Weather W.». WMlMr tiirM* PtrwMl Cloody, WiinMr THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition ^ VOL. 128 -- Tvrn ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. WEPNKSDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1966—64 PAGES' 10» All Are Puerto Ricans Wreck Kills 19 Cong Toll Big in Allied Drive; North Bombed WECim MOTHER EVACUATED-Mrs. Cvi Hoffert of Mohnton, Pa., an*ex-pectantTnother, is carried on a stretcher through high snowdrifts to a waiting Air Force helicopter yesterday.HShe was taken from the area, isolated by a snowstorm, to a hospital in Reading, Pa. Rails and' Bridges Hit by 4J.S. Craft; 1,000 Reds Killed/ Captured Snow WWOt)io/ttlinois SAIGON, South Viet Nam iff) — Communists losses-wm^^eckoned to-1 jday at more than 1,100 1'^ By Tte Associiied Press I left Belleville, 1 A groundhog day snowstorm inch cover. draped a white blanket over an m area from IlllnUis to Ohio today.Lj^*""’. while below-zero weather tended from the Dakotas Into I Iowa and Kansas.' A The groundhog saw his shad ow. which, according to tradi- Ciear, cold weather.extended jover the plains this morning. IS BELOW The mercury dropped to 16 be- winter. The storm blanketed Clncln-nntl with it inches of snow and j killed or captured in Operation Masher, the big allied drive in the central coastal plains, U. S, military spokesmen reported. They called it one of the Virginia—hard hit by snow, bloodiest fighte of the Vietnam-sleet and rain—continued a ese war. massive digging out operation U.S. -fighter-bombers contin-I ued tbe renewed air war against I The snowstorm in southern North Vjet Nam for the third' biizzard. But an emergency situation still prevailed in some areas as drifts up to 15 feet kept rural residents in forced isolation. . Florida Crash Farm Laborers Collision Near Miami ’ is Second Worst in History of the State €RA{ffl"Viem»-mAPPEfr --“Worir- -tjL th^ men use a cutting torch on the side of a yesterday when the bus collided with a diesei farm labor bus to free the bodies of some engine near Miami, Fla. WALTER SADOWAY Area Pancake Chef ~HifsVegas Jackpot The potato chip pancakes whipped up by a West Bloomfield Township man turned out to be a grand idea — worth a cool $1,000. Walter Sadoway, 6612 Ader-ley, yesterday Won the Men’s National Cooking Championship, topping three "other finalists. The event in Las Vegis, Nev., was sponsored by the Potato Oiip Institute International. The 45-year-old cooking champion is a welding engineer for Progressive Welder and Machine Co. of Detroit and Pontiac. Deaths attributable to the se-ere weather across the nation the last few days reached 157, including 47 persons who died in fires and heating accidents. PLOWING OUT New York State today was plowing out from the weekend snowstorms. The state’s major artery— the Thruway—wak reopened in the morning after being partly or fjily closed for almost 63 hours since 5 p.m. Sunday from Albany to Buffalo and the Pennsylvania line. A few exits on the 356-mile route still were blocked. There were jnany multiple fatalities on the nation’s snow and ice-slicked highways. In one collision in the blinding snowstorpi in eastern Idaho, four persons died. WELCOME REUEF Maryland after three days of coninir with the 9ftf>rmnth nf coping with the aftermath of a'tered 30 at 2 p.m. In Today's Viet Prediction Red general says U.S. can’t win. - PAGE A-3. Lab Contribution ' Annual cify outlay is formally terminated. — PAGE A-S. Political Confabs GOP committeeman says discipline is key to reform. - PAGE B-ll.' Aroa News .......... A-4 Astrology IM Bridge .............. D4 . DA C-2-C-4 .... D-7 Comics Editorials FoodSectioe Markets Obituaries D4 Sports D-1-D4 Theaters .......... D-5 TV-Radio Programs D-13 WilsoB, Earl ......D-13 Wemea’s Pages. B-I-4M Kan. bridges, railroad tracks,' 17 in International Falls,] * » , and - 6 in Hutchinson. ^ with fury yesterday. , and jammed traffiJ, elosi ®‘°'-"8e«reas. schools and stranded workers. Cincinnati stores closed in mid-afternoon. The University of Cincinnati suspended classes (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) In Marion, III., three hours before a remodeled drugstore was to open, a wall and part of the roof collapsed under the weight of saow and Ice. One of the heaviest snow and ge blankets stretched across Southm Illinois from SL Louts, Morrlo Vincennes, Ind. A comparatively light snowfall was a welcome relief to _ r*L__________Sea for the city of VInh, 160 +nefe^ mOe, south ol^Iaaof. for the ^^X^rouffidhog Saw His Shadow Despite me cold and a few flurries, there’s a chance Mr. Groundhog might have seen a faint shadow of himself this morning. If so,, Pontiac area residents are in for another six weeks of slipping and sliding, on and off skis or so tradition says. around Bong Son, 290 miles northeast of Saigon. Spokesmen said the allied troops found several hundred more enemy bodies. The weatherman tells us tonight wjll be partly cloudy with scattered snow flurries and a low of 10 to 16. And tomorrow he says will be warmer with highs a welcome 27 to 32 and skies partly cloudy. Partly cloudy and colder with scattered snow flurries > is the prediction for Friday. Morning north to northwest winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour will become west to northwest at 8 to 15 miles tonight. A mild 19 was the low recording in downtown Pontiac prior at 8 a.m. The mercury regis- ReporterWriles Own Obit: 'Cigarettes Caused Death’ Bad weather again hampered assessmeot of damage. Jets from 7th Fleet carriers flew 26 combat missions and Air Force planes hit Ben Thny, the port on the South China south of^aaof, for second day in a row, spokes-, ihen said. Aerialisf Is Critical After Fall in Detroit DETROIT IA1—The Great Murillo,'an aerialist with the Kingling Brothers Circus, never used a balancing tpole onr safety net-=* feat which “separate fhp hnys U.S. air cavalrymen. South from the men,” a circus official said. Vietnamese paratroopers and, , • -n i ............ ^ South Koreans carried Opera-j ^2, was hospitalized in critical condi- tion Masher into the ninth dayjtion today With aTractured^pelvls and liead injunes in a 13-mde-square battleground received yesterday when be fell 45 feet to the sawdust floor of Detroit’s State Fair Coliseum. Murillo, a native of Santiago, Chile, and a resident of Hollywood, Calif., was performing at the annual Shrine Circus. The spokesmen said the (Communist toll has been established as 695 killed, 102 captured and 437 suspects detained. Three-fourths of the latter have been identified as Viet (tong, they said. U.S. helicopters today accidentally unleashed a barrage of 2.75.Jnch ZuBl rockets iuto bh'ouacked 1st Cavalry troops. One American was killed and nine others wounded in the mishap. He was walking up a 45-degree slanted wire toward his main performing wire when he fell. “He had only been on about three minutes,'' said circus pro-ducer Alexander Dobrich. “He The aerial artillery helicopters were on station preparing to attack Viet Cong targets along the coast. A plume of yellow stnoke from' a flare was to have (he signal marking the Communist positions for the U.S. aircraft. A radio operator accompanying Col. Harold G. Moore, commander of the Gavalry’s 3rd Brigade, 'Accidentally dropped a I ,sin.9jk9_, grenade while cutting * jlLroygh some brush. HONOLULU (UPI)—Mark Waters, a v^^ran newspaper reporter, died yesterday of lung cancer at Queens Hospital — after writing his own obituary which attributed his death to cigarettes. Waters, 56, wrote the obituary, six days before he died and made the final proof corrections only hours before his death. It was The pin dropped out and the nearby U.S. troops were attacked as yellow smoke rose into the sky. i carried in full yesterday by his newspaper, the Honolulu Star-Bulletin. “Cigarettes were the death of le," Waters wrote in his lead sentence. He then went on to outline his> belief that his caifcer was caused by cigarette smoking, which he said he started 42 years ago at the age of 14. ‘Tve always smoked two -pecks a dav. inhallM most Iowa, graduated from the University of North Carolina and lived for many years in Baltimore, Md. Waters discovered he had cancer last year shortly after he left the Star-Bulletin to go into public relations work. He uid doctors told him bis cancer phobably was caused by heavy smoking. “I smokM incessantly. My stomach began to hurt and I would get up every hour or half-hour during the night to drink milk and smoke a cigarette. QNE OF THOSE THINGS “Whether this story will stop anyone from smoking, I don’t know. I doubt it. Not a soul I’ve preached to has qpit smok- . . ’ ^ |. ’ It fl nn* aF IhftOA ml who was born in Davehport, It’s one of those things’T'You always think it’ll happen to the other guy — never to me. When you get your lung cancer—God help you.” Watt'S ended his obituary by writins: “I don’t have a ghost of a chance. It’s too late for me. It may not be for you;” his balance, that’s all. He lost his balance and he fell.” DEAD SILENCE There was a dead silence among the audience of some 8,-000 Immediately after Murillo plunged to the floor. Then there were a few screams. “He landed on his side,” Dobrich said. .“I was standing there and he landed about five feet from me.”' Murillo lay unconscious for about five minutes. Then an animal act was A lawsuit was filed t od a asking $1.25-miliion in compensatory andT>unitive damages in connection with the death Mrs. Gerald M. Covington last November at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital. Lawsuit Filed in Ether Death Husband of Victim Seeks-$1.25 Mimon. Named as codefendants in the suit were the hospital, four staff doctors and.|wo nurses. Mrs. Covington, 24, of 436 Rowland was one of three patients who died at the hospital Nov. 18 and 19 when they were given injections of ether from a bottle believed to contain another anesthetic, Suri- Did these men have families,’’ a man asked one of the few who spoke English. HAD FAMILIES “They were Puerto Ricans,” was Old reply; ‘Hn 4Hierto Rico everybody has a family.’* Conductor Edwnrj B. Shaw said the Seaboard Ah- tiiie Railroad engine, which carried only a single caboose, was traveling about 91 miles an hour a[ben it reached tbe croosing, about IS miles from tal. The suit was filed just before noon with Oakland (kiunty Clerk-Register John D. Murphy in behalf of Mrs. Covington’s husband by attorney George Fulkerson. The case has been assigned to Circuit Court Judge James S. Thorburn. CODEFENDANTS The codefendants are doctors ^ „ Stanley Abrams, Lloyd Good- win, Paul W. Trimmer and ~ MIAMI. — teen young Puerto Ricans, who came to Florida’s fields to earn some extra dollars, were killed yesterday when a farm labor bus collided with a diesel engine. Fifteen others were badly Injured as the engine crushed the bus like an . accordion and pushed it 432 feet. It was the second worst toiP fic accident in Florida’s history and another in a long series of accidents involving Friends of the Pueito Ricarts heard the news at the labor caiRp where the bus was bound following a day in a pole bean field. “The bus just ran In front of us,” Shaw said, “nien I heard the racket. I looked- back and couldn’t see anything but dust. Then it settled and I saw bodies lying at the side of the road. “The brakeman yelled, ‘Good Lord, we’ve killed a bunch of people.’ HOLLERING. CRYING--------- 'They were all hollering and crying.” y The bns was hit squarely in the middle and wrapped ' around the front of the engine. Battered straw and felt hats were scattered along the roadie. Inside the bus were shoes, shreds of clothing, a battered tin cup and a paper bag that carried lunch to the field. WORKED FOR HOURS Police and firemen worked for brought distract the horrified crowd. i, ----- 1962 MISHAP iWhen.theseven-manbaIancing ‘^“‘"8®‘'- Murillo’s falPbccurred just a ^ ^ I Mrs. Covington is the mother few feet from the spot where the I w . i victims Flying Wallendas”’ high wire! ® Wallenda, 22, still is, were Kimberly Ann Bruneel, act, the “human pyramid,’’with a spine injury. 8. of 2599 Ivanhoe, West crashed to the ground in 1962. iTwo other, members of the' Bloomfield T o w n s h i p, and Richard Faughnan, 29, and troupe were injured. i (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) Joseph S. Maxwell and nurses [hours under floodlights to pry horrified*crowd.*" [Pioter Sehepp, 23, were. killed|Joan M. Booth and Margaret R. the bus from the engine ' wreckerk and aeetylono-torches.’ Friends from the labor camp, called to identify the dead, crossed themselveB as they lifted each blanket. Some electrical equipment for (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Drop in City Juvenile Crime Reported Pontiac’s juvenjle crime rate| I shows a downward trend over 1 the past five years, it was re-| I port^ last night. This was the essence of a| I report submitted last night the City Commission by the I Youth Assistance Department. Some reasons for the crime decline were noted in i cover letter from the Citizens’ Com--Jnlttee_jBiL^ ^ Jmevention. Dr. Charles L. Bowers, com- - mittee president, and George P. Caronis, executive secre- Presentlng a summary of 1965 activity by the department, the report disclosed that ttaf rate U juvenile offenses per 1,000 juvenile populatioix ' DR. CHARLES L. BOWERS dnmped from 36 in 1961 to 16 last year. While Pontiac’s juvenile offender rate based on population riimes. in the 7-16 age group has declined, the national rate has increased, said the report. POUCE-COUNSELOR PLAN helped in the decrease The youth assistance report showed 309 first offenders In 1965, as compared to 378 In the previous year. In their l?lter, Caronis and REPEAT OPfendeRS Dr. Bowers said the police-counselor program at both high schools had helped iq crime Early detection, identification and contact with potential juvenile offehders creates the opportunity for early redirection to prevent seriOus offenses, Caronis and Dr. Bowers noted. The number of repeat offenders dropped to 185 last year from 231 in 1964.-Jfce illtv’s youth department Secondly, they said the community-school concept operating at six Pontiac schools has also handled 165 cases list year. The largest category was incorrigibilities: defying parental authority, late hours and the like. FTfty-one cases of Incorrigibility were handled. 'Die second largest category was the 36 cases of theft or larceny. ■Jy, r GEORGE P. CARONIS A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, VVED?^,ESDAY. FEBRUARY 2, XM6. By HENRY S. BRADSHER • MOSCOW (AP) The Kremlin may be preparing the Soviet UdmlTnnns^p^^ foraial split, with Red China. It may , come at the party congress hext month. Soviet Communist sources said a long letter from the Kremlin" detailing the charges against Peking had been circulated to" party grbupuKiring the past two weeks. I. Brezhnev, have spoken at meetings where the letter, was read, the sources said. TO GET READY . . The purpose of the letter, the sources said, is to prepare the party membership for a formal declaration that a reconciliation with Peking is impossible. It may come at the party congress opening March 29 in Moscow, the informants added. subvert areas likS Mongolia, staging border incidents, f]pod-ing the Soviet Union with anti-Soviet leaflets and falsely proclaiming that the Soviet Union cooperates with the United States on international problems. " , is meant to be a basic document on relations with China and takes about two hours to read. It is reportedly meant only for trusted party members, but its circulation has been so wide that many -ordinary Soviet izens have heard about it. ' Party Presidium members, including First Secretary Leonid The letter reportedly accuses China of hindering Soviet aid to North Viet Nam, attempting to Some sources said the letter also accusea China of trying to drive the Soviet Union and the United States into a nuclear war. PUSH TOWARD WAR? The informants said the letter The letter follows a renewal of attacks on the Chinese leadership in the Soviet press. After Brezhnev and Premier Alexei fj. Kosygin displaced Nikita Khrushchev in October 1964, they tried to patch up the quarrel with China and avoided an- swering the cdnMnuing Chinese criticism for more than a year. The Chinese Communist party’s official newspaper, the Peking People’s Daily, accused the Soviet leaders tod^y of helping the United States contain Red China through actions in Asi|^ SAY HELP U.S. "The course taken by Soviet leaders on the Viet Nam, the India-Pakistan and Japan questions completely conforms with the requirements of U.S. im; perialism, and especially with the latter’s policy of encircling China,” thg newspaper said in an article signed by “Observer J’ the signature Usually means a senior official of the Chinese Communist party. On the Viet Nam question, the article said, “the Soviet leaders have been steadily -hand in glpve with the U.S. imperial- ists.” The article criticized Alenan-der N. Shelepin, the No. 2 man in the Soviet Communist party, for not condemning President Johnson’s peace efforts during his recent visit to Hanoi. “On the other hand,'the Soviet press, for obviously ulterior* purposes, went out of jts way^ during 'diis period to extol the soHralled ‘Tashkent spirit,’ adi, vocating the settlement of questions through negotiations’,” the Peking organ said. “This kind of propaganda in the Soviet papers had the clear import that the Vietnamese people ought to-sit down at the conference table with the U.S. aggressors while allowing the latter to continue their occupation of South Viet Nam.” FaririinglonTownshipBid on Cilyhood Is Snagged Snov^sform i Hits Ohio and Illinois I (Continued From Page One) and many southern Ohio sc The proposed incorporation of|at 9 a m. Monday to show Farmington Township as-^ircity|wrh y r temporary injunction came to a standstill today. should not be issued while The Boundaries Committee of | trial is pending, the Board of Supervisors was to' The suit asks that the petitions' were shut down early, have considered scheduling an be voided because there was a Msjor hotels were-jSmmed*by election date on the proposal conflict of interest when they.n^id-affei-noplKfiy workers who this morning, but was halted by were notarized by several town-j'io^ldn’t "^1 home. Basketball straiiS^g °Urom**tTking a^^ corporation''' “|cel®l - ! The rtieeling of The bounda-1 SLOW TURNPIKE 'TTie:S^WslgredT»j^UlF^ y<'»sjdjournedj ^ 40-mile:per-hour speed limit ® was posted on the Ohio 'Turn-' quit Judge Clark J. Adams on uftqr members learned of the „ Birmingham Area News ^B)diibit on Middh East Will Open at Art Center BIRMINGHAM - Images of the Middle East will be pro- and William M. Henderaon. a.<<»T;P.rt exhlbjt to To.“hip™“ while the native of Siberia was living in Iran before coming to the United States, “Faces and Facets of Iraq” by Iraqi A1 Ani is a group of The show will follow the cur-1 thoughtful studies of ancient “Stitchery, Lace and exhibit which already Ip I has broken all attendahce Tec- and modern buildings and the Iraqi people. Lake Township. , the request of township resident Conrad Braseth, 21217 Waldfdn, an opponent of the incorporation. Braseth’s request was part of a lawsuit he filed yesterday against the Board of Supervisors and County Clerk John D. Mnrphy. It challenges the validity of the pelltiOTs whtclr were circu- , « y-, wwaj pvoicvi wti iiic v/iJiu iUill*i __ restraining order from Corpora- from Fremont-Port ClinlhSl WILLIAM H. TAYLOR JR. to the Pennsylvania line. tion Counsel Robert Allen. Another meeting is scheduled for ’Tuesday before the full board convenes. Braseth’s suit is the second filed in Circuit Court in . connection with the proposed incorporation. h Jn mid-January, another citi- WESLEY J. WOOD The snow ranged from 4 to 10 inches in southern Illinois, southern Indiana and southern Ohio, and in parts of eastern Missouri and most of northern Kentucky. Mayor and District 6 Incumbent Announce Plans to Run Again late^ and approved for the in--corporation. zen, Raymond N. Felix, Brandywine, asked that the members of the Township Board * *_______ and tt^wn^hin nttnrnrv ToMnh^TL The defendants have been or- _ ~Dia' dered I. ap^ar be,am Adama ' ■ incorporation. " At Louisville, SellevlIIe, JIL. river from 12 inches; Ohio had 10 inches, Evansville, Ind., 9 inches, and Indianapolis, 5. w w * I He fell into a sand hopper while attempting to loosen sand with a hammer according to sheriff’s deputies. His body was discovered by coworker Edwin Crandall. 214Q W. Walton, Waterford Township. He was dead on arrival at ords for the arlT Sunday Is the last day for viewing the present show. Dominated by photography, the Middle East display also will include one graphics section. Three of the sections are spon-s®*"®** Americon Friends of Pontiac General Hospital. of Wash- pair of incumbent City,trict 3 commissioner in 1960.i I inounced last; He was reelected in 1962 and GRAPHICS,PHOTOGRAPHS ^ night that -they will seek their 1964. i._ They feature the graphics ,of Bill Berry and photographs of Iraqi A1 Ani and artist-turned- BERRY^S TRAVELS "rhe graphics ^ section of tha exhibit is the product of Berry’s travels through the Near East. Some of his sketches date from his days at the University of Texas, where he became acquainted with Arab students. The opening reception for thia exhibition will be 2-5 p.m. Feb. 13. It' w i 11 continue through March 6 at the center, which has 2-5 p.m hours daily except Monday. district nominations March 7 primary. the He has served as mayor since 1954 . lion City, Kan. night at J Governmenf — - Snow sleet«and freezing rain TTTthat time, Judge Adams is- covered a large section of Ken-|sued a temporary restraining or _ I FIRST ELECTED Meantime, Wood. Buying 258 GMC Trucks ider prohibiting officials from spending public funds on the campaign. A $1,794,927 federal contract for the purchase'of 258 trucks from GMC Truck & Coach Di-ond!otJBj]jtyj^ Seek $1,25 Million in Woman'^s Death tneky a nessee and south-central West Virginia. Mayor Willii|pi H. Taylor Jr. of District 3 and Commissioner!, ° tree Wesley J. Wood of Distrftft 6 'Truck said they would file nominating!^ An Army companion also was photographer Joseph Kostal. killed when their car struck a ~ . service The fourth section Is a set of 17 photographs entitled “Israel: Past and Present.” Ob- The heaviest snowstornr Tn more than 40 years^oved into Kentucky, closed one-fourth of the^jphools and choked off traf- Frankfort had 12. to 15 inches. petitions. . Wood,-59, of 11 N. Sanford and Taylor, SO, of 247 Ottawa will be seeking their fourth two-year term on the City Commission. irt 1958. Q-fgj Ponf/oc He won reelection in' 1960 and was defeated in 1962, but won again two years ago. A native of Rapid City, Wood Bias, Brutality Complaints uighJbe Israel con- sulate in Chkago, the pictures add aitother dimension to the entire exhibit, called “The Middle East Through the Eye of the Camera and the Graphic Artist.” KostaTs section Is entitled I SLEET PERIL TOO 1 Di-k. n_“impressions of Iran” and was A Michigan Civil Rights Com-between 1937 and 1956 (Continued From Page One) CUmitiuhitres wfiic1i~csc{ William M. Ketehum. 12, of iL^® tT'IT® 250 W. Webster, Ferndale. nounced today by^Senr. Patrick McNamara and Congressman Billie S. Famum. , 250 W. Webster, Ferndale. ?® dump^ 9 All trucks will be commercial-, .am u * i r on Lexington and 10 oh type vehicles equipped with' 1^" '"®''® ‘^® for Covington. Louisville had 11 dump bodies ranging in capacity ™"®® j inches bringing most business | from four to 10-cubidyards ! f^®Uowing an extensive in-1 to a standstill. Downtown stores I Ivestigation of the three deaths, did not open and factory work-Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson' ruled but any criminal charges. A $500,000 damage suit-against 5 the hospital and four staff mem-9 bers was filed Dec. 14 by Mrs. ’. Oscar Bruneel. A motion by the defendants t that the case be transferred out of the county is still pending. Most will be gas-powered, with the remainder toro-flow Diesel engines. The Air Force will receive 115 of the trucks while 84 will go to the .Army and 59 to the Navy. Some of the trucks will be four-wheel drive and the rest two-wheel drive. The Weather ers were sent home early. The streets were lined with abandoned cars, and those which rah creeped slowly along the streets. Both incumbents have served Pontiac in 19K. He is on the City Planning Commis- ® of First United Mission. ,, sionary Church and has been' Taylor, assistant advertising| ^-f’orch affairs. mission (CRC) representative managpr at Pontiac Motor Di-i ___________*____* - *■ said today that a cross section I vision, was first elected Dis-! In announcing his candidacy ,~bT coihpl^hls^^ filed j Wood said an experienced com-alleging police brutality and em-| l^illc mission would be needed to ployment discrimination in Pon- VV iGCK i\/l/o carry through the city’s urban tiac. renewal efforts. The CRC is scheduled to open 7Q in FlCirlrln * * * an office here Feb. 22 at 1 La- ' ' A product of schools in Yale, f^yette. Viet Talk Hope Fades in U.N. Brown City and Port Huron, The opening of the two-day-Wood is married find, has two: a-week office is to be kicked children. off with a community foruAi UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) ^ The United States may The snow , in Louisville was | succeed in putting Its Viet Nam the worst jsinee Jan. 14, 1918, jease before the Security Council when 10.4 inches covered the I today, but an American propos- ground. that the council sponsor Taylor, who attended Pontiac schools, Wayne State University and completed LaSalle Institute ^ Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Variable cloudiness and slightly warmer with scattered snow flurries today. Highs 24 to 30. Partly cloudy and colder tonight with scattered snow flurries near Lake Michigan. Lows 10 to 16. Increasing cloudiness and warmer Thursday, highs 27 to 32. North to northwest winds 10 to 20 miles today becoming west to northwest 8 to 15 miles tonight. Outlook for Friday: Partly cloudy and oolder with scattered snoiy flurries. ' >. Lowest temperature {Mean temperatuta ................ I Weather: Day, parity tunny; 50 'Friends' With Pair on Honeymoon ROCrifesTER, N.Y, (UPI) A Rochester man and wopian who spent the first thre^ days of their honeymoon trapped in a snowbound synagogue with 50 in-laws, relatives and friends, finally got started today on their first day of manriage — alone. Or. Rapid! 75 Houghton 26 Lansing Vis larguetta .26 23 i rt Chan I Where did they head? For a wJii'tJ « 55'ski lodge — if they could find tngelis M 11°"® ^®®" cf°sed by i Beach ;i 65 the blizzard. ' V Orteant 61 35 Ont Year Ago In Highest temperature Lowest temperature*_____ ’ PlttsbiA^gh Weather: Sunny, t aweit Temperal la In M Vaan 30 36 S. Francisco 56 21 t7 S. $. Marie 20 _ 36 IS Seattle. 49 33 Snowplows cleared a path to Beth El Temple yesterday and freed the guests and I doomed. Jordan held the answer to whether the 15-nation council would debate the issue at all- By last night the United States had mustered only eight of the nine affirmative votes required to place the issue on the agenda. Waleed Sadi of Jordan asked the council to postpone decision on the debate until today'^irfrgovemment could instruct him whether to support the U. S. request for debate on its proposal that the council sponsor preparatory talks to set up a Viet Nam peace conference. Even if the proposal goes up for debate, opposition led by the Soviet Union and France virtually killed any chance of the United States getting the council to take a hand in a Viet Nam jJeace settlement. 'The big power vejo does not Edward Edelstein, who were married Sunday afternoon. After the nuptials and a reception at the temple, the wedding party discovered it was trapp^, in the building by the snow. The couple made one attempt to leave Sunday night, but made it only as far as a nearby suburb btsfore their car boj^ed down. TURNED BACK Abandoning I heir "car, the newlyweds turned around and skied back to the wedding celebration at the temple. AP PtwMlY NATIONAL WEATHER — A band of snow and flurries will wind from the Rockies to New England tonight and showers will cover the western part of the natipn. Colder air will spread from the northern Plains to the Atlantic with wanner temperatures ih the central and southern Plains. Meanwhile, the guests — including a caterer who was stranded at the celebration with a truckload of food resolved to make the most of the situation and eontinued the party through Sunday night, Monday antfyes-tefi^y. Michigan ' Osteopathic College Foundation. He is married and has three daughters. such as putting items on the agenda. But it does apply to substantive proposals such as setting w a peace parley. SUM h8pe About all the United States can hope for is a chance to air its peace efforts before the council -and try to lay the blame fpr failure of those efforts at the door of the Communists. U. S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg has introduced a resolution calUng on the council to arrange discussions with interested governments on holding a conference that could lead to peace in Viet Ndm and all Southeast Asia. Soviet reaction to Goldberg’s opening appeal yesterday made it plain that the U. S. proposal Would run into a Soviet veto, even if it mustered the nine affirmative votes heeded for adoption. Taylor has been active in the Pontiac Area United Fund, Junior Achievement and Parent-Teacher Association. (Goq|linued From Page One) a warning light wa^ strewn by the crossing. The railroad had decided to install a flashing light after other collision several weeks ago when a tomato bus' knocked a train off the track. The light had not been finished. Feb. 22 at Pontiac Central High School at 8 p.m. Thomas E. Johnson, CRC field representative, said the purpose of the meeting was to inform the conununity of the function of the CRC. Johnson disclosed that he al- RAILROAD CROSS chairman last year of Michigan'ready had complaints of alleged The crossing was marked by Week in Oakland County. , |job discrimination and police i a railroad cross painlpd on the 4 * I brutality. narrqw country road and by The mayor was also named NO SPECIFICS stop signs on both sides. 1st year to a five-year termj However, he declined to cite ♦ * » on the board of trustees of the any specific complaint and said | Rows of trees grew along the he could not give the number:road and it would be difficult to of complaints. see an .approaching train. The ’The Pontiac office is td open sheriff’s pffice said it found no on Mondays and Tuesdays. jskid marks. Death Claims Gossip Queen Filmland Colujnnist Is Pneumonia Victim HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Movie stern mother to filmdom’s brightest and brashest stars, once reminisced about her first store-bought hat: “It was a thing of beauty. Of bright green straw trimmed with red velvet geraniums. It made me feel rich as a queen. Candidacy Announced by Pair state Sen. Farrell E. Roberts, R-14th District, will be a candidate for Oakland founty Circuit judge and his former campaign managqf will attempt to succeed him as the I4th District legislator. Roberts and Carl D. Pursell of Plymouth simultaneously an-nounced thClr CJ twd^posts today. Pursell ran Roberts’ campaign in early 1965 when he took over the Senate seat left vacant hy the death of Paul Chandler. Chandler died before taking office and a special election was held. which I believe is essential to be an effective circuit judge,” said Roberts. Roberts left , his Senate seat in 1964 to run for a seat on the Michigan Court of Appeals but was defeated, Ironically the court was established trough a bill Introduced by in the law firm of Dieterle, Roberts and Mann in West Bloomfield Township, Roberts is a graduate of the University of Michigan Law Schqpl. A graduate of the Naval Academy at Annapolis, Roberts served in both World War II An attorney, he is a partner “That hat was a greater at-taction on Easter morning than the ctllir or the preacher’s ser-' said if a hat CM get tho attqption of this many people, VII never go bareheaded.” HAT TRADEMARK She kept her word. Flamboyant, enormous and often outUm-dish hats remained a trademark of the Chicago Tribune-New York News indicate columnist until her death 'Tuesday at 75. Miss Hopper died at Cedars oi Lebanon Hospital of pneumonia 6nd the Korean conflict. He is qomplicated by heart trouble. Roberts, 43, of 2486 UFay, West Bloomfield Township, is seeking one of tl\p six-year terms on the circuit bench. The district he now represents takes in western Oakland County and Livonia, PlynMuth and NorUivilte-in Wayne County. THIRD TERM “The completion of my third term in the Michigan Senate, coupled with my previous service in the House of Representatives and the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office, has given me the variety of experience FIRST VENTURE This will bd PurseU’s first venture into politics as a candidate, but already he has received support in his bid from the Republican state chairman, Elly Peterson. A former teacher la Livonia public schools, Pvsell, 3$, is president of Western Office Equipment, Inc., Plymouth, and president of the Plymouth Community Chamber of Commerce. He is presently serving as GOP chairmaij of the Second Congressional District in Wayne County, and is^ a member of Gov. Ronmey’s i Task Force on Political Organil ‘ udWtion. I d master’s dn- FARRELLE. ROBERTS Pursell has gree in administration from Eastern Michigan University. was her only son, actof William / Hopper, who plays PaulDralnr on the Perry Mason television series. ENDS-PERIOD h^s Hopper’s death, and tha re<^t retirement of' her arch rival, the Hearst Newspapers’ Louella 0. Parsons, ended a flamboyant period in Holly- Ex-Pontiac Maybr Files for Commii^op Robert A. Landry, 47 Center, former Pontiac mayoy, filed nominating petitions yesterday for the March 7 City Conunis-sion prinnary. Landry, 51, employed as a ilhnior clerk at Fisher Body Division, Livonia piant, will bo seeking his fourth term as IMa-trict 7 commissioner. \.4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY. FEBRUARY. 2. 1966 Acr-8 Predicts Morale Will Fail Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac N. Viet General Says U.S. Can't Tliiirslloy Price Busters TOKYO^(UPI) - Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, who engineered the Viet Minh v i ctory over France in the Indochina War, is convinced the Upjted States cannot win the Viet Nam War by military force. * ★ ★ , Giap, current defense minister and deputy premier in the Hanoi government, predicted the . U S. would lose the Viet Nam conflict because American troops wo)4ld be overcome by “passivity” and "low morale.” The assertion was published in the January issue of Tap, Ideological journal of Ihe North Vietnamese Communist Party. It was broadchat yes-terday^'by Hanoi Radio. The timing of the analysis by the leading North Vietnamese military strategist all but finalized North Viet Nam’s rejection of peace talkS with the United States, observers felt. Giap commanded the Vie Minh forces (rf North Vietnam-President Ho Chi Minh in the war bgainst France more than a decade ago. He is a disciple of ihe Mao Tse-tung school of guerrilla warfare. NUMBERS UNIMPORTANT He said in the article 6ie United States would lose in Viet 'N,on‘Red Press Accepts Renewal of Bombings' WASHINGTON (UPI) - The director of the U.S. Information Agency said today the non-Cbmmunist press around the world generally has recognized resumption of U.S. bombing of North Viet Nam as Inevi- the Russian^ have been increasing propaganda activities in many parts of the world, concentrating on Asia, Latin America and Africa. i He cited India, which he recently visited as an example. There, he said, the Russians have ' Nam d e 8 p i t e the ndmber of troops sent to fight the war. “They caiinot avoid being ifriven into passivity in strategy, (by being) compelled to scatter their forces in the jie-fensive as well as in the offensive, Although Giap’s analysis did little more thdn restate theories of guerrilla warfare which originated in the writings of Mao, it was seen as an indicati(m the Hanoi government is firmly convinced it cannot lose the Viet Nam war. ||M Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Giap wrote that “np matter how modern its equipment, the American expeditionary forces cannot bring into full play its combativeness, and cannot escape the inevitable defeat which is likely to befall an army fighting on foreign soil against a people’^ movement organized for guerrilla resistance.’ ★ f ★ He also charged the Soji-t.^ Vietnamese government was ut^ ’ terly inefficient, corrupt, unstable and did not have the backing ef the peasants. OBVIOUS REASON Thb l)ombing of North Viet Nam has given further determination to the North Vietnamese people to fight the Americans, Giap added. He said the reason for U.S. involvement in Viet Nam was “qbvious.’ Just Arrived at SIMMS Timex Electric Wrist Watch Rnt shipment In 4 months. The famous Timex electric watch with cKrome cose radium dial, waterproof, weep second hand and comfortable expansion band SIMMSl* S|}op Simms Thursday for these price busters. While ybu are here look around *bnd see all the unadvertised bargains. We reserve the riglstto limit quontitiee and all prices subject to stock on hand. BARGAIN BARRAGE from The House of BARGAINS - SIMMS “World opinion has Universally—with the exception of the Communist states — welcomed the peace offensive and recognized the president’s good faith He said the Russians have added two new magazines in India for young people, with cir- -.1 trying to bring about an end,*^”’®^®" at 500,()00 to hostilities,” Leonard H. Marks increased radio said in an interview. broadcasts; published books in „ English and seven Indian dia- The world {wess generally i^ts; doubled tfie number of was skeptical that Hanoi and Soviet information personnel in Peki^ would respond hy call- the country and substantially in-* iag me fighting off and sit- creased the number of Indians ting down at the conference they employ in that endeavor. i USIA boM ,dd«l. : M«ks estimated IlMRusslaiB ; J~Since. the resumption of the spend the equivalent of S2 bil-TOmbing,” Marks . gaid, “the lion a year on overseas informa-world press'(except the Com- tion. USIA’s operating budget is 'munists) has reco^ized that the $158 million, but the compart-i United States did everything son is misleading because pri-possible and that resumption of vate publishing and broadcast-the bombing was inevitable.” ing accounts for a large part He said some editors “deplored” of information about America^ the bombing renewal but still which goes abroad, accepted ijs inevitability. ---------------- M.rir diLn ^ d ^ Killed Bv Truck Maries declined to say what, ' ^vlce he personaUy gave thel DETROIT (AP)-Oiarles F. ^President or national security jBunton, 59, of Taylor Township 4^ncil on the bombing resump- was killed Tuesday when struck^ by a truck in the yard of his ; The USIA chief also reported home. Last 3 Days! Sale of Stereo and Mono LP Records ★ Wastam & Country\ it Popular Racords \ it Classic Music it Show Tunas it Childran's Songs it Rock 'n Roll Albums it Plus Many Othars — Your Choice Moybe you missed out lost w, this sole of records — you' you like in this group of over Buy oil you wont for yourself Thurs.,Fri. and.Sot. last 3 Girls’ Boots |9d Firat Quality Close-out of Shoes $•100 Your Choice Ladies’ Anklets 7i|o. Roll loD onH.ti In combed ci Boys’Caps Foam Rubber Pieces Entire Stock 00c 48° tor cujhioni, pillow.. Girls’ Skates Ladies’ Dresses 1' Simma ^99 Price ■ 50' Simma Sm ^ Price CloM-out of wosh 'n wrcr cotton., cottorv>nd orn.1 or rayon. Anortod' rtylM, Sin. rOte li,—AAein fleer Infants’ Blankets Knit Hnts - Caps Valuea to 69c * ^ Valuea C to $1.98 ■. ond .Id tiol. (or boy. Rubbish Burner 127 Simma Price Lorg. wir. rubbi.h-'burner with tip doling top. limit I. Ha^ware-2ncl Floor .Simms ■■ ■ ■ £ Price * for .toning con, trucks, t on cold days. In .pruy cOn.\Limit 2. Hordworo —2nd Floor Rubbar droin hos. lor droining washing mochin., I«l wpt.r tanks, tic. Limit I. Hordworo-2nd Floor We Make Home Borrowing OPEN-END MORTGAGE PROVIDES: • Yon may pay np the mortgage at any time without advance notice and without penalty. • Your mortgage can be increased at anyjaier date to t^e original amount borrowed for additional improvements or for any other satisfactory reason. • You may pay any additional amount at any 4ime without notice or penalty. •* You may pay interest and principal in advance at your convenience. • Terms on onr conventional open-end mortgage up to 25- years. • Monthly payment includes Interest, T*rinripalv Taites and fasnranee. We have cash available today . . . for these attractive open end mortgages. Come in and talk with one of our friendly, courteous representatives. WE SPECIALIZE IN HOME LOANS WE^BUY LAND CONTRACTS ‘ 2-$lice Toaster Road Map Atlas Siauk. '^299 Price Gleoming chrom* 'Proctor' ttltclrlc toaster, with shade selector. 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Houtoworo«-2nd Flo 159 $28.50 yalue 'Big Daddy' Ronton >ith micro thin heod and trimmer for udeburns. Carry cato. Suodries-Moin Floor Dutdeer Breem 68° 11-inch width push broom for goroge basement floors. Hou«aworef-2nd Floor Uncle Sam Bank S.S.95 077 Value X All melol register bonk, regisitri dimes, nickels, quorlers. Opens qt SI 0.00. Sundries-Main Floor Emergency Light Sanitary Napkins Rensen Elec. Razer Fancy Stationery 12** 37® Ronton .with micro thin * foncy boxed s ____, lb envelopes In pink, beige, white "ue. Sundriot-AAoin Floor Beginner’s Guitar Tape and Dispenser $15.95 Value 12®® 19° Ik-size guitar lor begirwers wit ilructions and. pick. Sui^riot-Moln F Revolving emergency flasher 1.. Suction cup holds to dny melol s I lace. Batleryextro. * Sundries-Main Floor iBiytenTooth Paste 29' nac 95c I Value 44' Oakland County^M Largeat Mortgage Lending Institution' 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTTAC-CLARKSTON-DRAYTON PLAINS ROCHESTER-WALLED LAKE-LAKE ORION-MILFORD ‘M m I Fomily sirs Brylan tooth posts with llonnous fluoride formula. Drugs-Moin Floor Jergens Letien 46° Pkg. ol 13, your choice of Kolex, Ferns, Slenderline or Miss Deb Drugs-Main Floor Aspirin Tablets 9° Kleenex Tissues 16° 25c Value Pkg ol 150, 2-ply tissues in dispenser box. White or colors. Drugs-Moin Floor' Classic Colegnes 19c Value 75c Value 100 5-grain USP strength' Aspirin loblels. lor hecxfcKhe raliel. Drugs-AAoinJIeer Vaseline Ton'lc 98c Value 33' 50c ^ O ft Value « « Purse-size colognes in your choice el ' ‘rogronces. Cosmotics-Moin Floor Sheffield Blades •r pink lotion for dry fkig li It. JSrgeni lociol moistui|e treom. Cosmotict-Main Floor 59° -- 33° 5'/b'01: liquid creum horrto you Well-nroomed without <)rausinass. Drugs-Main Floor Pkg. of 5, itoinleii steel double edge Drugs-Moin Floor SIMMSiE 1 HE ruXi lAv 1-KESS. VVEi .. i’.aDA V. Ah \ 2. For Merged Walled Lalce-Dublin District Bright Financial Outlook Hinted By PAT McCarty I However, there Is* reason to The a 11 e d Lake - Dublin believe that state funds desig-I school district financial picture!nated for hardship areas will be jmay be brighter than it-looked-increased this year, the Walled at first glance. ^ ^ | Lajc^ superintendent noted. School officials are going to “^RDSHIP MONEY take another look^t their anticipated incomes to ,pee just what the proposed merger of the two districts would mean in terms of tax dollars behind each student. We are interested The hardship money is given the difference might be offset i Carver said the district would to districts with a<*declining'*’y ^ hardship factor, amount of property valuation in- * ♦ t ratio to the number of young-' Carver also- noted that the sters to be educated. ’ , Walled Lake district would gain Dublin is such a district. $37,000 annually in taxes With an equalled property 1 . A- » ...r I be used for retirement of school gdin about 40 cents a student in tax dollars if the area is included. He commented that Walled boundary extension into the Waterford district is m«inly. the desire to unify the Union Lake cofnmiinity. ‘ • He said all the figures would . be considered again, as part of a “careful analysis of Dublin’s present situation, enrollment trends, operdtional monies and debt retirement funds.” By Farmington JCs searcfiiim the uroDosition in jv^ltiation of $5.1 million, the , ^ « the ho]!?that there^ight not I smaU district has $5,162 behind *" ’^^ger be any loss per child to Walled student. Lake,” George G. Gai’ver, su- j ★ ★ * ORIGINAL HGURES perintendent of the larger dis- j Its revenue from local taxes While the original figures trict, said. - 'and state aid nets $392 per were based on valuations before student. a parcel from_ the. Waterford ( . Township School District was! FARMINGTON —' Dr. included* In the consolidation!R’^hardson, 32. recenil Veterinarian Is Honored fohn|BWd»of Commerce and past ^ was I president of the Jaycees; as ^ ,Jay-! welt as an officer in the Alta A proposal to merge the two districts now is before the State EQUAUZED VALUE ^hoor District Reorganizati^l TTie Walled Uke district has.^ecommenda^^^^^^ GariW" Mid>w^rded the Farmini,..,____________________________________ ___________ Committee, which is expected an equalized value of $81 nul- .{j^ j includine this area distinguished ^e.#v' ixe Lom8-Homeowners’ Association to take actl^ or $10,500 per student, and ^^f"^ sCl «ward for 1965 ^11- and an active A citizens’ committee will rec-lommend the 2-mill levy to al- 9 NEW EMPLOYES The committee report recom-1 mends hiring nine new.employes! for the police department, which j presently has nine men including the chief. There are seven aux- Four Seeking ^ Council Seats general election. ■Two of the candidates are incumbents Edward Bossardet and Ray Forman. qualified voters are opposed to, another mobile home site m the ■ township. Rezoning for the township’s!, second mobile home develop- ,‘he township to double Its the chief. There are seven aux- OXFORD - Four persons will ment was canceled by a 206-134 PoUce force, triple its number! “iaT PoUcemen. contend for three seats on thn vote. of fulltime firemen and increase! Also proposed "^is the pur- Village Coincil in the March 14 Yesterday’s election was salaries and fringe bene- chase of two new patrol cars scheduled after a Sept. 28; np-to-date fingtr-printing 1965 referendum vote on the ' The levy also would cover j ed“*P™e"|. a>®ng with provL matter was ruled unconstitu- ^ expenditures for some addi- ®'®" *®'’ “«"'‘'®"a' »"'ce sP»ff• tional by Circuit Court* Judge > tional equipment and office The Township Board now is Challenging them will be’ Arthur E. Moore. space. !contemplating construotipn of a Jay Allen, 124 S. Washington ' The issue involved 40 acres Suggested date for the election' R*"® of’property at the end of Cog--although it’s not officially a P'®® shall just south of the Holly part of the recommendation— Incumbent John Flumerfelt village limit. is April 4. The citizens’ committee backs did not file for reelection. * * * -- this idea and urges that four * ★ Bloch Brothers Corp. of Wa- full-time firemen be hired to The two highest vote-getters terford wanted to develop mo- _ , I staff the new station. will earn the right to filj the bile home sites on the property Farmingfon TwO. FIRE DEPARTMENT two two-year terms. 'The third it owns through Mohave Planta- , o / i J Included in the fire depart-8®‘.« tions, iRic duplicating the ad- Mail Is Reelectod ment expansion would be the ®ne-year term, j^acent Holly Shor - mqbde home additional assistant ^® P'''™'j; necessary be- development. Leader or deputy chief and one new ® ‘'T® candidates -ZONING CHANGED_______ ___________________ ifireman for each .of the three R'® ®^®‘’ Position. "^XNIJIIg Hlatlons.———------------ The Township Board changed .FARMINGTON - Aldo Vag- the zonii^ on the p^el from 26193 Kiltartan, Farmin|.| Pre«*t full-time fire de- . industrial to mobile home clas- j^.cj, A: recentiv was rt P®’’‘"'ent contigent is four PT A Pnilf^ sificaUon in April of 1965, „en, who work with 44 volun- ^ Democratic Club for a t®®"- matter forced the zonmg back to ju;,.. _________ *, „ industrial when property own-,!^®^ proposal the fire ers voted aoninsf the use of ihe . » * » chief and the chief, lieutenant property for mobile home sll^^wnf Sn ? the police de- COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - velopment. . rel Nonacademic curriculum at the proposal to cre^ a P^vate up to 10 per cent increase in elementary level wHP be the t fund their maximum salaries. on Schooling M(’ community betterment ’ve Plantations, protested which could be used to meet topic of a panel discussion at the Monday night meeting of the balloting in a lawsuit filed some of the needs identified in i u ‘"""'“’J' '“e"* in Oakland County Circigt Xenf Jaycee^ ^^l'® E'c^entary ' ed lo provide a $6,800 ratheFSchool PTA. Court, claiming the referendum * » ♦ .i, j . unconstitutional and f u r t h e r Also reelected were vice chair-j^ f ^ Moderator, forJheJl p,m. disclaiming that the only reason-man Charlef Snger an d ^ilO fo^^fulkJ^ S" > able use for the property is the treasurer John I, Bain Holding^' . ' expansion of Holly Shores Sub- club posts for the first time Viir^^R^R division. ■ ... be Mrs. William Hungerford, re-j The five-year levy would be elementary art ^'ITie balloting y e s t e r d a y cording secretary; Mrs. RolandjPe™issive, allowing the Town-, decided the first poiht and now Mutschall, corresponding secre-!ship Board to levy up to 2 mills.elementary vocal music: the firm will ask Judge Mor^ tary; and Gerald Freedman,! A 1-mill levy voted extra iM- instract'or'i^^^^^ to decide ,na.e«co.„dp.im.V,„®„r, Ueeinl«7, ' i n Sut r’u c t 0 r; and Joseph Stanczyk, physical education di- For later Elementary Pupils - te--wrTirtid’> Extracurricular Program Near in Troy Nonacademic Curriculum ,— Art, Music and Physical Education.” TROY — Tl|e comm u n i ty| ' schools enrichment program for! fourth, fifth and sixth graders starts next week at Morse Ele-| mentary School. • The after-school activities in-- elude cooking, after-school study time and roller skating on Mondays; knitting,.art, math for fun and roller skating on Tuesdays r afterschool study time, leather craft, baton .twirling, roller skating and an evening family recreation pr 0 g r a m on Wednesdays. Thursday clasiet arc s c i- | ence projects for fan, reading i for fuB and Girl Scoots. ’Tnmb-liag Vlasses wlD be held on | Fridays and boys’ basketball I are Bishop Sewing I, shorthand and volleyball from 9 a.m. to U upholstering cake decoraUng, noon on Saturdays. |^ ^ ^ The adult education program [grammar and spelling, starts the week of Feb. 14 and: ^ . , will be held at the high school, classes are busl- Morse and Big Bfeaver elemen-! “®*® bookkeeping I, tary schools. All will be con- ‘««®ring and ceramics, ducted from 7 to 9 p.m. Classes at Morse school will Courses at the high school will 5®.®«*‘e decorating on Tuesdays. . _ knirfino on/i cmiaro rlonmnn nn Area Panel to Discuss Parent-Teacher Talks ■ LAKE ORIONr-A panel dis-cussion dh parent-teacher conferences and report cards will' be conducted at the 8 p.m. meeting Monday of the Lake Orion Area PTA Council. be key punch, typing I, up-iholstering-.and creative writing, all on Monday; knitting, foods and nutrition, draperies and curtains, oil painting and French bn Tuesday. WEDNESDAY CLASSES Qass^ to be held Wednesday knitting and square dancing on Thursdays and ballroom dancing and beginning organ and piano, on a day yet to be announced. A modem math class for parents will be held Thursdays at Big Beaver. Heading the discussion will be Troy Schools Supt. Dr. Rex B. Smith. Other panel members will be Donald Ostrander, principal of Mark Twain Elementary Schoof, Pontiac; Mrs. Car-roll Kirkpatrick, administratiive assistant for Lake Orion elementary schools; and Mrs. Fred Cole of 233 Lapeer. HOME OUTFiniNG i'li.' I IIIN I'l AINS SHUl’PINn r.l NTi 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, FEBRI AKV 2. 1966 A—5 Radiomail Sfac.es At Jungle, Ready To Send Mayday VolunfeBr Tufors Need Direction in Pupil Aid Mott Family Forms j Charity Foundation ‘ By LESLIE X NASON, ED O. , FLINT TAP) — Members of H>h h , ^ n , ' High schod abd coMege stu-ing in present assignments, new philanthropic foundaUon dents from Marne to California^ Pejrp needed someone to spend and donated $99,900 to the, 0 envo un er eir services as talking with him, givingParenthood Federation, him an opportunity to develop a facility in the use of English. And so it goes! A ninth grade algebra student may not have understood fractions in the fifth tutors for pupils who find the going a little rough. They provide individual help and encouragement not otherwise possible In our crowded schools. • These volun- dr. NASON teers are ready. 15 Minutes Can Be Lifetime in Viet War first public gift. The elder Mott, 90, Is a former board chairman of Gen-, eral Motors Corp. and honorary I grade. chairman of the C. S. Mott Foundation which has donated: DEPENDED ON MOTHER millions to education, primarily! Another student may not have for the Flint Public Schools, i bothered for years to learn in: A son, Stewart R. Mott, 28,! class, alwpys obtaining suffi-was elected president of ’t^ie! cient information from his new organization. It will' be, , - , mother to complete his‘home-[called Spectemum Agendo Inc., wiling and usually capable of,work. the Mott family motto which' helping a child with hMrcurrent jn the latter case, tutoring in means “Let us be known by the usual sense of the word • • •• would only increase the defir ciency. Jhis student should be schoolwork. In many cases, however, it requires a careful studyr hy a trained counselor to determine the kind of help .j^yTOMTlEDE I “You sure?” Newspaper Enterprise Assn. “No, maybe it wasn’t anyt __.mUHTENAY, Viet Nam -i thing."” f It was nearly dark when the en-j ♦ * ★ emy opened fire and for 15| , But it was. Four Cong guer-Irightening minutes a group ofjrillas . . ; then four more, Gls wondered if they’d ever see'sneaking silently around the another day. ......... Eleven men were there, the|r mission: to find the Viet Cong. They found them at the edge •I the Jungle, wafpg, loicted^ ^®NDER WHY i» the to fight — dozens of skinny little men wrapped in silk shorts and ammunition bandoleers, spitting fire and fragmentation. wondered. “They may be waiting for I least a few. dark:” “Mayday! Mayday!” Lt. Ed Young grabbed h 1 s radiophone and screamed. FUU, KNOWLEDGE foliage and dirt mounds separating them and the enemy, they presented miniature tar- our deeds.” helped to start learning on h which could solve the pupil’s j own. problem once and for all and Volunte,ers should be used to make it possible for . him to help students make permanent compete successfully on his gains. But only after individual own in the classroom. programs have been set up by This^sttidy should include a i counselors following'^a thorough child’s cumulative records, i study of each case, his past and present hoipe en- Fame Comes Home to Roost in Arkansas STUTTGART, Ark. (AP) students at Stuttgart High School, mindful that, their home town is known as the rice and duck capital of the world, couldn’t supress their amuse- But the air was full of steel. And nothing could escape it flanks of the Gl pairol. Finally, '7- * ^ I """ ^et ' - . , ,, , four more A do7en cnnHwt now deficiencies., ' Child Succeed m School,” by| The film for the student as- anparently trying tT surround quaking but no j<,hn wds tutored to catch up sending $1 to Help Your Child/sembly was about rice, and the the grouD^ * one panicked . . . perhaps be- arithmetic in the fifth grade Box 1277, General Post Office, jU.S. Marine who came along as “ cause they were too busy firing. ,3^ jgajp jn tJie sixth But not ^ew York, N. Y.) la speaker was Maj. John Duck. [They saw fleeting shadows a counselor made a thor-|-*^------------------------------------------------ ■ COMEIMTODAYH Don’t gat iMhindthe "8-ball” STOf* pnd Ihinii. It it MCOMETAX *5 IruggI* witi it quickly at Uw coti? Tht TAX , SAVINO* w. diKoy.r elUn pay tk* !••. B« SMARTI Tkit y«ar try tk« BLOCK wayl - BOTH federal 2 AND STATE IE America’s Largest Tax Service with Over 1000 Offices 20 I. HURON POMTUC 4410 DIXIE HWr. OMYTONPUINt Weekdays: 9 a.m. to 9 p.iti.—Sat. and Sun. 9 to 5. FE 4-9225 a NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY . _!lWhMen’rtfi^ fire?” ing about and filled the wood- jmigh study ,in arfmmetic from ' the ' beginning was it realized that he had failed to learn his multiplication tables. ' A volunteer helped John mas-, ter . the tables tlvough the use of flash cards. He was then car: ried through a rapid reviey of Then, just as it seemed that!the fourth aqd Mh grade arith-a charge was iitiininent, t h el metic. From tfift points, John chop of,giant motors cut into maintained satirfactory' per-; the^^hfusiort./Young turned. So'formance in his arithmetic did his men. classes.needingnrfmore tutor- They could*bdrely see, it was'ing.', - , so dark./But there was no mis-1 ENGLISH DIFTICULT take. / • . I Pedro had made high grades Thg^rescue copter had some-|in art, music and science and! no^ landed. I above-average grades in math- Frantically all eleven Gls bel-1 ematics. But only through dint | lyflopp^ inside • • • , .A., | of great efforts had he been of his development “Yeah, they know the copters can’t get irs then.” At that m*ment, at the lajj^t light of dusk the shooting* started. ’The VC opened with automatic weapons and caught the Yanks in a^rgssliK. ’The JMWh»I-HBifWered wlth^TSD rounds r a -minute from Ivt-IK” HELD ADVANTAGE But the advantage was thfe enemy’s. />' And if they charged the patrol would stand no chance. heard, but he did not know if aid could come. Minutes earlier, his reconnaissance patrol had tumbled out of a helicopter with full knowledge that if trouble came at night help probably Choppers rarely land in the dark. Young hpid, therefore, planned to stay the evening in the tangled thicket, find the enemy, avoid him and leaVe quietly the following morning. But the VC had other plans "Hey,” a sergeant whispered, ”I thought I saw something.” “Where?” “Mayday! Mayday!” the lieutenant chanted. ' “Damn’em to hell.” “Watch the flanks.” “Keep down, keep down. “Where are the helicopters?”- “Mayday! Mayday:......... kidding!” / Fifteen minutes of fighting. It >down.” ; elicopters?”-/r^ ly! We’re ndt *' ,And 15 minutes of fighting was over. ***i«!i Saginaw Sheriff Quits JP«*fo was on the verge of a 173rd Brigade officer from' ® ..-^ling s - _ - . Monterey, Caiif. Kept waiting SAGINAW (AP) ICounty Sheriff Another man so lost his sense! Ibert, Lou- “Over there. Looked like fourl people.” hgS'"^bmitted Tiis " SuBetviMrs clulrman Elmer able to achieve passing grades in English. His verbal I.Q. was 20 points below his overall I.Q. liling seventh grade English | when, through a "study of his | history, it was .-realized that | he had not Sad an adequate opportunity to gain facility in ' the use of English. His home t^jvas bilingual, and the Eng- i — I—----------so ...dll Cslllier DlliOgV Tlify dkl have one break, Frahm. Loubert is in the second eish sj>oken was not spfficient rough. Oy their guts and with yeqr of a four-year ierm. ’ ly accurate. the velvet collared topcoat makes a callon spring And it's probobly one of the smortest dress -coots we've ever shown. It's tailored in a new textured worsted, uncohimonlY rich and long-wearing. \As for the styli/g, it's equally • distin^ive without going to extremes^ Flottering, shorter look with button-thr6ugh front"end trim, flop pbcliefs. TH*~5troo^ ore squared; lapels ore L-shaped with v.elve colloc. The coot is beautifully lined; and it's available in dashing jet black, 79.50 Our Pontiec MeH Stor* Opan To 9 P.M. . 7-- A * Corner Saainow- ond Huron St. ' Phone FE 4-2511 ' • SHOP WAITE'S MON., THURS., FRI. and SAT. 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All draperies are blind stitched and mitred corners, with oil corners tind seams weighted. All pleats are hand set apd ’4" deep. 5” decorator hems are used throughout and all draperies are pre-ironed, fan folded and custom packaged. All draperies are individually tabled ... available either unlined or lined-with Roc-Lon^. Choose from 48- tq 384-inch widths, 10- to 116- inch lengths. Just say Charge It at Waite's. PLfASE ALLOW 3 to 4 WEEKS FOR DELIVERY DURING SALE PERIOD ' Cuilom Mod* DraptrlM Dtpi.... Woito'i Fourth Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West ninm street " Pontiac, M!etiigiBn " WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1966 HAROLD A. FITZOERALD A»L0 Ucctnir ^ Maiwau Jo«sah ClrcuUtloB MktittM Lqc»l Adv«rtUln« UkDBgtng Editor Ann Arbor Jury Rates Award for Fast Work ago when Nike gave way to fi more sophisticated defense against air attack positioned in remoter area. We’roundly applaud the Ann Arbor jury that convicted 20 defendants on charges of trespassing on the,, preboises of the city’s draft board. Those on trial, most of whom werl University of Michigan students, had invaded the board’s offices to stage a sit-in protest against' the U.S. policy in Viet Nam—claiming the democratic freedom that others are giving their blood to defend. * « ★ ★ ★ After a three-day trial, the jury reached a verdict with corti-mendable dispatch. It agreed within .“10 minutes that the ac- , tions of the protesters were not only insufferable" but illegal as affecting the orderly process of filling the manpower requirements of the Nation’s military. Equally to be commended was the pronipt action of Circuit Court Judge James R. Breakev Jr. in passing jail sentences of 15 to 20 days. A- ★ . The Constitution grants ’fevery American the right of protest so long as it is expressed in a legal manner. It does not grant license to obstimctionists who would floift Federal authority by tactics such ‘ as those employed by the Ann Arbor rebels.,, ★ ★ ★ Let us hope that the summary verdict of their guilt will have de-terent effect on other like-minded Un-Americans and exemplary effect on jurists and laymen entrusted with administration of justice. We commend in full measure the magnificent job the USO has done in making more bearable the gruelling lot of Americans on the battle front and earnestly urge its all-out support by Americans on the home front. Smoker’s Wits Seen Outmatching Habit There are probably as many methods for stopping smoking as there are" people who have kicked the habit or are trying to, but few are as desperately ingenious aS-this one reported by Prevention magazine! It seenis a Parisian placed the following newspaper ad: - “I’d like to quit smoking. For this reason I’m looking fof a job in a large gas station or in aiiotHter high-’ ly inflammable or explosive working place.’’ We’d bet the frantic Frenchman makes it. As the fella said, “Where there’s a pill there’s a way.” Voice of the People: ‘Cost of Grade Crossing Will Rise With Delays* Shortly after 7:30 Monday morniiig a long freight stopped Huron street traffic. The west line backed clear up to State and half way to Franklin. After the freight cleared, the gates were raised about 20 seconds and then lowered again to let a single locomotive pass grandly but slowly. Can’t -the railroad be good enough to citizens to allow traffic to clear for at least two or three minutes before becoming a public nuisance the second time? ★ ★ ★ That’s the most ideal place I ever saw for a grade separation, anyway. What are we waiting fort The cost will keep oh rising every year we delay. LA-TE FOR WORK No^ Pasg JiidgiQent Without All Facts’ It Would seem Mary Puchalski has not thought enough about the Pearson and Talbot case. How could anyone pass judgment on another without all the facts? We ne^ laws to protect us from* each other, but why must we further hate and dissent by openly sanctioning punishment of the Pearson boy. He will have to pay for his crime, but how is not for you and me to decide. More understanding and sincere love of our fellow humans would help to create a society where criminal acts would be at a minimum. P. E. MOODY III WATERFORD TOWNSHIP 'Relax, Fellows, McNamara Says You're Obsolete!' Gives Suggested Consumer Protection I^aws David Lawrence Says: Peace Bid Reaction Expectable Michigan legislature should work on consumer protection laws to require those who lend money or sell goods ort the installment plan to disclose the true cost of credit to consumers; and establish means of standardized weights and measures for packaged consumer goods. GEO. McCART 204 LINDEN Voters Protest Irresponsible Spending WASHINGTOl*! ^ The United shall be taken . Doves, Hawks Dislike Air War in maintain u/i, I «' I I Wc wisH to advlse Senator Hart that we protest the hlgh- , , : . . ‘ maintain While official announcement handed and irresponsible spending and taxation by the present States government is. neither or restore international peace has been made here that the AdministrqUon and Congress! We work hard for a living and suqirised nor discouraged by and security.’’ bombing of targets in North Viet ‘**’®‘* seeing our federal goverrinient try to be Santa Claus Civilian Agency Boosts Morale of U.S. Military Yesterday United Service Organizations (USO) marked the anniversary of 25 years’ service to tbe men and women In America’s armed forces. unmatched by any comparable agency in the military annals of history, the USO has served more than 20 million military personnel in Wotld War II, in the Kor,ean conflict, in the continual “cold war’’ threats that have called the Stars and Stripes to critical areas—and now Tn Viet Nam, as the three units there are about to be ipereased to 11. ★ ★ ★ ' The USO is the unified outgrowth of six religions and welfare agencies that independently served our military per-' "sonnel in World War I. Far those in uniform, it is the bridge between civilian and family life and the strange and grim role assumed in defense of Country. As most Americans know the USO, currently operating id 128 communities in continental United States and 37 overseas areas, has been generously and patriotically supporteef by a host of individuals and organizations, divergent in' cmracter but united in mission. As i^iL-exSinple, .700 entertainers last year gave 4,000 performances to a military audience of 2.5 million. ★ ★ it Although the Pontiac area has not .embraced large-scale military instal-totions, a local USO activity, was formed in 1950 to serve the Army personnel manning the Nike bases that were established adjacent to the City. Under continuous' chairm|n-* ship of Irving Steinman, the agency well served its purpose antil it was discontinued a year By FRED S. HOFFMAN WASHINGTON UPi-JBoth the hawks and doves' probajjly were dissatisfied with the way the air war against North Viet Nam was restarted. The hawks want^ to raise the level of the targets—to hit'industrial, power, port, petroleum supplies and other Communist resources, including those around Hanoi and Haiphong, North Viet Nam’s capital, and chi^f port. j The doves wanted the bombing pause continued longer, perhaps indefinitely. ’The first bombing strikes after a 37-day break for the •peace offensive involyfB roughly the same order of targets and the same areas that were hit when the air war in the north began just short of a year ago. it -k -k There’s a broad body of opinion in the military and in Congress which holds there is^ little sense in returning to the air war at' the old stand. the initial reaction to its request that the United Nations intercede in the c 0 n troversy over how to end the Viet Nam war. Nor is thel Vatican being! deterred in its LAWRENCE effort to bring* about a peace conference under U.N. auspices. COUNCIL AUTHORIZA-nON Nam has been resumed, it may In another part of the charter, be doubted whether any intensi- sewe7 of the Security Council is author- fication of the war will ma- abroad, ized to “call upon the parties terialize right away. Rather the concerned to comply with such tendency on the part of the provisihnal measures as it ^ '' "'f,® " government-is to deems necessary or desirable. for every free-loading project around the world. The multiplied millions of our tax money which have been poured down the ' ’foreign aid” have never gotten us any real friends SEVEN MICHIGAN VOTERS Thus, arrangements can be made for an armistice without necessarily i n v o I v i n g the United Nations in the working ‘wait and see” whether the United Nations will take cognizance of the situation and initiate some armistice parleys. It could mean a long-drawn-out discussion. Some form of agreement on an armistice is ■1. _ The American government is protracted The Rome radio repeaU that it determined to press first for a negotiations would then be ex-is a function and responsibHity cease-fire and later for a nego- P®®ted to follow. . of the United Nations to enter tigtion. M.'rSlJ^'rCni’l’ynSlSIi.T’Jl;..) the situation and biding about - !-------------------------------- ‘Appreciate Support of Jr. Miss Pageants’ On behalf of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce and the Jaycee Auxiliary, we express our appreciation to the local mCTchants who supported the Pontiac and Michigan Junior Miss Pageants. 'Through their assistance we can continue our efforts in this project which gives well-deserved recognition to our community’s outstanding high school girls. DAVID OGG MRS. RONALD LOCKHART Questions School TraiisportHion Policy negotiations. LOGICAL COURSE Officers and congressmen holding this view argue that the only logical course now is to heap punishment on the Communists in North Viet Nam—to hit them where it really hurts. As a counterweight to this, certain . officials in the State Department reportedly have favored holding the bombing to a lower target level, strictly along the infiltration routes. The terms hawk and dove actually are oversimplifications. There is a range of views in both general camps—varying degrees of hawkism and doveism. For example, nobody could legitimately characterize any of the military chiefs as doves. Yet, there are divergencies among them on various aspects of the war. Gen. JoHh P. McConnell, the Air Force . chief of staffs is understood to be eager to turn his B52 heavy jet bombers against North Viet Nam. Other members of^ the Joint Chiefs would, place priorities elsewhere. k k k To Adm. David L. McDonald, chief of naval operations, action against the port of Haiphong—the main intake of seaborne supplies from the Soviet Union—bulks perhaps morA importan(^ BIG ^ACHHEAD CONCEPT ■* In the war in South Viet Nam, Gen. Wallace M. Greene, the Marine commandant, espouses a strategy of widening coastal enclaves to join them eventually into one long beachhead as a base of operations. Gen. Harold K. Johnson, the Army chief of staff, prefers a strategy which involves blocking main Communist approaches from Cambodia and Laos and sending mobile forces around the country to find, fix and fight Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops. \ Even the reply from, the North Vietnamese government in Hanoi that the proposal is “invalid” is not taken to be the last word. For, while the N q r t h Vietnamese Foreign Ministry d e c I a r es that the governments which are designated as supervisors of the 1954 Geneva agreement are the ones to deal with the subject, this hardly excludes . , other governmento from using ® their “good offices” to effect an agreement. Bob Considine Says: / Had a Grudging Respect for Matchless Mike Quill Why should some children in the Pontiac school district have to pay their own transportation to and from school when others are furnished school buses to ride? The school district provides bus services to soqie school children for which they receive no reimbursement from the State. A new look into the present school di.strict transportation policy ahd practice is needed. MRS. G. BEARDEN 1001 E. WALTON ‘Why Spend Money on Loaing Candirlalef^,?’ was alive. He went to his ^ 'The United Nations could ar- death full of the range for a cease-fire and then old bustle, his urge' the Geneva conference P®!®^ "'®®' group itself to conduct the peace gained, conference. In answer to letters, I did not say Richard Kuhn could not run for office. I said I couldn’t see how he could win after trying NEW YORK — It’s always the wicked and finds its way to so many times. I would think he’s done. Why should, people easy to like a person after he’s the Viet Cong, Hanoi, Hong spend money to put defeated candidates in office? We have dead, but I had a grudging re- Kong (for exchange into dollars) often heard of Abraham Lincoln, but there is only one level and Peking. Richard Kuhn and Abraham Lincoln are on: defeats at election . * * * time. RALPH HUDSON ^ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP such fences as he wished to repair in the --------- What is important today is course of being CONSIDINE that the United Nations take repaired. While American boys die for what amounts to coolie wages. ‘Men of All Beliefs Are Praying for Peace’ the' initiaUye in setting into motion machinery for the consummation of an armistice, as was the case in Korea. DRIFTED INTO LULL 'The truce negotiations In Korea lasted nearly a year, but the war itself drifted into’a lull. The same thing^ould happen in Viet Nam. It must have been distressing to him to read, as death approached, that Walter Reuther didn't think much of his strike. Secretary Rusk’s hard job is to explain that, alas, this has ^aily Pope Paul issues another statement about his true of every war ever efforts to effect peace in Viet Nam. Aren’t many other men fought by man; that greed re- of good will working tirelessly toward the same goal? Rabbis, quests no arrppr, no trench, no ministers, evangelists and religious leaders throughout the world, bombshelter,, for it is inde- along with the Pope, pray and strive for peace on earth; but structible in the savage side of only God can change the spirits of men. thj human heart. A BELIEVER ^ There won’t be one like Mike again. The mold whs broken shortly after the Easter Rebellion. He just made it under the wire. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Williams vs. Cavanagb . The Jackson Citizen Patriot The biggest tingle influence that could motivate the U. N. Verbal Orchids to- the telephone booji and make it for the mbon, literally, to the sound like a passage from Wash- twin objectives of high prosper-ington’s Farewell Address. ity and a growing social pro- • A gram. The only question is what The mayor undoubtedly would the costs are likely to be in _ be an effective campaigner, but other directions. Secretary of State Dean Rusk Maybe Mayor Jerome Cava- a few hundred Republican poll- As unemployment rate dels spending more time these nagh of Detroit knows some- ticians in Michigan can tell you dines and the space capacity of **P'**ning to C 0 n g r e 8 s thing about Sen. Pat McNa- that Mr. Williams is pretty han- industry is absorbed, pressures would be the reaction of public what happened in.the past and mara’s plans but his strong dy too. While he.has been away on costs are bound to rise. If opinion throughout the world, might happep again than he is indications that he will be in the in Washington for more than they rise too rapidly and start Certainly the United Nations spending attending to his job as Senate race are quite Intriguing, five years, the former governor ^ unsettle prices, they could was organized for the- very conductor of the foreign policy. , A A , A could put a new polish on his quickly strike at what is still purpose of delving into war G. Mennen Williams has image with a few weeks on the Americtf’s Achilles’ heel - the situations and finding some Renresenta- **•*" P**y*"* according to the campaign trail. He is as much precarious state of her balance machinery for the making of . time-honored political rules by af home in Jackson, or Traverse of payments. This is the real saying that he would run lor City or Ontonagon as he is ih risk the United States will be the Senate only If McNamara Detroit, where Mayor Cavanagh running throughout the next retired. It is not considered cricket to go gunning for an The devil’s advocate on the incomhent, even thmgh he commute have scored some get his job fai the first place impressive gains; stories of by an accident of fate and corruption in the Saigon govern- really wasn’t wanted by (the peace. If a war that ha$ as many international complications as the Viet Nam conflict |s brushed aside as irrelevant just because some of the parties are not mqpbers of the United Nations, the influence of the internation- in foreign aid, $275 million of it to pay for the mounting cost of the wal' in Viet Nam. Would have his main base of twelve months. strength. , " ---------—— I..o.k.b..gre..ngM. ggJ Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sternberg Sr. of Ortonville; 62nd wedding anniversary. ' Mrs. Dolly Shippey of 5515 Orion Road; 82nd birthday. Mrs.’Cora McCrhidle of 283 Elizabeth Lake Road; 91st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred ileach of Rochester; 5Sth wedding anniversary. Mrs. Luia Cook of Holiy, 89tlT birthday. Mr. and Miy. George E. Morgan of 22Q Elm; 56th wedding anniversary. al organizatipn itself is likely « mong American pa^’s high command, tn wpoiron Civilians Working therd. to weaken steadily. Under th/*charter of the One Drawback \ The Columbus Dispatch ■ The Changing Times Give the average husband a few tools and in no time-a drip-Automation may replace a lot ping faucet will be a running Cavanagh already may know that McNamara plans The wife of one U, S. civilian to retire, or he Jnst doesn’t of office workers, but it’ll never stream. IlniinH Natinn. «ha ca....ro. Worker In Saigon sent back to care for ordinary, political arouse any human interest when Council has thfr “nrimarv "’®"«y protocol. Either way, the it iSalks down the haU to the Silil toMhe SSance ZTLVe TxcS’lito of international peace and se- bank ACCOUNTS ImS tor ^ clirity.” the U.N. Charter says; There are reports that South ♦ * ★ •‘Th. cTonri*^ r* 1 II Mayor Cavanagh currently Is The Security Council shall,opened numbel-ed accounth with riding high In Detroit. He has determine t^he existence of any Swiss banks and that much of received much national exposure threat to the peace, breach of the goods we send to alleviate through magazine articles. He the peace, or act of aggression, the suffering of the South Viet is quick with words, and es- T1» AiiociatM PrMt It M "* *"* !*• for tt(__ itwt prlnttd In Johnson's New Budget The London Times Tht Pontiac Pmt b Utlhrar* carrbr for M conb a wttk; w.„. JMIW In Oakland, Ganatao, Llv — i-r»„ ■ . . , — ------------------------I— muu There is little doubt that the and shall make recommdnda- Nam people winds up in the pecially when speaking off the United States can afford to add tions, or decide what measures black market, where it enriches cuff. He can read a page from the costs of war and of reaching Mombor of ABC. T IHE 1*UMTJAL PKES& WEDNESDAY, FEERL ARY for Portage Students Cement, Mortar Part of Curriculum Portage area high school boys keeping reteords of materialsl drawing student who designed jare spending three hours of '*'*^*’*”8 each stage! the structure, classli™ ..ery day lajnng ce-k'ejj tteslUS'S! ”*> “ *"l jnjent blocks and mixing mor-psted.*' . eral homes "including his own. is tar. * j ★ w * doing “very little*’ of the work] '> * ■* * I Although house building has himself, evCT though he enjoys The goal — completion of a become part of the curriculum it. ^ three-bedroom rahch-style house **'. Michigan school dis- AP PhoWlx by the end of the school year. I Students in the project represent Portage’s t w o high schools — Central and Northern — and many are expected«to enter the construction trades upon graduation. Their work on the house is| jregarded as a class assignment,! and it’s graded. It’s definitely a nated endeavor. QUAUFIES FOR ELECTION - Rep.-elect Julian Bond (right) receives his qualifying papers from Georgia’s 'See. of Slate Ben Fortson in Atlanta yesteicday. Bond became an eligible candidate for the Georgia House, to which he was elected but denied a .seat last month. Bond was denied the seat becau.se of his support for a controversial statement on the draft. A special election for his district will be held Feb. 23. Portage’s public school sys-> tern is paying’for the materiafs and expwis to regain its invest- Jackie Extends Visit With Spanish Envoy basement interior. High school home economics ^ students are planning color j coordination for the living areas, a class project involv- ROME (UPI) —• Mrs. John ing selection of-drapes, wall j ment when the house is sold in Kennedy, obviously enjoying col^t^nd lamp fixtures. j the spring. - la Roman holiday, postponed her K e n n e d y ’ s Watching the ' INSTRUCTIONAL 'departure today. weather — hopiqg for a break> Ray Kennedy, industrial arts! ★ ★ * " t^ keep the project moving -| teacher, said that financial prof-j The fdrmer First Lady who there with the boys 1. B major n.otl,S -- omrropw a Swiss sku„g\.ca°'LU, :amoa^ hor^auiy b. some -I,a,;, ‘ . and that the activitv IS Dlanned ... ^ f ....... ..............primarily for iU mstructionalleave today ■ as I t know what’s wrong’’, I 'value. .scheduled. A spokesman for her ^ ‘‘e^k m thej Ppon/p in f/iP Mp\a/c ^ i thlSk"! caS • wL/fJl W II I 11 /“ I NW Vr O I ‘be year-1ong project Is |‘o the Vatican, said she now my ^orst cold of the winter so| • i I “the least of my worries.” iplans to leave tomorrow. far right here in the office.” By The Associated Press U.N. Secretary-General U Thant has become a grandfather at 57. The Burmese official’s daughter, Mrs. Tin ^ Mint y, gave birth Monday to a seveq-pound boy at New York hospital. Her husband is an I associated professor of mathematics at Manhattan College. Said Thant: “Life renews itself in spite U THANT of human frailty and foolishness.” Truman Candidate for Nobel Peace Prize Former President Harry S. Truman will be one of perhaps 31 to 40 nominees for the INI Nobel Peace Prize. The Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo confirmed last night that Trmpan was among the candidates after a report last week that be had been nominated by Sen. EdWtrd V. 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Breck shampoo for dry, oily or normal hair / Kotex sanitary napkins, super or regulars New, soothing Sordo.both oil for soft skin Big 16 oz. economy liza bottle. 99‘ large box of 48. 1 18 1 77 Poequins dry sKin cream for softer hands New 4-purpose face cream by Lady Esthec Ferns sanitary napkins, large box of 40 3 oz. tube. SAVEI CQc 77® ■ •'"2-1 QQ' ■ I « Top volueU izz., oac. Top volueU Large electric vaporizer, one full gallon size 5-pok Schick double-edged stainless blades For perfect air control. Save! Privine nose drops for fast cold refief 1-oz. bottle. Soval Geritol t(>bs for iron-poor blopd at big savings 29 Save! Pertussinr cough syru|> for relief of coughs ^ I tablati. ^ bottle. Savel JDPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Oroytoa ppen Sdn. noon to 6 p.m. 88‘ DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEpyESPAY. I^ERBITARY 2. 1966 City commissioners last night formally terminated, effectjye March 31. the city’s contribution toward operation of a county health laboratory. The commission; after receiving a report on a meeting be-, tween city and county administrators, passed a resolution diminating the annual $16,1.30 expendittfre. In a meeting Monday, city J and county officials agreed >>' that there was no good reason 'for the city to make the eontribulion. City Manager .Joseph A. Warren said he could’find no other municipality making a similar cWitribution. > lo-month basis. The commission gave the county tjie 30-day notice with,their action last night. County officials had indicated that the payment would be eliminated in the eouiity's 1967 budget and sboper if the city insisted.. Warren saitf terminating the contract March 31 would save iihe city $12,000 in the current J calendar year. * * ★ In .other business last^nigh!, the commission delayed ap- provide operating montes until approve the loan note's at their|{M-l). The city owns the prop-l ment building is planned lowned parcel north of West tax receipts are received af- I meeting next Tuesday. . grty. 4 there. ^ Columbia and,east of the rail-; ^ V A 22-acr% parcel located ad- \ block bounded by Ken- The northwest corner of Or-4°^*^ Alward said the city woUld^Jaccnl to the city’s new sanitkry nett, Carlisle, Dearborn and chard Lake Avenue and Tele-' PROPERTY EXCHANGE have to begin to scrap for fiftid? Jand-fill site north of Collier Dewey was rezoned Resident- graph was rezoned to M-1. i This land is to be involved in if the state comniission.did not was rezoned to Manuf|cturing-11 ial-3 (R-3). A 32-unit apart- I In other action, a 29-acre.city-a property exchange with thg A^asfer Plan for Thoroughfares Pontiac Orders New Traffic Study developer of an apartment project there.. A request for commercial re-zohing for a parcel of land on East Boulevard North at Vic-tpry was referred (b the City Planning Conjmissioh. ^ Also referred to the ciity ij-planners was a request by Mari- mont Baptist Church .to vacate an alley north . of Walton, between Hollywood and the alley west of Baldwin. (AdvtrtlsMivMl) The annual payment dates back to. a 1957 contract whereby the city agreed t'o the contribu-. City Affairs ^!O^THLY BASIS The contract, which expired in 1961. now exists on a month- Meeting Date Is Changed pointments to the’ city’s Board of .Tax Review. The appoint-jments are to be made in two weeks. Accelerated along withNhe area’s economic growth, Pontiac’s traffic problems will receive a complete review, as a result of. City Commission action last night. excess'* of that predicted for 1975. MASTER PLAN The commission' Approved a $16,000 study to> update the „ city’s .1957, major thoroughfare plan. ' The 8-year-old traffic survey was done by Barton-Aschman Alfkociation Inc. Invited to the Bosses Night banquet of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Comrperce, .« i-j” MM- passing in a sit-in at tbe oelec-i „ * * ♦ _ i j tive Service office here has filed! However, the estimated valu- , r* |®. an appeal with the State Court ation of new home construction . c ectricak 968 plumbing, of Appeals. ’ last ^ear was $6.,540,632'against Ernest Cniodman. a Detroit $5,686,850 in 1964. ^ attorney said he appealed the jncrkase [ "ihe” grand total* for 1964 was convictioils because he felt , , 4 -Vn ^ ‘there should be a place in - ^he nearly 60 per cent in- 4,579 permits, the American judicial system crease m total estimated valu- for a legal form to protest de- a"”" attributed primar.-' Qpal From Australia cisions of the. federal govern- >'y «PS'’uge m csimmercial ment." construction. ValuecFat $500,000 He .ppcal ““"J it! ! -SAN KHANnSCO ,AP, -- A on the refusal of the Circuit dal.development worth an es- dealer brought a 100- Court to admit evidence as to timated $4.465.5.52, well over aTJIL.i" why the defendant* staged the the 1964 total of 23 nermits Tuesday, apmonctration J"! T.™ ;Said it woUld be worth $500,000 if demonstration. for construction valued at $1,- ■ ,,, , , . The 39 demonstrators, most of 151.205. ^ . whom are students or junior , .. W. H, Walker of Castro Val- faculty members at the Univer- addition, permits were ap- ley, Calif., who said he plans .to sity of Michigan, said the Oct. construction of six keep it intact for exhibits, de- 15 siUin was to protest United^P®'‘‘"’®"‘ buildings (273) units) dined to say what he paid for it. States policy in Viet Nam. . ' ^ ^ ~ If it takes the longest warranty* in the business to make yon happy- we’ll be seeing yon soon. HANDS DOWN SENTENCES Circuit Judge James Breakey Jr. handed down sentences of from 15-20 days plus fines of $50 and court costs of $20 for each of the 28 defendants. All undergraduate students received 15-day terms. All the demonstratoi‘s had .^bcen sentenced to 10-day jail terms and fined $50 and $15, costs each ift Municipal Court Oct. 27. Most pleaded nolo contendere- and Appealed the decision to the higher court. Since jj|e.iitt-in 12 of the demons! ralgS^have lost their stu-i 3fent draTTdeferment* and have/ been designated 1-A *(8vailabl< for immediate induction 1 Selective .service officials sail the sit-in obstructed operalionil of the office,' an unlawful aej ^ under the Universal Militai Training and Service Act. The defendatits are- free $500 bond each. Lrfhuankin Day Feb.\16 LANSING (AP)—Gov. 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FEBRUARY 2, 1966 A^9 Reopen Geneva Confab on Viet-3 Senators WASiq^GTON (AP) -Three I Agency . The statement said flfci U.N. action on the Viet Naini The Montana Democrat said i resolution giving President tinue to be guided in these iMt-Senate leaders joined today in i Viet Nfim question “falls within question, although he said he is'he assumes that Hanoi’s de-Johnson broad powers to wage ters by the resolution ofCon-urgihg action to accept what i the competence of the ^ f *'^1 to North Viet gress." ' they interpreted as willingness Geneva Conference on Indo-WANT PEACE / Am»iMn"1l!!SlK"I regret that the President * * on the part of Peking and Hanoi lchina ’ “Our difficulty lies in the fact vSrCon? would-be stated the bombing, ” he to reopen the Geneva Confer-i •_ that nobodv in »hP Communist _ ™ „ me reopen the Geneva Confer-ence to talk Viet Nam peace terms. i Fulbfight said that if China Democratic leader Mike uud North Viet Nam are willing Mansfield of "Montana prepared to appeal in a Senate speech for, new administration efforts to ^et the conference, which negotiated, the 1954 division of Viet Nam, back into session for fresh negotiations. that nobody in the Communist world— and soni^in our own — believes that we really and seriously want, peace,” Kfe said. “I am convinced that one man does and that’s President John- to join in discussions, “why not take them up on it?” “There is some logic in utilizing' the same group which at-i tempUsd to settle the war in Mansfield said that despite, 1954,” he said. “If the effort in Russian and French opposition, Johnson’s decision to resume .. „„„ - . , bombing of North Vietnamese debate in any recon-f CK news targets was quickly e.ichrsed by vened conference. Ftiilsright, Advise and Dis- £„„„_ President Dwieht D I He and Fulbright said they ‘*1®* ^'Eisenhower, take the view that these are P^^y*** ® in that that I-am Eisenhower, now vacationing Ckunmunist “talking points,” "ut at aU proud of. Desert ‘ Calif., said which woSld not have to be ac- NECESSARV STEP Tuesday: “It is my view that cepted in advance of any peace Fulbright introduced the reso- *e must never allow our friends conference. authorized John-in that regidn to believe we “to take all necessary have weakened — or shall the United Nations fails, why “the door has not ouite been' 1“ ® teJevislon interview Tues-measures” in Viet Nam. , weaken - in our puipose of not try to get the Geneva Con-1 shut yet” on U.N. efforts. *“**‘*’ ^*hri*ht said he is Liast week Johnson told 16 supporting freedom.” ference reconvened?” The United States wa.«i not a proud” of the role he senators who appealed - for fur- ---------------^— nartv to the 1954 Geneva am-ee- P*®^®** *" helping to Win Senate ther consultations on Viet Nam A tigon is the offspring of a ment althouirh It arrent^ ,^{approval for the Aug. 10, 196j war policies that he would “con- tiger and a lioness. NEWl REDUCE ATcindLOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES? Easier to take arxi nrKJie effective than the powdered and liquid food supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you" INQIVIDUALLY Lie. Ph^-sician, M.D No Gastritis or irregularity with Medic-Way caps. DON'T DIET —JUST EAin As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 T Offiett 1« OtkliM (nd WayiM CtunlMi - Om M MirscI* Mil* Chairman J. Willianf Fulbright of the foreign relations! committee proposed Tuesday Led by opposition from the the sessions be reconvened. His | Soviet Uqion and France, the proposal .won support from Sen. j member U.N. Security Council Georjje D. Aiken, R-Vt., dean ofjdelayed until today a vote on a tehate R^blicans and a mem- U.S. request or peace discus- ber of Fulbright’s committee. The three senators based thSir fresh h(^ for negotiations on a North Vietnamese statement transmitted by Radio Hanoi and sions. Observers said the opposition virtually killed any chances for immediate U.N. action. Aiken forecast failure for ment although It accepted its]., terms. Britain and-the Soviet I Union are cochairmen of the conference and it would reijlflfili; aprefement between them for its reconvening^. I Mansfield said thpt if Peking! and Hanoi really want to talk,! “I would think that the Sovietj Union would go along with her BUY, SELL. TRADE. USE PONTIAC PRESS.WANT ADS. Peking’s New China News President Johnson’s effort to get sister Communist states.” *On SE Asia Security Resolution Is'Back in Limelight WASHINGTON (API - The congressional resolution on Viet Nam signed by President Johnson a hot August afternoon in 1964 has rocketed back into the limelight in snow-covered Washington. Exactly what does it say? In one form or another, the resolution has, like an undercurrent, swept beneath the great Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, NAVAL UNITS' Whereas naval units of the Communist regime in Viet Nam, in violation of the principles of the Chafer of the United Nations and of international The Congress approves and supports the determination ofJ the President, as commander inj chief, to taic( all necessary. measures t^ repel any armed attack against the forces of the| United States and to prevent' further a^resSMti. I Sec. 2, The United States re* decisions and debates over Viet' de^berately and. re-j*gards as vital to its national Nam the past five days peatedly attacked United States; interest and to world peace the * * * ■ naval vessels lawfully present maintenance of international It was used by President i‘" international waters and have | peace and security in Southeast Johnson as guidance in his deci-l^®^®^^ created a senbiis threat Asia. Consonant with thd^onsti-sion to resume bombing of tar- tojnternational peace; . tution of thetharter of the Unit- gets in North Viet Nam. It was cited by Chairnian J.W. Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who said he was "not at all proud of” the part he had in its LBJ CRITIC Its repeal is being sought by Sen. Wayiw Morse, I> Ore., persistent critic of the Johnson administration's handling of the Viet Nam situatipn. Johnson requested the resolution shortly after the Gulf of Tonkin incidents in which North Vietnamese PT boats attack^ American destroyers. Here is the text of the joint resolution passed Aug. 10, 1964, “to promote the maintenance of international peace and security in Soqtfaeast Asia:” Whereas these attacks are ed Nations and in accordance parf of a deliberate and systematic campaign of aggression that the Communist regime in North Viet Nam has been waging ‘against its neighbors and the nations joined with them in the collective defense of their freedom; ♦ * ★ Whereas the United States is assisting the peoples of Southeast Asia to protect their freedom and has no terrltofial, military or political ambitions in that area, but desires only that these peples should be left in peace to Wftrk out their own destinies in their own way; Now, therefore, be it resolved, by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled: , with its obligation under the' Southeast Asia Collective Defense Treaty, the United States is, therefore, prepared, as the President determines, to take all necessary steps, including j the use of armed force, to assist any member or protocol state of the Southeast Asia Collective! Defense Treaty requesting as-' sistanbe in defense of its freedom. w w ♦ Sec. 3. This resolution shall expire when the President shall determine that the peace dhdl security of the area is reasonably assured by international | conditions created by action of I the United Nations or otherwise,' except that it may be terminat- * ;ed earlier by concurrent resolution of the Congress. ' Me wear bifocals . , . ? ...NEVER! You, too, will like INVISO no-line glasses K EYES EXAMINED AND GLASSES FITTED BY STAFF OFTOM. ETRISTS ' PRESCRIPTION SUNGLASSES AVAIUBLE k Enjoy all the adv.sntages of the flnest bifocals without the dividing line on your lenses. These invisible bifocals give yon clear, comfortable vision in both the near and far ranges, without any annoying ‘ jump, blur or distortion. Tost try them yourself. Use your Sean Charge Plate, pay later. ^ 7 LOCATIONS ... 14 OPTOMETRISTS Optical Depti. Grand River-Oakman GralTbl .V a n Dyke Highland Park Linroln Park LtroniaMall Macomb MaU FEBRUARY BARGAIN DAYS COMPARE: There’s a reason why Penney’s is the world’s largest retailor of fashion fabrics. Women who shoppers. You wont savings. But you wont to put your work into fabrics that .hove quality, AUMAVU nn*T QUAUTY* foshion, o nice big selection and dependability. We’re old hands ot giving women who sew oil this! Come see the sowing and saving pleasure for you at Penney’s now! Optometrists Dr. H. Gould Dr. W. Sandem Dr, W. Lilllrjohn Dr. V. Pelletier Dr. J. Drapeau Dr. K. Snihcriand Dr. 0. Manlove Dr. E. Ondra IV. p. BroMod Dr. J. Jackman Dr. E. Mkulle Dr. E. Slepkowiea Dr. J. Wolfe Dr. F. Yonac Dr.J.Morof PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. A—10 THE T^ONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY. FEBRt^ARY 2. 1966 PROMINENT DISPLAY—A California in- Detail of the window is shown in the photo surance^inance company gun store displays .at the right, an u^ly-looking antitank rifle in its window. . Our Senseless Weapons Laws—2 Rille Unit's 3-Way 6on Bill Debatable (EDITOR’S NOTE: This is the second of a three-part series on the dangers in our lax gun- laws making weapons too-easily attainable. It warns Of the opposition that reform measures have met from entrenched organizations and the But only seven states now require a permit to purchase a pistol or revolver. There are no and Shotguns. AaJ the NRA proposal appar-[tently gives a shipper of guns I- ai).,easy out, since no conviction , could be obtained if he made a ‘‘reasonable effort” to learn if a state law is being violate^ SIGNED STATEMENT^*”*^ Its leadership freely admits Such ‘‘reasonable effort” Is the need to, / lew and ta ot- I^TOM NOLAN WASfflNGTON (NEA) - It shouldn’t be said that the National Rifle Association against any form of gun control legislation. The second NRA proposal defend the country against ene- would make it a federal offense for a licensed deale>' or manufacturer to ship a gun in contravention of S state law. mies both within and without. The NRA stands squarely on the premise that the ownership of firearms mush not be denied Americans of good repute. GIVE sdtBjENING To this end, the organization restrictions on the sales of rifles says it carefully screens its membership applicants. Each most certify that he is never been convicted of a crime of violence and is not a member of any organization which seeks to overthrow the government. Each applicant must also be endorsed by an NRA member. ficially backing a three-part proposal sponsored by Rep. Robert Casey, D-Tex. The proposal has been called “the toughest gun bill in Congress.” . And, indeed, it. is tough. Basically, the bill would make and rockets, it a federal offense to use a gun ing a signed statement by the purchaser to the effect that he is under no legal disability which would prohibit shipment. The third NRA^ proposal would provide federal control of such military ordinance^ as bazookas, grenades, cannons a public official or a military ------------. (j, .. . officer of the United States. This reporter joined the NRA by filling out an application he clipped from a barbershop magazine and enclosing a check for $5. Presumably he was carefully I screened. His NRA memhership in rano weapons would be sub- ^^e mail less kidnaptog and rape. |i4artmeM IfoJL trS'ff.^ FIRST OFFENDERS ’ * eral gun laws. Miller, one common enough to First - time.^4>ffenders would face a mandatory 10-year prison This proposal looks fine on the surface,'but — under NRA, a'x, i. D|«rirAA»»J tn KIV specifications - such weapons| Planned in NY as the 50-caliter machine gunj si^g stork Club and SIX antitank guns currently j advertised in mail-order cata-| NEW YORK (UPI) — The old logs would be excluded. Sen. stprk Club, a playground BIG BUSINESS society, when there was Dodd savs a c a f e society, will be de- . The bill reflects the NRA be- Hunting,' -target and trap repeaters, a mandatory 25 years. Under the Casey bill, roughly 100,000 gun crimes handled last year by state and local police would require investigation and proseenflon by federal law enforcement officers. fit one of the NRA specifications. Hef that the only justifiable fire- shooting are big business in the “ ° playground — a arms laws are those providing United States today. Their de-^ ® . stronger penalties for the crimi-votees spend roughly $2.50 mil- .. nal use of guns and that pre- lion a year on guns, ammuni-° ^ ^Columbia ventive measures, such as a reg- tion and accessories. oadcasting System, an- istration requirement, would, sj^e effects probably neither stop .criminals from get-! 3 I dollars annually for the makers of cars, boats, fuel and ting guns nor reduce crime. Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-Conn., who has his own bill in the con- gressional hopper, is not in fa- clothes. It is estimated that there are nounced yesterday he bought the property between 5th and Madison Avenues on 53rd Street to build a park in honor of his I father, the late Samuel Paley, founder of the Congress Cigar Co. BEEF VP YOlJR BUDGET! AT FOOD FAIR FOR FINE MEAT VAUIESI GrtW uvtafi ar* vkfilting for UXDJk. ClioiM pM lonM and you in tfM meat dppartmant of tfuks ara wtarlng ipaeial low your naijhbortiood Food Fair prica tap for your thrifty ihop-ttora this wtak. Stop in and Paa for yourwlf. 11/1 aating anjoymant. J=OOD FAIR U.S. CHOICE Bkide Cut Pot Roust ; TmkL Toir \jolm Tw' Uiut Sk»pf)trg ALWAYS FRESH AND TASTY „ 11jji auau. Lady Linda Angel Food foke 2? SUCED, GRADE 1, ZESTY Glendale Large Bologna BABY'S FIRST FOOD Beechnut Str. Baby Food ^FARM MAID LARGE & SMALL CURD. Creamed Cottage Cheese IDEAL FOR CHIP DIPS Food Fair Cream Cheese WeIc®w£S Tlirfy Sl^^^pptr( 5isr 5 VARIETIES! TASTY Food Fair Cak} Mixes FOOD FAIR Tomato Juice FOOD FAIR DELICIOUS Fruit Cocktail FOOD FAIR HALVES OR SLICES Cling Peaches fOOD FAIR CREAMY Evaporated Milk FOOD FAIR TASTY / - Bartlett Peare FOOD FAIR CREAM STYLE OR Whole Kernel Corn FOOD FAIR BRAND Tomatoes or Peas FOOD FAIR CUT WAX OR Cut Green Beans FOOD FAIR FRENCH WAX OR French Green Beans Slip Tltese {/aLacxbLe. TcmskiL Soviiys! rSUIT or IXKm^lKFASIC MAID GEADB A IIW^BSIIINO \.^ 50 EXTRA ^> |W3 TAILI CL FEBRUARY 2, 1966 »Ar~II - Backs Drivers in Car Hearing Blames Auto Makers for AAany Accidents WASHINGTON (AP)-Senate hearing& on highway safety get back on the road today with the .presldOTt of the National Safety GREENVILLE, Miss. (AP) -Leaders of a group that staged a 30-hour occupation of federal property accu^ the federal government today of kowtowing to Miaaissippi politicians over antipoverty programs for Negroes. In Washington, the Office of Economic Opportunity issued a statement Tuesday night which Council arguing that drivers may be getting more than their share of blame for the rising accident toll. . “The statistics do show that driver fault was present in about 85 per cent of all automobile accidents, but this does not mean that other factors may not also have been present," said HdWard Pyle. Most accidents, he said, result from a number of factors— “including in most cases the automobile itself, the highway and the driver.” Pyle, appearing before a subcommittee headed by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, D - Conn., called for an fdditional $1 bilUon a year for an “action program” to cut the highway death toll in half “and thus save approximately 25^ lives each year.” SMALL CARS Pyle*s 48 - page statement touched on every^ing from drunk drivers to small cars. On the latter, he said: “There is statistical information pointing to an unusually high association of small cars with the Increase in traffic fatalities in the past few years. Pyle said these statistfes do not "prove a casual relationship but are clues to the need for-research and possible state legal controls." Leaders of Sit-In at Mississippi Base Say^U S. Officials Playing PolHics proved with the Mississippi Wel-|want ^vttty or rrtef pro-jpoup of 80 other demdostra-jNe^s who said they werejAgi^lture) Orville -Freeman Can Trace Unexplained Pains to Ribs By Science Sen^e CHICAGO — If ^ get an unexplained pain hr t^our back or abdomen it c^d be traced to your ribs. / The rib/joint sometimes becomes abnormally connected to the spinal column, causing pain Ihat^an be mistakenly diag-no^ as anything from gall-bmlder trouble to appendicitis. Duodenal ulcer, kidney ailment and even coronary blood insufficiency are among the wrong diagnoses for pain sometimes brought on after a sudden mechanical injury, such as falling on back or bumping the rib cage, Dr. Prank L. Raney Jr. of San Francisco, Calif., told the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons meeting here. Fifteen of 41 patients who had inflammation irf a nerve root caused by rib-joint pain underwent successful surgery, and said they could participate in sports, had no symptoms and took no medication. CAR EQUIPMENT Fourteen more patients who ci.1, «Kl >ulo industry (I*of specialists wouldjsystem of distribution for |24|who can’t be controlled by thelcadets’ dub on the deactivated th hfississlppi Goy million of surplus food. iwWte poWr structure.” |Gre«iville Air Force Base Tpes- said a team* confer with Mississippi Gov.jnjiiuon of surplus food. Iwbite power structure.” |Gre«iville Air Force Art Tbornks, director of thejCHURCH COUNCIL UNIT , |day. A detail of 150 air police Ministtry, said, “The Of-| The Delta Ministry is an arm,carried otit the demonstrators, me tanupovmyi gran. jjjpg Economic Opportunity of the National Council of,who had bolted past guards * * * land the Department of Agricul- Churches set up to work amonglMonday and camped overnight The department said a^grant ture have been kowtowing ‘to Southern Negroes. in the wooden frame structure.! Thomas said “it was cruel of |1.6 n^lion had been ap-|Mississippi politiciaiu who don’t Thomas^ along with a jhlraciali The demonstrators includedtand inhumane of (Secretary of after demanding higher wages, and civil rights, workers. All said the base invasion was sponsored by the “Poor Peo^e’s Conference.” They said they wanted food, jobs and land. Katzenbach to send the message that was sent.” He referred to the order which ousted them, and to federal promises that their demands were being studied. fare Department to develop ajgrama in the hands uf Negroesitors, was ejected from a foiWrlousted from white plantations]and (U-S. Atty. .Gen.) Nicholas “Negfoes in the South have been getting this kind of message for years," Thomas^sai^. mert last year and he comment>‘»*" “’"y ed in an bpening statement: “I; 'like to think that some of the interest in traffic safety flowing . from Detroit these days was influenced somewhat by. those hearings.” Ribicoff observed that the auto makers have made some items of safety equipment—such as seat belts, back up lights and outside rear view mirrors — standard equipment. “But what about a dual braking system or a collapsible steering column?” Ribicoff asked. “What must be done to persuade the numpfacturers that they have a responsibility to the public to equip every car they build with real safety features?” WRONG TREATMENT A total of IM of his patients had rib-joint abnormalities, Dr. Raney said, and some of them had been spending large amounts of money for U^wrong treatment, causing them to become extremely frustrated and depressed. Sene had beca told by their was predombiaatly emotional or psycbosomatic. The pain is usually confined to one side of the body, but often it spreads around the side so that s person cannot tolerate tight clothing, coughing or turning in bed. -Junior Editors Quiz on QUES1[10N: What were the ancestors of our modem gbitar? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: The guitar Is one of a class of instruments —including the lute, mandolin and banjo—in which long strings of metal or gut are shortened with the fingers one hand while being plucked with the fingers of the other, la some cases, a plucking object is used. Unlike the violin, with its smooth fingerboard, these instmments hove metal frets across the fingerboard which make the position of the fingers easier to locate. ■ Instruments of this general class were used in far off times by the Chinese. Egyptians and people of bther ancient nations, but the particular body shape of the guitar seems to have come from Persia, as suggested in our illustration. The modem guitar shape appeared in Sppln about 1800 ps well as the name “guitarra.” In America, the guitar wu not widely used until the jazz age caiqe alcmg. It foond Its real use with the revival of M-time haunting folk melodies, the singing of which It could ’accompany with a soft, ronuntlc background. Into which elements of jazz syncopation and rhythm conld bo woven. The latest chapter in the guitar story 1s the use of electronic equipment which gives a new character to the guitar sound. The sound can be varied and amplified; a strong “twangy” quality can be produced which emphasizes rhythm. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Find out more about the remhrkable electronic guitar which really Is a new kind of musical instrument Look in a music store win^low to see the new body shape, often of solid wood. Since the soun^ js ampllfled eledrieaUy, the oUoi' hollow bodies are no longer necessary. Ltateo for the twangy sound in ilwdem records. '1 Snits-Tojicoals-Sportdoats We’ve drastically lowered the prices of our luxury quality clothing. Every one of these prized models re^esent the peak of tailoring art, the finest of fabrics, the epitome of style. Unquestionably the best values of the season. Not every style or size in every color, but a wide selection to fit all men. SUITS Regular to ^100 SPORT COATS Regular to *55 *44*78 TOPCOATS Regular to ^100 »I9..*34 Ladies’ Winter Coats Shoe Sale A1£ffy SHOBS FUR TRIMMED Regular to *125 39»‘89 A good selection of all wool, interlined coats luxuriously topped with mink, fox, or squirrel, DISCONTINUED STYLES Porto Peds Reft, to $23.95 1490 y90 A selected group of Portage-Pedwins ^oo Reg. to $12.95..... O Portage-Pedwin Reg. to $14.95.. UNTRIMMED Regular to *69’* 29»‘39 V' \ f A close out of all DISCONTINUED STYLES Naturalizers q9 Dretg - rcg. to $1^... ^ Naturalizers ™ 'CasuuU-ref(. to $13... • American Girl a 9 Dresi - rcg. to $11 \. AmericaaOirl qg CoMuaU - TBK. to $9., L ^ our winter coats at prices that will make it worth your while. There is plenijy of winter weather remaining. Children’s SHOBS DISCON-nNUED STYLES Buster Brown - Poll Parrot GIRLS* Si«««8Vkio4 R*t(. to $9 390 I . A Convenient Lion Charge Plan with option terms ,.i .■I1 / ^ A—12 ^ , PRE^S, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1966 AP PtWtPfAX U,N, Keeping Gaza Strip Trouble Spot Quiet GAZA (AP) - Stretched along 145 miles of desert frontier, a thin line of blue-helmeted' United Nations troops quietly j keeps the peace in an almost | forgottdn trouble spot. "Ciiily a few years ago, headlines were full of the Gaza Strip as Egyptian ahd Israeli forces battled in this coastal ^ea d Palestine,. Tbday the strip is quiet> The U.N. Emergency Force — UNEF — keeps it that way. "Western, Communist and so-called non-aligned nations combined to form an effective force for peace. More than 4(X) soldiers from Yugoslavia stand with 4,(K)0 troops from Canada, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, India and Brazil to keep Israelis and Egyptians Separated in^the Gaza Strip and along the in'tdr-inational frontier in Sinai. BACK IN 1957 The force first took up positions in March 1957. "Incidents have been few,” comments Lt. ' Col. Gnegers Bernhoft,' commander of thq joint Danish-Norwegian liattal-‘There have been soime aUempts by both sides to cross the border from Urtie-to time but no serious clashes have taken place. Farmers have been able to cultivate their lands and to take care of their livestock within; a few meters of the demarcation line and people on both sides go about their business-without interference from each other." Orange groves flourishing in what was desert land a decadel ago testified to the force’s effec-l tiveness in Gaza. The strip itself is Egyptian-administered with, full customs and passport barriers at its frontiers %ith Egypt proper. On the outskirts of the principal towns — Gaza, Rafah, Khan Younis and Deit el Ballah — a ditch three feet deep and three feet wide marks the 35-mIfe-long armistice demarcation, line between the Gaza Strp and Israel. To the south, C^nadjan and Yugoslav contingents cover the 110-mile frontier between Israel and Egypt that runs through the sun-scorched Sinaj to Ras al Masri in the Gulf of Aq^ba. Along the entire border the U.N. patrols, their Israeli counterparts and Egyptian observa- tion posts are tektjmony to the ! threat of new outbreaks of trouble. “Sometimes forces from either side, may try to cross the border hi something like a game,” says Norwegian Maj. Rolf Staenn. "If nothing happens and we intercept them, the game is over.” GIRL SOLDIERS The Israelis, "Staenn reports, sometimes post girls from their army along the line opposite emergency force troops. “the girls wear shorts and do a lot of smiling in trying to engage the boys in conversation,” Staenn says. “But U, N. troops cannot talk with them, no matter how much they smile.” This too, he says, is part of the“game” on the line. The 30-calibbr machine gun is the force’s heaviest weppon. If would-be infiltrators are intercepted they are held for action by a joint Egyptian-Is-raeli armistice commission, which determines what course to foHow. From the heights of the rolling sand dunes in the armistice line area, observers can easily see into Ashkelon, Israel. The merest footprint on the wrong side of the line can set off an investigation. The U.N. force is to be cut in March by some 60Q troops under terms of a reorganization. The reduction will result mostly from the withdrawal of the battalion from Sweden, which has other peace-keeping commitments on Cyprusir Contingents from Norway, Denmark, India, Canada and Brazil will stretch out their troofis to compensate for the pull-out of the Swedish battal-ion. The force’s commander in cheif, Brazil’s Maj. Gen. Sysepo Sarmento, has logistics, operations, personnel, legil, financial, engineering and medical sections in a Gaza headquarters. It cost $17.75 million’ to maintain the force last year. “The expense is justified by the results obtained here,” said one officer. “The orange groves you see along the frontier today are mainstays of the economy. They have grown up under the protection of tl(e U.N. Emergen-icy Force.” ** REFUSES TO ANSWER - Two attorneys talk at the witness table with Sam Hoiloway Bowers during an appearance yesterday before the House Un-American Activities Committee in Washington. Bowers was identified by the committee as the imperial wizard of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Bowers refused to answer all questions. Liberals May Help Klan Avoid Conlempt Charges WASHINGTON (UPI)-Seven Ku Klux Klan leaders today based Oieir one hope for escaping an overwhelming House Vote to cite them for contempt of Cong^ on the efforts of Democratic liberals. The House scheduled a vote on the issue, which was raised by the klansmen’s refusal to produce subpoenaed records before tlje House on Un-American Activities. r A heavy majority was expected to favor citing the Klan leaders for contempt, which upon conveition carries penalties of up to $1,000 in fines and a year in jail. Their only hope was an effort by a band of liberals to study the i»ue further. Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., national chairman of the Amer- icans for Democratic Action (ADA), intended to ask the House to create a special committee to study the merits of the contempt recommendations. Edwards and others sent S letter to all members outlining their case. They hoped for support from members who have voiced disapproval of congressional methods for handling contempt citations. * A number of liberals, including the ADA, oppose the committee in general. They contend its mandate is unconstitutional and its methods unfair. They therefore oppose the current investigation of the klan >s exposure for exposure’s sake. Committee chairman Edwin E. Willis, D-La., vehemently denies the charge. He says the purpose of the investigation Laws to Curb Cemeteries Are Proposed to develop legislation to combat the threat of communities from the Klan. The committee recommended contempt citations for the fol- lowing members ^ the United Klaifi of America Inc., the na- LANSING (AP)-r-. Legislation to establish a state cemetery commission and regulate the cemetery industry was proposed Tuesday hy ^n. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit. , Dzendzel’s Senate Corporations Committee' has been' investigating the tangled affairs of Brqpkdale Cemetery in Livonia. The proposed commission would license cemeteries and cemetery lot salesmen, and could set rules concerning burial-procedures, casket handling, placing and maintaining . of headstones and memorials, grave location records and financial records of cemeteries. The commission would use Investigators to keep watch on cemetery operations. Dzendzel’s plans would require cemeteries to put 20 per cent of a c,emftery lot’s price into a pefpetpl eSre fund^ instead of the present 10 per cent. Another proposal would prohibit funeral directors .from dealing with unlicensed cemeteries. ’ I tion’s largest KKK group: Imperial Wizard Robert M.j Shelton, Jr.; Georgia Grand Dragon Calyin Graig; North Carolina Grand Dragon James R:^ Jones: Virginal Grand Dragon Marshall R. Komegay; South Carolina Grand Dragon! Robert E. Scoggin; Conductor! of Ceremonies Robert Hudgins' of North Carolina; and thej Rev. George F. Dorsett, imper-' iai kludd (chaplain) of North Carolina. LEGAL POSITION The committee’s legal position is (hat the 5th Amendment to the constitution and its protection agains self-incrimination—which all seven used freely—permits an individual to remain silent but does not give the right to refuse subpoenaed records of an organization. Following a House vote for contempt the matter would go to a grand jury. If indictmeqts were returned, the defendants would be tried in Washington. The House vote was to follow a brief morning session by the committee to hear evidence about Klan activities in Miss- Annual Tax Sale Of Properties Delinquent For Taxes In Oakland County Lands delfnquent for real property taxes of 1963 and prior years are scheduled to be offered for sale by the County Treasurer at the Court House in Pontiac on M^y 3,1966. The legal descriptions nf propertips to be offered for sale will be published on February 10, 1966, February 17, 1966 and February 24, 1966 in the Birmingham Eccentric, Birmingham, Michigan. Allison Green Acting Auditor (>ei|rral Laiuing, Michigan Li."'.. ( -I, OPEN DAILYlOtolO-SUNDAY 12 to 7-MECHANIC ON DUTY UNTIL 10 PM THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC; MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1066 B—1 Energetic Mrs. Milts Lends Helping Hand ' WOMEN'^ PwrtlK Prau PM* A rare pause in thhbusy life of Mrs. Ben Mills ■of Bloomfield Hills enables her to explaifi in an interview what Camp Oakland means to^our society and to her. She envisions other communities^ across the nation patterning their youth homes after ours. Tell Him You Are Disappointed By JEANNE NELSON Whether she's jet-bound for London or Istanbul, no amount of distance can diminish the devotion of Mrs. B^n Mills to the children of Camp Oakland. For the 54 permanently ensconced youngsters there, it is “Aunt Helen” who sff often listens to problems and helps to find solutions for them. It -is she also who, as chairman of the women^s committee for this organization, has worked unceasingly to raise funds for the buildings and equipment needed to make Camp Oaj^land what it is today. Helen .Mills’ name is high en the list of outstanding wometi in this area. Wife of a^Ford Motor Company vice president, Ben Mills, and the mothSr of two tran sons, Mrs. Mills has taken on the joint chairmanship with her husband of the 1966 Meadow Brook Festival. - . With the program scheduling for this summer-long, avent already behind, them, the pair looks forward tU a record-breaking season. Mrs. Mills is especially en-, thusiastic about the adniission price which she says, “will not only bring college students, but will enable highschoolers to come as individuals, with dates or in “Dutch” groups. WATER BALLET Working with youngsters is nothing new to this attractive ‘Girlie’ Books Are Stage ABBY , By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: How can you keep a child who is,old enough to read from reading all those trashy magi-zines they pickp up at the news-stands? Our son g is 15 and (WneX of the “girlie” magazines wef* find in his room are terrible. He says all|i his friends read | them. If you have an answer ' w us, please print it. CONCERNED PARENTS DEAR PARENTS: All normal adolescent^ have a certain amount of curiosity, which is satisfied in this way. A healfhy, adjusted child will pass through this stage unharmed, in spite of the trash he reads. And your son probably will, too. Let him know that you are disappointed in his choice of “literature” and make sure you have plenty of good reading material available. Then keep your eyes open. If the boy appears to be overly preoccupied with trash to the exclusion of everything else, and his taste doesn’t improve with maturity, he will need professional help. DEAR ABBY: I am a 23-year-old girl who works in a factory where I meet a Ipt of men. There is one fellow I see there every day, and I Stire do like his looks. Abby, I’m far from being hard on the eyes, but this guy doesn’t even know I’m alive. Lots of the factory men. ask to date me but they don’t interest me. I am 5 ft. 7 in flats. This guy I like is a whole .head shorter than I, but I don’t care. He really has me going. I’d give anything to go out with him. One of the girls in the plan!' says she knows him and he is a wonderful person, 4-lot of fun, a good dancer and has a good sense of humor. She also says she’s sden him out with girls much taller than *1* himself so he can’t be telf-con-scious about his heiglil. How can I get him interested in me? LIKES HIS LOOKS • DEAR LIKES: TeU the girl who knows him that you would \ like to kiiow him, too. She could arrange a small get-together to include both of you. Then you’re on your own. DEAR ABBY: I am a 16-year-old girl who knows more about motors than any boy my age,. Berghoffs Are Here Mrs. William G. Berghoff ^th sons Billy and Danny, of Fort Wayne, Ind.^ are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Christie, of Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Berghoft Is tha former Juanita Christie. I was brought up next door to my uncle’s garage and I have always been good at taking things apart and putting them back together. I never liked to dress up in dresses. I am much happier in greasy jeans. I 'think g^ls who . Kiggle over boys are BUly,'aod I don't care anything about boys jyho are silly over girls, either. Lots of people take me for a boy, but it doesn’t bug me a bit. I take it as a compliment. I don’t know why I wrote this letter. Maybe I just wanted to tell somebody that here is one 16-year-old girl who never had a boyfriend and doesn’t need one. Is there something wrong with me? “HAPPY” nl CARLSBAD DEAR HAPPY: Not if you’re really “happy.” woman. As far back as World War II, she started England’s firsTt water hallet wliile an overseas recreational director for the American Red Cross. * * Recalling those days of London blitzes and air raid shelters, Mrs. Mills said, “The 7 a.m. dips in an "outdoor pool during the darly six-ing months, were all worth it when the troop was asked-to.perform for the royal family." * ★ Sports have always playe^ an Important role,in her life. She Was.chosen to represent the United States as a swimmer in the 1936 Olympics held in Berlin, Germany. But disappointment came early that year wdien she broke her back and vfas unable to compete. ★ * ★ She did manage to travel to Germany with her teanunates. Attendiflg the swinuning events each day, she helped display the good sportsmanship that the Olympics'stand for. A great believer in children and sports going hand-in-hand, Mrs. Mills says, “Athletic activities in the y o u n g are a mar-velous"^ outlet for troubled teens and the pressures upon youth in •general.” OTHER INTERESTS Camp Oakland is not the only youthfd organization to which she is committed. Junior Achievement consumes a great deal of her attention, along with the Merrill Palmer Institute and the new Bimingham Teen Center. ★ ♦ ★ Through her fund-raising efforts for Camp Oakland, she has been often in direct contact with Hollywood personalities. Add to this, numerous trips to adventurous and romantic places her husband’s work takes them and you might expect Helen Mills to be somewhqt of a sophisticate. ■* * ★ ■ Not K>1 It is perhkps her naturalness and deep concern for others that has made her'the person she is. Speaker at the Pontiac PTA Council’s annual Founders^ Day dinner Tuesday was A. B. Haist, first state vice president of the Michigan Congress of Parents and Teachers (top left). With him is Mrs. Willis 'Schnekenburger, Opdyke Road, general chairman^ of the dinner. In the lower picture, Daniel Hutchins, priryci-pal of Kennedy Junior High School where the dinner was held, lights the candle held by Mrs. Elton Losey, LeBaron Street. Mrs. Roderick Hodver, Irwin Streeter looks on. See itory on page B-2. >/■ ■goteitaf iBRinnimi- ANNUAL MID-WINTER > SAVE 10%-50% ON OUR REGULAR STOCK! Sealy Mattress and Box Spring Included Many One-of-a-Kind, Floor Samples -All at Huge Savings! 1. LIVING ROOM LAMPS and accessories. All soles final. Every one .In the store at........... . . 2. FOUNDERS—Rosewood 4-plece bedroom sej^ Regular $550................................... '/zOff »350®“ LANE Cedar Chests. ........... 25% Off BROYHILL-Oiled walnut, double dresser, plate glass mirror, and panel bed. 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PERMANENT and HAIR STYLE Tinting-^Bleachin^ Cntt ntting IMPERIAL'S BEALTY i SALON 158 Auburn Ave. . Park Free FE 4-!M7« Edrth SiMioa. dwn«r City PTA Council Gathers for Founders Day Dinner Kennedy Junior High School was host for the PTA Council’ annual Founders Day dinner Tuesday. Some 350 repr^em tatives of the 35 Pontiac PTA.^ locals attended the event. Speaker for the occasion was A. B. Haist, first vice president of the Michigjan Congress of Parents and Teach- j ers whose tbpic was “Founders Day Rededication.’’ Hospitality committee members Mrs. Robert Anderson, Mrs. Neil Smith and Mrs. Robert Irwin opened the program singing “We Don’t Know Why We Like You Like We Do.’’ Music also was provided by the Pontiac Northern High Male Chorus, directed by John Tousley. OFFICIAL GUESTS Honored guests were introduced by Mrs. Robert Trat-jchet, president. School board and school officials present were: Dr. and Mrs. Dana P. \. 49tii mid-winter furnitnie 1 n V [y a J- s Store-Wide Rednctiom! 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So gentle ,it won’t harm a rose, yet greaseis'cptbeautifully.That '^“push-pull” cap is so handy, too. Are you for sparkling clean dishes? Just try Vel and you’ll turn, too. *^^ R0SE LOTION VEL i H E UUNTIAL .PRESS, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1»66 R-3 Kappa Delts' Mrs. Ray Jewelljralks on 'friendship' Slate Two Gatherings Mrs. William Cheal Cherokee Road entertained the membership of Alpha Nu chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Tuesday. would be held at the Holiday Inn.- lentine Gala Wcarh6monlh, KENDALE 45 W. Huron Sl. K a p pX Delta Alumnae of South Oakland County will held meetings on Tuesday. The afternoon group will meet at the home of Mrs. Donald W. Fl^r of Birmingham for a 12:30 p.m. lunch- "FYiendship in Beta Sigma Phi” was the topic of the program given by Mrs. Ray , Jewell. A * A Valentine’s dance on Saturday will be sponsored by the > Vdle t Valentii Mrs. Robert Pritchett of Starr Street will host the best meeting. An announcement was made that the Founders Day dinner llwusand Lake Citizen’s Band and Radio Gub. It will start at 8 p.m. in the American Legion Hall Post No. 377 on Mary Sue Street, off Maybee Road. The X-Ls will provide the music for the event which is open to^the puUic. Fri.amis.1. Phone for Appointment, FE S-3260, FE 5-0322 THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DAYS lORBjKlAsMd JOB Yell Now it'i easy to quickly ilep into o glomorous, well-paid lec retoriol poiition. Only.