European Stars And Stripes (Newspaper) - August 15, 1988, Darmstadt, Hesse Page 4 the stars and stripes monday August 15,1988 government asks delay on secrecy pledge notices by the Washington Post Washington the government asked a Federal court Friday to spare it the task of notifying 2 million Federal workers within 60 Days of the definition of a controversial term in the secrecy pledges they have signed a government official said. Security pledges prohibiting Federal workers from it is not As simple As having 2 million Steven Garfinkel disclosing classifiable information were declared unconstitutional july 28 by . District court judge Oliver Gasch unless Federal agencies notified their workers of the meaning of the term within two months. The prohibition against the disclosure of classifiable information was attacked by opponents of the pledges As vague and open to abuse. These opponents feared that unclassified information innocently disclosed to Congress or the Public might subsequently be stamped classified and the person who disclosed it prosecuted. They said the term has a chilling affect on free speech. The government after several attempts defined the term somewhat narrowly As primarily unmarked classified material such As notes of secret meetings. The defense department said during the weekend that workers already had been notified of the meaning of the term in the dec. 21,1987, Federal Register. Craig Alderman jr., Deputy undersecretary of de sense for policy told the court that further notification of the entire group will be impracticable if not impossible within the 60-Day period the judge allowed. Alderman said that while a maximum Good Faith Effort might reach 95 percent of those Federal employees who have been required to Promise not to reveal classified or classifiable material on pain of civil and criminal penalties the remaining 5 percent could not be reached that fast. He cited As examples employees assigned to nuclear submarines intelligence personnel on assignment or persons who Are on maternity leave or who Are mov ing. It is not As simple As having 2 million addresses right off the Bat said Steven Garfinkel director of the government s information Security oversight of fice. Further who s to say we did it do we need a receipt this is a very very extensive undertaking to notify people All Over the Congress extended the ban on the use of the form containing the word classifiable in an appropriations Bill worked out by House Senate conferees last week. The form has not been used for More than a year. Dart pierced Donald ducked his rescuers St. Cloud Minn. A a wild Duck nicknamed Donald who waddled around for three months with a Dart stuck in its neck while eluding would be rescuers was finally nabbed with a Little com and twine and a lot of Hub belts trapping efforts paid off saturday and Donald spent the weekend in a Cage in Hub Bell s Kitchen. He was to be taken to a veterinarian s office monday to have the Dart removed Back in May someone shot darts at the ducks that congregate along the Mississippi River Inthis Central Minnesota City. One of the 5-Inch darts stuck in Donald s upper neighbourhood folks had tried to capture the Duck a Mallard. But nets scared him and hews too Quick to grab. Hubbell s approach was to use a Chicken wiretap. He d head Down to the River at 5 30 . Each Day set the trap with Corn and run a piece of twine from the trapdoor to his car. He d sit there until 6 45 ., waiting for Donald to Waddle into the trap. It never happened until was just like Deer Hunting Hubbell said. Sooner or later he was going to step in of natural resources officials gave Hubbell permission to keep a wild Anima until Donald can be nursed Back to health. Antique dealer pays record . Price for rare doll by the los Angeles times Anaheim Calif. A record on the american doll Market was set saturday at an auction Here when a Pennsylvania antique dealer paid $48,000 for an extremely rare German doll handcrafted sometime around 1910. Richard Wright of Birchrunville pa., made the High bid at an auction at the Hyatt Alicante hotel. The previous record was the $45,000 paid for a 19th Century French doll sold at an auction in los Angeles two years ago. Wright who was called one of the most important antique doll dealers in the world by several bidders at the an Aheim auction said he intended to keep the doll for his own permanent collection. Known Only As a Kammer and Reinhardt Model 106, the boy doll is made from bisque Ceramic and has Blue Gray eyes and Light Brown hair. I bought him because i be been collecting the Kammer and Reinhardt series for 25 years Wright 41, said after the auction beaming and clutching the doll to his Chest. He said that of the Kammer and Reinhardt Model 100 series which is numbered from 100 to 114, he now Only lacks Model 105. Because of the Sale of Model 106, Sev eral experts had called the auction one of the most important events for doll col lectors in some time. The auction raised $125,000 for a scholarship fund at the California Institute of the arts in Valencia. Last year More than 300 dolls including Model 106, were donated to the Institute by the estate of Lucy Earle a wid owed antique collector from Pacific Palisades who died in 1987 at 95. Seventy five of the dolls auctioned saturday were from Earle s collection. My blood is racing. I can t believe it Dan Pavillard Cal arts vice presi Dent for development said immediately after Model 106 sold. We d like to think that Lucy Earl who loved and enjoyed the arts Woula be thrilled with what we be done Here at the auction and that Art students Are going to Benefit As a re sult of her gift to the Model 106 was made at the factory of Ernst Kammer and Franz Reinhardt be fore world War i. But most of the dolls reportedly were destroyed by German department stores when they did not sell. Only three Model 106 dolls were known to have survived until Earle s collection was made Theriault who conducted the auction said Model 106 had been expected to sell for around $25,000. That was exciting Theriault said of the the winning bid. It was nothing we the highest Price worldwide for a doll was Well Over $100,000," paid last year for an 18th-Century doll in England said Surprise you re on candid candidate democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis and his wife Kitty Are surrounded by television Crews on the porch of their weekend Retreat at Pocas set mass. The Only prospective aide around to fend off the press is 3-year old John weeks and the boy son Ozone of Dukakis aides will probably have to wait a few More years before Pecan act As an official Buffer to the press. After All hell have to wait 15 year until he can even Register to vote. Theriault whose Maryland based auction peering firm is the largest of its kind in the world. Officer says soviet plane similar to b-1b Dayton Ohio a the soviet Union s once secret Blackjack bomber is an expanded version of America s b-1b bomber according to the Only . Air Force officer to have seen the giant soviet warplane. Maj. Gen. Gordon e. Fornell de scribed the bomber in a Story in sunday s editions of the Dayton daily news As being a close copy of the b-1b, from its pivoting wings to the rotary cruise mis Sile launcher on its belly. The soviets allowed Fornell and de sense Secretary Frank c. Carlucci to take a close look at the plane on aug. 2 while the two were on a tour of soviet military bases. Soviet officials had earlier been allowed to climb aboard a b-1b during a visit to Ellsworth fab in South Dakota. Like the b-1b, the Blackjack is de signed to Fly Low and fast during Long Range strategic bombing missions firing nuclear tipped cruise missiles. Fornell a former bomber test Pilot with More than 6,000 flying hours in More than 40 types of aircraft and an adviser to car Lucci said he believed there is evidence that the soviets copied at least the Basic aerodynamic features of the b 1 b
