The White Falcon


The White Falcon - 14.09.1963, Side 3

The White Falcon - 14.09.1963, Side 3
Saturday, September 14, 1963 WHITE FALCON 3 A MOMENT OF PRIDE is experienced by these three sailors, as Commander Robert Boe, Executive Officer of the Naval Station, re- enlists them into the United States Navy. They are: (1-r) S. E. Wiltze, HM2, D. E. Merkle, PCI, and J. D. Juarez, YN2. Bond Buying Americans Seek E and H Series The U.S. Treasury Department has reported that Ameri- cans own more than $46.5 billion in Series E and H Savings Bonds—all of which are earning interest. The figure sets an all-time high for American investment ®---------------------- RFE Brings Truth and Hope To 80 Million Captive People in government bonds. The original Series E bonds were issued in 1941. Although they were intended to expire in 10 years, their expiration date has been extended to 1970 and they continue to earn 33A percent interest. Those issued from June 1, 1949 to April 1, 1957, may be held up to 10 years after matur- ity. A Series E bond, purchased in 1941, would be worth double its purchase price today. The E bonds now mature in 7 yrs. 9 mos. with interest accumulating every 6 months. Bonds issued May 1, 1957, and thereafter, also have an extension privilege. Series H bonds mature 10 years from the date of issue. Current income from the bonds is paid by semi-annual interest check. The yield increases the longer the bond is held. A bond held to maturity averages 3 3A percent in- terest annually. These bonds are redeemable after six months from purchase. The seller must, however, give one month’s written notice of intention to sell. Series H bonds issued between June, 1952, and January, 1957, may be retained for an additional 10 years with semi-annual pay- ments at a rate of 3 3A percent per annum. No extension privilege has been announced for those pur- chased after February, 1957. The bonds of the E Series are the ones most military personnel secure through payroll deductions. U8S Thresher Fund Established As Relief For Crew’s Orphans On April 10, 1963, the USS Thresher disappeared beneath the Atlantic Ocean. She took with her 129 navymen. The loss of the ship and her entire crew left some- thing afloat and adrift—the 187 orphans of the men that went down with the ship. A fund has been established to provide educational assistance and emergency relief monies to the orphans. In the hope of being able to raise the funds, a Navy-wide effort is considered desirable. Leaders of the political, business and entertainment communities are being asked for their assi- stance in gaining broad public support. Corporate gifts are also being sought. Your support is also desired. The Internal Revenue Service has declared the USS Thresher Fund a tax-exempt charity. Contribu- tions, requests for information, and ideas for further promotion should be addressed to the USS Thresher Fund, Old Colony Trust Co., P.O. Box 850, Boston 3, Mass. GIVE TO AMERICAN OVERSEAS CAMPAIGN Cuba .... Berlin .... India .. Eastern Europe .... all hot spots in the cold war, targets for Com- munist aggression, infiltration and propaganda .... propaganda designed to convert people to Marxism and slavery. Today, the American people through Radio Free Europe, a member agency of the American Overseas Campaign, counter Communist propaganda at the Kremlin’s front doorstep — East Europe. The purpose: to help 80 million captive people resist the pressures of Communist indoctrination. Have the Communists succeeded in converting the captive people to Communism? The answer: a resounding NO! The captive pe- ople in East Europe have actively resisted all attempts to fit them into the Communist mold. Soviet agriculture collectiviza- tion attempts have failed. Many Soviet expectations for East European industrial growth have failed. Soviet hopes to use East Europe and its people as a stepping stone to further conquests have failed. In spite of the constant barrage of Communist propaganda, the captive people have preserved their religious faiths, national heritages, and their desire for eventual freedom from Communist rule. Why have the Communists fail- ed. Surely, it is not through lack of time, effort, money or even skill in the manipulation of facts and ideas. One of the main an- swers for the Kremlin failure to master the minds of East Euro- peans has been the work of Radio Free Europe. 3,000 AIR HOURS WEEKLY Radio Free Europe has broad- cast truth and hope of freedom for the past 12 years. It beams 3,000 program hours every week and is on the air both day and night. Beginning in December Radio Free Europe is doubling the power of its shortwave broadcasts to Communist East Europe. Installa- tion of four new transmitters will enable RFE to broadcast signals 2/2 times more powerful than at present over its best electrical equipment. This increase of power from today’s 825,000 watts to 1,825,000 watts will help make Radio Free Europe Stronger than ever in overcoming Soviet jamming at- tempts. Declared C. Rodney Smith, director of Radio Free Europe: “Many people will listen tenacious- ly to RFE despite heavy jamming and natural interference. But there is no doubt that this strong- er signal will increase our audi- ence as well as the amount of listening to our programs.” Over 50 per cent of Radio Free Europe’s broadcast time is devoted to news and news analysis; the remaining time is devoted to music drama and religious programs. RFE also plans broadcasts that appeal to different segments of its audience: teachers, profession- al people, women, students, fann- ers, factory and office workers. In effect, Radio Free Europe is the captive people’s free press in exile. And like a free press, it supplies national, international and, most important, local news. Radio Free Europe receives the news from all major free world wire services and from its own news bureaus located in Washing- ton D. C., New York and ten major European capitals. All informa- tion to be broadcast by RFE is checked and double-checked for accuracy. The captive people know they can rely on RFE for the plain, unvarnished truth. This re- liance has earned RFE the posi- tion of being the most popular and influential free world net- work broadcasting to East Europe. In Today’s World Adults Must Continue To Learn! The typical picture of a college education is one of daytime resi- dent study. It is a picture of post-high school youths living on some distant campus away from home for perhaps the first time, giving full-time to college studies; of hordes of students scurrying through rain or shine to and from classes, dining halls and dormitories; of the sacrifices par- ents are making to help their sons and daughters preparing for ca- reers in business and industry, education and government and the professions. But another picture of college education is fast emerging across the land—a picture of night-time adult part-time study. It is one of mature men and women hur- rying in the growing darkness from home and office to evening classes; of brightly lit classrooms inhabited by businessmen and housewives, fathers and grand- mothers; of college professors driving many miles to take the classroom to the students. Why this changing picture? Hundreds of thousands of adults are facing a new fact of life. In today’s world adults must continue to learn! Learning, like breathing, is a necessity of life. For the first time in history the pace of change has accelerated to the point where adults now live in a world dif- ferent in kind from the one into which they were born. The days when a man could make a good living through native ingenuity and the sweat of his brow alone are fast disappearing, if indeed they ever really existed. Resourcefulness and hard work will always be necessary to attain the productive life, but the chal- lenges of the space age demand more and more education as well. Adult evening students are aware of this truth and are doing some- thing about it. They include those who never had a chance or who were unable to finish their studies. Other adults have become aware of another truth, that the know- ledge acquired during the tradi- tional years of formal education Is no longer adequate for the rest of their lives—if, again, it ever was. Obsolescence has become a major characteristic of learning. More knowledge has been discover- ed during the lifetime of the pre- sent adult population than existed at his birth. Moreover “facts” must continually be relearned in the light of new scientific dis- coveries. Many adults attending evening classes already hold one or more degrees. They are filling in the gaps of knowledge not pre- viously acquired, exploring new areas of learning, reviewing new developments in fields with which they are already familiar. No one really knows how many adults are getting a college educa- tion through part-time evening study, but it has been estimated that nearly a million throughout the country are currently enrolled in credit courses alone. In the State of Maryland, the number is surely above 15,000. No longer is a college education the exclusive prerogative of post-high school youth. Adults too, go to college, and they’re doing so in ever- increasing numbers. How about you? How long has it been since you attended a night school or participated in a USAFI Course. Two major programs open to you at this command are the University of Maryland Extension Program and USAFI correspond- ence courses. The University of Maryland Extension Program of- fers the same courses as those on campus of any college and the classes are in the evening at the Naval Station High School. En- rollment in this program costs $45.00 plus the cost of books, but, through tution aid, the govern- ment will pay $33.75 of this and you will only pay $11.25 plus the cost of books. The United States Armed Forces Institute (USAFI) offers a large variety of corres- pondence courses available to mili- tary personnel at an enrollment fee of $5.00. If the first course is completed satisfactorily, you may continue taking as many as two courses at a time at no addi- tional fee as long as you succes- fully complete all courses in suc- cession. Consult your I&E Office ■for full information. BRITISH BOMBSHELL —English film star Diana Dors stikes a sultry pose for White Falcon read- ers. ■Quote of the Week- '‘It will be a better day for our country when the military man is rec- ognized for what he truly is—an in- surer of peace . . —Secretary of the Air Force Eugene M- Zuckert at the Reserve Officers Association con- vention in Miami.

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