The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964 Page: 5 of 24
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Wednesday, August 5, 1964
Sit* Ssfltnnra Bna
inger
tion of the Belgians."
t world-renowned Gor-
ed a denial that Ger-
is had brutally' des-
iivain. They were .noM
in a week after the
i of Louvain, the Brit-
:h and Russian gov-
signed a pact barring
! peace. Belgium had
le issues.
lbert carefully con-
limited Resources of
■efused to have thorn
Mlied offensives and
forward only in the
orious drive of 1918.
ist about 40,000 men -
but its percentage of
low compared to the
igerents.
ended, Belgium was
#2 square miles of
lat Jiad been held by
the cantons of Eu-
nedy and Moresnet,
Tt Gemmenich._____
EL CHAIRS
s Pharmacies
582-8107
ii MeMrat OtarUna
Automation: Extra Hand
To Scratch For Scratch'
EDITOR'* NOT^—Genera- Because the house always
.ins of slot machine gamblers wins, this is important. Ma-
ilienth’ a
;ve stood patiently and expee-
Htl.yjumplng coins Into ma
• IhesA anif triggering the
wIInBpm by yanking at a lev-
—all In the hope of hitting the
rk-pot. Now automation has
<me and nary a yank Is need
d.
By MIKE GAVIN
LAS VEGAS, Nev. , (AP)~
'utomation has caught up with
it women gamblers’ delight,
z onfraraied bandit.
Now there's a. no-arm bandit.
It looks pretty much like a
regular slot machine but after
ycu drop in the wheels with pic-
tures of cherries and bells are
nun electronically.
This has certain advantages
'of the garrtbler. The conven-
The new machine has only 23
moving parts, compared to
old bandits,
he
vin_
about 2,000 for the
thus cutting repairs. And be-
cause they pay winners out of
their own coin reservoirs, they
free floor employes of the chore
of paying jackpot winners. They
are adaptable within minutes to
the
le lever
tional jackpot machine-is i
ated two-handed—drop in
coin with the left, pull the 1
with the right. vT
The new model employs the
•dght for coin dropping, leaving
rtw-left free for holding drinks,
clutching purses, digging for
more chhnge, or even scratch-
ing one’s back. It also makes it
easier for smokers and those
whp prefer operating two or
three machines at one time. I
Foi* the casino, the electronic
models .are-a bit Of a bonanza.
They don’t require “elbow
room" to the side and space at
tije rear for emptying coin box-
es. This permits twice as many
new ones in die same floor area.
. And at a 900-per-hour coin-
gulping rate;. they permit a
theoretical 3,500 ‘extra, plays
ever 24 hours, - if- - operated
■ ieadily. „ |
opeiv But says inventor Jack La
chine," he says.
TTa -antiplnfltpt
tance to his new slow machine
..rill nervin fnnm “rliahorHo UfHfl
day my first model is getting.
It appears to be very popular
with women. And, let’s face it,
they’re the real slot
players,” LA Vigna says.
Cot* pitted dates with A little ble height, but the runner
orange juice and sugar; add Uttle vision of where they
grated orange rind and use as
filling tor oatmeal cookies.
Casualties Home
From Preminger's
In Ham's Way’
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - The
ELECTRONICS, EXPERIENCE TIE GLOBAL 62nd TOGETHER
McCHORD AIR FORCE
BASE, Wash. (API—One mom-
irg recently, as Col. Tracy J squi
Peterson was leaving home for 8th
work at McChord Air Force
Base near Tacoma, Wash., he
said to his wife: “I’ll call you
first casualties have returned later from the office,
from Otto Preminger’s replay of she got the call hours later
Pearl Harbor and its aftermath, from his “office" at Elmendorf
“In Harm s Way, AFB near Anchorage, Alaska.
On the base at McChord also earned the 62nd airihJto who fly
■e several ground support Shoehorn missions the nick-
luadrons and the 4th, 7th and name of “Four-Engine Bush Pi-
name of “Four-Engii
8th Troop Carrier squadrons lots.” The 62nd also has a small
with 50 C124s. detachment at Eilsen AFB near
At Elmendorf, the 62nd has
the 1727th Support Squadron
which, besides handling move-
ment of cargo and personnel in-
and out of Alaska on bbth MATS
end commercial aircraft, has
charge of “Operation Shoe-
horn.” This is a year-round, ex-
mu juimuuii u nugii umiau, nwtnmeH tr> 5,u,h thim.c tnr the » « JwnvwN, w
!? ."c&rsfiW k^sss' asts
almost an overhaul on old ones.
Slots, ,18,000 of them, are big
business in this haven of legal
gambling. They grossed $81 mil-
lion in Nevada in 1962, out of
$675 million fed in.
as'ra sst ‘SW'Sk
San Antonio, Tex., Robins AFB,
vjoii nimnuu, tea,, ivwumo rw.’ u,
hy legs in a cast.
“Broke the darned thing in a ^States
■eported. “Worked {rom j*™1™ ^
the dev fhnuvh to south of the Mason-Dixon line
scene,” she _
mdn'ffare°quU,eywklio^J10^: an^ east °r west around «*
Indeed I do. He is the hard- 8k>be.
headed taskmaster whose biteds Col. Petersen, a native ofTior-
seldom as fierce as his baric, ris, Mont., as commander of the
sized cargo is flown in the Glo-
bemasters to undersized, "ski
slope” landing strips near re-
mote radar warning sites on the
Dewline.
a year ago, added the nation’s
special weapons airlift to the
62nd's growing responsibilities.
This was in line with the De-
detachment at Eilsen AFB near If erne Department policy mak-
Fniibanks
At Robins AFB in Georgia
and Kelly AFB in Texas, the
62nd has the 7th and 19th Log-
istic Support Squadrons. The
primary mission of the 1,000
men and 38 Giobemasters at
these two bases is to provide
world-wide airlift of special
weapons for the Air Force Log-
istics Command, as well as
hauling general military cargo.
These two ' squadrons, for
many years under the Logistics
Command but reassigned to
Ing MATS the single manager
for all military airlift.,
With such a diversity and
scope of operations, naturally
there is a -built-in accident
potential. It is a tribute, there-
fore, to the stress laid upon pro-
fessionalism and flying safety
by Col. Petersen and his widely
red staff that during 1963
ft of the 62nd logged 66,-
iurs, or about 15 million
miles, of accident-free flying.
The history of the 62nd TCW
dales back to December 1940,
participated in the cami
North Africa,, Sicily Italy and
southern France. During the
Carrier Squadrons were placed airlift Into the strife-tom Cbngo
under it. The 7th’s history, how- and other such international af-
ever, dates back to August 1933, fairs. Whatever the action or
making it the oldest troop dar- the incident, anywhere around
rier outfit in the U.S. Air Force, the earth in die past decade or
During World War n, the 62nd more, it’s a sure bet that air-
men of the 62nd Troop Carrier
Wing at McChord had a front-
row, eyewitness part in it.
Col. Petersen, who attended
Montana State College, won his
pilot wings in 1942 and flew 28
combat missions from England
over Germany in the bl7 Flying
Fortress. He holds the Distin-
guished Flying Cross, Air Me-
al. French Crois I> Guerre
and .other awards and decora-
tions. He is married to the
former Beverely L Adams.of
Korean fighting, the 62nd was a
vital link in die “air bridge”
that carried supplies across the
Pacific. In mid-1954, the 62nd
flew a regimental combat team
to relieve a beleagured French
garrison at Dien Bien Phu in
one of the-most memorable ac-
tiour of that- war in Indochina.
Aircraft of the 62nd have'
since been in the forefront of ac-
United Nations Spokane.
ays mve
Vigna, simplicity was what he
had in mind when he created
the automatic—a 16-month job.
,, “I operated a slot machine
route of my own, and I just got
fed up with getting up at four in ______ __________
the morning' to make repairs. I had a differencFpf bpinion over its units separated by more real
decided to make a simpler ma- a scene, he and I had A fine estate that any subordinate ops- ■—
shouting match. I think he likes * ‘ ■ ---
SeiUUIIl as UPVC as Ills uaiiv. i»| avavrsii., as wuiimutuu i/a ujc
Paula, who stands 5 feet 9 with- 62nd Troop Carrier Wing (hea-
out cast, said she got along vy) of the Military Air Trans-
marvelously with him. ■ port Sefvlce (MATS) at Mc-
“We had some wonderful Chord AFB, heads a 4,000-man,
fights,” said the San Antonio, 88-airplane organization that,
Tex., beauty. “Whenever we for sheer distance, probably has
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He anticipates the only resis- it that way. It was good for me,
rational military command
histoiy.
toof by the time I did the scenes ^ bulb-nosed C124s, with
their huge forward clamshell
doors for loading everything
..... . last day of shooting. She and ^‘btcann^aM X
appears to be very popular John Wayne were supposed to gPJ roam!ihe skies from the
“ ------- " *“ .running through iK cane
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sasters such as the earthquakes
in Chile, Pakistan or the recent
Alaska temblor, and they may
even land in a remote Aleutian
island to fly a sick or injured
Eskimo child to a hospital in
Anchorage;------------------—-
Keeping track of such a diver-
fly df missions on si wbridAvidh
basis from an air base in the
Pacific Northwest could create
kinpsized headaches, and some-,
times does. But modem electro-
vide the knot that ties together
the 62nd's units.
Headquarters for the wing,
one of the oldest, largest and
most distinguished in MATS and
winner of humerous top awards
from flying safety to competi-
tive airdrops, is at McChord
AFB. The 62nd is one of the su-
bordinate commands under
Western Transport Air Force of
MATS, located at Travis AFB,
The Sun's
TeleScope
FOR SUMMER WHITE GOODS!
By CYNTHU LOWRY
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - After
10 days spent with people in-
volved in next season's new tele-
vision programs, reporter
becomes convinced they have
all memorized foe same basic,
all-purpose script for inter-
Usual procedure Is to set up
confrontations with the stars-to-
be and producers or creators of
entertainment programs, with a
press agent-confidehtialiy pass-
ing along Ms personal opinion
that the show will be a smash.
Then, ho matter who is trotted
out, foe interview drops "Into
familiar ruts;
Interviewer is conducted by
press agent to studio commis-
sary or nearby restaurant and.
after a few minutes, subject ar-
rives for lunch, break. *
If It 1$ an actor, he wears his :
make-up, costume and a happy
smile. If it is the producer, he
wears a sharply pressed sports
jacket and slacks, and is always
pressed for time. "Creators,”
who are usually writers by
trade, look as if; they, bad just
sa.swass
“S»rvi.w,r, "S> h~
things going?” ... '
Interviewee: “Just marvel-
ously! I must say that I’ve nev-
er been a part erf such a talented
team. The scripts are just
great, every one funny, unusual
and full of real entertainment
values.”
. Interviewer: “There were re-
ports in foe trade papers that
you were having script trouble
and foe sponsor was unhappy.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964, newspaper, August 5, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057299/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.