. X. r/i0 Weather ” ir.B, Weailisr Bunav TArattMl ' Colder, 8now flurries /V (u«uiu p»i« $)' PONTIAC PRESS Edition Vol/120 no. all iririri PpN'lTAC, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1963 -48 PAGES Seek to Try Tee/( as Adult WA5HINGTOJt'*-*''Tlrcr Kennedy adipinistration abnjptly decide^d today to las^Wore th^'Nation this a^ernoon it^ase in the al-^ged new/Soviet military /build-up in Cnba. / At the same time, the White ' House mbved to cut down on merch^t shipping to Castro. It /ssued a long-expected orMr barring U. S. government shipments on any foreign fiag ____vessel that trades with Cuba^^_ / Foreign shippers would be for-/ given for past shipments if they / promised not to make pny more trips to Cuba. The White House said the briefing by Secretary of Defense covers Keating Interview, Page A-2 Robert McNamara would qover “the whole Cuban problem.” ★....★ w The three major television nef-works, NBC, ABC and CBS announced they would carry McNamara’s .talk live gt 5 p.m. The radio facilities of the three plus that df the Mi ...IMWtillg'^.-fllBO pi age at the same time. TO ANSWER GOP Press Secretary Pierre did not elaborate on his terse an-nouncCTftent on the briefing. But McNamara and his aides obviously were primed to fire back at GOP charges that the Kiissiah missile build-up In Cuba is continuing. The new shipping regulation falls considerably short of more sweeping proposals first planned by the administration last fall. White House sources.said the tougher proposals have not been adopted because of U. S. diplomatic success in getting the mar- ..-itime>-oeuntrl06 -to-out -down, .on “■'TKe (Sim trade.' ■ w ★ ★ These sources said stiffer regulations may be issued later if needed»and meanwhile the num-. ber of non-Communist bloc ships calling at Cuban ports has dropped from 92 last July to 14 in January. . I In Today's ^ if! I Press i [r Minnesota Muddle ' / still undecided who won ; i election - PAGE C-11. Fermi A-Facjflity t may so Power plant be operatidhal A-3. iy soon I PAGE 5 Better Counseling Students should take advantage of service in high school - PAGE D-S. Area News ..........A-4 Astrology .. Bridge ..... S Coinlcs^ I Editorials ............A4 | f Markets .,............D-6 ! „ Obituaries ,. . B-8 » < Sports D-l~D-3 ^ Ibeaters :. .. .D4 | .TV-Radio Programs D-Hl ‘ I Wilson, Eari..... *“ n,s Pages B-l-rBiA ..D-b 1 .td-si Adrmfs of His Mother A v^arrant charging a 15-year-old boy with the muf-der of his mother was requested today by Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor. At the same Ume, Taylor said his office was* pre-/ paring to ask the release of Douglas Godfrey from the tntsto^ of jawBfiileXutHSHties. The youth, a 10th grader at the Bloomfield Hills High School, admitted yes- Douglas GddFfey terday that he shot and killed his mother Jan. 25. A waiver would make it possible to try the teen-ager as an adult on the first-degree miirder charge in Oakland County Circuit Court. Officials were meeting this afternoon with Probate Judge Popald E. Adams to schedule a date for a waiver examination. The examination was expected to be next week. Judge Adams said earlier today he would appoint investigators to gather information tFdetefffline ^if a psychiatric examination is “♦needed. Conservative Party Backs Diefenbaker OTTAWA (/PI—Conservative party members bf the House of Comnipns, together with the cabinet, decided today to stand by Prime Minister John J^efenbaker as their leader in the coming election campaign. After a two-hour caucus/Fina^i^e Minister George Nowlan said Diefenbakpr “will be prime minister” after the April elections made necessary by no-confidence votes administered the re-j gime in the houliiiijftf commons last night. Nbwlan had been mentioned as possible new leader of the party. Some elements of the Conservatives were dissatisfied with Tayloi said he would recommend the psychiatric examination your own words? to court officials. Analytical Story, Page A-9 Diefenbaker even before the y. S.-Canadian dispute over nuclear weapons blew up and forced last night’s no-confidence votes. Sen. Wallace McCutcheon, a SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (IIPB-A manned Spacecraft tenter official today said the Russians suspect that the bones of thtilr cosmonauts lost calcium in prolonged space flight. CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI)-The United States today fired its mightiest 'tallltary missile, the 10-story Titan-2, more than 6,500 miles to its longest test success. minister withbUt TtoWbllO, described the cabinet as united. He sought to deflate rumors of a move on foot to oust Diefenbaker. A leading member of the cabinet, Douglas Harkness, resigned Sunday and told Diefenbaker that their differences were irreconcilable. George llets, trade minister, called today’s caucus “.the best we’ve ever had.” He added: We’re on the road and we’re going to knock hell out of the grits.” ’This is a niykname for the Lib- OTTAWA (IIPI)—Prime Minister J o hn Diefen-bakcr, a cabinet revolt against his leadership jippai»iUIy.-q»asheil». to; . flay -dlsf^ CaMda'a-25th Parliament to hold a national election Monday, April, 8. eral party, the main opposition to Diefenbaker’s Conservatives. While other elements of the party-’ outside ' parliament remained to be heard from, the sentiment expressed In the caucus seemed to assure him of keeping the leadership. If the examination is scheduled, the hearing on the waiver would be delayed. OUT TOO OFTEN’ The teen-ager admitted yesterday that he wanted his rnbther dead because “she criticized him for going out too often,” *K^rd-ing to Taylor. Mrs. Mary Godfrey, 88, was shot in the head while standing in the kitchen of her home at 983 Dursley Road. Since tte fear of sniper” has spread over County. “People all over the county have been scared to death the last week and a half,” said Taylor. “I think we have gotten rid of this fear.” 'We Argued,' Soli Declares Answers the Questions of County Prosecutor Here are excerpts from the statement Douglas Godfrey made to Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor: The youth also has d'dmitted firing into two other houses in the vicinity of his home near the Eastdver School, Taylor, said. Douglas, who is reported to (Continued on Page 2^,’Col. 5) Snow Flurries, Cold Weather Due to Blow In tonight will usher in snow flurries and colder temperatures. 'The low will be about 20. .^Partly cloudy and continued cold, the mercury reaching high of 28, is th’e ,/rediction for tomorrow in the Pontiac area. South to southwest morning winds at 2 miles per hour will become 15 to 25 m.p.h. tonight. Twenty-eight was the low reading prior to 8 a.m. The thermometer recorded 39 at 2 p. m. Q. Suppose you just tell us in SEARCH FOR MURDER WEAPON - Police, headed by Bloomfield Township Chief Norman Dehnke (foreground), probe the snow in Orion Township for the gun that Douglas Godfrey used to kill his mother. In center background is Joseph Campbell, 17, of Royal Oak. Police said Campbell drove Godfrey tP;,. the area but did hot know that Godfrey threw away the gun. A. I went out — I went by the garage door and I went up there to the kitchen window and shot her. Q. Was there kome reason for shootiM your mother? Was that the d)|^ you had a little argu ment>ith yoiir mother about shoveling the snow? A. No. Q*JVbstr4Mitti>le.4ld.you have? Any disagreements — | A. We was always arguing. Did you have any reason for stealing the gun? ' A;N»;-........^-----^..... Q. Had you thought about shooting your mother before? A. Yah. Q When did you decide or think about shooting youif mother? A. Couple weeks before. Q. Had she 6een kind of strict with you? Is that what you thought? ^ A. Yes. Q. What in particular had she done.. • A. She tried to — like find excuses to keep me home. Q. How did you know that your mother had gone in the kitchen? You had. been down-in tlie -basement? A. I heard her.. Q. How far were you from the Iwindow whett,yottuse(UJiSvgwn? NOrthoaly winds lorecasl for i*- “A..Not too far. 4 just — itrob- ably to the edge of the little porch like, but it was closer. Q. Did you know that you had struck your mother when you fired the gun? A. Well, I heard a fall. I thought it was her. Q. Then what did you do? A. I took off as soon as I shot it. I wasn’t waiting to see or anything. •Q, Where did you go? (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) How Do You Explain to the Boy's Father? By JIM DYGERT How do you tell a man that his 15-year-old son may be the murderer of the man’s wife, toe bbyVdwh quiet, withdrawn son, Douglas-fell yesterday upon Thomas G. Kavanagh, a Birmingham attorney, That the killer who injected fear into a thousand daily routines, the “deranged” gunman sought by hundreds of worried police, may be his own little boy? That the “sniper” who shot the boy's mdlhcr through a^Mtchen windowrtttB^ lifore, apparently was the boy himself? The bitter task—of telling Donald. 11, Godfrey that police had frightening evidence against his cried. The boy cried. Godfrey had never suspected, Kavanagh said later. To caU it shock was only to begin describing it. . r • STOLEN PISTOL BtoomfieW-TWffitorFT^^ Chief It all began-weeks-ago7Teaily; Norman Dehnke and Michigan when a 22-callber p U to I was state pohec officers. Neighbors Re//^vgcf— but Sorry home at 983 Dursley “Road, Bloomfield Township, shortly after 9 p.m. Jan. 25. Godfrey agreed. He and Doug- When it waa all-over, Gedfpay iinifiatlvwl at tod api^ta^ tlnie. stolen froth a Royal Oak sporting goods store. But, yesterday-r-the final day —it all began at 11 a.m. when Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor telephoned Godfrey and asked hfm to come with Douglas to the P o n 11 a c State Police post at 1 p.m. Taylor wanted to discuss further the shooting of Godfrey’s 38-year-old wife, Mary. A fcallbe Altoough Taylor says he gave no indication the boy was under suspicion, attorney Kavanagh wds with them. TTiere to greet th^m were Taylor, county Sheriff Frank_Jrana,... Taylor asked that Douglas submit to a' lie detector test. ^ Kavaqagh replied that an explanation was In order. He could not approve of a He detector test as a fishing expedition. There would have to be good reason for it. Taylor took the attorney aside and told him what police had learned the day before and had told him at 10:30 a.m. yesterday, •they knew Dqngblui hnUr The Godfrey Home a Mystery Solved ^ ......■ Somewhere between stunned silence and a sigh of relief, there lies a sort of peacefulness. That kind of quiet descended on Dursley Road today. The phantom sniper is no more. The shooting of Mrs. Mary Godfrey, 983 Dursley, has been solved. Ilesidcnls of the Bloomfield Township nei^iborhood greeted the news with mixed emotions. FEEL RELIEF The initial reaction was one of relief. Tile t e n s i o n of recent weeks was gone. Once again, a car. backfiring is Just a noisy automobile, not a gunshot. A barking dog is a pest, not an alarm. Many residents were shocked into silence. The end was hprd to /-omprehend. They quietly asked themselves: “Why?” But possibly the most human reaction was compassion. Refusing to ’comment on the matter, a housewife said, “The Godfreys already have suffered enough.” This f e e Li rt g Was especially strong among neighbors clo,se to the Godfreys , They lelt sorry, ^ ___________....------- ----------- ------- ------, They were relie^d that it was sqh has admitted nhooting his mother, talks with Bltwmfinld all over, but wished it could have » Township Police Chief Norirtan Dehnke during an interview last ended another, way.. • night at the Oakland County Jail. In center background la Sheriff’s Deteqtlve Harry Jones, the first to learn Ullat Douglil . Godfrey possessed, a stolen gun. , i TROUBLED FATHER - FonllM Donald Godfrey (left), whose, iti reluri c s-iwe;. THK POKTl^C PHBS3> WEDNESDAY, FEBl^^ltARy 1 \m Classmate Provided Clue Leadihg to Apprehension MBMORAIILE ms Btltdns won’t soon forget this bleak winter. One of the chilliest scenes was this mid-January helicopter view on the wind-swept, snow-covered Yorkshire moors. Trapped three days by k hr Fh«tof*X blizzard at Flyingdales, workers braved the Yukon-like landscape on a four-mile hike to the railroad station and home from the * “ secret radar early warning station. Fresh Blizzards Hit W. Europe Motofifts StTtmdtiil in England, Scotland —tONDON W -- Fresh blizzards swept across much of Western Europe during the night, disrupting communications still more and isolating communities from Britain to thef Balkans: TM storms hit Britain with re-nev^ force, stranding hundreds - Of Hietorlsts aitd’trudt drivers. Many were helped through the snow by rescue teams and given emergency beds in village Parking to End on County Site The Downtown Pontiac Busi-l auditors and DPBA officials ness Association (DPBA) today agreed to the action, according announced it will close the old to Monroe M. Osmun, DPBA Motoring organizations said road ^conditions in Scotland were the worst since the arctic weather spell started six weeks ago. On one stretch near Lanark ISO trucks wete marooned. In Wales, two busloads of chO-dren were tripped in the stmrm. Villagers curried the children through the snow and put them up for the night. Western Europe’s death toll from the weather rose to 566. France remained b) ttlO grip M winter, with severe cold in the east and storms battering the Atlantic coastline. Most French rivers’ were hrozen. Heat from power plants on the ileine hear Paris prevented the river from freezing through the capital, but the Seine was 'isidid a few miies away. There was no sign of a thaw in West Germany, where temperatures averaged 14 degrees. More snow piled up in Austria. . Freed) falls in Vienna halted attempts to clear the streets. county courthouse site to free parking tomorrow morning. The lot was ordered closed today by the county, board of Printers Vote on Refilling Strike Fund By Uqited Press International Methters of the International Typographical Union (ITU) are voting today in the United States and Canada on whethef to replenish dwindling strike funds. The unionwide referendum was called on a proposal to assess each working ITU member 3 per ; cent .of his grou- weekly wage to bolster the funds. They have been depleted by the. long newspaper strikes in New York City and Cleveland. More than 80,000 printers are eligible to vote. Bertram A. Powers, president of striking New York ITU Local predicted approval of the assessment by the international membership. Result of the over-all vote will be available at Colorado Springs,! Colo., the ITU’s headquarters city. Douglas Godfrey, the admitted killer of his mother, was a suspect almost from the day of the slaying. But It was not until Monday'that police received information that pointed directly at him. A »^classmate provided the evidence that led police to press their investigation of him. Gary Rocamora, 15, of 23176 Fourteen Mile Road, Bloomfield iTowni^ip, told Oakland. County ;a)erlff*s Detective Harry Jonesr that Douglas had told him that he had a 22-caliber pistol he had ; stolen from a sporting goods !shop.- Rocamora said that young Godfrey bad tried to sell him the gun. The offer was made liii^ore the sniper Incidents occurred. ★ w a Police said the pistol was stolen from the Silverwolf, a sports shop at ilOQ Woodward Ave., Royal Oak, in December when Douglas ran away from home after quarreling with his younger brothers. TURNED SELF IN He turned himself over to Pontiac police just before (Christmas. The officer who met the boy after he returned was Pontiac Police Sergeant Carl Colando, head of the department’s Crime Prevention Bureau which deals with young'Offenders. ★ ★ 4 Colando today related the events that took place on Jan. 19, the day Douglas walked into the police station. I / w ★ e asked if this was the place president. However, the association also|„. , . j u i » «lld It plara to appeal a CircuitW>n»ell In," Court declalon prohIblUng (he Colando said. DPBA from providing free parking on_the site,,. , Jack L. Banycky, attorney for the DPBA, said he planned to file a claim of appeal to the State Supreme Court this afternoon. Accompanying it would be a separate motion asking Circuit Judge Stanton Q. Dondero to grant a stay-of proceedings pending a high court decision. If a stay of proceedings is 'anted,^ it could mean the would be open to parking for several months. ‘T asked him for what and he told me .IM. lui M nm away from home three days before,” added Colando. “It was for something trivial. If I remember correcUy he said he had been disciplined because he had thrown snowballs at his brothers. ★ ★ w “His father didn’t pick him up for more than three hours and since it was a slow day I had time to talk to him. ’The conversation was pretty much one-sided, however.” NOT TALKATIVE He was reluctant to talk and parents, he shrugged and said ‘.They’re alright’.’’ He told me that he did not like the neighborhood he was living in and would rather be hack In Clawson where the family had lived before moVing to Bloomfield Township, Douglas abo told Colando that he did not* like Bloomffeld Hills High School. ★ ★ ★ “We talked nbout eveiymii^ and the.cdnversation got arbimd to lie detectors.’-’ - - Since it was located in the next room, Colando said he took the boy and showed him how it operates. .51)6-boy’s interest in IhiLpsdy-graph appeared again last Thursday when he called George Ca-ronis, Pontiac’s Youth ^istance worker. REMEMBERED NAME Douglas had never mM Caron-Js, but apparently had remembered his name when GolandO mentioned it during the long interview. Douglas spoke on the pheme to Caronis for about , a half hour and his main concern was the accuracy of Ole lie detector tests. Police had indicated earlier In the investigation they Wanted to have the boy take lie detector tests. ★ ★ w Caronis told the police of the boy’s conversation. Bloomfield ’township Police Chief Norman, Dehnke.said the boy “had been a suspect almost right from the start.” Police had been unlHMe to find footprints leading from the window of the God^rCT home across the lawn or To the road. Snow covered the ground. ★ ★ w Douglas told .police he came out of the house, went to the kitchen window and fired one shot at his mother. Powder bums were found the window sill. ILLEGAL LEASE | Judge Dondero ruled Jan. 28 that a lease between the county ,, , . and association was illegal. His dfidaion was signed Moiay; ^ ““onsr Mmw Although the DPBA legaUy can „eep the lot open for 20 days,! “The bOy told me that hq had according to Banycky, association | sleeping in cars and ga-leaders agreed to close the lot,'•ages and had money to buy to keep peace with county offi- ^ ” dais. I “When I asked him about his Birmingham Area News fj!rison Educator Slates, Crime Prevention Talk ■ “-'THOBURN' H. WANT Death Takes Aree^MMar Hioburn H. (Toby) Wiant, widely known advertising and,,-.- ^ to DeHoCo, according to Birpung- early May in Harper Hospital, Detroit, after a lengthy illness. He was II. ★ ★ ★ Mr. Wiant, who was vice president, administrative and an account, supervisor of Young & Rubicam, Inc., Detroit, lived at 4331 Karen Lane, Bioom-fleld Hills. Funeral arrangements are pending. . He joined Young & Rubicam in 1945 as Detroit office public relations director. In 1958 he took over the tifree positions he held at hfo death. Prior to Joining the advertising firm, Jfr. Wiant was with the Associated Press for 11 years, first as a reporter in Indianapolis and later an editor in toe AP’ New York headquarters. At the time of his death he was serving his second term president of the Birmingham Commuhi^ House. He also was a ruling elder of toe Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian Church, BIoomfMlld HUIs. ★ w e Surviving are his wife Betty; a daughter, Susan, at home; his parents. Dr. and Mrs. W, W. Wiant of Columbus, Ohio; and a brother. Rev. Howard J, Wiant of Youngstown, Ohio. BIRMINGHAM - A pioneer in the field of educatidh for prison inmates will report on the latest research into the causes of crime at a meeting here next Wednesday. ^ New federal crime study centers, which were established to prevent crime by learning about, its causative factors, will be discussed by Mrs. Myrtle VI-ozka, director of women’s division rducalM at the DetroR House of Correction. Mrs. Viozka, who initiated the education program for women at the Detroit Instltutioo, will speak at a noon meeting-ofrthe Blf-mfrigharn branch of the American Association of University Women. The meeting will be at the Birmingham Community House. No girl who. lias obtained a ham AAUW publicity chairman Mrs. D. B. Dickerson Jr. Mrs. Viozka also will comment on guidance programs in elementary schools and special education for the emotionally and socially maladjusted child. ‘The Evolution of an Evolutionist,” an anniversary exhibit of C3iarles Darwin, will open Tuesday at the Cranbrook Institute of Science in Bloomfield Hills. Organized by the American M u s e u m of Natural History land circulated by toe Smithsonian Institute, the exhibit wm be open daily from 2 to 5 p.m. through March 17. ' The efflSff traces Darwto’s life and evaluates his contributions to science. Murray D. Jones Requiem Mass for Murray D. Jones, 79, of 2852 Colonial Way, Bloomfield Hills, will be sung 10 i.m. Friday at the St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church. Burial will follow in Mount Hope Cemetery, Pontiac. I Mr. Jones died Monday after a lengthy illness. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham, Mr. Jones was a ?wtlred employe of Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Joseph Pinter of Bloomfield Hills; three sons, John and Gerald, both of Biminghpm, and Philip of Pontiac; and 17 grandchildren. Police Locate Three Bodies PORTLAND, Maine (AP)-Po-lice said today the bodies of a young husband and his two children, missing since the man’s wife,w»s diacQvereil dead, ia hec„„ suburban home Tuesday, were found today in a Portland cemetery. # ★ Officers said the body of Clarence Allen, 22, of Portland was found under his car, and those of the children—April 20 months, and Cary, 8 montos-on the front seat of the auto. NOTE FOUND Clipped to the dashboard, police said, was a note reading: “It’s better this way. Sorry, I did it this way, but we'll all be together.” , At that point, police said, toe wridng trailed off int") illegibility. Preliminary reports said all three apparently died of carbon monoxide poisoning. Tuesday, the fUlly-clothed My of Allen’s estranged, 19-year-old wife, Sheila, was found on her bed with a necktie around her throat. Police said Allen was seen leaving the house earlier in the day.. A Portland lawyer reported he had scheduled service of divorce )apers 0" Mrs. Allen yesterday . )ut at 1 p.m. her husband called him and halted the plan. Teen to Be Tried as Adult in Sniping? How Do You Tell His Father- The Weather (Continued From Page One) I at toe time of toe slay- Pull U.S. Weatoer Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and mild today high 42. Colder tonight with sliow flurries low 20. Partly cloudy and colder Thursday high 28. South to southwest winds IS to 25 miles by afternoon shifting to nqrtoerly' tonight. _______ iw» Tn«d>]''ii^mi»«ratar« Chat Alpana IS, Fort Wortlt .. - Escanaba 2< 30 Tackaonvllli so 48 Houahton 36 33 xSitU City 87 44 UniilnK 36 23 Lob AMeles 80 86 Marquttta 28 38 MlamIBaaoh 68 56 Munkcgon 31 30 Mll»aukeS\ 30 38 PcllBton 31 18 New Orleanr^ 33 Trav. City 37 33 New York 40 33 Albuquerque 88 43 Omaha 5} 88 38 Plioenlx 87 56 38 Pltti---- ing. It was up to Havanagh to tejl Godfrey. \ The father, the ^ and the attorney went into a room to talk, NATTONALi mniER Snow is expected tonight In the Lakes region and in the northern Rockies while toe north Pacific will have occasional rain. It Will be mild on toe Atlantic gnd Gulf coasts; colder from the north and central Mississippi Valley to the northern Appalachians. The father and the attiu'ney urged the son to tell toe truth. Tlireb ifioiifs aTOr to&y eiitered: the room, they asked for Taylor to come in. ■ As Taylor answered the summons, he saw tears in the eyes of father and son. SON CONFESSES ‘ He wants to tell qyerything,” Godfrey said. And the boy did. In a statement to Taylor, Douglas admitted shooting his mother because "she tried to find excuses to keep me home.” Douglas adnWttcd he had fired into other hdmes to “build up a reputation there was, a sniper.” ★ * ■ ' He admitted stealing the 22-caliber pistol from toe sporting goods store about Dec. 18 He hadn’t planned to kill his mother then, he said, but decided to kill her a “couple of weeks before” he did kill her. When toe statement was over, the father and son cried again. The boy later was whisked to the county’s Children’s Home. POSSIBLE SANITY hearing The case could not have' been golvqd, Taylor said, without Godfrey’s aiKl Kavanagh’s (Cooperation. I Announcing plans to dikeuss a possible sanity hearing for the boy, T#yIor said, “iThave reason to believe this boyj moy be mentally III.” tor's theory of the crime-<4hat Douglas set out to create an age of a sniper as part of a plot to murder his mother without drawing suspicion toward himself. * . * A “eouple of weeks” before the mysterious shootings in Bloomfield Township began, less than a month before a horrified man heard his son admit to murder. (Continued From Page One) have an IQ of 140, said he shot his mother with a 22-caIiber pistol he stole from the Silverwolf sporting goods store in Royal Oak about Dec. 18. plotted in ADVANCE He said he plotted to kill his mother two weeks in advance. Officers from toe Bloomfield Township Police Department, sheriff’s department and the state police worked in cooperation,, to solve the qase since the shooting occurred 11 days ago. w ★ ★ Police today were searcjiing for the gun in the southeast corner of Orion Township. Douglas told Taylor be tossed toe gun alongside a back road in the area last Monday, the dityjtefoix his Teen Pair Found Guilty in Shooting Incident DEARBORN (AP) - Roger G. Luck, 19, and Daniel J. Doerfling, 17, both of Nankin Township, were found guilty yesterday of careless use of firearms after a 22-calibcr bullet struck the milk chute of a Nankin Township home.' ★ ★ * They will be sentenced Saturday by Nankin Township Justite Michael Bradley. - companied by Birmingham attor^ ney Thomas Kavanagh. The youth made a statement to Taylor after talking In private with his father and Kav-aha^ for nearly three hours. Godfrey,, interviewed last night by newsmen at a press conference, stated; ★ I had no knowledge that my son was/responsible until it all came out earlier today.” THOUGHT HE WAS INSIDE I thought he was in the house when my wife was shot,” Godfrey said. “I believe be was in the lower level (family r.>)inj watching -television:”- Taylor said the boy had^cen In the lower level below the He said a I7-year-old friend, Joseph Campbell of Royal Oak, drove him to the lonely area but did not have any knowledge that Douglas was going to throw away a pistol. Joseph was to be questioped today by polite. Douglas is being held in the Oakland County Children’s Home. He broke down and admitted the shooting at the Pontiac state police post yesterday afternoon. The youlh had been brought ther6 by his father, Donald H., lay preacher and partner in the Gage-Bilt Products Co. Godfrey had acted. on the request of Taylor, who received information from police involving the boy. The father and son were ac- wefe watehing television In a bedroom. Another sqn, Donald, 18. was away at Alma College, and a daughter, Deborah, 16, was out for the evening on a date. Doug as sald'ite Iffiew his mother would come in the kitchen that evening to fix a snacto When he got to the window, Douglas said, he could see only his mother’s shadow in the kitcii-). He estimated he was only about a foot from the window when he fired the single shot. Godfrey found his wife about 9:30 p.m. after becoming curious as to why she was taking so long in toe kitchen lUs discovery woiild have been about 10 minutes after toe shooting, kitchen bnt, by his own admis- W minutes after toe shooting, Shm,' w«««rflm limraffii "ir slate mother's footsteps above and rushed outside with the stolen gun. went jftut — I went by the garage door and up to the kitchen window and shot her,” Douglas admitted in his statement. Douglas said he and his mother were always arguing. * . ★ * Asked by Taylor what in particular Douglas’ mother had done to bring about his dislike, the youth stated: “She tried to find excuses keep me home.” TTie youth said that, after he fired the pistol he “heard a fair and then “took off” back to the family room. Godfrey and IWo of his other sons, Joel, 13, and Britcc, 12, ment. The boy said he shot her about 9:20 p.m. A young tipster was the first to give police from three departments Any. concrete lead to the shooting. A 15-year-old boy told police Douglas had offered to sell him a gun. Doqglas, who said he only considered killing his mother a couple of weeks before the actual shooting, claimed he halTTired upon two other homes in his neighborhood “to build up a reputation there was a sniper.” , The idea of creating the -impression of a sniper first crossed his mind “quite a while ago when that Taylor guy was loose,”. Douglas said. He was referring to Gary Ad- dison Taylor, who terrorized Royal Oak six years ago. GUNMAN IN INSTITUTION Taylor, now 26, was captured in a wild police chase In 1957 after wounding four women and firing shots at others. He is now in a mental institution. * ★ ★ . Douglas denied he had anvtiiing to do with the recent shooting, in Novi where a hoiusewife- narrowly missed being hit with'a 22-bali-ber bullet. He did admit, however,f ilial he once shot at a car traveling on Long Lake Road but said he didn’t hit it. 'We Argued,' Youth Declares (Continued From Page One) A, Back to toe laiAliy room, Q. Were you down there wato ing for your mother to come In the kitchen? A. Yah. Q. How tong had you been in the basement? A. About an hour. Q. Did you shoot through the windows of some other homes than your own home? A, Yes. Q. What rea.son did you have for going to this particular home? A. To build up a reputation there was a sniper. Q. Now, did you — were you over in Novi? A. No, I didn’t do anything there. Keating Willing to Give Cuba Data By JACK BELL Crafty, loo, according to Tay- FRED S. HOFFMiWf WASHINGTON (AP)^n. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., offered today to give President Kennedy previously undisclosed Information he has gathered about Soviet military activities in Cuba. The New York senator, wlio has been Involved to several disputes with the admliUstra-tion over tls charges that toe government had not told all of the facts about Cuba, made the offer to an exclnsive Interview With The Associated Press, . j Keating'said he would be willing to tell the President aMt reports he has received faqt on which he has made no public statements because he could not confirm their authenticity to his own aatisfaetton- I would welcome toe opportunity to tell toe President of the information I have, to tell him also of the information I’ve heard which I do not consider confirmed but which might be true,” he said. WON’T TELL SOURCE But. Keating said he doesn’t want to reveal even to Kennedy the sources of information the administration has often challenged in toe past but which proved to be basically right: Keating clarified one issue of conflict with the Pentagon. He conceded he was hot talking about hard bases for Intermediate range missiles when he said last week he had evidence offensive bases were being maintained by the Soviets. As far as he knows, Keating said these concrete bases have iNton broken up. (fo said he was talking about gravel-based medium range missile sites. He conceded he hqs no toformation that.Jannchers which could be used on the sites remain in Cuba. Keating suggested that there may be a difference of opinion within the administration on what about Cuba and that “may account for the reluctance on the part of officials to give Americans all of the facts.” ^ ♦ Here are questions and, answers from the interview: Q. The matter ol. toe Soviet build;up in Cuba appear^ to lie rushing toward an investigative (Continued bn Page A-Kf) JF-.V.. THE PONTlAd PHKS8> WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1963 A—» Atomic Readot—7 Years Building—May Soon Produce (Editor’s Note: This is the first of three articles mi the Enrico Fermi atomic power plant in Southeastern Michi-> pan, started almost seven pears ago and still Inopero-tivej be compoeed of atoms that can be separated and caused to ex* pend energy in the form of heat in the pi;ocess. .By A«F. S^AHAN MONROE ») - The Atomic Thus, n reactor that will produce more fuel than it bums could fuel other reactors, and, as the AEG says, “solve the problem of adequate energy supplies Energy Conunission says ihat^r generations.” “for the long-term benefit of the country, and indeed of the world’ ft Is time more emphasis should be placed on so-called fast-breeder atomic reactors. That assertion in an AEG report to President Kennedy liihbnnied to a miisslve in-the.«* ... il to control atomic chain reaction, said in 1945: “The country which first develops a breeder reactor will have a, great competitive advantage In atomic energy.” The world’s largest breeder-type reactor — and the only one privately financed and designed specifically for production lof - electricity — may be In operation in Michigan before Aiall 1. It has been named “Enrico Fermi” and is at Lagoona Beach, 40 miles soutiviiRest of Detroit. OTHERS PRODUGE Other tor plapt Detroit Edison was to build to use the reactor’s steam. In late 1959 it was estimated that initial nuclear operations would begin in late 1960. By now, “Enrico Fermi” has absorbed more than $100 million, and it still hasn’t, so to speak, tiirped a wheel. The spiraled costs and the delay weren’t entirely unexpected. Nobody else in the world ever had tried to build anything like “Enrico Fermi.” everything had to be designed from scratch, then built and tested for both performance and safety. 3ther t;^s qf reactors^^eady B producing elecWcity. And in some instances at costs almost competitive with coal-burning boiiers. But they bum up uranium 235 hiel, found only in dribblets witiiin plentiful butnonfissionable (nonsplittable) uranium 238. A fast-br«eder reactor is designed to produce more fuel than it bums, by converting U238 Into fissionable plutonium 239. The “Enrico Fermi” reactor is expected to produce 1.2 pounds for every pound it Not too distant, experts agree, is the day when fissionable uranium will be hard to come by. To serve as fuel, material must Send British Troops 1,000 British troops left this b.ase yesterday aboard the Commando carrier Albion for relief duty in the Sultanate of Brunei, recently stirred by a revolt. NEW MIRACLE FALSE TEETH RELINER ENDS YOUR FALSE TEETH MISERY >1 cljcIcU tint under i withouuea DBNTU«*« • •• -r- *-• Utts t ftnt end more! Peels out 'URITBitiyf firm y*t pU»n{i denturlte Atomic Energy Commission and are* at the national reactor station nearAJdaho Falls« Idaho. No. 1 produces a ipere ^ kilowatts No. 2 hasn’t into operation yet. No. 2’i maximum electric production is es-t i m a t a d at 20,000 kUowatts, compared with “Enrico Fermi’s” ultimate 150,000. Back in 1950, the Detroit Edison Go. and Dow Ghemical Go. began studying the feasibility of using nuclear hhat in the operation of a steam-electric power plant, and obtained an AEG “go-ahead” to '-design one in ----------------------— Now, says manager Itobert W. Hartwell, of Power Reactor Development Co., “Enrico Fermi” will be ready by late this month or early March to take on a load of atomic fuel and begin initial operations. But in initial operations, the plant will , make no steam and produce ao electricity. Hartwell says it may take three to five years to work up to a planned witput of 150,000 kilowatts of electricity — enough to supply all the needs of an average city of 100,009 population. Incidentally, Hartwell e s t i-mates it will require three weeks to load the reactor with its 105 fuel rods (elements), so-called blanket rods, and the neutron rod that bombards the uranium atoms and sets nfif cbain reac- SINGAPORE (APi-Mare tbaifSoii. 'Enrico Fermi” will use sodi-1 — a solid metal in its natural state — as a coolant or heater, depending on how you look at it. Sodium, which liquifies at 208 degrees fahrenheit, will at 550 to 750 degrees cool the reactor and heat the water that is turned into to run the electricity-making turbine. • ONLY FOUR OTHERS •lliere are only four other fast-breeder reactors in the world all M them experimental. One is owned by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority and is located at Doun-reay, Scotland. It now is producing 20,000 kilowatts of electricity and funneling it into the British power grid. This government plant’s ultimate. power production ia less than a third that of “Enrico Fermi.” Two known as EBR No. 1 and No. 2 (for experirnental breeder reactor) are owned by the U.S. ■ NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Donl lamp to Coiioluslom 00 yoir INCOME TAX *5 Avoid Iroublotonw, cottly mlitakMl To be SURE, take your tax to BLOCKI You'll get fast, accurate. J a eort M imair you'll 'way dhMd In time, trouble, and often even mbney K/tod< loVbd. See BLOCK, ii Ltriciit T»i SMilet /7321 W. HURON St. PONTIAC breeder, a 5i000-fcllewatt one. Rpssia • has jihe fourth fast- tj) June 19, 1959 — almost three , Michigan already has a hon-breeder atomic power plant p?o-ducing electricity. It is .at Big Rock Point, near Charlevoix,'and was built by Consuiners Power CO. at a coat of $27 million. Plans for the Big Rock Point plant weren’t even announced un- years after ground was broken for “Enrico Fermi.” But It went into operation with nuclear fuel last Oct. 4. PRODUCTION TD INCREASE Its ^nned capacity is .50,000 kilowatts of electricity, iwt as yet it has produced little. Consumers hOpes to bring,it up to 10,000 kilowatts this year, but 50,-kilowats may be as much as four and a half yeafs away. While Big Roc1k Point is built along what now has become conventional lines for atomic power makers — using boiling water to cool the reactor and make steam — it still is undergoing research and devel- opment, aimed primarily at im creasing fuel efficiency. The AEG says present type r«n actors “can make use of. . . less than one per cent of the uranl-nv utilized. Big Rock Point’s reactor will have to‘ be refueled from time to time and it will produce no fuel to replace that which it burns. Cionsumm Power estimatea its atomic fuel bill this year at |8B1,« 400 and expects it gradually to advance to $1,458,000 a'year by 1966. By then, conceivably, it could be burning plutonium bred and born at “Enrico Fermi.” (Toaiorrow: Enrico Fenid is ready to go; why bpilding has taken so long). TOMORROW For This Guaranteed SUPER SAVINGS Event 0MI. THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P.M. For AUTOMATIC WASHER^ Famous Colgates W Mmmi BotfirgEnt 39e Large SImo Box—Now The advanced detergent for automatic washers. Washes clothes reaHy clean. FREE stainless . spoon or fork inside each pack-^ age. >^2nd Floor THURSUAY-12 Noon to 9 P.M ChOtBB of TItlos SO Foot RAol 8mm Movie Cartoons BogxUtr $1»9S Value—Now Titles includei Bopeye, Betty Boop, Laurel & Hardy, eto Ideal for the kiddies. Black & Wh»e >ns. —Main Floor THURSDAY-12 Noon to 9 P.M 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS OMUlllt BIR«.«4UmO IVopam Sat Tank C $1.69 Value rKills Bad Odors Fast-COLQATES Popular^ TIorieiitt Air Deodorant 99< For hand torches — gas cylindor tank by Bernz-O-Motio limit 2 taAks. Regular 49c Solter-Naw Choice of Applebtossom, Pine, Mirtt, Ftorol, and unscented fragrances. S’/a-ounce spray con ; Umit 2. -2nd Floor 33 THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P.M Oalvanizod Steal-Complete With Cover 20-6al. Garbage Can Regular $2.79 SeUerr-Now For Water npot-Flberglas Pipe Wrap Insiilatioii K 59' of Insulqtlon and wrapping. For pipes — prevents freezing in cold weather, moisture drip In hot weather. ____________ Approved-size for city and township fick-up. Side drop handles, tite-fit cover. Limit 2 per person. —2nd Floor THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P.M Easy to Apply Bungalow 'DRIKCTE' Latex Wall Paint Regular $4.95 Per (^llon For living rooms, dining roomi, bedrooms, hallways etc Washable—easy to keep clean. White and'd'ecorotor colors. —2nd Floor THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P.M, In Space Saving Compact Box-400 Sheets ‘Kleenex’ Tissues Meigalar 29e Value-Now Soft, absorbent tissues — a necessity in any household. Popup dispenser feature. Limit 3 boxes. Save 1 Qc per box. —Main Floor THURSDAY 12 Noon to 9 P M, Vb-Inch by 1000-Inch Rolls ‘Tuck’ Celiephane Tape Reg. 29c Seller—Per Roll inch width by 1000 inch length. In handy dispenser. You'll find many uses for cellophane ■ tope in home, office, store etc. VumU2_rolls. —Main Floor THURSDAY-12 Noon to 9 P.M, . Sanfdrizhd-Reinforced at Strain Points Bcjfs’ Benim Bungarebs Regular $1.69 Value—Now ALL FIRST QUALITY denim in 10 , ^ ^ ^ and 11 (A-ounce weight. Front zipper fly. Sizes 4-6^-12. No limit. —Baaoment THURSDAY 1 7 Noon to 9 P.M The oven cleaner that reolly works—complete with applicator brilish—no scraping of baked-on greoso. ' . 2nd FLOOR BARGAINS Complete with Bow Tie an,|l Cuff Links Bejfs’ Dress iShirts Regular $1.98 Value-Now American made white dress shirts with permanent collarstqy$. \Mash shirts in sizes 5 to 7 ‘-Baaomonf 1 00 Blazed 3-Pieee Mixing Bowi Set ,/ $2.00 Value 1 27 THURSDAY 1 2 Noon to 9 P M: Nested set of mixing bowls — Norwelglan Ipiported glazed pottery in 5-6 Ond 7V!t inch sizes. FREE PMKING In Any Pontiac City Matarqd Parking Lots! You got double values in downtown Pontiac — FREE PARKING and SIMAAS — the storo whom you got more for your money day in and day out... heVe are Extra CUT-PRICES for Simrht 9-Hour Sale Tomorrow, shop 'n see for youraeHfl . BIG MARK-DOWNS PUYTEX LIVIN6 GLOVES I Regular $1,39 Value—plux free extra right hand glove. Save 50c. —Main Floor 89‘ NOXZEMA SKIN CREAM Regular $1.35 Giant size IQ-ounces of .world famous medicdted cream. —Main Floor 79' 69* TURES of T66THPASTE SAMTARY NAPKINS 2iSM12i29' Choice of Colgates, Creit, e Regular 43c package of 12'$ Gleem, Ipana, Pepsodent or J — choice of Kotex, Femx, Vee-Sfripe., Economy size tubes. • Forms or Modess. limit 3 pock-Limit 4. —Main Floor * ages. —Main Floor JERGENB urrigR Regular $1.00 Size—Jergens soothing lotion with dispenser. —Moin Floor 66' HUDNUr NOME FERMANENT $1.50 Value—'Hudnut 'Quick^ 20 Curl pfck-op permanent for all holr. —Main Floor 67' RAN A ARRID DEODORANTS 98c Sixe w Large economy size of.Bon or Arrid In poplar Roll-On form. For men and women's use. —Main Floor PLASTIC COATED PLAYING CARDS fi’98 7Se Deck 35' Bridge size playing cards wHh assorted backs. Wipes clean with a damp cloth, limit 2 decks. —Main Floor BALL FEN REFILLS .. Regular lOe values — fits most ball pens Including Paper-Mate. Blue ink. Limit 3 to a customer. : —Main Floor 5' MIXED NUrS-13-Ob Yin $1.19 Value ■— 'Chefs Choke' mixed nuts in vacuum packed can. Limit 2. —Main Floor 65' TAMPA CUB 5* CIGARS AOJIr-WNDUP AUHM CL0« soil 99: $2.59 Value 1 69 Regular $2.50 value — box of 50 smooth smoking Tampa Cub cigars. Limit 2 boxes per 'Pacer' wind-up alarm clock In-ivory case. Made by Ingraham and carrys factory guarantee. person. —Main Floor 2 Plus 10% tax—=-Main Floor MEN'S POGKET WATCH ^Regular $4.99 value — “Beau-Snooz" lets you snooze extra 10 minutes. Plus 10% Fed. Tax. —Main Floor 1 99 GE ELECTRIC ALARM CLOCK eg DAniilnr 1^4-99 \ynlkM» — 'Rccn-Snrtny' IaK Vrtii Regular $4.99 value — 'Bea-Snooz', lets you snooze extra 10 minutes. Fed. Tax. ^ -Main Floor ^ Buy Fer Qifts er Yehr Own Use ‘Beagon’ Baby Blankat Regular $2.98i fhUsie —Now 100% Cottons and Acrylic and Rpyon with wide safing binding- » Full 36x50 inches- Blue, white, ' ^Ikjw, ffnk or mint colors. —Main Floor 1 46 Family Ownod and Oporatad Only in Pontiato SInco 1934 Saginaw St. Only A Few Stops to 1000 City Parking Spaeoa 100% Cotton-BOYl’ Thomal Umtashirts 97c Value w All first quality thermal undershirts that really keep you warm. Short sleeve style. Size S-M-L BASEMENT BARGAINS Warm Fleoeo Llnod Men’s Smalshirlt $1.89 Value American made sweatshirts in sizes sma|l-medium4arge. Irregulars of better shirts. Mostly red color. ‘LILLYS’ First Quality Sawing Threads 10c Spool 1 Whitq qr black sewing threads-in 50 to 60 yard spools. No limit ot this low price. ^ Matohod Lid and Oovor 2-Pc. Bath Mai Set Values 63' VVoshable non-skid backs, loopa or cut piles in solid colors or tweeds. Slight irregulars of belter MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS 100% Sanforizod Cotton Fitted Crib Shetit $1.29 Value ST American made — fitted sheets slip over the ends of the mattress. Gleaming white. Infants' Heavyweight Receiving Blankeft f 100 R 3§T Regular 59c value — assorted sizes include small, medium and . large. Blue, pink, yellow, white or stripes. Mac Shadow Panol ' Ladies’ NaK-SI|M 71 Asserted styles with variety of lace trims. 5 colors to choose from. All .sizes. MAIN FLOOR BARGAINS Ftonnol with LaeoTrtm I $2.49 Value , Long and short styled gowns, yol front,, long sImvim. Choke ^ 5 popular colors. Slzee 34 to'48. ■A'' . • r ... r,, PONTIAC PEI^S. tfe t0«a Rochester ROCHESTEli - Village President Roy Rewold today charged opponents of cityhood fttr Rochester with “distorting the facts” in tiMir campaign to defeat the issue F^- II "It’s time tp clear the air,” t« said, pobthg out that residents af the v il 1 a g c and an adjacent perthm of Avon Town-sh^ have, less than two weeks before they go to the polls, “tlar opposition is conducting an intensive spat^ advertising and direct mail campaign,” Rewold said, “that not only distorts 4he Rm»a“httt hr^Wnly “b the first place,” ht^ pointed out, “the Roch^ter Village Coun-. cir Jotritod into the prsition blouse of the great number of village and surrounding area rea-. idonts who expressed an interest in Incorporation. departm e n t a were already serving the pro- expensively anyway. “Xnd"4hlrd, when a village councilmah is elected, it is his job to be Constantly concerned witii ^e planned, organized growth of his municipality that continues to be in the best interest of all residents.” Rewold was elected village president last spring. He lives at 312 Glendale St. ‘When V incorporation was before the cooncllr~all menbers, including Coundlmen Jay Rldred and John Boeberitz,^ who have since changed their minOs, apjwoved. fihis establishment of a steering committee,'' he said. “Following the selection of committee metidiers, aU phasm of Incorporation were Investl- Rewold «aid Parke, Davis officials indicated that they woidd not fight the proposition, at a meeting attendi^ 'by himself. Councilman Neil Rosso and Vil-lage Manager Paul York. “The three spokesmen for Parke, Davis said in front .of Witnesses that they had no serlbus objections to city incorporation plans which included their iprop-erty. “Now, they too seem to have had a change of mind when “Tb jny way 6f thinking, those are real, motives for kllllnif the natural progress of Rochester and the surrounding area. -^“Slnce the organizing of the so-called ‘Rochester Fact Finding Committee’ to defeat the planned proposal, careless staternents have been released regarding motive of the Village Council, the Icity Incorporation Steering Com- mittee' and others who support the issue,” charged the village president. “Not oidy that, but complete untruths are being expressed concealing taxes, services and manpower,” he contended. “Tb clear the air of motives," he explained, “it should be stated the lime ..gpts cloie^Mtewakl thar pmem^otrcilfiteft W riSl autolmatically govern the new city-. The new government will be run by the people voted for by the residents of the new mu. nicipality. “And while on the subject of motives,” he continued, “consider the fact that the Chair- man of the soHsalled ‘Fact Finding Committee,’ Charles Mor-ell, draws a salary from Avon Tbvrnshlp as Civil Defense Dl- _________ thalopposition porter Wayne Holman hps his eyes on the richly endowed Avon Township supervisor’s -••T»e~siipiftrvi«rd sBansWOs $10,000 a year,” Rewold said. Tt is a position t'hsit would be worth a great deal ^ess than the $10,000 if incorporation were , to become a reality," he continued. ' “Another member of flio committee, Mrs. Doris Ungler, also oraws w wmimrj i TbwnsMp,” he said. salary from Avon “As to Increased taxes, services and manpower, Holman, the candidate for the $10,000-per-year township job, is completely uninformed," Itewold contended. “The steering committee has never made a claim that the new area could be serviced with the same number of . employes “Another pewon,” continued Rewold, “one who should know better, has been widely quoted as , aaylng^that the current Rochester jlix of 17 mills ma. ‘high enough.’ "that person Is the same Councilman Boeherltz who voted Just last year to raise the base to 18% "We have said that the increased revenues to be achieved would cover the cost of the additional services without adding additional burdens to village taxpayers or the taxpayers of the great number of services to Its resldents' and to extensive areas of the township with only a 9 per cent tax increase during the past 11 years. “On the other hand,’’ he added, “Avon Township govern- “If he doesn’t know what the tax Iwse of Rochester is and he helped fix it, how couW he possibly know the tax situation of incorporation?” Rewold ^e reasons given were but a few of those necessary to “clear the air on the city incorporation statements being issued by the opposition.' TAXES, SERVICES “On the taxes,” he said, “thei village has continued to offer a{ some 30 per cent in the past four years and- given few, if any, services to village resl- “I sincerely believe,” Rewold continued, “that the majority of the residents in* the area Concerned will join with the steering committee and tim majority of the council in presenting an Informed ‘yes’vote on Feb. 18. ★ ★ ★ “When the air is cleared with the straight facts and the ungar-nished truth,” he concluded, “the I informed electorate wiU then |make the right decision.’^ ToHonorVIPs, Saginaw 6irl Briggs, Ford, Kretge, Nifbfrt to Gat Awards DETROIT tf)-A pretty Saginaw teen-ager and four prominent Mktoigan businessmen will be honored by Midiigan Week officials at an awards lundheon at the Eoonnnic Club of Detroit next Mmiday. Mary Ann Kingry, a freshman student at Naxareth College, Nazareth, Mich., will be pre-8 NMional Young FYonttersn^ man Award for her efforts In promoting Michigan: WALLED LAKE - The City Council set a public hearing on the recent flrjng of Building In-spec tor Ernest Campion and heard charges leveled against another city employe last night. City Manager E. V. Mercer, who fired Campion lastmontii, told coundlmen that City Clerk Mrs. Shirley J. Ryden was “taking too many coffee breaks” while on duty. Ryden replied fhat she to receive awards are Robert P. Briggs, Henry F«Mfd H, Sebastian S. Kresge and Stephan Nisbet, Michigan constitution conven- Mary Ann already has received I Nathmal Yoiing Frontiesman Award «d ■ dtntion from Resident Kennedy for her efforts in ( civic affairs. The tttmeUve coed has been prominent in state and nathmal Red CkoM work and in her school While attending Shglnaw St. Peter and Paid High School, Mary Ann wim a blue ribhpn at the Sattoum dty Science Fair. Her exhibit featured chemistry and its possibilities tor the future Dan Gerber, president of Gerber Products Co. of Fremont wllj preside at the awards banquet State Traffic Toll at 104 EAST UNSING (AP) - Traffic accidmita have killed 104 persons in Midiigan so far this year. provisional figures compiled by 'W'^shb# ......................... poHcd" showed today The toil at this date last year was 110. Set Public Hearing on 2nd Civ^ r e B e n t e d the city manager “questioning her intelligence and integrity.” The clerk, said today that she thought any further statement of her position should be made only at an executive session of the council. Mercer said at a Jan. 15 council meeting that he was not getting cooperation from the office Heating and language ROCHESTER - The Citizen’s School Study Group here today made public facts on hepting c(«ts and language cOursA discovered in its (irrent hxanilna' tkm of district schools. “Heating costs for the entire school district avemge 12.7 cents per square foot of usable floor space,” the study re- This compared With the av erage home cost of 12.1 cents per square foot. In answer to a question regarding the purpose and cost of language laboratories, the group found that educators agree “if used properly, language laboratories are the most effective tool available for teaching foreign languages.” The total cost of the district’s three labomtories was $19,-*n.f7, of which $9,082.97 Was paid by the federal government, the s^y The school study group issued an invitation to all community members to attend its regular, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday meetings at the high school. Results of the committee’s investigation will be offered to the school board for use in formulation of a possible special election proposal. Questioned about the high" school honors class, the conunittee found In Van Gordon Rites Colleen Kehrer Wed William Van Gordons, 260 North-aven St. WALLED LAKE - Colleen Janice Kehrer and Kenneth Dale Van Gordon exchanged nuptial vows before Rev. L. A. Kinne Saturday For her w e d d i n g, the bride evening in St. Matthews Luth- chose a floor-length gown of white erqnOiurch. j taffeta^ featuring long pointed The couple’s parents are Mr. sleeves'and a bouffant skirt end-and Mrs. John P. Kehrer Jr.,hng in a chapel train. The modi-1905 Dawn Ridge Road, and the'tied scoop neckline was outlined with floral appliques etched with that the class was forihed to offer bright additional challenge students in the field. Jte study revealed that 16 students ^tend the claasA, Special remedial classes in EngMi are also available at the high school. Plan Program for Teachers ave Avoiidate* shhoeis for w to' years will hS honored on a PTA Founders Day program Feb. 14 at Avondale High School. Sponsored by the Avondale Area 1*TA, the 8 p.m. meeting also will feature a talk by Otto Ynetma, state PTA president. Mrs. William U. Porter, president of the Avondale Area PTA Council, will give the welcoming address arid introduce the guest staff At City Hall. Mercer claimed tiie lack of cooptation was due to the staffs ais«ppolntirierit over his being appointed city manager Dec. 17. He said the staff wanted a city manager capdidate from inM IS be naiiied to Walled Lake’s top administrative po- The staff then included Campion, Mrs. Ryden and former Deputy Clerk Treasurer hfea. Joanne Burke, who resigned at the Jan. 15 meeting. NAME REPLACEMENT Coundlmen last night appointed Mrs. Marjorie Young, 2816 Loon Lake Road, Wlxqm, to' replace Mrs. Burke. The council also confirmed the appointment of Franklin E. Hamilton as police chief at a starting salary of $5,000 per ‘^year. Hamilton, formerly a lieutenapt in the Walled Lake Fire Department, r^lacies Joseph Nephew, who resigned as chief to join the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department last month. The public hearing requested y Campion was set for 8 p.m. next Tuesday. LANSING (» -House Democrats, Champing at the bit for state tax reform, prepared today to reveal new strategy with a sweeping tax repeal Tind reduction package that would wipe out some $488 million in rev«iu without a penny of new income. The ei^t-bill package, according to its princ^^pcHUKUr, Rep. E D. O’Brien, D-Detrolt, is designed to show that Michigan’s present tax structure — leaning heavily on sacajled nuisance taxes — is “unworkable, reprehensible and obnoxious.” The firing followed a dispute between Mercer and Campion. Mercer wanted Campion to become dispatcher for the police and fire departments in addition to his combined post as building, electrical, plumbing and heating Inspector and head of the city’s three-man road crew. In other business, the council named Dr. Irving Scheel, 404 N. Pontiac Trail, to a three-year term on the City Planning Commission. Karl Henke and Clements Phjl-ipski lyere reappointed to three-year - planning »commisslon positions. Two local insurance agents, G. Ivan Cox and Dan MeVety, were named agents of record for the city. Absence of proposed new taxes to take up the slack, said O’Brien, is a neW Democratic maneuver “which demonstrates our willingness to .sit down with the Repuhiicans and work put a new tax system based on ability to pay.” Marked for toHR elimination under the Democratic package are all of the “nuisance"'tones Imposed by the GOP-controiled legislature over the past few years, AFFECTED TAXES Wiped out by the proposal would be the business activities tax ($73 million), cigaret tax ($76 million), beer tax ($34 million), intangibles tax ($33 million), liquor tax (*14 million), and the tax telephone and telegraph use $9 million). The program also calls for reduction of the state sales lux from four to three per cent, exempting food and prescription drugs from all sales tax, and reduction of the corporation franchise tax to two mills. WELCOMES NEW MANAGER - OxfoKi Village President Allen E. Valentine (left) congratulates the village’s new manager, Michael M. Kilgore, shortly after he was sworn in at last night's council meeting. The 29-year-old fomter assistant manager at Santa Cruz, Calif., begins his duties ti^ay. Rochester to St^y Teacher Pay mke is boosted to a $220 increase for each of the next six years, reaching a maximum of $7,120. Annual salary for those with master’s degrees is based on the same increases, but starts at $4JtS0 and climbs to . $7,370 after 12 years. ‘ Under the proposed salary ROCHESTER - A proposed teachers’ pay hike will be consider^ at a joint meeting Monday oif the board of education and the salary committees of the Rochester Education Associatioh (REA) and the Citizen’s School Study Group. .' . •ae board deeW^ to teach- special session after recel^g jqq ^ the teaehwrs’ salary requests at n AOOA GA ihnicfA If totally approved, which O’Brien) conio^ed was jiinlikely the tex-rcut prograia: would 4eave (he state with only $59 million with which to meet Gov. George Romney’s proposed budget if $547 million for 1963-64. the teaehwrs’ salary requests Monday’s regular board meeting. The REA’s salary schedule is based on a IJ^-step pay increase. ceive a $220.50 raise for each of two years. ’The next hike wouM be to $245 for four years, $269.50 the following four and a $294 In- Presently teachers with, four-year depooa receive a beginning annual wage of $4,600. A $200 pay hike is offered for each of the six years after the first. This Pins will be presented to the t e a c h e rs being iionored by Schools Supt. Geroge E. Shackelford. A double tiara held her shoulder - length veil. She carried a bridal bouquet of carnations and Stephanotis. Maid of honor “"was Muriel Van Gordon, sister of the bridegroom. Sharon McKim of Ypsilantl, cousin of the bride, was bridesmaid. WaOLM. Di VAN GORDON Performing the duties of b the AVON TOWNSHIP - Members of the University Presbyterian Church here will celebrate the church’s fifth anniversary Sun-lay with gala “Hawaiian Night” fostiVlties. > Commencing at 6:80 p.m. in the Meadowbrook Elementary School 2350 Munster St., the program' will feature k color film on Hawaii, Primary and junior age children will be offered their ^wn special movie entertainment in the school’s music room. Baby sitter service for preschool childly also will be available., Following the movie, a pot-luck dessert wHl be served. ’ Set to Discuss Constitution R]^ salary epnpnittee report, ’rile Catizen’ Catizen’s School Study Committee has pointed out toat 19 of 29 Oakland Coupty school districts offer higher starting salaries than Rochester. FARMINriTQN-A constitutional convention delegate who is op-posedgpto adoption of the state’s proposed constitution will speak at a Farmington Democratic Club meeting tonight. Democrat Harold Norris, who served as vice chairman of the con-con committee on rights, elections and suffrage, will be speaker at the 8 prni. meeting. It will be held in the City National Bank building, IQ-MIle and tirchard Lake roads. Norris, an attorney, said the idocument contains “a number of provisions which are backward steps from,the present charter." 'rile meeting is open to the public. Farmer'! Price Index 225 Pet* of Base Period LANSING «B-The Index of prices received by Michigan farmers on Jan. 15 was 225 f»r cent of the lOO per cent for the base period,' unchanged IT’S ALL SET — Signing the contract setting Aprjil 4 for the apMarance Of the 106- - dent of the Oxford Llofis Club which will piece United States Navy Band In Oxford . present the band in a 1 p.m. matinee and an is Cmilr* John R. Tobin, U.S, Naval Reserve, 8 p.m. show. Both concerto wiU be staged Tn Pontiac. Watching is Harold Van Vleet, presl-. Oxford Area High School. from a mo|nth previous, increds Price il poultry were creases for dairy products, hogs AINA A. WALQUIST engagem anda Walqulst, 53443 Bruce Hill Drive, V Shelby Township, to WiHianir H. 'Webber, has been announced. She is the daughter ,of Dr. C. F. Walqulst of Roseville, and the late Mrs. Wal-quist. Her finance’s parents ard the Charles Webbers, 3iW0 EUainae Drive, Avon Township. No date has been set for the wedding. ,‘ -.I_: ■' '' ’ ". jm ■FOStI^~PBE9» A^35D^ liq EbwMMn^ CTMt&ARY e. 1068 ■■•'■ v'f .y .'I ............;.^ ,,. ^y'ryj To qlLour manx friends who could not be waited on during our $33 SUIT SALE last gies. I^t \ week ... please pccept our deepest apologies. It was just physical!/ impossible to ac-jcommodate the thousands of people whoJtofiiied^theJ£L4jUROhi.S^ As a result we are takiog.additidnal suits ouj of I^GUIfAR STOCK and offering them for sale this THURSDAY;FRIDAY AND SATURDAY at thf sgme $33^ri^ We lioi^ tfiis mokes up for any fnconvenience Vou may have suffered. X TB.-HURON STORE ONLY — Dtiors Open Thursday', 8 A,M. Sharp! SiZES 36 37 Js 39 40 41 42 44 46 48 Regular 2 4 7 16 31 2 41 12 4 2 Short 5 4 7 6 1 Long 14 36 43 17 11 5 1 Ex. Long 2 5 6 1 5 4 1 Portly 3 Portly Short 2 4 1 FREE ntRKMG rigM in fronl! STORES FOR MEN TEL-HURON STORE ONLY! TEL-HURON Shopping Center o-Corner Telegraph Huron St. YES, CHARGE YOUR PURCHASE UAIIDCi THURSDAY 8:00 A.M. to 9 P.M., FRIDa/ nUUna! and Saturday 9:30a.iii. to op.m. »•'' '■. " ■ i: r ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS H-Wiait Huron SirMt 'if?l WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY «, 196if WAROUl A. Pr^i^LO Frnldant «nd rubllihar Bowaitt K. PiTwilitu n. ■tSUAw Pontiac, Micliigm ewretdry and AdvcrUainf Otraetor ■iRAa AiHMttr I Advarttf^ . Pontiac Must Set Area Policy on Water, Sewer Services -—Pafttiae-irrostrtfect^ suburban communities around Pon- to a policy concerning water and sew- tiac has been roads. This problem is er services to areas outside the city. dlsapp»earlng rapidly, thanks to the If w« are to become a “core cltjr,” furnishing these vital necessities to pur growing neighbors, they must know this. ' If we are going to require annexation as a condition to extension of faciliUes, this must be known. ** We realize that one city^commls-sion cannot bind future ones, sfit we do not throw out aU policies when-we elect new commissioners every two - -years. ★ ★ ★ Several years ago^ the City was asked to extmd sewage and water service to the planned Miracle Mile Shopping Center. It was the City’s position at that time that areas requesting .such services must join the City. Subsequently the center developed as part of ^eomfield Township. ★ ★ ★ The same problems faced thp pro- ^good ^rks of JoRa MAckie and county road officials. ' Sewage treatment is the next major stumbling block, with . Water a close third. If annexatimi is the answer, in the interest, of efficiency it should be eonsidereidHonly for sizable areas, iiiot on ibe basis of each new subdivision or individual plant. ■. The Immediate future of Greater Pontiac depends on these services. It mttst plan ahead, and be prepared to follow a reasonable course. ■fv ■ ^ _ • *Voice of th^ People: ' ‘Dr. Crane Doesn’t Know How Sick Americans Are’ Dr: Crane’s column in ‘which he thinks 85 per cent of us who visit a doctor aren’t ill, will make him about as popular with the healing profession a8 Castro at ^Joh^Blrch meeting. What hasn’t occurred to the doctor is thst we’re re^ alck -sick of economic insecurity and the everlasting threat of war. . Samuel E. Hagon 3110 Garden^ Paitog fMifteE Upset Employes I am a nurse at Pontiac Gen- .......... eral Hospital and we are'proud should be informed. He wasn’t al-' to be a part of this fine modern jowed to bring in his dwri TV hospital. But the parking space because of the other patients. A for emptoyes Is outdated. The, 2-- hospital isn’t home, hour parking signs pre being t -k * S'tJ, h. received end this prompts disgust In opcii to do with the hos. ‘Patient!gJGripfia------ Are Groundless’ The man who had complaints about his stay in the hospital David Lawrence Says: employe. *■ Mrs. Nina Tyler, L.P.N. Waterford ‘WhatTllie Duties of County PR Man?* I see the county supervisors have devised a new way to spend flie taxpayers’money. They wmt a pnbUc relations man at a salary of anywhere from 15,000 to $U,000 a year. How are they planning to use thismant pital. His own private physician writes about a consultation for another doctor to see the patient.-Does he think the doctor shduld perform surgery for nothing? B.K. ‘Be Alert in ’Voting on Constitution’ The Man About Town Cites 3-to-l Odds ^ Distrust by Camera Man Posedliy XJM" Aiito Man By HOWARD HELDENBRAND Jirnhw Jaycees can take many curtain . » i AW. di. '-'alls for the excellence of their 40th-Annual posed shopping at the north- Banquet aiid Bosses Night last week. The west comer of Telegraph Road and turnout was the largest ever, the awards Elizabeth Lake Road, What Is now met the approval of weproiw and ^ .... .. , A w proaram was of professional caliber /. . A the Pontiac Mall. Development of JolSin salute tb President that comer. In addition to the Original supermarlwt, hinged for sevend years on tapping Pontiac sewers. Pontiac already had been serving a portion of the area west of Telegnyth and muth of Elizabeth I,ake Road, Huron Gardens, for a t. . /y , ___. Motor Division’s General Manager number of yrere. EIIMm. (Pdcl Btre Mall developers decided to proceed at the oqtMt, after having'stood for a with their center and Install their picture ot ^ program’s hopqrcd, jocularly own umwug. tr^tmont plant. Jnot before the shopping area was com- produ^wi k their product! pleted, fhe City changed its posltiun»uu» ««• ou„» temd vs iS in South- own country, i^ies waver from ^ - but only when facts are newage Has evCT py twaru py me east Asia flabbhiess to ffrmness and then faced squarely. iusiness_ men. It ^ deliv^ by Pontiac , _______________ . back auain. tConwiriit. 19631 Building itself. The sunshine will come some liHd ITie i^0wed«ity facili- ties, at nearly double the normal rate, plwS„R $35,000 fee, ★ ★ ★ Proponents of the “core city’’ Idea claim that by selling the services to outside areas, taxes of city residents can he kept lower, ★ ★ ★ In many Cases, paying twice the rate the Oty dhwges Us own residentals still cheaper for outsiders than bnildihg, istaffinf and maintaining treatment facilities. .. ^ . ★ . ★ CurrenGy, Pontiac Is facing a pollution problem caused by fesldential usage in Pontiac Township. In the past, one of the major factors In ddaying-"^ development of ' *fllwy alwiy« take three shots to be sure of one good one,’’ laugfiM thCHttfo maa. “We’d be ta.pretty bad ihapc H we had to buOd three Pontiacs to come np wMi one acceptable one,’’ he finished in fniHpoking vein. Came the dawn (as they used to subtitle In the silent movies a hundred or so years ago) and with it our own lensman Edward.T. (Eddie) Vanderworp of 100 Strathmore, president of the M.P.P.A: (Maligned Photographers Protective Association) to report developments . , .that 2. The Soviets have established a military base in Cuba with somewhere between 20,000 and 30,000 troops and “technicians.’’ But what do the “technicians’’ do, and how many missiles and planes are there in Cuba for them to operate? Why does toe United States government saorlHoe JUnecican . lives la Sooth Yiel-Nam, 5,000 miles away, and yet hesitate to take risks to assure the safety of its citizens residing in the southeastern part of this -country who could be attacked by “^fensive” weapons now accumulated on an island 90 miles away from our shores? back again. Bob Considine Says: (Copyright, 1963) sweetheart ... In the silence will appear ... Oh, toese days I dread the moment. . , When I hear the music die . . , And the ballroom lights are lowered ... And my heart begins to sigh.. . (Copyright 1963) Gen. Lemay A Big Help Jls Canadian Diplomat The Country Parson NEW YORK-Into that surprisingly bitter exchange of heat between U.S. and Canadian officials, which must have been regarded by Khrushchev as additional “proof” that the West-•ern Alliance is failing apart 3. Hie Western alliance is wob- rapidly, there bling. Quarrels over economic se- was injected a ----------- . curity and particularly trade note of dlplo- the three pictures he tot* w previous evete disrupted plans for a ‘‘Cora- maey from an ing all — repeat all — turned out to be Market” of low tariffs. unusual source. from their , bases Inside the U.S.S.R., count the launched missiles, reveal when the first one is going to hit, and where. All in a matter of s masterpieces! Seems to toe MAT that this pretty weO exposes the fallacy re the ne^tlve angle of photography touched-up at the banquet. A warm note from of 1865 Wellington, who adds his con- , ____________________________________ gratulations to the column’s on the 45to too. The ‘‘Alliance for Progress’ service milestone of a member of Pontiac’s hasn’t really made progress. Michigan Bell’s force. Bitter denunciations of the It was the French fi)l the press In Britain blunt voice of| and in other parts of the world. G«n. Curt I*-Nationalism is blamed, but inter- may that qioke ___ naUonalsIm affords ItttKs piwtpect up. He said, In CONSroiNE o! a solution, either. All the world's ills wUl not be cured by consolidating small states ipto. big empires.. Latin„Amerlca is in trouble, This doesn’t appear to be a friendship that is likely to dissolve over whether toe snout of a Bomarc, which would never be used in a big missile war, is stuffed with plutonium or sawdust. -’-“Maybe a fellow ought to. have a few bad habits that show — they might keep folks from looking for his'^ secret vices.” By United Press International Today is Wednesday, Feb, 6, the 37th day of 1963 with 328 te follow. The Moon is approaching nnuT^i^ase. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter. Those born on this day are under the sign of Aquarius. 0 ★ ★ On this day in history: In 1788, Massachusetts ratified the U.S. Constitution. * In 1850, Henry Gay delivered his last great s|i«ech on the Jeer ef jtoeJ^ato,^ spegyng in iavor of 'Eis Compromise Bill of 1850. In 1933, a Nazi decree Issued in Berlin forbade crlticisnl of Adolph Hitler. r “In 1943, Geh. Dwight Eisenhower was appointed com-mander-in-ohief of the Allied Ex-peditionpry~ Forces in North AfricA A thought for toe day — American statesman Henry (3ay said: “If you wish to avoid foreign collision, you had better abandon the ocean.” major address that should have gained more attention than it did, there Is a relationship iSeWSpoper Otnke Reviewing Other Editorial Pages My friend adds that he himself is not '‘exactly a beginner In the stick-to-lt line ... surprises us with his own span as a tailor before retiring after 61 years and three months . .. modestly questions whether It 1# a record. Well, the MAT never heard of one to beat it —and hopes that Mr. H. is finding lots. Of good health and enjoyment in his well-earned leisure. As in Sports, Senate Has Turnover, Too ' In the sports world It hlw become commonplace that faces in the team line-up change rapidly, even among champions. Half a decade brings a heavy turnover. ★ ★ In ifovernmenl, however, we have tended to cling fo the idea that Cdhjgress is a fairly enduring body. For some, it la. Hut a glance at the 1963 lineup of the UJ8. Senate shows that here, too,-the turnover is tremendous. ^ 1200 N. Telegraph Road; 82nd birthday. Of the Senate’s present 100 mem- Frank Van Conant beii, only five go back to the 1930s Lake orion; 85th birthday^' and earlier. Arizona’s ancient Carl Mr. and Mrs. Orrie Butter Hayurw Is the <»ily pre-1930 mem*- of Drayton^pialns; 58th wedding anniversary, ber. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Schwan > Another 22 took office In the 1940s. ot 102 Waterly St.; golden'wedding annlver-★ ★ That means that 73 of the 100 and Cooidination between toe U.S. Air Force and toe Royal Canadian Air Force that transcends just about everything else. Verbal Orchids tgr_^ ’ Mrs. Mary Seeley of 64 Seneca St.; 97th birthday. Edward Taylor of 2100 Woodward Ave.; 87th birthday.’ Grants by our government will not buy friendship. The way must be opened for private enterprise, but this cannot happen till governments take full responsibility for the protection of the lives and property of foreigners. The U.S. CSovemment has abandoned this policy in rela-- tion to Cuba, and there is no assurance that it will not be forsaken everywhere else in ^Latin America, too. Troubles in Africa,multiply. Whites kill blacks and blacks kill : - „ whites. Hie United Nations enters |n any peril of breaking up. He the kiUing, too, as it sends its ^™««ht ^ up a much- needed armies to “preserve order” and face of force factions to unite. minus. ft But this assumes a basic abpity '■ * * * and a readiness of the backward There were those in Washing-peoples to govern themselves. To ton and Ottawa last week who have applied the irusteeship idea made only “minus” .s o u n d s. and to have depended on gradual Their focus was trained on evolution would have been a bet- whether the short-ranged It is bound up with the defense of the peoples and properties of North America from Soviet attack* over the North Pole, It is In being, and the thing that keeps it in being is the magnificent tea m w o r k developed by the miUtary of the only two English-speaking nations on this side of the world. Gen, Lemay’s point was that the team was solid and was not ■ The Aiizkifa Itepublie “The only thing that counts is muscle. If disputes were settled by reason or justice, there wouldn’t be unions.” Thus, according to Time, spoke Bertram A. Powers, obdurate president of New York Local 6 of the International Typographical Union. And, as though to flex that muscle, „ Powers remains steadfast in his demand that New York newspapers pay $38 more a week to each of his members—a demand which has halted publication of nine New York dailies, tdted^ 2();0WTi«e^ prived 5.7 million readers of their daily habit, and has taken severe financial toll of untold numbers of businesses. cd his ire at electrical workers’ union president James B.^ Carey, and foveipied' against the AFL-CIO’s campaign for a 35-hour week; and a pro-labor University of Wisconsin eco-'liomics professor, Jack Bar-bash, recently lamented that “union leadership has- almost no intellectually organized insight as to what it is doing and why.” k k k ‘ Do these random examples indicate that liberals are ready to abandon the labor union cause — that they will take up against featherbeddihg, violence, corruption, and the economic paralysis mtide jMssible because of organ-mSl lanor’s monoply position? Poverfy Increase? The Republtcan cmgretsionai Committee Newsletter Thirty-two million Americans now are living on the “outskirts The newspaper blackout is a national disgrace. And Bertram Powers, whose eye is fixed firmly on taking over the reins of the international union, has of poverty,” according to Presi- ter M^. B"oiiarc%Vuatoft“mTrsTfo mulling New dent Kennedy’s State of toe Un- appeal, 6. Moscow Is fishing in troubled with which we have equipped York’s free press, he to pow^^^ ton message. In J960, ij,hen he waters everywhere. Its agen18 Canhdlan forces for the common *"oo8h to do whatnot even to- was ^mpaigning for toe job he Fate, ____. .. are stlrriM up violence In toe defense against Soviet manned- of toe Presidra^ now holds, he said that 17 mil- a crucial role in shaping British 'demonsfrattons” in vaf lous bomber attaOk (if any) ^ould or totemselves powerful enough lion American^go to bed hungry politics for toe next four or five Gaitskell’s leadership the Labor-itex had displayed more; unity than at any time since the war years. Differences between the extremes of the party continued to exist, but all elements deferred to Gaitskell’s judgment. .. ★ k ' k It was largely this unity that encouraged hopes in toe Labor Party of being able to capture the next general election in Britain. The London Economist , estimated early this month that the Laborites would have '42 per cent of the voles, the toserva-tives 40 per cent and the Liberals 18 per cent if an election JWCTCimoffHBow. " Gaitskell’s death undoubtedly will alter the^ figures, probably to the Conservatives’ advantage. Gaitskell would have been prime minister if he had lived and the Laborites had won toe election. But no one else In toe Labor Party commands his following. Labor simply lias no outstanding leader with the middle^f-the-road approach thqt was Galtskell’s big “r" It would ja s played Mr. and Mrs. Ernest McCardeO countries. Students and trained leaders areT*^ to foment fric- , have been in the Senate only since 1960 or subsequent election years. And a. whopping 22>-’-.niore * than one-fifth of the to^I chamber-date tlieir service from 1960 and later. At with other teams, the Senate is not always a Ufetlm^ career. ^ ot Farmington: golden wedding anniversary, tioiv This to something^th a t Ihe U.S. should not be Htted with nuclear warheads to be supplied' by' Mr. and Mrs. Harry 0. Willetts of Royal Oak; golden wedding anniversary, jCharles G. Parks of Birmingham; 92nd birthday. S. E. Mlnard of 88 Norton St.;, 89tH birtoday. Mr,^aad Mrs. Ifred Tontrell k 28 Michigan Ave.; 56th wedding anniver-sary. , ' , * ' needs exposure. 7. Berlin's “wall” remains as a symfol of Soviet trouble making "in'toe supposedly postwar world. 8. The Soviets/itmished arms and ammualtton to ttte North Koreans aadv.Ite(l Chinese to start a big war in Korea, bat they bavCi never been comT- Therie could be no defense of the U.S. without Canada, and vice versa. ,The military and science geniuses of the two powers havie worked qpt toe most remaHiabie patterns of alert,systeips. 4, ' J I dr sBiKu uw 'iypiqpiii>*>ivai^ inpia One of these qcRiany can spot leadership for Its Kcklessness; Soviet missiles if they ever rise . David Susskind recently direct* to do. But toe disgraceful newspaper blackout and other labor excesses haVe hot passiM unnoticed, even among ihany of those voices generally ready to condone whatever excesses organized labor sees fit to pirpe-U-ate. Columnists Murray fad .Eric Sevan a lyp^prapUt^ every night. Thus, In two years of getting the country moving again, he has managed to add 15 million Americans to the poverty list. Hugh Gaitshell The Or and Rapids Press The death of Hugh Oaitskell deprives toe Brittoh Labor Pfrty «f one man who couM hold Its warring factions together. Under /■ni*, Af»o«Ikt»a Vr«M ti mtlUfS Exclusively -to tiM for repubU- ^ -M l •v.l«w .CoUntlM It TH3B PONTIAC PRllSS, WEDNESBAy, OTRUARY e/xQgS ■ A-^f ; Pleads liinocent ■. in Armed Robbery ,Two 'Weeks' Proclaimed A 23-year*61d Pontiac man who waa shot while fleeing police Jan. 3. pleaded Innocent Monday LANSING (ft «— Gov; George Pptnney has proclaimed Feb. J>9 to an ahned robbery charge. He appeared before OakI ' ~ akland County Circuit Judge Stanton G. Don- Michigan Salesmen’a and Feb. 17-24 as MichWan -------jan Child Evangelism Week. The governor urged cltiz^ to Rotas Anderson Jr., of in Crestwood St., Is aconsed of Sabra’s Tailoring support of system. shop at taeJOcafikiJl He also asked support of the Michigan Child Evangelim Fel- png “tienter in A post office substation is in —^...1 was wcyinded in the hip police bullet when he attNnptodv^ escape Pontiac police seeking tp arrest him on another charge Of. assault with intent to rape. He was Jailed to await trial odien he was unable to iurnish 330,000 bond. ^ ^ New highways gobbled up rural land at the rate of 110,000 acres a xyear during the last decade. our free enterprise Bloomfield hoirie Bible'classes for some 38,- i AAA .... . ..... ’ I.tan«liiir Mfl. UVaMk RaasIU a# 000 children in the state. State Gets $259,776 for Vehicle Violations LANSING (iB — The secretary of state’s office reports Its enforcement division collected 3239,-776 last year. A crackdown on drivers with improper license plates accounted for 3101,754 of the total. ^The remainder came from collections for underweight vehicles, sales m use tax checkups, title andj liosnse plate transfers and certain motorboat registration fees. ' i^colate loM new lower-calorie chocolate drink... Has NO ADDED SUGAR! Sweetened just rig^t with approved calorie-saving sweeteners. Helps maintain your normal weight . . , and you’ve never tasted a more delicious family chocolate drink. mum FROM youR dairy ... at your favorite store... or delivered to your door! GOP Senators Borrow Fees LANSING (A-Three RepubU-can Senators have borrowed 35,-000 from a Lansing bank to help pay the fees of the New York attorney handling their Supreme Court appeal to block reapportionment of the state Senate. ' Lansing and Frank Beadle of St. Clair signed the note to help pay WhiMew North Seymour, New York attorney handling the case. ”MT. Seymour has put a lot of tlibe into' this case already and we want to make sure we have his excellent legal talent in handling our suit,” Fitrgerald said. Beadle said about 34,600 has eeA received in contributions but this Jhas been enoufdi only to pay , enses in preparing the legal briefs and for a trip to New Hampshire last July when Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart issued a ten^wrary stay to halt a state Suiweme Court order to reanwrtioh the state Senate. State MHLCIO President August 'SchoUe started the suit, favwed In Senate ri^resenta-tion at the expense of urban The Senators expressed hope further they wUi receive flpns to help pay off the note. It Was Quiet, Unusually So, in the Capitol LANSING (A - Gov. ^rge Romney and the Democratic State Administrative Board whlpphd through a 45-minute meeting yesterday with scarcely hint of an argument. In earUer meetings since Romney toolr office, he ifld the Democrats had clawed sharply over various Issues involving policy, and tempers had been short. But yesterday, the biggest dispute was over which page of the agenda they were supposed to be looking at. Lt. Gov. T. John Lesinski admitted perhaps the Democrats were not in a “fighting mood” following meir tumultuous convention at Gfand Rapids last weekend. SHOP MWNIWMinHTHC HHtairon f^NVlNEMlFKi! ^ PARKING! or ByS RIDESl . -.rfi tn any O"* . fOE^f=»S OOWfV OVER Men's genuine English rib Waldorf/sox, reg. 6 for 2.94 BUY-THE-BOX SALE Man, what values! Distinctive English rib dress socks In pure lisle multi-ply 100% Durene mercerized cotton. Every one reinforced at heel and toe, with special high spliced heel for extra wear, tasting vat-dyed colors-black, navy, cord, loden, tan, gray, charcoal, white, Britannia Sizes 10%-13. All have elastic tops except white. 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STORES DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PUINI «\ I ; THKrruiN'l'X^O vy ",' Defer Awart Appointment Action Postponed in 30>Minute Meeting City cQinmisakniers last night deferred action for one week on the appointment ot ^poembers to the dty’8 board of taa^ revie^ and tiia awarding of a demolition cop- must be filled on the board before it can meet in March to detgr-mine the city’s 1963 total assessed valuation. Bids on the wrecking contract wiere opened Ipst week and a complete I'Custbmar' Is Wrong ^ ^ If Was the Old Hprd Sell DETROIT 1IV"The holdup men looked like «aleSrtl^““ ^ So, when the one carrying a brief case, pushed a 45,000 in jewelry. He was bound over to Circuit Court for trial. Police said footprints in the snow led to his quicks arrest. N. Y. Seeking^ Purchaser fbr Alcohol Still y ALBANY, N.Y. (flhr’Djc State. of New York is eager to sell for the highest “reasonable" offer a still capable ol making 200-proof alcohol. , ★ * ★ Nobody has entered a bid for the l^foot-hlgh still, built for -the- -state-health... jlepartment. laboratory in the early 1900s for research purposes. ■ 'W w ■ ★ A spokesman for the office of general servicjes declined to say what wjJtild be considered a reasonable bid, ★ ★ ★ He pointed out, however, that the general rule was to accept no offer under |200. A federal license is required to use the still. Street to Bo Closed for Main Installation . City officials today warned motorists that South „Jessfo Street will Be closed’lomomw -Jtetweew-Elm and Osman streets. ★ ★- w ^'The street Is being dosed to^ allow laying of a 48-inch water main; part of the city’s water system improvement project water this BUihmert “ , ★ ★ ★ The section of Jessie Street should be reopened by early next week. UNITED SHIRT MSTHIBUTORS Tcl-Hnron Sboppiar Center I Pontiac Bank, Eastern Firm Get Notes. City comml^ners last Bight awarded sale of |L84 million in urban renewal preliminary loan notes to PonUac State Bank and the Chemical Bank, New York ’Trust Co; ★ The local bank was »ng four bidders, askln ATfENTlWr' MALTpRS I,» e proven feet that your Mist ere in direct relatiori to the iiitingi you make. You can improve your offiee iisting ability with iur proven system. — CoM for beteila-- RRESSER'S CRO$S,:INDEX ., 4-057C 1.59 per cent interest rate on ^ the notes. \ , Bids whref opened last week. The other bids ranged from 1.82 to 1.68 per cent. It was the first sate of preliminary loan notes to finance operations and land acqulslUon In the city’s second urban renewal project (R44). . The R44 project loan notes will mature In six months, at which time another loan note Issue wiU be sold. MSUO's STUDY SKILLS ______WORKSHOP_________ Saturday morning course for High School and College Students- to improve Study habits, develop vo-cobuldry^ and increase reading speed and corr\-prehension. Accepting registrations through this week Coil FE 8-7211 Ext. 2147 Prices Take a Record Fall During Our THE fOXtlAC WEDNESI^AY, FEBRUAJRY.6, 1963 U.S/Relations With Canada to Sttiy Strained Awhile (Editor's Note: Seldom have US.-Canadian relations been more strdtned, matrilv because of a'State Department statement Washington bi-siders say wasn’t intended as a bombshell nor read in advance by President Kennedy.) By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON (AP)-The political crisis in Canada threatens to maintain for several months - th6 severe stFains-^n-0;S:-Cana4* dian relations. ★ ★ ★ There was no Immediate ment here from the White House or State Department on the fall of Prime Minister John piefen-baker's tlonserv-ative goviemment Tuesday night. But U S. leadersl are sensiti -aware that a HIGHTOWER State Department statement Just a week ago sparked the tumult which now forces,the Canadians into new elections. ^ -★ ★ * ^ Since Diefenbaker had made a major issue of what he called U.S. intrusion into Canadian affairs there is no doubt joint Canadian-U.S. defenw a£tfrltles,( nuclear weapons for Canada’s armed forces, and probably the whole range cfjiolitical and economic relations between Ottawa and Washington will be hotly debated during the election period and in the new Parliament to folfow.«- NOT THOM TOr -r* - - So far as can be determined, neither President Kennedy nor Secretary of State^Degn Rusk had a hand in producing the State istood to have been cleared by McGeorge Bundy, special assistant to the President for national isecurity affairs. To Seek Post With Regents LANSING m - Ink White, St, Jbhns weekly newspaper publisher and a former Republican delegate to the constitutional convention, yesterdi^ announced his candidacy for the University of Michigan Board rf Regents. White, 4», Is a U. of M. graduate and a f^er visiting lecturer in its jonmailsm department. He is publisher of the Clinton County Republican-News. He also is past president of the Michigan Press Association and is the present chairman, of the Kennedy is understood to have been u{^t the day after the statement came out by the ap-jparent failure of State and De-Department authorities to both n, “■ '• ™ of Qanadian politics. i ■ ■ . ^ , t • ■ ■ I Indeed the statement evidently as not supposed to be such a| bombshell at all .although its authors reportedly foresaw the: The statement was designed to possibility of angry Canadian gov- clear up for the P6cdfdTr,S.”gov-ernment criticism. ernment views on issues involv- ing Canada’s acceptance or rejection of U.S. nuclear warheads for U.S., weapons systems already in Canadian hands. IDEA’S ORIGIN The idea of issuing a statement, informed officials say, originated in the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa and in the State Department here after a debate on nuclear weapons in the Canadian Parliament. The embassy is under direction of Ambassador \y. Walton Butter-worth and the State Department policy control is understood have been delegated by Rusk Undersecretary George W. Ball. Clinton County Republican Committee. A Curtail Use pf Water, Ow^sso People Asked OWOSSO (AP) -City Water Commissioner Ray Gellatly has appealicd fo all water users In Owosso to discontinue unnecessary use because the level in both the city’s large reservoirs-is going down daily. ★ ★ ★ He Said a new well was'yteld-ing only 100 gallons per minute. Penney’s ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY Come In Now—See Our Collection of SCATTER RUGS DEEP-CARVED NYLON ACaNT RUGSI FOMI BACKEDI 3«8 x36" a/"x48 " 5.98 36 "x80" 10.98 Lively colors tlial give a luxury look to living room. I>c I4S VICKS , FORMULA 44 |19 83c FAilLY SIZE m GLEEM a i?l 88c LARGE TUIE fl pREu a \T I.SS-l*xtl40 1 TAMPAX j|39 l49-4lorl-Pak , GAUZE S' |29 ^88c-4oxo(38TAI$. | BromoQuininel i? 2.96 BOX OF 28 | RA DDN=”,i 288 HOLDS PLATES MORE FIRMLY FMTEETH 98< An alkaline powder for' protection against slipping Pontiac Mall iShoppIng Center/ N. Telegroph Miracle Mile Shopping Center* 2145 S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Shopping Center, 3 S. Telegraph Saginaw at Huron, 07 N.^ Seglnew ' f'. ^ .If ' f THE PONIIAO fPBBSS. WBfawRsnAY. .iaBBWAlt¥-ft l^rti^ating WiHihg to Give CubaJJota lo^eanedy (CkmtirtUeJ FVom f^age Two) crisis in Congress. Sen. Humphrey jhii suggested opoi hirings. . WoijW you favor such hearings and would you be willing to appear befop some investigating QommiUee? „ ,iL_J^te»Al«8ttainly favor q»n hearings but I think it should be ■ “ to the discretion of the Sen- Q. Would you give such a committee any information you have as well as t|» sources of that information if the sources were held confidential? > -—‘ A. They will call as wltocsses, I am told, offi0al^ in the Defense Department and the CIA (Centr^'telligence Agency) and wnUriive ail of the information I hai^ and a good deal more. I ^ould be glad to confer with the member's, of that committee at^ time they wanted me to but I don't tiiirtkit wduld be in the interest of anyone to have me as a witness because what I knoW is comparatively little compared, to what they can get from these oth- have the information I have bre just as good RBtriotlc Americans as I am. I think probably the same iriay be true which was apparently true last October. They place a different interpretation on the information than I do. I don’t charge them with any insincerity or anything else,' but I think that the situation in Cuba is very seri-9«M- Q. There are some direct conflicts between a number of crit- ical points in a speech you made week and the Defense Dfe-partnmnt position, for example, on the status of the medium range and the intermediate missUe^sites. The Defmse Department contends that those-sites, those bases were dismantled and broken up in the case of the IRBM’s, that the missile erectors and the oxidizers mid fall the equipment needed to activate the missiles had been re- moved and had been seen