The Wbather 1T.B. WmUmt Bums rerMui mn ' \: THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 119 NO. 105 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, PKIDAY, JUNE 9, 1961—44 PAG^IS Congratulations to Carrie ■ rvjr,- Legislators Close on 1961 Session [Delivers Note ^Requesting End to War in Laos Harriman Says Nothing About Pros^pects of Resuming Conference M8IIO BOITND — Warren A. Gooch. 18-ycai -old son of Mr. and Mrs. Orin Gooch. 368 Hillcliff Drive, Waterford Township, is congratulated by Karl Treadwell, circulation manager of The Pontiac Press, after being named winner of the 3rd annual Pontiac Press carrier scholarship to Michigan State University Oakland. GENEVA —U.S. Ambassador W. Averell Harri-man delivered to Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko today a U.S. note urging the Soviet Union to end- the fighting in Laos. • I delivered the note and w« discussed it.” President Kennedy^ roving ambassador told a reporter May Bring Solons-Back for Meeting Later in Year Press Scholarship Won by Area Teen Nelle Lassiter Goes Home after returning from an hour’s discussion. Harriman would say nothing about the prospects for success. or on getting the ktalled 11-nation Laotian conference here under way again. A Soviet spokesman said the hvo diseuHHed “difflrulllrs In the work of the conference." You couldn’t blame the Gooch family of Waterford l•®aves Hospital After Township for being especially cheerful at the dinnerj All Charges Dropped table last night. Against Her . Celebration was In order sineft 18-year-old Warren A | Gooch, a Pontiac Press carrier for five years, learned Detroit lAPi- ’When you are Order Extra Copies of Centennial Issue Don’t forget to tell your Pontiac Press carrier te save for yon those extra copies of the big. colorful Oenteanlal edition that will be published Monday. this fall under a scholarship awarded by this hews-paper. still finding it hard to believe he was the lucky carrier among 43 seniors graduating this month, all the tall teen-ager could say : 'Tm real happy. ' W. ‘ You won't want to miss it, and neither will your friends aHd tel-atives from out of town. At SO rents for the extra copies, The Press will mi^ this outstanding souvenir of Poatisc's once In a lM .years eient te anyone you wish anywhere In the I niled Mates. As a subs«-riher. you’ll gel your copy at the regular price. But undoubtedly you'll ^anJUJ|;9»^ more coptoa-fer'^^Owelfrioo.' aii4 iiils caiiJ»e''Srraiiged with youe-Tlf-ffer. Konrad Too' Optimistic BONN, Germany (API — Mayor Willy.Brandt of West Berlin accused Chancellor IJonrad Adenauer today of showing too much optimism about the Berlin and German questions after the Vienna summit meeting. th«t be wlU enter Michigan:'””""'- m i”™ G«i »i SUte 'Oniveraity Oaklandim., how ™„ y™ h*-- .fmorc thW-fwo years ago with-the Soviet Uniew, has postponed the murder of her husband. Gooch, one of three sons of Mr. and Mrs. Orin Gooch. 388 HiilcHft Drive, /walked Into the office of Earl Treadwell, dreu-latlon manager of The Press, .yesterday to learn Hint he was the recipient of the isao-s-ybar, 4-year scholarship. ‘ Warren was choSen out of the 43 fpr his general qualifications — his grades, service _giid his alf-aroumi.aUribQte'Yas a young man,’ TrPadweli said. like, a It’s wonderful, dream," she said. Mrs. Lassiter and her onetime lover, Gordon Watson, had been accused of plotting the April 1939 slaying of her husband.' Parvin '(Bill). Lassiter, a suburban Ro.val Oak car dealer. .Scheduled to graduate from Waterford ToWnship High School on June 14, Gooch hopes to put his scholarship to work toward a pos-career as an engineer, a profession his 24-year-old brother is following at General Mptors Truck A Coach Division. His father is a-plant protection officer Ihere. AWARD’S THIRD YEAR Timetable for Echo This is the third year The ^resS has awarded the scholarship to I its outstanding senior carrier, {Treadwell said. The Echo satellite can be seen in this area today at 8:44 p.m., on horizon level. It will be in the south, moving southeast. _ A delegate to the Nattonal Boy ^ fool 8 inches and '^nds, took up the after-school Job «f delivering to 130 Press roaders In the Huron Gardens area after he had substituted for other carriers.' ‘Tve enjoyed working with these | ,people," Gooch said. ‘Tt’s - rific experience. ”• Blonde Nelle Lassiter thus closed the bool^ on. a story that began With an armful of ted rosea and smiling, the glamorous Mrs. Lassiter teft Jennings Memorial Hospital Thursday for her home St IMM Beverly Road, Beverly Hills, after murder and conspiracy charges against her were dropped and an order commit-flag her to a state mental Institution was set aside. East and West expressed desire for agreement. There had been some hope Gromyko was bringing new instruc-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 61 The prdseculion. accusing them of "lust and greed,” charged they plotted the slaying in order to continue their illicit affair and lake over Lassiter’s business. FOUND INNOCENT Watson was found innocent by Wayne County Circuit Court jury Monday. He returned to California wiUt the vow ‘T’ll never come back to Detroit." defendant hut collapsed midway In the trial and a mistrial was declared In her case. A sanity commission found her ^ntsUonal. 2 Decisions Face Waterford Voters The note recalled the agreement between Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev at Vienna on the need for a cease fire. Western delegations are refusing to attend conference sessions here under the pressure of pi-o-Communist military action 7,000 miles away. Harriman went to see Gromyko at Soviet headquarters. Britain, roehairman with ' the I.EWIS B.'RUKLLK LANSING I/}*)—^MichigJn legislators foqpaUy closed out their 1961 session to^ay, but there was a strong possibility that Gov. Swainson will Call them back into special session later in the year. Five, of the so-called “moderate” Republicans in the Senate recommended a special meeting to deal with important matters left unsettled. They range ffom moves to boost spending for higher education to a move to bring Michigan under the*^ new federal program- pro- T\ I • viding aid for children I IOC I y I VlfTip jobless workers. In lasl-minute dici.xion.s the b gi.s-' lature to Delinquency Federal Prisons Chief Believes Cause Relation Does Exist I —Sef up a special six-man .S<‘n-il late committee to study plans forj |pstabli.shjng the 19th (?ongre.ssionali I District allwated to the slate a re.^ult of popiilalion gains, in .the' Waterford Township voters will receive two separate la.st decade , ballots at Monday's 7 a m. to 8 p.m, annual school elec-! ijmniakers were unable t» tion. On one, they will choose a man to fill a four-year sure-e mi a reapimrtiuhment plan, —‘“ng up the iMMNiblllly that the ,, ,, r. .ougressinkn will iie elected , that 4he electorate decide on the establishment of a /nun the>siate al large. i°f Prisons, said today he thinks school library. ■ --Kiiu-d a hiH to require a }d. The n-commend.itidn for a finl .ses,sion ertme from .Seas. John Fitzgerald. R-Gimnd Ledge, William Milllkcn, R-Traverse City; Farrell Roberts, R-Pontiac, jThomaH .Schweigert, R-PetoSkey land .Stanley Thayer, .IVAnn.Arbor merely .said "modern television parallel (to the pitchmani.” jdcal with extension of temporary I taxes On telephones and cigaretfes. jdiie to expire .lune .'10; produce an unemployment eompi'nsation bill Ithat will assure solvency of the all-ling jobless pay fund;. as.sure ade- Bennett complained that some iquale spending programs (oi« high- television programs depict law cr eflueation ■ and mental health,foreement officers - as gnuche. ipiograms and produce .ai'litm on|slupid and in fact,venal at limes, the fedeiBf AIX: and billlxiardi He said this hinders Ihe re- Al a hearing by the Senate Judiciary suheonimiltee on Juvenile delinquency. Bennelt likened television lo "the aid-fashioned street comer pitchhian who attracted and entertained his audl-rnee uilh card tricks and nksgte. while he sold them snake-oil remedies." , Thc-s«i«oiv, they Jtracls and violence while, they sell soap gn^ deodorants,” But in delivery, I THOMAS E. WIIJMIN "In conclusion, i( elected, I shall | pledge to do to the best ol my ability, to continue to support school board policies which wiUi contribute to enhancing educational | opportunities lor our students. RUELLE A DEM Ruelle is married and has three | children. He has been employed for the past five years in the en-tContinued on 1PaRF“2rTToT”Tl i plans IMnocruis Thursday su*ccss-: fully hliM-ked Kepuhli'can al-Iciiipls to override the governor’s 14 vi-nies. They Include eon-Iroverstat nieasun-s lo modify i Rule 8 ol Ihe r»-al estate code, ' banning diserliiilnation b.y briik-ers and sah-smen in real estate deals, and lo revise Ihe stale un-employment compensation law. i Gov. .Swainson, meanwhile, was _ ..... * - confronted a second time with the ThOinaS c. Wilson boys hotly-dlsputed milk price-fixing He's proud to Be Head GMC Manager Takes UF Post ertillmenl of offiix-rs and damages the morale of those already In service. There is strong evidence. Ben nett said, that ‘ exposure lo the viewing of crime, mayhem and conflict as *a means ol. entertainment has a deleterious emotional impact on youth and creates the" risk of triggering delinquent behavior ' of Industrial Qroup Big Victory Marathon produces smashing victory for Kennedy on S6.14-mlllion Housing Bill-FAGt: 31. her own defense. Circuit Judge Joseph Rashid ordered her committed to a state piental hospital buj she remained at Jennings, pending a hearing in U.S. District Court on the commitment order. Rashid set aside this order when Assistant Prosecutor George D. Kent asked that the charges against her be dropped. Kent, who conducted the tripl He said his 9-year-old brother!against Watson, said It was On the Rise Editor looks at Turkey-I PAGE 6. Standoff Tigers snap aeveland win Btreak-but oirfy stter losing first gpme of douWeheatter— PAGE 3k. i Wonfs % Play Congress tglks of vaca- ! tions—PAGE 4. 'might become a catTler. I Treadwell, in announcing Gooch's scholarship, added that all but five of the 43 carriers planned tp edh-tinue their educations In colleges lor universities. IScafleied Showers Is 5-Day Forecast I The weatherman just can’t make j up his mind when he wants rain so he forecasts |cattered idwwers occurring at t^ief iieriods through! out the next five days. elded to drop charges against Mrs. Lassiter because evidence presented at Watson’s trial would be legally inadmissible in a separate trial ol’Mrs. Lassiter. • ^ Prosecutor Samuel Olsen said, "We had a much stronger case against Watron than we did'against her.” Three Tennessee men^ arr'^ro!" ing-tlte 'sciences at Southern Michigan Prison ior the actual ri’aying. of Lassiter. They pleaded'"^ly to second degree murder. Temperatures wfll * average near the'normal high of 73 aifd normid low of 37 with only minor day to day changes during the period. Tonight’s low „will he near lil. ftetnrday’s high wlO Morning easterly win^i will become northeast to east'! at 8 to 14 mwp.h. Ikte today and tonigHt. Sixty wks the lowest tempera-ing I a.m. The recording at 2 p.m. 7^. Mennen Williams' Son Engaged to Be Married LANSING (XI —. The engagement pin Gery Willianu, son of former Gov. and 'Mrs. G. Mennen Williams and Lee Ann Monroe ol L^u^ring announced here , Gery gave his bride-to-be A dla> mond ring. The couple said they would be married next June. Both are 30. They have l^een going ti gather since thte' were ramoi in high adiooj., V The prison bureau director said • J, , surveys at two federal institutions House members, ehioHy Dem-'for .voiuy; oftendere^^ oerafs. reversed ihemselvcs agajiL-Xouth—Genter'^and the National :I!y/rsday and caHeirtjacirthe bill Training School - showed that Thomas KWilson, general man-''’“"1 the House Agriculture Com-1 about one-fouj-th of '-htv jnmal^ mittee. where it had been sent for In'lioved such programs were in ufacturing manager of General burial. They .si-ht it IrTTHS^Some‘way responsible, fqr their tors Truck and Coach; has been 80-16 vote conflict with the law.” named chairman of-the Industrial;- . — Division of the 1961 Pontiac Area-United Fund Campaign Drive’ Wilson’8 appointment was ,i nounced today by 'ihomas F. Wie-i' thorn, general chairman of thi.s year's drive - Wilson Is a memlMT of the Pontiac ('haml»er (>f X'omni*Tce, hoard of Irusli-es of the WHIIaiii Beaumont H n s p 11 a-l. Oakland C^Miiil.v Bar Association, board it the Kingsbury Big Two-Hour Parade to Launch Centennial By PETE MICHBII.ER Of inisic-s mine ; Moi’c ttiau 3,000 pefsons Will participate In Ihc gjatit S4-ho4»i In i.a|>rer t’niiniy and has j parade kicking Off tilt Gicatcr Pontiac Centennial fi worked With the I lilted Eiiiid In I ^etk from tomorrow in downtown .Rontiac, , The biggest parade in PtotiacJiislDPywtiHet^^ parU£ipaWg with more, than 200 the drive’s total amount of $70.’),-separate units in a two-277. ■ hour, mile-and-a-half fan-i In eommeiuing uiwn his »PP«'ni-i. r„,. *41,0 oi„v,4 nor, ' ment, Wilson said: "Lconsider i( fare, for the eight-day Cen-an honor to he asked to serve as! tennial observance, industrial chijimaB Af ter , m thousands of: ii "'tfnittfkrl F linn 'PfllH- ^ ' .1 Pontiac Area '^United Fund cam:i piign. and it is with pleasure ihHt;«l‘^‘’1tatoi-s are expected, to line tht*' I accept the challenge . parade route from., |he beginning: • * * * , point at Saginawand Parice streets •"I am aware of the outstanding^ , success of the division in tile past for c'oinplele tlck« InfoiTnallim ‘‘A ' T'/i'-'.-V *P nwtetsi LEAVES HOSPITAL i- iDarrying a' jMtiich of red roses, btes. j Nelle Lassiter salutes, photographers as she leaves Jennings--< Meoiorial KospHsli in JMlrpit fhursday. ,j8he was free afttA Judge Joseph C.. Rashid droppe^sMl dtarges against tier in connection with the death of Jieir hufeb/uiid Parvia (BUIT Lassher on April 6, look forward to serving our com^t mun.ty in (his ^pdeit^y” , ihe WUAier Stwlium show, The industrial Division includasi Baldwin Rubber. Gonsunif^rs Ppw-| Fisher* Body. •General Motora! A- ■ ' J Truck'& Coach, Pontiac Motor,ion Jbe'routh to Wiener'§:iadiufn Jig Efushing, Pontiac Varnish and [/Oakland. Avenue ,on the north, Universal Oil-Seal, along, with ap-| The colorful n\archKip S^inaw - 'j proximatflV 50 stnafler plants iaj Street and Oakland Avehue will ix^ . >1^ • *Continu««d on Page-jJ, Col 3t 'RUN fAAy* '-V .'ihe Pontiac and Wsterfhrd. y**- , .|t' , '‘l ,‘A y. [■rioiS IJJTIAC PRESS. FRIPAY. JUNE 9, 1961 _ Next Move /s Mr. Castro's in Tractor Trade Ready lo Move on Exchange of Prisoners DETROIT (AP)-The Tractora Jpr Frv«J«Mn Committee i* ready ,40 aend Fidel Ca*th» the 500 Irae-tora be aaka in exchange for 1,200 Juvasion priaonere a$ well aa a •men of experts to neymtlate the IPP. The next move is ui committee cabled the Cuban prime minister Thursday night that “we are prepared to move with dispatch and ship the first consignment of 100 traetpra i)ot later than two weeis from today, to be followed by additional ronaignmenti of tractora In lots inif lOO until the total of 500 are member technical committee of agricultural and tractor experts. It said that if Castro ai>|nt>ved ol the offer the team of experts would arrive in Havana next Monday. It urged Castro to reply as aoon as possible. / * If * Castro had asked that (any delegation to Cuba should' contain one fit the principal members of Smittee "prelprably Mrs. P. Roosevelt or Milton • ~ R cautioned Outro, however, thdt ‘‘we trust you are equally -prepared to move with disiMtdi •^10 release the prisoners. We re-«AlDd you of our insistence that - mm mate available to us withoqt TMher delay a complete list, of Sq 1,2m prisoners Involved thM we cah develop aatiafactory procedures lor veripdng the identity of those released. “We would recommend that the International Red Cross be asked , ^handle the details relating to release of the prisoners." WIUj send COMMimCE The committee, formed after Castro made hia trade offer May -17, said it would not lend one of its more prominent members to Havana to negotiate as Castro had asked but would tend a six- ISight Funnels q/ 4 Tornadoes Over Michigan nFrom Onr nSwb WIrw ’Fbur tornado funnels swirled over Michigan Thursday, but none of Ibem touched ground and none did any damage. PMirfe* of Lenawee and Monroe countiet were under a severe weather warning for several hours Thursday. No twisters were slghl-*'W in those areas, however. the torwads fnnel sightlagB were made at NIlea fai the far t ef the state. ,at Monte Pteasaat la Ceatral MleU^, aad at Bad Axe la the ^ ■» Area. cause they are better known in politicai spheres, would contribute to the solution of the matter.' Mrs. Roosevelt is committee honorary chairman. Dr, Eisenhower, educator and'brother of former President Dwight D. Ei-sehhowel*, is % co-chairmpn. waiter P. Reuther, als6 a co-chairman and president pf the United Auto Workers Union, said. of the promthent n^embers would go.. ID DISCUM DETi^H % The committee toW Castro it had “designated a technical committee to discuss with you or your representatives the details of our proposal related to types of agricultural tractors and aftachnMnts best suited to increase agricultural production and raise the living standarda of thb Cuban people." Named to the technical committee were Prof. Roy Bainer, head of the 'University of Califor-agricultural engineering partment; William Bishop, leader of agricultural programs for the University of TennMsee Extension Service; Duane P. Great-Urector of the UAW’s agricultural implement department; C. M. Hansen, Michigan State University assistant profes-agricultural engineering: J. B. Liljedhal, Purdue University professor of agricultural en-and. Prof. E. W. Schroeder, head of fhe Oklahoma State University agricultural engineering department. They would be acedmpanied by a Spanish language interpreter. Two Decisions Face Voters in Waterford Spark Plug Dhriskm of General Motora in Hint. He attends St. Andrewa Epiacoi^ Churdi, nerves oh the Township Recreation Board, ten member of the township's Democratic Gub and the Ukeland Optimist Gub. RseUe has bma aellve In towa- TRAFFIC JAM — Heavy rains in Lakewood, Colo., brought about this unusual traffic picture. The motorist waits tor canoeists and’ the boy in ar rsMaiu a kayak to pass. The boats wbre able to navigate over a three-block area in the Denver suburb following the downpour. , Sfafe Medical Group To Choose Two to Dedicate Facility The new $135,000 headquarters I president of ^ state asaociation; for the Michigan Association of and Wilbur V. Brotherton, mayor Osteopathic Physicians and Sur- pro tern of Farmington, geons, Inc., will be dedicated at Also present will be Mrs. Camp- Pontiac Motors Output Shows Drop in Week p.m. tomorrow in Farmington. Main speaker at the ceremonies will be Dr. Albert £. Heustis. state health commissioner. Loratete at 33100 Freedom Road opposite the oew Oraad River Expressway, the new headquarters building Is modem-Istle In denlgn with nn exterior of light colorete brirk and gints. A spacious lobby, in the middle of the building divides the low, one-story structure into two sections. The lobby is faced at both ends with large glass windows and is covered by a W-shaped roof. JOHN ALLEN ARCHITECT ,^hitect John A. Allen of Farm-in^on designed the building and interiors. Furnishings are of Dan- >asant had no less fean plajing tag overii * r?were sighted near Sbepherd were tracked traveling MHih Pontiac Motor 5ivtekm production .MM totaled 5,7W passenger carsi. down from 8,755 for the week ending .May 27. 1 clouds hovered oyer n»9*t 441& Pontii edslifrn ftelf of the nation in the wake of another out-o< aevere storms, the same weather pattern of the aeveod days. compared to 5,883 Pontiaca and 2,872 Tempests for the pre- I Him for Divorce ANGELES (AP)-Actoi^ Dan Dailey was sued for Thursday by his wife, n. She chaiged cruelty, he had inflicted bodily jWory on,her. CTmt*. Dailey asked lor an order fV^raining ttie entertainer from IkSeteiJM her. , . >flhe estimated Dailey’s annual 'IRhome as more than ^00,000 and asked for reaaonable support and ^}Aintenance pending trial. Last week's output consisted of S. PoBtlae Mater prodaeed !«.-SU ears — t7.47S Poatteca aad UAM Tempests, acoardlag to statlstim ol the AatomobUe Maa- FoT the same period.of I960, the division produced 220,357 cars, all Pontiacs. GMC Truck I* Cbach production last week stood at 839 tnicks(: down from 1,728 trucks tor the week ending May 27. Cumulative output in 1961 through Jime 3 stands St 29,065 trucks, down from 51,683 for tha compdrable period of 1960. !?Mh The Weather — Full UJS. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND ViaNITT — A few showers this morn-Jet btfo«"t"g partly cloudy today and tonighL Little tem-' 4|vatiire change- Hifh today 76. Low tonight 56. Tomor-_ruw partly clondy, scattered showers, high 7$. Winds northeast to east 8-14 miles todsy snd tonight. for School Posts bell A. Ward of Mount Gemens; president of the American Osteopathic Association Auxiliary; The building will have ctm-ference and work rooms available for all osteopathic organizations in the state. The association will move from its present location in Highland Park to the t quarters late this month. The new botldiiig is hWsled In thn crater of a 3-acre plot boand-•d by a resideatial district and the Cloverdale Etemratsry Srbool. Other special guests at the der in the city’s k>n iiring hte^any yes ervlce, Doty W ak a ttiult In 1 ptioi^of 3unties.\ ^hlic aer^nt Aer five yeut the exception of Marquette and Alcona counties. His start as a was made in 1912 after IS a practicing attorney. - He served two terms as pros-centor h q fore' eatortag the armed forces. Aa iafoatry Ben-tenaat*ia 1010, he saw #rvlce with Oea. Pershiag on the Mexi- Sees Finance Curb on Cars Slap at CM and! a: ________ Valley with a lew ’SMMMk AtiAaS. except Flacklo. Cooler temperatures arer IfiiMHirH. AMtIilnl ^^daht and NasIjMtii Nevada. South A big cOntribuHon from the mili-j tori' wiU be 0 reaC Bomarc guided mlssllt', 45 f^t long,-' I There'll be bands and drill teoi from Amw and Navy units, i nun^ of cofor ber jazz bands, oM fliw trucki, bones, --------------------- tg>y scoots and a long ligt o( otbenjover otheD auto manufacturers. Air Force captala. flylag many Doty. 60, Uvea at 160 State Ave. He calls himself a ’’fermef at t," and OTvna a ilalry farm In Roae Townahip, Shunck emphasises that this vote Is not for the establishment of a township or commnalty library, aad that H wlU not Increase taxes. Voting places tor the school election have been set as foUows: Precinct No. 1. Drayton Plains School, 3000 Sashabaw Road, Dr ay to Plains; Precinct No. 2, Doijelson School. 1200 W. Huron St.; Pre^nct. No, J.V Watmford Cetite'r School, llto Airport Road; Precinct No. 4, Waterford Village School. 4241 Steffens St.; and Precinct No. 5. Pontiac Lake School, 2515 Williams Polls Trill open at 7 a.m. and close at 8 p.m. U. S. Note Requests :nd to War in Laos (C!bntinued From Page One) tlons from Moscow when he arrived in Geneva Thursday night for the first time since Kennedy met Soviet Premier Khrushchev in Viei^ Austria. But Gromyko quickly dashed Car Production Up 48 Pet. This Week hopes he was bringing orders to change t the Ctonmuntets t DETROIT — Auto production rose 48 per cent this week from last week’s holiday low point. Ward’s Automotive Reports said. Ward’s esBmatod pradaettaa at UMN All askembly plante worked five ays except for Llncoln-Thunder-Inl at Wixom, Mich., and Mer-iiri. at Wayne, Mich. Next week FordN^ close its'St. Paul plant ir five\days. ’Truck pt^uction was estimated at 23,832 i^ts compared vrith 16,-637 last week bI Motora.” Dsaaer said to red ior the HSMc aiyal Lee Loevinger. assistant attor-ey general in charge of the antitrust divii^, has told the committee that GM's ownerah GMAC, ‘‘the largest shies fin obmpaiw in the world," glW GM i'Vil;''': '' ■. V . STILL OVER 25,000 YARDS LEFT- GuorontMil FIRST Quality Yard Goods SANRNUZaiMMii ★ GOLGRFMTFMlipfMf PerYard-* Big sslsctibn—stripes,, florals, dots, Chntspnlo prints, etc.... idMl for Drsisss, Blousts, ^irts Hoywsor, Shorts, Girls’ Drsssss, Curtains,'otc NO LIA43T—dtolori wslcomo: lJHlUJUAi?rL*gr GIFTS roi DID 3-Pc. AdititaUs Wrench Set, Beg. S2M Volas 2“ • B-Ir. Wrancli • I-Ir. WrsRdi • 10-lR. Wrsndi As pictured — nest of 3 adiustsbie wretTches with cUmp holder. 12-Orawer STACrNASTEA Ports Cabinet $4M False Metal Cftbirvct with |ra-thru oteiite drew- erVAtjhown. WOOD LEVELS 34-lneh Slae ... 6-PC. WRENcH SET Open RRd Style . . STEEL TAPE 8” I to • Feet S8c 1.99 79c %-lnch 2.9 AMPS ELECTRIC DRILL Mirro finished housing, 2000 rpms, 2.9 amps. For tough work. $1 hoids. Famons SHOKMAFT LI Amps ELECTRIC Jlfi SAW 134 J5 Falsa « Cuts 2x4^6 at 2650 strbkes par minute. Compiete with 3 bisdes. ir Fomoss IF/ SLMCTJaC BAND SAW |34|5 Falsa 11 This band saw * does streight or , curved tawing lOOh tQiiara inch tabta top, t biada. Betfar than shown. $1 holdvJn layaway. n M. Boviaair -4s4 Flter rv. \' THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. JUNE 9, 1961 TlIjREfc Ko< Report on Colbert NEW YORK (UPI) ^ Directors pi Chryater Oorp., held a “routine’ meeting here Thursday^ with no indication of any progress by non* management directors to case out L L. (Tex) Colbert as either president or board chairpian. Airlifts Flying Bands to CentenniaJ Parade lepluf Ttv OM er Duuftdl Atriel witb GUARANTEED RECEPTION l>o military airlifts-will brii« Army and 'Na^ -bands to Pontiac (or the giant Greater Pontiac Ceih tennial parade at 2:90 p.m kickoff day next Saturday. 3-6-9 sad 12 Plus Regslor Cbanaels From the Chicago area thcra'II ; be the 5th U. .S. Army Band and ' the Great Lakn Navy Band. The ae-member Navy gdwip sill n.v Into Pontiac Mnnlrlpal Airport that mornlag. The new runway h Iona enough to hend^ big BSD Navy transport plane. The 58 Army musicians will have I a tight schedule. The arrive port, at 10:30 a.m. Coming into town in buses loaned by the Board of Education, the sailors are to eat at I er groupk at 1;.30 p.m. in the staging area fpr,^e parade. Arriving in Pontiac by bus after ! an Air Force airlift to Selfridge ; Air Force Base, they'il perform in ! a Joint concert after the parade I with' the Michigan Male Clionia ! Association. . TreliUiW Osirter ob-B Navy baw ter the pa- e Navy group Tr acbadulgtl to e at Pontiac Municipal (s Temple before Joining oth-)ups at 1:.30 The Army group is to arrive at Sclfridge at 10 a.m., then bus here. Arrangements (or their lunch ant\ dinner have been made at Waldron Hotel. NOW Raducad to 19” beginning at 7:30 p.m. The soldiers > will perform first in an hour-lodg ; concert. Then they’ll quickly bus ' back to 5>elfridge to catch (he 9:30 ; p.m. airlift returning to Chicago. I TO SING After the soldiers leave the sta-; dium, 21 male choruses with about > 600 voices will combine in the On-; tenniat State Sing. Tickets Iqf the • night cover both the band and ; choral concerts. UNCONDITIONAL MONEY-BACK* GUARANTEE • 12 Ndtlsa.iwi»ck George Putnam, head of sec-' ondaiy Instrumental and vocal ! music In the public schools, arranged (or the Army band as ! chairman o( the parade band committee. The Pontiac Naval • Complotoly Electronic -nNo Movisf Parts • SapotiM •" Color and llach-Wblto o Do-lt-YoursoK Easy li^allstlon Instructioni EVERYTHING included . . . pro-wired and pre-assembled ... 70 feet of wire, (hast mounting-brKketf and standoffs ... 12 position etoe-tronic switch-beam antenna controls at set. ; Mrs. Blair Mood/ OK ! AfteK Fai/iting, Falling ' WASHINGTON un - Mrs. Blair (Ruth A. I Moody, 44, widow of a I former - U.S. Senator from Mich- > igan, was reported improving in I Georgetown Hospital t^ay after ’ being found ' unconscious in her ! apartment. 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