ThB Weather U.I. WMNMr PartuM FlnrriM, Wanner (Mtito M Pw U VOL. 128 NO. 295 ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. .TUESDAY. JANuiRY 18. 1966 '--32 PAGES Home Edition UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL J ASSOCIATED PRESS ID* it 7X)00 More Troops FranceDefends Euromarf Veto GIVE GOP VIEWS - Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, R-IU., left, and House Minority Leader Gerald Ford, R-Mich., acknowledge applause with a wave and a grin after giving their views last night of President Johnson’s State of the Union message. The two Republican congressional leaders found a lot wrong with the President’s message and voiced their criticisms before a partisan crowd. GOP-Blows Hot and Cold! oh Viet, Say Demoaats ! 1!“'! f' j"® Trial Today WASHINGTON UPl — “State of the Union”1ieclara-tions by Republican congressional leaders have triggered Democratic charges that the GOP is “blowing both hot and cold on Viet Nam” and does a better job of talking than acting on domestic problems. Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen and House GOP leader Gerald R. Ford presented their | son Jr. televised and broadcast report last night—five nights after President Johnson delivered his State of the Union message. Dirksen counseled a continued quest for peace coupled with a continued military effort — in- Is Threatened ★ ★ ★ ’This brought a prompt charge from Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D- Pa., that Dirksen is “blowing hot and cold’’ on Viet Nam. * ★ ♦ An Oakland County Circuit Court jury of seven men and five fromen was to bdgin deliberations this afternoon in the murder trial of Alan Ross Pear- Nationwide Rail Strike WASHINGTON (AP) — Union President H. E. Gilbert said today that the seven-year-old railroad Hremen’s dispute could erupt in a new nationwide Mrike crisis March 31 unless the railroads agree to bargain and restore at least half the 17,500 jobs eliminated in the past two years. Gilbert, president of the AFlr CIO Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemmi and Enginemen, said the union will attempt to get an agreement first with six major railroads and then extend the pattern to the rest of the approximately 160 railroads of the nation. Gilbert said at a news conference that if the railroads refuse to start bargaining in a smail group, it could lead to a nationwide strike crisis if the union found that necessary to protect its interests. The 17,500 firemen’s jobs were eliminate under a special 1963 compulsory federal arbitration law. The arbitration ruling under the law expires at midnight march 31. The six railroads with which the union is seeking to bargain first are the Chesapeake & Ohio-Baltimore & Ohio; the Norfolk & Western; the Atlantic Coast Line; the Louisville and Nashville; the Santa Fe, and the Southern Pacific. In Today's Press County Growth Oakland hard-pressed to keep pace with population boom. - PAGE B-1. Apportionment State Supreme Court asked to approve Republican plan. — PAGE B-S. \ Havana Talks Observers feel China emerged with slight edge over Russia. — PAGE A-l. Area News ..... A-4 Astrology........ B-l Bridge ........... B-t Crossword Puzzle ... C-11 Comics ........... B-t Editorials .... A4 Markets ...........C-l Obituaries ...... . C-4 Sports ......; C-l—C-J Theaters ........ B-3 TV-Radio Programs C-11 Wilson, Earl C-U Women’s Pages B-4—B-7 it it -k The < 17 - year - old Waterford Township toy is charged with the June 27 slaying of Jeffrey Talbot, 17, of 2045 Watkins Lake, Waterford Township. ’Che judge, James S. Thor-bum, tastructed the jury on the law at noon today following closing arguments of Amt Proseortor Bernard Paige and defense counsel Clarence Smith. Thorbum told the jurors that they could return with one of four verdicts: guflty of first or second degree mitfder or man- “While purporting to support President Johnson’s Viet Namislaughter or find him innocent. * k * Pearson of 1127 Alhi gave himself up to state police about 45 minutes after the fatal stabbing of Talbot near Talbot’s house. He contends he acted in self-defense. policy, it would seem that he is nonetheless in favor of escalating the war if the President’s peace offensive is not immediately successful,’’ Clark said. BUDGET DRIVE Fwd vowed a budget-cutting drive aimed at Johnson’s domestic spending proposals. , Democratic National Chairman John M, Bailey said Ford’s statements show “that the Republicans do a fine job of talking. But they are not so good when it comes to acting.’’ The GOP leaders gave their views to a nation that they said faces drooping prestige pbroad and inflationary Democratic spending at home. I126BILUON Reviewing the world situation, Dirksen said that despite $120-billion spent on foreign aid, “our prestige on the world thermometer of good will has dropped fast and far.” » He called for continuing war and peace efforts in Viet Nam. In each, he said, there can be “no substitute for victory” — no wiMrawal and no negotiation from weakness which “would mean defeat before we ever readied tfie negotiatioi table. ★ ♦ ■ ★ “Let the peace efforts continue,” he said. “Let the military effort continue. Let it be intmisified if necessary, as sound military judgment dictates.” SHARP-PRUNING Ford denounced the “inflationary policies of the President” which he said had increased the cost of government $26 billion in two years. * He called for sharp budget pruning of domestic programs he hM would eliminate the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Romney Tells Plans for Aged Will Seek to Provide Meaningful Work LUXEMBOURG (ffi — France clashed with her five partners in the European Common Market today over veto rights of each member in the economic^ community. { France wants the veto preserved while the othei'') nations propose making a majority vote binding, at least in some cases. Foreign Minister Paul-Henri Spaak of Belgium suggested a limited use of majority voting, with the veto preserved for some pending issues and with past decisions remaining invio-iable. Dele g ate 8 said that the French rejected this. The ministers temporarily dropped the question. TTiey re-sumto discussion of a French memorandum to limit the power of the Executive Commission that manages Euromart. k k k Later, delegates told reporters that on most of the 10 points a compromise could be found but that tiiere were also some serious differences. FRENCH INSISTENCE One of these was French insistence that the commission consult the member governments individually before making its proposals. A Dutch delegate said the big issue was die natioual veto. ^ "The French, ’ he said, “hate to have us speak about a veto. They say that there must be an agreement on cases where qualified majority vote should not be applied.” * ★ ★ Such a system of majority voting already exists but it has been applied only to minor issues. Beginning Jan. 1, it was to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney announced programs today to help make lifa more meaningful for senior citizens and to keep older people, still under retirement age, employed. The state has received federal aiqiroval fw Michigan’s program for administering the Older Americans Act, Romney said at a news conference. The state will receive 75 per cent federal financing of the program, or $124,000 this year, Romney said. Federal approval of the pro-, gram will enable the Michigan Commission on Aging to begin aiccepthig and processing local applications for grants. The grants may be made to communities to develop and demonstrate a wide range of new programs benefiting senior citizens. STUDIES REQUEST - Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara studies his remarks at the White House before meeting with newsmen to announce that he will ask Con-gress for an additional $12.3 billion in funds this year. He said the money will provide for a boost of 113,000 men in uniform. At Cooking School 4 Evening Sessions Due Working women in the Pontiac area will have an opportunity to attend the seventh annual Pontiac FTess cooking school, Jan. 24-27, aa four of the six sessions will be held at night. In addition to the demonstration of all new recipes by Barbara D. Zimmerman and Harriet Cannon of Consumers Power there News Flash NEW YORK (AP) - Presl-doit Johnson today ordered Treasury Secretary Hewy H. Fowler to boost interest rates on U. S. Savings Bonds. Shriver Quits Job as Peace A Corps Leader WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson’s decision to have Sargent Shriver devote full time to the antipoverty jvogram won bipartisan concessional praise today. Johnsoif told a news confer ence yesterday that Jack Hood Vaughn, now assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs, would succeed Shriver as head of the Peace Corps. Vaughn previously^ spent three years as regional director for the Peace Corps’ Latin-American program. Shriver’s dual role as director of both the Peace Corps and the Office of Economic Opportunity had caused increasing concern at the Capitol for the past year Many members of Congress serving on committees which oversee the antipoverty program had been saying that it was developing administrative snarls and should have the supervision of a full-time head-Johnson, in making his a|i-nouncement, declared again that the fi^t against poverty would be expanded. Such programs may include training personnel, staffing of informational, counseling, referral and multipurpose activity centers, retirement preparation courses and setting up meal centers and home-delivered the Viet Nam war. Army, Marines Due Bulk of New Troops Cong Avoid Major Action but Stay Busy Premier Ky's Regime Again Threatened by Political Infighting SAIGON, South Viet Nam (i?’) — Seven thousand more U.S. fighting men poured into South Viet Nam today to strengthen Saigon’s defenses against guerrilla attack and to put more muscle in the Marine beachhead on the central coast. Although the Viet Cong forces avoided major action in advance of the Lunar New Year celebrations later this week, guerrilla bands harassed government positions, exploded mines, tossto grenades and ambushed militia platoons. An orphanage was hit in one attack, apparently by mistake. ★ ★ * Political infighting among South Viet Nam’s military leaders again raised fears of trouble for the 7-month-old government of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. He was reported to have told WASHINGTON (^The vast bulk of the 113,000 additional fighting men sought by the Johnson ad-rhinistration will be used to strengthen Army and Marine ground forces, it was learned today. American ground forces are shouldering an ever-greater combat load in meals. Romney said he also has met with state agencies to map an informational program on the state’s new law prohibiting job discrimination because of age. RESPONSIBILITY 'The primary responsibility for enforcing the law, which prohibits discrimination between the ages of 35 and 60, will rest with the Civil Rights Commission. Romney said he has met with representatives of the, State Civil Civil other will be numerous prices awarded at each session. Grand prizes include a Crown 36-inch gas range from Consum-| ers Power and a Crown 30-inch gas range from Don Frayer Home Furnishings, Inc.; an 18-cubic-foot Westinghouse Refrigerator - Freezer with French doors from World Wide Home Furnishings, Inc,; and a Westinghouse automatic washer and automatic gas dryer from t h e same firm. ’Three Necchi sewing machines from Richman Brothers Sewing Center; and 11-i n c h General Electric portable TV set from Hampton Electric; a gas fir^ outdoor barbecue unit and a Calcinator automatic gas incinerator from Consumers Power complete the list of large appliance prizes Labor Department, the Rights Commission, the Service Commission and organizations. “We don’t think there been any particular public infor-mati(m on the law,” Romney said. “And we decided that the Michigan Employment Security Commission should send notices to employers of its existence.” VA-nCAN CITY (AP)-Hope has been abandoned here now for any replies from Peking or Hanoi to the peace appals that Pope Paul VI sent on New Year’s Day, a Vatican source said today. and McNamara will give the specifics in testimony before senators on Thursday. This is the second major sup- Clouds and Flurries! TAKE THE CUE Through Thursday The Navy and Air Force each will get only a few thousand more men in the new build-up, which will push total U. S. armed atrength over the 3 lion mark lor the Ural time In al'""'“'T' manpower ,ncrej»e or . this year stemming directly dozen years. deeper U. S. commit- Secretary of Defense Robert jment in Viet Nam. S. McNamara told newsmen ★ * k at the White House yesterday Last August, when the basic that the administration will decision was made to put large ask Congress to vote another American ground forces into the $12,346 billion to underwrite battle. Congress granted the ad-the soaring costs of the U.S. ministration another $1.7 billion involvement in Viet Nam. and authorized an increase of The White House said $415 mil- 340,000 men, mostly for the ilion will also be asked for eco-|A™y- installment will nomic purposes, bringing thej|jQng| manpower ceilings to supplemental total to $12,761 bil- g pgjnt more than 450,000 above lion. ★ ★ * McNamara provided few details, beyond disclosing the dollar figure and the new manpower increase a battalion of army troops at Saigon airport yesterday tn.nt ‘5 to 50” generals were seeking to overturn his regime. RUMORS OF COUP Rumors of an impending coup swept Saigon over the weekend during the visit of Secretary of State Dean Rusk. Most of the country’s top military leaders were in Saigon at the time. The rumors subsided later. The new American arrivals were 4,000 infantrymen of .he U.S. 25th Division’s 2nd Brigade from Hawaii and 3,000 Marines from Okinawa. They brought total American troop strength in South Viet Nam to 191,000 men. A U.S. spokesman announced earlier that 4,500 Marines had landed but later said he had counted one battalion twice..' * * * The Viet Cong before dawn theTevei‘anficiprted“;riheirme!f^ compound in Quang Ngai City, 325 miles northeast of Saigon. . ORPHANAGE HIT McNamara said that only the big Viet Nam build-up wasi ordered last summer. Clouds and snow flurries will keep the sun from sight through Thursday. The weatherman predicts occasional light snow or snow flurries tonight and tomorrow with tehnperatures falling to 8 to 15 tonight and rising to highs of 23 to 30 tomorrow. Thtirsday will be cloudy Aid a little warmer. Officials at the Pentagon took their cue from the defense secretary and declined to elaborate. The new administration money request — heralded as long ago as hut summer—wiU be sent to Capitol Hill today $4.6 billion of the new installment will be spent before this fiscal year ends next June 30, the rest later. The shells fell into a nearby orphanage and a Vietnamese regimental headquarters. i Five children and three Vietnamese civilian caretakers at the o'-Together with the $1.7 billionIpbanage were wounded. Viet Nam supplement voted last summer, this will increase defense spending this year to $54.2 billion, about $6 Mllion mwe than had been anticipated None of the 200 Americans was hurt, but an unofficial report said two Vietnamese soi- I (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5). Morning northwesterly winds! Connolly’s Jewelers is, giving at 8 to 15 miles per hour today! three one-quarter carat diamond and tonight will bpcome soutn-pendants. westerly tomorrow. ' k k k * A chilly 14 was today's low Free tickets are still avail-iPrior to 8 a m. in downtown Pon-able for all sessions (see cou-'tiac. The 2 p.m. recording was pin on page A-10). Each complete school lasts two days With evening sessions Monday through Thursday and afternoon, sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday. II w w Fred parking will be available behind the First Church of the Nazarene on State Street. 19. Auto Show Correction The Make Miark H—Chevrolet’s nperimental Corvette —is not being displnyed. in the Pontiac Mall Auto Show this week) as,was announced In Monday’s Pontiac Press.- ! '65 AP Book Now Available 4 I I The year of 1965 was one depth articles. valuable research tool. It | of the most eventful periods “The World in 1965” makes is available for $3 with the I in history. Conflicts, natural fascinating reading and is a attached form. disasters and spectacular.................................................. 1 achievements in science and ^wnRi*n .......... ...........*....'• I s^ce followed one after the ; (Mich.) PRESS ; ' ^ Bering these events wer^ your Associated Press re- • Enclosed is $ . Please send pie copies of ; | “ porters and photo^aphers, I World in 1965, and topies of The World • * and the highlights of their | / ... | f I work are contained in the | NAME ....................... .................. j | book “The World in 1965,” j ADDRESS ............... ............ ; | This second annual edition J ....................' • ............... 11 of the handsomely bound j ^ STATE ...............•>.... ...... .....j | series has 288 pages (36 *......*------------------------—J ^ pages in full color) and (Type or print plainly. Make checks payable to I hundreds Pf photos with in- The Associated Press) * | A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, JANUARY 18. 1966 New Nigeria Ruler 'Will End er Royal Oak Pork Site Oakland Community College last night declared its int^est in buying a 45-acre park in Royal (Me as a future campus site. In a letter to the Royal Oak City (Commission, the college board of trustees said that it had obtained an appraisal figure of $305,000 dn ^ land at 13V4 Mile Road, one mile east of Woodward. / - Hk letter, read at hurt night’s commission meeting, asked that the commission consider the land sale. Drawing no imnudiate comments fr^ commissiono-s, the letter was referred to the City manager and attorney for a report on l^al aspects ot the proposed transaction. ★ ★ ★ Since &lks Park, the site OCC seeks, is declared as park prop erty, sale ol file 1^ would have to be authorized by a vote of the people of Royal Oak. CHOICE OF ELECTIONS This issue could be decided in either ttie primary election this summer, the November general election or in a special election. The latter weald cost the city about $3,500, according to City Cleih Mrs. Gladys Fogo. Elks Park, one of two major parks owned by Royal Oak, is largely undeveloped as a park area. The city owns several smaller parks. OCC officials have been seeking a campus site in the dense-ly^x>pulat^ southeastern area of the county for several months France Defends EuromartVeto (Continued From Page One) have been applied to many more important ones. Delegates said that the French had promised to submit new suggestions, mostly on dates fw future meetings. Some delegates expected French proposals for dates that would prevent further meetings with the present commission. The commission’s term has expired but it is expected to remain in office until the plan goes through for merging it with the executives of two other organizations — the European Ck»al and Steel (kunmunity and Euratom, the atomic pool. due to expected enrollment expansion. The college board of trustees previously had negotiated for an existing building on 14 Mile Road in Royal Oak but decided against acquiring the Mor^ly Brothers |»*(^>a1y at a cost (d $1.7 million. Presently the college has campuses in Waterford and Pontiac townships and one under construction in Farmington Township. Comer to Get Safety Devices Martial Law 'Committee Is Write Constitution' to Bloomfield Township today won from state officials the promise that two temporary safety devices will be installed at the high-accident intersection of Maple and Telegraph. Township Supervisor Homer Case and Rep. William R. Hampton, R-Birmingham, met this moniing with Gov. Romney and Harold Co(q>er, directw M the State Highway Department’s traffic division. Cooper will order installed within M days left-tam signals and yellow flashing “pre-pare-t04top” signals on Telegraph. The meeting in the governor’s office was arranged by Hampton following the deaths (rf two teen-agers in separate accidents at the intersection the last two days of 1965. ’The green-arrow lights for north- and southbound traffic on Telegraph will. have delays of eight to 12 minutes. Case said. The “prepare-to-stop” signs will be installed 1,000 feet from the intersectim, warning both north- and southbound motorists. Cooper said he also would ask the Oakland County Road Commission to , install overhead signs oh Maple to Indicate through and left-turn-only lanes List Waterford Student Fair After Fall at OU A 17-year-old Oakland University freshman is reported in fair coi^Hion at Pontiac General Hospital with back injuries suffered in a 20-foot fall yesterday. David Detmer of 463 Lakeside Waterford Township, was work Ing in a tree near the university’s Science Building when r<^ apparently gave way and he fell to the ground. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and continued coU with occasional light snow or snow flurries today and tonight. Highs today 17 to 25. Lows toni^t 8 to IS. Partly cloudy and not quite so cold Wednesday. Highs 23 to SO. West to nwth-westerly winds 8 to 15 miles today and tonight becoming southwesterly Wednesday. Outlook for Thursday: Increasing cloudiness and warmer. TMay Hi eoitlac LoiMst tamparatvrt praceding I a.m.: 14 At I a.m.; Wind Valocity 10 m.p.ti. DIraclion: Norttitvaal' Sun aatt Tuaaday at 5:30 pjn. Sun ritaa Wadnaaday at 7:51 a.m. Moon aatt Tuaaday at 3:33 p7n.„ Moon riaea l^tadnaaday at 4:47 a.m. Baamtaam Tamparataraa 4 a.m.......... 14 11 aJn........ 14 7 a.m. ........ 14 13 m............14 • a.m..........14 1 pjn......... 15 a am. 15 3 pan. ......,W 10 tjn 14 Manday ia PaaNac (aa racardad daatataam) Highaat tamparatura 34 Lowaat tamparatura 13 Maan tamparatura 1M Waattiar. Partly aunny, law tiurriea Ona Vaar Aga In Panllac Highaal tamparatura Lowaat tamparatura .............. Maan tamparatura................. Waathar: Moatly aunny Hlgliaal aad Lawaal Tamparalvraa Tlila Data In 74 Yaan 55 In 1747 ^ |n 1730 Manday'a Tamparatura Chart Alpana 35 1 Fort Worth 40 33 Eacanaba 33 7 Jackaonvilla 57 34 Gr. Rapida 34 14 Kanaaa City 34 13 Houghton Laming Marquatta Muakagon Palitton Traveraa C. Albuquarqua Atlanta Blamarcfc Boaton Chicago CInciniMtl Danvar Detroit Duluth 13 10 Loa Angalaa 47 45 33 10 Mllwaukaa 33 14 Naw Orlaana 53 43 34 4 New York 37 31 30 5 Omaha 14 1 34 34 Phoenix 40 45 44 37 Plttaburgh 33 13 10 -7 St. Loula 34 14 34 34 Salt Laka-C. 34 17 15 7 S. Franclaco 44 3* 17 S. S. Marla 31 17 43 13 Seattle 37 34 34 17 Tampa 5 3 Waahington TROOPS PATROL NIGERIA - ’Truck-mounted troops ride through crowds cm the streets oi La^, the capital of Nigeria, yesterday after Maj. (3en. Aguiyi Irons! took LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) - Maj. (j«n. Aguiyi Irtmsi, Nigmia’i new military ruler, says he will end disorders in this West Afi:i-can nation and will impose martial law if necessary. Irons! told a news conference at his heavily guarded headquarters that he will have a committee draw up a new constitution and will hold national elections whm the constitution is completed. ★ ★ ★ ’T am a sohHa* and it has AP ptwMhx never been my ambition to over military rule. Ironsi took over the < meddle in politics,” said the 41-nation Sunday and announced an attempted yeaixjW military chief who toA coup had bera smashed. CUFFORD C. GROVOGEL Select Officers Manager at Waite's Reelected President The Downtown Pontiac Business Association (DPBA) yesterday reelected Clifford C Grovogel, manager of Waite’s Department Store, to a second one-year term as DPBA president. ★ ★ ★ Two other merchants also were reelected. They are Howard Nelson, manager of the downtown Sears Roebuck Store, secretary, and Jack Simim, manager of Simm’s Brothers, Inc., treasurer. ★ ★ ★ In addition, William Dickinson, of Dickinson’s Men’s Wear, was chosen to serve as vice president. ★ ★ ★ Besides Grovogel, Nelson and Simon, the DPBA named to its board of directors John Riley, secretary and advertising director of 'The Pontiac Press, and Stuart Whitfield, vice president (rf Pontiac State Bank. Germany Plant FRANKFURT, Clermany (AP) — An explosion ripped through the huge U.S.-owned Caitex oil refinery on the outskirts of Frankfurt today, and police reported one man killed, another misshng and 68 persons injured. ★ * resulting fire threatened NAIKMAL WEATHER - Snow is predicted for the Appalachians and the Lakes area tonight and also in the northern Plains and Rockies. Rain is expected in the western and central Gulf (kiast areas. It will continue cold in the eastern third of the nation, except in Florida arid the centrM GulfCkMst. nearby propane and hydrogen tanks before firemen br^ht it under control three hours after the blast. * ♦ ★ Officials estimated damage at about $1 million. Police said they believed the original blast was in an ethylene tank. ITie remains of the dead man were found outside the grounds of the comj^ex, apparently blown tho-e by the force of the explosion that was felt in villages three miles away, we* j Earlier, police repoi^ 3 persons were killed and M injriied. But after the confusion died down they revised this. OOP's Reply Is Hit ^(Contbmed From Page One) V need fw $1 billion in new taxes Johnson Ms asked. Democratic reaction was speedy. House Speaker John W. McCormack said the Republicans were “a little presumptuous” in billing their ^fprt as a GOP “State of the Union” message. It was the President’s job to make such a report, he added. HAD A CHANCE However, Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said he is glad the Republican leader “had a chance to deliver its message to the people of the United States.” Sen. Joseph S. Cbut hit Dirksen’s reiteration of die old cliche tiwt “fliere is no snbstl-tnte for victory. “Throughout history most wars have aided at the conference table far short of total victory,” he noted. ★ ★★ House Democratic leader Carl Albert said, “If what we heard him (Ford) say tonight means that there’s going to be an about-face in Republican voting on such crucial issues as education, health, and war (m poverty, we can look forward to a very productive second session of the 89th Congress. ’WINDOW DRESSING’ “If on the other hand, all that we really saw and heard was window-Kh-essing intended to confuse the issue and conceal the Republicans’ real record then I thM it was largely a waste of time.” Sen. George D. Aiken,/R-Vt., who had joined Manmld in saying alter a worl^ tonr that die chances werf^ slim, said he was pritzled by what Dirksen bad to say. OK to lake a Striptease Break, Men DONCASTER, England (AP) — One (rf Britain’s biggest construction firms is giving some of its men time off without pay to watch stoipteasos. The firm, Gewge Wim-pey & Co. has about 200 men building a fuel plant at Doncaster. It diiKHiv-ered that on Sundays they were -taking more than their usual half-hour lunch break to watch strippers in a nearby miners’ club. A company spokeaman said: “It was no good closing our eyes to the situation or sacking good workers vriio return late. So we arranged that diey could have an extra half-hour added to their lunch break—widioat pay.” Those who wanted to watch the strippers lose $1.25 from their pay. it it •a “Sunday strip sessions are extremely popular,” said an 0 f f i c i a I at the miners’ club. “We get an audiencf of about 200.”. “ff he means we cannot get out of South Viet Nam until satisfactory arrangements are made, I agree,” Aiken said. “If he means we should intensify the war there, that is another matter. That decision is not ours to make.” ★ ★ ★ The Republican leadas chose the old Supreme Court room of the Capitol for their televised addres^. COACHED IN ADVANCE ’Ihey packed it with a partisan audience (d about 200 — including about 60 of their Houm members and a dozen senators — coached in advance to give “vigorous applause” that could be recorded for the television-radio audience. Urksen’s review of interaa-tkHiai affairs drew little sustained applause because he dealt largely in generalities. Bnt Ford brought die Republicans to their feet with thnn-derons 'apidanscr by his demands for “truth in budgeting by die White House” and his attack on vdiat he called “the bad odor of political bossism” in the antipoverty program. Even before the Republicans could get on the air, Johnson turned loose a series of administrative announcements that competed for national attention with what the GOP leadas had to say. over power Sunday after an-noqnctog that an attempted coup had been smashed. “it was my intention only to crush ‘the revolt by military means, but then I discovoed the rebel elonents did not want to fight. I was informed the people of Nigeria wanted a military government and wanted the army to take over to avoid further bloodshed.” THREE MONTHS The coup attempt came after three months of rioting in Nigeria’s western region in which more than 100persons have been killed. The violence began last October after Chief Samuel I. Akintola was reelected provincial premier. Akintola’s of^nent charged the balloting was rigged and claimed that federal Prime Minister Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was involved. ★ ★ ★ The rebels nre reported to have killed Akhitola and Sir Ah-madu Bello, premier of the northern region and the country’s most powerful political leader. Opponents of Akintola have nearly paralyzed the west em region with an orgy of murder, arson and looting. Inxisi said the coup was organized by lower-rank officers and that he had no advance knowledge of it. ★ ★ ★ He said his troops were still searching for Balewa and Finance Minister Festus Okotie Eboh, vdio were kidnaped during the revolt. Rebel remnants are believed holding them hostage in eastern Nigeria. Bernard Floud, a Laborite in Britain’s Parliament who was in Nigeria during the revolt, said in London that hp believed the main aim of the rebels was to eliminate Bello. Birmingham Area News Parking facility Project Given to Oak Park Firm BIRMINGHAM — A $1,016,6001 Civic Design Cnnmittee to dis-contract was awarded to an cuss three alternate plans for Oak Park firm last night for construction of Birmingham’s first municipal parking structure. V The contract went to the A. J. EUcin O)., lowest of 12 bidders for the project. In awarding the contract, city commisslonm noted fiiat the winning bid was $N,IM Iowa* dian architects estimated tar the cost of die 566-car garage. The facility is to be built on the present L-shaped surface parking lot fronting on Woodward and WiUits. In addition to being the low bidder, Etkin estimate it can complete the garage 200 days after starting. MH>-FEBRUARY (Construction is expected to begin by mid-February, with completion scheduled by September. Before work begins, however, bonds to finance the pro]^ have to be st by a memba of the Detroit Common Council. James H. Brickley, president pro tern of the council, will speak at the 8:30 p.m. meeting of the Oakland Ckninty 18th District Young Republican Club. Brickley’s topic for the public meeting is “How Urban Politics Affect You and How You Can Affect Urban Pditics.” Reuther Raps Transit Strike DETROIT (AP) -Walter P, Reuther, resident of the United Auto Workers Union, said yes-t^ay be opposed public service strikes, and urged closer management-labor cooperation to solve America’s pressing problems. it it it Addressing the Economic Club ot Detroit, the labor leader commented on New York’s recent transit strike. Reuther, who has led many strikes himself, declared “society cannot tolerate strikes that endanger the very survival of society.” i,. ^ , Reuther urged raadiinery that would prevoit crippling strikes before they occur. “Workers should be able to get justice in the absence of strike action,” he said. Reuther also reiterated an old UAW (ffoposal of a price-wage-review board that would rule whether price or wage step-ups in basic industries are economV ically justified. / Such a mechanism, he' said, could both prevent strikes and act as a brake against inflation. More Yanks Pour Into S. Viet (Continued From Page One) diers were killed and 14 were wounded. “It was really close,” said Sgt. Wayne Mabry of Philadelphia. “After the first round we were up and in the bunkers. We could see the rounds falling.” Other Communist mortars caused light casualties at the government outpost of An Lo, on north-south Highway 1 near the northern frontier 8 miles from the old imperial capital of Hue. The Viet Cong exacted their heaviest toll in the past 24 hours by ambushing two platoons of government militiamen on road clearing work 16 miles south of Saigon Monday afternoon. Ihe guerrillas also bush-wacked two companies of a relief force in a fight that lasted about an hour. The Communists fled after inflicting moderate casualties in both actions, a spokesman said. Other guorilla bands shot iq> the Binh Hiep outpost in the Mekong Delta 50 miles southwest of Saigon, attacked the Thanh Tri resettlement center and blasted a watch tower. U.S. Air Force B52s made the run from Guam again to unload their big bombs on suspected Viet (king camps in Tay Niiih Province four miles from the Cambodian border. The landing pushed total Marine stroigth in Viet Nam to 45,500 men and increased the L^theroeck force at Chu Lai to three regiments. The additional manpower will enable the Marines to laun'ih wider operations around the toehold. Most of the Marines have been tied down protecting die Chn Lai jet air strip. gade came ashore 30 miles southeast of Saigpn at the sandy beaches of Vung Tau, once the placid resort of Cap St. Jacques in French colonial days. The division’s 3rd Brigade landed in December and took up positions in the central highlands. Pretty Vietnamese girls welcomed the infantrymen vrith a large banner, flowers and an The 25th Infantry’s 2nd Bri- occasional discreet kiss. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander M U. S. focceG in Viet Nam, also greeted die troops while an Army band played Hawaiian music. The brigade came from Schofield Barracks, Hawaii. The soldiers were quickly hustled aboard trucks for the 40-mile ride to Bien Hoa, a major U.S. encampment 12 miles north (tf Saigon. They brought their own artillery to Viet Nam. Other Air Force and Navy ptenes flew 464 combat sorttes In the south, hitting Communist hideouts and river craft The Leathernecks from the U.S. 1st Marine Regiment began wacDng ashore from ara[diibious vehicles yestmlay at Chu Lai, a Marine beachhead in the coastal rice fields'62 miles south of the main Marine base at Chu Lai. WHArS NEW, PUSSYCATP? - Looks like this kitten hais found a friend and is losing no time in getting acquainted. The soldier is L/Cpl. Henry Williams, a machine gunner from Femdale, N.Y., who found the kitten in a South Viet Nam village shmily after Air Force idanes had strafed and bombed it in preparation for the U.S. Marine attack on Ben Dau, 15 miles southwest of Da Nang. / •M- THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JANUARY 18. 1966 Inoculations Planned ^MOUNT PLEASANT (AP)-An Inoculation program de-ligned to combat an outbreak of tome 80 cases of measles here. Is idanned for Wednesday and _ Itiursday for duldren between 1 and 8 years old. 1*^ 1. pM»rtLCMPIb«.aHt|. 1 L WaNad Uka 1 Fh.; MA 4.2674 I Latins Claim Fishing Areas American Shrimp Fleet Feels Pinch TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The Caribbean grows ever smaller for America’s shrimp fleet caught in the web of U.S. rela-ti«^ with Latin America T^e detention of nine Tampa-based shrimp fishermen in Sim-ta Lucia, Cuba, Sunday after one of their vessels grounded was another in,a long series of incidents based WWW The captain of one of the de- ! BURIAL FUNDS FOR PEOPLE 39 TO AGE 80 You can apply for a guar-anteed-rate legal reserve Life Insurance Policy, providing lifetime protection ALL - BY - MAIL from our Home Office. Application mailed to you without obligation. T^ar out this reminder and mail today w^th your name, addms, zip code and year of birth to Great Lakes Insurance Company, EUgin, Illinns 60120. Dept. 18A270P6A. ■ ■■■■■■■I hed been released. American shrimpers have been conducted ashore in so many Latin-American ports in the last 15 years that the U.S. government routinely handles their claims for reimbursements of fines and confiscated catches. CHECK RETURNS Under the federal Fishermen’s Protective Act, “ige lay out all the circumstances, substantiate it with receipts and vdiatnot, and a check comes down from the Treasury Department,” said Oscar Long necker of Brownsville, Tex., executive secretary of the Shrimp Association of the Americas. Cuba under Fidel Castro, has become the/newest .obstacle to movement of the U.S. shrimp fleet in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. Soaje shrimp can be taken near Cuba’s Isle of Pines, but the political risks all but elimi- MKE. RATS, AND GUINEA PIGS six million mice ... 1 million rati . . . almost a million chlckans . . . more ttian 100.000 guinea plgsl Those are lust soma of the animals used by America's leading prug manufacturers last year to test-new drugs— to make sure that only the safest, most effective drugs, reach the market. That's why we say ... TODAY'S PRESCRIPTION IS THE BieOEST EAROAIN IN HISTORY lit us fill your NEXT PRESCRIPTION Pharmnry Plaza Pharmacy Jerry i jeanHe DantHierE, RPH 35M Pontiac Lk. Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Phent (TM 2ET 34 H»un A Day Serrice FREE DEUV,tRY HoMyardarsIsaaadHare WmfrmtmrrSmmdmCmiidy \ TeaHayPayNIINiWyeiliaalMaaaPlMraMar / (ARvertfsamenl) (Aevarttaamant) DO WE RAVE TO DIE? LANSING (AP) - Michigan already has done more to control water pollution than many pec^le realize, Gov. (}eorge Romney said Monday. . “Under the leadership of the State Water Resources Commission, Conservation Department and Health Department... many (rf our programs were started years ago,” Ronuiey said at the 67th annual convention of the Michigan State Association of “They have been carried on and enlarged with patience and care,” he added, “'^ey have involve expenditures ol millions of dollars by private and industry and by taxpayers.’ Michigan, he told the county officials, “is already renowned A strange man in California tells of astonishing experiences in far-off and mysterious Tibet, often called the land miracles by the few travelers permitted to visit it. Here he lived among the lamas, mystic priests of the temple. “In your previous lifetime,” a very old lama tdd him, “you lived here, a lama in this temple. You and I were boys together. I lived on, but you died in youth, and were rebora in,Elngland. I have been expecting your return.” The young Elnglishman was amazed as he looked around the temple where he was believed to have lived and died. It seemed uncannily . familiar, he appeared to know every noiA and corner of it, yet—at least in this“ lifetime—be had never been there before. And mysterious was the set of circumstances that had brought him there. Could it be a case of reincarnation, that strange be lief in the Elast that souls re, turn to earth again and again, living many lifetimes? Because of their belief that he had formerly been a lama in the temple, the lamas wel-omied the young man with (yen arms and taught him rare mysterious and long-hidden practices, closely guarded for three thousand years by the sages, which teve enabled many to perfcHin amazing feats He says that the system often leads to strange inqirovement in. power of mind, can be used to further brilliant business and professional success as well as great happiness. The young man himself later became a noted explorer and geographer, a successful publisho* of maps and atlases of the Far Elast used throughout the win-ld. “There is in all men a sleep ing giant of mindpower,” he says. “When awakened, it can make men capable (rf surprising feats, from prolonging (A youth to success in many worthy endeavors.” The method is said by many to promote improvonent in’ health; others tell of in hreesed bodily strength, courage and poise. “The time is here for this long-hidden system to be disclosed to true sedcers in the Western World” declares the author, and (rffers to send his amazing, 9,009-word ’Treatise— which reveals many startling results—to readers of this publication, free of cost or obligation. For your free copy, address The Institute of Mental-physics, P.O. Box 460, Dept. 134, Yucca Valley, Calif. 92284. Readers are urged to write promptly, as only a limited number the free Treatises have been printed. m MVMORS Open an account SiRCR 1890 ... *75 ygorg •f s*rvic*r To thos* who «vont (ho mott in finonco convonioncoo, if you nood assistonco or odvica — linoncinfl o Mow Homo — or for on Educotionol Program — visit MO today. 75 W. Huron 338-7177 nate the temptation to go there. Here the trouble Ilea in the says Bobby Canaday of Tampa, A Singleton Shrimp Co. official. Ibis is not so in the rich shrimp fields of Caratasca Key, Honduras; Nicaragua and Campeche, off the western coast pf Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, Canaday says. varying' limits of territorial waters — nine miles in Mexico, 12 in Honduras, three in the United States and the continental shelf — up to 35 ntiles — in Nicaragua. It also comes from competition among U.S.-based shrimp firms and firms in Honduras] and their crews and held them dhd Nicaragua owned by Amer-i eight days. They were released jeans who use poUtical influ^ce ^ to keep American boats out of ^ , . , . the shrimp grounds, a Tampa if.™* 1°!? '*^*^*^ shrimp operator said. Th« it i, ir fishing in Nicaraguan waters. In, March 1965, Nicaragua J^P^uras seized 16 Tampa-based trawlers nine -Tampa shrimpws 'with fishmg in its territorial Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Sf. Open A, A| gm (0 01 Wad. CM>D PUSH — Three Navy icebreakers team up to move a huge iceberg which closed the shipping channel to the station at Mc-Murdo, Antat'ctica. The Navy, in releasing this picture, said it was made Dec. 29 and AP PlwlWix that the portion of the iceberg above the water, ai^oximately one-eighth its total bulk, measured 800 by 200 feet and towered above the surface of ^e ocean. State Pollution Progress Hailed 'No Reply Yet to Peace Try' Still Neither Success nor Failure-Goldberg NEW YORK (UPI) - U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Arthur X Goldberg said last night that although North Viet Nam has not responded to U.S. peace initiatives, the government still was not ready to report “either success or fail ure.” Goldberg said the U.S. drive for peace in Viet Nam already had shown positive results in convincingthe world that “America wants peace.” And, he said, ,‘T am con-vinced that it is bound to reach fruition, if not now, then in time to come.” Goldberg, one of the administration officials who took part in the more than 40 visits to the heads of state since ^sident Johnson began his peace offensive 'late last month, said the administration would persevm’e “through every conceivable channel.” He urged Americans to “endure the ordeal of patience.” The ambassador spidee at the annual Benjamin Franklin Award Dinner (A the {Minting industries of Metropolitan New York. He substituted for Secretary of State Dean Rusk who coitid not be present to receiv^he award. Several members of the New Workshop in Non-V i o 1 e R c e picketed briefly'^ outside the Commodore Hotel, where Gold-herg spoke, demanding a reversal of U.S. policy in Viet Nam. “Except for the public reaffirmation of old positions, we have not yet reeved a response from the place that holds the key to the settlement of the problem Hanoi,” Goldberg said. Goldberg said that in respinise to advice that “the key to negotiations” was suspension of bombing of North Vi^ Na^p for “a reasonable period,” the United States has not carried out raids over the north since before the Christmas truce in Viet Nam. throu^ut the nati(Mi as a state with a progressive and substantial pollution control program.” Industry, the governor said, “is generally in compliance with the several hundred orders which have been issued (and) legisiative and {niblic supp