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Page 34 text:
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lu. U I ht ou. L tau Gina. sf-.num ca. 'rue aosrox owns-wsnxssnu. Jun' 1, iss: '25 in za races-eicwr casts Telephone AV 8.8000 mn L . Falr. Cool Tonight I and Thursday thi!! ng-mt on Page Illi - . IN TONIGHTS GLOBE BOSTQN ,'2 Killed as Road Scifety Drive Upens Gov. Peabody Leads Holiday H1gl1wayiPro.gram Q 0 I Joins Police, Lawton In No-Fix Patrol ' By BOBERT B. CARB . Gov. Peabody took to the highway early today, heading an army ol law strict no-tix holiday road Registrar of Motor Vehicles Jamey R. Lawton, who ia ac- companying the governor has ordered an all-out war against xpeeders and drinking driv- ers, who will lace lou ot licenses. State Police, who have been ordered out in force, are armed with radar-equipped cruisers. They are patrolling all :tate roads with strict orders to halt ali rnotortau violating :peed limits. Participating tn the stepped- up enforcement during the holiday period are otllcialx in the itate'n 351 einen and lawns. Tao early morning fatall tin added impetus to entorce ment an the eve of the na tions most trneled holiday in which more than ll mil lion motomu are expected to take to the state roads. FLEET ballistic miuile fPolanai sub- commander of its blue crew, Norman marine Alexander Hamilton and the B. Bessac. Self-Thinking Gadgets Amaze Globe Man on New A-Sub Dive ITP!! lrrilrrh 5 member of the Globe 1tnU. spent ll hnuvl aboard the nrwrxt rub- marme to join the Navy: Polar-u fleet! ly an t. aus: The mighty Alexander Hamilton, newly-ommiuioned Fleet Ballistic Missile IPo- larui submarine, moved :iow- iy out ol New London, Ct, through thick log. heading tor the Atlantic. tor a test ot her myriad elertromc equipment and a due ot almost ICD fret. The lll0-million craft. which will pack more fire power than all ot the bombs dropped in all theaters ol operations during World War ll including the two atomic bombs, u the second ot the rfw powerful btayette class nf nuriear subs designed to handle the new A-J Polaru ru-tile with its 1500 nautical mio range when it become: operational in about a year Milos-ing su weeks of tests a' tra. she will have her ln1 r-.mir-Hung practice at Cape Canaveral sometime in Auf pm. - The llanllton h the lttl IBM llhmul-la to Jail the S I. lon' can on I 00-5-ra. .!:l.4 ? !i.11,.. ..3.'.:'C,'Z! I Lulu-sv lu-alla-mana ........s...v .... .-..,...... -.3 ann., my na-man du. . The Holbrook boQevtfo who plated lib Walt Al la The Globe Uala Bl ul all really 'nl not lure ber auahad. un ll the lull ln ld alll. SM land hr lhhnl bought a asv I-t a hw loathe aan Ncrlally, ahe nl. no would hva appnvad d Ili plh clue. except for the Ind mt the la:lI1 alrvady a as only nd hal. SM aald the u- rlan are tu high In M lalily u an, aan haatx all In Iuhd lu been reluctant ta aall llllor. To Plate a Uxild Mvt. ia The Globe CQII AV 2-1500 lkbalblrhglaudta Beet She was romtnlsaloned last Thursday at the General Dynamlrs-lleetrle Boat yards at Groton, Ft. Production of the new La- teyette-ciau submarines is being handled not only at Newport News. Va. lt has been lpeeded up no that a launching per month in on the srhedule for the luture Thirtyvone submarine: ot this clan are planned by the Navy. Groton but at Portsmouth. SUBHAIINL N H . Mare island, Calif, and Page 'I wo- ay Delay n s Monahan Garage Trial On :rue cate defendant .lo- W, Monahan Jr, nt Win- ter returned tn Sufloilt rior Court today after a -day hospital nay tor a ach ailment 'ith the arrital of Mona- the presentation ol ru- Returns, rhester Hospital lor trstx Monahan, Carp. and cis W Kteman are now their fifth week ot charge: ot larceny ot from the Massachusetts ing Authority enforcement 0mCll1l in a safety drive. er Prank 8. Gila. ll addition to euseeltng lava and dan ol tor state tnopen. ordered all hudqnartera personnel to the llghway on a roland tha eloel buh. They will be re- placed ata their deal anln- tnenta by anxl.llar1 troopers, Gilt: aald. ln addition to using radar to trap speeding motorists. State Police barracks will be armed with hreathalysers to test the sobriety of motor- uta auspected ot drinlunl or being under the intluence. Gov. Peabody. in personal- ly heading the safety drive is following the example of Sen Abraham Ribicofl who as governor ol Connecticut. drax tically cut that atatea hlxh any toll especially on holi days, DMV! HA- suszwannvs Continued lrom Page l A IJ-hour trip aboard the Hamilton is a revelation of ' fantastic electronic compu- ters. the Sherwood Forest ct giant missile tubes: naviga- tional systems which enable the 1-ommander while on a submerged 60-day patrol. to i know where he is at all times: millions ot dollars in devices to scout out moving objects above, on and below the water, and of instruments which enable the long-range Polaris to hit iu target with pin-point accuracy regardless ot the prevailing conditions. Any breakdown ot vimi ma- fhines it handled by what Norman H Bcsxac, comms-ndcr ol the Blu' Crew ol the Ham- nlon ull FBM sub: have two trevtt ol about H0 Offlteri and men each. one Blue. one Goldl calls the belts and atupenden' system. No loom tor lrron ln other words, there are two ot everythuig deemed vi- gtal. One oxygen-producing sys- ltem can turnixh enough air tor the 60-day patrol. but there are two. There are two turbo-genv 4erators. tao main turbines, and 'there are two men. in a wrt ol salt-ly guard system, to han- vdle every sensitive key spot 1 I No one man can. through ,this ayatem, thwart any part ot what la considered by many an our most powertll deterrent to aggression today. Nor can any atnlle raal aet ,set It ol-lor then lsalyatel lol :het-as as tharuul that aalety h aaauud. i Morale of the crew on this ten mp ot the Hamilton vu exceptional The attitude toward the re- cent Thresher disaster, in lens eral, was that aubmariners, voiunteerin tor hazardous P ON THE WATCH-In c In the breaks-thats why eatn money ls paid lor hn- ardoux duly. However, he admltted. I tlnd myself rhecklng everything out more rarelully than ever now. I leel ue all have great respon- alhllllllsf' lncidentally, all these men. are married, Chief Dunn, whose wife is the former Marilyn Moulton ol Belmont. is the father of two children. Weaver, whose wife is the tor- mer Dorothea Nault. of Fram- ingham, has three children, Dr. Baxter and hu wife 1Corlene Birchall, Newtonvillei have a I2-year-old boy, Darrell. Chiel Lennox is married to Marian Ballantine ol Melrose. Enhy Servlee Many ol the crew who served on other types ot craft- have asked to get on sub- marines and made it-and they love it. Typical ot reactions was that of 21-year-old Sea- man George L. Currier ot Mer- rimac st.. Newburyport: l was on a big aircraft carrier and it was like g city -4000 people. Here you know everyone. everyone is like part of a family. Each crew has 125 men. Currier, a sports lourvletler man at Newbury- port lligh, thinks he may enter the phyural education field sometime in the luture. All crewmen study exten- sively and, ol course. acquire all types ol special lkills, whether in the held ot radar, sonar, electronics. radio, com- puting. or the many other fields needed to expedite work on thh nelaat ot atomic submar- inn llhsilemen and llre control men, for example. get a mini- mum of one year ot specialized training, others go to schooia or the prototype land units, fitted out like the craft theyi will join. They are broughti into the submarine about the, time ot launching and more I . duty. cannot expect to be sate I00 percent ot the time. Senior Chief Quartermaster Douglas S Dunn of Winthrop av, Wollaston, ZJ years in the Navy. typified the submarin- er'a reacuon 'Yea drtva a ear. lla' do you lecl lk! yon read about a hu! naar accident? Then an plenty ol Iliad. ha aald. The food on the Hamilton u 'terriflci of a Polaris lub- are a healthy lot and eheclu are constantly made las resumed before GAIAGE Hlmmonl L' e Francis J Quinco and pug! Newton Mun 'm'mb WV? , E 'l of Boston Uni- I peeled to retun to the Fesmd vents Tug' eu stand ta Ilene Carp. H ul OOO-a-Yup lener man- U I-lzlhhlk Gu of 'grill ol the Basin on hmm.. ml nmmnnd '4 F '5'- Ai-vnitmure. 'Nev Boltnn' 'YP Nd hw' '4U '-5 'U um ,L-alum vm:-an texuty when Monahan was felled Monday at the court- houae and taken to the Win- IUSTOI P.VI.D. MTI! ll IUISIIIILMIS laa to Ile Jah Ita ltollay the regular Thursday IIEFUSE CULLECTIDII II be llhnwd one ily h ol latrkh ueopt h IOIYOI-DOWNTOWN bl IOIYOI-UPTON! UIQ! Yhwabfa :cloc- BQ I- Di llifill. ull: I lata! Co-an-any ol rant- In I! pn.,-folk Concert Ablll. Kulylnf. Court. dare Bild main stage. veteran Navy men, tn their early 301 vu on active duty and again in N50-Sl. served on the attack nuclear submarine 'hillibee and FHM Sub Abraham Lin- coln before yoining tha Hamil- ton this Apnl, Lennox had lour year: on modem submarines. on the nuclear underwater craft George Washington, tlrst ol U-.Q Poiaru group, and an the Sam Houston before coming to hu present assignment. Sterrh L. Weaver If-. Interior cxsnllathia clot' lrkhl. ll Cbtlllllll. Il d lil Tlrealer llcllell. 'll'l all was described by many crew-l tratrunl ia liven. 'faapayen have a tre- mendous Investment tn then, amen. Cmdr Dena: notes. 'Tha ainallnf thing ls that, duplta the inducements ot private Industry. olerlng lar higher aalarlea, they remala dedleated to the aervlca ol the nation and the Nan. The noise problem has been reduced to a :tate ol amazing, amoothneu and quiet despite the complicated gear ot the Hamilton. The silent service hu ll! lite at stake in keeping 'all noise to a minimum. I 1 I 6 I Lt Comdr Edward A. Burk- halter Jr, Annapolis '5l, three! yean with the submarine' Trout tour yean ago in thef Seadragon, and now executive! ofllcer ot Hamilton: Gold' Crew, who guided one group ot newxmen throulh the tn- tncaeies ol thu newest ol nu- clear Polaru aubx pointed out: 'lcldu keeping our pall- tlil a lyai-ery-and t.here'l no and to mel hcl Impor- tant that b-the Ie! avnnd on this ship. the eaaler lt b lor lar aonar operators In plea ap the other ny. lnpneen going out with tha submarine on Lnah can pin- point noue right down to a perucular bearing. Hand dry- ing machines. for example. must have minimum mise. Paper towels present a dispos- iiort Ili I up irfliflav death 4 al problem. would not guess mite problems lfllflhl. Lelsnre Hour Study There is a constant study to improve lite aboard a craft which must stay submerged 80 days on duty. l-lamilton's bunks have foam rubber mat- tresses. Besides a big library, a collection ot tape recordings on educational lubjecu ia in the works, I Blue nylon eoverall clothes of all type: are Issued ere'- men on patrol. They not only do not plrlt up llnt easily but they help solve the Important laundry problem Crewmen call the special eoveralls 'Polaris pajamas. The amazing computation ol sensitive devices on the Ham- ilton, many ol which light up like Times Sq, on a New Year'a Eve when they lo into action, is of especial interest to New Englanders, because our in- dustries have a major role m their development. ln fact, as S. Joseph Wor- nom, General Dynamics-Elem tric Boat representative points out, leading subcontractors to Polaris lubmarinrs include Massachusetts Institute ul Technology, Raytheon, and Massachusetts plants ot Gener- al Electric and Westinghouse, and constant study ix made by institutions and firms such as these to keep this nation ahead in a field which ia vital to our national security. Diving al the Alexander Bamlltan Wll accomplished smoothly on this particular test. She went down close to a depth ot 20 leet and ltayed under tor about an hour and a halt. Alr tune out ot the tanks as vent valves were opened. Sea water-hundreds ot tuna ol lt-rushed ln-all .ron- trolled by hydranlle valves. The angle ot tilt gave indi- cations ol descent and risei, However, the entire cruise-13 hours ol it-drew comment from most of the visiting group that one might think he was on land-or tied up at the dock -or in the cabin ot a cruiser on a lake. il a The lteep steel ladders, the narrow opening aa one moved from one complex, instru- mented division to another, the compact, amazing machin- ery, the men constantly moniv toring and taking ot data, the atmosphere of being in a group ot men who had rtudied for years in a vital specialty and knew how to use that knowl- edge to preserve the national security-proved to the visitor that this snub-noxed deadly monster is no pleasure crattl I Boxford Man Dies In Flaming Crash A Boxford man perish and a Maryland driver wa haven car accident early The Boxford victim was John R. Sweeney, 25, of Lake Shore rd. Bls ear shot od a deserted alde 'road leading to his home at 1:30 a.m. and llnlted. Neighbors some distance away heard a crash but were unable to spot the wreck. About three hours later. newspaper rivers for the Law- rence Eagle discovered the car. The driver had been burned severely. Grass, shrubbery and trees were seared away tor a 25- toot radius. The battery of the car had melted away. Police Chief Nathaniel Love said the driver evidently was knocked unconscious' and had no opportunity to get out ot the machine. Last ritcs of the Catholic ureh were given at the by Msgr. Daniel F. Ch BERT BALTCH ed in a iiaming auto wreck s fatally injured in a Fair- today. Moynihan of St. Mary'l Church, Georgetown. Medical Examiner Dr. El- mer Bagnall viewed the body. ldentinnation could not be made immediately. The car went off the road in West Boxtord not ter from Rte. 133, near the Andover line. ln the Fairhaven accident an auto carrying George G. Johnson. 30, ot Stevensvllle, Md., hlt a pole on Rte. 6. Johnson died at St. Luke'a Hospital, New Bedford, about two hours alter the accident. Police said that the driver ot the car was Charles Palmer, 29. also ol Stevensville. Ho was arrested, charged with manslaughter. driving while under the inlluence of alcohol, driving to endanger and drunkenness. I Both men were stationed at Otis Air Force Base. Price Spies , , a JOY ANN BALTCH g ing silver and blue Air e Jet transport, plus an a tment ot helicopter hops motorcades. He spent t 26 hours flying in Air n Home Front Force One. his transport, plus nearly a dozen hourl in heli- copters. KENNEDY Page 'I eat's Of f for 4th, Holiday Weekend e heat's olt tor the Fourth. he record-breaking heat 'e that'a had Greater Bos- stagging for the past 10 s broke up with a bang- it were-early today. Thundemhowera hit the area and northwest winds tumbled the temperatures to the low 80's this afternoon. This ls a welcome drop ot some 15 degrees tram the un- precedented htgh ot yester- day'a 91. And the weatherman say: this will be the story. plus plrnty ot xunahine. for the hmiday. llc said this pattern will most likely carry through the long Fourth week-end. BEAT Page I SIMPSON SPRING V auaau-nu x...f...4 .an s-.1,r BEVERAGES . ,' di' 'S , If !'ll'f' fsmooo 0 -.tnutnn BY J' me wom.n's ras cnzvnouuns FIRST 1 ROUND , NIST IACI 7iI! WDNDER LANIFGW . .TL if 4 f . SET 'Q A ' I TD,-44311, '- , erlfn, 4-1-. 'il'W l'
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COVERAGE GIVEN T0 CRUISE ON BOARD AIEXANDER HAMILTJN EY'iMaAnKiDUiiPREsENT5Tivms,FaoM'nADio AND TV STATIENS, BOSTON JULY 2 - WNAC Radio WEEI Radio WBZ-TV JULY 5 - WNAC Radio GROTON CONN. JULY 2 - WSUB Radio BIIRLINWIUN, VT. JULY h - WVMT Radio JULY 17 - wCAx TV 10 minute question and answer show with Gus Saunders and Louis Morgan with CPO's of the ALEXANDER HAMILTON. Included in three newscasts. ' Three minutes of Navy film on Arch MacDonald's 6:30 PM newscast. l0 minute report for 'TU AY IN REVIEWU. A 15 minute newscast about the cruise and ship was given at 8 AM and 12 noon by Art Mattson, News Director A lf minute newscast about the cruise was given at 5:05 PM: 6:05 PM: 10:05 PM: and 11:05 PM. A five minute interview by the announcer with Mr. Spokes, Vice President and General Manager of the station who went on the cruise, concerning the Polaris Submarine was aired six times. A special thirty minute program entitled UAboard A Polaris Subn was aired from 8:00 to 8:30 PM. The program consisted of a film open and close, and film of the guests boarding the submarine and overhead shots of the submarine cruising. Total Navy film used: Mr. Stuart T. Martin, President 8 minutes 27 seconds. of WCAX-TV, who was aboard the submarine, commented on the strategic and deterrent importance of the Nuclear submarine. In addition, a scale drawing of the Vermont State Capital was superimposed over a cut-away view of the submarine to show relative size. RAPID' 'rv in QT!
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The food on the Hamilton ' s The Boston Globe-Wednesday, July 3, 1963 Self-Thinking Gadgets Amaze Globe Man on New A-Sub Dive !The writer. o member of the Globg1,rtaU. spent IJ houvs aboard the newest rub- marine to Join the Nouu's Polaris fleets! By NAT 1. nuns The mighty Alexander Hamilton, newly-ommissioned Fleet Ballistic Missile tPo- larisb submarine, moved slow- ly out ol New London, Ct., through thick fog. heading for the Atlantic. for a test ot her myriad electronic equipment and a dive ot almost 200 leet. The SIIO-million craft, which will pack more tire power than all of the bombs dropped in all theaters of operations during World War Il, including the two atomic bombs, ia the second of the lllll lllll! Have a Bacardi Partyl I-lere'a bow: get aa many mixin's aa you can think of fcola, aodl. juices. etc.,-buy some Bacardi-lrtvite some guests. Mix well. Funl ascaan oa- lonl, mc., NY. atm, 80 raool. I l new powerful Lafayette class of nuclear subs, designed to handla the new A-5 Polaris missile with its 2500 nautical mile range when it becomes operational in about a year. Following six weeks of tests at sea, she will have her live missile-hring practice at Cape Canaveral sometime in Au- gusL The Hamilton I.s the 12th I-'BM submarine to ,loln the deeta She was commissioned last Thursday at the General Dynamics-Electric Boat yards at Groton, Ct. Production of the new La- teyette-class submarines is being handled not only at Groton but at Portsmouth. NH.: Mare lsland, Calif., and Newport News, Va. It has been speeded up so that s launching per month is on the schedule for the future. Thirty-one submarines of this class are planned by the Navy. A I3-hour trip aboard the Hamilton is a revelation of fantastic electronic compu- ters: the Sherwood Forest of giant missile tubes: naviga- tional systems which enable the commander while on a submerged 60-day patrol. to know where he is at all times: millions of dollars in devices to scout out moving objects above, on and below the water, and of instruments which enable the long-range Polaris to hit its target with pin-point accuracy regardless of the prevailing conditions. Any breakdown of vital ma- ' ,Q N i K' g ii T . I' -,Z 1 til. ' ' 5 ',s .-.-- Tr gb 'cj-r-3 'T'-h - atm:- Oh-oh! Looks as il another young man's heard our daughter has a United States Trust savings account! Having money certainly isn't a guaranteed way of getting a suitor - but it buys an awful lot of nice vacations where you might meet one. and clothes to attract one, . and so on. Thst's why it's a of that weekly pay check in a s when it's a savings account at United States Trust. We'la . so courteous . . . and so so conveniently located . . friendly. very good idea to put part avings account- especially Us aura to listsn to Tha World of Monsyf' a completely new and fascinating allies on tha practical ual ol money. Brought to you as a public service by tha United Stain Trust Ca. lt 7 P.M. Monday 1600 on your AM Radio and 92.9 on your FM Radiu- clovt tuu. omcs 475 lltll Null lvl- as-my through Friday on WBOS, U r 'Ny S ummm 'vi onlcc Mslllpltt Sl. C t TR- 'Treo ' ANY :si L MAIN OFFICE: 30 COURT STREET, BOSTON uzvsrn renzasl. ozeosir msuaaucc coavoaarlon chinea ls handled by what 'Norman B. Bessac. commander ot the Blue Crew ol the Ham- ilton tall FBM subs have two crews of about 140 omcers and men each, one Blue, one Goldl calls the belts and suspenders system. No Room for Errors In other words, there are two of everything deemed vi- tal. One oxygen-producing sys- tem can furnish enough air for the 60-day patrol, but there are two. There are two turbo-gen- erators, two main turbines, and there are two men. in a sort of safety guard system, to han- dle every sensitive key spot. No one man can, tbrongh this system, thwart any pa-rt of what ls considered by many as our most powerful l deterrent to aggression today. lNor can any single rash act set lt od-for there la a system of checks so thorough that safety ls assured. BGSTONI FLEET ballistic missile fPolarisJ sub- commander of its blue crew, Norman marine Alexander Hamil ton and the B. Bessac. this newest of atomic submar- Morale ot the crew on this test tri of the Hamilton was P exceptional. m The attitude toward the re- m cent Thresher disaster, in gen- 1 o eral, was that submariners, volunteering for hazardous 100 percent of the time Senior Chief Quartermaster duty, cannot expect -to be safe 3 . . ' ir lt Dou las S. Dunn ot Winthro E I P 1 av., Wollaston, 23 years in the Navy, typified the submarin- er's reaction You drive a car. How do you feel when you read about a fatal motor accident? There ara plenty of those, he sald. lwas described by many crew- men as 'terrilic'. I Crewmen of a Polaris sub- ,marine are a healthy lot and 'physical checks are constantly being made. l Aboard the Hamilton, Lt John C. Baxter, Newton nativel Land a graduate of Boston Uni- versity and Tufts Medical lSchool, tends to an medical Iproblems, C'-ief I-lospitalman Herbert White, ot Royal av., ,Cambridge, is his right-hand l'l'l8I'l. iYisnng Veteran: I ,Both are veteran Navy men, although in their early 30's. Baxter was on active duty 1945-48 and again in 1950-51, and served on tha attack nuclear submarine Tullibee and FBM sub Abraham Lin- 'coln before joining the Hamil- ton this April. Lennox had four years on modern submarines, on the gnuclear underwater craft 'George Washington, tlrst of .thg Polaris group, and on the Sam Houston before coming to his present assignment. Sterrle L. Weaver Jr.. lnterlor communications elec- triclan, of Cochltuate, said of the Thresher lncldent, lt's all In the breaks-that's why extra money ls paid for haz- ardous duty. However, he admitted, I tlnd mysell checking everything out more carefully than ever now. I feel we all have great respon- slbllltles. 2 s fl' f fa t -- gif, ' ., . . 5 ' ' '. f Wim, X -1 21- , 'as.. if. . ' but '4' e.-,:5j -. .yer xi ' ' 9951 P 1 'cafes F -e L- kfifw ' if ' fa5?L 7' 'q N'X:.'-:', -QI? '46, : . For Additional Enjoyment On Your Vacation Have Elie Boston globe With You.' To keep fully informed while you're away , . . mail coupon today wi'h ch:-Y-1 fr :nancy order or conf.-ir: 3. 'xv --H f in s :Tha Bc-:ten G':-'fa s lottca T, J-!:u s : Sud :Ha F- I fetdfta-I H5 -- -- a I I lily char! e- 'tc F:-.1 I I I I I I l-- , . , .--1 2-1-f 1 t I I i I I I I J or I .'.-S f.'5,'. Incidentally, all these men ,are married. Chiet Dunn, -whose wife is the former 'Marilyn Moulton of Belmont, ,is the father of two children. iweaver, whose wife is the for- mer Dorothea Naults ot Fram- xingham, has three children: Dr. -Baxter and his wife tCorlene lBircball, Newtonvillel have a IZ-year-old boy. Darrell. Chief Lennox is married to Marian Ballantine of Melrose. Enjoy Servlca Many of the crew who ines. Missilemen and f'lre control en, for example, get a mini- um of one year of specialized raining, others go to schools r the prototype land units, tted out like the craft they ill join. They are brought nto the submarine about the ime of launching and more raining is given. Taxpayers have a tre- mendous lnvestment tn these men, Cmdr Bessac notes. The amazing thing ls that, duplta the inducements of private lndustry, otlerlng far higher salaries, they remain dedicated to the service ot the nation and the Navy. The noise problem has been reduced to a state of amazing smoothness and quiet despite the complicated gear of the Hamilton. The silent service has its life at stake in keeping all noise to a minimum. Lt Comdr Edward A. Burk- halter Jr., Annapolis '51, three years with the submarine Trout, four years ago in the Seadragon-, and now executive oftlcer of Hamilton's Gold Crew, who guided one group of newsmen through the in- tricacies of this newest of nu- clear Polaris subs, pointed out: Besides keeping our posi- tion a mystery-and there's no need to stres how Impor- tant that ls-the less sound on this shlp, the easler lt ls for our sonar operators to plck up the other guy. Engineers going out with the submarine on trials can pin- point noise right down to a particular bearing. Hand dry- ing machines, for example, imust have minimum noise. Paper towels present a dispos- al problem, Things a person would not guess at present det- inite problems aboard a sub- marine. Leisure Hour Study There is a constant study to improve life aboard a craft which must stay submerged 60 days on duty. Hamilton's bunks have foam rubber mat- tresses. Besides a big library, a collection of tape recordings on educational subjects is in the works. I Blue nylon coverall clothes of all types are issued crew- men on patrol. They not only do not plck up llnt easlly but they help solve the important laundry problem. Crewmen call the special coveralls Polaris pajamas. The amazing computation of sensitive devices an the Ham- ilton, many of which light up like Times Sq. on a New Year's Eve when they go into action, is of especial interest to New ll-Inglandcrs. because our in- ldustries have a major role in l.heir development. In fact, as S. Joseph Wor- nom, General Dynamics-Elec- Law Introduced Surgical Devices Under Scrutiny By HERBERT BLACK tC-lobe Medical Reporter! BRETTON WOODS. N. H.- Legislation has been introduced into Congress to supervise the quality ot mechanical devices used in surgery, such as arti- ficial limbs, hip sockets, bind- ing pins and screws - Dr. Mar- tin Dobelle, Fnd and Drug Ad- ministration. Washington, told delegates to the New Englandg and Eastern Canada section ot the International College O! Surgeons here today. Dr. Dobelle, a forlner Pitts- tleld, Mass., orthopedic sur- geon, who ln recent years has been stationed at Cape Can- averal with the astronaut pro- gram, asked the surgeons to report to Washington any un- sattslactory orthopedic appll- ances which they encounter. I l Merchants Bach Fair Packaging, Solon Reports WASHINGTON tAPl- Truth-in-packaging legislation should have the support of not only consumers but all respon- sible and honest businessmen, Rep, Robert Kastcnmeier KD- l ,served on other types of crattiwff-I Said today. I have asked to get on sub-I ,The mffchanf WM EWG! lmarint-s and made it-and they fill' value for money dues not reactions llove iL Typical of was that of Z1-year 'have to hide behind gimmicks .old Sea. and come-ons, Kastenmeier lman George L Currier of Mer- mid- V I rimlc ,LI Newburyport- I He said that four in tive I -'1 wg, on I big aircraft-small businessmen replying to carrier and it was like a city '-4000 people. Here you know 'et-eryong, everyone 1, ljkg rm-g tional Federation ot Independ- 'at s family. Each crew hsslentBus1ncss.supP0fHhrtrulh- IZ5 men. Currier a s ru iD'P3CkiRlY1K bill DOW bCf0l'0 . Congress. I - P0 four-letter man at Newbury port High. thinks he may enter the physical education Held 'sometime ln the future. l All crewmen study exten- lsively and, rot course. acquiretbey favored the bill. ,all types of special skills,l The bill would set standards whether in the fleld of radar, ot package sizes and contents sonar, electronica, radio. com- puting, or the many other Helds needed to expedite work onl Hot Toe S Wg'- a poll conducted in his con- gressional district by the Na- Kastenmeier sald he received H9 ballots from members of the organization in his district and of this number 123 said to make it easier for shoppers to compare prices on compet- ing items. dren The legislation, introduced by Rep, Oren Harris of Ar- kansas, would amend the Ke- fauver-Harris Food, Drug and Cosmetic Law to require a pre- marketing showing ot the safety and etiiciency of appli- ances before they are used in surgery. The Food and Drug Ad- ministration is seeking inform- ation on devices which doctors have found unsatisfactory, Dr. Dobelle reported, I-le said ef- Thank Debbie As Bells Ring On the Fourth FANWOOD. NJ. tUPll -- If you hear bells tomorrow, .you probably can thank Deb- 'bie Christie for it. , . Debbie, a 10-year-old fourth' grader at Lagrande School,'- lheard her teacher, Mildred' Slack, read how the Liberty Bell was rung at 2 p.m. the day the Declaration ot Inde- pendence was signed. I She asked why bells were not sounded to commemorate the event on the Fourth of itluly, and Miss Slack suggested forts 3lS0 are bein! made to she write her congressman. tind out which materials are the best to use in orthopedic work. This would include types of metals that last and work well. and also types of materials 'which the body will best toler- ate and those which stand body pressures. The study is en- compassing everything from artificial eyes to the most com- plex ultrasonic and diathermy machines. Dr. Dobelle asked that ln- forrnatlon be sent to hlm, care of the Device Branch ot the Food and Dnsg Administra- tlon. There ls little protection for doctors and patients under ex- isting laws, he declared. He said the new legislation seeks to do in the fleld of prosthetic devices what the new food and drug laws do in regulating new drugs. l So Debbie scnt a letter to Rep, Florence Dwyer tR-N.J.l lwho liked the idea and intro- 'duced a resolution in the House calling for bells to ring throughout the nation at 2 p.m. ion Independence Day when- ever possible. In Fanwood. Mayor Sidney Hulsizcr will lead a special ceremony in honor of Debbie at which she and Mrs. Dwyer will receive replicas of the Liberty Bell. It's wonderful, Debbie said. But I feel a little em- barrassed. The other kids de- served as much credit as I did. i1'hey're just as interested as am. . Beckwith Faces Court in .lFK'S Family Evers Slaying Awaiting Him On Squaw ls. er are JACKSON. Miss. tAPl .. de La Beckwith goes a state judge today for on murder the sniper slaying civil rights leader Hen- pre- will trial the GLOBE MAN, Nat Kline, at controls of new sul:- anarine Alexander Hamilton. tric Boat representative points The angle of tilt gave indi- out, leading subcontractors to cations of descent and riae. Polaris submarines include However, the entire cruise-I8 Massachusetts Institute of hours of it-drew comment Technology, Raytheon, md'from most of the visiting group Massachusetts plants ot Gener- lhmlnoge might mink he W al Electric and vvestingho-ne,.0H Rn 'Amd l-'P,ll- ul' and constant study is made byldocl' 'To' m FQ, uhm of ' institutions and firms such as Hulse' on 3 I' d these to keep this nation nheadl The sleep ,sled lad 'r'- ul' in a licld which is vital to ourinarmw Ovfnmts as one lnovld national sammy- lfrom one. complex, tnstns- lmented division to another, Diving of the Alexander the compact, amazing machin- Flamilton was accomplished 'BUG 'he men Conilamll' mom' smoothly on this particular QUJYUIE Ind liklni of dill. '-h' test. She went down close to IBUHOSPMYE of bflnl ln Q ETOUP a depth of 200 feet and stayed .ot men who' had studied for under for about an hour and a fyears in a vital IPCCIHNY Ind half. Alr came out of the tanks -knew how to use that knowl- as vent valves were opened. ledge -to preserve the national Sea water-hundreds of tons ,securityfprovcd to the visitor of lt,-rushed .ln-all .con- .that this- snub-nosed deadg trolled by hydraulic valves. monster .IS H0 Plfaiufe ffl Ani I ' H' U . i h flaiofiv HAwTl19iii!iEL HW' 'tb oxroan HT- klsbaked lobster ll ' ' tnated hera . - - I. gbbter is utterly delectab 2 SWM . ca i HAWT .,co-rr-PHONE W ' - ua Hlhilznqliii Tuccislieitiuzcean-lreah aealood I7 Islidlthz Hawthorne WIY- I -RAe.ei:2.ttr:r,2-Ria-1 A, Mltlml-PH A 'ba ol U ' D?m:lvely delicious Plqzxhtln l charcoal broiled on Ill' 'V i -V I I -. ' - I .peill mligvi Y, h ' is A t r as aus I I V uonue BY-TWE5 .ma . 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