ers ee eee eee ees 3 * 4 e > ss = 2 3 ; N ‘ 1h é ae + eS ee ee ee ae a oe eee ge AKE OVER : 7 rs re * ra ~PONTTAG M TOHIGAN SATURDAY, DECEMUER 1987 —26° PAGES a e.. a ~ rs . Rescuers Recover 30 ¢ > eA _ Need Help on Lions’ TV? One of" em Sits |New Regulations to Aid Traffic ~ |Flow.on Dixie Bon Left. Turns at Williams. Lake, Walton Intersections Soon Left turns from . Dixie Highway onto Williams Lake Rd., on the west, and onto Walton Blvd., to the east, will be prohibited Bosaskor Told ‘State hep. Farrell E. Roberts, “West. ‘Bloomfield Township Republican, today urged Democratic. Gov. G. Mennen Williams to “do something practical” to get pea! Detroit-Cleveland football game televised in Detroit and “stop the talk for publicity.” _JRoberts said ina. telegram. to. the.governar:... “Suggest you stop-wasting funds on. telephoning Bert cording to-acting~ District) Bell telling him to televise the Lions-Browns game Sun-\Traffic Engineer _Joseph| day and do something practical to get. t the game on TV |Marlow of the Michigan! in the Detroit area, ‘State Highway Gepart,| / | “Lt. Gov. Phil Hart has an office on the same floor | ment. of the Capitol building as yours, he is a stockholder! No Left Tum signs will be in- Prenatal Stress Can Affect Baby directors of the Detroit led at that intersection to better Psychologist Describes oi rising this game you might, Lions, he is a member of [eamile So hnowry tanita Sew, Déer-| Results of Rat Tests at walk down to Li. Gov. Hart's Scientific Parley ~ =e acai the Briggs ‘family long] the-proposed roads have been ‘prominent in Detroit sports. planned for more than two years, affairs. | sn construction should begin “It you want to do something of. _ Elvis Gets 60- Day-Draft Delay ~~” SSS "80 FENISH PICTURE — In. Memphis, Elvis of the Rk ‘x! Rall singer’ are poltting to March 7 _ Presley appears nonchalant ‘when ativised that . 20, the new induction date, They are Kathy ' he has been granted a°60-day draft delay. The Gabriel (left) the. current /Miss Ohio, of Cleve- by his studio so Elvis could fand, did Hannerl Melcher, Mins Ansisia in thie, ‘ enna re F é 2 |Grabs Himself ,. jwithin. the. next. week, aor from the north, who want to make la left turn from Dixie Highway ‘to Stay a Few Days . Hittle change: in temperatures. _'|a&im." was 34. The reading at l/each man must carry on his back jot big city revenue, a University?mit a broadly diversified tax sys- - Survivors of Coal Mine Blast New York Thief ja Bag of Woe ‘NEW YORK Ns) where in New York there is a {| Call for Claims. on Antarctic | for Pole Settlement } _ WASHINGTON @® — Two senior | AP Facsimile are shown as they emerged from the mine this morning. Fourteen men were rescued. EMERGE THIS MORNING — Some of the One of them, Rep. Tollefson (R.| survivors of the mine explosion at Amonate, Va., Wash), said he has been informed last night that took the lives of 11 companions that the nation’s top strategy- group—the National Se 14 Other Men Survive Blast, . Virginia, West Virginia AMONATE, Va. (?—Res- cue workers today recov- ered the bodies of il rminers killed late yes- terday when a gas explo- sion trapped 25 men below ‘dling the “Virginia-West Virginia border. Fourteen miners were brought out of the. colliery uninjured shortly after midnight. - Canvas was draped over the vietims,earried- out of Mine No. 31 of the Poca- looked on in the first gray light of an overcast day. jported Arnold Bostic, a member jof one of the rescue teams. ‘“The jroof is in very good shape and oo snow arrived late for|there were no heavy -slate fa’ stmag in the Pontiac area, and) Bostic reported “lots of smok the weather Bureau predicts it Will) sq result of the blast, but there | be with us for the next few days.| was no fire. Tracks were ripped | | Tonight will be cloudy and cold-| y from et with a low around 20 degrees, )P tho gréund. Some tim. |. gr sow bere and supports we were knocked |. the only reason the State didn’t ask the death pénalty for ; John “+-# law forbids execution of .ane,..80 young. * * * . Miller will serve his sentence ‘Jat a-state prison. for adults. alse. tomorrow will be partly cloudy m and they had to be- re- my Countries Sign A Pact The forecast for Monday is part- werd.” Satere we ‘cold go for. 2 to 9g ly cloudy with snow flurries, and ~_ ss ROME. (INS) -— Britain and Italy signed an agreement to- day for peaceful nuclear col- laboration, The document is sim- | ilar to the one Italy signed with the U. S, in July, . — The lowest recorded temperature! Complicating the operation is a in downtown Pontiac, preceding 8/38-pound, two-hour oxygen tank AP Facsimile EXPLOSION SITE P.m. was 38. las. he slowly inches his way along. |. U. of M. Economist Calls for Cities to Rely on Other Levies. Seeks to Replace Property’ Taxes PHILADELPHIA, Pa. wp—Sales taxes, income taxes and service charges should gradually replace property taxes as the major source dicted, the per capita financial needa of central cities will grow. *- * * “wide taxing powers that per- ated with sales or income taxes im-;economic Waste and the increas- posed by clusters of small munici-/ingly ludicrous spectacle of higher palities,” Brazer said. and higher transit fares, accom- panied by deteriorating service, Discussi..g municipal spending, |driving more and more people ‘to Brazer said a wiajor change is the private automobile,” he said. needed in financial support given a ee es public fransi¢t systems. ; If cities are to avoid “economic “Continued failure of the federal strangulation through ‘traffic con- and state governments and the ci- ” Brazer said, all levels of ties themselves to recognize this can only lead to ever-increasing tem to provide the needed revenues with comparatively low tax rates are likely to produce fewer harm- ful effects than would one or two taxes’ imposed at higher rates,"’ of Michigan economist declared to- day, * * * ; Associate Prof. Harvey E: Braz- “ STATE AID TO FAIL (Larry) Miller was because the|'° Ifuence in the league because ive. then cross Dixie Highway |< ity Council—“ approves t \'Mostly We Just Prayed’ Va.-W.Va. INDIANAPOLIS @—New tests his position and connection. to Wan. iJ of Tollefson's antarctic l indicate babies can be emotion- * * * te, es and wishes to turn|Forcign Atinivs- Conpaitce Expl t Mi Re k moved trom the sprawling mine a . a peg nee the spra mine on Y sion happens to) Let's stop the talk for pub: ft on Williams Lake Rd., he! Rep. Judd "(RBMlew), a sete XP osion a Ine Oc S iron a shaft located in West ! mothers Pregnancy: ticity an@ take some action to jwifl turn right on a new cut-over'committee member, said, “Our: :Virginia, nearly three miles from Pregnant rats “had emationay)) Peete ig rede, |'2 Walon Blvd, then cross Die government ‘ought io press now us owly en Beneath the Ground {ite*inain ene shat where the i - | . , a (of antarctic. survivors were brought out. : anxious in the fests. produced oo the stadium Sunday. | * * *iclaims) that will be just and Crow to Protect! * * * teal Te cet ae relatively The Lions and Browns meet in) Another troublesome spot that |equitabie.” Has AMONATE, Va. Ui, few mneen wore working, ‘ewvers! This was the 1 disast ony . fab wal Stadium for -the sa Anllocaned: ae am. is RIVALS MAY STALL BID Trapped Workers and were eating, one was cleaning up when a gas-produced expiosion in Pocahontas Fuel Co. f league championship. lnake ros point where Scott) Otherwiee, Judd said, rival) Itself, Too ‘explosion trapped 25 men below the earth in the Poca-jmines in the border coalfields in mn one surprise, mice born tojseets have been sold. The cham-| road ends at Dixie Highway. | saimants gre likely to get into| f ; 11 months. A February gas explo- normal mothers developed igre de Dt Re: a gard wie * |vears of hassling as the claims) P hontas Fuel Co.’s Mine No. 31 late yesterday. sion at a mine near Bishop, Va. » tional changes when reared vision of Commissioner . who, Right-of-way crews are how ac- AMONATE, Va, @ — A miné|. , ' : : . ies foster mothers who had been sub--has-ruled that under league regula quiring RO-feet on the east side Od on ie nan ee resctie @peration lx an inch-by-inch| SOurveen were WrougHt to” safety early today — all ™lled out 37 lives. jected to emotional siress. a's there can oe ey no ec: yao weg Highway. Eventually a = pape [process that must "seem like an| nervous, all shaken but all 1 uninjured. The other 11 ~ * * Tee exghrtinainn nds | .* trom Pontiac, whbing to make a| Views om the heels et trean re, (eteMnity 0 loved ones waiting)Were found dead. 7 nr gel Aagpes ong ar today to the. American Assn. “for! Precio, Edwin J. Anderson of left turn onto Scott Lake Rd. will) pert 4 Srntenl interest. in tabove cod they’! — of fet Ens -aeplosiete-al—6 oy th, 15; G t life fentas Fuel Co., sud the Codies of the Advarenient Of Science by the Liss has” Urged Belj to lift Dear to thé Fight, then Toop back je area. Moscow radio ns re aware Any: m. didn’t have any). Ou ers ie three men were reached about 4 William R. Thompson, psycholo- the TV blackout. Andersén said he ross Dixie Highway, Marlow ex-| reported two heavily laden |*hing. . d, but th ussion a. m. The other eight were located gist of Wesleyan University, Mid-(bad unanimous support of Lion/Plained. “expeditions are heading for the | '* sn eee for Slaying Of Child about two hours later. ‘Plans were dletown, Conn. . He said other league, 4 signal light will also be in- | ™2sHetic and the geo-.| But W's a process Cats | was heavy,” said eral made to remove all the bodies at He said some Hniman studies in-/members had voted 11-1 against! stalled at that poigt, . sraphic South Pole. erately inch by inch — for ine Harris, 28, Cedar Bluff, one time. ae ee eut{him. - | mereite safety of those trapped and’ those LONG BEACH, Calif. W—A 15- emotional upse <—. Records show” that High.| British and New Zealand) coking to rescue them. (10-year veteran at the year-old reform school escapee,| The blast trapped men in two fered by a woman tan seriously ‘way in the Watert Township |S°uPs also are on their way to described vici he ‘sections—a joy loading area affect the unborn baby. The in- Bell stesidfast! Astly has geclined *o area, has an average traffic flow|the Seographic center. where a "tech a oan ae coi ine and cold - blooded.” Friday was! (site ef an automatic coal load. fluence is possibly transmitted by raise the ban, and upon his o¢ 25.000 vehicles during a 24-hour|US scientific expedition is al- cn edly toy os tarve crows ol 2'I know—it knocked the sandwich) jaeed guilty of first degree mur- ing: machine) and a continuous changes in the mother’s hormon¢|arrival Yo take over direction of period. In the summer months, the "e@dy encamped. The. Soviets are| six men each battled their way jout of my hand and knocked me’ der and sentenced to life imprison- mining area (also the site of au- system. —_. the” Gaitie yesterday: “It wouldn't! number is increased by some 10,- hurrying -ani icebreaker to survey| forward toward 11 men trapped over. It busted my ears when it, ment for killing a two-year-old girl.) tomatic coal loading equipment), ; Fae elaborate ba fair oo ine awe who there motorists. along the aus of an unclaimed| and killed 500 feet under the ‘hit. . ke « * *&: The survivors were found by _. Thompson bought tickets area. earth by a gas-produced expjo- rescue worke: tests to measure the effect, when|now you could have stdyed home| . sion in Mine No. 31 of the Poca. | « The- youth, Joke Lawrence Mi- oe a mo ate of Se pregnant. rats were made highly/and seen it for nothing on TV." 7 ke . HAVE NO CLAIMS Fuel Ce. Harris said he “knew what jer, had pleaded guilty to slaying| Joy leading section some 1,000 anxious, or subjected to electri- * *« * | }ours Qua Region Although American expeditions e + tit happened, although it was my /Laora Helen Wetzel Nov. 11 on the| feet from where the 11 other . cal shocks. Around 40,000 seats went to sea-| TEHRAN — The Shah of Iran|h@V “€xPlored far--more of the) (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) {Palos Verdes Peninsula while over-| men met death. While results are*not clear-cut,'son ticket holders at $10 and $7.50 today flew to Kermanshah ora |trozen land ‘than ‘has any other, Fourteen men were rescued) [°° °Oo°co = ae 3 due from a weekend pass from a The rescue work. was painstak- "they appear to confirm earlierleach. The remainder, including’ two-day tour of the Zagros Moun-|"#tion, the United States has not after five hours of painstaking) reform ochoal. * ot ing as rescuers were forced to work Thompson did with smaller bleacher seats and 4,000 standing tain. area of west Iran, where|/#id claim to any derritory there.|labor. It took that long — and) | __ a inch“their way along slate- numbersof animals, room admissions at $5 each, went|1,288 persons were killed in recent| al80 refuses to recognize claims longer | —- to negotiate or . Arrested four days later in jclogged passages filled with “They- strongly suggest thation public sale yesterday. The sta- earthquakes. The Shah will super-|° other countries. 1,600 feet to thie 11 othegs, fo Reno, ‘Nev., he told police he /smoke and deadly gases. They stress . « « has definite effects onidium seats 52,555. \vise the start of erecting prefab- . dead. et smothered the child under blan-'|carried oxygen tanks strapped to the emotional behavior of the off-| The Lions expect to crowd in|rieated wooden houses for nearly/ Vila Gag | T d . ; kets “because I felt like killing their backs. > spring,” he said. close to 57,000. |30,000 homeless W IS lar y, “s a hg ony in rel ne somebody.’ / * * * ape, a considered,”’ ' . id the mine was | Dep. Dist. Atty. Ted Sten .said - had failed to function properly touched off by a spark of unknown origin. ; Fullarton. said the families: of the trapped miners had kept a vigil at a station two miles from the disaster scene through ‘most of the night but had been Urged to return to their homes early this morning to await developments. ~ : x* * * been listed as ‘working in the con- tinuous loading area, Company of- ficials later discovered 11 men were there. Ironically, some of the'11 might have been due for a layoff today Pecan & per cent cut’ In Officials of the Pocahontas Fuel Co. said 534 of the 775. men em- ployed at the operation-Mine No, 3l—were due to bec ut off because of a decrease in. coal orders. Winter Driving — ° ° “@ 8s @ ee . A “| In arguing. the need of major ways,” Property taxes, he said, now |Metropolitan cities for broad tax in Today’ s s Press il “— . * account for 00 per cent of the powers to handle their growing fi-| — _ Even the less densely populated total tax revenes in the top 17 [nancial crises, Brazer said “state hiheth Stone: cadeeapeeecyt 67 + centers can “| cities in the United. States, ox- ee eae manatee, Comies ....... : ss. 21 [Succeed in providing fast; comfort- cluding Washington, D.C. ay tyertnn nagete « ” od abtinws “County News ..0.+scsseee, 96 able, cheap mass transportation if x # * tions of the central cities, of major Editorials .. +..sc4... 4 [construction and maintenance mon- ee | ons nea” 8, OL MAIO Hottie Section .;... ..» 48 to 17 [ey is diverted from arterial streets, Substantial property will be re-|metropotitan “ re | Obituaries .....c.cce..0..... % |moving from the center tacthe moved from the tax rolls, Brazer is * ® Sports ......... .+.. 18 te @ jperipheries, to mass transit facili- said, with the continued shift of “Wide taxing powers éxtended to Theaters, ......4-......... 1 ties, coupled with construction and] mahufactuying activity to the sub-jthe major metropolitan centers} TV & Radio Programs ..., 2 Oi tamer A oan ne urbs and the development of city|would not. involve the confusion Wilson, Earl .............. 5.. |vide access ‘to pu transit,” Iroads. At the same time, he pre-and compliance: difficulties associ-|, Women’s Pages ...... »» Stoo Braver said. |, = F \4 ’ 4 F * ) | ’ ° Ab al Coal Miners @ he land the accumulation had been ° —— Although only eight men had . p { With Aga Khan ~ governmental conference, which is} tries should -nationalize- Western.” by tho ‘sans. A Delegates to~Red- Hued Parley Praise Russiqn Economic Aid Offer CAIRO — The African-Asian) — People’s Conference plowed _ahead in anti-W estern fields today as the spotlight centered gn Rus- sia’s sweeping economic ajd offer. * * * | Subgroups of the cofference’s main Political Committee plunged into a discussion of such contro- versial East-West topics as im- . perialism, disarmament, racial! discrimination, Algeria angrPales-| tine. The Soviet ‘big brother’ offer of economie aid to/all Asians and Africans was well reeeivéd yes- terday by the delegates from 42 nations antivcolgnies at the non- munist policies. ** * Many of ‘those voicing” loud praise for the offer are exiles or fugitives from areas that receive) U.S. economic aid. Some of. the! leftists here are frowned on by tary“ of ‘the Army Wilber M. stay officially disconrected from) Ww: Communist propaganda lines. = Lewis, founder and governor WINS HIGH MASONIC HONOR — Secre- receives in Detroit the York Rite Cross, highest home governments-.that try [©) honor of this branch of Masonry, from Richard Brucker (left). . general of: the e York Rite Soversign College of Narth America. Brucker is wearing the uniform as Right Emi- nent Grand _Captain-Genefal of the Grahd Encampment, Knights Templars of the United States, a recent appointment. Fr The offer, obviously designed to; drive Western enterprise out of the: East, was accompanied by broad hints that African &nd Asian coun- _.Violence Flares i in Battle. Creek and Hew: York operated businesses - and- exploit their profits as Egypt has sought to do with the Suez Canal. * *« * This. apparently appealed many elements who shouted their) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS assent when Soviet delegate! youth on a rampage of vio- Apushavan A. Agafonoyich lauded! jence made news today in New _Indonesia's takeover of some 14) yor and in Michigan. — dollars in. Dutch invest- From Battle Creek, police re- port a 17-year-old high school The Soviet offer recalled West-> student fatally wounded himself ern predictions that the Kremlin last night in the deadly game would launch a drive in 1958 to| of Russian roulette. win more friends in Africa and) Declaring “I have nothing to Asia with a view towards driving! jose” Robert Eugene Keller put the West from these sources of) 4 shell in the cylinder of a .32 oil and other natural resources. | caliper revolver, spun the cyl- | inder, put the weapon to his | head and pulled the trigger. The } t to} Mexican Beauty Denies Romance | gun fired, MOTHER ON DUTY Keeler died two hours later at a hospital where his mother, Mrs. Theodore Keeler, was on duty as a desk clerk, - KITZBUEHEL, Austria ) — A | Police said the youth had dark-haired Mexican -beauty de- nied today there is a rofnmance be-| been target ‘shooting with two tween her and the Aga Khan, who| companions in the basement of abruptly left a resort where she| his home, Hig father was in a 11-year-old youth walked into a Brooklyn police station last night and told of shooting hig mother “Honest, I'm not kidding,” blong John Jessup told a po- lice officer, “I put two bullets { im the back of her head and dragged her body from the hall into the bathtub. “T was there half an hour try- ing to clean up the blood. Hon- est, I'm not kidding. Go there and see.” HE WASN'T KIDDING Police went to the ground-floor apartment about a block away and found the body of Mrs. Gladys Jessup, 35, an attractive blonde divorcee, just where her son said it would be. Jessup, booked on a homicide charge, said in a statement re- leased by police: “I lost my tem- per, I have a very quick tem- per.”’ is staying. hospital recovering from a re- * * * cent operation, The Ti-yearold Aga early. this N York Cit ther morning broke off a holiday ski-| _h ~~" mh ing vacation at Kitzbuehel in the | Austrian Alps ard drove ep SwitzeflAnd. There weré. re; Swnseiied There wort: Sept -# Company Identifies because refused to permit ' crngement tne bus. sien Miners Who Died Casablancas, 17, daughter of a wealthy Mexican. ij AMONATE, Va. The 11 min- the A * ‘ie * 4. broth lersk illed in a coal mine explosion ga's mother an rother | iherée yesterday were, identified to- remained betiind, So did Sylvia |aay by the Pocahontas Fuel Co., and her parents who are staying) joperators of the niine. The victims, at the same hotet. - Ithele-mine-sob, and-strvivors, are: | Archie Reece Alicia, 32, Rt. 1 Ceasr| |Bluft, Va.: brakeman; wife, Dora °| : | Alicia, three children, | Wiliam R. Amos, |W. Va., firedoss; wife, Melvins Amos, | seven children. | dames Chiles, $1, Valls Creek, Ww, Va. Myrtle Chiles, tow $0, Warriormine,| jboom Man; wife, children Howard Pields, Brandy, ‘Va.. section iforeman; married, two children Main B, Harfison, 43, Ban nay, Va.. machine operator, wife, trene Harrison. five children | | 1 H. SIMS Gilmer Eugene Monk, 26, Rt. 1, North By E. - Tazwell, Va. electrician; wife, Bobbie) , | Jo yee Monk. two children, Recent tornadoes in the middle! "Jona “Edmond ‘Nunlay, 30, section of the United States sur- Runlay. on” children wite, Aiease, rised many anda people! p aught va. motorman; wife, fe. Prankie, unpre pared. Are these storms out st three chiltren. of season’ in mid-winter? |, James Robert Rutherford, 26. , W.Va, machine elper; Yes, to a certain exterit, tor-| \Ravy Rutherford, two ehildren. 36, Preeman, W. Va., ” Lioyd EB. Vest, nadoes are “‘out of season” in mid-| achine opergtor: wife, Ba@te | Vest. winter. They are not extremely |three children. ¥ rare, however, for they can oceur, vont ote ete i ee a at any time during the. year. | chiildren. Warrior- | “ite. Ravenettes drill team has been in- In Bath, N. Y., still a third 17-year-old, described as a mild- mannered boy who uses neither alcohol, tobacco coffee told | said Stratton tried to fight him. Sarge ? j ig | Sommer, a tall, thin youth ‘with curly biond hair, told police he wanted his‘victims’ cars for hold- |; ups he pulled to get some money to pay a former employer for some allegedly stolen items. He off And cried, “There's no sense shooting me. I've got a wife and 10 kids.”’ ; Justice canght up with four other New York youths con- victed of the slaying of a 61- year-old shop owner. The quartet range in age. from 17 to 22. Two of them, Thomas Frye and William Wynn, 17, were unarmed and took no direct part in the killing of- William Boser, a delicatessen ‘owner. But since they stood guard when Ralph Dawkins and Jack- son Turner committed the mur- der, in order to rob the store, they also were found guilty of — first degree murder. A jury of 11 men ahd one woman brought in a guilty ver- dict on the defendants on Dec. 11 and did not recommend mer- cy. This made yesterday's death sentence mandatory. The execu- police last night he had slain two men who gave him lifts while hitchhiking. One victim was the father of 10 children, on his way to a hospital to visit his wife and newborn ‘baby. Authorities said Fred Sommer Jr. of Cameron. Mills, near this south-central New York commu- nity, admitted in written state- ments that he shot Cecil Stratton, 42, Dec. 13, and’ Leo W. Brown, 38, Thursday, night. — WANTED THEJR CARS He said he killed both men Wr ; their automobiles. He used the same pistol to put bullets through both of his victims’ heads. Pontiac Drill Team Tx-'tg¢ Appear at Game \vited to appear at the Lions game jin Briggs Stadium tomorrow. The ;|popular Pontiac drill team will per- ** form between healves of the game. Tornadbes occur most frequently | it turbulent and ‘changing air! masses, when heavier airpossibly | Aid. Program Reported moist) becomes inverted—suspend- ga above lighter air, Eventually the heavier: air} - (above) is certain to break through | and this may produce the awful} power of these small funnel storms. | The Weather Full t 8 eatees Bares Report PONTIAG AND VICINITY — Tonight! cloudy and ceider Ms br a low around 26. istration -re portedly Tomorrow partly tloudy. Fresh squtherly~ winds shifting westerly this afternoon. to_Congress a progr oo US. to Science -WASHINGTON UW—The ‘admin. am of match- Teday in Pontiac ret temperature preceding 8 am “at 8 am.: Wisa eveioeity 18 mph. | Direction: * Bouth - Bun sets @aterday ‘ot. .) oF pm. Sun rises Sunday at 8 a | Moon sets Sunday at. 12 3 em | jimproved teaching of science and \mathematics in the high schools. * * * The plan calls for the federal Moorguises Beturday at 11:52 a.m. government to provide more than bam Downtown n Femnperatures , 100 million dollars to heip the | Tam... 34 12M iseeese 3} states supplement salaries of sci- § ome eee 38 hm #' ence and*math teachers, employ BLM eeerees 3h additional teachers, purchase Friday in Pontiee equipment and strengthen state ‘ * Highest Lemperature cowntown! - education departments. . He anes: aay mperat we ooecceres »» 36. Other proposals also are being west temperatu 2 . Mean temperature 30.5 prepared to help meet the clamor Weather ~ Clear for more emphasis on scientific Highest “at wont Ase in Pentiae o9 4nd technical training -in the na- ig ites ute 2 Lowest temperature .........casee. 223 tion's schools and colleges. The Meah temperature eebereces 25 Weather new flur flurries” jemand has been growing since Hi me set 1 ayest Temperatares {Russia 8 Jauching ot : be . Datd in 5 Years ‘satellites emphasized an increas-| in 108 -@ in 1924 jing Russian technical capability, eeaeee heen eer owe 87 cmon will propose, h.| fing? ‘grants to states to encourage) Promote Studies school pupils; and promote the teaching of foreign languages, *. * * College scholarships, fo — cost eight » 10 million dollars the first year, would be provided for tal- ented *high school students. who could not otherwise go to college. |Fellowships also would be provid- ed in graduate schools, - -In a rélated effort, more than 50 million dollars a year would be ‘provided to: the, National S¢ience * * & updating science en _ Peo. viding more fellowships and ducting more. seminars and insti ‘tutes for teachers’in those fields. While plans went forward for a boost im the specialized. training, Jackie Rae Voorhees and her). tion was set for February. Explosion Traps Men}: Far Beneath Surface (Continued From—Page-One)— first time—and I hope it’s my last.”’ W. C. Carrico of Amonate, a mechanic, was repairing a shuttle- car and was lying on the ground at the time of the blast. “TI was rolled over against the wall by. the force of the blast,” said Carrico. ‘‘My first thought was that the car had ‘dropped. After I got up and saw all the smoke and dust, I knew what had happened and started calling the men_together."’ . . A LITTLE SCARED Harris admitted being ‘‘a little scared and I wanted to get out. But I settled down and joined the others. Everyone in the group was a little scared, but all the men were swell.” He said Woodrow Evans, a fore- man, was ‘‘specially nice. He called us together and said, ‘I am no longer your boss. We have to. put our heads together and get out of here.’ The men started duf twice, flarris said, “but were forced back each time by smoke. After the second time, we moved out. fo a protected spot and bratticed oursetves in. Then we built an- other bfattice (canvas barrt- eade) inside the first one. Then we wrapped up and sat and .waited.’’ “A: few tinies we called out to each other just checking up,” Hajris said, “but mostly we just sat, thought and prayed.” Harris paused a moment,: then added: “If some of. those men didn’t pray, they should have." | When‘ rescue teams finally _|to Church EomP ig : |. Son Abducted ‘lan’s husband Carroll Lane Kirby :|some government officials. Peacaleut Ram “Fm mighty anxious ‘tb be rid of him.” commented the evange-Penhower fs were scheduled at the Ei- list. - senhower / ‘farm here. But White em. House _ Billy said the ram showed t ldo some work on his State of the |Union message, in which he will ‘outline to Congress Jan. 9 his pro- gram for the coming year. Eisenhower's evangelist was feeding him a din-| nér of oats, hay? iettuce, celery and a carrot, Graham said that when he was slow in handing over the carrot, the ram lowered his head to charge, — vhs tine” comme on the re ramonied Presidential party to Gettysburg) === Pair Witnesses Slaying of Mom Horrified Couple Sees Woman Shot to Death, FORT WORTH, Tex. ® — young mother was ‘shot to de Al chi ath |one of Eisenhower’ (in front of her home last night! made the foler feo n while two people watched { in help- bright’ sunshine. They were fol- less horror. . -- Mrs. Anne, — gunned down. John Eisenhower planned Her: assailant grabbed the little Mis today to complete the boy's hand and fied, but the boy family circle. turned-up two hours later at the | x* *« * home of an uncle. Eisenhower arranged Police were seeking the wom- conferences bene nant week oom He to remain at least through the New Year holiday, but ig ex- both 19, witnessed the pected ashingt Jeffries, a newspaper Carrier inext week return to W on — cn 4 Hurt in Accident on South Boulevard house and I was next door,” he said. “I thought they were play- Four persons, two of them from Pontiac and another from Avon about 39. Bob Jeffries and his wife te Gale shooting, | ing. Then there was this noise like a firecracker and she fell.” Wagner, Wood Marry multiple cuts and bruises and is ‘in fair eondition today. ‘Police said she struck the rear of an auto driven by Charles R. Davis, 30, of 88 Bloomfield Ter- The couple will honeyméon In race, who was stopped to make * — pro-| turn. Davis and hig vite, Ruth, The 14 survivors were PpT0-199 were treated and released. nounced in godd phygical condi- tion and-were- sent home. They), came out of the mine about 12:05 No weekend business ‘appoint-|4? a 4 st tho Rectey. “f "Ch wrchds Taviie Shidsots ito New Year Services — with -higp school students con- ducting the program. College student$ will be honored) at an open house trom 4 to 6 p.m. 2 i ! il "aie Here’s One for. the Road small truck weaved ‘through the traffic here, apparently without a driver. ; They wetched as the truck scraped against the wall of the potles lice station and shuddered to a halt, Then the ~ driver-got-out. The.driver was Jim Brennan, just 7 years old and four a.m, _sdgne 5'@ hours after thelinjuries and blast. hospi Death Stills Prolitic Pen of James W. Clapp “Mr. Letter Writer,” Pontiac’s|acquired his knowledge ‘of live- James W. Clapp, was laid to rest/stock that became his life’s work. today in Oak Hill Cemetery. In after years, Mr. Clapp’s His death Wednesday at Pontiac), wide-ranging interest corned “te General Hospital stilled the pen sports and he became an author- of a man known to letter box ity on the subject as he had 6a editors of. newspapers throughout southeastern Michigan as thetr| fancy, subject that caught his most prolific correspondent. Mr, Clapp was $2 when he died. Ne one has an accurate count of the number of letters Last Monday, he awoke from sedation at the hospital and his first words to his daughter, Mrs. Ruth Ellis; of Detroit, were “How did the Lions do ae Funeral services for His letters to The Pontiac Press alone are believed to number in the thousands and his last letter received Dec. 13 is still to be published. * * * ° hen ‘he settled in Ponfiac, Mr. Clapp lived with his wife and a son, Donald, af 25 Matthews St. Later he, moved to 154 S. Johnson Ave. His wife died four years He was widely. appreciated | editors and their readers for his wide span of knowledge, lively style and interest in politics and history. Sales of 1958 ~ Licenses Lagging} at Pontiac Branch’ Sale of 1958 license plates at the. y Ponting branch of the ‘Secret ke A conservative Republican, Mr. Clapp not only defended his party in print, but was a regular atten- dant at Oakland County and state reached the section in which the 14 men had taken shelter, Harris ‘Foundation’ for expansion of its:Said, * ipresent effort to expand teaching‘glad to of science and math at al] levels. |five hours," ‘You can bet I was. sure hear those voices after Most of that money would go for Saves His Sled Too CHICAGO W. — Alfred Jack- son, 12, was saved from drown. ing in the icy waters of a pond | by the police chief of syburban | Robbins yesterday. After resou- | ‘ing the boy, Chief. Ernest H. | Hunt plunged into the water | again and recovere” the boy’s sled—a Christmas present.. U. $ Aide’s Gems Taken | ROME UNS) —' Italian police reported today. that an -estiniat-| ed $30,000 in jewels had been | stolen from the home of U. &. ~~ e F the Office of Education rted FRIDAY’S TEMPERATURE CHART: repo Alpena 33 22 Marquette” 39 1a) The program, to be administered|a record enrollment in colleges Baltimore + be pompnee ? 2s by the Department of Health,'and universities this fall, Brownsville 8 ¢1- MUwaukee © 4). a8 Education and Welfate, would be| The office reported a prelifhi- Putiole 2k are 2B t ; patterned after the present feder-/nary total of 3,068,000 students en- _ Chicago 44 33 New York . 44 34 ally aided vocational education rolled in, 1,890 instftutions, a gain Cipveland) a i Peiiston ‘s iH program, lof 4.1 per cent over the 2,947,000, es | 2 R 1 bate ‘; 3 That department also would be listed in the fall of 1956, The total Duluth 332 Louis’ 44 85 authorized to set “up @ ‘federal/by the end of this school year is a 3 i ¥ o & Gr Rapice 49 35 -@ Bee Marie 34 4) | scholarship program, aid expan-jexpected to reach 3,460,000, the a... ~ QR Wexchs 4 35,8100 of graduate schools, help the|report said. pnmane Gy 8 — $ ar states provide more and better] The announced total is 4 per Los Angelés 68 49 testing and | counseling ot Beh icone above that-for the fall of 1951. « ne 2 ’ i . * ‘ ° > - ‘ ~ _ \ . \ “ nt . ‘ ; ia * * ry 4 Be fd \ , fod, Ambassador James D, a bach conventions, * * * A familiar figure around — the) 1956, the court house, Mr. Clapp spent a yer great deal of time in research, writing and visiting his friends, Mr. Clapp was an adopted child) and was raised in Milford. His! The office is opened family moved to a farm veer’ a.m. wat 8 end on Wixom and it was here that heltrom 9 until 1 pm. ; > a OUR NEW ADDRESS. Is 3101 West Huron St. rs Specialising in Business ‘Management _ PROFESSIONAL REPORTING, INC. Sera | I i i H | H feet high. . ven = x *« * He had driven the truck, which belonged to his uncle, 1% miles along busy streets, around five sharp corners, across @ railroad crossing and up and down three steep hills. ‘ He couldn't see over the driving wheel. He had great difficulty reaching the pedals. And he had no idea how to stop. It all happened because Jim went to his uncie’s house on an errand and missed the bus home. His uncle was out. He saw the truck standing there in climbed in. a a af After the truck hit the police station, an officer drove Jim home in a police car. Under British law no one under 8 tan be ‘prosecuted. Jim's father, however, was under no such restrictions. He spanked the boy and canceled a present of a new bicycle. CASH BUYERS ONLY F rom « | All FISHING TACKLE, | HUNTING CLOTHI NG Ka FOOTWEAR, GUNS | (fbxeluding Brownings and Colts) ‘and AMMUNITION | Open Sunday 9-1—Sale Ends Tuesdey, Dec, 31° | SCAYBAUGH’ Oakland Ave., Gor, Tot Decides to Drive WASHINQTON, England (AP)—Motorists blinked as a r egg ete “ . t - a 3 ‘ of ‘ % scene HE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1957 ~ * Clearance of Men’s Fine Clothing — Miriani Will Retain pathe in Pantiz Piacins. DPW Chief | eaths in Pontiac and Near y Areas iggins, DPW Chief | | — , WILMORE F. CHANEY Oxford, will take place at 2 p.m.jing at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Cee ewan a Pict| Wilmore Ford Chaney, 51, of/Monday at Allen's Funeral Home, |Home, Keego- Harbor. JOmmussioner wa 5. Piggins |... E. Pike St. who died from a Lak . Officiati ill be the! A. grocer, he came here from and Department of Public Works) \Lake Orion. Officiating will be the Detroit. : ___Commissioner Glenn -C,—Riehards/#ll_in_his_home MWednesday_ was Rev. Albert B Johns. T Retin eo oC say they will remain in their jobs |‘@ken to ite Chapel Memorial 2 . , ‘| Surviving are his wife, Cora G.; as long as Mayor Louis Miriani/Ce™etery / for cremation by the Masonic graveside service willitwo daughters, Mrs. Joyce Spade requires their services. Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. - (be conducted by Orion Lodge, Free of Dearborn and Mrs. Jo Anne et _| He had been employed at Gen-|and Accepted Masons, with burial'Karause of Mt. Clemens; two sons, There hed bee ation the eral- Motors Truck & Coach Div.|in Evergreen Cemetery. |Ralph E. of Waterford and Donald ‘co top city jon imt be foe| Surviving are his parents, E.B.| 4 tormér Orion Township s1- \W. at home. _ Two _— Mrs. bs after Miriani starts his full “74 Jessamine Rutherford Chaney! pervisor, he attended Michigan |~'72 illiams of White Lake gra iof Cleveland, Ohio; a daughter, Agricultural College, now MSU. | ownship and Mrs Clarice Stahle of Roya] Oak also survive. er Aour-year term Jan. 7. \Kathey of Cleveland; three broth- But Miriani said the twe offi. ers and four sisters. | He was a life member of Orion) cials will be retained indefinite |i%%s2 Lodge 46, F & A M, and a charter’ Gogpon B. ROGERSON ly. Both Piggins and Richards | imember of Orion Chapter 340, Or-; — ; receive $19,239 a year. ) HUGRE der of Eastern Star. ROCHESTER =— _ Gordon BR. . ¢ WOODEKOW HUGHES Surviving are a son,. Homer J_,Rogerson, 72,-of 1597 Adams Rd., Miriani took over as mayor aft-. Service fdr Woodrow Russell, 43, of Lake Orion; a daughter, Kath-'died unexpectedly yesterday. . er the death last September of of 262 Hughes St. will. be ‘at 2 arine Mary of.Pontiae and-a sister; | Surviving are his wife, Velma! Aibert-. Cobo; Miriani was then’pm. Tuesday from the William Mrs. Jenny Howarth of Lake Orign.'his son, Fred ‘of Farmington and elected to a full term iF. Davis Funeral Home. The Rev. la daughter, Evelyn Bensmiller of oe » * * . 'V. Luther Lewis of St. James 4JAMES*K. COOLEY |etroit. One sister, Clara Glass Piggins, 51. has.beén police com-| Missionary Baptist Church will of- sume _— oe 'of Roseville, also suryives. Sarton anne since EKA. Richards 58. ficiate with burial following in Oak sotoN TOMNSHIP Sous er | Service will be at 2 p.m: Monday has headed the DPW since 1944. Hill Cemetery. His body will be a —_ . “Coley: » OF alr at the Pixley Funeral Home, with }. ‘at the funeral home at noon Sun- hurst St., who died Friday at Avon) puriat at Roseland Park Cemetery - : day \Center -Hospital, will be held at 10 Berkely. The Rev. Gordon Lind. Fred Bailey With WMU An employe of Pontiac Motor 4-™. Monday at Dudley H. Moore .., wilt officiate. KALAMAZOO w — Fred Bailey D'V: be leaves his wife, Mae Tumert!” Home. ofticase Grave lias been appointed Western Michi- Louise Russell; four children, “oenshell will officiate. Grav ae : Thomas, Woodrow Jr., Rena Mae side service will be conducted at )) th FI h gan University’s coordinator Of and J. C. Russell. all of Hills- Novesta Cemetery, Cass City, at y €a § Sew ere 4 field service for the greater Mus- borough, S.C.; and seven brothers, p.m. Monday. , . kegon area. Bailey Presently 'S &S- Rochell, Thomas and Paul Russell.) A retired farmer, he had been a By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS sociated with the Portage school 41 of Pontiac, Wiley, of- Detroit. resident of the county for 10 years erp | . . system. Boyd of Hillsborough, Hal and! He leaves two daughters, Mrs; DENVER — Edward T. Wit Boyce Russell, -both of Greenville, Cari (Lillian) Zeuner of East De-'°0". 88. president of the Continent- : : . _ al Oil Co. from 1912 until his re- 14 KARAT GOLD 5. ¢ . tke and he ree ‘orpna) tirement in 1932, died yesterday. é or oO P owns : ¥ ( . ~ : i : He was born i ston Spa, N.Y. Matched — ROBERT W. BENNETT. ‘sisters, Mrs. Mirnie Fredericks of '® “#S born In Ballston Spa, N-¥ WEDDING RINGS Word has been received of the Titusville, la..and Mrs. Carme) MARION. Ind. W—Edward W. death of Robert William Bennett, O'Neil of Flint Camp, 65, vice president and gen- 30, of Kent City, a former Pontiac eral manager of the Chronicle resident, He died Thursday in But- JOHN L FLLIOTT Publishing Co died yestertlay. terwoth Hospital, Grand Rapids COMMERCE SOWNSHIP_. John The company publishes the after- after an illness of several weeks ' baer “ “ot oe Cian Lake noon, Marion Chronicle - and the A former employe of Fisher Body Rad “a 4 * h he ~ Frid - morning Marion Leader-Tribune. Div.. he leaves his wife, Gladys “He fix i the pore ty tor 34 Camp, who was born in East St. ’ . . lived } t nty for 3 ad . . — a daugkhter, Mrs. Carl Bartlett of .24-. and noe ~ member of Louis, I1., oe been with the com- PO ee . tine, teri” ‘ “ pany ‘since 1932 Pontiac: and a brother, Walter Brighton Lodge 247. F&AM. - — | Bennett of Pontiac Surviving are his wife, Martha, SAN-JUAN. P.R. —bouis Has- Service will be at 2 p.m. Sum and five daughters, Mrs. Jean selmans, 79, who was a conductor day from the McKinney Funeral Forsyth,” Mrs. Christina Brvan, of New Yotk’s Metropolitan Opera Home in Grant with burial there. poh of Pontiac, Mrs. Elsie Cline, orchestra from 1924-26, died yes- of Drayton Plains, Mrs. Mary Mc- terday. He was born in Paris. JAMES Y¥. CLARK \Ginley of Marquette, and Mrs. ..- : Georges-Newports ORION TOWNSHIP — Service Gloma La Plante of Houston, Tex . . Jewelry Dept. for James Y. Clark, 92, of 100 E.' Service will be at 1 p.m. Monday @XxICO tempting rw 14 WN. Sagi Scripps Rd., who died earty today at the Coats Funeral Home with = at the Bliss Convalescent Home, burial at Drayton Plains Ceme- to p rt Tw Me ilery, The Rev.-Lyal- Howisen will epo — 0 A : re . — na ! MEN’S 1 and 2 4 eee oe ; . LAREDO, Tex ~ an ‘e—Two men ; as _ he,.Mexican government is tryin + . CHARLES C. LEAMING = 3.{D* ying T : S| ITS ‘na . HOLLY —Service for Charles C, (2 dePort turned up. again yester- E POUSEP. : day, registered at a hotel in Nu- Leaming, 69, who died Thursday at 75, > ‘ New Grace Hospital, Detroit, will evo Laredo just across the bom SPORT COATS be held at 10 a.m Monday at the or They hee see of S - Bendle Funeral Home. Officiatin& ng eariier this week, Dut Mexi- . - will be the Rev, William Lankton can officials said they were in Cus and TOPCOATS of the First Presbyterian Church. tody + t * ° Burial will be in Lakeside. Ceme- Max Shi: 7 ee F tery, Holly cots eran ‘Stee and from our entire stock a Mr, Leaming had made his home “SUC! ‘Sov re walling lor ice-fi ith his brother, Charles Fushour, Justice Department to decide if (except certain price fixed near Holly they actually are naturalized-viti- fair traded items) Surviving are his wife, Lacy: one 7€MS of the United States as they son, John of East Lansing, and Claim. Mexico tmed to expel them two brothers, Hugh Leaming of °" charges, of violating immigra- : New Yor Mr. Fushour. tion laws, but U. S. immigration ° __ New York City and Mr. Fushour authorities refused them entry, @ All nationally famous brands _ Mexican officials alsyn accuse . . MRS, RUTH PARKER them of being part of a. group {i- ® Grand assortment of fine LAPEER—Service for Mrs. Ruth nancing Communist activity in f k © - Parker, 67, of 6003 Bowers Rd.,' Mexico. ; ; abrics F & - who died thursday at Waliam —H——_——____ , Zz fp Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, © Newest colors and styles . : will be held at 1:30 p.m. Sunday he - “Fresh-Cleaned” at Muir Brothers Funeral Home. Officiating will be the Rev. Frank Hemingway of the Liberty n ; | Has ® Sizes to fit all men, 35 to 50 sizes, regular, shorts, longs, portlies, extra longs. and portly shorts Our Whole Famil y Clothes. . . spotlessly done and looking as J; new as the day we bought them. “Fetch ’em [street Gospel Church. Burial will to Gresham” for the cleaning they deserve. [be in Mount Hope Cemetery, La- ~ peer A lifélong resident of Lapeer : d SHIRT [counts che spent the tat 20 sears GRESHAM CLEANERS #3 Jo" suis y Drive-In Service -- Save 10% - Cash and Carry! Lapeer, and two daughters, Mrs. from Brown Bros. were $35 to $100 Elizabeth Grentzer of Grosse He 605 Oakland Ave. Branch 5 Oakhill = FE 4-2579 and Mrs. Doris Seeley of Birming. Exclusive Wallpaper Now $41.95 to $75.00 ham - Open Monday Thru Saturday 7A’ M. to 8 P. M. ; and Paint Store, — EDGAR W. POUNDS > : , 5 SHIRTS S ] 3 ORCHARD LAKE — Edgar W., 704 West Huron Street, TOPCOATS LAUNDERED @ Cesex Pounds, 58; died early this morn- you may select your ce ee eee ing of a heart attack at his home, - - ‘were $55 to $100 6990 Greenlake Rd. | wallpaper from the largest . assortment of famous - Now $41.95 to $75.00 makers pattérns in Oakland County. ; SPORT COATS | Choose from such ~ were $29.95 to $50.00 nationally known makers Now $29.50 to $37.50 patterns as... ~ Funeral arrangements are pend-| MONDAY thru THURSDAY — CASH & CARRY Men’s or — CLEANED || PRESSED | City Wide Pick-Up & Delivery Ladies’ © TROUSERS , Q: Men’s or Ladies’ or SLACKS .. : , What ‘@ value’ for fine quality cleaning! Each garment French-Glo Finished, FREE! Bring them in early in the week 7 ~e@Birge © Varlar | we | ; © Kazenback & Wallace ; . “ . © Fisher a Imperial \ oes “Shop the Stores That Have Never | " @ Stacy Hand Prints * Compramised on Quality” | © Wall Trimz © Fine Arts : “ >} © Walltex © Sanitas This also includes the ever 51.N.SAGINAW.. —TEL-HURON Center ob popular scenics and murals. Open . Open BROWN BROS. || 704 West Huron $t. Mon. Fri.: "til 9 pam. | _ Mon. Thurs., Fri:, Sat. tio. 7 a * capete \ , FE 84311 ine o aa P| aa Joe a Ly a ee a ee ee ee ST ee ee eS ee ee eee ee eee eee ewrwTwrrrevrevrveYTY." 7 wear them cleaned, pressed, immaculate on the week- end. . ; a . JOIN OUR SILVER DOLLAR CLUB! FRENCH-GLO (00) “it sos? ; , SP VALET. while shopping ot [-— Franklin Shopping Center , ma 65684 | TEL-HURON ‘ Ana a a na an eae ee een pei bi bb bbb bbe bith ibaa 1» cng : rs 8 oy : ot a, | Some 1957 Crime News Read Like the Comics - By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—’Fifty-seven was a boom year for jokes, and the one about Sputnik trailing a sign saying “Washington Slipped Here” (or “Slept Here,” as you wished)— which I first heard from a bartender at Bleeck’s—may have historic value in the year 2,000, if there-is a year 2,000. me Be The TV comedians weren't working—so they made up gags about the TV cowboys and sing- ers, who were. Adult westerns were called that “because the plots were all over 21 years old.” Perry Como.was_so relaxed on -TV—|- Jack Carter said—that one night he acci- ‘ dentally fell awake. The Como show was alse nicknamed, somebody said, sleeps a half hour before the show,” and 20 minutes during.” “Hollywood macabre humor’—mostly un-.. printable—spread through the land. * *x« * Bing Crosby’s son Gary supposedly sang, “I want a Girl Just Like the Girl Whe Married Dear Old Dad.” . . —Commedienne Sue Carson said, “Jayne Mansfield will” 7. far—she’s halfway there already.” ° * * : a . After Carmen Basilio couldn’t dethrone Sugar Ray Robinson, | ‘Hal. Block said Carmen had gone on a diet and found Sugar| “non-flattening.” Henny Youngman took note of “18,000 chums” who had to buy their champagne at Madison Sq. Gar-| den by saying, “I don’t have to do this for a living—I was a walter at Mike Todd's party.” | * * . “A-certain governor's got Little Rocks-in his head,” said “* Elmer Reilly, and Lee Segall asked, “You hear about the Texan| who went to Europe tourist class? He only did it to save) money.” Elsa Martinelli, the Italian countess and picture, star, who learned all about baseball during the World Series, defined a home run: “When | de ball goes where de people | sit, den. dat’s good.” A sign in Detroit said: “Volkswagens, go home!” | Mrs. Macdonald Care y, | mother of six, telling how - she almost became an ac- tress, said, “Just imagine— then I would have had. six husbands instead of six chil- | dren.” WILSON | | aap ois Comedian Larry Nixon, down in Miami, spoke an appropriate line for the holiday time when | he said, “I’m getting to the age, when I pull my stomach in, somebody says, ‘Why don't you pull your stomach in?’” After the Albert Anastasia slaughter came- the barber-) shop gags such as “Shave and a Haircut, Bang, Bang!” . . A girl singer came along with a new gimmick: she had a voice . . . Time Magazine said’ “Nobody’s brow furrows like Edward R. Murrow’s” . . . Mamie Van Doren said kids get! to be 16 now before they know “damn” and “commercial” are two words. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Actor Fred Clark, now on Bway in “Romanoff and Juliet,” says, “I've been appearing on s0, many TV_ panel shows I don't recognize myself when Tm standing up.” Jack. Carson rejected a Las Vegas: cate booking, in which he? would have followed Joe E. Lewis. “It’s tough enough playing after a great act in the cafe,” said Carson, “but who can fol- | Jaw him-at the crap tables!” Tfiat’s earl, brother. _ (Copyright, 1957) VAN DOREN Tells of Red Plans Jack Handle, ‘ Lots of Nerve OTTAWA UWA Soviet writer). says Russian scientists are now LOUISVILLE, Ky. —A 60-year loti ‘ectori old service. station attendant used ors trajectories for a Sight to a jack” handle and a lot of nerve a to save his receipts from a shot- -14)-Cent Boost “Have Stool. Will Sing.” Como, for about meee others. _|sessions yesterday, Hoffa was op- fin a contract negotiated in 1955, ‘Foreigner Prints Law ./than a year to be fingerprinted. Teamsters Seek | Hoffa Heading Talks With ‘Mid - Southwest Trucking Operators CHICAGO \®— An increase in wages and other benefits totaling 42 cents an hour over the next|4aY three years is the goal of James|¢ R. Hoffa and other Teamsters Un- ion officials in current talks coy- ering trucking employes in 22 states. * * * Hoffa, president-elect of the Teamsters, is heading negotiations -with trucking operators from the); |Midwest, Southeast and South- Jan. 4 and the winner will be annouriced at the Boss’ night to the community, his jeb, church and family. Church groups, clubs and PTA's. have asked to help the Wat Junior r of merce select the area’s Man of Year, according chairman rritt. Deadline fér the honor of the most outs young man in the pres a been set for Satur- “There are plenty of young Men |g amston. : Police said a car dinner, Jan, 14. , Gandidates must be between collided headon with the the ages of 21 and 35, and have jen by Myers, 4 made contributions a in Waterford Township who have these attributes,’ Merritt said. “In ‘west. He said the negotiations di-linyiting the various organizations rectly affect about 96,000 union members, but would set a pattern * ~ Talking: ty nw between} timistic about .an. early settle- ment. He said the package pro- |posal calls for a 15-cent hourly |hike beginning Feb. 1,-and addi- tional 10-cent increases in each of the two succeeding years. The .un- ion -also- is seeking” increased health, welfare and pension Bene- par s totaling 7 cents an hour, Hoffa * * * 5 The current talks are covered Hoffa said, and which terminates lin 1961. The contract provides for reopening of negotiations on wages, health, welfare and pen- |sions, with new terms to become | effective Feb, 1. The reopener lclauses cover over-the-road driv- ‘ers, dock workers and other em ployes in the three areas. — * A union official said drivers now average about $2.27 an hour, al- though some are paid according to time and mileage formulas. Japanese Try to Ease to help the Jaycees this ‘year, we hope to have more. entries than’ ever before,” he added.’ ship is qualified to nominate a candidate and may do so by send- ing a letter to any Jaycee or to Merritt at 335 Ascot St. Radio City Music Hall Marks, 25th Birthday © NEW YORK (# — Rockefeller Center's Radio City Music Hall, which opened its doors amid de- pression predictions that it was doomed to failure, celebrated its 25th anniversary yesterday. ‘Some 162 million persons have seen the giant theater's motion pictures and spectacular stage presentations, featuring the famed Rockettes, since it opened Dec. 27, 1932. __Any individual living inthe tewn-}ft— ~«+Ht Is Our | Sincerest Wish That .the New Yearf Will Bring Health and | All... Let Us Alll Strive | Toward a Better Future Day After Day. Mitchell the WASH - @ the more £ you save Cleaners & Shirt Laundry "2267 Orchard Lake Read at Middlebelt FE &-9571 TOKYO (\# — The Justice Min- istry said today that a bill easing) fingerprinting requirements for} foreigners will be sent to the Diet | (Parliament) early next year. Passage is expected. . ee The bifi would require foreign- ers who stay in Japan for more ‘The present foreign registration law has the effect of requiring! fingerprinting within 60 days ater M. E. “Mike” Daniels a foreigner arrives. an W. Heren St. Evening Phone MI 6-973 Tke Insignia of Superior Service Sound Prolection DANIELS INSURANCE Agency Ph. FE 39-7118 Soviet launchings of two earth satellites “‘open up a new era _in the history, of human culture,” V. Dobronravov said in the monthly U.S.S.R.. Ilustrated News, pub- lished recently by the Soviet Em- bassy here. “A flight to the moon, for. in- stance, will be a direct sequel to the ‘measures connected with Jaunching artificial satellites of the earth,” the article said. “At present Soviet scientists are also engaged.in calculating trajec- gun-toting bandit ‘ast night. Albert L. " tknags had $96 in his hand when the masked gunman entered and pointed the sawed-off shotgun “right at my stomach,” Skaggs said. ~_ But Skaggs ‘‘just backed up to the’ stockroom and grabbed this jackhandle."’ * * * The. bandit fled empty handed. “I guess I bluffed him,” Skaggs said.- ; tories for the flight to Mars.”’ | * * * S. scientists who have done JONES, Shoe Heiress some me theoreti work on the sub-| Wed After His Divorce ject have ted out that such a flight would curve through space| LAS VEGAS, Nev. {#—Singer to take advantage of gravity. | Allan Jones and shoe fortune heir- Dobronravov _-also predicted | \ess. Mary Florsheim Picking were flights. around the earth of pow- | married yesterday at the First ered satellites- with human pilots. (Baptist Church, a few hours after | former actress Irene Hervey di- Paris has more night clubs than'vorced Jones for the second time: any city in the world. New York:is| Jones gave his age at 50. His| second, . | bride said she is 37. > COMMUNITY NATIONAL. BANK Pays 242% ‘a Year on SAVING CERTIFICATES * Deposit your surplus savings or invest-.. ‘ide ” EARN SME DRASTIC REDUCTIONS! GENERAL & ELECTRIC =| RANGES - REFRIGERATORS WASHERS -DRYERS. F REEZER - DEO AGTEEDS EVERYTHING MUS T GO!! Table _ mént savings at any one of our 9 con- ' venient banking offices. Community — National Bank OF PONTIAC Open Evenings *til Our Lowest Price Ever « $59” Console _— 9, Saturdays ’til 6 RCA VICTOR COLOR TV —ag5° VISIT OUR. HI-FI DEPT. (Over 20 Models to Choose From) RCA Victor, Columbia, Grundig, Majestic » $4 28” Frayer’ ¢ MU ot 589 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 4-0526 Free Parking aT ~~ Sta rts | Tharsday’ A New Exciting Mystery Novel i Ba BRS eh. Pear ee gts Ee ee Se ay BO IS Ge Ba oa é ss Ce : ‘| 2 ay : 3 t % : A ; a : : s ; wet fOr s : et S : 5 | ee ee tk a | _THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1957 wei = : a. ae , " . ' ry - ‘ > : |More Space, Less Cost | | oe OT eae jin Squared Ranch Type , 3 TTT toy rom | ‘By JOHN OB. WALLACE © + oe! = A - Axttully designed, this seven orate store pods . a saddle bag of gold dust in ‘s g wm Se : cost of '@ Jot! Why? Althost square ob. Te. eo 2° in shape, it takes full c. ~~. of its depth to give E. rr woe! living’ space on a plot . ‘ rr intended for a much 12-01%. Fo (es bye . dence. * : a Sr r may ; i on A one-story house this © ; : €. Ze . ‘| ENCLOSED GARDEN — A short picket fence cupola and” an’ have larger side-to-side + shower = a ee: encloses the front garden area just outside the master bedroom. The exterior is vertical. board reap meg se Meg weno Bong Tl ow ook f bow window in the living room. Other exterior and batten siding. . 0 a nea ¢. Prin shetves. & features of this ranch home are a copper-roofed = ~ “ | 7 j design, could fit a lot - “J BEDROOM | tS GARAGE HH ae so = are” | dala . today, this polnt -can inet: BN rr vow weedow of great consequence Se. a‘ one = buyer. It was a major pol “Fae e tg eal _ OG — _|tainly. in the objective of ee | = Ee nowned architect who created aoe SO poreh ' HWE ee HW-84 design for the Fe. PER Sant! + Ane oes - |Week Series. It is the work : : La Rudolph A. Matern, : a Beyond this point, Matern 7 = of HW-84, “another design ° £ ' ee ture was te provide a more a, a : : modest sized family -room-kitch- p cod = j Da en arrangement with ea: ) 4 cess from all parts of <— - and outdoors and yet 5 : « see “Te add 0 final touch __ SQUARED PLAN — Uniluely arranged, this planter at one end, and fireplaces in, both. the the chimney core was floor. plan includes.a. porch off the dining room stinker living room and the family room. Inserts the center of the house so and a terrace off the family room. Interior fea- give the views indicated by arfows. : : : , ‘back-to-back ou tures include a double lavatory vanity with a es ; oth family room living a : - 000, up 36 per cent; residential 11 . as a ° 10-Month Survey fcr, wn ox er ow. na Simp Wood Walls. |, vu ott, os) ptt ne cso oat Til Cement — stern ate ee ; : jheavy engineering, af $9,202,000, jrooms. Although back -.to - back,) ly wide bow window in the living “The problem of staining grout 3125 and textures will go a long Shows Bldg. Down ows ver cent. Are More Popular —2cstvepiace bas its own iy! Same SF ee ne ee , | Construction contracts for the [tinetive character. ee bay inthe ben eugene more,” says Dr-ien popularity. : first. 10 months of compared octagonal bay window Vintent Fitzgerald, research di- — DETROIT — October contracts/Sr%, ® menihe of 161 compares Wall decoration is no' longer an In the- living room, which in- master bedriem accentuates - & Stainproof rector for the tile trade group of Pa Behind Cabi 1 for future construction in Michigan non-residential at $452,646,000, up/intricate matter, according to lead-| cidentally is sunken one step be- iciean, vertical board and -\26 manufacturers who produce 90 ntry ' inets amounted to $101,002,000, or onejone per cent; residential-at $507,-/ing home decorators. | bow tho level of the rest of the per cent of the domestic wall and Delights Homemakers ‘ be Oct 1956, 611 down 17, per cent; heav house, the log-burning fireplace | Brick veneer frames the living, A new boost for file kitchen percent below ober 1,000, m 17, pe 'Y|- Superficial ornamentation on) has a raised and | floor ceramic tile, Marvin J. Brokaw, F. W. Dodge|engineering at $207,423,000, up SIX! on. is being discarded and hand-| * seat and a planter ‘room window, \countertops has just come out of 7) now has @ perm |; Cvt 1% the greatest kitchen bless. Corporation district manager, re- per cent, and total construction at, ne woods in different grains and The rear dining porch is's. jaboratory. It's a new. type enuntly, mate. eared ings—after miles of ceramic tile ported today. ‘ |$1,1§7,689,000, down seven per cent. aoeling patterns now ‘form the gcreaned Tom Boor to collins: is cement calléd a countertop grout,| proof grout that’s ideal for kitch- hemamahar’s ddlight'e ae df tn Contracts by the major construc- i sett flagstone. , : u , tion categories in October com-| Use only waterproof wood glue ipeumery decorative element of a Statistics The floor of the family room/{r sealing the joints between tiles per It’s pron nde ehgaae too, | most ingeniéus methods of utilizing pared to the like month last year for outside work, not merely wa-| a a es The square footage of HW-84 | #tTace is scored concrete, the|The material, by re-| jest cos out. —_|wasted space at the narrow end of = of the Tile Council of) “However, if white is not an kit showed non-residential at 639,588, citer-resistant | glue. _| Wood paneling has long been| ‘3 1,685, excluding poreh and chimney o and the rootscarceers ” wever, rhite is pre- ns chen. _ — Se

- Here, again, an unusual note — nations “hardwood” and “soft. | mee | $ 0 emitrol 22 Sea | C. WEEDON HOME EQUIPMENT CO. | i Si: HEATING Planter at one end and a verti: |ieaves every year.are hardwoods, || 1661 S. Telegraph Road 52-GAL. ELECTRIC MESES USCM | coer op Se oeS Rta hh Best eh fone ae aad Phone FE £2581. ° $ 95. Bf "Heres wormno Pree suntTi arate the sunken living room and, woods. , Reg uler 99° pommeceecennnenennenneenquereensens | . _ COUPON At’ S Housecleaning Time