Tfm W»affwr us. WitUmr Pmtcai Fair, Cooler Chaace of Showen THE PONTIAC PRESS Horn# Edition VOL. 128 NO. 138 4 it. PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATURDAY. JULY 17, 19tW~82 PAGES IOC Support Ground Troops B52s Bomb Cong Position More Pictures of Mars Ready PASADENA, Calif WT—The world gets a look at the second and third pictures taken of Mars by Mariner 4, the amazing U.S. spacecraft which also found that planet’s atmosphere too thin for any form of earth life. Jet Propulsion Laboratory officials said the photographs, snapped as the 575-pound spacecraft swung past Mars Wednesday at the climax of a ^ ^ ^ month voyage, would be released to news media later today. The officials gave no hint of what the photographs showed. Picture No. 1, released Thursday night, contained the bare outlines of an earth-like desert bordered by smudges that Huge New Booster might possibly be vegetaUon. - ' , I . ^ Taken at an altitude of 19,- Could Carry Crew ^ jj giio,^ed surface markings as snuU as three MOSCOW (AP) - Soviet ac- In diameter-far sharp- counts of a powerful new rocket « *an Is possible with earth used to put a spaceship with a telescopes. 26,896-pound payload into orbit As picture No. 3 was coming roused speculation today that yesterday, laboratory scientists the Russians are testing a told a news conference that super-booster for a manned Mariner 4 had helped them demoon shot. termine that Mars’ atmosphere * * * at the surface is about as thin The new space station called as earth’s at a height of 90,000 Proton-1 was lofted yesterday, to 100,000 feet. First reports said it was the big- ★ ★ ★ gest payload ever hurled into “Men landing there certainly space. But Tass indicated that would have to wear space the boosting rocket was the key suits,” said Dr. William H. Soviet Rocket for Moon Trip? AID TO SCIENCE — Dr. Grace L. Picciolo examines a firefly under a laboratory enlarger in the Goddard Space Flight Center near Washington, D.C. More than 10,000 fireflies are being used by space agency scientists trying to develop an instrument to be sent aloft on a rocket or earthorbiting satellite to determine just how far out in space living microbes can be found. Huge Bombers Used 1st Time on Guerrillas New Demonstrations Feared as Rebellious Viet Officer Is Killed SAIGON, South Viet Nam (^)—U.S. Air Force B52 bombers flying for the first time in support of Vietnamese ground forces, dumped 500 tons of bombs today on suspected Communist positions in central Viet Nam. Between 25 and 30 of the big jets flying 2,200 miles from Guam blasted the suspected area in the Mang Yang Pass, a key part of Route 19 stretching across central Viet Nam. A major ground operation is reported under way along the route to clear out Viet Cong gnerrillas and open the road to MAN THE PADDLES-Canoeing became a front yard sport last night after a downpour hit the Pontiac area. At this corner of Wenonah and Navajo, there \ gational aids to indicate the c‘ stalwart grabbed the street a Foster's Children Testify Over Prosecution Protest factor in the experiment. The American Utan 3C rocket with a thrust 2.(5 million pounds orbited a satellite with a dummy pay-load weiring about 21,000 pounds last mmith. Pickering, laboratory director. “But when you consider the amazing complexity and variety of life forms on earth, you can’t exclude the possibility that some other kinds might have evolved on Mars.” The U.S. satellite was at- 8 MILES HIGH tached to the sewnd stage of Scientists who measured the the rocket bringing the total gradual fading of signal’s corn-weight to 32,347 pounds. The two ing through Mars’ atmosphere sections separated after six as Mariner 4 swung behind the hours. planet calculated it extends no * * * more than eight miles above the American scientists noted, surface. Earth’s blanket of air however, that the Soviet satel- is more than 20 miles deep, me had no rocket attached. They said the measurements srra »" « weight would have been about 40,000 pounds. ... ------------ LITTLE DOUBT A British space expert said in London there was little doubt that the new Soviet rocket is intended for spacecraft capable of sending men to the moon. The Carl F. Foster murder trial was adjourned late yesterday afternoon after two of Footer’s three small children were called as defense witnesses over the objections of the prosecution. ★ ★ A Richard Foster, 6, and his sister, Stephanie, 5, were allowed by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Ziem to testify in his chambers instead of the courtroom stand. The trial being heard without jury will go into its fifth day Monday. Foster’s children were among nine defense witnesses called to testify after Dr. Richard E. Olsen, pathologist at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, completed prosecution testimony. •k it it Foster is charged with the slaying of his wife, Angela, was found hanging in the basement of their house Feb. 18, 1964. REOPENED CASE The death was then ruled a suicide but police reopened the case after Foster was charged with the death of a Bloomfield Township divorcee, Mrs. Maurice Cnxdc, 20, last December. Mrs. Foster’s body was exhumed several months after the death and an autopsy was performed. Assistant Prosecutor Walter (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Yellow Cab Is Girl's Magic Chariot Illinois Bids Fond Farewell to Stevenson SPRINGFIELD, 111. (UPI) -Led by their governor, the people of Illinois paid a personal farewell to Adlai E. Stevenson today. * * k , All through the night and the day, thousands of Illinoisans fil^ past the flag-draped casket underneath the rotunda of the Illinois capitol. The procession was halted only briefly, when Gov. Otto Kemer led Stevenson’s family, friends and political associates in a short memorial “We miss him,” Kemer said. “But we are proud that to us came the honw, the rare privily, the fortunate circumstance that made a period of our own lives coincide in part with his. ♦ ★ ★ “We lived in the shadow of greatness — a greatness which scnnehow seemed to bring each of us a special feeling, a particular kind of pride, a sense of satisfaction that we lived in the world of Adlai Stevenson. “Hfe has come home and will rest from his weary tasks and (Continue on Page X, Col. 1) Though the golden carriage is not a pumpkin but a Yellow Cab, it brings as much magic into Linda Pitts’ life as the coach did for Cinderella. * * ★ Eight-year-old Linda, the granddaughter of Mrs. Elease Pitts of 102 Elm, is deaf. When she enrolled in Hie Wiliis School’s class for the acoustically handicapped last September, Linda was completely mute. Under the guidance of Mrs. Lou Davis, teacher of the special education class, within one school year, Linda learned to speak SO words. k * * “She has developed into a fantastic lip reader,” said Mrs. Davis. SUMMER LAPSE “But I was afraid if she couldn’t practice her new sdcills over the summer, much of her progress would be lost. “lie Lost Decibels,-an or-ganisatioo made up of parenta of deaf or hard-of-hearing youngsters, awarded her a six* weeks scholarship so she conid continue her stiid^ at the Baldwin School. “There was onl^W problem. Unda was eager to attend but she needed transportation. ♦ ♦ * “I called a number of social agencies and several area service clubs to bear exactly the same answer. They were sympathetic with my cause but couldn’t help me. “In desperation, I phoned the Yellow Cab Co. just to find out the cost. “I spoke with Leslie Edwards, the Pontiac manager. “After I told him about Linda and how much the additional training would mean to her, he said, ‘You’ve come to the right place. “ ‘Your transportation trou- bles are solved. We’ll see that she gets to and from school every day of the program. And there will be no charge!’ ” ★ ♦ * True to his word, a Yellow Cab drives up to Linda’s home every morning at 8:45 to whisk her away into a world every bit as exciting and thrilling as Cinderella’s ball. On the political front, the killing of a rebellious army colonel by government security forces rais^ fears of new demonstrations by South Viet Nam’s Roman Catholics. ★ ★ ★ The Defense Ministry said Col. Pham Ngoc Thao, a Roman Catholic who led at least two unsuccessful coup attempts, “was ambushed by securfty forces and seriously wounded” in a forest near Bien Hoa Friday. It said he died of his wound while being flown to Saigpn. INTENSE MANHUNT Thao had been the subject of an intensive manhunt. He was sentenced to death in absentia by a military tribunal on May 7. Reliable sources had reported earlier that Thao was arrested in a Roman Catholic monastery in the Saigon sub-orb of Thu Due. Bien Hoa is 20 miles northeast of Saigon. Most of Thao’s civilian and military followers were Catholics. These included Brig. Gen. Lam Van Phat, who is still at large. k k k Roman Catholic charges of persecution by Buddhists in the government have sparked previous upheavals. IS DISCREDITED Official Vietnamese sources, however, believed that Thao had discredited himself in the abortive coup attemiits and contend-(C!ontinued on Page 2, Col. 7) IT ALSO WENT UP - When the rains came down in torrents last night, some of it also went up. The holes in this manhole on East Wide Track began to spout briefly. giving the city a new fountain which went unappreciated during the heights of the storm. Crashes Claim Crty, Area Pounded 1 Lives in Area by Two-Inch Rainfall A Utica woman and a Lapeer man were killed in traffic accidents in Oakland County last night and early Oakland Highway Toll in ’65 85 Law Yaar YOUR CARRIAGE AWAITS — Opening the door for 8-year-old Linda Pitts of 102 Elms is Leslie Edwards, Pontipc manager of the Ydlow Cab Co. ’The cab firm made it possible for Linda to attend special classes for the acousticaUy handi-c^iped at Baldwin School Kosygin Says U.S. Can Expect Rebuffs for Viet MOSCOW (4^-Premier Alexei N. Kosygin said today each new action by the United States in Viet Nam will cause counteraction and rebuff by the Viet Cong and Communist countries. Kosygin accused the United States of creating “an extremely dangerous situation” in Viet Nam that threatens peace not only in Southeast Asia but all over flie wwld. The Soviet premier spoke after U.S. Ambassador - at -LaYge W. Avereli Harriman was reported to have ontiined American policies to Kosygin in an effort to avoid misunderstandings that mi^t lead to an accidental confrontation. In his first public speech since three hours of talks with Harriman Thursday, Kosygin reiterated Soviet support for North Viet Nam’s tmns on peace in the area. k k * They include an American withdrawal and local settlement. Kosygin spoke at Riga. this morning. Dead are Lynda C. Lowe, 22, of 8645 Lo-zen, and Reuben 0. Hurl-burt, 36, of 443 S. Main. Both were passengers. Mrs. Lowe was with her husband Ted, 23, when their car was struck by one driven by Arnold Leddy, 39, of 283 St. Clair, Romeo, at a Troy intersection. ’The 11:40 p.m. accident occurred at John R and Big Beaver. Both Lowe and Leddy are under observation at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. ★ ★ ★ Hurlburt was dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital after the car in which he was riding struck a large draft horse on Lapeer Road near Davison Lake Road, Oxford Township, at 1:40 a.m. RIDER SHOUTS The driver, Alford C. Kalar, 62, of 61 Mill, Lapeer, told sheriff’s deputies that he had his headlights on low beam and didn’t see the horse in the road until one of his passengers An early evening thunderstorm dumped two inches of rain on the Pontiac area last night, flooding streets and basements, knocking down utility lines and trees and darkening homes briefly. Sunny weather will return to the area tomor- r 0 w, however, bringing _________ with it a high of 76 to 82. Streets were flooded and wa- Vote No in Colorado Denver aro-lhe Colorado ed over «Kl lawn. .b« catch basins became plugged. on presidential succession and Sections of Pontiac’s west disability. The proposal was side were nooded and resi- defeated on a 19-13 vote, dents experienced similar conditions to those of last month when 1.5 inches of rain fell on Sunday, June 10. Some basements were flooded again. Lightning struck trees and a house in the Waterford Township area, but with only slight damage. The two-inch rainfall last night, equalled the total for the month last year in July. Prior to last night’s storm, a total of 1.2 inches was recorded for this month. Tonight wfll be fair and cool, low M to 10. Winds pre west to northwest, 5 to 10 miles per hour. Sixty-three was the low mercury reading preceding 8 a.m. today. 'Ihe temperature had reached 79 by 2 p.m. The hm^, owned by Virginia King, 921 E. Davison Lake, was killed. Kalar and his other passenger, Luther Mason, 45, of 430 Mitchell Lake, Attica Township, are in satisfactory condition at Lapeer County General Hospital with laceratiens and fractures. U.S. Treasurar V/all PHILADELPHIA (» - U. S. Treasurer Mrs. Kathryn O’Hay Gtanahan is reported to be “doing very nicely” at bar borne in recuperating from surgery for the removal of a blood ^ from the surface of her brain. In Toda/s Press Lakes Crash Charge Cederville skipper was at fault — PAGE 5. Early Action Work to begin on auto claim setiq) — PAGE U. Nab Escapee Canadian police recapture scandal figure — PAGE 10. Astrelegy ........ M Bridge ............II Ckarck Hews....U->13 Croeswwd Pexsle... 3 Comics .....U EditoralB ......... 4 Heme Sdetion .... n4l Markets.............M ......31 ....3I4B ...... II TV R Radio Piegms a Wlsoa, Eari.........m TWO THE PONTIAC T&KS8. SATUBDAY, JULY 17, lWi5 'Bama Town Still Uneasy After Outbreak, Klan Rally GREENSBORO, Ala. (AP) -An uneaiy peace has m over this Kiral community after a Ku KIuz Klan raUy that followed an outiuieak til racial violence which sent 17 Negroes to a City and county police, bade-stopped by a reinforced squad of Not-trained state troqiers, Itept fearful that a renewal k dvil rights demoostra-tions might touch off another clash today, ★ ★ >★ FBI agents and Justice Department attorneys also maintained close surveillance on the west Alabama dty of 3,000 which until Friday had reacted peacefully to the dvil rights campaign. Greensboro has been one of the targets in the fight for racial equality led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Illinois Bids Fond Farewell to Stevenson (Continued From Page One) awesome burdens. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois has returned." nor ei nUnois, twice a candi-date'for die presidency, his natiOB’s spokesman in the United Nations and an elo- worM in tte canse of peace, rested on the same wooden table whidi IN years ago bore the body of Abraham Lincoin Bndemeath the Illinois capi-toldome. Since be died on a London street Wednesday of a heart attack, the nation and the world had paid tribute to the man from Illinois. Now it was the turn of Stevenson’s fdlow lUi-noisians and Mid-westerners. Or ★ W An estimated 2,500 persons jammed the rotunda for the service. They included Stevenson’s three sons, congressmen, governors, state legldators and public offidals, and consula from foreign countries, many of them in native dress. The University of Illinois choir sang from an otherwise deserted seomd floor balcony ove^ loddng the casket. The choir sang “Illinois,’’ “These Things ShaU Be A Loftier Ufe" and “America the Beautiful” ★ ★ ★ Stevenson’s body will rest underneath the capitol dome until 11 a.m. tomorrow, when it will be taken to his bojdiood home (d Bloomington, 111. Burial will be at Bloomington Monday. The violence erupted when a small force of city and state police and sheriff’s deputies sought to break up a gathering of about 7S young N^ro pickets who bad refused to leave the grounds of the Hale County courdNuse. * Officers swinging nightsticks began clubbing the Negroes to drive them back. A small number of white bystanders waded into the crowd, attacldng the demonstrators with clubs, rubber hoses and fists. One man swung a hammer. ★ ★ ★ Hours later, several hundred white men and women gathered in a high school stadium heard Grand Ih’agon Robert Creel of the United Klans ol America appeal for restraint. Creel, who recently gave up his job as a machinist in a Bir-min^am foundry to devote full time to Klan activities, told the crowd they must ‘act like white men.’’ STAND UP “White men have to stand up for white men,’’ he shouted. Imperial Wizard Robert M. Shelton of Tuscaloosa, another speaker, also made a brief reference to the racial clash. He called it an “example of LBJ’s Great Society.” ★ ★ ★ Still another speaker, Klan attorney Matt Murphy Jr. of Birmin^m, blamed the world’s troubles on what he called the .Jtewish bankers’ empire. He advocated bombing attacks on the Soviet Union, Red China and Cuba. Seventeen Negroes were treated at Good Samaritan Hospital in Selma, 50 miles to the southeast, following the clubbing episode. ★ ★ ★ The diairman of the Hale County Hospital Board at Greensbtnro, Hamner Cobbs, said that h^ital was prepared to treat the injured but none of the Negroes sought help here. Detroiter Is Injured in RoseTwp. Crash A Detroit woman is in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital after her car left a road in Rose Township and hit a tree yesterday. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Dorothy M. Shattock, M, suffered an injury to her right hip in the 4:40 p.m. accident on Hickory Ridge just south of Perch Lake Road. ★ ★ * She told sheriff’s deputies that she was forced off the road by an unidentified farm truck. ATHENS DEMONSTRATION - Angry youths taunt police in Athens, Greece, yesterday, in protest to the ousting of Premier George Papandreou. King Constantine re- New Premier on Job moved Papandreou Thursday. The new premier, George Athanasiadis Novas, blamed leftists-for the disorder in which 100 persons were Injured. Blames Leftists in Greek Riots The Weather FuU U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Variable doudiness and slightly eoolo- today with local morning fog and a chance of scattered showers and thundershowers south this afternoon, high 74 to N. Fair and cooler toni^t with local morning fog, low 54 to N. Partly sunny Sunday, high 71 to N. West to northwest winds 5 to 10 mUes per hour. Monday outlook: cloudy and slightiy warmer with thundershowers. LsiDHt tamparatur* * pracadlng I t.m.: «1 at 4 am. At I a.m.: Wind Vatocity S m«.h. DIraetlan: Watt Sun lats SatiH«y •» P-'"- Maan Tamparatura . Lowaat tamparatura ..................« TMt Data la ti Yaan Prtdar^ Tamparatari Chart 7f M Jadcionvllla W n tt n KanMa City n 47 n M Let Angalat 79 M 4S SI Miami Beach M 79 ________________ 73 54 New Orleans Traverse C. n S4 New Yerk Albuquerque 97 70 Phlladalphia Atlanta tt 43 Phaanix 1 I JO Washington 90 70 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are expected in most of the northeast quarter of the nation tonight and in tea Great Basin area and part of the central Plains. It will be cooler in the oarth-ceatral area and warmer in the soutb-ceotral area. I, Greece (AP)—Premier George Athanasiadis Novas charged today that leftists had instigated Friday night’s antigovemment rioting here. He warned that his new regime will not tolerate violence. Athanasiadis Novas summoned his 15-member Cabinet to discuss the crisis and try strengthen his controversial government with more Cabinet appointments. ★ ★ ★ The Gredt capital appeared quiet this morning after the violent demonstrations in support of ousted Premier George Papandreou. More than a kcore of demonstrators were arrested and 110 persons — half of them police — were reported injured in spwad-ic outbursts during the night. Other antigovernment demon-strattons, involving thousands, were staged Friday in SalonOca and elsewhere. EXTRA PATROLS Extra police patrols were on duty around Athens to pard against further demonstrations. Athanasiadis Novas said he would have the dememstrations investigated because he had reports that Center Union party deputies were involved. The government party is a broad grouping that include elements ranging from the left to right. ★ ★ ★ The rioting broke out shortly after King Constantine had sworn in Novas’ new Center Union government and departed by More Mariner Photos to Be Ready Today (Continued From Page One) also indicated Mars’ atmosphere is (me to two per cent as dense as earth’s. Earlier estimates had ranged as high as II per cent. This finding will be valuable to men now wondering whether to use parachutes or retrorockets in braking the descent of instrumented capsules they want to land on Mars in 1171s. The study of the radio signals, known to react differently to various kinds of molecules in an atmosirfiere, showed no oxygen on Mars. This agreed with tele-sci^ic studies which indicate the presence of nitrogen, carbon dioxide, iron and a trace of water. WWW (Calculations of Mariner 4’s path made it likely that the first picture was of a desert area called Phlegra, north of the Martian equator. Tbe second and third pictures along this north-to-south track would fall between two deserts called Elysium and Amazonis. Later frames in the 25-minute camera sweep would cover a broad dark area, Mare Cim-merium, and anotho- desert, Phaethontis, astronomers said. ★ w * There was no hint as to when the later pictures being radioed across 134 million miles at a rate of one every 10 hours would be jreleased. plane for his (Corfu Island summer palace. The 25-year-old monarch apparently had thought that Greece’s worst crisis since the Communist civil war of 1947-1949 was past. Twenty-four hours earlier, he had fired 77-year-old Papandreou in a dispute over the premier’s proposed purge of politically active officers in the army. FAST WORK Athanasiadis Novas, 72, managed to put together a 15-man Cabinet in one day. It included six ministers who had served under Papandreou, who like Athanasiadis Novas is a member of the (Center Union party. Three more party members were expected to announce today that they would join the new government. Under the constitution, the new government must reconvene Parliament by Aug. 1 to seek a vote of confidence. The Center Union party has 170 seats in the 300-member Parliament, but a party split conceivably could defeat the confidence vote and force new elections. Army, Draftee Part Company 'Fasting' Soldier Termed Unsuitable FORT MONMOUTH. N.J. (UPI)-Pvt. David Ovall, who staged a 17-day hunger strike to get out of the Army as a conscientious objector, was a civilian today after being di>-charged as unstable for military service. An Army spokesman said the 23-year-old draftee from Los Angeles was released because of a “defective attitude” toward military service. Ovall left the -post here yesterday with his father, Vincent, who had been visiting him for several days. His commanding officer last Monday recommended a discharge on grounds of unsuitability. The spideesman said an Army board of officers was appointed to hear the case and Ovall was given legal counsel. The private, however, waived board action and accepted the discharge. Ovall began fasting June 20 after the Army turned down his request for discharge as a conscientious objector. The fast ended July 7 when he was taken to Patterson Army Hospital and force-fed. The soldier claimed to have lost 42 pounds during the hunger strike, but Army officials said he lost only six or seven pounds. During his fast, Ovall said, “I am prepared to die !<»• my cause. I don’t believe in military service.” The tall, slender private was drafted just one month before he was .to enter Los Angeles City College as an art nujor. The Army said it refused Ovall’s discharge request because “he did not meet the criteria as a conscientious objector.” Ovall had served 13 months of a two-year hitch before going on the hunger strike. BIRMINGHAM - Dr. M s x-well M. Maltz, a plastic sui^ geon, will speak at the Birmingham Conimunity House July N at 8 p.m. on(,“Tbe S u c c s-s s Mechanism,^ a subject discussed at loigth in his bestseller book, “Psycho-Cybernetics.” Dr. Maltz’ talk U sponsored by the Unity Center. There is no admission charge but an offering may be made to the Center. Dr. Maltz has made nnmer-oar experiments dealing with regrowth of injured tisine. Throogh these, he has discovered psychological effects from plastie surgery. The patient acquires a new “self-image” when scars or deformities are removed, he has stated. He has practiced in Eiq^, France, Germany, Italy and Latin America. Dr. Maltz has also given lectures at the University of Amsterdam, the Utai-versity of Paris, and the University of Rome. ★ ★ w In addition, he has served as professor of plastic suurgery at both the University of Nicara-ga and the University of El Salvador. He is the author til several books and plays, including “Adventures in Staying Young,” “Dr. Pygmalion” and “The MOSCOW MEETING-U.S. Ambassador at I^ge W. Averell Harriman (left) met today in Moscow with Soviet Minister of Agriculture Vladimir V. Matskevich (right) Farm Problems Aired AV PtetMax while waiting further talks with Premier Kosygin. Looking on is Foy. Kohler, U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union. Harriman, Red Aide Talk MOSCOW (UPI) - Presidential envoy W. Averell Harriman, in another move to shore up U.S.-Russian relations, discussed agriculture for tiiree hours today with Soviet Agriculture Minister V. V. Matskevich. ★ ★ w Western observers said Harri-man’s meeting today followed his three-hour session with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin Thursday was a good omen for reopening of a Soviet-American dialogue to improve relations. Soviet-American disenssions of mutual problems including disarmament have bemi stagnant for many months because of the Viet Nam crisis. It became apparent yesterday that Harriman’s mis^n here was not so much to try to end the Viet Nam crisis as to try to restore the U.S.-Soviet earing of tensions that existed before Viet Nam. ♦ * ♦ Harriman said he bad a “hng and cordial talk” with Matskevich and received a briefing on Soviet fanning developments. OLD PROPHECY Harriman said be hoped the uld fulfill a pro- phecy he once made in a book — that the U.S.S.R. would have two good harvests out of every five. Matskevich assured Harriman this was possible. The meeting in Matskevkdi’s office included a lunchedn during which the two recalled their first meeting in 1958 when Matskeviid) addressed a conference of American state governors in Chicago. ★ ★ ★ Their second meeting oc-. curred in 1959 when Harriman toured Soviet farmlands. Ambassador Foy D. Kohler accompanied Harriman today. Report French Force Yank Plane to Land PARIS (AP) - The French news agency reported today that French fighter planes chased down an American military plane which it said flew over an attknic plant. It said tiie U.S. plane was caught and “invited to return to its base in Germany.” FreiNdi authorities said they have laumdied an investigation. Rocky to Run Again Despite 'Rumblings' NEW YORK (Jfi-Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York says be doubts that anyone can talk him out running for a third term in 1986. He left open his ambition kr the GOP inesidential nomination. At a nqws conference Friday, Rockefeller said without qualification that he is running again. He had said May 4 that he had “every intention” of nmning again, but qualified this at the time, telling reporters: “If I make a fiat statement, then you fellows are going to bold me to it.” * w ★ Rockefeller’s announcement Friday came amid rumblings of discontent among state Republicans. The governor, just back from vacation at bis Venezuelan ranch, said be is not giving any time or thought on whether to seek the ]»«^iential nomination again in 1968. He said it would be “meaningless” to discuss tt, since “we are so far away from 1968.” ★ ★ ★ Rockefeller insisted there was no split between him and Sen. Jacob K. Javlts, around wiiom Rockefello- dissidents appev to have ralliad. Birmingham Area News Noted Plastic Surgeon in Unity Center Speech B52s Used to Hit Cong for 1st Time (Ckmtinued From Page One) ed that little Catholic reaction to his death was likely. Thao helped lead an attempted coup against fiwmer armed forces commander Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khaiih last Sept. U. This attempt failed, as did another on Feb. 19, largely through the intervention of Brig. Gen. Nguyen Cao Ky, the current premier. Ky has had close relations with Buddhist leaders and is not popular with Catholics. ★ ★ Sr The colonel had been in hiding since the Feb. 19 attempt, in which he actually held Saigon for one day. ASKED SURRENDER At first, the government asked all participants in the February coup to surrender. Those who did surrender received generally light .sentences from a tribunal. But Thao and Phat held out and received death sentences. The 43-yesr-old colonel joined the Communist-led Viet Minh during the guerrilla war against French rule of Indochina. At one time, he had served as commander of the Viet Minh’s 181st Regiment and later as chief of Viet Minh intelligence. ★ ★ ★ After the war, he went to work for the government of Ngo Dinh Diem, a Roman Catholic assassinated in a military coup of January 1963. Thao saved as chief of the critical delta province of Kien Hoa, and subsequently attended the U.S.'Command and Staff School. Vietnamese authorities reported that a hand grenade was thrown yesterday in fr(»t of the quarters of a U.S. Special Forces advisor in Phan Thiet, about 100 miles east of Saigon. Tlie Vietnamese officials blamed the incident on a Viet Q>ng terrorist and said he eluded capture. Pneumonia Blamed in Nigerian's Death ANN ARBOR (AP)-An unusual form of pneumonia was blamed Friday for the death of a 26-year-old Nigerian udio received a kidney transplant from his mother five monttis ago. Abraham. Adedire, a graduate student at Mi(diigan State University, died Tuesday. The cause of death had not been released, pending results of an aut(g>sy. Mrs. Asabi Adedire flew here fnnn home in Ife, Nigeria, last February to donate a kidw^'to her son in a five-hour operathm at the Univmity of Michigan Hospital. Magic Power of Self-Image Psychology.” Substitute teachers mre being sought by the school district, according to Kenneth Nagley, director of personnel for.. the Birmingham Public Schools. Preference is given to degree holders but applications will be accepted from persons with a mipltnum (4 60 semester hours of college work. Interested parties are asked to report at the personnel office, Chester at Martin. Floo(js Ravage South Korea Prompt U.S. Action Saves Many Persons _________ Korea (UPI) - Fast action by American soldiers and helicopter crews was credited today with saving scores of lives in the worst'floods to hit South Korea in 70 years. The government announced today that 74 persims have been killed and 94 injured by the rampaging waters. An addition-al43persons were reported missing. The casualties included South Korean soldiers. The floods were triggered by torrential rains that broke sent the country’s five biggest rivers cascading over their banks. Only a few days ago, the South Korean Army was hauling water to help the country’s farmers save their rice crop. A government flood committee estimated that 142,000 per-' sons lost their homes in various parts of the nhtion as the rains continued to fall throughout the republic. ★ ★ w Comparative low casualties were attributed to speedy American rescue operations. RAGING WATERS Eighth U.S. Army headquarters reported an estoated 2,800 persons plucked out of the path of the raging waters by helicopters alone. Hie 2nd Infantry Division set up housing and prepared food for some 2,500 refugees. Other units airlifted food, blankets and medicine to the villages of Tosong-Nl and Yonchon, hard hit by the floods. Authorities estimated t h e floods swept through 25,000 homfs throughout the country, cre$ting 70,000 refugees in the central provinces of Kyunggido and Kanfpvondo alone. Nearly 80,000 residents of the capital were forced to flee their homes yesterday when the swollen Han River hit the danger mark. The river receded somewhat this morning. The floods blocked roads and highways and disrupted the nation’s five major railroads, interfering with rescue efforts. Hear Foster's Children in Murder Trial (Continued From Page One) Schmier objected to the children as witnesses, stating they should be spared such a traumatic experience. ♦ ★ ★ Among other witnesses yesterday was Foster’s mother of 286 S. East Boulevard, who described her daughter-in-law as a nervous person on questioning by the defense. HEAVY DRINKER Testifying in cross-examination by the prosecution, fdrs. Foster said that she sign^ a commitment order to have her son, Carl, placed in St. (Hair Ho^ital due to his heavy drinking after the death of Angela. He was there one day, she said, w * * Another driense witness, Foster’s aunt, Mrs. John K. Featb-erstone testified Angda Foster told her: “If you are goiyg to commit suicide, hanging is the only way because in a few moments you are dead.” a * Mrs. Featherstone of 817 Orlando also testified Mrs. Foster had attempted to take her life in 1962 by turning on gas jets on her Utdien stove.. THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. JULY 17. 1965 THREE $1.4-Million Contract Awarded for JFK Site • WA3HINGTQN «»-A |1,408.-3S0 contract has been awarded for construction of a permanent gravt lor President John F. Kennedy at Arlington National Cemetery The office of the chief of Army ; Engineen «dd Friday the project is «pected to take 14 months. During this period spe(^ proviricns will be made to permit the stream of visitors to the grave to continue uninterrupted. This We Believe . No Business can always truthfully boast of the best service, the best price, or the best product. People must like to . do busiiiess with you, if you expect to win and keep their conHdence. If you fail to show friendly interest you can be sure a competitor can do it. C. Byron Gilbert, Director 2>. €. Pu, FE 4-1211 FUNERAL HOME 151 Orchard Lake Ave. ACRdK^ 1 WolflKwnd S The U« is a large -— t Equine jade U Submarine deep near 13 Golf score 14 Athena 15 DUl 16 Narrow inlet 17—fish 18 Discolored 20 Place for a horse 21 Food fish 22 Golfer’s mound 23 Descries 26 Prophetess 30 Poetic contraction 31 Play on words 32 Rodent 33 Conger 34 Worthless table bit 35 Lifetime 36 Grapple 39 Tapioca-like foodstuff 41 Also 42 Snare 43 Tossed 46 Cougar 50 Construct 51 SonofHaran(Bib.) 52 Cotton fabric 53 Lake — perch 54 Malt brew 55 Love god 56 Units of weight 57 Footlike part 58 Demolish DOWN 1 Genus of freshwater 2 Church fast season 3 Range 4 Announcement 5 Felt troubled 6 Biting ANIMAL LIFE r r 4 3 r r I" r- TT TT IS 11 14 IS 13 L 17 It w sr sr IT W 30 ■ ■ 3S 33 1 ■34 i 35" 5T 37 41 44 46 4T W nr do 51 3a 53 54 s3 37 33 -R *S2riMirtik Mraday Hours 9 AM. to 10 P.M. Special Buys for Saturday and Monday Shoppors « SIMMS Specials for Saturday and Monday-Only at Simms 7 Beverage 8 Subjugate 9 Canadian ixovince (ab.) 10 Genuine 11 Nobleman 19 Numbers (ab.) 20 Observe 22 Camper’s canvas shelter 23 Wwry (coU.) 24 Wharf 25 Small island ducks 26 Confident 27 Pertaining to an epoch 28 — hen 29 Pace 31 Horseback game 37 Cubic meters. 38 Pull along after 39 Transgression 40 Moose appurtenance 42 Fence openings 43 Allowance for waste 44 Demigod 45 Shower 46 ----cat 47 (Mympian goddess 48 Son of Seth (Bib ) 49 Flower 51 Race course circuit Answer to Previous Puzzle mMTEM ^ Pride of Clawson, Pontiac, and Rochester, proudly present last month’s top men. On the left Top Man Jerry Frick, Pontiac. On the right Top Office Ken Taylor, Clawson. JERRY “ " KEN YOUNG MEN ON THE MOVE KIRBY ASSOCIATES 2617 DIXIE HWY, * * YOU GET MORE! Earnings on Your Savings Account 8iivinfc« hy ihr lOlh of ihr Month r«rn from ihr li«t! Com|K»iinded quaHerly: Open Monday thru Friday until 4 p.nu-Saturday *til Noon ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ W. HURON t ★ ★ ★ 75 PONTIAC 338-7127 Wants Birth Control Plan to Be Halted CENTREVILLE Ml - A St. Joseph County birth control program—which includes sterilization at public expense — is ‘clearly illegal and a shocking nisuse of public authority,” Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley said Friday. Kelley has asked County Prosecutor William L. McManus to halt implementation of the program there and to send full details and a justification of the plan. If any attempt is made to implement the plan, said the attorney general, he would take “necessary legal steps to halt it.” McManus said: "I checked the statutes of the. state, the laws of the board of supervisors and the county welfare and health department laws. I found the county had ample general authority to offer this as a voluntary service.” FIRST IN STATE The St. Joseph County plan, which would be the first public program in the state to authorize sterilization, goes beyond recent legislative bills designed to provide inforfilaton and referral on family planning services for welfare recipients and es-tabUshing planning clinics for both married and unmarried mothers. The bills must have the approval of Gov. George Romney before they can take effect. ■I ami color. SS.O< Mrngisi*reJJetmUr»dimmriemm JIWIllAt J M.odMri[lO MIRACU MH.I 2303 $. Tolorapli U. K 2-a39) TONTIAC ZIIIMINOHAM 16W.Horo«Sf. U3 N. WooAaoid K24>394 Ml A-4293 Plush Tiger Simms Price Join the crov^d ond put a stuffed tiger your cor. Soft, lifelike col-down position, decorated eyes, one for the little one to play with —Main Floor Men's Dungarees Jrrt. of $2.98 179 8x11-Ft. Rugs First quality cut pile viscose tweeds with thick foam bocking for softness. Several decorator colors I to choose from. -Botomont | Heavy llW-oz. Dungarees for work with zipper fly and belt loops. Sizes 28 to 42. 4-Ft:-Stynifgani Surf Board $3.95 Value For lots of fun on the water. Supports over 200 lbs. —Main Floor Single and Dual Sealed Beam Headlamps c Simms Price 87‘ Famous brand headlamps for , 12-vol( dual systems or 6 and I 12-volt single systems. Limit 2 bulbs. -2nd Floor Drop Cloth 15’ Simms ^ Price ■ ** Protect your carpeting ond furniture while pointing. Large, heavy plastic dropcloth is long losting and reuseable. L;m»3. -2nd Flo - S” Stainless Steel Covend Fiypan $7.95 Valum 049 Heavy 3-ply stainless steel frypwi w Bokelito handle and knob on tho eow ne for a gilt loo. -2nd Flo