Page Eight
HITCHED TO STAR - DS3 Ron.ld Whitlock of Surf.c.
Missil.. Systems Br., Code 30, is r..nlisted for six ye.rs
under the N.vy's STAR progr.m by Lt. S. R. McMullen,
NOTS Security Officer. Whitlock receiv.. thr.. times the
norm.I reenlistment pay, .nd is guaranteed a CI..s B
school in the n.xt 12 months. He expects his 2nd CI.ss
roting in April.
I PROMOTIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
(Continued from P.ge 2)
and telt of guided millil.I and associated
~ipmenl 'rom glOll epoxy, rexolite 2200.
t.floo. and mylar lingte and double clod
coppet' lamino'.. Good eyesight and color
vision or. euen'iol.
file appliCCltion .... • It • ". with JOGft
Cheever. ~. 34, ..... 34, PhOlM 71514.
........ IIectridoR (two "ocone"'), JD No.
1"', Code 704-Auish journeyman in ac-
complishing work in induttrlol field such
01 industrial wl,inQ, trouble shooting and
&hop repair. All work is don. under direct
supervision of a Ieodingmon, journeymon
or detailed in.ttuction••
file applkotioM with DonI c..n...., ....
n. Code 657, ,...... 71•.
COMPETITIVE PROMOTIONAL
EXAMINATION
A competitive promotional eXQminotion il
announced for leodingmon lobor.r (Hoo-
vy) Anne. No. NOTS-IVo-S(6n issued Febrv-
ory 13, 1967. Applicants mUlt be Caree, or
Career Conditianal employees of the U.S.
Naval Ordnance Te.t Station, China Lake,
California. file Cord form NAVEXOS-.4155-
AS and Standard 57 with the Detached Rep.
resentative, Boord of Exominers 11 ND, Chi.
na Lake, California. Cord fcu-m NAVEXOS-
.4155-AB and Standard form 57 must be re-
ceived or p05tmarked not later than feb-
rlJOry 27, 1967.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
I ·Priest's
Yestment
4,PlIft of church
a ·porteco
12·federal apncy
(init.)
13·Turns ilround
trKk
14·labor
IS·Sea ealle
16·Tenet
II·Reduces to
rubble
20-Profound
21·lndefinite
ilrtecle
22·Thina:s, in law
23·Greenland
settlement
27-Greek letter
29.Preposition
30.Trap
31·Near
32·HoIe
33·Aced
34·Teutonic de;ty
35·lid
37·" month
38·EthiopYn title
39·PitctJer
40·Temporilry bed
41 ·Hebrew letter
42·Employed
« ·Move sidewise
47·Chief executiye .
51 ·0rlan of
. Milrinl
52·Rant
53·Brother of
Jacob
S4·Goddess of
healinl
55·ls in debt
56·Pierce
57·Title of respect
(abbr.)
DOWN
l-Genus of
mapfes
2·Unit of halian
currency
3·Ja~nHe shout
of lelicitation
4·Mountains of
Europe
5·Equality
6·lnsect
7·Slayes
8·Wales
g.UppermO$t
port
IO·Lubricate
II.Beveraie
17·Sy~boI for
cerium
19·Printe,'s
measure
22·Deca)'
24.Symbol for
tantalum
25·Relion
26.Ponessin
",<>nOUn
27·Walk
28·Pack away
2g·Enrr;reen tree
3D-Crafty
32·Reads
i' P
112
33-Grain
36·Brother of Odin
37·Shy
38.Buy back
40-Gives up
41-Greek letter
43·Spanish for
"yes"
44·Blunt end
I·
lJ
I"
f.f-~120
I"
45·o.n
46·ls mistaken
47·ln r........ oi
48·UncooMd
49-GirI's IliIme
SO-Nationa;l
Aeronautic:
Associatton
<_.)
~
10
11
I'· I" I"
127 1
28
iM' I§§l
31 1M Ii§§:I" ~ 1
34
I" 1
36
~ r&IllIJO
IJ· ~1
40
"
~~~142 1
43
I"
,4•
1
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1
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~' po
11
,.
ro
ROCKETEER Friday, February 10, r967
\S"OWBOAT rDrama Shows Steadfastness
II By 'A Man For All Seasons'
FlIOAY nUUAIV 10
''WALK, DON'T RUN" (114 Min.)
Cary Grant, Samantha Egger
7:00 P.M.
(Comedy in Color) Electronic industrialist
finds the only -'pace to ,Ieep in Tokyo, due
to the 1964 Olympic., i. the living room of
gorgeous Samantha', opartment. Cary sub-
lets his heM, get. mixed up w ith spies and
wind. up an unofficial Olympiad entront in
this laughfe.t. It's the land of the rising
FUNI (Adults, Y01Jtn.J
Short: " Chilcl Sockology" \1 Min.)
SATURDAY nUUAIY 11
~TINEE-
" THE SWOMKMAN OF SIENA." ,M Min.)
Stewort Granger
1:00 P.M.
!hom: " Two Ljttle Indians" rJ Mill.)
" Canodia" MounI'M No. 9" (13 Min.)
-EVENING-
"'IIRDS DO IT" (" Min.)
Soupy Salel, Tab Hunter
7:00 P.M.
(Comedy in Color) Soupy works at Cape
Kennedy and i, affected by lOme of the
machinery which makes him defy gravity,
o process desired by fQl"eign ogent,. (Adults,
Youth and Mature Children.)
st.rts: "Sissy RI.-iH" (J Min.)
" l_.est Bridge" (10 Min.)
SUNDAY-MONDAY fEBRUARY 12·13
" THE IAnLE fOR KHARTOUM" (134 Min.)
Charlton Heston, Laurence Olivier
7,00 P.M...
(Epic Adventure in Color) Magnificent pro-
duction tell. of a British general (Heston)
who is sent into the Sudan to combat the
desert prince who hal vowed to ravage
the city of Khartoum. Historical speclacle.
Cast af thoulands. (Adults, Youth and Chil·
dren.)
TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY FEUUARY 14-1$
''WHO'S AfRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF"
(131 Min.)
Elizobeth Taylor, Richard Burton
7:00 P.M.
(Drama) Unconventional, and .hocking
ItOry of a college prafeSior and his wife,
their bi"er family brawls and frustrationl
delPite a torrid attraction for each other.
This is marital beligerence, illicit romanet!
and all the fury of ill.temper with shock·
ing dialogue NOT for tke meek. (Adult.)
THURSDAY.FRIDAY FEBRUARY 16-17
"'MODESTY BLAISE" (117 Min.)
Monico Vi"i, Terence Stamp, Dick Bogarde
7:00 P.M.
(Spy/ Drama in Color) The wildest, ,'om·
bang adventure everl The British govern·
ment decides to send an Arob sheikii. a
fortune in diomonds and Monica is to guard
them, but they don't fully trust her. Other
spies try to get the stones and the trickery,
treachery, false romance, etc., mob this
'PY spoof a MUST SEE. (Advlt.)
'Drunken Angel'
Starts 2nd Half
Of Film Billings
The second half of the 1966·
67 Chi n a Lake Film Society
season will be opened ~onday
and Tuesday, Feb. 13·14, with
the screening of the master·
piece "Drunken Angel" by the
renowned Japanese director,
Kurosawa.
This film marked the break·
through of Kurosawa as a maj·
or directorial talent, and the
recognition of Toshiro ~ifune
as one of the greatest motion
picture acting talents in the
history of the cinematic art. It
led to the international recog·
nition of this pair as one of
the most impressive teams in
the history of motion pictures.
The award of a Japanese aw·
ard, Kin e m a Jumpo "Best
Film," marked the beginning
of successful careers for both
director and actor.
Showings will be at 8 p.m.
~onday and Tuesday, in the
East Room of the Community
Center. Tickets for this per·
formance and for the second
half of the season will be avail·
able.
The second half of the sea·
son will include in addition to
"0 run ken Angel," uCaptain
From Koepenick" (Germany),
"The Given Word," (Brazil),
and "House Under the Rocks,"
(Hungary).
Dramatic power combines
with colorful pageantry tonight
when "A ~an For All Seas·
ons," the Community Theater
and Light Opera special pro·
duction, opens at 8:15 p.m. at
the ~urray School auditorium.
The prize-winning play by
Robert Bolt is set in 1527 in
England when King Hen r y~
vm (played by Ed Romero) de·
termined to divorce his queen
and had to upset the whole
structure of church and state
to do it. The Lord Chancellor,
Sir Thomas ~ore (played by
~ark ~alinauskas), could not
agree with this and went to his
death rather than give up his
religious- fllith and self·respect.
Members of the cast who
will wear the early Tudor rob·
es, gowns, and capes, designed
by Flo r e n c e Green, include
Barbara ~alinauskas, ~artin
Landau, Frank Pickett, Walter
Koerschner, Will i a m Davis,
Phil Kelly, Warren Kirk, Hal
~cCormick, Bob Miller, Suz·
anne Larsen, Dick Wisdom -
and florence herself.
Tickets priced at $1.50 will
be on sale at the door tonight.
~arion Carter, ticket c h air·
man. reminds all CLOTA pat·
rons that this special produc-
tion is not included on their
season tickets_
COSTUMIER READY FOR ROLE - Director Mary Wlcken-
den .
(r) checks fit of cOitum. to be worn by Flor.nce Gr..n
,(I) in her rol. of L.dy Alice More, wife of the h.ro of "A
Man For All SellOns:' opening tonight. Flor.nce is the
pl.y's cOitumier, and .Iso m.de .11 of the four cOltum..
she will w••r in the CLOTA production.
DRILL TEAM WINS-VX·S'. Vampire Drill Teem topped
all comers at the Torrance Commemoration Parade for Na-
tion.1 Boy Scout Week. The squad he.d.d by Willi.m 0.1·
m.., scored their first place victory ov.r eight oth.r drill
t••me. Kernville's Whiskey FI.t D.ys will be the n.xt sc.n.
inv.ded by the t.am. Team members, from I.ft to right,
are Preni. Lewis, Jim Taylor, Bruce Blut.am, ·Fred Van
T.s..l, Ron Kunhl., Ernest Smith, John Malloy, Mik. Money
and William Dalmas.
From · PLACE
STAMP
HERE
. -
TO
,
,
1
,
. ,
•
CPO Annual Military Ball To Swing Feb. 18
Dining, Dancing
Lively Society
To Fill Evening
The usually easygoing Chief
Petty Officers' Club at NOTS
will be taken over next week
by ~Sgt. G e 0 r ge Beatty,
US~C, and his crew of hard·
working CPO Wives, as the y
prepare the Club for another
gala Military Ball.
The big evening of this 12th
.nnu.1 event will begin S.tur·
day, Febru.ry 18, .t 6 p.m.,
and will feature sweet music,
gr.at food, lavish decorations
and lively locializing, accord-
ing to ATC Bill Ascroft, ch.ir·
man of the aff.ir.
Starring in the gala evening
will be the fabulous Jimmie
Whetmore band, renowned for
its sweet and swing dance rhy·
thms. A social hour is to start
the festivities at 6 p.m. follow·
ed by an elegant prime rib din·
nero
C.pt.•nd Mrs. John I. Har·
dy will h••d the honor.d gu.st
list, which will include the St..
tion's top Navy, Marine, Air
Force and Army officer. and
th.ir wives. Bill Ascroft reports
that speci.1 cors.g.. for .11 the
ladies attending the event are
being flown in from Hawaii.
This will be the third annual
Military Ball to be held in the
new CPO Club building, the
successor to the original struc·
ture lost to fire in 1962. Ellie
Packard, president of the CPO
Wives, the inspired decorating
experts for the Ball, promises
that the new 6900·square·foot
club will never have looked
better than by next Saturday.
Good Turn Day Is
Annual Event For
Local Boy Scouts
The Boy Scouts of the Indi·
an Wells Valley this year have
planned a coordinated "Good
Turn Day" in conjunction with
Boy Scout Week. The boys are
cooperating with the Salvation
Army, Goodwill .Agency and
St. Vincent dePaul by collect·
ing salvageable discards.
Each Scout will distribut., in
his own nejoghborhood, f i v.
"Good Turn D.y" bogs on S.t·
urd.y, February II. One week
I.ter, on Febru.ry 18, he will
return to pickup the filled b.gs
.nd deliver them to the c.n·
tral collection centers,
There will be two collection
centers. In Ridgecrest the bags
will be taken to the K ern
County Fire Station. In China
Lake the collection point is the
Troop 3 meeting hall on ~c·
Intire St.
With e.ch of the 1,400 loc.1
Cub, Boy and Explor.r Scouts
participating, ••ch coll.cting
five INgl, this "Good T urn
Day" becomes v.ry signific.nt.
The h.rv..t of old cloth.s .nd
other ..Iugeabl. items will
be used by the thr.. non.prof.
it o....nintions in their reh.
bllitation progr.m.
FROM UNDER THE SEA TO THE STARS
Vol. XXII, No. 6 Naval Ordnance Test Station, Chino Lake, California Fri., Feb. 10, 1967
Bomb Disposal Crewmen Show
Skills On Job, In Emergencies
EOD Men Train Eight Months
To Perform Zero-Error Job
By JOHN R. McCABE
The Piute ~ountains, the EI
Paso Range and the Red ~oun·
tain and Randsburg min i n g
areas are unusual scenes of op-
eration for AOC D. E. Waste
of China Lake's Explosive Ord·
nance Disposal team and his
snnOUn
27·Walk
28·Pack away
2g·Enrr;reen tree
3D-Crafty
32·Reads
i' P
112
33-Grain
36·Brother of Odin
37·Shy
38.Buy back
40-Gives up
41-Greek letter
43·Spanish for
"yes"
44·Blunt end
I·
lJ
I"
f.f-~120
I"
45·o.n
46·ls mistaken
47·ln r........ oi
48·UncooMd
49-GirI's IliIme
SO-Nationa;l
Aeronautic:
Associatton
<_.)
~
10
11
I'· I" I"
127 1
28
iM' I§§l
31 1M Ii§§:I" ~ 1
34
I" 1
36
~ r&IllIJO
IJ· ~1
40
"
~~~142 1
43
I"
,4•
1
50
1
52 ~J
~' po
11
,.
ro
ROCKETEER Friday, February 10, r967
\S"OWBOAT rDrama Shows Steadfastness
II By 'A Man For All Seasons'
FlIOAY nUUAIV 10
''WALK, DON'T RUN" (114 Min.)
Cary Grant, Samantha Egger
7:00 P.M.
(Comedy in Color) Electronic industrialist
finds the only -'pace to ,Ieep in Tokyo, due
to the 1964 Olympic., i. the living room of
gorgeous Samantha', opartment. Cary sub-
lets his heM, get. mixed up w ith spies and
wind. up an unofficial Olympiad entront in
this laughfe.t. It's the land of the rising
FUNI (Adults, Y01Jtn.J
Short: " Chilcl Sockology" \1 Min.)
SATURDAY nUUAIY 11
~TINEE-
" THE SWOMKMAN OF SIENA." ,M Min.)
Stewort Granger
1:00 P.M.
!hom: " Two Ljttle Indians" rJ Mill.)
" Canodia" MounI'M No. 9" (13 Min.)
-EVENING-
"'IIRDS DO IT" (" Min.)
Soupy Salel, Tab Hunter
7:00 P.M.
(Comedy in Color) Soupy works at Cape
Kennedy and i, affected by lOme of the
machinery which makes him defy gravity,
o process desired by fQl"eign ogent,. (Adults,
Youth and Mature Children.)
st.rts: "Sissy RI.-iH" (J Min.)
" l_.est Bridge" (10 Min.)
SUNDAY-MONDAY fEBRUARY 12·13
" THE IAnLE fOR KHARTOUM" (134 Min.)
Charlton Heston, Laurence Olivier
7,00 P.M...
(Epic Adventure in Color) Magnificent pro-
duction tell. of a British general (Heston)
who is sent into the Sudan to combat the
desert prince who hal vowed to ravage
the city of Khartoum. Historical speclacle.
Cast af thoulands. (Adults, Youth and Chil·
dren.)
TUESDAY·WEDNESDAY FEUUARY 14-1$
''WHO'S AfRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF"
(131 Min.)
Elizobeth Taylor, Richard Burton
7:00 P.M.
(Drama) Unconventional, and .hocking
ItOry of a college prafeSior and his wife,
their bi"er family brawls and frustrationl
delPite a torrid attraction for each other.
This is marital beligerence, illicit romanet!
and all the fury of ill.temper with shock·
ing dialogue NOT for tke meek. (Adult.)
THURSDAY.FRIDAY FEBRUARY 16-17
"'MODESTY BLAISE" (117 Min.)
Monico Vi"i, Terence Stamp, Dick Bogarde
7:00 P.M.
(Spy/ Drama in Color) The wildest, ,'om·
bang adventure everl The British govern·
ment decides to send an Arob sheikii. a
fortune in diomonds and Monica is to guard
them, but they don't fully trust her. Other
spies try to get the stones and the trickery,
treachery, false romance, etc., mob this
'PY spoof a MUST SEE. (Advlt.)
'Drunken Angel'
Starts 2nd Half
Of Film Billings
The second half of the 1966·
67 Chi n a Lake Film Society
season will be opened ~onday
and Tuesday, Feb. 13·14, with
the screening of the master·
piece "Drunken Angel" by the
renowned Japanese director,
Kurosawa.
This film marked the break·
through of Kurosawa as a maj·
or directorial talent, and the
recognition of Toshiro ~ifune
as one of the greatest motion
picture acting talents in the
history of the cinematic art. It
led to the international recog·
nition of this pair as one of
the most impressive teams in
the history of motion pictures.
The award of a Japanese aw·
ard, Kin e m a Jumpo "Best
Film," marked the beginning
of successful careers for both
director and actor.
Showings will be at 8 p.m.
~onday and Tuesday, in the
East Room of the Community
Center. Tickets for this per·
formance and for the second
half of the season will be avail·
able.
The second half of the sea·
son will include in addition to
"0 run ken Angel," uCaptain
From Koepenick" (Germany),
"The Given Word," (Brazil),
and "House Under the Rocks,"
(Hungary).
Dramatic power combines
with colorful pageantry tonight
when "A ~an For All Seas·
ons," the Community Theater
and Light Opera special pro·
duction, opens at 8:15 p.m. at
the ~urray School auditorium.
The prize-winning play by
Robert Bolt is set in 1527 in
England when King Hen r y~
vm (played by Ed Romero) de·
termined to divorce his queen
and had to upset the whole
structure of church and state
to do it. The Lord Chancellor,
Sir Thomas ~ore (played by
~ark ~alinauskas), could not
agree with this and went to his
death rather than give up his
religious- fllith and self·respect.
Members of the cast who
will wear the early Tudor rob·
es, gowns, and capes, designed
by Flo r e n c e Green, include
Barbara ~alinauskas, ~artin
Landau, Frank Pickett, Walter
Koerschner, Will i a m Davis,
Phil Kelly, Warren Kirk, Hal
~cCormick, Bob Miller, Suz·
anne Larsen, Dick Wisdom -
and florence herself.
Tickets priced at $1.50 will
be on sale at the door tonight.
~arion Carter, ticket c h air·
man. reminds all CLOTA pat·
rons that this special produc-
tion is not included on their
season tickets_
COSTUMIER READY FOR ROLE - Director Mary Wlcken-
den .
(r) checks fit of cOitum. to be worn by Flor.nce Gr..n
,(I) in her rol. of L.dy Alice More, wife of the h.ro of "A
Man For All SellOns:' opening tonight. Flor.nce is the
pl.y's cOitumier, and .Iso m.de .11 of the four cOltum..
she will w••r in the CLOTA production.
DRILL TEAM WINS-VX·S'. Vampire Drill Teem topped
all comers at the Torrance Commemoration Parade for Na-
tion.1 Boy Scout Week. The squad he.d.d by Willi.m 0.1·
m.., scored their first place victory ov.r eight oth.r drill
t••me. Kernville's Whiskey FI.t D.ys will be the n.xt sc.n.
inv.ded by the t.am. Team members, from I.ft to right,
are Preni. Lewis, Jim Taylor, Bruce Blut.am, ·Fred Van
T.s..l, Ron Kunhl., Ernest Smith, John Malloy, Mik. Money
and William Dalmas.
From · PLACE
STAMP
HERE
. -
TO
,
,
1
,
. ,
•
CPO Annual Military Ball To Swing Feb. 18
Dining, Dancing
Lively Society
To Fill Evening
The usually easygoing Chief
Petty Officers' Club at NOTS
will be taken over next week
by ~Sgt. G e 0 r ge Beatty,
US~C, and his crew of hard·
working CPO Wives, as the y
prepare the Club for another
gala Military Ball.
The big evening of this 12th
.nnu.1 event will begin S.tur·
day, Febru.ry 18, .t 6 p.m.,
and will feature sweet music,
gr.at food, lavish decorations
and lively locializing, accord-
ing to ATC Bill Ascroft, ch.ir·
man of the aff.ir.
Starring in the gala evening
will be the fabulous Jimmie
Whetmore band, renowned for
its sweet and swing dance rhy·
thms. A social hour is to start
the festivities at 6 p.m. follow·
ed by an elegant prime rib din·
nero
C.pt.•nd Mrs. John I. Har·
dy will h••d the honor.d gu.st
list, which will include the St..
tion's top Navy, Marine, Air
Force and Army officer. and
th.ir wives. Bill Ascroft reports
that speci.1 cors.g.. for .11 the
ladies attending the event are
being flown in from Hawaii.
This will be the third annual
Military Ball to be held in the
new CPO Club building, the
successor to the original struc·
ture lost to fire in 1962. Ellie
Packard, president of the CPO
Wives, the inspired decorating
experts for the Ball, promises
that the new 6900·square·foot
club will never have looked
better than by next Saturday.
Good Turn Day Is
Annual Event For
Local Boy Scouts
The Boy Scouts of the Indi·
an Wells Valley this year have
planned a coordinated "Good
Turn Day" in conjunction with
Boy Scout Week. The boys are
cooperating with the Salvation
Army, Goodwill .Agency and
St. Vincent dePaul by collect·
ing salvageable discards.
Each Scout will distribut., in
his own nejoghborhood, f i v.
"Good Turn D.y" bogs on S.t·
urd.y, February II. One week
I.ter, on Febru.ry 18, he will
return to pickup the filled b.gs
.nd deliver them to the c.n·
tral collection centers,
There will be two collection
centers. In Ridgecrest the bags
will be taken to the K ern
County Fire Station. In China
Lake the collection point is the
Troop 3 meeting hall on ~c·
Intire St.
With e.ch of the 1,400 loc.1
Cub, Boy and Explor.r Scouts
participating, ••ch coll.cting
five INgl, this "Good T urn
Day" becomes v.ry signific.nt.
The h.rv..t of old cloth.s .nd
other ..Iugeabl. items will
be used by the thr.. non.prof.
it o....nintions in their reh.
bllitation progr.m.
FROM UNDER THE SEA TO THE STARS
Vol. XXII, No. 6 Naval Ordnance Test Station, Chino Lake, California Fri., Feb. 10, 1967
Bomb Disposal Crewmen Show
Skills On Job, In Emergencies
EOD Men Train Eight Months
To Perform Zero-Error Job
By JOHN R. McCABE
The Piute ~ountains, the EI
Paso Range and the Red ~oun·
tain and Randsburg min i n g
areas are unusual scenes of op-
eration for AOC D. E. Waste
of China Lake's Explosive Ord·
nance Disposal team and his
sn