The White Falcon - 02.04.1976, Blaðsíða 4
Page 4
White Falcon
April 2, 1976
AIMD remains
top team
6th Annual KBA Tourney
by Bob Si mister
AIMD won four more games during the
past week to remain the top spikers in
the Intermural Volleyball League.
AIMD played HS "A" and 57th FIS dur-
ing the week, but results were not
available at press time. These games
could just about clinch the league for
AIMD or put them in a tight race for the
league championship.
In other action, Supply dropped two
games, one to 57th FIS, and the other an
upset loss to 756. With the win over
Supply and one over Det. 14, 57th keeps
getting stronger.
In the Women’s League HS I remains
undefeated and remains the favorite for
the championship with a perfect record.
Mixed League action is still tight
with the top spot still up for grabs.
The champion will be hard to pick.
Intermural League
1. AIMD 14-0 2. HS "A" 8-0
3. 57th FIS 13-1 4. 756 9-2
5. Supply 12-3 6. Det. 14 9-3
7. AIROPS 8-3
Women's League
1. HS X 8-0 2. NSGA 7-1
3. HS II 6-2 4. NCS 5-3
Mixed League
1. Fantastiks 8-1 2. Heinies 8-1
3. Hamburgers 7-1
shows off local
The Sixth Annual Keflavik Bowling As-
sociation (KBA) Tournament held recently
turned out its own answer to the Profes-
sional Bowler's Tour, three-time PBA
Bowler of the Year winner Earl Anthony.
The tournament was held March 20, 21,
and 27 at the Arctic Bowling Lanes.
Jim Anthony (no relation to Earl),
LCPO of Supply Control Division, demon-
strated his form by winning the All
Events championship with a total of 1922
pins for the nine-game, three-event
tournament. Jim and his doubles part-
ner, A1 Hill, also captured the Doubles
Event with a combined total of 1282.
Von Soriano of AFRTS was a close sec-
ond to Anthony in the race for the All
Events title finishing just two pins be-
hind with a total of 1920. Von also led
The Equal Opportunity team to the team
.hampionship by rolling a 232 game and
634 scratch series.
Ernie Cartagena of COMCLOSED really
turned it on in the Singles Event,
easily winning that championship with
bowlers
games of 219-257-196 for a tournament
high scratch series of 672 and handicap
high series of 726. This outstanding
performance also earned him third place
in All Events.
A total of 20 teams, 45 doubles
teams, 78 singles and 63 in All Events
participated in the tournament. Award
winners in each catagory are listed
below:
ALL EVENTS TOTAL
Anthony 1922
Soriano 1920
Cartagena 1882
TEAM EVENT
The Equal Opportunity 3051
COMFAIRKEF 3028
Team //16 3008
57th Swingers 3004
TRAVEL
by Suzy Wiessinqer
People from all over the world go to
Scotland to golf on the beautiful, lush
golf courses. Just imagine yourself
teeing up on a world-famous Scottish
green.
The word "green" will take on a new
meaning for you when you have walked
along a Scottish one. After all, it was
in Scotland that golf originated.
A tour will depart May 10 for the
Hotel Marina in North Berwick, 20 miles
east of Edinburgh. You may choose
either a nine- or eighteen-day tour.
Another tour will leave May 19 for eight
days.
All prices include roundtrip airfare,
two meals per day, transportation to and
from the hotel and transportation be-
tween golf courses. Call the Tour Of-
fice at 4200.
Tine off in Paris or Amsterdam
Don't miss Paris or Amsterdam in the
spring. We have received information on
package tours you can take from London
to Paris or Amsterdam. You have a
choice of one-, two-, or three-star ho-
tels and a choice of traveling by rail
or air.
You will be on your own and may de-
cide to go for two days or up to seven
days. Prices will include your air or
train fare plus hotel and breakfast for
the number of days you desire.
You must book and pay the full price
at least four weeks in advance. If you
miss connections getting to London and
miss the tour, you are still liable for
60 per cent of the cost. However, the
low cost of these tours can easily out-
weigh the disadvantages. Come by the
Tour Office and get the details on the
"real deals."
Travel Talk
Loftleider will begin extra flights
this summer between the States and
Europe to accommodate the increase in the
number of tourists.
Don't throw away travel folders or
brochures.'.' Bring them to the Tour Of-
fice. Also, if you have any guidebooks
or travel books that you don't want, let
the Tour Office have them.
All European Economic Council coun-
tries are on daylight savings time, so
there is an hour difference between Ice-
land and most of the European continent.
When booking theatre tickets through
an agent in an overseas country, you can
avoid service charges by going directly
to the theatre and purchasing the tick-
ets yourself.
Deadline 5 p.m. Monday
Automobiles
1963 Scout International, 4-wheel
drive, radio, heater, 1976 inspection.
$950. Firm. Call 7445 after 5 p.m.
1966 Chevy Bel-Air, four studded snow
tires, four summer tires, 1976 inspec-
tion. Reliable transportation. Call
Dann . at 7562 weekdays 8-5.
1Q66 Jeep CJ-5, good condition, re-
built Chevy engine, soft top. $1500.
Firm. Call 3363.
1967 Mercedes 200D, power steering,
radio, low mileage, spare parts, in-
spected, new ekhaust. Call Mooney at
2147 Tuesday - Friday 10-5 p.m.
1969 VW station wagon, $1395. Call
4302 after 6 p.m.; 5251 weekends.
1969 1600 cc VW engine, runs complete
with starter, carb. and generator. $150.
You pull it out of car. Call 7487 Wed-
nesday - Friday; 7220 Monday - Tuesday.
1969 VW, new rebuilt engine, 1976 in-
spection, new muffler. $850. Call Ron
Sherman at 4267 anytime.
1970 Scout International, 4-wheel
drive, good condition, studded snow
tires, standard transmission. Call Sgt.
Lindsey 7519.
1970 Beetle, outstanding condition,
new paint job, body work, radio, brakes,
clutch assembly, good tires, interior.
1976 inspection, insurance. Call AE2
Gonzalez at 7287.
1971 Corona, 4dr sedan, 4-speed, ra-
dio, oummer and winter tires. Runs good.
Available now. Call 7548.
1972 VW 1200. Needs front end work,
engine in excellent condition; will sac-
rifice for $550. Call 5101.
1972 VW Super Beetle, AM-FM radio,
cassette deck, rebuilt engine, new muf-
fler and generator. 1976 inspection,
snow and summer tires. $1600. Call 4694
after 2 p.m. Ask for Dietly.
1972 Bronco, 32,000 miles, extra
tires. $3200. Call AECS Stearns 7287
or 7753.
1973 Datsun 610, excellent condition,
13,000 miles, four studded snow tires,
five summer tires. $2500. Call 7339 or
7466.
1975 Ford Cortina XL, 4dr sedan, nine
months old, less than 7,000, European
specs. See MSgt. Creek at Navy Lodge.
1975 VW, European specs, 15,000 km,
excellent condition, two sets of tires.
Call AT2. Wilson at 4325.
1975 Austin Mini. Available now.
Call Tex at 5103.
1970 VW Beetle, low mileage, 76 in-
spection, $900 firm. Call 5112 work,
7019 home.
For Sale
AR2AX speaker. Eight months. $70.
Call 4694/7147.
Teac 4-channel reel-to-reel deck
A3340S. New, never used. Original cost
$626. Will sell for $588. Teac cover
free. Call MSC Evangelista at 7505.
Refrigerator, medium size. Call Todd
at 5103.
Sofa, two chairs $60. Available May
8. Call Danni at 7562 weekdays 8-5.
Two transformers, 100 watts. $20
each. Call Ron at 4267 after 5 p.m.
Oak barrel, 10 iron hoops, 36" high,
$20. Samovar from Morocco, 20" tall,
$145. Two 5-gal. gas cans, $4.50 each.
Call 7056.
Akai 8-track tape deck GXR 82D plus
assorted tapes, $175. Call John Bennett
at 3363 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Child's snowsuit, size 4; back car-
rier for carrying small child. Call
7548.
Dinette table with six hi-back black
vinyl chairs. May be seen at Qtrs.
1059B or call 7466.
Dynaco SCA-80Q stereo amplifier, 40
watts per channel. In fine condition.
$100 or best offer. Call Rich at 3229.
Six VW studded snow tires. Will sell
separate at reasonable price. One Ice-
landic baby carriage. Call 7104/4257.
Refrigerator, 220 volts. $30. Call
4313.
Sale April 3 & 4, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Bunkbeds, antique sewing machine, hair
dryer, clothes, toys, books, games.
Qtrs. 1037C.
One converter with easy to install
instructions for converting TV sound to
pick up Icelandic TV. Call 5112 work,
7019 home.
Wanted
Small block Chevy or Ford V-8 engine
with or without car. Call Harrison at
4248.
Used transformers - all sizes. Call
9-1423.
Two 1200-watt or higher transformers.
Call 7620 after 4 p.m. Ask for Verts.
Moderately priced piano in good con-
dition. Call Mrs. Adams 9-2765.
Am interested in buying or trading
for a Bosson boatman head. Call 7247.
Seamstress to sew for individual.
Call 4694.
Lost
Brown wallet near Andrews Theater.
Reward. Call 7008 days or 9-3191 eve-
nings.
Miscellaneous
The next Lamaze Series begins Monday
at 7:30 p.m. in the Dispensary. Please
contact Jill Jarrett at 3384 to enroll.
La Leche League will begin a new
series of meetings on breast feeding
Monday at 10 a.m. in Qtrs. 963 2-H. For
more information call Linda Winkler at
7616 or Lynda Cote at 7370.____________
Little League begins
The 1976 Little League Baseball sea-
son is tentatively scheduled to begin
June 5.
Registration will be conducted at the
Youth Center tomorrow and again next
Saturday from 12 to 4 p.m. Boys and
girls between 9 and 15 who are depen-
dents of U.S. military personnel or of
personnel employed in support of the
Defense Force are encouraged to regis-
ter on one of the above dates. Regis-
tration information and forms have been
distributed to the upper and lower
schools and will also be available a
the Youth Center. Parents are encour
aged to read the information brochure
prior to registration.
Tree people-
Free libraries'
by Cathy MuTIei^
April 4-10 is National Library We^^ft
and this year the theme is "Free Peopl^^
Free Libraries’ in keeping with the U.S.
Bicentennial.
Visit your Station Library this week.
There will be displays for National
Library Week.
The Station Library has received some
new books. A number of them are up-
dated reference books and include:
1976 Uniformed Services Almanac (Ref.
355.1/SCH)
The World Almanac and Book of Facts
1976 (Ref. 317.3/WOR)
The Almanac of American Politics 1976
(Ref. 320/BAR)
1976 Community, Junior, and Techni-
cal College Directory (Ref. 378.73/SCO)
United States Stamp Catalogue 1976
voIs. 1-4 (Ref. 383/SCO)
The library has
1975-1976 National
also received the
Zip Code Directory
which is found in the shelves below the
telephone directories.
Another new book is Blumenson’s Mas-
ters of the Art of Command (355.4/BLU )
which is a study of command in war. It
shows how commanders functioned, what
they did, and how they moved men to act
in combat, while all the time under the
stress and pressures of battle.
We have also received five new
McNaughton books: two mysteries —
Nightmare in Pink by MacDonald and Raven
in Flight by MacKenzie; a fiction —
Whip by Caidin; a romance story — The
English Heir by Stevenson; and a Civil
War novel — For Us the Living by An-
tonia Van Loon. The last two are brief-
ly reviewed for vou:
The English Heir by D. E. Stevenson
is a gentle, touching romance
against the last months of peace and tl
first chaotic months of World War II.
It is the story of Franz Von Heiden, son
of a high Nazi official and an English
mother who died while he was still a
child, and Wynne Braithwaite, the lovely
English girl whose family he visits on
the eve of the war. His secret mission
was to ascertain the temper and forti-
tude of the English people for the Ger-
man intelligence. He is surprised
find the people have a strength
grace that he never expected. The grow-
ing love between Franz and Wynne and
Franz's subsequent heroic fight against
Nazi treachery are told with compassion
against a background of gaiety and
peace, turmoil and war, and the compel-
ling freshness of English country life.
For Us the Living by Antonia Van Loon
is a Civil War novel and is the story of
Beth Sheppard and the people she loved.
An upper-middle class New Yorker, Bet
lives in a world bounded by rigid morl
codes and strict definitions of woman1,
place. The war alters these boundaries
and so does the love of two men — Greg-
ory, wealthy officer and war hero whose
idealism inspires Beth; and Kent, the
rugged, disgruntled battlefield surgeon
whom Beth meets on the charred fields of
Gettysburg. The reader is shown a sel-
dom studied side of the Civil War, such
as the poverty of the Northern immi-^.
grants who formed the front lines in tlj
war, the rage of many northerner
against their own leaders, and the New
York draft riots which were an outgrowth
of the disenchantment.