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PAGE TEN SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1971 ADVANCE-JMEWS FAIR AND W A R M — U.S. aetre«« Barra Grant strolls In London where she works in a BBC television series. Taxpayers Ask IRS This column of questions anc answers on federal tax matters is provided by tie local office of the F.S. Internal Revenue Service and is published as a public service to taxpayers. The column answers questions most frequently taxpayers. asked by p for some, cover this Q) My employer is withhold- ing less income tax from my paycheck this year. Does this mean that I might owe tax next year? A) It could. Income tax with- holding rates are lower in 1971 mainly because the standard deduction was increased. With- holding is also lower for single persons because tax rates for .this group were reduced. But " won't bility; and underwithholding could result for those earning over $11,500. If your present withholding won't cover this year's liability, you can avoid owing money next April- by dropping exemp- tions now or, if you are al- ready claiming no exemptions, by asking your employer to withhold an additional amount. Q) My income is low, and I =never pay any tax although I file every year to obtain a re- fund. Is there anything that I can do to stop my employer from withholding taxes? Eastern Stars Host Canadian Grand Officers Tuesday night Grand Officers from the Province of Ontario were welcomed and honored at the Masonic Temple by Maple City Chapter 71, Eastern Stars. The Ass. Grand Matron Peg- gy Murphy, Assc, Grand Patron. George Pike and Grand Electa, Verna Young, were escorted to the East and presented Grand Honors. Also seated in t h e East were M.W. Nellie Ruther- ford, R.W. Alta Davis D.D.- G.M., R.W. Glenn Riekett D.G.L. and R.W. Sarah Smith, Grand Rep. of the Province of Ontario to the U.S. Grand Chapter,.from the Valley of the Thousand Isles Chapter, Mor- ristown. W. Irene Feld, representing the Matron and the Chapter, spoke words of greeting to the Assc. Grand Matron and Assc. Grand Patron. The Wothy R.W. Helen Jackson added an ex- tra greeting entitled "A Gift Friendship." R.W, Peggy Murphy spoke, thanking the Matron and Chap- ter for all the courtesies of the evening and gave a Version of the "Lords Prayer" which had been sent by her a friend from California, and also gave an appropiate verse on "Mother's Day." R.W. Verna Young in her re- marks said, 'Life is just what you make it' R.W. Sarah Smith ^responded with a verse "As we serve". ; Gifts were presented these Grand Officers, for which they thanked the Chapter and said they would be a remembrance of the evening. The Worthy Matron announc- ed the Official Visit and Home -coming of R.W. Alta Davis, May 11th. at the Temple, with a Smorgasbord Dinner at 6:30, reservations requested. She also announced an Officers re- hearsal May 8 at 7 p.m. at the Temple. Many members from Ontario attended the meeting, accom- panying their Grand Officers. As the meeting drew to a close, ene couldn't help but notice that the Tone of the Evening had been "Friendship." The meeting was preceded by a'covered dish dinner, with the "co-chairman W. Nan Phillips •and Laura Cutway, assisted by the co-chairman from the March Committee, W. Irene Feld and R-W. Edna Mix. A) Yes. You should file a Form W-4E With your employ- er. This is a."Withholding Ex- emption Certificate" in which you can certify that you did not have any tax -liability last year. Your employer must then stop withholding taxes. Q) How long must I keep my records for income tax purposes? A) You must keep your rec- ords as long as their contents may be material in administer- ing any Internal Revenue law. The Internal Revenue Service cannot suggest a specific time, but certainly all records should be kept for at least three year: a n d many records, such as stock and property •transac- withholding tions, even longer. year's lia- Q) I am retired with a com- pany pension and an annuity. Can I have tax withheld on these payments? A) Yes. You may use Form W-4P to request ^ie payer to withhold any whole dollar a- mount. However, the amount to be withheld must be at least $5 a month and must not re- duce the net pension or annuity payment to less than $10 a month. Q) I have received a gift from the bank because I made a long - term deposit. Must I pay taxes on this gift? A) Yes. In general, the fair market value.of property re- ceived for making a deposit or opening an account in a savings. institution is income and must be reported as interest income in the year received. Q) My employer withholds t a x from my regular salary. But I occasionally do, outside work which is not subject to withholding. Must I file a Dec- laration of Estimated Tax? A) You must file a Declara- tion of Estimated Tax if your estimated tax due at the time your return is filed is $40 or more and if your estimated gross income for 1971 includes more than $200 in income not subject to withholding. How- ever, instead of filing a dec- laration you may increase with- holding by dropping exemptions seing claimed or having addi- tional sums withheld. "Estimated tax" is the amount by which the total of your estimated income tax and estimated self-employment tax exceeds the expected withhold- ing from your pay. The Dec- laration of Estimated Tax for 1971 and the first payment are due on April 15, the same date that your 1970 income tax return is due. Publication 505, "Tax Withholding and Declara- tion of Estimated Tax," con- tains additional information and is available at Internal Reve- nue Offices. Guantanamo Bay: U.S. Stronghold In Cuba By BEN FUNK Associated Press Writer GUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba | (AP) — In the spooky darkness j of the Cuban hills, a flare stabs into the night, a dog rages, a gunshot cracks—and a U.S. Ma- rine standing guard on a lonely outpost tightens the grin on his rifle. Was it only a training exer- cise by Fidel Castor's militia manning the heights surround- ing this U.S. Navy base? Did it mean that another Cuban refu- gee had died in a dash for free- dom.? Or could it mean the start of an incursion against a hated Yankee base that Castro calls a dagger driven into the heart of Cuban territory?" From the tumbled brown foot- hills of the Sierra Maestra, frowning down on this isolated base from three sides, the noises are heard often in the night, firing the imaginations of young troopers. On the fourth side, Russian military ships prowl the Caribbean with in- creasing boldness. It is an eerie, almost unreal life—a life of constant waiting for an enemy who never comes but who is always out there and who might, in some angry, emo- tional moment, decide to risk a strike. 'It's weird at first, looking across the fence and knowing they're over there," says Nancy Conway, secretary to the base commander, Rear Adm. Brian McCauley. "But in time you get used to it." Inside the 14-mile fence cor- doning off the base from Castro land, a community of 9,050 mili- tary and civilian residents bus- tles with normal activity. Chil- dren go to school and play Little League baseball. Wives shop at fihs commissaries and visit hair- dressers. Marines and sailors swim in the blue Caribbean, fish, play golf, ride horseback trails and play football, base- NO SPRING FEVER— This Is no optical JHusion, just a pair of single-humped , camels passing each other in the spring sunshine during exercise at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo. J •ball, basketball and soccer. Ev- ery night, a dozen movies play around the base. But it is not a normal life. It is a never-ceasing vigil by rifle- armed Marines, fighter and hel- icopter pilots, artillery gunners, warships and tanks. "So long as he remains ration- al, I don't feel there is any chance that Castro will attack," said McCauley, the base com- mander since June 23, 1970. "But when you have dependents in a hostile country, you do all you can to guarantee their safe- ty." There i£ always concern that Castro might stage a diversion- ary assault to take the minds of his people off a staggering econ- omy in which food shortages have become a way of life. To be ready for instant action in any contingency, defense ex- ercises are staged every six. weeks. These are the only, exer- cises by any U.S. military post in which women and- children participate. At the sound of a siren, bars and commissaries close. Wives rush to their homes where bags are kept packed and ready for immediate evacuation. Children are sped homeward in a fleet of school buses. In case of actual attack, the buses would take them directly to the pier to board ships standing by in the harbor.' Troops man foxholes, trench- Movie Themes Need Big Movies .. By MARY CAMPBELL . .. AP Newsfeatures Writer . The only movie music which sells records is music from suc- cessful movies, says Henry Mancini. "You never get anything going anywhere from an unsuc- cessful picture. It could be the greatest music in the world and nothing would happen. : I don't think either the theme from 'Love Story' (Man- cini's latest hit record) or the theme from Romeo and Juliet a recent giant hit) would have had a breath of a chance with- out the films that go with them. The melodies are very pretty, classically oriented, but without that ear and eye matching up, I •H Will Hold County Livestock Judging Contest The St. Lawrence County 4-H ivestoek Judging Contest will e held on May 1, 10 a. m., at the Donald Merkley Farm lo- ated near Flackvnle on the gdensburg - Canton Road. 4-H Members from all over he County will judge classes if hogs and sheep. Each 4-H Member will also have to ans- ver questions about the classes ;hey have judged without view- ing the animals as well as give ral reasons as to why they ilaced the class. The top members from this udging contest will be invited participate in other livestock ontests this summer and fi- •ally, the top four members rill be selected to represent St. awrence County at the New r ork State Fair. don't think they would have been successful. "I think the day of the sound •track for the sake of a sound track is gone. Pve had several scores I felt have been some of my best work, in the last year even. The 'Molly McGuires,' I was proud of that, and 'Sunflow- er.' But because of the movies not catching on, it is nothing. In this business we say we have to eat them. "I use the principal theme in an album, instead of making a sound track album. In the LP, r Theme from "Love Story,'" we have the 'Sunflower' theme and 'The Night Visitor' theme and 'Wait until Dark.' "My latest score is 'The Night Visitor' and I'll be doing the new Paul Newman picture, 'Sometimes a Strong Notion.' Mancini says what he does is limited by time—writing about •three movie scores a year, cut- ting three albums for RCA Vic- tor, and making guest conduct- Wood Refinish Lesson Slated Canton — Cooperative Exten- sion, Home Economics Division is sponsoring a one evening les- son on refinishing wood furni- ture. The lesson will be held at 7:30 p. m., May 5, at the Can- ton Presbyterian Church. Clark Garner from Cornell University will be teaching the 'lesson and will cover such points as refinishing products, refinishing tools and equipment, when and how to stain wood, whether or not to bleach wood, and techniques involved in re- finishing. The meeting is open to the public and is free of charge. ]ome and bring a friend. • DEEIfS LOOKING AT YOB — This ywmg wiM deer pauses for a portrait and .» look -at the gtotogEapiw' a* bi» wide-open home near Charoa, Mew Mexico, recently. ing appearances at concerts. "I'll be doing two weeks with Jack Benny in August, at the Garden State Arts Center in New Jersey arid the Meriwether Post Pavilion near Washington D.C. We haven't worked out what we're going to do, but he always has fun and always works. I have concerts in Ger- many and England right after that and maybe Japan in Sep- tember. Then a few albums, a few pictures, all that stuff. I'll keep, off the streets, I think." Mancini is proud that of the 35 albums he has made for RCA in the last ten years, all but five or six are still available. "Normal- ly an album gets cut out one or two or three years after it's made. 'Peter Gunn' has been in the catalog 11 years. It still sells. It's old enough, it may come back." Mancini got a gold record for the single "Love Theme from 'Romeo and Juliet,'" and also for the LP which featured that theme. "A Warm Shade of Ivo- ry," and on which he played piano. He says, "Recording 'Romeo' was an accident. I hadn't even seen the inovie. I just liked the tune. The A side of the record was 'The Windows of Your Mind.' Someone turned it over and played it and someone heard it and another guy played it. We pinned this one down to a fellow in Orlando, Fla., on a top 40 station. For some reason he played it, and got so many calls on it, he kept playing it. "The movie had been cut al- most a year. No one had thought to record the theme. All the smart guys completely over- looked it. I overlooked it too, really." Mancini didnft wait a year to record the theme from "Love Story." es and bunkers. Tanks rumble I against the Cubans." ; But, Castro added, "We are 'not going to take it away by ! force." McCauley agreed: "We're not about to leave it. "It's the Russian Navy sailing all around that bothers us, not Castro," McCauley said. "In the current Russian maneuvers, this base is a very important en- clave in Cuba. The people of the K-1 United States need to realize ^ I that we still have a stronghold -*f*>. in this very strategic spot." **•*•" I Before Castro, duty at Gitmo •|«*rvf • | was widely sought by sailors. *v*\\ The gates were wide open to the '* v i happy island of Cuba. Men on , leave flocked to Pepe's Place in nearby Caimanera and the Ari- zona Bar in' Guantanamo City. i, Friendly Cuban girls came to i the Saturday night dances on the base. But in November 1958, as the Castro revolution against Ful- gencio Batista flared, Cuban territory was declared offJimits to military personnel and the i gates closed. The last physical connection between the base and Cuba two pipelines delivering water daily from the Yateras River to Guantanamo—was severed in 1964 by orders from Rear Adieu John Di Bulkeley., over brush-hidden staging area for trails to a deployment, t Combat ships steam out to sea and stand, by to lend fire sup- port. Planes take to the air. "If Castro does come," says Marine Col. Van D. Bell Jr., "he knows he will have to come in superior numbers. We can hold this base as long as we desire." "Gitmo," as the base has been known to generations of seawater desalting plant hastily assembled and in sailors since it was wrested from the Spanish in 1898, is a major strategic asset control- ling the Caribbean and the Windward and Mona passages to the Panama Canal. Protected from the elements, navigable by the biggest ships of the fleet, and with a 14,000- square mile area of deep Carib- bean waters free of major sea and air traffic, Guantanamo Bay is considered the best na- tural location for shipboard training in the world. But, perhaps most of all, it is a psychological emblem of U.S. power and prestige thrust into the hide of the Sierras-^the same mountains that sheltered Castro as he goaded Cubans into the rebellion that was to lead them behind the Iron Curtain. Last Feb. 16, on the anniver- sary of a treaty giving the Unit- ed States perpetual claim to the base, Castro was quoted by Ha- vana Radio: "We will never dis- claim that piece of land, and we will never cease claiming it un- til it is returned to our coun- try." He -called the base a center of corruption and sinister plotting, a refuge for criminals, a center for counterrevolutionaries, and "the only remaining symbol of A was six months Gitmo was a self- sufficient operation. But what had been a great duty base was enow a hardship post for the sin- gle man. For men with wives, a tour still can be rewarding. There are no expensive restaurants or jewelry and clothing stores. They can save money. On leaves, sailors and Ma- rines take rest and recreation in nearby Jamaica, Haiti and Puerto Rico, and in the States when transport is available. After 1964, tight security .;as clamped on the base. Newsmen were not encouraged to visit and those who came were close- ly restricted in their move- ments. For four years, Gitmo was almost a forgotten base. Now the bars are down. Re^ porters tour the perimeters by jeep and helicopter and are giv- en access to all areas. Forty-five posts ring the fence on the U.S. side, some manned by day, some by night, and some around the clock. Steel and concrete bunkers are sur- rounded by the largest known mine fields in the world. In the iVent of a filtration attempt, floodlights can illuminate key areas of the fence like Yankee Stadium. The 45-square-mile area of the base consists of one-third water, one-third salt marshes and one- third highlands. K attacked, Bell said the 1,400-man Marine detachment would pull back into rugged hills in the southeast sorner, giving the enemy the iwamps. "We'll still be there," he said, "when help, comes." Last year, when Castro failed goal of 10 million tons of sugar, Bell expected a rush of sugar cane cutters trying to get into, the base from fields to the north. At the height of last year's harvest, the Cubans starte'd building a new fence barrier- around the base, with watch towers like those between East' and West Germany. Thert is a triple fence in the center of 300-yard wide strip cleared ot all vegetation. The op— are"a gives militiamen clear shots a£ fleeing refugees. "Fewer Cubans get in each- year," one Marine said. "Castro is getting better at catching them. Only the most desperate try it now." Under orders from the Statq department, nobody talks offi* ciaMy about the refugee prob- lem. Reports from Cuban sources, however, indicate thaf fewer than 400 reached this ha- ven last year, about half of the 1969 total. And a majority of these came by water r-atheg than through the Cuban fences^ land mines and border guards. These sources estimate tha.t 4,000 Cubans have reached th§ States through Gifrno and thai at least as many have been killed in the attempt. Only 360 Cuban workmen still commute from jobs on the base to homes outside. Some have died or are believed. to have been imprisoned at home. As their ranks thin, more than l,00l) Jamaicans have been brought hi" to replace them. In the early days of the Castro' regime, the commuters were threatened and bullied by Cas- tro militiamen in sight of the' gate as they were forced to ex- change their U.S. dollars for Cu- ban pesos. Now the "search house" is hidden behind a hillv To reach it, the aging workmea must climb more than a mile up" a steep slope through a fenced "cattle chute." The pesos are virtually worth-; less because there is little tos • buy in Cuba. The workers try tcr save enough of them to buy tick- for loved ones on flights to Mexico. Merchant ships, including th f US l Russians and those of U.S. al- lies, are allowed to enter the bay, passing through a water: fate to the sugar-loading port of Boqueron under escort. Just over the fsnee, Caima-. nera sits like a ghost town. Cas- tro had trumpeted that he would turn it into a showplace but the., project soon bogged down. A' large, Russiamtype apartment building stands like a gaunt skeleton, abandoned with walls in place. The harbor is silted up and useless. An evil-looking 16-foot shark lurks at the water gate and all around the mist-shrouded peaks' of the Sierras glower down 09. this democratic bastion in a Communist land. "When * e base," says Yankee rapacity and aggression in a frenzied effort to achieve a first built this 1 Marine Capt, George Kiesel, looking ruefully up. at the hiHs, "those wert Mendlies over thee." i WHO'S TO DOUBT that spring is here when teen-agers get so literally all wound j up? The double flip was snapped by the cameraman in. Omaha, Neb. IT'S SO MUCH EASIER TO FIND IT IN THE CLASSIFIED BUSINESS DIRECTORY READTHE OGDENSBURG JOURNAL and ADVANCE NEWS WANTADS ] To Place Your A d . . . Ask For "§erf" or "Pqf Phone 393-1003 or 3941006

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Page 1: PAGE TEN Guantanamo Bay: U.S. Stronghold In Cubanyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84031165/1971-05-02/ed-1/seq-10.pdf · cessful movies, says Henry Mancini. "You never get anything

PAGE TEN SUNDAY, MAY 2, 1971 ADVANCE-JMEWS

F A I R A N D W A R M — U.S. aetre«« Barra Grantstrolls In London where she works in a BBC television series.

Taxpayers Ask IRSThis column of questions anc

answers on federal tax mattersis provided by tie local officeof the F.S. Internal RevenueService and is published as apublic service to taxpayers.The column answers questionsmost frequentlytaxpayers.

asked by

pfor some,cover this

Q) My employer is withhold-ing less income tax from mypaycheck this year. Does thismean that I might owe taxnext year?

A) It could. Income tax with-holding rates are lower in 1971mainly because the standarddeduction was increased. With-holding is also lower for singlepersons because tax rates for.this group were reduced.

But "won'tbility; and underwithholdingcould result for those earningover $11,500.

If your present withholdingwon't cover this year's liability,you can avoid owing moneynext April- by dropping exemp-tions now or, if you are al-ready claiming no exemptions,by asking your employer towithhold an additional amount.

Q) My income is low, and I=never pay any tax although Ifile every year to obtain a re-fund. Is there anything that Ican do to stop my employerfrom withholding taxes?

Eastern StarsHost CanadianGrand Officers

Tuesday night Grand Officersfrom the Province of Ontariowere welcomed and honored atthe Masonic Temple by MapleCity Chapter 71, Eastern Stars.

The Ass. Grand Matron Peg-gy Murphy, Assc, Grand Patron.George Pike and Grand Electa,Verna Young, were escorted tothe East and presented GrandHonors. Also seated in t h eEast were M.W. Nellie Ruther-ford, R.W. Alta Davis D.D.-G.M., R.W. Glenn RiekettD.G.L. and R.W. Sarah Smith,Grand Rep. of the Province ofOntario to the U.S. GrandChapter,.from the Valley of theThousand Isles Chapter, Mor-ristown.

W. Irene Feld, representingthe Matron and the Chapter,spoke words of greeting to theAssc. Grand Matron and Assc.Grand Patron. The Wothy R.W.Helen Jackson added an ex-tra greeting entitled "A GiftFriendship."

R.W, Peggy Murphy spoke,thanking the Matron and Chap-ter for all the courtesies of theevening and gave a Version ofthe "Lords Prayer" which hadbeen sent by her a friend fromCalifornia, and also gave anappropiate verse on "Mother'sDay."

R.W. Verna Young in her re-marks said, 'Life is just whatyou make i t ' R.W. Sarah Smithresponded with a verse "As weserve".; Gifts were presented theseGrand Officers, for which theythanked the Chapter and saidthey would be a remembranceof the evening.

The Worthy Matron announc-ed the Official Visit and Home-coming of R.W. Alta Davis,May 11th. at the Temple, witha Smorgasbord Dinner at 6:30,reservations requested. Shealso announced an Officers re-hearsal May 8 at 7 p.m. at theTemple.

Many members from Ontarioattended the meeting, accom-panying their Grand Officers.As the meeting drew to a close,ene couldn't help but noticethat the Tone of the Eveninghad been "Friendship."

The meeting was preceded bya'covered dish dinner, with the"co-chairman W. Nan Phillips•and Laura Cutway, assisted byt h e co-chairman from theMarch Committee, W. IreneFeld and R-W. Edna Mix.

A) Yes. You should file aForm W-4E With your employ-er. This is a."Withholding Ex-emption Certificate" in whichyou can certify that you didnot have any tax -liability lastyear. Your employer must thenstop withholding taxes.

Q) How long must I keepmy records for income taxpurposes?

A) You must keep your rec-ords as long as their contentsmay be material in administer-ing any Internal Revenue law.The Internal Revenue Servicecannot suggest a specific time,but certainly all records shouldbe kept for at least three year:a n d many records, such asstock and property •transac-

withholding tions, even longer.year's lia- Q) I am retired with a com-

pany pension and an annuity.Can I have tax withheld onthese payments?

A) Yes. You may use FormW-4P to request ^ie payer towithhold any whole dollar a-mount. However, the amount tobe withheld must be at least$5 a month and must not re-duce the net pension or annuitypayment to less than $10 amonth.

Q) I have received a giftfrom the bank because I madea long - term deposit. Must Ipay taxes on this gift?

A) Yes. In general, the fairmarket value.of property re-ceived for making a deposit oropening an account in a savings.institution is income and mustbe reported as interest incomein the year received.

Q) My employer withholdst a x from my regular salary.But I occasionally do, outsidework which is not subject towithholding. Must I file a Dec-laration of Estimated Tax?

A) You must file a Declara-tion of Estimated Tax if yourestimated tax due at the timeyour return is filed is $40 ormore and if your estimatedgross income for 1971 includesmore than $200 in income notsubject to withholding. How-ever, instead of filing a dec-laration you may increase with-holding by dropping exemptionsseing claimed or having addi-tional sums withheld.

"Estimated tax" is theamount by which the total ofyour estimated income tax andestimated self-employment taxexceeds the expected withhold-ing from your pay. The Dec-laration of Estimated Tax for1971 and the first payment aredue on April 15, the same datethat your 1970 income taxreturn is due. Publication 505,"Tax Withholding and Declara-tion of Estimated Tax," con-tains additional information andis available at Internal Reve-nue Offices.

Guantanamo Bay: U.S. Stronghold In CubaBy BEN FUNK

Associated Press WriterGUANTANAMO BAY, Cuba |

(AP) — In the spooky darkness jof the Cuban hills, a flare stabsinto the night, a dog rages, agunshot cracks—and a U.S. Ma-rine standing guard on a lonelyoutpost tightens the grin on hisrifle.

Was it only a training exer-cise by Fidel Castor's militiamanning the heights surround-ing this U.S. Navy base? Did itmean that another Cuban refu-gee had died in a dash for free-dom.?

Or could it mean the start ofan incursion against a hatedYankee base that Castro calls

a dagger driven into the heartof Cuban territory?"

From the tumbled brown foot-hills of the Sierra Maestra,frowning down on this isolatedbase from three sides, thenoises are heard often in thenight, firing the imaginations ofyoung troopers. On the fourthside, Russian military shipsprowl the Caribbean with in-creasing boldness.

It is an eerie, almost unreallife—a life of constant waitingfor an enemy who never comesbut who is always out there andwho might, in some angry, emo-tional moment, decide to risk astrike.

'It's weird at first, lookingacross the fence and knowingthey're over there," says NancyConway, secretary to the basecommander, Rear Adm. BrianMcCauley. "But in time you getused to it."

Inside the 14-mile fence cor-doning off the base from Castroland, a community of 9,050 mili-tary and civilian residents bus-tles with normal activity. Chil-dren go to school and play LittleLeague baseball. Wives shop atfihs commissaries and visit hair-dressers. Marines and sailorsswim in the blue Caribbean,fish, play golf, ride horsebacktrails and play football, base-

N O S P R I N G F E V E R — This Is no optical JHusion, just a pair of single-humped ,camels passing each other in the spring sunshine during exercise at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo. J

•ball, basketball and soccer. Ev-ery night, a dozen movies playaround the base.

But it is not a normal life. Itis a never-ceasing vigil by rifle-armed Marines, fighter and hel-icopter pilots, artillery gunners,warships and tanks.

"So long as he remains ration-al, I don't feel there is anychance that Castro will attack,"said McCauley, the base com-mander since June 23, 1970."But when you have dependentsin a hostile country, you do allyou can to guarantee their safe-ty."

There i£ always concern thatCastro might stage a diversion-ary assault to take the minds ofhis people off a staggering econ-

omy in which food shortageshave become a way of life.

To be ready for instant actionin any contingency, defense ex-ercises are staged every six.weeks. These are the only, exer-cises by any U.S. military postin which women and- childrenparticipate.

At the sound of a siren, barsand commissaries close. Wivesrush to their homes where bagsare kept packed and ready forimmediate evacuation. Childrenare sped homeward in a fleet ofschool buses. In case of actualattack, the buses would takethem directly to the pier toboard ships standing by in theharbor.'

Troops man foxholes, trench-

Movie Themes Need Big Movies.. By MARY CAMPBELL ... AP Newsfeatures Writer .

The only movie music whichsells records is music from suc-cessful movies, says HenryMancini.

"You never get anythinggoing anywhere from an unsuc-cessful picture. It could be thegreatest music in the world andnothing would happen.

:I don't think either thetheme from 'Love Story' (Man-cini's latest hit record) or thetheme from Romeo and Julieta recent giant hit) would have

had a breath of a chance with-out the films that go with them.The melodies are very pretty,classically oriented, but withoutthat ear and eye matching up, I

•H Will HoldCounty LivestockJudging Contest

The St. Lawrence County 4-Hivestoek Judging Contest wille held on May 1, 10 a. m., at

the Donald Merkley Farm lo-ated near Flackvnle on thegdensburg - Canton Road.4-H Members from all over

he County will judge classesif hogs and sheep. Each 4-HMember will also have to ans-ver questions about the classes;hey have judged without view-ing the animals as well as giveral reasons as to why theyilaced the class.The top members from this

udging contest will be invitedparticipate in other livestock

ontests this summer and fi-•ally, the top four membersrill be selected to represent St.awrence County at the Newrork State Fair.

don't think they would havebeen successful.

"I think the day of the sound•track for the sake of a soundtrack is gone. Pve had severalscores I felt have been some ofmy best work, in the last yeareven. The 'Molly McGuires,' Iwas proud of that, and 'Sunflow-er.' But because of the moviesnot catching on, it is nothing. Inthis business we say we have toeat them.

"I use the principal theme inan album, instead of making asound track album. In the LP,rTheme from "Love Story,'"we have the 'Sunflower' themeand 'The Night Visitor' themeand 'Wait until Dark.'

"My latest score is 'The NightVisitor' and I'll be doing thenew Paul Newman picture,'Sometimes a Strong Notion.'

Mancini says what he does islimited by time—writing about•three movie scores a year, cut-ting three albums for RCA Vic-tor, and making guest conduct-

Wood RefinishLesson Slated

Canton — Cooperative Exten-sion, Home Economics Divisionis sponsoring a one evening les-son on refinishing wood furni-ture. The lesson will be held at7:30 p. m., May 5, at the Can-ton Presbyterian Church.

Clark Garner from CornellUniversity will be teaching the'lesson and will cover suchpoints as refinishing products,refinishing tools and equipment,when and how to stain wood,whether or not to bleach wood,and techniques involved in re-finishing.

The meeting is open to thepublic and is free of charge.]ome and bring a friend. •

D E E I f S L O O K I N G A T Y O B — This ywmg wiM deer pauses for a portraitand .» look -at the gtotogEapiw' a* bi» wide-open home near Charoa, Mew Mexico, recently.

ing appearances at concerts."I'll be doing two weeks with

Jack Benny in August, at theGarden State Arts Center inNew Jersey arid the MeriwetherPost Pavilion near WashingtonD.C. We haven't worked outwhat we're going to do, but healways has fun and alwaysworks. I have concerts in Ger-many and England right afterthat and maybe Japan in Sep-tember. Then a few albums, afew pictures, all that stuff. I'llkeep, off the streets, I think."

Mancini is proud that of the 35albums he has made for RCA inthe last ten years, all but five orsix are still available. "Normal-ly an album gets cut out one ortwo or three years after it'smade. 'Peter Gunn' has been inthe catalog 11 years. It stillsells. It's old enough, it maycome back."

Mancini got a gold record forthe single "Love Theme from'Romeo and Juliet,'" and alsofor the LP which featured thattheme. "A Warm Shade of Ivo-ry," and on which he playedpiano.

He says, "Recording 'Romeo'was an accident. I hadn't evenseen the inovie. I just liked thetune. The A side of the recordwas 'The Windows of YourMind.' Someone turned it overand played it and someoneheard it and another guy playedit. We pinned this one down to afellow in Orlando, Fla., on a top40 station. For some reason heplayed it, and got so many callson it, he kept playing it.

"The movie had been cut al-most a year. No one hadthought to record the theme. Allthe smart guys completely over-looked it. I overlooked it too,really."

Mancini didnft wait a year torecord the theme from "LoveStory."

es and bunkers. Tanks rumble

• I against the Cubans."; But, Castro added, "We are'not going to take it away by! force." McCauley agreed:"We're not about to leave it.

"It's the Russian Navy sailingall around that bothers us, notCastro," McCauley said. "In thecurrent Russian maneuvers,this base is a very important en-clave in Cuba. The people of the

K-1 United States need to realize^ I that we still have a stronghold

-*f*>. in this very strategic spot."**•*•" I Before Castro, duty at Gitmo

•|«*rvf • | was widely sought by sailors.*v*\\ The gates were wide open to the' * v i happy island of Cuba. Men on

, leave flocked to Pepe's Place innearby Caimanera and the Ari-zona Bar in' Guantanamo City.

i, Friendly Cuban girls came toi the Saturday night dances onthe base.

But in November 1958, as theCastro revolution against Ful-gencio Batista flared, Cubanterritory was declared offJimitsto military personnel and the

i gates closed.The last physical connection

between the base and Cubatwo pipelines delivering waterdaily from the Yateras River toGuantanamo—was severed in1964 by orders from Rear AdieuJohn Di Bulkeley.,

over brush-hiddenstaging area for

trails to adeployment,

tCombat ships steam out to seaand stand, by to lend fire sup-port. Planes take to the air.

"If Castro does come," saysMarine Col. Van D. Bell Jr., "heknows he will have to come insuperior numbers. We can holdthis base as long as we desire."

"Gitmo," as the base hasbeen known to generations of

seawater desalting planthastily assembled and in

sailors since it was wrestedfrom the Spanish in 1898, is amajor strategic asset control-ling the Caribbean and theWindward and Mona passagesto the Panama Canal.

Protected from the elements,navigable by the biggest shipsof the fleet, and with a 14,000-square mile area of deep Carib-bean waters free of major seaand air traffic, GuantanamoBay is considered the best na-tural location for shipboardtraining in the world.

But, perhaps most of all, it isa psychological emblem of U.S.power and prestige thrust intothe hide of the Sierras-^thesame mountains that shelteredCastro as he goaded Cubans intothe rebellion that was to leadthem behind the Iron Curtain.

Last Feb. 16, on the anniver-sary of a treaty giving the Unit-ed States perpetual claim to thebase, Castro was quoted by Ha-vana Radio: "We will never dis-claim that piece of land, and wewill never cease claiming it un-til it is returned to • our coun-try."

He -called the base a center ofcorruption and sinister plotting,a refuge for criminals, a centerfor counterrevolutionaries, and"the only remaining symbol of

Awassix months Gitmo was a self-sufficient operation. But whathad been a great duty base wasenow a hardship post for the sin-gle man.

For men with wives, a tourstill can be rewarding. Thereare no expensive restaurants orjewelry and clothing stores.They can save money.

On leaves, sailors and Ma-rines take rest and recreation innearby Jamaica, Haiti andPuerto Rico, and in the Stateswhen transport is available.

After 1964, tight security .;asclamped on the base. Newsmenwere not encouraged to visitand those who came were close-ly restricted in their move-ments. For four years, Gitmowas almost a forgotten base.

Now the bars are down. Reporters tour the perimeters byjeep and helicopter and are giv-en access to all areas.

Forty-five posts ring the fenceon the U.S. side, some mannedby day, some by night, andsome around the clock. Steeland concrete bunkers are sur-rounded by the largest knownmine fields in the world. In theiVent of a filtration attempt,

floodlights can illuminate keyareas of the fence like YankeeStadium.

The 45-square-mile area of thebase consists of one-third water,one-third salt marshes and one-third highlands. K attacked,Bell said the 1,400-man Marinedetachment would pull back intorugged hills in the southeastsorner, giving the enemy theiwamps. "We'll still be there,"

he said, "when help, comes."Last year, when Castro failed

goal of 10 million tons of sugar,Bell expected a rush of sugarcane cutters trying to get into,the base from fields to thenorth.

At the height of last year'sharvest, the Cubans starte'dbuilding a new fence barrier-around the base, with watchtowers like those between East'and West Germany. Thert is atriple fence in the center of300-yard wide strip cleared otall vegetation. The op— are"agives militiamen clear shots a£fleeing refugees.

"Fewer Cubans get in each-year," one Marine said. "Castrois getting better at catchingthem. Only the most desperatetry it now."

Under orders from the Statqdepartment, nobody talks offi*ciaMy about the refugee prob-lem. Reports from Cubansources, however, indicate thaffewer than 400 reached this ha-ven last year, about half of the1969 total. And a majority ofthese came by water r-athegthan through the Cuban fences^land mines and border guards.

These sources estimate tha.t4,000 Cubans have reached th§States through Gifrno and thaiat least as many have beenkilled in the attempt.

Only 360 Cuban workmen stillcommute from jobs on the baseto homes outside. Some havedied or are believed. to havebeen imprisoned at home. Astheir ranks thin, more than l,00l)Jamaicans have been brought hi"to replace them.

In the early days of the Castro'regime, the commuters werethreatened and bullied by Cas-tro militiamen in sight of the'gate as they were forced to ex-change their U.S. dollars for Cu-ban pesos. Now the "searchhouse" is hidden behind a hillvTo reach it, the aging workmeamust climb more than a mile up"a steep slope through a fenced"cattle chute."

The pesos are virtually worth-;less because there is little tos •buy in Cuba. The workers try tcrsave enough of them to buy tick-

for loved ones on flights toMexico.

Merchant ships, includingth f US lRussians and those of U.S. al-

lies, are allowed to enter thebay, passing through a water:fate to the sugar-loading port of

Boqueron under escort.Just over the fsnee, Caima-.

nera sits like a ghost town. Cas-tro had trumpeted that he wouldturn it into a showplace but the.,project soon bogged down. A'large, Russiamtype apartmentbuilding stands like a gauntskeleton, abandoned with wallsin place. The harbor is silted upand useless.

An evil-looking 16-foot sharklurks at the water gate and allaround the mist-shrouded peaks'of the Sierras glower down 09.this democratic bastion in aCommunist land.

"When *ebase," says

Yankee rapacity and aggression in a frenzied effort to achieve a

first built this1

Marine Capt,George Kiesel, looking ruefullyup. at the hiHs, "those wertMendlies over thee."

i WHO'S TO DOUBT that spring is here when teen-agers get so literally all woundj up? The double flip was snapped by the cameraman in. Omaha, Neb.

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