Colonel Davis` retirement highlights monthly ceremony

Transcription

Colonel Davis` retirement highlights monthly ceremony
•
Published in the interest of the personnel of White Sands Missile Range
~olume 23-Number 47
Four split $655
for suggestions
saving $6,690
Suggestion award checks
totaling $655 have been
presented to four persons
through the U.S., Army Incentive Awards Program at
White Sands Missile Range.
The four adopted suggestions
are saving the government
$6,690 annually in costs of labor
and materials and are
resulting in other benefits.
John H. Kopf of El Paso,
employed in the Movement
Services Division of Logistics
Directorate, received a $255
award. He suggested installation of a multi-dial
telephone and intercom system
in the division, which now
handles approximately 500
calls daily. The idea is saving
the government about $4,067
per year through greater efficiency and reduced manhours.
A $155 award went to Chief
Warrant Officer Jerry D.
Dickson of Alamogordo, a
e branch chief with WSMR's
Army Air Operations Directorate at Holloman Air Force
Base. He suggested an improved procedure for inspecting fuel cells in OH-58A
helicopters. The change is
saving
the
Army
approximately $752 annually in
labor costs and is resulting in
reduced maintenance and
inspection time for the
helicopters and their ground
tlcrews.
'
John D. Westbrook of
Alamogordo, also employed
with Army Air Operations
Directorate, received an
award of $145. He designed a
new tool for use in removing
tail rotor drive shaft bearings
on OH-58A helicopters. Use of
the tool expedites replacement
of the bearings, saving the
government about $1,871 annually.
A $100 2ward was presented
to Robert G. Starman of Las
Cruces, employed in the
Civilian Personnel Division. He
suggested a new format for
personnel management
statistical reports made to
higher headquarters. The new
format speeds up reporting
procedures and provides more
useful dat ... for personnel officials in higher headquarters.
White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico
Colonel Davis' retirement
highlights monthly ceremony
•
e
e
e
JOIN THE SCOUTS - Girl Scout Marsha Pyland, Troop 148
and Boy Scout Ronnie Poe, Troop 74 hang the first of many
posters to go up around post announcing the Scouting membership drive. All boys and girls, second grade through senior
high school are eligible for Scouting. More information may be
obtained by calling CW4 Marshall Pyland or Mrs. Pyland at 6783253.
Important briefings on the replaces the Retired SerSurvivor Benefit Plan (SBP), vicemen's Family Protection
of special interest to all Plan <RSFPP) entirely, except
military
personnel
ap- for certain retired personnel or
already
parproaching retirement or survivors
recently retired, are scheduled ticipating in the RSFPP, at
at 1 p.m. Friday, March 2, in their option.
The March 2 program is
the Briefing Room at the
WSMR Army Education expected to last one hour.
Effects of the Social Security
Center, Building 464.
The program also will be of offsets and Veterans Adindemnity
interest to dependents of ministration
military personnel nearing compensation offsets on the
retirement or recently retired. ·new SBP will be outlined.
In charge of the program will
It is being held for the benefit
of those living at WSMR and in be Bill Montgomery, Project
Transition
and
Army
the Las Cruces area.
The Survivor Benefit Plan Retirement Services officer
was enacted into law effective with the Training Division of
Sept. 21, 1972, under Public Personnel, training and Force
Law 92-425. This new program Development Directorate.
Other speakers will include
Bill Brown, Social Security
Administration representative
from Las Cruces, and Jack
Valencia,
Veterans
Adm in is tr at ion
contact
representative for the Las
Cruces area.
In announcing the briefing
because of its long whip-like session, Montgomery stressed
tail that "thumped" everyone the importance of the new
and everything in sight, the Survivor Benefit Plan to all
pup took it upon herself to help retired military personnel and
raise the Brimm 's son Todd, those approaching retirement,
now 31 2, and their Siamese cat, as well as their families.
"Baby."
"We have been getting many
"Thumper worked her way questions concerning this new
into our hearts within months," . program and its many supChief Brimm says. "She helped plemental benefits," MonTodd with his first steps when tgomery said. "Apparently
he was learning to walk, she there is quite a bit of confusion
protected the kitten from dogs about it.
in the neighborhood, and
became a very alert watchdog .
"Published · by the Zia
She also helped me with my
Newspapers, Las Cruces,
hunting and fishing."
New Mexico, a private firm
Fishing? "Sure," says
in no way connected with the
Brimm . "I had her out along a
Department of the Army.
salmon stream one day, and
Opinions expressed by the
the salmon began to roll in the
publisher and writers herein
water and jump. Thumper
are their own and are not
acted as though she wanted to
considered to be an official
hop in after them, so I gave her
expression by the Departthe nod. She landed three nice
ment of the Army. The apsilvers within minutes."
pearance of advertisements
Thumper also became very
in this publication does not
adept at flushing and
constitute an endorsement
recovering Ptarmigan, a
by the Department of the Argrouse common in Alaska .
my of the products or serChief Brimm, a native of
vices advertised."
compassion
By Ed White
A moment of compassion
shown by a U.S. Navy sailor
while stationed on Kodiak
Island off the coast of Alaska in
C 970 has resulted in a love
,.ffair that continues today in
3
the desert of New Mexico.
Chief Petty Officer Glenn
Brimm, now assigned to White
Sands Missile Range's Naval
Ordnance
Missile
Test
Facility, claims he just wanted
to remove a piece of rope from
the neck of a young pup that
day on Kodiak . "I sure wasn't
thinking of adding to my
family," he says.
• But that's the way things
turned out. Chief Brimm,
assigned to a Naval Support
Activity on Kodiak, removed
the tightened rope from the
pup's neck and then returned to
his car. But the pup jumped
into the car first. "I put that
dog out, but then it followed the
car," he says. "I finally had to
pick it up."
Tiie young Husky-Labrador
soon ingratiated herself into
e he family . Named "Thumper"
White Sands Missile Range's
former chief of staff headed a
list of 11 Army retirees, and a
helicopter
flight
young
engineer received three
medals earned in Vietnam, at
the
range's
monthly
retirement and awards review
Thursday morning (Feb. 22).
Sixteen men received medals
from the range commander,
Major General Arthur H.
Sweeney Jr., during the
ceremony. The medals, earned
in Vietnam, Korea, Europe,
Taiwan and the U.S., ranged in
ranking from the Legion of
Merit to the Army Commendation Medal.
Colonel Walter R. Davis, who
plans to retire in the Las
Cruces area, came to the
national range in November
1970 to be director of Personnel, Training and Force
Development. He became chief
of staff in July 1971 and deputy
for support and chief of staff in
September 1972. He received
the Legion of Merit upon
retirement.
_Specialist Four James C.
Burks, 23, now assigned to the
range's
Air
Operations
Directorate, was awarded the
fourth and fifth oak leaf
clusters to the Air Medal for
meritorious achievement while
participating in aerial flights in
the support of combat ground
troops in Vietnam during
August and September 1972. He
also received the Vietnamese
Gallantry Cross for flying
combat missions in support of
Republic of Vietnam troops
while under heavy anti-aircraft
ground fire in 1972.
Other retirees from active
Army duty, and the medals
awarded, included Major
Charles G. Baldwin (Army
Commendation Medal First
Oak Leaf Cluster); Chief
<Continul'd
on Pa ge Xl
\
Warrant Officers Ted A. Medals,
awarded
for
Taylor <Army Commendation meritorious service, went to
Medal Second Oak Leaf Sergeants First Class Albert D.
Cluster), Charles R. Nelson Elzey Sr. <second Oak Leaf
and Rufus H. Chisholm; Cluster) and Thomas W.
Sergeant Major Albert Mont- Doncaster <First Oak Leaf
bleau; Master Sergeant Paul Cluster) ; Staff Sergeant
R. McManus · Sergeant First George B. Hinds <First Oak
' Class Earl A~ Hoover (Army Leaf Cluster); Sergeant Terry
Commendation Medal Second L. Copeland; Specialist Six
Oak Leaf Cluster)· and Staff Jimmie R. Lands; Specialist
Five Robert M. Gardner; and
Sergeant Joseph A.' Olive.
Specialists Four Stanley G.
Specialist Four Elijuh Lyons Hueske and Kenneth J. Smith.
Jr., received the Air Medal for
meritorious achievement while
Sergeant
Earnest
M.
participating in sustained Easters, White Sands Missile
aerial flight in support of Range's Soldier of the Month
combat ground forces in the for February, received a $25
Republic of Vietnam from Aug. Savings Bond and a certificate
23, 1972, to Sept. 16, 1972.
of achievement at the
Army Commendation ceremony.
Deputy comptroller, R.A.Souter
retiring today after 36 years
Raymond A. Souter of Salt
Lake City entered civil service
at Ft. Douglas, Utah, in 1937 at
the age of 21. He is retiring
Feb. 23 as deputy comptroller
at WSMR after 36 years of
military and civilian service.
Souter's only break in service - just two weeks - was in
1945 after 39 months in the U.S.
"We will answer many of Army during World War II. He
these questions at the briefings is being credited with nearly 37
on March 2," he concluded. years of service for retirement,
"We strongly urge all those due to an accumulation of 2,523
subject to this new Survivor hours of unused sick leave.
Benefit Plan to attend this
The Salt Lake City native,
briefing session."
now of 9914 Audobon St. in El
Paso, has been deputy comptroller since last October .
From 1959 to 1972 he served as
chief of the Budget and
Programs Division.
The Dona Ana County
A 1934 graduate of South
Chapter of the American Red High School in Salt Lake City,
Cross is planning a series of Souter attended business
classes on child care, of special college there in 1935. He served
interest to expectant parents, it in the Civilian Conservation
was announced this week.
Corps in 1936. Employed as a
The first session will be held commissary buyer at Ft.
for two hours starting at 7:30 Douglas from 1937 to 1942, he
p.m. Thursday, March 1, in the was responsible for providing
Chapter House. A schedule for rations for 50 CCC camps in
the remaining 10 hours of the Utah and Nevada.
course will be drawn up at that
In early 1942 he transferred
time.
to Hill Army Air Field (now
New SBP to be explained
at briefings here Mar. 2
••Love affair b egan
~ith
Friday, February 23, 1973
Red Cross sets
child care class
Hill AFB), near Ogden, Utah,
where he and one helper
established the field's first
commissary.
Souter entered the Army
later in 1942 and served as a
supply sergeant with the 1st
Armored (Old Ironsides)
Division. Most of his Army
service was overseas in
Northern Ireland, England,
North Africa and Italy.
After his two-week break,
Souter was hired for an
assignment in supply and
property disposal at Utah
General Depot, also near
Ogden.
Back at Ft. Douglas from
1946 to 1949, he again was
employed with the commissary. He again served at
Hill AFB from 1949 to 1952, this
time in consecutive jobs in
accounting, manpower
management and management
analysis.
Souter transferred to WSMR
in September 1952. He served
first as a management analyst.
Then in 1953, under Comptroller Samuel Teitelbaum
<now retired and living in
Tucson, Ariz.) and the late
Brig. Gen. George G. Eddy,
Raymond A. Souter
Souter helped to establish the
first cost accounting system at
WSMR. He served as chief of
the Cost Accounting Branch
from 1953 to 1957, and chief of
the Accounting Office from
1957 to 1959.
During his 2011<! years at
WSMR, Ray Souter advanced
from GS-7 to GS-14 and earned
a number of performance
<Continued on Page Ii l
Motorcycle Club offers varied
programs for bike enthusiasts
As Spring makes its appearance in New Mexico many
of the activities that go with
warm weather in the Southwest also appear.
One of the most popular in
this area is motorcycling in one
of its many forms. Unfortunately here on post, there
continue to be violations of
motorcycle rules, despite the
tremendous facilities provided
for bike riders.
On the road toward the El
Paso gate there are four areas
set aside solely for the use of
off-the-road bikes.
These areas, according to
Gary Parrish, president of the
White Sands Motorcycle Club,
offer the off-the-road rider
everything he could want to
sharpen and challenge his
riding ability .
One area, and all areas are
clearly marked, is desert,
grass and hummocks. Another
is rocky and provides a real
challenge to the off-the-road
riders. There are also sandy
areas, trails and wide open
spaces - everything for the
biker.
Closer to home, there is an
area just west of the Navy
compound provided for the
minibikes. Provisions have
been made to allow the minis to
cross roads to get to that area
even through they are not
usually allowed on the paved
surfaces.
For other types of bike activity, the post club provides an
outlet. Last summer they
sponsored road tours and a
trail ride to Cloudcroft. The
area around Cloudcroft offers
an outstanding spot to run the
bikes through different trails.
They also traveled to Las
Cruces, where they spent a day
off-the-road riding with area
motorcycle clubs . Though
there is nu organized affiliation
between the various motorcycle clubs, there is informal
contact and the clubs invite
each other to their events.
Parrish calls the club a place
for fun and safety . On the
safety end, the club sponsors
defensive driving classes, free
of charge, for all personnel at
the range. The eight hours of
instruction includes several
hours of classroom work and
several hours of practical
exercise . The course is accredited by the Navy Safety
C~nter and is a requirement for
all Navy riders on post. It has
been extended to allow interested Army anrl Air Force
personnel to attend.
Post regulations do not
require any safety program
completion for motorcycle
licensing, and according to the
Provost Marshal's office, the
post regulations follow the New
Mexico regulations very
closely.
There are some places
around the housing area that
are off limits to motorcycles.
These include all service roads
on the north, west and southwest perimeter of the housing
area and the manmade levee
around the west and south
sides of the golf course.
There have been complaints
about riders using these areas
and the Provost Marshal has
instructed the Military Police
to check the areas and cite
violators.
Continued violations of
motorcycle regulations can
only lead to implementation of
stricter regulations, and that
would hurt all bike riders.
•
•
PAGE 2 ·WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23, 1973
..·
,,,.......
.,f'- ,
Policies and statements in the news and editorial ~olumns are
not necessarily those of the Department of the Army or an endorsement by the Department of the Army of the products or
services advertised.
• ~h.e White S~nds. Missile Ranger is published weekly as a
c1v1han enterprise m the interest of the military and civilian
personnel of White Sands Missile Range, N.M"., by Zia
Newspapers, Box 51, Las Cruces, N.M. 88001.
All news matter for publication should be sent to the Information
Officer, White Sands Missile Range, N.M., telephone 678-2716. For
advertising phone 526-9012 in Las Cruces; 565-8663 or 565-2561 in El
Paso; 546·2611 In Deming.
Press service material is not copyrighted or syndicated and may
be reprinted or reproduced without further permission provided
proper credit is given.
This newspaper is not an official or semi-official Department of
Defense publication.
All pictures are by White Sands Missile Range photographers
unless otherwise stated.
Everything advertised in this publication must be made
available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to sex,
race, creed, color or national origin of the purchaser, user or
p<:itron . A confirmed violation or rejection of this policy· of equal
opportunity by an advertiser will result in the refusal to print
advertisino from that source.
Whose pie?
Many whites are afraid of physical violence from blacks.
Many blacks are afraid of hassles from whites. We are all
afraid because we don't understand what is happening in the
world around us.
Mariy blacks are afraid of the white superiority complex.
Many whites are afraid that blacks want a piece of their pie.
That's where the problem comes in. Because it's not the whites'
pie at all . The pie belongs to everybody in the United States
who's willing to work for it. The black man wants an equal
share for an equal amount of effort and he hasn't been getting
it.
Whites also think that the black person hasn't been getting it
and this might be the one place where whites and blacks agree.
But it's also the point of departure for their basic difference.
The difference is the black man wants his share of the pie; not
more than his share and not somebody else's pie. The white is
concerned that if the black gets a bigger share, he (the white)
will have to give up part of his share.
The fact of the matter is, there's plenty of pie for everybody
and the pie can be made bigger if we allow more people a
chance to help it grow. This is what Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
tried to accomplish in his lifetime - create an understanding
that there was enough pie for everyone. The black doesn't want
a handout, but he does want equal opportunity to get at the pie.
Everyone can benefit. The bigger the pie, the bigger each piece.
Even if more people share it the individual benefit is greater.
We can't begin to understand what makes each person tick.
It's difficult to overcome prejudice, myth, legend, and
stereotype, but there's one thing we can all do and that's make
the pie bigger. Equal opportunity for blacks means greater
opportunity for whites. Take a moment and learn to know your
brother a little better - eat a piece of pie with him. Don't be
afraid. (AFNS)
••••
5:30 p.m.
Free Buffet Supper - 6 p.m.
Dance with "Rio" - 8 to 11
p.m .
Sunday
"Oldies and Goodies"
Record Review and Chess
Tournament - 11 a.m.
Hospitality Hour Buffet - 4
p.m.
Discotheque Time - 6 p.m.
The Chess Club meets each
Tuesda y at 8 :30 p.m ., and
Conversational Spanish class
m eets e ach Tuesday at 7: 30
p.m.
1 MCA-P.S.Q
5"JIM~Vs
Tonight
Chess Club - 7 p.m.
Discotheque Time - 8 p.m.
Tomorrow
Coffee House Happenings 2 p.m .
Pool Tournament - 3 p.m.
Conversational Spanish - 4
p.m.
Folksinger Lynn Sholly -
*-
(~ -· · ~
- --=-- t .
~.
TONIGHT
DOUBLE FEATURE
CATHOLIC SERVICES
"THE KILLING OF SISTER
Sunday Mass - Post Chapel at
GEORGE" (R) -The sensitive
9a.m., Sierra Chapel at 11 a .m.
darkly humerous look at an
Saturday Mass - Post Chapel
againg English actress at the
at 9 a .m. and 6 p.w.
end of her rope.
Weekday Mass - Sierra
"STRAW DOGS" <R) Chapel at 11 : 30 a .m. Monday
Dustin Hoffman moves his
through Friday.
English wife to a farmhouse
Confessions - One-half hour
outside a seemingly quiet
before each Mass.
Cornish village. Their placid
Baptisms - Call 678-2615 or
life is interrupted when they
2740 to make arrangements.
discover the savagery and
Catechism classes - Kinviolence they sought to escape
dergarten through eighth
is about to engulf them .
grade begin each Saturday
TOMORROW
with 9 a .m . Mass: classes for
"TRINITY IS STILL MY
grades 9 through 12 held each
NAME" <G> Brothers
Monday at 7 p.m . in Post
Trinity and Bambino are
Chapel classrooms.
bribed to leave town by a crook
GESERALPROTESTANT
named Parker who has
SER\' ICES
mistaken them for federal
Sundays - Sierra Cha pel at 8
agents. They uncover a plot by
a .m . and 7 p.m.
Parker to smuggle guns to
Sundays - Post Chapel a t 11
Mexican revolutionaries.
a .m.
Aided by a group of monks, the
Sunday School - Post Chapel
DESERT SEARCH IN 1955 - Bertha Guard, second from left, now with SAFSEA, was the only
brothers confront Parker and
at 9:30 a.m.
woman electronics technician assigneci to then White Sands Proving Ground . This picture was
his men.
Koinonia Hour - Sierr a
shot in a fringe of White Sands National Monument during a lunch break. The crew, working on
SATURDAY MATINEE
Chapel. Mondays at 7 p.m .
the Nike-Ajax project, was hunting an instrumentation package. Other members of the crew,
"YOG-MONSTER
FROM
Adult Bible Study - P ost
sitting, from left, were Bob Chamberlin, John Mitchell and Hollis Lilley. Standing, from left :
SPACE" <G> - Helio 7, an
Jesse Thompson and Richard Nacen . (Photo courtesy Bertha Guard)
Chapel. Room 8. Thursdays at
unmanned rocket probe bound
8 p.m.
for Jupiter, is overtaken by
PTOC - Post Chapel. Wed YOG, a blue substance from
nesdays at 6:30 p .m. (for junior
outer space and forced back to
high age l .
earth. YOG consists of a body
of dust particles which invade
CYF - Post Chapel, Sundays
at 5 p.m . <for senior high age l.
the bodies of men and animals.
Marigolds "
Upstairs March 4 at 2 p.m . - Little
SUNDAY
ALAMOGORDO
LllTllERAN SERVICES
Theatre Downtown - 8:30 p.m. Theatre.
Feb. 2:!-2.t
Sierra Chapel · 9:30 a .m .
MONDAY
Feb. 2:1-25
"Arsenic and Old Lace"
"DOCTOR ZHIVAGO" (PG)
Youth Confirmation Class ·
Feb. 24
"La Tia de Carlos" (Carlos'
- Omar Sharif is the doctor- <Alamogordo
Player ' s
Aggie Basketball <NMSU vs Sierra Chapel , Sunday s a t
Community Aunt) - Three-act comedy Memphis State
poet Zhivago, the sensitive Workshop ) Pan 10 : 15 a .m.
presented by El Teatro Los American Center - 7:30 p.m.
Adult Instruction Class <for
man who can see right in both Theatre - 8 p .m .
those interested in becoming
Pobres - Festival Theater - 8
EL PASO
sides of the Russian Revolution
Dance, Las Campanas, The
Lutherans ) -Mondays at 7 p.m .
p.m.
and never takes a stand
Feb.2:!
Rounders - Corbett Center at
109 Tooele. Contact Chaplain
Feb. 24
himself . Geraldine Chaplin
" The Devils" <UTEP Film
9 p.m . - 1 a.m .
Ganz (678-3537 ) if you are inBlack Student-Faculty
plays his selfless wife and Julie Series) - The Union Theatre
Feb. 25
Basketball Game for Sickle
Christie is his mistress and the - 7 p.m.
Concert, Symphonic Band terested.
EPISCOPAL SERVICES
great love of his life .
Ronald Dellums , Black Cell Anemia. All proceeds go to and Wind Ensemble - Corbett
Sierra Chapel - Fourt h
TUESDAY
congressman from California the UTEP Black Student Union Center - 3 p.m.
"THE HERO" (PG) - A and a member of the Sickle Cell Anemia Fund ASNMSU Movie "Great Sunday of each month at 12
noon !Feb. 25).
delicate human relationship Congressional Black Caucus, Memorial Gym - 7 p .m .
White Hope"
DUTY CIIAPLAIN
Basketball
<UTEP
vs
story about an over-the-hill speaker <Black Heritage '73)
Feb. 26 - Mar. :!
Feb. 21i - Mar . .t
soccer
player
(Richard - UTEP's University Com- Colorado State Univ.)
BASHA
Week
<Black
Chaplain Richardson - duty
Memorial Gym - 7:30 p .m
Harris)
and
a
hero - mons - 8 p.m.
Association of Students Hailing
phone 678-5325 ; home phone
Feb. 25
Feb. 2:! - 24
worshipping Israeli youth
Action )
678-5862.
" Hamlet " <UTEP Film
"Tobacky Rhoades" COid
<Kim Burlfield). The boy runs
Feb. 26- 28
TllOUGllT FOH TODAY
Series) - The Union Theatre
away from home to see his hero Fashioned Melodrama ) Exhibit, Black Student
What on earth are you doing
- 1, 4 and 7 p .m .
play his last soccer game and Turn of the Century Theater League - Corbett Center Art
for heaven's sake?
Feb. 26
Harris suddenly finds himself 8:30 p.m.
Gallery.
EP
Symphony
Orchestra
"The Effect of Gamma Rays
too old for soccer, a reality he
Feb. 26
on
Man - in - the - Moon concert - Liberty Hall - 8
has never faced.
Lecture by Addison Gayle p.m .
WEDNESDAY
A deaf man , Alexander
"Black Writer at War"
EP Symphony Orchestra Corbett Center - 8 p.m.
"THE STRANGE VENGEGraham Bell, invented the
Children's concerts - Liberty
ANCE OF ROSALIE" (PG) telephone.
Feb. 27
Hall - IO a.m . and 1 p.m.
Bonnie Bedelia, an Indian girl,
" Black Culture, White
Wrestling - EP County Judgment: Patterns of Justice
buries her grandfather and his
Coliseum - 8:30 p.m.
gold on the family farm. She is
in the Black Narrative "
Feb. 27
attracted
to
traveling Dear Editor:
(Lecture by Dr . Houston A.
We are happy to announce
The Porter Wagoner Show salesman Ken Howard, but
Baker Jr. l - Corbett Center when he refuses her affection, that the Las Cruces City Civic Center Grand Hall - 8 8 p.m.
she rides off with motorcycle Bowling Tournament for p.m .
Feb. 28
Feb. 28
hood Anthony Zerbe, another Bantams and Juniors was a
" Social Action - Social or
complete success under the
" Erotic Film Festival" Anti-social" (Lecture by Dick
Indian.
direction of Mrs. Edna <U TEP Film Series) - The Gregory) - Corbett Center - 8
THURSDAY
Union Theatre - 2 and 7 p.m. p.m.
"THE LAST PICTURE Stewart.
The tourney was held as
Feb. 28 - Mar. 4
SHOW" (R) - Timothy Bot Mar. I
" Disney on Parade " - EP
toms and Jeff Bridges follows :
Record Hop with Steve
On Jan. 27-28 team events for County Coliseum - Wed., Crosno - Corbett Center - 8-9
graduate from high school in
Anarlene, Texas, and spend both Las Cruces and WSMR Thurs. and Sat. at 7: 30 p.m .; p.m .
their time at Ben Johnson's bowlers was held at the Sun. at 6 p.m . and Matinees
Mar. 2
pool hall, restaurant and movie Roadrunner Lanes at WSMR. Sat. at 10:30 a.m . and 2:30 p.m.
Billy Preston concert - Pan
house. For the young people The following weekend, Feb. 3- and Sun. at 2 p.m.
American Center - 9 p .m.
Mar.1-4
it's a matter of growing up and 4, the tourney was moved to to
Mar. :! - 22
"Don Pasquale" <Opera ) escaping or growing old in a the Monte Vista and Midway
Black Student Art Show 8
UTEP's Magoffin Auditorium Corbett Center Art Gallery - 9
place that's dying right in front Lanes in Las Cruces.
of them.
A total of 468 pre-teens and - Call UTEP Music Dept. for a.m.-4 p .m .
SUNLAND PARK
teens participated in the time.
JUAREZ
Feb. 2:1
tourney with WSMR bowlers
Jolts
drug abuse taking the majority of the
Feb. 2:1 - 2.t and 28 - 2!!
Thoroughbred Racing - 7: 30
Greyhound Racing - Juarez p.m . post time
The re is a n apparent prizes . All together there were Race Track - 8 p .m .
Feb. 24 -25
36
pos
it
ions
.
WSMR
came
reference to opium in Homer's
Feb. 25
Thoroughbred Racing - 1: 30
Odyssey, written in the 9th home with 24.
Greyhound Racing - Juarez p.m . past time.
We would like to take this
century B.C. Rouses' transRace Track - 2: 30 and 7: 30
tha
nk
opportunity
to
publicly
lation tells of a " drug potent
p.m .
against pa in and quarrels and our coach , Mrs . Edna Stewa rt,
LAS CRUCES(NMSU)
For all kinds of
for
the
superb
performance
she
charged with the forgetfulness
F eb. 2:1
Alterati ons
dis
pla
ye
d.
We
feel
ver
y
forof all trouble; whoever drank
Dance, Alpha Gamma Rho for men & Ladies
this mingled in the bowl , not tunate to ha ve such a person with Clay Mack and the Town
See
one tear would be let fall the who is concern ed with the a nd Country Play boys NATHAN'S
whole day long, not if mother welfare of our youth.
Men's Wear&
She has s pent countless Corbett Center - 9 p.m . - 1
and father should die , not if
a. m .
Tailors
hours,
not
only
on
this
activity,
they should slay a brother or a
Feb. 2:1- Ma r. 4
205
E.
Lohman
Las Cr uces
others
concerning
but
on
many
dear son before his face a nd he
" Blood
W e ddin g"
523-6450
should see " with his own eyes " our yo uth program . We hope (Play makers production > - 8 Lom ador Center
(over 35 yrs. Experience )
but he will not under stand for she 'll r eside among us for a p .m . : m a t inee Feb. 25 a nd
long time to come because we
he is the " Living Dead."
need people like her .
She h as now complete d
arra ngem e nts to ta ke our
bowlers to the State Tour nam ent in Farmington, N.M.,
on May 5-6. And again we wish
her success and m ay she br ing
home the bacon .
Good Luck . Edna.
Ha rla n A. Attleson
Director. Youth Activities ; +
Remember When?
What's happening?
USO girls
coming to
Countdown
Servicemen won't have to
just sit and listen to the band
ton ight a t t he Countdo wn
Service Club.
The band - "Stonebluff" - .
will be playing but even better ,
the USO gir ls will be up from
El P a so to provide dancing
partners . 'Course you 're all
invited.
Sunday the Chr istian Brothers , a singing and variety
entertainment trio, will be
performing at 2 p.m.
Registr ations are still being
taken for the astrology classes
which a re to begin at the club
Ma r ch 12 . Cla sses will m eet
each Monday evening at 7 p.m.
for eight sessions, ending April.
30.
Cla sses will be taug h t by
Mrs . Pat Scott. a well-read and
trai ned astr ology teacher from
E l Paso. Interested persons
should register a t the club.
Another impo rt a nt event
comi ng up is a shopping tour to
J uarez on Sun day, March 4.
The tr ip is free. of course. a nd
will leave the club at I p.m.
RPl!ist er now .
. You have to pay tax on thee
m teres t on you r savi ngs account. even though you didn 't
collect it in cash. All dividend
and interest income is taxable.
You must repart it on your
income tax return, even if it's
only credited to your account.
,,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
Frank 0. Papen
&Co.
142 So. Water
Las Cruces, N.M.
Insurance
of all kinds
Special Rates
for
Service Men
Dial
524-8531
~
parade of
performers
•
of
THE FRIENDLIEST
PLACE IN TOWN
Dona Ana Sauings
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
524- 7748
W. Lohman Ave.
P.O.Drawer E.Las Cruces
~~
!
LINCOLN-MERCURY
USED CAI
SPECIALS
1910 Montego
stk . no. 200,4 dr .• air .
35,000 miles, was $1995
+
Now $1595
Stk . no. 210, 4 dr., loaded,
19 71 Marquis Braugham
1972 Ford f 250
1968 Cadillac
4
3/4 ton p ickup. 390 engine.
PS, P B, 4 spd., w as $3895
dr ., two t o choose
tr~:~ $1995
Now $3395
NOW
$1595
1601 N. MAIN • PH. 526-2481
'kJkue 'I°"' C<M, ~ (.(,I.alt, e<ui~ce!
Las Cruces
•
'
..... !
,~
~~""~ MESILLA VALLEY
Born to SP4 Richard D. and
J oyce Ann Combs . a g irl,
Meredith Rene, on Feb. 5.
Bo rn to Bern ardo C. Hernan de z J r . <USMC Ret.l a nd
Socorro He rn a nde z, Las
Cruces . a boy , Bernardo C.
Hernandez III, on Feb. 6.
Born to !::>P4 Michael E . and
Re ba J . Ye ksavich, 209 Anniston , a girl, Dar a Anastasia
on Feb . 11.
Born to SP5 Steven A. a nd
Gale L. Jensen, a boy, Sha ncy
Wade, on Feb. 12.
Born to Alfre do a nd I sabel
Chavez. Vado. a boy, Richard,
" " 1·
1
1
\ 1\
•
+
•+
•• MOTORCYCLES
• HONDA
•• PENTON
•
.+
,+
+
+
•!
•
BICYCLES
10-SPEED
3-SPEED
PEUGEOT
•
~r$24?n;t ,,~.,
runner
and other
makes
t ubeless
WSW plu•
$2.51 F. E. T.
Cooper's Great Performer
• Fiberglass cord belts - reduce tread distortion - long ~tire life
• Polyester cord plies - resist flat spotting - deliver a smooth ridl!
• Built low and wide for ma)(i mum road contact and stabil ity
• 7 rib tread is up to 2 inches wider than conven tional t ires
9
YAMAHA!
BMW
~ Cruces
·~
~
Cycle Center
420 SOUTH VALLEY DRIVE
LAS CRUCES
~
717 N. MAIN
LAS CRU CES
524-4661
•
•
WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23, 1973- PAGE~
~
1e
111
:o
•
rt
IS
u
'O
r-
is
,e
1e
it
Sergeant Roy Smith was
going for more than the
• bonus when he reenlisted.
"The $8,000 helped. But
. part of my reason for staying
in the Army is I can get the
rest of my college credits for
• .· a degree. I've got 2 years
in already.
"I enjoy the job I'm doing
now ·a s a drill sergeant. But
.....
I'd also like to try military
• intelligence. And eventually
get to go to OCS.
"It's all there. It's
completely up to me and my
qualifications for it:'
Smith views ..
• theSergeant
Army as one big opportunity for a guy.who wants to
get ahead.
There are job and educational opportunities. In
• advanced electronics.
Cryptography. Foreign languages. Data processing .
~
Comminications. Traffic
analyffi. And lots more.
Anc travel opportunities ..
In Eunpe. Korea. Hawaii.
Alaskc Panama. And the
time tcenjoy it. To live it. In
a way 10 tourist ever could.
An< the opportunity to
save mney on all the everyday thngs.
Lik free housing. Free
dental lnd medical care.
Comm1sary and post exchangtprivileges. Low-cost .
life insirance.
It's 11 here. It's up to
you.
You Army Career
Counsmr has a whole book
of job, uty station and
traininJ opportunities just
waitingor you. He'll give
you lot!of reasons for
stayingn.
Ser~ant Smith has good
reasonffor staying in.
••
ti
b
It
s
0
ll
'r
y
p
g
r
e
e
s
e
1
'I
&.1Gt
•
•
:r
y
e
1e
•
rt
I
••
AGE 4 - WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23, 1973
~'1II,/'( ·
I
\
~,
Q
I was recently
ischarged from the service
nd am now working for a tile
Q
etter, learning the business. Is
:iere any way that I can
ualify for on-the-job training
~ nder the GI Bill?
A - From your nearest VA
~
ffice obtain application 21E990. Fill it out completely and
"Busaroo" of the week is
eturn it to that VA office along
vith copies of your separation
Floyd Campbell, driver of Bus
1apers from the service
No. 9579 to and from Las
DD214), and birth and
Cruces, N .M. He has been a bus
narriage certificates (if the
driver for the past 20 years.
atter apply). Your state apMr. Campbell was born 47
>roving agency (usually the
years ago in a little town called
)epartment of Education) for
Widtsoe, Utah, which is now
;uch training will take it from
just a junction in the road. He
.here and determine whether
and his wife Kay, a housewife,
>r not your job qualifies. If it
have three children, two boys
foes, VA will send you benefit
and one girl, all married. They
ehecks allotted for such
have five grandchildren.
training.
Floyd's hobbies are wood·
Q - I am a veteran, aged 46,
working and raising Chihuahua
and I have cancer. I am unable
dogs. They now have five little
to work and must stay in bed
"Cs" and are expecting pup· 100 per cent of the time. Can I
pies any day.
get any financial assistance
Floyd served 21/2 years in the
from the Veterans AdCoast Guard. He has received
ministration?
safe driver awards for accident
A
You may apply for a
free driving each year, and his
pension which is allowed to
last one was for 19 years. He
Floyd Campbell
qualified war time veterans
recently completed a first aid
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ whose annual income does not
course given at WSMR.
exceed $3,800. For further
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell are
information contact your
members of the Church of
nearest VA office, or the VA
Jesus Christ of Latter-day
office where you know your
Saints in Las Cruces. He and
records are located.
his wife are both Sunday School
Q - If a veteran sells his
secretaries.
home and his GI loan is
Next time you ride on Bus
No. ~579, give him a big smile
Service certificates and lapel a~s~~~d by the buyer, can his
pins representing a total of 18( ehg1b1hty be restored so he can
and say "Hi, Floyd"!
years of government servicE buy another house on a GI
have been presented to eigh1 loan?
civilian employes of Arm) A - No. Entitlement can be
Stewart
organizations at White Sand: restored only if both the
Missile Range.
following conditions are met:
The group included six La: (1) The original GI loan has
ends service
Cruces residents, one fron been paid in full; and (2) the
Alamogordo and one fron home was disposed of due to
lletiring this week after
Mesilla, N.M.
compelling reasons such as
more than 18 years of governReceiving 30-year award health, destruction by hazard,
ment civilian service is Herwere Emery C. Ackerman an1 condemnation and under
man B. Stewart of Las Cruces,
William H. Palmer, both of La certain conditions of transfer
a crane operator at White
Cruces
. Ackerman is cmploye for employment.
Sand~ Missile Range.
in Procurement Directoratt Q - I am a World w II
He·has been assigned with Palmer in the Securi~Y. Offic1 veteran who never used h~; GI
the Buildings and Grounds
Las Crucens rece1_vmg 21 loan benefits. Is it true that I
Division, Facilities year awards were Willard E can still use this benefit?
Engineering Directorate. He Brower and Oliver D. Hahr
A - Yes The v t
·i
·
e erans
has been em11.Ioyed a,t WSMR A/my M'
. 1ss1 e . Test an Housing Act of 1970 restored
since Novemb~t'\954, ~h'cl all of Ev a I ua ti on D1 rector ate unused, expired loan . benefits
his government serWce has George E . Ev.ans, Faciliti1 to all veterans who were
been at the missile range.
Engmeermg Directorate, ar previously eligible.
Stewart was born in Charley B. Pettes, Logisti1 ·
Q - I am the daughter of a
Frederick, Okla., in 1910. His Directorate .
retirement will become efOthers receiving 20-ye; veteran killed in Vietnam and
fective Feb. 23.
awards included James ' going to college under A's
He has been living at 1183 N. Cater Jr. , Alamogordo, a1 Dependents' Educational
Sixth St. in Las Cruces. In John C. McGaw Jr., Mesill Assistance program. I wonder
retirement he plans to make both employed in elements if _the $1,000 I earned last year
his home near Indiahoma, National Range Operatio will prevent me from receiving
further education allowances?
Okla.
Directorate.
A - No. There is no limit on
the income you may earn while
receiving benefits under this
program.
Q - I am in a VA hospital for
treatment of a serviceconnected disability which is
rated as 10 percent. Will VA
give me a permanent increase
in my compensation?
A - Compensation will be
increased permanently only if
there is a permanent increase
in
the degree of your serviceWHERE TO fAT?
conneeted disability. If you are
hospitalized more than 21 days,
Where the food is consistently good
a temporary 100 percent rating
And you can choose w~at you want.
will be assigned for the whole
Most meals served with our Famous
period of your hospitalization.
~
~
~
-.
8 cited for
US service
H.B.
V
Hot Dinner Rolls.
2401 N. Main
Las Cruces Ph. 524-0451
r~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~
TOP QUALITY
USED CARS
Running magic (Part 2)
Plymoulfi
Q - I am a veteran's widow
drawing VA pernsion. Would
state welfare benefits reduce
my pension?
A - No . VA does not consider
benefits from public or private
welfare organizations as income for purposes of computing pension.
By Fred Gass
Tragically, too many persons
are unaware of the fact that the
heart is a muscle (pump) that
improves (like all muscles do)
with work.
The heart's only job is to
keep pumping blood through
your arteries and veins. In an
adult this means that about
five quarts of blood circulates
through about 100,000 miles of
large and small blood vessels.
The circulating blood helps
cool you or warm you,
depending on the temperature
which surrounds your body; it
nourishes your uncountable
billions of body cells with fresh
oxygen and gathers up waste
carbon dioxide; it supplies
nutrients, vitamins, minerals
and other substances to the
system.
Blood keeps you alive. But if
the pump (heart> that circulates blood throughout your
system is weaker than it should
be, then your entire network of
blood vessels doesn't function
as effectively as it should.
The exercise that the
average person gets daily is
not enough to maintain good
health. Dr. Morris Fishbein in
"Medical World New~ "
represented the consensus ~f
the
American
Medical
Association when he recently
said: "Real physical fitness
results only from progressively
increasing one's capacity for
physical activity."
And Dr. Bruce E. Douglass,
chairman of the division of
environmental medicine the
Mayo Clinic, said: "Once
considered an indulgence for a
few, exercise is now a must for
all."
The amount of exercise?
Mayo Clinic's Dr. Donald
Erickson, of the physical
,medicine and rehabilitation
department, says: "Exercise
until you 're somewhat short of
breath. Like any other muscle,
the heart needs deep swings of
demand - maximum work
maximum rest."
'
For the normal person, Dr.
Erickson
recommends
jogging, brisk walking or
swimming.
The magic of exercise is
fantastic . For if you take Dr.
Erickson's
advice
and
"exercise
until
you're
somewhat short of breath"
you 'II happily discover that
through regular exercise it's
taking you longer, during each
exercise period, to reach that
state of being short of breath.
As each day goes by you'll be
increasing your endurance
through exercise
strengthening your heart'.
flushing out and extending
your blood vessel network
toning up your muscles, and
transforming flab and fat into
!ear., firm, dynamically strong
muscles. As a bonus, you'll
become progressively im THE CITY BARBER SHOP
is not just a
~
"Clip Joint"
i::
It's concerned
~ about your bestlooks !
1201N. Main
Las Cruces
Ph 526-9808
Some diamonds were
born to be a cut above.
And Zales has them.
pressure points to slop severe
The course was t aught by
bleeding and the use of splints Mrs . James M. Vaughn, a Red
PT-CT
Eleven White Sands Missile and bandages.
Cross volunteer . Cert ificates
Artificial respirat ion and the \\·crc presented by Frankie
Range bus drivers and security
guards received certificates t r eatment of burns and Austel l. chairman of Red Cros~
for completing a Red Cross poisoning were also covered. \'Oluntcer~ .
multi-media first aid course in
a brief ceremony last week.
Those receiving certificates
were Roberto C. Lujan , Floyd
D. Campbell. Ramon Garcia
A.H . Rede. Clarence A. Spady:
Isidro Acosta , David T.
Lucero, Guadalupe G. Saenz,
Rudy Armijo , Jesus P . Barela
OPEN HOUSE
and Inez R. Duran.
Benito Canales and R. C.
8 a.m. to s p.m.
Salas completed the course but
Saturday
Sa.m. til 12 p .m .
were not present for the
ceremony.
REGISTER FOR FREE TUNEUP
The 10-hour course, the first
in 1973, covered all aspects of
REFRESHMENTS
emergency first aid treatment.
Come in and meet I RV
Particular stress was placed
and ED and the mechanics
on such skills as the use of
B)' llenr)· llansen
AUTO
ELECTRIC SERVICE
1003 W. PICACHO
LAS CRUCES Ph. 524-3641
YOU CAN SELL IT!
WITH A WANT AD
••
••
HOME TOWN
MEAT MART
••
MAN
ALIVE,
DON'T
BUY
YIELD
5
••
••
"THE BEST BEEF IN THE WEST"
FREE BONUS
15 LBS USDA
GRADE "A"
FRYERS
INCLUDES
T-Bone .Steaks
c
Sirloin ,
Club, Round Steaks,
Roasts,
lb.
••
Lean Ground Beef
Hanging Weight
FREE 90 DAY FINANCING!!!
$2295
W ear our 19-diarnond jacket rin g two w ays .
Two looks, one with , one without
re movable jacket of 14 Karat gold. $695
lllust r'1tio n e nla rged
• Re volving Char ge • C us tom Charge
• Ban kAme rica rd • Master C harge • l ayaway
l
Nothing could be farther
from the truth. This popular
misconception often shortens
lives and fills the passing years
with the miseries of high blood
pressure, other heart and
circulatory conditions and a
wide variety of physical
complaints.
Regardless of age, persons in
poor shape should first get a
doctor's checkup then start
exercising very gradually.
Time and patience are
essential. There are no shortcuts. Even the most perfect
conditioning progrnm requires
the passing of time to bring
results. The unhealthier you
are, the longer it takes to
transform
yourself into
physical fitness.
Next: Your Jogging Pro~ram
Workers end training
••
Price Includes Cutting, Wrapping, Freezing
1969 OPEL
Station Wagon
Chaparral Chrysler,
lymouth, Inc.
2001 S. Vallar Drive
~s Cruces, N M
Dr. Cureton, whose 40 years
of research into physical fitness included testing and
training of thousands of persons of all ages , explains that
individuals in their forties,
fifties and sixties often
mistakenly believe that they're
too old to start an exercise
program.
TH~ GRADUATES-. Mrs. Frankie Austell. left. supervisor of Red Cross volunteers , presents a
certificate of completion for multi-media first aid training to Clarence A . Spady. Others in the
photo _are: <Kneeling, left to right) Roberto C. Lujan, Floyd D. Campbell and Ramon Garcia.
Standing: Mrs. Austell, A.H. Rede, Spady. Rudy Armijo. Isidro Acosta. Mrs. James Vaughn
<course mstructor l , Jesus P. Barela, David T. Lucero. Inez R. Duran and Guadalupe G. Saenz.
8-
1972 PONTIAC LEMANS
Sport Wagon
1970 FORD XL
pervious to the damaging effects of stress.
"It is never too late to
begin," (an exercise program l
"prov~ding the transition from
inactivity to activity is made
intelligently," advises Dr. T .K.
Crueton , director of the
University of Illinois Physical
Fitness Research Center.
i::
IM PERJAL
1972 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
••
Your life pump
526-24
ZALES@
JIWIUIU
We've go_t the whole world
working for you. .....
~iiiiiiiiliiliii__,
--
HOME TOWN MEAT MART
------------------------------------------
CALL 524-9774
1035A El Paseo
LAS CRUCES
"Across Fro 1 oodway"
••
Three end
67 years
gov't work
•
,
CLASSIFIED
Three New Mexico residents
are retiring this week from
White Sands Missile Range,
after serving their government
for a combined 67 years.
Thomas H. McCain, 52, of
Las Cruces, leads the trio with
nearly 29 years service, including five years in the
military. Most recently he has
been a powered ground
equipment technician for
Logistics directorate. Born in
Clarksville, Tex., McCain
plans to enjoy fishing in
retirement.
Ruby E. Dunn, 60, of
Alamogordo, has 221h years in
federal service and was
assigned at White Sands
Missile Range 16 years. Most
recently she has been a supply
clerk at the Army Aviation
Activities section at Holloman
Air Force Base. She worked in
the aircraft supply support
facility. She is moving ta
Dekalb, Tex.
Daria 0. Gonzales, 41, . is
retiring after 12 years at White
Sands Missile Range and after
15 1/z years federal service. She
has been a clerk-typist in the
Range Modernization division
of Instrumentation directorate.
The native of Alamogordo now
• makes her home in Las Cruces.
Did you receive dividends or
·interest last year from your
bank or your credit union or
from other investment? If so,
you must report them on your
Federal income tax return.
Those who pay you dividends
or interest must also report
these payments to the IRS. So
be sure that your bank and
credit union have your Social
Security number.
COUNTRY CLUB
SHELL
1005 Highway 70 E.
Las Cruces
S&H
2' Hour
Service
...
FOR SALE
ELECTRIC Kenmore dryer, $50;
Irish Setter puppies, females $75,
males $100. Call Mrs. Max D.
Jones, 678-3686.
1971 MERCURY Comet GT,
blue/white vinyl top, 302 V-8,
bucket seats, factory air, in excel·
lent condition. Call Gilbert
Martinez, 678-2756 or 524-3835
after 5: 30 p.m.
1957 CHEVY, 4-door, V-8,
3-speed, radio, recent paint and
upholstery, $225. See at 1900 N.
Solano, Apt. 30 or call Bennett,
678-5335 or 524-2304.
LIKE NEW 22 c·aliber target
pistol (German made), cleaning
kit and almost full case of long
cartridge-, $35. Call Mr. Ward,
678-1317.
1967 JEEP Wagoneer, very clean,
looks like new, 4-wheel drive,
auto. trans. A/C, 2 gas tanks,
radio, luggage racks, trailer hitch,
1973 NM plates, $2740. Call
523-1854.
1968 TOURITE mobile home,
12X65, 3 bedroom, located in
LC. Must vacate by May, $6,000
or best offer. Call SSG Nicolson,
524-1728.
1965 ZIPPER shell type camp
trailer, not a foldout, $575. Call
678-5868.
1972 HOLIDAY 12X65 mobile
home, Spanish decor, 3-bedroom,
2-baths, $900 equity and assume
payments. Call 678-5868.
GELDING, 16.3 hands registered
thoroughbred, 7 years old, flashy,
for experienced rider. Call
523-0102.
THREE BEDROOM home in LC,
one year old, 1-3/4 bath, large
den with fi,·eplace, double garage.
Call 678-3163 or 524-3915.
CORRUGATED roofing tin,
$2.25 for 8-foot sheets, $2.71 for
10-foot sheets and $ 3.75 for
12-foot sheets. Also 2X4 lumber
cheap. Call Bradshaw, 233-3468
or 678-2609.
PICKUP truck, 2-seat with
4-wheel drive. Must be reasonably
priced. Call 523-1854.
TO BORROW 500 hours sick
leave from any employee who was
····················································:
.
•
••
•
•••
••
••
••
•
•••
••
•
•••
Top Priority
.•
Anything more important
than your family's future?
Put first things first with
common sense life
insurance. Call me today.
••
••
•••
••
.••
••
:
..
UMwvvJit!llln
··~"""""~'
New York, N. Y.
:
Life
••
.
•
•el•
••
.•••
.:
•
~
~
;
:
We sell life insurance.
But our business is life.
•
smart enough to use his sick leave
wisely. I didn't and now I need it
to keep from losing the house and
to buy food for my family while I
recuperate for three months from
a serious operation. Call
678-SICK and ask for I. M.
Desperate.
WILL PAY $25 to $25,000 for
SUGGESTIONS that save money,
manpower, improve morale, etc.
Call 678-JDEA or submit DA
1045 to IAC.
'
Action F•rnltare
Economy Priced
. New & Used We Buy & Sell
Open Mon. thru Sat.
12.'iS N. Main
523 ':485
Las Cruet"s
WHITE FENCE FARMS
Located in the heart of
Arizona's finest farming and
hunting country, near historic
Safford (county seat of Graham County.) Great yearround climate. 1 1/4 acres, $1100
· low terms. For full information, please write to Mrs. A.L.
Young, Glenarm Land Co., 2233
North 7th Street, Phoenix
85006.
NOW LEASING
Villa Del Telshor Ap'ts.
Adults Only-No Pets
Efficiency 1-2-3 bedroom
furnished or unfurnished.
All utilities paid.
Refrigerated Air
Completely Carpeted
Private Lanias
Complete built-in kitchens
Walk-in closets
1755 Telshor Blvd.
Las Cruces
526-8442
WANTED
1st Shell coming to Las Crucel
from WSMR.
:
:
ART INSTRUCTION in all
media at Arts and Crafts
Center, 535 S. Melendres St.,
Las Cruces. Ph. 523-4476 or 4334
Hatch.
BELMONT UPHOLSTERY
CENTER - Autos - Vinyl and
Convertible Tops - Seat
Covers. Sofas - Recliners Dining Chairs · Furniture. 991
West Picacho, Las Cr1tces,
New Me"ico. Tel. 523-7341
RENT OR SELL - Just arrive
at WSMR? Let me find you a
home in Las Cruces or the
Mesilla Valley. 2, 3 or 4
bedrooms, furnished or un"
furnished. Call Ozzie, Dorothy.
Powers, Richard Cauble or
Jack Kaltenbach at 524-3503;
PIONEER LAND CO. INC.
•
:• .....••••.............•.........•.•••....••.•••...•.•
VALLEY EMPLOYMENT
AGENCIES
En~meers.
Technicians
NATIONWIDE PERSONNEL CHANNELS
las 4'm€RICas
a mano
HANDCRAFTS FROM All THE AMERICAS
IN OLD MESILLA
PH. (505) 524- 8445
MAILING ADDRESS : BOX 307 • MESILLA. NEW MEXICO 88046
New LUY
Y2 Ton·Fleetside Pickup
4 s peed
fransmis~ ion,
1600 .lb. capacity,
6 ply tires, all vinyl Interior, air flow
ht ater.
~~'"""
1111111tau
El P111, Tt111
Study and hard work reap
benefits for Nora Gonzales
A free service for civilian and military personnel of WSMR.
Personal· non-commercial· ads accepted until noon Tuesday. Mail to
"Missile Ranger" STEWS-IN, WSMR 88002 or bring to Bldg 100, Room
108. No phone ads, please. Ads received after Tuesday noon will be run
in the following week's paper.
Green
Stamps
Reid. Ford, OWner
523-5101
WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23, 1973 ·PAGE
111
g
s232l
.....
d11iYtr1d in
00
Secreh11es·Clerks
lAS CRUCES 524 3565
ALAMOGORDO 437·7880
For Sale: 1969 Opel Cadett
station wagon. Good condition.
Good transportation. $800. Ph.
523-7971. Las Cruces .
AMC wife
selected
Mrs . Sandra J . Klaver has
been selected as the Army
Materiel Command's nominee
for the Military Wife of the
Year .
She is the wife of Captain
Robert P. Klaver, deputy chief,
Technical
Management
Di\'ision. U.S . Army TankAutomotive Command.
Final selection was made by
a panel of judges representing
the Al\IC headquarters wives
club from a total of nine
nominations submitted.
Mrs . Klaver will be in
competition with wives from
other Armv commands for
selection as· Army Wife of the
Year .
In turn. the wife selected as
the Army Wife of the Year will
be in fi~al competition with
wives from each of the other
branches of the military ser vice for the selection of the
Military Wife of the Year.
JUST CHECKING - Miss Nora Gonzales checks a computer
print-0ut.
~J~.~
eo~
.'
4'J;shssst
'GOJdtf
l .\
1..... ,,.. "'""
lll•t
BY ARMIDA !ARMY) ALVARE2
PEACE ON EARTH - GOOD
WILL TO MEN has been an
ideal long aspired by the
human race ever since the
world began. All we have to do
is pick up the Bible or a history
book and find out that this is
fact. Anyway, to get to the
subject at hand, what greater
tribute to this country than to
have found the way to "peace"
and to have its long missing
sons (prisoners of war) back
where they have always
belonged. May God Bless
America and may He also
always smile upon this
country.
v v v
A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS
was the title to a movie that
was nominated for an academy
award about two calendars
ago. Well, we happen to know a
man who would qualify for this
title in the field of training.
That man is Bob Barcus,
training instructor, U.S. Civil
Service Commission, Dallas,
TX. You see Bob is the type of
person who is so enthusiastic
about the courses he teaches
that you not only enjoy them
but become totally engrossed
in the subject at hand. Bob had
Paul Cazaboun, also CSC from
New Orleans, give him a hand
with the afternoon classes.
With such competent personnel
in training, how can you help
but learn!
v v v
BIRTHDAY OF SOME OF
OUR NOTABLES. The other
day someone informed us Fran Butler, FE-EE's construction gal, to be more exact
that the 3oth of January was
the date of birth of Franklin
Delano
Roosevelt,
32nd
president of the U.S. While we
were not aware of this, we did
find out that it is also the day
that two of our distinguished
personnel also celebrate their
particular day; our illustrious
FE leader , Thomas S. Pate,
and John E . King, FE -EM,
Master Planning Branch. Our
belated birthday wishes to
these two fine gentlemen .
v v v
RECIPIENT
OF
A
SO LIT AIRE DIAMOND dinner
ring was Yvonne A. Lopez, ADAR , Records Management
Branch, which was the
thoughtful gift from her permanent sweetheart and hubby,
"Pepe." Fort Bliss these past
holidays.
v v v
A
LACEY
VALENTINE
GARTER was the flirtatious
garment that caught our attention this past 14th of
February and which was attractively worn around the leg
of Evelyn Anchondo, FE-EM,
student aid from Austin High
School. That was quite an
original way to celebrate
Valentine's Day .
v v v
A SOFT SPOKEN GAL but
quite competent at that is
pretty Ernestine Moya, PT-F,
Force De velopment Division,
\\'ho very generously offered to
transport a number of ladies to
and from their office while
attending a recent WSMR
training course. Erni, bushels
of tha nks'
v v v
SOME
APPEALING
PIECES OF JEWELRY are
v v v
A MAN TO THE RESCUE Last week while trying to
decipher which wire to move or
what to do to our car after we
had flooded it, Alex Tapia,
Welding Section, FE-B, immediately came to our rescue.
Alex, many thanks!
v v v
THE CASE OF THE
DRAWN VENETIAN BLIND.
Last week we noticed the
venetian blind in J. Rey
Garcia's (FE's Chief, Administration
Services
Division) office facing the
interior to our building being
completely drawn part of the
week. People have been
wondering what it is all about.
0 .K., Rey, do you want to
speak now or forever hold your
peace?
Services held
Thursday for
former em ploye
Funeral services for former
White Sands Missile Range
employe William (Corky)
Akers were conducted Thursday morning in Graham's
Chapel with Chaplain Thomas
Boyce officiating. Burial
followed in Masonic Cemetery.
A retired chief petty officer
who saw extensive submarine
duty during World War II, Mr.
Akers worked as an electronics
technician at White Sands
Missile Range following his
retirement from active Navy
duty. He later retired from
Civil Service and was self·
employed at the time of his
death.
He is survived by his widow,
Dorothy, a national range
employe, a nephew and three
nieces. Members of the U.S.
Navy served as pallbearers.
Honorary pallbearers were
members of Las Cruces' VFW
Post 10124 and close friends.
'Blood Wedding'
starts Monday
Federico Garcia Lorca 's
"Blood Wedding" opens
Monday, Feb. 26 at New
Mexico State University's
Theater.
The Playmakers' production
will run nightly at 8 through
March 3 with a 2 p.m. matinee
Sunday. March 4.
University Theater box office is open weekdays from I to
5 p .m . Reservations for "Blood
Wedding" may be made by
calling 646-4517. Tickets will
also be sold prior to performance .
want Ads Get Results!
For Late Model Cars and Late Model Rebuilders
"PARTS READY TO INSTALL"
We Buy Burned & Wrecked
Cars & Trucks...
9735 Dyer, E l Paso
Special Discount to WSMR
Civil Service & Military
the ones being worn by honey
blond Vicki de Gracia, SAFSEA. You see, Vicki wears a
rather distinguished ring and
earrings to match with the
stone
of
her
month,
aquamarine, which pertains to
February. As you must have
guessed, this lady's sign is
Pisces, and her birthday will
be coming up real soon. Our
anticipated "happy birthday"
to Vicki.
NEW AND USED AUTO PARTS
El PHO
OYER SHAMROCK
SERVICE STATION
~
psl-lt~
-i:~l
To rise from a GS-2 to a GS-11
rating is a feat many of us
would like to brag about - if it
ever happened to us.
It happened to Miss Nora
Gonzalez. Or. rather, it didn't
just happen; she achieved it
thMugh a lot of hard work and
study.
l\liss Gonzalez. now a
computer programmer in the
Management
Information
Svstems Office here. started to
,,:ork at White Sands as a GS-2
equipment operator . But.
determined not to remain in
this pcsition and grade. she
trained during the four years
she had the job. taking on-post
math and statistics courses .
"I knew the field was almost
unlimited and that advancement depended mainly
on how much I was willing to
train myself." she said.
After attending various
Army schools to complete her
training,
Miss
Gonzalez
became a GS-7 computer
operator.
1~..,~··~~~iii;
Call 524-8539 ~ ;-_?.
Auto Salvage~~
. .':~~llT-·~)f~~---
('MI· TIU:Dt\lllf·AW
(2 Milest;·a·s t of Country Club) Las Cruces
PAITI
Highway 70 East (Mailing Address 1728 Foster Rd.)
COMPLETES COURSE Howard I. Shulman, Safeguard
System Evaluation Agency,
WSMR, has been awarded a
diploma after completing a
correspondence course from
the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces, Washington,
D.C. Shulman, assigned to the
System Performance Division,
lives at 5249 Wren, El Paso.
Eleven get
awards for
performance
Eleven civilians employed
by the U.S. Army at White
Sands Missile Range have been
presented
performance
awards through the Incentive
Awards Program.
The recipients included five
El Paso residents, five Las
Cruces residents and one from
Mesilla, N .M.
El Paso award winners were
Donald T. Mount, chief of the
1',orce Development Division,
quality step increase; Judson
L.
Caruthers,
Pictorial
Division, special act ; Ramiro
Belmontes , Security Office,
and Vernon L . Lawson,
National Range Operations ,
both sustained superior performance , and Gilbert H.
Klusman , Logistics, letter of
commendation .
La s Cruces honorees in cluded Arthur
Narvaez,
Logistics , and Roy L. Heath
Jr.,
National
Range
Operations, both quality step
increase ; Arturo 0. Fernandez
and Hamon B. Almanzar , both
of Facilities Engineering and
both sustained superior performance, and An selmo F .
Sauceda, Security Office,
quality step increase .
Heceiving a
s ustained
superior performance award
was r'ilimon P . Nieto Jr. of
Mesilla. employed in Logistics
Directorate.
"I'm lucky that I got into a
developing field," she explained. "When I started there
weren't many people in the
computer field, and the
government was anxious to
train us."
Shortly after attaining her
GS-7 rating. Miss Gonzalez was
asked if she were willing to go
to France.
She accepted the offer from
Washington and soon arrived
at Orleans. France, where she
was trained as a computer
programmer. During her twovear tour there she achieved a
GS-9 and later a GS-11 rating.
··An added benefit was ... she
said. "getting to see Europe
during my off-duty time."
Soon after returning from
France. Miss Gonzalez was
aga in on the road. this time for
a six-month tour in Vietnam
where she worked with
logistics.
"That trip was the experience of my life." the busy
lady said. "I was there during
the Tet offensive and learned
first hand what was going on."
She worked with the Red
Cross throughout the tour and
says she'll be glad to go back if
the opportunity ever arises for
another tour .
Miss Gonzalez is currently
training in the systems
analysis field. She says she
hopes to eventually earn a
degree in the computer
sciences or a related field.
She says she enjoys the
constantly changing nature of
her work, although she admits
that keeping up with the job
and travel sometimes involves
sacrifices.
Miss Gonzalez spent two
years. 1969-71, at U .S. Army
Test and Evaluation Command
headquarters at Aberdeen
Proving Ground working on
Project TEAM-UP as a lead
programmer and then traveled
to most TECOM instillations to
initiate the system.
During her hours away from
her job, Miss Gonzalez is as
busy as during her hours at
work.
The native of El Paso is
president <for the second timel
of the White Sands Toastmistress Club and is initiating
a program to interest more
women in participating in the
club .
She's also national chairman
of a veterans organization,
vice-president of a Department
of Labor veterans manpower
program, vice-president of
SER (Service, Employment
and Rehabilitation Program l,
and project director of WICS
<Women in Community Service l, a Job Corps program.
"The projects keep me busy,
so much so that almost every
evening is occupied." Miss
Gonzalez said, "But when I see
people being helped by the
efforts I make, it makes it all
well worthwhile."
Though not adequate to
repay all the time and effort
expended, Miss Gonzalez has
received numerous awards. At
work she has received two
Sustained Superior Performance Awards.
The award of which she is
probably most proud is the
Bronze Medallion which she
received in 1967 from President
Johnson for her work in her
community. She was the only
woman on the White House
workshop-eonference for the
settlement of the Chamizal
problem .
Happiness
and
job
satisfaction as great as that
enjoyed by Miss Gonzalez is
not achieved by all women who
work for the Army.
At White Sands the Federal
Women's committee (under
the
Equal
Opportunity
Program) is working to help
women identify the training
and jobs best suited to their
abilities.
Women interested in the
work of the committee are
invited to call Frances
Williams at 678-5219 or Gayle
Hinchart at (i78-3307.
5
99
m
B•nd•••I
~ I Qod11
LEARN ElECTRONtCS3 WAYS TO BUILD
A BIGGER, BRIGHTER FU1VRE
Enroll in one of Bell & Howen
Schools' exciting, at-home training programs.
• Home Entertainment
Electronics Systems. learn
TV servicing as you build
your own Solid State
Color TV.
• Electronic Communications.
Prepare for a career seivicinl
two-way radio equipment.
• Electronic Operations
Technology and Computer
Controls. Train for careers
in industrial electronics and
i11strumentation.
Approved by the state •PP.roval
agency for Veterans' Benefits.
Eligible institution under the
Federally Insured Student loan
Program.
Art Electror1/c. Home SrlldySo/toel
DEVRY1JnSTITUTI! DFTECtllDLDIJY
~ BELL"~ HOWEU S00:U
4141 Belmont Avenue
Chicago, llllnois 808'1
[)opt. •
AJ1>9-6
FOR MORE INFOFIMATl9N
CALL:
Leo Rodriguez
10122 Saigon St.
El Paso, Texos 79925
Ph. (9151 598-2078
Over
Dealers
Cost
955 S. Valley Dr.
524-7721
LAS
CRUCE~
USE WANT ADS!
• I .
·T egmeyer '~
Steahhou."it' &
":!.>2fl-MJ:u,
!. '"""-'" -;o1:·
·
/.,01111/..(t'
..
/,n., Cmn·s
Featuring
The Saints
This Weekend Only
9 p.m. to 1 p.m.
LIVE LOBSTER FEATURED FIRST
FRIDAY OF EACH MONTH
OUR STEAKS & SEAFOOD DINNERS ARE TOPS.
.
AGE 6- WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23, 1972
Carter G. Woodson
Alexandre Dumas
More ibex
released
in Floridas
Frederick Dougl48s
Shirley Chisholm
hat's your Black history l.Q.?
Last week wa-s National
Black History Week, but our
awareness and knowledge of
Black history should not be
confined to one week of each
year but, rather, 52 weeks.
To create a greater
awareness of Black history and
of the contributions of individual Blacks to our way of
life, this quiz is being
presented . Try to match the
pictures
with
their
biographies.
I. The son or a French
general nicknamed the "Black
Devil" , he made and lost 10
fortunes. A witty, dashing
figure, he took iiterary Paris
by storm. In the 68 years he
lived, he produced some 277
volumes, including "The Three
Musketeers" and "The Count
of Monte Cristo".
2. A long-time civil rights
advocate, he was one of the
thirteen people in the first
group of Freedom Riders and
participated actively in the
continuing struggle for racial
equality . He helped to found
the Congress on Racial
Equality <CORE) in 1942 and
has served as its national
director.
:I.
In
a
survey
by
"Newsweek" in 196:1, this man
stood first as the leader in the
Black Revolution. A minister
from Atlanta, this man was a
firm believer in non-violence
o
matter
what
the
rovocation. It was said of him
by a close associate that "he
articulated the longings, the
opes, the aspirations of his
eople in a most earnest and
rofound manner."
His
ramatic rise to leadership in
he civil rights movement
gan in 1955 with a boycott of
ublic transportation in
ontgomery, Ala . Many
arches, boycotts and protests
ollowed until finally, in 1964,
e was awarded the Nobel
eace Prize. He continued to
igure prominantly in the
ontinuing struggle for racial
quality
until he was
ssassinated in April, 1968.
-t. This woman escaped from
la very to Philadelphia in 1849.
here s he became an out poken advocate of the
bolition of slavery and
eturned to the South many
imes risking her own life to
Ma'MJ McLeod Bethune
Harriet Tubman
escort other blacks to freedom
the
"Underground
on
Railroad" . Moving by night
and hiding by day, she carried
a revolver or a rifle which she
used against anyone who tr~ed
to intercept her - or against
any slave who lost his nerve .
Her work was so effective that
she soon carried a $40,000 price
on her head. During the Civil
War, she served as a Union
nurse and spy.
5 . In July, 1893, hospitals
were not the clean, antiseptic
facilities we take them for now .
Yet it was in such a place,
Provident Hospital , in 100
degree heat , that this man
performed the very first
operation that involved the
repair of a human heart. He
later moved from Provident
Hospital, which he helped to
found, to the Freedmen's
Hospital in Washington, D.C.
He also was on the staffs of St.
Luke's and Mercy Hospital ,
and the Northwestern School of
Medicine.
fl. The son or a tenant farmer
and former slave, this man has
been called the "father of
Negro history". After working
as a coal miner in Virginia to
finance his education, he began
a long career of teaching and
writing. One of his books, "The
Negro in our History" ,
published in 1922, was the first
textbook of its kind and proved
valuable later as U.S. schools
began to develop black study
programs.
7. A strong critic of Booker T.
Washington, this man was a
prolific writer and was instrumental in the formation of
the NAACP. The involvement
of blacks in pressing the issues
of segregation in the courts
was initially discussed by a
group led by this man and
called the Niagara Movement.
In 1961, having decided that
blacks had no future in the
U.S., he went into . exile in
Africa , where he died in 1963.
8. This man first began his
public career as the editor of
the
antiwar
magazine,
"Messenger". He then became
active in the formation of the
National Association for the
Promotion of Labor Unionism .
The Brotherhood of Sleeping
Car Porters and Maids, which
he organized in 1925, was the
first successful attempt at·
black unionism . Recognized as
a pioneer in agitating for
improved working conditions
for blacks, he became the first
president of the National Negro
Congress, and was instrumental in the establishment of the U.S. Government
Committee on Fair Em ployment Practices.
!I. Born in Maysville, S.C.,
she was the founder of a
college, the National Council of
Negro Women, was the Florida
state director of the American
Red Cross, Director of the
Negro Affairs Division of the
National Youth Administration
and a consultant to the founding conference of the United
Nations. She received the
NAACP 's Springarn Awa rd
and the Medal of Merit from
the Republic of Haiti.
w. This man began his public
career
in
his
na tive
Massachusetts as head of the
Boston Finance Commission
and was subsequently elected
Attorney General of that State.
Lat er he gained national
prominence when he became
the first black elected to a full
term to the U.S. Senate since
1874.
11. Raised in Pasa dena,
Calif.. he attended Pasadena
Martin Luther King Jr.
legislature. She was elected to
the U.S. Congress in 1969 and
ran for president in 1972.
14. He was born in Baltimore
in 1908. In 1935, he joined the
legal staff of the NAACP and in
1938 became the first directorcounsel of its Legal Defense
and Education Fund. In 1965,
he was appointed Solicitor
General by President Johnson
and was later appointed to the
Supreme Court.
Edward W. Brooke
Junior College and U.C.L.A.
Shortly before graduation, he
left school to join the National
Youth Administration. After a
period of service in the armed
forces during World War II, he
joined a professional baseball
club in the old Negro American
League. In 1945, he joined the
Brooklyn Dodgers organization
and played for that team 's
farm club in Montreal. He
became the first black to play
major league baseball when he
moved up to the Dodgers in
1947.
12. Born a slave in Maryland
in 1817, he escaped to the North
in 1838 where he became an
active abolitionist. An eloquent
orator and writer whose
autobiography became world
famous, this man was
variously employed as an
editor, a lawyer and a foreign
minister during his career.
1:J. Formerly a consultant on
child welfare in New York City,
she served four years as an
assemblywoman representing
Brooklyn in the state
Jackie Robinson
A. Phi li p Randolph
,,
Daniel Hale Willia.ms
James Farmer
Thurgood Marshall
W. E. B. Du Boi$
ANSWERS:
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w1oqS!lf::> AaJJ!lfS "ti
sse18noa Jta1.1apa.1..i ·u
uosuiqoy a1Jtaer ·u
a1100.1g p.1eMp3 ·01
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S!OH na ·g·3·M "L
uospooM ·9 .1a1.1e3 ·9
swem!M a1eH 1a1uea ·~
uewqn.1. napJeH 't
".If ~U!)I Jaqtn'l U!llllW •t
JawJe.!1 sawer ·z
sewna a.1puexa1v · 1
WED NITE ODD COUPLES
LEAGUE: 1. P's and R's, 32-8;
2. Bottoms Up, 30-10; 3.
Hookers,
26-14.
TOP
BOWLERS (men) : 1. Bill
Markus, 212-547; 2. Ron Mayer,
201-553; 3. Pat Oakes, 200-516.
<Women): 1. Marge Withers,
168-432; 2. Carol Cook, 153-365;
3. Jo Lucas, 147-429.
BANTAM NO. 1: 1. Pin
Killers , 43-11; 2. Filthy Four,
42-12; 3. Gutter Balls, 39-15; 4.
Tigers, 26-28; 5. Bald Eagles,
23-31; 6. Roadrunners, 24-30.
TOP BOWLERS: 1. Jim
Salzman, 419-160; 2. Sam
Combs, 375-134; 3. Anithra
Cranford, 372-134; 4. Debbie
Bowling, 372-133; 5. Jessie
Moore , 358-133. MOST IMPROVED : Jim Salzman - 14,
Tracy Weathers - 11. HIGH
AVERAGE: Sam Combs - 146,
Debbie Bowling - 113.
THURSDAY MIXED
COUPLES : 1. Ding-A-Lings,
112-48; 2. Dum Dums, 110-50; 3.
Hit or Miss, 96-64; 4. Roommates, 95-65; 5. Suluts, 94-66.
TOP BOWLERS : 1. Annette
Gentile, 204-572; 2. Shirley
Smith, 193-523 ; 3. Lois Parish,
176-498; 4. Jim With ers, 210566; 5. Vic Celania, 202-564 ; 6.
Errol Quick, 192-550.
ROADRUNNER CHICKS: 1.
Sakura, 118-58-44854; 2. Pin
Peckers, 122-64-4894 ; 3. More-0Les,
106-70-45187.
TOP
BOWLERS : 1. Sumi Kita , 515186; 2. Terry Pier , 491-177; 3.
Clara Jo Lucas, 490-200. Edith
Wilson had an a ll spare game
of 181.
MISSILE FIZZLES : 1. Slo
Starter s , 125-59 ; 2. Tum bleweeds, 118-66 ; 3. Sa ndbagger s ,
113-71.
TOP
BOWLERS: 1. Lea Landis, 202542: 2. Clara Jo Lucas, 218-527;
3. Frances Casey , 180-507; 4.
Frances Wilkins, 172-500; 5.
Bonnie Heiden, 175-495.
JR-SR WINTER LEAGUE :
l. TM l , 92-60; 2. TM 5, 83-69; 3.
TM 7, 80-72; 4. TM 10, 78-74; 5.
TM 2, 74-78; 6. TM 8, 74-78. TOP
BOWLERS <boys ) : 1. Da ve
Deen, 542-206 ; 2. Dave Sment,
527-197 ; 3. Mike Jones, 480-189;
(girls): 4. Lisa DeVer a, 424168: 5. Connie Boraca, 431-161 ;
6. Vicky Western, 399-161.
Th er e ar e mor e t han 119
AUSA Chapters throughout the
world . You too are eligible to
this
worthwhile
join
organization.
The Department of Game ,
and Fish has released an additional 10 Iranian ibex in the
Florida Mountains, southeast
of Deming, bringing the
number of these exotic animals
in the Floridas to an estimated
40 to 50. The Department first
released 15 of these animals in
the rugged Florida Range in
Dec., 1970.
The latest release of the ibex
included six males and four
females . The animals were
trapped from one of the gameproof pastures on the Department's Red Rock Wildlife area
near Lordsburg. They were
then crated individually and
trucked to the west base of the
Floridas and, frl}m there,
carried by four-wheel drive
vehicles to an area near the top
of the mountain. Access to the
area was by a private road
used by a mining operation.
The road is not open to public
travel.
The 10 animals were
released simultaneously and it
is hoped that they will join with
the other ibex that are already
on the mountain. The release
site is in an area where the
other ibex have been seen.
Four of the 10 ibex released
last week were fitted with
collars which have radio
transmitters attached, making
it possible to trace the animals'
movements in a post-release
study. Bob Bavin, a Colorado
State University graduate
student working on his
master's degree, will live in the
area in a trailer house and
conduct a year's study on the
animals in their new habitat.
•
•
A FISH STORY - Five El Paso residents, including Robert
Tucker, NR-CK, spent the Washington Birthday Weekend at
Lake Roberts, N .M., where they caught a total of 21 trout. The
largest of this picturesque catch measured 15 inches. Bait was
corn and all were caught from shore.
With the
weather
CHANGE TO SILVER - The director of White Sands Missile
Range's Army Air Operations was promoted to lieutenant
colonel last week during brief ceremonies at post headquarters.
Here Lieutenant Colonel Clyde L. Motes receives a handshake
and silver oak leaf denoting his new ra nk from Major General
Arthur H. Sweeney Jr., national range commander. A Vietnam
veteran with more than 18 years Army service, LTC Motes lives
at 2840 Quay Loop, Holloman Air Force Base, with his wife
Verna and their four children.
COURSE COMPLETION - Specialist Seven James A. Key,
right, displays the certificate and receives a handshake from
Captain David H. Gilbert , for completion of an extensive course
in automatic data processing systems analysis. The exhaustive
correspondence course , offered by the Adjutant General's
School at Ft. Benjamin Har rison, earns 76 eredit hours on
completion. SP7 Key, assigned to the Management Information
Systems office, is only the fourth person on post to complete the
course in the last two years.
speech contest
When you pay a bill , you
expect a receipt, right'? If you
owe money when you file your
F ederal tax r eturn this year ,
pay with a check or money
order . To prevent a n y mixup
when you file, put your Social
Security number on the check
or money order that accompanies your return . A
canceled check or money order .
is your record of tax payment.
?.
·.~
D eg r ee - w i se and
prec ipitation-wise , WSMR
experienced an unusual and
rather mixed-up January.
Temperatures at "A" station
<WSMR Headquarters )
combined to make the month
the coldest since 1966.
The average temperature, 52
degrees, was four degrees
above the norm , and the
average minimum of 31
degrees was three degrees
colder than the mean.
Coldest " A" Station temperature during January was
22 degrees on the 29th and the
68
J an.
16.
warmest,
Rangewide the coldest temperature was nine · d~grees at
Apache a nd Desert Raob the
•
•
:~rd.
Andy Fliss wins
Andy Fliss won the third
round of the preliminaries in
the White Sands Toastmasters
Club 3422 a nnual speech
contest at the Wedn esday
meeting.
He will compete next week in
the finals to select the club
winner who will continue in
competition at th e area contest.
Frank Dylla won the table
topics award for his impromptu presentation and Joe
Fuller was selected as best
evaluator.
Doyle Mathews will serve as
toastmaster for next week's
meeting, Feb. 28. Topicmaster
will be Ted Johnson , and the
point of emphasis will be given
by Zeke Montes.
Speakers will be Andy Fliss,
Joe Fuller and Dick Dale.
•
------------ ...
Desierto to hold
speech contest
Desierto Toastmistress Club
will hold its annual speech
contest Feb. 28 at 11 :30 a.m. at
the Noncommissioned Officers
Open Mess.
Winner in this competition
will compete later in Council
competition and, should she
win there, move on to regional
and, perhaps, national levels.
Featured speakers at the
meeting will be Pat Ayers,
Elaine Woods and Martha
Anderson .
Judges will be Evie Jones,
Gladys Frost, ·Art Borrego and
Colonel James Pierce.
Timers will be Ruth Sybrant
and Lois Christensen ; tellers,
Allison Noel, Margaret Pena
and Loretta Emery ; and
pages, Evelyn Bullard and
Ramona Taft.
The speeches will be
preceded by a sit-down roast
beef luncheon costing $2.50.
The speech contest is open to
any interested person. Contact
Nora Gonzales, 678-4343, for
reservations .
THREE MORE:__ SP6 Robert
Lucas Jr., a computer
programmer assigned to White
Sands Missile Range's Atmospheric Sciences
Laboratory, U.S. Army
Electronics Command, has
reenlisted for another three
years with the U .S . Army .
Assigned to the national range
in August 1972, after completing a duty tour on Okinawa, !
SP6 Lucas lives at 602 Ravenna
with his wife Clara and son
Timothy, 6.
" A" Station precipitation of
1.07 inches was .59 inch greater
tha n the 24-year January
average, and the 5.5 inches of
snowfall during the month was
4.5 inches above normal. This
snowfall had been exceeded
d uri ng the 24-year period of
record only in 1972 when " A"
Station received 6.9 inches for
the month.
T e mp e ra t ur e s dur i ng
F ebruary are expected to
increase, the average daily
maxi mum going from the
Janua r y 54 degr ees to 62
d egrees in F ebruary and t he
mean minimum from 32 to 40
degrees.
Wind speeds are expected to
inc r ease fro m 5.8 knots in
J anuary to 6.5 knots. On the
average 40 percent of the sky is
co vered .
Norm al
cloud
precipitation is near one-half
inch and an average of l1fl
inches of snow falls .
The length of day increases
by 49 minutes in Febr uary.
Indi cat ions a r e t hat tem perat ures a nd precipitation
during the month will be near
normal levels .
•
•
Income tax tips
SHIPS OVER - Chief Steward C.V. Caldejon , right, Supply
Gepartment, Naval Ordnance Missile Test Facility, takes the
re-enlistment oath for an additional three years, administered
by Captain H.E . Davies Jr., commanding officer of NOMTF.
SDC Caldejon is in charge of the Navy's Commissioned Officers
Mess (closed ) at WSMR. <US Navy Photo by PHl J.W. Lamm )
Jolts of drug abuse
Spa in has much to offer
tourists - bull fights, gay
fiestas , golf courses, excellent
beaches, and sunny weather .
Spain also offers free room and
board for a minimum of 6 years
and 1 day. To qualify, you need
onl y be convicted of drug
possession. The year you spend
in pre-trial confi nement is
credited to your sentence. And
you need not be concerned
a bout a language barrier . You
will likely share a cell with
another American who thought
he was too smart to get caught.
Drug a rrests in Spain have
more than tripled in the past
three years.
The Southern New Mexico
Chapter of the Association of
the United States Army works
for all the men and women who
wear the Army green!
Last year , over 75 million
individual Federal income tax
returns were filed wit h t he
Internal Revenue Service. How
do you think each one is
identified ? By the taxpayer 's
Social Security number , which
provides the IRS with positive
id enti ficat ion on a ll t ax
documents that belong to that
taxper . P ut your Socia l
Security number on all
correspondence with IRS. It
helps them keep your tax
account records straight!
DON' T LI TTER!
Mesilla Valley
Lincoln Mercury
IS PROUD
TO ANNOUNCE
GIL GILBERT
To Their Staff
llEAl ESTATE CO.
For All Your Needs
Located 9488 Dyer & Sanders
New Homes-Resales-Rentals
Phone 755-2327
24 Hour Service
El Paso
•
•
Gil invites all his friends
To ·c ome by and see him.
At
1601 N. MAIN-LAS CRUCES
PH. 526-2841
•
WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER, FEB. 23.. 1973 - PAGE 7
Celtics unbeaten in
bantam basketball
One team remains undefeated in the bantam
basketball league and after six
weeks of play, every team has
at least one victory.
In the senior division , the
Bullets won their first game of
the season with a hard-fought
42-40 victory over the Knicks.
Clyde Johnson poured in 24
points for the winning Bullets,
and that performance earned
him honors as high point man
in any single game this season.
Aiding Johnson in the Bullets'
first victory were Andy Price
with 10, Rick Reidy with four
and Charles Everett and Bill
Naddef with two apiece.
The losing Knicks showed a
three pronged scoring attack
.
AT THE HELM - New officers of the WSMR Junior Rifle Club are, from right, Bill Poorman,
president, and Sandra Beach and Timothy Western, vice-presidents.
Junior Rifle Club members
get 157 shooting awards
By CPT George C. Leach
The WSMR Junior Rifle Club
began its spring activities last
Thursday evening with a
e eneral membership meeting
and awards presentation at the
Post Theater.
Paul Fullbright, club leader,
outlined the spring activities
for the clt1b which will be
highlighted by the parentmember match and the club
champion match.
The club winners of the
National Rifle Association
Winter Postal Matches were
announced.
Sub-junior match winners
....[under 13) for November,
W>ecember and January were
David Reason, Steven Beach
and
Timothy
Hickey,
respectively.
Junior match winners for
each month were Trevas
Younger, Douglas Clonts and
John Harzewski.
Club teams placed thirtythird of a possible sixty-five in
the sub-junior class and eightyseventh of ninty-five in the
•
junior class. Most of the team
members engaged in this
competition had been shooting
for only three months.
New club officers elected are
Bill Poorman, president, and
Sandra Beach and Timothy
Western, vice-presidents. They
presented the awards for the
past few months.
Since Nov. 1972, 157 NRA
shooting awards were earned
by local club members. This
represents an achievement few
shooting clubs can ever hope to
match.
The most improved shooter
was Steven Beach, who earned
the Marksman First Class and
Sharpshooter awards with
Bars one through four. Second
place was shared by a four way
tie between Wayne Clonts,
Robert and Timothy Hickey
and Gary Jefferson. Each
received the Pro-Marksman,
Marksman, Marksman First
Class and Sharpshooter
awards with Bars one through
three.
Other members earning
·The Sports Seen
SAFSEA made it a sweep of the season's basketball title with
a 62-59 victory over ASL No. 1 in the post season tournament.
Earlier, SAFSEA had finished the regular season with a perfect
10-0 record to take that title.
+++++
Volleyball intramurals are scheduled to begin shortly. With
no post team planned, a team will be made up from the intramural league to represent the range at the Fifth Army
Tournament, scheduled for March 20-23 at Ft. Hood, Texas.
+++++
•
A' speedy recovery to Vic Grant, Assistant sports director,
ho underwent a kidney stone operation, from all the personnel
at the sports office.
+++++
Roll-offs have been completed for spots on the post bowling
team and WSMR will host the Five Star Bowling tournament
next weekend.
•
llAZ/14
TRADE-INS
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•
'70 TOYOTA 1200
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28,000 miles.
'67 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE • '1495
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'11 MAVERICK ....
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'71 FORD PICKUP •
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'10 PONTIAC CATALINA
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'69 OLDS
SAFSEA
awards 6
Six employes of the
Safeguard Systems Evaluation
Agency here have been
recognized for outstanding
multiple awards were Sandra performance of duty and
Beach,
Marksman
and length of service.
Sharpshooter with Bars one
Receiving Quality Step Inthrough
three;
Joseph creases were James H. Peters,
Thomas,
Marksman, Las Cruces, director of the
Marksman First Class and Data Processing Performance
Sharpshooter with Bars one Evaluation Directorate, and
through three; and Bill Raymon E. Price, El Paso,
Poorman, Pro-Marksman, Perimeter Acquisition Radar
Marksman, Marksman First Division.
Class and Sharpshooter with
Two persons receiving
Bars one and two.
Outstanding Performance
Qualifying for Marksman Awards
were
James
First Class and Sharpshooter Zubizarreta, El Paso, Data
with Bar one and two were Processing Hardware
Harry Miles, Matthew Mov- Division, and Mrs. Sandra
sesian, Ronald Poe and Rouse, Las Cruces, Manpower
Richard Thompson. Richard and Management Branch.
also earned the Marksman
Francis N. Winans, Las
award.
Cruces, Weapons Effects
Seven new club members set Division, received a 20-year
impressive records, earning length of service pin and
the
Pro-Marksman, certificate and Hector J.
Marksman, Marksman First Esparza, El Paso, Main Class and Sharpshooter tenance and Safety Division,
Awards. They were Bill was awarded a 10-year length
Hughes, Larry Seefeldt, Jean of service pin and certificate.
Salzman, Kenneth McDonald,
The awards were made by
John and Casey Harzewski and Colonel Bobbie A. Griffin.
Bret Hayman. John, Casey and
Bret also qualified for Bar one
to the Sharpshooter award.
Other award recipients were
Mike Ayers, Curtis Leach and
Charlene and James Thompson, earning the Marksman,
Marksman First Class and
Sharpshooter awards. Cathy
Sophomore sprinters will
Miles, Carla Younger, Trevas take the spotlight Friday night
Younger and Steve Wiggs at Sunland Park as IO threeearned Marksman First Class year-olds face Starter Dean
Turpitt in the featured eighth
and Sharpshooter awards.
Members qualifying for the race.
Friday's 10-race card gets
Pro-Marksman, Marksman
and Marksman First Class underway at 7:30 p.m., but it'll
awards were Greg Judah, be back to the regular 1:30 p .m.
Robert Leach, David Reason for 12-race programs both
and Timothy Western. Donnie Saturday and Sunday.
The top attraction of the
King qualified for the
Marksman and Marksman
Jnrst Class award and Paul
Dean earned the Marksman
First Class award.
The Pro-marksman and
Marksman awards went to
Timothy
Hughes,
Jean
Thomas, Margaret Thomas
and Ronald Pierce.
The club's newest member,
James McCarthy, earned the
Pro-Marksman award and is
well on his way toward further
achievements.
The older club members, not
to be outshot by
the
newcomers, continued their
qualifications toward Expert
with James Spooner earning
Bar five and six, Barbara Poe
earning Bar one through four,
Douglas Clonts qualifying for
Bar four, and Shelia Poe
receiving Bars one through
three.
Also Jessie Moore earned
Bars two and three, Robert
Nichols qualified for Bar three
and Steve Moore earned Bar
one .
as !Jon :\lassey. Doug Dowden
and David Gloor pumped in 13,
12, and 11 points respectively.
Steve Reid canned two, and
Curt Latimer and David York
combined for two more.
In the other senior di vision
game. the Lakers maintained
their first place position with a
29-21 victory over the second
place Bucks. Tony Casey hit 16
for the Lakers. David Va ldez
dropped in seven. Cassy
Harzewski canned four. and
Greg Fagan hit for two.
The losing Bucks were led by
Isaiah Murray. 12 points. Bill
Hughes, five. Larry Seefeldt.
two. and Ron Pagett. two.
In the Junior Division, the
Celtics remain undefeated.
They outpointed the last place
Squires 28-15 to take their sixth
win.
Mark Heiden and Gary Gloor
led the winners' attack with 10
points apiece . Ron Pierce
added six and Ken Murray
contributed two.
Three men scored for the
losing Squires. Tim Slattery hit
for seven , Bob Hickey canned
six and Harry Acosta added
two.
An overtime victory by the
Pistons gave them undisputed
second place in the Junior
Division. They took the Kings
by a single point, 22-21. Sean
McLaughlin's 12 points led all
scorers. Ben Torres, five, Bill
Apodaca, three, and Robin
Mccurry, two, rounded out the
Pistons' attack.
The Kings, knocked into
third place by the loss, were
paced by John Perkins who
pumped in nine . Carl
Richardson added six, and Bill
Donahue and Clyde Murray hit
for four and two points.
League standings are:
senio1· Division
Lakers
5
Bucks
4
2
Knicks
2
4
Bullets
5
Junior Division
Celtics
6
0
Pistons
3
3
Kings
2
4
Squires
1
5
Quarter Horse Derby
on schedule for Sunday
we
weekend takes place Sunday as
10 home-bred three-year--0ld
Quarter Horses line up for the
fifth running of the Spring
Quarter Horse Derby at 400
yards.
The 10 qualifiers are Mr. Top
Tex, Sea Of Stars, Ima Reh; Jet
O'Roses , Miss Jet Otoe, Tap
Toe Leo , The Honker , Miss
Hippie, Duplicate Moon and
Antique Lad.
GOT THE BEST
DAMN STEAKS ANO
DRINKS IN TOWN •••.
JUST ASK JOHN.
MVP-Terry Marsha (24) was selected most valuable player at the recent Fifth Army basketball
tournament at Ft. Riley, Kan ., not only for his outstanding scoring performance. but also for the
rugged defense he played. Here, he defends against Jeff Snelling of F t. Leavenworth during one of
the final games. Behind Marsha, the White Sands team finished second in the tournament.
Women score big
•
1n Cruces tourney
WSMRites carried off more
than their share of honors in
the 16th annual Las Cruces
Women's Bowling Association
tournament Sunday.
Top winner was Phyllis
An'ast, a sergeant first class in
the WAC hP,re.
She won the Division I title
with a 716 <handicapped ). She
also won the high individual
scratch series by rolling a 603.
And the high handicapped
game went to her with a 269,
just one pin ahead of her
nearest competitor, Lupe
Gutierrez.
Anast also had the runnerup
scratch game with 232, behind
Lupe Gutierrez with 237.
A Sands team, the Petite 5
was the Division I team
champion with a 2,964 score.
Members of this team are Sumi
11 . . 11111111111
IIII II II I
factory air.
••
smithmazda
4&20 DYER
566-93~5
El Paso
Phone 382-9920
VETERANS- RENTERS
Did You Know?
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By Buying A Dale Bellamah
Home.
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To Your Land- Lord!!!
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Open 10 to 7 Daily
Las Cruces
•
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I
anGAK
MDUlfTAllf
Deliciaas Charcoal Broiled Steaks Lodge
II II II Ill I II II
4
What Have You
Done Today
For Your Community?
George Chandler's
I II I II II II II II II II II II II
4
Ki ta, Ty Boraca, Terry Pier,
Sue Fujii and Frances Casey.
The Division II singles
winner was Mary Ann Nichols,
665, followed by Brenda
Skinner , Cecilia
Harty,
Virginia Haake, and Shirley
Miller.
Following Anast in Division I
were Nadine Jones, Colleen
Smith, Phyllis Eyer, Joann
Coday and Marlene Ham.
The winner in Division I
doubles competition was Janis
David and Nancy Phillips,
1,268, followed by Fran
Wilkins-Phyllis Anast, Shirley
Hcdgecoke-Neta James, Billie
Matkin -Nadine Jones , and
Nancy Martinek -Mary Ann
Nichols.
Pam Lackey and Sandy
lludosky won in Division II
with a 1,207 score. Behind them
were Mary Olivarez-Shirley
Boghosian. Sarah Virgil·
Joanne Muro. Pinkie Stevensl<'ran Stakes and Evelin
Parsons-Molly Daly.
Nancy Phillips bowled the
second best scratch series,
Nadine Jones the second best
handicapped series, and Karen
·Weisner the third best behind
Anast and Gutierrez in the high
handicapped game.
Following the Petite 5 in
Division I team scores were
Family Shoe Center, White
Sands, Ritter J:listributing Co.
No. I, A~'s Prlace, Manny's
Auto Mart, Desert Motor
Toyota, 4-M Stables, Quick
Check and Roadrunner Chicks.
The Division II winner,
!layettes, 2,972, was followed
by the Misseleltes, Rede's
Pharmacy, Burger Time,
Ritter Distributing Co., No . 2
and Country Club Shell .
The Old West Bar, and the Coffee Shop, are
crammed with more artifacts, antiques, and
old west relics, than found in most museums.
Organ, New Mexico
, ~ Plan to dine '-;t Organ Mountain Lodge soon.
It is one of the few remaining authentic Old
still open to the public.
PAGE 8- WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGER. FEB. 23, 1973
Vets' dependents
eligible for OJT
PALS-Chief Petty Officer Glenn Brimm of White Sands Missile Range's Desert Navy (wearing
a hunting jacket) watches as his son Todd, 3, and dog, Thumper, romp at the post housing area.
Chief Brimm found the Husky-Labrador pup on Kodiak Island, loping along a dirt road with a rope
choking its throat, in 1970.
Love Affair
(Continued from Page I)
Kentucky, admits that he has
never trained a dog to hunt or
fish and wouldn't know how to.
begin. "Actually, I think the
dog trained me," he smiles.
Before leaving Alaska Chief
Brimm discovered
that
Thumper formerly belonged to
some itinerant
cannery
workers who had migrated
south following the fishing
season.
At White Sands Missile
Range Thumper found a
backyard shade tree and dug a
small hole to help fight the
blazing sun. ''She was a little
sluggish at first but got used to
the desert in about two weeks,"
Brimm says.
Thumper made her hunting
debut at the missile range
during the 1972 season and
proved she could flush and
recover quail and dove in the
desert as well as she did
Ptarmigan on the tundra of
Alaska.
Chief Brimm says the newest
addition to his family has only
one more lesson to learn. "She
must learn
about
the
dangerous end of skunks we
have here," he says. "She's
been sprayed once and we had
to wash her with tomato juice
at 2:30 in the morning."
Chief Brimm, his wife DixiL
and children, Monica, 8, and
Todd live at 206 Terrier.
WSMR . At the same address
lives a happy, long-tailed dog
that just two years ago was
loping along a dirt road on
Kodiak Island with a piece of
rope choking its throat.
NMSU sponsors
BASHA activities
LAS CRUCES - Lectures by
Dick Gregory, Black entertainer and spokesman, and
two outstanding Black authors
will highlight activities for
Black Association of Students
Hailing Action <BASHA) week
Feb. 26 to March 3 on the New
Mexico State University
campus.
BASHA is a student
organization for the more than
100 Blacks on the NMSU
campus, including some 35
foreign students. All lectures
will be at Corbett Center and
are open to the public. Admission is free.
"Social Action - Social or
Anti -Social" is the topic for
Gregory's lecture on Wednesday, Feb. 28, at 8 p.m.
Dr. Addison Gayle will kick
off the week's events Monday,
Feb. 26 at 8 p.m. with a lecture
called "Black Writer at War."
Dr. Gayle is an assistant
professor of English at Baruch
College, a division of the City
University of New York . His
latest books include "The
Black Situation" and "The
Black Aesthetic," which he
edited .
Tuesday, i"eb . 27 Dr .
Houston A. Baker Jr . will
speak at 8 p.m. on "Black
Culture, White Judgement :
Patterns of Justice in the Black
Narrative." An associate
professor of English at the
University of Virginia, Dr.
Baker
edited
"Black
Stephen Hopkins, a signer of Literature in America." He
the Declaration of In· recently wrote "Long Black
depeudence, was a victim of Song : Essays in Black
palsy.
1973 B8QUGNAM
TRAVEb~:1AILER
Ful ly self confained, sleeps 6,
complefel y rigged.
1913 GMC PICKUP
V·8, lon9 wide bed,. complefe
wifh, new EL DORADO CAMP·
ER stove, ice box, sleeps 4
Culture," which was published
last month.
BASHA will sponsor a
Record Hop with Steve Crosno
from 8 to 9 p.m. in Corbett
Center, Thursday, March 1.
Admission charge is $1.
Friday, a concert featurin~
Billy Preston begins at 9 p.m.
in the Pan American Center.
NMSU students will be admitted free with ID; charge for
other guests is $2.
The public is hvited to view
the Black Student Art Show in
the Corbett Center Art Gallery
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily
from March 3 to 22.
L. Bouvet ends
17-year career
Luis Bouvet of Garfield,
N.M., a motor vehicle operator
at White Sands Missile Range,
has announced his retirement
after 17 years of military and
civilian service.
He was assigned with the
Post Commissary Sales Store
Section of Subsistence Branch,
Supply Division, Logistics
Directorate.
Bouvet was born March 1,
1924, at Garfield. He served in
the U.S. Army for more than 18
months before entering civil
service in 1956.
Bouvet was employed at
WSMR from August 1956 to
July 1963 and again from
December 1964 until his
retirement, which became
effective Feb. 6.
He has been on leave pending
retirement. He plans to remain
in the Garfield area. north of
Las Cruces in Dona Ana
County. in retirement.
Income tax tips
52295 s3995
Got a special income tax
problem and don't know where
to turn? One of the first places
to look is the Internal Revenue
Ser\'ice. The IRS has over 80
free tax publications written in
plain English about special
problems . Whether your
question concerns the in nstment credit or the selfemployment tax or hundreds of
other subjects. chances are
vou ·11 find the a nswer in an IRS
publication . Where do you get
them? At your local IRS office .
TOLLIVER AND
SONS CO. ·
s7495
Uwua--_~- QUALITY T~UCKS
6610 INTERSTATE 10
..
El Paso
778-6435
VALVE GRINDING, REBORING CAM
GRINDING. PIN FITTING
AUTOMOTIVE ENGINE REBUILDING
CRANKSHAFT GRINDING
Truck- By-Pass & Barker Rd
Las Cruces, N.M.
Ph. 524-3529
Specializing in Racing
Cam Shafts
Veterans' wives, widows and
children, who are eligible for
VA educational assistance,
may now take on-the-job
training or apprenticeships in
lieu of going to college, the
Veterans Administration has
pciinted out.
A law approveti oy the
President in October increased
allowances for this type of
training by nearly 48 per cent
and broadened the types of
training available under the
Dependents' Educational
Assistance Program. ·
In addition to training wages
paid by employers, VA now
pays trainees a starting
stipend of $160 per month. The
old rate was $108.
During October, 102,000
veterans were taking on-thejob
and
apprenticeship
training, but trainees under the
Dependents' Education
Program were limited to inititutional training programs
lefore the October law.
For job-training veterans,
the starting allowance is $160
per month if they · have no
dependents. For those with one
dependent, the allowance was
raised from $120 to $179
monthly; with two dependents,
from $133 to $196. For each
additional dependent in excess
of two, veterans receive an
additional $8.
The new public law CPL-92540) also changed the rules on
correspondence training to
open this form of training to
eligible wives and children and
to provide greater protection
for trainees. The law also
permits greater flexibility in
classroom for veterans in fulltime
farm
cooperative
training. Some of the required
440 annual classroom hours
may be rescheduled provided
enrolees spend at least 80 hours
in classroom study in any three
month period, it was explained.
VA education benefits, including apprenticeship and
other on-job-training, are
available to those who served
at least 180 days, any part of it
after Jan. 31, 1955:
Also entitled to these benefits
are: wives, widows and
children of veterans whose
deaths or permanent, total
disabilities were service·
connected; and wives and
children of servicemen who are
prisoners of war or missing in
action for more than 90 days.
Veterans ask
<f - How long can I wait to
get my teeth fixed after I get
out of the Army?
A - You must apply within
one year after your discharge
to be eligible for the
presumption that your dental
conditions
are
serviceconnected. Even so, not all
dental conditions can be
presumed to be serviceconnected. For example, teeth
lost before you entered service
obviously are not.
Q - With no more space in
the National cemeteries, I have
been wondering whether I
might be buried in a VA
cemetery. Can the money VA
pays for burial expenses be
used this way?
A - VA does not have a
cemetery system of its own. It
has a few small plots near VA
hospitals and domiciliaries
where veterans who have died
in these facilities have been
buried, but most of this space is
now full. Chances are you could
not be buried anywhere near
your home if you chose one of
the few available plots. The VA
burial expense payment can be
made regardless of the burial
place.
Humprey Davy, discoverer
of sodium and potassium, and
Handel, composer of the worldfamous "Messiah", were lame.
FRON
WHERE
My hevvins ! ! What could all
that wet stuff be, dropping
from the sky?? Could it be
rain?? . . . er snow?? ... er ...
gosh, it sure isn't sun, is it?
Well, guess it's good for the
crops <if you've got a couple);
or the trees and shrubbery;
and the - hope to be soon green grass. I'm sure not
complainin', folks. Just find it
rather unusual, but that's the
latest, I reckon. Unusual
weather. Ha! !
0
0
0
Welcome to a new cowpoke,
SP4 Larry Garris to TMP No.
l, Equipment Pool Branch.
Hope you like it here in the Bar
Log-Eee Ranch . Adios to
several cowboys who have
moved on to greener pastures.
They are: PVT Karlton Jones
from Holloman Section, LGEM <ETS time); PVT Dannie
Kelley, LG-EM, going on PCS
to Mannheim, Germany; and
PVT Danny Starling on PCS to
somewhar out thar in Germany. Also Mr. Thomas McCain, LG-EM, took the big leap
to "Retirementsville." Hope
you all will be very happy out
thar!
0
0
0
Congratulations to Arthur
Narvaez, LG~EM, on his
Quality Step Increase.
Also, thanks to all of those
nice people for their hard work
enabling Equipment
Management Division to
receive a Certificate for Excellence for 1973, from the Sun
Country Combined Federal
Campaign. Those good people
also received citations for
Outstanding Leadership and
Support from the Chairman of
SCFC. They are: Dan Diaz,
Allied Trades; Wilbur Dugger,
Heavy Construction Section;
Gene Gorman, Inspection
Section, and Lewie "Peewee"
Vaughan, Material Control
Section.
Also Ken Ford, Holloman
Maintenance Section; Ed
Pennington, Rhodes Canyon
Maintenance Section ; Benny
Salazar, Automotive Shop; Nat
Hard, Data Collection Branch;
Captain Richard Beard,
Mechanical Maintenance
Branch;
John
Teeuw,
Equipment Control Branch;
William Mayes, Generator
Shop and Loretta Emery,
Programs and Administration
Branch.
Additionally, we are very
proud of PFC Michael Bennally, Heavy Vehicle Section,
who was selected as Soldier-0fthe-Month for February 1973.
He received a $25 Savings Bond
and a 3-day pass.
0
0
0
Congratulations also go to
2LT Wilbur G. Dugger Jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur G.
Dugger Sr. <Heavy Equipment
Section, LG-EM > who recently
was awarded his silver wings
at Laughlin AFB, Texas, upon
'graduation from U.S. Air
Force pilot training. He is
being assigned to Ching Chuan
&;
24 Hour
...
Service
.__~~
Chevron
Devil Bill Adams
MAIN & PICACHO'
·
Las cruces
TUNE -UPS
Kang AB, Taiwan. for flying
DOING THE DIRTY WORK - Boy Scouts of WSMR Troop 74
duty with the Pacific Air
found out that camping also involves chores during a weekend
Force. Lt. Dugger is a
campout over the Washington Birthday Holiday. Doing the·
graduate of Las Cruces Hi'gh
dishes after cooking their own meal are, from the left, Robert
School and received his
Nichols, Kenneth McDaniel an.d Jim Safar.
bachelors degree in 1971 from - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NMSU. Good luck to this
"Winged Warrior."
SIDELINES
Hope everyone passed the
AMC "Ferret" Review Team's
"check-up" with flying colors.
Glad to see "Mo" Oliver
back in LG-ED following
prolonged illness.
Poor Denise! She is really
Scouts enjoy a varied array of New Mexico. There are few
hobbling after her "trip" of programs within the places in this country where
upstairs. Better just watch it ! organization of their troop, and Scouts can enjoy practically
probably the most enjoyable year-round camping, and the
and rewarding is outdoor Scouts of Troop 74, who have
camping.
been stationed all over the
The outdoor program in- world. loved every minute of it.
<Continued rrom Page 11
cludes mastering such skills as
All the Scout troops on post
use of map and compass, first are looking for youngste•
awards, including outstanding aid. pioneering and cooking. interested in getting into the
performance ratings,
This past weekend, Scout Scouting program. Potential
sustained superior awards and troops from White Sands spent Scouts or their parents can
quality step increases in pay. several days camped on the obtain more information from
"I have been associated with Rio Grande near the historic Chief Warrant Officer Marmany wonderful people here at town of Mesilla, N.M.
shall Pyland, 678-3253.
White Sands," he says. "If I
Troop 74, the older Boy
had it to do over again, I would Scouts. left Friday evening.
not change a thing."
They set up camp after dark in E.R. Carsrud
He plans to remain in El a grove of salt cedars on the
Paso, where he serves as Stake west bank of the fabled river retirement set
clerk of the Church of Jesus opposite the town that was once
On leave pending retirement
Christ of Latter Day Saints. He the capital of the New Mexico
Elmer R. Carsrud of Las
is
will devote more time to Territory.
Cruces, a supply supervisor •
fishing, yard work and home
Saturday the Scouts hosted White Sands Missile Range.
projects.
the Webelos Den of WSMR Cub
He has been assigned with
Souter's wife is the former Scout Pack 79. Under the
the
Atmospheric Sciences
Ardena Stephens of Cedar City, watchful eye of the older
U.S . Army
utah. Their children are Mrs. Scouts, the young Webelos Laboratory,
Electronics
Command,
serving
Danny <Valerie) Danserreau cooked over an open fire, hiked
of El Paso; Stephen Souter, a and sat around an evening in the property branch of ASL's
graduate of Texas Tech campfire, singing songs, Logistics Office.
Carsrud 's retirement will
University and now an ar - participating in skits and
become
effective March 2. At
chitect in San Antonio, Tex .. telling stories.
that
time
he will have comand Julie Ann Souter, a student
The Webelos returned to the
pleted
18 1 ~ years of governat Ricks College in Rexburg, range Saturday evening.
ment civilian service, inIdaho.
Troop 74 spent three days
cluding 13 years at WSMR . He
and nights camped under the
has been employed at WSMR
sunny skies and starry nights since February 1960.
•
Boy Scouts enjoy •
weekend of camping
Souter retires
NOMTF
honors 2
of George Washington's
Birthday SALE
Take Advantage of These
Fabulous Savings
READ WANT ADS!
USE WANT ADS!
Come by and dea l w ith the economy minded
people at Desert Motor Company
MONEY
SAVING
CAR
BUYS!
DON'T
YOU
THINK
IT'S TIME TO CUT
EXPENSES? HERE IS
THE WAY TO SAVE!!
You
OPENING
LAST2
DAYS
Two
WSMRites
were
recently honored by the Naval
Ordnance Missile Test Facility
here.
Specialist Five Donald C.
Atkins, photographic
laboratory technician , was
awarded a letter of appreciation
for
his
professionalism and for his
part in aiding many Navy
missions through outstanding
performance of his work.
In a traditional Navy
ceremony, Gunner's Mate
<Guns> First Class R . Raper,
Research Rockets Division,
NOMTF, was "piped over the
side" and transferred to the
Fleet Reserve after 20 years of
Naval service.
Save
On
The Original
premium , and on the
maintenance cost.
1972 TOYOTA Mark II
station
wagon.
4
cy l inder, 4 speed. Extra
clean. Was S2,595. Sale
Ask for
Loi s
Cynthia
or
(Honey)
Owner
Hannelore
(Honey)
Johnson
Full Service Reauty Center
Blow Drying
Specialize ]11 Hair Shaping
Evening Appointments
523-9405
201 E. Lohman
Lomador Center- Las Cruces
523-9405
1972 TOYOTA Ma r k II . 2
door har dtop, 4 cylinder,
automati c, radio, air
conditioner . Was S2,095.
1971 VOLKSWAGEN
Station
Wagon .
4
cyl i nder ,
automatic
transmi ssion. Radio .
Extra clean . Was $2 ,095.
$2,483
1971
VOLKSWAGON
KARMANN
GHIA
convertible. 4 cyl inder , 4
speed, radio. 'Nas $1 ,795.
Sale
1970 TOYOTA Mark II . 2
door ,
hardtop.
4
cy l inder, 4 speed, radio,
l owner. Was $1 ,895
Sale
$1 ,769
1970 TOYOTA Mark II. 4
door, 4 cvlinder , 4 speed .
Air conditioning . Blue.
Wa s $1 ,895 .
$1,998
Sale
DESERT MOTOR
935 S. VALLEY DRIVE
LAS CRUCES
$1 ,637
1970 TOYOTA Corolla
Sprinter. 2 door , 4
cylinder, 4 speed, rad io.
Economy Specia l. Was
$1,395 .
Sale $1 ,289
Sale
$1 ,899
$1,871
Sale
Sale
Purchase , Gasoline Expense,
Insurance
1971 TOYOTA Mark II. 2
door hardtop, 4 cylinder,
automatic . Vinyl roof,
radio. Was $1.995.
523-5566
1970 SAAB 99. 2 door, 4
cyl inder , 4 speed, red.
Was $1 ,495.
Sale
$1,299
1968 TOYOTA Corona, 4
door ,
automatic,
4
cyl i nder.
Ai r
con.
d it io.n i ng . Ext r a nice.
Was $1 , 295.
Sale $1 , 189
1971 CAPRI, 2 door, 4
cyl inder, 4 speed, radio,
red. Was $1995.
Sale
$1 ,749
1971 TOYOTA Corolla , 2
door, 4 cyl inder, 4 speed,
radio. Extra clean. Was
$1 ,495.
Sale
$1 ,383
1970 TOYOTA Mark II, 4
door ,
4
cyli nder ,
automatic , a ir con d it i oning , rad i o. One
owner. Was $1 , r~5 .
$1 ,699
Sale
1970 TOYOTA Corona, 4
door , 4 speed, 4 cylinder,
a ir condit ioning, radio, l
owner . $1 ,595.
s,,.
<>/('
$1 ,754
$1 ,399