KVf~.JALEI~ HOURG'-~SS

8
A HERO'S WELCOME AT HOME IN EGYPT ANWAR SADAT RETURNS FROM HISTORIC TRIP CAIRO (UPI) -- Egypt1an Pres1dent Anwar Sadat today returned to a hero's welcome after a h1stor1c pledged to work with Israel1 leaders to solve d1fferences through negot1at10ns. not war. Sadat and Israel1 Pr1me M1n1ster Menachem Beg1n had earl1er announced a momentous agreement that tween the1r two nat10ns. As he walked down the sta1rs from h1S pres1dent1al jet, was greeted by tr1p to Israel in which he there would be no more war be- trumpets 1n Ca1ro. "Ya Sadat! Ya Sadat l " shouted tens of thousands of cheer1ng Egyptians who 11ned the route from the Ca1ro A1rport to Sadat's home in suburban G1za. "W1th our souls and our blood we redeem you, Sadat." the crowds chanted 1n contrast to the storm of enm1ty h1S tr1p aroused elsewhere in the Arab world. He was met at the Cairo Airport by V1ce President Hosni Mobarak, Prime Minister Mamdouh Salem and Parl1ament Speaker Syaed Marei. Egypt1an jets flew overhead as he stood to attention wh11e a m1l1tary band played the natlOnal anthem. Barely an hour before. Is- raeli Jets flew over h1m 1r a departure ceremony at Ben-Gur10n A1rport. The crowds along h1S route cheered. waved flags and held up placards of support and pictures of Sadat. He stood up 1n an open car, and waved. Sadat and Begin made the declarat10ns 1n the cl1max of a historic f1rst V1S1t to Israel by an Arab leader and then agreed to work toward a negot1a- ted M1ddle East peace settle- _____ T VOLUME 14 ALLIANCE REALLY UPSET WITH SADAT'S TRIP TO ISRAEL ment. The men whose countr1es have fought four wars Slnce 1948. Journeyed to Tel Aviv after the declarat10n. and Sadat then flew back to Ca1ro. Dur1ng Sadat's tr1p to Is- rael. he and Begin spoke at a J01nt news conference and 1n formal farewell statements later 1n an atmosphere of warm sin- cer1ty and expressions by both men of a w1111ngness to gotiate a f1nal Middle East peace desp1te outstand1ng pro- blems. The verbal agreement. sealed w1th a handshake and a sm11e a 21-gun salute and a fanfare of before the thunderously applaud- ing newsmen. would 1n effect rule out resumption of hos- t11ities 1n the Middle East even w1thout a formal peace treaty since no Arab state ever went to war aga1nst Israel without Egypt. If the agree- ment is kept. Egypt is Israel's m1ghtiest foe with a m11110n men under arms o A one-front war aga1nst Israel by Syria would be suic1de accord1ng to military analysts. Sadat sa1d. "The essent1al thing now is to qO to Geneva and negot1ate a settlement between us." NOVEMBER 21, 1977 NUMBER 225 A Lashing Arab Denunciation AMIN THIEA TENS 200 AMERICANS IN UGANDA NAIROBJ (UPI) -- President Idi Amin yesterday accused the U.S. of a maSS1ve plan of sabo- tage against Uganda and he threatened to take retaliatory action aga1nst the 200 Amer1- cans st1l1 liv1ng 1n his land- locked country. BEIRUT (UPI) -- Lash1ng Arab denunciation of Egypt1an Pres1dent Anwar Sadat's v1sit -- and speech to Israel todav threatened a major shift in all1ances in the volat11e M1ddle East. Syr1a. L1bya. Alger1a, Iraq and Palest1n1an leaders all branded Sadat as a tra1tor and J01ned initial moves toward a wide Arab "reJection front" to ' counter Sadat and lay down tough condit1ons for any peace settle- ment. "Damascus Rall1es The World Aga1nst Arab Treason." said a banner headl1ne 1n Syr1a's state-controlled daily L1bya yesterday Of,'lc1ally replaced its Joint flag w1th Egypt with a new one, the L1byan Ambassador announced. The former shared flag was ceremono1usly burned Saturday when Sadat ar- rlved in Israel. A top Palest1ne Liberation Front (PLO) spokesman repeated calls for an urgent summit group1ng the PLO, Syr1a. Iraq. L1bya, Alger1a and Marxlst South Yemen to f1ght what he termed the "Sadat-Beg1n plot," 1n reference to Israel1 Pr1me M1n1ster Menachem Beg1n. L1bya -- a longt1me advocate of the "rejection front" 1dea now boosted oy fiery Arab op- pos1tion to Sadat's v1sit -- d1spatched Prem1er Abdel Salam Jalloud f1rst to Damascus for talks w1th Syr1an President Hafez Assad and other officials. u.s. AND BRITAIN AGREE PEACE PROPOSALS ALIVE IN RHODESIA LONDON (UPI) -- U.S. Ambassador to the Umted Andrew Young and Br1t1sh off1cials agreed today the Anglo-Amer1can peace proposals for Rhodesia are "very much al1ve and in being," the Foreign Office sa1d. Young met for hours w1th Foreign Secretary David Owen. Lord Carver. Brita1n's res1dent Comm;ssloner Des1gnate for Rhodes1a, Under Secretary Slr Pallister and Ass1stant Secre- tary John Graham. Young 1S flying back to New York tom ght. Speak1ng w1th reporters after the meet1ng, Young sa1d much more 1S happen1ng towards a peace settlement 1n Rhodesia "than appears on the surface." "Everybody's stalllng for t1me -- (Rhodes1an Prime M1nis- ter Ian) Sm1th. the Patr1ot1c Front." Young said. "You can't push people to speed up a settlement because 1t 15 their future." Young sa1d he enjoyed meet- 1ng Carver for the f1rst t1me and praised h1S recent - but - talks with the Rhodeslan nat10nalist leaders and government off1c1als. Young sa1d Carver d1d a good Job under the C1rcumstances. SAMOAN ELECTIONS PAGO PAGO. AMERICAN SAMOA (UPI) -- Amer1can Samoans w1ll elect the1r own governor to- morrow for the f1rst t1me Slnce the Amer1can flag was f1rst ra1sed over these South Pac1flc 1slands 77 years ago. The 7,200 reg1stered voters will choose between a Samoan- Ir1sh bureaucrat and the Ch1ef of Aunuu. one of the seven lslands that compr1se Amer1can Samoa. Republlcan Peter Coleman. former actlng H1gh Commlss1oner of the Trust Territory of the Pac1f1c, got 39 percent of a Nov. 8 election. but was forced 1nto tomorrow's runoff when the other SlX candidates Spl1t the maJorlty of the vote 1n the pr1mary electlon. and late tomorrow to Iraq for further consultations. Damascus Radlo said the talks between Syrian leaders and Jalloud - who later conferred w1th the leader of the PLO Democratic Front for the Llbera- tion of Palestine - consldered "steps being taken by L1bya and the Palestlnian revolution to transform the Arab outrage lnto a worklng Arab struggle front. " Hours before Sadat landed 1n Israel Saturday. the PLO reJect- ed any peace accord of the V1S1t. Mothers Asi Vance: 'He', find Children' Am1n accused Washington of planning to bomb various Ugandan Embass1es and indicated he had enlisted the help of international terrorist organi- zations to h1t back at Amer1can targets. It was the second t1me this year the unpredictable dictator of Uganda had threatened U.S. citizens in his country. plung- ing President Carter into another major fore1gn policy cr; Sl s. In February, Amin. w1thout warning forbade the then 400 American residents in Uganda from leaving the country and BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -- A group ominously ordered them to his of mothers asking for news of capital of Kampala for a show- the1r missing relat1ves broke down face-to-face meeting and through police lines today to 1nd1cated he would take stern reach Secretary of State Cyrus measures aga1nst them because Vance on his way to meet of U.S. condemnation of Uganda. Arqent1ne President Jorge V1- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * who arnved 1n Buenos : SUN & SURF : A1res yesterday on a three-nat10n* AS OF 0001 HOURS 22 NOV. '77 * tr1p to South Amer1ca. was ex- * WEEKEND RAINFALL: .93 1nch * pected to ask the Argentlne * MONTHLY TOTAL: 4.49 1nches * government about some 7.500 * YEARLY TOTAL: 75.191nches * persons who are allegedly Ja11ed * TOMORROW * or m1ss1ng for pol1tical reasons.* Hi Tide' 0240 4.5' 1501 5.2' * The Secretary of State had * La Tide: 0840 1.0' 2120 1.0' * left the Foreign M1n1stry and * MOONRISE: 1639 MOONSET 0429 * placed a wreath on the monument * SUNRISE. 0644 SUNSET' 1826 * to General San Mart1n when a * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * group of 50 women on the oppo- * FINANCIAL NEWS * site side of the street began * * call1ng his name and waving * DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES * wh1te handkerch1efs. * 30 Indus. * Vance nodded to the women * 20 Trans. 1'01' * and proceeded to h1S car. Three * 15 Ut1ls. 4 r4 1, * of the women reached the car * 65 Stocks (4 11 ((, * and banged on the window. * Volume * shout1ng. "Help us f1nd our * Closing Silver Price: Unavail* ch11ciren." * Closing Gold Price. Unavail* sltuat10n 1n * NO LISTINGS ARE AVAILABLE IN * Argent1na 15 one of the pr1nc1- * LIBRARY FOR MONDAY 21/11/77 * pal topics for Vance's talks. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Transcript of KVf~.JALEI~ HOURG'-~SS

A HERO'S WELCOME AT HOME IN EGYPT

ANWAR SADAT RETURNS FROM HISTORIC TRIP CAIRO (UPI) -- Egypt1an Pres1dent Anwar Sadat today returned to a hero's welcome after a h1stor1c

pledged to work with Israel1 leaders to solve d1fferences through negot1at10ns. not war. Sadat and Israel1 Pr1me M1n1ster Menachem Beg1n had earl1er announced a momentous agreement that

tween the1r two nat10ns. As he walked down the sta1rs from h1S pres1dent1al jet, ~e was greeted by

tr1p to Israel in which he

there would be no more war be-

trumpets 1n Ca1ro. "Ya Sadat! Ya Sadat l " shouted

tens of thousands of cheer1ng Egyptians who 11ned the route from the Ca1ro A1rport to Sadat's home in suburban G1za.

"W1th our souls and our blood we redeem you, Sadat." the crowds chanted 1n contrast to the storm of enm1ty h1S tr1p aroused elsewhere in the Arab world.

He was met at the Cairo Airport by V1ce President Hosni Mobarak, Prime Minister Mamdouh Salem and Parl1ament Speaker Syaed Marei.

Egypt1an jets flew overhead as he stood to attention wh11e

a m1l1tary band played the natlOnal anthem.

Barely an hour before. Is­raeli Jets flew over h1m 1r a departure ceremony at Ben-Gur10n A1rport.

The crowds along h1S route cheered. waved flags and held up placards of support and pictures of Sadat. He stood up 1n an open car, ~m11ed and waved.

Sadat and Begin made the declarat10ns 1n the cl1max of a historic f1rst V1S1t to Israel by an Arab leader and then agreed to work toward a negot1a­ted M1ddle East peace settle-

KVf~.JALEI~ _____ T

VOLUME 14

ALLIANCE REALLY UPSET WITH SADAT'S TRIP TO ISRAEL

ment. The men whose countr1es have

fought four wars Slnce 1948. Journeyed to Tel Aviv after the declarat10n. and Sadat then flew back to Ca1ro.

Dur1ng Sadat's tr1p to Is­rael. he and Begin spoke at a J01nt news conference and 1n formal farewell statements later 1n an atmosphere of warm sin­cer1ty and expressions by both men of a w1111ngness to ne~ gotiate a f1nal Middle East peace desp1te outstand1ng pro­blems.

The verbal agreement. sealed w1th a handshake and a sm11e

a 21-gun salute and a fanfare of

before the thunderously applaud­ing newsmen. would 1n effect rule out resumption of hos­t11ities 1n the Middle East even w1thout a formal peace treaty since no Arab state ever went to war aga1nst Israel without Egypt. If the agree­ment is kept.

Egypt is Israel's m1ghtiest foe with a m11110n men under arms o A one-front war aga1nst Israel by Syria would be suic1de accord1ng to military analysts.

Sadat sa1d. "The essent1al thing now is to qO to Geneva and negot1ate a settlement between us."

HOURG'-~SS

• NOVEMBER 21, 1977 NUMBER 225

A Lashing Arab Denunciation AMIN THIEA TENS 200

AMERICANS IN UGANDA NAIROBJ (UPI) -- President

Idi Amin yesterday accused the U.S. of a maSS1ve plan of sabo­tage against Uganda and he threatened to take retaliatory action aga1nst the 200 Amer1-cans st1l1 liv1ng 1n his land­locked country.

BEIRUT (UPI) -- Lash1ng Arab denunciation of Egypt1an Pres1dent Anwar Sadat's v1sit -- and speech to Israel todav threatened a major shift in all1ances in the volat11e M1ddle East. Syr1a. L1bya. Alger1a, Iraq and Palest1n1an leaders all branded Sadat as a tra1tor and J01ned

initial moves toward a wide Arab "reJection front" to ' counter Sadat and lay down tough condit1ons for any peace settle­ment.

"Damascus Rall1es The World Aga1nst Arab Treason." said a banner headl1ne 1n Syr1a's state-controlled daily T~shr~n.

L1bya yesterday Of,'lc1ally replaced its Joint flag w1th Egypt with a new one, the L1byan Ambassador announced. The former shared flag was ceremono1usly burned Saturday when Sadat ar­rlved in Israel.

A top Palest1ne Liberation

Front (PLO) spokesman repeated calls for an urgent summit group1ng the PLO, Syr1a. Iraq. L1bya, Alger1a and Marxlst South Yemen to f1ght what he termed the "Sadat-Beg1n plot," 1n reference to Israel1 Pr1me M1n1ster Menachem Beg1n.

L1bya -- a longt1me advocate of the "rejection front" 1dea now boosted oy fiery Arab op­pos1tion to Sadat's v1sit -­d1spatched Prem1er Abdel Salam Jalloud f1rst to Damascus for talks w1th Syr1an President Hafez Assad and other officials.

u.s. AND BRITAIN AGREE PEACE PROPOSALS ALIVE IN RHODESIA

LONDON (UPI) -- U.S. Ambassador to the Umted ~!atlOns Andrew Young and Br1t1sh off1cials agreed today the Anglo-Amer1can peace proposals for Rhodesia are "very much al1ve and in being," the Foreign Office sa1d.

Young met for 1~ hours w1th Foreign Secretary David Owen. Lord Carver. Brita1n's res1dent Comm;ssloner Des1gnate for Rhodes1a, Under Secretary Slr ~l1chael Pallister and Ass1stant Secre­tary John Graham.

Young 1S flying back to New York tom ght.

Speak1ng w1th reporters after the meet1ng, Young sa1d much more 1S happen1ng towards a peace settlement 1n Rhodesia "than appears on the surface."

"Everybody's stalllng for t1me -- (Rhodes1an Prime M1nis­ter Ian) Sm1th. the Patr1ot1c Front." Young said. "You can't push people to speed up a settlement because 1t 15 their future."

Young sa1d he enjoyed meet-1ng Carver for the f1rst t1me and praised h1S recent - but unsucce~sful - talks with the Rhodeslan nat10nalist leaders and government off1c1als.

Young sa1d Carver d1d a good Job under the C1rcumstances.

SAMOAN ELECTIONS PAGO PAGO. AMERICAN SAMOA

(UPI) -- Amer1can Samoans w1ll elect the1r own governor to­morrow for the f1rst t1me Slnce the Amer1can flag was f1rst ra1sed over these South Pac1flc 1slands 77 years ago.

The 7,200 reg1stered voters will choose between a Samoan­Ir1sh bureaucrat and the Ch1ef of Aunuu. one of the seven lslands that compr1se Amer1can Samoa.

Republlcan Peter Coleman. former actlng H1gh Commlss1oner of the Trust Territory of the Pac1f1c, got 39 percent of a Nov. 8 election. but was forced 1nto tomorrow's runoff when the other SlX candidates Spl1t the maJorlty of the vote 1n the pr1mary electlon.

and late tomorrow to Iraq for further consultations.

Damascus Radlo said the talks between Syrian leaders and Jalloud - who later conferred w1th the leader of the PLO Democratic Front for the Llbera­tion of Palestine - consldered "steps being taken by L1bya and the Palestlnian revolution to transform the Arab outrage lnto a worklng Arab struggle front. "

Hours before Sadat landed 1n Israel Saturday. the PLO reJect­ed any peace accord of the V1S1t.

Mothers Asi Vance: 'He', find Children'

Am1n accused Washington of planning to bomb various Ugandan Embass1es and indicated he had enlisted the help of international terrorist organi­zations to h1t back at Amer1can targets.

It was the second t1me this year the unpredictable dictator of Uganda had threatened U.S. citizens in his country. plung­ing President Carter into another major fore1gn policy cr; Sl s.

In February, Amin. w1thout warning forbade the then 400 American residents in Uganda from leaving the country and

BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -- A group ominously ordered them to his of mothers asking for news of capital of Kampala for a show-the1r missing relat1ves broke down face-to-face meeting and through police lines today to 1nd1cated he would take stern reach Secretary of State Cyrus measures aga1nst them because Vance on his way to meet of U.S. condemnation of Uganda. Arqent1ne President Jorge V1- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

del~~nce. who arnved 1n Buenos : SUN & SURF : A1res yesterday on a three-nat10n* AS OF 0001 HOURS 22 NOV. '77 * tr1p to South Amer1ca. was ex- * WEEKEND RAINFALL: .93 1nch * pected to ask the Argentlne * MONTHLY TOTAL: 4.49 1nches * government about some 7.500 * YEARLY TOTAL: 75.191nches * persons who are allegedly Ja11ed * TOMORROW * or m1ss1ng for pol1tical reasons.* Hi Tide' 0240 4.5' 1501 5.2' *

The Secretary of State had * La Tide: 0840 1.0' 2120 1.0' * left the Foreign M1n1stry and * MOONRISE: 1639 MOONSET 0429 * placed a wreath on the monument * SUNRISE. 0644 SUNSET' 1826 * to General San Mart1n when a * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * group of 50 women on the oppo- * FINANCIAL NEWS * site side of the street began * * call1ng his name and waving * DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGES * wh1te handkerch1efs. * 30 Indus. *

Vance nodded to the women * 20 Trans. 1'01' * and proceeded to h1S car. Three * 15 Ut1ls. 4r41, * of the women reached the car * 65 Stocks (411((, * and banged on the window. * Volume * shout1ng. "Help us f1nd our * Closing Silver Price: Unavail* ch11ciren." * Closing Gold Price. Unavail*

Hu~an rla~ts sltuat10n 1n * NO LISTINGS ARE AVAILABLE IN * Argent1na 15 one of the pr1nc1- * LIBRARY FOR MONDAY 21/11/77 * pal topics for Vance's talks. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

PAGE 2

8ritis" Po'ice Hunt Arsonist LONDnN (UPI) -- Gollce Wlth dogs today

~untc~ r :)ni5: JelleVed to have trled three t 1 ~I,E:S 1 n ?tl r ~ 'rs to set fl re 'cJ a central London hospltal as a Brltain's natlonwlde flreflqhters strlke entered ~s second week.

A 10-year-old boy and his slx-year-old slster dled in a flre at their home ln east London despite efforts of several striklnq firefiqhters who left picket lines to help soldlers and pollce rescue the youngsters.

Neiqhbors and the army troops and volun­teers had been forced back by flames and smoke from a bOller exploslon ln the house in the Forest Gate distrlct.

Police wlth dogs Joined in a search of the 740-bed Middlesex Hospital in a search for an arsonist authoritles say has made three attempts to set fires ln the insti­tution.

The search began after police drlving past the hospital in the early morning hours saw flames and smoke from the apparent third attempt. They fought the flre with flre extinqulshers from their pollce cruiser.

Tralning of several thousands more army, navy and alr force men in flreflghting was expected to start later this week.

Some 9,000 army and air force personnel along with volunteers have been trying to fill in for the nation's 35,000 regular fire­flghters who struck ln demands for a 30 percent raise, 20 percent more than the government's 10 percent antl-inflatlon limit. The flrefiqhters are pald a basic $118 a week.

Dissidents Wife 8egs Aid HASHINGTON (upI) -- The wlfe of imprison­

ed Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky -tearfully asked the Administratlon yesterday to win her husband's freedom, and Vice Presi­dent Walter Mondale promlsed to take her message to President Carter.

Shcharansky, a Soviet Jew, and Sovlet dissident physicist Andrei Sakharov are this year's 'reciplents of the "Joseph Award" for human rights from the Anti-Defamatlon League of B'nai B'rith, a prominent national Jewlsh organlzatlon. They were honored at a luncheon meeting of the group yesterday wlth Mondale deliverlng the keynote address.

Natalla Shcnaransky, who was forced to leave the Soviet Union only one day after her marriaae, accepted the award on behalf of her husband, and Professor Sidney Drell, a physicist at Stanford Universlty, accepted the award for hlS close friend Sakharov.

Mrs. Shcharansky broke into tears as she asked the league and the Ad~inistration to "do more."

"I want to be with Anatoly ln Jerusalem to begin our Jewish famlly," she sobbed. "To the A.D.L., I ask you to flght for Anatoly's freedom as you fouqht agalnst the Arab boycott and discrimination, to use your ,nfluence to free Anatoly.

100 Dead As Portuguese Air'iner P'unges O,er e'iff

FUNCHAL, MADEIRA (UPI) -- Passengers fly­ing home from a Chrlstmas shoPPlng trip ripped off their seat belts and screamed when a Portuguese alrliner plummeted over a high bluff at the end of a runway, surVlvors said today. The plunge kllled more than 100 people.

Offlcials said 39 of the 164 passengers and crew aboard survived the landing crash of the TAP liner. About a dozen of the 40 non-Portuguese aboard were among the lnJured.

A Belgian passenger said a man ln front of him leaped to his feet as the Boeing 727 sl,d down the runway on thlS mid-Ptlantic island late Saturday and started screamlng. Others rlpped off thelr safety belts.

Moments later the plane bounced off the end of the strip and plummeted 60 yards to a rocky beach below and exploded.

The blast threw part of the plane into the sea and 'hurled passengers hundreds of yards in all directlons. One small ch,ld landed ln a banana plantation several hundred yards away, but still survlved.

Portuguese Prlme ~inlster MarlO Soares late yesterday declared three days of national mourning for the crash vlctlms.

Cyclone Kills 6,000 In 'ndia NEW DELHI (UPI) -- More than 6,000

persons were killed in the cyclone that struck a south Indlan state last weekend, Indla's National News Agercy Samachar re­ported today.

The agency sald the flgure was "offlclal" but did not 1mmedlately glVe further l'lfor­matlon.

Members of Parllament, meanwhlle, sald they had been told the death toll was well over 3,000 earlier today; state officials sald more than 1,000 people had died.

Officials sald the tidal wave alone might~have led to the drowning of thousands of vlllagers because 1t appeared to have washed away as many as 10 v1llages and swept the 1nhab1tants 1nto the Bay of Bengal.

The cyclone left more than 100,000 people homeless. It tore tin roofs from shacks and demolished thousands of thatched huts occupied by flshermen and other reS1-dents along the coast in Andhra Pradesh state, north of Madras.

Rescue hel1copters dropped food packets to Indians marooned by the cyclone where possible, but officlals sald many areas had not been reached.

Top state off1c1als, 1ncludlng the Ch1ef Mln1ster, flew over some of the badly h1t areas today and reported the cyclone was the worst in the h1story of the reg1on.

There were still no reports of casualt1es from rural areas because commun1cations were down. State offlcials said the death toll in such areas would likely be h1gh. The first f1gures, Wh1Ch totaled over a thousand dead, came mostly from urban areas, the off1cials sald.

Di,ers find 18t" Century S"ipwreci In Austra'ia

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA (UPI) -- A mar1ne d1ver hospitalized wlth the bends told today of his narrow escape from a shark minutes after a divlng party made a h1stor1c d1scovery of an 18th-century shipwreck near Thursday Island.

Ted Louis, 68, was menaced by the large t1ger shark only minutes after the party d1scovered the wreck of the 18th-century British frigate Pandora about 100 miles southeast of Thursday Island 1n the Torres Stra1t Thursday.

Speaking from hlS hosp1tal bed in Towns­ville, about 1,100 mlles north of Sydney, Louis said he fended the shark off w1th a vintage bottle he found near the wreckage more than a hundred feet below the surface.

"I had been down about an hour and I started to make my way to the surface," he said.

"I was down about 100 feet and made lt to about 40 feet when this great shark came up snapping at me.

"I still had some decompression time to go but I got back into the boat as fast as I could. At the time it seemed like a good idea to get out of the water qU1ck," LOU1S said.

"When I got into the boa t I forgot all about the shark and the decompress1on, but after about 10 m1nutes I started to feel a bit funny," he said.

HOURS OF OPERATION WEEK OF 21 NOVEMBER

ONLY

MONDAY 3:00 - 7:00

WEDNESDAY 2:30 5:30

FRIDAY 10:30 - 12:30 2:30 - 5:30

SATURDAY 9:30 - 12:30

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1977

Ranqe Operation A range operation lS scheduled for

Tuesday, November 22. In connect1on wlth thlS operation,

hazard areas w1ll eXlst 1n the ocean with­in a 200 naut1cal mile radius of Kwajalein and 1n the Kwajalein Atoll north of a llne jOlning, but not lnclud1ng Enubuj and North LOl Islands, and south of a line Join1ng but not including Ennubirr and Yabbernohr Islands. For this operation there are "take cover" requirements for Ennylabegan Island only. Unless specifl­cally authorized all personnel assigned to duty or llving on the above lsland must either "take cover" in an approved shelter when dlrected or rema1n out of the hazard area between the hours of 1730 Nov. 22 and 0330 Nov. 23. Unless speciflcally author-1zed no air or sea craft will enter or be ln the KwaJale1n Atoll hazard area between the same hours. See the map below for the KwaJalein Atoll hazard area.

r

I-----t---+-- I --

~t,~

Met Rociet In conjunction with fhe above Range

Operation a meteorological rocket launch is scheduled for Tuesday, November 22.

In connect1on with this operation hazard areas w1ll exist in the ocean and on Kwajalein Island between the aZ1muths of 2250 true and 2750 true. The ocean hazard area extends out from KwaJale1n for a d1stance of 50 naut1cal m1les. The KwaJalein Island ground hazard area is that contalned wlthin a clrcle hav1ng a 400-foot radius from the rocket launcher. All personnel and craft must stay out of the ocean hazard area between the hours of 1930 on Nov 22 and 0530 on Nov. 23 or untll the restriction 1S lifted. The ground hazard area must be evacuated not later than 1930 hours. See the d1agram below show1ng the ocean hazard area.

§ o

Met Rociet A meteorological rocket lau~c~' oper­

atlon is scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 22. In connection with this operat1on

hazard areas will exist in the ocean and on KwaJalein Island between the aZlmuths of 2250 true and 2750 true. The ocean hazard area extends out from Kwajalein for a d1stance of 50 nautical m1les. The Kwaj­alein Island ground hazard area is that contained within a c1rcle hav1ng a 400-foot radlus from the rocket launcher. All personnel and craft must stay out of the ocean hazard area between the hours of 0900 and 1545 or until the restr1ction is lift­ed. The ground hazard area must be evacu­ated not later than 5900 hours. See the diagram above show1ng the ocean hazard area.

r·l0NDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1977

GETTING CLOSER

Trials Of An Indian Giver by Art Buchwald

WASHINGTON--The Unlted States made a terrlble mlstake many years ago when lt gave the Amerlcan Indians a lot of what lt con­sldered worthless land to llve on. It now turns out that thlS land has on It--and under It--one-thlrd of all the low-sulphur coal sUltable for strip mlnlng, about 55 percent of the natlon's uranlum and 3 or 4 percent of its oil and natural gas.

But the Indlans, lnstead of offerlng to glve the land back to the whlte man, have formed a Councll of Energy Resources and are plannlng to play hard ball when it comes to leases and mlning rlghts. No amount of persuaslon can make the Indlans realize that the whlte man had erred ln glvlng them the WRONG land.

A frlend of mlne went out to talk to an Indlan council mem­ber the other day.

He sald, "I come ln peace. Many moons ago our forefathers dld your trlbe a terrlble lnJustlce. We gave you land on WhlCh nothlng could grow and no anlmals could graze."

"We know about that," the Indian chlef replled. "Our geolo­glStS recently reported that the reason nothlng could grown on our land was that there was too much low-sulphur coal ln It.''

"Exactly. Slnce you are the descendants of these brave warrlors we wlsh to make amends and give you land that really has some value."

"You are very klnd, but we are happy wlth the land," the chlef sald. "The royalties from our uranlum deposlts wlll see us through many a cold winter."

"But mlnlng uramum is so degradlng for an Amerlcan Indlan,r' IT\Y frlend sald.

"We're not gOlng to mlne It,'' the Indlan chlef sald. "We're gOlng to let the white man do that. We're gOln9 lnto stock In­vestments, bonds and real estate. We mlght even buy a few In­surance companles, and Boardwalk and Park Place, lf they ever get those Atlantlc City caSlnos bUllt."

"But, Great Chlef, wouldn't your people be happier llvlng somewhere else besldes thlS vast wasteland of parched earth?"

"Do you know what's under that parched earth? Three or four percent of all the 011 reserves in the Unlted States. We're even thlnklng of JOlnlng OPEC and trYlng to persuade them to ralse the pnce of 011 to $15 a barrel."

"But what does an Indlan want wlth oll? Your horses and buf­fa 10 need fresh water."

"Our Cadlllacs and Lincolns don't. They have fuel lnJectlon and once you put antlfreeze in them they can go without water for a year. Actually, one of our plans lS to open a string of gas statlons wlth the brand name 'Flre Water' and start a multlmil­llon-dollar advertislng campaign wlth the slogan, 'Put an Apache ln your tank.' How does that grab you?"

"Before you make these hasty declslons, 0 Mlghty Chlef, let met tell you what we are wllllng to trade for your grubby reserva­tlons."

"I'm llstening." "What would you say lf I told you that the Unlted States

government lS prepared to make up for the terrlble treatles we made wlth you ln the past by glvlng you ln exchange for your land the followlng: the South Bronx, most of Watts ln Los Angeles, all the land on the SST approach to Kennedy Alrport and part of down town Cleveland."

"You woul d do that for the Amencan Indl an?" "It's the least we can do for all the paln and angulsh you

have suffered through the years." "I can't. gl ve you my answer now because I have to fly to Wash­

lngton ln a few mlnutes." "Why are you gOlng to Washlngton?" "I'm 10bbYlng for the gas deregulatlon blll." the chlef sald.

"How does Carter expect our people to dnll for gas when he's only offenng us $1.85 per 1,000 CUblC feet?"

PAGE 3

Prime Minister Menac"em Begin TEL AVIV (UPI) -- Prime Minlster Menachem Begln who has been

ln offlce only five months has achleved what no other Israeli prlme mlnister cou1d--the former underground fighter is the flrst Israe11 statesman to greet an Arab leader in Jerusalem.

Begln's polltical Skllls made him respond to what seemed at the tlme a Sllp-of-the-tongue by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, wlth an lnvitatlon to address the Knesset (parllament). Those Skllls were learned as a member of the Opposltlon for 29 years in Israel.

When Sadat accepted Begln's invltation. the bespectacled Begln. who wears a tie in the hottest of Mlddle East weather. re­sponded with characteristlc calm:

"I'm not exclted ••• ln the days before the state. when danger was all around me. I was the calmest person In the country."

Before Israel's creatlon ln 1948. Beg1n led a strident under­gound movement--the Irgun Zvel Leum1--that first retaliated against Arab ralders and then agalnst British mandatory authori­tles.

Begln. who arnved ln Palestine ln the uniform of a P011Sh cor­poral ln 1942, then became the No.1 target of the British with a $40.000 price on hlS head.

When Brltain ruled Palestlne, it had its general staff head­quarters at the Klng David Hotel ln Jerusalem. Begin ordered the blowing up of the hotel and the bomb attack killed 91--Britons Jews and Arabs.

In hlS book, "Revolt" Begln sald Britlsh authorities refused to heed a telephone warnlng to evacuate the buildlng before the blast.

Born ln Poland, Aug. 16, 1913, Begin was trained as a lawyer and became actlve ln the youth movement of Betar. the Revlsionlst Party founded by publlCist Zeev Jabotinsky. He became Jabotin­sky's closest confldant.

The revlsionlsts asplred to the creation of a Jewish state ln Palestlne that would reVlve--even by force--the ancient Jewish klngdom of Judah, WhlCh straddled the Jordan River.

They were opposed by the moderate soclalist-orlented Jewish leadershlp, includlng DaVld Ben-Gurion. Israel's first prime ml n i ster.

For 29 years, Begln led Israel's Llkud Party and even his most ardent supporters never believed that he would ever step out of the polltlcal wllderness of the Opposltlon.

But he dld May 17. though his upset V1ctory in the national electlons worrled polltlclans across the world because of hlS near-mystlcal bel1ef that Israel has a histor1c right to the oc­cupled West Bank of Jordan and the Gaza Str1p.

But llke Sadat, Begln showed he was decislve enough to embark on an unpopular course.

President Anwar Sadat Some Western dlplomats in Cairo bel1eve Anwar Sadat's deci­

Slon to V1Slt Israel and talk peace was as momentous and epoch­maklng polltlcally as his declsion to launch war against Israel ln October 1973 was mllltarlly.

They say both moves are typlcal of the man who rose from re­latlve obscurlty under hlS colossal predecessor. Gamal Abdel Nas­ser, to become presldent ln 1970.

Sadat, a firebrand revolutlonary ln hlS young days as an armY offlcer and member of the Nasser-led junta which overthrew the monarchy ln 1952, has acted w1th qreat courage at fateful stages of hlS tenure ln offlce. H1S bold strokes average one a year.

In 1971, he cracked down on a political clique of top of­flcials of the pollce-state Nasser era and ordered a general lib­erallzation at home.

In 1972, he summarlly expelled some 15,000 Sovlet milltary personnel to end Moscow's lnfluence in hlS country.

The fourth Mlddle East war came in 1973 by agreement between Sadat and Syrlan Presldent Hafez Assad.

Faced wlth a Sovlet arms embargo In 1974, Sadat decided to buy arms In the West desplte hlS depleted finances and the dlffi­cultles he antlClpated ln Western capitals worrled about the Mlddle East mllltary balance.

In 1975 Sadat re-opened the Suez Canal following an eight-year closure desplte failure of lnltlal negotiatlons for a second in­terlm peace accord wlth Israel. The agreement was concluded three months later.

And ln 1976, Sadat unllaterally abrogated his friendshlp and cooperatlon treaty wlth the Sovlet Unlon.

Then came hlS declslon to go to Israel and address the Knesset, flrst announced ln a parllamentary speech November 9. H1S aim, he sald, was "to break the V1C10US clrcle ln which Arabs and Israelis have been movlng for nearly 30 years."

He sald the confllct lS "70 percent psycholog1cal and 30 per­cent substance" and that hlS Jerusalem V1S1t was lntended to ellmlnate the psychologlcal problem.

Sadat, who wlll be 59 next Chr1stmas Day, has always descr1bed hlmself as a man of peace dedlcated to ending the Mlddle East con­fllCt and restorlng Arab umty. In pursuing these aims, he ahen­ated some fellow Arab leaders at some pOlnts but he went ahead wlthout worrYlng. He would later succeed in patching thlngs up wlth the Arab brothers.

It has happened agaln over the Israel tr1p. Syria, Iraq, Llbya and Palestlnlan factlons of the so-called Rejection Front openly opposed the move.

Baldlng and dark-sklnned and always nattily dressed, the pipe­puffl ng Sadat takes pr1 de 1 n bel ng of peasant stock. He has r e­peatedly exhorted Eqyptlans to ablde by "the ethics of the vil­lage," malntalnlng peasants lnstinctlVely know what is r1ght and what lS wrong and have thelr own strongly entrenched tradition.

Sadat was born Dec. 25,1918,in the tlny Nile Delta village of Mlt Abul-Kom.

"I am not asklng for collectlve approval from the Arab world to go to Jerusalem," Sadat sa1d. "I am gOln~ by IT\Y own choice."

, PAGE 4 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1977

KHS Nat;onal Honor Soc;e Inducts 12 New Members ..

The KwaJa1e~n H~gh School chapter of the Nat~ona1 Honor So­c~ety ~nducted 12 new members dur~ng a ceremony ~n the Mu1t~­Purpose Room on November 17.

New ~nductees, seated, left to r~ght: Les1~e Bursey, Franc~ne Gouve~a, Den~se Hauffe, K~m Koller, Dean M~tche11, Donna Corey, M~ke Hugq~ns, Wayne Marhefka, M~sty Meyers, Deb We~nberg, Maureen Welsh and Lauren W~ngate.

NHS members, stand~ng, left to r~ght: Tanya Hawk~ns, Secre­tary; Den~se MCG1~nn, Pres~dent; Greg Burke; L~nda Murakanu; J~m G~bbons; Mark Sah1; Karen Mart~ni Syb~l Gray, V~ce Pres~dent; Ted Hunter; Shelley Huffman; Carl Darrell; Kathy Mart~n; R~eneke Zessou1es and Candy Hergenrother, Treasurer.

Jeramon Non Kom * * Jeramon non kom ~s the Marshallese way to say "Goodbye and good luck, fr~ends."

by Sharon BEchtold

JAMES C. SCOTT, better known as "Scot­ty," 1 eft KwaJ Sunday, headed for Cl trus Helghts, Callfornla. Scotty has been on lsland for seven and a half years, work­ln9 for Global Assoclates as the Supply Warehouse Co-ordlnator.

Durlng hlS stay on KwaJ Scotty was a member of the Global ~anagement Club, and enjoyed snorkellrg, flshlng and photo­graphy. He says he lS looklng forward to loaflng untll the flrst of the year, and adds, "I hate to leave my many fnends on Ebeye and KwaJ."

**************************** *' * :: I usa Shows presents * ! Mr. J's JAMBOREE I ,* * * * * * * * * * * " * i ffl, musicru i :: variety :: * show * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * A fun-f~lled comb~nat~on of mus~c, * :: dance, comedy and beauty. * * Intermounta~n Beauty Queen MaJor~e t * Chr~st~ansen ]o~ns Jack~e Wood ~n a '* * s~ng~ng duo that presents h~ ts by Helen * :: Reddy, Capta~n and Ten~lle a.nd Tammy :: *Wynette. * * Bern~ce Sant~ago presents modern * ::Jazz danc~ng. * * Hand1~ng p~ano and keyboards ~s :: *Brent Johnston. * * Susan Er~cksen s~ngs love ballads * ::and current h~ts l~ke "H~gher and H~gh- * *er," and "Telephone Man." :: * Producer of the show ~s veteran * :: usa performer, "Mr. J," Eugene Je1esn~k 1: *who ~s a comed~an and v~ol~n v~rtuoso. *

* * # SQturday, Nov mb r 26 # :: 7:30 pm at th Rich :: * * : F" w d Sy Th Sneak :: ****************************

Faculty advisor ~s Mrs. Janet Kowalkowsk~.

J·5 Enters Drydock Tomorrow The Marlne Department advlses that the

J-5, the flshlnq boat, wlll be drydocked from November 22 untll December 28.

The Department also reports that the USNS Seallft Arablan Sea, a large tanker, arrlved early Sunday, dellverlng varlOUS petroleum products for KwaJaleln. Captaln Jlm Monogan brought the Arablan Sea In to the fuel pier.

Ho'i~ay long Distance Calls KMR provldes personal long dlstance

telephone serVlce to the malnland for all resldents, 24 hours a day. No approval lS requlred for credlt card or collect calls. ThlS serVlce lS normally aval1able by dlallnq "88."

Due to the 11mlted number of clrcults egresslng K~1R, the "88" dlrect dla1 capa­blllty wll1 be dlsabled between 0100 and mldnlght on November 2~. All long dlS­tance calls durlng thlS perlod wlll be booked through the KwaJa1eln operator, by dlallng "f'}. "

Due to antlclpated heavy trafflc dur­lng thlS perlod, please 11Mlt your calls to ten nlnutes.

A point to remember lS that the tele­phone systems on the maln1and wl1l also be saturated due to the ho11day traff1c. Calls placed a day or two before or after have a much better chance of be1ng com­pleted.

New fiction A t The library SHALL WE TELL THE PRESIDENT? by Jeffrey

Archer. There's a consplracy to k11l Pres1dent Kennedy, only th1S t1me 1t'S Teddy, elected 1n 1980 after Jlmmy Carter 1S den1ed renomlnatlon. The plotters 1n­c1ude a U.S. Senator, but WhlCh one? A llkely cand1date lS Senator Dexter, a strong opponent of the gun-control law E~K wants and w111 get -- unless he dles. Compl1cat10ns occur when FBI agent Marc Andrews, who lS 1nvestlgatlng the sena­torlal connectlon, gets 1nvolved wlth Dexter's daughter, a comely Washlngton physlclan. '~~arch 10, 1983 lS the day Ken­nedy 1S to be shot and there's a paqe-by­page countdown at the end.

Th1S 1S the novel responslble for Jackle Unassls' reslgnatlon as a consu1t-1ng ed1tor at V1klng Press.

KRAMER VERSUS KRAMER, by Avery Corman. Joanna Kramer's answer to that locked-ln fee11ng was to leave her husband and pre­school son for a 11fe of her own. Ted Kramer tells of h1S mlnute-by-m1nute ad­Justments to the cnses of slng1e parent­hood. Just when he has thlngs under con­trol, h1S w1fe brlngs SU1t to regaln cus­tody of the boy, wlth startl1ng results. An 1ntel11gently wrought novel Wh1Ch de­P1CtS the role of slng1e parenthood wlth conv1nclng ver;slri11tude.

Photo by Terry El1~ott, Kentron Photo Lab

No Matter Which Was 'first' It's The Spirit That Counts The flrst national Thanksglvlng, pro­

clalmed by President Abraham Llnco1n In 1863, was dur1ng the darkest days of the C1Vl1 War. The very flrst ThanksglVlng held by the Pi1grlms of Massachusetts, more than three centurles ago ln 1621, came at the end of a perlod of suffering dur1ng Wh1Ch almost half of the settlers dled. It lS strange that manklnd lS very seldom thankful durlng perl ods of plenty.

There was a Thanksgiving celebratlon In Jamestown, Va., several years before the more famous one at Plymouth. In June 1610, a serVlce was held by the emaclatid surVl vors of "the starv1ng tlme." Of some 490 co10n1sts who had been at Jamestown 1n the fall of 1609, only 60 were alive wlth the comlng of Sprlng.

These hollow-eyed surV1vors were about to abandon the settlement when news came that a ShlP bearing rellef supp11es was on ltS way. A thanksglving serVlce was held upon arrlval of the Sh1p.

Llncoln's 1863 Pres1dentla1 Proc1ama­t10n estab11shed the last Thursday in Nov­ember as a customary day for Thanksglvlnq, but 1t was not observed as a legal holiday lIntll 1941.

By 1939, however, the date had been so establlshed by custom that when Presldent Franklln D. Roosevelt moved Thanksgivlng Day to the second Thursday of November, many people observed both that day and the tradltlonal date. Among them was the Presl­dent h1mse1f, who admltted 11klng the idea of a double celebratlon.

Controversles over the "flrst Thanks­glvlng" stem from a fallure to d1stlnguish between the centurles-old custom of glvlng thanks for dlvlne favor at the harvest, and the part1cular characteristlCs of the nat10nal hollday WhlCh Amerlcans today celebrate as "Thanksglvlng."

Whatever ltS or191ns, lt lS the splrlt of the day that matters.

HOLIDAY CLOSING

THE FOLLOWING MERCHANDISING FACILITIES WILL BE CLOSED ON THANKSGIVING DAY, TIIURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24TH:

Ml\CY'S '1ACY • S EAST & ~VEST SURF"I'IY POST OFFICE LAUNDRY BARBER SHOPS BEAUTY SALON

TEN-TEN WILL BE OPEN FROM 9:30 A.M. - 12:30 P.M. ONLY.

MONDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1977

ANN LANDERS

Your Iftdividual Horoscope

=== Fruces Dnke=======~~=== FOR 'I1JESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1m

What kind of day WIll tamorrow be' To find out what &be ...... y, read the forecast atvlD for your birth Slin

mvenbveneas; heighten your lDlaglDabon. Much can be accomplished on a day like thia' SAGITrARIUS ..I..M (Nov 23 to Dec 21) jI['{~

DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some "kind soul" sent me a recent column of yours in the mall. Anonymous, of CQurse. This is not the first time I have received an anonymous letter on =21 to Apr 20) ~~ this subject. I can remain silent no A pod word from the right

Sudden, unupected moves, abrupt speech, unconvenUonal action could let you Into dlf­fIeulties and dI8turb the amootb acccmpllalunent you could have otberwtIe. Be alert' CAPRICORN 11'1 ~ (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) ~tI \\rf

longer. IIOUI'Ce'mayenable you to attain I know I have an unpleasant odor. I am tbereCOlPlitionyoubelleveyou

aware that I have been offending people ctu.ve now You have jut for years. It is an' awful feeling but I've C8U18foroptlmism.

learned to live with it. r:: to May 21) tig I have been to three doctors. They s.U.tactory pins indicated

Dey awaim YOUR move stellar Influences are fairly puerous, lilt you may run Into some complex situaUona which will require I!I:ceedlnsly good judjpnent to 801ve

suggested vari ous pill s, soaps, deodrants, lDpreaent undertakings but day anti-perspirants, and two baths daily. willnotballoodforatartingnew Nothing helps. ~ ~

.The last doctor mad: the most sense. ,He (May 22 to June 21) II~ sa 1 d about one person 1 n 100 has a chernl ca 1 Stars promise benefits from condition that produces a body odor that put efforts 88 well as sur-

AQUARIUS _~ (Jan 21 to Feb. 19) ........, ~

nothi ng can be done about. prIaIng developments - and I wi sh my fri ends and co-workers wi th achievement - in recently

Look to revttaUzed ambition and lofty inlpiratioo to help you put over moat Ideas and plana now A good day, underUranua' generous Influence the delicate noses had to walk in my body ~~areaa

for 24 hours. It woul d be interesting to (June 22 to July 23) at:) PISCES )(~

see how well they could suffer the slings You may encounter a few (Feb 20 to Mar 20) ~

MInor 88IJlBts and friendly 88SOCl8tea may be the blgest factol'8 on your SIde now With better-than-average mfluences, you can achieve more than you probably anticipate

and arrows of my -- Outraged Fortune. baffling situations Remain DEAR O.F.: I, too checked with three undisturbed, neither

, overanzioua nor careless. A doctors about the one ~n 100 theory and late-day inspiration should help none of them had heard about it. That ~s you clear things up not to say ~ t isn't correct. LEO J1,~

Two of my consultants ment~oned an odor (July 24 to AUS, 23) phob~a. It seems that certain ind~ v~duals A brand new financial start

Indlcated - acmmpanled by

YOU BORN TODAY are endowed with sreat phy81cal vitality, and mental vigor, too, You often surprise yourself, 88 well as others, at the power thrust of which you are capable. A stalwart soul, you can also be adamant and inflexible at tlDlea In emerllencies, you act swiftly and accurately. SImn tendencies toward overin­dulgence In pleasures, ex­CItement and gambllnll since, once the native of Scorpio takes to the "pt'lDlrOBe path," it is almost lmposalble for him to return to the mamatream of an orderly life Don't waste your potentialities, which are many - outstandingly In the theater, hterature, mualc, avlatioo and statesmanship Birthdate of Mary Ann Evans Cross (Georlle Eliot), Eng poet, novelist, Geraldine Page, Amer actreSl

who feel rejected by family or friends bi8h hopes, which CAN be imag~ne they don't smell right. They go reallzed, You must take the from doctor to doctor about the "problem." initiative, however - and No doctor can smell the odor they insist ~ently ~s present and offens~ve. The next step ~24 to Sept. 23) np~ ~s a psych~atrist. Mixed influences, mbed

DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have a beautiful daughter who has a great deal of talent and an outstanding personality. I learned only recently that she is ln love with another young woman.

I have tried to talk with her about it but she says she is very happy and doesn't want to discuss it any further. This is tearing me apart inside and I can't sleep at night. Being a self-sup­portlng wldow I must work and it is very hard to keep going with all thlS strain on me.

Do you know a good doctor in this Clty who can help my daughter get straightened out? -- Desparate In San Jose.

DEAR FRIEND: There is no way you can force a lesb~an to get "stra~ghtened out" ~f she ~s happy w~th her l~festyle. S~nce you are the one having the sleepless n~ghts, I sUigest counsell~ng to help you adjust to the situation. Also, cons~der ~nqu~r~ng about organizat~ons and groups for parents of gays who feel as you do. Check w~th Community Referral -- in the telephone book. From all reports, these groups have been ~mmensely helpful to many. And good luck, dear.

DEAR ANN LANDERS: In spite of the vlgorous campaigning against cigarette smoklng, I read where the inhabltants of the Unlted States are the heaviest cigar­ette smokers in the world. About 600 mil­lion cigarettes were smoked in our country last year at a cost of $13 billion. I'm writing to you since you have been one of the most anti-cigarette people in the country. What do you make of it? -­Baffled BenJle.

DEAR BAFF.: A lot of PS9ple th~nk "the worst" w~ll never happen to them -­it ~s always "the other guy" who gets ~t. Then, of course, there are the add~cts who are hooked and those who say, "Well, I have to d~e from someth~ng."

To them I reply, "For your sake -- I hope ~ t ~s something else." Lung cancer is a terr~ble way to go. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Are druqs okay if you learn to control them? Can they be of help? The answers are in Arm Landers' new booklet, "STRAIGHT OOPE ON DRUGS." For each booklet, send a dollar bill, plus a long, stamped (24¢) self-addressed envelope to: ANN LANDERS, POST OFFICE BOX 11995, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS ':.;611.

copyright, Fleld Enterprises, Inc., 1977

poIIibUlltlea How you react to opposition and unexpected obstacles will tell the tale

~ 24 to Oct 23) :a:n Don't walt too long before

makin& up your mlnd In mat­ters where the time element is Important Highly favored creative Interests, travel, romance SCORPIO "., ~_ (Oct. 24 to Nov 22) f7t("

Generous stellar Influences stimulate your adaptability and

MOVIES TONIGHT

RICHARDSON---TAKING OF PELHAM 1-2-3-----R MECK ISLAND--ISLANDS IN THE STREAM-----PG YOKWE YUK----SWEET HOSTAGE-------------PG IVEY HALL----NIGHT OF THE IGUANA-------PG TRADEWINDS---ONE ON ONE----------------PG

TUESDAY RICHARDSON---THE TERMINAL MAN----------PG MECK ISLAND--BRANNIGAN-----------------PG YOKWE YUK----LOVE AND DEATH------------PG IVEY HALL----SWEET HOSTAGE-------------PG TRADEWINDS---N~W YORK, NEW YORK--------PG

TELEVISION GUIDE

KwaJalem TONIGHT ON KWAJ

.. ROI-Namur

3:00 7:00 WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS 4:00 8'00 ASCENT OF MAN 5:00 9'00 McMILLAN & WIFE

TUESDAY 3:00 7:00 DONNY AND MARIE 4:00 8:00 CAROL BURNETT 5:00 9'00 POLICE STORY 6'00 10'00 M*A*S*H 6:28 10'28 NANCY WALKER

TONIGHT ON ROI-NAMUR 3:00 7:00 GOOD TIMES 3'28 7:28 MARY TYLER MOORE 4'00 8:00 ASCENT OF MAN 5:00 9:00 COLUMBO 6:17 10.17 SANFORD AND SON TUESDAY 3:00 7:00 NANCY WALKER SHOW 3:27 7:27 ODD COUPLE 4'00 8:00 CAROL BURNETT 5'00 9:00 POLICE WOMAN 6:00 10:00 SONNY AND CHER

59 00 53:00

100:00

54'00 54'00 53 00 27:00 25:00

26:00 27'00 53:00 76'00 23'00

26 00 27 00 54:00 54'00 54 00

PAGE 5

AT' WIT'S END By ERMA BOMBECK

This Jogging business has really gotten out of hand.

My street used to wake up lazily to chirping blrds, an occasional clatter of mllk bottles, and the gentle thud of a newspaper as it lodged in the bushes.

Not any more. Joggers in an assortment of shapes and stages of deterioration parade in front of our house 16 abreast like a Russian revolution. Cars zoom in and out, honking and screeching. Dogs bark and occasionally snap a thigh in their teeth. The sweat alone is enough to raise the humidity significantly.

My husband is one of them. He panted into the kitchen yesterday

where he grabbed either side of the sink, bowed his head and gasped for breath.

"I don't want to alarm you," I said, "but there is tire mark on your throat."

"It's not a tire mark," he said irrita­bly, "it's gym shoe treads. One guy was runnlng the wrong way."

"Couldn't he have stopped?" "And lose his rythm?" I pulled the draperies. "Look at 'em.

I haven't seen crowds like that since Bloomingdale's half-price sale on Christmas ornaments. It's not good for you."

"Who said?" "Dr. Peter J. Steincrohn said. He con·

tends jogglng is for horses. Listen to thl s," I said, grabbi ng the paper. 'Have you ever taken a good look at a jogger as he labors by? Look at his face. Have you ever seen a happy one? It's usually serious and contorted. If he's a masochist, he's having a great time. If he's like you and me, he's having a heck of a bad time.' He's right you know. Look at that guy ••• there's nothlng in his face but pain."

"That's because the turkey is running agalnst the traffic. You should never make eye contact with the driver of a car. Besides, you're just jealous because you don't have the discipline to get out there every morning and keep fit."

"You mean like the guy jogging along beslde you this morning with a cigarette dangling from his mouth?"

"He's awfully good with dogs, though. What you don't understand is that we Joggers share something special out there ... an esprlt de corps, so to speak. We're speclal and we know it. We're doing somethlng for our bodies and our country and it is worth everything we have to sacnfice. There is a name for it!"

"I know. We used to call it World War Two."

copyright, 1977 Field Enterprises, Inc.

DID YOU KNOW??????

Only 10 percent of American women can whistle!

-- President Franklin Roosevelt and hlS wlfe were fifth cousins!

-- Frogs and flies catch athlete's foot the same as people!

LITTLE PEOPLE'S PUZZLE

~ ~J/'-DOWH I

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PAGE 6 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1917

Spartans I And Leftovers Are Champions Of Women's Softball

Spartans I,Champ~ons of Women's Softball, are from left to r~ght, s~tt~ng: Jod~ Add~ngton, Lynn Darg~e, Franc~ne Gouve~a, Lesl~e Bursey, Danna D~hel, and Kelly Smoot. Stand~ng are: L~sa

Cataldo, Tanya Hawk~ns, D~ane Fellhoelter, Karen Fowler, K~m Pru­nest~ and Coach C~ndy Terw~ll~ger. M~ss~ng ~s Coach Debb~e Lull.

The Women's Softball Champ~on Leftovers from left to r~ght ~n the front row are: Mascots, Ronelle Kuratsu, Ke~th Alias and Stephan~e Dreher. In the second row are: Med~ng Buenaventura, Eleanor Kur­atsu, Phyll~s Saka~, Lee Alias, Judy Sumter, Marlene Bass and Juel Partr~dge. Stand~ng are: Coach Ron Kuratsu, G~nny F~nk, D~ane Lan­drett~, Carol Kapahu, Karen N~sh~mura, Carolyn Hag~hara, Joe Caskey

Photos by Terry Elll0tt and Larry Allen, and Coach Paul Alias. M~ss~ng are Coaches Bear Kapahu and Herb Kentron Photo,~L~ab~ ________________ ~N~~s~h~~~m~u~ra~. ________________________________________________ _

by Sharon Bechtold Saturday afternoon saw the completl0n of

the Women's Softball World Serles. The Leftovers defeated the Spartans 11,9 to 8 and the Spartans I got by Sunshlne 3 to 2.

In a replay of _gam~ two of the "B" LeC\que Women's World -Serles} the Leftovers came up Wlnners and champl0ns over the Spartans II. The evenly matched teams played a qood game wlth the flrst three lnnlngs scoreless. In the fourth lnnlng the Leftovers got a rally gOlng and scored flve runs. The Spartans II went ahead ln the flfth and the Leftovers took the lead ln the slxth. The Spartans II threatened ln the seventh lnnlng when they got then flrst two batters on base. l~lth no outs the next batter hlt a grounder to shortstop Marlene Bass who tagged the run­ner gOlng to thlrd and tossed to second for a heads up double play. The next batter flew out and the game ended. Carol Kapahu came up wlth two hltS for the Leftovers.

The Spartans II got a great defenslve play from Ila R1PPY when she came up wlth a nlce play ln the second lnnlng when she caught a 11ne drlve and threw to flrst base to catch the runner leadlng off. Klm Koller had three hltS for the Spartans II and Tracy Hatchell came up wlth a trlple.

The decldlng game between the Spartans I and Sunshlne was a well played defenslve game.

Kelly Smoot led off by hlttlng the ,fnst pltch of the game for I a trlple and was brought ln on a hlt by Franclne Gouvela for a 1 to 0 lead.

Dlane Lull led off the bottom of the thlrd wlth a home run to t1e the score. In the top of the fourth lnnlng Iwalam Carr connected for a home run wlth no one on base. Tanya Hawklns got a hlt and was brought ln by Leslle Bursey to make the score 3 to 1. The Sunshlne scored thelr last run when Debb1e Lull was brought ln on a hlt by Jean Brown.

Tanya Hawklns dld a superb Job at flrst base savlng several short throws by dOlng the SplltS. Iwalanl Carr caught a fly ball and threw to home pl ate to catch the runner comlng from thlrd. Dlane Fellhoelter, Fran­Clne Gouvela and Tanya Hawklns comblned for a second double play of the game.

Special Ser,ices A thletic Officials

Speclal SerVlces 1S lnterested ln re­crultlng adults wlth some experlence In basketball and soccer off1clating. Candl­dates are lnvlted to attend an organlza­tl0nal meetlng In the Speclal Serv1ces of­flce on Tuesday, November 22 at 7:00 rm. Speclflc dates for offlclals tralnlng cllnlcs ln basketball and soccer wl11 be established at thls tlme. Persons who have offlClated on KwaJ and want to work agaln must also attend thlS meetlng.

PRO FOOTBALL Chlcago vs DetrOlt at 8:00 am on Thursday Mlaml vs St. LOU1S at 8:JO am on Thursday

Men's World Series Results by Sharon Bechtold

The Men's Softball World Series open­ed yesterday on Brandpn Fleld with a good crowd enJoYlng the actl0n.

In the first game the Medlcare beat the Charge, 7 to 2 ln the opener of the "C" League M~n's Softball World Serles. The game was mostly a defenSlve effort but the Med'lcare came up wlth seven runs on nlne hltS lncludlng two home runs from Doc Holllday.

Defenslvely, Merle Dihel made a nlce stop at thl rd and threw to second for the thlrd out leavlng two men on base.

The Charge's Brlan Blanchard comblned wlth Monge Arlla and R1Ck Iosla for a double play, ln the flrst lnnlng. John Deandrels came up wlth two hltS for the Charge.

In the "B" Le'ague Men's Softball World Serles, the Drlfters shut out the Spartans ln another great defenslve ball game. The f1nal score was '5 to O.

Bob Wl111am dld a good Job ln left fleld comlng up wlth a great catch ln foul terrltory and maklng a long throw to second base, catchlng the lead off runner. Ron Webb comblned wlth Art Ml11et for an­other double play,

Offenslvely. Terry Strlcklln had a good day at bat hlttlng three for three and Jerry Cross came up wlth two hltS for the On fters.

Ted Hunter connected for a double and Dave Goss, Byron Sherwood and Mlke Kaholokula added a hlt each for the Spartans. Al Slms caught a fly ball and threw to home for the th1rd out and a double play for a go<;>d defenslVe effort.

In the "A" League Men's World Serles T1m Toblas led off the game wlth a home run to rlght f1eld for the Leftovers. The R1ders threatened only or,e t1me 1n the slxth 1nn1ng but were unable to tring a run across the plate.

The Leftovers scored one more run 1n the fourth 1 nm og and two 1 n the f1 fth for a flnal score of 4 to O.

On the defens1ve slde, T1m Tob1as made a runn1ng catch 1n r1ght f1eld for the Leftovers. D1Ck Thompson came up W1 th a great 11 ne drl ve catch for the R1ders and the shortstops for both teams, Frank Gouve1a and Jeff Beckley, made some good stops.

Tonlght on Brandon F1eld the Med1care take on the Charge 1n Game #2 of the Spec1al Servlces sponsored Men's Softball World Ser1es. Come out and J01n the crowd for more softball act10n.

MEN'S WORLD SERIES SCHEDULE TONIGHT 5:15 Med1care vs Charge Game #2 TUESDAY 5:15 Leftovers vs R1ders Game #2 WEDNESDAY 5:15 Spartans vs Dnfters Game #2

Top College Scores 1. Texas beat Baylor 29-7 2. Oklahoma was ldle 3. Alabama was ldle 4. Oh10 State lost to Mlch1gan 14-6 5. Mlch1gan beat Oh10 State 14-6 6. Notre Dame beat Alr Force 49-9 7. Arkansas beat S.M. U. 47-7 8. Pen State was 1dle 9. P1ttsburgh was 1dle

10. Nebraska was ldl~ 11. Arlzona State l~st to Colorado State

25-~4 12. Texas A & M beat T.C.U. 52-23 13. Flor1da State lost to San Dlego State

41-16 14. North Texas State beat Lou1sana Tech

41-14 15. Clemson beat South Caro11na 31-27 16. (T1e) North Carol1na beat Duke 16-3

(Tle) Texas Tech lost to Houston 45-7 (T1e) U.C.L.A. was 1d1e

lY. Iowa State beat Oklahoma State 21-13 (Only 19 teams recelved votes)

Team Tennis Results FRI DAY' S RESULTS

Lobsters 2 Strung Loose 2 Luvs 2 Lobsters 2

TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE '7:00 Strung Loose vs Double Trouble

Men's Soccer League There w1ll be a meet1ng of the coaches

and managers of all Men's Soccer teams on Tuesday, November 22nd at 6:30 pm 1n the Spec1al Serv1ces off1ce. Team representa­t1ves must present the1r team rosters at th1 s t lme.

Men's World Series

Ron Kuratsu, P1tcher for the Leftovers

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PAGE 7

DENNIS the MENACE

by joluuly hart

e>lfAMe A LDAF OF BREAD

~D A. IbllND OF B.A.LDNEY .' I OON'" CA~E IF ITS DAI<K ~ WHITE MEAT, LONG AS ITS A lJRfHlSTlCK,I'

ACROSS 45 Orgaruc DOWN 21 Word With

o 1 Pull compounds 1 Stunulatmg code or 4 Lettuce 47 Japanese 2 Flonda city servitude 7 Engme statesman 3 Irngate 23 Stare

~D'-''' 12 Wood sorrel 48 Pleasant to 4 Surpasses fiercely

14 Wlute poplar 52 One~ed 6 Caesar, (Pharm ) 15 Burmese fruit for one 25 Frost ?;rh, )~ 13 Bll'd In carat the taste 5 Declauns 24 Mllk

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---~:::::====::_::::::== -==:=:;;;:;========::::! demon 53 Teus 7 Beverage 26 Garden plot _----=:-r-.._ r- 16 Medieval shrine 8 Large 28 Baseball

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ANDY CAPP

OLSON, WE 5140ULD AAVE GUf55fO'-rnEY WILL PEro~TE ll105E PLA5TlC POPOVERS gy l\:EMorr CONWI.

I DON', UNI7~RsrANt:' I, ••. we: KNIW WHE:RE: Tl-II:: ';:N~MY CAMP~S,WESWOOPt:'OWN ON II IN A SURPRISE: A1'fACK, AND FINt:' EVERYONe: 8ONI!!

vassal 54 Paddle sash great lords 55 Netherlands 9 Denary 30 Arumalln

18 Island In commune 10 Shout at caper mlles 56 ForUflcaton flamenco 31 Resort In

19 Declare 57 Nautical dances despair 20 Freshwater cham 11 Start for 32 Elevator

flSh 58 Word With pond or tore cage 22 Nlgenan carpet or 17 On the 33 - Baba

tnbe cedar summit 36 Sight In 23 Fhppant Ava •• olnUoD dme' %7 mID Sicily 27 Dawn 37 Amencan

goddess poet 29 Emperor's (0 Automaton

residence 42 Eatery 31 Meager 43 Musical

~~~~~~~~~~~ 34 Strode back study r and forth 44 Observed

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STCPSA!?E NICe

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I"MfJSE[J 7lJ WING IT

IN FRONT OF 8fJ/?NING TANkS,

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by Reggie Smyt~

35 Mental 45 Jacket or relish collar

37 Mal de - 48 Withered 38 Seed 48 Start for

covenng take or boil 39 Start for 49 Pub order

ad or dent 11-21 50 Boy 41 Paradise Answer to Fr~day' s Puzzle51 Chalice

They'll Do It Every Time A F/?IENO I'AJ.lS IV ~fT7EI?'S ItO{JSE ANO FM' POOH·POOIfS HIS ~'S PAIN

4,~ t.£T FRIT P'lfl~ STUB HIS CORN ON SQI.1EONE ElSE's /?EAL ESTATE· HEI?E (;'(WE THE JUtJ6E1

~ t" JIWoES CAf?fY. 27 CRANSTON RO'ID. KENDALL Al\I/K./J :r

JUST A umE SLIP -Ijt)(,/'RE OI<AI{·-/...ET'S HA'fl: A DRINK­HA-HA" NOTHIN' T'GET E,XCIiEP

MOUT HfH-HEH'

PAGE 8

FOR SALE FOOD GRINDER - llke new; celllng llght fixtures, perfect to lllu~inate dark trallers. Call 82296. 225/2t

STEREO SYSTEM - AM/FM, turntable, 8-track tape player and speakers, complete outfit only $200; 2 blue rugs w/frlnge, $5 each, 1 48" round, 1 33"x48". Please call 82689. 225/2t

GENUINE WOOL FLOKATI RUG, off whlte, ap­proxlmately 9'x12', needs cleaning. Call Sharples, 84100 for lnfo. 224/2t

SHOE-GO-ROUND CADDY, holds 18 pro shoes, llke new, now only $9~ Call 82762 after 5 pm weekdays, any tlme on weekends. 224/2t

WANTED ACCOUNTING INSTUCTOR - Unlverslty of Hawail KwaJ Extenslon - Minlmum requlre­ment usually a Masters Degree ln account­ing and/or flnance. If interested call Mrs. Ruth Gronosky, Adult Education Center, 82800. 225/3t

PSYCHOLOGY INSTRUCTOR - Unlverslty of Hawall Extension - minlmum requlrement Masters Degree ln psychology. If interested call Mrs. Ruth Gronosky, Adult Education Center, 82800. 225/3t

COMMUNITY NOTICES THE ETAWI CIRCLE of the Chrlstlan Women's Fellowshlp meets tomorrow morning at 9:30 am ln the home of Mlldred Rembert, 215-A. Mrs. Allce Buck wlll tell of her exp~rlences as the daughter of a mlssion­ary ln Micronesla. All lnterested women are invited to attend. 225/1to

COME AND ENJOY THE Lord wlth us! Charls­matic prayer meetlng and Blble study every Tuesday evenlng at 7'00 pm ln Qtrs. 403-E. 225/2tpw

PRE-SCHOOL STORY TIME - every Tuesday mornlng at 10 am at the Special Services' Grace Sherwood Llbrary. All three- and four-year-olds are welcome. 225/1tpw

CATERING ORDERS for the PDR and Bakery must be placed at least 48 hours prlor to dellvery date, and are subject to workload limitatl0ns. Orders may be placed by call­ing 83425 weekdays from 9 to 11 am or 1 to 4 pm. 225/1tpw

DALLY COURTS ONE AND TWO are reserved for the Kwajalein Assoclation of Teachers on Nov. 25 from 8 am to 11 am. 225/3t

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS - Call 83505 weekdays, 81212 evenings, holidays and weekends.

(COMMUNITY NOTICES CONTINUED)

VISIT KANGROO COUNTRY wlthout leavlng KwaJ. The Adult Educatlon Center offers resldents this opportun1ty at 7'30 pm, Wednesday, Nov. 23 at the Communlty Cen­ter when Robert Sver West1n of Honolulu wlll present a f11m travelogue on Aus­tralla and New Zealand.

According to Weston, th1S l~-hour pro­gram w111 lnclude two films. One 1S "BIG COUNTRY, BIG WELCOME," and covers all six states of Australia, lnclud1ng the Great Barrier Reef. The other is "AMAZING NEW ZEALAND," Wh1Ch covers the major clties of Wellington, Chrlstchurch, and Aukland, as well as ski resort of Mt. Cook, flshing ln New Zealand and the beaches of this large 1s1and, down under. That's Wednesday night, 7:30 pm at the Community Center'

BOATER'S NOTICE' As part of boat licensing procedures requ1red by Global Procedure 1090, a Boating Safety Or1entation must be attended prlor to a boat llcense belng lssued. There w1l1 be an orlentatlon seSS10n conducted tomorrow night at the Community Center at 7'00 pm. All persons who are currently working on or planning on getting a boat 11cense should attend one of these seSS10ns. Famllies are in­vlted as boat1ng safety 1nvolves all mem­bers of the boating party, not just the operator. All presently llcensed boat operators and thelr famllies are invited to attend. ThlS is not requlred to keep your license. For further lnformation call 83506 during worklng hours. 225/2to

T*O*P*S MEMBERS past, present and potenti­al' there will be an lmportant meetlng ln the Girl Scout Hut Wed. at 6.30 pm after the weigh-in at the liospltal from 6.10 to 6'25. We are consldering canceling the national affl11ation and becoming a local weight-control group wlth weekly weigh-ins and a monthly meetlng. Please come and share your feelings on this matter Wednes­day nlght at 6.30 pm at the Glrl Scout Hut. 255/3t

CHANUKAH CANDLES are now available. Call Sharen Sherman at 82296. 225/3t

THAnKSGIVING DINNER AT THE YY CLUB , 3'30 - 9:00 pm

SALAD BAR ROAST TURKEY or BAKED HAM HAWAIIAN

SAGE DRESSING WHOLE KERNEL CORN CRANBERRY SAUCE GIBLET GRA VY

MASHED POTATOES SWEET POTATOES

m~nce p~e, pumpk~n pie, or fru~t cake coffee, tea or ~ced tea

ADULTS' $4:75- CHILDREN UNDER 12' $3.00 Reservat~ons are recommended - Call 83419 NO FOOD SERVICE AFTER 9:00 PM. NO REGULAR MENU SERVICE. _TV WILL BE SHOWN IN THE

BAR LOUNGE ONLY'

Clip and Save----

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1977

---------------------.,.. __ ","" .. 1-I:, .. 1\1t if _ ~ ... ---., 1 r:J_OU. ~~ ,

The HourG/a .. IS publIShed by Global A .. oclalel Monday'

through friday at ,h. d,rection 01 'he Commander, KWG,o/.,n'

MIS"/e lange, Marshall "'and" und.r conlracl DASG ,

60·75·C-0001 The VleWI and oplnlonl expr .... d In Ih. I newlpaper are nol n.ce .. a"Iy Ihole of Ih. D.parlmenl of Ih. :

Army Thll newspaper, an unoffICial pub'lCo"on authorized t under Ihe prOVISIon, of conlrael DASG60-75-C-0001, I IS reproduced by 0"'.' printing i ,

Commun,ca"onl ,IIou/d b. add,eued '0 'h. HourG/olI, ,

80x ,733, APO San FrancISCo, Ca"fornla 96555, or by ,

callIng 8-3539 I , Ma'."a'. appearing ,n the HourGlau may no' b.'

r.p"nl.d wllhoul Ih. approval of Ih. Command.r, Kwa,a/.,n:

:~.~; ::r:·8028 AI::::'r:':; :O:~,n::,,::' '::'~b~::;'~:'''·d t JIM WA TT, Ed/lor

, , PAT CATALDO, Anoclal. Ed,lor, ,

SHARON 8ECHTOLD, Sporll, SANDRA LLOYD, Typ .. ' ,

I-----_--,---,--,--~-----,

(COMMUNITY NOTICES CONTINUED)

THE MIC-SHOP has some books of local in­terest that wl11 make really good Christmas presents. Come by and take a look.

EMON LODGE #179 will hold a stated meetlng tonight. All Master Masons are requested to attend. 224/2to

BARGAIN BAZAAR NEEDS all of your discarded clothes, toys and household items. Please call 84728, 82785 or 82233 for a pick-up.

ART GUILD SUPPLY LOCKER is open Tuesdays from 8 to 9 pm at Bldg 1051. For further lnformatlon call Denton Mitchell at W-82065 or H-82418. 224/3t

NOMINATIONS FOR KCT'S new board are now being taken by Bobbi Barclay. If you are lnterested ln one of the maln offices or one of the three "at large" offlces, please call 82764 after 6:00 pm. 223/3t

NIKE FLYING CLUB. Recently received FAA fl1ms on the subjects of-wake turbulence and safety and survival will be presented at the next meeting of the ~ike Flying Club, this evening at 7.00 pm in Room 202 of the KwaJaleln High School. New members and interested vlsitors are welcome. KwaJalein alr trafflc control procedures and club alrcraft care and handllng will also be dlscussed. 223/3t

IF YOU HAVE NOT received your newspaper by 5 30 pm on normal working days, please call 83539 after that time, and a copy wlll be dellvered to your quarters a few minutes after 6:00 pm. 225/an

New Schedule for Receipt And Dispatch Of U.S. Mail At Kwaialein Post Office

~ Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Fn day

Saturday

Sunday

Receipt

From Hlckam AFB Ponape/Truk/Guam

Hono 1 ul u/MaJ uro

Hlckam AFS Ponape/Truk/Guam

Hono 1 ul u/'1aJ uro

Hl ckam AFB Ponape/Truk/Guam

Honolulu/Majuro

No Fllght

A1 rcraft r~AC

Al r Ml c

Ai r N1C

1·1AC Alr M1C

Alr M1C

r"1AC Alr Ml c

Alr M1C

Estlmated Arn val

Tlme ll-:OOam 10 09 pm

12 '36 pm

11 '00 am 10 09 pm

12 36 pm

11 00 all]

10 '09 pm

12 36 pm

Letter mall wl11 be processed on arrlval. All other mall that arrlves after the regular duty hours of the Post Offlce wlll be processed the follovllng day.

~ r40nday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Fn day

Saturday

Dispatch

From Hlckam AFB Honolulu/Majuro

Ponape/Truk/Guam

Hlckam AFB Honolulu/Majuro

Ponape/Truk/Guam

Hlckam AFB Hono 1 ul u/MaJ uro

Ponape/Truk/Guam

Sunday No Flight

Alrcraft ilAC

Alr M1C

Al r Ml c

MAC Alr M1C

Alr Ml C

MAC Alr M1C

Air M1C

Mall Closeout

Tlme 9-:DOam 4:30 pm

10 00 am

9 00 am I 4 30 pm

10:00 am

9'00 am 4.30 pm

10'00 am

Reglstered mail to and from the U.S. lS not received or dlS­patched on Air Mlcronesla. Reglstered mall must be at the Post Offlce by the close of bUSlness the day before the dlspatch to be included in the next day's dlspatch.

Usua 1 ly, Alr r'11 crones 1 a wl11 ta ke 1 etter mall and pri orl ty mall; MAC wlll take Registered mall and SAM mall.