I gQB __ r SI ' ’ +LZi>% 7 ;'n ±L $ J: ^jnj^^SSq The Weather / v fp» ipwww? ipif«w y»wwM«;. Chance of rain mixed with snow. ponti^M .pme . Edition * VOL. 119 NO. 244 .jPONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1961 -26 PAGES .^ INTIRNATIONAL Some Views of the News Sam Rayburn Buried Today Thousands to Be Present Rockefeller, Wife Parted for Divorce Escaped.. .but Not HimselfXfinnody, Ik6f {Truman, LBJ NEW YORK and Northern coach Ed Heikklnen have a friendly chat at the, Conclusion oflast night's second annual intracity football game at Wiener Stadium. Deilerba's post-game feeling were mote pleasant than Heikkinen’s since the PCH gridders defeated PNH for the second time. The score was 2742. 11 Years As Manager Over Willman Bids City Mail Goodby property settlement and Mrs. Rockefeller will continue to have New York apartment at 810 Fifth Avenue. Gov. Rockefeller will reside at the apartment of his brother, Laurence S. Rockefeller." Police said Thalen was mistaken for a coyote by bis brother-in-law, Ronald Pick), 32, of Menominee, as the two were hunting Thursday about 30 miles north of Menominee. Barve was fatally shot late Friday while hunting in Mattson Township, Branch County. State police said Thomas Duckworthy, 32, of Battle Creek told them he fired at a deer and Barve somehow got into the line of fire. PCH Defeats PNH to End Prep Season The Oakland County high school football season cnded^Slust night with only one game, that being the crosstown rivalry between Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern. In an exciting game, PCH scored a 27-12 victory over the Huskies. It was 1442 at halftime. City Manager Walter K. Willman put tm . his overcoat and walked quietly -from his office yesterday. R was like, any other Friday except,it was his last day at CUy Han* ;; : ■ ;£' , ■- Toddy. Pontiac’s city manager for the past 11 years begins his terminal leave. Assiatant City Manager Robert A. Stierer will assume full managerial duties Monday. . § I***?- “ Bee. St. -The next stop for be Miama Beach. He and Stierer attend .the i In title with the passing of Will WiUman plans to arrive for a Nov. 25 board meeting. The tafiow-ing day both men WUJ participate in (he. same session bat on opposite sides'of the-table. by Willman on the topic of ethics tu manlrtpal “ Acting in his capacity as imme- 1 Cornwell will be at East Lansing for the Michigan State- ciation, Willman also wit be chairman of the nominating committee to fjelect candidates for 1962 offi- The association will honor Wili-tan, one of its sgniar i during the annual banquet Nov.29 (Continued on Page 2, CM. 7) Members of .the .Press sports «t the Mlchlgan-Iowa he brenght sports Sports editor Bruno Kearns in in Minneapolis fur today’s battle he- Sunday’s big pro game between the Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings. The hunting scene in Michigan Is being coveted by Outdoor Editor Don Vogel See today’s sports 4*49 for aB the details, The terse announcement of the separation and divorce plans was issued from the Rockefeller family. offices in Rockefeller . Plaza and read: i announced today that Governor and Mrs. Nelson Rockefeller have arrived at agreement of legal separation. "It is anticipated that the terms of the agreement will be incorporated into a subsequent decree of divorce. Split Could Affect Political Career, Page 5 to Join Throng Bodly Is Moved From Library to Church for Simple Funeral Rife ‘COULDN’T STAND IT* — Capt Julian Harvey, skipper of the ill-fated charter boat Bluebelle which sank Suftday near the Bahamas, killed himself Friday in a Miami motel room. A suicide note said he "couldn’t stand it any longer." He is shown when be was an Air Force pilot flying jets in Korea in 1953. Terry Jo Gains Strength After Ordeal on tiferaft The crowd cleared away, however, and It was not necessary to extend the viewing to noon, as bad been contemplated. President Kennedy, ex-Presl-dents Truman and Eisenhower and many as 150 congressmen'and U.S. senators will be prerant for the final rites in the First Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m. (Pontiac time). Rayburn, 79, died at 7:20 t.m. Thursday of cancer. He had been a member of the House of Representatives 48 years and speaker more than 16 years — longer than any other man. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — An ll-year-old girl, orphaned In a shipwreck she barely survived, was off a hospital’s "critical” list today and apparently gaining strength that may enable her to tell what happened on the ill-fated ketch Bluebelle. A lot of people—‘including FBI and Coast Guard Investigators—want to know. Attaches at Mercy Hospital said no one would be al-1 owed to question sunburned, blonde Terry Jo The governor is S3 and Ms wife 54. The couple have three (Continued on Pag* 2, Col. 5) ' Duperrault of Green Bay, Wisu until she feels up to par. :hild, taken semi-conscious from a liferaft bobbing on the Atlantic Ocean off the Bahamas, the only witness to the Bluebelle's breakup with raven persons aboard. The skipper, Julian A. Harvey, survived the Fort Lauderdale charter boat’s destruction as he had several other brashes with suicide Friday that said: “I got Harvey said after being taken to Nassau Monday that the Blue-belle's mainmast snapped, yanked down the smaller mizzenmast, and tore holes through the deck. Then, he raid, dire broke out and he had time only to launch a boat raft before the 60-foot ketch sank. With Harvey's death by razor slashes in a Miami motel, Bluebelle tragedy's toll roi six. The dead body of Terry Jo's sister, Renee, was in the boat in which Harvey was picked up Monday. Presumed drowned were the child’s father, Dr. Arthur (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) U.N., Congo Probe Death of13Italian Airmen LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP)—'The United Nations pushed forward today in a joint investigation with the Congo government to root out and punish the mutinous1 Congo soldiers who slaughtered 13 Italian airmen. Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula agreed Friday to an encirclement and disarmament plan aimed at what the U.N, command called a 'fair investigation and stem punishment" involving the 80 Congolese troops at Kindu, In Kivu Province. Adoula also agreed to cooper- mine whether leftist Vice Premier Angry Italian Crowd Turns on 3 Negroes inevitable. Adoula promptly agreed to name four members to the joint com-that trill seek to appro- JX«T5ton£to ami ** «* represent the United Neons. Gizenga's whereabouts were not sources ___he was in Kindu prior to the outbreak oI die mutiny. PJt. eswwasUnra plan to oIt the airport area and disarm an estimated 1,000 Congolese troops there. The troops at one time were In a private army that Glsenga bossed when he set ap n rebel government la Stanleyville with Soviet backing. In Italy, outraged* countrymen of the slain Italian airmen mourned the deaths with bitter- ROME (AP)—Three Negroes at least one of them American-fled to shelter in a i Rome shop today from an angry crowd aroused over the Congo slaying of 13 Italian member* of the UJN.' Congo • force. Polity took the American man and two women from the shop in police automobile and escorted them to safety. said none was injured. They said they did not obtain their A number of American, Euro- i in BONHAM, Tex. (UPI) — The body of House Speaker Sam Rayburn was moved {today from the memorial library where it had lain -in state since Friday and taken to the First Baptist Church for funeral services. The body, dressed in blue suit, white shirt and dark blue tie, was to have been removed, from public view Tn the foyer br the Sam Rayburn Library at 10 a.m. (Pontiac time). But so many people were lined up in front of the library when 16 a.in,,oftnw,..that'.4t>w-iylng«i>M4ntowr-.f- period was extended. BODY IN LIBRARY The body has been lying in state In the foyer of the library since m. Friday. The funeral In the First Baptist Church should take about 3* minutes. Rayburn then will he hurled In the family plot In Willow Wild Cemetery. In addition to the president and two ex-presidents, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, House Majority Leader John W. McCormack of Massachusetts, 122 congressmen, including the Texas delegation, and 25 U.S. senators are scheduled to attend the funeral. McCormack may succeed Rayburn as speaker. The service will be nationally televised by the three major television networks. Memorial services for Rayburn , will be held simultaneously in the nation’s capital at the Washington Cathedral. TO BE PALLBEARER* Active pallbearers today will in- ' (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) News Flash DETROIT (AP) —Clarence K. Pinkston, athletic director and swimming conch at the Detroit Athletic Club and a ISto Olympic diving champion, died to Worn-Hospital today. He was <1. ness. Somettoesponded with donations totaling thousands of dollars1 to an overnight campaign to build; a memorial chapel near the" air-|j men’s home base at Pisa. WALKED SILENTLY ' Mourning corteges walked silently through Bari, Leghorn, Pa-i lermo and scores of other cities | and towns. A few joined angry demonstrations that brought police runnig. The government proclaimed I three days of national mourning It-llans to pray at In Today's Press Ready and Willing Rusk dispays "reach terms with Adenauer on Berlin issue — PAGE 3. Hopes Blasted? President Giovanni Groncht and j the full cabinet planned to i •pedal mass next Thursday ' Rome’s Church Will second straight Ranger (allure spoil hopes to reach the moon? — PAGE Premier Amintare Fanfani, after ringtog- clashes between anti-Communists and Italian Reds Friday in the Chamber of Deputies, said the united Nations "si M reconsider its poiides in Congo.” 'Buggingf the Deep Navy eyeing plan to) ‘(Mg’ ocean flooor with microphones as sub warning — PAGE 16. Tunisians Want to Fight TUNIS (AP) - President Habib Bourguiba said today Tunisia is dancers to ready to launch a new attack on the French (Hferte base if no aat-isfactory evacuation agreement is! V "Lookattoday’s TV programming and you*!! know color Is here. We’re glad to be a part of It With 'Wonderful. World of Color' on NBC." Your Choice Vs Off! Size 30x40 30x44 30x48 30x56 36x48 36x60 ' v $2950 '$3450 ■ $3600 $4500 $4950 v $5955 Door Mirrors $2250 ’par week rca Victors 16x56 16x68 $2750 for the Best Selection! 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KjWP® ^ Posturepedic ' -NO mo«n.no sackacm* iw*0«...AN» you CNOOM fm comnw you iM PHXII tprmt gently With your weight; new ^ supporting under any weight. easy It I Hid Conw ^ chooM your Postumpsdic today! available 'jmtffaAto 4945 DIXIE HIGHWAY • DRAYTON HAIM Phone OR 4-0321 .* PONTIAC STORE OPEN Monday, and Friday 'til 9 • DRAYTON STORE OPEN Mon., Thurs., and Fri. 'til 9 Some Views of the News MOVE BODY TO CHURCH - The body of speaker Samr Rayburn is moved from The Sam Rayburn Memorial Library to the First Baptlat Church in Bonham, Tex., for' the funeral service. Area Man Dies 2 Injured as Cars Crash in City of Farmington; 2 Hurt in Troy Mishaps A Farmington Township man1 died this morning in St. tyary's Hospital, Livonia, after his car collided with another injuring the driver and one of two passengers. Dead Is Thomas p. Greeley, 41, of 28456 Thorneybrea, Farmington Township. Injured were Hebert Rellley, 18, of 9210 Melrose, Livonia, and one of two Reilley and Kenneth Balter, 19, of 35373 Edith Road, Farmington are In fairly good condition At St. Mary’s Hospital. The collision happened ait 2:08 a.m. today at Powers Road and Oakland Highway Toll in *61 83 U*; Vw to gig j| ten *4% in the City of Farming-ton. In other auto mishaps', a 16-year-old Rochester girl was injured at 8:40 p.m. yesterday when the car In which she was riding ran into a ditch at Crooks Road and Square Lake Road, Troy. The car 1 driven by Donald Pearce, 22, 543 Franklin Road, Pontiac, police said. The girl, Helen Goss, of 3611 Pearborn, Rochester, was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital, treated and released. Also In Troy, a Leonard Davey L. Ferguson, 31, was Injured when his car collided with a stake truck at Maple and Rochester roads at 8:30 this morning, police said. Driver of the truck was Dale Peake, 31, of 50709 Cedar Grove St,. Utica.-Both men said they had the green .light in their favor, police, said. OI# Man Winter Sends Mercury for a Tumble Ol’ Man, Winter is oh his way. Although not expected officially until December he sent temperatures -tumbling from a’ high of 38 yes-TCT3gy~ffl~a6~ at"T a.m. today,-»• new .tow-for the season. There’s a chance of some light rain possibly'mixed With some snow lato tonight or Sunday morning, ending by afternoon-The tow tonight will dip to 34. Sunday’s high temperature will rise to 45. Partly cloudy and a little warmer Is the outlook tor Monday. Morning westerly winds at 5' miles per hour will become west to northwest at 8 to 15 m.p.h. this evening and light, variable tonight. The mercury reading at 2 p.m; was 37. AT INAUGURAL BALL - Gov, Nelson Rockefeller and his wife were a smiling couple on the dance floor at his inaugural ball In Albany, N.Y., in January of 1959. A family spokesman said Friday they are living apart with a legal separation agreed upon. He said the couple was planning a divorce. The Rockefellers were married In 1930, Sam Rayburn Buried Today Thousands to Be Present Rockefeller, Wife Parted for Divorce NEW YORK 9* #\ WUlman ptans to arrive tor,* No\. 25 board meeting. The toUow-ing day both; men will participate jn the aims session but on opposite sides of the table. i to he addressed n on the topic ft ethlos Acting in his capacity as immediate- past president of- the association, WUlman also wilt: be chair-urn of the nominating committee » select candidates for 1982 offi- rrs. ....* , The association wW honor WUI-man, one of Its senior numibers. ‘ jring the aimuMi banquet Nov-. 29 (Continued on Page 2, Cbl. 7) er the accident, Smith made his way through a mile and a half of woodland to reach a road and get help, police said. However, Owen died where he fell about ar hour after he was hit. Heavy weather in the Upper Peninsula also resulted In another five hunters being reported lest yesterday. Three were from Alger County and the other two from the east end of Upper Michigan. A sixth hunter who was reported lost Wednesday was found yesterday. The other hunters killed by gunfire were: Myron Thalen, 31, of Menominee, and Edwin Barve, 26, of Route l, Athens, in Calhoun County. ft ft ft Police said Thalen was mistaken tor a coyote by bis brother-in-law, Ronald Pick), 32, of Menominee, as the two were hunting Thursday about 30- miles north of Menominee. Barve was fatally abet info ffrt. clay while hunting in Mattsen Township, Brunch. County. State police, said Thomas Duckworthy, 32, of Battle Creek told them he fired at a deer and Barve' somehow got into the line of fire. his wife would accompany However, it said, the governor canceled the trip and tried to persuade her to drop or delay divorce plans. ft ft ft The terse announcement of the separation and divorce plans issued from the Rockefeller family offices hr Rockefeller and read: “It was announced today that Governor and Mrs. Nelson A. Rockefeller have arrived at an agreement of legal separation. “It is anticipated that the terms of the agreement will be incorporated into a subsequent decree of divorce. 5 CHILDREN 'pov. and Mrs. Rockefeller were married in 1930. They have five adult children. "There has been an agreement Split Could Affect Political Career, Page 5 property settlement and Mrs. Rockefeller will continue to have New York apartment at 810 Fifth Avenue, Gov. Rockefeller will reside at the apartment! of his brother, Laurence S. Rockefeller." The governor Is 53 Md hi* wife 54. The couple have three (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) PCH Defeats PNH to End Prep Season The Oakland County high school football season ended last night with only one game, that being the crosstown rivalry between Pontiac Central and Pontiac Northern. In an exciting game, PCH scored a 27-12 victory over the Huskies. It was 14-12 at halftime. Members at the Press sport* Mt am HR the college and m circuit, the poet-game high- l Cornwell will be at East Lansing for the Michigan State- Sunday’s Mg pro game between the Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings. The hunting acme in Michigan is being covered |hy Outdoor Editor Don VegeL She today’s sports pages 16-19 tor aO the details. Esca/ped.i.but Npt Himself jKOfilwdy, 1(6, Truman, LBJ to Join Throng Bodly Is Moved From Library to Church for Simple Funeral Rite BONHAM, Tex. (UPI) — The body of House Speaker Sam Rayburn was moved today from the memorial library where it had lain in state sinee Friday and taken to the First Baptist Church for funeral services. ] The body, dressed in blue suit, white shirt and dark (blue tie, was to "have been: removed from public view in the foyer of the Sam Rayburn Library at 10 a.m. (Pontiac time), But so many people were Hncd up in front of the library when 10 h m. same tint ihe lying-in-statef l*rio3f™wns extended. ' The crowd cleared away, how- •« ever, and H wss not necessary to extend the viewing to noon, as had been contemplated. President Kennedy, ex-Presi-dents Truman and Eisenhower and a* many as 130 congressmen and U.S. senators will be present for the final rites in the First Baptist Church at 2:30 p.m. (Pontiac time). - Rayburn, 79, died at 7:20 a.m. Thursday of cancer. He had been member of the House of Repre-•ntatives 48 years and speaker rare than 16 years — longer than any other man. BODY IN LIBRARY The body has been lying In state in the foyer of the library since 10 a.m. Friday. The fum-ral In the First Baptist Church should lake about 36 minutes. Rayburn then will be buried in the family plot In Willow Wild Cemetery. In addition lo the president and two ex-presidents, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson, House Majority Leader John W. McCormack of Massachusetts, 122 congressmen, including the Texas delegation, and 25 U.S. senators are scheduled to attend the funeral. McCormack may succeed Rayburn as speaker, ft ft ft The service will be nationally televised by the three major television networks. Memorial services tor Rayburn will be held simultaneously In the nation’s capital at the Washington Cathedral. TO BE PALLBEARER* Active pallbearers today will In* (Continued on Page 2, Cbl. 4) ‘COULDN’T STAND IT' — Capt Julian Harvey, skipper of the ill-fated charter boat Bluebelle which sank Sunday near the Bahamas, killed himself Friday In a Miami motel room. A suicide note said he "couldn’t stand it any longer " He is shown when be was an Air Force pilot flying jets in Korea-in 1953. Terry Jo Gains Strength After Ordeal on liferaft MIAMI, FI*. (AP) — Afl ll-yeaf-old glrt, orphaned in a shipwreck she barely survived, was off a hospital's "critical” list today and apparently gaining strength that may enable her to tell what happened on the ill-fated ketch Bluebelle. A lot of people—including FBI and Coast Guard investigators—want to know. Attaches at Mercy Hospital said no one would be al-*-------- owed to question sunburned, blonde Terry Jo Duperrault of Green Bay, Wis., until she feels up to par. rhild, taken semi-conscious from a liferaft bobbing on the Atlantic Ocean off the Bahamas, the only witness to (he Blue belle’s breakup with seven persons aboard. The skipper, Julian A. Ilarvcy, survived the Fort Lauderdale charter boat’s destraetkm a* be several other brashes with death in the air and nfloat. But mltted suicide Friday leaving a note thnt said: “I got too tired and nervous. I couldn't stand It any longer." Harvey said after being taken lo Nassau Monday that the Blue-belle's mainmast snapped, yanked down the smaller mizzenmast, and tore holes through the deck. Then, he said, fire broke out and he had time only to launch a boat and a raft before the 60-foot ketch sank. ft * ft With Harvey’s death by razor slashes in a Miami motel, Bluebelle tragedy's toll row to six. The dead body of Terry Jo's sister, Renee, was in the boat in which Harvey was picked up Monday. Presumed drowned were the child’s father, Dr. Arthur (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) U.N.f Congo Probe Death of 13Italian Airmen LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP)—The United Nations pushed forward today in a joint investigation with the Congo government to root out and punish the mutinous Congo soldiers who slaughtered’ 13 Italian airmen. Congo Premier Cyrille Adoula agreed Friday to an encirclement and disarmament plan aimed at what the U.N. command called a "fair investigation and stem punishment" involving the 89 Congo- j tele troops at Klndu, in Kivu Province. Adoula also agreed to cooper-In an Investigation to detar- p airport area and disarm Maaleyvllle with Novtet backing. In Italy, outraged countrymen of the slain Italian airmen mourned the dealha with bitter- to ihe lato Patrice Lumumba, had anything to da with the slayings. The Leopoldville government appenrad to have accepted the stern measures, which the United Nations proposed as inevitable. Adoula promptly agreed to name tour members to the joint com-|jg “ will seek to appro- Sports editor Bruno Kearns ia In Minneapolis for today's battle be-tween Purdue and Minneaota and ^ *** A Any... : —- _____ a**.. Ilf lARR VMVPIPlit thf* t Tliitftfi Nl* » represent the United Naans. Gizenga’s whereabouts were not •o«m but government sources said be was ip Klndu prior to toe outbreak of the mutiny. U.N. commander* plan to Mai Angry Italian Crowd Turns on 3 Negroes ROME (API—Throe Negroes -at least one of them American-fled to shelter in a downtown Rome shop today from an angry crowd aroused over the Congo slaying of 13 Italian members of tl» UN. Congo force. Police took the American and two women from toe shop in a police automobile and escorted them to safety. Police said none was injured. They said they did not obtain their nanies. * A number of American, European and African Negroes are in Rome these day* as dancers in the 20th Ontury Fox film “Cleopatra" and as artists in various theatrical performance*. News Flash DETROIT (AP) — Clarence E. Pinkston, athletic director and swimming coach at the Detroit Athletic Club and a 1CM Olympic diving champion, died In Woman’s Hospital today. He was St. Some responded with donations totaling thousands of dollars { to an overnight campaign to build memorial chapel near the airmen's home base at Pisa. WALKED SILENTLY Mourning corteges walked silently through Bari, Leghorn, Palermo and scores of other cities and towns. A few joined angry demonstrations that brought police runnig. The government proclaimed throe days of national mourafag and asked all It-Uana to pmjrat President Giovanni Gronchi and the toil cabinet planned to go to ‘ special mass next Thursday ming at Rome’s Church at Santa Maria Degli Angeli. Premier Amintore Fanfani, JP er ringtag clashes between anti-CommunisU and Italian Rada Friday in th* Chamber of Deputies, said the Untied Nations "should '* p- tta policies - in the' Congo.” Tunisians Want to Fight TUNIS (AP) - President Habib RqurgUUba said today Tunisia Is ready to launch a new attack on the French Btaftrte base if no mt-Isfnctory evacuation agreement is In Today's Press Ready and Willing Rusk dispays readinegs to ’reach terms with Adenauer on Berlin issue — PAGE S. Hopes Blasted? Will second Straight Rangerfailure spoil hopes to reach the moon? — PAGE 'Buggingf the Deep Navy eyeing plan to ’bug* ocean flooor with microphones as sub warning —■ PAGE IE Chureli News ......... 8 » .........11 .......... 4 ...... 13-15 ......... I# ....'....taw Theater* ........... 1»>1» A THE X8, 1961 ' jtBtissr-*- T' ' llf l/lx jjHH N-Test Talks With West' MOSCOW tAPr—Western sourc-1 the major Western diplomats at a d today Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan has indicated toe Soviet Union is Setting ready to .accept the Western proposal to retjpne talks on banning nuclear tesfe, Mikoyan had talks with most of reception given Friday night by the Sudan Embassy on its national Snow Piles Up, Hunters Cheer Upper Peninsula Gets 2*5 Inches in First B i g Pall of Season By The Associated Press " A sizable snowfall in the Upper Peninsula, welcomed by deer hunters, came along with colder weather over most of Michigan today. _..... The tJpper Peninsula's snow was the first of a substantial sort this] season. Kinross reported five Inches of mow on the ground and Marquette tour Inches. Houghton had two inches. • Subfreezing temperatures were ^general in the state overnight. _JHC'A» MARQUETTE m the Upper Peninsula, the mercury fell to 22 at Marquette. In the Lower Peninsula, Grand Rapids reported 23. Clear weather with temperatures-in the 20s and 80s chilled much of the nation today. The snappy autumn air extended ns far south as G£QYg!s< Some heavy snow was reported in the central Rockies, including .a five-inch accummulation at Denver. This steam, which was moving eastward, also brought rain to ports of central Texas, Temperatures dropped in the East and South as cold air, ac companied in places by snow flur ries, streamed southeastward across the Great Lakes region and northern Appalachians. A proposal tor resumption talks was made by Britain and the United States in similar notes delivered to the Soviet Foreign Office Nov. 13, The note recalled that the talks jon banning tests bad.j^essed. [Sept 9 by-agreement'*among three members of the atomic club, the United States,'Britain and the So-] 1| viet Union, pending completion of] i the debate iajthe United Nations i ' ar testing. ADOPT RESOLUTION _ The Disarmament Commission of. the United Nations adopted a resolution Nov. 8 asking tor a report .of progress on the talks On nuclear testing, and the Western note followed this Up. The note suggested that the talks begin Nov, 28 To permit preparation of a reply by Dec. 14, the date suggested by the Disarmament Commission. The Western powers said they would agree to any, other date which would permit * preparation of the reply on time. So far as could be learned, Mikoyan did not indicate what date might suit the Soviet Union. The Soviet -Union has been :mh jecting the idea of separate talks on a ^nuclear test ban. The Russians nave insisted, the test ban be considered in negotiations for general and romplete disarmament, a proposal turned down by the West. South Is Urged to Back 'Wo'tt Put c vEnd to NY. Would Back Rocky in Spite of Split Says GOP " ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - The ponding divorce of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller should have no effect •on dun rejection al governor of New YaHt in the opinion of Republican National Chariman William Miller. Miller commented today that the divorce "is a family matter and a personal matter and there is nothing involved that would reflect on his (Rockefeller’s) moral character or integrity." The GOP chairman added that "If he continues to be the good —administrator he has been as governor of New York. I expect that if he seeks re-election he will get it." In Albany, Republican State Chairman L Judson Morhouse de dined comment. "This to a purely personal matter,” he said. Says. Goldwater spending ATLANTA (UPI) ■ Goldwater, R-Ariz, South today to elect licans to Congress "and stop to the ridiculous proposals” of the Kennedy administration. ★ ★ * Goldwater and GOP National Chairman William E. Miller were here to stimulate Southern Republicans to an all-out effort to cap-congressional seats in 1962. QOp leaders of 13 states were whipped to hopeful activity by surprise victories In scattered recent Dixie flections and decided the conservative soil was Worth Intensive titling. Addressing a two-day southern election strategy conference. Gold-water called for "more and more Republican victories in the South to bolster lhc forces of constitutional government and Individual free-jdom in the Congress.” You give us the kind of strength need in Congress and well turn on some real heat for a foreign policy that speaks from itrength and promises more than foreign aid and worldwide giveaways,” he said. The Weather FULL U. S. WEATHER REPORT „ PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Considerable sunshine today, high 42. Increasing cloudiness tonight with chance of some light rain possibly mixed with some snow latt tonight or Sunday morning ending by afternoon. Low tonight 34, high Sunday 45. Winds west to northwest 8 to 15 miles becoming light and variable tonight. ROCKEFELLER FAMILY — Nelson, A. Rockefeller and his wife, who are planning a divorce, are shown posed with their family in New YorkMn November 1958 after Rockefeller’s election as governor of New York. Standing (from left) Are the Rev.’Robert Pierson, husband of daughter Anne, standing in front of him; Rod-1 man Rockefeller and his wife; twins Michael and Mary Rockefeller, and Steven Rockefeller. Disclosure of the planned divorce was made Friday. Ban Seven Airlines From Carrying GIs WASHINGTON (UPI) - Seven nonscheduied airlines are barred from carrying military passengers until Air Force experts can investigate all details of their opera tions, the Defense Department said today. ..... One of the lines affected by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s safety crackdown Is Imperial Airlines, operator of the airliner that crashed at Richmond, Va., Nov. 8 with a loss of 14 Army recruits. I The other six carriers listed 6y ;ha-.PtuUagan.aroSaUirnAir,ways. American Flyers Airlines, President Airlines, Modern Air Transport, Worldwide Airlines and Associated Air Transport. A spokesman said survey teams I the Military Air Transport Service (MATS) would be ready 0 begin checking nonscheduied alr- 1 ]nes wanting government business next Monday. . said an inspection takes three /e days. NEW REGULATIONS McNamara announced, new regulations to govern the use of commercial airlines for carriage of military personnel." The rules, made public Friday were framed in the weight of the Richmond crash and had tw« ■hief aims; —Nonscheduied air carriers, now known ns supplemental carriers, caa bo hired by the Defense Department for domestic military passenger air lifts only after they have passed Inspection by MATS. That Is In addi- tion lo being certificated by f MSl civil aviation agencies. —Defense Department personnel traveling on individual tickets, rather than on a contract opera" lion, must travel on the regularly scheduled comercial airlines. They no longer will use the “non-skeds." The recruits aboard the Imperial Airlines plane were traveling on Individual government tickets. Survives Fire 27th and 28th Floors of Dallas Building Are Ravaged by Blaze Oak Park Dem Gets State Post Sherwood Coleman Is Appointed by Swainson as Insurance Chief LANSING (AP)—Sherwood Colburn, a 33-yoar-old Democrat from Oak Park, was named s(ate Insur-commissioner today by Gov. J6hn B. Swainson. Colburn, of 24642 Scotia St., Oak Park, will succfeed Frank Blackford as insurance commissioner Nov. 30. Blackford resigned recently, presumably to accept a federal appointment not yet disclosed. Colburn has operated a Detroit l Insurance agency with his brother te*He Since 1957, and has bee 671 In the insurant-so | years. j (Continued From Page One) n He was a radio and television elude: H. G. Dulaney, an assistant *j I announcer while a student nl|and the administrator of Rayburn University and hasjubmry; Robert (Buster) Cole, DALLAS IB — A fire ravaged the 27th and 28th floors of the tow-’ing Mercantile National Bank Building in downtown Dallas this morning. - ~ ~ A girl elevator trapped In her elevator was the only person reported injured. The operator, Joy Buckbee, 19, was freed after more than an hour from the 27th floor. Flames and smoke rose up (he elevator shafts. She was reported not seriously hurt. Cause of the flames in the sky-icrapcr was not Immediately learned. The flames knocked out elevators. Firemen had to climb 27 floors to reach the source of the flames in the building of about 30 floors. SOUND 2 ALARMS Three alarms sent scores of fire-ien and policemen to the scene in the heart of downtown Dallas. Off-duty firemen were called back. A maintenance man discovered the trapped operator. "I’m trapped, save me,” he quoted the operator as screaming over the elevator telephone. The building, one of the tallest m Dallas, houses the Mercantile National Bank on the first floor and hundreds of offices on uppe floors. Thick grey smoke poured from the upper rim of the skyscrupe Downtown traffic was snarled as firemen and police blocked off streets around the scene Rockefeller, Wile Are Living Apart (Continued From Page One) sons and two daughters, all living away frbm borne, and eight grandchildren. All except Michael, the youngest* son, are married. He is now in Dutch Guiana with an archeological expedition. The impending divorce will be the second among the five of the late John D. Rockefeller Winthrop Rockefeller, younger brother of the governor, was divorced from Barbara (Bobo) Sears in a spectacular court suit several years ago. .. *....* ★ ■ Mrs. Rockefeller was reported Sti^nfliTTOw ^Iforic 'Friday night and her husband at their estate in Tarrytown, N.Y. Although neither was available for comment, a family spokesman said the divorce would, be sought outside New York where the only ground for such action is adul-ery. LIVING APART He said it also would be reasonable to assume that Mrs. Rockefeller would petition for the divorce. The spokesman admitted the couple were livlhg apart when the announcement was made but declined to say when the decision had been reached to seek a di- _____ The spokesman said the separation agreement was signed this week in New York. ‘ Mrs. Rockefeller, the former Mary Todhunter Clark, is an heir to n railroad fortune. The Rockefellers were married soon after the governor was graduated from Dartmouth at a wedding attended by 1,500 guests. In addition to the 20-room duplex apartment on Fifth Avenue, the Rockefellers also maintain the Tarrytown residence, one in Seal Harbor, Maiqe, and another in Washington, D.C, Accept No Substitutes! Look, tip in the sky. It’s a bird . . . it’s a plane . . . it’s Echo I! And for a tired old bag she sure is piling up the rplleage. You can get a glimpse of her at 6:33' tonight high over the northern horizon, moving toward the southeast. She’ll be back again tomorrow night at 5:47, only this time ing northeasterly. Sam Rayburn !; Buried Today Delegates Differ onCongoCrisis U Thant Sure of Getting Added Power, but U.N. at Odds on Its Scope UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) (Rove to give acting Secre-tary-General U Thant authority to deai with the Congo crisis appeared sure today of U.N. approval. But delegates dMtored n how fir It should extend. ■ - - .■★. - dr :* ' Corridor predictions were that the Security Council would approve a resolution calling tor vigorous U.N. action to end secessionist activities in the. province of Katanga and deal with other trouble spots in the Congo. # dr . * The Western powers objected „iat a resolution by Ceylon, Liberia and the United Arab Republic dealing with Katanga alone ~M| too narrow in scope. They insisted that U Thant and the Congo command should be empowered to deal with other mutihous - ’areaa; such -as - Kivu Province where Congo troops lteved headed by leftist leader Antoine Gizenga killed add butchered 13 Italian airmen. ASKS POSTPONEMENT U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson asked that council action be * postponed until Monday to give thne tor consultations "suitable resolution. • dr dr Meanwhile, a reuqest by the U.N. comander in the Congo tor more soldiers to deal with increasing violence was questioned by India, whose 5,700 troops make up more than a third of the entire U.N. force In the Congo. Indian Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon took issue with the request made by. Maj. Gen. Sean McKeown, head of the 15,400-man force, at a private session of the 18-nation Congo Advisory Committee summoned Friday by U Thant. fr * * Menon told the Security Council •if l5,O0O’ troopB are wd enwigft to police the Congo, then there something wrong with troops." The PaytoBirmhiKfaRqi ProtesSorJo Discuss ModernDrama at Library BIRMINGHAM - The problems of defining modern drama and the Of the off-Broadway movement will be discussed Monday when Rie Friends of the Bakfe win Public Library meet at 8:15 p.m. to the librgry auditorium. Speaking to toe group will be Dr. Marvin Felheim, assistant professor of English at toe Uhtven-sity of Michigan. IMs the second appearance tor the writer, playwright and poet before the library group to the last several years, Felheim h a critic of the modem poychoanantytlc novel and “the popular pattern ofa perversion and violence ta a editing of hlgh-claM people.” The meeting is open only to members of the organisation but f&lE? —1 ‘ Terry Jo Gains (Continued From Pagd One) Duperrault, 49, his wi|^ Jean, of Green Bay, their/son, Brian, Mary Harvey, wife of the skipper. / TOOK OUT INSURANCE The Bluebells sinking Sunday came a little more than two months after Harvey took - out large double indemnity life insurance policies on both Himself and Mary wi|h the Travelers Insurance Co: of Hartford, Conn. A 320,000 policy on his wife named Harvejr as beneficiary! A 325.000 policy on himself was taken out in her behalf. Harvey, tall and ruggedly-built, had survived two previous sh|p sinkings, two airplane Mrs. Kennedy Insists, Tm All Right Jackq M1DDLEBURG, Va. (AP) MraJacqueline Kennedy has a Isured her husband that she s all right and a top White House spokesman dismissed the First Lady’s fall from a horse “• ■ very minor mishap.’' * * * 'The horse stopped, but she didn’t,” was the way one eyewitness described Mrs. Kennedy s tumble Friday when her horse balked at a jump while she was riding with the Piedmont Hunt in Northern Virginia. Mrs. Kennedy, who ha riding horses since she child got up, remounted quickly and rejoined the foxhunters. The White House said she turned to Glen Ora, the Kennedy country estate here, in the late afternoon and “was fine.” • ★ * ★ Word of Mrs. Kennedy’s mishap was quickly passed along to Prea* tdent Kennedy, who was attending a testimonial dinner for Sen. Carl Hayden in Phoenix, ArlZ. Aides said the President called Middleburg to check with Mrs. Kennedy: Then, White House press secretary Pierre Salinger dismissed the. incident as "a very minor mishap.” plunge off a bridge Into water. He apparently was married at least tour times. A it. it ' Qge of his wives, Joan, drowned with her mother, Mrs. ’wfyrffe Boyen of Washington, D, C. when car dropped into a northwest Floridq bayou near Eglln Air Force Base, where Harvey was | stationed in 1949 as an Air Force lieutenant colonel. Harvey told officers at the base that he was thrown clear during the plunge but the two women were trapped inside the car. Willman Bids Goodby to PontiaeCity Hall Continued From Page One) at convention headquarters in the Fontainbleau Hotel. Willman will then return for more honors. On Dee. 4 he Is to be guest of honor and master of ceremonies at the annual retirement and sendee awards dinner for city employes at the Elks Temple. On Dec. 11, city commissioners and department heads will honor Mr. and Mrs. Willman at a dinner at the Pontiac City Gub. ...... Oakland County's *8 Democratic politics since 1955. w | He is a regional vice chairman |o| the Democratic State Central Committee tor Oakland County. NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and showers are expected tonight from the Western1 Ohio Valley to the Mid-Mississippi Valley and East Gulf Region with snow expected from tfve East Centra] Plains to the Upper Mississippi Valley and snow showers in parts ol Northern and Central Plateau and Northern and Central Appalachians. It will be warmer from Lower Mississippi Valley to the Ohio Valley and from the Upper Mississippi Valley to Nortoetn «iid Central Piateaii. It will be cooler on the Northwest, Southwestern Plains and Atlantic and Gulf coasts. Finland Proposes Leader Fly to Nikita ! HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) — ! Finland has proponed to the ] Soviet Government (hat President urtw Kekkonen fly to Moscow personally to discuss the Soviet - Finnish situation with Premier Nikita Khrushchev, It was disclosed tonight. Finnish Foreign Minister Ahtl Karjalnlnen ssked Soviet umbos-wider to Finland A,V. Zakharov to conevy the proposal to the Moscow government A government communique to- ( I Rayburn’s lawyer; Robert West and Choice Moore, who were old friends; Dr. Joe A. Rlsser, Rayburn’s personal physician, and John Holton, his administrative assistant. Honorary pallbearers will be the President, vice president and members of the Honata and ] Elder H. G. Ball will conduct [the simple service, Rayburn joined Bail’s Primitive Baptist Church of Tioga, Tex., in 1857. Many of the 45 member* of Ball’! congregation will be present. Church Collection Box In Area Robbed of $25 A collection box containing about]-' $25 was stolen yesterday from St. Anne Catholic Church-In Brandon Township, according to Oakland Kek- County Sheriffs deputies, make the : Officers said a thief apparently entered the unlocked church during the day and ripped the metal container from a wall. The church, located at 825 Ortonville Road, Is left open during the day. \ ONLY $1.00 HOLDS IN I LAYAWAY J Outfit Includes: • Radio • Case • Battery • Earphone 1 | * fit -TRAHSIST0B POCKET HAW0S Regular $34.95 Valito — Full 8 transistor radio with on« Diode ond Thirmistor, Extra high powsr will pick up far-ow6y stations. Real-tone 'Ranger' Model. $1.00 holds in layaway. Fully guaranteed by SIMMS , 17 87 Choke of 4 Color* anyone interested in joining flu Friends can obtain more if * on by contacting toe 1“ A 10-week course in rapkf read-ing is being offered at toe (immunity House with toe fifet class a train- - The adult course ls/de»Kn< Improve toe efficiency of z tog skill* and will toctoto ti tog In aecek reading speeds and in comprehension. Anthony p./Wltham, reading consultant mid Supervisor tor Genesee County, will be the instructor. The tee tor fee course will be 330. Gasses/will be held Saturdays jno 2«ao p.m, _ Thanksgiving service tomor-at the First Baptist Church Birmingham will be televised _J toe tape replayed that afternoon at 2 p.m. on Channel 7. A feature of the service will be processional by the tWldren bringing food gifts and ft financial offering for the Baptiat Childrens 13-Mile and Greenfield roads. •V ■ * " * it George G. Ross Memorial services tore being arranged tor George G. Ross, 67, of 1660 Apple Lane, who died Sunday Veterans Hospital in Battle Creek following a long illness. Mr. Ross a professor of landscape architecture at the University of Michigan until his retirement two years ago, was known in the area tor his sculpture of a bronze bust and 12 full-size Apostles at KMc in the Hills, * * Sr' . He was a member of the U. of M. faculty for 25 years and had served as a planner tor Federal and state agencies in yarious cities for many years. He served on the Detroit Planning Commission from 1923 to 1925 and was a landscape architect for Wayne County Park commission in 1927. .-.. ;...... fe was a planning engineer for City of Pontiac in 1930-31 and was director df the MlcTCgan'Ftah-ning Commission from 1941 to 1942. Surviving are his wife Mabel; father, Garrett Ross of Chilltcothe, Ohib; and a brother. Man in the Moon to Have Company ... of a Russian? MOSCOW (AP) -ovulated today that th< plan to send a man around the moon next January, It to not planned for him to land. A<’cording to these reports, the “lunanaut” has completed Ms training and is at the Soviet spare base at Balkunur In Ka-sakhstan waiting for the blast-off signal. The i i will i i to give moon before the Russians land an automatic astronomical observatory there, these reports say. The Russians are said to have built two of these observa- 2-SUPER DISCOUNTS at SIMMS For TONITE and MONDAY! “These Grow With Your Children** 2-piece ski-style sleepers with extra long tops thp) allow child to grow into them ... rib knit cotton, gently napped. ^ Colors of Canary, Blue, Pink ir Aqua. Sixes 3-4-5-4. -MAIN FLOOR A Brand New Shipment Arrives! YARD GOODS Values to 69c I Over ($,000 yard* of bettor quail-I ty fabrics in solids, plaids, patt I toms, checks, prints etc. Heovy lightweight,, materials in I many, atony assorted colors. |9S North mam /;-T PONIIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, roP\TRMi|ER I THREE for Adenauer Hera Are Today’s 7 TURKEY WINNERS Drawn at SIMMS Shows Administratiorvj Willing to Roach-Terms on Berlin Issues WASHINGTON (AP) With Chancellor Konrad Adenauer due here Sunday, the Kennedy administration hopes to work out in the next few , days ff U.S.*We«t German agreement that would lead to Western negotiations with Russia a Berlin settlement. " • | Ocretary of State Dean Rusk I played administration readi-is at a news conference Friday to try to come to terms with Ger-j views on Berlin Issues dur-1 ing* Adenauer's visit here. The West. German chancellor and President Kennedy will open talks Monday. 7 iori Wilson-2914 Corcteil, Kesgto *'4 Juno Larson- 138 Highland", Lake Orton. ' Mr*. Seales-84 Lincoln, Portiiac " .■ HI Rarker*-2816 livernoit, Rochester Sherry Plewsont-387 Newport, Ponttoc , Dorothy Hotchkiss-249 Lapeer, Lake Orion Elmer Koep-W Pork. Oxford YOU Still Have a Chance to WIN a FREE TURKEY Today will be your last chance to register ter the Monday Maming) no purchase necessary. It yeur name is' Simms for your certificate, which entitles you fa a tree turkey turkey (UkdUrewmg H Rusk declared the Communist wall sealing oft East Berlin from West Berlin "certainly ought not to be a permanent feature of the European landscape." He branded the wall as a "monument to { Communist failure in East Berlin and East Germany." Rusk stopped short "of saying-as Adenauer said earlier^ this week—the removal o’f the wall must be a condition of any Berlin agreement with Russia. Authorities here see tittle prospect the Soviets will even consider tearing vail down.. Rusk also said on another point publicly raised by. Adenauer that the United States still stands by its offer to supply, the North At’ tantlc Treaty Organization with a fleet of nuclear-missile Polaris submarines. They would operate under NATO command and coitld be used by NATO decisions. Yugoslav Freighter Greeted by Pickets SAN DIEGO, Calif. vcr~dif~Tana repay their respects at the tomb. This does not happen on November 23 any more, but .who is to say it did not happen in the times when the legend began. (Copyright 1961) ce Is Heard.... irrent studies indicate the Voice imerlca is reaching 20 million be outside of Russia and “several on” witlaln the Soviet homeland, le estimates are based upon talks tourists, refugees and world .. ★ ' ★ t’s fairly well established that i Reds are spending $150 mil-i a year and employing 2,000 pie to nullify these broadcasts, ty do a tolerable job but they’re front perfect. When I was In »cow, we heard several proms end abruptly. As long as Mrs. Sarah J. Hale wrote in ll963: ~ “ ‘Go your way and eat the fat and drink the sweet and send persons unto them folr whom nothing is prepared; for this day is holy unto the Lend” ... Can we not thei . . . establish our yearly Thanksgiving as a permanent American National Festival. . . Putting aside the sectional feelings . . . would it not be more noble, to become national Jonlty, . ---- when we offer to God our trihute-of ioy-and EraHtude-Tr."^ And'm Conclusion . .------------- ------------., • For IT years, the ladies’ magazine editor fought for a uniform Thanksgiving, be- • > lleving it would unify the nation. She urged it on governors and Presidents. Later that year, . Jottings from the well-thumbed President Lincoln issued the first national proclamation snee Washington: “l do, therefore, notebook Of your peripatetic re- invite my ttllow citizens in every part of the United States ... to set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next as a day of Thanksgiving and praise to our Beneficent Two cabinet members and a former Father____________________—.— -------1—_-----------------—*—......... Harvard President, James B. Conant, * , are seriously concerned over the eco- Days of all Faiths! nomic and social problems presented ' _ _ - Churches Give Surplus to Needy Boys, these astute men strongly urge you to finish..............Chicago By Dr. Howard V. Harper sports writers say if the Lions win tomorrow, their Thanksgiving Day November 29-26 is called Share game ilttth. Green Bay will be one of Our Surplus 'S^.sj week but it * IT . 7:. , could as well he called bargain the great football battles of I90l. . . . week.» The bargain—300 pounds . . . About 50 miles outside of Of food for a doUar-is made possi-. _ ___ ... ble by the combined action of the St. Louis are caves and caverns that g^tes Government and _____ ___________________________________ _ 3M| will hold 500,000 Church World Service. The food, bac|< and forgave him, but also cording to legend the worries of nennle eranfnrtflhlv every gigantic dollar’s worth of it, • • - - ■ - people comrortamy gw>s t0 undernourighed members and authorities are of God’s family in all parts of the evaluating them as wo{,dwry yew durIng fallout shelters. . . . ing, week, when America Is Purely personal thanking God tor the fruits of the H earth, Church World Service nomination as an sponsor* thl* attention to lands ■— -—especially attrac- that are not WfesaeA jdjibflMk* , . i h _ abundance. And tltfe Government ' - Fji tlve glirJ in- tho cooperates, making available — area: June Mat- out or what we ourselves don’t need and indeed can’t even use JUNE THEWS. —such staple* as milk, wheat, ■fa W ★ rice and bean*. Did you know that eountrle* like Japan and the 1 can’t prove it, but I’ll bet Philippines, where rice la the a sugar cookie, Perry or basic food, cannot ralae enough n i iii l i j j . . ot It to meet their need*? Thank*. bunk will be traded or dumped K,vlng week ta » good time for by the Cleveland Indiana before American* to be “mindful of the nexUteaaon............Sherman need* of other*.” ^ Billingsley has never allowed pipe A1| through thts week ,here wili smoking in the Stork Club. be offerings in individual churches Which recalls the crack: “No one «n<* in Joint service, *»r the pur- . , , . pose of sharing our surplus at the loves a pipe smoker—except an- unb«iievabie bargain rate. The other pipe smoker.”............. biggest of these services will be TO. ht-t: f*u. .h.H.r. marked “his and ners............ 1he nnr yml have ip your own .....Cleopatra swept past on 1 he church or the one all the churches '•'cTr'\T*e ZlStSSVS'ZLm Anthony gasped: “Some doll and food’' (M«tthew, chapter 25, verse she’s really built.” Caesar nodded 35). ’fh«t is what is really impor- vigorouslv. “I looked her up. t!ml„.„ _____ au . vvvui w it vv win •» GREAT SALES LETTER She’s XXXVI-XXII-XXXVIJI. Nobody ^ MadlS(m Avenue hus if it if ever turned out, nor probably Children’s mistakes in literature ^trhewi st.^Paul wote toiffiS are historic and priceless. Here are mon. Read the Epistle to Philemon some from U» Lord's prayer: “Dive us this day our jelly bread”; and: sistibie. “Lead us not into Penn Station”; thu to ^ and.: “Harold be Thy name.” (I cheer mg Philemon about piiiie- especially for the last one). ...... '!r, “ . . . “They” tell me eating apples The Country Parson cleans teeth better than tooth- * > \ brushes..............Fire insurance jm •/»m X f companies state settlements in Los Angeles will be swift....... - U JThant’s name contains the letters TNT. Symbolic? ......... Dept. of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—the fall weather; the J’s — those MSU students that hung the coaih In effigy- H —Harold A. Fitzgerald ‘Another Commie in Latin America* The very first thing that Carlos Julio Arosemena did when he her came president of Ecuador was to place his government iiquardy^ alongside Communist Cuba. Speaking of Cuba, he said “I did not know relations had been broken with Cuba; but if they had been broken, they are renewed as of this day.” It would seem that the former vice-president of Ecuador was totally ignorant of his country’s position with regard to Cuba. Arosemena also waved a cheery hello to Moscow, v C. L. J. __________________2k------:------— Pre-patent agreements are the usual method and are perfectly legal. They are, In fact, ceoour-aged by the Patnet Office. In I960, 80 per cent were disposed of before final hearing, many ot them by p Senator Kefauver believes the traditional agreement, although legal tor other tHdtHttrtes, reprteaent* a form of conspiracy in the drug, industiy^Pne pf the provisions in the Kefauver-Celiar Bill makes it illegal for drug companies to arrive at these agreements. The bill will compel drug companies to tight each other through Patent Office or court proceedings/ Important new drugs will he withheld. R. P. Scherer Corp. Detroit Dr, William Brady Says: Many Readers Assure Me lodin Returns Hair Cofor By DR. WILLIAM BRADY Three years ago, I started taking the iodin ration. Although I’m a grandmother 50 years old, no one believes it, be-cause I look young and have only a tew gray * IralwWiM more three years i but h a i r changed to nat-| ural . . . (Mrs.! ___ C. G.) DR. BRADY An*.—Good for you, Grandma. dressed envelope for “Instructions for Taking Iodin Ration.’’ A good many f< H original color to gray hair. All I say la that It can do no harm, to try-and yo» haven’t W*Hy tried the iodin ration until yon have taken It dally for.three or Grateful If you would devote a column or two to the effects of enemas. Are they habit forming? Are they harmful? (Id. F.) Case Records of a Psychologist: We Need Emotional Calisthenics Enjoy reading your articles so rrfuch and am sure your teachings have improved my health . • • Wish there were more doctors like you. (Mrs. H. B. J.) » Until n v medic By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE K-454: Lon J.. aged 42, is an executive in a large bank. “Dr. Crane, I haven’t had anything to do with my wife for over two years,” he stated, morosely— that your appetite tend* to disappear. You feel squeamish and drifted apart. She says tt is due to my Jealousy of her, for I used to criticize her a lot. DR. CBANR strangers who happen to live under the same roof. “Do you think I should dlvoreu Nixon and Knight evidently lost interest In their feud about the time It began to become highly interesting and entertaining to others. emotional calisthenics a few years ago America was addicted to morning setting-up exercises. They became quite a fad. And physical exercises are really very healthful, in moderation. But what we need far more in this country is emotional calisthenics. For our good emotions of love “The fellow who ■ doesn't matter which church he belongs to Is like a horse that he's pulling needs pulling.'' I become dwarfed or »tonted unless they are exercised frequently, And that is doubly true of married people who are close to the age of 40. So don’t let your mar-rlages degenerate into platonic affairs. For the less you indulge your emotion of love, the less appetite you will nave lor love tomorrow. Love is not something that grows greater by disuse. In fact, It Is much like gastric hunger, for whoa yen go too tong To maintain a healthy appetite, you need to train the glands of the stomach to secrete gastric Juice on a regular schedule. PROSTATE maURANCB----------------- Poets have maintained a monopoly on love far too long. Now we physicians and psychdtogisti. are beginning to invade that field with sensible scientific findings. If married people grow platonic, they will often find -that the husband soon becomes impotent. This result is chiefly psychological. He simply becomes afflicted with a sexual inferiority complex. And it is then essential that his wife banish his fears by taking the initiative and becoming more seductively aggressive. There Is also a good medical reason for thlo fact, for we medics are ot the opinion that prostate trouble may often develop from cessation of regular exercise of that gland. The prostate Is much like the mammary glands of a young mother. It secretes a milky fluid that comprises the bulk of the aex fluid in the dele. . if a young mother suddenly stops nursing her baby, her breasts may swell up and “cake.” They be-come painful. We medics prescribe ice packs and drugs to relieve her of the discomfort. i In similar manner, a man who loses his wife suddenly by death, or whose marriage beegmeu platonic, may And that his prostate gland likewise gives him trouble. LAW OF FUNCTION 0 In physiology we have a rule that regular function of the bodily organs and glands, seems to insure their future good health and productivity. This is true ot even the retina In crossed-eyes, for unless the crossed eye In straightened, Its retina will become relatively So deliberately become romantic again with your mate. Revive the high school graduates may earn the MD. degree In four yean plus a year or two of Internship, then begin practice, there are not likely to ho any more general practitioners to serve as family A' glib doctor talked me into hav-ing my 5-year-old son tonsillccto-mized. He said it would relieve chronic asthma. Since the operation, my son has asthma much more severely . . . (D. M.) An*.—A doctor dare not tell poMeats the truth lest they change doctors, but he can tie to velopc tor free Pamphlet No. 9, old emotions that may have been in coM (Storage foe ten years or so. Kiss and act devoted, for it you go through the proper motions, you’ll soon begin to feel the corresponding emotions. ' Send for my bulletin “How to Prevent Impotence in Men,’* enclosing a stamped return envelope, plus 20 cents. Please sand me, in the stamped, self-addressed envelope Inclosed, your Pamphlet 39, “The Habit of Bed-Wetting.” From the viewpoint of a mother and a graduate nurse, may I commend you totr your good, common sense advice, given in language all can understand. (Mrs. L. E., RJ4J Am.—The pamphlet Is ws the way- Graduate nurses make the best wives and mothers. AI M, • writ* t« Dr. 0*wt» w^ersns tint lamped Micky, head muse ta Mr* o< Hw Room* Pmm, PmUss. Xn you wd lor hi. p.joholo|l«al *S' “*(3fCfSSt, I9«) Th* AiiMllUd pi •xclu«l**ii?o It-t cation of all Mat « tht« new.paper a* ' «»«* HitkUM Rd. LADIES' PUIN SKIRTS p Dr» Oletnrd, Ban# FlnUhtd. -t>»n *»e . O.r DM *d only A in Opt r* ltd HURON ECON O DRY CLEANERS and SHIRT LAUNDERERS 944 WIST HURON ST. PI 2-0211 Vi Ifock Wmtt of T»t-Huron Center ... Init Opposite Huron Theater and ASP Store i Uiirtd t.d Om.rt.Wd Dr; Clrttlnr I. Oer Own Htdtn Ftant Groupe. Ceslumee. Adult* Slightly Higher—' Open Man. and Frl. Kvrnlnge '111 9 ' Open Daily 9,tit to 5:3# ~ ■ \ VARDEN STUDIO 23 E. Lawrence St. I® 4-1701 PONTIAC 15. MICHIGAN CHRISTMAS Order Christmas Portraits Now LOVELY 8x10 Oil Tint PORTRAIT SPECIAL Rough Only Exterior Completely Finished with , Windows and Doors For as Little os f No Money Down No Payments Till Next Ysor Exterior ond interior Completed with Heat, Electric, DrywaH, Flooring For as Little as No Money Down No Payments v Till Noxt Year BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 92 WIST HURON ST. DOUBLE DISCOUNT CLEANING SPECIAL! 20% Off On All Dry-Cleaning CASH and CARRY • AH Men’s Garments • All Ladies’ Garments e All Children’s Garments e Blankets • Draperies • SLIPCOVERS L OFFER STMTS SONDir. NOV. 2M thn SATURDAY, DEC. M Quality Cleaning Since 1929 thp. Choice of Pont/a7#M W CLEANER^ 719 Wust Huron FE 4-1536 Pontiac Prepares Safaris VERSATILE LINE UP - The Pontiac line of 1962 Safari station wagons are represented here by the economical six-passenger Tempest, left, Station Wagons for All Needs and (he luxurious six-passenger Bonneville v its custom interior. The one-piece Tempest b gate simplifies cargo handling. Pontiac's station wagon custom-*s may choose between'four Safari models to suit their individual needs whether it be for industrial te or private transportation. The Bonneville Safari features luxurious interior appointments. Six and nine-passenger models are offered in the lower priced Catalina series. The new Tempest station wagon represents the greatest value in economy of operation, Pontiac officials said. - “In designing these versatile station wagons our engineers and stylists objectively studied the various needs of different customer gawps,” said E. M. Estes, General Motors vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division. “The success of our efforts Is reflected In 1M1 model sales when station wagons for n pel* cent of all sales and 10 per cent _...... standard else Pontiac .. . The 1962 Safaris are built on a 119-lnch wheelbase' with an overall length of 212.3 inches and are Says Gen. Walker 'Sleeper' in 1%4 PITTSBURGH (UPI) — Mar-ence E. Maiilon former dean of tin. Notre Dame I,mv School, told 500 persons here Friday night that former Army Gen. Edwin L. Walker Is a “sleeper” candidate, for president of the United States In 1004. WWW Manlon, who lectured before an audience which paid fl apiece for admission to the auditorium of the Third Presbyterian Church, described himself as a member of the John Birch So-clety and a sympathiser"©! the Americans for Constitutional Action. Manlon said Walker, who resigned front the Army early this month following an admonition for his right-wing activities as a division commander In West Germany, Is 1 "rieener" among n group acceptable.— tlves as candidates for the lion’s highest office. 57 inches high arid 79.6 inches wide. The Tempest Safari has a 112-inch wheelbase and measure 189.3 inches in length, 72.2 inches In width and 83.6 inches in height. All Safaris are four-door models and have sent belt Installation provisions. The loading area of the Pontiac Safari can accommodate a sizeable stack of four by eight plywood sheets. A luggage locker beneath the cargo deck provides extra storage space, while spare tire and tool Compartments are conveniently located in the right rear quarter panel. Standard equipment Includes the high-performing V8 engine with a wide range of horsepower options to meet all performance requirements. SPLIT BACK SEATS _____e carriers, four-speed manual transmission, air conditioning. an