th0 W^artmr '•V‘f THE PONTIAC P VOL. 124 — NO. 108 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 13, 1966 —48 PAGEl AP WlrwDM* Romney Steps Up Attack on U.S. Viet Nam Policy Showers Tonight to Bring Cooler Temperatures Scattered showers and thundershowers will cool things (rff in the Pontiac area tonight after a high this afternoon of near 80 degrees, the U. S. Weather Bureau predicts. Cooler temperatures with lows of from 52 to 56 are expected tonight. Tomorrow will he partly cloody and cooler with possible showers. The high will be from 68 to 74. In downtown Pontiac the lowest temperature prior to 8 a.m. was 68. The weather indicator read 77 at 1 p.m. In early 1965, Romney generally endorsed the administration decision to bomb in North Viet Nam. In Today's Press Vof% in Moscow Khrushchev, Molotov make rare public appearances - PAGE B4. Chicago Riof awoting by policeman touches off violence— PAGE B-16. Praisos Troops U. S. .Viet commander visits front in central highlands - PAGE A-U. Area News .........A4 ......C-tt ......C-lf sk . . .D-11 Oomies ...........C-M ......A4 ......D4 ...D4 Sports ........C-1-C4 Theaters ..........IM TV-Radio Prsframs D-11 WOsoa, Eari ......D-U Womai’s Pai Lll ONES “YouTl be sorry If t Step off the deep end!” Pickets Jeer Veep at MSU EAST LANSING UD — Vice President Hubert Humphrey, addressing a graduation audience including 75 anti-Viet Nam pickets, encouraged young people yesterday to “collect a few bruises” by opposing the “compact majority.” Humphrey spoke before nearly 30,000 persons, including 3,487 degree recipients, at commencement exercises of Michigan______________________ State University. He also received an honorary doctor of laws degree. Those who dissent, he said, “are more a part of this land and more a source of its. strength than are all of the multitude who jcdn in silence, no matter how vast they may seem.” “The more you speak out — responsibly and thoughtfully — and the more you act, the more Fear 100 Dead in Rail Crash Two Trains Collide in Suburb of Bombay MAKES POINT — Gov. George Romney e . a discussion of the Viet Nam war yesterday in Detroit. Romney said getting into a land war was a mistake for the U.S. But, now that we’re there, he said, “we really need to make up our mind what our objectives are.” If the objective is to win, nonland elements of the Viet Nam war must be stepped up, he said. Related Story, Page B-12 you are going to discover that you are lending courage to a surprising number of people whose feelings will come to the surface in response to yours,” Humphrey said. The words “responsibly and tbon^tfnlly” were not in the vice ivesident’s prepared text. He also added a reference to the American serviceman as “a pacemaker... a lifesaver.” BOMBAY (AP) - At least 100 Indians were feared killed today and 120 injured when two suburban trains jammed with commuters crashed together in a Bombay suburb. Five hours after the early morning collision, railway officials announced 52 bodies had been countecj and there were 106 injured so far. Traffic on the city’s railways, which carry two million persons daily, was disrupted while doctors, ffremen and police struggled through the wreckage to rescue trapped Issue at Stake in Waterford Voters to Fill Seats on Community College and Pontiac Boards Voters today are electing board of education members and deciding school financial questions in Pontiac, Waterford Township and 21 other area school districts. Also on the ballots in all of ' biikland County’s s c h o o 1 districts are the names of the 14 candidates seeking six seats on the Oakland Community College Board of Trustees. Polling places are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. In the Waterford Township district, voters will decide the fate of ft ■ BECKONS BALLOTERS-Mrs. Gladys Riley, 152 Washington, protects herself against this morning’s showers to let voters know the Precinct C polling place at Central High School is open for business. She is one of hundreds of workers who today are conducting school elections in the Pontiac, Waterford Township and 21 area school districts. At Waterford Schools DETROIT — Michigan Gov. George Romney grad-usually is stepping up his attack on administration policy in Viet Nam. The Republican governor refuses to discuss hjs 1968 presidential prospects but is increasingly diverging from President Johnson on the “I have seen these brave men (servicemen) perform acts of compassion that would be the marvel of any peaceful society,” he said. foreign policy issue uppermost in most Americans’ minds. In a panel interview yesterday, Romney said getting into a land war in Asia was a mistake but that now other elements of the war should be stepped up “if the objective is QUOTES POET Humphrey quoted Norwegian poet Henrik Ibsen as saying “the most dangerous enemy to truth and freedom amongst us is the compact majority.” “If you oppose that compact majority,” Humphrey said, “you are sure to collect a few bruises. Now, he says, this bombing should include petroleum concentrations in Haiphong because “It’s silly to bomb petroleum trucks when we know 65 per cent of the fuel is concentrated in Hai|*ong.” “But I have found that the best remedy for a bruise — And I have collected a few along life’s way myself — is to collect a few more. You forget the pain of the first blow.” The pickets chanted “End the war in Viet Nam” as Humphrey’s motorcade entered Spartan Stadium. Later, they carried their signs, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Each train reportedly carried more than 1,500 passengers. Firemen used blow torches to cut their way into twisted aluminum coaches in which men, women and schoolchildren were trapped. The accident was the worst in western India’s rail history. It occurred near a grade crossing north of Matunga Station, nine miles from Victoria Station in downtown Bombay. The collision occurred at the 7 a.m. rush hour. One train bound from Victoria to Thana Junction, 20 miles to the north, was being switched to another track. Graduation This Week Graduation exercises will be held this week for seniors of Waterford Township and Waterford -^Kettering High I Schools. Dr. George Brower, professor of education at. Eastern Michi-I gan University, will address the WTHS seniors. | His speech entitled “Toj Serve Is to| Live.” The other train was en route to the central terminal. The impact sent the first thee cars of one train off the tracks., Service on the central railway was stopped at once, halting movement to Madras, Calcutta and New Delhi. CHEEK A t Waterford Township High School, 424 seniors will graduate during exercises beginning at 8 p.m. Wednesday. TOINTRO-iDUCE BOTh Both speakers BROWER will be introduced by Dr. Don 0. Tatroe, superintendent of Waterford Township Schools. Speaker for the Kettering ceremony will be Willard D. Cheek, senior physicist at General Motors Research Laboratories. John D. Boardman, board of education president, will hand out diplomas at each exercise. Baccalaureate services for seniors of the schools were held 'yesterday in separate ceremonies. At the same time, however, the governor declared it is a mistake to be in South Viet Nam if the object is to contain China rather than only protect the people of South Viet Nam. MAKE UP OUR MIND “We really need to make up our minds as to what our ol^ jectives are,” said the governor. He observed, however, “Now we can’t withdraw without a loss of honor and other consequences.” He did Mt say how a withdrawal sbonld be handled if a new South Vietnamese government rejects U.S. military help. Romney said the present land war leaves the initiative with the enemy and “ties our hands. “We made a mistake in going in there by land. We are in a (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) totaling $114 million and of a one-mill increase in 6ie operating tax. On the Pontiac school ballot is a proposition concerning the transfer of some $57400 out of debt retirement funds into the district’s building and site fund. The Pontiac and Waterford Township boards ,of education e^h Haoc'Ovttd^il^toncies for -four-year terms. EXPIRING TERMS Expiring in Pontiac are the terms of Dr. Walter L. Godsell, who is not seeking reelectkm, and Mrs. Elsie Mihalek. Candidates are William H. Anderson, S3, of 2281 Ostmm, Waterford Township; Mrs. Mihalek, 44, of ISR Vinewood; bfrs. Susan L. MUkr, 26 of 960 S. East Blvd.; Victor L. Smothers, 47, of SK WoifO; and James R. Stelt, 46, of 261 Ottawa. Seeking two terms on the Waterfm-d Township Board of Education are incumbent Norman L. Cheal, 46, of 2751 North Lake; Lewis S. Long, 39, of 5657 Brunswick; and incumbent Eldon C. Rosegart, 47, of 2983 Shawnee. One of the four bond issues on the Waterford Township school ballot would raise $4.8 million to erect, furnish and equip a new high school and elementary school and to acquire and improve school 8ites and site ad-diticms. A $5,975,000 bond issue would pay for additions and improvements to existing buildings. The other two bond issues on the ballot are $625,000 for an auditorium at the new high school and $400,000 for a swimming pool there. Over 170 Get Diplomas at Three Schools More than 170 Pontiac area high school seniors received parochial high sdmol diplomas during programs yester^ at their respective churches. St. Frederick Hi^ Sdraol, Our Lady of the Lakes High School See List of Graduates, Page A-3 and St. Michael High School aU held commencement exercises. dipkuw from St Frederick, after they heard a graduatha address by Rev. Richard ’Thsmas, pastor ef St Beae-diet’s CathoUcCharch. HONOR PUBLISHER - Pontiac’s Congregation B’nai Israel, celebrating victory in their campaign for the State of Israd Bonds, honored Pontiac Press PubUsber Hardd A. Fitxgerald (left) last night at a dinner. Emil Cohen, guest entertainer, talked. Fitsgeraid was presented with a plaque for community activities. Shown wiOi him are (from left) Mrs. Herman B. Stenbudc, 766 Owego; Mrs. Dadd Saks, 6 Bloomfield Torace; and Rabbi Israel Goodihan. Exercises were held for S7 students frmn Our Lady of the Lakes. Rev. James Mayworm, a reco^ ordained prM, pve RipaMh. for M gradnatea. 50^ ■i, Get Out and Vote Today in Area School Elections^, 4 ‘='1- it 13th MIG of War Is Shot Down Sylvan Lake Boaters Get Councilman 161 Warnings Seeks Post Sylvan Lake Councilman John I). McKinlay announced today that he will seek the Republican nomination for state represents-' live from the 61st District. On the city council since 1964, McKinlay. 34, of 2709 Littletell, is a member and former chairman of the human relations committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors. The district seat being sought by McKinlay is presently held by Rep. Francis A. Crowley and includes the townships of Springfield, Waterford, Independence and White Lake and the city of Sylvan Lake. McKinlay, like Crowley, has been a member of U.S. Olympic teams. Twice a member of the rowing team, in 1952 and 1956, McKinlay won a silver medal for his efforts in 1956. Crowley participated in track events in the 1932 Olympics. EUROPEAN GAMES In 1957 McKinlay competed in the European Games as a goodwill ambassador of the U.S. government. Six times a U.S. national rowing champion, McKinlay also competed in the 1962 English Henley race in England. Presently employed by the Birmingham real estate firm of Weir, Manuel, Snyder and Ranke, McKinlay was the assistant superintendent at White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, from 1959 to 1965. Water Patrols Ticket 17 During Weekend The Water Safety Division of the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department issued 161 warnings and 17 violation tickets over the weekend. These totals represent patrol activity in about two-thirds of the county, according to Lt. Donald K. Kratt. director of the division. Complete figures will be compiled when reports from the remaining patrol units are received, Kratt said. Most of the tickets issued were for inadequate fire extinguisher equipment on watercraft. Other boaters were ticketed for inadequate life preserver equipment or for reckless operation. PontiK Praii PiMl* Deputies also made 25 assists to boaters who were either out of gas or having motor trouble. 4 COMPLAINTS The division took four citizen complaints in the Friday night through Sunday ni^t period. Two were for boat cenies, another for a lost boat and the final complaint concerned reckless driving. Kratt has requested that lake-front residents install a sign with their house number and street name near the beach so patrol boats can see it from the lake. GROUND-BREAKING CEREMONY-Rev. Arthur Oldani deft), pastor of St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church, helps Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor of St. Benedict’s Catholic Church, dig the first shovelful of dirt at the ground-breaking ceremonies for the new Pontiac Catholic High School yesterday. The new school, located on the Southeast corner of Giddings and Walton, will accommodate 1,500 students from six local parishes. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — A U.S. Navy pilot stroyed the 13th Communist MIG of the war in an air battie Sunday between the key North Vietnamese cities of Hanoi and Haiphong, and narrowly missed getting a second. But two U.S. planes were lost in new air attacks on the Communist North today. The political kettle boiled again in South Viet Nam when Buddhist demonstrators swept through the streets of Saigon and riot police responded with clouds of tear gas. The disorder ended two weeks of comparative calm in the capital and followed a day of giant pro-government, anti-Communist demoi strations by Roman Cathoiics. He graduated from Boston University with a bachelor of science degree in business administration and has attended the graduate school of the University of Michigan and the Detroit College of Law. McKinlay has served as precinct captain in Berkley and as an alternate delegate to the Republican convention. He is a member of the chamber of commerce, YMCA, Detroit Boat Club, St. Andrews Society and the Boston University Varsity Club. During the Korean War McKinlay served in the Marine Corps and was discharged with the rank of staff sergeant. This will eliminate the necessity for deputies to pull to shore and walk around to check this information, Kratt said. Teachers at Eastern Back Today PEA, School Board Agree on Proposed '66-67 Pact Eastern Junior High School teachers were back in their classrooms this morning, giving final examinations and organizing activities for the last three days of the school year. The 28 teachers who stayed out of school Thursday and Friday decided over the weekend Negotiators for the Pontiac Board of Education and the Pontiac Education Association (PEA) have reached agreement on a proposed 1966-67 contract for the school district’s 947 teachers. "nie contract calls for a $5,800 base salary and would jump the It will save our men a greatito comply with the Friday afterdeal of time in handling com-1 noon order of Schools Supt. Dr. plaints,” Kratt added. jDana Whitmer and return to --------------------- their posts today. With two-thirds WASHINGTON (AP) -'Die Supreme Court held constitutional today a provision of the 1965 federal voting rights law designed to permit Puerto Ricans to vote on the basis of literacy in Spanish. Hilton Hotel Boycotted in London Cab War LONDON (Jfl — London’s 11,-000 cab drivers boycotted the Hilton Hotel today as part of their war against the capital’s growing fleet of minicabs. The cab men, who are licensed, claim that minicabs, which don’t have to be licensed, are taking their trade away. Supreme Court OKs Literacy Provision faculty missing, the school had been closed to seventh and eighth graders both days. Although still at odds with the board of education, the teachers’ group said it “will fulfill its obligations to the students at Eastern, so they can enjoy the conclusion of their school year with full activities and their promotion exercises. At the same time, the court ruled New York State cannot enforce its own literacy standards against persons who have completed at least a sixth-grade education in which the instruction was not in The 7-2 decision upholding the provision of the federal law was announced by Justice William J. Brennan, Justice John M. Harlan wrote a dissenting opinion in which Justice Potter Stewart joined. Romney Boosts Attack on U. S. Viet Nam Policy maximum salary for teachers with masters’ degrees over the $10,000 mark for the first time. Teachers today .received copies of the proposed contract to read before attending a ratification meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Pontiac Northern High School auditorium. The board of education will consider the proposal at special meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Scattered showers and thundershowers today and tonight. High today 75 to 80. Cooler tonight. Low 52 to 56. Tuesday partly cloudy a little cooler with a chance of showers. High 68 to 74. Outlook for Wednesday-fair and cool. Southwesterly winds ten to 20 miles becoming westerly this afternoon or tonight. OiM V#»r Ag« In Pontine Highest temperaturt Lowest temperature Mean temperature The teachers, who said they will attend a board of education meeting tomorrow night, are seeking public support by the board for Eastern Principal Theodore E. Wiersema apd his staff. DISCIPLINE INCIDENT Wiersema was involved in a pupil discipline incident which prompted a May 27 demonstration by some 175 pupils and parents. In a prepared statement today, the dissident teachers noted staff studies and Pon-i tiac Police Department investi-I gations have indicated accusation against Wiersema were I unwarranted. i The teachers also said the j board had failed to keep its promise to issue a public statement which would clear the air. At t am.: Wind Velocity M2 Direction, Southwest. Sun sets Monday at * — Sun rises Tuesday •' Moon sets Monday a Moon rises Tuesday n Temparatures Wealtieri Sat., Sunny. Sunday, Sunny. Highest and Lowest Temperature TMs Date la P4 Years I In 1956 « In H 73 52 M 55 Denver M M Detroit M S3 Duluth 74 55 Ft. Worth 17 S4 Jacktonvllle 12 SS 71 SI Kansas City 15 S2 73 5f Loa Angeles M S3 II 55 Milwaukee 13 SO N. Orleans ft 5S New York It SI Phoanix «l 50 Pittsburgh 14 5S S2 53 $. ■ ■ This failure, combined with influences from outside the school and community, has “precipitated tensions at Eastern as well las other schools, disrupting the climate of learning,” they said. ‘The fervent support of many students, parents and educators from the city, county and state could warrant a mass demonstration for goals at Eastern, but the staff feels at this time the good of the students to complete the year should be the first consideration,” they said. (Continued From Page One) conflict over which we have no control of the magnitude.” BROUGHT ON RISK The first land commitments, he said, brought on the risk of war with Red China and that risk would not be significantly increased by heavier bombing! of supply routes and storage facilities. Romney continually has said that protection of the people of South Vitt Nam is the sole justification for the war, but yesterday’s comments were his strongest yet about the land war. He also expanded his attack on administration information policies, blaming withholding of facts and overly optimistic predictions for “a gradual deterioration in the feeling of confidence bout what the government says.” The governor offers something for bother the hawks and doves: • For those who would expand the war, his call for more bombing, provided the U. S. objective is to win. • For the doves, his declaration that containment of R e d China is no reason for a land war la South Viet Nam. Under provisions of the contract, the school system’s base salary would be boosted $300 from the current $5,500. I city 73 43 ,, „ .lAprle ■ “ M 40 Wpphlnglon NATIONAL WiEAHIER - Showers and thunderstorms art expected tonight from the eastern Great Lakes south- weatward tetAthe eouthem Plains and into Florida. It Will be cooler in the Mi e Midwest with little change elsewhere in the Humphrey Jeered During MSU Visit (Continued From Page One) ntost of them saying “Huboi Humphrey, Master of Whr. ” into BASE FOR SCHEDULE The figure which provides the base for the district’s indexed salary schedule is the pay of the teacher who holds a bachelor’s degree and has no experience. At the other end of the scale is the $10,034 salary proposed for teachers with master’s degrees and 10 years of experience. There are some 159 Pontiac teachers in this category. Other major provisions of the proposed contract include paid life insurance and a $l-million liability insurance policy fo every teacher, reportedly t h first in the state. 2 U.S. Planes Lost in Attacks Buddhist Protesters March in Viet Capital BIRMINGHAM •> A dtiaens advisory committee will be tabllshod by the board of education to set up a new millage proposal. ’The present millage ez|rires in December with a new one required to provide for the increasing growth of the district and construction of new buildings. A special School Board meeting will be held tomorrbw at Berkshire Junior High School to approve commencement lists and discuss alternate housing plans for the new Covington Junior High School, which may not be finished by fall. Cmdr. Hal L. Marr, 40, of Roseburg, Ore., scored the hit on the MIG with his second heat-seeking Sidewinder numerically equal dogfight between four F8 Crusader jets the carrier Hancock' and four Soviet-designed MIGs. A U.S. spokesman said the encounter occurred 31 miles northwest of Haiphong, North Viet Nam’s main port, and 55 miles northeast of Hanoi, the capital. HIT RIGHT WING The missile homed in on the MiG’s hot tailpipe and destroyed it. Marr, commanding officer of Fighter Squadron 211 aboard the Hancock, attacked another MIG with his cannon and hit its right wing but ran out of ammunition before he could finish off the enemy plane. The damaged plane apparently limped home. A twin-jet U.S. Air Force B57 Canberra fighter-bomber vanished with its two crewmen east of the Mu Gia Pass today, while an Air Force F4C Phantom jet was shot down by ground fire northwest of coastal Dong Hoi City. Parachutes were seen but the two fliers were missing. Birmingham Area News Citizen Group to Ready a Neyr Millage Proposal offer acadonic subjects, recrea-t tfonal programs and special ] c 1 a s 8 e 8 and activities in the \ Bloomfield Hills district. A preseason conditioning program for boys attending Bloomfield Hills High School in the fall will be offered Tuesday and Thursday evenings bei^nnlng July 26. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Robert Boston, former assistant superintendent and curriculum director at Essexville, has been appointed assistant superintendent in charge of curriculum for Bloomfleld Hills School District. Boston and Us assistant, Marilynn Wendt, also from Essexville, will begin work July 26. Curriculum changes will be introduced first in new schools opening in September, but in-service training will be offered all teachers in the district. Elementary summer school ' will begin June 20 and continue ' for five weeks. Registration may f be made by mail or at Vaughan / School. \ * * * ' Junior high summer school, a ; six-week session beginning June \ 20, has registration at the ( Bloomfield HUIs High School or \ at East Hills Junior High. Mail registration must be by June 18. A new elementary school is under construction on a 20-acre site on Long Lake Road, near Willoway, to be called the George P. Way Elementary School. The three-anit building will be available for use In September 1967. West Hills Junior High School is under construction on a 40-acre site on Lone Pine near Middle Belt. It will be a 600-student school with provision for the addition of ^pace for 300 more students. Also included is an expanded Easter vacation beginning Good Friday and continuing through the week after Easter. The proposed contract also calls for establishment of a professional relations committee composed of PEA members who would meet monthly with Schools Supt. Dr. Dana Whitmer to assist in teacher-administration communication and in instructional program development. They were the 261st and 262nd American planes reported lost over the Communist north. In the jungled central highlands of Soqth Viet Nam, U.S. paratroopers killed 25 Communists in a series of skirmishes'as the “Screaming Eagles” of the lOlst Airborne Division combed the jungled mountain lair of North Vietnamese regiment. They have been battling since Tuesday. BOMB SATURATED Before the paratroopers moved into the area where the North Vietnamese were believed encircled, high-flying B52s from Guam saturated it with bombs. After seven bombing runs, helicopters lifted a company of paratroopers into the charred jungles, and a battalion of the 101st began an end-to-end sweep of the ridge where an estimated 1,000 North Vietnamese were believed burrowed in. A spokesman said the paratroopers met light, sporadic Construction will begin this summer on the 40-acre site for the new Senior High School. The school is scheduled to be ready in September 1%7. SWIMMING POOL Work on swimming pool and improvements to the athletic field at the present high school building will begin this summer with completion planned for summer of 1967. High School classes will start Jaae 28 aad coatinue tkrongh Aag. i. Special courses will be offered in field d driver BILLIE S. FARNUM Seeks Second Term in House 19th District Dem Cites Future Aims Additional sites for future school district use are: 16-acre site in Long Lake Road opposite the Kirk in the Hills Church; 20-acre site at the corner of Middle Belt and Lone Pine; 16-acre site on North Franklin near Hickory Grove. Congressman Billie S. Far-num, D-19th District, announced I A 4-R’s Summer Program will LBJ OKs Lower Figure on National Debt Limit WASHINGTON (UPI) - The administration, in a suprise move, today resigned itself to a $2-billion cut in President Johnson’s request for an increase in the national debt limit. today that he will seek reelection to the U.S. House of Representatives. 'The 19th District includes western Oakland County, the city of Pontiac, Redford Township, Livonia and Northville in Wayne County. “Much legislative good has materialized in the last year and a half,” the freshman congressman said, “but the outstanding legislation is in the field of health and education. “The real benefits of this legislation will be realized in future years if these programs are continued and improved,” he added. Treasury Secretary Henry Fowler, testifying before the Senate Finance (Committee, said “I am prepared to accept level of $330 billion” instead of the $332 originally requested. 1 ' i .»**.{■* 'j'« Ace Interviewer Interviewed By Howard V. Heldenbrand This has to be the “Man Bites og” piece to end all such: the nation’s ace interviewer being himself interviewed. 4:00 a.m. press deadline. Holy Toledo! At the vwtsef it was necessary to revise the ground rules for an Earl Wilson interview. In his new role of subject instead of interrogator, he had to field the questions, not bat ’eip out. Although the 59-year-old columnist (he llooks 49) lacks some of the, uh, pulchritudinous features of the beauties be is prone to paint, your Press interviewer found many compensating qualities — a compelling personality, a coj-orfi^l style of discoilrse and Having a working knowledge of the domestic routine much favored by the distaff division, I ventured the thought that his wife must lead a dog’s life. COLUMNIST’S LIFE “Not a dog’s life,” Earl answered brightly, “just a columnist’s life.” the stadium and stood in the stands. After the vice president’s speech, and while he was receiving bis honorary degree, they marched out of the stadium, repeating their chant. Applause continued until the| As we visited over victuals in last picket left. i a Manhattan restaurant, Ear' glanced ruefully at a typical Then MSU President John Hannah said “I am sure the ause is for the vice president and net foi- the diversion.” A short burst of applause fob schedule of 10 “appearanw’ events punctuating the day that began around noon and would wind up at three the next morning. A^ whidi, he has only Id write bis column Jo me|rt The columnist’s proliferation would put a rabbit to shame. His six-times-weekly pieces average 1,000 words, and it doesn’t take an Einstein to figure out that his annual output is 313,000 words. NO VACATION When does he take tion? In covering his international beat that last year logged 150,009 miles, he takes off for Hollywood, Rome, Paris, London and intermediate points as casoally as the average citizen sets out for the neighborhood drugstore. A native of Ohio add an alumnus of many Buckeye newspapers, Wilson landed in town 31 years ago with the New York Post. Some years later he became the paper’s amuaement editor and te^an writing his column. In 1943 the Post syndicated it. The Pontiac Press has run the column fw 12 years, is the cosmopolitan chronicler always one jump ahead of embryonic celebrities or events about to light up the New York scene? Well, for openers, he gets more tips than a hooked track follower gets on horses. Are you kiddin’? He doesn’t take one — not in the sense the term is loosely used. Oh, sure, he can take off now and then for a little pleasure travel ~ but onty by stockpiling enough columns to fill his space in the several hundred newspapers that use Add to this an occult scent for the locale of thje current “Charlie!” (Wilsonism for “action”) and you have a working formula for his being not only in the know but in the show. “It has been my good fortune to have served on the Committee on Appropriations of the House of Representatives that is responsible for the funding of the programs of health and education, and my d^ire is to continue in this capacity so that opportunities and benefits for our youth and our nation will be fully realized.” AUDITOR GENERAL Before being elected to C!on-gress in November, 1964, Far-num, 50, 995 N. Cass Lake, Waterford Township, was auditor general for the state of Michigan-first appointed by Gov. John Swainson in October, 1961, and then elected to a two year term in 1962. A former Pontiac Motor Co. employe, Famnm held various UAW-aO union offices, ranging from steward to interna-tioual representative. Between 1952-54, he was administrative aide to the late ty.S. Sen. Blair Moody and, in 1957, was appointed deputy secretary of state. WILSON LABOR And, don’t overlook a lot of: steady and enthusiastic WUsoo labor. He didn’t succeed in the trying^ Earl looked at his watdi, started, and said hastily he’d have to ahove. Where? To an Interview ope, he added happily, where HE would ask the qu^ons. The description given to Far-num by the press while he was auditor general, “watdidog of the tax dollar,” has carried over into his first term in Congress columnist business without half when he was named to the ap- propriation committee^ » post rarely given to freshman representatives. 'I have had the opportunity,” said Famum, “to senginize the use of the tejqM^’s dollars and to make sure that fiie monies appropriated are spent for purposes intended by Congress” 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNK 18, 196ft "l-ist Op* rGRADUATES The following are aeniora who were graduated in commencement cerenxmles at St. Frederick, St. Michael and Our Lady of the LakM high Bchoola yeaterday. 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Ideal for tfie handy dad. 10** Choice of Belt Sander or Pollsher-Sander Combination Cut Price, We Can’t Mention Name 188 29' l^ous ‘ARROW’ Heavy Duty Stapler Gun Tacker MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Choice of Five Famous Automatic 4-Brush Toothbrush Sets ^288 Meu’s Gift Toiletries ‘OLD SPICE’ 5-Pc. Gift Set $6 value — set has cologha, after shave, deodorqnl. 'i’i For the handyman father—does so many things around the house. Included are a free $1 staple lifter. Shoots o staple wherever you'd drive o nail. Chpic* of 'Sunbeam,' 'General tieciric,' 'Roiiion,' 'Pycopay' or 'Northern tletiric' brands. Automatic toothbrusli does o Letter teeth cleaning job for the entire family ... so buy one for 'Dad' ond the entire family benefits. MAX FACTOR’ 3-Pc. Sets I Set has offer shave, cologne ond co-' logne deodorant. 3-pc. sets. ' ' SHUI.T0NS LIME Sets I $3 value 2-piec* set hos 'Lime*'' ' shove ond oerosol deodorant. 449 350 x-2’* SIMMS.?* -,r:) THE PONTIAC PRESS mi/r imrn pnctt PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1966 IflHIlti U W M* * Wed Sunday in Temple Beth Jacob Susan Arnkoff Weds Doctor on Sunday Feingold, son ;t of the George Feingolds of Lonsdale, Pa. MRS. ALFRED FEINGOLD A luncheon in the KnoUwood Country Club, Birmin^m, followed the marriage of Susan Marsha Arnkoff to Dr. Alfred Feingold, Sunday, in Temple Beth Jacob. Dr. and Mrs. Harry Arnkoff of Illinois Avenue and the George Feingolds of Lansdale, Pa. are parents of the couple wed before Rabbi Milton Rosenbaum of Temple Emmanuel, Oak Park. Denim’s Durable, Is Tops in Wear Quality, Style NEW YORK (UPI) - The amazing thing about denim is its durability. It has been around since Levi Strauss put the first rivets in a pair of blue jeans during the California gold rush, and it gets more fashionable all the time. faded patina through exposure to salt water, sun and strong soaps. But does everyone rush out and buy the latest in denims? Not necessarily. A spokesman fm- one of the old line firms reports a “vigorous iqisurge” in just plain old blue jeans. It is worn by the younger set to discotheques, to the movies, to parties, to classes, at home and away from home. Its fame has spread to Rome, London, Paris, ■ Bangkok, Tel Aviv and even Moscow, where it is popular but short in su|^y. If you’re a motorscooter enthusiast denim is boss. MOSTLY BLUE Mostly it remained indigo blue over the years though some farmers wore brown overalls and railroad men wore striped denim which is suddenly experiencing a revival in everything from jeans to sports coats. A mark of honor was to shrink the blue ones skinti^t and fade them. The situation changed in 1958 when the Graniteville Company introduced something called “Bull Denim,’’ or |riece-dyed denims in a wide variety of colors. Before that everything was pretty much a yarn^yed cotton twill and pretty much the same color — indigo blue. The Graniteville color discoveries turned denim into a fashion item and women who also wore faded skin tight blue jeans began wearing the new colors. Instead of dark blue there was beige, pewter, black and loden, also know as “wheat jeans’’ and “cactus green.’’ White is big right now. KAREN LOUISE MARTENS Women Attend State Meeting Then somebody discovered stretch denims, a mixture of cotton and nylon and durable press which is a cotton and The latrat thing is brushed denim which is a denim made soft and comfortable. It also looks lived in. The days are probably gone forever when people rushed to second hand stores and bought blue jeans worn by sailors until the pants acquired a soft and Local members of Chapter 4, Blue Star Mothers, attended the recent 24th annual convention of Mich^an in Kalamazoo. Those who attended were Mrs. Ahna Cowley, Mrs. Clyde Taylor, Mrs. Edna L«nenger, and Mis. Herman Dennis. Newly elected state president k Mrs. Lilian Felton of the Flint diapter. Other officers Are Mrs. Irene Kruger, of Milfcxti, first vice president; Mrs. Evelyn Harris of Grand Rapids, second vice president; and ^ Mrs. Jessie Brady til Flint, third vice presi- Plan Dinner for Couple The Wililam Bawdens ol Dover Road will host the rehearsal dinner for their son, John Jay Bawden of East Lansing, and hk fiancee, Susan Marie Weide-man, Friday, in Devon GaUes. The luide-elect was honored at recent showers given by Mrs. Paul E. Tomi^dns, Lagoon Drive, Commerce Township, and Mrs. James R. Menear of North Franck Street. She k the daughter of Mrs. William B. Weideman of Margaret Stre^, Pontiac Township, and the late Mr. Weideman. Bermuda Honeymoon for O'Donnells Lt. and Mrs. John Loftus after Saturday vows in St. Bene- O’Donnell (Connie Ann Scriven) diet’s Church and reception in left for a Bermuda honeymoon the Birmingham Athletic Club. Plan Installation MRS. JOHN LOFTUS O’DONNELL Stanley Feingold and hk cousin James Feingold of Doyles-town. Pa., Leon Fox Jr. of Plymouth Meeting, Pa. and James Fox of Norristown, Pa. Alencon lace accented the After a honeymoon in Chicago, Dr. Feingold will intern at Billings Hospital. He was graduated from Dartmouth College and the Tufts University School of Medicine. Hk bride is an alumna of the University of Michigan. bride’s Empire gown and Watteau train of cameo silk peau de soie worn with jeweied lace toque and tiered veil of illusion. On her mother’s bridal prayer book rested Stephanotk, ivy and a white orchid. ATTENDANTS Sarah Kaminsky of Detroit Should Take Her Clients to Lunch was maid of honor. With Diane Arnkoff, her skter’s bridesmaid, were Ann Falk of Ifills-dale; Susan Lovitt, Southfield, and Judith Wax, Detroit. Dr. Cassius DeFlon of Boston, was best man. UMiers were By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I am employed, on an executive level, by a public service organization. I often meet with clienk to dkcuss business over lunch. These men are doing services for our organizatim. I feel as thou^ lunch should be my treat but, I don’t know how to handle it without making them feel awkward. Another problem that confronts me k thk: We wwk very closely with public officials, many of whom I’ve known for a number of years when I was working as a volunteer. In my present position, I correspond frequently with tjiem. Mrs. C. W. Smith, Checkering Lane, helps her daughter. Sue, pack for a trip to Lake Forest, III. Sue who will be a senior at Kingswood this fall is one of the school’s five representatives at the Lake Forest Conference. Pamela Wacker of Birmingham is another. Thirty schools of the Middle West Association of Schools for Girls sponsor this week’s meetings. It is designed to help the young women share the experience and moral values of their individual schools. Grandmother Is Fed Up As a vSunteer we were all on a first-name bask, but now as a staff member I am wondering if I riiould start a letter with “Dear Bob’’ w if I should become more forinal, use their official title, etc. Summer Visitors a Trial I don’t want to appear too chumiqy, yet I don’t want my old friends to wonder, why, all of a sudden. I’ve become stiff and formal. — Arlene T. Dear Arlene: I agree that you should take these clioits to lunch. The best way to Invite them k to say that your organization would like to have them as its guests for lunch, and convince them that you are not paying out of your own pocket. Open a charge account at a restaurant, or use a credit card, to avoid the awkwardness of a woman paying cash. By ABIGAU. VANBUREN DE^ ABBY: Every year my daughter and her children have vkited us and stayed all summer, and eadigi year the dren grow a lit-| tie bolder. Lastf In writing to yoiur friends, you will sound stilted if you suddenly start to call them “Mr.’’ I would suggest that you use their first names, and yours, in ordinary correspondence. If you m-e writing a very official letter in the name of your (H-ganization, which might well be shown to many pei^le, you should address them as “Mr.’’ and sign your full name. home was bed-1 lam! The children! kept the stereoi going full blast! night and day, ABBY refused to pick up after themselves, ate all day long, and abused our lovely fu^ture. They partied at night and left the mess for me to clean up in the morning. They had their teen-age friends running in and vwt, and never bothered to introduce one of them to their grandfather or me. (Their mother said teenagers NEVER introduce their friends to anyone, not even to their paroik.) I was shocked to hear the rude manner in which those children talked back to their mother, and she didn’t say a word. If I had treated my elders that way, my mother would have worn out a willow switch on me. Summer k upon us, and I am dreading it. Have you any advice for me? GRANDMOTHER DEAR GRANDMOTHER: No advice, just sympathy. If you put up with those hooligans another summer, you’ve asked for it. Apparently you failed to teach your daughter what your mother taught you—respect for one’s elders. For if you had, she’d have passed it on to HER children. And perhaps something else would have been passed on — the willow switch. asked her to please stop payment on it. I found the check today and called the lady back to tell her I had found the check and to apologize for any inconvenience I had caus^ her. She asked me to SEND HER ONE DOLLAR, as thk k what it cost to stop payment on that check! After waiting a year for our money, how could anyone be so miserably cheap? HAMILTON, 0. DEAR HAMH.TON: For people who are mkerably cheap, it comes naturally. DEAR ABBY: I am so mad, I have to unload on someone, so here goes: My husband k self-employed. A year ago he did a job for a customer who lives in a home much more beautiful than anything we could ever af^ ford. Afto- a year, we received a check for thk job. The check was mkplaced (I thought it was stolen) so I called the lady and DEAR ABBY: My pet peeve is the accepted, thou^ asinine system of seating wedding guesk so that the bride’s family and friends are on one side of the church and the groom’s are on the other. When the usher asks me, “Whose side are you on,’’ I always have the urge to say, “Must 1 choose sides? They haven’t even started fighting UNCONVENTfONAL Their parents are the Clare A. Scrivens, Oriole Road, and the John T. O’Donnelk of Elkins Park, Pa. LACE ACCENTS Venke lace hi^dlghted the bride’s sheath gown and detachable train of white linen worn with illusion veil and jeweied tiara. She carried vHiite Sweetheart roses. Hodn' matron was Mrs. Thomas Dvorak of Lansing, with bridesmaids Janet Raymond, Saginaw; Karol Goode, Detroit; Mrs. David Scriven and Mary K. O’DonneU. Michael O’Donnell was best man for hk brother. Lt. Kenneth Bodner of Oscoda ushered with John Bartek, David Solvai and Frank McNeik. The couple will reside in Oscoda where he is stationed at Wurtsmith AFB. She is an alumna of Middgan State University and her husband was graduated The Soroptimist Club of Poo-tiacwUlinstalloffittrsforUSS-87 at a 6:30 pjn. dimw thk evening at Beddl’s. ACROSS Fram The MALL 22S6 EUZUETH lilKE RD. FRORr BOOR NRHHG FE 4^216 Open Men., Thors,* M. 9 to 9 Teas.,Wad..Sal.9to6 1 PLAY ALLS GAMES ATONCE...WIN EARLY AND OFTEN ON EACH AND EVERY GAME Each time you visit your friendly A&P you will receive Book and mark the box specified on the slip with an "X". ABSOLUTELY FREE a BONUS BINGO PRIZE SLIP having There are 12 ways to win on each game — so HOLD ALL a "wash off" patch on the front which conceals the identity SLIPS. You win the prize shown for any game Just by scoring of the game to which the slip applies and the number and any 5 boxes on that game in a straight line—either vertically, letterofthespecificboxyoucanscoreonthatgame.Remove horizontally or diagonally. All boxes containing a printed "X" the "wash-on” patch by holding the slip under running in your Game Book are FREE boxes... and count as scored water and rubbing VERY GENTLY thus revealing the Game ... to help you win. When you have collected the necessary and Box Number. slips to win a prize as indicated in your Game Book, bring and Box Number. slips to win a prize as indicated in your Game Book, bring Locate the designated game in your BONUS BINGO Game them to your friendly A&P and receive your Cash Prize! 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N ' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1966 MAKE flVEB PAfiS^ Yankee Homers Bother McLain, Bengals Split Doubleheader With NY Nine Detroit Takes First Behind Right-Hander; Home Runi Rule 2nd CAUGHT IN THE ACT-Detroit Tigers infielder Jake Wood was nabbed trying to steal second base on this play against the New York Yankees in the fifth inning of the second Phil Rodgers Champ Buick Open Has New Host for Party By FLETCHER SPEARS GRAND BLANC - A new face served as host here yesterday at the champagne party following the $100,000 Ninth Buick Open. Bacheior Phil Rodgers, 28-year-old swinger from LaJolIa, Calif., survived an Amold-Pal-mer-like charge by fellow Californian Tony Lema — originator of the champagne party who served in 1964 and 1965 - to win the $20,000 first prize with a four-under-par 284 over long Warwick Hills. The stocky Rodgers was five stndies behind leader Fred Marti of Baytown, Tex., after 36 boles, bat Marti faded during die SIJMde windnp yesterday while Rodgers fashioned a 71-76-141 to go wfdi his earlier roniids of 76 and 73 over the 7,2N Warwick Hills DETROIT (AP) - Joe Pepi-tone hit two home runs Sunday to bring his season total up to ten, which isn’t bad. Denny Mc-game in Detroit yesterday. Yankees’ short- Lain gave up two home runs, stop Clete Boyer is ready to make a tag . making his season total 16, after taking the throw from catcher Elston which isn’t good. Howard. But McLain also posted his ninth victory of the season in the first game as the Tigers and the Yankees split a doubleheader 7-5 and 12-10. McLain now tops the American League in games won and trails only Juan Marichal and Sandy Koufax, both National Leaguers, each with 11 wins. But McLain would prefer to win his games without the ordeal the Yankees put him through in the seventh and ninth innings. “I died out there,” McLain sighed afterward. “This was the second straight game that I didn’t have a good fart ball,” McLain said. “My curve wa$ great and I had just enough of a hop on the fast ball to get them out. ‘When that went, I was in trouble.” The Tigers, who rapped Yankee starter Mel Stottlemyre for five runs in the first five innings including a three-run homer by Gates Brown, got two more runs off of reliefer Bob Friend in the eighth. HITS TRIPLE Ray Oyler’s triple scored one run and McLain drove in the other with a single. But McLain, with the ’Tigers ahead 7-3 gave up a double to (CoBtinned on Page C-3, Col. 2) The big Buick purse vaulted Rodgers into first place on the PGA money list with official earnings of $57,574, giving him a sli^t edge over Doug Sanders ($57,500.84) odw collected $2,950 in sharing eighth place with Arnold Palmer. ★ ★ ★ Rodgers, whose ailing legs and back forced him to withdraw from the Memphis Open last week, said there was still some pain but observed that “When you’re in contention, you don’t feel the aches and pains.” LONG WAY “I did get tired,” he said. “I played 36 holes earlier in the week. (He shot 143 at Country Club of Detroit Tuesday in qualifying for the U.S. Open) and then the 36 today. It was a long way.” ★ ★ ★ Rodgers pulled the corks from a few champagne bottles with the press corps in celebrating his victory and then headed for San Francisco where he’ll play in the Open this week. Sharing the maner-np spot two strokes back of Rodgers were Johnny Pott of Golf Hills, Miss., who was also second last year, and Kermit Zarley of Yakima, Wash. ’Ibey took home $9,756 each. Lema and Marti tied for fourth at 287 and collected $4,650 apiece. ★ ★ ★ Rodgers is in the midst ot a hot streak that began in March. He pidced up $20,000 for winning the Doral Open and had a string ot 10 straight appearances in which he won $1,000 or more. ’Diat string ended when he bowed out at Memphis. TWO BIRDIES The Buick champ incked up two birdies in his morning round of 70 and he added two more while collecting one bogey in his afternoon 71. ★ ★ ★ A cou|de of excellent shots during the final four holes preserved Rodgers’win. On the par-4, dO-ywd Uth, Rndgeri hit Us drive behind a tree an tte left Me et the fairway. He haaled eat an eighNrsa, ieftei the hoD evck the tree and it hit the 61 feet ftam the pin. He twe-pnttedfsrapnr. On the par-3, 2tt-yard 17th, (Cnrttwed an Page C4, OoL 1) IN WINNER’S aRCLE-(5tocky Phil Rodgers displays his $20,000 chedc and trophy after capturing the Ninth Buick Open at Warwick Hills near Grand Blanc yesterday. Rodgers finished with a four-under-par 284. Farmington golfer Bill Curtis came up with his finest shot early in the second round and it helped him cr.pture the 36-hole Michigan Publinx Medal Play championship over the weekend at Bald Mountain Golf Club. Curtis, 32, carded 72 over the par-71, 6,206-yard course Sat-urday, and he came back with a 70 yesterday, a round that in- Ciytls, Ml RoSerSSU' BiiM"’Mount«iii Vi-ji-iS Cliudt Dwight, Rochctttr ........73-7*-l4» Cliud* Foomel, Detroit ........... Oery Balllet, BeM AAountaIn . 73.76-147 Clan Vallance, Clarkitan .........74.76-1M - ■- ----—— ..7W4-1S1 Sam Lima, Rochester Joe Wilson, Bradbum .... Bill Schwope, Morey's Tkn Baldwin, Sylvan Glen Pete Baker, Hickory Publinx Crown Goes to Farmington Golfer At U. S. Open Site Golfers Testing Links SAN FRANCISCO W - Offi-'ltive Opens since Ben Hogan did cial practice rounds begin today for the 66th U.S. Open Grtf Chanqiionship that starts Thursday on the Olymjric Club Lakeside course. A few fanKMis golfers alr^dy have been over the beautiful, tree-lined course, just a No. 1 wood from the PacUic. But many participated in the Buick Open, won Sunday by Phil Rodgers. Among them were Arnold Palmer and Tony Lema. Gary Player, the South African who won the Open last year, played Lakeside Sunday for the first time in his life. Jack Nicklans was his part- Should Player win, he would be the first to take two consecu- it in 1950 and 1951. BEN PRACTICES Hogan, now 53 years old, apparently is serious about trying to become the only golfer ever to win five U.S. Opens. He has practiced on Lakeside nearly all the past week after the U.S. Golf Association gave him a special exemption from qualifying. w ★ ★ This is not the first time on Lakeside for Hogan, whose overall game matches the requirements for the course. For in 1955, he was an apparent winner of the last Open played at Lakeside until Jack 5Si!ti “ 4 0 10 MAullff* 3b 4 ,. . 0 Oyl«r u 1 0 0 0 McLain p * 000 Podras p 0 0 0 Stwrry p ....York 3, Oefrolf 7. »—RIchardion, Boyar. 3B-Marls, Oylar. ------ (2), Pepllona (7), Barkar McAuima. S-Wood. IP Stotimyra (L, 36) S Dash Record Cracked By the Associated Press Tommy Smith took the headlines away from Jim Ryun in track and field over the weekend. / Smith, of San Jose State College, set a world record of 20 seconds flat for the 220-yard dash around a curve at the Sacramento Invitational championships Saturday night. Ryun, of the University of Kansas, who set a world record for the half mile of 1:44.9 Friday, ran a modest 4:02.8 mile in the U.S, Track and Field Federation national meet at Terre Haute, Ind. The previous Saturday Ryun had beoime the second fastest miler in the world with a 3:53.7 at Los Angeles, just on< I really didn’t get off to a great jump, I’ve had better starts,” Smith said after he had erased the mark of 20.2 set by Henry Carr of Arizona State in 1964. ★ ★ ★ Smith, who is entered in the NCAA Championships at Bloomington, Ind. this weekend, ran the 220 on a straightway last month in 19.5, a pending world record. Fleck birdied two o( the last four regulation holea and then won an 18-hole playoff. That’s the closest Hogan has come since then. ★ W ★ Fleck, then an obscure pro from Davenport, Iowa, apparently has slipped right back into the void. Now a 44-year-old pro from Northbrook, 111., Fleck practiced Sunday at Lakeside, drawing the attention only of his caddy. Player, whose accurate game gives him an excellent shot at a second straight title, fell in line and inredicted a winning total of 284 fw the 72 holes, four over par. "This is a beautiful course,” Player said. “It plays just like it looks. Because of the rough, there is no chipping in the Open. Not one chip shot in 72 holes.” Streak Ends for Tiger Ace DETROIT (AP) - Don Wert, Detroit’s third baseman, missed Sunday’s doubleheader with the New Yoric Yankees, ending his streak of playing in 261 consecutive games. Wert entered a hospital Sunday for observation. The early diagnosis was that he had chest Wert’s playing streak, which began Aug. 11, 1964, is believed to be the longest for a Tiger infielder since Charley Gehringer played 551 codsecutive games in 1927-31. SHARE HONORS Veteran Jim Grelle of Port- OUT IN FR()NT-University land. Ore., and 18-year-okl Tim of Kansas freshman Jim Ryun Danielson of Chula Vista, Calif., »s well in front of the pack High School, shared honors at at this stage of the U.S. the San Diego invitational meet. Track and Field Federation Grelle, voted the Athlete of mile event and he went on to the Ni^t, won the mile in a first place finish in 4:02.8 shy of the Wki mark of 3:53.613:55.4, the 20th time he has been in competition Saturday at held by Michel Jazy of France. I under four minutesL_ Terre Haute, Ind. Yale Athlete Is Cited NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) --Jim Groninger of Aurora, Hi., who played football and lacrosse, received the William Neely Mallwy Award Sunday, Yale’s highest athletic recogni- .74-77-151 .77-75-152 .7577-152 75n-152 7577-152 ... ...74-75153 Hollow 7575154 ......11-73-154 loin ... 7575154 .......7577-154 f ......7575155 M .....77-n-154 ______________________________ 736W54 Roy Con#, Mo^l ................. Ray Karfankl, Hki^ Hollow 77-77-156 _... Hlck^ ii. U.H.. . 7575ir ...7563-15 eluded an eagle on the 368-yard second hole. His drive on No. 2 left Curtis about 90 yards from the green and he sent the ball flying to the green and into the hole with a wedge. Two strokes back of Curtis in the field of 52 was Allan Thompson of Pleaisant Ridge, who held the lead after Saturday’s round with a 71, but he went two over par (73) in yesterday’s finale. ★ ★ ★ Defending champion Dick Robertson of Pontiac finished third, four strokes off the pace at 146. Tom Balliet, also of Pontiac, runner-up last year, was well back with a 163. Sharing fourth with 149s were Gary Balliet, son of Tom; Claude Dwight of Rochester; and Claude Foumel of Detroit. I McClkiteck. Bow Mountobi W.. I Stavtra, Plum Hollow .. TO-a-wj toy Brook*, Broobom ...B-W-Uj 0 Llndgron, Dotrolt ...n 1 Mm, BoM Mounroln ... 64 Wo*lk, BoM Mountoln ...13 1 Lock, LHoe Breo....... ,‘0.‘iiaSU ::::::SS8 povk Oifoit .......... Rudy I CocH P Tliompion, * MeRwwo, English Soccer Team Shuts Out AAexico, 1 -0 MEXICO CITY (AP) - Eog land’s Tottenham Hofaqnirs sprtled the departure of Mexico’s Wbrld Cup team Sunday with a 14) victory over the home side in a game witnessed ' about 75,000 fans. ♦ ★ ★ Tito Hotspurs appear at U. of D. Stadium Friday night Podre* -Horry T-2;22. PopHotio 1 EHoword < Mori* ph Gibb* c HLopoz If 2 1 MAullffO 3i 0 0 wood 2b 2 113 Froohon c 5 1 0 0 0 GBrown If 5 1110 Oyler u 4 4 1 H O Lolldl p 0 5 13 1 Pen# p 0 4 113 Lump# ph 10 0 0 2 110 Clodding p 0 . 2 0 0 0 MForlono ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Spormo p 0 0 0 0 10 10 Demeter ph 1 0 0 0 Sherry p 0 0 0 0 WHorion ph 1 1 1 0 Aguirre p o * " ' 7. 2B—Pepitone, Borfcer, V HR-E.Howord (3), Bo— Tre*h (4), Clinton i 1 1-3 5 5 5 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 1?ff-“l^Lr«ibO,!”-^3^W 41,421. MEDAL CHAMPION-BiU Curtis (left) of Farmington checks his scorecard after winning the 36-bole PubUnx Medal Hay eban^onshh) with an even par 142 over the weekend at Bald Mountain Golf Chib. At ri^t is Allan Tliompson of Pleasant Ridge wbo finiahed $econd at 144. HONDA ond Anderson Sales and Service Lead the THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JtJNE 18. 1066 MAKEDVFBPm C-9 Robert Bothfield Jr. Scaholm High Carl Griesback Kettering High # , *• jr« Arthur Reis III Pontiac Northern •Vfi Fbntiac FVess Comers Graduating h the o Daniel Newman Avondale High Jack Girst Pontiac Central William Rafhburg Lake Orion High Robert Simmer Milford High It is with great pride and satisfaction that The Pontiac Press takes this means to express our best wishes to these Newspaperboys who have graduated from high school and The Pontiac Press with the Class of '66. These young men represent many years of business experience on Pontiac Press routes. Each has operated a business of his own, profitably, efficiently, completely. Each one of the 26 graduates has also recognized the importance of education in his life and in attaining his future objectives. Most of these young men plan to continue their education on the college level. Dan Lovse Pontiac Control THE PONTIiiC PRESS I' \ ' ' ' . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 18. 1966 JflEflVEfrPAfiB MARKETS Trading Is Active The foUowing are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotatioiis are himished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produc/a Appm, Otikiout, c AppiM. Jonathan, O., bv........ Appln, Maclntoah, bu........... Applat, MacIntA, CA., bu....... AppMt, Northarn spy. bu. Northarn Sm CJk., bu. Applai. Staal Rad. bu. Applat, Staal Red, C.A., ou. VIOETASLRS Potatoat, SO Ibi. . Potatoes, 25 lbs. Radishes, Red, 1 d Radishes, V..... ... . Rhubarb, outdoor, dz. bch. , hothouse, 8-lb. I ORSENS' Stock Market Rally Continues NEW YORK (APl-Tlie stock market continued to rally early today in activii^ trading. Several unusually big blocks were traded, both in the glamor issues and in the blue chips which started coming to life in Friday’s sharp advance. metals, drugs and rubbers as well as by the high-flying color televisions, electronics, airlines nd aerospace issues. General Motors supplied leadership by advancing % to 81% on an opener of 10,000 shares. Collard, gi.... ................... Mustard, bu............ ........... »rrel, bu.......................... Spinach, bu......................... Turnips, bu.............. LETTUCE AND OREENS Lettuce. Bibb, pk. bskt........... Lettuce, Boston, dz............... Lettuce, Leaf, bu.................. Lettuce, Romaine, bu............... American Telephone resumed its snapback, advancing % to 54T'b on an opening block of 16.000 shares. Eastern Airlines opened on 50.000 shares, unchanged at 113%. GAINS MADE Gains were made by motors, steels, chemicals, nonferrous Braniff Airways and Motorola opened on sizable blocks, up about 4 points each. Zenith and Polariod rose about 2 each. Up a point or so were du Pont, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Xerox, Raytheon, Kennecott and New York Central. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Pan American World Airways, up 1% at 72 on 19,300 shares; Chrysler, up % at 41% on 6,100; and Commonwealth Edison, off V4 at 49 on 5,000. On Friday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 3.6. New Optimism on Viet War U. S. Officials Believe Turning Point Nearer in the Coolil St=L Weathers the Word Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange. Up about a point were Oak Electro-Netics and Westec. Fractional gains were made by Creole Petroleum, Seaboard World Airlines, Giannini Controls, Edo Corp. “A” and Scurry Rainbow Oil. By SAM DAWSON AP Bntiaess News Aualyst NEW YORK-Weather is giving the air-conditioning industry mpre concern than President Johnson’s plea for restraint in spending by consumers and in plant expansion b y business. WASfflNGTON (AP) - High On the plus, administration officials believe side, cooling exexpanding U.S. combat opera-perts are basing tions in Viet Nam may hasten a big hopes just turning point in the war against now on Medi-^ care, the educa-' explosion Communist conquest in South Viet Nam. A new tone of optimism is apparent in official comment here, although it is not universally shared. Some highly placed officials fear that the miUtary gains now being registered may be frustrated by new politically affect the air-conditioningiof hot weather in some parts of violence in South Viet Nam or The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs NEW YORK (API-Following ii of selected stock transactions on t1 York Stock Exchange with noon DETROIT (API—Prices paid per pound| — A— ■ No. 1 live poultry; roasters heavy «-■— e 2T-27Vj; broilers and fryers 3--' Ites 20'/>-22. DETROIT POULTRY AlcanAlu .80 Alleg Cp .lOe AllegLud 2.20 ____________; 90 B M'/j; 89 C 63'/4; cars 90 B iS'/x; 89 C 64 Vx. s steadier; wholesale buying prices Eggs steadier; wholesali inchangad to 1 higher; alter grade A whites 31 nedlums 27,^ 57% - % I 21% 21 21 I 24% 25% 25'/l 36 16% 14% 14% -I- Atchlson Stocks of Local Interest “ Flgurei AtICLIne 3a jAt1Rich^^2.4r decimal points are eighths corg 1 OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations trom the NASD are re sentative inter-dealer prices ot appi... mately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices not Include retail markup, markdown commission. Avon Pd 1.20 Bid A: Citizens Utilities Class A Monroe Auto Equ--------- Diamond Crystal . Safran Printing . MUTUAL FUNDS 79 44% 45% 44 4 104 74% 74% 74% 87 2% 2% 2% 4 81 33% 33% 33% sSfse^asi 331 70% 49% 49Vj 4 4 33% 33% 33% . 32 35 34% 34% - 15 44% 43% 83% 4 5 44% 44% 44% . 207 70% 49% 70% 4 Affiliated Fund........ Chemical Fund ......... Commonwealth Stock Keystone Income K-1 Keystone Growth k Putnam Growth ........ Television Electronics Wellington Fund ...... Windsor Fund . American Stock Exch. 31 72% 72% 72% - 38 40% 40% 40'/j 4 5 43% 43% 43% 4- I . Cert-teed .80 „ »h.iCessnaA 1.40 nilnn'champS 2.20 Ches Oh 4 M^lChlMil StP 1 2.40 59 109% PepsiCo 1.40 PhelpD 3.40a PfIzerC 1.20a Phila El 1.48 72% 72% 72% - ' 35 38% 38% 38% .. 4 12% 12 12% .. 50 45 43% 65 4 45 53% 52% S3 (hds.) High Law Last 10 14 34% 34% 34% . .. 2 4 75% 74 75% 42% a 33 32% 32% 32% ' I 27 33 32% 32% 5 33 32% 33 and the complicated technical fields fascinating the nation’s in- i the by some strategic shift part of Communist forces. ADMINISTRA’nON LINE However the dominant administration line as developed primarily by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara and apparently supported by Secretary of State Dean Rusk is that political turmoil among the South Vietnamese this spring had caused only temporary — even though serious — setbacks to the anti-Communist fight 'substantial military progress” has been made in recent weeks. Pitney Bow 1 PItPlete 2.60 Pit Steel Polerold .20 57% 57% 41% -.16 - % 4 14% 14% - ■ 4 145 145% ■ 28 457% 45% 4nj- teadlng < (elchCh . 3 27% 27% 27% 4 4 13% 13 13% 4 SO 40% 40 40% 4 Rexell .30b Reyn Met .7.4 Reyn Tob 2 RheemM 1.20 54 37% 34% 37% 4 93 59’% 59 59% 4 iia a Rohr Corp T RoyCCole .40 Roy Dut .89* RyderSys .40 8 25% 25% 144 12% 12% 23 40% 40 Sefeway St l StJosLd 2.60 SLSenFren 2 StRegP 1.40b i 18 17% 17% 4 r 41 40% 41 4 I 39% 39% 39% Schenley 1.40 Schering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b — pwr J IdahoPw 1.30 Ideal Cem I IllCenInd 2.40 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 inland StI 2 InuirNoAm 2 InterlkSt 1.80 IntBusM 4.40 5 23% 23% 23% —1— 2 32% 32% 32% 4 % 5 17% 17% 17% 4 4 737/k 73% 73% - I 10 35% 35% 35% - ' 78 351 ■“ ■“ .. ,... 41% 45% 4 29 44% 43% 44% - 49 90% 90 90% 4 14 10 9'% 10 70 28% 28% 28% 79 71'/i 71% 71% 4 2 26% 26% 26% 4 ShellTra SherWm i.™ Sinclair 2.40 SIngerCo 2.20 SmIthK 1.80* SouPR Sugar SouCalE 1.25 South Co .94 SouNOai 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 Sperry Rand Square D .40 StdBrand 1.M JohnMan 2.20 johntnj 1.40a JonLogan .80 42 41% 40% i 37 38% 37% 3 —K— StanWar 1.50 StauffCh 1.40 SterlDrug .80 StevensJP 2 Studebaker KImbClark 2 11 111 110% 111 4 8 37% 37 37% 4 4 6P^ 47% 47% 4 1 74% 74% 74Va 4 14 51 50% 50% 4 Korvette Kresge wl Kroger 1.31 29 25Vj 25% 25% 4 % Lear Sleg .40 LehPorCem 1 Leh Val Ind Lehman 1.49e LOFGIs 2.80a LIbbMcN .27t ti« * ■ • IngsO .431 :khdA 2.20 13 43% 43% 43%- % ChHtCH 1.1 19 3% 3% 3Vi4 ^ 28 4% 4% 4%- %|CITj;n 1. 20 31% 31% 31H-4 102 10% 10% 10% CampbChll CanSo Pel IUV4 tore 8%*81'H44 •“ 5-14 2%41-14lCBS LoneSGa 1.12 LonglaLt 1.08 Lorlllard 2.50 LuckySt lAOb Lukens StI 1 §?rywide Rlty Creole P 2.40a Data Cont' Col Gas 1.34 ComICre 1.80 ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comsat Con Edit 1.80 ConElecInd 1 CnNGat 2.70 ConsPow 1.90 Containr 1.20 I 13% 12% 12%- % Cont Can 2 Gulf Am Ld Hycon Mfg Itram Corp Kaiser Ind 4 10% 10% 10%4 ' Cont AAot .40 ContOII 2.40a Control Data Corn Pd 1.60 CorngGWk 2a McCrory wt Ahead John I 12% 12% 12%4 ’ Sperry R wt «»-*'-m In X Cp .40 I 34% 35% 34%4 ’% I 93% 92% 92%4I% „ I 13% 13% 13% UnControl .20 14 4% 4% 4%- Copyrlghted By The Associated Press DanRiv 1.20b DaycoCp SOb Day PL 1.24 Deere l.*0a Delta Air 1 DenRCW 1.10 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)—The C*l Of the Treasury compared t ---------- a yejr ago._^^ 5449,195,408.30 8 8,444,557,449. 'T2^9«,2M,^.m'*“'i11,’s544S3,187.06 Withdrawals Fiscal Year 135495r4M,S32.94 118450,802,909. X—Total Debt 322J0IL201,345.00 319414,421,744.45 0®“ ^?*t*--------14.291.419,004 n459,797.53 debt n \ limit. 3434,09^.88 Udes imMt a statut^ III \ BOND AVERAGES \ complied ^ The AOSKlated^PreU^ Milt led. UtH. Fgn. L. Yd ^ Day . 784 95.1 Slo nil SI Xr-tTgo a? Jii 84 ^ ^ Yoar 4ip . tt.5 1«.2 “• rH*R : ir«4 Low .. 1945 High ; 1 = S 17 40% 40% 40% 13 48’% 48% 48'% 4 30% 30% 30% 138 72 70% 70% 8 64% 45% 44% -H% Marquar .25e "irq Cmt I ...jrtlnAAor 1 MayDStr 1.40 AAaytae 1.40a McC^ .40b AAon^ liol MontOU l.f 7 19’k 19% 19’k 50 32% 32% 32% -t 23 15% 14% 15% 4 DomeMn 80a Doug Alrc lb Dow Ch^2 Dreu Ind 1.25 28 41% 40% 41% - : 84 85% 83% 83% -V 37 48% 48% 48% 8 29 28% 28% + ' ? 31 30% 31 + = - —• 39% - EatonYa l.X EC8iG .20 ElPasc— ’ EmerEI 1.32 82 28% ■ -i- 53 13Vj 13% 13% + __E— 770 114% 112% 113 - 52 139% 138% 139 + 12 59% 58% 59 4- 3 22% 22% 22’-% 4- 13 19% 18’% 19 + 11 59% 59 59 - % 7 24% 24% ■ no 20 19 —F— FalrCam .SOg 218 174% 171' 19 -1 Fair Hill Fensteel ww. FadderCp M FedDStr 1.70 Ferro Cp 1.20 — I iJO 171% 75 17% 17% 17% 54 32% 31% 32% 2 13% 13% 13% 18 88 84% 85 9 31% 5% 28% 2 50% 50% 50% 38 45% 45% 45% 55 14% 13% 14% 12 18% 17% 17% 5 42% 43% 43’/S .. 37 * 70 89% -% 9 44% 44'A 44% 4 27 31 30'4 30% 4 14 14% 14% 14% . 15 21% 21% 21% i fl% insts , 74'% 73% 74% + % 24% 24'-k 24% — % W n% 74% ^ 4-1% 2^ SI S 8 . _ 41% „ 23% 23% 85 34'% 34% 34% - % »Ti than Pmi-8 I St— •i-Hm and refrigeration industry’s prospects over the next five says WUIiam H. Roberts, president of the ^k Division of Boqr-Wamer. “The reason is that ak-coodltionlng now is considered a necMsity rather than It’s not thot we question the president’s persuasive powers," DAWSON A. J. Hackl, president of Worthington Air Conditioning Co., explains. “We agree spending cutbacks will be made in certain areas as a result of his request. But air-conditioning no longer can be considered a nonessential item, either for businessmen or home owners.” ANOTHER ’THING But weather is another thing. I And a late cool spring has cut the sale of room coolers while “A temporary curtailment in other consiimer durable g(^s spending should not sustantial-lwere booming. Sudden arrival the nation belatedly ha* sent sales up smartly. Borg-Wwmer says its May sales were the hi^t tar any month in its history. But the industry is looking beyond the window cooler to the centrsl air conditioner for homes and the use in hospitals, schools, office buildings and factories. 5-Death Slate Crash Puts Weekend Road Toll at 20 Sales of central units for homes were around 600,000 in 1965, but Trane Co. predicts 1970 vrill see 1 million units sold. It also notes 75 per cent of ail new apartment house units built in 1965 were air-conditioned. The Air Conditioning and Refrigeration Institute adds that 51,626 residential unit systems were exported last year. Expected demand for new hospital and education facilities —plus the trend to put college programs on a year-round basis —is expected by some industry experts to offer about 50 per cent of the growth potential for large conditioning systems in the next few years. Medicare may expand the already pressing need for more hospital rooms, and more comfortable ones. 24 29 28% 28’% 18 41 39% 41 17 43% 43% 43% 14 34% 34<% 34’% . .. 141 43 42% 42% 43% In a joint news conference with Rusk at the White House Saturday, McNamara also told reporters that offensive operations by the United States, ^uth Vietnamese and allied forces had frustrated plans of the Communist high command for a 'monsoon offensive.” Other officials indicate that the total amount of damage which allied forces are now able to inflict on Communist forces is almost in balance with the gains which the Communists are able to make by way of infiltration of troops from North Viet Nam and recruitment in the south. 581 80% 78’% 79% 41% 14 32% 31% 32'% 4 •' x4 45% 45% 45'% - II Oil 1.90 7 47% 47% 47% -24 47'-k 44% 47’% 4 | 24 »% 29% 30% 5 28% 28% 28% ^ 20 34 35% 35% - % 18 48’% 48% 48% ■' 445 23% 23'% 23% 33,IM GAIN Administration officials have claimed that in the first four months of this year — January through April — the North Vietnamese sent 19,000 men through the jungle roads and trails into South Viet Nam — an average of about 4,700 a month. In the same priod about 14,000 fighters are estimated to have been added to Viet Cong forces through recruitment in the south. The gross gain from the two sources totaled about 33,000. 15 40’% 60% 4^ + '% 14 10% 10'% 10'% • 27% 27% - ' 84 71% 70% 71% ^ 1.05 32 21'% 21 „ - % 117 123% 121% 121% 41-2 17% 17% 7% — 42 45% 45'% 45% 4 20 17% 17'/4 17'% 4 27 41'A 40% 41% . - «r UGaKp 1.7 UnlIMM 1.) US Borax 1 us li.._____ US LlnM 2b US Rub 1.20 USSmalt .50* 18 25% 25 25% 4 % 29 52% 52% 52% 4 24 38% 37% 37% — ' ,J iL. 8% SK; ¥' 13 29% 29% 29% -4 ] 40 57% 57% 57% 4- ' II 21% 2I<% 28% 4 ' 14 30% M 30 4 ' 45 55% 54 55% 4 ' 2 47% 87'% 87% 21 75% 75% 75% 4 —V— 24 33% 22 33% 41% « 71% m |%-% 4T r k 57 22% 32% 22% 18 I8M 303% 208 7 23 13% 23 —N— 98 93% 90% 91% 41% ^ ^ ssw - “ as ^ WUnTal 1.40 wtatgEi 1.40 Weyerbr 1.40 Whirl Cf 1.80 While M WinnDIx IJt Xerox Corp 1 111 YngttSM 1.W ZanltbRad nl Copyrlglitad by if J 1 14% 14% 14% ■ “ t 5 S% » 21% 4 % *22% 2,%-% U 110% 109% 109% 4 % SS + x71 41% 41% 41% . . 1 24% 24% 14% + ' i 11% 11% 11% + ' r 22% 22% 22% - ' I 73% n,'* +>' —w— 17 13% 13% 13% 4 % 33 30% M “ 4 33 33 _ 140 52% 51 51 41 5 31% 31% 31%-% SO 41 40% 41 41% 119 51 57% 51 — 7 37% 37 37 3 45 44% 45 $0 43% 43'/4 43< 3 32% 33% 32> . . 85 33% 33% 33% 4 % _ IS 38% 38 38% + % _X-Y-Z— Til* Awodatad Frau II pMrsiion. w S%- i." 5^ arre8nr'.„*«L Mlowing (ocitnotaa. ^ . jSrcjaysr.T,® an aecumulaHva laaua dW ■*£’ By the Associated Press Five victims of a fiery four-car crash near Berrien Springs Saturday night were among 20 killed in Michigan’s weekend traffic. ’The Berrien County sheriff’s office continued its investigation of the crash today, trying to unravel details of the tragic smashup which also injured five. It took place on U. S. 31 near Berrien Springs. Dead were Alfred Floyd Sel-mon, 18, of Fireford, W. Va.; John LaRue Jr., 25, of Niles; his wife, Grace, 26; Mrs. LaRue’s son, Ronald Herron, 7, and Joy Kiczenski, 14, of Niles. OTHER VICTIMS Other traffic victims: Charles E. Thome, 19, of Kalkaska, when he was struck by a car Sunday on M66 in Kalkaska Township. Joseph DeBonnville, 15, of Roseville, Saturday of injuries suffered Friday when his car hit a tree in Roseville. Birmingham Dem Quits Senate Race Able to obtain only half of the 20,000 required nominating signatures, one of the three Democratic candidates for U. S. senator, James L. Elsman of Birmingham, has withdrawn from the race. An attorney, Elsman said today he was considering a U. S. Supreme Court test of the constitutionality of the “burden-some requirement (for petitions) which even better known candidates have had trouble meeting.” Elsman commented that he entered the race not expecting to win but of a public interest to push the other two candidates, Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavana^ and former Gov. G. Mesnen Williams into commitments on certain critical issues. Clemens, when Pried’s struck a tree in Clinton Township Saturday. Mrs. Hazel M. Muehleison, 64, of near Maybee, when the car in which she was riding and an auto collided Sunday night at an intersection near Milan. Peter Parys, 74, of Detroit, when his car was struck broadside Sunday night at an intersection in Dearborn Heights. 2-CAR COLUSION Jack Bates, 29, of Ypsilanti, in a two-car collision Sunday night in the Detroit suburb of Garden City. Albert Dixson, 13, of Flint, Sunday in a c^lision between his bicycle and a car. Ray LaTume, 53, of Port Huron, was killed Saturday when his car was struck by a Grand Trunk Western freight ...______________ _it divMand mealing. The election law regarding petitions, said Elsman “denies the poor-man candidate and the candidate who has no coercive power over groups of people, such as the mayor of Detroit, an equal opportunity to put together the organization necessary to do the drudgery work of getting signatures. “Besides requiting too many signatures, the law discriminates between political parties by being based on the number of votes cast for Secretary of State at the last election,” Elsman said. GOP CANDIDATES “Republican U. S. Senate candidates need onlf half that of the Democrats or 11,000 signatures.” Finally, Elsman said, “th cM-CalM. x-¥Ex dividand. ¥r-Sx — and jala* In fulL x-dla--ax dlilrRw-xr^ rIgMt. xw^mwul ww-I. ww With warranlt. wd-Wban dla- signatures are often ..................IdStot leas for they only indi^t^ the signer does not. object to you being on the ballot, or worse, that the signer doesn’t understand at all, but will sign just to avoid being delayed any longer.” train at a crossing near the Port Huron city limits. Pamela Lynn Hargrove, months, of Benton Harbor, was killed Saturday when she ran onto a highway and was struck by a car about five miles north of Coloma. James Bertram Arscott, 22, Rochester, died Friday when his sports car ran into the side of a tractor-trailer leaving a construction site in Pontiac Township. DOUBLE FATAL ’Thomas Land, 26, Lake Linden, and Frank Klarich, 23, Calumet, were killed Saturday in a headon collision on M26 about a mile south of Laurium. James Buchanan, 23, of Quincy, died Saturday when the car in which he was riding ran off road south of Albion and struck a tree. William Babcock, 58, Middle-bury Township, died Saturday when his pickup truck ran off a road in Shiawassee County and struck a tree. Percy A. Price, 22, and Gloria Mullen, 22, both of Mount Klan Leader's Trial Delayed NEW PROCESSES A challenging market is industrial technological needs. Chemical, fertilizer and steel companies are using increasingly lower temperature processes. Some call for temperatures below minus 100 degrees Fahrenheit. Food processing, the biggest customer of the cooling industry, is still expanding, as are the printing and textile industries. Sales of auto air-conditioners were around 2.5 million units in 1965 and are expected to hit 4.5 million units in 1970. Growing concern over air pollution is counted upon to boast a sideline of the air-conditioning Honeywell, which makes electronic air cleaning units, says sales are mushrooming. It puts industry sales at $6 million in 1961 and |20 million in 1965, with a goal of |70 million by 1970 when makers think one 'Of every 10 new homes will be so equipped. Viet Guerrilla Hurls a Spear at Marine WASHINGTON OPI - A federal judge delayed today the contempt of congress trial of Ku KIux Klan leader Robert M. Shelton until Sept. 12. By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “A few years ago, I wanted to invest in a safe, long* term stock. I bought shares in First National Bank of Chicago, which I notice has recently dropped in price. I an 14 years ok" and plan to use this money for college. Should 1 stick with First Natkmai Bank of Chicago or switch into something faster?” M.P. A. You own shares in a ma-jrx* Chicago bank which is strong and excellently managed. I believe your stock has come down in price — together with others in its group — because of the rising cost of time deposits. Earnings have been gaining over the past two years and should be up again in 1966. At this stage of the market, I don’t think you would be prudent to switch into a faster stock. I advise you to hold your bank stock — a safe, long-term issue — and wait for changing money conditions which could return the bank stock group to favor. SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — 'Ibe U.S. Marines reported today that a guerrilla hurled a 6-foot spear at a Marine sentry, standing guard at an outpost near the coastal city of Chu Lai. The spear missed the sentry, the Marines said, but hit his guard shack. A Marine patrol, led by a sentry dog, went after the spear thrower. He got away when the dog lost the scent at a street. Donald Ingland of 4290 Cass-EUzabeth, Waterford Township, reported to township police yesterday theft of a canoe, valued at $100. A break-in and theft of $50 at Turner Auto Service, 49 E. Walton, was reported yesterday morning to Pontiac Police. Chief Justice Matthew McGuire of the U.S. District Court ordered the delay after Shelton’s attorney, Lester V. Chalmers Jr., said it would take one to two weeks to try the case. The govemmeat had estimated earlier the trial would last only one day. Shelton, named by the House committee on Un-American Activities as imperial wizard of (the United Klans of America, appeared in court dressed neatly in a blue suit and blue tie. He would not speak to newsmen. If convicted, be faces a fine of between $100 and $1,000 and a prison sentence of from month to one year. FrMav'i 18» Fa- 1%. *1 Fay-■can ri*E tBCBr-OMITTID J5 0 8-21 4-J9 R FMklom ' .It Q Q. “My savings account is adequate and I have Comsat; General Motors; IBM; du Pont; Pfizer; Standard of New Jersey and others. I know nothing about bonds but have $19,aM which 1 would like to invest in this medium to balance my stock holdinp, as yon have frequently advised. What issues do you suggest?” L. T. A. It is quite true that I have been recommending a backlog of good bonds, since yields on some issues have gone up to usually high levels. You must understand, however, tiiat bonds are subject to fluctuation on money rate conditions, although at current prices the risk of any substantial decline appears negligible. For your purpose, I like American Telephone SVta of 2001, seU-ics to yield 5.20 per cent. I also suggest Commonwealth Edison 5^ of 1996, offered at News in Brief Prominent Conductor Dies in Italian Clinic 20 Railroads IS Uflittlai .......... 40 Sends ............... 10 HIglwr orad* rails . iX. a? IS:? m a; laj ...4714 ...W.9 (Copyright IMI) FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -(Conductor Hermann Scherchen, one of Ekin^’s leading champions of modem music, died Sunday in a local clink. He had suffered a heart attack Tuesday night. Although he made his conducting debut in 1911, he did not make his first appearance in the United States until Novmber 1964. he was well-known to Americans because of his many recordings, which ranged from Bach to the avant-garde. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1966 —Television Programs— Ffogram* fumithad by ttatioiw listadi bi this column aro «ubIoc»loclMn8« without noHeo ' ' " 2-WJOK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXY2-TV. O-OgW-TV, SO-WKlb^TV. 80-WTVl "* TONIGHT C:N (1) (I) News, Weather, Sports (7) (Color) Movie: “Cha^ Uoofie Caboose’’ (I960) ' Molly Bee, Edgar ^han-an. j (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Superman (56) Friendly Giant | 6:15, (56) Children’s Hour f;|l (2) (4) (Color) Network News (9) Marshall Dillon (50) Little Rascals (56) Museum Open House 7:00 (2) Dobie Gillis (4) (Color) George Pierrot (9) Movie: “The Red Pony” (1949) Myma Loy, Robert Mitchum, Louis ' Calhern (50) Soupy Sales (56) (Special) Civil Rights 7:30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) (Color) Hullabaloo (7) 12 O’clock High (50) (Color) Lloyd Thax-ton i 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (4) (Color) John Forsythe (56) Great Books 3:30 (2) (Color) Lucille Ball (4) (Color) Dr. Kildare (7) Jesse James (50) Merv Griffin (56) To Speak With Friends 8:55 (9) News 9:00 (2) (Color)Andy Griffith (4) (Color) John Davidson (7) Shenandoah (9) To Be Announced (56) U.S.A. 9:30 (2) (Color) Hazel (7) Peyton Place (56) Japan: Enchanted Isles 10:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) (Color) Run for Your Life (7) Avengers (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee (50) (Color) Talent Scouts 10:30 (9) (Special) Jazz 625 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) H 51 ^54 1 bb 58 .t; -s. j . Path to Doctor Is Busy One By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP) - Things a columnist might never know if he didn’t open his mail: Smne 122 million Americans — six out of 10 — visited their doctors last year. As usual, the women outnumbered t h e men. Your chances of becoming a centenarian are getting better all the time. There are now more than 12,-wfao have reached the age of ★ ★ Science may not be able to cure wrinkles — but at long ’ it feels it knows what caused them. They are believed to result from the gradual loss of a chemical called hyaluronic acid, which helps hold water in skin tissues. If you want to sell somebody something during office hours, avoid Mondays and Fridays. A survey found that salesmen make most sales on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, and prospects were more likely to buy in the morning than in the afternoon. MILESTONE COMING The nation now has 95.6 million licensed motor vehicle drivers. At this rate, the country should soon reach a historic milestone: It’ll have more front than back seat drivers. Prosperity note: Most people are living higher on the hog — but more are going bnAe, too. Personal ban^ptcies tripled from 51,000 in 1955 to 163,400 in 1965. ★ ★ ★ If you’re on a long auto trip through the South, you can always pause for a iM'eak in Hot Coffee, Miss. Why do you wake up feeling tired? Well, if you weigh 150 pounds and shift positions four times an hour, that means you’ve had to move about 4,800 pounds during eight hours of sleep. NOTED TEETOTALER History lesson: Can you the First Lady who dried up the White House? She was Sarah Polk, a noted teetotaler and wife of the 11th U.S. president, James Polk. During his administration, 1845 to 1849, no liqiKV served at presidential receptions. Life must have been pretty empty for teen-agers before 1890. It wasn’t until theq that U.S. doctor devel(^>ed peanut butter, thus making possible the chief fodder of modem youth the peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Other side of the problem: Listen magazine reports the experience of a researcher on juvenile delinquency who called 10 homes at 9 p.nL to check if the parents knew where their children were at that hour. “My first five calls,” he said, “were answered by children who had no idea where their parents were.” Worth remembering: “If you insist on a place in the sun, you must expect s(»ne blisters.” BUDGET BOOM There’s no business that booms like government business. In less than 3% decades, the U.S. federal budget has increased from $3.5 billion to nearly $100 MUion. Folklore: Small ears are a sign of stinginess. Peopie with dimples in their chins or cheeks never commit murder. Wear a red string around your neck and you’ll never get rheumatism. Children bom in summer are more intelligent than those born in winter. It was Finley Peter Dunne who observed, “Nothing makes a man so mad as when somethin’ he looked down on as in-teriw turns on him.” People in the New^ By The Associated Press India’s Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is planning a trip soon to Moscow, her pi;ess secretary announced today in New Delhi. Her talks with Soviet leaders reportedly will deal with Soviet misgivings about Mrs. Gandhi’s economic policies, which have included attracting private American investors rather than concentrating on the “public sector” in India’s mixed economy. The Soviet Union and its economic aid — about a billimi dollars committed thus far— Indira Gandhi play an important role in India’s economic planning. Veteran Actor Grows Better in Hospital Actor Edward G. Robinson, 72, who suffered abdominal injuries in a Los Angeles trafiic accident Wodiwsday, sras improving \ at ML Sinai Hospital, officials reported last night. A hosptial spokesman said Robinson would remain in the hospital another 11 to 14 days. BfttlNSON lie actor underwent 4H hoars surgery to repair abdominal Mood vesseb after the accident in which his car struck a tree. Graham Aide Denies Deficit Report Said Crusade Behind on Donations LONDON (UPI) - A spokesman for Billy Graham’s crusade denied a newspaper report that the evangelist’s organization was economizing because it faces a possible deficit of $70,-000 in its $840,000 budget. Walter Smyth, crusade director and vice president of the Billy Graham Evangelist Association, said in a statement: ‘'At this point, the crusade is fMiowing a norma) pattern. It is hard to say now that at the close of the crusade, there will he ei^r a surplus or a deficit. But from ali the indications, all bills will be met.” Smyth’s statement was in answer to a Daily Telegraph story that quiXed other published reports as saying that donations from churches fell short by about $56,000 and that collections at Graham’s ni^tly meetings at Earl’s Court Arena were less than expected. Meanwhile, the North Carolina evangelist planned to spend the day in meditation in preparation for tonight’s sermon. He and his wife, Ruth, had tea with Dr. A. Michael Ramsey, the Anglican archbishop of Canterbury, yesterday afte^ noon. Earlier yesterday, Graham preached in SL Mathew’s Parish Church in Brixton, a poor district M London hea^y populated by immigrants. The diurch was filled to overflowing, and even ^le sepices were in progress, (nhamVame outside to preach to those who had been unable to get in. ‘You don’t have to come to Earl’s Court to find Christ,” be them. “You don’t , have to be inside a church! you cRfi find him outside.” 0^ Mnkers LONDON (UPI) - British Labor leaders today sought a meeting with officials of the seamen’s union to find a “common view” for ending the nation’s crippling maritime strike. The strike, which has idled 23,377 seamen and 880 ships of Britain’s 2,S00-venel merchant marine, entered its fifth weel today. National Uahm of Seamen (NUS) remained ada-mant in its demands tor a shorter woitweek and m o r e pay despite pressure from both the Labor government and the powerful TYades Union Congress to reach a compromise settlement. “The first step toward a settlement is for the National Un- ion of Seamen and ouraelvaa to come to a commoa view,” said George Woodcock, general secretary of the Ttades Union Coogresi (TUC). the British equivalent of the U.S. AFL-CIO. Woodcock, who nude an un* the dispute by meeting With fiw NUS executive council Friday, said he would seek ftnlber meetings to develop a tkm which the pi ganization could support TV SERVICE OOLOII-BUBK > WHITE SWEETS TIUimiON IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT BUILDER^”^ FREE PLANS and ESTIMATES-NO CHARGE CALL FE 8-9880 KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OCQC COMPLETE *09 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ0 COMPLETE *99 INCLUDES: Upper an< Lower Cabinets, Counte Tops, Sink with Faucets I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIAAATE AND PLANS - NO CHARGE 15 W. 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