The White Falcon - 23.03.1963, Blaðsíða 6
6
WHITE FALCON
Saturday, March 23, 1963
A. T. Mahan’s cheerleaders have been hard at work since last October
learning cheers getting uniforms, and using linament for sore
muscles. Sweaters were the worst problem because they seem to
come three to a color! Pep assemblies were held to teach cheers to
the students; finally you could hear a slight rumbling following the
four “bubble-bouncers’ ” blatant roars. Spirit ran high throughout the
year and, win or loose, the cheerleaders were behind the Vikings one-
hundred per cent.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1-Choice part
6-Former
Russian
rulers
11- Segregated
quarter of a
city
12- Ponders in
the mind
14- Boundary
15- Vessels
17- Exclamation
18- Fuss
19- In a list '
20- Man’s name
21- Prefix: down
22- Rldge of a
wave
23- River in
Germany
24- Man's
nickname
25- Weapons
26- Untrue
27- Periods of
time
28- Partner
29- Incites
31- Substance
32- Hebrew
month
34- European
35- Tricks
36- Behold!
37- Bitter vetch
38- Fees
39- Everyone
40- Registered
nurse (abbr.)
41- Thick soup
42- Ox of
Celebes
43- Style of
automobile
(Pi.)
45-Forgives
47- Group of
eight
48- Goes by
water
DOWN
1- Scolded
2- City in
Nevada
3- French for
“summer'’
4- Near
5- Mohammed-
ans
6- Bend
7- Clan
8- Three-toed
sloths
9- Football
position .
(abbr.)
10- Coastllnes
11- Grassy open
space in
forest
13-Portion
16-Swishing
sound
19- Tapestry
20- Unemployed
22- Fencing
position
23- Solemn
attestations
26- Roman
goddesses
27- Lampreys
28- Moths
29- Imitators
30- Island in
Malay
Archipelago
Amwar to Pravloua Puula
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IP I N M A C L E SI
13HES £33 BUffll
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31- Heap
32- Apportions
33- Missile
weapon
35-Most evil
38- Melody
39- Dye plant
ii
41- Stroke
42- French for
“friend”
44-District of
Columbia
(abbr.)
46-Babylonian
deity
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 w
II 12 13
14 15 16 17
18 19 20
21 22 M 23
24 25 26
27 i 28
29 30 31 32 33
34 35 36 r
37 38 39
40 41 42
43 44 45 46
1 47 46 b
For Official lita Only
SWEET SWINGER — Swinging
sweetheart Florence Imber sways
on a flowered swing at Cypress
Gardens, Fla. The gal is just one
of many attractions at the semi-
tropical Gardens calculated to
catch the tourist’s eye.
FRA Notes
By A. Brinkman
Loyalty: Loyalty to the United
States of America and it’s ideals
of freedom for all people; loyalty
to our fellowmen in upholding the
ideals of freedom.
Protection: Protection of the
United States and all other people
who believe in freedom as we do;
protection of our heritage, liberty
and justice; protection of our fa-
milies and homes.
Service: Service to our country
and to our fellowmen.
These three words; loyalty, pro-
tection and service, stand for the
motto of the FRA, and all it’s
members are obligated to abide
by it. There are some members of
our organization who are slight-
ing their obligation by not being
active in their branch. There
are also personnel who hold the
same ideals and are not members
of the FRA. In unity there is
strength, so why not join us in
enhancing our motto.
April’s monthly business meet-
ing is going to be held on the
third, at 10 p.m., in the party
room of the NCO Club, where one
of the main points of business will
be the election of board of director
members. All members are encour-
aged to attend and to assist in
this election. All perspective mem-
bers are also invited to attend
this meeting to see personally how
we operate.
Since the election of officers is
coming up soon, now is the time
to start thinking of men to fill
these offices of trust. We need
good officers, and it takes the
proper effort of thought to make
sure that we nominate and elect
the right ones.
TRIO (Continued from, Page 1.)
80 per cent nitrogen—comparable
to the natural mixture on earth.
A monitoring console containing
24 different controls and various
instruments enables the research
team to maintain a continuous
record of the environment inside
the capsule.
In addition to psychological
tasks, the subjects are required to
make various instrument readings
at specific times and report to
observers over the comunications
systems.
Lakland, Fla.—After visiting Japan at the end of the ’62 season,
the Tigers invited the Hanshin Tigers of the Central League of Japan
to take in two weeks of spring training here in Lakeland.
Twenty-six players, a manager, one coach and a trainer made the
trip to the Detroit Tigers’ spring training base accompanied by nine
newspapermen.
In addition, the Hanshin team was accompanied by Dr. Jun Ima-
zato, an avid baseball fan who maintains a dental clinic near Osaka.
Dr. Imazato declares himself the world’s number one baseball fan,
seeing all the Hanshin games in Japan, and listening to every major
league baseball game broadcast shortwave by the Armed Forces Radio
Service. A complete daily score-book of the 1962 season attests the
dentist’s enthusiasm for the American national pastime. The visiting
team brought to Lakeland over 1,600 pounds of native Japanese foods
to maintain diet-control, but after a few days hamburgs, hot dogs
and soda pop were taking the place of rice, fish and tea!
In the off-training hours, sight-seeing was the order of the day,
and the Hanshin Tigers with omnipresent cameras visited Cypress
Gardens, Busch Gardens and other tourist attractions of the Florida
sun-coast. Richard Pope, owner-operator of Cypress Gardens, esti-
mated the souvenir-hunting Tigers enriched his concession by over
$700 in their short visit.
The Tigers are not the first team to train with a Major League
club in the United States. The Yomiuri Giants sent a few players to
Vero Beach three years ago to train with the Dodgers.
Rick Ferrell summed up the visit of the Hanshin Tigers when he
said “They’ve come a long way to train—but they’ve come a longer
way in their development and skills.”
The Constitution (Continued from Page 2.)
The future looms before us—uncertain, imponderable.
We of this generation will convert it into reality in our
lifetime. One of the primary instruments of navigation will
be the Constitution of the United States. We must preserve
it, defend it ,and keep it a living document for human
guidance. We must ever be aware of the moral basis for
law in its interpretation, so as to come ever nearer toward
the fulfillment of the doctrine of the fatherhood of God
and the brotherhood of man.
World-Wide Golf Field Vs. Palmer
“Beat Arnold Palmer” is the
1963 battle cry for military and
civilian golfers entered in the
world-wide Military Police As-
sociation’s Annual International
Golf Day.
The goal for divot digging duf-
fers and professional linksmen
alike is to card a lower score than
Palmer will shoot in the first
round of the 1963 Masters Tour-
nament at Augusta, Ga., Apr. 4,
where he is defending champion.
In 1962 there were 18,500 chal-
lengers and 6,000 of them bet-
tered Gary Player’s opening
During a trip through Rumania,
Soviet Premier Khrushchev was
riding in a car with the Romanian
Communist Party chief. They no-
ticed the devil running behind
them. The police did everything
to chase him away. Finally Khru-
round 67. The Police Association
charges $1.00 to compete in the
tourney. Twenty-five cents is de-
ducted by the Association to pay
for prizes and defray costs. The
remaining 75 cents is donated
to local charities.
A contestant may enter as many
times as he desires but all his
scores must be turned in to the
nearest Provost Marshall’s office
before Apr. 4.
A player may use his club han-
dicap, or the Calloway system of
handicapping. Both men and
women may compete.
shchev took a small bit of paper,
wrote a few lines on it and threw
it out of the car.
The devil picked up the note,
and after reading it, started run-
ning quickly in the opposite di-
rection.
The Red chief asked: “Comrade
Khrushchev, what did you write
on the note?”
“Oh! nothing special,” said
Khrushchev, “only: ‘This road
leads to Communism.”
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