The Weather 0. S. Wuthw luruu F* Snow, Cold \.u»r/yri\A/_ AP Wimholo NO SURPRISE — This baby, symbolic of a birth every seconds in the United States, ho-hums at the 200-million population mark reached this morning, according to the demographic counter at the Commerce Department in Washington. Experts weren’t surprised. They add the births and an immigrant per minute, and subtract a death every 17 seconds and an emigrant every 23 minutes to compute population. 200 Million of Us —at Least—in U. S. WASHINGTON OW - The United States celebrates today a milestone some experts contend should have been observed more than two years ago — a population of 200 million people. About 11 a m. EST, this country — officially at least — becomes the fourth nation in the world — behind Commu-liist China, India and the Soviet Union in that order — to reach and pass 200 million. Alexander B. Trowbridge, secretary of Commerce, under whose jurisdiction the Census Bureau falls, is to lead the celebration of the Commerce Department lobby where a census clock has been ticking off population gains for 40 years. The clock now registers a net gain of one person every 14'i seconds based on one birth every seconds, one death every 17 seconds, an immigrant every 60 seconds and an emigranf every 23 minutes. Timing is ba.sed on recent averages rather than actual births, deaths, arrivals and departures and the timing is changed as the averages change. FIGURE CALLED LOW A private group, the Population Reference Bureau, contends the basic calculations are all wrong. It says the Census Bureau missed 5 7 million Americans in the 1960 nose count. Actually, the reference bureau said, the United States population probably surpassed 200 million in the spring of 1965 and could be at least 206 million now. It said its contention is based on 1960 cessps figures indicating there were far more Negro women than men. THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS A'OL. 125 NO. 24B PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, lAIONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1007 ★ ★ ★ ★ UNITEO^PRE'A^fNTERNATIONAL --108 PAGES IQC Senate Schedule Set Social Security Actioil Near WASHINGTON UP) - The Senate appears ready to wrap up before Thanksgiving its work on one of the most sweeping Social Security bills ever considered by Copgress. Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield has set early opening schedules for the' next two days and obtained a strict limitation on debate on all remaining amendments. This is expected* to bring final passage of the legislation on Wednesday. The final form of the measure then will be determined in a conference between the Senate and House, which passed the bill last August. In three days of debate last week, the bill’s managers succeeded' in maintaining it in nearly the form in which it won Senate Finance Committee approval. ★ ★ ★ ' Many more amendments remain to be acted on. The biggest test is expected on a Republican move to substitute the House bill for the version worked out by the finance panel. SENATE DECISION In passing on this, the Senate will determine whether it wants to go along with a much larger benefit increase and also much higher taxes that the' (IpiA mittee wrote into the legislation. The.committee’s bill would assure all persons now on the benefit rolls at least i a 15 per cent increase with a 59 per cent hike for those at the bottom of the scale. The minimum payment wduld be raised from the present $44 a month to $70. * ★ * V The House voted for a boost of at least 12Mi per cent in benefits and a $50 minimum. MAJOR DIFFERENCE - On the tax side, the big difference between the two versions is in the eventual wage base on which the payroll levies would be paid. The House voted to boost the base to I $7,600 a year from the present $6,600. The Senate Finance Committee plan would raise the base to $8,000 next year and eventually to $10,800 in 1972. Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware, senior Republican on the committee, said the GOP attempt to substitute the House bilUprobably will come tomorrow. * w * Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., said he’ll propose this week a rider to the bill, calling for a joint congressional committee to study health care. Kennedy said yesterday the proposed committee should study everything from costs to methods of achieving greater health care'efficiency. j and concluded some Negro males must not have been counted. The Census Bureau conceded the possibility of a higher population but stuck by the basic fact on which the 200 million estimate is based — a 1960 population by its count of 179,323,175. * -k * The 200 million figure includes not only U.S. residents but American servicemen abroad. In the first census in 1790, the Bureau counted 3,929,214 Americans. It took until 1915 to reach the first too million but the Bureau said the 300 million mark could be reached by the turn of the century, in only 33 years. Here's a profile compiled by the Census Bureau of today’s U.S. population: • Females outnumber males 102 million to 98 million. • 19 million Americans are under 5 years old. • 19 million are over 65 years old. • There are 175 million whites and 25 million nonwhite, mainly Negro. • 91 million are married and 11 million widows and widowers. • 120 million are old enough to vote, 6 million in college and 30 million in other schools. ^ • There are 33 million white collar workers and 27 million blue collar workers. • 9 million Americans are foreign born. • There are 125 million city dwellers, 33 million home owners and 123 million church members. And contrary to some reports, the bureau said, most Americans aren’t under 25. The median age — half are older and half younger — is 27.7 years. Evacuation End Expected; Blast Threat Is Over Woman in City Fire Murdered NEWTON, Ala. (AP) — Residents of Newton, evacuated because of the danger of an explosion after a railroad tank car of deadly chlorine was derailed Saturday, were expected to be permitted to return home today. An emergency call brought additional water pumps after one pump broke down as fire fighters, tried to cool the tank . car. Officials said the danger of an explosion apparently is passed. However, it Picture, Page C-7 was not announced immediately when the residents would be permittQd to return home. Newton, with a. population of about 3,000, was desj;rted except for state patrol officers who cruised the town to guard against looting. Only a few firemen and rescue workers remained at the scene of the/ wreck where small fires continued to threaten lb set off the tank car containing 100,-000 gallons of chlorine. ' News Flash AMMAN, Jordan (AP) — Israeli guns pounded a U. N. run refugee camp along the Jordan River today, killing 14 persons and wounding 28, a Jordan army communique said. A routine autopsy performed Saturday on a Pontiac woman who had apparently died of burns in a fire at her home earlier that morning revealed that she had been brutally murdered, according to city police. Investigators said doctors at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital discovered Mrs. John T. Johnson, 36, of 412 Californi^i had suffered a fractured skull and was strangled prior to the fire. Waterforid District Votes on Millage Hike Today Electors of the Waterford Township School District began going to the polls at 7 a m. today to vote on a proposed 7'/2-mill property tax increase for a five-year period from 1968 through 1973. ★ ★ ★ The eight precincts will’ remain open until 8 tonight. School officials contend the additional local funds are needed to avoid drastic cutbacks in program and personnel^ If the proposition wins voter approval, it is undetermined how much of the 7‘/5 mills would be levied the first year — in December'1968. * * * School officials estimate 7'‘> mills would raise about $1,125,000 in addi-'tional revenue the first year. SCHOOL BOARD POUCY . The board of education has maintained a policy that it will not levy any more millage than is necessary for a given school year. How much would be levied next year all boils down to how much state aid is forthcoming for the 1968-69 school year. Distrio^ducators claim $1 ..320,000 in additional revenue, over what is anticipated, will be required to balance the 1968-69 school budget. It is estimated that a 7>/i!-mill increase next year would add $25 in taxes to a home of $7,000 market value; $40 to a $12,000 home; $75 to a $20,000 home; and $112 to a $30,-000 home. DISTRICT’S HISTORY Waterford Township Schixil District voters have a history of supporting the system’s needs. Of 34 millage and bond issue proposals put to district voters since 1946, 26 have passed. They said a metal coat hanger was found twisted about her neck. Mrs. Johnson’s charred body was found by firemen in the combination bedroom-kitchen of the house — scene of a $7,000 pre-dayKn blaze which took nearly two hours to extinguish. Mrs. Johnson’s husband, a General Motors Truck and Coach Division employe, was at work at the time. It was at first thought the fire was caused by careless smoking, but subsequent investigation showed traces of kerosene spread about the room, according to police. i^PPARENTLY SET Detectives Dallas Flesher and Billie Irwin said the blaze was apparently set in an effort to hide the slaying. They said the skull fracture was caused by a blow with a blunt instrument, and the force of the hanger did i n t »r n a I damage to Mrs. Johnson’s neck. The investigation is in its preliminary stages, and there are no s as yet, according to Flesher. Light Coating Devoluotion of Pound Jolts World of Snow Is Due The weatherman is forecasting a light coating of feathery white stuff on your sidewmks and windshi^plds by morning. Today’s northwest winds at 6 to 14 miles wilt push in .snow clouds. By tonight the winds will become light and variable with the cold punctuated by snow showers. Tonight’s low will fall In the 28-to-32 range. Snow and cold will remain the order of the day through Wednesday. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are today, 20; tonight, 40; and tomorrow, 60., Low temperature reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 22. By 2 p.m. the mercury stood at 33. AUis-Chalmer Tractor Sold Quickly “We had a fast and profitable result from our Press ^ Want Ad. could have sold seVM-al.’’ Mrs. ALUS CHAUiAER B WITH SNOWPLOW and chain. PRESS WANT ADS are qui(5:k to produce good results because of the responsiveness of the Press Classified readership. They’re a big market. Dial 332-*181 or 3344981 AF WlrtphaHi SIGN OF THE TIIVGES — A printer for London’s Sunday Express looks at a proof sheet bearing a headline announcing devaluation of the British pound. The Labor gowmment move provoked mateb^ devaluations In Spain, Ireland, Denmark, Israel and Hong Eong. Prime Minister Harold Wilson went on television last night to bxplain that tho action is meant to spur British exports. r-' • '' '.V' LONDON (AP) — Repercussions to the 14.3 per cent devaluation in the British pound rolled around the world today, and bitter discontent brewed at home among Liborites, Conservatives and angry men-in-the-slreet. * ★ * The government’s announcement .Saturday that the pound would be devalued from $2.80 to $2.40 provoked matching devaluations iii Spain, Ireland, Den- mark; Israel and the British colony of Hong Kong. Fifteen other nations said they were undecided, while other nations kept their currency’s ■ ratio to the U. S. dollar steady. Prime Minister Harold Wilson went on television last night to explain that the devaluation is meant to spur British exports and that the limping economy will have a chanfce to “break out of the straitjacket” of boom and bust. Officers at Pontiac State and Community National banks said that there will undoubtedly be an indirect effect on local economy because of the devaluation of the pound. ★ ★ * Their concern is over the action of the U.S..Federal Reserve in increasing its discount rate |rom 4 to 4.5 per cent. Edward Barker, president of Pontiac State Bank, said the new charge wilt ultimately effect th<( interest rate charged to businesses; “Shortly before noon today the Continental Illinois, one of the nation’s largest banfci, increased its prime rate of “in- terest from 5'*/ (n 6 per ccnl','' Barker said.' “It is too early to tell how quickly (he banking industry will follow that lead." Most countries that devalued with Britain are suppliers of food and raw materials, meaning British buyers can import from them at the same old prices STAND TO GAIN British salesmen stand to gain in epUn-tries that held fast. ^ The government is in effect giving them a 74.3 per cent subsidy to undercut See Stories, Page B^7 their competition, increase th^r profits or a combination of both. However, many prices on the home market will go up, resulting in a curtailment of buying. The government hopes this will turn manufacturers to the export market so that Britain’s balance of payments will move toward the black again: Wilson’s Conservative opposition re"^^' acted as expected. Tory leader Edward ’ Heath charged that under Labor leadership Britain had been “reduced from a prosperous nation to an international pauper.” Wilson’s Cabinet has been unanimous on devaluation and showed no sign of breaking up under the critkism. An emergency debate-5«n the crisis is scheduled in Parliament tomorrow ' and Wednesday. MRS. JOHN T. JOHNSON , In Today's Press Music Boxes Antique mechanical bands en-liven Clarkston home — PAGE A-4. Health Care Commission offers solutions to crisis in services—PAGE B-7. Cambodia '' Discovery of Vietcong camjJt* site disputed by Prince Sihanouk - PAGE B-16. Area News Astrology Bridge Ciiossword Puzzle Comics Editorials Food Pages Markets Obituaries Picture Pages Sports Theaters .............D-7 ^ TV and Radio Programs D-15 Wilson, Earl ........D-15 Women’s Pages .....B-1—B-4 C-10 C-10 D-15 C-10 A-6 C-4, C-8, C-9 B^, C-1 D-l-D-O t ■ A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 196T Red China Foe Fights U.N. Entry] UNITED NATIONS, N.Yto substitute Communist ling to seat Peking. He said t both Chinese regimes would be the independence of neighboring (AP) - Foreign Minister WeilChinese for Nationalist Chinese'Cambodia’s chief of state, tin the United NaUons'. He saidlstates” ind U.N. membership Tao-ming of Nationalist China delegates in the United Nations Prince Norodom Sihanouk, said.the Chinese were fighting “alwould not “change their bel- told the General Assembly to- and all related bodies. ■ jin a speech Sept. 4, Red China* ..................... day that to seat Communist Chi-j Diplomats generally expected lost Cambodia’s friendship na in the United Nations wouldjthe assembly would vote down!by “walking on the wrong path’’ storm Kills 12 in California Blrminighom Area News Cify Commission to Rule encourage Peking in aggression [that proposal, and friends of Na-to the point where war would be i tionalist China said it would do Iso by a wider margin than last Wei s remarks were for the year, assembly’s annual debate on the and told a news conference Sept. 18 that Mao Tse-tung’s “cultural revolution’’ was tike “a whale which devours small fishes.’’ Wei said that to the Chinese people, his was the “one legal Chinese government.” He said they rejected “the so-called with introduction of a resolution jterest of his country” in press-‘two-China’ formula” whereby Cambodian Ambassador Huot Sambath launched the debate ‘TRUE INTEREST’ The Chinese minister charged that the Cambodian ambassador was disregarding “the true in- people’s war” against Mao, andjligerence” but “only give them their hopes “for the recovery of an opportunity to carry out their their lost freedom appear the long-standing threat to ‘reform’ brightest.’ He denied that the Chinese Reds are peace-loving, that they would be less dangerous inside the United Nations than out, or that , their presence would help solve such problems as disarmament. He said the Red Chinese claimed the right “to subvert or rather destroy the United Na-' tions.” Mu^ Slid.., Floods on Trailer, Boat Proposal Start Rainy Season | BIRMINGHAM — Jfl revised] house trailers, boats and trail- LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Tons controversial proposed'ers in the city will be up for ac Those who want to seat Pe- king are “motivated by fear of war,” he said, but to Admit king “purely on the basis of fear is to encourage it tp move from aggression to aggression until there remains no tolerable alternative to war.” of oozing rock and mud flooded U.N. Plans on Mideast Up for Vote UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — A British resolution seeking a Middle East settlement was given the best chance of adoption among three headed for a vote in the U.N. Security Council today. Delegates expected that the vote would come late tonight. *1110 three resolutions all would send a U.N. representa-tii(e to the Middle East to seek settlement of issues left by the Arab-Israeli war in June, including withdrawal of Israeli troops from territory they seized. But they differ over how he should work and what form the settlement should take as to the Israeli withdrawal from territory seized in the war, an end to | Arab belligerency against Israel, the fixing of borders, free-, i I A A * dom for Israeli shipping through LGOuGF, /VlUfTI disputed waterways and solu- ^ U« .f the Arab N.Y. (AP)i-: U.S; homes, leaving at least 12 dead today in the wake of the torrential storm that marked the beginning of southern California’s rainy season. The mud slides and flood-waters marooned hundreds of campers in the Angeles National Forest and kiljpd a 12-year-old I Boy Scout who was buried in South /Coreah"" ordinance regarding the oc- cupancy, parking and storage of Tool-Die Shops Face Deadline tion by the City Conunissioners Digs in Clash With RgcJs terday. Police blamed eight traffic’ fatalities on the downpour, including three deaths in a head-; Camarillo,! DETROIT (AP) - While Wal-Calif.-Two men died when their ter P. Reuther attended the fu-light piane crashed into a hiil-jneral of ^is father today, sotne cirniTr /adv a'®'^® driving rain ^0 miles 5,500 skilled trades workers in ^ “ A northeast of San Diego. [Detroit area tool and die shops killed today^ln^Wef huffier^ Service re-l^^*^®** ^ strike deadline borSr clai on thrcLb^yfrom inches of rain in a >" negotiations for a new con- in Korea about 45 miles north|i®’h°n*‘ period at the West Fork tract with the Detroit Tooling of Korean Station in the San Ga-|Association. 'Ministry sources reported ^ |h"el mountains and said up to A strike by skilled tradesmen i They said the fiaM develoned ‘nches of snow felt on could have a serious effect on I when ^ South Kor^n sent^els P®^hs. the auto industry because the 54 discovered North Korean regl-. Scattered showers continued shops represented by the ass<> lars south of the riemilifnriwMt ‘n most areas today with ciear-ciation make vital parts needed owners will be permitted to keep zone. Defending forces *"8 expected tomorrow. in the production of new cars, j their recreational vehicles in tonight at 8 in the Mijnici-pal Building. 1 Several weeks ago a strictef proposed ordinance drew a large crowd of residents and several representatives of outdoor affiliations who protested the restrictions which appeared to eliminate any residential parking of such equipment. Some of the revised resli-ic- ^ Reuther at Funeral of tions in the most disputed part , c •! I [—parking and storage—include: rather as Strike Looms, no overnight parking ’of house trailers, ^ats, trailers on any public street or place; no occupancy of trailers on private property for more than 48 hours; no hookup of utilities to a trailer no parking in front of homes on private property: no parking closer than 10 feet to any building; and no parkjng of equipment between or at the side of dwellings for more than 30 consecutive days, or for more th^ 30 days in a six-month period. According to the ordinance. VILLAGERS WEEP — ii'rightened South Leathernecks found hidden bunkers in the Vietnamese villagers weej> as they are village and proceeded to gather the villagers rounded up by U.S. Maripes at Loc Son, for questioning on North Vietnamese activity South Vietnam, during a sweep of the area. in the region. Girl Returns; Father, GOP N. Viets Surround, Batter Paratroopers more than 100 rounds of howitz-. BRUSH FIRES er shells and repelled the enemy, they added. A second lieutenant in charge of a sweep unit pursuing the infiltrators was killed. No Nwth Korean casualties were found. The North Korean versicm of the clash, as broadcast from Pyongyang, said U.S. forces fired hundreds of shells into Areas hit worst by the cas-l Meanwhile, the UAW contin- ceding mud were those denuded “‘I General of vegetaUon by the massive Motors Corp^ the only member of the Big Three auto makers without a new pact, as 4,300 members of Local 659 struck the Chevrolet V8 Engine planLin Flint, 55 miles northwest of De- The ^abs consider resolution pro-Israeli. The .Israelis consider an In-dian-Malian-Nigerian resolution pro-Arab. The British resolution, introduced Thursday 12 days after the others, has been widely hailed as “balanced.” Diplomatic sources said that at p meeting at the U.S. mission Sunday, U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg joined Lord Caradon of Britain in rejecting suggestions for changes put forward by Ambassadors Jose Maria Ruda of Argentina and Ger-aldo de Carvalho Silos of Brazil. They had been trying to merge the British resolution with an unpublished Argentine-Brazilian draft. The informants said they believed Brazil would vote for the British resolution. They said that if Argentina did also, it would have the nine votes necessary for adoption, because it already had those of Britain, the United States, Nationalist China, Canada, Denmark, Ethiopia and Japan. SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)|-! SAIGON (AP) Elizabeth “Liz” Schoeneck, |he'na™ese regulars surrounded a runaway teen-age daughtei^ ofjH.S. paratrooper battalion on a the New York State Republican j hill-near the Cambodian border chairman, was back at hom^to- South Vietnam’s central high-day, but her 18-day odysseyie-l lands today and, jvith heavy mained a mystery. j— ------------------------— Charles A. Schoeneck Jr. told a reporter he would say nothing brush fires that swept southern California during a recent heat wave. Families were driven from their homes by the creeping mud, arid downed power lines knocked out electricity to I*’®'!- r.ore tnan 250 areas. | The walkout was one in a se- Flash floods stranded more of harassing short duration North Korean positions “to pro-i^ian 400 weekend campers and strikes authorized by the union voke a new war.” I hikers in forest areqs. ' About to keep the giant auto maker “All the incidents taking place! loo persons still marooned early from stockpiling new cars lately on the military demarca-| oday were reported on high through the use of overtime, tion line ciearly show that thel - out of danger. jo END TODAY .. ^ J , U.S. imperialist aggressors arej---------------------------- North Viet- ground assaults and mortar at- further expanding war provoca-tacks apparently inflicted heavy I tion maneuvers, wantoniy tram- about how or where his daijgh-ter had been found. ■' i * Scoff RomnGy to Tour Ngw HompshirG casuaities. An American relief force reached the scene at dusk The battaUon of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade was cut off for 24 hours before the reinforcements arrived to break the Communist attack and bring out dead and wounded. Heavy enemy ground fire kept rescue helicopters away. Associated Press correspondent John Lengel reported from Dak To, about 15 miles from the pling underfoot the Korean mistice agreement ..the broadcast added. N. Viet Aide Vows No Deal ^ , TOKYO (UPI) - Premier ifighUng, the heavy Communist Pham Van Dong of North Viet-WATERTOWN, Mass. (AP) —/*-j® ® in-nam said his nation would never Scott Romney, son of Michigank, i*’®.U-S- perimeter possi-jnegotiate a compromise settle- hlv raiisinff hpavw fasiia I oc T*__ -r .. . ;Gov. George Romney, wiirgor^.a^*^'"*. casualties. Itjment of the war because it ' -- - ° [could I, not be ’ ‘ ’ Syracuse police said she returned Saturday from Yellow Springs, Ohio, home of liberal Antioch College, where she had! been living with an unidentified! couple. Yellow Springs Police Chiefi‘® f'®'^ Hampshire Monday cau^'tS James McKee, contacted Sun-l8®‘^>®>' ior Ms father’s^ ‘h® other Munich, Radio Hanoi said The llghtta*. pert„p, the Ttae.™„™l„r«to bn,ad. Liz, a brown-eyed blonde, was! Young Romney, who'lives STpaigr^rme^ls U^! reported missing Nov. 1, afterj^'f*' f’*® "'*f®> Ronna, in thejpjgj,gg bombed the Hanoi-Hai-leaving a note that police saidj®o®f°n suburb of Watertown, is|pf,ong area for the fifth straight expressed an interest in the hip-'scheduled to spend nine days inThe aLcksIn nent in New York^jNew Hampshire laying ground- pie movement in New York’s' East Village. A search of the!work for the state’s March 12 Flower Kingdom proved f^tile, presidential primary, the first however. M the nation. the fifth Liz was an honor student at a! “I am an underdog in New select Syracuse girls’ school [Hampshire and I have to over- The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PON'nAC AND VIONI’TY - Sunny early today, becoming cloudy late today. High 36 to 42. Cloudy with a chance of light snpw tonight. Low 28 to 32. Occasional snow and cold toihorrow. Wednesday’s outlook: Snow fliirries and cold. Northwest winds 6 to 14 miles becoming light variable tonight. Precipitation probability: 20 per cent today, 40 per cent tonight and 60 per cent tomorrow. come a tremendous lead,” Gov [Romney said Saturday when he announced his candidacy. I Gov. Ronald Reagon of California and former Vice Presi-jdent Richard M. Nixon are con-Isidered likely ■'runners in the primary race. At I •.fti.; Wind velocity A-U Direction: Northwest. ' Sun sets today et 5:08 p.m. Sun rises Tuesday at 7:31 a m. Moon sets Tuesday at 11:48 a.m. Modn rises trday at 7:25 p.nt. Highest temperature Weather: Saturday, cloudy. Hurries; Sunday, cloudy Sunday's Tamperatura Chart 33 24 Jacksonville 65 37 36 18 Kansas City 56 46 26 13 Los Angeles 65 62 ...........il Bch. 78 65 31 27 One Year Ago In Pontiac 78 65 31 27 Orleans 65 35 44 33 50 32 Scott Ronmey and campaign workers plan a 50-community tour “to get people to know more about George Romney.” Young Romney is a student at Harvard Law School. and sixth targets to come off the Pentagon’s restricted list in four days. They, are a concrete plant and a barge yard near Hanoi. The U.S. Command announced the loss of four planes, bringing the total number of losses over the North to 749 air-craft. The four planes carried six crewmen, all of whom are missing. The belief grew among U.S. commanders that the Communists around Dak To are trying to do what they achieved earlier this year just below the Demili-iarized Zone—draw large American forces away from thiqkly populated areas and pin them down in the sparsely settled mountains. session between the premier and Olivier Todd, a French newsman. It did not say when the interview was made. The broadcast was monitored here. r bers of Local 699 at GM’s Steer- ;L.n/nO tlSCapG mg Gear DWlsion plants msagl-' naw was to end today. They their back yards, may park anywhere on-the premises for 48 hours to load or unload, and will be able to keep one boat and one housetrailer, but no more, at the same time. The proposed ordinance dbes restrict width to eight feet bul the length will be left up to the commission tonight,«said R. S. Kenning, City Manager. PARKING SUGGESTIONS The commission will also discuss a recommendation by t|ie Bifmingham-Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce to change I meter parking in parking lot A similar strike by 6,200 mem- No. 1 parking to attendant hold by Britishl parking. “Our struggle is of principles,” Doing said, when principles of such greatness, such importance, are involved, there is no compromise. There cannot be any compromise. “Think of Munich,” he said “That is why there is no compromise possible.” (Some Western Commentators have cited Munich as the best reason for not negotiating with North Vietnam. Britain and France virtually surrendered Czechoslovakia to Adolf Hitler in Munich in 1938 in the mistaken belief that this appeasement would prevent war.) walked out at midnight Friday. The plants make vital gears in • |. . I power and manual steering Pnll/T^ / jfti/''in/imechanisms for GM, Ford Mo-r UI/V.C Wl IILIUI jtor Co., Chrysler and American I I Motors. HONG KONG (AP) —• British Reuther was in his native Police Inspector P. G. Knight| Wheeling, W. Va., to attend the said today he escaped after 35 funerai of his father, Valentine days’ capUvity in Red China byi Reuther, 83, who died Friday. | lifting a bolt on the inside of his j ★ ★ * window and siipping out whUe Because of the funeral, the s two guarts were away. union Friday set back its strike! Kn^ht said he could have es-deadline on bargaining for 8,000 caped that way any day but de-jChrysler Corp. salaried workers cided to ‘let the proper author!- to Sunday. It had originally ties try to get me out first.” [been set for 'Tuesday. fil An agreement covering 95,000 • where he was heldjhouriy-rated UAW workers at m the ^mese border village of Chrysler was ratified Friday. Shum Chun was taking a show-1 The union has not set a date er and the other was talking on [for gm negotiations, which have the telephone. jimbo since contracts After shppmg out the window, I between the UAW and the Big he said he walked possibly 25 Three auto makers expired miles m a circmtous route to the Sent 7 Ford and the UAW Struve Shum Chun River, five miies See ye^r paS d A_d jjjg boslel. Hc hid mlQ^j 22 -7 e a ditch for 45 minutes until a sentry walked away and then swam across to Hong Kong, he said. He was picked up today by a British military truck. ACCIDENTALLY KIDNAPED Knight said he was kidnaped from Hong Kong accidentally by farmers who had not meant to push him across the border. He The move indicated that Reu-said he was well treated, and ther may try to wrap up the tool was told he would be released and die shop contracts before eventually. [trying to win a new contract at Knight’s abduction resulted in^GM. The old tool and die pact a formal British protest to Pe-, expired Oct^ 31 and the union king and the partial closing of i has been woHcing since then un-the border by British authorities |der an extension of the in Hong Ko^^g. tract. Reasons cited in support of the proposal include shopper convenience, minimized police patrol and collection time and increased merchant validation. The chamber suggested the prograiri be tried on a triai basis. The union set today’s skilled trades strike deadline last Thursday, charging “there has been no meaningful progress in contract talks between the union and the Detroit Tooling Association, which represents the companies.” Arroignmonf for Defro/fer in RopGs SGt Teens Set Me Afire--Boy, 9 Bismarck Boston Chicago This Data in 9S Yaars 29 20 Milwaukee Orlea' - -..... York ,, ‘3 37 PN»n"x 8? 54 A 9-year-old Pontiac boy, al 46 32 si"*Lou?s'’ 53 38 ^godly S6t afire by three teen- 48 34 S*TK* city 66 38 '®‘® » Tepoil- 37 23 s' rM“'i“ 31 201®** ^ saUsfactory condition II Mgton il il'Mday in Pontiac General Hos-pital, Authorities said Jimmie Lus-cumb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Buell Luscumb of 926 Stanley, suffered second- -and third-degree burns of the right leg and foot. He told police he was walking through a field near his home on the way from a .market when the youths approached Um from behind The three, described as about 15 or 16 yeafs old and wearing black leather jackets, doUsec him with gasoline from a medicine bottle and set him on fire be said. AP Wirwhutu NATIONAL WEA111ER — Snow and showers are forecast tonight in most sections pf New England and portheast-ern New York. Showers are expected in Texas. It will be colder in ^ large portion of the Midwest. The assailants fled in a car, police were told. Officers said they are continuing to invesUgate the Incideiit. Romney, Percy Differ on Bombing Paus^ WASHINGTON (AP) — Re-j by three assistant secretaries of publican prt^identiai hopeful George Romney said today it would be unwise to stop the bombing of North Vietnam with out knowing whether the halt would bring some “worthwhile result.” Thus the Michigan governor appeared to differ with another GOP presidential Sen. Charles H. Percy of Ilii-who proposed over the weekend that President Johnson order periodic, unannounced halts in the bombing to test communist willingness to gotiate. Romney dealt with Vietnam and his political hopes as he opened his first week as a formally announced candidate for the Republican presiderttial nomination. He threw his hat into the ring with a speech in Detroit Saturday. In preparation for his tour abroad next month Romney canoe to the State Deptartment Monday morning for a............. brlefij« state. They are William P. Bundy, assistant secretary for Asia, John Leddy, assistant secretary for Europe and Lucius Battle, assistant secretary for the Middle East. polls was due to the way his views were presented by the national press. The press, Romney said, had been doing *‘a superficial job on what I’ve said.” And this had resulted, he add- COMMENT ON BOMBING Earlier Romney was interviewed on ■ NBC’s “Today” Show, where he expresseii belief that to stop the bombing of North Vietnam without “Imow-ing” it could lead to some worthwhile result “would not be a very wise thing to do.” On the oiher hand, Romney suggested thaf if the United States knew a bombing halt Would be a step toward Vietnam neutralization, for instance, then it might serve a u^ful par- ed, in the charges that he yas inconsistent ip his positions particularly on Vietnam. As for the domestic scene. Romney contended “We’re in i fiscal mess.” He said he would not favor a tax increase without spending controls. Romney acknowledged that his complaint of having once b^n brainwashed on the Vietnam war had hiurt him in his drive for. the GOP presidential nomination. But he contended his drop in the public iqiinion Romney said he would bring about reductions in spending by cutting space, highway beautifl-cation and other programs “not as essential as others.” Romney, who declared candidacy for the Republican presidehtial hemination Saturday with a pledge to lead this country out of the Vietnam war, said Sunday that neutralizing Vletham is “the most promising alternative” to the nation’s current policy. “Neutralization is a specific alternative. It deserves very careful study,” declared Romney, the first major figure in either party to declare his inten-tioni to seek (he 4 11 A suspect in a recent series of rapes in the Oakland County area faces Circuit Court arraignment on two charges of rape and one of kidnaping in .connection with the assault of a Pontiac woman Sept. 11. Daniel Lee Anders, 26, of Detroit waived preliminary examination at his lower court arraignment Saturday before Waterford Township Justice of the Peace Kenneth Hempstead. He is in custody in Oakland County Jail In Ueu of |150,000 — $50,000 on each charge. •Anders, arrested by Detroit police last Monday following the attempted abduction of a teen-agod girl leaving a laundromat, was transferred to the custody of Oakland County sheriff’s/ deputies Saturday morning on a writ of habeas corpus. Deputies said he was arrested in the girl’s car after a highspeed chase which ended when the vehicle went out of control. FIVE ASSAULTS Anders is a suspect in at least fiV assaults on area women rls in the past two months>> In each dJiM, the victim’s attacker repoi^y approached her as she was apodt to enter her car, point of a knife oir pah^of scissors to drive to a seclnd^ where the rape took place. In the incident in which An^ ders is charged, the woman, aged 25, was walking to her car at the Pontiac Mall when a allegedly forced her to accompany pirn to a wooded area in Commerce Township where he reportedly raped her. After rifling her purse, deputies were told, the assailant raped her again, then returned her to the Mail, No Dividena DETROIT (AP) -i- American Motors directors voted today to ondt payment of a quarterly dividend. It was the ninth suc-qiiBiter without i dhrl- Tiii$ PONTIAC riiKss. isipypAY, November 20, i967 A—3 iJerusalem Continues id Yield Valuable Relics stroy the finds surreptitiously ad go on with their woi But archaeologists ar sistent in their jobs as builders are in theirs. Once they find a promising site, they like to stay with it. Jerusalem (upd -whue Ii raeli Mirage jets scream overhead, archaeologists with trowels and brushes seek traces of past civilizations in the hard, chalky soil berteath Jerusalem. Scientists have been digging in this ancient city for 100 years U^t they continue to find ancient| Kathleen"Kenyon, head of St. I j Hugh’s College, Oxford, Eng- i A well-preserved first century,land, and a lecturer in Pales-I tomb^as unearthed six months tinian archaeology at London I ago when the British consulate, University’s Institute of Archa-! general was building a garden eology has been digging on the well. I slopes south of El Aksa mosque Another tomb, believed to j early Byzantine, was discovered tenacity has proved simultaneously at the site of a worthwhile. Dr. Basil Hennessy,| new wing on the American col- ^'rector of the British School of ony hostel. Archaeology in Jerusalem, be-i it * jlieves Miss Kenyon now has a The soil is so archaeological-picture’’of’the city back! ly rich that many builders be-,*° ■ | gin construction projects with! “It will take time before we as much apprehension as anti-'can tell,” says Miss Kenyon.j cipation. j“'The finds have to be analyzed,! WILL STOP WORK | dated and evaluated and there | is still much work to be done' They know when they uncover.,„ tenches.” an old wall or foundation, the . Department of Antiquities will W'ss Kenyon represents a link stop the work and rush in ex- British archaeologists have had I perts to examine the find. with Jerusalem since 1867, when' . u iij . 'Sir Charles Warren of the Royal, As a result, builders anxious Engineers made the first scien-to complete a project may de- excavation. I dition gave all the explanation | Warren's efforts prepared the one needed to know about Je- way for subsdqyent digs, but rusalem’s past. ] his report was of little use to I * * ★ . I historians because he lacked a «rfle said the Moslem’s sacred reliable means of dating his poti rock rested on the top leaves of a palm tree whose roots fed all the rivers of the world. tery and masonry finds. Several scientific expeditions in the next 20 years were likewise hampered. It wasn’t until the arrival qf another Briton, Flinders Pietrie, that a system- I atic recording of all finds and I a method of dating pottery was CHANGES MIND Although Warren finally got permission to dig, the Pasha periodically changed his mind. But the Briton always had a new site ready to excavate <‘>xi;inti^odac^~ when the Pasha stopped one dig| he started another. i .petrie claimed each period Some of Warren’s heavyhand- could be identified by its own ed methods undoubtedly worriedjkind of pottery. His thesis was the Pasha as much as they strenghtened a few years later would modern archaeologists. by American scholar F. J. Bliss. He Used gunpowder, for ex-1 OLD PRINCIPLE ample, to blast hedvy stones out| Since 1894, the Petrie-Bijss of the way for diggers in the principle has been used to date Between the world wars, ar-, chaeologists uncovered enough pottery, bronze and iron to sub-| stantiate the beiief that Jems-aiem was in fact the site of the ‘City of David.” The American School of Oriental Research undertook several digs. Jewish scholars took Simms, 38 H, Saginaw Sf. Protect Your Family From Winter Ills with Drugs from SIMMS 4-Way ColdTablets Like most pioneering efforts, Warren’s expedition required an I enormous amount of patience and dedication. It also required a sense of humor. When he landed at Jaffa, Tur-, kish officials governing the country at the time thought his| pickaxs, shovels, sextants and theodolites were some strange new weapons. Only fast talking enablei^Uic party to continue on. Warren faced another obstacle in Jerusalem in the form of Izzet Pasha, the Turkish military governor. The Pasha bad not yet received a letter from the Grand Vizier auuthorizing • Warren to dig in Jerusalem and jhe did not know what to do with the intrepid Briton. The Pasha expressed fear that the city walls might tumble down it Warren began digging. Besides, he said, Moslem tra- Short Circuit Kills Horses; Riders Safe I ! EL MONTE, Calif. W -High I voltage electricity killed two, _ mymm. mmim m ^mm\ Sunday but the two young women riding them escaped in-j jjury. Donna McCros.son, 21, and I Sheila Armitage, 27, said theyl rose their horses between a pow-:er pole and a chain link fence. I One horse brushed the pole, the other the fence and the two collided. j Police blamed a short circuit in the power pole. They said the ‘7 — apparently were m-. Be»M oistiiimo CO,cu»()0Ni. BUM. kekiuCby. . ®^*®ted from the current by, their saddles. , subterranean tunnels running off his shafts. The Moslems thought it all part of a plot. “They said were going to deposit little lumps of gunpowder all around the \yalls of the noble sanctuary,” Warren said in his report to the Palestine Exploration Fund. PREPARED WAY “These were to grow until they became barrels. Then in about 20 years we would come back with some machine ami blow the place up.” pottery as far back as 1500 n i All This Week at Simms i %\.’29 volu9i pkg. of 50, fo relief of cold diitress and «i 77c Complete WATCH OVERHAUL with PARTS and LABOR at this price . . . your watch will be disassembled, cleaned and oiled, -odiusted and timed electronically. Genuine factory ports used and you get full year guarantee on labor. Parts include stems, crown, mainspring or balance stolf at this price. automatics, calendars, chronos, biokan crystals. Decanter Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Sf. American Made Towels and Blankets Cost Less at SIMMS Tonite-Tuesday and Wednesday SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT -A Slight Irregulars of Better Quality Bath and Hand Towels Very slight irregulars of $2.95 values of famous make terry cloth towels. And you con choose from solid colors, lovely florols and beautiful scrolls, in o variety of colors. 12x12” Washclotlis 5J1* [00 72x90-ln. BLANKETS First Quality Famous Name Brands Plaids, florols and solids, ’ thermals, revarsibles, houndstooth, etc. Guaranteed washable, Beacon, Pepperell, Chatham, Field-, cresf, etc. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Specials for Today, Tues., Weds, at Simms Enjoy Thanksgiving day more with the specials listed below. Prices slashed so low, we must reserve the right to limit quantities. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Adjustable Chrome Roast Rack and Nylon Baster Enameled Roasters 79? Porceloin enomeled toasters with built-in gravy wells. Self-bosling covers. There's o size tor your fowl at lower Ceramic Electric Pots Boils Liquids in Minutes and Whistles When Ready Sininis Price |48 As shown-decorated pot with singing birds in flowering bushes. Ideal for tea, coffee ond soups. 4 cup copocity. Limit 1. Sits on Top of Toilet Tanks Cabinet-Shelf Units Actual $8.95 value —steel shejf unit with sliding door cabinet. Use it on top of toilet tank, in laundry on the dryer or in the kitchen on 0 base cabinet. A reol qjoce savor u^it. SIMMS..?*. Simms, 98 Nb Saginaw St. LOOK at What YOU Can Buy for Yourself or Give ’Em as CHRISTMAS GIFTS! And you can hide 'em in Simms FREE LAY-AWAY for only $1 down 'til Christmas. Come, save more at Simms today—Tues., and Wed. SIMMS CAMERA DEPT. Genuine TENSOR DIAX HI-INTENSITY LAMPS Model 4975 lamp os shown. Brass and walnut finished, 2-way 'switch for B light. Positions any direction want. $1 holds. Half-Price Vale*on REALTONE 3-Band Portab $:i9.9S M-AM-MB e Radio Model 3002 radio bos 10-tronsisfor and 7 diodes for , extra power. Get FM and AM stations plus marine band . . . tone control, too with battery and earphones. Full year warranty. $i holds. KODAK M-12 Electric Drive Super 8 Movie Camera $29.95 V Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. ;an increasingly larger share in jthe work after the opening of the Hebrew University in 1925. ★ ★ When the state of Israel was created in 1948, a Jewish Department of Antiquities took over responsibility for all excavations. OtoNITE ’til 9 Tubs., 8 to 8:30 P.M. Weds., 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. 4-Way Nasal Spray FAr 98c vatu., 15 cc. Ho. 2 mor. d«o.- jll/ geslonls lhor> olljor leoding sprays. Bromo lunine oAr $ 1.39 value. Pkg. of 50 Cold ortd sinuo - ^ ^ relief with loxotive oettoru Pkg. of 8 Citrism SIMMS Sale Famous BELL A HOWELL Ciperas and Projectors All thi. weak a typical Siintnf Sola — no off-brand goods but ganuino BELL & HOWELL. And tha worrontias won’t go into affact 'til Jon., 1968, plus o full ratum and axchonga privilaga. So coma and sova mora at Simms. Use simms free layaway for Christmas Giving! $1 holds your Christmas gift salaction in FREE LAYAWAY 'til Christmas ... no oxtro chorgas — You pay only tha odvartisad prica. ' Minit Rub „ . $119 vatu., 3-oz. Soolht. I;L« a hikil V|JC Sal Mepatlca _ . $ 1.19 volu., I Ooz. Gentle, ellerveicent C ontocid loxotive that mokes you feel M ll better lost. M \w , DRUGS-MAIN FLOOR Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St, The Entire Family Can Use This Set! BELL & HDWELL to George Wallace, a new star on the presidential political horizon who has the moral courage to support and defend constitutional government, States’ rights and the Nation’s local police forces. DON HOPKINS 51707 MOUND, U-OCA Commends Doctor for Action in Emergency thunders: Nor have the law-enforcement agencies of the federal government taken advantage of the broad phrases of old laws and i!fee^ them to squPlch the interstate activities of the originators of the disorders. VAGUE EXCUSES ’The Portuguese have been in Macao since the time of Magellan. This little place made evil by many of them through the long centuries but ennobled by now is considerably closer to Peking than some to Lisbon. Chinese wall posters litter the place. “There appeared on the walls of St. Joseph’s and every church and religious house in Macao the infamous posters and slogans against God, Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, the Pope, the bishop of Macao, the clergy, accusing-them of the worst crimes practiced, according to the language of this literature under the cape or disguise of religion. As an eyewitness, I express appreciation on behalf of all Grand Trunk employes in the way Dr. Baylis responded and gave medical aid to an injured employe recently. This employe was pinned Inside a gondola car by a heavy steel end gate on his foot. Dr. Baylis was aroused out of bed and responded immediately to this call. With complete disregard for his own safety he gave medical aid. Dr. Baylis is truly a credit to his profession. MEL LEKTZIAN CHIEF CLERK GRAND TRUNK WESTERN RAILROAD CO. (Continued on Page A-7) QueHtioii ami Answer Fear that the Negro voters might misunderstand firmness on this issue has presumably led to the vague excuses that the “demonstrations” come under the head of “free speech” and are, therefore, inunune from punishment. Many voters, however, are at loss to understand why a restaurant owner who wants to choose his own customers can be hauled into court and accused of blocking interstate commerce while organizers of riots which impair the business life of a community — such as those in Detroit, Newark and other cities -r- supposedly are not interfering with interstate The I a m e n t s of the fada singers, the crack and snap of the gambling casinos and even the hymns of the predominantly Catholic European mi- “This is the traditional tactic of atheistic communism— to combat under a political pretext a truth which it does does not admit.” If someone in the family needs psychiatric care but can’t afford professional care. Is there an agency that can help? MRS. D. REPLY His is a lone but stirring voice crying in this tinseled wilderness. We suggest you contact Community Mental Health Services, 1880'S. Woodward Ave., Birmingham, 642-6410. They will do what they can to see that you find the help you need. nority (9,000 of the 200,000 population) have been more-or-less drowned out by Chinese youths chanting the thoughts of Mao. YIELDED TO BULLYING With Lisbon’s consent the local authorities yielded t o bullying without audible p r o-test. Forgotten Man ministrative jobs during the war. have answered mouse, Minnie Mouse/ Des Moines Register They turned over the province’s pro-Chiang Kai-shek Chinese, gave Mao’s Chinese the right to expand what was already a big beachhead in the schools and extended what amounts to a veto power over anything the Portuguese propose or do. As for criticisms of his policies in the Vietnam war, Mr. Johnson, at his news conference, gave an impromptu answer which happens to be one ' of the best definitions of a president’s duty that has been uttered in a long tilM.' He said: One voice cries out against this sorry capitulation. It is that of Paulo Jose Tavares, bishop of Macao. He has tom down posters at personal risk. Verbal Orchids Mrs. E. A. Krebiehl of Rochester; 81st birthday. Mrs. Henrietta Hamper of Union Lake; 84th birthday. Mrs. Ben Blnqirfich of bxford; 85th birthday. : A declaration from his pen takes on the thunder and lightning of biblical doctrine and the r^hteous r^ages of the prophets! TROUBLES PINPOINTED Hi^ troubles can be p i n-pointed to charges by the Red Guards that Prof. Lan Sal Chong of St. Joseph’s College showed pro-Chiang leanings by urging his students to ignore the Oct. 1 anniversary of Mao’s victory but to turn out in force for the Oct. 10 celebrations, “H)e Double Ten,” The American Revolutinary war was a tumultuous period; many men who played an important part in it have been slighted by the passage of time. .j,. One of these forgotten heroes, John Hanson, was recently recalled when a memorial was dedicated to him in Philadelphia. John Hanson has mistakenly been called the “real” first President of the United States, ’Though he led the first congress under the Articles of Confederation, on Nov. 5, 1781, his actual title was President of the United States In Congress Assembled. He negotiated the compromises necessary to win the ratification of the Articles of Confederation. Though the weak organization of states soon proved unworkable, the articles did keep the victorious nation from splitting into independent states after the But not any more. Today the answer would range from miniskirt to mini-state. And it’s not about to end. John Hanson retired because of ill health in 1782 and died a year later. Otherwise, he might have played a major role in establishing the Constitution, and be well remembered among our founding lathers. Bom to Swedish parents in Maryland, Hanson was daught up darly in the revolutionary f^or and pre^ded at a 1774 meeting to protest British to acts. He established a gunlock factory, helped- commission die first troops from the south to join Washington, and worked in other major ad- As it is, he isn’t even included in the Encyclopedia of the American Revolution or the prestigious Dictionary ( pf American History. Recently Moscow radio reported that the Soviet Union has a mini-river. The miniriver is the Reprua River, which is used as a natural reservoir at Gagry, Soviet Georgia. It measures some 65.6 feet from its source to Its mouth. One can only wonder where all this will end. There are loads of possibilities. For instance, in the future, workers will demand mini-daya and mini-weeks, but no doubt they will do more than mini-com-plaln when they see their minl-sBlariea. Many Minis. ^. ff: The Hartford Couraht Just a short time ago, if you Iiad asked someone to tell you, the first word that came into hismind when you said mini, he probably would tuc^lnly IQ IM uw lor ropublt-mloQ of all .local nawi printad In •>!» iMwaMWr at wtll at all AP In Oakland, Gtnttaa, Llv- . I. t altawhtra In Michigan and Slalat SIAM a } Reviewing Other Editorial Pages THE PONTIAC PRESS, MOXDAV, NOVEMBER 20, 1907 A—7 Statue Gets Short Shrift PORTLAND, Maine - A statue of Portland-born poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in the square here that bears his name is getting short shrift these days. ■ ★ ★ . ' ★ „ Since it was set up in 1888, the monument to the creator of “Hiawatha" has become a favored roost of pigeons and the butt of affectionate jokes. A Portland women’s group has protested reports the statue might be moved for street-widening. The city quickly denied any planned move. But f*ublic Works Director Thomas F. Griffin Jr. commented; “Since they’re raising the point, I think it would be a pretty good idea. Henry’s right in the way where he is.” YOUR CHOICE' Children’s upholstered reeking chairs 9.88- Early American platform or modern wolnut - look vinyl covered rockers. m Cradle for make-believe mothers Easy rocking cradle is 20" long, lO'/j" wide, 12" high. Sturdily 1 Afi constructed! Great funi ■ crlh ...2.48 Deluxe crib ......4.48 1 Voice of the People (Continued from Page A-6) ‘Area Needs Improved^. Telephone Service’ We who live in the'^Proud Lake (Milford) area have phone service with a lotted calling area. Our fire department, police department and schools are toll calls. We pay a base rate of $5.10 per month and compete with eight or ten other parties for use of the phone. Our babV has been hospitalized four times in a year and two of the times the phone was out of order. It is time General Telephone got abreast of the times and did a little modernizing. MRS. ALFRED WILKINSON , , MILFORD ‘Car of Ex-Serviceman Was Destroyed’ To persons involved In burning and destroying thd 1967 yellow Dodge stolen from Oxford Bowling Alley October 30, the young man who owned the car^didn’t have insurance. The car was two months old. He purchased it when he got back from Vietnam where he spent a year fighting, risking his life for the people who destroyed his car. Now he has to hitchhike home from work. It is no wonder some don’t want to fight. MRS. BETTY COLEMAN 2195 HEDGE Mother of Servicemen Discusses Vietnam A recent letter on open housing said “put your home where your mouth is.” Perhaps a similar statement would go for those who are for Vietnam — “put your sons where your mouth is” — from President Johnson on down. It would be interesting if each one supporting it would reveal whether or not he has anyone over there, or if those marching for it would prove their sincerity by volunteering. I didn’t raise four sons only to have the draft take each one, but I seem to have no choice. ★ ★ * After the big anti-war demonstrations President Jc-hnson said that if they didn’t quit, they’d have to pass legislation to stop them. This is a great statement for a man who two weeks later fihds “Chucky’s” life too important for his cause. MRS. JAMES FROST 128 E. ELMWOOD, LEONARD ‘Are Wild Chases Worth Lives of Innocent?’ When are law enforcement agencies going to realize how deadly a wild chase on city streets and county roads can be j for citizens of our State? It seems a much better alternative can be arrived at for apprehending lawbreakers. I am sure there are good reasons for these automobile chases, but are they worth the lives of innocent citizens? BOB THIBERT 6480 EASTLAWN, CLARKSTON ‘We Don't Need Romney for Our President’ Gifts, Grants Accepted hy MSU Trustees EAST LANSING W - Gifts and grants totaling $2.75 million have been accepted by Michigan State University trustees for the university. The Herrick Foundation of Detroit gave $300,000 for the John Hannah Professorship Fund, founded to honor the MSU president. ’The Federal Agency for International Development gave $273,988 to continue a business advisory program in Turkey for two more years. CONTINUED AID The U. S. Office of Education gave $260,000 to continue assistance to special education teachers and administrators. A gift of $245,469 was received; from the U. S. Vocational Rehabilitation Administration for a training program for rehabilitation counselors. ★ ★ * A post of director of volunteer programs was authorized by the board. The program now has more than 2,000 students giving free tutoring and teaching assistance to 72 schools throughout south central Michigan. Full School Year Offered to Teachers Football or baseball game, now All-star baseball or all-Arrteri-can football make a big hit with O young sports fans. Sharpihoetcr or Goo-Grophr >omo . 2.64 oo. Two years ago Governor Romney was supporting LBJ on Vietnam. Now he realizes he had been brainwashed. He said j he favored open housing for the State but after protest from all over the State he said he was misquoted. Now he puts [ open housing legislation in the House of Representatives and j takes off to parts unknown trying to sell himself for the presi-I dential nomination. We don’t' need this man for president. I ★ , * ★ i With Romney and LBJ, taxpayers had better wise up and I realize where their money is going. I am against the Vietnam war and open housing. I haven’t been and won’t be brainwashed. 1 W. WILLOUGHBY 291 EWELL, ROMEO ‘Prank Telephone Calls Are Very Upselling’ Recently when I answered my phone at 1:30 am., 1 , heard a female voice making sounds as though in terrible i pain, a sound as though the phone had dropped and a body falling to the floor. In the past year my mother has had several strokes and always called me when having an attack, | acting exactly like the routine I had just heard. I was deeply j upset by the call but because I overheard a faint whispering j in the background I called my parents’ home and found they [ had both been asleep. Since these calls were repeated, every | time my phone rings I feel apprehensive about, answering. NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. (JPi — The School Committee has offered about 40 of the town’s 112 public school teachers year-round employment. Teachers are now paid 10 months a year. The proposal, given to the North Andover Teachers Association for approval, would mean a pay increase of 15 per cent. A ★ ★ I The school board said the j teachers would get four-week 'summer vacations, but would I be expected to work vacations I during the school year. They would teach summer school and aid in school planning. By applying medicine through a tube directly to the site of blood clots in the lung, doctors in Australia have succeeded in dissolving the obstructions. tot Boys', girls' slipover print sleeper Made of Hdneset® for maximum length Ihrinkage control, softly brushed cotton, print top, solid bottom, non- _ __ skid feet, 3-8. 3.39 Deluxe print gro-sleeper of Honeset Elosticized ankles with non-skid plastic soles on feet. Cute "Rocking Horse" print. ■«, Grow features! 100% cotton, _ 14. 2.99 Acrilon® acrylic blanket sleeper Double faced for twice the weor. Full length Zephyr® nylon zip. Non-skid solejj feet, raglon sleeves. 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We now seem to be on the verge of such' a confrontation in the perfume industry, and I just hope some scientist wili be 'around to pick up the pieces. BUY NOW! GET YOUR HOLIDAY TURKEY FREE FROM FRETTERS! WEST Yule Project Readied by Red Cross Red Cross offices are ^ now preparing for their ^ annual Christmas “Voices \ from Home” project. “Voices from Home” enables families of serV- ’ icemen and women stationed abroad or in stateside military hospitals to tape, free of charge, 15- : minute messages which ’ the Red Cross sends. Foreign students and ' families of Peace Corps members may also take advantage of this oppor- | tnnity but must pay their own postage. ; Red Cross officials rec- , ommend preparing notes before coming to tape | messages so that they ^ may take full advantage ^ of every minute of tape. | ★ ★ ★ Tapes are made by appointment only. Contact the Red Cross office at 114 Franklin Blvd. for an appointment. The buildup toward this cataclysmic collision b< back in the stone age when perfume makers first decreed that women would be more alluring if they smelled better. “We’re doing pretty good the way’we smell now,” the Stone Age women xeplied. “Who n it?” ★ But by the time of the Glass Age, man’s natural reticence had developed to the point where some artificial allure was, needed to overcome it. I The perfumers then proceeded to develop fragrances of such devastating potency that man’s natural reticence crumbled at first whiff. And, gosh, how the money rolled in. But still the perfumers were )t content. “The women are hooked, but that’s only half the market,” the deeper thinkerg among them pointed out. “How about tapping the male half?” ★ ★ How can we do that when we have already established perfume as a feminine allure?” skeptics inquired. MANLY SCENTS “It’5 simple,” the thinkers responded. “We simply decree that certain fragrances are feminine and others are masculine.” So they decreed that women should smell like flowers men like wood bark. Which was a fairly satisfactory arrangement all around. But now the perfumers have gone too far. In promoting manly fragrance I to the point where it leads the I field in gallons sold annually, the perfumers gradually upp^ the potency to the irresistible level. One firm has just introduced a manly fragrance so alluring that each bottle is sold with^an instruction sheet illustrating how to ward off feminine advances and break passionate grips. INEVITABLE MEETING So now the stage is set for the inevitable meeting between two irresistible forces. Science cannot tell us what to expect, but I hope I’m nowhere near ground zero when it happens. There may be a heavy toll of innocent bystanders. YOURS rm MM fpnp» FAM0I9 WgRRY (OYiiyi 3 1 . Jf L2J/ .UJfut-J Wynham high style for the young ' ■ man THE QLEN PUtID SUIT & DOUBLE-BREASTED VEST Wynham goes high style this season in a distinctive one-button suit>-and that's fashion news. The story begins with the slightly wider peak lapels, the welt pockets, the high side vents ... and continues with the six-button double-breasted vest and Vim, tapered trousers. And it’s paiierned in this season'i top newsmaker: crisp black-and-whitO Glen plaid. (Also available in high fashion solids of blue, sold, green, brown, or rust). Sizes 35 to 46 ... tSE 1 (pJllIrM INhOUR MEN'S CLOTHING DEPTS. GMW RE-OreNMG PRICES, TOO! We're still celebrating grand re-opening of our recently destroyed Pontiac Storel bilie Fretter has made spectacular factory direct buyi so you can enjoy the savingi of a lifetime. And you'll each receive a free turkey SALE SUNDAY 10 A.M. - 7 P.M. AMril tetof CgmM- . mNoo. Ftoor iwM. f|rNHMlrMi4hloGk Md wMto TVe Eorty flRlHv bMfl«Mi.nMrM6ol IVfl Eetvtaeter IS ee.~n. keheii freeier :ri.:ais^rei »249” ssr-®;'’39r* 11” ae« Sleek eed r.Vwr.i..'r: *189** IS" seiH yy. aieea SS- *286" Ka'^^’ptrb lOOglB iMeSel wOO MeUril IS Oe. PI. c Jirtir’.-:... *199” 'su's.s-Kr.YYijlB , lEALTaNE TIANSiSTli'TlPE lECSaBEI 5 tresslslsr. billl. .rltble ss«S rt- LbJI ADMIRAL SOLID STATE 4-Speed Port. Phono jwM *26*' GENERAL ELECTRIC - AM TABLE radio PrleM Aste. Vel. $1^88 acA vicTii sail# ' STATE TIAiCEIVEIS 3 ells run. sa'/t” to. ^Hln tiku, letlsiy itrseitli 11 ■ Mlutsr. EiralMM ■« 11 ■ tettsrlM. Ret a liifl U ■ *40" M FREE! dalivsry, color tof-i 90 day in homo sorvico policy RCA VICTOR PERSONAL PORTABLE COLOR TV COLOR TV DIA6. Here It III The color TV you'vo boon waiting for and ot tho right A brand now Zenith high porformonco hend^roftod Color TV choiiii. Frottor Prico. Poworful 2I,SOO volt chauii, full UHf-VHF tunor, fin# Super Vidoo Range tuner. Suiiihino Color pl«t«r» »“be, exclusive Color , . I e ^ I a I a *• a I A t Domodulotof Circuitry, 6" twin-ton# Spookor. 25,000 volti of picturo tuning confrol, sloy-set volume (onir.l, outomotu; scene eonirol. Only yHF-VHf tuner. "Push-pull" On-Off switch. $3.16 per week ot Fretter'i. f02 Yq. In, tectfonglor screen. Automofic color clarifier, legs opt, extra. (§) Westinghouse 23" diagonal pictoro, intfant-on COLPR TV WITH ON SCREEN TUNING BARI Exclusive en-screen tuning borl Gient 395 sq. In, rectangular Krttn with initont-on sound, picture in 6 socendi. Forfoctly tuned color In 10 loconds with o,n-scroon tuning bar. Ntw Color chouis with 22 major improvomonti. 23,000 volts ot picturo power. Illuminated Popup channel numbers, memory fine tuning. Contemporary vmlnul lowboy console. Priced to Soli on Sight ot Frottor's. (^Westinghouse All Solid State Combination Console Stereo .Solid Stoto throughout, no tubes to burn out er ro-: place. FM, AM FAVsIeree radio. Six spookori, 4-spood ; automatic' record changer. Automatic shut off end : record intor-mix. Automallc frequency control, record ; storogo space, wood wolnut low boy cabinetry, full ; Hi Mmey Dtwn « a ^ No PayRiRU 'til 1»8 *7^0 i 3 Fill Yiart ti Pay! : 4+oripMiil: Front-Loading •i+rtpolnt' Gknt 16-lb. §Mt9/in€Mtar 2-DOOR, 14 PT. Giant 21.3 cu. Ft. Frestpreef Portabid Dishwasher Automatic Washer Refrigerator/Freexer • Aleblle, with JeNFowntalii Weshine AOiee iSS - ‘ ^ Ni Mtiiy Dtin M Ni PayRoats’tU 1KI 3YiarstiPqr! n49 fRETTES' APPLIANCE V COMPANY THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1967 A—9 Alaska Highway, '42 Construction Wonder, Marks 25th Year JUNEAU, Alaska Ml — One of the construction wonders of World War II, the Alaska Highwaiy, celebrated its 25th birthday today. Conceived of necessity during those early days when Japanese forces held virtual military control of the Pacific the highway connecting Dawson Creek, B.C., with Fairbanks’ Alaska, was completed on Nov. 20,1942. The road had been cut through an untracked wilderness at the incredible rate of eight miles a day, and completed in eight months and 11 days. Total cost for the 1,422 miles of road wai^ $138,312,166. Aften the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941, thelUnited States found her huge territory of Alaska in danger on isolation. Japartese vessels harried Allied shipping the length of the Pacific Coast, and the Alaska Defense Command re- ported a military air force of 23 planes. It had not a single up-to-date fighter. URGENT NEED Ii), Congress, Alaska’s delegate, Anthony J. Dimond, spoke of an urgent need for a supplemental transportation route to Alaska, and on Feb. 11, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt gave the go-ahead for construction of the highway. Moving out from four main bases — Dawson Creek and Ft. Nelson in British .Columbia, Whitehorse in the Yukon Territory and Ghlkana in Alaska — die Army Corps of Engineers tackled the big project. Winding through narrow river valleys, along the sides of solid rock mountains and over seemingly endless muskeg flats', the route presented problems that engineers hadn’t encountered since the Burma Road was finished in 1938. During the summer months of 1942, the Army engineers found their way blocked time and time again by bogs, which consumed rock and gravel as fast as it could be poured in. CLOUDS OF MOSQUITOES Clouds of mosquitoes, the bane of the northern muskeg country, attacked every inch of exposed skin. With the approach of winter, the road builders were beset by temperatures ranging down to 60 and 70 degrees below zero. ★ ★ ★ In all, some 10,000 American troops from seven Army Corps of Engineers regiments and approximately 6,000 civilians worked through the summer and early winter of 1942 to finish the road. Ownership of the road reverted to Canada after the war, with a proviso that travel would be permitted to one and all. Now known as the Alaska Highway, the route was first known as the Alcan Highway. The men who built it had two other names. Because of the oil cans discarded indiscriminately along its length in the rush for completion, they called it the “Oil can Highway’’ or the “Ali Can Highway.” ’The long convoys of military vehicles which once rushed defense materiel to Alaska have given way to streams of tourists, particularly during the summer, and huge truck-trailer rigs. In a report to Congress in 1946, the old House Committee on Roads took official note of the obstacles which confronted highway builders; “The construction of the Alaska Highway and its feeder facilities . . . constitutes one of thq construction epics of modem times. It was a gigantip task performed under great pressure where the elements of nature put man and machines to the ultimate test of performance.” MONDAY-TUESDAY AA ONTGOMERY WARD QEOKgNERS SORRY, NO PHONE, MAIL OR C.O.D. ORDERS • ALL ITEMS ON SALE WHILE THEY LAST Save 1.81 \ . Save 1.51 Save 99^ Special Purchase MEN'S YEI^R AROUND \ WORK PANTS Boy now!'Wear 'em all year for tportt, for work, for leisure. Fortrei " polyester-cotton machine-washes, dries, ready to wear. Trim-fit cot for daylong comfort. Get 'em in black, loden, tan. 30-44. . , LigKt, Lacy Waltz or Nj Full Length Gowns 349 each , REG. $5 • i'.nrol Hrrhjt" »t\lpx uilh flrgiirihirinm • Soft, rozy hruhiied oreliile nntl nythn • In del-vole — unrm, u-i$py-lighiK Soft, light, warm ... bib front etched with fine . lace or lacy yoke-front gown with daisy embroidered applique. S-M-L. Lingerie Dept. Big Assortment of Warm Men's Gloves Reg. 2.99 e It ool-nyltni knitu u ilh toft cnpvekin i>ulin * Hnndsome riny) elyles nith n suede look » Rugged couslruetioii-heavy stitching Plenty of warmth and comfort on cold days! Knits are hand washable ... vinyls have rayon pile lining. S-XL. ilenucear Dept. Teflon® Coated Snow Pushers and Shovels A 88 e Snow ivou'l slick to Tefliui" Coaling e Rusher has 21x12-in, hlutle • Shovel hus 18x15-in. hlude Snow removal made simple! Snow, ice fly off Teflon® coating! Reinforced aluminum blade is lightweight, strong. Garden Shop Save 5.11 Game Table-Extra Top 1988 Regulation 45-in. folding table • . . green or gold felt surface. Extra Masonite® top makes if into dining table! Lamp Dept, Values to ^30 Ready-Made Draperies ^3. Reg. 24.99 Save 1.02 A terrific assortment of styles, colors, fabrics! Colorful prints, solids! 72 or 96-in. wide pow $8 pr. 1 20, 144-in. wide now $14 pr. Drnperyltrpt. Nylon Shell 1” Reg. 2.99 . A classic style! All-' nylon, ribbed waist. \ ' J/ mock turtleneck, nylon zipper. Bright colors! \ Save 3.33 Figure Skates ^66 Reg. 10.99 Ladies' hollow-ground skates . . . full lace style with fur trim, soft, warm insulation. Sportiitg Goofl$ 48 in. wide Save 1.20 Longline Bra Reg. $4 Wear it with or without straps! Zip front, low back, Satin/lace. A 32-36 B 32-38 C 34-40. l.ingerie Dept. Save 58c Super 8 Film 2|67 Reg. 3.25 Price irtcludes , processing! Wards own brand 50-ft. cartridge. ASA 40 ideal for most shots. VhoUtDept. Save 1.91 Children's Phonograph 997 Reg. 11.88 Save 3’^ AUTOMATIC HUMIDIFER Compact, sturdy phonograph plays 45's and 78's. Comes with two unbreakable records,* needles, record rack. An educational toy for your kids! toy Dept. lAdds up to „1 1 gallons of rr^isture to air every day! HoVhumidistat, water level in-dicamr ond washable filter. Caster^ beige finish. • .1,1,/ llruling »39 Reg. 42.95 for Save 69c Boys' Underwear ^2 Reg. 3/2.69 T-shirts and briefs of SuPima" cotton. Soft Pak - nitk' underwear lasts! Size 4-20. Save 40c Propane Refill 77' Reg. 1.17 Stock up on extra propane cylinders —they fit all standard torches, camp stoves! Hat,Inare Dept. ^rv Save 1.21 Men's Pajamas ^78 Reg. 3.99 forized ' cotton broisdcloth, adjustable a I s'!. Coat, middy styles. \Colorfast S-XL. Drpt. Save 1.55 Waterproof Paint Waterproof, ready-mixed paint for basement walls, masonry. Dries in two hours. :atUx,a)cJu- i'ti) OPEN MONDAY THRU FiabAY Ifl'IStTO ‘):00 l>.M. BATUJLDAA y;30 A.1W;-TO*9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 N(«)\ TO^P.W^ • 682-4940 • 'A—10 THE iONTIAC PRESi MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1967 Rosalind Russell: Beauty, Brains and Heart NEW YORK UP) — You never hear anyone bad-ipouthing Rosalind Russell. This js uiiustihl because she is one of those rare women who have beauty, brains and a heart — and other human beings sometimes find it difficult to put up with anyone that gifted. An actress with a sense of humor as engaging as her dramatic talents, she seemed amused the other day when asked how she could explain her own enduring popularity. “Well, if people like me,” she said lightly, “it must be because I like people — all kinds of people. I come from a large family.” ★ ★ ★ As a slender somewhat tomboyish young girl back in her home town, Watertown, Conn., where her mother had been a schoolteacher and her father a well-known trial lawyer, Roz dreamed of a career oh stage and screen. LIST OF ACHIEVEMENTS Now at age 54, some 30 years a star, the list of her achievements is awesome. She has made 48 films—the latest Is Universal’s “Rosie” — in which she played 20 different types of career women, ranging from a mother superior to a judge. Her memorahle portrayals include those of “Sister Kenny” and “Auntie Marne.” 3he has received 97 awards and citations, including three nominations for an Oscar, and election by the Costume Designers Guild to its Hall of Fame of “all-time best dressed women.” Generous with both her time and money. Miss Russell has participated in some 75 civic and philanthropic activities. Through it all she has avoided any taint of smugness or stuffiness. She is still frank, friendly, warm-hearted and merry of spirit. ' “I really love to laugh,” she said. “People don’t laugh enough, and they should. After all, it takes so much more energy to be angry and pan things. “My biggest problem is time, as it is with most anyone. That’s what we are all really looking for, more time to try everything.” ★ ★ ★ To Roz, life is symbolic with light. “It isn’t darkness, it is enlightenment. What goes with poverty and ignorance is darkness. What goes toward making life better is light. “My philosophy can be summed up in one of the phrases Auntie Mame used: ‘Life is a banquet, and most poor suckers are starving to death.’ ” What do you feel is your own best quality, Roz? “That I am myself, I suppose, I don’t try to be anyone else. It isn’t always easy to be yourself. I was in my 30s before I was sure of who I was. , ‘But I sure don’t know everything yet. I'm still guess- ing.’ Your biggest fault, Roz: “Procrastination. I hate to make an unpleasant decision. But I don’t procrastinate about my work. I’ve never been Tate to the set or shown up without knowing my lines.” These are things Roz likes: “My country. I’m terribly pro-America — white picket fences in front of a house — collecting rocks, I must have at least a ton of quartz — vegetarian meals — my religion — working in a garden, I have flowers that bloom all year long — and home and the unify of the family. “I’ve been to a lot of parties and places, but never had more fun than in my own home with my husband and son.” Stops Tormenting Rectal Itch Exclusive Formula Promptly Stops Itching, and Relieves Pain of Piles In Most Cases New York, N.Y, (Special): One of the most tormenting afflictions is the burning itch caused by piles. It’s most embarrassing during the day and especially aggravating at night. ‘Scratching’ only makes the condition ■worse. No matter 'what you’ve, tried without results—here's' good news. , A scientific research institute discovered a special medication which has the ability, irt most cases-to promptly stop the burning itch, relieve pain and actually shrink hemorrhoids. Tests conducted on hundreds of patients- by leading doctors ip New York City, in Washing- ton, D.C. and at a Midwest Med- . ical Center proved this so. And it was accomplished without narcotics or stinging astringents of any kind. The secret is Preparation H* — an exclusive formula for the treatment of hemorrhoids. There is no other formula like it! In case after case. Preparation H promptly stops the burning itch, relieves pain—as it gently reduces the swelling. Preparation H also lubricates, gently soothes irritated tissues and helps prevent further infection. In ointment or supposi- WANTEI Highest Prices Paid <n objectionable provision Jrhich would allow auto trails-1 jport companies which are sold; to replace the drivers with i “guys off the street,” Taylor! ■aaid. He also charged the contract! would allow a company to trans-1 fer drivers into areas where! other drivers were laid off— making it possible to replace older drivers without regard 1 for seniority. “They've just * watered our seniority rights down to where we’ve got nothing at all,” Taylor said. “Anybody who would work up a package like this is oat of his mind.” He said the Teamsters originally agreed to send a representative to a meeting of Lan-simg Local 580 last week explain the contract, but later ordered the meeting cancelled wl len the union learned men from other parts of the country planned to attend. “They found out this thing was) snowballing on them—that more people were going to be here .and that more was getting out than they wanted to let get out-”y Taylor said. Taylor said he understood i drivers would get copies of the flew contract this week along' wflh ratification ballots and woulcf iiave only lO days to, study, the agreement and votej on it. Another meeting of “truckers will !be held in Lansing Sunday, Tayl(^r added. Conservatives in\N.Y. May Run Oyn Candidate NEW YORK (UPI> - The New Yiork Con.servative party may put up a presidential candidate of its own in 1968 if the Republican nomination goes to Gov. George Romney of Michigan, Gow. Nelson Rockefeller of New Yark or New York City Mayor John V. Linday. State Chairman J. Daniel Mahoney said yesterday the party would h»«e no objections to former Vicel President Richard M. Nixon or 1 Gov. Ronald Reagan of California. But he termed Romney, Rockefeller- and' Lindsay “unacceptable.” Mahoney tsaid the party would not support President Johnson in any case. He said that although the.party admires the President’s \basic commitments in Vietnam, It feels the war is not being ‘^effectively prosecuted.” I WASHINGTON (UPI) The Peace Corps, worried about the manpower drain from the draft, is going to play an “active” role from now on in trying to have its overseas volunteers defer^.- Director Jack Hood Vaughn said yesterday the corps is changing its policy of merely advising volunteers of their draft rights and will take cases all the way to the Presidential Appeals Board if necessary to win deferments. In future draft appeals, he said he would write letters to a man’s local board describing the circumstances and' urging deferment until the man completes bis overseas tour. “We have a serious situation,” Vaughn said. “The problem of induction notices to overseas volunteers is becoming a major concern for us. Pulling a volunteer off a productive job at mid tour is unfair to the nation, the host country, the Peace Corps, and the individual.” * * * According to Vaughn, about 60 Peace Corps volunteers have lost draft deferment appeals before the Presidential Appeals Board — the court of last resort for draft reclassifications — in the last 6VI years. I^CENT RULINGS But, while adverse rulings by the board involved less than one-half of one per cent of the 15,000 draft-eligible men who have served in the corps, “virtually all-of these have occurred in the past year.” Vaughn said that most Peace Corps volunteers ore deferred for two years of overseas duty because their 1^1 draft boards consider their ^jwi'to be “in the national interest,” as recommended by Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey. Peace Corps service does not relieve a man of his draft ol^ ligation. . ■* * * But, he said, some local boards refuse deferments to volunteers and their refusals are supported by state appeals boards. The next step is the presidential appeals board. America has increased in population by one-third since 1937. Fires Damage Two Theaters BA^MORli, Md. (#1 - Just IS Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara were trying to escape a blazing fire in “Gone with the; Wind” — on the screen, a fire broke out Sunday in the building, houseing the Hippodrome Theater. No one was injured as 1,400 patrons filed out of the theater. Later Sunday, 60, patrons evacuated just as orderly from the East Theater, where ajnul-' tialarm blaze burned an hour, destroying a heating plant and utility room. The film there ‘You Only Live Twice.** WOMEN OITEN HAVEBUBPERHIMTATION Common Kidney or Bladder Irrlta-ttona aUect twice aa many women aa men, often cauaing tenaeneia and nervouaneaa from frequent, burning. Itching urHtatlor "...— may lote aleep a Backachea and f preaaed. In auch i ally brlnga relaxl... Ing germs in'acid urine, and easing pain. Get CYSTEX at drugglaU today. eimetff \A/AVfi CIPQT ni lAI ITV " ‘YOUR HEALTH” “HEAH'ACHES” Br. H. H. Aleniider CUropraetU Ph^itU^, 1029 Joalyn Avcv, FE 2-0111 ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY STILL tImE to do YOUR WINDOWS ELEGANTLY WITH TIERRA'DRAPERIES Celebrate the holidays in an'elegant setting. Your own. Simply odd the lavish beauty of 'Tierra' drapes to your windows. They're handsomely textured brocade, self-insulated to keep rooms winter-warm, summer-cool. And enjoy practicality os well as elegance: These drapes are Penh-Prest to machine wash, never iron. What more could you ask for? Except a great color range, and our low prices! Make your home beautiful for the holidays Warm wishes to last all winter. .. fashion hued all acrylic blanket Luxciously soft virgin acrylic. Scrumptious decorator shades. They machine wash in lukeWarm water. And best of all, these blankets are the perfect winter weight. At this low price you'll want several! Candlelight sets of rayon and cotton damask .. gift boxed! 3.50 4.50 5.50 48"X 64" 54"X 74" 58"x 88" Holiday tables gleam with rich damask... pink, honey gold, sky blue> or white! Great gifts! Smaller sizes, 6 napkins; large 8. QUILTED VINYL, TABLE PAD . . ., Taffeta ambattad, with Vt" ‘ foam backing............52"»72" “ Terrific & thirsty Terry Towels in 2 prints to choose from . . . SAVE! ^ 'Rose Reflection' towel trio. Print jacquard on thick cotton terry. Lace border frame. Both towel.................$2 'Blossom Brocade Towel!..1.59 Face towel, $ 1; Washcloth, 50c Face Towel, 85c; Washcloth 45c 63 pc. stainless steel tableware service for 8 Quality heavyweight stainless steel, polished to a mirror bright finish. Knives hove hollow handles and forged serrated blades. All pieces ore carefully balanced and proportioned for comfortable handling. 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A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1967 AP WirtPhQto Human Heart Transplant Near ^ CHICAGO (AP) — Surgeons of experience with (animal) rective surgery or treatment, lened somewhat if the heart isibodies is not expected to be any at California’s Stanford Medicalheart transplantation in the lab-| The ideal donor would be a'immersed in cold salt water, jdifferent for transplanted hearts Center are ready to make the oratory which makes us confi-relatively young person dying of i This limits heart transplants-than for transplanted kidneys, world’s first human heart trans-ldent we can take appropriate causes unconnected with heart tion attempts at present to Various drugs are administered plant whenever the ideal donor care of the patient with a car-disease. I emergency situations in which to suppress this reachon. and ideai recipient appear there diac transplant,” he said. | Shumway said the ideal donor both donor and recipient are * * * . . at the same time, the Journal of The journal article said these and ideal recipient have not inmediately avaiiable. The period between death and the American Medical Associa-types of recipients are being been patients in the center at| _ „ heart removal would be when tion said today. Iconsidered at the Palo Alto the identical time, although pa-1 irreversible brain damage sets * w * {medical center: tients of both types haw been I Stanford surgeons have per-in. ‘‘We think the way is clear for; ★ ★ ★ | treated there recently. forfned some 200 heart trans- “Therefore removal of the trial of human heart transplan- • A patient whose heart can-j * * ★ 'plants in dogs with a 60 to 70 per heart cannot be objected to on tation,” Dr. Norman E. Shum- not be restored to normal pulse! Experiments have shown that cent survival rate. One dog the grounds that if it can be reway, head of Stanford’s division when taken off a heart-lung ma-jif the heart is removed from the “ved a year.with a tran^lanted suscitated outside the donor’s of cardiovascular surgery, was chine during open-heart sur-|donor within a half-hour after heart until he was killed for test body there existed the possibili-quoted as saying. Igery. {death, the organ suffers no purposes. ■ ity that the donor himself could * * * ! • Children born with heart de-damage from lack of oxygen, j Stanford surgeons say the have been revived,” the journal We have achieved a degree fects for which there is no cor- The time span can be length-1 body’s effort to reject foreign report said.__ PAWNS OF WAR - Anxious eyes of peasant children watch as U. S. Marines scour their village in search of Vietcong. The children are huddled in a bunker in Loc Son village near An Hoa, south of the Demilitarized Zone in South Vietnam. Flight to U.S. Poll Points to Nixon as Pick of 3 Groups PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) — selves as independents than as' Richard M. Nixon is favored by Republicans for the first time, j r^nk and file Republicans across close SECOND ' Each Plans Press P-nte gusirr ss P™i1 go., A. RockeMkrr oC of 200,000 Copies 'tg to the latest GalluTpoll. Isonly a (e« percent- 1 .. , u J 4u . su age points behind Nixon among I The poll also showed that the independents and the dissident DETROIT (AP) — Three dif- ^®™®'' vice president is also a Democrats, according to the ferent groups worked today nationally ^h mde-p^jj put out three new newspapers Gallup based the findings on proval of President Johnson’s f" November survey and performance in office. Gallup w h i c h M ft says more people now list them- P®'’.®®"® '''®[® ® ®! ® ® * News, an after-.^______________________their top choice from a list of paper, has been closed 3 Strike Papers Set in Detroit Quaker Yacht Faces a S. Viet Deadline DA NANG, Vietnam (fl —j the Quaker yacht Phoenix until Declaring ‘‘we don’t want to beill a.m. Tuesday to get out of second best,” South Viet- South Vietnamese waters and namese government today gavejtake with it the $6,250 worth of -------------------------j medical supplies originally in- I tended for North Vietnam. Soviet Airliner! Government sources In Saigon whW"Ve“ cVr\wo"reitllM^'w^^ currently express disa^ ■said another reason the 80-foot daHies are shut dowiO by --------------------------' " i«hncnn a I r* I lyacht and its crew of eight paci-Ljpii^g Leoves on r/rsfifists were barred from South: ,j,j, j Vietnam was that the crew re-, fused to turn the sup^es over|^.„^ ^ ^ jto the ymtnamese Red Cross^.^^^ ^nidn strike and the D^ jl^tead they insisted on giving, Michigan’s oi^ MOS(X)W W — A new So-|them tq*3uddhist struggle |y corning daily, suspended! viet IL62 jet airliner left today!movement g[oups w h i c h op-Friday because of on its first flight to the United P®®® ^® Vietnamese gov- ^^,jjgj called ‘‘actions of cer-States. Aboard were officials to ®™™®®‘- tain unions.” I discuss a regular New York-! * * ' The three strike papers Moscow airline service. | These sources said the gov- piapngj ^gre the Daily Press GEN. WESTMORELAND NLRB Enters Two Dispuies seven possible GOP candidates. ’The results show. Nixon fa-i vored by 42 per cent of the GOP{ rank and file polled; Rockefel-: ler by 15; Gov. George Romney j iof Michigan, 14; Gov. Ronaldj {Reagan of Clalifornia, 13; Sen.; Mayor John V. Linday of New Charles Percy of Illinois, 5; Market Blaze Kills Cashier Token Pullout by '69 Foreseen WASHINGTON UP) — Citing tional Education Television net-“very serious manpower prob-iwerk prograip-lems” among the North Viet-1 In other war-related develop-namese and Vietcong, Gen. Wil-!ments: jr liam C. Westmorelanrf says a • The Defense Department token withdrawal of U. S. troops acknowledged that more than from South Vietnam may be pos-j600 Air Force F105 fighter-sible within two years. bombers — widely used in Viet- “We have evidence through |nam — were grounded in early our intelligence that the enemy j 1964 because of propulsion has vei’y serious manpower {problems, problems in the South,” said thei * * ★ commander of U.S. forces in! The Pentagon said the sidelin-Vietnam. * jing of the planes followed eight * * * ' ^ instances of major fires and ex- But he warned that any phase-{plosions a b o a r d the Thunder-out of U. S. troops “may be tok- chiefs during combat operations, en at first” and remains condi- But sources said the groundings tional on improvement in the lasted only two days and did not , South Vietnamese forces. adversely affect the U. S war j Westmoreland’s statements effort SAGINAW (At*) — Police are Sunday confirmed reports of the • The American Sociological The group headed by Dmitry!®™ment had guaranteed to the published by Gary Stern, the| WASfflNGTON (UPl) The Hatfield oT investigating a supermarket fire assessment he gave last week to Association said 5,000 of 7^000 / I. Petrov, inspector-general of ‘^e Red C r o s s Express, published by f*®"®"®‘^“®'; Oregon, 3. Five per cent listed in which a cashier died of smoke the House Armed Services Coin-sociologists responding to its; 6 ......... .1,» ^ ^ .n iuhalsUon. - mittee. survey expressed some degreu RirirnRir «ATiTRnav I Susan ftreen 20 whose father APPEARED ON TV of dissatisfaction with U. S. poli- tovototo, pH..toly 0.™. We..too„,«-.ppeared .ton, ^ The board, upsetting its own' .. ________^___„______ „ . J. . 4 V -J . 4 J • • J-4- . ‘ Oregon, 3. Five per cent listed in which a cashier died of civil aviation, will begin techni-'vouW pa®? medicine on to Beaumont, and the De-J®^>®tion ‘h „o preference. inhalation, cal talks in Washington Tues-{‘^® » i '^®*^ *^®'*y Times, published by p®!*®®^’'® bargaining ®*«®tions dav A sDokesman for the Minis-1 Vietnamese navy boats later-,^^arles Dickson. involving privately owned hos- tt