II MARINE . Voluntary payment for delivery to MCAS housing/$1 per four week period VOL 10 NO, 2 KANEOHE BAY, HAWAII, JANUARY 14, 1981 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES Preventive Maintenance Drinking Police crackdown sweeps beaches Marines are being caught up in the crackdown on public drinking of alcoholic beverages. According to LtCol Ronald Neubauer, provost marshal, MCAS Kaneohe Bay, five Marines have been arrested off-station since the increased enforcement began in Novella*. Mai ito itsfge-* are being charged with violating Revised Ordinance, section 13-42. "This ordinance," said Hilton, "prohibits drinking, offering to 'drink or displaying in public view in any park, playground, school ground or parking lot, Any intoxicating liquor, whether in a can, bottle, jug or other container." The penalty for violation is a fine of up to $50 and 30 days imprisonment. Hilton added that Hawaii Revised Statute, section 281-78, also prohibits consumption of any liquor on any public sidewalk or highway. Violators may be fined up to $500 or inprisoned for up to six months. Lt Col Gerald Miller, staff judge advocate, remarked that the arrests have been impartial, but added that Marines are easily identifiable. While Honolulu Police Depart- ment is cracking down on public drinking, Neubauer says the policy on the air station hasn't changed. Station Order P6600.6. prohibits drinking in: Bank revises service charge Effective Feb. 1, military personnel using the direct deposit program with Bank of Hawaii will be subject to a $2 service charge on regular checking accounts whenever their accounts dip below the minimum required balance of $200. PREVIOUSLY, the Bank of Hawaii had offered free checking accounts to their direct deposit customers. According to Stephanie Pahia, branch manager of the Bank of Hawaii at MCAS Kaneohe Bay, the change became necessary due to rising maintenance costs. Pahia also added the charge will apply to all tistomers of the Bank of Haviaii who use direct deposit, not just military patrons. All direct deposit customers were notified in December by mail of the forth- coming change. Other financial institutions on - Oahu have indicated they will continue to offer free checking and no minimum deposit requirement to their direct deposit customers. Both the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Credit Union and the Navy Federal Credit Union offer share draft accounts without service charge to their direct deposit members. Share draft accounts are the same as the new NOW accounts offered by most banks. SEVEN BANKS that offer free checking to their direct deposit patrons are: American Security Policies ensure equal opportunity Bank, Bank of Honolulu, Central Pacific Bank, City Bank, Liberty Bank, First Hawaiian Bank and Hawaii National Bank. Addition- ally, there are numerous savings and loan institutions that offer free checking to direct deposit customers. Military personnel may establish accounts with any of the above financial institutions. Those interested in changing their direct deposit to another financial institution should first open a new checking account, wait until all outstanding checks from the account at the previous institution have been cleared and then cancel the old account. ALL IT TAKES to begin or change a direct deposit program is for the individual to obtain a Standard Form 1198-A available at disbursing, their unit administrative office or their financial institution, get it filled out at their bank, credit union or savings and loan and return it to disbursing to be entered into the system. Personnel using direct deposit have the advantage of knowing their money is secure. They ales avoid the inconvenience of waiting in long lines to deposit their pay- checks, Whenever a change is made by a person using direct deposit, only a new Standard Form 1198-A properly completed is needed. The new form supercedes any previous form. Respect curtails sexual harassment WASHINGTON, D.C. - Male or female, it doesn't matter. If you wear the Marine uniform, you are to act -and be treated - for what you are. A Marine, and nothing else! That message comes from Gen Robert H. Barrow, commandant of the Marine Corps, in his most recent White Letter (18-80) entitled "Leadership and Responsibilities Pertaining to Women Marines." THE COMMANDANT pointed to the fact that women are not only an integral and vital part of the Marine Corps, but their numbers will continue to grow-ultimately reaching a strength of about 10,000 by 1987. "This planned increase," Barrow said, "recognizes the 'contributions to mission accomplishment that women Marine* have made, and continue to make, within the Corps Snit eta, for dedication of women Marines s speak for themselves, leaving no question that increasing numbers of women will be a major factor in maintaining and enhancing the quality of our Corps. parties; motor vehicles, military or privately owned; unaccompanied enlisted quarters, except for corporate; and sergeants who are permitted to store alcoholic beverages in such BEQs, provided that secure storage spaces under direct control of the activity commander or delegated authority are available; counseling and assistance, Building 1037, including the adjacent baseball diamond; special services activities, including the marina, theater, skeet range, hobby shops, swimming pool and gymnasiums (Hangar 103 and Mini-gym), and beaches, with the exception of beer which may be consumed at Fort Hase, Pyramid Rock and Hale Koa. Questionnaire determines cost of living allowance CAMP H.M. SMITH, Hawaii - You're going to lose money if you don't report your cost of living and housing in Hawaii to Uncle Sam. SERVICEMEN and women presently receiving statics housing allowance are asked to complete cost of living and housing 4- survey forms before the end of this month. The survey will be forwarded to the Per Diem, Travel and Transportation Allowance Committee on the mainland. "It's extremely important that eligible members participate," said Capt .Jim Adams, chairman of the Hawaii Joint Interservice Resource Sub-study Group on cost of living and housing. "Look at it this way: It's money in our pockets," he added. THOSE LIVING on base or residing with "non-command sponsored" dependents will not have to fill out the forms. However, the cost of living allowanee everyone receives will result from completed queetion- beim/ by members who reside off base. While unit commanders and their representatives will sseist in the effort, you are the key to the survey's success. if you are eligible to participate, contact your unit commander immediately. The survey, also known as DD 376, should not be interpreted as invasion of one's privacy. Last year, more than 1,000 servicemen elected not to participate due to the privacy act of 1974. The forms are used only to determine how much is needed in future pay raises to offset the increased cost of living here. PAY PARTICULAR attention to section A of the survey. "Occupancy Expenses" means money spent to make your home livable. For example, you may report telephone installation cost, but not your phone bill. Section 13 covers recurring expenses. Fill in the amount of rent you must pay your landlord, even if you have sublet your apartment to someone else. Members who own or are Purchasing the quarters they occupy should show on the "Rent" line ea estimate of the current "fair market" rental value, net the mortgage payment. Reeding instructions carefully in preparing the survey will avoid confueion for the study group, and remember, it will have a lasting effett on your pay. "I AM CONCERNED, however," Barrow told comman- ders, "about the way in which women Marines are viewed by their male counterparts and how they view themselves. There is only one standard I can accept. They are Marines and must be treated as all Marines are treated: with fairness, firmness and dignity. This is fundamental ... ' Barrow said leaders at every level must fulfill their responsibilities to all Marines in terms of recognizing outstanding performance or taking appropriate action to correct substandard performance. "The tendency to turn to the senior Marine of the same sex- whether it be male or female-to counsel a Marine constitutes a failure in leadership," he said. "MARINES, REGARDLESS of sex will be' fully expected to ontititaia .ittriet itharoastat y, ben nit and p ne, Barrow said. "All Marines in positions of leadership and' supervisory responsibility must lie thoroughly familiar with uniform grooming and other pertinent regulations that pertain to both sexes, and must exercise their leadership responsibilities uniformly and equitably. Anything else is unacceptable. "I am especially sensitive to the fact that while women Marines are indeed Marines in every sense of the word, they are women, and consequently the male-female. relationship must receive special command attention," Barrow said. "THERE IS NO place in our Marine Corps for what has become known as sexual harassment," he continued. "An attitude of respect as a person and as a Marine must prevail." Barrow said that attitude must be established by commanding officers and insisted upon everywhere in the organization- at viehic, in that drubs, the dining ftwiliSas. at antaiknO events, bus stops and exehattig " Pbo MAIM of mutual shared responsibilities and common goals must become as real for women in the corps as it has been for men." The commandant underscored the need by Marines in leadership positions to understand Marine Corps policy on the assignment and utilization of women. He said that, based on those policies, "...assignment to command and staff billets at all organizational levels must ensure equal opportunity for all Marines, regardless of sex. "SIMPLY STATED, this requires that the assignment of positions of command and staff responsibility must be based on past performance, background, experience and training, as well as considerations for individual professional development. "Women Marines and male Marines serve side by side in our ranks," Barrow said. "They are equal in every sense. they are Marines. They deserve nothing lee. than outstanding leadership, equal treatment and equal t Sep for professional opment. "I expect all commanders to ensure that these fundamental considerations are scrupulously followed in the process of carrying out command and leadership responsibilities," he concluded. GAS? WHAT GAS? - Moments after a chemical gas attack, Marines of 3d Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Base Squadron-24 don field protective masks. This Leatherneck awaits the signal to continue the unit's mission. During Jan, 5-8, the Marines participated in advance demolition training at Makua Valley. For story and photos, see page B-3. Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez Published by Community Publications, inc., a Private firm in no way connected with the Department of the Navy or the U.S, M ari ne Corps. Opinions exprcised by publishers and writers herein are their own and not to be considered an official expression of the Department of the NaVy or tht 11.8. Marine Corps,. The appearance of advertisements in this publication including in mint , clot* not constitute an endorsement by the Department of the Navy or the U.S. M srineCorps of the firms, products or services advertised.
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
II MARINE . Voluntary payment for delivery to MCAS housing/$1 per four week period
VOL 10 NO, 2 KANEOHE BAY, HAWAII, JANUARY 14, 1981 TWENTY-FOUR PAGES
Preventive Maintenance
Drinking Police crackdown sweeps beaches
Marines are being caught up in the crackdown on public drinking of alcoholic beverages.
According to LtCol Ronald Neubauer, provost marshal, MCAS Kaneohe Bay, five Marines have been arrested off-station since the increased enforcement began in Novella*.
Mai ito itsfge-* are being charged with violating Revised Ordinance, section 13-42.
"This ordinance," said Hilton, "prohibits drinking, offering to 'drink or displaying in public view in any park, playground, school ground or parking lot, Any intoxicating liquor, whether in a can, bottle, jug or other container."
The penalty for violation is a fine of up to $50 and 30 days imprisonment.
Hilton added that Hawaii Revised Statute, section 281-78, also prohibits consumption of any liquor on any public sidewalk or highway. Violators may be fined up to $500 or inprisoned for up to six months.
Lt Col Gerald Miller, staff judge advocate, remarked that the
arrests have been impartial, but added that Marines are easily identifiable.
While Honolulu Police Depart- ment is cracking down on public drinking, Neubauer says the policy on the air station hasn't changed.
Station Order P6600.6. prohibits drinking in:
Bank revises service charge Effective Feb. 1, military
personnel using the direct deposit program with Bank of Hawaii will be subject to a $2 service charge on regular checking accounts whenever their accounts dip below the minimum required balance of $200.
PREVIOUSLY, the Bank of Hawaii had offered free checking accounts to their direct deposit customers.
According to Stephanie Pahia, branch manager of the Bank of Hawaii at MCAS Kaneohe Bay, the change became necessary due to rising maintenance costs. Pahia also added the charge will apply to all tistomers of the Bank of Haviaii who use direct deposit, not
just military patrons. All direct deposit customers were notified in December by mail of the forth- coming change.
Other financial institutions on -
Oahu have indicated they will continue to offer free checking and no minimum deposit requirement to their direct deposit customers.
Both the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Credit Union and the Navy Federal Credit Union offer share draft accounts without service charge to their direct deposit members. Share draft accounts are the same as the new NOW accounts offered by most banks.
SEVEN BANKS that offer free checking to their direct deposit patrons are: American Security
Policies ensure equal opportunity
Bank, Bank of Honolulu, Central Pacific Bank, City Bank, Liberty Bank, First Hawaiian Bank and Hawaii National Bank. Addition- ally, there are numerous savings and loan institutions that offer free checking to direct deposit customers.
Military personnel may establish accounts with any of the above financial institutions.
Those interested in changing their direct deposit to another financial institution should first open a new checking account, wait until all outstanding checks from the account at the previous institution have been cleared and then cancel the old account.
ALL IT TAKES to begin or
change a direct deposit program is for the individual to obtain a Standard Form 1198-A available at disbursing, their unit administrative office or their financial institution, get it filled out at their bank, credit union or savings and loan and return it to disbursing to be entered into the system.
Personnel using direct deposit have the advantage of knowing their money is secure. They ales avoid the inconvenience of waiting in long lines to deposit their pay- checks, Whenever a change is made by a person using direct deposit, only a new Standard Form 1198-A properly completed is needed. The new form supercedes any previous form.
Respect curtails sexual harassment WASHINGTON, D.C. - Male or
female, it doesn't matter. If you wear the Marine uniform, you are to act -and be treated - for what you are. A Marine, and nothing else!
That message comes from Gen Robert H. Barrow, commandant of the Marine Corps, in his most recent White Letter (18-80) entitled "Leadership and Responsibilities Pertaining to Women Marines."
THE COMMANDANT pointed to the fact that women are not only an integral and vital part of the Marine Corps, but their numbers will continue to grow-ultimately reaching a strength of about 10,000 by 1987.
"This planned increase," Barrow said, "recognizes the
'contributions to mission accomplishment that women Marine* have made, and continue to make, within the Corps Snit eta, for
dedication of women Marines s speak for themselves, leaving no question that increasing numbers of women will be a major factor in maintaining and enhancing the quality of our Corps.
parties; motor vehicles, military or
privately owned; unaccompanied enlisted
quarters, except for corporate; and sergeants who are permitted to store alcoholic beverages in such BEQs, provided that secure storage spaces under direct control of the activity commander or delegated authority are available;
counseling and assistance, Building 1037, including the adjacent baseball diamond;
special services activities, including the marina, theater, skeet range, hobby shops, swimming pool and gymnasiums (Hangar 103 and Mini-gym), and
beaches, with the exception of beer which may be consumed at Fort Hase, Pyramid Rock and Hale Koa.
Questionnaire determines cost of living allowance
CAMP H.M. SMITH, Hawaii - You're going to lose money if you don't report your cost of living and housing in Hawaii to Uncle Sam.
SERVICEMEN and women presently receiving statics housing allowance are asked to complete cost of living and housing 4-
survey forms before the end of this month. The survey will be forwarded to the Per Diem, Travel and Transportation Allowance Committee on the mainland.
"It's extremely important that eligible members participate," said Capt .Jim Adams, chairman of the Hawaii Joint Interservice Resource Sub-study Group on cost of living and housing. "Look at it this way: It's money in our pockets," he added.
THOSE LIVING on base or residing with "non-command sponsored" dependents will not have to fill out the forms.
However, the cost of living allowanee everyone receives will result from completed queetion- beim/ by members who reside off base.
While unit commanders and their representatives will sseist in the effort, you are the key to the survey's success. if you are eligible
to participate, contact your unit commander immediately.
The survey, also known as DD 376, should not be interpreted as invasion of one's privacy. Last year, more than 1,000 servicemen elected not to participate due to the privacy act of 1974. The forms are used only to determine how much is needed in future pay raises to offset the increased cost of living here.
PAY PARTICULAR attention to section A of the survey. "Occupancy Expenses" means money spent to make your home livable. For example, you may report telephone installation cost, but not your phone bill.
Section 13 covers recurring expenses. Fill in the amount of rent you must pay your landlord, even if you have sublet your apartment to someone else.
Members who own or are Purchasing the quarters they occupy should show on the "Rent" line ea estimate of the current "fair market" rental value, net the mortgage payment.
Reeding instructions carefully in preparing the survey will avoid confueion for the study group, and remember, it will have a lasting effett on your pay.
"I AM CONCERNED, however," Barrow told comman- ders, "about the way in which women Marines are viewed by their male counterparts and how they view themselves. There is only one standard I can accept. They are Marines and must be treated as all Marines are treated: with fairness, firmness and dignity. This is fundamental ... ' Barrow said leaders at every level must fulfill their responsibilities to all Marines in terms of recognizing outstanding performance or taking appropriate action to correct substandard performance.
"The tendency to turn to the senior Marine of the same sex- whether it be male or female-to counsel a Marine constitutes a failure in leadership," he said.
"MARINES, REGARDLESS of sex will be' fully expected to ontititaia .ittriet itharoastat
y, ben nit and p ne, Barrow said. "All Marines in positions of leadership and' supervisory responsibility must lie thoroughly familiar with uniform grooming and other pertinent regulations that pertain to both
sexes, and must exercise their leadership responsibilities uniformly and equitably. Anything else is unacceptable.
"I am especially sensitive to the fact that while women Marines are indeed Marines in every sense of the word, they are women, and consequently the male-female. relationship must receive special command attention," Barrow said.
"THERE IS NO place in our Marine Corps for what has become known as sexual harassment," he continued. "An attitude of respect as a person and as a Marine must prevail."
Barrow said that attitude must be established by commanding officers and insisted upon everywhere in the organization- at viehic, in that drubs, the dining ftwiliSas. at antaiknO events, bus stops and exehattig " Pbo MAIM of mutual shared responsibilities and common goals must become as real for women in the corps as it has been for men."
The commandant underscored the need by Marines in leadership
positions to understand Marine Corps policy on the assignment and utilization of women. He said that, based on those policies, "...assignment to command and staff billets at all organizational levels must ensure equal opportunity for all Marines, regardless of sex.
"SIMPLY STATED, this requires that the assignment of positions of command and staff responsibility must be based on past performance, background, experience and training, as well as considerations for individual professional development.
"Women Marines and male Marines serve side by side in our ranks," Barrow said. "They are equal in every sense. they are Marines. They deserve nothing lee. than outstanding leadership, equal treatment and equal t
Sep for professional opment.
"I expect all commanders to ensure that these fundamental considerations are scrupulously followed in the process of carrying out command and leadership responsibilities," he concluded.
GAS? WHAT GAS? - Moments after a chemical gas attack, Marines of 3d Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Base Squadron-24 don field protective masks. This Leatherneck awaits the signal to continue the unit's mission. During Jan, 5-8, the Marines participated in advance demolition training at Makua Valley. For story and photos, see page B-3.
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez
Published by Community Publications, inc., a Private firm in no way connected with the Department of the Navy or the U.S, M ari ne Corps. Opinions exprcised by publishers and writers
herein are their own and not to be considered an official expression of the Department of the NaVy or tht 11.8. Marine Corps,. The appearance of advertisements in this publication
including in mint , clot* not constitute an endorsement by the Department of the Navy or the U.S. M srineCorps of the firms, products or services advertised.
Page A-2, January 14, 1981
Policy reversal allows S pace-A enrollment in Restrictions: Department of Defense Dependents Schools CAMP S. D. BUT-
LER, JAPAN - An earlier decision not to allow enrollment of any new Space-A students in Department of Defense Dependents Schools on Okinawa has been reviewed and
'revised, according to 'DODDS officials.
"Following a meet- ' ing between the Secre- tary of the Navy and the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Man- power, Reserve Affairs and Logistics, the earlier decision to cut new enrollments of Space-A students in
DODDS has been revised. Now new enrollments will be considered on a class- by-class and school-by- school basis.
"WE'RE GOING to be giving consideration to the number of students already en- rolled in each class at the schools on Okin- awa," said Douglas Spaulding, chief of executive services for DODDS-Pacific.
"If there's room for more students, we'll be allowed to let more
Space-A students enroll. The original decision to cut new enrollments out com- pletely was due to a$4.2 million budget cut," he explained.
According to Spaul- ding, the cutback in funds would not effect students already enrolled in DODDS on Okinawa.
"There is presently no problem with enrolling Space-A students in schools on the island," according to Gene Roberts, education program
Training device quickens reactions
administrator for the DODDS on Okinawa.
HE INDICATED, however, that this could change at any time, depending on the number of command- sponsored students enrolling in the schools.
"The biggest problem we could encounter with Space-A enroll- ments is probably in the kindergarden to second grade level," Roberts concluded.
"Of the four cate- gories of Space-A students on Okinawa, two are of particular
interest to DOD civ- ilian and military members and their families," said Spaul- ding. "The first category consists of military and civilian dependents whose parents are stationed overseas and are not authorized dependent transportation at government expense," Spaulding added.
HE ALSO said that this includes those who have elected to bring their dependents over- seas at their own expense, or who have
acquired their depen- dents locally.
The second category, according to Spaul- ding, should be of special interest to these civilian and military personnel who are already retired or are planning to retire in the Far East.
"This category includes dependents of U.S. citizens who reside overseas and are employed off-base, including dependents of deceased and retired U.S. miltary mem- bers," said Spaul- ding.
CH-46 simulator aids crew evaluation
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez. DON'T TOUCH THAT DIAL - Capt Jim Wright, Naval Air Training and Operating Procedures Standardization officer shows Capt Jerry Kotz, personnel officer, the many warning indicators in the CH-46 helicopter simulator located in the Audiovisual Training Department.
I.
SCHEDULED AIRLINES TICKET OFFICE (SATO)
Staffed by full time Airline personnel To assist in your travel requirements
1/4
Individual leave Family travel to the Mainland Neighbor Island International Dependent travel to West-PAC Fares Flight Information.
Contact SATO for reservations and airline tickets at one of our three convenient on base locations.
r Featuring he Beautifully Redesigned Kitchen Of Mr. and Mrs. John Day of Kaneohe
Totally redone by JANJAY CO., this new kitchen is highlighted by quality Diamond cabinets, color coordinated tile and Whirlpool appliances. Glass doors were custom-made for the cabinets by JANJAY to display the crystal collection and the ceramic counter and floor is color coordinated with the white marble top dividing the kitchen and dining room.
In the comfort of your (home let JANJAY CO. show you what they have to offer at Prices That Will Amaze You! Call Now.
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HAWAII MARINE
The Air Training Devices Section of the Audiovisual Training Support Center re- ceived a CH-46F heli- copter simulator from MCAS New River, N.C., in October.
The simulator will be used by CH-46 pilots and their crews at MCAS Kaneohe Bay.
Located in the Training Devices Section the simulator orients pilots and crewmembers to the operation of the heli- copter and familiarizes
them with indicators and control locations while training for emergency situations.
By training for emergencies under simulated conditions, reactions of a pilot or crewmember, may be quicker if an actual emergency occurs during flight.
While training in the simulator a pilot, copilot or crewmember is accompanied by an instructor. The instruc- tor programs a series of emergency situations on a teletype tape
which is played on a computer, to activate the instruments in the cockpit.
The instructor then views a screen that shows him the situa- tions as they happen.. He is able to watch the people in the cockpit to see how they react to the emergencies. He later critiques the training.
The simulator allows pilots and crew to have a higher chance of survival by being prepared for emer- gencies.
Spaulding indicated that an exception to this category would be if the DOD sponsor dies while on active duty, and the spouse decided to return to their country of origin.
"THEN THEIR children would be allowed to enter DODDS-Pacific Sys- tern as long as they register within one year of the DOD sponsor's death," he said.
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BODY DYNAMIC: FOR WOMEN
Fun. Music Total Body Workout
Showers Sauna
Sign Up Before Class
BOQ MWF 8:15 M Tilt 7:30 PM
KMCAS
"The Alternative to Flowers" Every occasion is a lighthearted
celebration when you send a colorful Bouquet of Balloons that say
"You are Special."
EASY TO ORDER - Balloon Boutique is as close as your telephone for delivery anywhere on Oahu. The price for any bouquet includes tax, greeting card and free delivery in Honolulu, Kailua and Kaneohe. We accept Visa, MasterCard or local check.
Here's a chance to make a loved one happy! Send or bring us a
photo of your children or grandchild (1-20 years). We'll place
the photo in a heart like the one shown. It will include the child's
name and your name and address, and will appear in a special section
February 11th. Cost is $15.00 per heart.
( Family Restaurant )
Invites YOU to a fine dining experience seven days a week
BREAKFAST DAILY 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. (Sun. 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.)
LUNCH DAILY DINNER DAILY 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
315 Uluniu St. Phone Kailua Square 261-8724
HYPNOSIS can help you . . .
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Hardly a day seems to go by that we do not hear of
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with startling results. In addition to weight control, smoking control,
alcoholism. mind control, sexual dysfunction, etc., it is
now being used to remove seemingly incurable cases of
warts, to control migraine headaches. nervousness. stuttering, pain control. and oven to enlarge breasts.
Find out what hypnotherapy can do for you.
CALL TODAY FOR FREE CONSULTATION PH. 533-1811
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THE CENTER FOR CLINICAL HYPNOSIS
11221 KAPIOLANI BLVD., HON., HI 96814 is either good or Oda
but thinking makes .t so
Sponsored in the public interest by the College of Clinical Hypnosis
VISA and MASTERCARD ACCEPTED
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Offer Good At: 98-1234 Kaahumanu St., Pearl City 94-875 Farrington Hwy., Waipahu 25 N. Kamehameha Ave., Wahiawa 1415 Dillingham Blvd., Honolulu 1335 S. Beretania, Honolulu 174 Hamakua, Kailua Hours: All Shops Open 7 A.M. lo 5 P.M. Mon. -Sal.
For your convenience - Dillingham. Waipahu, stores open Sunday 9 A.M. to 3 P.M.
'full Financing Available 'No Interest II Paid In 90 Days
The Hawaii Marine is an unofficial newspaper published every Wednesday by Community Publications, Inc., 46-016 Alaloa St., Kaneohe, Hawaii 96744, in interest of U.S. Marine Corps personnel in Hawaii. All news copy is prepared in the Joint Public Affairs Office, Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii 96
Copy must be submitted no later than noon Thursday for the following Wednesday'publication. Hawaii Marine solicits contributions of information and Photogr$ from all Marine Corps organizations. However it reserves the right to edit or rewrite material submitted. All advertising is arranged by the publisher, Community NM tions, Inc., telephone 235-5881. Circulation is 8,000.
Everything advertised in this publication must be made available for purchase, use or patronage without regard to race, creed, color, national origin, age or sex of purchaser, user or patron. A confirmed violation or rejection of this policy of equal opportunities by an advertiser will result in the refusal to print advertising from that sou
Business Women's meeting
The Ulupono chapter of the American Busi- ness Women's Associa- tion will host Hawaii singer and entertainer, Carol Kai, at this month's meeting. The meeting will be held at the MCAS Kaneohe Bpy Stall NCO Club today at 7 p.m.
For additional in- format ion, contact Melia Crump at 235 - 6666 or 247-8642.
Chapel service A commemoration
service honoring the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. will be held tomorrow in the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Chapel at ,2 p.m.
Col Louis Buehl, commanding officer, 3d Marines, is the guest 'speaker. The program will also include a solo by De Etta West, a congregational partici-
pation song and a sermon by Chaplain Leroy Gilbert.
Marines, sailors, their families and civilian employees are invited to attend the affair honoring the civil rights leader.
Spot bid sale The Defense Property
Disposal Service will conduct a local spot bid sale of 186 items of government surplus at 9 a.m. tomorrow.
The sale will be held in Building 4, at the Pearl City Junction area, located one block Ewa of Waimano Home Road in Pearl City.
Prospective buyerA, may inspect the Rene today from 7:30 a.m. until noon and 12:30 until 3:30 p.m., and again tomorrow from 7:30 until 9 a.m.
For more details, call 455-5171.
Aliens Marines and their
family members who are not U.S. citizens are reminded that all aliens in the U.S. are required to report their address to the Immigration and Naturalization Service during January.
Forms to report addresses are available at any U.S. Post Office. Upon request, the U.S. Department of Justice, Immigration and Na- turalization Service, Washington, D. C. 20536, will mail them.
Aliens temporarily out of the country have 10 days after their return to submit a registration form. The Immigration and Na- turalization Act im- poses serious penalties for failure to register.
Navy League nominations
Navy League Award nominations are due at
GLASSES
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ALSO AVAILABLE SOFT CONTACT LENSES FOR ASTIGMATISM ORTHOKERATOLOGY ONE DAY SERVICE FOR GLASSES AND HARD
CONTACT LENSES IMMEDIATE SERVICE FOR SOFT CONTACT LENSES
the Navy League board of awards by Feb. 18. Air station nomina- tions are due at the station adjutant's office by Jan. 30 and the brigade nomina- tions must be submitted to the brigade adjutant no later than Feb. 16.
Active duty and retired Marines and civilian employees are 111110aS
eligible for the award which provides com- manders with addition- al means to recognize individuals whoa*: performance deserves special note.
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Page A-4, January 14, 1981
EDITORIAL /OPINION sz,..asawr Inflated reports deny quality control
by 1 stld Dale Dye before vitlind ourselves in a war with unqualified folks leading the charge.
We need an effective way to weed out the weaklings and poor performers and insure they don't get promoted to positions of leadership.
The "Peter Principle" should not apply in an outfit in which poor leadership gets people killed. And to prevent incompetent people from being promoted to their level of incompetence, you need a fitness report marking system that accurately assesses performance and potential.
When I was a young NCO my seniors taught me never to surface a problem without suggesting a solution. Wish I had a good answer for fitness report inflation but the solution is far from simple.
REPORTING AND REVIEWING officers must understand they owe the Marine Corps an accurate appraisal of their people's duty performance and potential for success in higher ranks. They've got to understand that they're not ruining careers by giving lower, more
them in spite of long and faithful se *ce. accurate marks to Marines that
In reality, they are exercising a fond, of quality control which can insure a quality Marine Corps. They are avoiding having to answer questions such as "how did that dummy make 'gunny' " or colonel or whatever.
And officers and NCOs who get fitness reports must realize that changes have to be made. They have to understand that "above average" is commendatory and not catastrophic. They should realize that fitness report inflation hurts good Marines as easily as it helps bad ones.
HOW DO YOU CITE and recognize truly outstanding Marines when everyone is judged to be outstanding? How do you decide Who to promote when the performance standard is pumped up somewhere between phenomenal and miraculous?
Sound decisions simply can't be based on faulty information. With a heavy fitness report inflation factor, promotion and duty assignment based on fitness reports becomes a crapshoot.
counseling. It's much easier to give high marks than to face an officer or NCO across a desk and tell him that he doesn't quite measure up to standard.
Ifo posy with genuine bad actors who have clearly discernible disciplinary problems. It's hard to face a loyal, dedicated Marine with relatively low potential for success as a leader and plainly point out that he's not as good as he should be in some areas. That seta the reporting official up as judge and jury, making decisions that will effect a Marine's family and his future.
"If you could be someone else, who would it be?"
CmdrOlfax Dunks, 3d Marines, chaplain: "Chief of chaplains. It would give me more opportunity to support the chaplains' ministry throughout the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard."
LCp1 Tim Curran, H&HS: "The president. I think I could run the country pretty well. I'd cut federal spending and foreign aid and raise pay and allowances for the military."
LCp1 Ricky Murphy, Co.G, Bn, 2/3: "Billy D. Williams, an oiler. Because I like the way he presents himself as a man."
(41 Robin Miller, Mainz. Co, BOW: "The first woman president. could clear up the overseas problems, particularly Iran "
CAMP S.D. BUTLER, Japan - Inflation is ripping everyone off left and right. The greenback is an international red herring and the only ,thing moat Americans can afford to pay is attention.
Those things are crystal clear to moat military people, but there's another sort of inflation that's hurting Marine Corps officers and NCOs and money won't help.
FITNESS REPORTS - those paper appraisals designed to separate the leaders from the losers-are rapidly becoming meaningless.
The commandant has asked for a crackdown but the current system has bloated to the point that a quick-fix won't work. Reporting officers can't whip a new evaluation standard out of their hip-pocket and people whose careers hinge on semi- annual evaluations wouldn't stand for it if they tried.
Most officers and NCOs have a lengthy string of fitness reports already on record and any sudden shift in their marks is bound to be interpreted as criticism. Say what you will, no veteran officer or NCO is likely to quietly accept an above average mark when he's been judged excellent or outstanding on previous fitness reports.
How can they be sure everyone is using the same standard? It's simply too critical
in he roanlvad
BUT SOMETHING MUST be done
I SUPPOSE WE COULD establish a cut-off date and say all fitness reports prior to that don't count. We could start fresh, using a stricter, truer evaluation system thus assuring officers and staff NCOs that their new fitness reports won't appear to represent a drop in their evaluations. Or we could de-emphasize the fitness report. Stop being paranoid about it and use it as the leadership tool it was designed to be.
As long as the fitness report is used by reporting seniors as a weapon to threaten subordinates with and as long as subordinates feel their entire lives hinge on a paper portrait submitted twice a year, we can't do much about inflationary, misleading marks. In short, attitudes toward fitness reports are going to have to change. At the heart of the issue is performance
IT'S EMBARRASSING and un- comfortable for many people who have been taught that Marines take care of their own. Granted it's potentially painful and time-consuming, but it's also very necessary.
In fact, it's vital if we intend for poor performers to correct their deficiencies rather than stumble along and get promoted with their peers when they reach the requisite time in grade.
It would certainly help matters if someone could come up with a sound, clearly applicable definition of "the average Marine NCO" or "the standard Marine officer."
WE NEED SOME SORT OF yardstick by which to measure Marines and we need it before we inadvertently find ourselves following people who aren't qualified to lead.
14.1 74.44,
Hawaii Marine? As it stands now, your name "Hawaii
Marine" implies that your paper serves all Marines on the island. This might not be really true.
As a case in point, a photo and caption were submitted showing the Reserves and their Toys for Tots program; it was not printed Dec. 23.
In addition, another story with photo about a Camp Smith Marine of the Month for December 1980 was submitted; your paper chase not to run it Dee. 9 but the Navy News did. The Navy may be doing your job as far as reporting on the Marines on this side of the island.
I know we don't make a lot of news, but a little coverage would be nice for Marine Barracks (not just their parades), the 18rI Staff, the Marine recruiters and Camp Smith. I think and know our name is Marine, not K-Bay or brigade Marine.
James A, Kaminski SgtMaj Camp Smith
Marine units do not enjoy being called incompetent and this one is no exception. The Hawaii Marine staff takes offense to the sergeant major's implications.
First of all, any number of variables (ranging from copy received too late to lack of available space) determines if an article runs in this or any newspaper.
However in this case, the Toys for Tots Program was represented in the Dee, 24 issue on page one and again on page A-6.
The front page piece was a picture (similar to the one submitted by Camp Smith) of Santa holding toys as he boarded a helicopter bound for Molokai.
We chose to run that one since the photo on page A-6 was of a Camp Smith Marine finishing the 10 Kilometer Toys for Tots Fun Run sponsored by the 4th Force Reconnaissance Company (a reserve unit).
The decision not to run the Marine of the Month photo submitted for the Dee. 10 issue was strictly a policy move. The Hawaii Marine does not publish MOM articles, however, we do mention them in Salutes.
The reason behind this is simple; the amount of usable space and the number of "must runs" does not afford the horsey of running all 29 Marines of the Month (including Marine Barrack.* and Camp Smith).
Instead, we run a joint articleon Marines of the Quarter and Noncommteariorvd Officers of the Quarter.
141014ta jaBalismgmr, Co L, , because of the
fir% handle it better Cotter."
To say the Hawaii Marine does not serve all island Marines is unjust. Of the 10,719 Marines on Oahu , 92 percent belong to MCAS Kaneohe Bay and 1st Marine Brigade, Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor makes up five percent of our audience and Camp Smith is the remaining three percent.
Based on percentages, Camp Smith receives more than its share of print. In the past four issues there have been major stories on the FMFPac Rind, the Camp Smith rifle competition and basketball tournament and numerous At-a Glances. In addition, the Cinema schedule appears weekly.
We don't intend to neglect, ignore or forget our "family" on the other side. In fact, future articles are in the works right now. I am certain that our Leeward bureau,
Fleet Marine Force Pacific, Public Affairs Office, would appreciate your input. For now turn to Pages A-1, A-9 and B-I.
Editor
Freefailing Banta No Santa Claus? Well, you cannot
convince the children of Maunaloa Village, on Molokai!
With the foresight of a very nice Marine Corps wife with an oversized heart, a couple of phone calls were made-one to the Marine Corps Reeser. Center, "Toys * Tote." These fine young men, some regulars and some reserves, took time from their busy schedules to see that some unfortunate children received gifts.
The pilots, jumpers and helpers
volunteered to come to our island Dec.19, to see faith restored in many good humans.
It was a sight to see Santa and his helpers jump from 10,000 feet and drop into the baseball field at Maunaloa. This humanitarian fete even restored many adults' faith in their fellowmen.
It was heart-rending to see the little ones look at the teenagers and say, "See, we told you there was a Santa Claus."
We would also like to thank the many people on Oahu who dug down and "gave " so the toys could be purchased for their island neighbors.
Mow theraWfrestaliggitiftleftlpfmai their neighbors, both m on Oahu. God Bless You All!
Jim & Evelyn Stevenson and
Many thankful people on Molokai
Mysterious fall-guy shoulders blame by SSgt Dennis Litalien
"Somebody" struck again. It began iprocently enough. I had to
drive to Honidulu to pick up textbooks for next semester at one of Oahu's colleges. To ensure against making an unnecessary trip, I called the school to check the campus bookstore operating hours.
"NO PROBLEM,"chirped a reassuring voice over the phone. "Our bookstore is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. till noon." Armed with this information I confidently strode out of my office, hopped into my car, and headed for Pali Highway.
When I arrived, the bookstore was closed for inventory!
I couldn't believe it! "Somebody" gave me bum scoop! Diagruntled, I headed back to base, mumbling expletive* all the way.
Once I stopped growling I began wondering; how many times have I, or people I know, blamed their misfortunes on that elusive creature known as "aglIthe'de"
Think about it. People are always saying thin Ms, "Somebody left the lights on," or ' forgot to make coffee."
The problem itt, whenever something goes wrong and we can't immediately IdsrtUfY the culprit, we blame "Somebody" for it. That's pretty unfair if you ask me.
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WHO IS THIS mysterious fall -guy? What does he (she, it) look like? Does he have any hobbies? How come he never complains when other people falsely accuse him of bringing about their misfortunes? What's his social security number?
With these and other mundane questions floating around in my relatively uncluttered mind, I decided to find out for myself who this "Somebody" is, and what he's all about.
The first interesting point I uncovered is he is the victim of bad press. He is constantly being accused of things he had nothing to do with. Take for example that bozo I spoke to on the phone. I believe he purposely led me to believe he was "Somebody." Then after he messed me over, I naturally blamed "Somebody" while this jerk got off scot-free. This led me to the ultimate conclusion that people who impersonate "Somebody" are really nobodies.
EVEN HOLLYWOOD HAS blamed "Somebody" for some of their bombs. The film "Somebody Killed Her Husband" gave him a special notoriety. His fame was short- lived however, as critic' panned the film, recommending it be retitled "Somebody Killed This Movie," Once again "Somebody" is unfairly accused of a crime he didn't commit. They may never find out
who is responsible, but I'll bet he's related to the guy who said the bookstore was open.
One thing I discovered that amazes me is "Somebody" has had some good moments in life. His romance with "Everybody" was immortalized in that famous 1964 recording by Dean Martin entitled "Everybody Loves Somebody Sometimes."
All this nonsense fails to answer the question of who "Somebody" really is. I found that people I asked for help in this search thought I was joking. A common wisecrack was "I don't know, why don't you ask "Somebody?" Ha! Ha! Ha! All this wittiness made me wonder if I'm taking this too seriously.
OKAY, SO LAUGH. I've reached the point of desperation. I'm starting to believe I'll never find out who "Somebody" is. I kept hoping he would speak up like former Commandant Gen Louis H. Wilson, who settled a airliner issue once and for all a few years ago by proclaiming "I am They." So far, no such luck.
Well, despite my failure to identify "Somebody" at least I exposed the fact that he really didn't do all those rotten things we raid he did. That must be worth something. Now that I've cleared up that point, maybe "Somebody" will figure he owes me one. come on who are you? Is "Somebody listening out there? Will "Somebody" please stand up?
isesseLeAre:".413
January 14, 1981, Page A-15
Baptist minister sets desegregation tempo by Sgt Pepper Davis
Dec. 1, 1955. Rosa Parks, a rslender, middle-aged black woman, boarded a city bus in
:Montgomery, Ala. It had been a long day for the seamtress. Her feet ached, and ha' body felt lifeless as she took a vacant seat in the middle section.
As the bus became crowded, the driver called for her to get up and stand in the back. "No," she
.quietly replied. "I won't" Though well-versed in the city's racial etiquette, she did not intend to become a test case. But her feet hurt and she would not move.
, THE DRIVER summoned the police who took her to the police station and charged her with violating the bus segregation ordinance.
News of her arrest spread through the black community like wildfire. Promiment black leaders agreed to stage a one-day boycott Dec. 5, to coincide with her trial date. The boycott went extremely well but Parks was nonetheless found guilty and fined.
- Dissatisfied with the outcome, the leaders decided to form an organization to keep the boycott going until the bus company
. agreed to desegregate. The Montgomery Improvement Association was horn, and Martin Luther King was chosen its leader.
During an evening meeting at a local church, King addressed more than 4,000 blacks, laying out
. issues that confronted them in the community. In leis speech, he mixed sharp social analysis with
.an eloquence that reached every listener. He relayed a message of commitment: "There comes a time when people get tired-tired of being kicked by the feet of oppression.
"We have no alternative but to protest. We come here tonight-to be saved from that patience that makes us patient with anything
'less than freedom and justice," he .-said. King added, "We must not -.'become bitter and end up hating e hour white brothers. We are tied ;cc together. The Negro need thg white
man to free him from his fear; the 'white man need the Negro to free him from his guilt."
ONCE ORGANIZED, the MIA .formed taxi shuttles and carpools
. which produced a 99 percent effective boycott. Feeling the
of the peaceful black dr liation, Montgomery whites
attempted desperate techniques to get "their Negroes" back in line.
Black domestic workers, who depended heavily on bus transportation were fired. But white households quickly
- discovered they couldn't manage without "help," and the plan backfired.
As the boycott conttnued, the community became enraged. Ninety blacks were indicted under a 1921 anti-union law forbidding conspiracy to obstruct the operation of a business. King was the first tried . . he was found guilty.
While King awaited his appeal the bus company frantically sought to settle its problem before becoming bankrupt. The com- panies woes mounted in February 1956 when black residents filed a suit against the city, declaring the racial-seating ordinance as un- constitutional.
The case reached the Federal Court in June. Relying heavily on the Supreme Court's 1954 school desegregation decision, the special three-judge panel ruled that Montgomery's bus segregation laws violated the Fourteenth Amendment. However, the ruling didn't result in immediate action.
City officials obtained a stay of the court's order, pending an appeal to the Supreme Court. The city also initiated a lawsuit against the MIA seeking an injunction against carpools, a
move King anticipated. If granted, the injunction would break the back of the black campaign.
IN NOVEMBER the case was brought before Eugene Carter, the
same judge who previously convicted the MIA leaders of participating, in an unlawful boycott. The court atmosphere was tensed. An adverse ruling would drain the lifeblood from an important cause.
In the midst of the hearing, a reporter rushed in with word that the Supreme Court had un- animously upheld the Federal Court's ruling, declaring segrega- tion on city buses unconstitution- al.
The boycott that originally was scheduled to last 24 hours, ended after 382 days Dec. 21, 1956. With national television cameras recording the event, the MIA
, leaders rode in front seats of Montgomery's buses.
The effective weapon of boy- cotting gained popularity as blacks in Florida,. Atlanta, Mississippi and Nashville successfully put it to the test.'With the victory of the Montgomery bus boycott, King became an inter-
. nationally known public figure. Michael Luther King Jr. was
born Jan. 15, 1929 in Atlanta. The second child and first son of Reverend M.L. King Sr. and Alberta Williams King Michael later changed his name to Martin.
King grew up in the South when to be black in that region was to be like a snake in the swamp: invisible most of the time, but when seen, hated. Even as a youngster he had a firm grip on the black plight.
AT AGE 15, he entered Morehouse College to study medicine, but he was so greatly influenced by the college president, he decided to study for the ministry. He was ordained in 1947 and was graduated the following year at age 19. Little did the young minister know he was destined to become the principal spokesman for the Civil Rights Movement of the early '60s.
King's ideology for social change was based on high tational and religious principles, and a mature psychology which stressed mutual consideration, respect, sharing and equality.
King was often called a student of "Gandhian)." His program of nonviolence was adapted primarily from the teachings of Mohandas K. Gandhi, who used nonviolence to help free India from Bratsk control.
A talented writer as well as an outstanding orator, King expressed his ideas of peace and justice in five books: "Stride Towards Freedom," 1 95 8; "Strength to Love," 1963; "Why We Can't Wait," 1964; "Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community," 1967; and "The Trumpet 'of Conscience," 1968.
White America attacked King's logic on peaceful demonstrations, attaching the stigma of violence to such gatherings in the minds of people. Whites were so repressed and discredited in their thinking that, by 1965 an overflow of white hostility led to the emergency of a white power movement referred to as the "while backlash," causing blacks to exclaim, "We approached whites with love, they responded with hate."
KING FOUNDED the South- ern Christian Leadership Council in 1957. Under his guidance the SCLC achieved great success. By the fall of 1962 King and the SCLC Ware moving by leaps and bounds. Blacks of the nation were responding favorably to the ideas of the astute, persuasive and articulate Georgian. Millions swore allegiance to his cause, willingly to follow his lead.
Birmingham, Ala. A city sweltering' with injustice and oppression. Blacks and whites walked the same streets, but the streets, the water supply and the sewage system were the only facilities they shared . - every- thing else was segregated.
Every channel of communica- tion, every medium of mutual interest, every reasoned approach, every inch of middle ground wee
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fragment by the emotional dynamite of racism.
The razor, the gun, the bomb, the torch, the club, the knife, the mob, the police, and many branches of the state's apparatus helped reinforce Birmingham's "justice" system.
King announced he would lead racial demonstrations in Birmingham until "Pharoah lets God's people go." He felt if that city could be cracked, the nonviolent movement in the South would take a significant change. "It is our faith that as Birmingham goes, so goes the South," he said.
In April 1963, defying a writ of injunction as well as the attack dogs of Police Chief Eugene "Bull" Connor, King led a mass down the main thoroughfare of Birming- ham. The marchers were met with brutal opposition. Undaunted by the reception in AlabaMa, King continued his fight for social, political and economic equality for blacks.
HE WAS STABBED in New York City, stoned in Chicago. His home was bombed and his family threatened, but he endured.
He returned to Birmingham several times, eventually bringing the justice system to its knees. As
the years passed he became deeper engrossed in the Civil Rights Movement. His pleas for racial equality were beginning to win the support of whites who once opposed him.
In March 1963, he astonished the world as he led more than a quarter of a million people on a march from the Washington Monument . to the Lincoln Memorial. Also, millions watched on television as he delivered his stirring "I have a dream" speech.
"... Ihave a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: 'we hold these truths to be self evident; that all men are created equal' ..."
Five years later King was summoned to Memphis, Tenn. to assist the sanitation workers in their quest for higher wages and better working conditions. He was advised by his aides that an injunction against a march might bellied. He replied, "Whether it is granted or not, I'm going to lead that march."
A FEW MINUTES before six on the evening of April 4, 1968, King and his associates stepped onto the open balcony outside his motel room. They were on their
way to a "soul supper" at a friend's house. King, in his shirt sleeves, went back into his room to get his jacket. He returned and stood flanked by longtime companions the Reverends Ralph Abernathy, Jesse Jackson and Andrew Young. As they talked, a single shot rang out, and King fell. mortally wounded.
He was pronounced dead at St. Joseph's Hospital at 7:05 p.m.
King's murder caused strong reaction throughout the world. President Lyndon B. Johnson declared a National Day of Mourning to honor the slain warrior. But as the news reached the black communities, the shock' and grief turned into anger.
Rioting broke outin more than a hundred cities as stores and buildings were looted and burned. One news commentator called it, "a widespread convulsion of disorder."
Before it was over, more than 55,000 troops had been deployed around the nation and 46 persons died. In March, lames Earl Ray was apprehended in connection
with King's assassination. Ray later confessed to the killing and was sentenced to 99 years in prison.
King was perhaps the most admired black man of this era. The dream he spoke of still lives in the hearts and minds of millions of people who found strength in his words; his ideas.
He made such a deep impact on his times, and all those who knew him, because he maintained, in inspired fashion, the tension between the eggal and the moral. He knew that law without justice is tyranny, but he also knew that disorder tears the fabric of society.
HE WAS ALWAYS willing to negotiate. But if negotiations were futile, or if others sought to use it as a cloak for inaction, he was prepared to march.
King is buried near Ebenezer Baptist Church, where he once co- pastored, in Atlanta. The words from a black spiritual are carved on his tombstone: "Free at last, free at last. Thank God almighty, I'm free at last."
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Page A-8, January 14, 1981
Emergency Facilities Department handles maintenance
by Cpl Nora Parrish
Military families residing in base housing have a distinct, advantage over those living off base-free maintenance for their homes.
Workers at the Facilities Department fix everything, from leaky faucets to broken compressors on air conditioners, both in base housing and the offices at MCAS Kaneohe Bay.
THE FACILITIES Department Trouble Desk receives an average of 200 calls per day and ensures that service is provided as quickly as p6saible.
Bobby Conley has worked at the trouble desk for about two years and has received most of the mainten- ance calls.
When people call 257-2380 with main- tenance problems," explained Conley, "I take their names, building numbers or addresses, telephone numbers and problems. Then I turn the request into the shop. After that it's out of my control.
MANY PEOPLE are unaware of the heavy work load, says Conley, and seem to expect workers to be
there in less than an hour to take care of their problems.
"Some problems receive same-day service," said Conley. "If a house has only one bathroom and the toilet is clogged, we repair it that day. We also take care of emergency items right away, such as electrical shorts or broken water lines."
If the problem is not an emergency the Facilities Department tries to see that the person has service within two weeks.
"FACILITIES wor- kers don't take care of all the problems people have," said conley. "Some appliances are maintained by con- tractors. When the appliance is the responsibility of a contractor I take the call and the contractor picks-up the request. He takes it to housing for approval."
The Facilities De- partment services almost everything in the offices on base including refrigerators, window-type air con- ditioners and electrical items.
Renovations and major changes to offices require written requests. They must be
filled out and taken to the trouble desk.
"Before people call here asking for some one to fix an item," stated Conley, "they should try to fix it them- selves, within reason of course. Many items women call about repairs to their garbage disposals before they even push the reset button. If they would just think about these things and give it a try, it would save everyone time and trouble."
CONLEY explained that people also request repairs on self-help items, such as jalousie windows.
"One of the biggest problems I have," said Conley, "is that when people call, they don't fully explain the problem. There is a lack of communication and when I start asking questions so I can determine who to send to fix the item, they get mad."
When Conley is not answering the phone in the evenings and at lunch, a recording service is proVided on which people can leave their names, phone numbers and pertinent information. That information should include when both husband and wife work. That way a worker can be ache-
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"WHEN A worker goes to a residence and no one is home, he leaves a card with his name and phone number. Residents should phone the worker right away so he can arrange another time for the work to be done," said Conley.
Though the trouble desk provides a con- vinient dispatching service for the air station, the thing to remember is don't call them until you're sure' you can't fix it.
Photo by Sgt Victor Outlorroz
AND YOUR NAME? - Trouble Desk attendant, Bobby Conley, answers one of an average 200 calla per day. Conley takes repair requests and forwards them to the Facilities Maintenance Shop for action. She has been working at the trouble desk nearly two years,
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Kama'aina Marines complete course by Sgt Lamar Johnson
Fort Base Beach at MCAS Kaneohe Bay, and Bellows Air Force Station in Waimanalo were linked together as Communications Sup- port Company, 7th Communications Bat- talion, 1st Marine Brigade conducted their fifth and final Student's Field Skills Training Course Nov. 24 through Jan. 9.
This particular course was an eight- week study in basic field radio communica- tion procedures. It consisted of 13 mem- bers who recently graduated from the 1980 All-Hawaii Pla- toon.
THE DEVIL Dogs are attached to the 3d Marines and carried the 2500 Basic Field Communications mili- tary occupational specialty. As students they completed the
training course to acquire a 2531 Field Radio Operations MOS.
The change of MOS allows them the flexi- bility to perform preventive mainte- nance to applicable field electronics equip- ment and switch- boards. Additionally, they are able to prepare and interpret communi- cation line route maps, circuit diagrams, and traffic diagrams for radio communicati while living in fi d conditions.
Sgt Brian Ali, Com- munications Support Company, let Marine Brigade, taught por- tions of the course to the new brigade Marines. He also had , six Leathernecks from Company A 3d Recon- naissance Battalion under his instruction.
NOW THAT they
have completed the course they will be assigned as field communicators during future field exercises performed by their unit.
Ali explained in detail what he taught the Marines: "In this course, I instructed the men in basic radio telephone procedures, and proper utilization of Very High Fre- quency, Ultra High Frequency and Multi- Channel radios.
"They were familiar- ized with the capa- bilities, limitations and tactical employment of associated equipMent for each type of radio used in the field."
HE CONTINUED, "The first part. of training was conducted in garrison where the men learned the char- acteristics of the equipment.
"Afterwards we put them in a field setup
where they used and tested the radios and equipment under the supervision of members from the Communi- cations. Support Corn pany."
Dec. 8, the 19 Marines and their instructors established a campsite and arranged radio circuit equipment set- ups in a secluded creatershaped area off the shoreline of Fort Hese Beach. Another group of Marines set up camp at Bellows AFS.
SSgt Philip Lehman, radio technician and assistant camp com- mandant during the field exercise said, "The field set-up is a simulated command post exercise. It gives the Marines under- going the FBI' course an idea of what it will
be like when they must perform what they are learning in a battalion or regimental-sized CPX."
WHILE AT Fort Base Beach, the Marines took on the task of performing practical application by conducting radio communications.
They practiced with Technical Air Control radio equipment for medical air evacua- tions and other air operations, Multi- Channel Retransmis- sion Link equipment to patch in radio com- munications from lo distances, and t extend them past obstacles that normally interfere with com- munications.
The practical appli- cation portion of the
FST course in the field ended Dec. 12. The Marines at Bellows and Fort !lase Beach regrouped at MCAS Kaneohe Bay, for more training instruction which included one week of electronic warfare training.
WHEN THE Marines graduated from the Communications sup- port Company's final FST course Friday, moat received the MOS change. The other Marines will employ their newly-acquired skills in e field with is
dory MOS to complement their primary job functions with their units.
Future courses of this Photo by Sgt Victor T acres
will be conducted HELLO, IS THIS NEW YORK? - Sgt Brian Ali, Communications at r ilitary training Support Company, performs field radio communications with junior schoo on the main- troops during his last class as instructor of the 7th Comm, Field land. Skills Training at Fort Base Beach.
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HEAVY ON THE BUTTER- SCOTCH - Sgt Michael Metzger, assistant dining facility manager, puts the finishing touches on a banana boat during noon meal at Camp H.M. Smith's dining facility.
Photo by Sul Moses Reynolds
Icehouse dishes up frozen delights by Sgt Moses Reynolds
CAMP H.M. SMITH, Hawaii - Where does a
'Marine go to enjoy a hot fudge sundae or a
_banana boat for des- ,:sert?
Many would drive to :a Baskin-Robbins or. Parrells; but Camp Smith Marines go to the 'Icehouse," conveni- intly located inside the :inning facility at the headquarters building.
:; THE ICEHOUSE was an old storage
:closet in a corner of the .'dining area. Since its :Complete refurbish- :"!nent Nov. 7,1980, more i-than 210 gallons of ice cream have been ?served, according to Sgt "Michael Metzger,
sistant dining facili- y manager.
"This may be the illy dining facility in e Marine Corps with
ice cream parlor," d Capt Duane
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Hegna, dining facility officer.
LCpI Michael Fla- herty, a cook, worked at an ice cream parlor for two years before joining the Marine Corps. "Sometimes I feel like I'm at my old job," said Flaherty. "Banana boats seem to be the favorite desert here. I guess Marines are no different from civilians when it comes to ice cream."
THE ICEHOUSE also has chocolate, vanilla or strawberry sundaes and milk- shakes.
"I like the Icehouse. I now find myself using the dining facility more often than the snack bar," said Cpl Peggy Johnson, a disbursing clerk. "And you can't beat the price." John- son pays the regular $1.40 for a lunch which includes a trip to the Icehouse. A banana
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Participation has been favorable since the Icehouse has been in operation. "During the noon meal we've picked up more than 25 people as a result of the Icehouse," said Metz- ger.
"EACH DAY ap- proximately 120 people take advantage of the Icehouse's delicacies," added Hegna.
The Icehouse hours of operation are the same as noon and evening meals.
Marines and other servicemen and women working here all seem to agree, the Icehouse makes for a cool day in Hawaii.
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,January 14, 1981, Page A-9
Survey searches for geothermal resources
Geothermal energy (energy produced by converting Earth's internal heat to electri- city) may some day provide power to MCAS Kaneohe Hay.
LtCol James Mar- shall, executive officer, WAS, met recently with Cmdr. Bruce Jackson, geothermal utilization division, Naval Weapons Center China lake, Calif., and Dr. Donald Thomas from the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics, to discuss surveying the air station to
determine if geo- thermal resources exist.
According to Jack- son, the Navy got into the geothermal busi- ness in 1978 because of resources on Navy property. The U.S. Navy Geothermal Utilizational Division z8mtracted with the Hawaii Institute of Geophysics through the Hawaii State Department of Plan. ning and Ecological Development to con- duct the survey.
Prior to the survey, the air station will conduct a preliminary
environmental assess- ment to ensure the proposed action won't have a detrimental affect on the environ- ment.
The survey team, headed by Thomas, will test soil and water samples for elevated or diminished mineral deposits, monitor electrical resistivity and conduct geo- thermal chemical analysis of the soil.
The survey is sched- uled to start in Febru- ary, and is expected to last six months.
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Page A-10, January 14, 1981
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez PERFECT FIT - Cpl Pete Minich installs the intake cowling on a Huey helicopter after insuring that there is no blockage to interrupt the system during flight. Minich is a crew chief attached to Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron-463, his responsibilities as a crew chief range from making sure the helicopter is airworthy to seeing that all passengers are briefed about safety procedures while in flight.
Crew chiefs control aircraft maintenance
Despite an instinctu- al fear of falling, people venture into the clear blue skies every day. Passengers of aircraft, be they 747 jets or CH- 46 helicopters, place their lives in the hands of a multitude of people, some they will never see.
The responsibility for completing the mission of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron- 463 does not rest solely upon the shoulders of the pilots. The pilots rely on their crew chiefs to make sure their 'birds' are airworthy.
THE CREW chiefs job often begins early in the morning as he prepares the helicopter for take-off. Before the helicopter can leave the ground the crew chief performs a pre-flight inspection.
"I'm here to keep everybody alive," stated Cpl Pete Minich, HMH-463 crew chief. "Before the helicopter leaves the ground I c ck the oil levels,
e sure all parts k and check the fit controls thor-
..ghly. Basically, I just lake sure the helicop- r is airworthy." Each crew chief has 's own helicopter that e flies with and aintains, according
o Minich. "If a bird .eeds maintenance
by Cpl Nora Parrish services we fill out requirement cards to request work on the helicopter. After the card has been turned in, the crew chief does all the maintenance work himself."
The crew chief knows his helicopter intimate- ly and can detect anything that is wrong. Once each week crew chiefs switch helicop- ters for a flight. "This practice allows another crew chief to notice little discrepancies on the aircraft that I may not notice because I'm with that helicopter most of the time."
WHILE THE heli- copters are aloft, the crew chiefs responsibil- ities continue. "While in flight I make sure all safety equipment is properly used and that passengers are proper- ly briefed for emergen- cies. Anything or anyone behind the pilot's seat is my responsibility," ex- plained Minich. "Also, while in the air I have to keep my ears and eyes open at all times for noises, excessive vibrations and smoke.
"If I notice these things or anything that may be detrimental to the flight, it is my responsibility to make the pilot aware of it. Then we decide wheth- er to set the 'bird' down
and fix the problem or continue to fly.
Being a crew chief is not a job that just anyone can perform. "Before a person can become a crew chief there are a number of tests he must pass, along with on-the-job training with a crew chief. He works with him the same as a co- pilot works with a pilot. I learn something new every day," said Minich.
"When the 'bird' is on the ground preventive maintenance must be done. Every 14 days I wash my aircraft. At 28 days I do an in- depth corrosion inspection. After every 25 hours of operation I have to wash the engines with soap to remove the carbon, salt, dirt and whatever else out," explained Minich.
"WHEN WE'RE flying there must be basic communication between pilots and crew chiefs for the flight to go smoothly," said Minich. "I feel that a crew chief has to have a flexible personality, because he flies with a different pilot almost every time he gets in the air.
I know that the main reason I continue to be a crew chief is the simple fact that I love to fly. This is a way that I can continue to fly."
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez
FINISHING TOUCH - Crew Chief, Cpl Pete Minich, receives a helping hand from a co-worker while replacing the intake cowling zin the helicopter after a pre-flight check. The intake cowling is used For air management during flight. Along with pre-flight checks 01' 'eh also does repair work on the helicopter.
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THE LATEST CRAZE - Members of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron-165 take the quickest way out of a CH- 46 during a Safety Stand- Down. The Stand-Down was held Saturday to prepare the squadron for shipboard operations. During the training they practiced tieing down procedures whle on ship, learned about using a mirror and pen flares for signaling during day or night if an emergency were to occur, reviewed the use of the survival vest and raft and ground support equipment.
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez
Undertow lurks off Pyramid Rock Beac by Sgt Phillip Williams
Pyramid Rock Beach at MCAS Kaneohe Bay is considered to be one of the most dangerous beaches on Oahu. It has a tremendously powerful undertow that takes unsuspecting and unconditioned swim- mers deep into the ocean blue.
THIS BEACH, a- long with North Beach and the station's swimming pool, are manned by Marines experienced in water safety, and physically fit to endure the feat of rescuing hapless vic- tims.
According to Capt Harry Steever, station recreation services officer, more than 40 rescues have occurred at the station's beaches within the past six months.
Who are the people who watch over the
beaches and pool to ensure water safety precautions are ob- served? They are an 11- man lifeguard team that make up station's water safety section.
"MANY PEOPLE imagine the lifeguards' job as sitting in a tower for eight hours and soaking up the sun," said Sgt Kevin Fillo, lifeguard and noncom- missioned officer-in- charge of the station's water safety section. "Actually, he has to concentrate on being alert and responsive in case of an emergency."
Lifeguards constant- ly watch for unaware swimmers who frolic in the aquatic playground because danger lurks within each wave.
He said that new- comers don't take the time to educate them-
selves about surf conditions on the beaches. "The biggest problem we have is newcomers who are naive about water safety."
FILLO noted that alcohol consumption also contributes to mishaps at the bea- ches. "Sometimes people drink six to twelve. beers and then attempt to swim to Molokai," he stated, half-jokingly. In such cases, Fillo or another lifeguard usually ends up dragging the indivi- duals back to shore.
According to Fillo, before Marines can be a part of this life-saving group they must meet certain qualifications. A thorough screening process is conducted before training begins.
"After screening, applicants must swim about 3,000 meters a
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day in the 'ocean and pool. They also learn to judge ocean waves and currents," explained Fillo. He added that the applicants receive instruction on cardio- pulmonary resuscita- tion.
"AN ADDITION- al portion of the training includes a session in the pool with five or six people surrounding the appli- cant. At any given moment, two or three of those individuals jump on top of him creating a panic-type situation and he must take appropriate action to bring the situation under control," said Fillo. The final testing stage includes a 1500
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meter timed swim, a written test and other life-saving skills.
Upon completion of the course, the new lifeguards aren't just thrown out onto the beaches or pool to tackle the heavy responsibility alone. They are supervised for an additional two weeks by veteran lifeguards to ensure that they're confident about their new profes- sion."
THE LIFEGUARDS constantly conduct water survival training to stay familiar with lifesaving procedures.
There is a daily requirement swim of 1,000 to 1,500 meters the lifeguards must
accomplish prior assuming their pos
The water sa team is posted Pyramid Rock or N Beach during 10 until 4 p.m. weekd and from 9 a.m. p.m. on weekends.
They're also requ. to be on the beat during inclem weather. "Whether raining or high s someone is alw there," Fillo said.
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EDITOR'S NOTE: Salutes is designed to recognize individuals for their outstanding achievements and exceptional perfor- mances of duty, as well as. to welcome new arrivals to MCAS Kaneohe Bay and the let Marine Brigade.
The information contained herein is compiled from Fleet flame Town News releases submitted to the Joint Public Affairs
;Office by unit informa- tion officers.
:HEMS Promotion:
J. L. Ramirez .Cp1J. M. Gannon .Cpl J. Joo :LCpI K. W. Briley :LCpI G. J. Scholl LCpI W. M. Winter
iPFC J. P. Cogan Letter of Apprecia-
Wan: Sgt R. L. Morris
Reenlistment: Brut S. K. Lissemore ...Mgt A. M. Zamora
January 14, 1981, Pa e A-11 L
5444e4 Sgt J. A. Keating HI
Retirement: let Sgt L. Calabar (22 years) SOMS
Good Conduct Medal: Sgt A. M. Lyons Sgt B. P. Murray Sgt F. Perez
Boeing Vertol Res- cue Citation: Cpl B. E. Boles HQ CO 1ST MAR HOE
Promotion: SSgt P. T. Andrews SSgt W. D. Heathman SSgt C. J. Williams
Reenlistment: GySgt I.B. Pace SSgt F. Castro Sgt R. J. °Orin CO A 3DREtON 1IN
Promotions: 1st Sgt D. B. Felts Cpl S. E. Johnson Cpl J. Jones LCpI W. R. Stacey
Welcome Aboard: LCpI D. A. Payne MSSG-37
Promotions: Sgt P. L. Gaspar LCpI F. E. Lakine
PFC R. P. Edwards Meritorious Mast:
Cpl A. Dade CPI J. L. Jones LCpI D. D. Disharoon Pvt T. J. Bryant CO D AAV BN
Meritorious Promo- tion: LCpI C. D. Zuroweste
Promotions: Lep) D. Bear LCpI D. Flores LCpI C. E. flagons LCpI E. M. Smith
Good Conduct Medal: Sgt S. R. Dixon Sgt M. B. Robinson Cpl M. J. Reeb
Letter of Achieve meat: Sgt D. T. Hall BSSG
Promotions: Sgt J. L. Brown Sgt D. W..Curtis Sgt T. Talalotu Cpl M. R. Bybee' Cpl F. D. Maclsaac Cpl M. P. Sampey LCpI D. R. Alton LCpI K. Cunard LCpI W. H. Faunteroy LCpI D. T. Lee LCpI J. C. Oehme
PFC B. L Hammer Sgt D. V. Williams PFC B. L. Hankimeier Cpl C. D. Dupre
Good Conduct Medal: Cpl C. Levitt Sgt K. V. Williams Cpl E. L. West Cpl M. Figueroa LCpI W. J. Rodriquez
Meritorious Mast: LCpI R. C. Self Jr Sgt J. M. Crumley LCpI C. R. Young Sgt. C. G. Diggons PFC J. R. Gallegos
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Promotions:
SSgt J. M. Ruth Sgt J. E. Bancroft Sgt J.E.Debernardeaux Sgt D. L. Foss Sgt E. L. Loretto Sgt G. W. Pupae HQ CO CAMP H.R. SMITH
'`Marine of the Month Sgt B. J. Nero MABS-24
Meritorious Promo. time: Cpl G. S. Leverton Cpl K. W. Walker
Promotions:
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B SPORTS January 14, 1981, Page B-1
HAWAII MARINE
Basketball Oahu-based Leathernecks compete in double elimination council tournament
by Sgt Phillip Williams
Teams from MCAS Kaneohe Bay; the 1st Marine Brigade; Ma- rine Barracks, Pearl Harbor; and Camp H.M. Smith squared-off in the double elimina- tion Hawaii Marine Athletic Council Bas- ketball Tournament, Jan. 4 through 10 at the air station's gym.
Camp H.M. Smith was pitted against Marine Barracks, while members representing the ground forces of the tat Marine Brigade challenged the talents of the air station's ballplayers in the opening games.
Game 1
Marine Barracks had come to play basketball in this match against Camp Smith, defeating the Pacific (Head - quarters team, 67-61.
Pearl Harbor took an early lead, but Camp Smith retaliated and began scoring. The first half was competitive with each team scoring point-for-point.
Then, in a move that had the fans gasping in disbelief, Camp Smith replaced the entire darting squad with fresh players. The strategy worked, as the Pacific' Headquarters' team took a six-point lead. Their momentum was flowing and Barracks decided to call a time-out before the halfs end.
After a review of theii' tactics, the
,Barracks team came back onto the floor and
closed the gap to one point as the half ended.
At the beginning of the second half, Pearl Harbor danced to the beat of a different druniner. They took an 11-point lead in the first 12 minutes of play forcing Camp Smith to take a time-out:
Throughout the remainder of the game, Camp Smith attempted to turn the score around. They hacked Barracks' lead to six points, but as the buzzer sounded, Marine Barracks had won, 67- 61.
Game 2 Marine Ground took
a quick lead over Marine Air in what would turn out to be the first of three meetings between the two teams.
Air had received an infraction during their warm-up exercises and ground was awarded a technical foul shot, and scored.
The Ground team wasted no time capital- izing on their op- ponents by outscoring them in the first five minutes of play.
As time ticked away in the first half, each team played tough offense and defense. There were many blocked shots on the part of both teams and several outstanding plays that would make members of the Nation- al Basketball Associa- tion blush.
By the time the gym shoes had stopped squeaking and the
buzzer sounded, ending the first half, Marine Air had taken a thin 28- 27 lead.
Both teams returned in the second half with revised strategy, but it appeared as though the Air team's tactics were the only ones working.
Station's ball play- ers' aggressiveness mounted and as did the scores. In the end, Marine Air had won, 57-46.
Game 3 The losers of the
opening games- played against each other in the elimination round.
The Brigade team played -a run-away game against Camp Smith, outscoring them by 16 points in one rally. To regain some respect, Camp Smith made several mad dashes to the boards to end the first half in a 37- 29 deficit.
Camp Smith looked more like a team in the
.second half. They put their motor in overdrive and began to make their shots count. In less than four minutes, they closed the gap within three points.
The ground team bounced back. Camp Smith seemed to have lost their poise toward the.closing minutes of the game while Cround pressed on and eli- minated their oppo- nents from the tourney. Final score: 69-55, Ground.
Game 4
The Air Station team and Marine Barracks
were matched up in the winners bracket:
The Barracks team wasted little time taking their opponents to the hoop. The Station team then opened their offense and by the end of the first half had topped their adver- saries with a score of 40- 30.
Pearl Harbor return- ed in the second half with every intention of matching the Barracks team's threat. With three minutes left in the game, they pulled within one point of the top spot.
The excitement and tension mounted. Marine Barracks pass- ed the Air team, 62-61 with 72 seconds left in the game. They were certain the victory was theirs.
With only one second left, the Barracks team made a crucial mistake which might harm-Cost them the game: A foul was called against them and the shooter calmly sunk the first shot to tie the game. He missed the second shot and the game went into overtime.
In the last few seconds of the overtime period, the Air Station team was ahead 69-68. Barracks moved the ball downcourt as seconds ticked away. A shot went to the hoop with one second re- maining but was blocked.
Game 5
The first half of the contest between Marine
Ground and Marine Barracks was close but Ground jumped ahead. The last points 'of the half were made as the buzzer signaled thy end.
Barracks appeared to have lost their motiva- tion in the second half. Coaching from the sidelines gave them the spark they needed and with one minute remaining they trailed, 64-62.
Ground fired up and went on the warpath, defeating Marine Barracks, 70-62.
Game 6
Marine Air met Marine Ground for the second time.
The station team took charge of the game for the first five minutes of the match. Down by a score of 11-2, Ground elected to use a time- out.
There was a lack of spirit on the Air side of the court as Ground began moving the ball and scoring.
Soon, Station's basketball team picked up tempo and caught the ground team asleep on two occasions with fast breaks.
Both teams began executing plays, but neither allowed their opponents 'to shoot from under the basket. Any attempt at doing so was answered with the ball being smacked away.
As the half ended, Marine Air had a comfortable 40-32 lead over the Ground team,
but the excitement of the battle was yet to come.
Both teams came out firing in the second half. With 4:20 left in the game, Ground had taken the lead for the first time 71-69. The pressure mounted as the final moments of" the game ticked away.
The second half ended with both teams tied at 75. They plotted their strategy for the five minute overtime period.
Each team took turns scoring and the lead see-sawed. As the buzzer- ended the overtime period, the teams were again deadlocked, 83-83.
In the second over- time period, the teams were again deadlocked, 83-83.
In the third over- time period, Ground put their marbles in one bag and went on to win 97-93. Now that each team had one loss against them, a tie breaker was scheduled.
Tie-breaker
The tie-breaker lacked the spirit and enthusiasm as the previous game. Both teams appeared slug- gish in the opening minutes. At the end of the first half, Station's team was ahead, 34-33.
The tempo picked up in the second half, with Marine Air ahead most of the time. Air took Ground's team to the hoop. As the buzzer Bounded ending the game, the air team had
Athletic activities attract_dependent
won the championship 83-70.
In awards cere monies held after the game, Sgt William
Stone, of Marine Ground was named Most Valuable Player in the series. Stone led the tournament in
scoring with 106 points. Cpl James Hawthorne stood out for the Marine Air team by blocking mon than 25 baskets.
UP AND AT 'EM -A Marine Air defender challenges the shot attempted by a Marine Ground player during heated competition at MCAS Kaneohe Bay's gym. The two teams matched-talents during Bewail Marine Athletic Council Basketball Tournament conducted Jan. 4 until Saturday at Hangar 103.
Marine's daughter masters martial art by Cpl Charlie Marshall
Owning a black belt in a martial art means, you're good. Owning a black belt in Unified Tee Kwon Do when you're 11 years old and have only two years experience like Bess Baer, means you're not only devoted but, as the young expert puts it, "achieved self-confi- dence."'
GySgt Herbert Baer describes his daughter as, "a chip off the old block." Her Tae Kwon Do instructor lists her as one of the top students in class. And she' can also be
Pboto by Sgt Victor Gutierrez
FLYING KICK - Bess Baer, daughter of GySgt Herbert Beer, flies through the air to demonstrate a Tee Kwon Do kick. The 11-year-old Martial arts enthusiast recently earned her black belt and is also an avid roller skater, swimmer and gymnast.
Broken-fingered shooter fractures range record
CAMP H.M. SMITH, Hawaii - Two things were broken at the Puu loa Rifle Range Dec. 4, the year's known distance shoot- ing record and a shooter's trigger finger.
The record now belongs to 24-year-old Marine . Sgt Solomon Saenz and so does the broken trigger finger.
Saenz, of Head- quarters Company, broke his finger while playing softball 12 hours before qualifica- tion day. Despite the handicap, he fired with his middle finger to score 247 points out of a Possible 250.
by Sgt Mosel.; Reynolds
The San Diego, Calif., native dropped one point from the kneeling position at 200 yards. He then dropped two more at the prone 500 -yard line. "I should've held my position steadier," laughed Saenz.
Shooting within a few points of a perfect score was the first time for Saenz. However, this is his fifth award as an expert shooter. "I missed the expert badge by one point while in boot camp in 1975," he said Saenz had never held a rifle prior to entering the Corps.
Saenz, trained as an administrative clerk, now works as the training NCO for the company. His duties include keeping the company informed of Marine Corps training requirements for the year.
"I iike my job here," he said. "Now I can try to schedule myself for the rifle range this year and break my own record."
Saenz has a good chance of breaking his own record and it won't be as painful as breaking his own finger.
characterized as gre- garious, and fun- loving. .
BESS IS A four-foot five-inch camera ham, who upon seeing a photographer ex- claims, "Hollywood here we come!"
"She didn't get that hum me," laughed her father. What she did get was her fondness for athletics. Although most of her spare time is spent practicing-far, an upcoming Tae Kwon Do competition, Bess still makes room in her busy schedule for roller
skating, swimming and gymnastics.
Scott Alexander, Bess's instructor, is looking forward to entering her in local competition. The 10- year veteran instructor believes she 'has the ability and potential to capture fir.gt place. "Bess has already won a first place in blue belt competition." She will be challenged by other children of her age and belt classification
"I FIRST became interested in the sport when a friend took me to a practice," Bess recalled. "It looked like
a lot of fun so I joined." Looking over various
trophies and medals, Bess teUs a story of how she won each of them. "This one was for my first place in a tourna- ment and this one is for being the class honor student and . "
In addition to all the physical activity, Bess does well scholastical- ly also. "I'm getting good grades," beamed the diminutive martial artist. "The only thing 1
don't like about school is the homework."
ASKED WHAT plans she has for her future, the confident
5f04.744.014
youngster listed, Tae Kwon Do, roller skating and eventually be- coming a television star.
Her father says, "The only difference between me and Bess is maturity, which comes with age. I started with sports at age six. She started at
"I don't believe parents should push their children into athletics," the gunny continued. The kids should have a natural attraction for it. For instance, when Bess saw me run in the Honolulu Marathon
she expressed an interested in running. The next week she said she liked skating better, so I told her to forget running and pursue skating. I encourage her to do what she wants to do."
BESS HAS tried practically all the sports available to her, and she has acquired a liking for all of them.
Sports to the Baer family is like a hand to a glove. Like father, like daughter, the Beers stay healthy and active participating in any athletic activities for which they have time.
The Fleet Marine Force, Pacific boxing program begins Jan. 23 at 7 p.m. at the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Gym in Hangar 103.
The Marine boxing team will compete in the Amateur Athletic Union Invitational Tournament tonight at 7 p.m. at Schofield Barracks. Spectators are encouraged to attend.
Gunnery Sergeants Richard Melim, Provost Marshal's Office, and Manny Maldonado, Head- quarters and Headquarters Squadron, captured the Intramural Open Doubles Fall Racquet- ball Division title in match play Jan. 5. The two Marines, pitted against SSirt Vince Cruz and Cpl Amancio Cantu, both of Communications Support Company, won with sets of 21-17 and 21- 19. The next racquetball season begins March 16.
The Fourth Annual Hawaii Women's 10- Kilometer Run will be held Feb. 1 at 7 sum Starting point for the 6.2-mile running event is at Kapiolani Park. All entries must be made no later than Friday. For additional information, contact the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Special Services Department at 257.3108.
Women Marines aboard MCAS Kaneohe Bay are faced with cancellation of many women's intramural and Hawaii Marine Athletic program., unless enough interest in athletics is generated among the women, the Sped,' Services Athletic Department will discontinue many activities. Women Marines interested in participating in athletic competition should contact the Special Services Athletic Department at 257-3108, 257-3520 or visit the office located it the Family Theater complex.
The Intramural Basketball Jan. 6 are: Division I 1/12 3/3 lstRadBn MACS-2 Division II H&HS CSC BSSG, Supply BSSG, Main
leaders as of
W L 7
7 2 7 2 6 2
9 6 2
.3
6 4
Cindy Pedersen, Melissa Fisher, and Mike Pedersen are the new MCAS Kaneohe Bay Junior Tennis Champions. The trio .
participated in the Junior Tennis Tournament held at the air station Jan. 3.
A fee of $6 pays for everything: gun ammunition, birds, sodas, hamburgers and more Sunday at the Deadeye Skeet Tournament at the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Skeet Range in Ulupau Crater.
Competition is open for teams and individual shooters for the tourney. Trophies will be awarded for first place team, overall high shooter, high 12- gauge and high 20-gauge.
Competition in more than one gauge coats an additional $5. Sign up at the Skeet Range Friday from 1 1. a.m. to 6 p.m., Saturday and Sunday from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. For more information call the Skeet Range during sign-up hours at 257.286B, or call the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Special Services Office at 257-3520.
A MCAS Kaneohe Bay Mixed Doubles' Tennis Tournament will be held Saturday on the lower courts aboard the air station. All active duty, retired personnel, or their dependents are eligible to participate in the competition. Entries must be received by 6 p.m. today. For more information, contact Mark Skillicorn at 257-3520 or 949-7360.
In the eighth week of bowling, the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Intramural Mixed Handicap Bowling League standings are: TEAM VMFA-232 24.5 7.5 H &HS (A) 24.0 8.0 HMH-463 22.0 10.0 HAMS-24 (C) 22.0 10,0 Hq Co Bdr 21.0 11.0 HANS (C) 19.0 13.0 MACS-2 (A) 18.0 14.0 HANS (B) 18.0 14,0 1st Rad fin 17.0 15.0 HAMS-24 (B) 17.0 16,0 GEMO 17,0 15.0 MA BS-24 16.0 16.0 HAMS-24 (A) 16.0 12.0 SOMS (A) 15.0 17.0 Maint Co BSSG 15.0 17.0 1/12 15.0 13.0 Navy 14.0 18.0 lifq 3d Marines Comm 14.0 18.0 SOMS (B) 134 18.5 HAMS-24 (D) 111.0 20.0 Eng Co BSSG 11.0 20.0 MACS-2 (B) 11.0 21.0 H&S Co BSSG 7.0 25.0 HAS Co BSSG (B) 0.0 32.0
USING photo
CULTURAL DISPLAY - Murray Wafer, head librarian at MCAS Kaneohe Bay, folds a Sari for his display on India. Visser supervises the other librarians and assists library patrons.
r
by Mgt Dennis Lita lien
The MCAS Kaneohe Bay Joint Education Office, recently opened a net Reference Room.
Information is what makes the Reference Room work. The mate- rials are broken down into numerous cate- gories. While distinct from the others, each serves as an essential element in answering the questions of those using it.
IMMEDIATELY ) upon entering the
room, the eye catches a group of shelves lined with multicolored books and pamphlets. This is the college bulletin section. It contains more than 400 catalogs on colleges and universities in all states.. To find certain
THIS LOOKS INTERESTING - Linda Myers, a librarian at the MCAS Kaneohe Bay Library, helps Cpl Ed Doyle, Marine Fighter Attack Squadron -232,, find a book. Aside from assisting library patrons, Myers also orders new books.
Photo by Sgt Victor Gutierrez
Entertainment Station Library offers literary or educational choice
by Cpl Nora Parrish
With theater prices approximately 400 soaring and citizens records, all available scrambling to save for check-out. money, it's refreshing "A few of the booksin to know there is still a high demand here are place to go that offers the almanacs, encyclo- free entertainment. pedias and car repair
It's a place to sit and manuals," said Scovel. watch television; a "These are for use in the place where people are library only, unles s we willing to assist each have a second volume other; and a place for check-out." where the latest issues of newspapers, mega- Active duty people zines and books can be and their families must found. This virtual have a completed card entertainment center is on file inorder to check the MCAS Kaneohe out books or records. Bay Library. The library has a
liberal check-out "THE LIBRARY policy. Readers are
tries to cater to the allowed a 12-book or community on the record limit and items base," says Cathy may be kept out from Scovel, assistant one to three weeks. librarian. "Many times, books
"It houses about are not returned by the 25,000 books and due date," commented
Scovel. "An overdue notice is sent to the person when the return date is two weeks old and one again on the third week. When books are four weeks late we send a letter to the active duty member's commanding officer, asking for assistance in retrieving them."
THERE IS NO need for books to become overdue. If people have not completed the b oo kir-they have checked out, they may renew them by stop- ping in the library or by calling.
"We consider our- selves a public library," stressed Scovel, "and try to cover all tastes by having a collection of fiction, literature, Hawaiiana and chil-
dren's books. We have many others," she said.
Another popular item in the library is paperback books. They may be traded for other paperbacks of equal value. When the floats depart paperbacks are also sent out with them.
Thursday evenings the library sponsors a "Children's Story Hour," during which the librarians or volunteers read to children and share jokes. The story hour is set up for children four years and older and lasts about half an hour.
In the written cate- gories study materials for the General Equiva- lency Diploma, The Armed Services Voca- tional Test, Scholastic Aptitude Test and the
materials assist information seekers information, one refers to the state where the school is located, (states are in alpha- betical order) and looks for that school's bulletin.
ABOVE THE section reserved for informa- tion and textbooks used in St. Louis High School's Adult Educa- tion Program hangs a facsimile of a high school diploma along with a photo of smiling St. Louis graduate,/ Roth serve to motivate others to duplicate that achievement.
Specially prepared 'manuals are also provided. Students can find binders relating to subjects such as opportunities at educa- tional centers of the
Army, Navy and Air Force around Oahu, and even a series of binders pertaining to high school and off - duty educational op- portunities available at Marine Corps facilities around the world. Eventually their num- ber will be increased to provide an overview of programs available at all Marine Corps com- mands.
Soon Kaneohe-based Marines will be able to utjlize the Kentucky
Educational Television GED Preparation Pro- gram in the Reference Room.
THE NEW program offers qualified Ma- rines who do not have a high school diploma to prepare for the GED white on deployment. KET will be used in addition to the local St
-He's Very touchy On spelling'' son IltImmiem So
WILLIAM F. MOORE, is pleased to announce the relocation
of hie nifiro Geo,. Csee...ss
Louie program and consists of three video cassette tapes, four and one half hours long each. They are to be used with reading, mathematics and English workbooks
THE REFERENCE Room is the brainchild of Capt Michael Howard, joint education officer. Since taking over the JEC early this year, he's become acutely aware of the need for a place where Marines, sailors and their depen- dents can sit down and take their time brows- ing through education- al information.
In addition, Howard
and his staff have been relieved from the substantial amount Of time they spend answer- ing questions that can just as easily be found by some quick research in the Reference Room.
"This Reference Room is not meanttodo our work for us," said Howard. "Its set-up to be used as an addition- al tool to help us complete. our mission. When used properly it is an excellent supple- ment, capable of serving many people."
Howard plans to eventually increase the information in the Reference Room to
UNCONTESTED DIVORCES
1200 r
include a section designed for depen- dents, a Veterans Administration section and a special informa- tion hinder to aid Marines interested in commissioning pro- grams.
THAT'S JUST the beginning, according to Howard. There's a whole series of study guides for the College Level Examination Program, GED, Schol-
astic Aptitude Test and others. Marine Corps Orders and Bulletins pertaining to education are also available for ready reference.
Howard said the Reference Room will never be considered,
complete because the information is ever- changing. Once the system is fully opera- tional, however, the final result will be aki to an educatio I
smorgasbord.
4110rson's QUALITY SEAF001
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0 True False
YOMT financial circumstances change from year to year. The form you used law year
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in your situation last year.
WE'LL MAKE 1'14E lAlt LAM WORK fOR VOW
1480.4""iniMU `ON totems Volt lottetPa
College Level Entrance Program are also available.
FOR THOSE prefer- ring video to written material the library stocks at least four 8 mm films at any one time. They cover areas including ecology,
' parts of the world and other subjects of interest. These films last between 15 and 20 minutes.
A new addition to the inventory is the micro- fiche machine used to review magazines for research. The library offers Consumer Rd-- ports, Time, U.S. News, Department and State Bulletin, Newsweek and scientific maga- zines on microfiche. A Library of American Civilization provides
information of histori- cal reference.
The magazine lounge houses current issues of most magazines and newspapers and has a television for the viewing enjoyment of library patrons.
( FROM TIME to time a book may be unavail- able. When this hap pens, the librarian can put the borrower's, name on a waiting list When the book is returned, the librarian will notify the person.
If the library does not stock a particular
loincaatio,,nwisithmlisaty.,
-444bput for possible order if it is not available through another library.
"Reading can be fundamental" and the fun starts at the Station Library.
CCSISIDIL WATIEIC 111-1LAT LILA
REVOLUTIONARY CINEFI SOUND AT THE KAM ORIVE-IN
YOUR AM CAR RADIO IS YOUR SPEAKER. it NO
CAR RADIO. WITH IGNITION ACCESSORY POSITION. BRING YOUR OWN AM PORTABLE
NOW 4 BIG DAYS AT THE KAM D.I. 'SUPER SWAP MEET
PLUS: NOW EVERY THURSDAY!
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January 14, 1001, P e 11-3
y Sgt Victor r ullotou WHERE THERE'S SMOKE - Engulfed in a for a five-inch motor rocket. The rocket was protective smoke screen, Marines from 3d used during advanced demolition exercises Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air conducted Thursday at Makua Valley. Base Squadron-24 erect a launching ramp
DOWN TO THE WIRE - Donned in field protective masks, Marines of lid Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Base Squadron-24 expedite troop movement through an enemy mine field using lane
Demolitions
Photo by Victor r utforrez
breeching techniques. The units eliminated mine and boobytrap threats during advanced demolition training conducted Jan. 6 -8 at Makua Valley.
Marine combat engineers trigger explosive exercise by Sgt Phillip Williams meat of the troops the unit's movement.
through the mine field Loud clanging noises to the objective was were heati as they first priority. For this readied to clear a reason, any mines fori4rd path. When the located and marked by smoke faded, a rock A the engineers were not lay waiting in its detonated until after launching ramp point- the infantry unit had. ed in the direction of the passed through the /enemy mine field. field. 'Attached to the rocket
was about 1700 pounds of C-9 plastic explo- sives.
The platoon* of demolition Marines concealed themselves within high-grass areas, leaving a lone Leatherneck crouched far behind the launch pad with the controls to the rockets and ex- plosives.
The rocket launch resembled a miniature Cape Canaveral space- craft takeoff. The difference being that this launch carried a cargo of almost one ton of high explosives.
As the rocket stretch- ed out across the mine field, it last its head steam and quickly descended. A loud "thump followed the crash-landing along
MAKUA VALLEY, Hawaii - Marines of 3d Platoon Company A, 3d Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Base Squadron-24 pooled their destructive forces for advance demolition exercises Jan. 5 through 8.
The art of "demoli- tions is simple," stated Mgt Thomas Ramer, platoon sergeant.
:.°1-lowever, there's little ,-;room for error," he
ted es hie men for the final
ii.otage of the exercises. Inside the pictureque,
mountainous valley, the engineers waited in seclusion for their mission of operation,
;,-.The command relayed .elnstructions to clear a ;r lath of mines and :'-bdebytraps for troop :"and vehicular move-
ment. Like a regiment of worker ants, they tackled the task.
Marines equipped with mine detecting instruments cautiously scanned a designated area for infantry troops
and vehicles to travel through the mine field. Once the mines were located, mine bonnets were placed atop traps. (Bonnets are distinctly marked devices used to point out possible explosives.)
When barbed-wire and shrubbery hinder. ed the engineers' progress, they deployed bangelore torpedoes, hifh-explosive devices used specifically for removing unwanted natural or man-Made obstacles.
As the demolition experts found and marked mines, re- moved wire and other obstacles, they marked their lanes of travel with white tape. (The tape identifies specific lanes en route to the objective that must be foil owed when in amine field.) Trails were marked off on each aide of the field and an additional lane was provided for vehicular movement.
Expediting the move-
Aware that the engineer unit had discovered and was disarming their "well hidden" mines, the
"enemy attacked the Matinee with chemical gas.
"Gael Gas!" rang throughout the valley as quick reacting Leathernecks donned field protective masks. The mission continued without a break in the Action.
With the mine field cleared, 3d Combat Engineer Platoon advanced forward. Movement was halted when an even larger mine field was dis- covered. Again, the wild maze of engineer activity began.
A dense cloud of smoke covered much of
with a few moments of silence.
A flash and a large mushroom smoke cloud preceeded the noise from the explosion. The linear charge exercise, as the rocket launch weapon is known, was successful.
Loud echoes from the blast bounced off the mountains, engulfing the valley for many long seconds. Cinder and dirt drifted hack down to earth for about three minute, after the explosion.
When the dust settled, the damage was evident. The linear charge explosion had cleared a path about 100 meters in length and 13 wide. The mine field had been cleared.
Although clearing mine fields is only one of many tasks 3d Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Base Squadron-24 perform, the destruc- tive nature of this Marine team is a welcomed sight for those wanting to get to the other side of the road.
IT'S ALL SET - After dumpily" about 1,700 pounds of C.4 plastic explosives, g forklift returns to its lunging point as Matinee amide the way. The high-charge explosives were used in advanced demolition (mei,
Ptak, by eqt V 11.1101M
else conducted by 3d Combat Engineer Battalion and Marine Air Rase firttutdroll..24 Jam .6-4 at Make. Valley.
IN A PUFF OF SMOKE - All that remains of a heavily concentrated enemy mine field is a- mushroom of smoke. The field was destroyed by 1,700 pounds of C-4 plastic
Photo by apt Victor r utlerna explosives launched by a five-inch motor rocket during advanced demolition exercise. The exercise was conducted at Makua Valley Jan. 5-6.
U.B.M. SALE BEGINS 1-14. ENOS 1-21
AIKARI PARK AND
ALA MOANA /PUNCHBOWL
PH. 264-3617 MON-SAT. 7:30430
SAN. 830110 PH. R37.3314
MON:SRT. 78. SUN. 8-5
ALL ITEMS MAW STORE ONLY
WHITE SALE CLEARANCE HAND TOWELS
REG. $345 $ SALE I 0
WASH CLOTHS
;ALE $1 09 KITCHEN TOWELS
REG. S1.99 SALE $1 19
POT
HOLDERS Rig. Agt
SALE
59' DISNEY BEACH TOWEL
HANDYMAN SPONGE
r 7" e 23/4"
9E9. 81.19
SALE 59t
REG. 14.0g SALE S2 99
RAIN BIRO LAWN SPRINKLER
API -Ill COOPS WOO so FT.
NES 118811
SALE 119.1119
'Si
Pale B-4, January 14, 1981
ietzets.44:4)4% K-BAY OFFICERS' CLUB
TODAY: Lunch served in the Pacific Room from 11 a.m. till 1 p.m. features special, hot carved sandwiches, soup and salads. Mongolian barbecue on the Lower Lanai from 6 till 8:30 p.m.
THURSDAY: Lunch served in the Pacific Room from 11 am. till 1 p.m. Beefeaters' Night from 6 till 8:80 p.m, features steamship round, a seafood item, rice or potatoes, vegetable and a salad bar.
FRIDAY: Lunch in the Pacific Room from 11 HIM till 1 p.m. Happy Hour in the Tapa Bar from 4;30 till 6:30 p.m. Mongolian barbecue on the Lower Lanai from 6 till 9 p.m. "Rainbow Connection" entertains from 8:30 p.m. till midnight in the Tapa Bar.
SATURDAY: Candlelight dining in the Pacific Room from 6 till 8:30 p.m. with new menu.
SUNDAY: Champagne brunch served in the Pacific Room from 10 a.m. till 1 p.m. with a variety of breakfast specials and a complimentary glass of champagne. Beef and crab served from 6 till 8:30 p.m. Reservations requested.
MONDAY: Lunch served in the Pacific Room from 11 a.m. till 1 p.m. Join us Monday through Friday for a variety of specials, hot carved sandwiches, soup and salads. Monday evening the dining room and Taint Bar are closed.
TUESDAY: Lunch served in the Pacific Room from 11 am. till 1 p.m. Tuesday evening the
dining room is closed. The Tapa Bar is open from 4 till 10 p.m. Sandwiches and chili available.
WINDWARD ENLISTED CLUB .
TODAY - Club open from 11 am. till 1 p.m. fin bar and dining services. The club reopens at p.m. and the dining room is open from 6 till 8 p.m '"Zuprock" plays from 7:30 till 11:30 p.m. Couples' Lounge open to NCOs.
TOMORROW - Club open from 11 a.m. till 1
p.m. for bar and dining sery ices. The club reopens at 4 p.m. and the dining room is open from 6 till 8 p.m. "Zuprock ". plays from 7:30 till 11:30 p.m, Couples' Lounge open to NCOs.
FRIDAY - Club open from 11 am. till 1 p.m. for bar and dining services. The club reopens at 4 p.m. and the dining room is open from 6 till 8 p.m. "Zuprock" plays from 8 p.m. till 1 am.
SATURDAY - Club open from 1 p.m. till 1
a.m. Dining from 6 till 8 p.m. "Zuprock" plays from 8 p.m. till midnight.
SUNDAY - Club open from 1 p.m. till midnight with dining from 6 till 8 p.m.
MONDAY - Bar open from II a.m. till 1 pan and 4 p.m. till midnight.
TUESDAY -Club open from 11 a.m. till 1 p.m. for bar and dining services, The club reopens at 4 p.m. and dining room is open from 6 till 8p.m. fora smorgasbord. Children under 12, $1.99; adults $4.99 all you can eat.
FAMILY THEATER WThr S S M
7:15 p.m. 1 2 3 4 5 6 CAMP SMITH
S 8 9 10
T 8. AN ALMOST PERFECT AFFAIR - Keith Carradine, Monica Vitti, PG, romantic comedy. A
7 brief encounter between a young American film- maker and a middle aged Italian wife of an Italian
11 law p.oducer who has just completed a picture. 9. CRY ONION - Franco Nero, Sterling Hayden, PG, comedy. The Super Oil Company h is taken over a once happy, sunny town and now misery reigns. Lamb has bought out all the farmers and those who have refused to sell their land have become the victims of strange accidents. 10. MEMORIES IN MY MIND - Michael Christian, Josette 13. Banzet, PG, suspense drama. A suspenseful and romantic tale of a young man, Guy Montgomery (Michael Christian), whose life so far has been a desperate escape from a tragic and violent past. (Note-may not be suitable for children due to violence) 11. HE KNOWS YOU'RE ALONE - Don Scardino, Caitlin O'Heaney, R, suspense drama. A psychotic killer runs rampant on New York's Staten Island stabbing people. Primary victims are young women who are engaged to be married.
1.M Y BODY GUARD -Chris Makepeace, Ruth Gordon, PG, comedy drama. Two teenage Chicago high school boys are friends. They are drawn together by their need for one another. 2. THE BIG BRAWL - Jackie Chan, Jose Ferrer, ft, martial arts adventure. Jackie Chan is a young man in Chicago during the 1930's learning judo from his uncle. When the mail-bride ofChan's brott:er is kidnapped, Chan must fight as Jose Ferrer's representative to gain her freedom. 3. SOMEWHERE IN TIME - Christopher Reeves, Jane Seymour, PG, romantic drama. A contemporary young man, Christopher Reeves, falls in love with the portrait of an actress, Jane Seymour, of the early 1900's. Through an extra- ordinary effort of will he transports himself into the past where he meets her. (Note-may not be suitable for children due to language.) 4. RICH KIDS -Trim Alvarado, Jeremy Levy, PG. comedy. A comedy about divorce and its
imulbenda, wives and ewer offspring. 1114 Peer* Caress, 34,146 Heesdes. PG, comedy. A scrappy and impoverished girls' basketball team makes it despite the obstacles. O. THE NORTH AVENUE IRREGULARS - Edward Herrmann, Susan Clark, G, comedy, A group of women parishioners lead a madcap assault on organized crime. 7. SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT II - Burt Reynolds, Sally Field, PG, action comedy. A cross- country car chase with Burt Reynolds (The Bandit), Jackie Gleason (Smokey) and Sally Field (Frog).
In order to test the effectiveness 9!.thi1averlisie9 media, we we offering
$200 REWARD ler finding and bringing In this ad. You will receive a $200 savings on any Rainbow or filler Queen Vacuum with atlachmenla and power nozzles.
Individualized education program (I.E.P.) Diagnostic testing
Reading, language ads, math Learning and motivation problems . SAT, SSAT, GED preparation, study skills All ages-all subjects-specialized instruction
SPRING SESSION
112B 595-4781
Carol Wood, M.ED., Director
Learning Development Resources
Honolulu, Aina Haina, Kabala, Kailua. Pearl City
Success Learning
Programs
AMAZING WATER HEATER CUTS HEATING
COSTS BY 50%!
TEMOOR sews put10100 to 11450 a year
TF-MCOR operates s11 the cost of a conventional electric water healer
TEMCOR heats water with west* fleet out of the ak -a teeitalologIcal hfesidittougtf
TIMOR sir conditions, dehuntidilles
ritilitCOR With solar penes saves 10% of your ti Water Neatbuy coa
CALL. NOW 262-0513
IT'S REVOLUTIONARY!
IT PAYS FORITSELF!
lieVaeas Hodges S Co.
20 libiuniu Ars. Keller
261-2540
oote
104. honolulu
music institute In association with Thayer Piano Company, Ltd., the Honolulu Music Institute is now offering instruction in Piano, Organ, Guitar, Drums, Flute, Saxophone, Clarinet, Trumpet. Comprehensive Musicianship programs designed for all-Pre-school age through Adults.
tfonoluiu music institute 536-6161
The Good Shepherd School
NOW ACCEPTING Student Applications for
FALL SEMESTER Kindergarten thru Grade 12
(4-yeerold 141mtergades)
°Noting . .
Clean Academic hallow Olscitillsed EnvIrsoosni Christian Cored/Ms
For information, testing and registration call 538.1191
REARING CENTER HAWAII, INC. SUM 233 735116/10P STREET OILLWAIWA TRANSPORTATION BLDG.
0010701efe MIA AINA NANA
KAILUA HAWAII
261-6217
NEW TERM JAN 26
Mavis Tracy 1-10ME OF THE
WINDWARD Ballet
' YOUTH School BALLET
Interested in a Medical Career? Unique accelerated training Is what we offer to help you achieve your position in the exciting field of medicine.
programs In:
o nmdical assistant
0 clinical assistant
(7) medical secretary
Limited space available for February 10th & March 20th classes
For information call 524 -3363
FIUDad,r3 nooka 'school of hawaii
1164 blatqp at, tulle 105 1.1101v/t, hi 96813 800/524.3383 LICorr.0 by 0.01. Member National Health Careers Council
Madlcol Aselslanl Proprern Folly Accrecbted Sy Accrediting &nen Of Health Education Schools
Financial Aid Available Approved for V.A. Benefits
DOUBLE YOUR CHANCES( It you already have military skill or background In management, Increase your employability within the Service and In the civilian world with a Bachelor's Degree or Certificate In Computer Science or Systems Analysis. ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY'S certificate and bachelor's degree programs In Computer Science offer evening classes using the modem resources of Con trot Data Corporation, an established international corporation covering virtually all aspects of the computer industry.
"HANDS ON" training, a wide selection of computer languages from BASIC and COBOL to FORTRAN, and full college accreditation make this a unique computer *dance program to satisfy both your current and future career goals. The World of Computers Is becoming part of eery human endeavor. Prepare yourself now to be a part of this new world.
VA/IA Approved
roar
for further Information
Ph. 833-2555
ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY (Control Data Corporation Bldg.)
2828 Paa St., Suite 1000 Honolulu, HI 96818
'S114,1t141:
TENNIS CENTER kONOttAu ANNA.
Facility Includes:
( Radom'. Wedina Pool
Si, term, Court,
Approximate!)
brat foul (Aman
Volkytmlf Court
I and I Meier nixing
Men', and Women'.
and Plea Area
SoiNsming Pool XI-Meter
Ward.
Sauna)
ONLY $315 PER MEMBERSHIPS
Memo Replica
feet* Imarotaion
Soon learn Latched by AAR
Offered: Activities Presently
'Towns Inatruclion by
Aerobic lunatic Oaten
llet11Us Piegreel9F108
Halo Phrase
Peter Bumph Internatiottel. I td.
FAMILY MEMBERSHIPS
to $elvt0 01'14 Ck to Selto ol'Avk to se
0".
0
Anticipating all that's new and exciting ...
ashin Cinder SEWING SCHOOL PHONE 536-8250
1296 S. BERETANIA ST. CLASSES START JANUARY 15. 1981
SMALL CLASSES INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION
CLASSES
830-2:30 MORNING CLASSES-8:30-11:30
MONDAY NIGHT-6:30-9:00 SAT. MORNING-B:30-11:30
SAT. AFTERNOON-12:393V
Phone 536.8250-946-4529 MRS. ELLEN HAMADA
guard by Dept. al Ed.olibb
MATH CLINIC MATH SKILLS
DEVELOPMENT FREE Diagnostic test. ing for enrolled stu- dents
es individualized instruc- tion Rinforcernnt of skills
For letermatlea testing & registration
Math Clinic 538-1191
Katrice Montessori
School A "U
Gentle, creative learning experience for your child's formative years. Pre- school /kindergarten and Grades 1 thru 3.
Announcing the Opening of our 4th Grade program September 1. 1981.
Limited spaces are available.
Please Call 536-5154
, 1515 Lihollho, Hono, AMS certified
REGISTER NOW FOR WINTER TERMS STARTING JANUARY 15 AND JANUARY 26. Students starting Jan. 5 will have free
tuition until Jan. 19.
LOW TUITION Secretarial Clerk/Typist Accounting Hotel Management
Business Administration Air Travel
HAWAII Yl
SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 111 N. King The Quality School The Penthouse
'Accredited by A I.C.S. 'Hanna by 1101
PH. 524-4014
HOAKALEI KAMAUU
ANNOUNCES HULA CLASSES
TRADITIONAL & MODERN.
NUUANU & KAIMUKI FOR
MEN, WOMEN & CHILDREN.
Registration Now Open Classes Begin Feb. 3, 1981
For More Information Call 533-1492
MOANALUA COMMUNITY
KINDERGARTEN & PRESCHOOL
BEGISTF RING
FOR FALL ON
FEBRUARY NTH
OPENINGS AVAILABLE NOW FOR
KINDERGARTEN ANI4 Y40111118,
AFTERNOON PROORAMS,
FULL TIME DAY CARE Looted Nut To MemOus
SAINT ANN SCHOOL 46 125 Haiku Road
Kaneohe, Oahu, Hawaii 96744
REGISTRATION FOR GRADES K-8
February 2, 3, 9, 10 & 11, 1981 from 8:3011:00 a.m.
Bring birth & baptism (cat hi (y's) cirt1(1Cilles
Call 235-1495 for further information
01 CO-EDUCATIONAL
ALL RACES & RELIGIONS
We are now testing for, all grades.
HOLY NATIVITY SCHOOL
5286 Kalanianaole Highway Phone 373-3232
A CORRESPONDENCE COURSE
through Windward Community College
Kaneohe
WINDWARD COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Course Title: CREATING YOUR FUTURE
SSCI 197 - CREDIT HOURS: 3 10-week course: February 9 to April 17
**EARN COLLEGE CREDITS AT HOME**
Explore your alternative futures in Hawaii. Create the future you want by selecting your goals and designing strategies to achieve them.
Tuition & Mandatory Fee $12 For Residents And Military Dependents. Enrollment Limited To 50 Students.
Call Now 235 \LI! 13 To Register By Mail, or Come See Us.
LEARN MUSIC THECEaSV WAY
EASY KEIKI MUSIC MUSIC
SCHOOL SCHOOL
Piano Lab (ages 7 to ictuil)
Group Guitar (ages 10 to adult)
Group Ukulele (ages 7 to adult)
Music Fundamentals (ages 35: to 4 -PreSchool
5 to 7 -- Elementary) Junior Keyboard Lab and Junior Enrichment (ages 4"': to 131
Kelki Choir (ages 31/2 to 12)
Other skill group programs available based on demand: HULA, STAGE BAND, VOICE, ORGAN.
Private Instruction available in Piano, Organ, Guitar, Brass, Woodwinds. Percussion and Strings (based on demand).
Sign up Choir classes begin the week of Feb. 9, 1981. Other classes
now! begin in February. McCully, Waipahu, Kailua, Newtown and Wahiawa.
For more Honi;lulu 955-2691 Waipahu 671-0008 information: Mon-Sat Kain-4:30 pm A DiviS,OM OF SERvo0
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
ADULT EDU ATION F RST SEMESTER CLASS OR ADULTS
TO BEGIN-J UA Y 26, 1981 AT
COMMUNITY SCHOOLS ON OAHU
ADULT BASIC EDUCATION HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION CITIZENSHIP HOME AND PARENT EDUCATION FREE CLASSES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
NO DISCRIMINATION OF THE GROUNDS OF RACE.. COLOR. RELIGION. SEX, AGE, NATIONAL ORIGIN, PHYSICAL OR MENTAL. HANDICAPS SHALL EXIST IN ANY OF THE EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS AND ACTIVITIES WITHIN THE DOE
.1..nuary 14, 1981
in the world of education, here's a
glimpse at the many opportunities
awaiting students of all ages!
,bosawastbbr,
DAMIEN VIRILITER AGE A PRIVATE CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL FOR YOUNG MEN
'COLLEGE PREPARATORY PROGRAM
COMPLETE ILH SPORTS
EXPERIENCED FACULTY
ENTRANCE EXAM FOR FALL ADMISSION INTO NINTH GRADE:
SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 1981
8:00 A.M.
GIVEN ONLY AT DAMIEN ICSTING rEE: $15.00
NO REGISTRATION NECESSARY
1401 HOUGHTAILING STREET
841-0195
EPIPHANY SCHOOL "The Episcopal School K,imuk,"
Tenth & Hardin!! 737-4114 Avenues 734-5706
Give your child a thorough foundation Kindergarten 5's Grades 1-6
All day supervision 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Transportation Spalding Phonics Physical Fitness
Art Music
APPLICATIONS BEING RECEIVED STARTING
FEBRUARY 2, 1981
FOR 13131-82 SCHOOL YEAR
Application Forms Available at - Epiphany School
1041 Tenth Avenue Honolulu, HI 16
or Call the School ffice
ADMISSION TESTING DATES AND TIMES FOR APPLICANTS AS FOLLOWS:
Kindergarten grade 2 February 21, 9 a.m. -12 noon Grades 3-6 February 28, 8 a.m.-12 noon
1131111PAANA MIMIC SCHOOL
MAXIM Et MEIUMIC New Classes Begin in Jan.
4.
IP,'
tz\
ti '
14 of
Singing Games Ethnic Dances Ear Training Rhythm Keyboard
7 For More Inlormator, Call or Write:
YAIIVILAINA ry MINSK
SCHOOL YAMAHA icAHmAngMusic School for children 31/2 to 8 Classes
Famous YAMAHA Electone COUO*. All Ages . Beginners Inlettnerhate classes daytime and evenings
Plano - For Pleasure! Quality Teachers for all ages.
Guitar- Private and Class lessons classical fol and electric guitars
615 PIIKOI STREET 850 W. HIND DRIVE. HONOLULU, HI 96914 HONOLULU, HI 96821
5318002 3734945
ALSO LOCATED IN KAILUA AND PEARLRIDGE
age B-6, Januar 14 1981
1-4,eitie4Act Ei-zet by Combat Intelligence Center
T-64 MEDIUM TANK - The T-64 along with Le T-72 were developed 3 successors to the T- 1, T-55, and T-62 Lmily as main battle Lnks. The T-64 is now sing deployed in the roup of Soviet Forces, ermany and in the extern military dis- icts of the Soviet nion. This tank has not ppeared outside of Dviet units. Although milar in several
.spects to the T-72, the -64 has a less powerful igine, and its cross- nintry capability may at be as good as the T- r s.
THE USE OF an Ito-loader has en- pled the Soviets to duce the size of the irret and crew.
Therefore, the space available to crew members (comm'ander and gunner) in the turret has not been significantly increased.
When using an antenna, the command variant is immobile, because the mast must be anchored to the ground. The T-64 uses two snorkels for crossing underwater. One is attached to the turret for air intake; the other to the right rear of the vehicle for exhaust.
In armament, this tank has a 125 mm smoothbore main gun which fires a hyper velocity armor piercing round at 1,615 meters per second. The gun also fires the high explosive anti-tank fin stabilized round and the high explosive
-fragmentation fin stabilized round.
IN ADDITION, the T-64 mounts a 7.62 mm machinegun in its turret and a 12.7 mm anti-aircraft machine gun on top of its turret. (The command vehicle will have two addition- al antennas instead of the 12.7 mm gun.)
Some of the main advantages listed for the T-64 are:
Its height presents a low silhouette.
The tank has an excellent hull and turret configuration which helps protect it from the impact of enemy fire.
The main gun fires at a constant rate.
The commander is capable of operating all weapons in the tank from his position.
One of the tank's main disadvantages is that the main gun can only be lowered five degrees from being level with the rest of the tank.
THE NEXT ITEM of concern is how to stop this tank. The T-64 can be immobilized by damaging the road wheels, tracks or engine (located aft.)
Another vulnerable point is located on the turret, just port of the main gun. The tank commander can be knocked-out by a hit with an anti-tank weapon in this area.
There is also a vulnerable point located above the forth road wheel on the starboard side of the hull, where fuel and ammunition are stored.
Finally, some of the
Wit 344." The daily breakfast and weekend/holiday breakfast/brunch menus nsist of fresh fruit, assorted hot and dry cereals, eggs to order, omlettes, sorted meats, creamed or chipped beef, hash browns, hot cakes or French ast. All lunch and dinner menus include assorted salads, beverages, breads and sserts. The menus for today through Tuesday are: TODAY - Lunch: soup, Swiss Steak with tomato gravy, baked potatoes, ur cream, buttered lima beans and glazed carrots. Dinner: breaded veal cutlets, buttered noodles, mushroom gravy, buttered inach and buttered peas.
TOMORROW - Lunch: leg of lamb with mint jelly, stuffed beef roll, getable combination, Bavarian cabbage and hot biscuits. Dinner: minestrone soup, spaghetti with meatballs, combination pizza, Leese ravioli with sauce, buttered green beans and toasted garlic bread.
FRIDAY - Lunch: soup, fried rabbit, Maryland fried chicken, French tked potatoes, chicken gravy, O'Brien corn and buttered brussel sprouts. Dinner: corn chowder and crackers, baked halibut, fried shrimp, steamed
cocktail and tartar sauce, potatoes au gratin, vegetable combination and It cornbread. SATURDAY - Brunch/Dinner: soup, steamship round of beef au jus, tttered steamed rice, au jus or natural gravy, Lyonnaise potatoes, buttered inach and broccoli spinach. SUNDAY - Brunch/Dinner: turkey rice soup, roast turkey, natural rkey gravy, mashed potatoes, cornbread dressing, simmered green beans, anberry sauce and hot dinner rolls. MONDAY - Lunch: soup, smoked rolled boneless ham, scalloped tatoes, mustard sauce, buttered succotash, Southern style greens and rnbread. Dinner: knickerbocker soup, Spanish steak, chicken fried steak, parsley ittered potatoes, brown gravy and buttered peas and carrots. TUESDAY - Lunch: soup, meatloaf, home fried potatoes, vegetable avy, french fried cauliflower and buttered wax beans. Dinner: cornish hen, Hawaiian glazed duck, rice pilaf, broccoli with cheese uce and spiced beets.
Switch to Beneficial Income Tax Service
FIND OUT WHAT YOU'RE MISSING.
The IRS allows more than 500 tax deductions, credits and exclusions. Our trained tax preparers know them all, and dig for every one you're entitled to.
We'll prepare your state returns, too, for any states in which you need to file.
Stop missing tax deductions! Call or some in today. No appointment neces- sary. Most offices open evenings and Saturdays.
1M Beneficial IncomeTax Service Beneficial Income Tax Service at your nearest Beneficial Finance System office.
-10NOLULU - (6 convenient offices) 36 North King Street 533-4202
I 1451 South Beretania Street 941-7702 3427 Waialae Avenue 734-1947 1947 North King Street 841-3671
I 1283 Kapiolani Blvd 536-3565 1425 Liliha Street 537-5248
See Telephone White Pages for other offices in irea
prominent recognition features for the T-64 are:
Six small, evenly spaced road wheels and four track return rollers.
Front of hull is sharply sloped with a V-shaped water and debris deflector.
External ammuni- tion stowage boxes on the turret sides.
TWO SNORKELS, one with an elbow for attachment to engine exhaust, stowed on the rear of the turret.
Gunner's infrared searchlight mounted to the left of the main gun.
Integrated fuel cells and stowage containers give a streamlined appearance to the fenders.
Some people hesitate to go to a doctor for the help they know they should have and could so easily secure.
We don't want you to feel that way about coming to our office. No one should suffer if health can be obtained through gentle. effective chiropractic treatments. We've' dedicated our lives to helping sick people get well and stay well. We want to talk your case over with you to See if we can help you. and if so, to explain our method. which often gives quick relief and lasting benefits.
We are conscientiously coneerned shout every patient and offer this service without obligation.
If treatment is indicated. most insurance includes coverage for chiropractic care.
The following conditions frequently respond to chiro- practic treatment:
HEADACHES NERVOUSNESS DIZZINESS IRRITABILITY NECK PAIN HIP OR LEG PAIN SORENESS TIREDNESS STOMACH DISTRESS FATIGUE UPPER OR MID-BACK EXHAUSTION PAIN
SHOULDER, ELBOW, LOW BACK PAIN WRIST, HAND PAIN
David L. Halpain, D.C. Jeanne C. Halpain, D.C. 602 Kailua Rd., #207
Phone 261-0831
Classified I
(When you place a Classified ad, results are just a phone call away.
TO PLACE YOUR AD- Dial 235-5881 Classified Advertising Department
FREE KIDS 25 PERSONALS 35 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
CLASSIFIED ADS MALE 39 seeks relation- ship with lonely lady 30 to 45. Write S. K., 1750 Kalakaua, Suite 3-172 Honolulu, Hi. 96826
SEARS 20" bike, 3 spd. $50, very good cond. Ph. 235- 2625
10 CEMETERY PLOTS
VALLEY of the Temples 5 plots $575 ea. Call 262-9172 eves & weekends.
FOR yardwork or other odd jobs at very reasonable rates in Kailua area. Call David at 261-7145
HOUSECLEANING Services.
Call 239-9571
LOW Budget masonry. No job too small. Driveways, slabs, sidewalks, blockwall & stucco. Dick 254-3892
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Classification categories are listed alphabetically
Announcement' Antiques
15
1 30 Appliances 127
Apts. Furnished 73
Apts. Unfurnished 74
Ault Portly turn. 75
Autos For Sale 178 Auto Parts/Service 158
Autos Wanted 181
Boats. Supplies & Service 148
Building Supplies 141
Business Directory 40 Business Opporturities 50 Business Property
For Sale or Rent 108
Card of Thanks a Cemetery Plots 120
Furniture 120 Furniture For Rent 121
Garage & Lanai See 88 Hot Rods 172
Help Waited. Mole & Female 130
Help Wanted. Saes el Hemp Wanted. Domestic 82 Houses Furnished 81
Houses Unturnlahed 82 Houses Partly Furnished 83 No0211011119 84 Income Tai Service 30 Income Property 113
Jewelry ao Loans. Loam Wanted 55
Lost & Found 37
Machinery & Equipment 37
Miscellaneous 28
Motorcycle Sales S Service 71
Musical Sales & Service 44
Office For Rent 03 Personals 25
Pets. Supplies & Service 51
Prolessionel Services 35
Real Wee For Sale 14
Real Estate Announcements 15
Real Wale Wanted 1
Rental TO Share 78
Rentals Wanted fie
Rent-A-Car 174
Roonn For Rent 88
Schools & Training 45
Situations Wanted Male & Female 83
Swede 128
Condos b Townhouses 85
Condos 8 Townhouses Furnished 85
Condos 8 Townhouses Uniurnithed 87
Travel 122
Trucks 6 Pickups
Vacation Rental. 03
Hens. Campers. Jeeps 175
Saki WM Free One
35 PROFESSIONAL SERVICES..
GENERAL roofing, pitch & gravel & shingle, reason- able rates, free est. Call 235-4871 after 5 p.m.
MUSICIANS contact service. All music. Tele- phone 455-2114
s HOPTO SERVICE
All types of excavation, fooling. lot clearing, etc.
Daily. weekly & monthly rates.
FREE Estimates Ph. 247-4742
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES & REGULATIONS Your classified ad automatically runs in all nine editions of The Sun Press and reaches over 97,000 homes each Wed- nesday. Read Sun Press Classifieds for profit, use Sun Press Classified for results.
CLASSIFIED LINE ADS
Deadline Monday 4:00 p.m. $1.54 per line. tax
3 line min. Ad will appear in all
9 editions 13 Woes Contract Required
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Deadline Friday 5 p.m.
Can 235 -5681 for information on
open & contract rates.
Corrections &
cancellations deadline Monday - 12:00 noon
REPORT ERRORS AT ONCE
The Sun Press Newspapers will not be responsible lot more than one incorrect .insertion of any Classified advertisement and is responsible only for that line or portion of the ad that appeared incorrectly.
For quick. experienced help In piedno your ad
Ph. 235-5881
People Helping paw.
Festival of Chinese Arts 10 am Saturday January 17, 1981 St.Stephen's Church 2747 Pali Highway Free Admission
Herb Display '
Acupuncture Lecture and Demonstration
-
Li Tleh Kuel . Story of Taoist Immortal 64-7: tt,
)/Nd
Ceremonial Lion Procession
Pirritatry
Lily SiotA School of the Six Chinese Arts Phone: 947-4788
tppoint
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Housing Info Center
I 1,1111, %A
IFEB. 5 -10th' Opens.HE RE AIRPORT HOLIDAY INN
3401 Nimitz Highway
836-0661 11 am-7pm
IMIIIIIIMID%.2711r-fr'="71-7 a !lasted by prnfeNsional representalies ruf one of the rifitif,ti's largest real estate seretees repreNenling the 11 ashintoir metro area with 211 offire.s
.... and 601? assm.intes. On the spot I I titres/just" answered. new facts about financing. CfP/Or jrtrntus of 111)111.S schrl
formation and more.
1111i[LPI as
weals' recornended, but not required.
cWOUNTWERIVly. REALTY riPh litnimf I
(,I
May & Elmer Caldwell noose .'14.11'/ISISII lie.vandrut. I n. °ar11
Yard Service
When you place a Classified ad, results are just a phone call away!
,ro PLACE YOUR AD-Dial 235-5881 Classified Advertising Department
ESTATE, garage, moving sale done by a professional. No Job too small. Licensed. Call Jonelie 247-5469
"WIKI wiki clean-up" quality house cleaning for gen. or major work. Keneohe/Kailua only, 247- 5719 Cleaning Services. Resi- dential, Commercial. Ph. 521-2331
"MAINTENANCE Experi- ence" Yard Service Clean- up. Call J.B. at 261-1496
GAB Baquiro Carpentry & Painting Service. C-8144 Call 689-0843
DESIGNER custom-made, all types of garments and alterations. Ph. 262-4949.
ATTY Joe Tansies, simple wills from $100, Trust & Real Estate Investment Consellng. Call 487-8086
35 MIME, FSPESSIONAL
DRESSMAKING 8 alterations
Call 523-1128
FRED Domingo Yard, etc lot clearing & hauling services. 422 -7428
YARD Service: Retiree.
Can 262-7588
DEPENDABLE yard care & hauling, a little or a lot! Free Estimate 235-4206
CARPENTRY, wood or concrete; walkways, patios, decking, fencing or repairs. Reasonable. Call Miles, 262-8859
TAX Preparer. Your home or office, 1156 Koko Head Ave., Hon., Hi, Call 737- 1022, 373-9476 eves.
PRO Income Tax Prepara- tion, Specializing In Military taxes. 833-9407 eves.
PARKER books: Used paperback, new & collecti- bles comic. We buy, sell & trade. 909 A Lehua St., Pearl City. Store Hours: 10- 6 p.m. daily 456-4996.
HOUSE CLEANING $40 Introductory Offer 3 bdrm. Attention House- wives: Attention please; keeping your house clean can be a breeze. If you call this number (833-3877) as quick as a mouse, we will have a crew there to clean your house. For forty ($40) we will clean your three bedroom and 2 bath; we will vacuum all carpeted rooms, mop and put a thin coat of wax on kitchen and bathroom, dust and polish furniture in living room.
VIDEO tape any event, birthdays, parties, etc. Your tape to keep. Reasonable rates. Call Ed 254-5441 or 254-2770
45 SCHOOLS & TRAINING
PIANO lessons. Hickam area. Has degree, special- izing In classical music. Call Toshlko 422-2823
Remit Wahl MATHEMATICS
INSTITUTE Academy & Learning Clinic
By APO. 281-8106
01-GINNING Piano or Flute lessons. Individual instruc- tion. Ph. 247-2495
HABIL ITAT House PIANO Leeson*, Classical, Cleaning, Commercial & Popular, or Chord Method. Residential Free Est. 235- Ph. 235-4432 6648
BRUCE Lee's style Mar- tial Arts Instructor. Priv- ate lessons only $6 an
hour. 262-7318
PROF. Drummer willing to teach serious students
$5 an hour 282 -7316
AIRLINE TICKETING
RESERVATIDNIST TRAVEL AGENT
tl eau MN Sough Soul a if vtl (reef. a MON pc bui sum rue bug
=.11:41111.md being considtred MOM a usal career is lc/
VIIL *MI la demi navel «Nal iu
M11111,1111 damtnli ff =oed Ism Warn v(S,
NEW CLASSES BEGIN JAN. 26
II our nes bnlih In
PEARL CITY
Call 4551063
TRAVEL ACADEMY
Mit. am May. tulle TN roil till Deemed by DOE
45 SCHOOLS A TRAINING
PRIVATE or group lessons in NEEDLEPOINT, CREW- EL EMBROIDERY, KNIT- TING & CROCHET. Reasonable rates. Call 254 5145
50 OPPORTUNITIES
BE YOUR own boss. Full time or part-time. Local Shaklee distributor trains you for a unique oppor- tunity. For appointment call Bob Briggs at 282-8298 or 281-1870
55 KELP WANTED MALE I FEMALE
FIBERGLASS cutler needed. No exp. necessary. Apply in person only. 8-3. Island Air Filters, 46-170 Kahuhipa St., Kaneohe
LOST your Trl -Chem liquid Embroidery Instructor? FREE services, classes: NEW '81 Spring Catalog. 235-3074, 624-4469, 422- 9508, 254-4834 or 499-1513 F/part time career oppor- tunities. No Exp. Nec.
Travel Consultant
Military oriented Part time,
Commissions Call Rich at
521-4620 Before 8 am/After 7 pm
SECURITY Guard. Part time. Hawaii Loa College. Call 235-3641 Ext. 115. For emit. An equal opportuni- ty, affirmative action employer.
PRESCHOOL teacher for Christian preschool, hrs. 7:30 to 12. Alice Bailey, ph. 235-2271, 8-11:30.
EXPER. care for Senior citizens, 4-8 hrs. per day, Kailua or Enchanted Lake only. Call 261-3190
Temporary Office Jobs Just A Phone
Call Away
536-3456 ENSF.S..4091/151R8 CYVELIFILC) AsCr
188 So Hotel Street
WANTED NOWII P.T. Vet Receptionist $3,10 Bookk. Gen. Off. $4.50 P.T. Factory Workers $3.35 Nurses Aid $3.60 Maintenance to $6 Cashier Clerk - Bookk.
$4.50 P.T. Person Friday to $3.50 Counter Person st. $3.10 Grill Person st. $3.10 Product Stock Clerk st. $3.25 Tax Preparers OS Helper for picture framer
KOKUA EMPLOYMENT Apply at 787 Kallua Rd.
Kailua - Free parking
HAIR STYLISTS
Manicurists/Receptionist
lull or part lime. Weald
SUlions also available.) NoW
Interviewing for Kaneohe &
NEW KAILIIA BEAUTY
SALON. All calls confidential.
For Interview call
239-6727
8.0 KELP WANTED MALE & FINALE
WANTED: Pert time secretary, 19 hrs. a week, minimum requirements. Call for App't. 261-4847
BASKIN Robbins Pearl- ridge, cake decorators, part time. Ph. 262-2082
ARTEX Decorator Paints, accepting orders. Party Plan. Call 833-4146
EARN EXTRA MONEY
Pillory 5 local Welcome Fart Tlas 531110 p.m.
NOW, Mod dlecounl Mapping mike POW bee sties 5 ilsbuary weillene nut. Olelribaleis ol
Ones televlalens. allcroanie. Also
111_5100 esnilce for clothing,
Maw.. ponmg good.. ado ownwl.s. Opening. welt N Nos. Pew Maar. 5.11 bk.. Wallavii. En ball. BUI.f. Points KMCAI. Mad it WM/hr. or 1000110 pay 'Pen voila. Call Cenlrel Personnel WIN lot Interview.
d33-4578 ask far Mary
EXPERIENCE or non- exper. kitchen helper & part time party waitress. Apply in person, 130 Mango St., Wahiawa.
NEEDLECRAFT Demon- strators needed. Island wide. $10 to $12 hr. 499- 2451
WANTED part time recep- tionist for Pediatrician office. RN or LPN prefer- red. 282-6568
ARE you making all the money you can spend? Double your income by working part lime. 624- 4353 Tony
PART time rec. level Gymnastic coach. Scho- field 624-4297. 825-0750
announces a station available immediately in a new, nicely appointed shop for a beauty operator who washes to besell-employed. Centrally loomed in Radon.
CALL NOW
50 KELP WANTED MALE & FEMALE
NEEDED volunteers to work part time in Republi- can Senators office Jan. - April. Call 548-3867
RETIRED or semi-retired couple to do house & garden maintenance in exchange for lovely Kaneohe apt., 239-9800, 839 -4688
CHRISTIAN babysitter wanted.
Call 262-4883
03 SITUATIONS WANTED
EXPER. house cleaning avail, refs. $6 hr.
Call 247-3166
Typesetter Wanted
Newspaper typesetting. Experience desired.
At least 55 wpm.
Part-time, possible nights.
Call Patty at 235-5881.
PRESSROOM HELPERS Sun Press has immediate openings for pressroom
helpers. Duties include jogging and slacking papers, helping with press make readies and cleaning pressroom.
Apply in person. Benefits include medical, dental. profit sharing. Ask for Dennis Heupel.
SUN PRESS 46-016 Alaloa St.. Kaneohe
Ph. 235-5881
WANTED!! Newspaper Area Manager
Part Time Positions
Openings In Awe, Pearl City, Kallua, KMCAS. Work with children. Must have van, truck or station wagon. Good salary plus allowance.
Call Pat Meador 235-5881
Sun Proms DISTRIBUTORS
NEEDED 350 distributors needed to deliver telephone books beginning Wednesday, January 21. Job Maui for approximately 5 days. Must have Hawaii driver's license and car or light truck. APPLY ON: Saturday, January 17, between
8:30 to 11:00 at the following locations:
Waipahu Office: 94-225 Leoku St., Waipahu
for distribution in the Leeward area Alma through Kahuku Kaneohe Office:
Honolulu Federal Savings & Loan Bldg. 2nd floor, 45-1144 Kam Hwy., Kaneohe
for distribution in Hawaii Kai, Koko Head, Aina Heine, Waimanalo,
Kailua, Kaneohe to Laie Honolulu Office:
1040 S. King Street for distribution in the Honolulu area
Kabala to Airport
HAWAII STATE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE Affiliated with the .U.S. Employment and
Training Administration
There's more in a carrier's bag than
newspapers...
Look what's in it for you: MONEY I As a SUN PRESS carrier you earn and manage your
own money, just like a businessman!
In addition to your regular earnings, you can merit PRIZES! valuable prizes by excellence of service and gaining
new subscribers!
Being a SUN PRESS carrier is not all work ...every year
Boys! Girls! If you are bright, energetic and have the desire, we need you! It's great to earn your own money ... win valuable prizes . .. You'll be part of Community Publication's big SUN PRESS Newspaper team, working together to bring our neighbors the latest local news.
JOIN THE SUN PRESS CARRIER TEAM CALL 235-5881 TODAY!
104111110111MIIMIIII1111101111010119.
PA /
Ns no easy. Here's all you do. First. decide what you
0 want lo turn into cash. Go through your home end make
0 a list of good INngs you fond that you no longer use or
0 eno
things like furniture. appliances. oporling 0: goods. power tools. typewriters, bicycles a' 'I much m
A Now you're ready to write your Want Ad on the handy 11.4 order blank. Describe each item you want to sell and be p sure to give the price you want lor it. Lost your phone fp PER LINE
number and the hewn to cad. Be sure to print using Per Week .54 PLUS 4% 1.1
TeX
IIIDEADLINE - MONDAY 4 P M. FOR THE FOLLOWiNG.WEDNESDAY EDITION 0
0 PN. 235-5$81
I
I
11:
SUN PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS
SAUE YOU MONEY Complete Coverage
Ad Appears In j All
3 LINE 64PaINP.101761
$ pencil. ballpoint pen or typewriter.
0, PLEASE RUN THE FOLLOWING AD FOR E t WEEK 2 WEEKS 3 WEEKS 4 WEEKS
41.
E NAME
dr ADDRESS
L
I IPA
Pot Ash DU 501 ABBSE AN/ E AO. E I TEP AND PIING US ,UN t EA VC (-.AC 1111W EN W(, 41
AP
(Air AM MUST BE CALLED IN 50 MONDAY II u, A M
31511111n 46-016 Alaloa St., AP
Kaneohe, Hawaii 967440
salememalmweevr wwwwwwwlimwommlimanowymofteg
Reese run my od as follows:
rn:1111_11
MI RI 1
NI II MIMI I MN IMO 1111 Omni OH 11111111111 O
1 MI IIIMIIMRM N IUII I II 11 1 o MI I Hi ILI II
III II Mill II 1 1 a
BUSINESS & SERVICE DIRECTORY Appliance I Repair
HOME APPLIANCE SERVICE
Expert repair to all makes/models, reasonable,
Ph. 671-0445
Estate-80km' 1
Gulp Sale j
BY SUE-ANN Professional Service. Accurate pricing. Licensed. 395-8878
[low& Contracting
S KE0 Coetracting C8748 - Concrete Mobs &
Masonry wells. Free katimates Ph. 247-0173
General Contracting
Instruction
STAR School of Music. Instruction for all musical instruments, piano, drums, guitar. Mc. 621-0418
PIANO Lessons. your home. Exper. Teacher w/Masters Degree. Call 521-61,38 eves.
S. UMENO PAINTING Free Eats tic C-10211 Ph 621-6823.6218393
Painting
KAMAAINA PAINTING Free Estimates
Lic C4767 Ph. 247 -8621
ABLE PAINTING
Inexpensive. Miler:sus. pi ofessionai Free Estimate C8473 Call any lime 923-MHO 24 Ns
LEE'S PAINTING Residential Lic. C-3853
Ph 247-1454
Alumni Painting Waterproofing dooldmead epMlhai
yedleslawl Mb tfloweble pron asi ex us 400138
1111. 11111140111sr1a-1060
Painting
NAIIIKAWA PAINTING Free Estimates
tic. C-5465, Ph. 488-1080
O, Remodeling I Building Repair
PATIOS ANU NEW ADDITIONS
Repair-garage Free Est. Clifford !wane C-4477
PR: 677-4695
rPiano Tuning
OLD RELIABLE
J. PAUL BILLINHER TUNER TECHNICIAN
261-0457
Roofing
STATE ROOFING General Roofing Free Estimates. Ben Pascal
37 year exp. Lic C-2036 PH 247-2421
Raley Seam Smola rn Anse . . . awes. Mdistka air Made el 14
admind lsnitre la ftimi eras MINN* blloofts
Mgr CO.
Ue. OM Me masell<MIIA
LTyping Service
HOME Typing Service - Dependable. Accurate. Cell 281-9109
Welding
WELDING & BOAT REPAIR Trailers built/repaired
Metal fabrication 239-9337
WALLACE GARDEN SERVICE
General Yard Maintenance Old lawns restored, new
lawns planted. trim hedges & shrubs, remove
rubbish. Hawaii Kai to Kahale Free estimates
Ph. 395-1829.
GENERAL yard cleaning service. reliable workers, reasonable rates For tree eat call 677-5467
Yard Service]
KOKUA TREE TRIMMER Si YARD
SERVICE LEI 110 beautify your yard Inn BM
hantlayt di every day. Mewling. weeding.. 511004 & has !rimming wr apecialtios Cali
soy tuss.-269
OLSMONO TARO SWIM) All KIN Iurnt A :mull erect (leonong inourrunu d ktuIng 150,01 Prtgaralum A puts plEnyng toI urareI dnuf lErAlbly Astelsuncr NH! rellttlo NurviEn Nen ,flare,
FORMER pre-K teacher has opened a licensed Day care in the home. Which includes a well balanced academic program, hot meals, excursions, but most of all TLC. 262-9455
I WILL baby sit, my home, Maunawili. Pull time or occasional, weekends also. Refs. 261-3795
WILL baby sit 1 infant in my home full time. Lots of Christian love & attention. Occasionally also. HAFB. 422-8784
KANEOHE -share home - completely furnished, near bus. shop, etc. Couples $300 plus utils. Avail. Jan. 30, 1981. Single $275 plus utils. Avail. Jan. 10. 1981. 235-1173
HOUSE to share, female to share w/same, Kailua $150. Call 262-8911
KANEOHE: male to share w/same, own room, private bath $175, 235-8483
81 HOUSES FURN.
WAIPIO: 3 bdrm., 1 bath, fully furnished, includes utilities $525. Available now. 623-5159
82 HOUSES UNFURN.
KAILUA: Lovely 3 bdrm, family rm., lanai, Ige. yd., near bus & school. $625. Call 262-0769
4 BDRMS, multiple dwelling house w/view of Kailua Bay $850, 262-5528
Grandparents Unite!
Put a photo where your heart
On February 11th, we will offer a special section for grand- parents to show oft their grandchildren. At a cost of $15.00 per heart, your grandchild's photo can be included. Bring or mail your photo in by February 4th.
Classified Advertising Department
Ph: 235-5881
83 HOUSES PARTLY FURNISHED
KAILUA: 3 bdrm., 3 bath, all appliances, yd. wk., $650/mo. Lease, Ann Jeffries, Incl. 261-9747
KANEOHE - Club View Ige. 4 bdrm., 3 bath w/family dining, rumpus room, den, sundeck, single family only $725, 487-1375 eves.
KAILUA: 2 bdrm., refriger- ator & stove, lg. fenced yard, garage $400 per mo., near beach. 261-6667
KAILUA: Aikahi district, 3 bdrm., 2 bath, family room, enclosed yd, $650 mo. includes water + yd. service 254-4948
MAKAKILO: 4 bdrm., 2 bath, extra lg. paneled living rm., dining rm., carpeted & drapes, enclosed work shop, double carport, high, view corner lot, fruit trees $600. Call 423-1288 or 521-4414
KANEOHE -3 bdrm., 1-1/4 bath, den, 2 car garage $600. 235-6526 Peter
mo. Phone Ted, 262-8131. (Hurry, this space wont last long)
AN ADDED PLUSH!! Established surplus store! Lots of inventory! On corner with very good traffic flow! An opportunity to open the doors to YOUR OWN store! MIS 043170 Leasehold $40.000.
Call Michelle Wang 949 1279
Ph. 941-2222
LICENSE EXAM COURSE WEEKEND BROKER CLASS
2V2 wknds, Hawaii Loa College Begins Jan. 23
WEEKEND SALESMEN CLASS 21/2 wknds., Hawaii Loa College
Begins Jan. 30 VISA & Mastercharge Accepted
vitausek John Reilly For Information
Instructor & Free Brochure Over 9,000 Graduates roll 5 - ti 21 6575
Approved by Real Estate Comm . D.0 E Board or Accountancy For V A Benefits
ATTENTION NEW & EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE LICENSEES LUKE & LUKE REALTY, INC. will be interviewing qualified new and experienced real estate licensees for our Windward office.
WE OFFER *Project Sales *Choice Listings *Continuous Training Program *An Equitable Commission Schedule *A Large Variety of Sales Aids *An In-House Hewlett-Packard 300 Computer System *A Competent Management Force
For details and confidential interviews, please call
The finest in carpet &upholstery cleaning of all types- through gentle cleaning.Top quality workmanship-only skilled, train- ed operators. Fastest drying time ever.
STATE CARPET CLEANING
P.O. Box 162/Waipahu PHONE 671-0766, 521-8297
LAWN & SPRINKLER SUPPLIES
NEW YEAR SALE ENDS JANUARY 20th
ICLEAN -UP SALE!! II
Spectracide
lawn insect control
SPRUCE UP YOUR LAWN FOR THE NEW YEAR
LAWN INSECT CONTROL GRANULAR
REG 9.89
SALE
$5.99
ROUND-UP HERBICIDE WEED KILLER
REG. 24.95
SALE $2 1 .89 QT. SIZE
GRO POWER ORGANIC BASE CONDITIONER & FERTILIZER REG. 8.69
SALE
$6.8920#
hiArelmAl'A in,trl
ORTHO PT. SIZE MALATHION REG. 5.99
SALE $4.99
"117:110
gkini0 Lawn Food
ORTHO LAWN FOOD 23# 22-4-4
REG. 10.29
SALE
$7.97
ORTHO LAWN SPRAYER
REG. 6.85
4E, SALE
$5.99
8 qt. size
PT. SIZE
JUNGLE GROWTH POTTING MIX REG. 2.85
SALE
$1.98
WEEDONE 170 KILLS HAOLE KOA!
REG. 7.89
SALE
$5.89
MANIENIE GRA3S SEEDS (Bermuda) 1# COVERS 250 SQ. FT.
REG. 4.50
SALE
$3.39 AVAILABLE IN 5# BAGS ALSO
DO-IT-YOURSELF AND SAVE!! CUSTOM DESIGNED AUTOMATIC SPRINKLER SYSTEM
SAVE OVER 1/2 THE INSTALLED PRIG SAVE WATER SAVE TIME FREE DESIGN AND CONSULTATION ALL MAJOR BRANDS
TORO RAINBIRD NELSON
25%oFF All Sprinkler Heads
RAINJET CHAMPION
EIcon (-Its-terns
Kam Hwy
[Cutter Ford I
)
Behind Cutter Ford
STORE HOURS- M-F 8:00-5:00
SAT. 9:00-3:00 SUN. CLOSED
98-025 HEKAHA ST. AIEA
VISA'
PH. 488-7721
a
0
74t.-ISLA 11 '41
AUTO PAINTING & BODY WORKS
Hawaii's Largest Production
Paint Shop.'
573 Pohukaina St.
98-025 Hekaha St.
Stop in for Free
Estimates
Ph. 531-3753
Ph. 488-1987
We specialize in complete auto repainting
Our service includes: Machine sanding of chips & scratches Thorough hand sanding of the entire car Masking all chrome & glass Full coat of primer sealer Three full coats of enamel (exterior only) Thorough detailing of car
expert body A for only c work available at $16 per hour
for any size car for any size car '1799
93 VACATION RENTALS
LANIKAI: 1 bdrm. apt., all new furnishings, 1 block to beach $250 per wk. Call 262-8591
98 RENTALS WANTED
RESPONSIBLE non- smoker w/2 children would
to rent 2 or 3 bdrm. house or apt. on Windward side. Under $350. Please call 235-5881 9-5, ask for Robin
A CLEAN quiet parent and baby seek home on Windward Side. 247-3859
VACATION Rental, Kaa- awa. Magnificent view 2
bdrm. 11/2 bath * loft. Swimming pool, volleyball $250 per wk. Cathy Lyman 261-4332
WINDWARD Passage -#1406 Large one bedroom, one bath with carpet, drapes all appliances. parking. Building has super amenities $97,000 Lease mls 45836. Good terms on A/S Harbor Realty 941- 9988
'4100,000 you can buy this well kept 3 bdrm. 11/2 bath single family home in prestiges Makakilo! Enjoy
GP the spacious fenced yard and relax in the family room featuring a pano- ramic ocean view. Excl. neighborhood ' Only steps to school, park pool. All this plus flexible financing. VA/FHA welcome! (Lease- hold) Nancy Stout (RA) Mike McCormack Rltrs. '672-9474/671-4511
HAIKU Gardens: 2 bdrm, 2
bath end unit. New carpets $112,000 A/S w/ $20,000 down or VA possible. By owner Mr. Medlock, 836- 6228 (W), 235-6929 (H)
NANAKULI 2 bdrm., walk to beach. very affordable, minimum down. Owner will
_help finance. $61,500 MLS 42726 Call Tony Karkosza (R) 395-9643, Century 21, American Homes, Inc. 373-
.2144
AIKAHI area 1124 Mokapu Blvd., spacious, immacu- late, 3 bdrm, 2 bath, Ige. family rm., living rm.,
. dining rm., hollow tile wall - enclosed back yd. giving privacy to a beautiful lanai & solar heated pool. Lease
-$153,500. Shown by owner -254-1284 M. Lockridge Inc. (R)
SUNSET & BARBECUE Open house 2-5 p.m., 87-
dr149-5 Helelua St., Nana- Enjoy the spacious
yard of this 3 bdrm -diagonal 1 bath town- house. Excl. for quality .family time. Only 1 block to -beach. Open house, Sun. 1/18/81. $71,500 MLS .47192, leasehold. ALAN -pYLE (RA) Home ph. 941 - 3571
114 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
PUNAHOU Gardens, fully renovated studio, close to Punahou & UH, A/S possible, lease. Banyan Realty 533-1825, Dennis Yoneoka (RA) 737-4234
LOVE AT FIRST SIGHT!!! As you walk into this freshly painted home, you are drawn immediately to the unique hand crafted country kitchen, pool by the brass ceiling fan. This 4
Bdrm., 2 bath home has been completely re- modeled with a style to satisfy the most discrimina- ting buyer. It also features a
429 sq. ft. lanai overlooking a free form pool. $159,900 LEASE TMK #1-4-2-56-54. David Chase (RA) 262-8006 Sam Daily Realty, Inc. 235- 6666
KAILUA Gardero: Poin- ciana Manor, 2 bdrm., 2 bath condo, 930 sq. ft. inside, 350 sq. ft. of astro turf lanai. Semi-furn., near shopping ctrs. & schools $103,000. Call after 6:30 p.m., 261-0469.
126 MISCELLANEOUS
AIR CONDITIONERS New & reconditioned
Expert repairs on all -ekes We pay cash for used units
The Air Conditioner Shop
836-3103
SLATE pool table $300 /offer.
Call 537-5341 Ken.
SCOTT FM stereo, turn- table, speakers $25; Beacons storage boxes $.50 ea : car stereo w/speaker $20; clock radio $10. 261-4111
MARY KAY Cosmetics For free facial & reorders Call Elizabeth, 262-0463
POLYNESIAN show. Thrill your guests at your next party by presenting the Beautiful Puakea dancers. Ph. 261-3579 FOR Sale: Hammond organ; table lamps; rolltop desk; 2, 10 gal. aquariums w/stand, 1 , 29 gal. aquarium; G.E. turntable. Call after 6 P M. 623-3924 SPA lifetime VIP member- ship for 2 people, $700 value. $250 for fast sale. Ph. 254-5338 STAINLESS steel double sink; counter top; vanity mirror; water heater only 6 mos. use, etc. 395-9663 after 4:30 p.m.
80 PADDED chairs, like new, brown/beige, reg. $29.95 at $18 ea. Ph. 487- 6604, 9 to 2 mon-fri. RAINBOW vacuums like new, 2 yr. warranty, must sell. $295. 262-8131
I can help you BEAUTIFY YOUR
YARD Experienced. know-how. best references. Lic. 07903. Landscape. rock garden. tropical garden. re-do your yard. Ring. Ph. 422-9556 any day
488-8381
REBUILT air conditioners for sale, warranty, service, & repairs on all makes & models. Trade ins wel- come. Cash for unwanted air conditioners. Ph. 487- 7479
DON'T Want to be bothered with people
coming into your home to buy your furniture? Give us a call. We pay cash! The Old But New Shop 261-2852 or 538-7187
STANLEY HOME PRODUCTS Ph 262-5531
CAPIZ shell lamps. High quality, many styles and colors. 16" diameter - 691/2" long $40-$50. 623-6688 after 6 p.m. & weekends
MINI Trampolines for sale. The best, quickest & safest way to lose fat and inches through exercise. 261- 7095, 262-8477
HEALTH special, Wind- ward mens health club, offer special new yr. rates. Call now; ask about 2 yrs. for 1, 261-7905
SIDE by side refrig. w/ice maker $300; bunk bed set complete $150; color TV console $150; queen size poster bed teak headboard & footboard $150.455-2750
AKAMAI AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION
Repair & Service. all makes,
refrigerator. freezers. ice . machines, etc. Commercial or residential. Repair and service.
Buy & sell air COnditiOn.
531 -5178.247 -3272
APT_ stove $49; apt. size refrig. $89; rattan living rm. set $249; 5 pc. dining set $129; queen bed set $99; 3 pc. living rm. sectional $149; desk $49; 6 drawer dresser w/mirror $59; 3 drawer chest $20; heavy duty dryer $89; 3 pc. bar set $99; double mattress like new $30 ea.; 10 drawer chest $99; mahogany btiffet $79; mahogany server $29; rattan coffee table/end table $19 & $25; lamps from $5 and up; twin size bed set $39; Bentwood arm chairs $39 ea.; 35 Oneawa St., next to Invader Wars. 261-2852
"Note: These are no- service prices for outer islands and over-the- counter sales. Air freight charges for shipment to outer islands must be added. Oahu car owners who desire service must add $10.00 per tire for mounting, balancing, weights, valve stems and back-up service. There is an extra charge for alignment. Fed. Ex. Tax must be added (1.48-3.24) plus Hawaii 4% Excise Tax. Easy pay plan avail- able. Visa and Master Charge cards are accepted. Should we run out of stock we will give yon: raincheck good for 30 days.
LEX BRODIE'S Honolulu - Phone 536-9381
701 Queen St. Waipahu - Phone 671-4561
Near Gem Store
Classified V January 14, 1981
126 MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE: Opihi and dry opelu.
Call 261-0190 eves.
PUNEE $15; 8 trac tape player for auto. $30; misc. VW parts. Ph. 261-2928
MARY KAY COSMETICS. For re-orders & free facials, call Yolanda, 259-9021
SPACE Firebird coin op. Video game machine $1650 Money maker 247-1874 Ed
Keep your New Year's Resolution - tighten up,
lose inches with BODY DYNAMICS Classes to fit your special
needs and time. Free childcare & Spa
235-5839,254-3571
BE A Career woman and a homemaker. Shaklee offers the best of both worlds. Work at your own con- venience. Earn a healthy part-time income. For appointment call Bob Briggs at 262-8298 or 261- 1670
WESTERN hats; shirts; buckles & feather bands. Sunbird Trading Co. 955- 1559, 1481 So. King St., #412, Professional Center. Aloha Swap Meet #223
APPLE TRS-80
Pet, Etc. Computers Lowest Prices In Hawaii
Open 7 Days A Week
COMPUTER CENTER
488-2171
127 APPLIANCES
WHIRLPOOL counter top stove and oven, built in. Works fine, $75; concrete d bl. sink $50. 395-5686
WASHER for sale $40. Call 261-1078 after 6:30 p.m.
127 APPLIANCES
Like New - Reconditioned
Washers & Dryers Available - 6 mo. lease or longer. $11.50 per mo. In-
cludes full maintenance.
847-1344 Ask for Oon
NEARLY new, Kenmore Heavy Duty washer, Sears warranty $300. 422-4877
REFRIGERATOR, aqua $25; desk; file, furniture. Call 254-3132
REFRIGERATOR $125 and dishwasher $25. After 6:30 P.M. Ph. 239-9205
FREEZER, 16 cu. ft. upright, runs good $75. Call 261-1558 eves.
ALL MAJOR Rebuilt Appliances
90 Oays/1 Year Guarantee.
Quality Rebuilt Washers. Refrigerators. Dryers. Ranges. Large Selection.
SALES-RENTALS-HOME REPAIRS
FROM $69 WILL DELIVER-WILL FINANCE ROSSS RECYCLED APPLIANCES
Pier 35. 2 blocks from City MIII on
Nimitz. Open Mon. thou Sal. 524-6023
131 WIKI WIKI FREE BEE
FREE: One cute, fluffy poi dog. Now 6 weeks old and eating well. Must go to loving family soon! Call Bruce at 235-1284
FREE female kitten, black & white, fluffy, good person- ality. Ph. 262-4928
FREE: To good home 1/2 Siamese black male, 12 wks old kitten, litter trained, 254-4277
FREE: To good home, part German Shepherd puppy & poi dog shots, 839-0110
FREE: 3 puppies, 1/2 German Shepherd.
Call 239-6632
FREE Yorkshire Terrier AKC female, 7 yrs. very loving, to caring home.
'79 DATSUN 280ZX Right al low blue book. Slk. 1131
$6895 '79 MERCURY Capri Super sharpl Slk. 1124
DON LUCAs Hah, 45-671 Kam Hwy.
Kaneohe
WIZISMCM) 247-8544
$3995
174 RENT-A-CAR
RELIABLE Used Cars, $7 per day, 1 wk. minimum, Special monthly rates, collision waiver extra. Auto Mart Car Rental, 98-7068 Kam Hwy., Aiea. Ph. 487 - 9991
175 VANS. CAMPERS & JEEPS
'70 FORD Super Van E-100 -41400/offer.
Ph. 239-9478
'74 JEEP CJ5, V-8, cage roll bar $3500. Ph. 257-2217, 235-1927
'74 14' ALUMINUM Step van, good cond $4400 Call 487-8430
'78 DODGE Custom Van fully equipped $5500 or test offer. After 4.247-3710
DON'T SELL UNTIL YOU SEE US FINN WE PAY TOP us.
CAR CITY -
2845 rinheu 1133-3017 r- 3,
FIAT '78 HAT X-19, many extras, excl cond, must seal Call 422-2406 eves.
'79 HAT Spyder 2000, white convertible w/red interior 5 spd., AM/FM stereo. wire mag wheels. low mi., Blue book $6775. Must sell 56275 or best otter. Ph. 254-5157
'79 JEEP CJ5. 4e4. Witter seeker nags, with wide ovals. Special stripe package. A sleall 1P53891 $5495 '79 GLC 3 dr. #010,. radio. great gas economy. Limited no. for sale. 15E88111 $2995 '78 PLYMOUTH TIOTARE 4 dr auto.. porter steering, air cond. Try &find one cheaper. 52395 165015)
'76 CUTLASS SUPREME hdlp .1113 auto..
vinyl lop. coaled wheels, air Cond., buckets, simply gorgeous.
(7E2(33)
'76 PINTO Coupe. 4 cyl.. radio. body & engine excl. Re first0,
156221) .
$ ,
'79 MAZDA PICKUP. 4 spd., radio, low nil. Cheapest truck we haw in stock!
1283677) $3995
250 Additional Cars On
Display!
'78 FORD FIESTA COUPE. 4 spd. 4 cyl..
radio. burnt orange, a going
ma. NE7951chine1 '2895 '76 COROLLA HOW. fully loaded, with every luxury. leather, while on white. i
si zi inner , (806400)
'77 PONTIAC FIREBIRD, hdlg_ VW power steering, air mind.. vinyl top,
Ming your down pymt. early.
15M7 51
$
'72 FIAT 124 SPIDER. convertible. 5
spit. radio. A slick looker.
(399739) 1995 '77 PORSCHE frilS Coupe. power win,
down. Wren. while on 884
die. map. $1000'$ heloW
replacement.
ta Al
11E4454) 413,995 '79 COUGAR XR7 ve. air Mt. every COO
salvable 6919111 wait Mast see!
$4444 ilF10711
SHELLY CARS Cllrnrtr
836-0461i
MG '74 MOB. excl. cond, original owner. $2850, Alter 5 p.m. 261-6544
OLDSMOBILE 73 TORONADO. very clean, lull power including power windows. 6 way seat. AM/FM. First $500, 404 Prikoi St, 536-4355 days.
WE NEED
CUTLASS SUPREMES TOP CASH PAID
EGG TRACE IN ALLOWANCE WW1 78 CUTLASS SUPREME 2 dr hdlg..
many accoutre. 6 wry elms Mout 15443131 5127 5
yigglem.1 MOTORS Pk 13&1222 2911 ISHimiu IHry.
PLYMOUTH '74 PLYMOUTH Fury, new radiator & carburetor, best offer. 261-3553
'68 ROADRUNNER, perf. parts, as is $650/of ler. 547- 9299 or 536-3888 eves.
'69 FURY, runs good, $225 after 5 P.M.
708 Maine St.
'78 PLYMOUTH, Fury, 4 dr. V8, auto. air, like new, (6N1084) Was $3495 Now $1995; dir; Ph. 671-5567
76 Fury Station wagon, 4 dr, air, p/b, p/s, $1000 /best offer, 247-6691 Mon.-Fri.9- 5 p.m. Ray
BANK REPOSSESSION '16 1118116 AM MIN. way 21.110 all. 0E30291 1270 ceah dn.pyrol..ense lic.nn awned Ueda Repossession Price 1151192.16. Ste Repossession
Milr. WHOLESALE MOTORS 53111212 2440 N. 111.111 Hwy.
TOYOTA
'72 TOYOTA. 2 dr., station wagon, $875, 239-8156 after 4:30 weekdays
'76 TOYOTA Corolla Stn. wgn, auto, new paint. (5E4058) Was $4195 Now $3795, dlr. Ph. 671-5667
'78 TOYOTA Corolla, 4 dr, auto, new paint, like hew (5N7351) Was $3895, Now UM: dlr. Ph. 671-5667
TRIUMPH '77 SPITFIRE, many ex-
tras, must see, parking lot Hono-Hale. Punaluu 3700.
THE DIAMOND EXCHANGE MAIN SHOWROOM: 1691 KAPIOLANI BLVD. PH. 955-1712, 955-0268 PAN AM BUILDING: SUITE 930, 1600 KAPIOLANI BLVD. PH. 944-1122 WAIPAHU: HONOLULU FEDERAL SAVINGS BUILDING, SUITE 204 PH. 671-3191
REGULAR SHOWROOM HOURS: MAIN SHOWROOM: MON. THRU FRI. 9:30 AM-6:00 PM, SAT. 9:30 AM-5:00 PM PAN AM AND WAIPAHU: MON. THRU FRI. 9:30 AM-5:30 PM, SAT. 9:30 AM-5:00 PM