completed hlS flrst 10 passes and scored after a bobbled center snap Sunday nlght to lead the Phlladelphla Stars to a 23-3 vlctory over the Arlzona Wranglers ln the second U S Football League champlonshlp game

The vlctory was especlal1y satlsfYlng for the former Penn State quarterback Slnce not only dld he feel the NFL Tampa Bay Buc­caneers never gave hlm a chance 1n the three years he played for them, but he also was the 10slng quarterback last year when Mlch1gan beat Phlladelphla In the flrst tltle game

Fus1na and the Stars wasted no tlme Sun­day nlght, scorlng the flrst two t1mes they had the ball and outgalnlng the Wranglers In the flrst half by a 5-to-l margln, 249 yards to 49

Bryan Thomas capped a 66-yard drlve, featur1ng two Fuslna passes and a 10-yard Fuslna scramble, wlth a 4-yard run wlth 6 50 gone ln the f1rst perlod Fuslna, 3-for-3 ln the second drlve, scored from a yard out wlth 1 11 left In the f1rst perlod to bUl1d a 13-0 lead

Three turnovers and Davld Trout's mlssed 27-yard f1eld goal attempt 1n the closlng seconds of the half kept Phlladelphla from scorlng agaln untll mldway through the fl­nal penod

A Wranglers' fumble then set up a 1-yard touchdown run by KelV1n Bryant, who rushed for 115 yards In the game Trout added a 39-yard fleld goal to w1den the Stars' lead to 20 pOlnts

The Wranglers moved wlthln scorlng dlS­tance only tWlce all game, gettlng a 37-yard fleld goal from Dav1d Trout In the second quarter and mlsslng a 40-yarder late In the thlrd

High Rollers Frlday Nlght Flve men's bowllng actlon Hlgh Game Steve Gard1no, 231 Second-Hlgh Game Carl Steeves, 205 Hlgh Serles Steve Gardlno, 567 Second-Hlgh Serles Henry Cabasag, 559

Ehukal Mlxed League Men's Dlvlslon Hlgh Game Second Hl qh Game Hlgh Senes Second-Hlgh Serles Women's Dlvlslon Hlgh Game Second-Hlgh Game Hlgh Senes Second-Hlgh Serles

* * * actlon Sunday nlght

Henry Cabasag, 232 Steve Gardlno, 224 Henry Cabasag, 638 Ed Kromck, 545

Grace Koch, 193 Grace Koch, 187 Grace Koch, 523 Mable Plerce, 485

Sign Up For Summer Fun II Slgn-ups for the second seSSlon of the

Speclal Servlces-sponsored Summer Fun pro­gram wl11 be taken at Le Jeune Spot today through July 20, accordlng to youth dlrect­or Clndy Pender

Slgn up Monday through Saturday 2 to 5 pm, and Monday through Thursday from 7 to 10 p m

Sports HOURGLASS, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984, PAGE 5

Softball ScooP In a classlc splne-tlngler Saturday on

Brandon Fleld, Greg Daugherty's run scored on an error and stolen bases ln the bottom of the tenth lnnlng broke the tled score and gave the Drlfters a 5-4 vlctory over the MIMA

MIMA, at bat flrst, scored two runs In the flrst lnnlng The Drlfters responded wlth one run, kept MIMA scoreless ln the second, then added two runs to go ahead 3-2

The thlrd and fourth lnnlngs were score­less for both teams, then ln the flfth, MIMA added two runs and the Drlfters scored one to tle the game at 4-4 MIMA threatened In the slxth wlth a double and a 51 ngl e, rut no runs, then prevented the Drlfters from capltallzlng on a base hlt

The seventh lnnlng saw three up and three down for each team MIMA threatened agaln ln the elghth wlth two base hltS and ln the n1nth wlth a slngle The Drlfters started the bottom of the elghth wlth a double, but scored no runs and couldn't get a man on base ln the nlnth

In the top of the tenth, MIMA aga1n fal1ed to turn two base hltS lnto runs, so the stage was set for the grand f1nale 1n the bottom of the tenth

Mlke Danes hlt 3-for-4, lncludlng a double, for the Drlfters, and Bob Cox hlt 2-for-3 wlth a double for two RBI

For the MIMA, Inos AnJolak hlt 3-for-5 for one RBI, and Deall Korok hlt a double OTHER WEEKEND SOFTBALL RESULTS KUU1PO'S 7, Bodaclous T's 0, (forfelt) B 0 4 Leftovers 0 Black Sox 5 Patobo's 1 Leftovers 5 Entertalners 4 Junk Heap 12 SKF 2 Black Sox 4 Thlngs 1 Drlfters 9 Benchwarmers 4

Basketball Roundup The Gulf Coast Communlty College chalked

up ltS flrst Wln of the season wlth a 53-39 vlctory over the Junk Heap Sunday on the Basketball Court

The Gulf Coast outplayed the Junk Heap through the flrst three quarters wlth a 33-18 score gOlng lnto the flnal perlod

But the Heap came allve to outs core the College 21-20 ln the fourth quarter, pro­vldlng an excltlng flnlsh to the game

Sheldon Coulon of the Junk Heap was hlgh scorer for the game wlth 18 pOlnts, and Dlno Bell scored elght

For the Gulf Coast, Sam Garland put ln SlX baskets for 12 pOlnts, and Johnny Thomason and Kevln McLaughlln each added elght pOlnts OTHER WEEKEND BASKETBALL RESULTS Heap-A-Junk 35 Benchwarmers 33 Chute Hoop 49 Crunch Bunch 41 Wlld Women 30 Ice Cream 14

Sports World PEABODY, Mass (UPI) -- HolllS Stacy

eagled the par-4 13th hole and went on to shoot a 69 Sunday and Wln her thlrd U S Women's Open wlth a L-over-par total of 290

Stacy holed her second shot on the par-4, 341-yard 13th at Salem Country Club, punchlng a seVen-lron from the rlght rough, under the 11mbs of a tree, and onto the green

* * * WILLIAMSBURG, Va (UPI) -- Ronnle Black

clalmed hlS second Wln Slnce JOlnlng the Professlonal Golfers' Assoclatlon tour Sunday as he came from seven shots down to edge Wlllle Wood and capture the $350,000 Klngsmlll Classlc

Black, 26, of Lovlngton, N M , came from fourth place by tYlng the course rec­ord wlth an 8-under-par 63 He flnlshed 17-under-par wlth a 69-69-66-63-267 and won $63,000

* * * ATLANTA (UPI) -- John McEnroe and Jlmmy

Connors won the concludlng slngles matches ln stralght sets Sunday to glve the Unlted States a 5-0 sweep over Argentlna ln the Davls Cup quarterflnal serles

McEnroe, wlnnlng for the 56th tlme thlS year agalnst a slngle loss, beat 19-year­old Martln Jalte 6-3, 6-4 after Connors clowned hlS way to an 8-6, 6-2 vlctory over Jose-Luls Clerc, wlnnlng flve games ln a row ln the second set

Page 6: Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

1984

;filII £lJIfders

Dear Ann Landers My father lS only 70 years old Untll recently he was actlve, alert, self­sufflclent and extremely pleasant to be around We have all notlced, how­ever, that he has become lncreaslngly forgetful

Last week he asked me to help hlm put on hlS trousers He sald, "I must have galned welght because I can't get these on alone" I was startled when I saw he already had trousers on He had been struggllng to put on a second palr over the flrst

A close frlend's mother has been sufferlng from Alzhelmer's dlsease for nearly two years I spoke wlth the frlend at length ye~terday and lt sounds as lf my father lS also a vlctlm What can you tell me about thlS dlsease and what should I do? -­Frlghtened And Dlstress­ed In N Y

Dear N Y I am not a phys~c~an and even ~f I were, I would not attempt to make a d~agnos~s ~n the ma~l

Your father's cond~t~on sounds susp~c~ously l~ke Alzhe~mer's If such ~s the case, he ~s one of 3 m~l­l~on Amer~cans who are af­fected by th~s problem

Alzhe~mer's ~s sen~l~ty,

but ~t somet~mes affects people of m~ddle age At th~s moment, ne~ther the cause nor the cure ~s known

Take your father to a

competent neurolog~st I suggest also that you ed­ucate yourself Wr~te to Alzhe~mer's D~sease As­soc~at~on, 360 N M~ch~gan,

Su~te 1102, Ch~cago, III 60601, or contact the Ger­~atr~c Study and Treatment Program at New York Un~­vers~ty School of Med~clne 550 F~rst Ave, New York, N Y 10016

Dear Ann Landers My husband's teen-age son from a prevlous marrlaqe llves wlth us He has strange eatlng hablts to say the least Andv ~lll take a llklng to a certaln food and refuse to eat any­thlng else For example four years ago he gorged on canned chlcken noodle soup He ate lt for break­fast, lunch and dlnner After two months he sald, "I hate chlcken soup I can't stand the slght of lt Throw lt out" So the rest of the famlly ate chlcken noodle soup every nlght for a month

H1S next addlctl0n was shredded wheat cereal He went nuts over the stuff Somedays he'd go throuqh SlX boxes of the stuff Then he suddenly turned agalnst the stuff

H1S present crush lS on canned vegetable soup I told my husband thlS must stop but he says buy what the kld wants What can I do? -- Bonkers In M1Ch

Dear Bonk Take the boy to a doctor for a complete physlcal

Your Individual Horoscope

============ Fraftces Drake====~~~===== FOR TUESDAY, JULY 17, 1984

ARIES (Mar 2ltoApr 19)

Undercurrents affect romantic relatlonslups Work hard toward the realization of your goals, but mamtam a low profile TAURUS ~ (Apr 20 to May 20) ~,

Though social life IS active, It'S bet ter to VISit others than to entertam at home Unexpected news pertams to fmances GEMINI ,a... (May 2lto June 20) '1\1\'

You'll make excellent progress at work, but the tune IS not ripe for sign mg papers Partners disagree about monetary matters CANCER ~ (June 2ltoJuly 22)

AVOId unfeaSible tangents on the Job Make plans for a pleasure triP, but be rrundful of the costs mvolved Romance IS a plus' LEO (July 23 to Aug 22)

A date may be changed Home based actlVltles bear frwt Don't abuse credit m the afternoon A take charge attitude swts you VIRGO ~ (Aug 23 to Sept 22)

A wrong nwnber may start your day off on the wrong foot Be direct m dealing With close ties Be deCISive and you'll be effective LmRA ~ (Sept 23toOct 22) ~v(,j,)

Don't let friends distract you from your work Concentrated effort now puts you on top The day proves fman clally lucrative SCORPIO (Oct 23toNov 21)

Unexpected expenses are likely Though you shouldn't ITllX busmess and pleasure, It'S the perfect time for candJelIght and musIc SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21)

In laws are on a different wave length Do further mvestlgatlon m connectIOn With domestic plans You Will make progress CAPRICORN (Dec 22toJan 19)

Details may be more bothersome than usual Take the Imtlal step m reneWing a frlendslup You may 10

vlte someone to VISit AQUARIUS (Jan 20toFeb 18)

You and a partner Will have trouble agreemg about a purchase today Ex tra effort should be devoted to career mterests Be aggressive P~CES ~ (Feb 19toMar 20) .....

A chance meetmg has busmess overtones An urge for travel takes hold Social mcetles are a factor on the Job, so be cordial

YOU BORN TODAY have a good head for busmess, but shll, your work must reflect your Ideals Banking, 10

vestment counseling, brokerage and management are some of the fields for wluch you have a natural aptitude You're also drawn to mtellectual pur swts and Will succeed m law, educa­tIOn, sCience and wrltmg Dramatic by nature you can have success 10

show busmess You're a person who always must keep busy OtherWise, you tend to get mto a rut Birth date of James Cagney, actor, Donald Sutherland, actor, and Dlahann Car roll actress

© 19841<1"9 Features Syndicate Inc

Eviction Notice For Ma rlene Dletnch2

PARIS (UPI) -- Former fllm star MarlenE. lJletnch faces posslble eVlctlon from her luxury apartment for re­fusing to pay malntenance bllls, court offlclals sald Thursday

The owners of Dletrlch's large downtown home, three wealthy Belqlan banker broth­ers, Thursday told a Clty maalstrates court the 79-year-old ex-actress owed them 130,000 francs -­$16,000 -- ln arrears

A flnal declslon would be handed down Oct 11, the court offlclals sald

Lawyers representlng Olet­rlch, an lnternatlonal star for half a century ln motlon olctures, the theater and on televlslon, had pald her monthly rent Slnce 1976, but refused to meet some of the ~alntenance bllls on her three-room, fourth-story apartment near the avenup Des Champs Elysees

"t"1y cllent has pald the rent but refuses to pay costs rlghtfully due to the owners, such as a new photocopy ma­chlne for the secretarlal offlce or a new unlform for the doorman," sald her law­yer, Jacques Kam

Rent for the prestlglous apartment stood at 4,200 francs -- $500 a month ln 1976 when Dletrlch moved ln Her lawyers refused to spec­lfy the current rent or the cost of the monthly maln­tenance blll

The recluslve German-born actress has llved ln New York, Hollywood, London and elsewhere ln Europe durlng her career She was marrled ln 1924 to Rudolph Sleber althouah they llved most of thelr llves apart

She was the star of such fllms as "The Blue Anqel," ln WhlCh she played a sultry nlghtclub slnger, "Shanghal ~xpress" and "Destry Rldes Aaaln "

Rolls Royce

So les Inc rease LONDON (UPI) -- Rolls

Royce sald today lt sold more than 300 Rolls Royce cars world-Wlde ln June, ln~ cludlnq 126 ln Brltlan --the hlqhest monthly flgure for two years

The most popular model was the Sllver Splrlt, WhlCh lS gOlng to be ralsed by 2 5 percent Just under $74,520

A 6 percent prlce In­crease was announred for the Cornlche convertlble to $104,697

The company blamed the In­creases on the hloher cost of materlals and manufacture

The sales were provldlnQ , rea 1 encou ragerJlent" to everyone ln the company, sald Peter Ward, Rolls Royc~ Sales and Marketlnq D1V1Slon manaOlno dlrector

"It also lrJlprOVes buslness confldence and Slnce our return to proflt earller ln the year, the outlook has changed to glve us a much better profl1e," Ward sald

A Thought For ~ Day In 1956, John F Kennedy

sald ln a statement "~Ie must have a cltlzenshlp less concerned about what the gov­ernment can do for lt and morp about what lt can do for thp natlon "

""". \

By ERMA BOMBECK There are four klnds of people who buy

garments wlth a label lnslde that reads, "DRY CLEAN ONLY"

There are those who don't sweat, those who do not declare all of thelr lncome to the government, and those who cannot read a word of Engllsh

I belong to the fourth group We're ldeallsts who never belleve a blrd wll1 sprltz us when we are lndoors We never lmaglne there wlll be a fresh blueberry (for WhlCh there lS no antldote) on a park bench We never conslder the odds of reachlnq for salt and havlng our bosom drag through the gravy on our roast beef

No, we Just dance along the yellow brlck road llke we have some sort of lm­munlty to the stalns and spots of 11fe Clothlng manufacturers walt for people llke me to be born -- people who plck up a aarment that looks llke you can throw lt ln the washlng machlne and who never read the label untll we have fallen ln love wlth lt and taken lt home

I would llke to thlnk I am the same per­son when I wear a DRY CLEAN ONLY as I am when I'm wearlng a MACHINE WASHABLE, but who am I klddlng? I'm as tense as a bul1-flghter enterlng the arena wlth lrregu1ar­lty problems As I sllde a pure s11k dress over my head (that I THOUGHT was polyester when I bought It), I plnch my llPS together untl1 they turn whlte Not oood enough --I stlll get llPStlCk on the collar

As I wash my hands, water splashes down the front of lt The 011 from the car door grabs at lt When I walk lnto a room, frlendly dogs come out of nowhere and small chlldren wlth stlcky flngers throw the,r arms around my neck Speaklng of necks, I am careful not to put makeup on lt, yet

\

lt secretes a rlng-around-the-co11ar that crles for the work of a professlonal cleaner

What's a woman to do? I bought a 11ttle cotton Jacket the other day that I thought was "safe " It was one of those casual, perma-wrlnkle thlngs where you pushed the sleeves up and wore lt over slacks I threw lnhlbltlons to the wlnds I ate tomatoes ln lt and an lce crea~ bar I stood under trees, Dumped my own gas and brushed my teeth whl1e wearlng lt When I went to toss lt lnto the washer, I saw the label. "DRY YOU KNOW WHAT"

As a frlend of mlne sald when I gave her a handpalnted blb at a baby shower that sald, "DRY CLEAN ONLY" "Erma, you're a loser"

Colo. State Workers Better Not Leave Early

DENVER (UPI) -- State employees had best stay by thplr dpsks on Frldav ~fternoons When the phone rlnqs, the caller may be the governor

Gov Rlchard Lamm, who belleves some employees may be taklng off early to start the weekend, Thursday sald he has begun a orogram of spot telephone calls to see who 1 s on the Job

Lamm made hlS flrst surprlse phone checks last Frlday, dlscoverlng 10 of hlS dlV1Slon heads were AWOL and a number of others mlsslng

The governor dldn't name names, but lndlcated employees could expect slml1ar telephone calls ln the future

He sald he expects government workers, especlal1y hlS dlVlslon heads, to be on thelr Jobs at least 40 hours a week

Lamm sald he had "been through a couple of departments on Frlday afternoons, and I've got to tell you they've been vacant"

He sald one secretary deserved an award for her reactl0n to last Frlday's surprlse call

"When we called, she sald, 'Oh, he Just stepped out of the offlce Walt a mlnute and I'll try to get hlm for you'

"Ten mlnutes later we got a call back and he told us he had been home all after­noon " Lamm sald

If you have not rece~ved your Hourglass by 5 30 pm, please call 84190

Page 7: Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

It." .

PEANUTS

STEVE CANYON

HAGAR C5IZT,AlrJl,..Y; 5J1Z­WILL 50MGoNe: BE JOlrJlNG You

L.,ATEI2 '2

WIZARD OF ID

BC

TF?Oof'e::~ s:>M1-rH f2E;:QU~S;T~ A , ij4~HIP- DI~Cl1AfCGe::/' ~~

~ N .. G p ell Q I

"New AND fMPR'OVED"

r .... Q .... C ... ClolD IIIe ..

BEETLE BAILEY

chari s m schultz

d.k browne

:L OON7 cAlZc IF IT 16 HEIZ etI2Tt!I?AY-Tr//6 /5 !Zll?/CtfUJtJ5 1

brant parker

MY MonIe:fZ H4s; To TA~ IN MUN[7f2Y

and ,ohnny hart

GRAN~I ANDT~u...-H~

,0 ~NO~ Off ~~ ~T4~H INMY I FCOTtJA~l~

,ohnny hart

A NEAT BUMPER STICKER Fbrc A 'E3ORN AbAII\I'CtlRI~"AN

walker

regg.e sm.th IN I="ACT 'rOU CAN COUNT ON

HIM 10 BE STI L.L. SITTIN' -rHERE WHEN ';Q(JIVE OONE IT

GARFIELD I.m dav.s [ WOULIi' LIKE YOUR Cl-IEAPEST WELL GARFIELD THERE 5 n£ ROOM !=OR ME AND MY CAT BED AND THE BATHROOM '0

DOWN THE HALL AN Y QUESTIONS?

ComllCS HOURGLASS! MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984, PAGE 7

They'll Do It Every Time

7N.eN awes 7NE IS RVSHtP __ _

70 7IIE IIOSPI7AL

I c"-

Vl -----II SURE,I HEARD YOU CALLING, BUT DAD TOLD\\t NOT TO BELIEVE EVERYTl1IN6 1 HEAR 1/

Crosswon! By Eugene Shelfer ACROSS

1 Roosevelt matnarch

5 Corrode 8 R1verm

Spam 12 Love god 13 Spy org 14 Cabbage

salad 15Shngshot 17 RatIonal 18 Stock urnt 19 Chooses 21 MInute

parttcle 24 Imlia,

for one 25 Early

Egyptian 28 Theater

sectlOlI 30 Shy 33 Fmrush port 34 Shallow

vessel 35 EX1~t 36 Wire

measure 37 Southwest

wmd 38 Greek

portico 39 Hearmg aid

maway

41 SkIrt feature

43 WlSconsm City

46 TIucket of small trees

50 Toward the mouth

51 Waterfall 54 Feed the

kJtty 55 Hawk

parrot 56 Dash 57 Monster's

loch? 58 Explorer

Johru.on 5'1 - precedent

DOWN Ilnillall, 2 Un( nwl nur~e

3 Hoster 4 Biblical

mountam 5 Old French

com 6 Trouble 7 London

gallery 8 Gennan

cIty 9 Symbol ot

bddluck 10 R.lve 11 I~ In debt 16 Fdvont, 20 (, ,1l111bil, P

Frlday's Solutlor

U 1('0(, of Norv.ay

2J HplJrew prophet

25 Eccentric wheel

26 Broad sash 27 Skunks 29" -of My

Dreams" 31 Gold,m

Granada 32 AffinnatJve

vote 34 Fann

bwldmg 38 Shops 40 ""~Istants 42 HJVtf If

l' Km(,ot hor~t'

44 ' Rule Hntaruua' (omposer

45 Reverberate 47 Ashen 48 'imghke

1'..lla 49 Slghtm

SIcIly 52 ThrPl toed

ClOths ~3 (tunese

pagoda

Page 8: Hourglass - ufdcimages.uflib.ufl.edu

PAGE 8, HOURGLASS, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1984

OFFICIAL NOTICES THERE HAVE BEEN A FEW INCIDENTS where gro­cerles from Surfway have been dellvered to the wrong address To help allevlate thlS problem, please check your grocery bags to ensure that they have your correct reSl­dence number ( (Global QA)

ADULT EDUCATION ADULT EDUCATION CENTER OFFICE HOURS through August are Tuesdays, 8 a m to noon, and Frldays, 7 30-11 30 a m and 12 30-4 30 P m

FOOD SERVICES PDR DINNER ENTREES FOR THE WEEK* Today Roast pork wlth gravy

Spaghettl wlth meat sauce Tuesday Roast beef wlth gravy

Pork long n ce Wednesday Brolled slrloln steak Thursday Roast turkey wlth glblet gravy

Barbecued beef cubes Frlday Grllled mahl-mahl

Sweet and sour pork rlbs Saturday Pork curry

Tenyakl steak Sunday Roast prlwe rlb *Menu lS subJect to change wlthout notlce

SNACK BAR DAILY SPECIALS Today Pepper steak

Soup - Chlcken noodle Tuesday Beef wlth vegetables

Soup - Oxtall Wednesday Chlcken wlth long rlce

Soup - Beef vegetable Thursday Sweet sour sparerlbs

Soup - Egg drop Frlday SW1SS steak

Soup - Vegetable Saturday Pork adobo (bralsed)

Soup - Chlcken vegetable

YOKWE YUK CLUB DAILY AND WEEKLY SPECIALS* Tuesday Chlcken terlyakl Wednesday Barbecued rlbs Thursday Joe's Speclal Frlday Stuffed sole Saturday Yanke~ pot roast Sunday Chlcken and dumpllnqs Weekly speclal - Llver and onlons *Menu lS subJect to change wlthout notlce

YOKWE YUK CLUB ENTERTAINMENT FOR TUESDAY In the bar area lS Taco Nlght -- free taco pupus and taped country and western mUS1C from 4-7 p m

RETAIL SERVICES

FREE GOLF LESSONS

CONDUCTED BY

LARRY HARRIS REGISTERED PROFESSIONAL - HAWAII

AT SPECIAL SERVICES'

GOLF DRIVING RANGE WEDNESDAY, JULY 18 2 30 - 4 30 P M THURSDAY, JULY 19 4 30 - 6 30 P M

FOR RESERVATIONS

CALL 8-4819 OR SIGN UP

AT

LARRY WILL BE CONDUCTING CLINICS AND DEMONSTRATING EQUIPMENT FOR ALL OTHER SPORTS AT MACY'S WEST

WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY 10 30 A M - 12 30 P M

FOR SALE ONE DOLL HOUSE WITH FURNITURE, $10, wrought lron bookcase, $4, 16' whlte Chrlstmas tree w/stand, $5, set golf clubs, $10, 19. Tonka Jeep, great for Barb1es, $4, 1ronlng board, $5, 1ron, $5 84579 or 99413

SWIFT BOY'S SWIM TEAM BATHING SUIT, sz 26, excellent condltlon, complete Cub Scout umform sz 8, $10 Glrl Scout unlform, sz 12, $10 84579/99413

10-SPEED WOMAN'S BIKE by Suntour, 27" wlth 21" frame Used three tlmes, ln perfect condltlon Pald $185 plus shlpplng, sell for $170 New sheepskln seat cover lnclud­ed Call Sharon, 84542 after 4 30 p m

ONE PAIR KORET WOMAN'S SLACKS, Slze 10, fltS more llke a 12 Never worn, tan Pald $39 plus shlpplng, wlll sell for $34 Call Sharon at 84542 after 4 30 weekdays

SINGER STARLET 495 portable sewlng machlne, has only been used several tlmes Asklng $150 Call 99330 8 30-4 30, ask for Rosle

YAMAHA TRUMPET, gold, two sllver mouth­pleces, excellent condltlon Lubrlcants, olls and case lncluded $200 H82261, W82212

MEN'S NIKE CLEATS, Slze 9, worn once, $25 W82212, H82261

NIKONOS IV 35mm Speed Llght, SR-101, $465, Calypso VI regulator, $85 83795

TWO 40-hp Johnson motors, $400 each, $700 both, two 9/0 reels Call Dan, H83697, 1<183482

WANTED SUMMER FUN ARTS AND CRAFTS NEEDS YOUR baby food Jars Mothers, please call Clndy at 83331 or 83754 to come plck up your Jars

HELP WANTED MACY'S IS ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for In­ventory help July 28 through Aug 2 Call 83595, or slgn up at Macy's SerVlce desk

THE HOURGLASS NEEDS A TYPIST for part-tlme posltlon Must type at least 50 wpm ac­curately for long perl ods of tlme Contact Global Personnel, Lagoon and Nlnth Street, to appl.}\

COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES HO'OULU GARDEN CLUB wlll meet July 18, Qtrs 444B, 9 a m SubJects wlll be prepar­lng plants for Judglng and dlScusslon All members and newcomers are urged to attend For more lnformatlon, call 82658

EMON LODGE NO 179 F&AM w1ll hold a stated communlcatlon Tuesday evenlng, July 17 All Master Masons are lnvlted to attend Bus serVlce wlll be provlded at the usual stops and tlme Info, contact K Holt

HOURS FOR THE BARGAIN BAZAAR ARE TUESDAYS, 6-8 pm, and Thursdays, 1 30-5 p m Plck­ups are made Tuesday afternoons Call 82478 lf you have ltems to donate

THE ART CENTER HAS NEW SUPPLIES and wlll be open Thursday mornlng to the publlC

AT YOUR FINGERTI

ENERGY SAVING$

W,II,"g Wafer says

'Help save waf r,

wash only full loads'

SAVE WATER SAVE ENERGY

HAVE DINNER

AT THE YOKWE YUK CLUB 8J~09 to~ ReJe~vat~onJ

NO CLASSIFIED TALK

TOnight At The Movies

Rlchardson - Namu -- The Klller Whale 7 30 --------------- G

Ivey Hall - Hercules 6 30, 8 30 --------- PG

Yokwe Yuk - Metalstorm 12 40 only --------- PG

Tradewlnds - Roseanna McCoy 8 00 --------------- PG

Tonight On TeleVision

4 30 5 35 6 25 7 15 8 05 8 55 9 55

10 45 11 35

5 25 6 10 6 35 7 00 7 50 9 40

10 30 10 55

KwaJalem Famlly Feud/Gen Hosp Solld Gold Entertalnment ThlS Week Love, Sldney/Muppets Pollce Woman Great Performances Knots Landlng Best Of Carson Donahup (Helolse) ROI-Namur General Hospltal Benson Dlff'rent Strokes James Mlchener "Duke Of West POlnt" Knots Landlng On The Road Wlth Kuralt B 111 Moyers