The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR Home Edition VOL. iiM NO. 1)1 ★ ★ ★ ★ l'()\'NA( . Ml( IIKLW, .M()M)A\ MA^ il, MMO n PACKS Commander of OAS Force Named Viet Cong Kills 5 Yanks; 11 c r- i- A - Cl I Arrival to Bring (J.o. Lonfinues Air Strikes ,, r r il t U. S. Cutback SAKiON, Soiilli Vicl Nmn '/I’l All Amcriciin mlvlM'i iiiiil lift South Vicliimncfio Iroopfs wore killed ill II Viet Conn iimlModi Kid miles soiilh ol Salmon last nlKlil, a US, spokesman announced. Anolher Amei ican adviser and 2fi ViHiiamese are missing l''oiii oilier Amei icaiis were killed and one was wounded in two amhiislies Salurday near Hen Cal and near Soii){ He Five Soidli Vietnamese infaii Irymeii were killed at Soii(» He, III were missing and 10 wounded T h e weekend easiiiillles l>rmi|;l)l the loll ol U.S. eomhat dead In VIel Nam lo .'IKS! since December Ultll. .Soiilli Vietnamese casualties the Hen (!al amhiisli were r reported hut were hell e v i heavy. U S Navy war planes ★ ★ ★ e#ftll« Pr«ii Phot* FIII.ST OFF TFK - First prep goirer to K(i oft Hie toe at fl OO a m. in the 14th annual Pontiac Press Invitational golt tournament today at Pontiac Country Club was Walerlord Town-ship High School’.s David Uueiie. Teammate .Joseph Kopeikin .stand.s in the background awaiting liis turn. Walied l.ake and RliMimricid Hilis are the tavorites in the annutd prep tournament. Boat Crash Kills One; 2nd Lost ed sinking anolher Norlli Viel namese PT boat today anil damaging .six military barracks as round the clock air strikes against North Viel Nam conlin lied without letup. Four trucks were damaged in anolher raid, HUAI IN I I.AMFS A II .S military spokeaniin said the boat was lell in Haines alter Navy Skyhawks and Sky raiders bombarded the vessel In Hie Hao Nay Itiver, 1)5 miles north of Hie deimhlarl/ed /.ond North iind .South Viel Infer American Peace Unit First of Kind in Western Hemisphere Says Reds Win Guerrilla War Nam The spokesman said il was the seventh PT boat sunk h\ planes Irom the 7lh lleel < arrler Midway since April 2R. II S Air Force FIO.'is liomlied the barracks near Hie Vnih SANTO DOMINCO. Doinmic.in l{(‘|uihlic i/l’i l'>f.r/,iliiii) (it'll, llii)',o I’aim.sco Alvim wii.s named (o command llie inlet .Ami'iic.in peace I'ofei' ,in Dll' Dominican Kt'pnlilie Iasi niplil as Ihi' Iruei' m .Saiilo l)omin]L;o eonlimied U. S. 1,1. (icn. Hrnce Palmer named dcpiily commaiulci CI.OSFD TO SWIMMFHS The hearh at .Sterling .Slab Park, near Monroe, has lieen closed to swimmers because the polhilcd condition ol upper I.akc File 'I'he sandy hci would make an ideal spot tor bathing if llie water Were cle ol Ihe lorci which U. S, Waterford Ahead in Prep Golf Meet DF/ntOIT (AP) A '2« fool cabin cruiser and a lilMI-fool ocean-going Helgian freighter collided in Hie Detroit Hiver yeslerdiiy. One of six men aboard the (■miser lost his life. A second m;in is missing A Coast Ciiiard boat rescued Ihc other four as Ihey clung In Ihcir overfurned craft. Briton Sees Total Viet Communist Victory on missions along 10 diHcrcnl Marines and paratroopers will oninnmix'r l.alin Americans 10 Sewage Treatment Not Halting Pollution See Story, Page A-3 lo Palmer iiniiids Ihe Amerieaii forces who limded here iiUer Ihe Doininleim re-\(dl on April '24. Firs! miils of a CifiO imm Hra ■/.Ilian torn' were due in Santo A surprising Waterford Township High School team held a two-stroke lead at the halfway point in the 14th annual Pontiac Press Invitational Golf Tournament today at Pontiac Country Club. The five-man Waterford team, led by Dave Ruelle and .loe Kopeikin, both with par 36s, rolled up a nine-hole total of 192: and 'I’he Kelglan freighter Pat-IgnifK and the eruiser humped together at 3:15 a.m. uH the men aboard the smaller eraft were enjoying a predawn eruise. highways. The pl.'ini's also ;d I'ONDON (DPII A Hrilisli tacked fnur si'coiulfirv bridges eounterinsurgeney expert said willi rockets ;md Hiillpiip mis lodav in an interview willi Ihe siles. Hi.- spokesman said, and Uondon Fvening Standard that droppe.l a span of a bridge near Ihe Viet Cong have defe.iled Ihe ip, Taih, ahoiil 170 miles sonlli Domingo today, lo join small Americans in Ihe guerrilla pha.se o( Hanoi. noils Irnm llondnras, Nicaragua of Hie Vietnamese war and may * * a and Cosla Hica. win lofal vielory wilhin a year. ■ The .spokesman said the pilots _ , * * * , ^ * reporled lieavy ground lire al Fulled SI ales said il pollution hgonls The newspaper .said Ihe views, (mies but no enemy aircraft would withdraw about 1,700 of H. (i. K. Thompson, liead of sighted. He said all planes re Ihe British advi.sory mi.ssion to turned safely. South Viet Nam, had been for- (Kdilor's note: This is the lirsl in a live-part series on water poltntion. Associated Press writer Phil Brown has spent several nw.eks visitinq areas ol poUntion and treatment and taUcinq with water probtem experts. Todaq: The Futnre.) Montreal Hit by Bomb Blast heavily favored Bloomfield Hills held down the second spot with 194. Walled Lake, with 197, was third; and Milford and North-ville shared fourth place with 20fi strokes apiece. Pontiac Central was in ninth M0NTRP:A1. Two sticks of place with 211 followed by Pon-dynamite wrapped in’Dewspaper tiac Northern at 21.'i. were found in the main po.st of- Bloomfield Hills is the defend-fice today le.ss than two hours ing champion. It .set a lourna-after a time bomb smashed tnent record of 38.') last year but doors and windows in downtown this could be broken by Ihe red-Montreal. hot Waterford Skippers. * ^ * Leading the Class B entries No one was injured in Ihe ex- was Norlhville, paced by .Jim plosion, which ripped doors off Bertoni who carded a two-over-■ the 12-story Prudential of Eng- par .38 this morning. land building and broke windows . »-hole —............. on the first six floors. waiwiord ' . . ,i_ 1 Bloomlield Hil It was assumed the expio- waiM Lake sion was the Work of Quebec The Coast Guard said Bill Pruitt, 27, of Detroit was trapped in the overturned cruiser and drowned. A companion, identified as Wade Hale, 28, al.so of Detroit, was thrown overboard and was missing. othf:b four The Coast Guard rc.scued the other four within Hi minutes. They were identified as .John Marshall, Frederick Burt and (iene P'crrcll, all of Detroit, and Martin Mohray of Grosse He. FOG, CLOUDS Fog and low clouds covered .some targets in the morning bill Hu' weather cleared by early afli'rnoon. Warded to the U S. gove With the war’s turning point at hand, aeeording to Thompson, (he Communist North Vietnamese lenders “w o ii I d not give u damn” if American planes bombed the capital city of Hanoi. He said ihe Viet (?ong now control mo.st of the countryside and are ready to c iir r y terrorism and subversion - whicli Thomp.son said would be the ”'4 girl was killed and anofhe war’s decisive phase - to South t'h'td wounded slightly during troops as soon arrived and that fiirtluT American men would he wtllulrawn in proportion to the nim.lier of l.alin American troops sent, Tliese are eventually expected lo total 2,000. By IMIII. imOWN Associnted Press Writer LANSING Michigan’.s bc.sl .sowaj’o froafmrni, facilifit'.s ahoul 90 jx'i' coni oll'ocfivo atjain.sl wafer not jfood onouj'h ,to handle ipj.‘7{l'a/,iiinns ui'iUcal pressuie.s that are arisinj'. The 10 per cent Ihat triekle.s through is enough to I'oul many rivers already. And that 10 per cent ehunk grows larger as the pop- At Chii Lai, 52 miles south of Da Nang, a U.S. Murine apparently killed another Murine when he discharged his rifle accidentally, a Marine spokesman said. FIRST SUCH GROUP The iiiter-Amoricaii pe Tlie spokesman said a fi-year- forcc Ihe first such group the history of tlic Western Hemisphere was created last night by Ihe Organization of Amori-can Stales. Umbrellas Needed Tonight, Tomorrow ulation grows larger, and dumps out more and more sewage- hut the rivers do not grow. „ ‘ We need a terrific breakthrough in treatment tech- Viel Nam's towns. The OAS said its purpose will be to cooperate in the ‘restoration of normal eon- I over-all community that An invcstigatiiin was scheduled today by the marine inspection officer. Marines and Viet Cong guerril-“The South Vietnamc.sc and •''•s at Le My, 8 miles west of Da Americans have now lo all in- Nang. A Marine was wounded tents and purposes lost the guer- when a booby trap exploded, rilla phase of the war,” Thomp- la (he ambu.sh last night, the f . n 1 I I i 1 . II-5UIIMUUII Ul IIUI Him L’WII- ^ — ---- M hetween ,1^. through tomorrow. you are planning an outing this evening or tomorrow. The , , , . , . weatherman predicts scattered showers or thundershowers ‘he-.stream for high purpo.scs,” snower.s or inunuusnoweis , TEAM SCORING separatists who want to separate French Canada from the English-speaking part. Today is Victoria Day, a holiday named for the British queen and honoring Canada’s mem- Porillac Central Pontiac Northern West Bloomtield Ferndale Ciarkston ......... Later in, the day there was a .second mishap on Great Takes waters of this area. BURNED SiLIGHTLY Busines.sm^n Charles S. Wolf of Detroit was burned slightly when his 30-foot cabin cruiser caught fire in Lake St. Clair. Wolf, 38, a member of the Mayor’s Committee for the Rehabilitation of Narcotics,Addicts, said the $15,000 craft caught fire shortly before being refueled. son said. CONG CONTROL ''The Viet Cong arc very largely in control of the counlry- Viet Cong caught about 200 government troiips l.'iO miles south-(Continued on Page 2, Col, 1) public” and (q assist in creating “an atmosphere of peace and conciliation that will permit the functioning of democratic institutions.” Temperatures will warm from tonight’s low of 55 to 62 to a high tomorrow of 70 to 78. Prior lo 8 a.m., the thermome-..‘r’s lowest reading in downtown Ihe act creating the force was pontiac was 52, By 2 p.m, the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) mercury climbed,lo 69. said Donald Pierce, chief of .sewage treatment for the State Health Department. “F’rom here on out, a new, hard look at the situation is going to be more and more urgently demanded,” added Norman Billings, asistant executive secretary of the Stale Water Resources Commission. side and are now ready to move against the towns. 3'he next pha.se of the war will be the decisive one. Seeks to Fire Tonohill “The war could be lost by (he South Vietnamese and (he Americans within a year unless it is regarded as a long-haul job, ‘But if the United States is 1 Lawyer Neglected Ruby, Says Brother ticed a paper bag lying on the "R^eT^ woienord sidewalk in front of the insur- jop Kopeixm, Waterford ance company building. Stop; jark''eriwTpon.%r7hea ping their car to '"vestigate, Berjoni.^w^^ they found four sticks of dyna- red Bunker, NortSville , . ... 1 . Rfth Thamfl<. WjitPrforrt Bud Boman, Walled Lake ; AAazniOr Clawson He jumped overboard and was pulled from the water by Coast Guardsmen. The steamer E. M. Ford, first to the scene of the collision, played ®a searchlight on the overturned cruiser lo aid (Joast Guardsmen in their rescue work. “Where pollutional conditions impend, there is little choice of alternative courses to follow,” Billings said. “Either we call a halt to further municipal growth and expansion of industries that produce oxygen - consuming wastes — or we turn to new principles of effluent disposal.” One man bu.sy in the search for belter methods is Dr. K. L. Schulze of Michigan Slate Uni- transformed in a year or two ana j. m. ion sane and that he (Tonahill) has Judge Joe B. Brown, who was versity’s division" of engineering . , . once the Viet Cong stop SftWafm makit mnvt' ^ ""4 legal obligation” on the bench in Ruby’s murder research, winning, theaide could be turned i ‘Dal has temporarily stepped XWO STAGES against them. But the war could about the movie „ , ' . , , down. DLst. Judge Louis Hoi- .ru„ ian» continue without a final decision ‘‘fer- Ruby, 47, was found guilty of Montague County sat in I for ahoiit five vpars ” whether Tonahill will he March 14, 1964 of murdering , , j today’s ‘wo stages, primary for about five years. fired as Ruby’s lawyer. Ruby Lee Harvey Oswald, President hearing ^ " treatment, which alone is about ----------- and his family want to get Ton- Kennedy’s assassin, and sen- ’ ^ 35 per cent effective, and secondary treatment, which takes DAl.l.AS IIIPI) Ruby’s ahill out of the case, but Tona- tcnced to the elcdric chair, resolute’\hrpro.spITct.s c^^^^^^^ be ‘’''•’‘her charged in court today hill maintains that Ruby is in- The case Is now on appeal, that Melvin Belli and J. H. Ton- . Annual Event Pontiac Plans Parade The annual Memorial Day Parade will be held in Pontiac a week from today. The- parade, scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. will follow a rouje beginning "bn Saginaw at Huron, south to Water, -east on Water to Wide TVack and then south to Auburn; ^ • Al Auburn, the 50-unit parade will mhke a U-turn and return to the front of city hall. Represented in the march will be near 1 y'all lodal; veteran groups, school bands, area military, reserve units, law enforcement agencies, churches, children’s organizations and many other groups. front of the city hall when the parade concludes. TO PLAY ‘TAPS’ A "c h 0 i r made up of local church members will sing several selections and the Pontiac Northern High School Band will play “Taps.” Rev. Theodore R. AUebach, Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church,” will prese.it the Memorial Day address. City officials on hand will be introducedh^lhe Memoriaf Day Association President David MacGiHis, 34, ^f 259 W- Column Four husky deputy sheriffs out another 55 per cent of the rushed Ruby from a jail eleva- pollutants, tor to the courtroom for his „ . , .. fourth public appearance since Scientists usually measure his murder trial. Ruby, in a “'V blue and silver colored tie, Hicmical oxygen demand ’ or looked calm, though glum. ' QUESTIONS BROTHER Schulze is working on a third , step — tertiary treatment — lonahill questioned Ruby s brother, Earl of Detroit, as a witness and Earl spent almost p^^ - the case because they had lost confidence in him. two hours on the witness stand. ^ Earl Ruby said that the experiments, Schulze family wanted Tonah.il out of passed through primary and secondary treatment in the East In response to a question as Lansing plant and has been cut to'when they first decided they to about 25 parts of BOD per wanted Tonahill out, Earl Ruby million, said that he started thinking xhroUGH A TANK about a change in counsel dur- „ , , , , ing the actual murder trial. “ ^ ^ ^ - where air is bubbled into it and ■ . 7 , • it‘passes thrbagh a plastic-coat- “I was thinkmg about making Microorganisms ac-’ a change during the trial, pumuigting on the mesh pro^ ■especially when L learned they .tertiary treatment” were making a movie and were j,ave cut BQD by. two or not spending enough time.with parts per million. " my brother and with the wit- - Following the City Hall cere- There will be a ceremony in Cemetery. iflohy, a shoirt service, will be held] at the Perry . Mount Park BACK TO COURT ^ Jack Ruby (right), convicted slayer,' of presidential assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, is surrounded by sheriff’s deputies as he enters eburt in^^Dallas, Tex., nesses. . . KIND OF MOVIE “What kind of movie was Atty. Henry Wade today. Ruby was in court to hear a ruling on ‘ which group of lawyers will represent him in his appeal. t \ 1 P l^hololax D, IT" ii “Well, we first found out (Continued,on Page 2, Col. 4) i . :,t ■ ■- ‘1- n-.’- The treated sewage-balled effluent — thqn goes into a second-tank, in which Schulze is raising some-^upplesr--------- “Fish living in sewage,’' he remarked. • The fish, now in about their (Continuefl on Page 2, Col. 3) i; 1(4 ,7. • ■ -J Jf' A IIIK l‘ONTI/\r I'llKSS, MONDAY. MAY 21. HKO Bolivian Gunfire Leaves ! p* One Killed, Six Wounded 1,A I'AZ, llolivia Sni()Hh lllt-d nil aoldlnit, Hllil |m!lct‘ in (h«‘ hlirnis (il l,i( I'll/, Inditv nnd III till’ niiiiiiliifi |,;iiiillylil, id li'iisl niif iHTwiii wii'i Killed mid six well' wniiiidrd, iiii liiiliii^ Iwn women ' The nlinnlliiK liroKe oiil in Oie ' rii|)lliirs iniiiinliicliiriiif? dislilel. A piihlie dls|)eiihiii\ f^iive llie liKOie nil the VMiiiiided iiiiil Mild nlliei cii.siiidlles were posMlile fur H mililury omi|iuliiiii nf Ilie ifiiveiiinieiil riill (in iidiies. A (joiei niiieiil iiiiiimiiK'eiiiriil siiiil die iidnr id Mllliinl tell In llie iirmeil Imeex funl he lore iiimii iitiil lliiil ii hiillle Wiix iiiiilei wiiv id Teliiiiiayo, The iiilini; millltiry jiiiilti, nieunwhile, preMied its drive I'.mller IimIiiV Hie Jiiiilii re jeeled ii 111 himr Irnee,|irn|)nfied hv die i.lriklii|.| niliiei'i, lii’ihliii(^ dial die Jiiliiei '. Iirsl ndense iifl lliell liie inajnr einha.s.sy I eonsiriiclinn Jnhs dm iii(^ die j enininn fiscal year Birhningham Area News Parking Ramp Discussion Set HIHMINf^HAM City eom iiiissionera will gel logelher with downlnwii biiNliieamiiieii Wednesday n i g h I In discuss methods nl finiiiieiiig Ihe elly's first parking Hlriieliire The HOHsloii to wliloli eoiitral hiisliiess dislricl properly own ers and leiiimis have been liivll ed will he held id II |) in. id Ihe ('ninmuiilly House. The (iroposed |tarking ramp will be built on the I. shaped parking I o I Irontlng Wood ward and Willlts at an estimated cost of $I,I74,KIMI. Uiykenbach Ine recently were approved by Ihe eommisslon. Still unsolved is tile prol» lem of bow' the eonsti uelloii Is to be finaiieed. 'I'be eommisslon esiabllslied ibe Auto Parking System in I0f>4 lo provide lor oft sireel parking faeilllies In Ihe eily. The (leeislnn was revealed in closed lesllmoiiy before Ihe lioii.se Appropriations siibcmn millee in Kebniary. Portions of die testimony were fir.st re leased last March 111. Another IMirlion was released Sunday. Cniitainiiig some rdili parking spaces, die siriicitire wlli re suit ill a net gain In Ihe parking Myslem nf apprnximalidy T/l) spaces. The nrdlnance selling u|) llie sysleni aulhnri/ed Ihe l.ssuance nl reveiiiK' hnnds In pay I nr Ihe lacilllies All nioiieys cnllecled froni sireel nielers and parking lots are pledged lo pay off Ihe hnnds. not appropriated for fiarking lots except lo pay Ihe city’s sliare for properly il owns with in a special aasessmenl dlsliiet. To be discussed Wednesday are two ulternule plans lor fi nanclng the struclure one re qillrliig property owners wllbln Ihe district to pay 40 per cent of Ihe cost and Ihe (dlier re(|ulr-Ing no assessnietil bid providing for a rale Increase. will tiKNI'lllAI, I'tiNDS The elly’s general fund; While cnnimissloiier: seek the reactions of businessmen al die Wedile.srlay meeting, they do nol plan to make a I Inal deterniiiialinn on the linancuig nudhiMl TANKKIt lUTtNS Fiv lorn nttic t'ONt; ATTAt KS 'I'lic hallidinii was no id way hack when the (aimiiumisl guei rlllas opened up with small nrn s fire froni Ihe jungle Helicopters dropped flares over the area, but the Viet (^uig broke nil con-lact and melted ijilo Hie brush, Military sources reported 26 Viet (king killed during a two-duy operation 18 miles south of Ua Nang. The sources said U.S. helicopters aecounted for more than a third of the Viet Cong dead. Nearly irifl U.S. Air Force and Navy nnd Vietnamese air force planes hit targets in North Viet Nam yesterday. U S. spokesmen reported 25 buildings destroyed. 48 damaged, and partial lo total dc.slruction lo three bridges, one weapons site, four railroad boxcars, one radar site, two trucks and one barracks and supply re|Mirled In have h(‘(•n held i hnslages nl Mdliini since l.i Wcdiiesdm \ii Fokc hehcnpler.s today were unnh^e In cMinguish Ihe lire ahnard a Norwegian oil lanker which smashed inin ;i pier yeslerday and exploded in dames al Murnran, .lapan Six crewmen were killed and four nihers were missing in Ihe lire ahnard Ihe Heimvard Al leasl 22 crewmen were in|ured More lhan 500 firenien d ied In hall die hla/e Nn 1 ■poll;, had been re ccived from Qiiechisla, .’ItM) miles south of l.a l’a/„ where figliling yesterday produced a number nf casualties. BLOWN ur Miners at Quechisla were re ported to liave blown up railroad bridges, interrupting rail Iraffii-with Argentina. An armed forces communique said soldiers resfored calm at the Kami mines and that many of the resisting miners had fled. GOP Survey Shows Tax Change Backed One U.S. Air Force F105 Thun-derchief developed engine trouble during the raids and crashed into the sea, but the pilot parachuted and was rescued. DROP LEAFLETS U.S. Air Force planes also dropped about 200,000 propaganda leaflets on the towns of Linh Cam and Vu Liet, about 20 miles northeast of Vinh. North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh declared that U.S. air raids will not weaken his nation. “The U.S. imperialists barbarous and perfidious rnaneu-vers only increase our people’s hatred and only instigate them to fight resolutely till final victory,” Ho said in a statement broadcast by Radio Hanoi. A number of miners w e r e killed in the fighting A cahinel member called the situalion ' virtual civil war. " Presidential assi.slanl Fernando Die/, de Mixiina said troops had taken over the mining center at Kami, near the city of Oruro, 140 miles .south of l.a Paz. He .said “armed action” will be carried out al all mines of the state-owned Bolivian Mining Corp, JUNTA ORDERS The ruling military junta ordered the army to occupy the mines after striking miners refused to return to work. A government decree declared the mining centers military zones and put all per.sons under military juri.sdiction, The miner’s union proposed a suspension of the strike Sunday night if the government would cancel its mine occupation Order and recognize the union’s rights, the miners’ radio network said in a broadcast. The miners control 10 radio stations. The Weather I.ANSINC (API Eleven House Itepublicaiis today reporl-ed dial a survey condiicled among their constituents showed an overwhelming majority supported revision now for Michigan’s lax siruclure. Personal and real (iroperly lax reductions received 8(1 [ler cent support and (l.'l per cent said lliere. should be sales |ax reductions or exetnptions. The majorily voted almost unaniniouslv against an unbalanced budget. Hut al Ihe same time no majority was received for any lax proposed lo replace revenues lost through tax reductions The 11 OOP Hou.se members said more tlian 1,300 per.sons responded to the question sheet, which was printwl in local newspapers and sent out to constitu-enls. Majorities favored elimination of the bounty system on predators, motor vehicle inspection, a poini syslem for 1(1 and 17-year olds, iinplied con.sent for tests of (Irinking drivers and properly tax relief for senior citizens. They opposed lodery sweepstakes as a revenue - rai.ser, greyhmiiid racing, a vote for HI \'car olds and a local option vote on ,Siiiiday li(|uor. (kmdueting the poll were Heps Lester Allen of llhacji, Melvin Destigi'r of lludsonville. Arm'll Engstrom of Traverse ('ity, Thomas k'ord of (Irand Hapids, Willumi Hampton of Birmingham, Quincy Hoffman of Applegate, Uarl tattle of Saginaw, Harry Bohlfs of Akron, (,’yril Hoot of Kalamazoo, Roy Spencer of Attica and Nelson Ti.sdale of-Midland. Stale Depai Iment seliiiily chief (1 Marvin (lenlile fold Hie siihcommillee dial despite American security I(H'iiI work men apiiarently .sneaked in Ihe electronic listening devices dur ing die basic const ruction of the embassies. CHANt'E I’O BE HAD' Said (lenlile "I think our ('x perienees liave shown dial in the way we have handled our affairs in new construction and reconslriiction projects overseas, we have let ourselves be open fdr a ri'al chance lo b<‘ ■had’ by the opposition.” .Surface parking for about 2(KI! cars will remain in the lot, BE( EN'I LY Al'I'HOVED Flans lor IIk; building de signed by O’Dell, Hewlett and OAS Names Dominican Force Leader (Continued From Page One) H(‘ said die Seabees will be used for clo.se and constant oh servalion of foreign workmen lo prevent Ihe jilanting of surrepti tious listening devices on 15 major embassy building and renovation projects around Ihe world. signed by OAS .Secretary-Oener-; al Jose A Mora, Col, Carlos de Meira llattos for Brazil, Lt. Col. Alvaro Arias for Costa Rica, Maj, Folicarpo Faz (larcia for Honduras, Col Julio (lutierrez Rivera for Nicaragua and (Icn. Falnier for Ihe United States. Prosecutor's Aide Is off Critical List Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Considerable cloudiness with scattered showers or thunderstorms today, tonight and Tuesday. Warmer, High today 60 to 74. Low tonight 55 to 62, high Tuesday 70 to 78. East to southeast winds 8 to 16 miles today and tonight and south to southeast 10 to 18 miles Tuesday. Wednesday outlook, partly cloudy and warmer with possible thundershowers. il degree I.; Wind velocity, 12 m.| Direction: Easl-Southeesl. Sun rises Tuesday at 5:04 a.nn. Moon sets Tuesday at 2:06 p.m. Moon rises Tuesday at 2:33 a.m. Downtown Temparaturti Lowest temperature Weather: Scattered showers. Highast and Lowest Ti This Date In t3 Years 52 Chief Assistant Prosecutor Robert D. Long, stricken with internal bleeding last week, has been taken off the critical list, according lo his doctor. “His condition has improved immensely,” the doctor said. Long, 55, regained consciousness over the weekend and is now taking food by mouth, the doctor said. He had been fed intravenously since lapsing into a coma shortly after being admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Tue.sday. The doctor said he will now be able to make studies to de-termine the source of the hemorrhaging. “ ^ Ruby Brother Raps Lawyer (Continued From I’age One) Marine guards will be as signed lo Ihe building sites dur ing nonworkiiig hours. The locations weren’t given, hut officials said most would he al posts behind Ihe Iron (,’urlain. In addition, Centile said some Seabees will be sent lo Frankfurt, Beirut, Panama and Tokyo where they will fan out to area embassies to prepare specially secure rooms. Ferry Capsizes; Fear 150 Dead ahoul it when they asked permission to make some pictures in the Old Carousel Club,” Earl Ruby replied. “My sister, Eva Grant, refused lo let them make the picture. “Sam Gallu was the producer. They received a large sum of money — $65,000, we think — as an advance.” Tonahill said it was “a lie,” and demanded witnesses. Earl Ruby said he had a letter which would help back up his story. Tonahill asked where it was. ZOMBA, Malawi HIM) - A river ferry capsized last night, hurling more than 200 persons into a crocodile-infested river. More than 150, mostly women and children, were feared dead. “Right here in the courtroom,” Karl Ruby .said. j One of the defense lawyers i fished out a letter from a briefcase and gave it to Earl Ruby to read on the witness stand. | Tonahill asked Earl Ruby to j give it to Judge Holland and the letteC was not immediately read aloud. ) Officials said a guide cable snapped and the ferry keeled over and sank in the Shire river 30 miles from here. A government official, who visited the scene and returned to Zomab this morning, said most of the victims were women and chiidren. Mora said the objectives for which the force was created come within Ihe “broad provi I siotis of the OAS charter which are concerned with matters at feeling Ihe iteace and security of the hemisphere.” INFORMAL CEASE-FIRE 'I’he OAS akso announced it had worked out an informal cea.se-fire helween Ihe two warring factions. A 24-hour truce it arranged to evacuate dead and wounded expired at noon Saturday, but fighting did nut resume. An OAS spokesman said the rebel leader, (fol Francisco Caa-mano Deno, and the junta chief. Brig. (Jon. Antonio Imbcrt Bar-■rera, had agreed not to open fire unle.ss attacked. The cease-fire seemed to be working, and yesterday was one of the quietest days in Santo Domingo since the outbreak of the revolt that toppled the government of Donald Reid Cabral. He said 57 persons struggled to shore. They told of seeing their relatives and friends die among the crocodiles in the muddy river waters. It was believed to be one of central Africa’s worst recorded disasters.- AT STALEMATE The military situalion reached a stalemate last week after junta troops broke rebel resistance in the city’s northern suburbs. This left the rebels in control of a downtoU^ area 12 city blocks long and eight blocks wide cordoned off by U.S. troops. The United States has ordered its troops not to allow either side acro.ss its lines. “The military civil war is over,” said one diplomat here, “but the civil war will continue in politics.” RAPID EXHAUSTION’ Imbert said in a radio speech that the rebels were facing “rapid exhaustion.” Sewage Treatment Not Halting Pollution Full ^lor Snaps With '‘Kodacolor’ Films 620-120-127 Siz« |c Hoil 84‘ ‘Kodak’ Kodachrome II I Color Movie Films 1" 8mm Magazine load 3.25 ‘Kodak’ Kodachrome II Color Slide Films* 20-Exposuro Roll isS-Exposure roll . 2.23^ For All-Weather Condiliont I Ansco Snap-Films ‘Polaroid’ Film Sale Type 32 and 37 in ^ \ I 400 and 3000 speedf | i 'Type 42 and 47 179’ ids I 200 arrd 300 speeds Type 1 07 Pack , | 89 j Load —3000 speed Color Film A69 | Type 108 and 48 0 m ^Kodak’ Instamatic Film VP 126 Black 'n Whit* 12-Exps. 49' ||^ CX-1 26 Film for H Kodacolor Prints 99' ■ KX-1 26 Film for Hp Kodachrome slides......, ■I49 Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather I. Fran/fsto 62 ; WlArNM tUMAU (Continued From Page One) third generation, live off water plants which thrive on nutrient materials still in the effluent. CAUSE PROBLEMS In actual waterways, these nutrients in sewage sometimes cause problems by boosting, the growth of waterplants to the point where they clog the stream. (That is why Schulze puts,, water plants in the second tank — to absorb some of the nutrients before the effluent finally passes out of the sys-_ tern. AP Photofax NATIONAL WEATHER. — Weathermen predict rain tonight from; the northern and cefrtral Plateau region eastward into Uie upper Mississippi Valley. It will be milder ovpr eastern half of nation and cooler in the northern and soutiv-ern Hateau region. Little temperature change is forecast for the remainder of the natioqt. i ,Vi’ A.. Schulze has had success with 10-and 15-gaIlon tanks, cutting the bacteria count by as much ; as 95 per cent in addition to I cutting BOD. His next experiments will involve 200 - gallon tanks. There could be problems using. this system in a ‘full-scale sewage plant, Schulze explains, since lower temperatures in winter could slow down the process. • L ” SECONPARY TREATMENT ’ Present conditions would be better if all municipalities had j Arbor. Construction could begin secondary treatment p 1 a n t s, j by next fall, with completion by Schulze says,„huijbe, js„ippking June, 1967. farther ahead. j ★ * * ^ And, he adds, “if we have | Meanwhile, officials are study-endugh money to shoot that ; ing the possibilities of three many space probes, we should : other waste handling methods-have enough to handle these i lagooning, spray irrigation and problems down here.’’ | stream low-flow augmentation. Billings noted, however that “reservoir sites suitable for this purpo.se are not abundant, and, one by one, they are being removed from availability through development for other inten.sive uses.” Some federaL money for water pollution research in Michigan is forthcoming. NATURAL ABILITY ; The augmentation approach aims at making better use of a river’s natural ability to handle wastes. How much a riv.er can handle, without becoming foul depends on the size and flow of '’’e river. The water resources act of 1964 provides $7.5,000 the first year, W,500 the second and $100,OOO each year after that for the institute of water research in each state, MONEY FOR RESEARCH It also provides money for research from a matching fund, of Under a Michigan la\vj)assed the Office of Water Resources : last year, communities a 1 o rt g Research of the U. S, Depart-j such a river would be allowed to form an agency to build reser-voif's to catch excess waters The principle of lagooning is the reverse. It involves holding wastes in manufactured lagoons, where bacterial action would cut BOD somewhat during the waiting per^* iod, and then releasing them during periods of high stream flow. • . Some rivers handle the waste flowing into them; fairly wejll until midsummer, when their flow drops. Spray irrigation involve? spraying treated effluent into vacant fields. “Both lagooning and spray irrigation require rather large land areas,” Billings reminded. ment of the Interior. Michigan’s Institute of Water Research, opened in 1961^ has headquarters at MSU. in addition, the U. S. Publib Health Service plans to build Its $2.5 million MidWest Water Pollution L^^oratory, at Ann when stream flow is high during the spring; When flow drops during the summer,, water would be re-leaseld froip the reservoirs. Pierce added that isolation also is needed for spray irrigation, to ensure that stray winds did not carry the* effluent into population centers. Meanwhile, the sewers ’keep flowing. I Next: The Problem. •luV” ‘ -i 'INK I>()NIIA( I’HKSS. >roXI)AV, MAY HMl.l 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET [sPKIM'TMIsDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!] GRADE A 291 CANADIAN BACON Ends & Pieces 21*1 FRYING CHICKEN QUARTERS $- No Indonesia Officials as U. S. Envoy Leaves .IAKAHTA; liKloiicsIii (Ill’ll Urliriii)> U S. Ari)l)ftsHji(ior Howard l‘. .loitcH Iffl Jakarta today, ending a seven-year assignment in Indonesia No high ranking Indonesian oftieiul was on liand to Sf^e him o)t Jones and his wite were I he only parisengers ahoard a Tan Arnerlean fliglit. They received Npei'ial dispensation from tndo nesian I’resident Sukarno to lM)ard tlie plane I’an Ameriean flies to Jakarta from Singapore hut is not idlow<‘d lo carry pas- Movement at N. Viet Border Red China Buildup Called 3care Tadic eng(‘r: MUSCULAR ACHES-PAINS eftUVO lableta whan you want temporary reliel Irom minor achei and paint and body ilillnett often attociated with Arthritii, Rheumatitm, Durtitii, Lumbago, Backache and Painful Mutcular achei. Late theie ditcomforti or your money back. I SIMMS BROS. Dept. Stoie 98 N. Saginaw — Drug Dept. First /it Simms . . . of coursv-and already At ('nt-Frices. Came^ See and Huy The ISem IKODAK ‘Super 8’ Movie Cameras! Intlanl Thrradinfg—All with Klwtric I'ilm Drive Good-lnstamatic M2 Camera TAIPEI, Formosp (UPIl -Nufionalist Chinese inlelligence officers said today Communisl ('liiiui lias lieen moving mlll-fary eipiipmenl lownrd its border wllli Norlli Viet Nam in llie past two weeks, The move Was seen as a feint 1),V tlie Picking regime to frighten Hie United Slides away from any plans it may liave for ex ponding the war in Viet Nam ralher Hum a step lowaid out rigid Chinese Inlervenlion. In London, the Suiidny Express reporlrsl that C(»|iiniiinist Chinn Is stepping up n vast iiiovement of troops, ntekets, guns and uminitnillon toward the Vietnamese border. In a dispatch from Hong Kong, Express correspondent (ieoffrey Thurshy said Hu> buildup was so inteii.se Hud the i fill way line l)(dw(‘(‘n f’eking and t'aidon was. closed lo civilian Iraffic two weeks Jigo unless they can be sure of Russian logistical support. Siieh support Is not likely heeaiise of the stale of Slno-Sovlel relations, It wag re-IHii'teil. The Chinese are believed lacking sufflcitmt oil and other resources for fighting a successful war al Ibis time Russian oil delivtiries to (Jdna were siis-pemled in IIHiO The Sovitds, in a Pravda statement publislied yesterday in Moscow, rcitcrattHl their pledgt! to incK^nse military aid lo North VicI Nam Hui the slaleineiit cotdaine<| no specif "To rebuff the reckless Ame iciin imperialism in Viet Nam is Mililary ofticials line liasc Ihcir iidclllgencc information on high-flying U2 rcconn.ii.s.simcc planes operating over Hie t’hi-nese mainland and ohserver.s on llu< ground. NO NEED Scandal Clouds Bridge Tourney the vital task of all peace-loving . forces, of all those who are figliting against the danger of a w 0 r I <1 Hieniionuclear war," 'ravda said "TTie jieople.s know i om ■ experience whiU tlie ap j peasing of aggressors leads lo, | There must he no more i Municlis ’’ I Park Free in Simms Lot only a 160 to our front door J ond oil you do it hav* your ticket Httampad with lany purchata IpkOwiMfJ*” Simms. 1 / 6 WAYMt ‘ (V ^ A’ COUNI{ JAIL , .1 1 r.AOlNAvV 5 ■ T Two British Players Accused of Cheating They said that lliere was no | lUJENO.S AIRES, Argenlina for Communisl Cliina to j i;n[, yvorld bridge move udditionul trcsip.s into the border area. As long as three tnoiillis ago, the Chinese were reporl-«‘d to have Increased border garrisons to about 20(1,000 men and to have stationed nn air division of 150 planes on Iluinan island in the (Rdf of Tonkin. The island is less than 100 miles from the Vietnamese eoasl. Tile Nalionalisl ofticials .said Hiey liad no knowledge of any large (roop movements recently and statisl they were unaware of disruptions of rail Iraffic on the I’eking-Canton route. louruamcnl ended under a cloud of scandal Sunday night a.s officials of the World Rridgc Ewler-atioii accused two British filay-ers of clicaling. The captain of the Rrilisli team immediately ceded all points it had won. giving the Uiiiled Slates .second place in Hie (ournament. Maly won Hic world ctijimpionship and Hie "B(‘rmud;< Bowl” lor Hie sev-eiiHi con.secutive lime, Argen-Hn(‘ was thtf'd in Hk‘ four-nation finals. The litiildup of e()uipmenl was being carried on so conspicuously that it could hardly be meant as anything more than ‘‘coercion" to force the United States to drop any plan.s for expanding Hie war. officials here said. NO INTENTION They said Hie Red Chinese have no intention of sending regular (roop.s into tlie conflict Fine Quality Early American and Colonial Furniture At Special Introductory Prices FREE GIFTS FOR CHILDJ^EN and ADULTS Slop in and take advantage of our Grand, Opening Specials Today. We Are Sure You Will Like Wliat You See. Colonial . . . Furniture That's Fun To Live With. SPECIAL OFFER! 4-PIECE COLONIAL GROUP Includes a 3 cushion sola in your choice of 5 different styles, plus many different fob's rics and colors to select from. Also includes 3^ tables in your choicer of styles. $198 [■’cdcralion officials accused Terence Reese and Boris Sdia-piro of "transmitting information to each other in a prohibited manner" during play. Authoritative sources said they had been using finger signals during bidding. Both Britons are retiowned players, and Reese is considered by many expert.s lo be the world’s best individual player. He has written nrany authoritative books on the game, WORLD CHAMBS Schapiro and Hee.se played together on the British team that won the world champion-I .ship for pairs in I9(i2, That year I Schapiro also was a member of I the team that won the world mixed team champion. 100% woven cotton drapes In 45 or 90 Inch lengths. Pre-plealed, ready lo hank. Vqriely o( stripes, checks or plaids in decorator colors. —Basamant Pay More? What for? Simms is Right Here In Pentiac! Michigan Peat w Gold Prize’ Grass Seed 'High organic nitrogen leasing peat for plants, gardens and lowns. l.imil 4 hbgs. —2nd Floor A guaranteed mixture of seed for noW or established lowns. (Other seeds at discount price loo.) -2nd Floor 3-Qt. Polished Aluminum Whistling Tea Kettle For Home, Cottage and Cabin 16-Pc. Dinnerware Set Durable Fiberglas-Stackable Over-Lap Snack Trays $:t.95 Value each ofi' di'i plates, cups,,, saucers, bread " and butler plates. In attractive designed Wpe. _2nd Floor m A 4.-^ ■J' ■ As shown — fubulor steal leg design allows you to put table right over your lop. Wild flower pattern on troy, opd removoble for ^ cleaning." —2nd floor White Enamel Steel Folding Chairs 199 ■ IlfilL $4.00 Value - - all metal folding chairs for the home, cottage or cabin. Perforated seals and backs tor coolness and contoured for comfort. Perfect as extra chairs in your home. Limit 4 per person. “ -2nd Floor SIMASM 3-Fioors ' of Tlicr* Discounts I A—4 'niK rON'I’lAC’ l*KK-SS, Mf)Nl)AV. MAY it. 100.5 Ford Co. Fund Gives Hospital 1,000 Sum $150, H(K HKSTKI( A KninI of lliiiii $1 25 million, iicconling to $i:)(),000 lowiird consInK'llon ol Hilcy Allen, mlminislriilor of llie lloclie.sler Pnil of (’nllenlon ( rlllenlon Cetiernl. (.eiieml llos|)iliil li;e. Iiei'ii iiukIc * a * l)V Ihe l■'olrs. I’UK PONTIAC I’llKSS. MONDAY, MAY 2i. HMD A—5 Dr, Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Polarizing Glasses Best in Cutting Glare Hy WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D. A reader writes (hat he wants to tjet (lilted ttlosses to ease (tie straht on h I s eyes, wlitch he IIikIh eHim'lally arihoyinii wtien he drives lon({ distances. lie Itlasses reglilar ly tail w o III (I like to get Ills |) I es c r I plion BIIANDSTAD'I ground Into a |ailr of tinted glasses for driving. Itecoinineiiidations fniin v a r Ions Hoiirces as to wliat tint is best are often contradictory and those put out as advertisements may be misleading. Xlic American Academy of Ophthalmology has studied this matter and has (ioncluded that tinted glasses, althougli they re-duce the amount of light that reaches the gye, do little to reflect light that is tjlie chief sourc<> or Irritation and a definite ha/-ard In driving. In driving it is essential to nialntaih the best possible vision at all times. For daylight driving, polarizing glasses arc best for culling down glare. These can now be ground to your prescciption evim in bifocals. Polarizing clip-on glasses are also available at a much lower cost but are less satisfactory because of the a d d e d Weight Yellow (tilted glasNe* are of special aid to liuiiters liecause they make fawn-colored nnl-niiils appear more distinct by cutting out blue and green wave ieiigtliN. 'Hiey have no oilier advani age For al| other puriMises, In eluding, driving, smoky grey Is preferred as a mimhukI chidee after polarizing glasses TinU^d lenses should not be used indoors and should never be used for reading. Unless your eyes are diseased or are abnornially sensitive, such glasses sliould be worn only when the light Is excessively bright. Healthy eyes. In which any refractive error baa been properly corrected, aliould be able to tolerate bright sunlight unless It Is refleeterl hy snow Do not, however, look directly at the sun, even for a fi^w sec onds. Night driving presents a dil ferent problem. Any lens, polar izing, reflecting or tinted, will reduce I lie light that reaches your eyes and to that extent make it more difficult to see dc tails. It is especially dangerous to wear such lenses at dusk nr on a heavily overcast day. You should prevent glare inside y<>ur car l)y d I m III i n g your itanel lights, Never drive so fast you enn't atop within the clearly lighted distance ahead of you. If you are bljuided by (lie glare of on coming cars, reiluce your speed and keep your eyes focused on the light-hand side of the road (WrltlM l*r NtwiSiiwr anUrerlM Ann.) DIB DRY VODKA lor all seasons CAVAUER ^45 5 p287 4/SUI, I I'INI MtlrSAll just say “CHARGE m“ VACATION ALL-WEATHER “42” BLACKWALLS »8 TIME BRAKE SPECIAL «.70 X IS 7.50 X 14 or tubo typo 6.70x15 b ock plus tax and lubalaai, plui tax rtcappablf tira and recappabla Add |2 If yow ttra. Add $1 If trada-ln it your trado-ln not raeappabli It not rtcappabit. 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Doipestlcs . . .iFourth Floor ,1^1 J-'rV'-’rv.' 3'' .. .'I'rvni'll ■’'1 . Tl THE PONTIAC PRESS 4R WorI Huron iStroot Pontine, Mlehlgnn MONDAY, MAY Zt, limh HAIUn.P A riTKlt^tjAl O (' Prr^mrnt »iid Kdllor It Seems to IVli‘ Press Answers Tribune’s (ilovernor Romney p]ditorial Oil thus pai^c IS an t'dilonal Irnm Tlic ('liicat^o Trjbuiif irpi(kIucuh^ ,110..,I oi my mriil Coiiiiiiciit.s on (iovcilini (iioiua. K’omnuv The Tribune is still aj)|)raisinp mir Mich igan man this i.s iinfli'islandablo. Ooi.dwaiuh'h,. their Nmiiliei One boy ★ ★ ★ W , I). Maxoell. Triluine editor and one ol Vmeriea’s most eapa-l)le and disliiiKuislied journalists (a word'we use sparingly) went overboard for Harry (hddwater — and hasn’t reeovered. Mr. Maxwell and tiovernor Uomney had dinner recently and the ('hi-eagoan was imptWKsed w'ith Romney personally; but he can’t forgive the Miehigan (Jovernor (or anyone else) for not clasping the controversial (iIoldw,aier to his bosom in a lasting embrace. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac Pkess supported Goldwateh. I voted for him personally. But when you di.scuss ensuing earnpaign.s, Goeuwaieh is a dead duck and Michigan’s Governor is in thcv ascendancy. The odds are agalhst any man for the Presidential nomination, but George Romney is a definite possibility. ★ ★ ★ Many Michiganders agreed with The Tribune on Romney’s failure to endorse Goldwater. I did my'self, during the campaign. In fact I told Romney so. But Goldwaier was swept into utter oblivion in Michigan by more than a million votes, while Romney was elected by 400,000 « running on the same ticket. The (Jovernor must understand some phases of politics infinitely better than 1 do — and timidly, 1 ■•.iuggCHl perhaps slighily heller than The Trihime. ★ ★ ★ Kinbnicliip, (ioi.DWAiEK and Jil.s dnhloiis pronouncements ni 1 g h t have cost Romney the Governorship, Certainly the people of Michigan proved tliey wanted no part of the Arizona man. He was swamped. The concluding paragraph in Mils outstanding Aim-iican newspaper leaves me unhappy. It .says: “Me (!Mr. Romne> ) is not ^ <|iiile the paragon Mr. Kil/.gerald seems to (hink he is." My dear Mr. Maxweui,. because of your long a;ul perceptive analysis of men and events, I am constrained to suggest there must be more than a modicum of accuracy in your observation. I confes.s I’m tremerulous-ly sold on Mr. Romney, And In closing, may I suggest that I believe you will be, too, as time |)us.ses. ★ ★ ★ In Ihe meantime, Don — are you and 1 going to .Moseow together again — .say in Ihe summer of 1;)()()? And in Conclusion ... New Congressman ... This general area can rejoice over the promising early start of our newest Congressihan in Washington, Billie Farnum. His baptismal weeks have, been fruitful. Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter : A Western Michigan florist tells me he had to refuse two big planting jobs because of the lack of Mexican labor. He always employed two dozen during the spring but the new Federal ruling bars them and U.S. laborers won’t do it............. Currently a well-known magazine runs several pictures of Ursula Andress devoid of clothing. Perhaps this isn’t sensfitional today but one fact is: the photos were taken by her husband. . ......... . George Cram’s death recalls the fact that when he graduated from the Ujtof M. law schooli, his marks set a new high record. Scouts ad- District of Columbia newcomers are inevitably thumbed to the sidelines and bluntly advised to “be FARNUM seen and not hear d.” Our n e w e 8 t rep-r e s e n t a tive hasn’t committed the ihdis-cretion of flying in the face . of Con-gressional precedent, but in the early business of “being . seen’’ he has created a very favorable image. Farnum is quietly “on the” job’’ to a much greater extent than, the traditional beginners although he has never transgressed by challenging historical procedures; ★ ★ . ★ ■ ■ Hq already graces the Appropriations Committee which is a major achievement .for a yearling. This highly coveted spot customarily comes after meeting preliminary tests. Washington newspaperirien say that the Michigander ;has handled himself very creditably and that this district can be proud bf his first months of quiet but effective service. ★ ...★ ■ There are monumental problems at hand aitd more lie ahead; The Press is happy to report on the early showing of this i 1 fledgling statesman. I', t I '' ' vise me that Sue Johnson deserves mention as one of the fine looking girls in the arCa........... .. . Maria Cristina Diligenti, 21, is .studying currently to be- come a mult.i-lingual secretary in Rome- The interesting fact is this: Mai^ia is one of Argentina’s famed quintuplets — two boys and three girls — but they’ve , been *^kept from the spotlight, the front pages and cameras by a jvealthy father who .said at birth that this worldwide event wpuld never be exploited for fi- • hancial gain. And they haven’t. ★ ★ ★ Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La.,^ says Johnson’s “Great Society’’ has already brought “galloping socialism’’ upon us. In my book, most modern Democrats are Socialist-Democrats. ......... . . Fred Corcoran says Sam Snead earned $1 million and saved $2 million of it; while Walter Hagen earned $1 million and spent $2. million of it» . . . ........TV sets a record next fall with 40 new programs.............. Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s — TV’s grand colored “Middle Ages’’ program last Tilesday; the J’s —the same program’s background music which qualifies as the worst ofl the year to date. \ —Harold A, Fitzgerald Early to rise and early to bed—-You’ll have less fun, but a clearer head. ' Voice of the People: Slightly On The Short Side David Lawrence Soys; Voting Rights in States’ Domain WASIIINCTON Conlniry to ii noiicral litipiT.ssion which pic-vaii.s both inside and outside (’onuress, there is no such IhiiiR as a r i (4 ti t to vole I h a I can he i>ranlcd to a cilizen hy Ihe federal j^ov-ernment. il has no au-| Ihority to e Irol or su| vise or in any other way to in- LAWRENCE terfere with the right of the state.s to establi.sh the qualifications of a voter — except to remove di.sorimination as between citizens who arc really qualified to vole and should be registered. The big question now is how far Congress can go in preventing discrl'mination hy , the states when persons are being registered who wish to vote. Certainly, a literacy or other test which applies equally to persons of every color or race is not in itself an abridgement of the right to vote^ fore the right to vote is grunted to a citizen. II i.s one thing to bar discrimination and quite another to deprive slates of the right to say who is or is not really qualified lo vole. This is a slate's re-spoiisihihty and constitutional rigid What is most importani, however, is to keep in mind that neither the executive nor th<> legislative branch of the federal ^opitol Letter: Another Rancher Putting Brand on Political Party To abolish poll taxes, for example, as a qualification for registering votersas has jirst been approved by a vote In a House committee of Congress handling the voting-rights bill— is plainly an action in disregard of Supreme Court decisions. NO DISCRIMINATION A poil tax could, of course, be used wrongfully to limit a citizen’s right to vote, but unless it can be found that white men are permitted to vote when they have failed to pay such a tax, while ,the same neglect by Negroes has lost them the right to vote, no discrimination in a constitutional sense has occurred. The voting-rights bill now before the Senate Would qualify non-English-speaking citizens to vote if th6y have the equivalent of an eighth-grade education in an American ' school where another language is spoken. This would, in effect, amend the constitution of the state of New York, for example, as it contains a provision which requires that a voter be “able, except for physical disability, to read and write English." By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - President .Johnson is no longer the only big-time rancher who is stamping his brand on a national political party. Petite Mary. Brooks, owner-operator of the several - fliou-sand-acre Flat j Top Ranch in Idaho, has forsaken sheep-herding a n d 1^ .! castle roundups \ to become GOP. National Chair- RUTH man Ray Bliss’ MONTGOMERY top assistant in charge of the women’s division. Since women outnumber men in the Grand Old Party, and Mary enjoys speech-making more than her boss? does, Yiational audiences will probably have more Brooks than Bliss in the months ahead. The daughter and the widow of two former U.S. senators, Mrs. C. Wayland Brooks is herself a state senator who captured her traditionally Democratic county last year despite the Johnson landslide. time paid chairman that the GOP has had in years, and he and Mary arc busily cutting out duplication of services between the male and female divisions. Both are real pros in politics. ‘Nokoomforholationim in Today’s Smaller World’ When George Washington left the presidency, one of tlie. points he stressed in his farewell address was to stay out of f(»r0 feet apart. One of the motor-driven doors will he kept closed at all •allieil in role, steel and cop|>er, Tlje nminal .’ItKiinan slafl manning lh<‘ center would swell to aixail IIIHI In a '^i|illon up" MODKitN TOUCH II has Hie feeijng of a modern, e(licj,<'iil indieslrlal building, wilh tliiorewenl llglil.s, pastel Interior coloring ami long corri doi'N a-rgen ('hey lias Tlie Norad command post now is above ground, aboul five miles away In Colorado Springs, and is vulnerable to an alomic knockout By early littWi, alter the spe cially ilesigned compiilers and other fancy new e(|iilpmciil have lieen checked out, the U S and Canadian n'lilllary slafl will take over the underground Com bat Operations (’enter. MAINTAIN VKilL There, these keenly trained experts will maintain a '24 hour vigil for signs of impending at lack bv missile, bomber or sa lelltlc ' If attack should come, the Norad commander in chief and Ids battle staff would "bullon up" behind a brace of Ur lon steel blast doors and call the shots lor the deicnse sending up jet nilerceplor lighter planes, laiiiicliing aiHimlsslli* and untisalellile wea|tons. Air Korce offii-ers claim this (Simplex of steel buildings resting on flit? unkpii' aniishock springs and wedgisl into a network of tunnels beneath aboul 1.-000 h'Ot of .solid granite ' would lie safe from all but jierliaps a direct hit by the biggest hydrogen warliead imaginable. To prepare tor lliiti, Ibi' eiine Mountain coinple: lieen designed as a sort ol un dergrouiid town with the (Uipa liilltles to sustain Us jiopulalloii lor about tl(l da>s willioul out side conlaci Hewn out of rock nl•arby are deep roHervolrs to liold 1 "2 mil lion gallons ol drinking water, another I !i million gallons of water lor cooling, and diesel fuel to run the iiUiny motors Inside Hie windowless walls ol the It inlerconneVled reclangii lar sicci buildings are dormllo lies, mess halls, loixl storage areas, offices, cianpuler rooms and the main lliealer where Hie bailie staff would assemble. 'I'lic wliole complex is scr\'n 1)\ an air jninlicalion system I screen out a(iv gasi's chemicii (ii germ agents n"il radiologi cal cicn rills The center has its own s Berkeley leader, Wife Due in Court There is nolliiiig outside Hie II,-,''i(i.'j-|ool inminlain "a lough old lady," one officer calh'd II to indjcale what i.s inside 'Tlic entrance, reached Irom a roiid winding up the iiuainlain side, looks like Hie inoiiHi of a railroad lunnel Tlie lunneiN vary in size, with the hlgge,sl meiiHurlng 45 lent across and till feel, II Inches from Horn' to celling In all. ((mlraclor.s siijiervlsed hy Hie Army Kngineers hlasled ahoul a million Ions of granite lail of Hie mminlain to create the three miles ol tunnels It took a million piainds ol dynain lie to do Hull Job INItiUMATlON Infiainalion Is the hlehne of the Nialli American Air Delensc Ciiinmaiid VVlIhoul llu‘ latest, mo,“it complete and la.sicsl In lormiillori, Ihe Norad command er would be gravely hampered in reaching what could Im> life-ordeath judgments, radar giant missile warning screens. Tlie Norud chief also must kiujw the status of U.S. interceptor squadrons, of Hie Nike liemiles batteries proleiling aixail IIHI II .S, popnlalion cen tors, ol Ihe slrali^gie Hlrlklng forces COMHITATIONS Tile liigh s|M‘ed compulers goldde up this data, ahaig with ln|)iils reflecting the degree of (lommunisl military midiness, de|iloymeiils of Ited forces and ev(‘ii political taclias In as sliorl a lime as II sec ends, Ihe electronic liniitfs can (ligesi Hiis ItUormalion. inter prei It and then display it on two .icreens fai'Ing tlie Norad commander in his theater at Ihe liciirl ol Ihe undiu gnaind com piex. Inlormallon on widch decisions i new gear Ihonglil so much of its ■ the trip of only a few miles fidin are made. value that it insured each van Colorado Springs to the moun The company which built Ihe | load for at least |1 million for | tain. MAIN Ol'KNINfi The I,OS ANCKl.KS (Al'i Mario Siivio iuul Ihe lormer Su z.iinne Coidherg w.ue exp<>cled lo si’end Hie lirsi (hiy ol Hieli honeymoon in court In Berkeley today lo fiice charges arising from last fall's Kree Spe(>ch Movement demonstrations on the University of California Ber keley cani|)us. aboul a quarter mile iiiMde Ihe mount.'iin hcfis'c reaching Ihe mam op('iiing Hit' command He must be able lo communi cate lho.se judgments to Wasli iiiglon, Hie .Strategic Air Com maiid, and lo Ollawa, Canada's I'iipilal lulu Ihe Comlial Operations Center must flow an unending stream of (lal;i (ui aircraft ap proachuig North suspii'i.ais suhnii Tlial was anoHier objective of the engineers In designing Ihej e(|uipmenl for the Combat Oper j alions Center: greater sjieed in computer IrealmenI of Hie vital "All I Sfiifl w.'is: Show me a filter that reaHy delivers taste and I'll eat my hat.” \TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS a lie,id. oil Hie Iclliles whirring (‘adings Inaii the The engineers bent special efforts to making certain there is continuous communication betw('(>n Ihe ('ombal Operations Center and Hie outside world a serious deficiency in Hie present above-ground command jio.st whose communications Savio, 22, and his 24-y('ar-old bride, were marricsl .Sunday in Beverly Hills, Both have been ch.irgcd, with other CSM mem hers, with disturbing Hie peace a n (I other misdemeanor charges. .Savio was a philosophy slu-d(‘iil at Berkeley, but lias since lel'l Ihe university. Mi.ss Cold-berg is a iihilosophy graduate student there. FORD MOTOR CO. UTICA PLANT Needs Journeymen Electricians, 'toolmakers. Sewing Machine Attachment Makers and Pipefitters Also Needed Are Several Electric Knife Cutters I-)urncym.in't c.ird or 10 houri oporicnco required. Prefer Tooim.ikeri wilh dielecfric, die fepnir cuperience. APPLY HOURLY —PERSONNEL OEFICE 50500 Mound Road ul 23 Mile, Ulku. An Equfll Opportunity Employer Go AheacJ... Go Cadillac! Before you buy any car at any price, consiclera Cadillac first olaI| or previously owned, a Cadillayis the one way to be skire your investment will buy the most and last the longest. Whatever you have budgeted for your next car, your Cadillac dealer has a Cadillac to fit your plans. Naturally, if your choice were unrestricted, you would .prefer a new 1965 Cadillac like the Sedan de Ville in frbnt. Next best would be a late-model, previously-owned Cadillac such as the black 1963 Se(j[an de V'ille, above’. A well-maintained, one-owner used (Cadillac is actually the only real rival of a new Cadillac. Because of the popularity of the 19(i.5 model, your authorized dealer is (he one logical place to go for the best selection,of fine used Cadillacs. Standard ol theWorld SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER’S FINE SEEECl lON OF NEW AND USED CADILI.ACS JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 19B0 WIDE TRACK DRIVE; WEST* • PONTiAC, MICHIGAN' GENERAL MOTORS NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR It enneiit A/AYfi FIRST nilAl ITY ^ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY I Juit chari at P«nn0y*i ^ PENNeY'S O' Foremost Motorized 24" Brazier, Reg. 21.95 NOW Charge If* • Steel hood, worming oven I Swing-out spit • UL listed motor • Removable redwood troy Our ruggecdly-built brazier has "everything"! Redwood tray lets you bring sizzling meats right to the table. Four polished oluminunrG-x. legs, chVonne grid with chjorcool-feeder door. Cook up a whole world of fun foods for the family this summer with this quality brazier grill! Foremost Deluxe 24" Folding Brazier, Reg. 11.95 . . . NOW Q99 Charge It! Foremost Covered Cooker, Reg. 44.95 36” NOW NO DOWN PAYMENT, JUST $5 A MONTH! Value-jSQcked ! Has chromed grid with handy charcoal fetsder door, rugged beaded steel bowl, tovveL-tool bar handle. 1" polished alurninum legs. ' Has full-view heatproof window, chrome - plated spit, UL Ifsted motor. RedWood side troys, bottom storoge area,- adjustable firebox, draft controls more! PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE , Store Hours 9;?0 AM. to 9 P.M. i'l ^ .. I- l"*!' ... V .1 la,., I l\ 'd ' I'f I’i,/. ' V/f. „ 1 ' (Ki I’ONliAC IMiK.SS.MONDAV, MAY llHJft News Briefs From Around the World THE IHTERNATIONAL WHISKY U.S., Philippines Completing Crime Jurisdiction Pact Revision MANILA (AP) U.s; and Philippine nogoliulors are pul ling “finishing loindies" on n revised ngreeinenl covering Jurisdiction over critnes cominlUivI l»y American servicemen In ,tlie Plilllpplnes, a P(»relgn Office source said today. The source said the agree meat Is along the lines of U S. agrc'ements witli its allies In the Norlli Atlantic Treaty Organl/.a lion. These give the United Stales jurlsdhdlon ovdum|Msl over Ihe whmd, a car careeneslle Miller was helliwed to have had a hmul attack iztms Is a parly mcinbei MOSCOW (AP) The Soviet Conininnlsl parly had 11,7511,10(1 lull and candidalc members on The otiiclal journal ol Ihe pin -1 ly's Central Commlllee said :i7 .11 per cent ot Ihe members were I workers, iind only I5 per cenj had completed higher eiinttng e(|uipment, false passports, forged or bogus traveler checks, falsified dm-uments, banknotes In several currencies' and a gun. IX)VKIt, England (AP) -Persons on (he Krench coast 23 miles away watched a roaring FREE! nm , I \M-kei to .I'*"' I th* I VVaiedotd I aroop to' ” VrVi.n%rSmd'om--- ■ i aae vou purchase 2 TO fos . .. 7'r«S Of <>I"L FREE TICKETS AVAILABLE WHEREVER RICHARDSON’S ICE —------- CREAM IS SOLD! %fff •OTC/f ^ CHIP CHIP Ifr'oi/d fHALfi ^Ktr ^0 Fum KOEGEL’S HOT DOGS RICHARDSON'S 1-LB. B D’« THIS IS A "BERRY GOOD" TIME TO ENJOY OUR PERFECT BLEND OF FRESH MILK N' CREAM. iSAVjJjl' PRICES GOOD AT ALL RICHARDSON STORES THRU S-31-65 SPECIALLY PRICED ONLY AT THESE RICllARDSON'S STORES: • DRAYTON PLAINS • MS9 PLAZA • SYLVAN LAKE • HURON AT ELIZABETH LAKE * iflJ.'!!;-!!!??!!!/^ * 7350 highland road • asaz dixie highway ELIZABETH LAKE M-59 PLAZA DRAYTON PLAINS • » 2466 ORPHARD LAKE ROAD SYLVTANLAKE • 5838 M-15 CURKSTDN ^ar#n ©airy Stores V fc I , A- 10 TIIKi rON'IIAC l*RKSS. M()NI)AV. MAY n, MMi.T Johnson Sees Permanent Red Existence in Cuba—Rep. Laird WASmN(;T()N (AIM ll»|) Molvln H. LnlnJ. H-W1h , Mnld today pormonent cxistonce of a romnuinlst Cuba now appears lo l»e pari and parrel of Prest deal Jolitison'a ioi'ei||ti. policy "No other <’oiu'limlon seenia IHmalble," |.aird aald, "In IlKhl of the PreHldenl’H receni slate ineni lliitl we. 'caiinol |iermit the. eKlahllKlinienl of anolhei Coin niimisl KOveriirnenl In llie VVesI ern Hemiaphere ' lion loiel^n ptillcy, II ceilalnly will nol enjoy hiparllsaii support " 'l.aird, chairman of the House llepnhln an f'onterence and a ineuihei ear to he III in. hill onr policies are allll unclear," he said In an Inler- iion: i;\i>iti;s.si:i) Uainl expressed hope lhal Us alms and olijccllvcs, espe Colisullallon with the Or^ani-Ziilion of American Slates he-lorc acliiiK In Uatin America was one a.sjiecl of wind many l»('llcvcd lo he firm American policy, Ualrd said, "ycl only Raps Critics of U. S. Policy Ex-Waterford School Official Gets New Post WASIHNC.TON I AIM Hep Cl .I III Cord ol Michit^an odilV . of MEN WANTED !tvint.; Ilml Ihc for E.l.T. Grodo'alei than wm can lupply" • Full and Part Time • Day and Evenine Sessions • Tuition is Low • Pay as you Go im|iic? limicd Slates is nol iiinicd The llou.se lle|)Uhlican Icadc spoke on 'Commcnl,’’ Ihc weef 1\ radio news program prcpaie l)v llu' ('.or N.'dional Coinmil Dr .Charles N I'apims, who was coordinator of office and dislrihulive cdncalion in the Wa-lerford Township school system before poln(^ lo Northern Mich i(^an Universily in lllftll, has re sl(rni“d his position as head of the business dcparlmcnl of Ibal uni- notification and no coinsultalion t(M»k place before Anierlearl Marines landert in the Dominican Hepublic." It Is doubly unforfimate, l-alrd said, that Johnson aptilles tlie same deflnlllon of "consulfa-llon" lo U S. allies as he appar-enlly does lo the Hepulillean con|tr(‘AHlonal leadershii). ‘CONSUI/rA'I'lON’ "The 'consultallon' that occurred with memhers of Congress leKardliiK Ihe PresidenI’s (ieclslon lo send Marines Into Ihe Dominican Hepuhlic is--ciimsl approximately one hour idler Ihe Marines had landed," he said. "Yel the American people are led lo believe lhal Ihe staunch siipporl tilven Ihc I’rcsidenI by Hcpubllcans Wji.s xlven before iis well as idler Ihe decision had been made " some South Amerlciin countries. "It Is a fairly safe bet that another crisi.s situation will develop in one or another of these countries, and if would not be sur|)rislnK If the next crisis (m;-eurred In (Guatemala or Venezuela or, Colombia, to mention Just three of the more explosive possibilities," he said. ELECTRONICS CLASSES NOW FORMING iianil loifRCn NAME....... ADDRESS... PHDNE...... CITY....... ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE TECHNOLOGY 2451 WOOOWARD AVE. OETROIT 1 WO 2-5660 Si Augusline, Ha , I iriri Ihe 4(M)lh anniven I founding Ihi.s yoiir. I ohsei' PAINT SALE! 7 Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel CLEARANCE ALL LIGHT FIXTURES 50% OFF MAG-O-LAC’S WONDER PAINT of the Century • FAMOUS FORMULA “99” • EXTERIOR-INTERIOR FINISH • NO PEELING eVlOO • NOBLISTCRS Reg. ^7” V CERAMIC 16x16 ASPHALT CERAMIC WALL CEILING TILE TILE TILE TILE BROWN For Floor, Wall 1x1 Cry»toline Wo Loon You Th« Toolt Slightly V ea. r«* 69c 35* t 8® J-: Light 6'« »59' PLASTIC PANELING MOSAIC VINYL WALL 4x7 Ft. TILE Asbestos TILE Luan Mahogany l!ou!; GENUINE TILE 50% Off ORIENTAL Case of 89 Wat Now Durable' All Shopes ond Sizas Stom R««i>tanl 4c 2c 6c 3c 8c 4o Plaatic Coated R95 7.9S W 55* 7.1 ^ PONTIAC'S UR6EST TKE CENTER Our Own lnsta|ition Work Done By Experts OPtMAAON.,THURS.,FRI. TR 9d)0 PJM. FREE PARKING in REAR 1075 W. Huron St. 334-9957 If You Don't Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! :ic. JJT ■rslly I’iipp.is has iiccepted an np-pomlmenl as de.in of hiisiness id Cvahogii College, Cleveland, OIno' I.aird also said Johnson should iollow up his initial firm iicllon In I his hemispliere by restallng Ihe docliine lhal Ihej exporl of communism from | (!ul)ii lo other l.alln American I countries will not he tolerated, j It is a well-estid)lished fact,! l.idrd said, thid thousands of Castro trained guerrillii subversives have already InfillrattHl PRE-DECORATION DAY SALE SPECIALS QOOD THRU MAY 29 Th« acllv* iprlnfi and •omm«r tnonihi ar« |ull ahaad. Gat your tlioa wardrob* In ihapa now at Ihoto low, low pricat Ladies’ TOE PIECES and TOe PLATES pair RUBBER HEELS pair HEEL LIFTS L 39‘ LADIES’ HANDBAG HANDLES . - $1-25 WHILE YOU WAIT OR SHOP SERVICE NEISNER’S SHOE REPAIR 42 N. Saginaw - Downtown Pontiac Week CUSTOM CONSTRUCTION BIG BEAR CORSTRUCTIOH FE 3-7833 "At my Universdy ol Micin g;m iiiid t'lsewhetc." siiid I'ord. a Mlchigiin gnidu/de, ‘'there hiivo l)e(‘ti some |)lficiu'd car ri(«rs critical of Ihc I’residenl and llieri' card.s say Why die for Viel Nam’’’ "Tliey won’t hiiv,- any impiicl on I,tie Uresictent,” Ford said. “Hirt you know, these peojile who are trying lo create di.s-sension in America on lids cril leal issue in, Ihi.s crilical time may be leading the enemy to a miscalciibdion as to Ihe unity of Ihe United Slates" • 'll WHY NOT the: esortgage: lo ye:ars and *5000 You can, you know. Look at a typical $12,000 mortgage. By paying it off in 20 years instead of 30, your total payments would be $19,812 instead of $24,530. And your monthly payments would be only $14.41 more. That's something to think about before you buy or build a home, isn't it? The Mortgage Loan Specialist at each of the 16 offices of Community National Bank thinks sp. Nationql Bank MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION THE PONTIAC PRESS ■ r '"r '■ 7 ■ MONDA Y, MAY 24, l««fi rONTlAC, MICItKJAN B—1 Women Named to Worlds Fair Hall of Fame Newspaper and nmpazine women’s editors nationwide have picked the above as the 10 “greatest living American women of the 20th century." Their pictures are displayed at the World’s Fair. Top, from left, are Pearl Buck, Edna Ferber, Helen Keller, Sen. Margaret Chase SmUh, Marion Anderson. Below, from left, are Helen Hayes, Maragaret Mead, Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey, Margaret Sanger, Margaret Bourke-White. the Also chosen to the Hall of Fame at World’s Fair are these 10 greatest deceased American women. Top, from left, are Ethel Barrymore, Dr. Florence Sabin, Evangeline Cory Ihjoth, Eleanor lioosevelt, Amelia Earhart. Below, Irom left, are (Irandma Moses, Rachael Car-son, Babe Didricksen Zaharias, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Jane Addams. Brides-Elect Are Feted at Parties Women's Editors Pick 20 Greatest fly SICJNK KARUSTROM Mrs. l-oslcr C. (^olborl relumed Inst week after spending several weeks at the (;olbert home in Texas. She is preparing to leave with Mr. (Colbert for Philadelphia where their son, Nicholas, will claim as his bride, Jacquenette Cummins Chesley, Saturday, in vSt. Peters Church. Nicholas’ sister, Mrs. Colbert Noble, from Battle Creek and his brother, Ivcster Jr., from New York will also be in Philadelphia in time for the rehearsal dinner which the senior Colberts will host. NEW YORK Un - The late Eleanor Roosevelt and Helen Keller, pioneer in work for relief of the handicapped, top the list of 20 American women of the 20th century named Sun- , day to the Women’s Hall of Fame at the World’s Fair. More than 200 women’s editors of newspapers and magazines voted on a list of 100 nominees. Officials did not give vote totals but said Miss Keller, who resides in Westport, Conn., and Mrs. Roosevelt, former First Lady who died in 1961, received the most ballots. SHOWERS Jackie Paulus, daughter of Mr. and MrS. Joseph F. Pau-i lus whose marriage to David Graham Ong II, son of Mr. and Mrs. Graham W. Ong, takes place on June 19 is being feted by her many friends. Neighbors on North Glengarry Road I Mrs. Jesse P. Judd and Mrs. John D. Richardson Jr., entertained for luncheon and a kitchen shower at the Village Women’s Club. Mrs. Palmer R. Rose honored Jackie at a luncheon-shower in the Detroit Golf Club. Mrs. Margaret Maxon and Mrs. John P. O’Hara Jr. were cohostesses at a luncheon and linen shower in the latter’s home. Sharing hostess honors at the trousseau tea in the home of Mrs. Lance Minor were Mrs. Walter J. Simons, Mrs. Douglas Roberts and Sue Schaefer. Jackie’s sorority sistCTs in Delta Gamma eritertained for her in Ann Arbor at the home of Mrs. Robert Peterson. Mrs. George Raywick of Detroit honored her niece at a luncheon. \ Mrs. Spencer Rogers Her-shey is entertaining for tea and a “time-shower,” Tuesday at the Village Woman’s Club, honoring-Lynn Gottlieb, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Jacques Gottlieb of Franklin. The Hall of Fame will be officially dedicated Thursday by Robert Moses, fair presi-ident, and photographic portraits of the winners will be displayed. Ten living and 10 deceased women were selected. Miss Keller’s childhood battle against blindness and deafness was told in the stage play and movie, “The Miracle Worker.” MANY FIELDS Others making the list were; among the living - Marian Anderson, singer; Margaret Bourke-White, photographer-war correspondent; Pearl Buck, author; Edna Ferber, author; Helen Hayes, actress; Dr. Frances 0. Kelsey, pharmacologist; Margaret Mead, janthropologist; Margaret Sanger, birth control leader; and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, R-Maine. FROM PAST Among the deceased — Jane Addams 1860-1935, settlement worker and Nobel Peace Prize winner; Ethel Barrymore 1889-1959, actress; Evangeline Cory Booth 1865-1950, Salvation Army cor^mander in chief and Rachel Carson 1907-1%4, scientist-author. Concluding the list are Amelia Earhart 1898 - 1937, aviatrix; Edna St. Vincent Millay 1892-1950, poet; Grandma Moses 1860-1961, painter; Dr. Florence R. Sabin 1871-1953, scientist; and Babe Did-rikson Zaharias 1914-1956, athlete. Mrs. Tozer Heads Lake Gardeners Mrs. George Tozer has been elected president of the Sylvan Lake branch of Woman’,s Nn-lional Farm and Garden Association. Other officers named at a meeting in the Oakland County Boat Club were Mrs. Glenn W. B(xiell, first vice president; Mrs. Earl Bartlett, second vice president; Mrs. Armand Tremblay and Mrs. William Sanderson, secretaries; and Mrs. Wayne Smith, treasurer. The program was a panel discussion of garden problems, conducted by Mrs. Ralph W. Beebe, Mrs. C. W. Doerr, Mrs. Richard Gavette and Mrs. Sam Warwick. Serving on the hostess committee were Mrs. Paul Antilla, Mrs. Charles E. Hughes and Mrs. Kenneth Ollis. w o m e How Cooks Do Grumble n S BY ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; 1 would like to take exception to your ;,latement liiut women wiio do not give tiieir recipes f ' "1 selfish,/ t and that but , for tlie gener- ' osity of others;' would not haves, a coll e ction , „ themselves. 1 s,pend| many hours | going through cook books, magazines and newspapers culling and trying out new recipes. I have experimented (and even improvised) on some recipes trying to perfect them for guests. For Ai)l)y’s bwklet, “How Troubled? Write to Abby, To Have A l,ovely Wedding,” ‘J"'*' For a personal reply, enclase send .59 eeiits to Abby. care „ stamped, self-addressed en-of The Pontiac Pn'ss. velope. Miss Dunlop Is Wed 'I’lie Edith Cobb (Jiapel of the First Congregational Church was the setting today for the marriage of Carolyn Lee Dunlap to Ralph Girard Coulter of Flint. Parents of the bride are Mrs. Louis L. Dunlap of Delaware Drive and the late Mr. Dunlap. The bridegroom is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Leonard P. Coulter. Plan July Vows Bon Voyage Mrs. Axel Newman, Otter Avenue, who Is leaving for a year in Sweden and Norway was guest of honor at a tea in the Euclid Street home of Mrs. Robert Fuller. Mr. and Mrs. P e r c y L. Berry of East Howard Street announce the engagement of their daughter Linda Sue to Frank Russell Baker, son of Mrs. Louis Rolley of Edison Street and the late Reuel Baker. Although it may be flattering to be asked for ray recipes, isn’t it rather selfish on the part of another to expect to be given a recipe which has entailed much time and effort on my part in order to make her own entertaining easier?- Let’s be fair to the hostess. “THE OTHER SIDE” BEIGE SUIT With her costume suit of beige souffle wool with satin piping, the bride wore a petal hat and gardenia corsage. Her accesiJories were beige and caramel brown. Mrs. Richard C. Draper of Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and Arthur P. Gallagher of Ann Arbor were honor matron and best man respectively, at the rite performed by Rev. Malcolm K. Burton. After a luncheon in the home of the bride’s mother, the new-lywed.s left on a trip to Quebec and the New England States. Their home will be In Flint. The bride was graduated from Ohio University, Athens, and is affiliated with Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Theta Sigma Phi journalism fraternity. Mr. Coulter is an alumnus of the University of Michigan and a member of Phi Bela Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi scholastic honoraries, also Sigma Delta Chi journalism fraternity. A July 2 wedding dale has been set. Volunteers Are Business to Her By MADELEINE DOEREN ‘Volunteers are the b a s i c strength of virtually all Red Cross activities,” according to Mrs. John F. R e»ne c k, c h a i r m a n of the Oakland County Chapter, Office of Vol- unteers, American Red Cross (ARC). “it is my responsibility to have enough volunteers to provide efficient service and to place each volunteer in the most suitable assignment. “All volunteers must be given an understanding of total Red Cross and of their part in it. They must be kept interested and working. All concerned m u s t be informed of the work of the Volunteers.” Linda Conrad Is Honored at Shower A recent bridal shower in the home oT Mrs. Harry Johnson on Cedarbrook Drive honored her niece, Linda Conrad, fiancee of Timothy C. Kumik. The cohostesses, also aunts of the honoree, were Mrs. Harlow .Valin, Mrs. James Conrad and Mrs. John Riedel. Among some 40 guests were Mrs. Bernard Conrad of Royal Street, Commerce Township, .and Mrs. Edwbrd Kumik of Davista Drive, Highland Township, mothers of the engaged couple. St. Patrick’s Catholic Church of Union Lake will be the setting' for the June 12 cei'emony:. TWO LEADERS This assignment entails con- siderable administrative ability w h i c h seems to come easily to the Reinecks, for he is Pontiac’s assistant city manager. Marriage followed Mrs. Rei-neck’s graduation from Wayne University (as it was known then). Then came the grim war nth MRS. JOHN F. REINECK years with her husband stationed at' Fort Knox, Ky. Answering the call for volunteers, she became chairman of the Red Cross Auxiliary in 1940 — supervising production of bandages and surgical Lessings. In 1943, she received certifi* cation as a Gray Lady. IN GERMANY From 1946 until 1950, the Reinecks lived in Germany where he was with Army Intelligence. She taught in American schools and worked as a volunteer in a field hospital. After returning to America, Mrs. Reineck taught at the Georgia Military Academy in -Atlanta." ■ ■ ‘ Before coming to Oakland (bounty in 1961, she was chairman of the Gray Ladies chap-. ters for Fairfax County, Virginia. , ~ The Oakland County Red Cross chapter had over 2,500 local residents serve as volunteers during the past year, according to Mrs. Reineck. The volunteers out-number the salaried personnel 300 to one. The total volunteer group gave over 123,000 hours’ service last year. None received financial remuneration for her work. Volunteers trained in the area of social work assist .the chapter ‘Service to Military Families’ program. Hospital volunteers, formerly called Gray Ladies, serve in all but one of Oakland County’s hospitals. They worked over 58,000 hours last year. Safety service volunteers conduct first aid and water safety classes throughout the year. Last year, 2,900 residents received first aid certificates and 9,588 were given water safety certificates. When not devoting from 25 to 30 hours each week to' her executive duties, Mrs. Reineck delights in concoctb^ rare spaghetti sauces or preparing Polynesian dishes. She is an avid collector of recipes and cook books. The family, presently livin.g' in Huntington Woods, is preparing,, to move to West Iro-quois TIoad next month. Their s.on, Capt. John Reineck Jr., who has four children, is. stationed at Fort Riley„ Kans. His sister, 14-year-bld Lynn; attends junior high ischool in Oak Park. 1“ :'\,- : !..■ II 2 vuK i*oNriA(’ PHiiiss. Monday, may 21. i»«/j Villi n* HKAUING ( KNTKIl in (h« MAM. I ifciTi • Ainii •aATifemEs Gardening Apparel Wlwn workiiiK In your k«i clcn will'll llii'ii* In h lii'iivy ili'w or will'll llii' Ki'oiliiil In wri III rolil, wi'iii Untilwi'l^lil Kii loslii'N, Miss Yates Says Vows Saturday Try Fruit Juice Try NOiikiiin |inini'N in Imil liilri' IiinIoiiiI oI waliT lii'loio I'oiikliin lor Improvi'il fliivor, For Appointment Call 67:{-r> l 11 xmm F mm riijisiral Tlirnijijsl Masseur aN.VI t'liiilliu- l.iiki^ Itoiiil itoii't miss our SAMs! E Navi‘ l’)% Id 1(1%: mmm wright rurnilurt Afiikrri nnit Vjihotiterrri 270 Orchard Lake • FK 4-0S38 Sirving Oaklond County Ov..' 33 Y.oril EASY m;ix;Er TEUMS OR . 90 DAYS CASH ★ All W'orkmnnihip 5 1V.I SI Viiu'l'nl rti‘ Paul Calholif (’liiiirh was llii> st'lling loday lor llir iiiiirriant' ol Litiila l.oii YiilcN III John l.i'WiN Poljark o| Oinlorhury Di ivi' The lirldi', daiiglili'r ol Mrs, Kliiii'i' Yali'.s of Airadia Coiirl. mid llii' lali' Mr. Vali's, ap-pi'anil In slri'i'l li'iiglli wlillc Itorlii'lli' lari' over laffi'la A slioiilili'r li'iiglli veil of II lii'Uon and lioii(|iii'l of wlilli* ro.'ii's and Sli'phanoli.s roin-plrli'tl lii'i rii.si'iiililr lor 1lii' ri'ri'inony prrforiiii'il liy Ui'v. Thonia.s Mrdralli Mrs (larni'r (Irogan was iiialroii ol honor Mike Itri'iinan was li i* s t man lor lln- hrlili'grooiii, .son ol Min la'tia I’oljark of Iron-woikI .’111117101111 Poljark of I.ih-rrly Stri'i'l After ilir wedding breakfast ill K Falls l,oungp Ihe eoiiple left lor a norltierii Mirhigan hoiirymooii AAUW Has Teacher as Speaker d('cl, Niii s(',ry II ('JKl .lohii Mollal, sorial slbdirs leadirr al Walnlord Krilei ing High School, .spokr lo Ihr Wairrford hranrh, Anirrirari As.sorialion of University Women (AAl'Wi al Iheir re-renl meeting He oiillined the high school course, ' Home and Family Living, ’ and ex|)lained how he taught it. This was the year's s', uly topic, "The American Famil,\ in a Chang ing World " -Hosle.s.ses for Ihe coffee hour were Mrs. Donald I^lace, Mrs Cii'orge Koss and Mrs. llerherl Allen Mrs Wayne Moilanen, Lake Angeliis, will he hostess for Ihe June 17 picnic al (i JO p (n. She or Mrs. Palmer Hums will accept reservations before .June II. Mrs. Fugene Sikorski w a s elecli'd president of Ihe Temple Helh Nursery School, Inc al Ihe f i II a I mi'eling of the year on T li ii r s d a y in Ihe school, Olliers elecicd included Mrs. Itoherl Crandall, vice presi deni; Mrs. .lohn Miller and Mrs. Paul M a n d e 1, sei'i e laries; and Mrs, Stanford Village Unit Names New Top Officers III, Ire; .Still ollu'is are Mrs Irving .Schlyfe.slone, Mrs. Harry Heed, Mrs. Arthur Hosner, Mrs, Hohert Cash, and Mrs. Mori Metzger. Mrti, Crandall was speaker of ihe evening on "Your Child’s Hig Step.” lldiul cllpiml Chmilllli/ (flat iiccdtileil (I i/owii ol white net over leorg toUeto /or Marilyn Joy Koharye who exchauyed vows with (teraUl Milton While, Saturday, in Ihe l.uth-eran Church of the Ascension. Mrs Fred Oppenheiser of I,in den atletuled her sister as honor nudron. They are Ihe dauyhlern of Mrs, Donald Hur-ycr, Flizaheth Lake Road and Ronald F. Robaryc, Detroit. Rrenda (Ireer was bridesmaid, Al Ihe rile performed by Rev. Mires Stein, Robert A. White was best moit /or his brother. James and Darrell While were ushers. They are Ihe sons of the John J. Whiles of Lorher-la Lane. After Ihe church reception, the couple left for a northern honeymoon. rnK FiNivs r PKKMANEISTS IN l lIi: COlINTHY OBTAINAIU.F DMA AT ANDIMT.S I’erinaiient.s llneorulilionnily (Guaranteed :liiili'i''\ >Sii|imiii‘ l*miiiiiii'iil 995 Complete with haircut, Shampoo and Set Regtdar $15.00 NOW -------gaiann-------------- |{(‘}(iilai* tM.IHI Pi‘rinan(‘nl 12"’^ >o\v OMA Complete ‘‘‘'Jiatiirally” cuiTv riTRMANENT M) APPOLNTMEM’ NELDFI) At .Vmlre’s Oual**y Service Arc Siipi cnic Beauty Salon ii N. Saginaw St. FK 5^92^7 The .Iiinior Croup of Ihe Village Woman’s Club reviewed the year’s activities at the annual meeting, Friday, in the clnhlioiise on East Long l.ake Hoad. Hostes.ses were Mrs, Hoherl Hye.son, Mrs, Halph M a z z a, Mrs. Hichard Hcndersholt and Mrs. Mark Krane. Conference Has Answers The following slali' of officers was elected for a Iwo-,vear term: Mrs. William Hamilton, first vice-president; Mrs. William (i. Wilkinson, third vice-president; Mrs. Wendall 11. .Smith ,)r , treasurer; Mrs. Hichard J. McClear, corresponding secrelan. Others were Mrs, Noel H. Cook, Mrs. (,’harles Himelhoch and Mrs. William J. Donald- for Career Gal Problems Women lliiiiking of enierg ing from home into the working world can get their questions answered at O a k I a n d University Thur.sday at Ihe fourih in Ihe current ,scries of women’s confereni'cs, Women’s Alternatives in Employ- lent. Hostesses for the meeting were Mrs. Roger Crimmins, Mrs. Cook, Mrs. Paul Geiger, Mrs. David M. Schulte and Mrs. Smith. Starve Out Those Moths The conference begins at «::t0 a m, in the Oakland Center under the sponsorship of the Mott Center for Community Affairs. WHERE ARE JOBS? ‘‘Where are the jobs for women nationally'.'^’ will be Ihe question answered by the day’s first speaker, M a r-gueritc Gilmore, chief of field .services. Women’s Bureau, U S. Department of Labor. llimmelhergcr, inlc't vie w e r; and .lane Kay, personnel coordinator. The day ends with a County Fair of Careers with representatives of many professions and professional organizations making themselves available to answer questions participants may have on how to enter their particular fields. I.':: 1 or without prescription in a wide choice of frame styles and colors. Choose the frame style to suit your individual taste, and personality from hundreds in our studio. Lenses are available. in neutral gray, green or brown. BUDGET TER/\AS AVAILABLE 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E.STEIN/yAAN,O.D. Daily 9:30 A M. to 5r30P.M, Friday 9:30 A M. to 8;30 P.M. FE 2-2895 Believe if or not, a moth may chew up an entire bulky-knit sweater and still be hungry. Your only hope for Ihe pleated skirt hanging next lo Ihe chewed-up sweater is that the moth expire before he cros.ses over the closet . bar. Textile World says the newest way to mothdoom is starvation, rather than poison. A California entoftiologist has found a number of substances — anti-metabolites — which make the textile fiber valueless as nourishment. She’ll be followed by Diane Edgecomb, promotion director of the Central Business .District of Detroit. Her subject will cover information on whether women are ready lo work, untrained, inept, discriminated against or shy. Parttime and temporary opportunities will be diseus.sed by Jack Seelye of K e 11 y Girl Services. The moths will be as unable to develop immunity to the anti - metabolites as they will be to overcome their need for noufishment. Hope f o r early malnutrition. PANEL A panel will talk about “Where are the jobs for' women locally?” Members, wiH be David Waggoner, placement, Betty J. Dain, staff relations, Anna Rose Hersh Vass, placement : Herbert Graebner, personnel services: Elaine Murphy Reed, employe con-.sultation; Gretchen Saam, industrial relations : Anna By Dr. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE V-491: Lorna S., aged 29. is a problem wife. "Dr. Crane,” her husband began (joleful-ly, “my wife is an alcohol- “What is wrong with my wife?” “As a traveling salesman, I am away g from homel most of the! week. -So sh el goes to a near-" by tavern al- DR. CRANE most every afternoon. “I had her hospitalized , when^she began to get drunk too often, hoping she could get cured.» • “For she says she really , wants help. But within a week I after she got home from the I hospital, she started visiting ■> i the taverns again. RED HERRING ALCOHOL _ Alcohol is oTten used as a “red herring.” \0 cover up unsolved, conflicts deep within the victim’s personality. Why should Loriia seek a •tavern every afternoon? "Dr. Crane,” you might retort, “maybe she just gets lonesome at home since her husband is gone much of the. time.” Well, that is a plausible reply except for the fact that, millions of other wives who are equally alone during the day, don’t frequent taverns. So there must be another reason for Lorna’s drinking. When unattached women invade a tdvern or even a ritzy cocktail lounge they are looking for some man to make a ’pass” at them! i She Plays Mother Hen (H.A.SCO, Kiiii, 1/11 A hen (|iilt II ncKl on which slie had slarHHl lo hatch Hi eggs. Mr.s Glen Taylor tiuik the pai’lially-incuhaled eggs into her kilehen, put them in her elei-lric frying pan and luriied it up lo !CI degreea Fourteen of the HI eggs haU'hed. Alkiut 75 |M!r cent of all rub Im'i- used now Is synlhclli'. Flower FasFiions Raring fashion nqte: Carry a noaegay or hang one on yisir hell; wear a flower In your hair; or aftaeh a few Idossoms oil your suit or [MtekellMiok. You’ll feel gay and wonderfirl, says the Society of American Florists. TOOTHACHE Don't •Uttar ■|onV. lO ••cnod* ent r« th»i itDi vylth onAAFA. r Inrmula pull H lo work la iltnily lo ilop Ihrobhlni / toolHiKlia pain, lo ••!• doo- /c „ , raontiiniiPil It ""‘ora-jer Keep Legs Smooth Following lunclu'on, which is included in the J.'l.flO rcgi,s-Iralion ft'c, Dorothy Hope, director of placement, Oakland University, will give practical suggestions on how to look for a job. Mrs. William Gossett will give the official’welcome to the conference. Reservatiorlls may be obtained by calling Oakland University. Wife Takes to Taverns Oh, they will rise up in furious protest! Many such wives may attack me today for exposing their -^subconscious intentions. If such women were simply lonely, they could go to a sandwich countermand sip coffee, for they’d be surrounded by other human beings just as much as in a tavern. . So their loneliness is not the real answer, nor is it pjerely a wish for companionship! I No, they crave something I else, They are secretly hun-' gry for some evidence that they are still attractive enough to catch the fancy of men. But their conscience would bother Them if they tried to two-tijine their mate with noth-I ing but coffee their tummy. [ (Always write lo Dr. Crane in care of The Pontiac Press, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing I „cosfs when you send for one 6( his HOME CARE EQUIPMENT FOR SALE OR RENT • HOSPITAL tEOt • OOMMODEt • ALL TYPES OF WHEEL OHAIRS • OAHES and CRirTOHEt • PORTO LIFTS ■ RED ROARDS • TRACTION UNITS • WALKERS • RATHRODM AIDS Oia£ 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC SERVICE INC. 1066 WEST HURON STREET - PONTIAC Sliorl.s .sliow off beautiful legs. They also show up beauty blemi.sfies. Make sure the leg.s iire completely h a i r-free. Shave offt'ti to eliminate Ihe sIlghteHl trace of slubhle. Keep skin conditioned with 1 good quiilify witch liazcl. For [ Ihe first few days concc.'il the ' winter pallor with a light coat I of nuikeup 'I’lie sun will filter j through and soon take over ! wilt) natural t:in. HO/YIEMADE CANDIES Hotter Tliinf(s in Sweets 11 dO Woodward Ave. open Lvenings 'til 8 ; tO The Pontiac Mall Opnti Evenings 'III 9 MATERNITIES • UNIFORMS MIRAUIE MILE SHOPPING CENTER DPI N t;vi:NINr;S umil: NINF LOCAL ADVICE Staffing the County Fair will he Phyllis Peters, accounting; Helen Brown, real estate; Katherine Smith, art; Mary Sohler, engineering; Carol Kurlh, home economics; Florence Meiers, dietetics: Jo Ann Hardee, Dorothy Jurney, and Janet Odell, newspapers, and Mary Mitchell, libraries. Concluding the list are Ella Rach^ll Lyons, insurance; Lee Murray, radio, TV and advertising; Bernie Rish, stocks and bonds; Dee Cramer, part-time and temporary work; Anne Horton, secretarial; Elcen Auvil, interior decoration; and Rosemary Ragiani and Leah Dunham, banking. , . Enjoy the Hospitality V| i, 1 of the i Eamous For Our Fine Buffet HreaklaNl:« liUnch • Dinner Also Ala Carte Menu Service I Prices 10 P.M. ('.oektnil Hour: .Special L MON. till II SA P .5 III 7-9 WA'lCIl THIS SPACK FOR IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT • BANQUETS • MEETINCS • RECEPriONS ORGAN The magical, wonderful sound of that big movie-palace organ—now yours to play and enjoy in your home! MORRIS MUSIC FE 2.0567 Plenty of Free'Parking - ^ -- hr : I , ■' - 1 I'lfK. PONTIAC PHRSS, MONDAY; MAY 21. lOOfl B~H ■ A LI. PERM ANEN I S 395 INCI lll>K8 AM mis. 1 New l.iiBiro Sliunipoo 2 l''liillering Hair (lut 3 l.auolin Nnutrali/.iiiK i Siiiai'l Stylo Sotting HOLLYWOOD BEAIITY OiM>n Morning* in a poHltkni lo do something xV room may interfere with the with an extra $7r> a month. i„(e |ale slmw, While you may My husband doesn't like lo „oi increase their rent your think about money in any way. presence may cau.se a certain lie's not extravagant but Ju.st amount of discomfort, wants enough to do the pleasfint Member Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce nnuTiNiiiw out DO HR JOB ? C. WEEDON CO. HOLIDAY HEALTH MAKES YOU MORE BEAOTIFUL ONE WEEK SPECIALS! 1SIX SEWING BOBBINS ^^^MACHINE^n * m REPAIR J $IX # SPECIAL % NEEDLES M «■ for odjuft In moke mochino ■■■ our itoro SEWING MACHINE I REPAIR SPECIAL oloan, 0 odjuft in our Itoro OPEN FRIDAYS UNTIL 9 P.M. DOMELCO of PONTIAC Miracle Mile Shopping Centor (Arcade) VACUUM CLEANER NOSE ^Replacement 1 FABRIC COVERED RUBBER HOSES ^ WITH CUSTOMERS USABLE ENDS 338-4521 338-4522 t THK !*<)N'riAC PHKmSS. M(»NI)AV. MAY 5i-l, TUO/J * Hints on Draperies To Fotten Raisins Heat in Oven To plimip i'iiInIiih, wiinIi uml uprood out III II tint |>nn Covol' the pun iiiiil hout slowly III II iiiodcnilo ovoii until the nilNiiiH puff iiiul the wrinkles come out. « New York City's Metiopolllan MuHeiiiii of Art was esluiilished In 11170 IVIcLf'od (larpel Sale 11*: :t-7on7 End-Of-Month CLEARANCE I niisinil values ami grcal saviuj's lor ral ly liinl.s! Im-lmliiig floor .saiiipli-s ami oiir-of-a-kiml pirrch. 5 Days Only! Hefpilurly O.V'Ci r(lSof.i,Ti I Cii^liii (lilioiiiil Style ill I loiiil IViiit Co' llt9..',0 (Icnisiomil (iliair. l.ooM‘bae k (ill sliion.Silk 'riinpioir. iC Cover. Polv Daer on C iisl.ioii 1 1 19.00 Ocnisioii al Cliair . Loose Cii: sliioii 1 Hack. Floral Priiil I.Vt.OO Oceasion al Chair oil (iasicrs . <;i e en PiTnl i Ht9..-,0 l.oiiiige ( iliair. Fr eiieli Prov. Bliii .7.19..'i0 Ciiive.n raililioii al Sofa, Ml -loin •olor. Poly/ Diirmii ( iiishioii. 9(,” 99. .70 OiU aHional Cbaii' w/liifleil b aek. (mliUV While :... I 19.00 .89.00 .(>9.00 l.')9..^)t) Kiirly American I.ovcKeat, Piiilteii IViiil Cover...................I 29..SO 3 I9..')0 Colonial Wiii^ Hack Sola, lii^!;ll Tiilleil Hack. I'oam Kiililier Cu^liioii. < iolil Brown Tweed (iover 90”.....................299..SO 429.50 3 Cu.sliion ('.oloiiial Sofa. Bed ^ (d’een Print (iover. Fouin llublier CuhliionH, Mr. & Mih. CliuirH willi Ottoinun in Black & Red Check Cover. All Four Pch.......................298.00 289.50 High Back FLarly American 1-oveseul. Blue & Red Print (Lover. Poly Dacron Cushions f>2”.................................] 19.00 129.50 FLarly American Occasional (iliair. Bed Print (Lover. Foam Huhber .Seal (Lii.sliions....................................99.00 274.00 Modern Sofa, (ireen Textured Fabric. F'oum Rubber Seat Gu.sliions. 86”.............................................] 89.00 438.75 Contemporary Sofa in Textured Bust Fabric, Mr. & Mrs. (Lliair ami Ottoman in Modern Print Fabric All Four Pieces.........................................................298.00 GROUP OF CHAIRS GROOP living room TABLES .30% Off 30% Off Modern, Traditional Modern, Traditional & Colonial 139.50 Modern IjOvcseat, Rust and Brown Print fabric. Foam Rubber Seat Cushions......................................109.50 785.25 Solid (Llierry Dinin)' Room Suite. 15” Buffet w/ (.{hina Top, 48” Round Drop leaf table w/2 extra leaves. 4 Windsor Side Chairs and 2 Arm Chairs.........................599.50 109.50 60” Harvest Table, Formica To|>, Maple .........................89,50 483.95 4.V’Round Pedestal Dining Table and 1 (Lliairs, (Lreen upholstering'3-12” leaves w/table (Lontemporary Walnut...........................................339.00 395.00. Solid Oak Bedroom (Lroup, Full Size Bookcase Bed, CornerDesk, 2 Bach. Chests, 2 Door Cabinet w/ Bookcase top ijnd Night Stand . . . Complete...................259.00 424.50 White w/Pink Trim Bedroom Suite. Double Dresser and Mirror, Student Desk and Chair, 2 Twin Princess Beds. Plastic Tops....... . ............................ y.....299.50 584.75 6t”DoubleDresserandMirror,FullSizeHead- board and Frame'w/Malching Chest and Night Stand. . (Linnamon Walnut Finish. Modern................................1.39.00 79.95 Bed (Lliair. Beige Textured Fabric..............................19,9.5 L")9.20 ]2’xl2’ (Larpet, all wool. Beige.............................129.00 71.10 9’ X 12’ Ivory Rug. 100% Nylon . . . ...........................5 1.00 439.00 1 piece Carpeting, 1.5’x26’6” 100% Acrilan Spray Green. 41 1/6 Sq. Yd.....................................3 19.00 101.00 12x10’ Carpet Remnant, Aqua. 100% Nylon.........................69.00 All Items Subject to Prior Sole Values up to 12.95 "\ Special 27" X 54" Rug Samples STEARNS & FOSTER MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS Wool — Acrilan : Firm - Quilted Full or Twin Size Interior Decorating Consultation Ju^t a few of the many values available! Convenient Budget Terms 1680 South Telegraph Rood ^ 'FEderal 2-8348 Just South of Orchard Lake Road — Parking Ftoo Open Thursday, Friday, AAonday Evening 'til 9:00 P M Oil on it uorllirni hoiiri/ moon niter Sntunbii/ nows (111(1 reception in the Clarks ton First Mctt(o(ltst ('tnnrh, arc the Thomas Oonut Younf/s (Teresa Mane Coleman). Their IHirents ore the Mar Prossers (>l Stiekney Hoad and Mrs. Alice Yonny o/ Holly Venise l((ce accented the bride's yown and train o/ white oryanzn over satin worn with oryaiw.a orchid headpiece and Illusion veil. Her allendaiits included her sister, MYs. Thomas Seho/I, Chirkslon: Laura Mn har, Hotly; .lanet Haviland, Hriyhinii, and Fuyeniii Hrandt, Fiirminyton. 'Thomas SehoU was best man. Ushers were Larry T.ireel, John Sawyle o/ ' Troy and Kent Hrandt, )unior usher. Hev. I.ewis C. Sutton oijiciated at the evemny ceremony. The James Frnest Uerisos (Pdlncui Martell Ashby) he yan a Canadian honeymoon alter their cnndleliyhl vows and reception, Saturday, in the First Methodist Church oj Troy. Their parents are the Lawrence L. Ashhys, Avon Township, and the Ernest R. Perisos, Auburn Heights. For vows belore Hev. Ralph Jan-ka, the bride chose white peau (fe soie with a Chantilly lace train, and a mantilla oj lace and illusion. White orchids and Stephanotis rested on her heirloom Bible. Attendants included Hilda Periso, Marie Haynes, Linda Teasdle and Donna Grmom; Wayne Periso, James Ashby, Eugene Payne and the bridegroom’s uncle, Edward Periso oj Mar-lette. Church Unit Will Hear 'Parish Life' Rev. Robert Patterson, associate rector of Christ Church Cranbrook, will address the Epi.scopal Church-women after the noon luncheon on Tuesday. His topic will be “A Look at the ECW in the Total Life of the Parish.” ★ • ★ * Sewing and knitting workshops will follow Holy Communion service at 10 a.m. in St. Dunstan’s Chapel. Currently serving on the Cranbrook Public Relations Council, Mr. Patterson has worked closely with staff members of the Institute for Advanced Pastoral Studies in ■ the development of the Human Sensitivity Program recently introduced. He is the father of two daughters and a son. The Pattersons will soon become' residents of Bmti-more, Md. where he wi|l be rector of the Church df the Redeemer, as of Sept. 1. {eumode **SMART (ARV SK AMI.ESS Plain’or Micro with nude heels ' and demi-toes. 44P 2 pairs 88c At all Neumod'i Hosiery Shops 82. Ni Saginaw St. When huylriu druperloH r«-meirilier thiil ii firm, compnet weave IuiIiIn Hn NhuiMi hetter tlimi (loeN n Immely woven fabric of almilar texture and weight. .3 easy to clean your own caVpats ... and great to save the money FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE BLUE LUSTRE PHARMACY, INC. . 880 WOODWARD-Medioal Building : fe 2-8383 fe 4-9916 ■ BaBBaBBMBMWaaBaaaaBBiiaaBaaBM TIIK> I'ONTIAC I’HIWS, MONDAY, MAY U, 100.1 0*“”# Socialist Wins Austria Election VIENNA, Austria (AFO — Viiiiina's Suflallal mayor, Fran/. .It»nn!*, wna rjoclnd |trarently • ast l)y tliose who wanUsI an independent candidate to run. .Jonas’ term runs for sl.\ years. He succeeds Adolf Schnerf, wlio ditsl in February PONTIAC Rockcoto PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 South Ciii il2-4«4l daring his second term. Under the Austrian i;onstltuU(>n, new elections are calletl when a president dies. MORE VOTES fiorhach piled up more votes tlian any Conservative candidate since l!Mf( for the traditionally Socialist offict^. Tlie close outcome raised lla> party's hopes of Increasltig their 111 scats In tlie III!) seal I’arltament in the ItNUi elections. 'Must Reaffirm Stand on Sex' COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Attitudes about sox today have some Christians worried. They want church standards (Ml the matter reinforced. .lonas' sirengih was as.sured in Vienna wlitue lie got 1147,DIM) voles again,st (iorbach’s 474,41111 He also carried the Industrial provinces of Slyria, Carintbla and Hurgenland. (Jorbach’s main strength was in the Alpine provinces, Tlie concern was In evidence at Hie (ieneral Assembly of the United Ui'csbyterlafi Churcli here, with delegates from sever al ret^ions pressing for rein forced emphasis on sexuid morality, Tlie :i'<. million iiiciiiber de nominal Ion was askisl to rcaf firm "our (’linrcli's historical moral slandards" in opposition to wliat was called a drift to license, "Any abuse of s<“xual Inlimn-cy onlslde Hie responsible bonds of lioly matrimony d(‘stroys pare love, damaging marriage and causing guilty alienation from Cod,” declared a proposed resolution Weeks Of Back Pain Now Relieved ••After weeks of p«in in my bsek amt lops. I liie.l heWin's IMIls- got won-(Irlful irllcf," anyi Mis. R. (iiiiiliier, W'iOriloo, Iowa. People write in CYcry day praising the rc|niirkiil)le relief they gel with DeWill's Pills. DcWill's Pills id fMl with a proven analgesic lo relieve pain of backache. Their mild diiireiic action helps 10 eliminalr. lelained lliiids ami lliisli out irrilaling bladder Waalea Ihill can ciilise physical dinireaa. If pain per-amls, aeo your docifflr. DcWill'a Pilla often aiicceed where othera fail-duickly relieve minor miiacle achca and pains, Uh). Insist on the genuine t)cWitt's Pills. Over m million I)eWill's Pills are ttdd by driiggisls day after day aflar , day. the world over-a tribute lo Uieir amueing action! Austria lias a coalition gov ernment of Sociallsf.s and Con-servnllvcs. TrsdiHoiially I lie |ircinicr is ii CoiiscrviiHve and tlie president a Socialist. House Debate Begins Today Foreign Aid Policy Showdown Brews in Congress WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House called up President .loltn-son's f3..Tt!-blUion foreign aid bill loday with all signs iiolntlug Iti a eongresslonal showdown over p 0 11 c y rather than casli this year, The flrsl round of deliaie w|is to begin at uihiii (I pm., I’oti' line lime) A vole jvas set for tomorrow on Hie aiithdri/.alloii measure, wlilcli would sid Hie celling on overstuis asHlsInnee for the 12 inoiiHis begliiiiiiig .Inly aid program would be financed at something very close to what the President wanted. His reipiest tor funds this year was the lowest sliiee the program started In 1047. Wlial eoulil not be predicted Is what Hie fluid aid hill will say aboul Hii^ |U'ogranrs future. CEREMONIAi. DUTIES The constiluHon requires the president to be nonpartisan and to guard over domestic political peace .lonas pledged; ”1 will be a president for all Auslrians” Much of his duties are ceremonial, but he takes a hand in the formation of new governments and can exercise considerable influetuui at that time. He is the first president wiHp out a university degree. 'Hie son of a pcHir worker, Jonas api)renticed as a typesetter and spent 13 years at the trade before becopiing a Socialist party official in 1932. A MILLION AUTO PARTS AT Give-Away PRICES Due to on over-stocked supply, we will not accept junk cars for approximately 2 weeks. Please bear with us. FE 2-0200 H PONTIAC SCRAPS It was oflered by the I’reshy-tery of Omaha , Neh Olliers similar lo it came Irom regional units of Peoria, III , and Sheiiaii go, I'a They elled news reports (>f j ‘‘churchmen advocating a rnor j nl relativism bolding Hial 'lists i of cans and citnnols iin' mean ingicss,’ that no sexual rela-Hoiisliip should be iibsolulcly c'indemned liv the cliurcli’, . According lo HuTr view, the resolution prole,sled, “Hieology should adiipl ilScIf lo thi* times instead of applying Juridical' or ‘thou sliiilf not' ethic.s, , , thereby excusing fornication by en gaged eouples as no sin" However, Hie Cummand-rnents, including Hint against adultery, are “permanently binding'' on all Christians, Hie resolution maintained, adding; •'Our Lord Jesus, while emphasizing that superior love, which encompas.ses, and is the ultimate piirixise of all the law and the prophets, still claims that He came not to abolish the law.” Further, the resolution asserts, Jesus taught that “those who leach relaxing of the Com-mandmenls are lo be condemned; that lustful Hiltlking is spiritually tantamount lo unchastity; and that purity of heart is es.sential to the blessedness of seeing God.” Extramarital intercourse, the statement says, damages “personal character and spirituality . . . requiring sincere prayer of contrition.” FORD COMMANDER 6000 NOW! F0RD2000 New economy leader in the all-purpOse two-plow field. TRACTORS FIVE POWER SIZES BUILT TO WORK AND AST Stop in tnd set them mm I EOlilPMENT FE 4-0555 Pontiac Tractor & Equip. Co. 1751 South Telegraph Roatl Pontiac^Mich. It apiR'ured likely that t h e Tlic .Sciiiilc l'’oreigii Itclalions Cotiimlllce wmils Hic progruiii sludlyd will) a view lowiirds cm! lug II In its iircseiil lotni mid dcvidopiiig ji whole new plan lo begin ill l!Mi7. The Senate committee also broke precedent and voted lo extend the program not for the IradiHoiml one year |ierlod bill for two year,s, at f.'l ;if> hillloii each year The House I'oielgii Affairs CotiiirilUee slack lo the eoih ventloiial inelliod; one year, al $3.36 billion and no (nik iihoul any revainpitig. Ill a reiKiil aimed direelly al Hieir .Senate coimlerparls, I li e H(ai.se mciiiliei.s said Hiey recognl/.ed Hial Hie program eo ild lie iiii|)rove(l hut Hint numerous past sliidies had proven Hull il was hasically ".sound and I sliould not Ilf (|ia.slically re liiinds of Hie adminlstralion as woqld be the ease with a tint proliiblHon Ai)oHier aniendmeiil Is one in Hie House lilll that would hat iissIstaiiOe lo any coutilry whose ships or planes eairy ciirgiMw lo Norlli Viet N«m, DIFFERENT VIEW.S Also touching on Hic Viet Nam coiifllcl l.s Hie rreHlilenl’s reqiiesl tor advance miHiori/.a lion of any military or eeonomic aid he might want for South Viet Nam. RURIAL INilIJiANCi SOLD SY I^IL 11,000.00 or mot,. Itiutd to «s« 40. Nr ag«nl will fall. N» si«4-Ifol •Kum, Monty back guoron-to*. OID UNI IIOAI RlSIkVl od lodoy. WrIU. Ctnlrol >«cur-lly III., D.pf, H-2086 MU W.il Soi.daU, rort Wonti, T.aoi. Cicd, ” II is over Hie future of the program Hial Hie battles will he fouglil Tlie eonfliel will he be-Iween Hi<‘ Hou.se and .Senate, riol Hie fTe.sideiil and Congress. ANTICIPATION Tlie I wo coiigri'ssional com-iiilllces aiillcipaled Hie type of aiiiemliiieiils Hial usually are added In the hill on Hic floor of eitlicr House. WALLPAPER 7,000 ROUS IN STOCK 29! ™ *1 99 WALLPAPER BARGAIN CENTER 1078 W Huron . I ■/] Block. W. ol Tologrdph hpim Monday and Friday Till 9 318-8988 I'or example, both eominlt-(ees included in the measure a rcsointioii expressing t li e sense of Congress that aid should he hailed to any eoiin-try whose government permits nnhs to damage U.S. embassies. Tlie ".sense of Congress" re,solid ion reflecls Hie annoymice fell by mernlH'is without lying the KISS FOR MOM -- Mrs. Ida Cathey. 92, of Chandler, N.C , is kissed by her son, ‘James, 34, a member of Hie graduating class of Western Carolina College al Cnllowhee. He was in a siicciiil academic program for industrial workers. PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CENTER liTiiii W'hTni!li NEW! REDUCE lArundLOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULtS! tasier to lake and moi# effective than the powdered and liquid focxl supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M D No Gastiitis or Irreg^ularity with Medic Way caps. DON'T Dlbf •—JUSr EAl! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 His Honor's '65Ford......rides quieter than His Lordshipls Rolls-Royce In certified tests ’65 Fords rode quieter than a Rolls-Royce.’" But we invite you to judge the new Ford for yourself. Visit your Ford Dealer. Take a no-obligation test drive. You won’t find Ford offering the rare handcrafted luxuries of a Rolls-Royce, but you will find a hushed ride and solid feel you never expected in a popular-priced car . . . proof of Ford’s deep-down quality. Feel Ford’s solid quality ■ Strongest Ford body ever ■ New frame “tunes out” vibration ■ New ultrasoft coil spring" suspension Inspect Ford’s luxurious new LTD’s ■ Decorator-styled interiors, thick nylon carpeting ■ 10 courtesy lights, 5 ash trays (4-door hdtps.) ■ Elegant nylon-vinyl upholsteries ■ Walnut-like vinyl inserts on doors, instrument panel . Relax in Ford’s spacious interiors ■ Mpre hip, shoulder, knee room than last year ■ Transmission hump is lower for extra foot room B Trunk holds four 2-suitcrs standing upright, and more T est Ford’s new power B Big, new 289-cu. in. V-8 standafd in XL’s and LTD’s B New Big Six is the biggest Six in any car, standard on other Galaxie and Custom models B All automatics are 3-spced, not 2 as in some cars -smoother, thriftier B The manual transmission is fully synchronized—easier shifting Visit your Ford Dealer and lake a lest drive! '"Leading acoustical consultants conducted tests in which 1%5 Fords l(Galaxie 500 Sedan, XL and LTD Flardtops) with 289-cu. in. V-8 engines and automatic transmissions rode quieter than a new Rolls-Royce. These tests were certified by the U.S. Auto Club. Test Drive Total Performance ’65 Best year yet to go Ford! FORD }R COMPASY PAVaiOS, NEW YORK WORLD'S FAIR Save Now at Your Ford Dealer’s Red, White and Blue Sade! V j! .. . V.j. c High Court OK 1$ Due for Nun IIIK l*()NTIAl MONDAY. MAY ->4. lUd.^ She marntxl Arthur Royce, who owned n general store at Mecosta, near the center of the lower I'eninsnla, and .served for a while in the State Senate She went to work lor the Leg i.slative Service Bureau and from 19,'tl through IS-V) served as the Legislature’s chief drafter of bills. i She said she had handUnj more than 25,0(K) bills. Royce died in 1947. Five years later his widow was converted to Roman Catholicism. She felt drawn to the religious life Some years later she sold t^e store and came to the Sisters of Charity, who have their Mother House at Mount St Joseph, west of (Cincinnati overl(K)king the Ohio River. LEGAL ADVISER The sisters made her their legal adviser, and in 1956 she was admitted to the Ohio bar while wearing her novitiate’s robes. She took her perpetual vows in 1962 and became a teacher of business law at the women’s college operated by the sisters. She continued to represent the i sisters in the courts. When she I was admitted to practice before I the federal courts in Cincinnati six months ago, someone asked her if she actually expected to, argue any cases there. | “Yes — if there’s violation of the federal statutes,” she said. ★ ★ ★ 4 Brothers Priests at Rare Mass CHICAGO (AP) —- Four, brothers - two of them identi- i cal twins and all four Roman' Catholic priests - have partici-. pated in a rare liturgical cere-' mony - the celebration of Mass together. The concelebration took place Sunday at St. Kilian’s Church on Chicago’s South Side Where all i four were baptized and attended j grade schooi. The unusual cere-1 mony was made" possible when I the Rev. Richard Hogan was I ordained Saturday. i Father Hogan, 34, was joined I by his eidest brother, the Rev. William Hogan, 38, and his twin ! brothers, the Rev. Benedict Ho- j gan, who teaches at Mount Car-; mel High School in Chicago, and the Rev. Wendeli Hogan, who teaches at Mount Carmei High School in Houston, Tex. More than 1,000 parish members entered the cathedral to attend the concelebration, including " the mother of the priests, Anne Hogan. 67„ a wid- ‘NEW DIMENSION’ Father William Hogan, an assistant priest at St. Martin’s Ci^rch in Chicago, termed the Mass “a new dimension in brotherhood.” “We’re all brothers by bloqd and through Christ,” said William, “but somehow there was a unique new sense of being Jmn^ together at a higher level." William was ordained by the late Samuel Cdniinal Stritch in 1952. He partidpated in the rp- cent Ala, mpreh. The 31-year-old twins, ordained by the late Albert Cardinal Meyer in 1958, said the Mass ^ was. unique because it revised an old duijrch tradition. [ARir BIRD VAimi PRICES EFfECTIVE MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY! CINCINNATI, Ohio lAP) A| Roman Catholic tiun who used ! to draft bills for the Michigan l/egislatiire will l>e admilte J Fully Cooked, Semi-Boneless CUBE OR Sirloin CHIP OR T-Bone 09 Whole^ or Half 59 Rump or Botisserie Roast"-99* Porterhouse Steak No Center Slices Holiday Special! Southern Star lb Removed "Super-Right" Quality, Skinned SMOKED HAMS CANNED HAMS 5” 16 ” 3” 8-LB. SIZE ALLGOOD BRAND Shank Portion 43f--i^”53f‘"r;49 Sliced Bacon ... 59*^ "SUPIR-RIGHT" FANCY g Sliced Bacon.................. "Super-Right" 2 to 3 Pound Si*e« SPARE lb. 49. ANN FAGi QUALITY |_pr JN BFg Barbecue Sauce '^'^5 No Coupons, No Gimmicks, No Limits... Just Quality Merchandise at Low Prices! 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MAY 24. 10(W Bogalusa Mayor Pledges End to Segregation Laws h()(;alusa, i.h iai-i ■ i luiv«' |i) (|i) wliiil I llitiik b iIkIiI ftir llu‘ wholt‘ niiiimiinlty iiiul not worry aboiil it ” So said Mayor Jesse II Ciilrer Jr wlio Sunday nigid inomlsed an rod to Hegregalioii laws In this r»a|)ei mill lowii whli h the Kii IvliiK Klaii elaims It 0, in an interview, "Yon Imve to work lor llie people In the mid die • All I can see, ollieiwine, is ciiaoH and violence and killing. I can't l|uy thid." rwo AKKKSriH) Two white Bogalusa residents were arrested eaply .Sunday and charger llic (^orniminiHt party in Illinois Tuosclay. "Thoy're going to reeeive a vory warni rooo|i(lon,” says the Hov William T Italnl, 5S, lioad ol llio Chicago Coinmilllee to dch-iid I he Hill ot Itlg'lilH. A A * ('oiiiinlllci‘ Clialrtiian Kdwin K Willis, 1) l.a , said: "We have a jol) lo do and viv intend to do il Yon always have protests and they normally come from the same sourees.'' Willis said that the hearings are aimed at the organl/.atinn, strategy, tactics and objectives of the U S. Communist party In Illinois, ClliCAUO IIMAIUNUH lie described the ('hicago heatings ns |mrt of a seiies the committee has Immui holding around the country to Inform Congress of how well the IDSO SeenrUy Act Is being executed. I,list week federal officials transfinred the hearings from the new federal building In downtown (iilcago to the former Court of Appeals building two miles away. The officials said any demonstrations coidd disrupt federal business. * A A Similar hearings in San I'ian (isco five years ago resulted In student dots, HIxty four persons were nrresltHl and many |s>llce and demonstrators Injured. Willis announctHl the Chicago hearings May 12. A few days later word was hoiked that II residents had luum nub|MMUiaed residents had laieii BUb|Matnaed to apiiear laifore the committee and many more had been sent letters Inviting them to testify at the closed hearings. DEMAND PIIOIIE . Dr. E. (S. llahnan, Nortli western yniverslty professiu’ and chalrinan of the Illinois American Civil lilhertles Union, demaiHled that Willis and Chi cago jMillce Initiate Investigations to detertnine how the names <»f the 11 were revealed. The Chicago commItUte staged a rally Sunday night and more than l,(KHI |hmmoiis, mostly white, heaid James Eorinan, head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and the Rev. Fred L. Shuttlesworih of Dr Marlin Culher King’s S(ndhern Christian leaderslilp Ciinfeience say: "There can be no (ivll lights luihwlheie are civil liberties," John Dlllinger, who was the KHCs public enemy number one In ,III:m, was killed by agents In Chicago on July 22 of that year. I.EAI'IN’ U/AHDS! Ueonard Mall (left) ol l.atayclle, Calif , holds "Hops," winner of the Calavera.s Coiinly Jumping Frog Centennial event, lor hi.s |>uckered paiiner, AP IMioIoUk Hill [‘roder, lo kiss. "Hops" won yesterday over a field of ftO with a Jump of 14 feel, !l imiies. The two men had last year’s winnn', IlKI. It’s rasy lo buy lliesi^ iliiiilily A|i|iliiiiii;(^ii al a SAVII\lliN! • I\0 MONliY DOWN •ClOiim IN .i IVUNirilvS • IIP K) i YI AKS lo i»AY • *w DAY.s s\mi\ AS CASH • I scHvici; • I Hi i; DliLIVMKY INS I AU.AHON frog's Winning Jump Case of Do or Die' mini DON’T MISS THIS BIG SALE EVENT I ANCFl/S CAMP, Calif. (AIM - Spiced with international in triguc, the centennial of the Calaveras County Jumping frog contest ended Sunday nighj(.with more than 50,000 frog watcher.s watching. For the over all winner, a big bullfrog named "Hops" from Lafayette, Calif., it was literally a ca.se of do or die. “We don’t eat them if they win,” said Hops’ co-owner Leonard Hall, a frog-raising lover of frog legs who Is $300 richer because of the champion’s 14 f(X)t-9-inch leap. Mark Twain, who immortalized the Jumping frog competition in the sleepy little Sierra foothills town 100 years ago, would have gotten a giggle out of the International complications Sunday. DIDN’T SHOW Only one of the three entries in the foiSeign frog contest got off the ground. “The Swedish entries turned out to be toads," said a contest spokesmmi, “and the Filipino frogs didn’t show up.” | That left the foreign contest with only a black and-while am phiblan named "Impala" from Soutti Africa, owned by I’iem Fouric and T. Botha, who come from Cermlston. Naturally, he won, with a leap of 11 feet, 5 inches, Angel’s Camp, which normal ly has about l,n00 inhabitants, was an amiable madhouse over the weekend. Residents welcomed visitors by banging out tbeir wash. QUIET SHATTERED The normal peace and quiet of the fairgrounds were shattered by 10 high school band.s, Scot-ti.sh bagpipers, beauty contests, vaudeville shows, fireworks and all the hoopla of a few circuses. Frog owners kept to themselves. They regard their training methods as “top secret” At the fateful moment, a frog is placed in the center of a measured circle preparatory to the Jump. Owners station themselves on the rim. jumping up and down and run ning around in circles. Presumably the frog wants lo gel out of there fast. A special feature of Sunday’s finale was the Nevada-Califor-nia cla.ssic. Nevada Gov. Grant Sawyer’s “Nuclear Ned" wiped out California Gov. Edmund (I Brown’s “Whi.sperlng Ed” with a leap of lOMi feet to 2 feel II inches, “Nuclear Nwl" whs recruited from the Nevada nucleat lest site and was transported to An gel’s Camp in a lead container. 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WITH PORTION OF BACK CHICKEN BREASTS ... 49il I WITH PORTION OF RIBS NECKS and BACKS.:. lOit. mM Food Ttiwn-People’s Bonus Stamp Coupon | M FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase on Any Half or Whole WATERMELON *~'cou^°o^i')orWodM»doY^^^ Food Town-PBBplt»s Boiina Stamp Coupon | FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase on Any L) Jars of ncKiEs«oum 50 Food Town-Pooplo’s Bonuf Stamp Coupon FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase o Pounds or More 50 FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase on Any 1 Pkgs of Bondware PAPER PRODUCTS Food Town-Pooplo’s Bonus Stamp Cobbob I MFREE GOLD BEa Stamps With Purchase of Any BEEF ROAST Cr 2 'mi<: l*()N'l'IA(' PHKSS. MONDAY. MAY U, UMW Collegians Seek to Halt 'Creeping Impersonality' {^•:l)IT(ilrS NOTH Joe (’ol lei/e and Mr nrr both dead, Ulled />// ((m/ii)/ v lu/j/r "niulllvemUu " hordeH (>l xtudenlH arc »io»> reduced lo, punched eoiiipi/ler cord/i “nnd they cr\i out. "iiolxulj/ hiioirn nil/ niinir'" .■1 pcnelratiuii Inoh ol the coininis rcoohdion Nwerpinii Awnu ii i Hy A. MUl.I.KiAN Al’ New)il«Miliir«‘s V\ri( Ihi' laiiil, oiici' told ulial wa-i nilailrd in III'. exallcd mil- "I ill I'"’I dcMcr" at llic I'nivci Mlv ,,l \'n Klnia ^'alllKll(•l' said lie waMi'l actually required lo mi'iIc any thing, or lo (each anvlhing, or «vcn lo read nnyllilng aloud, but lie did leel obliged lo alroll acros.s llie campus Iwicc a day, aiiilablv allircd in Iweeds and a Ihmiglilliil demiMiior, so Ihc slu-dents could , jal) cm li oilier in wonder and exclaim "There- he is...........There he later Neeiiied lo have been "Reeenl ehangeR bi the Ainer-leaii iiiilverally have done them little good; lower teiudi iifg loads lor the laculty, larger classes, the use o( siihstl-tale teachers for the regular faculty, the choice of faculfy nieinhers hased oO research accoiu|ilishmeiits rather than lostrucllooal capai lly, I h e tragioeotatloii ol knowledge into eiulb'ss ,suhdi\ isioiis. Then leiplen voll Hie tindergradiiale .sliidenls agaiiisl the taeiilh' The sliideni'i wiinl lo he irealed as dislliiel individual'. " The uiidcigriidiiale,-. iire' resl- Wh,\',' goes' In Ins (iislomary eii cumloc-iilorv lashioii, the sage o| Yok-onpalawpha County had pul his linger on one malaise of modern undergraduate life. Al Vale where the aneinil ivy is sllll (iiiaklng wilb•' '''‘’/object and dedicated it lessness and restlessness, of >'<> 1'’“f Richard B. Sewell a alienation from the faculty and house master who had ™led of just being a number on a .......... computer punch card that causes students to rise and revolt, and presidents to up and resign, and deans to throw up their hands and calj in the cops when confronted with a sit-in demonstration. STUDENT ACTIVISM Tied in with the whole problem of "creeping impersonality” is a sudden rebirth of student activism, after a decade of apathy, of concern for and committment to civil rights and peace movements, and the emergence of a new radical left, less dogmatic and party-lirting than the left-wing student movements of the thirties, more devoted to social than political revolution, but in its more extreme form still far out enough to flaunt the Viet Cong flag at rallies and make an antihero hero of Fidel Castro. The modern undergrad, more inclined to run down to Mississippi for a Negro vote registration drive on his spring vacation'than down to Fort Lauderdale for a beer blast, demands more and - more of teachers at a time when they are inclined to give him less. Faced with keeping up with dramatic changes in his field of knowledge and ever-increasing calls from the government, industry and the international commdnity of scholars to do research and prestigious scholarly papers, today’s faculty members often can keep ’pace only the undergraduates over the loss of Bernstein. "We are not against professors doing research," Wocxlward insisted. "A guy who spent all his time teaching would not be welcome at Yale. It's easy to talk to students all day, to listen to their 2.5-ccnt ideas and maybe give them back 50-cent ideas, but the students and Yale are looking for , the $10 idea and that requires a certain amount of research and scholarship. Still, being a professor is a profession, At Knmkiyn College, there was an uprising in behalf of a music teacher fired in a “perform or perish” controversy and another in behalf of a philosophy p r o I e s s o r dis-missH for ahrogating his loyalty oath. Al. .St. John’s University in New York City, the largest Catholic college in the country, noontime demonsiratois IxKX'd the name of the ab.sent president, the Very Hev. Edward ,1. Burke, called for an end to "Burke’s Law” and demanded repeal of censorship of campus publications and the ban on political activities and controversial speakers. '.Vlarxism seems muiialerial to what IS happening in .Selma and ItoglaU'ia Six'ialism, more than any oilier left moveiixmls, seeilis lo be flourishing, but even then there Is an absence of the parly lining that (‘xisled in the thirties," Itiulergraduate .Ridy lleeh-ler, treasurer of the campus chapter of the W. E. R. Du Itois Clubs, an orgaiif'/.ution that FBI Director .1. Edgar llixiver says was spawned hy the Communist party, attributed the student appeal of her movement to the remoteness of elassrixim issues from the day’s headlines. There have been student.demonstrations, At Oberlin and Ohio State University and at Fair-field University, a Jesuit institution in Connecticut, students broke Into the library to remove books on the church "index” of , _ forbidden publications from a , professor is a proles-scholarly profession that; ,, . , "Must of what giK's on in the university .seems unrelated to what goes on in the world around you. The |)olilical .science and economics courses seem unreal in relation to Selma and Viet Nam and the march on Montgomery," If today’s students are more serious and more sophisticated, they are also, in the o|)inion of political scientist Sheldin Wolin, "mon* uncertain about what commitment they should make lo life.” should not be incompatible with good teaching,” AT THE CROSSROADS At its heart, Yale’s dilemma involved a modern university at the crossroads, torn between the traditional values of the old liberal arts college and the cultural colossus of Qark Kerr’s multiversity. Al each turn in the road, defending the separate paths, stood an eminent Yale philosopher. On one side stood Prof. Norwood Hanson, a former Marine fighter pilot and amateur boxer who defended his department’s “publish or perish” decision and publicly blasted student demonstrators for putting Yale on the path to becoming “a banana republic university.” where faculties lived in constant fear of an aroused student body. On the other side was Prof. Paul Weiss, Bernstein’s mentor. It was examination time, and from the lovely :i07-foot campanile fumbled out the mournful strains of "Hanging Danny Deever in the Morning,” a traditional dirge at Berkeley in time of intellectual crisis. CHANGING TIDE Students hurried to class _____ ‘he flowered walks and by shortchanging his undergrad- j episode "as | hurried back again, like a tide uate students. ^ j a crisis in values” and another | that changed pyery hour. example of "the growing attri-j x i, p political ferment on tlx,' open shelves. RESTLESS . . The undergradiililes are restless. ^ If Yale trembled, nervous and reluctant, on the brink of becoming a multiversity, the spacious University of California campus across the Bay Bridge from San Francisco seemed to accept its fate with willing resignation. The multiversity of Berkeley, .seen at first glancp, appeared to exi.st on many levels, some of them conflicting, all of them dynamic and exciting. YEAR OFF "A large percentage of fhem will take a year off to find themselves. They feel they would be cheated if they went through the academic lockstep, emerging with a B.A., without knowing what they want out of life. So they will go off lo Europe, or work with CORE in the .South, l^r just hang around the university for a year. "They no longer hx)k upon the university as a place where you find the answers to life. The off-campus life of civil rights demonstrations, of lectures and the coffee shops plays as .much concerts, of plotting all night in a part in their development as what goes on inside the gates. HOUSING SHORTAGE “More than 60 per cent of our .students live off campus. Berkeley has a serious housing shortage, yet rooms in dorms go begging. The fraternities and the sororities have to do some hustling to get recruits in rush week.” , , , „ , I exampiu ui me i n e ponucai lermeui on Nobody ^ows my name j the undergraduate col-j campus seemed little altered a common dormitory lament on university.” by Berkeley’s worldwide head- campuses where classes may! " . . *. ^ run from 1.^ to 2,000 students; Hanson, Yale’s problems; in business at the Sather and be divided into bO or more ^ tbe“ problems of many col-j Gate, manning the rows of sections presided over by ^ across the country, a com- ' card tables that had been the teaching assistant, a graduate [jjagHaf, growing pains on the; battleground for the free student working on his i part of the university and grow-1 speech movement when the Frequently the full professor do-j pains on the part of the! university tried to invoke a trig the lecturing doesn t even long dormant regulation know his assistants by name. j GRAVITY CENTER against outside political activ- GIVES LECTURE ’ g^j.^rsity today is ex- pected to occupy the center of gravity on the intellectual frontier,” said Hanson. “Once you start going after the big mon^y and the big names, you are expected to make a real contribution to the world reservoir of knowledge. The students who drop out for a year and just hang around feed the ranks of Berkeley’s .growing “hidden community,” a random collection of artists, writers and beatniks who dwell on the fringes of the university, live off its cultural activities and low-priced cafeterias and lend a leading hand in the rallies and protest demonstrations. Rresident Clark Kerr once estimated the size of Berkeley.’.s hidden community al .3,000. More than a year before the strike and sit-in at the Berkeley campus that resulted in the arrest of 773 demonstrators and nearly two years before the jarring a^iearance of the four-letter-word signs that prompted him to resij^ (and later reconsider) President Clark Kerr of tte. University of California (enrollment 87,(WO on seven cam-, puses) gave a remarkable series of lectures at Harvard. His subject was the care and feeding of today’s huge university — or the “multiversity,” as he named it. Xcir ■i Firesideot ‘t. “Yale has got to take a definite stand in tevof of research if it expects to occupy a position of world leadership . in thought by 1980.” You could buy a button for almost any c'ause: “Get Out of Viet Nam,” "Legalize Marijuana,” “Sack HUAC,” “Abolish the Regents,” “Lower the Drinking Age,” “Friends of Fidel,” “I’m a Right Wing Extremist” and “I’m from Cal, Color Me Red.” Becau.se Berkeley, like other campuse.s, is concerned w^ith the flight of teachers from the classrooms, the job of Dr. Neil J. Smelser has been expanded to encomp’ass the broader issues of educational reform. You could sign up for a summer Negro vote drive in Mississippi, or to work beside the field hands in the California Across the campus, in his j fruit orchards, or for the marcli stucly in the^ top^ turret of Eero on Washington against the war Saarinen’s high rise Ezra Stiles I in Viet Nam'or to help tutor LESS AN ISSUE He sees the conflict between research and teaching as less an issue than the demands made on a professor’s time from the outside world. Smelser, 34-year-old editor of the American Sociological Review, recently was appointed special assistant to the chancellor for student po-litical activity._______________ Dorm, philosopher Weiss expounded an almost completely opposite point of view. “The undergradu^c is losing .. f\ ' ll': disadvantaged Negroes in the poorer neighborhoods of Oakr land. No table seemed ^ do much business. • “The faculty member is no longer geographically fbced to his campus,” said Dr.' Smelser. “He has become a citizen of the national and Jnter-national scholarly community, (Continued on Page,-C-3) 16.1 CU.R FHILCO WITH NEW PHILCO POWER SAVER Automatic Defrosting in refrigerator section 16.1 cu. ft. NEMA Certified voluma Separate freezer holds 125 lbs. of frozen foods New Philco Power Saver can save you up to $15.76* per year! Philco Thinsulation adds more than 2 cu. ft. usable storage space. *Bas«d on local! and national avtraia a • FREE SERVICE • FREE DELIVERY • FREE FACTORY WARRANTY WKC • OPEN THURSDAY. FRIDAY and MONDAY UHTUJP.M. ' 108 NORTH SAGINAW • PARK FREE IN LOT REAR OF STORE Name your own terms. We handle our own contracts. We hove no one to tell us how much down or how many months we con finonce. We con custom tailor the terms to fit your individual needs. No money down. l.r 11 ii I I I’MKi VONTIAC PltK-SH, MONDAY. MAY Jt/MHI.T C—8 College Students Revolting Against 'Creeping Impersonality (('oiidiiiiitfl frmn l*u|.>r> C Z| i|nd hr frriN IiIn ohll|{ii(loii U IcNN lo town mill ,|{own (liuii l« Ihc ln(crn«U«inul Nudcly (tt wlik’h he belongs. ‘ The professor with Hie pockeit hrieteosr dtishlog off fo on iiitertiulioiiol ineolliiij or l(t serve os adviser lo some |iuh llshlng house or lo lake par! In some scholarly panel has he come a eomnioiiploee sight on many eainpuses" For this r('ason, Simdser mhl ed. "The young leaelao' who devotes his major energies to the preparation ol his stiuhods soon realizes llpd h<‘ is nol tak ing the opliimim l)olh lo sue cess, Me knows he can damage his career it he doesn’t gel in voIvihI in lln^ larger scholarly slndenl iMNly," liislsled I’linl (taker of Morugn, Calif., a ilieiiii>er of (he DidversKy Seii-Hlc and u leader of Alpha (iamma Omega fralernily. "They fry lo keep stirring up one crisis after another, and iiiosl students have g o 11 e ji plainly disgusted. "The fraternities are Iryjiig to move hdo the povviu' vaeiaun vacated hy K. S, M. and trying to wipe out tindr old stereotype (d a hunch of drunken snohs hy stressing their service funcllon and the balance hot ween fun and seriousness lhal Ih*^ pro vide in undergraduate life" gradiiule enroHiueiit lit on the verge of pUsHing Its iiinler-graduate enrollment. Like (he University of California, with whom tt has a "no raid eompnci" on swiping facid ly, Htanfoi'd alrendy i» a nudU verslty, |»roud of Its five Nols'l laureates, Its $ll4 rnlllion, twir itdle long lineal electronic aceel ernlor. Its enormous research park, where more than 45 In dustries will) annual payroll of $.50 million thrive in the re tiecled hrilliauce o( Its eminent faculty, There wets' other culprits, too IIKSI'.AIU’II IN.STITUTLS Social .Scientist l,ewis Feuer, who has written widely on the subject of student unrest, charged thiit re>seiirch institutes, which buy up a professor's time on a contract basis, usually with government funds, "have be come operating base "Fm against Heed becoming a graduate school," said Hetty .lo Hlavat, a |unior froin .Seattle, Wasti Weiss bud said "If I had a| and lai.ulty cotice son of college age to ' ‘ ‘ ‘ ' lighted hy a live hour hHid tight mcnl at Hcrkclev. "We raid like belt,’ cheerf.dly i mimillvd l*rol . Sitniord Dorn .S’l ANI’’OHI) AND HIsl'J) j pii.^ch. "We’ve became the mo,st In a nationwidi' .survey of un-, frightening ogre in the West. (Icrgruduate unrest, huge, rich- The only thing is we make them ly endowed .Stanford Univer.sity | (each after they get here. Less at Palo Alto, Calif,, and tiny, j than 1 |ier cent of our faculty is illflAin .sit K "The cainpuH Isn't large enough It would make my heart sick to see the Irciil lawn Nlmlenl body wlio Ibluk Heed Inis no cliolce but to move lii (he direction ol graduate edii-catioii, both (or the sake of nttrueling new fucully and keeping t h e older members Iroin tnillug Ikeliind In their Helds ol knowledge. "Cood teaching can't occur wllhoiit a viable research ac llvlly and Inlerest," argued sociologist .lohn Pock. tm excellence In leaching has g()l to keep pace" On the op|Hi,9ltc tack, political science professor Maure L Caddschmidt, pleaded (or the ,'iulvalion of "a first class lib era! arts school and against the cieallon of another medloi'ie graduate school" NOT ('U.SII "All my prolt'ssors know me lien', call me by my (uhI name I liave a giral fear of graduate students leaohlng uudergradu ales And It It ever •comes lo llu' point w li e r e lluil JHM nuu'luiie starts computing our grades, llu'u we've all bad it" There are many on (he faculty and even a lew in (lie develop . graduate ealive liave llu" ( hi acw aud c loid, lo build oil the u' past ,Students lliliik llial they inighi be ne l'-;lecled, lliey act like their fattier was gelling again la' .slaying or liimse loo idicn, tail scliool with He "The job id the liberal arts college," be stressed, "is lo pass on Hie bcillage, not push Hie lionllers Once you gel Into le compellllve rescan li mar I'l, Hie demands liecome In iimpalllde wlHi good leai'lilng." (teed llsell had been siib-iiarried I Jecled lo I acui t y raldtiig ot Hie parties In the past tew years. Would It now go in for raiding. Its faeiilty to seek recognition III (he world community •( scholars? "I hope not," said Acting President Hichard Frost, "and I'll do my heat to im|K>se (he condition that our reaurcli work lie In direct relation lo our educational coiiimitmenl. pulalion, liai? And would it encourage "TIiIh ha,a always been a school where pridessors around Hie country scut their children because ot llii' stress on under graduate leaching. I ho|)c we never lose that reputation. ' (ielling rid ol the undergraduates allogeibcr sei'ins lo lie a mark of professional ills Unction tlicsc days at least Hiars the chitcluil you hear It the bar at conventions. May we avoid that distinction." ■xperimental Heed (College rollmi'iil Itlll at Portland, Ore , ] would .seem to liavi; lllll<< In (Simmon, a.side from the tact | lhal they are botli private In j stiliilioiis. Yel few schools in uluslvely involved In re rch." ning down teaching by paying ; u„. i;„„i ,|„nc as much .soul , teachers not lo le Universities “on the make," ns Ulark Kerr called (hem, try lo upgrade themselves by hiring away the big iiapies with promises of lighter classroom loads and lucrative laboratory facililteH. "The mark of a university (m (he make," said Kerr in his Harvard lectures, "is a mad scramble for football stars and proH'ssorial luminaries. T h e former do little studying and the latter little teaching, and so they form a neat combination of muscle and intellect. ” iching in the whole ( II of undergraduate uplo Stanlord, I.. has had Its native uprising, most n'cently an uproar over whether the student government should enforce rules not made by students that led to (he resigua-llon ot three women deans. I.ike Yale, Stanlord has now reuclied the |m»IiiI where its Baptists Adopt|E Unity Theme Hut long bcfori' that, more Ilian a dozen tacully committees were at work studying every pha.se of undergraduate life, in •luding the question of whether today’s s t u dent is needlessly ■worked. Convention ClosesI Says Prof. Wolin: "It’s scandalous these days the efforts you have to go to get some of ilie important scientific people to teach. We have a large percentage here who never set foot inside a classroom. Mr. ('hips is obsolete, bis miKlel just doesn’t exist anymore, A university faculty now is made up of many people of diverse mo-livations and goals, only some of which have to do with teaching," (‘OSSIBI.E TO OVEIII'AINT Just as it is possible to exaggerate the estrangement of faculty and student body in the modern multiversity, .so is it “ possible lo overpaint the changing campus scene. At Berkeley, the fraternities and sororities still flourish, the football games still draw crowds on Saturday afternoon, the pranksters no longer swallow goldfish but they do try to see how many hours they can spend in a shower, and The Daily Californian, the campus newspaper, still has its sport pages and its frivo- "Heform is long overdue," says |)sych()logist Nevitt .Sanford, bead of .Stanford’s institute for the study of human problems "Teachers try to upgnule With Dedication Rite l tlie .same wav de- partments and colleges do, by making their courses tougher. Th(' result is that the student is ‘iiormoilsly ovcrburdi'iu'd with , witli ciidli'ss ading lists, witli an incredible array of abstract concepts, with papers and reports that are absolutely punitive. Tbe poor graduate student is even worse .SAN FHANCl.SCO (AP) One Lord, one world, one mission is the theme of tbe Anu'i i , , , can Baptist Convention this i Delegates to the 58th annual meeting of the denomination were chargerl to carry llic unity tfu'rtu' as they headed (or their j liomes today in 40 states and several foreign countries. Tbe meeting ended .Sunday night with dedication" of more than .'too missionaries in colorful costumes of the nations .they serve in. Adopted resolutions calk'd for .strengthening the United Nations, supporting the National Council of Churches, and expressing a willingness to .send official Baptist observers to the fourth session of the Vatican p]cumenical Council. KFFP HAISINC; "We’ve made the rewards of gelling a Ph. I), .so attractive, that we can rai.se the hurdles as fiendi.shly high as we like and the poor chap will keep jump- IHT SKGRECATION Other resolutions condemned racial segregation and recommended that the government reevaluate its relationship with such countries and Cuba. ' "If undergraduate life is grim, graduate work is even grimmer. The teaching assistant working for his Ph. 1). is under enormous pressure, to act iike a professional, to speak the academic language and engage in the gamesmanship of lining up grants without displaying his ignorance." Sanford admitted that he himself now gives his students as Hed' (diina much reading in a quarter as he i did in a whole s'emester. hack In addition to diluting the The Hev. Dr. J. Le.sler liar- in 1959, lous 'columns, along with all nish of Portland, Ore., outgoing the aware and concerned let- |,president,'summoned “harvest-ters to the editor, as witness j ers of the spirit" for Christian . quality Qf undefgraduate educa-this classified ad: service, either lull- or part-time, ! Sanford believes the pres- "Two .swinging chick.s-want-; "“"?bers of gradu- ed for trip to Mexico over East- Contact Dave and Wolf- gang. At Berkeley, the fraternities are busy scrubbing up their, public service image to com-' pete for members with the political activists and the civil j HAl I Y rights groups on campus. "Big government, big busi- students and teaching ness, and big unions increasing-1 campus have in-[ ly force the church out of areas i (>rea.sed the disciplinary prob-! of concern historically confined i ](>g^g to the church," Dr, Harnish I ' , said. I STAY AR()UNI\ He described modern theology | "The administration now has as "a product of a church braid- [ to deal with students'who stay j washed by materialism.” ^ around long enough to learn the I , ; ropes. IVlost crises evaphrated : in June when the seniors left,! S'RATFRNITIF'; SDRORITIFS r ^ he Baptists - almost 8,000; graduate students | FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES . formally registered at the meet- gre around all summer mount-1 Fraternities and sororities ing - spent a sunny Sunday j attacks on the power struc- may no longer "set the tone i afternoon at an outdoor .rally | f^re And when they get t(j on campus,” as Prof. Searle | and in a house-to-house visiting: te„ing undergraduates how has pointed out, but neither do campaign in the San Francisco unhappy they ought to be, it the Du Bois clubs, tlje Young j area. ' I becomes quite a force,” Socialists Alliance, the Students | American Baptist Con-1 for a Democratic Sdciety and | vention, which |ias 1.5 million j all the other kftists groups, | members, will hold its next an-1 ranging from TroIsFyites to Ma- j nual meeting at Kansas City, | oists and Castroites, that have j Mo. - May 11-15, 1966. S sprung up in the last few years. Even the free speech movement that managed to bring the university to a halt, for a few days with its campuswide strike seems to have hit its high watec fnark. “F. S.. M. is rapidly losing ground with a majority of the USAF Officer Succumbs RUISLIP, England (AP) -i Lt. Col. Roy White, 49, assistant chief of staff of the U.S. 3rd Air | Force, ‘based in Britain, died Friday at his home near the base. Played Doctor for 6 Weeks Stanford, like California, has had its resurgence of student activism after years of political apathy and the parallel decline of the old rah-rah spirit. It prides itself on having sent more students into the Peace Corps and more to Mississippi than any campus in the West. “Civil rights rallies now out-draw the football rallies,” admitted Biff Barnard of ' Green-\Vich, Conn., chairman of the ' Axe Commission that organizes I the massive card stunts in the I stadium at football games. NEW YORK (JPi - Daniel Bostick, 24, played the role of an interne at Harlem Hospital for six weeks before he was spotted by a hospital official. Bostick was arraigned Saturday in criminal court" on charges of practicing medicine without a license and imp^jf^+^rM are “considered de-classe” sonating a doctor * ^ and ipolitical activism had taken He t»ld J.dg. Neal R BaHigllerh <•. ».»« I. d. ^.yle, I never had a etac. U, be a d«U,r. » I jnat on \Sity“ rJw acted the part. _ trying to determine “which one Bostick, with no medjcal education, went on ambulance can stay away from lectures calls, treated some parents and once set a broken collarbone. the longest and still get a “ " Bostick was sent to Bellevne Hospital for psychiatric j LIBERAL ARTS examination. , . I At Y a 1 e 1 philosopher, Paul Somehow, it was reassuring to learn from Dean Robert Sears that even in an age when students “drive themselves” | and cheerleaders and pom-pom r^i. IT. f V ■ ,v • ] / / XUK l•()^'I IA( lM{|<:aS,M()NI)AV. MA\' Vi. lUO.V NY Fair Short of Cash, Customers-Not Ideas I NKW VOUK (AIM ItomidliiK I Nrlmin hml plmintui to *• 1 oul llu‘ liiMl monlli ,)( Its scctmd i .slrlptcaMc” by dam - I and llnnl NcaNon, Ibe Now York ^''<'rry Bullion in an effort to I World’s Fair today finds itself | Hllruct more patrons to his oa-I runnint> slioi t of easli and cus-' tablishment. (omers ~ but not suggestions. ! Heopening jasi monlli al leusl I $1/million in Ibe bole, Ibe bil DIltF ItKrOKT I lion dollar exposition limls al [ ^ apokespum for Ihe llolel I l(-ndHnee figiii'es .ill per eeni AsHiHdallon of New York (lily iM-low Ihe liPHl monlli lolal l"i’ dire report, HUM \ “I’lidersexed and overpriced’' 1 Is Ihe way more and more con I ces.HlonarIcs are ilescrlhmc, Ihi' Me said advance hotel reserv-idlon.s are nmnlng aboni !i() iKir cent bebind Iasi year for out of town lair jialrons he said, "last a» tile U S. FavlTloii, die 'Vall-can Pavilion and the Sir WIm ston Churchill display Issued no official complaint about the price boost, some quietly express their concern, Very v«M*al In Die eornplaints about the admis>^on liiKist are operators of tlie many fiKKi concessions, ranging from exotic foreign restnuranlH lo Hlaml-up lunch (siunters, "'I'bis pnidlsli iilliindc low 0(1, clean sex. and Ihe Im , Iben who afraid SUtUiKSTIONS Moses lnrii(*d down, for Die preseni, at least, sugKosIloiiH , , , .Dial davlliiie admlsKloiis lu‘ a rush l.y people I would pay four times us miteli lo the tali',’’ be reasons, "And Die fair would go ov^r the top." NISAK CRITICAL Those close lo the fiscal sltup-Don conceded that Die fair corporation Is dangerously clotie lo llie critical stage. Among other Ihings, It sold 17 million advance th’kelH lust year and Hfieni the money. Il lias i>ocn rcporled Dial Die lair's casli posllloii is shoii and officials soon will he faced wlDi paying security and iiminte-iiaiicc flriii.s large ammmls of 52 l„ 52MI i, ......... ll«. (»„;■ ''.'I.'" ' “ ' ............... »|»l In llu- said Itobcrl Ncl.son, manager of |,asl week, Moses and Ills SIreel Pavilion, lias an (• going alter (i p in moiic ■y tor N crvicc H rendered .since curly In Die .spring, ;TW 0 W((ckH ilflCI r Die fair op(‘iii •d, Mosch siild "Nothing so Inr in the expel ienee and eorpoiatloii Is "In i ger of going broke” icing U’iilci s " show .ll!ST l.lkK IIADIIV Viscotml Lliilcy, .'1 (IctI). son of I'niicc.ss MargarH and the Farl of Snowdon, served us a page al a wedding Saturday, repealing a duly performed by Ins tallier .'l.'l years ago (right) when he wa.s 2'v!, ird ol direcloi's III scIbacK when cn approviil lo |)orallon’s books, tors, who lor (he most pari don't i BORIlOWINt. lo depend on sale.s and In- ihc amusemciil area OTIlKItS (OMPl.AIN I Ihe iiilernalioiial cxbibi siillered People in the News more draslic suggest "Why not droji (he daylime insiieid "lie l"-^- I'IkIm'-' 'hnn $2 and make p $1 alter II o cloc^ al ' night,be said, "And fjwing the gates open lo free admission The city comptroller conteiKls aftry 9 o'clock at night ” dividual gale receipts, have the fair borrowed $21 million to j * * * coiiiplaincd alioul Die admission u.se In preparing Die (Mli acre Ho aaid most of Dm conces-boosl. site for Die fair. I slons work on a percentage lia- So tar, (air PresIdenI Itobert Mo.ses lias said Die transter of j sis. paying in rent lo the fair a Mo.ses has slood tlrm In Ids dc- llic money was n"l a loan and ; certain percentage of the Icrminalion lo keep ll'c adinls- served nollce Dial II would nor amouiil of business they do dal-sioMs al $2 TiO lliroiighoul Ihe be repiiid ly. (lay and evening and ban slrip .\llhough the major mdiisirial "So, if we drew In four limes sliows cxinbilions and such allractions ‘ as many people al night, we knowledge of nianagemeiil indi-cali‘s lliat Die alleiidance will iiol l)e larger Ihaii Iasi year” However, Mo.ses said a study of the slliiallon was under way and any "substantial change In policy" will be decided by Ihe fair's executive committee, 13 MILLION SHORT !,asl ' (be exposlllon fell about i:i million short of Its 40-mlllloii attendance goal. This year, Moses forecasts a II7'/,j. million gale for Die six-inonlli season. Life magazine said the fair "Should this happen," Life said, "the fair will not go out of business, In one way or anolher, IxMi many iKMiple have loo miK’h Invested Jn the fair lo let II go under” The miigii'/.lne said Moses ran Die fair with siicli diclatorlal fHiweiH Dial even his lop aides were afraid to tell him moiilhs ago of Die corporation's sinking flnimcinl condition. FUOL’.S PARADI.SF "The re.siil^ was llial Ills own pco|)b‘ allowed him lo live lor monlh.s In a fool's paradl.se," Lite said. Despite Die drof) in Die gale, opcralors of some of the large Indiislrlal and oilier exhihils wliicli were ,so |Mipiilar last year have re|M)iled only sligld drops jn the numbers louring their displays. , enough people lo keep Ihe lines I lilUai most of Ihe lime” ! A'lTRAtmONS The fair this season boasts several new attractions, including the Churchill display of paintings and persoiiaf effects, a new eoDeclIon of |>aliifhigs by .Spmdsh masters In the iSpnnish Pavilion and a eollecllon of original American hislorlcal docmnenlN In the U.H. Pavilion. Some of the slide and other exhihMs this year droppial nd-inissioii charges and are preseni Ing their show.s free. Many of them are geared lo liaiidle only a certain number of people per hour. "iaisl year, probalily Ihou-saiid.s of people didn't even try lo get Into .some of the exiilhits liecause of Ihe crowds,” one exhibitor said "This year, even with thinner crowds, there are A "lainily - geared eariilval alniosplime,” has laam added to the amusement center wltli cancan (lancers, games of chanec and dance halls. But the midways there and in most oilier .s(*ellons of Die fair ! are vlrliially deserled on wc(*k-day nights. MAY (;0 imOKF "Something’s got to be done about Die admission price or a lot of UN are going to go broke," said one concessionaire. "I don’t care If you have a talking donkey, people Can’t pay to .sec him if they go broke getting through Die main gale." "This lair Is nndersexed and overpriced," he said. ^ By The Ass«H'iatcd Press l ornuT Japanese l‘riine Minisler Hayalo Ikeda paid Ids lirsl visil loday lo the Diet in Tokyo since resigning eight rnonllis ago lor Irealmeiil of a cancerous Ihroal tumor. Ikeda, ()5, now spends most of his lime al his n'sidenee. Negro College to Give Reuther Degree Walter Reuther, president of Ihe Dnited Aiito Workers, will receive an honorary dm--tor of letters degree from Tuskegee (Ala.) Institute, it was announced Sunday. Reuther will reeeive the degree at graduation exercises May 3j|, a spokesman for the Negro institution said. The eom-mencement speaker will be l)r. Martin Luther King. Ex-GM Chief: 'Just Want to Fade Away' Alfred P. Sloan, former president and board chairman of General Motors, said in New York yesterday on his 90th birthday he wanted only to "fade away and be forgotten ” Sloan declined a birthday interview but sent this word: "The greatest opportunity for enterprise still lies beyond the horizon. "The future belongs to the young, the adventurous, but they must have the courage and initiative to reach out and grasp it, and then the willingness to retain it.” House Group Keeps Adlai's Rent Down The rent on U.N. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson's apartment at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City is still $33,-000 a year. It was disclosed recently that the hotel had considered upping the rent to $45,000, but the. House Appropriations subcommittee wouldn’t go along with the idea. Rep. John J. Rooney, chairman of the subcommittee, disclosed yesterday in Washington that the hostelry heeded his suggestion that having Stevenson reside there helped bnsiness. West Germans Cheer Queen in Stuttgart STUTTGART, Germany (iPi - j Streets of this capital of Baden-Queen Elizabeth II visited Stiitt- Wuerttemberg as the British gart today on her official tour monarch drove standing in an of West Germany. open limousine from the rai!- * ★ ■ I road station to Stuttgart’s new Thousands cheered in the > palace for a reception. SAIL THE (iREEK LINE **Golden Route^ 29 Day Madifarranean Cruisa From $595 Also Wost Indie^^ruises ^ WORLDS FAIR WEEKEND Hofol Folf Tickott and,Now York Tour ONiY $19.95 HONEYiyiOONERS! he our guest your first night in |\Aiami Beach You stay, 8 days, 7 nights for only $66 per couple Normal 7 day, 6 night rate; Plus free car., champagne, yacht cruise, camera and hfiany others. AMPLE FREE PARKING 332-831B BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE 2237 S. TELEORAPH (ARCADE) 45 S. TELEGRAPH at HURON 536 N. PERRY 398 AUBURN AVE. NORTH HILLS PLAZA TEL-HURON CENTER ^ AT PADDOCK AT AUBURN N. MAIN ST.,-ROCNESTER OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY-SATURDAY 8, to 9 . OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY-SATURDAY 8 to 9 OPEN 9 to 9 DAILY M„ T., S. 9 to 6-W„ Th.r F. 9 to 9 jt. IkfeK, ,,U --tr- 'I’ll 1C I»(|N%I AC MON I )A V. .M A V 2 C M)0A On Weekend Duty Farmer Is Proud Member of KKK Guard Resigns Post Belgian Chief MUSKIN POOL SALE! KARMVTLLE, N.C, (AR) -Raymond Cranford stood at parade rest, his gold steel helmet shining under the bright lights, liis parntnHtper Jump iioots diis> ty from walking a plowed field, He wore the silver burs of a captain on his gray-blue uniform. During the week, Ray Cranford, 44, Is a North Carolina farmer. On weekends, lie serves kn a member of the Kii KUix Kbm Security Guard. I’he guard in the police and lirotectlve arm of the KKK, which has had a resurgence In North Carolina during the past year. Cranford had Just completed a Klan street walk through the downtown section of Karmvllle, a community of 4,000 In lh(! heart of North Carolina’s tobacco country. Now it was Saturday night and he stood within Ihe circle of robed Klansmen at a rally in a fii'ld on the outskirts of town. While Cranford talked, the first public Klan wedding in North Carolina since lll'^ti was being performed in the dusty, plowed cornfield. An estimated li.lMK) watched. .lames Earl Taylor, 27, an automobile body .simp operator in P'armville, atid Bessie Irene Tyson, 37, were married by the Kian’s black-robed chaplain, the Rev. George !<’. Dorsett, a Baptist minister of Gi-eensboro, N.C. / Taylor wore the white robe and peaked cap of a Klansman in go(Hl standing. Tbe bride was clad in a light blue, full length old Southern-style party dre.ss. (Tanford talked freely of his Klan work, angrily of the words written about the KKK. KI.AN WEDDING .lames Earl Taylor and Bessie Irene Tyson were married in ii dusty North Carolina cornfield Saturday night in the first Ku Klux Kian wedding in 3!) years, lie is an automobile body shop operator in I'lii inville, N.C. She wore a light blue, full-length old .Soulhern-.style party dress. "All we want is the truth,’’ he said. "They convict the KKK without a trial. “I don’t wear a mask,” he said. ”1 don’t hide my Klan work. I’m out in the open and I’m proud of it. 1 volunteered for the Security Guard. We’re all volunteers.” Why? "Because I’m a white man. I don't believe in mixing the races. Hi] don't like being called a bigot. I don’t like being called subversive, "flow could 1 be subversive when I served 12 years in the Marine t;orp.s. I have 13 cam paign ribbons. I have four pur pie hearts.” ('ranford, a husky man, said he had several Negro families living on his land. "I furnish them a hou.se and food and money. I carry them in my car to pick up their food. 1 IrCal them light A man who mistreats a Negro down here I can’t get help. They llhe up to ! work for me. STILL A BKiOT BRUSSELS, Hglglutp ifll Premier Then Lefevre resigned today on the heels of a national election in which his 4 year old Social (!hiiallnn Himiallst coalition government lost nearly 40 seals III Parliament. Lefevre presenliMl the reslgna lion of his government to King Baiidouln, and Ihe king asked him to rcnmlM on in a caiclakn' capacity. T li e two - parly coalition, plagued by the conlliiulng prohlein of governbig a country spill between Erench-Hpeaktiig Walloons niisl Elein-Isli-spiuiking Flemings, wiintcHl to diiinge tbe eonstltiitlon to give language luliiorltles more protection. But unotficial results from tlie cleidlon gave tlic coalition only 141 seats one less than Ihe two-thirds majority needed The biggest gainers in yesterday's balloting w e r e the Liberals, who picked up 211 seals in Ihe 2l2-si>ai Mouse of Itepre senlalivcs and 12 in Ihe lIKl senl Senate. The ministry of Ihe Interior gave this breakdown lor Ihe Sen-ale: .Social Christians 44 seats, a lo.ss of 3: .Socialists 31. a loss of 14; Liberals '23, a gain of 12; (annmumsts 3, a gam of 2; Ihe I Volksunie parly 4, a gain of 2. Tlie.se were the returns in I the popular vote with 5,122,186 I of the C,0!ll,5.'i4 votes tubulated; I "Atkl still they call me bigot.” SPECIAL SALE! 65-1OOC NOW ONLY INCLUDING NORMAL INSTALLATION Price includai inttallation of lamp up lo a distance of 60 feet from house Nominal charge for addition footage Offer applies only to residential gas customers of Consumers Power Company Chormglow GAS LAMP Gives a soft glow to patio or yard ... repells insects . discourages prowlers makes walks safer! I MAIL COUPON FOR MORE INFORMATION I CONSUMERS POWER COMPANY . 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(!r(‘t*I, grand dragon of Alabama, said .Sunday niglif lliat lio bad quit job as a foundry machinist in Birmingham, Ala., lo devote all his time to the Klan. Social Clirbstiaim 1,776,611 (34.71 per eetit against 41 46 In 1961); Soclalist.s 1,454,‘208 (28,39 |M>r cen( againsi .16 73); I.iberals 1,111.61).') (21 70 per rent against 12.32); (huumutii.sls 214,766 (4.19 per cent Jigainst 3.11); Volksun 358,033 ( 6.98 per cent against 3.41), and mlscellaneoiis small parties ‘20«).9I3 |15 42 ■l5«48 |18x48 ■21x48 I |24x48 ■2878'^ SURF QUEEN SUPER CAROE SUPER I4ACY SUPER CROWN 1 " TOP UOOl r TOP uooT ■ Ltpof suppolirs 1^995 6MVAHUTO w«u *125 *89” *79” *180 *145 *110 *240 *190 150 140 *290 *225 *185 175 *350 *280 *200 190 jSUNr KINL# 1% WO.OU LESS IHAN SUNE UUFEN muUEL clearance on AU RILNOR P00LS-15»X45‘\..$59.95 D0UGHB0|., Mtuumf Moo; M30| i8o; *200j All With Muskin's New Enamel Galvanized Wall ' ifORE # 2 NORTHWES^5. of PONTIACB NORTHEAST „ 27207 L 1965 I' 34001 PLYMOUTH IS mEGRAPHl <^N0SEBECK jrrimnnnnnnrrnrim^^ TnniTtnnnnfTrtnrTtrTrTinnnnrrirrrirrirrinnnrTrinfTrinnroTt^^ Open Tonight Til 9 p.m. IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service to All Floors S. SAGINAW ST. • Provincial 41 Colonial • Traditional • Modern — All by America's Leading Manufacturers! Open Tonight 'til 9 P.M. 7-Piece Kroehler Complete Living Room NO MONEY DOWN ' MONTHS TO PAY We'vecoordinated a complete living room ensemble and cut the price on all seven-pieces. You get a large, luxurious sofa, matching chair, cocktail table, two step tables, two lamps . .all at this low price. Sofa and chair are new Kroehler designs, built for beauty and comfort. Reversible, zippered foam cushions. Covered in durable nylon fabrics. ; * jfree delivery OPEN MON -THURS -FRt 'TIL 9PM “yon must be satisfied-this we guafantee” 17-19 S. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC ; : ■ FREE PARKING WHILE SHOPPING AT WARDS - .Bk-.vIG IN YOUR PARKING STUB bULWAm.tJ.UAJl«.^mJLmJLJLJUUUI.RJUtJUa.lLUJLL»JUUUL»JL«.8..9Ag.AU.«jAAJJL»XU.A.5UL«.aJL8.EAAAm 0" I l ine PONTIAC PHKSS. MONDAY. MAY ii. I0(D 7-3,8-3: Tigers' Twin Bill Tragedy Toll at Ten Defense Slips, | Reliefers Fail in Twin Loss ft Bengals in Chicago Tonight, Mgr. Dressen to Resume Monday DKTHOIT (Al'» I'K'sNcd f(ii II IhiMiif sotiK liii this yi'i' N cdlllon of lilt- DHroil 'riKciN, OIK* coidd narrow Ha* Holcclion to “KingH of lilt* Koad" or "Never on Sunday " A UHle more Ihougld possibly could turn up a number of olbei tunes wblch would describe I be team's babll of losing double heiidei.s The Tigers did H again Sun day, bowing to Ibe Hallimore Orioles, 7-3 and H-:i. idler clos ing to within a run of a tie in cacb game The Tigers' recoid lor twin bills is 0 10. They have dropped two games on each of the last lour Sundays BKTTKR ON ROAD Detroit, which has fared much better on the road-1 T6-tries to improve that mark at Chicago tonight wliere Mickey Lolich will face John Buzhardt or Juan Pizarro. "We gave them that first game.” Bob Swift, who starts his final week as interim manager today, said of Sunday’s defeats. • '1' m< y.0.1 |gr ..120^ Medal Champ on Tee Again III* rolled In a 21 foot, uphill putt for a birdie on the par 5, ri27-yard llllh hole to finish will) ii 72-hole total of 300 and with Creen, and he rolled In a sixT(M)U*r on the first extra hole for a birdie and the champion- shlp. (iRKION RAIJJKS Creen, bidding fur his first major local golf crown, staged a stirring rally after falling five l,ong hilling Melvin 'Hud' Stevens, who |)rov«*<| he's sllll the slate's best amateur willi a playoff victory yesterday in the Michigan Medal Play tournament, fa«ed tougher con)petlllon today as he leecloff lu a field of 107 in a local iJ.S ti A <|uality iiig I o 0 II d at Meadowhrook Country Cliih ru*ar Norlhvllle 'Hie 32 year old Sh*vens. who downed Pete Creen of Orchard Lake on the first hole of sudden J will L* hatlllng the ar.*).'s h.p f '' «»'• ,,r„.s and «...ah*ur,s al Meadow he then r»l led will, . ,b f„r iiw, .iiOu In iidvance birdies on 10, 11 aiwl 12 and l!!'(bc U S t; A Uecliontd (|uall- IlnaNy pulled even with Stevens fvinp roiiiui sp( for .lunc H ol i I.U i. n * Hlrmingbam (MIcb ) Cuunlry, u* two s ay.*d even the rc.st . of tlx* way. (.non moved to the ' " ’ par 3 llllh green in llir(*e .shots, Stevens, known more lor his ; j,jj, f;(()ppj„)j, only two feet (;|*:TS pan IIPLP Hlg Jack Nicklaiis, walehes will) a tight lip as bis pud beads for the cup on Ibe lOlb hole in Ibe playoff with ,Iohnnv Poll The galltiry wnlclu*.s intently as llie ball drops and Nicklaus, after sh.Kding a 63 in regulation, won the Memphis Open. DOtIBLINC 1)1' Ded'oil Tiger Don Dem eler slides liead first Into second base wUh a double in the lllh inning of the 2nd game again.sl Baltimore yesterday as infielder PhOl«*«K t.Ki late in trying tor die .lerry Adair lag. Baltimore won l)odi ends of the twinblll al Tiger Stadium, 7-3 and 8-3. booming tee sliols, turned to his putter tor tin* Michigan Medal vk^ory at Indlanwood shooting^ three over-pur 75 on the final round. MSU Takes Big 10 Track Title The Tigers announced before I the game that Charlie Dressen will assume his managerial du-1 ties in New York a week from | Ohio State? Kayoes MSU to Take Title Big 10 Track Result? FIELD SUMMARY '•&, b. the op.-n« Bamcj CHHMm m. Hank Aguirre picked runners captured Us first Big len base- ,,u. ^ S first base Kat'h I'^e the ball crown in 10 years Saturday j, , ,, j runner reached second and went! when it kayoed Michigan Stale lUllll^l * /l<\l ihhvhivtl/I- AAMa 1 k< on to score. “1 don’t know what they were thinking about out there,” Swift said, pinpointing the blame on the first play on second base-man Jake Wood. “Dick McAuliffe has to play in the hole at shortstop with Jackie Brandt up there because he’s a pull hitter,” Swift added. ‘‘That leaves Wood as the only )n nnvpr. But he didn’t- 1 season ending doublehcad- Iian to cover. But he didn’ The Orioles clinched each game with big rallies in the ninth inning. BLAST GLADDING They scored three times Off Fred Gladding in the opener on back-to-back homers by Brandt and Norm Siebern. Brandt, who topped all batters with five runs batted in in the two games, opened the ninth inning of the nightcap with a single in triggering a four-run rally off Larry Sherry. Actually, Ohio Stale clinched j the championship with a come- j kpiiv. from-behind 13-10 triumph in the I o'”’ first game and then downed the Spartans 2-0 in the nightcap on the strength of one hit. The Buckeyes put them.selves into championship position with a 4-3 triumph over Michigan Friday in 16 innings. This left Ohio State with an advantage of winning only one game Saturday to capture the title. > Michigan Slate, Kan'l Bernard. Michigan, U.6 Campbell, Michigan Slate, 47 4 lllham, Minnesota, 47 4. 4, Jon lorthwestern, 47.6. 5, Elwin Set I, Michael Bowers, Ml. 7, William Holden, Wise d McKoy, Michigan Sti Densham, Michigan^ nneth Lalloglal, \ Garrett, Michigan I Stale, I, Jamas Garrall, Michigan . 2, Elwin Sellers, Ohio Slate, Daswell Campbell, Michigan 4, James Summers, MIdhIgan . 5, Dennis Kohl, Iowa, 1\,7. IOWA CITY, Iowa (Ah Michigan State captured its first Big Ten outdoor track title with dazzling deiith Saturday but Iowa sophomore Jon Reimer stole the spotlight. Reimer won the ,330-yard intermediate hurdles in 36.1 seconds, smashing the listed Big Ten and national collegiate marks. ) esola, 9:01.5. (Big Ten Recorc I 9:02.a, George Harvey, Purdi Dave Wegner, Minnesota, 9:0 Helnoniin, Minnesota, 9:05.9. I senhelmer, Northwestern, 9:1 ; McCollam, Michigan Stale, 9 The Tigers’ only chances to cheer came in the second game when Bill Freehan hit a two-run homer and G^rge Thomas cracked a solo shot. ^ But that wasn’t enough to overcome the four runs the Orioles scored in the opening inning ih spoiling Jack Hamilton s ■first start. ; Willie Horton joined the "n-gers’ injury list when he pulled up-lame at second base in the fourth inning of the opener. Traiher Jack Homel explain^ that the tendons in Horton’s big toe on his right foot were inflamed. The double loss dropped Michigan State into third place behind rival Michigan which split a doubleheader, defeating Indiana 7-4 after an H-7 loss. The split enabled the Hoosiers to finish on top' in the second division behind Iowa and Illinois. Minnesota, last year’s Big Ten and NCAA champion, downed Wisconsin 7-4 but lost the nightcap, 3-2. The Gophers finished in a tie with Purdue for seventh place. Net Champs BLOOMINGTok, Jnd.-Mich-igan’s tennis team, took four singles and two doubles matches in the Saturday finals to win the'^lig 10 tennis crown, out-pmnting Indiana 142-127. Northwestern with one singles’ champ was third with 84 points, followed by Michigan Stale with 82, Illinois 62, Minnesota 41, Iowa 32, Wisconsin 31, Ohio State 30 and Purdue 21',4. Only one singles defending champ retained his title, North-western’s Clark Graebner who defeated Indiana’s Dave Power, 3-6, 6-4 and 6-3. One upset was Michigan’s Jerry Stewart who defeated In- in preliminaries; old national colleglati record 36.2. Jim Miller, Colorado, 1964. 2, Gene Washington, Michigan Stale, 36.9 3, Alvin Randolph, Iowa, 36.9. 4, Gerr\ Beatty, Wisconsin, 37,7. 5, Arvid Johnson 1962.) 2, William Burnette, Iowa, 15. David Selberllch, Wisconsin, 15-3. 4, L Mueller, Minnesota, 15. 5, Ronald I Dhio Stale, 14 8. DETROIT Detroit Lqa Angeles Cleveland Boston american^l^aou|^ Bthind t diana’s Charles Fichter 6-1 and 6-4 in No. 4 singles Indiana’s No. 1 doubles, Dave Power and Rod McNerney won over Michigan’s Stpwart and Karl Hedrick, 6-3 and 6-3. Washington Kansas City Saturday's Results ^73 Is^ ___ 5, Minnesota 2 I, Baltimore 4 I, Cleveland. 4 IfeUm **E_Johnson 2, Demeter, G. Brown. DP -Baltimore 3. LOB-Ballimore 9, Detroit 2B-Snyder, Brandt,. ..Deme'e''^ • SF- jihUSSn. ^Aparicio, Aguirr. .Brown, Lumpe. „ r er B Barber W.2-4 , . . 7 | J 2 ^‘S/Wguirre: T-^. ^ \ Second Game BALTIMORE DETROIT .<> r h bl 2 0 Woog 2b Aparicle i Blefan 3 2 1 1 W Sieliern 1b Lau c tj'lw'n' 3b Brandt cf Adair 2b ... 1 Cash lb 3 1 0 0 0 Demeter rf 4 2 0-0 1 'Freehan c 4 2)00 Thomas cf ,2 10 12 Lumpe ph 1 S' 0 0 0 G.Brown If 3 3 12 2 M'al'ffe $s 4 4 110 Hamilt'n p 0 3 0 10 Regan p i tool Oyler ph 1 Kaline ph 1 Norfhrup ph 1 U I 9 I Totals 34 Difralf OOfl 200 K»-3. E—Wood. DP—Baltimore 2, Detroit ' LOB-BaMimore 7, Detroit ' . S S ? ____ _____ Washington 0 Los Angeles 6, Chicago 3 Sunday's Results Chicago S: Los Angeles 3 Washington Kansas City at, Minnesota, rain Today's Games Cleveland (Kralick 1-2 or Slebert 4-2) a tew York (Slottleitiyre 4-2), night Detroit (Lolich 5-2) at Chicago (Bu ;hardf 4-0 or Pizarro 0-0), njght Baltimore (Pdimer 1-0) al Washingloi Daniels 3-3), night Only games scheduled. “ Tuesday's Games Detroit at Chicago, night Cleveland at New York Los Angeles al Washington, twl-nighl Kansas City at Baltimore, night Minnesota at Boston, night Purdue Wins Golf Crown NCAA Baseball This Weekend at Ohio Site Spartan Squad Nets 55 Points; Michigan 2nd The 158-pounder won by about seven yards, upseting favored Gene Washington of Michigan State. However, Michigan State won five events and scored 56 points as it ended 14 years of frustration in taking the title for the first time since joining the conference. WOLVERINES SECOND Michigan finished second with 43 points. Wisconsin, the defending outdoor champion and the 1%5 indoor Utlisl, was third with 37. Iowa and Minnesota each had 28, Northwestern 13, Illinois 9, Purdue and Ohio State 6 each and Indiana 5. from the bole Stevens was also on in lliree but 21 feet from the bole. Ilotb tiimle the putt.s, On the extra hole, (Jreeii thrce-putled after hitting the green in two. Stevens, although- he hit his second shot over the green, elilpptKl bnek within six feet and dropp«*d it for a hirdie. (Jrcen |H>sted the day’s low score of 78. Sam Kocsls, who Is also in the field at Meadowhrook hMlay, wound up in fourth al ,303. Kocsis will be trying lor his second trip to the USGA In the qualifying, He made it for flu* firsf time last year. Pontiac’s Mike Amlonian post-, (*(1 a 3()(i to close in sixth place. I Of Ihe 2,232 golfers in today’s and tomorrow's qualifying ounds, 418 will survive for the sectional play, and from the sectional play, 119 players will join 31 golfers exempt from qualifying for the 72-hole U.S. Open at Bellerive Country Club St. Louis, Mo., June 17-20. EARLY STARTERS Among the early starters today was Ted Kroll, head pro at Franklin Hills, golf’s leading money winner in 1956. Kroll finished in a tie for second in the 1960 U.S. Open. Paired with Kroll were Robert Panasiuk of Canada and Reggie Myles Jr. of East Lan-sing. Warren Orlick of Tam O’Shan-ter and Tommy Shannon of Orchard Lake joined amateur Melvin ‘Bud’ Stevens at 7:26. KALAMAZOO (AP) - The NCAA District 4 Baseball Committee met here Sunday and set Athens, Ohio, as the site for the district championships. The series is scheduled for Thursday, May 27, through Saturday, May 29. Competing will be- Ohio University (26-1), Mid-American Conference champion; Ohio State University (22-11), Big Ten champion; University of Detroit (24-4), independent; and Ball State (15-6-1), Indiana Collegiate champion. Jim Garrett, springy-legged junior, led the Spartans. He won the 220 and finished second in the 100,-after winning the broad jump Friday. The Spartans also picked off firsts in the irtile, where Keith Coates raced to a Big Ten record; the high jump, and the 120-yard high hurdles. Other records fell in the pole vault and in the two-mile, where Norris Peterson of Minnesota led a 1-2-3 Gopher finish with a clocking of 9:01.5, more than a second under the old mark. Los Angeles Ctacinnati ..... St. Louiy San Francisco Milwaukee .... Philadelphia . .18 22 .450 Los Angeles 3. Chicago 1 Pittsburgh 9, Milwaukee 4 San Francisco 10-2. Houston 1-Clnclnnatl 9. Philadelphia 4 Sunday's Results ttsburgh 10. Milwaukee 1 n Francisco 5. Houston 2 licago 3. Los Angef “ " Louis 8. DIew Ye liladelphia 4. Cine Today's Games ! 0-2) (Osteen 3-33. night 3. 10 innings Pittsburgh os Atjgeles Milwaukee (Fischer O-O) at :lsco (Shaw 3-0 or Bolin 1,3) ancthnati=tMe' (Giusti 6-1), rtight New Y4>i;k (Spahn 3-Philadelphia (Short 4-t The winner of the district tournament will meet the win-LAF'AYETTE, Ind. — Michi- ner of the District 3 tournament gan golfer Bill N e.w t o n took in the NCAA World Series at medal honors in the Big 10,^golf Omaha, Neb., June 6,- 7, and 11. championship-wlth a 287, but the The committee named the Wolverines gave way to Pur- following players to the All-Dis-due in the team championship. trict team: lb, Arnold Chonko, The Boilermakers trailing by Ohio State; 2b, Jerry Walker, a single stroke at the end of Michigan State; 3b, John morning round, finished, the fi- ■ Biedenbach, Michigan S t a t e; nal 18 with a 14 jstroke lead over ss, Terry Harmon, Ohio Univer-Midhigan and a tournament to- sity; If, Bill Guerrant, Western talofl472. Michigan; cf, °Dick Schyrer, Michigan had I486, Wisconsin Michigan; rf, Mickey Moses, 1504, Ohio State 1421, Minnesota I Iowa; c, John Huizenga, West-1523, Michigan State 15(,0, lowa'i®*’" Michigan; p, Steve Arlin, 1543, Northwestern 1545 and 111- ~ inois 1570. , ■> Fro'sty Evasheski of Michigan was among the top 10. He was 7th with 298. . Ohio State, and Leonard Stahl, Ohio University. ■ Ohio University coach Bob Wren was named District Coach of the Year. Two Pros in Net Final 1 stale 13-2, Michige Central Michigan 8-2, Eastern I Tutsday's Qamas Chicagd at Pittsburgh, night NHw Yddt aLiWIistfclphia, night Cincinnati at Houston, night 'St. Louis at Los Angeles, night San Franci^o, night TRACK MIAA ChamUloiisl ibion 78, Calvin 53, H Eoo 31, OItvet 16, Adrii' idzoo zUf nape i,»a o, 3 3/ (Olivet ily Adrian 0 LOS ANGELES OP) - Pancho G on2alerT3F~tos™Angeies “and Rod Laver of Australia meet tonight in the finah*otind"Of the ninth annual Masters Round Robin’ Professional Tennis Toutr nament. Bob Gajda of Forest Lake and Rallying Jack Nicklaus Knows What's Needed MEMPHIS, Teitn. (AP) Jack Nicklau.s served warning to the golfing world with his victory in the $(k),000 Memphis Open that he’s not to be trusted no matter how hopeless his position looks. I’m the kind of guy who plitys Ix'tlcr under pressure,” Nicklaus said Sunday after he came from five strokes off the pace to win the Memphis golf tournament. "I don’t gel excited unless I have something to play for, but when I get charged up, something forces me to play my best. "When 1 got out of bed Sun- day morning I knew f would have to shoot either a 63 or a 64 to win this thing and 1 knew that wasn’t out of the question, ” Nicklaus said. Albion, Kazoo Again Reign KALAMAZOO ^AP)-Perenial favorite Kalamazoo became the MIAA tennis champion Saturday and Albion retained its track crown. Kalamazoo ea.sily outdistanced the field, capturing all five singles events and one of the two doubles matches in .scoring Gene Bone of Lancaster Hills ! 20 points. Following were Hope were also among the early ! 13, Albion 8, Calvin 4, Alma 3, Olivet 1 and Adrian 0. 72- 79-73-79- 303 73- 77-78-76-304 77-75-77-77-306 79-76-78-75-308 m-72-81-74-308 74-79-75-80-308 74- 78-82-77-31 75- 74-82-81-31 . 75-73-80-84-31 Hunter MacDonald . Gene Eyier . Chuck West Albion became the track champion for the second straight year, piling up seven firsts and placing in -every event for 78 points. Second place went to Calvin with 53, followed by Hope 47, Kalamazoo 31, Olivet 16, Adrian 8 and Alma 7. The MIAA All-Sports Trophy went to Albion for the first time since 1961. At Tuesday Weigh-In FIEI,D FALTERS As it was, Nicklaus shot a 65 i the field before him faltered little, finished the regulation 72 holes tied with Johnny Pott at 271 and then beat the latter in the first hole of a sudden death playoff. It wasn’t a matter of my playing so well, although that string of birdies got me fired up, as it was the ollicrs not playing so well,” he .said. Nicklau.s started the day Ip routine fashion and after eight holes had just clipped one stroke off the lead. But then his game fell into place and he played sensationally to birdie the next four holes. On the 298-yard 10th hole, Nicklaus stunned his gallery of about 10,000 by driving the green, which Was off on such a dogleg to his right that he couldn’t even see it. His ball, which soared over the gallery, the trees, two .sand traps and yards and yards of treacherous rough, dropped onto the green 30 feet from the pin. The victory-was worth.$9,000 to Nicklaus. Pott shot a round of 68 during the day and picked up $5,000 in prize money. Finishing two strokes back with 273s were Lou Graham, Bob McCallister, Julius Boros and Bert Yancy. Jack Nicklaus, 89,000 Johnny Pott, 85,000 Lou Graham, 83,175 Bob McCallister, 83,175 . Julius Boros, 83,175 Bert Yancey, 83,175 Bruce Cramplon, 82,225 67-68-71.65-271 69-67-67-681-771 71-66-71-65-273 (2,225 Jack McGowan, 1.,___ X-Deah Beman ......... Randy Glover, 81,800 Bob Galloway, 81,550 . Homero BlanCas, 81,550 Dick Sikes, 81,550 71-71-69-66-277 69-67-71-71-278 The pole vault mark of 15-% was bettered by three vaulters, with George Canamare. of Michigan winning at 15-9'/4. Reimer’s run was the most spectaculat of the meet. The 6-foot-2 stringbean scooted over the hurdles and his time matched a pending national collegiate best of 36.1 by Colorado’s Jim Miller earlier this spring. Michigan State started fact after a finishing burst by Coates erased the mile record. Sports Calendar Battball Ortonvllle at Harlland Lake Orion at Avondale Madison at Fitzgerald iroy ?! C'awsoh Troy at ciawson . Rochester at Warreh Cousino Grosse Polnte U.S. at Country Day Flint Central at Pontiac Central (21 PONTIAC CLASS A: Huron Airway v CIO at Jgycee Park, 7:30 p.m*. At Northside (Pontiac)-Elks No. 810 vs. 3()0 Bowl, 7 p.m.) 8:30-Ponliac P—' '^^At^^i^yton Plains Park (Waterfoi Bob G Larry vs. Huron Bowl, 7 f g,30—Rlcpardsoi) Dairy v.s. Kitg G LEWISTON, Maine (AP) -Police from the state, county and city kept a round-the-clock , guard over Cassius Clay today while the heavyweight champion’ was cooking up another crazy plot aimed at upsetting Sonny Liston at the weigh-in Tuesday., ‘‘It’s going to be more exciting than the last one,” promised Mighty Mouth. If it even matches the vvild sdenes of Feb. 25, 1964 at Miami Beach, then the Tuesday night return fight may almost take a back-seat to the ceremony of the scales. the slqin Malcolm X — who left the Black Muslim group of .which Clay is a member — uniformed police, supported by plainsclothes men, guarded Clay wherdver he went. No man scares me,” said Clay. “You gonna scare people out of the arena. You gonna scare Liston. You can bring in an army but you won’t Scare The cocky, poem-spouting Clay claims lie “psyched” Liston into defeat with his seemingly hysterical outbursts before the first fight. The brash youngster ranted and raved, stomped and yello3.7J-294 , ---------- 73-78-74‘74-294 Marlenef-Hagge; t Sandra; Palmer, $ VI:, • > ■ ' MONDAY, MAY 24k HM15 ■ X., C-^7 20 I63IT1S in PrGSS Meet | Major League Boxes I4thyf Event Today at PCC Walled Lake,* Barons Among Favorites No County Winners ilk) " “ pr ''K'f' in State A Track IK Tetil» II 1 1 I Wii! mSSSw- yrniifiJiiJni U,7Iuir2s'In 2o'r Five Cranes Qualify for State Finals mmJli :: Lnill K.r.r. rtiiat't kSSS-” ■"« -■ CTnfi .•.r*v;i,rr v’;rv, . Offy Roadsters SDSI^Hz':^ end <3. ” ' 'Mo'Moore Hot but Misses Finals ST. PAUL, Minn, lypt—Robbie Robinson of Wilmington, Del., won the qualifying trophy in the American Bowling Congress Masters tournament Sunday with an eight-game total of 1,725. ★ * . * The diminutive pro shot four-game series of 851 in the first qualifying "block Saturday. He improved to 233, 223, 225, 191 for an 872 total Sunday. Monroe Moore of Pontiac, rolfed Sunday’s best series, 257-196-159-179-4191, but his 1,586 total was not enough to qualify for the finals. Dick Preston of Detroit, who led after the first day with 892, dropped to second place after > shooting iB27 Sunday to bring his total to 1,719. Near Extinction INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Tex- 1 A. .1. i*'oyt, who saved the durable old Offenhauser roadster from extinction by booting to victory in the 1964 Indianapolis 500-mile auto race, may preside at final rites for the last of the breed in the 49th running May 31. When two weekends of time trials ended Sunday with a thunderous but bloodless crash of an Offy roadster with Bob Ma-thousec of Gardena, Calif., at-the wheel, the 33-car field was fixed like-this: *. * Seventeen rear-engine Fords, including the Lotus-Ford in which Foyt set a 10-mile qualifying record of 161.233 m.p.h. May 14. Ten rear-engine Offenhausers, in one of which the sixth-best qualifying speed of 158.416 was set by rookie Billy Foster of Victoria, B.C. Four of the old reliable Offy roadsters, which the late Bill Milford Needs Victory to Clinch W-0 Title Milfortf needs only a win at Clarkston today to sew up its second straight Wayne-Oakland Baseball League title following Saturday’s 74) blanking of Brighton. The Kettering - Farmington double-header turned into a wild oae with the latter taking a 5-4 nine-inning opening victory, then blowing an 8-0 lead as Kettering won 10-9. Milford’s Dave Moilanen hurled a fine one - hitter at Brighton with the lone safety coming with one out in the seventh. He fanned 13 and had only three men on base in the tilt . The LH H e rigR-hander is now 8-2- for the season while Milford is 10-6 over-all, and 10-3 in the league. The Redskin hitters were paced by Jack Ward who had a single, double and triple for foun runs, and John Kaspar kept his average in the ,400s with a single and Mpi&fdr two runs. Farmington’s Bill Johnson homered to win the extra-inning opener and had two singles and a double in The nightcap. Vukovich brougtit to Speedway prominence in the early 1950.S, A fqur-wlieei-diive Ferguson-Novi which Bobby Un.ser of Albuquerque, N M., put in the third three-car row at 1,57.467, and a Novi roadster which Jim Hurtubisc, North Tonawanda, N.Y., qualified at the ia.st weekend’s top speed of 156.8(53. There were .seven rear-engine Ford V8is in the 1964 field but only Rodger Ward of Indianapolis finished in the top 10, taking second for a remarkable record over the Ia.st six years of 1-2-3-1-42. WARD MISSING Ward will be mi.ssing from the line-up May 31 for the first time in 15 years. He wrecked his new Watson-Ford trying to qualify Saturday after having a-ssorted troubles with four engines. He tried again Sunday after the field was full and would have made it if he had been satisfied with his first full lap at around 154 miles an hour. He signaUnl timers to start counting on the next lap and slowed to an average of 153.623 m.p.h. That was 34th best. Slowest of the 33 qualifiers I was Bill CheCsbourg of Tucson, Ariz., in a rear-engine Ger-hardt-Offy, at 153 774. The famous Unser racing family of Albuquerque, N.M., put a second son and the 11th rookie in the line-up Sunday cd Walled, Lake in the stale meet with 81, | while the team’s regional med-, alist Bud Bowman was sick and did not compete. .Other Vikings j were Russ Streeter 82, Jim Giroux 82, John Hebbler 82. | Seaholm finished well down i the list in Class A with a 334 | total. I But Kettering’s 10-run splurge in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings overcame the Falcons. Qunuay Captains. Chuck Watson (thre^ f*eld at singles), Jerry Harkey (home a Lola-Ford. run) and Dan Runyan (two-run fastest go-ahead triple) sparked t h e rally. ifon ii2 400 1— y y 7 g . 000 375 x-10 11 s hnston, WINDER (5) »fi<) Snearly; .... ... Campbell, Scrambles Runners-Up The Pontiac Comp Team took two s e c 0 n d s in motorcycle scrambles races yesterday at Richmond. -^Ray Pace was nmner»tip^4n the combined heavyweight class and tgammate Dave Spanke tw) second in the combined lightweight event. ^he last four drivers who the field Sunday, quali-fying'^r his 11th straight 500 ht 155.172 a BRP-Ford. 30-32\Hred at Clarkston In a completion of a suspended match from last week, Clarkston Golf Club defeated Highland 16-6 in weekly Pub-linx play. Jim Smith led Clarkston with a 30-32—62 W D h two eagles and a birdie in the record 30 strokes on (he front nine. J --His-62-is iil8ira“Cflpse“Tei> prd at Clarkston Golf Club. Par is 35-35. The young golfer lives in-Lake C^ion. , Needs Few Hits in Rec Victory Powerful Huron-Airway needed only two singles last night to defeat Talbott Lumber, 10-2, in the opener of the season’s Class A City League baseball race at Jaycee Park, The defending city recreation men’s champjon took advantage 'of three walks, a hit batsman, an error, a sacrifice fly and run-producing singles by Chuck Johnson and Bill Bennett for five first inning runs. That was all the help Don Sackett needed to hurl his first win of the season. He whiffed eight Talbott batters while yielding four hits, including a tri|ile to Tom Booth. ■j-— Huron-Airway addech-Hn-^ e runs in the fifth on one single an opposite field hit by former major leaguer Churck Oertel. HURON-AIR. (10) Crouch 3b-2b Seconder rt Rolfe cf D. Miller )b Collins p 0 0 0 Sackett p . talbott Lumbar ..000 101 0— 7 4 4 I Hbron-AIrway SOI 031 x—10 « 3 Triple—Booth. Runs Batted In—Crouch 2; Fleser, Johnson, Bennett, Honchell, Or-1 tel, Marcum. Pltchino-Colllns 2 H, 3 W, , 5-4 R-ER, Foraker 3 H, 2 W, 1 SO, 1-0 i R-ER; Lundy 2 H, 5 W, 4-1 R-ER; Sack- ‘ ....... 8 SO, ------------------ Los« -, Crou. dy; Bennett 2, Rabaja. Hits 255-Yard Ace Ricardo Rizzo, 28-year-old Detroit golfer, used a driver on the No. 5 hole at Morey’s Red Course and he dropped it for a 255 yard Jrole "hr one-^day. He had 41 for the nine. Playing with him were D. E. Wright,. Bob Wright and Rod Dzurcla of Birmingham. . ^ 1 United Nations, the Organisation of American States, and the one sent by.. a-the Soviet Union b-France c-President Johnson 2 President Johnson asked Congress to get rid of Section 14-B of the Taft-Hartley Act. This section permits states to have so-called ** right to work” laws. Unions favor these laws. True or False? 3 Mr. Johnson wants Congress to make the minimum wage law cover 4-1/2 million more workers, Including those in restaurants and laundries. The minimum wage now is......an hour. a-$1.00; b-$1.25; o-|1.50 4 Prolect “Head Start” begins this summer in a number of communities. This federal program concerns ..... a-the Keep America Beautiful campaign . b-school drop-outs ’ c-trainlng the pre-school child 5 The proposed Amendment concerning what to do If the Presidentcan’tfulfillblsduties, if approved by the states, would become the 25tb Amendment to Our Constitution. True or False? PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points lot each word that you can match with its correct meaning.^ 1., a-public announcement 2... ...reconcillatloh b-to give up 3... ...futile c-full of life d-bringing tog^ether 4,g, again in friendship 5,. e-useless PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Hubert Humphrey 2.. ...Ray Bliss 3.. ...W. Willard Wlrtz 4...Heinrich Luel^e Vol. XIV, No. 35 a-U.S. “roving” Ambassador b-Republlcan National Chairman c-a Dallas visitor d-President, West Ger- ®VEC,I DP ing pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. (a) U.S. offered 22.000 ihen for Its peace army (b) its President a Moscow visitor (c) 45 million to be produced this year (d) President Johnson asks for reduction (e) issue 1 n voting rights bill (f) makfhg historic 8..... visit to West Ger- exCISE TAX many ; (g) its nuclear explosion caused fallout (h) President i declares it a prayer day for peace (1) Natural Beauty Conference held In Washington, D.C. (j) a British ^ visitor Hdw DO YOU RATE? (Scora Each Side of Quiz Soparetoly) 91 to 100 polnH - TOP SCORE! 8) to 90 poinH - Excallant. 71 to 80 polnta - Good. 61 to 7DpoioH-Fair. 60 or Undar???-H*mml 1 FVo0ram which Thii Nowtpapar iMmulato bitoraW in National t an aid to Dovoloplng Good Citizomhip. This Quiz it part of tha Educational Pto0ra lumlihai to Schools in this aroa to Stimuli and Vtorld Affair* at an aid to Dovolo| Save This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS TO TODAY’S NEWS QUIZ -f-TH l3-t1p-8 !8-i. !q-9 Jj-g !o-fr Iq-g Sa-2 IH :Zinb 108NAS 8-S Ipry l8-£ lq-3 lo-i nil iavd q-S lo-y J8-E fp-z l8-i :|| lUVd 8iui-9 ia-y fq-8 l9S|8i-z i>\ :| iwi IJ..- C--II 'I'llK IM)NTIA(: l*HK-SS. MONDAY. MAY'21, limfl Failure of Ai^gels Pitcher Chance a Puzzler in AL Hurler Steals Show in Township Softball By The An««h Iu((mI Whut’M wtoUK will) I> CTtance? 'D.iiil iisk m*-: I n |)hiin 11/’ said Hit- II i Vmmu wiiiiicr allor llu‘ ( I Willie Sox loillcreil liliii lioiii till- moiiiid eti nmic to an II .1 Irlimipli over llic l.os Ant^t'ls Sunday DON NICHOLIE 'I -HOME- -BUSINESS- .lii/o Inslirnnrr I'or in ytntr 53 V2 West Huron FE 5-8183 ritaiua*. wliost* '20 0 record Iasi seasoh «*anicd liiiii llie award as llic licsl |iilc|i<-r in llic ina|ois, now him (Iroppcd llircc (.piiiica In III (Ijivh and Iwih hccii Ills earned rim avn ane Hoar In :i HH He laaled only 2 ^ .'1 InniiiKN af-;aliiM| lln'While Sox, ^{ivln^! up I walked Ihe lira I wo li Hers In liowing .12. Knln wuhIhhI out six runs on live hits and live Ihe kanie, and Ihe While Sox Kanana (lly at MlnnemHa. |. I were on Iheir way to a Ihree run Horlen, Kddio Klaher and i inning. He finished his brief per j Hoyt Wilhelm each pitching HAD :i 0 MAitK I formance hy walking pilcher ilvree inning as Chicago snapped "All 1 know i.s llial Ihis1.s Ihe | .loe Horlen wilh iwo oul and Ihe I a ihree-gnmedosing streak, worsl I've ever pilched," said i bases loaded in Ihe Ihird | Pete Ward led the attack. (!hance, who poaled a .’10 record heloie !tllp|iing Inin Ida loalng Hi leak, Cliance never gave himsidf a (hatice againal Cliicago. He In oilier Ainericaii l-eagiie gamea, Hofflon swept (levelaiid fl2 and 11,1 and WaHhIiiglon whipped New 'Vork 7.1 before driving in Ibree runs with two douliles and a aacrifico fly. Two errors hy (.’loVeland’s Cbiick Hlidon brought the lied .Sox thn‘e unearned runs In each Home Dome Causes Astros' Loss to Giants lf> Ihe .Associnled l’r«‘sN ns Ihc A.sIros were unable lo 1 "I saw Ihe ball as 11 loll ll Wlial s up 111. Ihc National delcjid against The Dome hat, " saiil Wynn, hat nev l.cagiar when three outlielders The Dome turned on the As H'"' " aren't enough at lloirsloii and Iros In the tlrst iiining when .lUn l'm';<'K ('Ol.OItS I rilcli(‘r Ken .lohn.soh, who la.st year lo.sl a iio-hilfcr and turned out lo be file latCNt victim of Th<‘ Dome, bad no commeiil riiree iniilngs alter lie left Ihe two sue ipiite sullicleiil at Chi Wyiin lmiiKf the glare loo hard lloii.slon ollici.'ds ipiickly went g ^^as announced lliat he cago ’ lo balidle and lost a Hy ball hy lo work, and, aaid they would |,j„| inidcd to Mllwaiike The Dos Angele.s DiKigers un .Hiii Hay Hurl lhal wnil for an paint Ihe pla.Hlic Imbhle, which lo,'outfielder Dee Maye. veiled a uni(|ue Iwo-oulfielder iitside the park liomer wilh Iwo is what they did Iasi lime. Only ^ * * defimsive aligiinuail al Chicago inen on and started Hie .San Ibis lime paslels are oiiD The .Sunday and got awi|y with It 1 h'ranci.sco fiianls on Hie way lo cidor .scheme will eilliei' lie but even wilh Ihree outfield |a .12 victory. green, blue oi' black. 2nd H.S.T. TIM 0 VwHbN iww Ends Wed. May 26. NYLON H.S.T. .^^10 * 7.75/7.50-14< 7.75/6.70-15 tubeless blackwall BRAND NEW RIVERSIDE HIGH-SPEED TIRE Track tested at speeds up to a sizzling 160.1 mph! Armed with extra tough RIY-SYN tread to deliver a whopping 22% more mileage than first line nylon tires. Its new, continental tread edge adds stability cornering control. Rugged, 4-ply nylon cord body. H.S.T. TUOELESS SIZE wice WITHOUT TRADE 2nd TIRE H.S.T. TUOELESS SIZE, PRICE WITHOUT trade 2nd TIRE 0.50-13 J3.30* 10.00 8.25/8.00-14 8.15/7.10-15 31.95* 10.00 7.10-13 0.95/4.50-U 26.35* 10.00 7.35-15 0.40/6.50-15 26.95* 10.00 8,55/8.50-14 8.45/7.60-15 34.55* 10.00, 7.35/7.00-14 27.65* 10.00 8.85/9.00-14 8,85/9.15.15 ^00/8.20.15^ 37.15* 775/7.50-14 775/670-15 29.35* i., ,,-1.7 TIM WH« 70« NYLON ST-107 7.50-14, 6.70-15 tubeless blackwall RACE-TRACK TESTED-PRDVED DEPENDABLE Track tested at speeds up to 138.46 mph at the Indianapolis speedway by Parnelll Jones. Built with R/Y-STN and 4-ply nylon cord body, ST-107 gives great mileage. Its wide tread delivers road stability and traction. TUBELESS SIZES PRICE WITHOUT TRADE 2nd TIRE TUOELESS SIZES PRICE WITHOUT TRADE 2nd TIRE 5.90/6.00-13 18 15* 1.00 7.50-14 6.70-15 26.40* 0.00 6.50-13 2075* 0.M 0.00-14. 7.10-15 28.45* *•* 7.00-13 6.50-14 _J035^ 0.00 ~ 7M-T!r —30.50'^ 8.00 7.00-14 24.65* 0.00 - 9.00-14 0.00/8.20.15 34.30* 0.00 6/4076.50-13 ,^1.9I •.00 *W«« •xcii* fox, ne irad»-ln rogulrwf. W/iiNwelli, 43 oof* •cS. Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road PHONE 682-4940 The DiMlgcr.s, mcanwhil(‘, pullcil ibeir uni(|uc player hIiIII In lli(‘ 121I1 inning of a 12, l(D iiiuing loHs lo Ibe Cubs. Wilh one man 011 and piteber Diiidv McDaniel up ior CIlieago, Dodger Manager Walt Alsloii liroiiglil rigid fielder Hon Kairly ill lo play first and moved first liii.seman Wes Parker halfway up Hie line between home and lust, guarding against Hie oli-vious l)unf siluafion. This left the Dodgers wilh only Dou .John.son and Willie Davis in the outfield. The shift worked, MeDfiniel bunted foul on the third .striki*. I'llsewhere in the ND, Hie .SI. Douin Cardinals outlasted the New York Mels 8-7 in 12 innings for their fiflli straight victory and lOlb in 11 games, FMiiladeD ' phi.s (>dged Cincinnati 4-.1 in 10 innings and PiUsbiirgh crushed j Milwaukee lO-t. The Mels Imilf a 7-0 lead’afler .seven Inning on a pair' of Iwo-run homers by Hob Taylor and (!|iarley Simlh's I b r e (> - r u n double! j Hug Tim McCarver cracked a| Iwo run homer off Cary Kroll in the eiglilh, and the Cardinals tied i| with a fivi‘ run ninth Hial started wilh Ifoy McMillan fumbling a grounder and finished with Hon Swoboda falling down on a routine fly by Dal Maxvill that went for a bases-loaded triple. I2fh INNINt; The Cardinals scored the clincher in the 12th on a single by Curt Flood, a walk to Dou Brock and Bill White’s double. The I’hillies won it in the 10th after Cincinnati reliever Gerry Arrigo seemed to have pitched out of a bases-loaded and none out situation, Frank Thomas’ single, a double by Alex ,John.son and a walk filled the bases before Arrigo struck out .Johnny Callison. Arrigo then got Cookie. Jlojas to lift a fly io Vada Pinson. Pinson’s throw home had pinch runner .John Jlerrnstein doubled up as he allempted fo score from third but he rammed into catcher .Johnny Edwards and jarred th'e ball loose. game. 1 Union let Frank Mai zone's grounder get lludugli lilnj in tJie ihird inning of Uie o|Knier and loueJied off a threc-run Boston eighth In the second game by dropping Lee Tliomas’ pop fly, fi’ellx Mantilla powered Hie lied Sox III Hie nlglitx-ap wlHi a three-run homer in the fifth Inning. Thill lilow willed out a 2 (1 Cleveland lead built on lloeky Colnvito'a ninth iHinier. ■ ' .Jim King liatled In Hiree Wfisliinglon runs in the first game wiHi a lioiner, doiilile and saerlHce fly. Ken McMullen added a homer and pitelier Plill Ortega a two run (loulile In a four-run slxUi. .loe I’epilone and Tom, Tn^sli liomeiisi for Hie Yankees. ( Pepilone uriloa(l(‘d a tliree run I blast ill the sixtli inning of Ihe second game for all of Ni“w York'.s runs. Pedro Hamos saved Hie victory for Al Down Ing after Hie Senulors had scored a run in the ninth and had Iwo on and Iwo out, Don Welelierl was almost the whole show last night as Dixie Har whipped Djxle Tmil M l, I" II Walerford Towiialilp Metis’ Softball Dengue makeup game at Drayton Plains. The barmen’s hurler yielded only an Infield single 'to Ken Dawley In five Innings on the nioniid Hie game was halted liy Hie HI run lead rule and walloped a long home run hi Ig iille a five run second frame for Hu; wliuiers. Boat Champs Gain Victories National champion of the :t(! class marallion lioat racer, Boli Moore of Hoyal Oak won liis division in Hie .K) mile OuHioanI M a r a t h o n al Belle Isle yes- terday. Hay Denk, national maraihon ehampion in the DU class, won Hie Helle Dsle event for Hie .Ith time lo Jjcgin the first leg of retaining lii.s national HHe. 1 i' BH CLASS: l-J); 2 Tom . /ogpl, St. Clflir CH C.......... CLASS: . - - (12); 2 Gory Mlskorlk, MSon Bob Erhol, Taylor „„ . .............. Moore, Royal Oak (I-2); 2 R. K. Turner, Toledo (2-X); 3 Bill Lawton, Huntington Woods (3-3), bridgestoneJ Sportster n. ; Tho RriflRcstone ry other m.Khino ,in (MM) Inns Sundfiy gave the 20-year-old exearpenler from Elmlml'sl, 111., his lOtli victory at the four major H|MHHlways the $I0().(MMI mark driving just stock cars when he won $11.1,(MM) in ltHi;i. DETROIT RACE COURSE Itiilmer, of Eloyds Knoh, Ind , and Darel Dieriiiger of Charlotte drove (he two 1004 Mercuries equipped with IflOri Lord engines that provided the toughest challenges lor Lorenzen’s taclory-hacked Ford. Conditioning Problems? Solve Them In Just 60 DAYS the Holiday Way M«n today build healthy, muscular bodies at Holiday Health where electric-powered equipment does all the work! Take as rnany supervised treatments as you like for weight gaining -- weight loss — body conditioning. WANTED! Underweights-Overweights MEN WHO UCK ENEEGY! 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HOSE 1 Vffln. 1 SiMl 2FF Plaiticl $o good It's guaranteed for lO years . . I oil. Reg..39c Eo. HOSE NOZZLE .nctlon 88 picKET PENCE PAII Wood—painted white I Sturdy I Aw^OO TIRES Car TOP CARRIERS *8^8* —Open Stool Baskot— a* Well built, channel steel top carrier with big, deep -37V5 Inches tong- •“'»>«" ^ -42 Inches WWa- •fraps-easy to handle. Csrdsvon "SAFETY” Blackwall Tub* Typ* or Tubohu 7.50-14 6.00-13 6.70-15 7.10-15 STEEL RAIL CARRIER Channel steel bars with "K«y Lock" new type gutter ilraps.-Big suction cups—a full 42 Inch size I 9S 6.00-13 6.50-13 MOWER "Trade-In” SALE NO TRADNN TIRES NEEDED 8.00-14 I Stf *f ^ •/oclrWo//—ritke Typ, 60 Whits walls. Add $10 Per Set of 4 TiHbm-Msstc £11: —hern’s a real "work-saver" so many new improvements and euaw of opsrotlon that it will reduce your lawn cote work drosticolly.. I "Vnewm Act/an” EndsRakiRR I Swooplog- Grass clippings disappear like moglcl it mulches lawn o“ time overl INSTAUEiyfREE! NO MONEY DOWN 1 your lire needt, put on a ft today! Wheels Balanced.,per whool...completoi * All Tiro Prices Shown aro -Plui Fed. Tax 115 North Saginow J & R AUTO STORES Qpon Mon. ond Fri. Evenings 'HI 9 P.M. AUTO STORES COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE JOB !99 ALL 4 WHEELS FORD-CHEV-PLYM FAST SERVICE This low price includes relining all 4 wheels with Heavy Duty Top Quality Molded Brake Linings—Cleaning of alt drums—adjustment—check and filling Master Broke Cylinder. FREE — 1000 Milo Ad/ustment MONEY For OTHER CARS —not listed above call at Store. DOWN Prices Slightly higher in Semi cases for Wagons. NO SHOCKS "'c'::'" . ...’22* C^io niK PONTIAC I'HKSS, MONDA-V. MAY *JL lUM Natural Beauty Parley Likely to Ask Central Effort WASmN(:iX)N (AP) Thf FYp»ld«^nt'5 Wlillo llouw ('(infri rijc* on Nnltiral Hcmity, *)pon-inf{ Indny, probably will ank him to set up a palional coimdl to renirallze efforls to heaulily America. Soma ••onfeiers llilok one ol ibe firal (a»k!i of nucIi a cotincll would be In clieek lenU'rfll Kranta-ln aid to see if llic gov-ertimcnl Ik Kclttiiu IIk moix'y's Worth In beautinralion pmjeclK Most of the work lor Ihifi two day c0VER 32,000,000 TOP VALUE STAMP! lot o froo ‘*Nott igg" »lif» ov«ry t(m« SWIFT'S COAAPLETELY CLEANED WHOLE rPESH FRYERS 29: U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY RIB STEAK ...... ..........89* HYGRADE'S BALL PARK WIENERS . » 59‘ IIGER TOWN SLICED BOILED HAM. ________________99* MAR«QJ(FER'S CANNED HAM . . 5 HYGRADE'S FULLY COOKED West Virginia Ham. . 69* APPLESAUCE............ PACKER'S LABEL TOMATO CATSUP? 15‘ FRESH BRAND POTATO CHIPS .49‘ SAVE lO'-BORDEN'S WHIPPING CREAM^cT^' 29 c KROGER BRAND SAf.AD DRESSING. T.* 39' KROGER GRADE 'A' ALL WHITE LARGE EGGS . 2-75* BIG 'K' ASSORTED FLAVORS CANNED POP. WITH COUPON BEIOW $5 PURCHASE W. fMMV. »h. right I. rimrt quonlih.1. and (l.m> .ffKnv..t Trog.r in D«troH and iotlorn Michigon thru Tuosdoy. May 75, 1965 Nont toW !• daalan. wedcwoodlcoltdA COBNTRT SIM MTTIRII dessert ^ --- WITH " MAILER COUPON ASSORTED COLORS HARDY PLANTS READY FOR PLANTING ■ .m tl Witli Mail*' Coup.n I WaSgwp*^ * C*., U*- CA ■■■ top value 50 STAMPSUSO STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON ■ “ — 'GERANIUMS 6-“^' ATRAYi ■ ANY TWO CARTONS I KROGER SAIADS ; “I —rriBim. s*K ^ May 39, 196S. I WITH THIS COUPON ON ANY TWO JARS 65ltEXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS PERENNIAL RYE ^ GRASS SEED S 1 YD- aEgf% TOP VALUE TOP VALUE A TOP VALUE 50 STAMPSriSO STAMPS STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON ON WITH THIS COUPON ON BillAli • LIQUIDSWiinlilR * i (ovarar am wImirs j POTAfOES ' ' i EEf ioREN BN H op ■■ JiSIn nTinm ■■ ■M>aa HM NM w dL^BH M^N^ St oN^iM hSm mmmmmmtm nSm m ni ■■ in nn no mmm -I--, I f- •'■■■■- . ' C, ' 'I'.'f ' ' I KROGER AAAILED BOOKLET! TOP VALUE 50 STAMPS 2 pKos CUT-UP FRYERS. 1 I ANY 8-IB. OR MORE I % I Jt Going Everywhere Your Checks Can? • A Great Aid for Budgets • Cost Less than Money Orders • Saves Time and Steps • Cancelled Checks are Proof of Payment • Permanent Record for Tax Purposes • Enjoy Sound Money Management r 8 *lSr Offices MIMItR federal OEROSIT insurance ,TIIK IH)NT|AC rilKS.^^ MONDAY. MAY ‘H, 1005 D-l GET READY FOR DECORATION DAY WEEKEND AT YANKEE'O You’ll Enjoy the Weekend More With These Items From Your Yankee Store! 30-Qt COOLER CHEST FOAM CONSTRUCTION >*■ 1,11^,111111111*1** HALF-GAL. PICNIC JUG PAPER PLATES:PAPER NAPKINSHce Tea Glasses: Beach TOWELS PLASTIC COATED SOFT ABSORBENT LARGE 15-oz. SIZE CANNON DUALITY Solid foam comfruc-tion with moulded handlot — koops contontf cold or hot for hour*. CHAIR PAD Adds comfort to kitchen, bridge and porch chairs Covered in provincial prints Solid cotton corduroys Reversible,,., NOW SLEEVELESS BLOUSES DRIP DRY FABRIC Woven cotton plaid ^ and iricFescent cot-](. ton. Ivy and regular )t collar models. Asst S-M-L NOW : Ladies’ Cotton i SHIFT DRESSES Choose from stone-cutters, seertuck-ers, sateen cottons, or blends. Induded 4 are "Zip skimmers". 4 Guaranteed yirash- 4 able with a full front 4 zipper. 10 to 18 * S.AA-L N * 4 REG. $2.99 ! Plaid, seersucker, stripe and solid color Bermudas. Ivy and continental style. Sizes 29 to38. BOYS’ SHORTS NOW 4. Classified as slight 4. imperfects. If per-4- feet would be 3.95. 4 Cardigan and slip^ 4 over. Sizes S-M-L-XL. • NOW 4 Nylon lastex in brief 4 stylet. Dan River plaids, 4 boxer style. Solid col-4 or poplins. Built in * support. Sizes S-AA-L. NOW Girls’ Wash 'n Wear cotton Continental and ivy styles. Woven plaids, solid color cottons and denims. Popular shades. Sizes 6 to 16. 75% tetoron, 25% combed cotton. Drip dry fabric. Beautifully tailored Bermuda collar. White and pastel colors. 32 to 38 NOW NOW SLACK SETS 2 PIECE DUTFITS Cotton krlit tips — in 3 collar styles,, with matching solid slacks Many colors, to choose from Sizes 3 to 1 2 NOW GIRLS’ JAMAICA SETS 2 PIECE Assorted styles in cotton denims — seersuckers and combed cottons m o wide assortment of colors LADIES’ JAMAICA SETS COMPARE AT 1.99 2 FOR Border print, cowl neck or 2 tone tops. Solid Jamaica shorts Side zip well constructed Blue, pink & turquoise 10 to 18. Asst, pastel gingham ■ trim on white pique ground — ruffle edge bottom. Sizes 1 to " NOW $1.59 Each YANKEES PONTIAC MIRACLE MIIE ST0RE...0PEN HlfiHT$ UNTIL 9, SUNDAYS Ulim 7 i'.l. 1) 2 Summer Ideal for Leisure Activities Children Must Learn to Use Free Time r111-’, IM)NTIA(’ I• H l<:ss MON1)A Y. M A 24. 1 UUfl . I HICN OAHKY EJI By I.KSUK .1. NASON, i:i). I). When (Hir children move into the workintj world, they will he faced will) .shorler work-weeks and loiujci viicalidns An impoi liinl iiarl ol lliclr cducalMin nuinl he pmcllce In llie wollhy use of Irie time Siimmei children I leisiiie M molher’s IteiiiK tt time when iiiolher must devote hours to supervision, it should be thought of Hs a time of opportunity to dl rect leisure iictlvlllies. Tlie cliild wild Is Imsy, lor wliom I He days are scar< ely j long enougli lo g(d all Ihe lliing.s lieing a well adjusted Individual I factor In Ihe recreation of young Here are a few of Ihe areas to and old It lakes only two to he considered: 'practice throwing and ealching a wide n lislening lo gisid music, allend Music offer; i hasehall or handling racket , Hie Ideal lime lor don)- Ik* vvanis lo do, will he III Ihe III 11 lo live wllli I lildren will need s licl|i, al least al llie tlioU(.:li llie si liool \c;o', ' of yotiuiier rliil()reii luis ■gimeiilcd in school as onl ol school ,Sii(l(lcnlv, I then Instead ol summer husy, hafipy adult ciuldren shoulil he guided into a wide variety of experiences dill ol which Ihev will liopelully (s'ltrv a lew Inlo adiill liie If lhe\ inainlain many inleresis. There appears lo ihip hi'lween Ihe le mieresis and all Ihe I lug coni erlN mil ol doors, play ing musical insirumenis, per-forming wllh community groups, alh'iidlng a miiHiy .sum mer camp liidepeiideiil study can he while pleasures in life II can stall In Ihe summe| while lliere is a relief Iron) regl meiiled sindy. The more one learns ahoiil any snhiei I Ihe 1 is genei iiled lor lurllu-r learning. .SWIMMINtf Skill in .swimming or performing on Itars can he gained In dividiially. They hring ahoiil heller mu.Hcle lone and a feeling sit Jacoby on Bridge ^ Btin.niNi ; HEALT II family and ( 'ommuiiily lliroiigh Drama, wliellier il lie eliildreii sucli ( iclivili es pilIHllg oil il sliow 1 n Hie liaek Don 1 keep all a clilld'.s time yard ,or volimlyei ■ work ill regimt ■tiled. howev er He i II .slie summer si lock, give s an oppor- needs lime H ) relax ; and do nolli- tumly for eooperatii in willi olli- ing. ers its we 11 as an opjiortunily — fo act Old plamied 1 beliavior. 1 Voi 1 can gPl "Help Yoiir NORTH 4k A g HIR ♦ A g 10 8 IT6S If K .1 0 7 ♦ K J 9 7 ♦ fi !> S 4 6 5 4 4 K J II 7 .notmi (D) 4432 V AQ 10 8 ♦ 32 4AQ 10 8 Both vulnernblc Konth Weil North I'.Rst 14 PilRI 1 77.T. Biss 3 N.T. r P«Kg rnss Opening lend—4 7- Pn.ss . he .selects the appnipriale i i Irom dunum to cover whatevei card'West |ilay,s A second liear finesse, a third spade fiiiessi and a third heart linesse lollov and South lias eight tricks lu' fore starling on eillmr clubs oi diamonds Kiiilding physical lieallli and sltetiglh and pcrfecling pliysi-cal skills should rcceivi' alien Hon It should he a major lie does not need lo finesse Ihe eight spots in these suits since he only iumhIs five more tricks lor the grand slam hut ten spot finesses succeed. He makes all the tricks and complains mildly about underbidding. JACOBY By JACOBY & SON 'ITie finesse is by far the duced l.T mo.st common play in bridge if you include all sorts of . fitu's.ses. There I are lots of def-! inifions of it hut the best one is that the finesse effort to ^ make a lower card do tlie Pwork of a higher card by reasoiL of its position We doubt if today’s hand has ever been dealt but it illusirales the iillimaie in fine.ssing. The cards have been placed 86 that South will have no trouble making all the deep finesses that arc available to him. Thus he plays dummy’s - eight of spades on the opening seven spot and since West holds all the higher spades that eight wins the trick as surely as the afie would have. His next play is to lead a heart from dummy. He chooses the heart in preference to a club since dummy holds three hearts and only two clubs. He is prepared to finesse the eight but East plays the nine so he wins the trick with the ten. ^A second spade is led and diogigai By SYDNEY OMARR For Tutsday "Tha wiso man controls hi . . . Astrology poin‘ ARIES (Mar. 71 his destiny Cycle now Ihev exist, -eality irrying TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20i; .Privacy required. Take time to collect thoughts. Be SPECIFIC. Avoid scattering forces. Accept challenges. Older Individual can provide sound advlcei _______ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Complete assignment. Finish what you start. Don t be satisfied with halfway methods. Your • Influence spreads ... for the good. Act accordingly! CANCER (June sources. *^*Flnd ^letter ways of serving the public. Good lunar aspect highlights LEO (JulY23-Aug. 22); Your sens ahowmanshW comes lo lore Exce for contacts. Be as good "a guesi you are a host. Obtain valuable from today's CANCER message. be versatile. Is willingess I thuslasm impre: e criticism. Be LENIENT! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22); Check c tails and facts carefully • then pr ceed to handle trouble spots. Have coi age ol convictions. Your sense of JU TICE shines and impresses others. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Good I nar aspect now stresses romantic i terests.’ B* considerate of children ai KEEP PROMISES. Change, trave’ ■ ----- —e In spotlight. riety are In spotlight. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.„ 22-Dec. 21): R ■ ----------1 lift. OppbrtunlY H « |>rl(to upset plans. Time to bo prai CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Sorr confusion of recent days evaporates. Ut II... lre«>.leA«> nelnefj |n past. YOUr al oal. Take steps i e It by probity lARIUS (Jan. tain changM revIflofW; Be work may be n-wlth experience Is PISCES (Feb. U tlon Ci ___19-Mar. 20)1 Money ques- (avorably resolved. But donft ifect. Examine ------------- ptomaciT IF TUESDaV is* YOUR BIRTHDAY ... you tend to be Introspective. You analyze, often place yourself in role of underdog to she how others will react. You are sensitive and would be a good »<-i«r, writer, or artist. NdInCiI^S: GENERAL I^NDlNCliS: Cytle high for ARIES, TAURUS. Special word to AQUARIUS: An essoclate may .need aid. Ba falrl (CapyrlBM.IMS, ttanaral Paaluras Carp.) .liLsI lor llie full of It .sliitl lilt' I'iasI iimi VVt'.sl caf-ds. Now all fiiic.ssc.s will h(> wrong ami Soiilli will do well lo make as many as six tricks with flic (is that liave just pro- You, South, hold; 4KQ JZ VA 102 432 4A6 5 4 What do you do ’ A—Btd one apade. An Immediate heart raise la a fair accond choice. TODAY S question ''^)ur partnoc c-oiiUiuies ti dubs. What do .yoi^do now? Anawer Tomorrow OUT OUR WAY V( Y' j DRINK GLOPPO POP ' 1 drink /) 1 f ( Gl OPPO ! By Ernie Bushmiller By Charles Kuhn /2.. By Walt Disney ^ ^’7 rON TIAC’ N(KSS, ^I()NA. MAN; 2>y 11»U,N I) }| BT4; arkets,; Business 'and' Finance ♦ i f*rr‘ /,; ■'„': \.'i .> MARKETS Tim following are lo|) iniros covoring anloa of l(H;nl|y grown |)i'(Hluce by growers iimj sold by Iboin In wlioli!Nule imckago lots. Quotullons urn furnisimd by Ibo I adroit Hui oau of- Markets us of I'rlday. Produce RAdlshts, r«d, i Naillihek, while, Rhuharb, hnlhoi Poultry and Eggs DgTHOIT iOOS il receivers (Includlno U b ! A W aai larpo ?|l5l( tr ,T"brow )i medli R, eo slead^t wholes^ dium J3 J5) small IB II'/bi browns arac exira^lar^^e W) large 27 Ni medium «-2: s 25; checks 21V( CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API-(USDAI Live poullry wholesale buying prices unchafrgod lo ICi higher; roaslers 25-27';5; special “ted Livestock DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (API (USDA) Callle 200; Around 100 head choice slocrj 24.50-27.75; lew scallered lots standard and low good steers 1* 00 23.00; ullllly cows 15.50 ' canner ...td culler cows 12.00-15.50. Vealers 25; not enough lo lest Sheep 50; not enough In l/x 47% Data Coni EquIlyCp .151 Fargo Oils • Feimt Pet .15e Fly Tiger Molybden^ fife Group"3.25 Scurry Rain Sperry R wl 16 5% Syntex Cp .30e 71 63% I Technicol .75 5 21% ! Un Control .20 190 5 2 . Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API—The c; ol the treasury compared \ 'spending date a year ago; S $10,581,361,330.44 $ 7,373,654,453.x Deposits Fiscal Year July I— 104,752,624,656;47 102,013,805,590.; 14,353,024,392 14 15,460,993, X—Includes $283,853,632.26 debt not subject lo statutory limit. STOCK AVERAGES compiled by The Associaled^Prtss^ ^Ind. Rails Util. Stocks n'oLX'’* .mi ud vd m :::::: ]fd Month Ago ......... 492.3 172.0 175.0 ^.8 Year Ago ......... 434.8 172.4 152.0 304.' 1965 High .......505.2 177.8 178.2 344. 1965 Low ....... 442.8 165.8 167.2 322. 1944 High ....... 475.8 189.4 147.2 332. 1964 Low 406.6 150.7 148.9 284. Net change Noon -Mon. I Prev. Day I BOND AVERAGlIs - by The Associated Press 26 10 10 10 18 ----- ■-- Util. Fgn. L. Yd Month Ago 83.5 101.8 Year Ago' 81.5 101.4 1965 High 83.7 102.4 ^ Wnday's 1st DIVIDENDS DECLARED' Pe- Sik. of Pay-Rate riod Record abla INCREASED Century Elec .15 , IRREGULAR , Philb'k Rasaecch .125 6-8 Jus^ g Few Bright Spots Market Is Dull and in Decline GOP Plan Up for Senate Vote NKW YOKK (AP) A few HIMiciul HituiilloiiH brlgblttiittil an olliorwlHc (lull mid dnrlliiiiig Hlock miirki‘1 (“iirly IIiIh alliT 'IVmlliig wiiH iiiiHliinilu and (’biuigiiK (if moHl ki*y Hlock,s wore fnicllon'iil. Mere and Ibcre were Hoirie wider lihSHes HIM, nff (i, dn Ponl down iicmiy :i mid Hnclng down 2. SlecrH, autoH, oIIh, airlines, tobaccoH and building materials were narrowly mixed. Drugs, eleetrleal mid mall order rettilla wore generally lower. OPINION CAUTKKIS Oplnlmi in Wall Slreid was eauilolls following last week's sleep eorreelloii of llie previous iidvmiee. j The Assoeiiiled I’ress avenige , of no stocks at noon was oil 10 at TI7.1 with iiulustrtals ott 1.0, rails oft .T atid ntllllies oil It. Till; l>ow Jonus Indiisirial av erage at noon wa,s ott O.lkl at out'll. (ireat Northern Paper elimbed nearly 0 points on news it Ih piminliig merger witb (ire Soiitliern 1-mid & Paper (,’o. Penlek & Kord held a gain exceeding a point following news Unit Kederal Court liml ru)<>d favorably on ae(|nlsltloii of Ibal eoiiipany by Ileyiiolds To biiL’co. Hey Holds was ea.sy. Prices were mixed In moderate triiding on tlie Anieiiean Stock ICxelimige. National Video "A" was down ;i points after a delayed opening .Synlex and Paddinglon "A ” losi I each. Corporale and U S. Treasury bonds .-were nioslly unchanged in light trading. May Clear Way for Rights Bill Cloture The New York Stock 1 WASIIINCTON (AP) The Smiale may vole today on a , llejiiibllcaii Ntibsllliile (or Itie 'voting rtglils bill, hoping to ^ clear the decks for Tuesday's elimaelie move lo limit debate on the measure , .Siinihern senalor.s, lilsloric toes of any niovi^ lo Invoke do . Iiire, are (‘X|)eeted l(r^iiu' up willi Hepiiblleatis altempling lo Hiibstilnie their plan to insure voting rights for Ibe one backed l)V the W'liile lloibse, the Demo ei alle leaderslilp, and I lie Ke , piililiemi leader, .Sen Kverell j M. Dirkseii. I Inli'iHlueed by Sen John (J, Successfully Investing ”* $ y $ ,»OWIN(; OUT Chief Pctly Officer Itoberl 1,. Scolf Jr. (left), local Navy recruller, acipialnis his siieee.s.sor. Chief I’etly Officer J. 1,. Wighlniiin, with office iirocedure, Scolt is retiring today'idler 21 years .service. He first enlisted in the. Navy liere in l!)4'l Hy UOUDIl K. SPKAK ald in .1965 F—Payable In stock during *965, 'estlrnated cash value on ex-dIvIdend or ex-dlstribu- tion date, g—Declared------" year, h—Declared or paiu aim split'up. k—Declared 1 accumulative irsue p-Paid AMT Corp. ....... Associated Truck ......... Braun Engineering CItllens Utilities Class A . Dfamond Crystal .......... Ethyl Corp................ Mohawk Rubber Co. Mich. Seatr\less T ' ' Pioneer Finance J or ex-dlsirlhu- Vernor's Ginger A paid so far this Whf corp. 8.6 15.1 15.5 Wolver________ Wyandotte Chemical 34.6 35.4 (Juotstlons compiled by the .NASD al approxJmelely 11 a.m. Bids are repre-sentatwe inter-dealer prices and do. not IncludKrctail markdown or commission. Asked prices have been'adiusted upward to include, approximate markup. ■Ex dividend, y—Ex Dlvi- Vesely Co. 15.3 - ... .....---.-lx disirlbu- /i1hti%anirwd!!’when*d*ls- •ibuted. wl-Wh.n Issued. nd-Nexf day bankruptcy or receivership MUTUAL FUNDS . J5:26 ockr ......... \r* K-1 ......... lV09 Com;nonwealth Stockr Keystone Income K-1 Keystone Growth K-2 ___ Mass. Investors Growth ;... 9.84 ________ Mass. Investors Trust ........ 17.73 tat. X—Matured i Putnam Growth ............... ---- —, —............(—Ex warrants, i Television Electronicsi ...... 8.93 -Foreign Issue subject to mteresf j Wellington Fund ‘ “ Windsor Fund too, is borrowing more. New York bank loans to «om-mercial and industrial concerns have risen $1.4 billion since the first of the year. In daVTSOn' the like period of 1964, they dropped by $574 million. The nation’s commercial banks as a whole have been net borrowers for 12 straight weeks from the Federal Reserve banks to meet the demand for loans from business and individuals. When money is easier and lending demands less urgent, the banks have nest eggs of excess reserves in the central banking system. Are debts, business and individual, rising too fast and too high? Is this a sign, as sometimes in the past, that the business upswing is peaking? Is the net borrowed position of the commercial banks a warning that the Federal Reserve is tightening up bn credit to keep the economy from overheating^ loans has risen very little. And this is reassuring.’ A worrisome factor: repayments of outstanding installment debt is taking 14 per cent of disposable income —what’s left of an individual’s income after taxes. That’s a new high. At the same time, borrowers have been taking>on new In-stallmcnt(debt at such a pace that they arc pledging 16 per cent of their disposable income for future payments. 'J-his, too, is a record. Bankers say this is manageable for most families — unless times suddenly turn bad. The ri.se in loans to business by New York banks of late has been chiefly to retail stores', public utility and transportation companies, apparel and leather goods producers. Earlier in the year, loans werd heavy, to makers of machinery and pther durable goods and to commodi;/ dealers. Bankers say the rising demand for logins is due to the general upswing in business and is actually smaller in-relation to the growing economy than in past, booms. Therefore, it needn’t foretell an economic downturn, SPARINGLY the nation’s business, the demands of consumers, the popu-' iation, the number and size of firms. As for the apparent tightening of bank Credit in recent weeks, some bankers hold that reserves actually have increased this year — but not as fast as the demand for loans from inoividuals with rising standards of living and from business seeking to keep up with the expansion of the economy. “Total reserves have surged upwards almost without interruption ever since the onset of the 1960 . recession,’’ Morgan Guaranty Trust Company economists note. Available bank funds have gone up even faster in the business upturn that started early in 1961. ■A ■ * ★ Part of this is due to a huge flow of time and savings money into the commercial banks in the last five years. But monetary authorities h^ve been in an expansionary mood,, too. The Morgan Guaranty economists note that the Federal Reserve in the first four months of this year along added more than $600 million to these reserves. Some bankers are answering “not necessarily” to all three questions. DELINQUENCY Delinquency of installment ! In fact, many companies have I been borrowing sparingly, be-jcai^MheyWlad^ more profits ! and more cash flow from such i items as larger depreciation tax j write-offs on which to draw to ] meet financing needs. The bigger total of loans is due to the fact that everything is bigger SMALL FACTOR If money looks a little tight right now, they, add, a new monetary policy may be only a small factor. It could be that: “Fast as the Federal Reserve is running, private credit demands are run-1 ning aTittle faster.” I, ■t ( 1)^4 IHK JH)NriA(’ piiii.sH, Monday, mav-m4, Deaths in Pontiac Area Court Voids Red Mail Curb FlIltN II. TIIHHS . I .lom's. 72, ol 2(i;t2 iminulnlr will Service for Kurn II Tiibbs. (HI, I Ih“ 1 l> m. Wednesday at Don-of 71 Ogemaw will be II am j elson-Johns l-'uneral Home. Hur-lomorrow al the Ponelson Johns i i«l will be in an Imlay City Funeral Home with burial in eemelery While (’liajiel (Vjiielery, rroy ! Ml s Jones died yesterday all Mr Tubbs died Saliirday after j er a long illness A former n long Illness | leacbei, she was a nannbn of Surviving In addlllon lo lil.s j Uie Michigan Fducallon AhhocI-Wjife, Myrtle, are five sons, He-mllon, Alpha Oelta Ka|»pa Hho I •*<»sl Ofliee Deparlmenl lo hold Itoy, Kugene, Newton ami WH M'l'''Pler, and Ihe I’ontlac llraiu h , up certain Communlsl rnall liam, all o( I’onllac, anil Mor- j of Hie American Assm'latlon of | from abroad. llnlver.slly Women i Jiisllce William O Douglas de Surviving are one daughler, llvered (he II0 decision. Jiisllce Ml'S, Donald Tee of llocliesle and one grandchild. Unanimous Decision Hits Postal Detention WASHINGTON (An The Siifirenie (!oiir( slruck„down lo day a 1IKI2 law aiil||orl/,lng the ris ol Hay t’lly, and eigbl grand children I, ( (OWKN HIKMINCHAM Service Hyron It While look i pari lor 1, C. Cowen, nil, of 710 Oakland was held Ibis m o r n i n g at Manlcv Hailey l'■|nlcral Home ('remallon wa.s at Whiti* Chapel Memorial Cremaloiy Ml Cowen died Saliirday at |ci a sliorl ilinc.ss A relired real estate brokn, lie was a member of itie Hinningliam Unitarian Church, Surviving are hi.s wife, llulh; one daughler, (I A. Hauer ol Arlington, Va ! one .soil, John C ol Hloomfleld Townsliip; and Ihree gi aiidclilldien IIAI.SMY H. UUCAS HIKMINCHAM - .Smvice for Halsey H, I. u c a s, (il, of 112.1 Clui|im will Ix' 1 p.m. Tuesday al Manley Hailiyv Kuileral Home Hurial Will be in Itoscland I'ark Ccmelery, HerkIcy, Mr Lucas died .Saturday idler a long illness, He was a iiaiiilcr. Surviving are two brothers, Kvereli iif Hirmingham and Floyd of Allen Park, The governnieiil conlended Hie law served two basic purpo.ses: j Il prolecicd American citizens, j ('S|)eciidly those of reeeni for I (dgii origin, from harassmeni; I It ileiiieil loreigii powers the service of having Hie I lulled Slides deliver llieir propiiganda lo people wh odid not wiinl lo ri'ccive il. Drivers to Get Safety Unit's Questionnaire OIIVILLF, JAMKS H, FOOTF-Mll.FOHD TOWNSHIP .Service for Orville James 11 Foote, 20, of O.'iO Duck l,ake will be 1 ^ Home MitS. WAl.TUIt MAHKLINF COMMFKCF TOWNSHIP Service lor Mrs. WalH-r (lolii Hetty) Markline, (17, of 51)211 Plckbourrie will be II am, to- '•'he morrow al FJIon Hlack Funeiid matter, excejit Hurial will be in Com- tl'nt originated attacked as eo and open s The law wji triidictory lo i ciely and as ah unwiirranled vaslon of iirlvacy. TO HF HFTAINFJ) aw provided (hat mailed aled letters. .SQllF.F/.F PI,AY The driver of the sports ear esciiped wflli minor injuries In this wreck ill Jonesboro, Ark Polici' said the big American made car was slopped,'preparing lo make a Icll lurn, and the sports ciir wiis .slopped For Top Federal Posts LBJ Pushes Hunt for Female Talent in Thursday at the Klchard-j merce Cemetery. | country and was determined by son-Hird h'uiiernl Home Hurial I Mrs. Markline died Saturday Hm' secretary of the Trea.sury lo will be in While (Jiapel Memo | after a long illness. be Communist political propa rial Cemetery, Troy. Surviving besides lief h ii s- gand.i was to lie detained liy Hie The youth died in an auto ae- i •*•'"'<• ‘*r<' two sisters and t\vo poslniiisfer general, cidenl yesterday. ' grandchildren. ★ * *- Surviving are his mother, | .IO||N M WAISH exceptions this Mrs, Vernon Foote, with whom .k,,, , „ mail could be delivered only he made his home; two broth- ' the addressee’s request, era. Jansoii H, in the U S. Navy J;'' M Walsh, ,5.5, ol 212h „ and .Sidney H. at liome; and a ' '^‘•* •»■ lomor- w-,s de.siroyed. . , ,, ,, , , grandfalhiT William Paton of ''iw al Kichard.son-Hird Funeral * * * : ^-><1 the results wen- .showing Ih-lroil. ' ""'.V Douglas said the court had lo, ' ;H>pomlmc‘nt Sepulchre Cemelerv, .SouHificUl (.iinelude lint tlie act as eon Mr Walsh died .Saturday after sirued and applied is unconsli- 1 wimiaii anib.a.ssador Mrs l>alri-" -a Koberls Harris of Washing- WASHINCTON (AP) Pre.si-incj'hv •''•'* applied addi- tional heal in his talent hunt for more women in top government Joll.H. He’s sent out word around the country and througli some key women to keep suggestions coming to chief lalenf scout .lohn W. Maey, head of (he US, Civil Service Commission MRS. MORKFI1, M. JONES AVON TOWNSHII* for Mrs. Morrell M. (Joyce) long illness. He tool luiional ' bee, Opens Fight For 'Right to Work' Ban WASHINGTON (UPI) - Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz today opened the administration’s fight for repeal of the Taft-Hartley Law provision permitting stales to outlaw the union shop. His testimony touched off sharp debate on the issue. Wirtz told a House Labor and Education subcommittee t h e Controversial provision allows states to limit “the right to decide’’ rather than guarantees the right to work. Nineteen states have adopted so-called right-to-work laws under the provi.sion. Rep. Robert I’. Griffin, R-Mich., who supports the right-to-work laws, asked Wirtz who spoke for the nation’s “unorganized workers’’ at the hearing. Of approximately 70 million employes in the United Sthtes, he said, only 17 million were union members. Wirtz replied thdt as segrc: tary of labor, he represented all the workers, unorganized and organized, “that,” he added, “is my o?th of office.” ★ ★ ★ -Griffin also complained that governors and attorneys general of states involved in the i.ssue were not on the witness list of the hearings. ROMNEY OPPOSED ' \ Subcommittee Chairman Frank Thompson J?., D-N. J., replied, “If you like. I’ll have Gov. Romney come; yes, my j governor, too.” Gov. George’ Romney of Michigan is opposed ! to state laws banning the union shop. Griffin said that Congress j would be doing “a disservice” i • to the nation to repeal Sec- ! tion 14-B of the Taft-Hartley I Law. He said the “issues of civil liberties and ihdividual ! rights are involved.” But Thompson told his sub- i committee that Section 14-B was “bad law and bad logic.” He said: “it offends the Constitution, because once federal jurisdiction is asserted, it should pre-. vaiL” ★ ★ ★ , ■Wirtz was tha first witness at the opening of the^ hearings, which are expected to run two weeks. .................. it requires an ,, His biKiy will be at offieij,! net (viz. returning a re-1 ‘tbe funeral home after 8 p.m. p|y <.ard) as'a limitation on ,hc I unfettered exerci.s(* of the .Surviving ........... ** [' his wife, Mary; , (i|-,.ssee two .sons, Thoma.s J. and Mark D., both of Walled Lak(“; and one brother. k'ir.sl Amendment ■111 the U .S. ic’s the third woman Joliiison has namod to imbassadorial post PCH Senior Is Third in Scholarship Debate Robert Sullivan, 17, a semor •■ i Hesides that. Hie President Douglas said the court has i •*’*’*^ •*'*’ opportunity to needle a rested its decision “on the nar- i •>'• when 10 men were honored row ground that the addres.see I o White House ro.se garden in order to receive his mall ceremony as winners of govern- Interlm reports on the activities of (he Oakland County .Safely Committee were present ed at a ineefiiig of Hit*, commit lee’s lioiird of directors rei'ently. Heven committees presented leporfs, which Included the dis-ciiHsloii of a questloiimiljpe which will be (llH(rll)iited to KMI.IMHI cit iz.eim next week The 17-qiieHtIon document Is being sent out In hopes of finding some IIII N w e r s to the causes of Otikliiiid Coiiiily’s high m eldent rate. .Sanijile (|ue,si loirs lo be asked are: “When were you last in a traffic accideiif.'’’ and “ ai;e traffic .signs and signals in Hie coiiniry easy to see and under slaiid’'’’ The questionnaire will be dl.s-trlbuled through places of bu.si-iicss, c I V 1 c and professional groups, unions, factorie.s and cliilrs. COMMUNITY LKADFR.S 'I’he Traffic .Safely Committee Is made up of l()()’community leaders working with technical experts from the Highway Traf deputy assistant secretary of stale for public affairs. t behind il when the Iriick slammed Into the rear of the sports car, The .s|)orls car driver said be saw Hie truck coming and lay down In Hie seid must request in writing that it be delivered” ! lent career service awards. $2«,(M)0 POST Only this tnonh, he put Eileen Hernandez, a.sslstant chief of the California Fair Employment Practices Division, into the $2(i,-000 |: st as i member of the new Equal Opportunity Comml.ssion. The President has gained some and lost .some, too. Two very prominent Kennedy women appointees have resigned Hieir posts * * A One was the first woman While Hou.se physici.in, Dr. J:ui-et Travell. She returned to jiri-vate practice in Washington. And career diplomat Eugenie Ander.son, .55, Hwi Wing, Minn., the only woman chief of a diplomatic mission beliind tlie Iron Curtain, resigned last Decem-M rs. Harris,, the President' •’*’'■ «« minister to Hulgaria. She picked Mrs. Frankie Freeman H!>>d at the lime .she would con-ot St. Louis as the first woman ••’'’i*’ •>’ diplomatic service “in member of the Civil Rights position 1 am given.’’ Bid, Commission. so far she’;? been given no new And, he promoted Charlotte assignment. Moton Hubbard lo the liighest i Johnson maintained in April State University under the auspices of the Moll Center. A June 28 target date has been kel for the coirplellon of all .studies. MRS. IIARHI.S CITES ODDS * * * I "Where are the women’.'’’ t This amounts in our judg- ^ President wanted to know, at Pontiac Central'High School, ment to an unconstitutional | He i^iid he couldn’t belie won third place and a $(i00 abridgement of the addre.ssee’s j "The wlds are 10 to nothing in j ranking federal agency post! 1964; .scholarship .Saturday in (he 18th First Amendment rights,’’ he favor of men when'it comes to! ever held by a Negro woman — I "My whole .John S. Knight Scholarship Dc- said. ’The addressee carries an 1 making an award based on i . bate at Royal Oak Kimball High, affirmative obligation which we j merit. ” Scho()l. ' do not think the government i “I think sometimes we men * may impo.se on him. TJiiS re-] arc inclined to think that be- Son of Mr. and . Mrs. Unvis quirement is almost certain to 1 cau.se we weigh more, are taller Sullivan of 215 Pioneer, Rob- have a deterrent effect, especi- j and our shoe size Is bigger tliat| ert's debate topic was:- “Re-1 ally as respects those who have’! this is also true of our intelli- solved: That nuclear weapons sensitive positions. Their liveli-1 gence and dedication,’’ he com-should be controlled by an in- ’ hood may be dependent on a mented. ternational agency” ^ .security clearance” ★ * ★ Saying he’d never found this so in his .‘!5 years in public service,. John.son declared that jiro-j motions and awards in govern-} ment aren’t based on the race, iligion, political party Arrest Teens at Weekend Beach Parties in promoting I women and picking out more I women to serve in tins administration is lo underline our profound belief that we can waste no talent, we can frustrate no creative power, we''can neglect .no .skill in our search for an open and just and challenging society.” Robbers Take $400 From Oxford Firm OXFORD About $400 wa.s taken from the Nowels l.umber and Goal Co., at 52 E. Burdick yesferday.'- Police said the (’xact lime of the break-in was not establislied but that it was rcfMirted at .5 p.m. yesterday by Manager Mil-ton Francis. Access was gained through a window which had been pried open. Youth Is Found Dead in Car Near Howell MILFORD Orville .1 Foote, 20, of !)5() Duck lujLke was found dead in his car Sunday in a pasture near Howell. Police said Foote apparently, fell asleep at the wheel, veered into the pasture, and was asphyxiated by carbon monoxide fumes. Waterford Students leave (or D.C.Trip A group of .'to ninth graders at Clary Jtaiior Higli fich(K)l, Waterford 'I’ownshlp, will leave by bus lixlay at 7 p.m. to visit the nation’s capital. Traveling with tlie students will be social science teaidier .lames Malleson, Mrs. Malteson and Mrs, .Son)a Zoch, They wilt return Friday, Highlights of Hie trip will be a visit to Hie White House, the House of Representatives office building and FBI headquarters. Hospitalized After Crash A Pontiac Township man is in siillsfaclory condition al St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a two car qulo accident Saturday at North Perry and Kcn-netl. Wilford W, Rates, 59, of 2410^ Lapeer was Injured when Ills' auto collided with a car driven by Shirley R Gra.ssa, 22, of ‘2l):il Rambling Way, Bloomfield TowiiHlilp, * .She was (realcd at the him-pital and released. Report on Education ALLENDALE (AP) The Governor’s lilue ribbon committee, created to make a study of higher education in Michigan, presents Its recommendations tonight in a panel .session open lo the public at Grand Valley State College. GtNeRAl. u s ROYAI , riRlfSTONf, 1 I . OOOORlCIt, «ml GOODYEAR Spntltlcnllona nnO Old (orms mny bf ikl/ind, Michigan. BOARD OF COUNTY ROAD COMMISSIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF ROBERT 0. FELT FRAZER W. STAMAN SOL D. LOMERSON [ Junior Editors Quiz on— FRACTIONS the individual. By United Press Intcrnalionai Th^ licer-and-beach theme ! ■prevailed again at several Lake''win V hHd,"?o r sex of Michigan beaches over the I'ekend, So did (he arrests. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE that on Thursday, May 27, I96S, o'clock a m. al 109 Second Slreei, Oakland Counly, Michigan, 1959 Cadillac Devllle lal number 59L086537, held, lor cash al auction. Inspec- Rochester, Oakland Counly, Mlch- From the very start of his Authorities in Berrien County ; bate administration, Johnson ha.s ‘’’'''c’sted 60 teen-agers for pos-: made his position clear. ' ■''‘^ssion of intoxicants at raids HANni PS OATH "" beaches in the St. Joseph ' HANDLES OATH ; j --- He summoned Texas Judge ^ day and Sunday. Sarah T. Hughes, one of the few women on the fcnleral bench, to A personalized monumoni, carved of Select Barre bi'cL ' Granite, can .say more than many words. II will be ,an c OF DETifoiT : cverlasling tribute lo a loved one. See our display of Rochester, Mich. 3nrre Guild Monuments, backed by the industry's' *'2r»rrd^2r W5 mohument guarantee. ' ’ ORDER NOW , Monurn.epts administer his oath of office afte# the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. She thus became the first woman in history to swear in a president. Only a few months later, in a splash of publicity, Johnson .named 10 women at one time to high posts. And, he chose a dinner of the Women’s National •Press Club to do it. More than 25 of these were arrested at Warren Dunes State Park near Bridgman, most of them from northern Indiana. Mishap Kills Worker DE'TROIT (AP) Edward Jones, 46, of Mount Clemens, employe at Chrysler Corp.’s Mack AVe. plant, was killed at tile plant SiWay. Police said a pressurized cylinder head exploded when Jones was removing it from a boiler. QUESTION: Fractions are a nuisance. Why do we have to use them? " ■ ' ■* ' - ANSWER: Why get angry at fractions when you use them every day? 'Think of how useful they are. You stop for a pint of ice cream—'1> is a fractioiT. You have one candy bar and there are three of you. You want to be fair, so you divide the bar so each gets '/a, another fraction. . You are cutting a cake for six people. You cut the cake in half, divide each into three so each person gets 1/6 of the cake—fractions again! A fraction- is a part taken from something. Fractions can be written as in M>, where one is the numerator or number of parts being taken and two is the denominator, which shows the number of parts some whole thing has been divided into. Another way of writing certain fractions is to use the decimal system, where numbers are related to units of ten, iskvery old. It probably developed because ancient man found his ten fingers easy to reckon on. If he wanted to express 'i, he could hold up five fingers. Nowadays, we would write such a decimal fraction as .5, the same thing "as Vz. Fra'ctioHs may look puzzling, but if you taken them step by step, you won’t have trouble,learning them. As Karen is saying in the picture, they are really very simple. ★ ... FOR YOU TO DO: Cut out the picture and show it to your Mend without comment. Watch them, closely to see their eyes pop when they discover a mistake-printed in the newspaper. But don’t write to us, telling us that 4/? equals l*^, instead of 1%. We know that— we put the mistake in so you could have some fun with your.friends. 1 At Grand Haven, Ottawa County officers arrested more than 15 youths at the Grand Haven State Park beach. The teeh-agers were in two separate parties. Officers said quantities of beer and whisky were confiscated at To date, Johnson has named; ^^^en beach parties, j some, 90 women to executive I of the charges involved | positions, but most of these | Po.ssession of alcohol by minors, j have been appointments to com- j ^t SaugaHtsk, which last year missions and advisory bodies on i ^he big trouble a per diem basis. 1 officers reported things ! His talent tabulators also re- i were fairly quiet. The Sauga-port that during 1964, 418 other i tuck beaches are being heavily I women were appointed by agen- ' putrolled. i cies and departments to posts .... ~ “ - ! paying $10,000 or more and that 1..55.3 women were promoted to such high-paying jobs. ACCOMPLISHMENTS The President frequently makes announcements updating these totals and pointing with pride to his accomplishments. Just how good the record is, j though, is hard to say, since | comparable figures are not ■ readily available. Nonetheless, he has scored; some historic firsts in putting DELIVERY FOR MEMORIAL DAY monumeKits . . . . from *195 MARKERS............ Iron, *35 Memoruds for Over 72 Years INCH MEMORIALS, Inc. 864 N. Perry FE 5-6931 Bronze Plate; for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Open Evenings Until 8 P.M. Sundays I 'til 4 Starving Woman and Man's Body Fo.und in Fiome DETROIT (AP) - A starving woman was found Sunday in a Detroit home in which police also found the body of a man. Mrs. Ida Mae Bowden, 60, was women into jobs heretofore held hospitalized for acute malnu-exclusively by men. These in-l‘*’‘hon. She was reported? in : dude naming the first woman critical condition. memheX'pf the Atomic Energy; * * ^ Compfrission, Mary I. Bunting,! The body of Charles M. More-president of Radcliffe; the first head, 60, ^Was found at a table j woman ever named to the Inter-' •he house. Police said he ap-: state Commerce Commission, ■ Purently suffered a fatal heart I'Virginia Mae Brown, Pliny, W.! attack. They said he had been Va.; and the first woman to taking care of Mrs. Bowden, serve as assistant secretary of i who had been ill. agriculture, Dorothy Jacobson, ' Officers said Morehead had Minneapolis. , been dead for four or five days. * ’ ♦ j They said the wom§n weighed He’s also given high posts to I only 65 pounds when they found Negro women. In addition to her. I-The North 250 feet ■ the East 600 feel Lot 3, Assessor's Plat No. Residential 3—Lot 3 of 'Assessor's Plat No, 141, except that part described as: Beginning at the Northeast corner of Lot 309 of East Side Park Subdivision; thence North 87° 47' 10" East 75 feet; thence 01” ®' 55" West 50 feet; thence North/i 87” 47' 10" East along the Northerly line of Cottage Street extended East- .......... J,. jy, 55" t 700 ti Southerly,, line of Whiltembre Avenue extended Easterly; thence South 87” 47' 10" West along the said Southerly line 547.30 feet; thence North 01° 59' 55" West 50 feet; thence South 87” 47' 10" West along the Northerly . ^ line of Whittemore Street extended Easterly 75 feet to the Southeast corner of Lot 294 of East Side Park Subdivision; thence South 01” 59' 55" East along East (Ine of said Subdi-, vision 800 feet to point’ of beginning. Also, that part of Lot 4'of Assessor's Plat No. 141 lying Easterly of a line 293 feet West of and parallel to the North and South 'A Section line of Section 34. Also, except the North 250 feet of the East 600 feet of Lot 3, Assessor's Plat No. 141. By Order of the City Commission Dated May 20, 1965 OLGA BARKELEY City Clerk May 124, 1965 Your Cull Puts Into Motion ... ... A complete organization. For when moved by the hand of deatfi, there are more than fifty items of service to be performed by the funeral director, '• •The Dopelson-johns F.uneral Home, •nd every member of our staff recognize our obligations of service to our cormfiunity and are always ready to perform these duties. tallllli 'Pkoni federal 4-4511 0„Ou.’•■ -^V'-Ln;L', TMK I'ONTIAC MONDAY. MAY 'Ik IU(D I) 7, TIMES CURKSTON ''^TMtsStAllY ‘''''‘""“rHN.?;!; ..... CLARK JOHNSON ..- iSnS’” ^ -iO"''""-1 lAKM BA(RIS ; X" Hi pfSigiysSi................... v,;,r HilHrllr-"-'' s-yj' & Sons Reoiiy " I.I..1 f«, ?«L .. 10 Acre Parcels EieCTRIC STOVE, 135, I. M HainT ANf, listil H/hNi S-sSIi-fi'jf—"" V H t r,TwS ^MfcMOuffc V| I AUTOMATIC ...........................................................................■ ,............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................. “I'liw SELLING OUT C.v»r7.-sc-7,r;,.7»^^ ........ ., p%|,P5.#............. V Mrtrru, re c irci E fi uorescent I I(JHT5, I ^ ' 1704 S. Telegraph FE 4-2533 ANNETT *.™r .BaTemAN 6, ‘■~i'{:'","rri,„ ■■" 3£=3| lllflll I Suburban ! ‘"'--riy .«..,.i.. 9, k*%,?'A MAN WANTED »™3c-FS;'~s yyr-“"'NiCH^^ j£fs-== gg ■:-|i mmm SIP Realtors 28 E. Huroti St. FE 8-0466 Brown LMiNU v.umr\«\.iD 1 WARREN STOUT, RealtorOl pearson s furniture SEASONED XONTRAC^ BALANCE I ] WHOLE HOUSEFUL £ir„.";u“^ ! 3 rZ^s'K’ S™ BARGAIN BOX ..‘^r !:"f5 rv r'-' ° ' KELVINATOR food , 0 . RAMA, lOT WATER HEATER, 30 GALLON '■ssr-s Try Before You Buy 27 S. Saginaw .VAyiNos^^ofl R%En”5;’r'?'™'-" TV, S88.HB AND . J IRWIN £.aTi"».^*r,ur.K, I s.rai:'.r-" — ■"“ag.a—_______ COUNTRY HOMESITES Rugs $3.89 FINANQAL WORRIES? Let Us Help You! , A-1 croe.,1^; Help You! IP TO $1,000 ORGE CHEST freezer, t1 I Renewedlppliances VLL SERVICED BY us UL M499. LUMBER 'iPi^S Burmei^t^r's = L mi^sWz.sK. ..... I » ONE WEEK ONLY jack Hagan Music Center FE , I AKf SMAi 1^ MtmATUHt!^^HK)I)I f ). : poooi B -----‘ " r;;. s: « 5HA5TA nei UAE TRAM ER, '". ?»ni,l,n'^11 u I MK- I'ON I’IAC PUKSS, MONDAY. MAY n, 97(;aHNIVAI. Ily Dick Tiir JSBriBL EiEri ■"’ fiSSi : :h l\XIir?.rmiT.! I, M.«I JOHNSON MOTORS 'mu' r'',"’ l/.'“Mnu"'lTm.I!“;!; I T "7' "" »" ''inv''''RM .U, I...I. ........IV ii.mm,, M> ;4M, C ASS IA K E M A RIN E r,—..........“’; ;;■..„ ..,..,n.w ... u..d t™ SPECIAL PRICE I 7r^,'‘/r?„w 1965 ...^'Ti'wvir'"''^ .......free"....... i'vu\. GMC r au.oservice 93 ..wRR,.E.;'^"^r, ’...oo.iuo IME OCEUI.O O. BirounolurL^i Ceuier QT FNN'^ Auction Sulee 80^ , ■,.u koc^ . am^Rs , m ... e ro a, aoams ro E^LlLiM IN G yOY terrier rOK IERRIE.R, All Sires fTrestone ‘’store ELLSWORTH AUTO GO 1 TRAILER SAIK , OAKLAND i STARCRAFT! ! OPEN SUNDAYS AT 1 P.M. S94r«| ‘ *' OPEN DAILY 9 TO 9 ! ^^.'^'oriUTHo WANTED :«»„c AUTO I ......... .SSSIIS PINTER'S!'--“=7; , .ill. ' Kir:3:r“&3; ‘ ?S"'£Hs“v,C.r,-.I,..k. s, KTrr'M'S.r”-' ‘ I “,iO-svn;s,r'i.r.5; : r.™;r,>. I1,H^rjNDF Til T TRAII ER I 13 AND^^O JONK^ARS ■ Tl $14.00 QUARTERLY BRUMMETt’AGENCY SPhtUBUAIS - IIHFSAIR excellent cone t||r^J^ r RAF^T ii^Fn liuEv i-rm, UP lion. 673 0343 r ond Utod Cart 108 Repossession 1^^ $2,455 Ntw Olid Uttd Curt 108 CHEVROLETS iss's-s rjlsri' rrs.,4- •ss £’‘£“:S£3=s 1964 CHtVHOUI "Ifprsl ruriier I’ord ■I.,rsi SSF'S 1963 CliRYSLER VIILAGE RAMBLER "SWIET AND HOI" $2397 855 Ookicmd Ave. Iniiialo Snnil Loiiiie. (.oltlWiKiil y6l ^ I. KiIIb iin'i III nl Law. Ave ) Xe.'l.'ow';.'".':X'urn Spartan Dodqe 25 Mon.ln Chevrolel I KIGSl.l ’H'S I DODGE Co- ' Russ lohnson MY 3-6266 COME^m ATTEST DRIVE JEROME OLDS-CADILLAC N I V» enolne. Biilomallc, power «leei 'T, ‘."'iMerir rtfromfon, tl.WWLI ' ‘ Repossession Cadillacs 1962s, '63s ond '64s. All body stylos, all colors, most with full power and several VII engine, ii/ii'i Aidra nicel Luli AAA^VEr'’' *'’ ''“'“hi Oekland Ave. Lt’iTe^ ' EQUIPPED^'^RAmO HEATER, WMITEWAil TIRES, as $299 c WILSON ,n,:;f'-:i'’: PONTIAC-CADILLAC ::pir- Sused Au.o.Truck , \,^z']zLrrzi LAKE & SEA MARINA A/,*: ^'R^’^^'^'yiSCRAM 'Also?V?n3^ ;. Blvd. EE 4 9587 Sl^LnrL'l .BOARD MOTORS^^ clallU. C^n“ In'^.SlI, TerUrv. ""an"" I ■ mT~'s parts. '«5^chevV S 3 '’JL^Sr."p"E"1^033".°'^"'^'"'^' CAR, 337 4. .. estate STORAGE I.M I.IUMPH- SPlIFIBf COM.' 103 ms "Sr s,“;, 1958 CHEVYS, 8 TO CHOOSE FROM. To.! Capitol Auto "Wagon Ho" ftlMS ■~£=t:rs~s^~ 312 W. MONTCALW^ FE 8-4071 '''order^'^oV'MAs’MW ' 1963 Ford iWlAc7,Z"^iyS $1395 ' I Kina Auto Cliff Dreyer's T-g-p RbT^74|- un ana iporrs L.emer 11953 ford econ-o line bus ‘ 963 RENAUL-^ "°T"HE"A^rcr5F"^'N^“o°urOA^R"5 . CORRECT CRAFT ro?win’C?uri 391 S. SAGINAW 14-FOOT ALUMICRAFT RUNABOUT I Will ACCept IOD'''Eilr'^f‘t475^'EM'3 ^ °S Tfade ■.„7'5'o;orAKsrA7w^^ ..... »■> “'.S'.””;?,!,,.,, R-8. See this one! VILLAGE RAMBLER Ww«NT«lll° I 1962 Falcon i t, f,i'“kr“■ "m i^sW^ Turnei-Ford V8 BIRMirGHAr°""'"'’""llf-4 3500 Homer High! j i£T e-FrOtlklin 10x7'/2' IS' ScFniURY - inboard with 30 up. engine, trailer, horns, sXIs'^ P°Nmc-BUllK ^ Ml^ MeTte" -dir - AUCT,ON;WEONESDAy.-“MAY 3^^ 4 CAMPER - iCnSVtlSS: ■ a'L5F“' 3®3“ $895 1962 FORD °'"L.. SSSIS ■ Ellsworth AUTO SALES '* MSiSFIELtX $T,295 ■ Russ Jdhnson T"'" ■ ■ ■ 1 ■'■ 5' ■ ■ ‘ ‘I'- '"■ '7 ■ ' ■ |‘T ' 5- ji A 'j ,, , ^LgriWLT w,;. r' ! ', , A ' .4 "G.d'iW|7nm...-bGi.1'''ll,: LLi'i’ ■ ■- F 1 M u . .. , ,T .1 t I., . 't 1 , I I N....dU»IC.r. m LLOYD'S 'r»rS=&r-BOB BORST 1963 FORD Turner Ford mCKY AUTO 1965 FALCON Turner Ford ¥o‘b BORST 1965 Mustangs FULL E AS LOW AS $79 C Turner Ford JEEPLAND mm BOB BORST ’’ MfeASsr''' MAY SPECIALS mmmMM mws VAL-U-RATED USED CARS__ 100% Writtenl Guarantee ' 1963 OLDS F-85 4-Door, V-8, Automo' 1962 OLD?'^Sta^fil^l*'ci, power ?LD? '°9"b" Tdooi 1962 1964 OLD? "9r "l 1964 OLDls°JetsTar"ll' $1695 $1995 $1995 '$2995 $2795 $2395 PONTIAC Catalina 6-Passenger Wagon, Power Steering, Brakes, a Real Buy at Only $1995 $2495 $1995 $2295 $1595 TlIKd I'ONTIAC l‘HICSS. MONDAY, MAV 21. \ 106 MAItMAIMIKIO By OLIVER BUICK Convertible OLIVER BUICK srii;«,^"%n,rit .js IW rONllAC, IdM. Ol'OYKh FE 2-9165 bob’BORST BOB BORST 1963 OLDS with 1963 PONTIAC Power Sti 1964 OLDS “88" . Brake 1963 OLDS 1963 PONTIAC Grand Prix 1962 dr conditioning, sharp $5 OLDS Cutlass convertible, V-8 engine, automatic, power-steering $1 7-WAR~WAftftAHTY " 635 S. Woodward' Ave. Birminghaha 647-5tll LLOYD'S 1964 SirSSrS $2,295 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 BOB BORST :ir.r^s a, 1963 OLDS F-85 $1688 ’■rtf ., - .. 1964 Electro Convertible. Full Power .. $3188 1962 Pontiac Bonneville 4-Door \j^ .. : . $1888 1963 Olds Super ”88" 4-door hardtop ... $1988 1962 LeSobre 2-Door Sedap. " Gold .1 1963 Special Station Wagon, 6-Possenger ....$1488 1964 LeSobre Convertible,-White Finish .1 ,.. $2688 1962 LeSobre 4-Door Hardtop ... $1688 1963 Electro 2-Door Hardtop ... $2488 1963 Falcon 2-Door ^edon, Shorp! ., $ 988 1961 Chevrolet Impolo Cpnvertible *$1288 ^ZuV'iry^Vr Turner Ford i*M SPORJS^FimV, PATTERSON ttRVSI ER PLVMOUTH VAUANT “MAY Markdown days" Capitol Auto 312 W. MONTCALM ' FE 8-4071 '’££r..';s;,rr/!sr LLOYD'S All our CREST 1250 OAKLAND 33 xm .u„ King Auto '’fe'^b-aobV*' ’:S.Oon':°Tu!omMlCr^d^^ "bob BORST ' l>-9 r.«ANP^PR,X ivtiu RAMni EN WAoON. V PAS .......................... DON'S radio. VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward lesl (liscounti of tii« year t now on new 1965 Ram- blers at I (luoto of tmles luii h RAMBLER ROSE $1,995 ';;y. IIP-1 Russ lohnson MY'V6266 A' lOl.mCi*J; 6/7 S. LAPEER RD. VILLAGE RAMBLER 1962 PONTIAC 1964 PONTIAC Hunter Dodge 499 S. HUNTER Ml 7-0955 ',ar,: $1,495 250 OAKLAND 333-7863 ESTATE STORAGE f. Repossession Memorial Day Trip is that part of your plans? Take the whole fomily olonQ in on© of these extrn sharp 9 Passenger Wagons 1963 DODGE Wagon Ith V8 engine, automatic. Power : $1697 Full Price , $1697 $2197 Fuy Price 1962 FORD 6-passenger, V-8 sticki $997 Full Price 19^2 PLYMOUTH Slant six, stick shlftl ■ $991 , Full Price LLOYD'S SP“ PONTIAC CONVE 2 ‘ PON11 aT^CATALINA"'hA R D-«ck. Sharp, ,,^623:0285"'’ lomatic, power steering and brakes, sharpi VILLAGE RAMBLER 56 S. V Ml 6-3900 $3,7il2 Russ lohnson HAUPT PONTIAC Repossession HILLTOP AUTt) SALES, INC. WHERE YOU CAN BUY _ Spartan Dodgel_ LL-.l':! .Ny.-h R - 1964 VOLKSWAGEN' f962 f-BI^D « tun.power rmd new.^ ir*r;ViSyge"?:;;rdCk'“'' yis'^s 1962 VOLKSWAGEN AUTHORIZED VW DEALER ’/2 MILE NORTH OF MIRACLE MILE 1765 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-4531 1964 VOLKSWAGEN Convertible. Sea blue finish, loaded wilt 7,000 rniles. Real economy 1961 OLDSMOBILE 1964 CHEVROLET r, automatii^ans-', 1964 VOLKSWA^N S:tyet».K' - blalk'lniyrtof/'l ’’f^g^’Shu UNSCRAMBLE IHE LETTERS AND PLAY "Auto-Word-Play" "ATRWNYAR" Here's a hint on today's wordi When you buy a used car, be sure you get one of these. You alwoys get one when you trade with PONTIAC RETAIL STORE, and it is Take the puzzle out of buying a car , 1963 TEMPEST $1595 1963 PONTIAC ”tJeThr,Tne7''"’' Clark,ion. tticr MA .5566 ||“~H $1995 PONTIAC $1695 1964 PONTIAC E=r^- $1895 - (*) WARRANTY Pontiac Retail Store 65 MT. CLEMENS FE 3-7954 New Car Warranty* No Gimmicks - Just Built-in Confidence '.aJS ”C Ew^m isfss PsESS/s ists-sri 1 PONTIAC ISLiillS iHl ed Used Car Lot PONTIAC-BUICK ) ROCHESTER RD„ ROCHESTER 651-9911 *ASK FOR DETAILS t" T « j .M U -lu C3t)U0fe enrollment thin yeer la 4,800,t)0Q. It la expected to riaa to • million with the new term beginning in Septeinl>er. AIJ)£RTRBRO(mi«.HAfifiYSAlTZMAN SEAN CO W .mmOOir- II hUNREMING'S . • ■■ , 1 ' , ^ ^ \ IHK I'OMIAC l'UI<;}SS. MONDAV. ^JAV U. llMIrt Pays Off for Producer Spiegel Makes Movies the Hard Way OOLDniOEB' FEATIRE 1M5 and 9:20 By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer IIOI.KYWOOD Sam Sliiegel aal lirliiiid Ills expansive desk wllh (lie linpidienre of a raged tiger T e I e p li one rails hrearlied I he con versa lion every tew mmules, and lie issued slarralo rders on at lairs to he dealt VInil in l.oiidoii. Wai COMMERCE' IIIOMaS ' than usual. Me muik nea samv snaHiaHnnDaviSjr. -■ROBiliiaND ^WCTHOODS^ iiiiCROSliy Chop-Chop Hoo»e o( or how to (lip your or th« unliindetl cul ric Spiri hliHslIimind seehird we was slink Ixdiiiid a de.sk in IIiiIIn wood when he would ralliei I he iiiakmg a movie in the jiiii-I gles ol Ceylon or the wastes ol I Arahia, I * * * Long one of the film indus- I lr>'s colorful figures, Siiiegel is I making his first movie in Hollywood ill IT) veins It is callrHl The Cliiise," and it sleJiis Iroin Horton l''ool(’’s novel and play of josliee ill a small Texas town Tlie pla,\efs: Marlon [tranilo, .lime l''ondii, HoImmI Hedlord, I'l. Cl Miirshiill, Angie Diekinson, It has always seemed |o Hoi-l\wood thill Spiegel enjoys niak ing movii'S llu' luird way He doesn't deny it. ‘You create the sweat of the jungle anywhere but in the jungle," he reasoned HIT FILM Instead of shooliiig "The Atrl can Ijneeii" on a studio ba< k lot, lie tiKik viin enlire troupe to Africa. He citrne hack from the safari wllh a hit film and an Oscar for lluin|ihrey llogarl Harry Cohn, late hoss of Co-liimhia, wanted Spiegel to shoot '(hi the Waterfront’’ at the studio. The produc<>r insisted it had to he mad*‘ on the docks of New .lerst'y Itemill eight Os (‘ill’s. Including lasst picture, actor (Hrando), dins Ka/anl, .supporting (Fva Marie .Sand ) Spiegel went to ( "Hridge on the Hivi .six other Oscurs, Orudgingly, he I Chase," .Spiegel will return to made ‘ Suddenly Lust Summer" [ hi.s global-type filming, He will can desert for the next Christmas. Our l(K'alion.s were three to four Ihou.sand miles apart." financial IIAitVFST Once again Hie results justified the labor, '’t-awreiicc" won Spiegel’s Ihird best picture Oscar In nine years, plus a luii'vest at the b()X office "Hut you think of the risks when you are making such a picture, not till' 1'1‘turns," said the prodmer. "There were many sleepless nights during ‘Lawrence’ when I woiuhui'd If it would all bb worth it. I was (or (Ella two and a half years in prepar- iicircs.s ing Hie film and a year afid a half in shoot ing il Kmii • years Olll of a mail's life is a long 1‘vlon tor lime ’’ r Kwiii," * A ('lure and 1 AfH'r he fini,Nhc.H "The ^ Wide I iurk Drixr ill W. Huron, 17.12 ^ Fine Foodls — Liquor ^^ I ms ami HER Couples Nijjht^MOMUVS :|. ij?; Special — 1 Full Price, 1 Holf-Price M lU ,SINES.SMEN’.S LLJ.NCII >;i .SPECIAL PRICES-COCKTAIkS 4 to 6-DAILY "MASQUE OF THE RED DEATH" with VINCENT PRICE and "PYRO" Pontfae’s POPUUR THEATER EAGLE I TUESDAY LADIES’DAY Starts TUESDAY tony I dehbie ______ eurtis; reynoUls i ooone pat " utallf GiooDBinb matuiaii “ in an English .studio, then hit | file road again for ”l,awieiiee ” "Thai was Hie longhesi of all, jnsi because of llu' logiMlIcs,” lie r('called "We filmed over a hogc .span of lime mi a varicly of local ions Wc spent one (’hrlslmas on llic Araliiaii desert, niov(“d laler to Hie .Spanish desert and were in Hic Moroc- Restaurants 'Go Dry' in NY Drought Forces Bon on Some Water Uses NEW YORK (AP) - If you want a glass of water in a New York City restaurant, you’ll have to ask for it. If you get it without a.sking, the proprietor will he risking a summons to court and a fine up to $.'■>0. * .(V * The water conservation rmuis-urc, effi'ctive Tuesday, was dered because the drought is 1 continuing to lower levels in the city’s reservoirs. The ban on serving water in restaurant.s will save 12 to 15 million gallons a day, e.stintatcs Armand D’Angelo, commissioner of water supply, gas and electricity. All) IN PROGHAM D’Angelo issued a number of other directives to restaurants to aid the water conservation program. Tue.sday, 2!)0 inspectors of D’Angelo’s department will begin a survey of all eating places in Manhattan. Surveys in other parts of the city will be made within 10 days. 1 ■ ★ * ★ i As qf last Friday, D’Angelo j said, the city’s reservoirs were I at 56 per cent of capacity — j holding 267 billion gallons ^ ! one-third below the level at the same time last spring. “The problem is getting more serious each day as the drought continues to plague our upstate watershed area,” the commissioner said Sunday. HAVE AGREED D’Angelo said representatives of I'estaurant and hotel associations had agreed to cooperate in the conservation program. About 17,000 restaurants and other eating place.s are affected. Last Friday, D’Angelo ordered ornamental fountains irt j the city shut off. The order' holds even if the fountain system recirculates the same i water, .so as not to give the pub-! lie the impression that water is 1 being wasted. in Pari.s, Hei liri iiiid W«r.saw. 8 Reported Musing MANILA A motor launch wlHi 40 peiNons alioard cOpsIjitxl and sank during a storm last night, and eight of them were ndNsIng, Pjillippine News Her-vlco repqrted Iwlay. Tlie other 32 people wore rescued after the laiincli sank south of lanyte Island, tlie news service said. Train Runs Out of Gas 1X)NIX)N (DPI) ’I’he crack, overnight express from Perth to London ground to a halt 25 miles from the end of Its 440 mile Journey yesterday because the diesel engine ran out of gas. Tlie train was lield up «" « secludixl slreteh of track for an hour* • • alijow! ^lANT PtAy6KQUNDS-C|RCUSTfy\IM RiPBLAmi - “ -BRILUANT* ■aiulflBflflDOIIED OrC.CM EMU Si|nanon S'lsvelMS MANyFAceS »uruicoc«o« n .lOMNfpORD'S r tHBYBimt mrruMii I AlCLnaHHHM"' D’Angelo recently issued orders restricting hours for lawn sprinkling. NOW! ffnrrnn at 7:00 «10:27 Blaze Hits Warehpuse DETROIT (API Fire -■;e.-sed an ■■ estimated $150,000 | < damage S'jnday night to a Love I3"ps. inc! warehir’se. The five-alarm fire burned out the firsts f'o( r of the warehouse anti damaged the second and third! floors. I „ THE PONTIAC PHK.SS, MONDAY. MAY 21. 1005 -—Television Programs— Pro0ram( furnithad by ttallont llttad In Ihtt column or* tublact to chango without nolle*. II 2 WJBK TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7 WXYZ^TV, 9-CKLW tv, 30 V/KBD-TV, 56-WTVS MONDAY EVENING WeBllmr, liOO (2) (4) News, 8|h)I'Is (7) Movie; (Color) “VellH of BiiKdiul" (In l*ro|{feHB) (II) MiikIIUi Gorilla (f)0) People Ai*e Funny (f»0) Creollve Person 1:30 (2) (4) Network News (7) (Color) News, WeMli. (0) Hal MaHlei'Hon (liO) Comedy (;ariilvnl (!>(i) World of MiihIc • :45 (7) Network News 7:00 (2) Doble GIIIIh (4) (Color) George Pier- rot TV Features National Drivers' Test Hollywood Holds Party a la Harlow Acium I Sight-seeing & Keil ja/./. (slang) It Midnight 12 Marine bird 13 I By Dulled I’ress Iiiteriiiitloiiul IIEAUING ON VIET NAM, 7-(Ki p.jn ([>») IligbllgbtH of receiil bearing on President .lohnson’s Viet Nam |)oll(‘y; among dignitaries heard ai(^ presidential aide MeGeorge ; Ihmdy and noted polltieal scientist Hans Morgenibau. HOLI.YWOOD (AP) movie colohy relived (be wild, partying days of Its golden era over the weekend with one of the HwInglngeHl Nolreea In yean. AelroHH Carroll Maker a mere baby back In tho|«^ days — asktsi gia^sts to eoine dresswl In styles of the 30s "Mergen to Oslo” (7) Ensign O’Toole (9) Movie: “W h e r .Sidewalk Ends” (lOf)!)) Oalla Andrews, Gene Tierney, Gary Merrill (50) Little Rascals (5(i) (SiMH-ial) Hearing on Viet Nam (See TV Eea-tmes) ■ft30 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Karen (7) Voyage (50) Lloyd Thuxlon Allan Sherman sings "Hello Mud dab” and "(hazy Downtown,” 8:00 (2) I’ve Got a Secret (4) Man From U N.fhL E. (5(i) Great Books 8:30 (2) Andy (Iriffith (7) No Time for Sergeants (50) Football Charity game between " Notre Dame varsity and alumni. 9:00 (2) Lucille Ball (4) (Color) Andy Williams Maureen O’Hara and Bill Dana head guest list. (7) Wendy and Me (9) (Special) Nation’s Health Concluding program ex amines future of Canada’^ health services. 9:.30 (2) Danny 'Fhomas (7) Bing Crosby (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee 10:00 (2) (Special ) News Special (See TV Features) (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Ben Casey (9) Show of the Week (See TV Features) 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) Horse Racing 11:15 (7)u Nightlife 11:30 (2) Movie: "The Las Time I Saw Paris” (1954)' Elizabeth Taylor, Van Johnson, Walter Pidgeon, Donna Reed (4) (Color) Johnny Car- NEWS SPECIAL, 10 (K) p. m. (2) This one-hour special, which airs four days before start of long Memorial Day weekend, will use tedmique enabling home viewers to check own driving knowledge, judgement and hazard |)er-= ceptlon ability; sequences re-crCuting common collision situations and driving hazards are major segments of broadcast. SHOW OF THE WEEK, I0:(KI p. m. (9) Wayne and Shuster head guest list lor bilingual variety show. (9) Movie: "The Square Peg” (1958) Norman Wisdom, Honor Blackman 1:00 (4) Lawman (7) After Hours 1:30 (2) (4) (7) News, Wcath- (4) Sports TUESDAY MORNING (9) Butternut Square 10:35 (5(1) French Lesson 10:50 (9) News (56) Spanish Le.s.son 10:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffitli (4) Concentration (7) Girl Talk (9) Canada Schools 11:20 (.56) What's New' :30 (2) McCoys (4) .Jeopardy (7) Price Is Right (9) Across (hinnda enroll, celebrating finl.slilpg the movie '‘Harlow", didn’t have lo change lier working clothes She was Jean Harlow. Aetn^ss Susan Oliver cam<> ns a striking reminder of the late Oarole Lombard But lirsi prize for costume went to Peter Lawford. He came In plus-four knickers, tailored in early Gene Sarazen. ALWAYS IN STYLE Red Biitton.s, tongue-in-cheek, said his tuxedo was one he lamglit in 1935, “iuid it's never gone out of style” The more than l(K) guests sat down to a lavish dinner calercHl by Chasen’s. Sirollhig violinists Michigan Pair Held in Daughler's Death LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) The FBI said Sunday a Taylor, Mich, man and woman were arrested on federal warrants of interstate flight lo avoid prosecution in connection with the death of the 2-year-old daughter of the woman. The Bureau said Mrs. Linda Beckman, 23, and Halbert Turner, 27, were .seized in Bowling Clrcen and are being held in the Warren County jail. The body of Mrs. Beckman’s daughter, Rhonda Hensley, was found in the" bedroom of the woman’s apartment May 10. Police in Taylor said the girl had been beaten to death. Police Break Secret Army Ring in France TUESDAY AFTERNOON 14 'Why go r 15 Dlslrlcl In Greece side shows 18 Prisoner 20 Return 21 GeiuiH of freshwater ducks 22 Veiierolloii 23 Onward 25 Perform lidxir 29 Boiindry (comb, form) 30 Grieve 31 Aurora 32 Circuit Court of Api«‘als (all ) 33 Dawn (pot‘1 ) 34 Legal point 35 Aircralt shellerM ,'17 Demoiislialive pronoun (pi ) 39 Reply (ah ) 40 Monk’s cowl 41 Scarcity 44 Shadows' (Fr.) 47 Holds 49 Bullfinch (Scot ) 50 Blue color 51 Fondle !i2 Jewish measure 53 Danube tributary 54 Streets (ab ) 55 Roast rare 1 r S \T 16 r- r” TT 14 nr rr (2 re" - - - - ri~ sr ■ 23 2i| r J ■ i ■ ir- n 1 m P 1 35 36 ■ 1, 38 41 42 43 44 46 4(> 47 55“ bi 52 53“ 56 .........W-IL., Copter Plucks Five From Gulf as Yacht Sinks DOWN •Irculaled in the huge dining! 4 Feel 1 Placed a golf ball 2 Voided escutcheon 3 Liberal churchman ‘24 Killer whale 2.5 Boat paddles 26 English liangar 27 Pedal digits '28 Essential heing 30 Adores .33 Devilfish 36 Sock support :i7 "Piper’s son" 311 Drink familiarly 4(1 Not giie.sls 41 6li:> 1 Romani 4',' I'Jernllies 4.1 Peruvian Indlai 45 Fencing sword 46 Slave 48 .Seine anger Answer (u Previous Puzzle 8:10 (2) On the Farm F’ront 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Operation Alphabet 6:30 (4) Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News, Editorial ’ 7:00 (2) Happyland (4) Today (7) Johnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie; “I Wonde Who’sXKissing Her Now” (1947) Jti ■ June Haver, Mark Stevens 8:45 (56) English VI 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry - Go -Round 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) Romper Room 9:10 (56) Come, Let’s Read 9:30 (56) American History 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson TOiOO (4t LA FLECHE, France (JB President Charles de Gaulle has completed a tour of western France during which police cracked down on a secret army network in the area. Interior Minister Roger Frey, traveling with De Gaulle, said police had the network under surveillance for 2% years and just now decided to arrest its members. He sai(J there was no connection between De Gaulle’s trip and the arrests. De Gaulle as usual di(i not seem disturbed. He made a pressing appeal for national unity in a speech on a public square in this little town. Among those arrested were two police officers. Police said the ring’s members were in contact with secret army leader Capt. Rene Sargent, believed to be in ejcile. They said its mission appeared to be one of information rather than terrorist action. The secret army was formed in Algeria by Europeans who opposed De Gaulle’s plans to to the North African territorTTTTrmeffiher 12:00 (2) Love of Life (4) ((;olor) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Reed (9) Bingo 12:20 ( 56) Science Is Fun 12:25 (2) News 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) (Color) I’ll Bet (7) Father Knows Best 12:35 (56) Spanish Lcs.son 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (.56) Come, Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie: "Waterloo Road” (English, 1945) John Mills, .Stewart Gran-ger 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Childreri’s Hour J;15 (4) Topics for Today 1:25 (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns f4y (Color) Let’s Make a Deal (7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Flame in the Wind 2:20 (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Profile of a Lady 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:(K) (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmastcr (.9) Razzlc Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: "House of Horrors” (1946) Robert Lowery,: Virginia Grey (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Adventures in Para- Vintage champagne flowed like water. A band revived the musical hits of those swinging years while guests danced in the .style of the .30s. MODERN DANCE But like all Hollywood parties, the (Jiarleslon and tlie other older dances were abandoned and everybiKly wound up dancing the modern Watusi, For tho.se who didn‘l dance, a nearby projection room showed classic Laurel and Hardy movies. Jean Harlow got her .start with the comic pair. Cheat 6 Harem room 7 soup , 8 Tremble 9 Threw (var ) 10 Persian poet 11 Shoe part 17 Stair [wst 19 Bible book (ab.) 23 World War I general Busy Launch Schedule HmkhI SPECIAL CALL FINANCE PfAN FE 4-4138 Open Daily and Sun. CABINETS S-Ft. Kitchen $OCQ0 COMPLETE fbU3 To Loll Salurn After Dark COMPLETE fbUU T-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ0 COMPLETE £99 INCLUDES; Upper am Lowor Cabinets, Counte Tops, Sink with Faucets ^ ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING One of the guests was Sidney Gullaroff, once Miss Harlow’s personal hairdresser. “This party lakes me back .30 years,” said Guillaroff. "It’s the kind that Jean herself always tossed...a real swinger,” Finance Exec Killed LEBANON, ind, (AP) -nest R. Lee, 54, a finance executive who .served in World War 11 as Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower’s senior military aide, was killed Sunday in a traffic accident. Lee was president of the Economy Finance Cprp. and executive vice president of Indianapolis Morris Plan. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) The .Saturn I supcrrocket is scheduled for its first after-dark launching Tuesday lo continue a flurry of space activity that began Saturday with the successful Project Fire mission. Also on the firing line are an interplanetary probe on Friday and the four-day orbital ride of astronauts James A. McDivitt and Fklward H. White 11 on June Florida mi.ssile watchers may see quite a spectacle as the Saturn 1, the world’s most powerful rocket, pushes the Pegasus 2 meteoroid - detection - satellite toward orbit. The launching Is scheduled Western Hero Type Seen 'Juiced Up' by Scripters 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot “Michigan’s Hiawatha ■ Land" (7) Movie: “Mighty Ur-sus"’ (Italian, 1961) Ed Fury, Cristina Gajoni (50) Movie (56) Art and Artists 5:30 (9) Rocky-andjJi^rSriends (56) What’s New? 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Here’s Carol Duvall By EARL WIL.SON NEW YORK — Those, varmints - the Hollywood writers, directors and producers ■— are trying to destroy one of my ijlols : . .'the old-time western gunfighter. They’re trying to make him out to be a drunk who could hardly stay on his horse. Some of his great trick-riding in the crises was not due to his riding ability but to the fact that he was falling off his pony after an attack of acute alcoholism. The pony, hy swerving cleverly at the proper second, was able to hold him up and help him scare off the rustlers or whoever they were scaring off that week. One reason for his great success at scaring off enemies was that he looked so terrible with his hangover that he would scare off a scarecrow. between 2:30 a m, and 8:52 a.m. E.ST). If Ihe rocket gels off In darkne.s.s, the 300-foot exhaust flame from the eight-engine powcrplanl should be visible from much of Florida, weather IKTinitling. The Pegasus 2 satellite is to unfold two winglike panels to a span of 96 feet lo offer a broad target for meteoroids, particles which race through space with incredible speed. These bits of space dust, mostly remnants of disintegrated comets, are a possible hazard for astronauts. The launching of the third in the Interplanetary Monitoring Platform .series is set for 6:.30 a.m. Friday. A Delta rockqt Is to hurl the payload into an eccentric orbit ranging from 120 to 1.30,000 miles high to investigate cosmic rays, magnetic fields and .solar winds. Astronauts McDivitt and White, both Air Force majors, are rehearsing for their 97-hour, 50-minute flight; whose majgr goal is to determine If , man suffers mental or physical degradation during jong exposure to the space environment. A ■ decision is expected this week on whether White will open a hatch and poke his head into space for a quick look-around. WOODFIELD CONSTRUCTION WILSON (9) Friendly Giant 10:10 (56) Our Scientific World i were active With plastic bombs! million ★ ★ ★ Lee Marvin plays the drunken old bum kind of gunfighter in a burlesque western called “Cat Ballou,” produced by Harold Hecht and directed by Elliott Silverstein — ijyhich may ruin western pictures for you for all time. > “Kid Shellen” — as the grizzled old gunfighter is called — will just about shoot up anybody anywhere for $50 — but, if you haven’t got 50 bucks, would .you buy him a drink? ■ “I’ll drink to that!” he says, in a saloon in Wolf City, Wyo., in 1894, to any remark anybody makes — but it doesn’t work. Nobody offbrs to buy him a drink. That not only makes him nasty, it makes him thirsty. ★ ★ ★ An Atlas rocket propelled the Project Fire payload - over a 5,000-mile balletic course Saturday at more than 25,000 miles per hour to measure the heat which will envelop manned Apollo ships returning front the moon. Officials reported excellent data was. received,, during the fiery dash back through the atmosphere above the South Atlantic. I WILL COME TO YOU WITH FREE ESTIMATE ANO PLANS-NO CHARGE CALL FI 4-4138 6 Months 6*for* Firit Paym*nt ONE CONTRACTOR FOR EVERYTHING Work The CROSSWORD PUZZLE AND WIN PRIZES If You Con Work This Puzzlo — You can WinI Ovor $5,175.25 In Priiot To Bo Given Away I HI Brand Now $199.50 Drotimakor Sowing Machino (101 $150.00 Gift Cortificaloi good toward tho purchato of tho $199.50 Droftmakor Sowing Machino 1st Prize 2nd Prize tho $199.50 Droftmr 3rd Prize (25) $125.00 Gift Cortificatot good toward tho purchato of tho $199-50 Drottmakor Sowing Machino ACCUIACr, NfATNESS •llfibl* l« •niH. CONTEST ClOtEt MIONIGNT. 10:15 (9) Chez Helene 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) What’s This Song? ! and assassination plots against i states that suffered from floods, I De Gaulle but have been dor-i hurricanes, drought and earth-I mant for more than two years, quake. RatJk) Programs- WJR(760) WXYZfl 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1460) WJBKQ 500) WHri-fM(94.7) , tONIGHT «;M-WJR, News WXYZ, News CKLW. News WJBK. News, Robert E. Lee WCAR. News, Joe Bacarelle WPON, News, Sports WHFI. AAusic by Candlelight CIS-CKLyy, Fu WJR, Sports. WWJ, Sports itJO-WXYZ; Ale* WWJ. Business WJR, Business CICLW, Tom Shannon *i4$—WXYZ, News, Sports WWJ, Three-Star Extra WJR, Lowell Ihpmas News Emphasis , WXYZ, Ed Morgan WCAR, Boyd Carender I WJBK, Music WJR, Newt, ^rts WRON. t t. Bob Green WHFI. Curtain Time Iilt-WXYZ, Lee Alan, Music WWJ, Phone Oolnion 7:4$-WJR, Tiger Beet 7:J5-WJR, Detrolt-Chicago Beteball i * l;«t-WHFI, News, Montage t;3»-WWJ, Challenge of Poverty ‘ T;«F-WWJ, News, Sports t:3S-WPON, World Today lOrOg-WXYZ, Madcap Murphy, MuSfe 'WPON, News, Bob Greene lOrltt-WJR, News, Music IT.-OO-WJR, News, Sports Itrlfr-WCAR, This Week t UN,, n.tS WCAR, Boyd Carende , Midnight , CKLW, Music til Dawn TUESDAY MORNtN* 4:^.WJR, Voice Of AgrIC WCAR, News, Delzell 4;SO-WJR, Music Hall WWJ, Roberts CKLW, Eye Opener. Davies WPON, pews, Whitman 7:00-WHFI, Almanac WJR, News, Music Hall CKLW, News. Davies t:00-WJR. News. Guest WHFI. News, Almanac 1:30 WJR„ MUSIC Hall WW.J News, Riley t:IS-WJR, Open House *:30 WJR, Lee Murray VHFl. News, .McKenney ):00-WJR,-News, Haas WWJ, News, Ask Nelghbo WXYZ, Breakfast Club WXYZ, Marc Avery, Music TUESDAY AFTERNOON U:00-WJR, News, Farm .....Newt.-------- WPON, News, Ron Knight CKLW, News, Grant WXYZ, Marc Avery .Music WCAR, News, Tom Kolllns WHFI, News, Enc •-2:'$—WJR, Focus 1:00-WJR, News > CKLW, Ne*(rs, Joe Vanfe ' l:Jt-WJR, Women's World liot-WJR, News, Ellion, Field Gazette WHFI, Kaleidoscope WJBK, News, Lee WPON, News, Bob Lawrenc -CKLW, News, Dave Shafer WXYZ, Dave Prince 3:0»-WCAR, News, Bacarelle I don’t want to tip off Oie sI6ryn>F-fcow--JBIieJEimda,_^^^^ schoolte’bcher turned bank robber, escapes from being hanged^ — but there are other burlesque touches, including J. C. Flippen, playing the shoriff, beiitg The happiest py in town when he says the hanging’s got to go fhrough on schedule. “I think there are a lot of public officials,” said Director Silverstein, “who are quite happy when they have to execute somebody—it makes their whole week.” MIAMI (DPI) A Const Guard helicopter rescued a man and four boys, all from St. Pc-lersbiirg, yesterday w It e n a $3(1(1,INK) yaelil, Hie Owniia, broke ii|) mill sank In the Gulf of Mexico, 'riic boal’.s captain, Ed Erlck-Moii, said lie was ferrying the liiiiti III Fiiliforniii wlicn if broke iqmrl in II) foot seas about 70 miles norlliwe.sl of Key Wesl. Ke.sciied wllli hlrlcksou were lili Mins, .loliii 13, and Sven, II; Tom McDerinoll, 16, and Tom .Shelley, 16, all of St. I'eler.s-liurg El icksoii said he was hired by Hie boat’s owner, (Charles Vln cenl ot New York, to ferry lh« 130 Ion sliip l(L California. Tlia live were flown lo Miami aftor lieing rescued. ' THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . The Shah of Iran (formerly Persia) was taken to — naturally — the Persian Room, with a group of 35. Eartha Kitt ad-libbed a lyric change: from “champagne and caviar” to “champagne and caviar from Iran” . . . Frank Sinatra gave his pal, insult comic Jack E. Leonard, a gag gift -r- a book titled “2,000 Insults for All Occasions,” with a note: “I hope it improves your act!” ihe crowi^at the opening of My Place included some of the many owners: Eva Gabor, Nora Hayden, David Susskind, Ben Gazzara, Les Crane ... NBC-TV’ll take its cameras to the Concord Hotel for a documentary on the Borscht Belt : . . Peter Falk “was shaken up in a Park Avenue auto accidenR EARL’S PEARLS: Two of society’s problems are how to stop school kids from dropping out and unexpected guests from dropping in. Comic Chuck McCann overheard a fellow warn his wife. “I’m telling you — one more TV dinner and you better look for a new sponsorP”, .. That’s earL brother. - , ITIi# Hall lyndlMt*, ln«.) . , ■ j... . r I D—151 Homely Girls Get a Break in S. Viet Norn TIIK l*()NTIA(: FRITHS, 1VI()N1)Av, ^IAV 21. . i i Volume of mall liaiulled by llie i lion i»lo<:e» a year the lant Ibree I , Approximate!/ a I x million i IK) |air cent of the »( IuhHb an l‘o»t Offb-e Department baa In- yenra. AlnMit 72 billion pjecea elilldren In the United Slatea ab op««rnteil by the Itomnn ( athollu ■I eMH« Extends to 60" with two 9" leaves............... ^79.0U Mate's Chairs ... ..... M9.95 e PONTIAC 367 S. SAGINAW • FE 3-7907 OPEN MONDAY ^ND FRIDAY 'TIL 9 1317 ,T ..V'' " ; 1. The Weqttimr U.i, WfUlmr Burciu ■■•rKMl (DilaMt )>•«» » \'()L. I2.J NO. IM THE PONTIAC ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ rONi'IA(, MI( MIOAN. .MONDAY, MAY 2K HMD H PACKS A$(tOriA1t;l) HWBSS OVER ONE COLOR Name Leader of OAS Force Detroit River Crash Kills 1; 2nd Missing Cong Ambushes Kill 5 Yanks Freighter Collides With Cabin Cruiser on Predawn Jaunt CroSlil) TO SWIMMKKS The bench nl SlerliiiK vSlalc I’nrk, lU’iir Monroe, hn.s l)een closed to swiinmeis beemise of the polliiled eondilioti of upper Inike Erie. The sandy beach would make an ideal spot for hathitiK if the water were clean. Sewage Treatment Not Halting Pollution DKTIU)IT (/!') - A 2R-fool cabin cnti.sor afar a 000-foot ooean-fioinj4 Bel f’ian freighter collided in the Detroit R,iver yeslcr-daVs fJtM* of six men aboard (he cruiser lost bis life. A second man is miss- SAKiON, South Viet Nam (/I'l ■ An American ad viser and 35 South Vietnamese tr'oops were killed in a Viet Cong ampush 150 miles south of Saigon last night, a U.S. spokesman announced. Another American advi.ser and 25 Vietnaniese are missing. Four other Americans were kilhul ;ind one was wound(“d in two ambushes a a x mg. Saturday near Ben Cat and near Soitg Be. Kive South Vieliiaiue.se Inlan Irymen weie killed at Soon He, 1!) were missitifj and 10 wounded T h e weekend cuNiuilth's brouKhI the toll of U.S. combal dead In Viet Nam to .'Ili2 since December tttfil. Says Reds Win Guerrilla War A (toa.st (Juard boat reficiK'd the other four as they clun^ to* tiK'ir overturned craft. (Editor's note] This is the first in a live-part series on water pollution. Associated Press writer Phil Brown has spent several weeks visiting areas 01 pollution and treatment and talking with water problem experts. Today: The Future.) The Kel);nin frei);hler l‘at-Ignie-N and the eraiser hiimpi’d together at 3:15 a.m. as the men aboard the smaller cruft were enjoying a prerlawn cruise. South Vietnamese casualtie.s,in the Ben f^at ambush were not reporU'd but were b (> I i e v <> d beavy. Briton Sees Total Viet Communist Victory HONDON (HIM I A Hrlli.sh •oiinU'rinsurgency expert .said Interview wilb Ibe Brazil Troops Due Today in Santo Domingo Will Replace Part of U. S. Units; Capital Is Quiet al Truce Holds iSAN'I’O DOMINCO, iMiminican l{('pnblic rday night as the trnc(> m Santo Domingo continiK'd. U, S. I-l, (len. Bruce Palmer named deputy commander , By Pint BROWN ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER LANSINC - Michigan’s best sewage treatment facilities — about 90 [ler cent effective against water pollution agents ~ are not good enough to handle critical pressures that are arising. 'The 10 per cent that trickles through is enough to foul many rivers already. And that 10 per cent chunk ______________^ grows larger as the population grows larger, and dumps out more and more s('wagc—but the rivers do not grow. The Coa.sf Guard .said BilP Pruitlv 27. of Detroit -WHS f r a p p e d in the overturned cruiser and drowned > A companion, idenUtied, as Wade Hale, 28, iljlo of Detroit, was thrown overboard and was mi.ssing. OTHER FOUR The Coast Guard rescued Ihe other four within 15 minutes. U.S. Navy war planes report ed sinking‘another North Viet- \sumdard name.se PI boat today and p,,, yj,,| Uk. (lamaMing six military barracks j„ the guerrilla phase of Ihe Vlelnamese war and may See Story, Page A-3 win lolal victory within a year. l''Mt.ST OFF TIsF First prep golferjo go off tile lee at it Oil a in In Ihe I'm! annual Pontiac Press Invitational golf lournameni today at Ponllac Country CInli was Waterford Township lligli .School's David Huellc. Teammate .lo.seph Kopeikin slands in the background awaiting his turn, Walled I.akc and Bloomfield Hills arc Ihc lavorilcs in the annual prep tma namci'il. -» of llie force in which U, S. Marines and paralroopers will oulnumher Latin Americans 10 lo I. Montreal Hit They were identified as ,Iohn Mfirshall, Frederick Burt and Gene Ferrell, all of Detroit, and Martin Monray of Crosse lie. as l■(mnd•lhe-(•lock air strikes against North Viet Nam conliii ued without letup. Four trucks were damaged in another raid. BOAT IN FLAMES A U.S. military spoke.smaii said the boat was left in flanu's alter Navy Skyhawks and Sky raiders bombarded the vessel in the Rao Nay River, 55 miles north of Ihc demililarizc'd zond between North and South Viet Nam. by Bomb Blast MONTREAL lil-i Two sticks of dynamite wrapped in newspaper were found in the main post office today IcJis than two hours after a lime bomb smashed doors and windows in downtown Montreal. No one was injured in the explosion, which ripped doors off the l2*story Prudential of England building and broke windows on the first six floors. It was assumed the explosion was the work of Quebec separatists who want to separate French Canada from the English-speaking part. Today is Victoria Day, a holiday named for the British queen and honoring Canada’s membership in the Commonwealth. Two constables on patrol noticed a paper bag lying on the sidewalk in front of the insurance company building. Stopping their car tp investigate, they found four stickk of dynamite and a timing device. The policemen put the bag on the ground, jumped Into their car and turned it to block the road while they called for the bomb squad, seconds later, the bomb exploded, rocking their "We need a terrific breakthrough in treatment techniques, or we need to regulate; stream flow, or we must decide as an over-all community that we have to refrain from using the stream for high purposes,” said Donald Pierce, chief of sewage treatment for the State Health Department. ‘‘From here on out, a new, hurd look at the situation is going to be more and more urgently demanded,” added Norman Billings, asistant executive secretary of the State Water Resources Commission. An investigation was scheduled today by the marine inspection officer. •‘Where pollutional conditions impend, there is little choice of alternative courses to follow,” Billings said. ‘‘Either we call a halt to further municipal growth and expansion of industries that produce oxygen -- consuming wastes — or we turn to new principles of effluent disposal.” One man busy in the search for better methods is Dr. K. L. Schulze of Michigan State University’s division of engineering research. car. TWO STAGES The most advanced plants now have Two stages: primary treatment, which alone is about .35 per cent effective, and secondary treatnjent. Which takes out a«off16F"55 per cent of the pollutanfs. Scientists usually measure sewage in terms of its “biochemical oxygen demand” or BOD. Later in the day there was a second mishap on. Great Lakes waters of this area.^ BURNED SLIGHTI.Y Businessman Charles S. Wolf of Detroit was burned slightly when his 30-fool cabin cruiser caught fire in Lake St. Clair. Wolf, a member of the Mayor’s Committee for the Rehabilitation of Narcotics Addicts, said the $15,000 craft caught fire shortly before being refueled. He jumped overboard and was pulled from the water by Coast Guardsmen. The steamer E M. Ford, first to the scene of the collision, played a searchlight on t b e overturned .cruiser to aid Coast Guardsmen in their rescue work. The Patignies, undamaged, proceeded on to dock at River Rouge after the collision and reported she may have hit a boat. The Coast Guard ^aid the Belgian apparently was unaware earlier there had been a collision. The spokc.sman said it was the seventh PT boat sunk by planes from the 7th Fleet carrier Midway since April 28. U.S. Air Force F10.5s bombed the barracks near the Vinh area on missions along 10 different highways. The planes aliio attacked four .secondary bridgc.s with rockets and Bullpup missiles, the spokesman said, and dropped a span of a bridge near Ha Tinh, about 170 miles south of Hanoi. The newspaper said Ihe views, of H G K. Thompson, head of Ihe Brilish advisory mission lo South Viel Nam, had been forwarded to Ihe U.S. government. With (he war’s turning point a| hand, according to 'I'homp-Non, the ('ommunist North Vietnamese leaders "w o u 1 d not give a damn” if Ameri-ean planes bombed the capital city of Hanoi. He i;ai(i Ihe Viel Cong now control most of the O^tryside and are ready to c ar r y terrorism and subversion — which Thomp.son said would he Ihc war's decisive phase — to South Viel Nam’s towns. Walled Lake Listed Palmer e o m m a n d s the American forces who landed here after the Dominican re-\’olt on A|>ril ‘2't. F|i sl units id a 1,250-nian Brazilian force were due in Santo Domingo today, lo join , small units from llouduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. Favorite in Prep Golf Walled Fake High School, fourth place finishers in the Michigan High School golf championships over Ihe weekend, ruled as favorite to dethrone Bloom-' field Hills today in the 14lh annual .Pontiac Press Invitational Prep lournameni. A field of 20 fiVe-man teams started teeing off at 9 this morning in the 18-hoIo medal play lourncy / on the par-72 layout at The United States said it would withdraw about 1,700 I mops as .soon as the Brazilians arrived and that further American men would he withdrawn in proportion lo the number of l.al-in American Inmps sent. These are eventually expected lo total 2,000, , FIRST SUCH (illOUP The inter-American peace force—the first sqch group in ttie history of the Western Hem-isnhere— was created la.sl nIoHI ^ The spokesman said the pilots reported heavy ground fire at times but no enemy aircraft sighted. He said all planes rc= turned safely. FO(J, CLOUDS Fog and low clouds .•overed some targets in the moniing but the weather cleared by early afternoon. . ‘‘The South Vietnamese and Americans have now lo all intents ;md purpo.ses lost the guerrilla phase of the war,” Thomp.son said. CONG CONTROL "The Viet Cong arc very largely in control of the countryside and are now ready to move against the towns. The nest phase of the war will be the decisive one. Tote Umbrella Again Tuesday- Pontiac Country Club. Bloomfield Hills set a learn record of ,385 strokes in winning last year, and the Barons will be after their fourth championship in the past five years. Walled Lake ruled as 1960 1963 champion. isphere-was created last night by the Organization of American States. “The war Could be lost by (he South Vietnamese and the Americans within a year unless it is regarded as a long-haul job. 'nhe two schools have domin-Take along your umbrella if aioH the tournament since the you are planning an outing this absdnee of Birmingham Sea-evening nr tomorrow. The holm, five-time champion, weatherman predicts scattered which is missing for the second shpwers or thundershowers year in a row. through tomorrow, ...... i, i, * INDIVIDUAL HONORS At Chu Lai, 52 miles south of Da Nang, a U.S. Marine apparently killed anolhex Murine wjien he discharged his rifle accidentally, a Marine spokesman said. 'I'he spokesman said a 6-ycar-girl was killed and another chfW wounded slightly during a firehght Saturday night between Marines and Viet Cong guerril-(Continued on Page 2, Col, 1) ‘‘But if the United Stdtes is resolute, the prospects could be transformed in a year or two . , . once the Viet Cong stop winning, the tide could be turned against them. But the war could continue without a final decision for about five years.” Thompson said if the Viet Cong win the war this year, they will have to overthrow the South Vietnamese goverment — either by subversion or by neutralization through peace nlegp-tiations. Temperatures will warm from tonight’s low of 55 to 62 lo a high tomorrow of 70 to 78. Winds tomorrow will be out of the south to southeast at 10 to 18 miles. Wednesday's outlook includes Battle for individual honors should take place between Scott Springer and Bill Scott of Bloomfield Hills and Walled Lake’s Bud Bowman and Russ Herron. The OAS said its purpose -will be to cooperate in the “restoration oL pormal conditions in the Dominican Republic” and lo assist in creating “an atmosphere of peace and conciliation that will permit the functioning of demo-eratie instUhtions." The act creating,the force was signed by OAS Secretary-General Jose A. Mora, Col. Carlos de Meira Hattos for Brazil, Lt. Col. Alvaro Arias for Costa Rica, Maj. Policarpo Paz Garcia for Honduras, Col. Julio Gutierrez Rivera for Nicaragua and Gen. Palmer for the United States. The« Press will host the prep partly cloudy skies, higher tern- golfers at‘the awards dinner peratures and possible thunder- this afternoon at Pontiac storms. Country ,Club. Prior to 8 a m., the thermometer’s lowest reading in downtown Pontiac was 52. By 1 p.m. the mercury climbed to 62. Russell Back in Senate Schulze is working on a third I step — “tertiary treatment” — I which would be designed to cut I BOD down to just two or three-I parts per million before sewage I goes into a river. In his experiments, Schulze I uses sewagh which already has I passed through primary and I secomlary treatipent in the East I Lansing plant and has been cut I to iabout 25 parts of BOD per I million. I THROUGH A TANK He puts it through a tank I where air is bubbled into it and t passes through a plastic-coat-!d mash. Microorganisms accumulating on the meSh pFo-I vide the ^'leitiary treatment” I and have cut ' tlOD by two or I three parts per million. The treated, sewage-balled effluent then goes into a second' tank, in which Schulze W raising some guppies. “Fish living in sewage,” he I remarked. >^ /nie fish, now in about their ' Lcontinu^ on Page 2, Gol. 2) 1. ^ WASHINGTON (J’L^Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., returned to the Senate today after being absent since Feb. 2 because of itfness. I • Mora said the objectives for which the force was created come within the “broad provisions of the OAS charter which are concerned with matters affecting the peace and security of the hemisphere.” INFORMAL CEASE-FIRE The OAS also announced it had worked out ah informal cease-fire between the twef warring factions. A 24-hour truce it arranged to evacuate dead and wounded (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) Next Monday Pontiac Plans Parade The annual Memorial Day Pa- front of the city Jhall when the -rade will be held in Pontiac a parade concludes. ' weekfrom^tdday. ^ TO PLAY‘TAPS’ The parade, scheduled to h'e-'- A choir made up of local gin at 10 a.m. wilj follow a route, church members' will sing ,sev-beginning on Saginaw at Huron, eral selections and the Pontiac south xo Water, east on Water Northern High School Band will ipe Track and then south play “Taps:” to Aimurn. i Auburn, the 50-unit pa-radj) will make a U-turn-and n to the front of city hall. Represented in the march will be n e a H groups, schi Rev. Theodore R. Allebach, Oakland Avenue Uuited Presbyterian Church, wm prese.it the Memorial Day address. City officials on hand will be all local veteran introduced by the Memorial Day bands, area mil- Association President D aw i d I COPTER ARMADA — Like great birds of prey, these helicopters, carrying men of the U.S. Army’s 173rd Airborne Brigade, head for an attack point ^northwest of Bien. Hoa ih . I . , AP Photolax South Viet Nam. The troops encountered Con^^sniping after landing* / . . . ' itary reserve\units, law enforce- MacGillis, 34, of 259 W. Colum-ment agencies, churches, chil- bia. f dren’s organimtions and many Following the City Hall cere-^ other groups./ mony, a short service will be ♦ ★ held at th^ Perry Mount Park There will bnt-duEemony in iCemetery. i i Bolivian lin Miners M Fighting Army Occupation I.A 1‘AZ, lioliviit (Al’l Holt vlmi Inxips mliiprs r«^- sIf.lliiK mlllliwy ocnipalioii ol lli(* tin tiiliK’s Simrjay nifitil and many minors wcro rcporlwt klllril, A CiiliinH inrmla'r said il was "virlual civil wiir " KiKlilinp, wiis rcporlnl In the sonlhrin aica nl C^iiTliisla, :i!KI Vief Cong Kill Five Americans liiltos sotitli at l.a I’a/:. A radio slalion ('(mli'ollotl l>y tlio tninnra in Ciilavi ap|)oalo(l lor a 48 hour (riKT Minors rtt Iho QuoirliisUi iiroa woto ri‘porl(‘d to liavo blown up lallroad IiiuIkos, Inloi rupIliiK rail Inillio will) ArKOiitiiia. |■'losi(lonlild assislaiil I'oruaiv do Dio/. (Ic Misliiia said troops had lakon ovor Iho mining mi-Ifi ill Kami, ijoar Iho oily of Onno, HO mil(s4^ south ol l.a I’ii/ Ho said “armod action" wdl 1)0 oarriod oul at all minos ol Itio slaloowned Molivian Mining Cor|) •UINTA OmH>lt.S do The nillilV milllary junta i-iod Iho army lo occupy the tConliriuod Krom Page Onoi las at 1.0 My, « miles wosi ol D.i NaiiM A Marino wiis wouiidoit when a hoohy trap oxplodisl In Iho iiinhiish last niKhI, Iho Viol (lonn oatii^hl ahoiil UPO (iov orninonl troops UMI iiiilos soiilh west of Saigon A hallalioii Inid gone Irom Iho dlslriol town ol Thoi Hinh lo Khai Quan, II miles away, lo rotioYo an onipo.sl lhal had been iiiulor harassing lire for .sovoral days. (ONi; ATTACKS The haltalion w'as on il.s way hack when the Coitjiminisl gia-t-rittas opened up willi small arms fire from lire Jungle, lleliooplers diopprsl Itai'i's over tlie area, hill tiro Viel Cong broke off con-lact and melted into the brush. mines after striking miner.s re-lii.sed lo I'elurn lo work. A gov-|(‘rnment decree declared the mining conler.s milllary /.ones and pul all por.sOn.s uiHJor mili-laiy jurl.sdiollon The miner 's union proposwl a suspension ol lire str ike Sunday night if the governnrent would (tincel its mine (Kcupation order and recogni/.e the union’s rights, the miners' radio network said in a hroadca.st. The miners i;onlrol 10 radio stations. Military sources reported 36 Viet Cong killed during a (wd-.day operation 18 miles south of Da Nang, lire sources said U.S. helicopters accounted for more than a third of the Viet Cong dead. Nearly 150 U.S. Air For ce and Navy and Vietnamese air force planes hit targets in North Viet Nam yesterday. U.S. spokesmen reported 25 buildings dcstroVed, 48 damaged, and partial to total destruction to three bridges, one weapons site, four railroad boxcars, one radar site, two trucks and one barracks and supply area. One U.S. Air Force F105 Thun-dcrchief developed engine trouble during the raids and crashed into the sea, but the pilot para chuted and was rescued. DROP LEAFLETS U.S. Air Force planes also dropped about 200,000 propaganda leaflets on the towns of Linh Cam and Vu Liet, about 20 miles northeast of Vinh.' North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh declared that U.S. air raids will not weaken his nation. "The U.S. imperialists barbarous and perfidious maneuvers only increase our people’s hatred and only instigate them to fight resolutely till final victory,” Ho said in a statement broadcast by Radio Hanoi. There was no immediate response from the government. IJcfoi^c the move on the mines was announced, President Rene llarrientos told newsmen the governmetit would ask the Ro-imfti Catholic Church to mediate Ihe conflict with the tin miners. The archbishop of l.a Pa/., Msgr. Abel Ante/ana, had vol-unteercHl lo serve as a mediator. PLACES BLAME (u)vcrnment Minister Col, O.s-car Quiroga blamed the ('om-munists for the crisis. The Central Bolivian Workers Association called a nationwide strike last Monday to protest the deportation of ,)uan Lechin, a leftist labor leader and former vice president. Strikes and rioting broke out in La Pa/ and in the mines, and the government sent another 17 labor leaders into exile in Paraguay Saturday lo join Lcchin. DALLAS (UPl) - Jack Ruby said hxlay he sided with his family in the confused case of which attorneys would repre-.sent him in carrying on an appeal of his conviction for the murder of presidentiid assassin Lee Harvey Oswald. Ruby, looking thinner than the last time he was in court in the conflicting legal .ma/e that has surrounded him since his conviction, had no smiles for newsmen wailing as he was brought down from his jail cell to a courtroom. An armed band of gunmen tried to a.ssassinate President Barrientos near the Kami mines Saturday. He escaped harmed, but one of his guards was killed. Four of the gunmen were captured. The army has not occupied the mines since 1952 when they were nationalized by President Victor Paz Estenssoro. Barrientos ousted Paz Estenssoro last November. The military junta wants to make a drastic reorganization of the mines, which are nearly bankrupt. Led by Lechin, the miners’ union has been fighting the changes because they would mean loss of jobs. The Weather Full U.S. Weather bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Considerable cloudiness with schttered showers or thunderstorms today, tonight and Tuesday. Warmer, High today 60 to 74. Low tonight 55 to 62, high Tuesday 70 to 78. East to southeast winds 8 to 16 miles today and tonight and south to southeast 10 to 18 miles Tuesday. Wednesday outlook, partly cloudy and warmer with possible thundershowers. Today In Pontiac One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest temperature 63 51 degrees. Weather: Scattered showers. Direction; East-Southeast. Sun sets today at 7:54 p.m. Highest and LawasI/ramparaturai This Data In Years Sun rises Tuesday at 5:04 a.pn. ^ Moon sets Tuesday at 2:04 p.m. Moon r'liei Tuesday el 2:33 e.m. Downtown Ttmparalurei 4 a.m 52 11 a.m, 59 7 a.m 52 12 m 41 10:::: 56 67 In 1933 / 33 In 1925 5unda)f't Tathparature Chart Alpena 63 37 Detroit 42 53 Esc4naba 41 49 Duluth 52 40 Gr. Rapids 43 54 Foci Worth 64 71 Houghton 57 42 Jacksonville 88 67 Lansing 58 53 Kansas City 87 49 Marquette 52 42 Los Angeles 46 54 Muskegon 61 57 Milwaukee 51 46 Pension 43 44 New Orleans 83 70 Waakand In Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Sal. ^un. Highest temperature 72 42 Lowest temperature 52 - 50 Mean temperature , ' 62 56 Weather Mild Cloudy Trav. City 40 4) New York 79 53 Albuquerque 81 42 Phoenix 81 59 Atlanta 83 48 Pittsburgh 78 59 Bismarck 68 58 S. Lake City 65 44 Boston 65 47 S. Francisco 42 52 Chicago 59 53 S. S. Marie 67 '43 Cincinnati 86 58 Tampa 91 72 Denver 73 48 Washington 68 42 WIAWIH $UH$AU NATIONAL WEAipiR;^ Weathermen predict rain tonight from the northern and central Plateau region eastward into the upper Mississippi Valley. It will be milder over eastern half of nation andh cooler in the northern and southern Plataau region. Little ten^rature change is forecast for tb^i^femainiier of the natBaH % ’ON'I I AC M()Nl)/\ vlIjl, mhia Send Seabees to Halt 'Bugs' Birminghatri Area News Will Supervisn Work on Embassy Buildings WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Ih^pnrtment is sending out Squads of Seabees lo prevent ’bugs" from infesting Its for-•ign embjissies. "To pr(went recurrenr^cs, Ihe .Stale Department has picked 155 .SealM'Cs, 4 (smstruction spe ■lalisls and .10 Marines lo su|M'r vise work on 15 major embassy construction jobs during the ■omlng fiscal year. TANKER BURNS U.S, Air Force helicopters Iwlay were unable lo extinguish Hu* fire alMUird a Norwegian oil tanker which smashed into n pier yesterday and cxplcxlcd in flames at Muroran, Japan. Six crewmen were killed and four others were missing in the fire aboard the Heimvard. At least 22 crewmen were injured. More than .500 firemen tried to halt the blaze. Ruby Backs Family on Attorney Choice Asked If he wanted lawyer Ji)cll, Hewlett and subcommittee that despite American security lc electronic listening devices during the basic con.struction of the ■mbassies. HANCE TO BE HAD’ Said Gentile: "1 think our ex pcriences have shown that in the way we have handled our affairs in new construction and econstruction projects overseas, we have let ourscivc.s be o(H!n for a real chance lo 1h‘ had’ by the opposition” Ruby case, troubled by an ever increasing cast of characters and conflicting statements, may be unraveled today by a visiting small town judge. 14 MONTHS A(;o Dist. Judge Louis T. Holland of Montague, Tex. (pop. 284) will sit in for Di.st. Judge Joe B. Brown who .sentenced Ruby, 54, to death 14 months ago for the slaying of Oswald. It will be for Holland to decide who should represent Ruby at future codFt proceed-ings. I.awycrs from New York, Detroit, Chicago. Dallas, Austin, Tex., and Jasper, Tex. are seeking to handle Ruby’s defense through a maze of state and federal courts. They were expected lo seek four motions today® At least one of the attorneys was expected to ask for more time to prepare for a pretrial conference and a sanity hearing. VENUE CHANGE Also sought were a change of venue, permanent disqualification of Brown, and the right of Jack Ruby to choose his own counsel at pretridl hearings and sanity hearings. The Ruby family wants Mrs. Eva L. Grant, Jack’s sister, to pick the lawyer. She has Ruby’s power of attorney. The lawyers a'ppeared to agree among themselves they did not want Judge Brown to hold the sanity hearing. Attorney Joe Tonahill said Brown should be removed because he is writing a book about the case and trial, thereby constituting a conflict of interest. The lawyers also claim a different city should be picked for further court activity. Brown refused a change of venue. But that was up to Holland. He said the Seabees will be used for close and constant ob servation of foreign workmen lo prevent the planting of surreptitious listening devices on 15 major embassy building and renovation jjrojects around the world. OAS Names Dominican Force Leader (Continued From Page One) expired at noon Saturday, but fighting (lid not resume. An OAS spokesman said the rebel leader. Col Francisco Can-mano Deno, and the junta chief. Brig. Gen. Antonio Imbort Barrera. had‘agreed not to opim fire unless attacked. , Marine guards will be assigned to the building sites dur ing /lonworking hours. The locations weren’t given; but officials said most would be at posts behind the Iron Curtain. In addition, Gentile said some Seabees will be sent lo Frank-furtjjleirut, Panama and Tokyo/ where they will fan oul to area embassies to prepare specially secure rooms. The cease-fire seemed lo be working, and yesterday was one of the quietest days in Santa Domingo since the outbreak of the revolt that toppled the government of Donald Reid Cabral. Ferry Capsizes; Fear 150 Dead ZOMBA, Malawi UPII - A river ferry capsized last night, hurling more than 200 persons into a crocodile-infested river. More than 150, mostly women and children, were fcare(l.dead. Officials said a guide cable snapped and the ferry keeled ovei^ and sank in the Shire river 3j) miles from here. A government official, who visited the scene and returned to Zomab this morning, said most of the victims were women and children. AT STALEMATE The military situation reached a stalemate Iasi week after junta troops broke rebel resistance in the city’s northern suburbs. This left the rebels In control of a downtown area 12 city blocks long and eight blocks wide cordoned off by U.S. troops. The United States has ordered its troops not to allow cither side across it.s lines. ‘11)c military civil war is over," said one diplomat here, "but the civil war will continue in politics.” RAPID EXHAUSTION’ Imbert said In a radio speech that the rebels were facing "rapid exhaustion.” U.S. and OAS negotiators were still trying to get agreement from the rebel and Junta leaders for a government representing all political factions except Communists and right-wing extremists. l^e said 57 persons struggled to sljore. They told of seeing their relatives and friends die among the crocodile's in the muddy river waters. It was believed to be one of central Africa’s worst recorded disasters. U.S. negotiator McGeorge Bundy was reported pressing for a government headed by Antonio Guzman, minister of agriculture under ex-President Juan Bosch. The United States was also reported insisting that top rebel and junta leaders be excluded from the government. A rebel spokesman reiterated yesterday that Caamaho was ready to resign as soon as a government was agreed on. But Imbert resisted any compromise with the rebels and insisted they must surrender. Sewage Treatment Not Halting Pollution (Continued From F third generation, live off water plants which thrive on nutrient materials still in the effluent. CAUSE PROBLEMS In actual waterways, these nutrients in sewage sometimes cause problems by boosting the growth of waterptants to the point wheFe’^ they dog the stream. That is why Schulze puts water plants in the second tank — to absorb some of the nutrients before the effluent finally passes out of the system. Schulze has had success with 10-hnd 15-gallon tanks, cutting the bacteria count by as much as 95 per cent in addition to cutting BOD.. His next experiments will involve 2(W - gallon tanks. ” There could« be problems using this system in a fullrscale sewage plant, Schulze explains, since lower temperatures in winter could Slow down the process. SECONDARY TOEATMENT Present conditicMis wouW *>e better if all municipalities had secondary treatment plants, Schulze says, but he is looking farther ahead. And, he adds, "if we have enough m<)ney to shoot that many space probes, we should have enough to handle these problems down here.” Some federal money for water poIIutiort».re8earch in Mich-' igan is forthcomihir~>.^__^ The water resources act of 1964 provides |75,000 the first year, $87,500 the second and $100,000 each year after that for the institute of water research in each state. MONEY FOR RESEARCH It also provides money for research from a matching fund of the Office of Water Resources Research of the U. S. Department pf the Interior. Michigan’s Institute of Water Research, opened In 1961, has headquarte^at 5ISU, In addition, JJie U. S. Public Health Servied plans to build its $2.5 million! Midwest Water Portion Labon Arbor. Construction could begin by next fall, with completion by June, 1967. Meanw)iile, officials are studying the possibilities of three other waste handling methods— lagooning, spray irrigation and stream low-flow augmentation. NATURAL ABIUTY The augmentation approach aims at making better Use of a rivler’s natural ability to handle wastes. How much a river can handle, without becoming foul depends on the size and flow of the river. Some rivers handle the waste flowing into them fairly well until midsummer, when their' flow drops. Under a Michigan law passed last year, communities along such a river would be allowed to form an agency to build reservoirs to catch excess waters when stream flow is high during the spring. ^ ’ iratorv . jit Ann V-*” When flow drops during the summer, > water would be re* leased from the ireservoirs. . Billings noted, however that "reservoir sites suitable for this purpose are not abunciant, and, one by one;, they are being removed from availability through development for other intensive The principle of lagooning is the reverse. It involves holding wastes in manufactured lagoons, where bacterial action would but BOD somewhat during the waiting period, and tl|en releasing them during periods of high stream flow. Spray irrigation involve spraying treated effluent into vacant fields. “Both lagooning and spray irrigation require rather large land areas,” Billings reminded. l^ierce added that isolation also is needed for spray irrigation, to ensure that stray winds did not carry the effluent into population centers. Meanwhile, the sewers keep floWliig. Next; The Problem.' CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Full Color Snaps With ‘Kodacolor’ Films 620-120-127 Sizo ‘Kodak’ Kodachrome II ^ Color Movie Films lit KOH 10(1(1 8mm Magazine load 3.25 ‘Kodak’ Kodaohromo II Color Slide Filins. 20-Expctiuro Roll f..u 143:, • olor aid., V.III. g.nuln* I 'Kodak, limit 10 roth. I 36>lxposura roll . 2.21' For All-Woathor OondHIono Ansco Snap-Films lr.nl. black whil. Ilimn I). 6'/0- OCC r/O-l/7 nize. limit 12Rolln. - ‘Polaroid’ Film Sale 1" Typo 32 and 37 in 400 and 3000 ipoods limit 10 Typo 42 and 47 200 and 300 spoodt Typo 107 Pack. 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Jnhonc# and beau yout boihroom. Qharge yours ^ , Domestics . . , Fourth Floor n . I T"," t!.i2''t Am. -t'y'l JT'TzA 40 W«nt liuron Htriwt PontliU', Mi<'lilKHn MONDAY, may Z4, 11M1.1 IIA(t01.l> A, M-miKKAI.I> IIOW«llll II. PlTiUI»«l.ll II Butcutlvt vipd Preuldi Budniai UAnkger John W. Kitippiim. a«cr«Ury and AdvsrtUlnt’DIrco It Seems to Me . . . Press Answers Tribune’s Governor Romney Editorial On Mil.s |)ug(' l.s an cdlUnial Irom Tlio Clia'ago Tribune n'prodiu’iiin nio.sl, of my |•(•(•(‘ld, (uiimncnl.s on Ciovomor Gnomiio Komnisy TIic Tribune l.s sUll uppruisliig oui Michigan !nun. % understandable. OiifuwATKii’H their Number One boy. ★ ★ ★ \\. I). Maxwell. Triliui^i^ilor and one of Anieriea’H ino^capable and dlHtinffiilHlied journaliHt.s (a word we nae sparinfcly) weni overboard for Harry (Joldwater — and liasn’l recovered. Mr. Maxwell and (Governor Uomney bud dinner recently^ and the Cbi-cu|;oan huh impressed with Romney perHonally; but he can’l forgive the Michigan (Governor (or anyone else) for not cla.sping the controversial (hddwater to his bosom in a lasting embrace. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac Pkkss supported Goldwatkr. 1 voted for him personally. But when you discuss ensuing campaigns, Goldwater is a dead duclc and Michigan’s Governor is in the ascendancy. The odds are against any man for the Presidential nomination, but OBORaE Romney is a definite possibility. ★ ★ ★ Many Michiganders agreed with The Tribune on Romney’s failure to endorse Goldwater. 1 did myself, during the campaign. In fact I told Romney so. But Goldwater was swept into utter oblivion in Michigan by more than a million votes, while Romney was elected by 400,000 running on the same ticket. The Governor must understand some phases of politics infinitely better than I do — and timidly, I And in Conclusion ... New Cpngressman ... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter ; A Western Michigan florist telis me he had to refuse two big planting Jobs because of the lack of Mexican labor. He always employed two dozen during the spring but the new Federal ruling bars them and U.S. laborers won’t do it............. Currently a well-known magazine runs several pictures of Ursula Andress devoid of clothing. Perhaps this isn’t sensational today but one fact is; the photos were taken by her husband...............George Cram’s death recalls the fact that when he graduated from the U of M. law school, his marks set a new high record. This general area can rejoice over the promising early start of our newest Congressman in Washingv ton, Billie Farnum. His baptismal weeks have been fruitful. ★ ★ ★ District of Columbia newcomers are inevitably thumbed to the sidelines and bluntlj^^' advised to “be seen and not hear d.” Our newest rep-r e s e n t a tive hasn’t committed the indis-cretion of flying in n the face of Con-gressional precedent, but FARNUM in the early business of “being seen’’ he has created a very favorable image. Farnum is quietly “on the job” to a much greater extent than the traditional beginners although he has never trdhsgressed by challenging historical procedures. ir ★ ★ He already graces the Appropriations Committee which is a major achievement for a yearling. This h'ighl^r cove.ted spot customarily comes after meeting preliminary tests. Washington newspapermen say that the Michigander has handled himself very creijitably arid tha^this district can be’ proud of nis first n^gnjyb&joLqdiet but effective service. ★ ★ ★ . ; There are moliumeiital prob-i lenis lU hand and more lie ahead. The Pr«^ is happy to report ^n the eai^ly showirigi of thi^ I fMIgUng statesman. ; ,,‘f[ I Scout s advise me that Sue Johnson deserves mention as one of the fine looking girls in the area. ....... ... Maria Cristina Diligent!, 21, is studying currently to become a multi-lingual secretary in Rome. The interesting fact is this: Maria is one of Argentina’s famed quintuplets — two boys and three girls — but they’ve been kept from the spotlight, the front pages and cameras by a wealthy father who said at birth that this worldivide event would never be exploited for financial gain. And they haven’t. ★ ★ ★ Rep. Otto E. Passman, D-La., says Johnson’s “Great Society” has already brought “galloping socialism” upon us. In my book, most modeni Democrats are Socialist- Democrats...............Fred Cor- COran says Sam Snead earned $1 million and saved $2 million of it; while W’adter Hagen earned $1 million and spent $2 million of it, . . . • ......TV sets a recordliext fall with 40 new programs. . ........ ; . Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s — TV’s grand colored “Middle Ages” program last Tuesday; the J’s ---the same program’s background music which qualifies as the worst of the year to date. —HArold A. Fitzgerald Early to rise and early to b^d— You’ll have less fun, but a clearer ■head. , , . i ■ . , i/' * j . 1...VJ'l . . , . 1 U A ... i Voice of the People: . .siiggCHl |)crlia|>H Hlighdy Jictlcr (ban 'I’lu* Triluiiic. •k -k if , Kmbiaciiig Goi.dwateh and lil.s diibiou.s |)ronouncements in 1 g h t have co.st Romney the Governorship. Certainly the people of Michigan proved they wanted no part of the Arizona man. He was swamped. The eonchuling paragraph is this oiilstamllng American newspaper leaves me iinha|)py. It says: “He (Mr. Romney) is not ((uite the paragon Mr. Fitzgerald .seems to think he is.” My dear Mr. Maxwell, becau.se of your long and iiereeptlve analysis of men and events, 1 am constrained to suggest there must be more than a modicum of accuracy in your ob-.sgrvation. I confe.ss I’ln tremendously .sold on Mr. Romney. And in closing, may I suggest that I believe you will be, too, as time pa.sses. * k k k In the meantime, Don — are you and I going to Moscow together again — Say in the summer of !%(>? ‘No Room for Isolationism in Today’s Smaller W orld’ l^A) When George Washington left the presidency, one of the points he .stre.ssed in his farewell address was to stay out of foreign affairs, At t|iat time there w<*rc no teleptiones, radios, television, radar sets, automobiles, ariplanes, nor satellitos. The distance,s Ix'tween countrie.s wet;e far greater than the^ are today due, to the ab.sence of efficient communication devices. AAA Now times have ehunged and the United .States has become a leader among (he Western nations. Whether these professors and tiie rest like it or not, it is too lute to change thi.s siliiatum and go buck to the isolutioii era. A A A If we liacked out of Viet Nam, vylio do thesi* |m‘o pie lliink will lake over? The (’ornmunists, of course. Ilpw do these people think the rest of the Western world will feel toward the United Slate.s, when they find them.selyes defeQ(;ting their own country again.st a (’ommunist take-over after the United .Slates liackcd out bccau.se they didn’t consider it to be “any of their liusiness” to interfere? NANCY H. HIUL.S A WKHS SENIOR , Slightly On The Short Side David Lawrence Says: l*ri destiny of civilization toward a higher and better level. If the right lessons arc learned, all the covetousness that lends to disunity amongst good peopli will disappear, and everyone rcgardle.ss of their station in litc will advance toward the higher ideal together. A believer Capital Letter: Another Rancher Putting Brand on Political Party The Belter Half Certainly, a literacy or other te.st which applies equally to persons of every color or race is not in itself an abridgement of the right to vote. To abolish poll taxes, for example, as a qualification for registering voters — as has just been approved by a vote in a House committee of Congress handling the voting-rights bill— is plainly an action in disregard of Supreme Court decisions. NO DISCRIMINATION A poll tax could, of course, be used wrongfully to limit a citizen’s right to vote, but unless it can be found that white men are permitted to vote when thej^ have failed to pay such a tax, while the same neglect by Negroes has lost them the right to vote, no discrimination in a constitutional sense has occurred. By RUTH MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - President Johnson is no longer the only big-time rancher who is stamping his brand on a national political party. Petite Mary Brooks, owner- 3 operator of the! several - thou-y sand-acre FlatL Top Ranch in ^ Idaho, has for-is sakeh sheep-' herding and' castle roundups' ( to become GOP.t; National Chair- RUTH man Ray Bliss’ MONTGOMERY time paid chairman that the GOP has had in years, and he and Mary are busily cutting out duplication of services between the male and female divisions. Both are real pros in politics. President Johnson’s cattle brand is “LBJ." Mary's Flat Top brand is the division mark; a dot above and below a bar. Her immediate mission will be to divide the Democrats anci re- ’ brand the GOP mavericks\ who have strayed to the LBJ corral. (Dlilrlbultd by King F««lur*i Syndic^tO , “I guess I’m just too discriminating — I was a school drop-out because I didn’t like that and now I don’t care much for this cither.” top assistant in charge of the women’s division. Since women outnumber inen in the Grand Old Party, and Mary enjoys speech-making more than her boss does, national audiences will probably have more Brooks than Bliss in the months ahead. Reviewingv Other Editorial Pages Tribune Opinion The Chicago Tribune The voting-rights bill now before the Senate would qualify non-English-speakinfg citizens to vote if they have the equivalent of an eighth-grade education in an American school where another language is spoken. This would, in effect, amend the constitution of the state of New York, for example, as it contains a provision which requires that a voter be “able, except for physical disability, to read and write English.” The daughter and the widow of two former U.S. senators, Mrs. C. Wayland Brooks is herself a state senator who captured her traditionally Democratic county last year despite the Johnson landslide. Federal courts have uphel® this language as constitutlojjai/ and “not an unreasonable exercise of the powers of the state to provide requirements for exercising the elective franchise.” Her experience gleaned in the Idaho grass roots will now be put to work corailing maverick voters and minority groups in the big cities. FIRST MOVE Mary’s first move has been to invite four immediate predecessors, Patricia Hutar, Clare Williams, Elly Peterson and Bertha Atkins, to a two-day confab at national headquarters in June. Our friend, Harold A. Fitzgerald, of the Pontiac, Mich., Press, is lent some space in the guest editorial column today to put in a strong plug for Gov. George Romney of Michigan. Our estimation of Mr. Romney is not so unreserved. We freely adihit that he is an improvement on his Democratic predecessor, Soapy Williams, but who wouldn’t be? themselves to busfness and salesman types, being in essence a salesman himself. In some ways he is another version, of Wendell Willkie, who was more of a public relations man (especially for himself) than a business executive. Could-Be Blessing} The Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette MUST DECIDE The Supreme Court eventually will have to decide whether the various devices inserted in the voting-rights bill now pending in Congress really serve a valid purpose and are within the s,Qppe of the Constitution. Acc^ing to Supreme Court decisious thus far, the' Cou-. stitutiou ha» giveu ouly to the states the right to determiue the ^ualiflcattons of voters and to specify what tests shall ^ be applied and what age re-qiUre^^^ts shall be fixed be- By letting their hair down in privacy, Mary hopes to gain w i s d 0 m and avoid pit-falls. Michigan was just about bankrupt under Soapy. Since then things have been looking; up. But a large part of the improvement should not be credited.to Romney. Any governor riding the crest of the greatest boom in ; automobile production and sales fn history in a state whose basic industry is automobiles could hardly miss. At the Republican national convention last year, he was one of the leaders in a fight to amend the platform—which, in reality, was an undisguised attack on (Joldwater, seeking to embarrass the man who was to be nominated by implying that he opposed civil rights, was attached to the far right, and could not be trusted with nuclear weapons. Romney made an emotional speech in front of the TV cameras and picked up a lot of publicity. A harried mother at a park noted that her two preschool age children had gotten into an outside phone booth and were unable to cope with the door. "Look,” she said, "they can’t get out.” And then, with a sigh, ^"Boy, would 1 like to buy one of'those.” Simple Answer The Montana Parent-Teacher One of the chief subjects due for discussion is a project, called GROW, which stands for “Grass ’ Roots for Women.” It’s designed to enlist fence-sitters and new faces in the regular Republican organization. ENTHUSIASTIC Winsome Mai^^iyfeJtajy^ing with enthusiasm about tfie pity’s prospects of capturii^ more House and Senate, seats nextyear.. That boom, of course, is part of a national boom engendered by the Johnson administration’s deliberate policy of creating easreredit and, Riru tax reduction and constant deficits, of promoting inflation. In Michigan the boom in automobiles has extended employment and j brought iri greater tax revenue, so that the gov^nor takes largely unmerited bows for having a surplus in the treasury. During the campaip he deserted the national ticket to court the colored vote in Detroit. He didn’t call himself a Republican in his literature and billboard advertising, but ran out on the party. He’s still a political neuter. In a recent speech, before the Associated Press convention, he unveiled New Dealish schemes 'fot..,^^p«)gress sharing” to achi^'world^ieace. Election as governor hardly qualifies Romney as an oracle on international affairs. "I remember dear little old Aunt Mandy. Although she was deaf anddlmost blind, she could be found wherever the better things of life ' were being promoted. She was jxirticularly faithful about her church attendance. One day a fellow parishioner asked, ‘Aunt Mahdy, why do you alUrays go to cfiurcli when you can’t hear the sermon on,,even see the congregation?’ Aunt Mandy’s reply um; “To show them which side I’m onl” Ray Bl liiss is the first fuil- Gov. Romney has an ap-Ipearance of imposing vigor ^and possesses a lot of the attributes which c 0 m m e h d )■ ■ IV -.rtT ' These observations, we feel, are necessary to put Mr. Rom-‘ ne^ in balanced perspective. He is not quite the paragoif Mr. Fitzgerald seems to think Ihe is. , , J The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use for republl-callon of all local news nrinted in this newspaper The Pontiac Pren Is delivered hiy carrier for'SO cents a weekf where mailed In Oakland. Genesee, ' Lapeer IS ,It b $10.1 scriptions paydble Postage has bOen p class rate at Porn Member of ABC. ’Um' r. I .. Tirifi |•ve ground, alaait fl\te miles away In (’olorodo Springs, and Is vulnerable to an atomic knockout. By early lOtW, after the spe-<'lally designed computers and other fancy new e(|ulptnent have been checked out, the IJf.S. and Canadian military staff will take over the underground Com' bat Operations Center. MAINTAIN VIGIL There, these keenly tfnlned ex|M;rts will maintain a 2C-hour vigil for signs of imiamding attack by nilsslle, bomiMT or sab'll lie. If attack should cotne, the Norad commander in clilef ami his battle staff would “button up” bidiind a brace of CVton steel blast doors and call the shots for the defense simding up jet interceptor fighter planes, launching antimissile and antisalcllite weu|M>ns. Air Force officers claim this complex of steel buildings — resting on O.!? unique antlshock spi'lngs and wedged into a network of tunnels beneath about 1,-000 feet of solid granite ^ would Im! safe from all but ptohaps a direct hit by the biggest hydrogen warhead imaginable. The engineers bent special efforts to making certain there is continuous communication between the Combat Operations. (Center and the outside world •— a serious deficiency in the present above-ground command post whose communications lines are exposed to possible interruption. CABLES BUIIIEI) All phone cables are buried in sled comiulta aoveral feet Iwlow ground. They are embedded In lite and sheathed In concrete, lieel and copper. The normal 300-man staff niaiiidng tlw center wrtald swell to fllkOUl 000 In a “button up" emergency. To prepare for this, the (;|ioy' enne Mountain complex has Ixwn deHignml as a sort of underground town with tile capa-hilltles to sustain Its |M)pidatlon for olxtul 30 days without oiif^ side contact the U interconnected rectangular steel buildings are dormitories, m%8s halls, food storage areas, offices, eomputen rooms and the main theater where tbe battle staff would assemblr- Berkeley Leader, Wile Due in Court 1X)S ANOIOUOS (Al*) Mario Snvio and the former Suzanne Goldberg were ex|)ccled to spend the first day of their honeymoon in court In Berkeley hnlay to face clpirges arising from last fair.'? Free Speech Movement demonstrations on the University of California Berkeley campus. Savlo, 22, and his 24-ycar-old bride, were marrliHl Sunday In Beverly IIIIIs. Both have been charged, with oUkt FSM mem bers, with disturbing the peace a n d other misdemeanor charges. Savlo was a philosophy student at Berkeley, but has since left the university. Miss Goldberg is a philosophy graduate student there. The center has Its own seven-rin lioHiiltal, with separate plai'es for major and minor sur gery, a recovery rra lory, dental clinic ami other fa -llltles. MOBEHN TOUCH It has the feeling of a nKslern, 'fficlent Industrial .bididing, with fluorescent lights, pastel Interior coloring and long corridors. Hewn out of rex'k nearby are deep reservoirs to hold 1.2 million gallons of drinking water, another 4 5 million gallons of water for c(M)ling, and diesel fuel to run the many motors. Holds an 'Open House' of Own at Miami Zoo Inside the wlndowlcss wAlls of nuaintaln Indore reaching the main o|M;nlng the command center. The tunnel Is curved, in part to lessen blast effects. At this inner approach to the center, crews will emplane llie {Ittiil , eight-inch thick blast |i)orS spncet'N will be kept closed nl all limes. The whole complek is served by an air purification system to icreen oul any gases, tiu'mlcal ir germ agents, and radiologi •nl elements. There is notlilng outside llie 0. 505 fool inounlain , - “a lough old lady," one officer called it to indicate what is inside, Tlie entrance, reached from a road winding up tlic mountain .side, looks like tlie moiitli of a railroad tunnel MAIN Ol'ENINC; ’I’lie entrance tunnel runs for about a quarter-mile inside the glniil missile warning ihdar llie Norad cliief al.HO must know the status of U,S. interceptor- squadrons, of the Nike Hercules batteries protecting aiMtiil IIMI U.H. (atpulallon cen tors, of tlie strategic striking forces. 'Hie tunnels vary In size, wllli llie higgesl measiirliig 43 feet rns.s and (HI fei'l. It inches from floor to celling In all, coiilraclors H)i|X'rvlsed liy tile Army Engineers blasted atMiul a million tons of granite out of the mountain to create the lliree miles of tunnels. It l(Mik a mlliloii pounds of dynaiii He to do tlial job INFORMATION Informullon Is llie lifeline of the North American Air Defense Cpmmand. Without the latest, most compicle and fastest information, tlie Norad command-would be gravely liam|>ered In reaelilng wliat could Ih; llfe-oi-death judgments. He must he able to comtminl cate those judgments to Wash Ington, the SIrntegIc Air Com mand, and to Ottawa, Canada’s capital. into tlie Combat Operation.s Center must flow an unending stream of data on aircraft ap-proacliiiig Norlli America, on .suspicious submarines off llie coasts, on satellites whirring overhead, on readings from the liifoilnalloii on wlitcli decisions i new gear tliiHiglil so iiiiidi of Its. (he trl|i of only a few miles from are made. value flial it liisurtsl eacli van I Colorado Springs to the inouii- The company wlildi hiilll tlie | load for nl least $1 million for | tain. ;OMBUTATlON8 Tlie lilgli speed compuiers gohlile U|i lifts data, along wMli Inputs reriiM'tIng tlie degree of (kimmiinist military readiness, deproymetilH of Bed forces and veil political facloi’H III as sliort a lime as II sec onds, llic elcclronic liralns can digest this Information, tnler it and tlieii display It on two screens facing llie Norad commander in ids llieater at the licail of Hie iiiidi'igKiiiiul com plex Tliat was anotlier objective of the engineers in designing the equipment for tlie Comlial Operations Center; greater speed In com|)uler treaimenl of tlie vilal "All I said was: * Show me a filter that r^ly delivers taste and I’ll eat my hat.” \TRY NEW LUCKY STRIKE FILTERS MIAMI (UPl) A 25-year-old man yesterday ran througli a “Junglcland” Zoo yelling ‘Tm saving us from the animals.” Fifteen policemen didn’t believe him. They caught him after a 30-minule chase near a raccoon cage. He had been opening the doors to cages occupied by chickens, ducks, goats and baboons. “Oh well, this is show business,” said z(ki operator Tommy Dale. FORD MOTOR CO. UTICA PLANT Needs Journeymen Electricians, Toolmakers, Sewing Machine Attachment Mokers and Pipefitters Also Needed Are Several Electric Knife Cutters roolmakcriwjth dlelscfric, die r«pair aaperienca. APPLY HOURLY —PERSONNEL OFFICE 50500 Mound Road at 23 Milo, Utica. An Equal Opportunity Employer YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I . NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 Three teams worked for peace In the Dominican Republic last week. They include the teams of the United Nations, the O^anisation of American States, and the one sent by. a-the Soviet Union b-France c-President Johnson 2 President Johnson asked Congress to get rid of Section 14-B of the Taft-Hartley Act. This seo-iion permits states to have so-oalled ** right to work” laws. Unions favor these laws. True or False? 3 Mr. Johnson wants Congress to make the minimum 4-1/2 m wage law cover 4-1/2 million more workers, including those in restaurants and laundries. The minimum wage nc^wJia....an hour. a-$1.00; b-$1.25; c-$l.S0 4 Project “Head Start" begins this summer in a number of communities. This federal program concerns.... a-the Keep America Beautiful campaign b-sohool drop-outs c-training the pre-Bchooli child 5 The pro{x>sed Amendment concerning what if the President can’t fulfill his duties. If ay by tbe states, would become the 25thAmei to our Constitution. True or False? PART II . WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for eacVword that you can match with its corrwt meaning. 1..proclamation a-publlo announcement 2.. .. .reconciliation 3.. ...futile 4 ...vital 5 ...yield b-to give up c-full of life d-bringing together again in friendship e-useless PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1.. ...Hubert Humphrey 2 ...Ray Bliss 3 ....W. Willard Wirtz 4.. ...Heinrich Luebke 5.. ...W. Averell Harrl- a-U.S. “roving" Ambassador b-Republican National Chairman o-a Dallas visitor d-President, West Germany e-Secretary of Labor, Vol. XIV, No. 35 ®VEC, Inc., Madiion, Wls. The Pontiac Press MonJay, Miiy 2 t, I'>(>.> Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. (a) U.S. offered 22,000 men for its peace army (b) its Presidei Moscow vlslto (o) 45 million to be produced this year (d) President Johnson asks for reduction (e) issue in votinif rights bill {t) making historic o..... visit to West Ger- EXCISE TAX - many ——------------ (g) its nuclear explosion caused fallout (h) President declares it a prayer day for peace (i) Neural Beauty Conference held In Washington, D.C. (j) a British visitor HOW DO YOU RATE? (Seora Each Side of Quiz Soparaluly) 91 to too Him-TOP SCORE! 81 to PO H"** * ExcoTlont. 71 <0 80 point* - Gi^ " 61 to 70 poiim - Fair. 60 or Undar???-H'mn! Thi> Quiz is part of Iho Edueational Ftognni which This Nowspapor fumishos to ^hoolt in this aroi to Stimulato htoroit in National and World Affairs as an aid to Dovolopina Good Citizonship. _ Save This Praclfce Examination! STUDENTS Valuaiile Reference Material For Examb ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUIZ r-oi !8-6 IP'S le-L iq-9 !i*g !o-y !H :zinh lOSNAS »-S lq-3 Ip-t !||| lavd q-9 !a-e !p-2 !«-l :|| IgVd aiui-9 !o-y !q-£ Jasjiei-z !o:i :i lavd JmiI chorfi at FeniHiy'i j ennetff lA/AYS RRST QUALITY • KiS*S«iEBAiBicu6^'' ^ ^1^ OFFER ENDS SATURDAY! Foremost Motorized 24" Brazier, Reg. 21.95 NOW Charge It • Steel hood, warming oven • Swing-out spit • UL listed motor • Removable redwood troy Our ruggedly- "everything"! Redwood troy lets you bring sizzling meats right to the table. Four polished aluminum legs, chrome grid with charcoal-feeder door. Cook up a whole world of fun foods for the family this .summer with this quality brazier grill! Foremost Deluxe 24'^ Folding Brazier, Reg. 11,95^^. . ^99 Foremost Covered Cooker, Reg. 44.95 .99 NOW Chorge It! NO DOWN PAYMENT, JUST $5 A MONTH! Value-packed! Has chromed arid with handy charcoal feeder door, rugged beav^nc Weiss had sgld "II I had a son ol college ligf' loday, I wouldn't send him lo 'Vale iir Harvard or any of the big state universities lhal have sold out lo graduate research I’d send him lo a good jlheral ails col lege with a good leaihing tacully, like AniliersI or Oherlln or Nwarlhmore or Heed" Heed had always prided llselt on its total coiniidtiikeij^ lo teaching, Us lack of coiit-pclillve alldetics and Us very small classes, where aliuosi all learning was conducted on a discussion basis. and lacully concern over plans for a graduate sclasd. "I’m against Heed becoming a graduale school,” said Helty Jo Hlaval, a |unior IromSeallle, Wa.sli IIKAHT ipus Isn'l large I'lamgli II would make my liearl sick lo see lln* In.'nl lawn go sliidenl Itody who lldnk Heed has no choice hut lo move in Ihe direction ol graduate edu cation, both tor the sake of attracting new faculty and keeping I li e older members Irom tailing behind in ibcir Helds ol knowledge. "(iood leaching can't occur wllhiiul a vlahle research ae livlly and InleresI," argued soeiologisl Jolin I'ock I lor excellence In huiching has j gol lo keirp pace.” 1 On llie opposite trh k. polllical I science professor M a u r e 1. ('.oldschmidt pleaded tor the jsalvalioii (»f "a first class liberal arts seliool and againsl Hie ! ciealion ol anidher medlocrc graduale school " Us Incully lo seek recognition In the world community of "I hope not," said Acting President Hichard Frost, "and I'll do my hesi |o im|a>se the coiidiHoti tlial our rosarcli W(|ik 1)1^ In diiccl relation lo oui cducalloual commilment, I know I i With '27,IM)0 sliidenls and 1,70(1 ' professors on lli|' one campus, I Ihert! is never any shortage of • Inlellechial and ideological Id i mvd al Hei kcley Perhaps no universlly In lls' I'ouniry has raised lls standards ; so higti In Hie past two decades HAIh l,IKF IIF.IJ, liiilly ItuI ' Hick There were ollid' er eeni ol our lacully is exdusivi'ly i n v o I v <■ d in re search" Slanlord, loo, has liad lls native uprising, most recently , an ii|iroai over wbelber the student govei iimciit should «‘ii toree rules not made by students (hat led lo the resignation ol three women deans. I.ike Yale. Stantord lias i reached (lie point where Baptists Adopt Unity^ Theme Hill long behii'i' Ihiil, more lhan a do/.eii tacully eommith'es were jtl work studying every jihase of undergradiude life, in ! eluding Ihe question of wlu'lher | liKliiy's stud e n I is needlessly overworked. Convention Closes With Dedication Rite Says Prof. Wolin: “It’s scandalous these days Ihe efforts you have to go to gel some of the important scienlific jicople to teach. We luive a hirge jier-centage here who nevi'r set foot inside a clas.sroom. IMr. (ihips is obsolete, his mcKlel just doesn’t exist anymore. A university faculty now is made up - of many people of diverse motivations and goals, only some of which have lo do with leaching." POSSIHLK TO OVKHPAINT Just as it is possible lo exag gerate the estrangement of faculty and student body in the modern multiversity, so is it possible to overpaint the changing campus scene. At Berkeley, the fraternities and sororities still flourish, the football games still draw crowds on Saturday afternoon, the pranksters no longer swallow goldfish but they do try to see how many hours they can spend In a shower, and The Daily Californian, t h e campus newspaper, still has its sport pages and its frivolous columns, along with all the aware and concerned letters to the editor, as witness tMs classified ad; SAN FHANChSCO (AIM One l.ord, one world, one m sion is Ihe theme of Ihe Ame can Haplisl Coiivcnlion this yt^u j Delegates to Ihe .^>llth annual I meeting of Ihe denominalion were charged lo carry Ihe unity theme as Ihey headed for Iheir homes today in 40 slates and several foreign countries. The meeting ended Sunday night wilh dedication of more ; than :i0() missionaries in colorful I costumes of Ihe nations Ihey "Hetonn IS long ovenhic, ’ says psychologist NeviH San loid/head of Slaniord's inslilnie fol' (he study of human |)rob lems "Teacliers try lo uiigradc themselves, Ihe same way de-parlmcnls and colleges do, by making Iheir courses longher. The resull is lhal Ihe stndeni is enormously overhurdened wilh meaningless work, wilh endless reading lisis, wilh an incredible array of abslracl concepts, wilh pajiers and reporls lhal arc ah-solulely |)unllive. The ji o (> r graduale sludeni is even worse off. e in KKF,P HAISING I "We’ve made Ihe rewards of 1 gelling a Ph 1), .so allradivc, ; llial wp can rai.se the hurdles as I fiendishly high as we like and the. j)oor cliaj) will keep jiimp- Adojited re.solulions called for stri'tiglhening Ihe United Nations, sup|)or(ing Ihe National Council of Churches, and cx-jiressing a willingness lo .send official Ha|)tist observers to the fourth ses.sion of Ihe Vatican Ecumenical Council, HIT SEUHECATION Other re.solulions condemned racial segregation and recommended that the government reevaluate its relationship with .such countries as Hed China and Cuba. The Hev, Dr ,1 Hester Har-ni.sh of Portland, Ore., outgoing president, summoned "harvesters of the siiiril" for Christian .service, either lull- or part-lime. ing. "If undergraduate life is grim, graduate work is even grimmer. The teaching assist-ant working Tor his Ph. 1). is under enormous pressure to act like a professional, to speak the academic language and engage in the gamesmanship of lining up grants without displaying his ignorance." Sanford admitted that he himself now gives his students as much reading in a quarter as he did in a whole scmcslcr hack in HIM. "Two .swinging chicks—wanted for trip to Mexico over Easter. Contact Dave and Wolfgang.” At Berkeley, the fraternities are busy scrubbing up their public service image to compete for members wilh the political activists and the civil rights groups on campus. FRATERNITIES. SORORITIES Fraternities and sororities may no longer “set the tone on campus,” as Prof. Searle has pointed out, but neither do the Du Bois clubs, the Young Socialists Alliance, the Students for a Democratic Society and all the other leftists groups, ranging from Trotskyites to Maoists and Castroites, that have sprung up in the last few years. Even the free speech movement that managed to bring the university to a halt for a few days with its campusWide strike seems to have hit its high water mark. "Big government, big business, and big unions increasingly force the church out of areas of concern historically confined lo the church,” Dr. HaVnish .said. He described modern theology as “a product of a cluirch brainwashed by materialism.” OUTDOOR RALLY The Baptists almost fl.OOfl formally registered at the meeting — spent a sunny Sunday afternoon, at an outdoor rally and in a house-to-house visiting campaign in Ihe San Francisco area. The American Baptist Convention, which has 1.5 million members, wilf hold its next annual meeting at Kansas City, Mo. - May 11-15, 1966. In addition to diluting the; quality of undergraduate educa-1 lion, Sanford believes the pres- i ence of large numbers of gradil- j ate students and I e a c h i n g assistants on camjjus have in-1 crea.sed . the disciplinary prob-1 lems. i USAF Officer Succumbs “F. S. M. is rapidly losing ground with a majority of the RUISLIP, England (AP) -Lt. Col. Roy White, 49, assistant .chief of staff of the U.S. 3rd Air Force, based in Britain, died Friday at his home near the base. STAY AROUND "The adminislfalion now has to deal with students who stay r around long enough to learn the-1 ropes. Most cri.ses evajjorated j in June when the seniors left, ! but now the graduale students ■ are around all summer mount- j ing attacks on the power struc- ' ture. And, when they get to | telling the undergraduates how j unhappy they ought to be, it becomes quite a force.” i Stanford, like California, has had its resurgence of j student activism after years of political apathy and the ! parallel decline of the old rah-rah spirit. It prides itself on having j sent more students into the | Peace Corps and more to | Mississippi than any campus in the West. Played Doctor for 6 Weeks "Civil rights rallies now out- j draw the football rallies,” admitted Biff Barnard of Green-] wich. Conn., chairman of the: Axe Commission that organizes; the massive card stunts in the I stadium at football games. ' j NEW YORK (iP) — Daniel Bostick, 24, played the role of an interne,,^at Harlem Hospital for six week's before he was spotted ‘-by a hospital official. ' " Bostick was arraigned Saturday in criminal court on charges of practicing medicine without a license and impersonating a doctor. ’ He told Judge Neal P. Bottiglieri: “I, wanted to do good for people. T never had a chance to be-a doctor, so I just ' acted the part,” '» Bostick, with no medical education, vvent on ambulance calls, treatedTSome patients and once set a broken collarbone. Bostick was sent to Bellevue Hospital for psychiatrics examination. „ " ...........................■....... Somehow, it was reassuring to learn from Dean Robert! Sears that even in an age when i students “drive themselves”! and cheerleaders and pom-pom | girls are “considered de-classe”,! and political activism had taken ! the place of Saturday football,! there still are a bunch of the boys down on fraternity row] Tiding to determine “which one ! ^can stay away from lectures the longest and still get a B.” LIBERAL ARTS M | NAl Yale philosopher Paul i CARS SELLING LIKE MAGIC DURING OUR BIG USED CAR SALE WE HAD NO IDEA THAT OUR DECISION TO RETAIL OUR SUPPOSED SURPLUS INVENTORY . . . INSTEAD OF WHOLESALING TO OUR OUT OF TOWN BUYERS . . 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A lidle more thoiiKhI possilily could lurn up a uumher ol olhcr luiie.s which would dc.scrihc Ihc team’s hahll of loslnK douhle ticadcr.M The TlKcrs did il again Sun day, howing to-,I he llallimore Orioles, 7-1! and ll-H, after closing to within a run of a lie in each game The Tigers' ’record for twin hills is (MO, They have droppi'd two games on each of the last lour Sundays HKITKII ON KOAI) Defroif, which has fared much heifer on the road—II ti tries to improve lhaf mark at Chicago toritglif where Mickey l.olich will face .John Hu/.hardI or Juan Pizarro. "We gave them that first game," Hoh Swift, who slarts his final week as interim manager today, said of Sunday’s defeats. DOUm.INC liP Detroit Tiger Don Dem <•ler slide.s head first into second liase with a (haihle in the 8th inning of the 2nd game against Haltimore yesterday as inficlder Jerry Adair was tisi late in trying for the tag Italtimore won both ends of the twinhill at Tiger Stadium, 7-3 and 8-3. Medal Champ on Tee Again Cong hitting Melvin 'Hud' Stevens, who provtsl he’s still the state’s best amateur with a playoff victory yesterday In the Michigan Medal Play tourna ment, taced tougher competition today as he teedoff in a field of 107 in a local U S (I,A (|uallfy ing I o II n (I at Meadowhrook Country Club near Northville. 'Ilie 32-year old Stevens, who downed Pete Green of Orchard l,ake on the first hole of sudden death yesterday to win the title for the second time in a row, will he battling the area's lop |)i(),H and amateurs at Meadow-lirook for the right to advaiu;e to the u se.A sectional qualifying round .set for June 8 at HIrmIngham (Mich.) Country Club. Stevens, known more for his IxHiining tee shots, turned to his putter (or tlie Michigan Medal victory at IndianwoiKl shooting a three over-par, 75 on the final round. The Tiger.s announced before the game that Charlie Dressen will assume his managerial duties in New York a week from today. Twice in the opening game Hank Aguirre picked runners off first base. Kach lime Ihe runner in the back—and went on to score. “1 don’t know whal they were thinking about out there,” Swift said, pinpointing the blame on the first play on second base-man Jake Wood. "Dick McAuUffe has to play in the hole at shortstop with Jackie Brandt up there because he’s a pull hitter,’’ Swift added. "That leaves Wood as the only mao to cover. But he didn’t." The Orioles qlinched each gaine with big rallies in the ninth inning. BLAST GLADDING They scored three times off Fred Gladding in the opener on back-to-back homers by Brandt and Norm Siebern. Brandt, who topped all batters with five runs bafted in in the two games, opened the ninth inning of the nightcap with a single in triggering a four-run rally off Larry Sherry. The Tigers’ only chances to cheer came in the second game when Bill Freehan hit a two-run homer and George Thomas cracked a solo shot. But that wasn’t enough to overcome the four runs the Orioles scored in the opening in-. ning in spoiling Jack Hamilton’s first start. Willie Horton Joined the Tigers’ injury list when he pulled up lame at second base in the fourth inning of the opener. Trainer Jack Homel explained that the tendons in Horton’s big toe on his right foot were inflamed. AASU Takes Big 10 Track Title Ohio State 9 Kayoes MSU to Take Title \ Big 10 Track Results CHICAGO (AP) - Ohio Slate ..aptured its first Big Ten baseball crown in Iff years Saturday when it kayiMid Michigan Slate in a season-ending doublehead- Actuali^, Ohio State clinched the championship with a come-trom-behind 13-10 triumph in the first game and then downed the Spartans 2-0 in the nightcap on the strength of one hit. The Buckeyes put themselves into championship position with a 4-,3 triumph over Michigan Friday in 16 innings. This left Ohio State with an advantage pf winning only one game Saturday to capture the title. The double loss dropped Michigan State into third place behind rival Michigan which split a doubleheader, defeating Indiana 7-4 after an 11-7 loss. The split enabled the Hoosiers to finish on top it) the second division behind Iowa and Illinois. Minnesota, last year’s Big Ten and NCAA champion, downed Wisconsin 7-4 but lost the nightcap, 3-2. The Gophers finished in a tie with Purdqe for seventh place. - TODAY’S - AMERICAN LEAGUE Won Loll Pc Chicago ........ 2* II .«*' Minnesota ...... J1 13 Baltimore ...... 20 17 Detroit ........ 1» 17 Los AngeljCS ... 20 18 Cleveland ...... 17 16 Boston ......... 17 18 New York ....... 16 21 Washington ..... 15 23 Kansas City .... 9 24 Saturday's Rosu Kansas City 6, Minnesota Detroit 8, Baltimore 4 Boston 8, Cleveland 4 New York 6, Washington .541 .526 .515 .432 .395 .273 TRACK AND SUM^AN 1/ 8. 2. Dove Orove, Michigan, • In, 53 6. 3V«. 4, . Steve le k Harvey, MIchIjian, 53- n, Michigan, 51-3%. h Coates, Michigan State, . 5, Michael Kalnes, 440 - I, Kent Bernard, Michigan, 46.6. 2, Daswell Campbell, Michigan Slate, 47 4. 3, Mike Olllham, Minnesota, 47.4. 4, Tom Thomas, Northwestern, 47.6. 5, Elwln Sellers. Ohio Stale, 47.9. too - Dorle Reid, Michigan, 10. James Carrell, Michigan Stale, 10 Wolverines Net Champs BLOOMINGTON, Itid.-Mich-igati’s tennis team, took (our singles and two doubles matches in the Saturday finals to win the Big 10 tennis crown, outpointing Indiana 142-127. Northwestern with one singles’ champ was third with 84 points, followed by Michjgan State with 82, Illinois 62, Minne-.sota 41, Iowa 32, Wisconsin 31, Ohio State 30 and Purdue 21‘/j. Only one smgles defending champ TraWcQ his title. North-western’s Clark Graebner who defeated Indiana’s Dave Power, 3-6,6-4 and 6-3. One upset was Michigan’s'Jer-ry Stewart who defeated Indiana’s Charles Fichter 6-1 and 6-4 in No. 4 singles. Indiana’s No. 1 doubles, Dave Power and Rod McNerney won over Michigan’s Stewart and Karl Hedrick, 6-3 and 6-3. Purdue Wins Golf'^rown LAFAYETTE, Ind. - M an eolfer Bill Newton honors'in the Big 10 golf jAm4»j Summers, Mkhlgnn 10, ^ichArd DIMIng« IndlADA. 10.3. 5, i Golditon. Iowa, 10.3 120 high hurdifi 1, Gene V Ington. Michigan Sfatey. 14.2. 2. B GIgler. AAlnneiota. 14.4. 3. Clinton Ji Michigan Slate, 14.5. 4, John Hende Michigan, 14.2. 5, Alvin Randolph, I X, lump - I, MIchaal Bowars, Mlchl-‘ ‘ ' 2, William Moldan, Wlicon- iin, 6 7. 3, Frad McKoy, Michigan Stale, 6-2. 4, Robert Den«ham, Michigan, 6-2. 5. Richard Cummins, Iowa, 6-2. (Poilllons senhelmer, Northwestern, 9:10.8."s, Paul McCollam, Michigan State, 9:14. Mile relay I, Iowa (Dale Thompson, Fred Ferree, Alvin Randolph, Jon Relm-3:12.1. 2, Michigan, 3:13. 3, Wlscon-- - Purdue, 3:14.2. 5, Illinois, I. 3:13.2. ' 14.3. , Jon Relmer, low 36.1. (Big Ten and national collegia record. Old Big Ten record 37, Relm ^ .... . MIchlgar ,ro.., William Burnette, Iowa, 15.3. : David Seiberileh, Wisconsin, 15-3. 4, Larr Mueller, Minnesota, 15. 5, Ronald Horo Ohio State, 14-8. NCAA Baseball This Weekend at Ohio Site KALAMAZOO (AP) - The NCAA District 4 Baseball Committee met here Sunday and set Athens, Ohio, as the site for the district championships. The series’ is Scheduled for Thursday, May 27,. through Saturday, May 29. Competing will be Ohio University (26-1), Mid-American Conference champion; Ohio State University (22-11), Big Ten champion; University of Detroit (24-4), independent; and Ball State (15-6-1), Indiana Collegiate champion. The winner of the district tournament will meet the wim ner of the District 3 tournament in the NCAA World Series at Omaha, Neb.-, June 6, 7, and 11. The committee named the following players t6 the All-District team: lb, Arnold Chonko, Ohio State; 2b, Jerry Walker, Michigan State; 3b, John Biedenbach, Michigan S t a t e; ss, 'terry Harjniin, Ohio University; If, Bill Guerrarit, Western Michigan; cf, Dick Schyrer, Michigan; rf, Mickey Moses, Iowa; c, John Huizenga, Western Michigan; p, Steve Arlin, Ohio State, and Leonard Stahl, Ohio University. Ohio University coach Bob Wren was named District Coach of the Year. Two Pros in Net Final LOS ANGELES liW - Pancho les of. Los Angeles and Laver of Australia meet tonight in the final round of the ninth , annual Masters. Round Professional Tennis Tour- Spartan Squad Nets 55 Points; Michigan 2nd IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -Michigan Stale captured its first Big Ten outdoor Irjick title with dazzling depth Saturday but Iowa sophomore Jon Reimer stole the spotlight. Reimer won the 330-yard intermediate hurdles in 36.1 seconds, .smashing the li.sted Big Ten and national collegiate The 158-pounder won by about seven yards, upseting favored Gene Washington of Michigan State. However, Michigan State won five events and scored 56 points as it tfnded 14.years of frustration in .taking (he title for the first lime since joining the conference. WOLVERINES SECOND Michigan finished second with 43 points. Wisconsin, the defending outdoor champion and the 1965 indoor titlist, was third with 37. Iowa and Minnesota each had 28, Northwestern 13, Illinois 9, Purdue and Ohio State 6 each and Indiana 5. Jim Garrett; springy-legged junior, lied the Spartans. He won the 220 and finished second in the 100, after winning the broad jump Friday. The Spartans also picked off firsts in the mile, where Keith Coates raced to a Big Ten record; the high jump, and the 120-yard high hurdles. Other records fell in the pole vault and in the two-mile, where Norris Peterson of Minnesota led a 1-2-3 Gopher finish with a clocking of 9:01.5, more than a second under the old Tfnark, The pole vault mark of 15-^4 was bettered by three vaulters, with George Canamare of Michigan winning at 15-9V4. Reimer’s run was the most spectacular of the meet. The 6-foot-2 stringbean scooted over the hurdl^ and his time matched a Ending national collegiate best of 36.1 by Colorado’s Jim Miller earlier this spring. Michigan State started fact after a finishing burst by Coates erased the mile record. Sports Calendar t FItiget ondale :ral(J, Madison Troy, at (.lawson Rochester at Warren Cousino Grosse Pointe U.S. at Country Day Flint Central at Pontiac CenITal (2) PONTIAC CLASS A: Huron Airway vs. 10 at Jaycee Park, 7:30 p.m. Sottball At Northside (Pontiac )-E1ks No. 810 s. 300 Bowl, 7. p.m!; 8:30—Pontiac Bepsi s. Spencers. At Drayton Plains Park (Waterford)— 8:30—Richardson Dairy vs.. Keg'8, An- Gelf Birmingham Seahplm at Fernd^le St. Frederick at Avondale Birmingham, Seaholm He rolled in u 21 loot, iiplilll pult for u lilrftle on the par 5, r)27-yai;(| llllli hole to finish with a 72 hole total of .100 and a He with Green, and he rolled in a slx-f < I \ i III i. Iflon I* H..IIIII IkM.fllO, WMII 11 0 ‘ I T* b**V ''>y '<'ver Rouge with (11 points in )52. Walled Mak.> I,n,ke l'« 16 points was gocxl .spell wi ll a victory in 6.1 but ,4^^ the Hills Clew came Ibiough Shrine had 14 points and on top last year. ! Oxford 11. Walled take was considered j 44,^. Crane mile relay team the strongest challenger to the Baums’ title hopes ' Kowlervillc and Battle (Tcek Ti-am and individual trophies ^ pn, class C were to be presented to tbe , (.^own and Covert won the class winners at a banquet im-1 Mount Pleasant. CLASS B SINGLES I CLASS B S*mMln.|li. Kroll Bogdan. Rlvorvlaw, «-4 and i dPioatadBurns. Cranbrook, 6-DOUBLES FINALS-Clati A Raven, Plymoiilh, dalaalad \ Jonaj. Plymouth, 4 3 and 4 1 DOUBLES SEMI-FINALS \ Jonos Bruit 'Mo' Moore Hot but Misses Finals Offy Roadsters Near Extinction mediately following the tournament. In the Mieliigiin high seh(M)l stale meet finals at Saginaw, class A honors went lo Ann Arbor, followed by Detroit Austin, Saginaw McArthur, Walled Lake and .laekson Parksidc. In class B, Norlhville finished 4lb behind Kalamazoo U. High, Okeomos and Whitehall. Flint St. John won the class C-D crown ahead of Richland. Stale medal honors in (Mas's A w(‘nl lo Ron Bohland of Mu.s-kegon Catholic with 38-3.5 73. Ann Arbor won with 316, Austin ;t20, McArthur 326 and Walled ! Lake 327. 0 RUN P»l. WIKon, I T6on, Drtrol! Cody. Battle I Palter- V Chany, R#dfori **'TEAfc'‘TbTALS%«hIm«oo Cunlrnl 4L Nnrlhw(iil«rn 12, Detroit Redlord \2, D DevUofi*'Beni '*"''1'* *^’**^'' ' BtFioMrifti D till is 7, ^iIrmuJona, SRAHOl-M /, Dolroll Southwestern CLAM B WINNERS High Jump Jim Miller, Slu new tiele ft record), r'o’?,e,"'.fo lo8 Yord Dnsh_ Clarence Sebbelh, RIv r Rouge le»--Jlm Seymour, Shrine, 220 baih-JIm Wood, Mount Morris, 13.0. Brofld Jump Pel Howard, Albion, 21 Mile Relay River Rouge, 3:21.4. ICran- Swolwda rl 3 I 1 I) Boyer ,3b 1 0 0 0 Me*Kvm Sb 3 6 I 4 110 SadeckI p 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 Skinner ph 10 1 Warwick ph l 0 0 Shennon ph I 0 0 jriy h 2B McCarver, While, Smith, Kroll. 3B Mexvlll. HR D. Taylor 2, (4), McCer-er IS). SB -Brock, McCarver, Swobode. Persons L.0-2 SadeckI ...... R.Taylor MfiP By Veale, Torre WP N PB -Crandall 2. T 2:44. A- 2,053, LOS ANGELES CHICAGO 2 0 10 Ranks lb 10 0 0 Altman ph o o o 1 0 0 0 Duh( p J O 0 1 0 0 0 Am'f'ano ph 1 o o G'bf'li'n ph 1 0 0 Totals CWcA""' Briqhl ph i o 0 0 S4 2 11 t Tblals SI 3 t J as 200 000 000 000 000 0—1 too 001 001 000 OOO 1-3 er, Latebvre, Wills. DP I os . LOB los Angeles 13, Chicago 2B rainy. Davl anio (2). -SB WII r. SF Clemens. 2, S Podres, Park-l> H R ER BB SO 5 2 2 1 1 «T. PAUL, Minn, (/Pi-Robbic » Hobin.son of Wilmington, Del., won the qualifying trophy in the American Bowling Congress Masters tournament Sunday with an eight-game total of 1,72,5. The diminutive pro shot a four-game series of 851 in the first qualifying block Saturday. He improved to 233, 223, 225, 191 for an 872 total Sunday. Monroe Moore of Pontiac, rolled Sunday’s best series, 257-196-159-179-891, but his 1,586 total was hot enough to qualify for the finals. Dick Preston of Detroit, who led after the first day with 892, dropped tp second place after shooting 827 Sunday to bring his total to 1,719. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Texan A. J. Foyt, who saved the durable old Offenhauscr roadster from extinction by booting one’to victory in the 1964 Indianapolis ,500-mile auto race, may preside at final rites for the last of the breed in the 49l^h running May 31. When two weekends of time trials ended Sunday with a thunderous but bloodless crash of an Offy roadster with Bob Ma-thouser of Gardena, Calif., at the wheel, the 33-car field was fixed like this. Seventeen rear-engine Fords, including the Lotus-Ford in which Foyt set a 10-mile qualifying record of 161.233 m.p.h. May 14. Ten rear-engine Offenhau.sers, in one of which the sixth-best qualifying speed of 158.416 was set by rookie Billy Foster of Victoria, B.C. Four of the oid reliable Offy roadsters, which the late Bill Milford Needs Victory to Clinch W-0 Title Milford needs, only a win at Clarkston today to sew up its second straight Wayne-Oakfand Baseball League title following Saturday’s 7-0 blanking of Brigh- ton. The Kettering - Farmington double-header turned into a wild one with the latter taking a 5-4 nine-inning opening victory, then bloTving an 8-0 lead as Kettering won 10-9: Milford’s Dave Moiianen hurled a fine one - hitter at Brighton with the lone safety coping with one out in thetaeV^ enth. He fanned 13 and* had only three men on base in the tilt . The 1 i 111 e right-hander is now 8-2 for. the season while MUford is 16-6 over-all, and 10-3 in the league. The Redskin hitters were paced By Jack Ward who had a* ■ single, double and triple for four runs, and John Kaspar kept his average in the ,40(te with- a single and triple for two runs. Farmington’s Bill Johnson homered to wiif the ejrtra-inning opener and had two singles and a double in the nightcap. But Kettering’s 10-run splurge in the fourth, fifth and sixth innings overcame the Falcons. Captains Chuck Watson (three singles), Jerf^ Harkey (home run) and Dan Runyan (two-run go-ahead triple) sparked t h e rally. KatKrIng ........... 120 100 OOO^ 4 10 1 Mellert, WINDER (.2) and Snearly; D. MIcell, Mahallc (4), MANNII4G (8) and Campbell. Farmington .......... 112 400 1— 0 0 7 Kattaring 000 325 x-10 11 5 W. Johnston, WINDER (5) and Snearly; Prince, McCLOUD C3) and Campbell, Runyan (5). ' Brighton Milford GALLUP poo 000 (3 ri^O X Scrambles Runners-Up Th^ Pontiac Comp Team took two seconds in motorcycle scrambles races yesterday at Richmond. .. Ray Pace was runner-up In the combined heavyweight class and teammate Dave Spanke too second in the combined lightweight event. , Vukovidi brought lo Speedway prominence in the early 1950s. A four-wlieei-drlve Ferguson-Novi which Bobby Unscr of Albuquerque, N.M., put in the third three-car row al 1,57.467, and a Novi roadster which Jim Hurtubisc, North Tonawanda, N.Y., qualified at the last weekend’s top speed of 156.863. There were seven rear-engine Ford V8is in. the 1964 field but only Rodger Ward of Indianapolis finished in the top 10, taking second for a remarkable record over the last six years of 1-2-3-1- Russ Herron pacfxl Walled Lake in the state meet with 81, while the team’s regional med-. alist Bud Bowman was sick and did not compete. Other Vikings were Russ Streeter 82, Jim Giroux 82, .John Hebbler 82. Seaholm fini.shed well down the list in Class A with a 334 total. 42. WARD MISSING Ward will be missing from the line-up May 31 for the first time in 15 years. He wrecked his new Watson-Ford trying to qualify Saturday after having assorted troubles with four engines. He tried again Sunday after the field was full and would' have made it if he had been satisfied with his first full lap al around 154 miles an hour. He signaled timers to start counting bn the next lap and slowed to an average of 153.623 m.p.h. That was 34th best. Slowest of the 33 qualifiers was Bill Cheesbourg of Tucson,. Ariz., in a rear-engine Ger-hardt-Offy, at 153 774. The famous Unser racing family of Albuquerque, N.M., put a second son and the 11th rookie in the line-up Sunday wheh Al made the field at 154.440 in a Lola-Ford. Johnny Boyd was the fastest of the last four drivers who made the field Sunday, qualifying for his 11th straight 500 at 155.172 in a BRP-Ford. 30-32 Fired at Clarkston In a completion of a suspended match from last week, Clarkston Gk>lf Club defeated Highland 16-6 in weekly Pub-linx play. Jim Smith' led Clarkston with a 30-32—62 with two eagles and a'birdie in the record 30 sfrokes on the front nine. ' ' . • His 62 is also if Course rec-prd at Clarkston Golf Club; Par is 35-35. The young golfer lives in Lake (^ion.. Nee,ds Few Hits in Rec Victory Powerful Huron-Airway needed only two singles last night to defeat Talbott Lumber, 10-2, in the opener of the season’s Class A City League baseball race at Jaycec Park. 'I’he defending city recreation 'njen’s champion took advantage of three walks, a hit batsman, an error, a sacrifice fly and run-producing singles by Chuck Johnson and Bill Bennett for five first inning runs. That was all the help Don Sackett needed to hurl his first . win of the season. He whiffed eight Talbott batters while yielding four hits, including a triple to Tom Booth. Huron-Airway added three runs in the fifth on one single an opposite field hit by former major leaguer Churck Oertel. ' TALBOTT (2) HURON-AIR. (10) Crawford li Craig 2b-3b Booth ss 2 0 0 Rabala 2b 3 2 1 Oriel cf 3 0 0 Berkeley II Totals 27 2 Talbott Lumbor Huron-AIrway " 2; Fleser, Johnson, Bennett, Honchell, Or R-ER; Sack-R. Winner— _____ ___s (0-1). Br- !, Crouch 2, Crawford, Lun- Go Ahead... Go Cadillac! Before you buy any car at any price, consider a Cadillac first of all. New or previously owned, a Cadillac is the one way to be sure your investment will buy the most and last the longest. Whatever you have budgeted for your next car, your Cadillaedealer has a Cadillac lo fit your plans. Naturally, if your choice were unrestricted, you would prefer a new 19{i5 Cadillac like the Sedan deVille in front. Next best would, be a iate-model, previously-owned Cadillac such as the black 1963 Sedan de Ville, above. A well-main-tained, one-owner used Cadillac is actually the only real rival of a new Cadillac. Because of the popularity of the 1965 model, your authorized dealer is the one logical place to go lor the best selection of fine; used Cadillacs. Sliinddrd o[ the World Hits 255-Yard Ace Ricardo Rizzo, 28-year-old Detroit golfer, used a driver on the No. 5 hole at Mor(sy’.s Red Course and he dropped it for a 2|5 yard hole in onp-Friday. He hid 44 for the nirie. Playing with,, him were D; E. Wright, Bob Wright and Rod Dzurcla of Birmingham. SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER'S FINE SELECTION OF NEW AND USED CADILLACS JEROME MOTOR SALES CO. 1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST # _ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN GENBWLMOiww^&ftSMit NEW YORK v7oi!tipa mtj \\\ r e \' ,1- "'1 I’UK VQNTIAC IMIKSS, MONDAY. MAY 2K tile fullowInK nre top prlc«n covering enloH of l(H:ally grown produce by growerg and gold by them In wholegale package lota. Quotationa are furnlatied by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Stock Mart Moves Unevenly Produce NKW YORK (AI')~The ato(!k market movtxl Unevenly early today In eautloua trading. (•alng and louaen of tnoat key Ht whSsi *Vji. DEtliolT BOOS \^hll«i Gr»d« A jumbo — .................. largo largo W-3II modlum M-JJ) trnoll ItVy; Browns Grade A jumbo 31 j largo 3/-») medium 33 34/ check! IB. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USDA) Hogs 4,500/ bulchort steady lo 35 higher/ mixed 1-3 190-330 lbs. 31.35-33.00/ 350-400 lb. sows 10.50-19.00 / 400-450 lbs. 18.00-10.75 / 55IT600 lbs. U.90-17.5/ boars 13.50-14.50. Callle 7,000/ calves none/ si----------------- steers fully steady; lour loads prime 1,200-1,350 fb. 3».;5-30.q0; numerous loads high choice and prime 1,135-1,375 2B.50-2f.50; 1,000-1,400 lbs. 2<.25-2B.50; (aulns and losses were scrambled at random among steels, motors, rails and oils. On l<'rlday the Associated Press average of (10 stiK-ks dl|ipcd 1.0 to ri.l« 1. I’llces were Irregular on the American Stock Exchange. Fargo Oils Feimi Pet .I5e Fly Tiger Gen Devel ira"ni7er6o, Goldlleld Gl Bas Pet Gulf Am Ld Hycon MIg Kaiser Ind Mackey Air . . . . . . McCrory wt 1 4?4 m 4- Mead John .40 3« 21% 20% 21 Technicol .75 TexOSgl ,40 Texasinsim I Textron 1.B0' Thiokol .571 TlmirSB ^i'bO I mnaom .aun trangltron tri Coni .370 Twent C .AOb 5 35 I 45 13 42% i UnC^blde w Un ilac 1.1 as ?HcS"»o 10 3B% 3B 30% 2 39% 39% 39% 5 58% 58% 58% 7 74% 74% 74% 3 75 uMm' USBorax . USOypsm US IndusI I 30% 74% -| 13 38 15 75% 75% 17 15% 15% 38 51% 51 1 5% 5% . - 8 14% 1«% 18% 3 47% 47% 47% ■ 88% 8B% _v_ 7 33% 33 18% 10 4931, ~w- 33% WUnTel 1.4 WesIgEI 1.3 «C’w WhltfM t.4( WltmDIx ].'4 Woolworth Wort! Sales llgures are unolllclal. Unless otherwise noted, rates ol divi lends In the foregoing table are annuo llsburkements based on the Iasi quarlerli •xlra*"dlv"dends SP®cl»l »i laled as regular are'^Menlllled’' In*lhl ollowing foolnotes. a-Also extra or extras, b—Annua ■ale plus slock dividend, c- Liquidating I vidend. d—Declared or paid In 1985 Ills stork . -o.L, ..1. I -Payable In slock during 1985, estimated cash value on ex-dtvidend or ex-dlsirlbu-lion dale. g-Declared or paid so tar Ihli year. h-Declared or paid alter slock divl dend or spill up. k-Declared or paid Ihli year, an accumulative Issue with divi dends In arrears. p-^Pald this year divl dend omitted, deferred or Ad wictton'taker *’ii*v meeting. r-Declared oi paid In 1984 plus slock dividend, I- Pale In slock during 1984, estimated cast ■dividend or ex-dlsirlbullor dale. Ex Dlvl- Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal p B eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retail markup, markdown or commission. Eld Ai Citllens Utilities Class A Diamond Crystal Ethyl Corp. Mohawk Rubber Co. Michigan Seamless Tube Pioneer Finance .......... Safran Printing Vernor% Ginger Ale ........ Wolverine Shoe Wyandotte Chemical Quotations eomplled by approximplely II the t sentatlve Inter-dealer prices and do not Include retail markdown or commission. Asked prices have been adjusted upward to Include approximate markup. WInkelman's 143 Vesely Co. '10 8 MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock . Keystone Income K-1 9.27'“Tin5' 15!33 is!; Investors Growth . ,.103.. Investors Trust .. Putnam Growth Television Electronics ... Wellington 3=und __________ DOW-JONES NOON AV STOCKS 30 Indus ........ 20 Ralls ...... 15 Utils ... «5 Stocks ........... BONDS 40 Bonds •* Higher grade rails . 10 Second grade rails 10 Pubife utilities . 10 Industrials . 90.13 . 84.87-0.05 . 93.12-f0.12 . 88.70-0.07 Business Notes William L. Belaney, 93 Chippewa, has been elected vice president of the Cooperative Editorial Association at the 14th annual meeting in Chicago. The association consists of editors and public relations directors of cooperatives, mutuals and credit unions in United States and Canadd. Belaney is promotional director of GmTC Employees Fe d e r a 1 Credit Union' | for Senate Vote May Clear Way for Rights Bill Cloture WAHlIINd'IXiN (An 'I1iti Stiiialti inay vote today on a Htipublkan HubMtUutc for the voting rights bill, hoping to lear the decks for Tuesday’s llmaetle move to limit debate 111 the measure. .Soulliern seiialorfi, historic foes of ally move lo Invoke cloture, are expected to line up with Uepublleuns attempting to substitute their plan to insure voting rights for the one hacked Ity the While House, the DeuKi-cralic leadership, and the He-publlcan lender. Sen. Everett M. Dlrkseii. IritriKlueed by Sen. John (i. Tower, K-Tex., the GOl* proposal provides for federal examiners to register voters under slate qualification laws In any county where 25 or more per-.sons have been denied the right to vote or iHiglsler because of race or, color. This differs from the adminls-Iralion bill which provides for suspension of literacy tests and similar voler-qunllflcatlon requirements as well as federal registration of voters in all i parts of seven Southern stales. Cl.OTUUF l*KTrriON Senate leaders expect to beat down the Republican substitute and arc confident they can pass the cloture petition by the required twd-thlrds of tho.se voting. If cloture Is invoked, it will be the third time In four years, and on a civil rights measure, only the second time in history. The historic unlimited (lebaHS for senatorsn-has ‘Gften brought emotional, even tearful, pleas against any effort to restrict it. If the Senate invokes the cloture rule, each senator will be limited to an hour’s speaking lime on the bill and all Its amendments. The leadership figures this will lead to a vote on passage itself by file end of the week. Probably the most dramatic of all cloture moves came last year when, after 75 days of debate on a broad, civil rights bill, it was invoked. r LIMIT DEBATE In August 1992 lh£. Senate voted to limit debate on the Kennedy administration’s bill to establish a private communlca-tiqps satellite corporation. TThe House today is debate foreign aid, with a vote scheduled Tuesday on the $3.37-blllion assistance program. The only other major measure before the House this week is a $5.6-billion appropriation bill to finance the Agriculture Department for the fiscal year starting July 1. Former Press Editor Named to OU Post Mrs. Lee M. Olson, former area news editor of The Pontiac Press, has been appointed a conference coordinator and marketing specialist for the Division of Continuing Education, Oakland University. The ex-newspaperwoman also served as vromen’s editor of the Daily 'Monitor-Leader, Mount Clemens, and the Tri-City Progress, Utica. ■^he and her family reside at 1»7 Priscilla Lane, Avon Township. 3 Area Men Pass Exam Three Pontiac area men were dmong 96 persons who passed the Mar-;h Bar Examination, the Michigan Bar Association announced Saturday. They are Joseph E. Kieninger of Birmingham, John B. Clayton of Farmington apd Artemus B. Jewell Jr. of .Oxford. Eight others ffboi south Oakland County also passed. Friday's 1st Dlvldtndi DKlirtd Rtmeo Industries ipe -’ REGULAR Fwrida PQW Cp .. .30 Q ^ HOWINti OUT - Chief Petty Officer Robert L. Svolt Jr. (left), local Navy recruiter, acquaints his successorv Chief Petty Officer J, L. Wightman, with office procedure. Scott is retiring today after 21 years service. He first enlisted in the Navy here In 1944. * Investing/^ s * % By ROtiEll E. SPEAR Q) “My husband BUggested (hat I buy Et4)eka with |lt,-900 I just Inherited, I prefer growth NtiMikN. At 00 years of iige, lx It too lute to buy fiuch Isxiies'f We can well afford to invest tills money, since 'savings nnd olher Ini'orne provide for IIS very nicely." T.L. A) I do not consider 1(0 years of age too old to l)uy growth stoi’ks. All slocks are subject to fluctuatloim, (lie market is at iiii extremely liigli lilstorieiil level, iinil you .ihould not luiy growth slocks, or any others, unless you liave the lernpcra-meuF to sit tlirougli any future decline wiilf patience nnd fortitude. If you can do so, I suggest tlie purcluise of Avon Products, Bristol-Myers, Northern Illinois Gas and Winn-Dixie Stores. I believe you will find these rewarding If lield over a pericKl of Local Navy Recruiter Ends 21-Year Career time. ' Chief Petty Officer Robert I,. Scott Jr., tlie local Navy recruiter, ends a 2l-ycar career in the Navy today. Scott, who Is a native of the Pontiac area, will join Montgomery Ward & Co. a.s a supervisor at the Ponliac Mali store. He and his wife, Geraldine, News in Brief Mrs. Arthur Kinney, 5524 Walling, Waterford ’Pownsliip, re|K)rt-ed yesterday tiint two pairs of trousers valued at $27 were stolen from her car, according to township police. I’ontiae police are investignt-ing the llieft of two rings, valued at $350, from the Jack Lloyd home at 53 S. Roselawn. Rummage Sale: All Saint’s Church. May 2(i, 10 a m. —adv. World's Largest Local Voting for New Leader DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) -United Auto Workers Ford Local 600, world’s largest labor union local, began choosing a new president today. More than 45,000 union members, including 16,000 retirees, were eligible to vote in a four-day election to name a successor to Carl Stellato, president for 15 years. Stellate is retiring. and tlieir two children, Robbie and Mike, live at 5965 Southward, Waterford Township. ’I'lie .’17-ycar-old Navy man lias lieen assigned to tlie re-iniiting station In Pontiac since August 1961. Scott enlisted in Hie Navy in 1944. At that lime the recruiting office here was located in Hie YMCA building. AFTER BOOT CAMP After bool camp at Great Lakes Naval Base,. 111., he served as an assault boat coxswain during the landings oh Iwo Jima, I-uzon and Okinawa in the Pacific. Following World War H, Scott was assigned to the East (kiasl cruiser division. During the Korean conflict lie saw action as a boatswain' mate on the USS Wooster, a light cruiser, and the USS New Jersey, a battleship. He was pssigned recruiter in Kalamazoo in 1954 and was transferred lo staff duty in CaJ; ifornia in a cruiser division in 1956. RETURNED TO SEA Following the shore duty he returned to sea in 1958 on a destroyer until his transfer to Pontiac. Looking over the past 21 years, Scott said he didn’t regret a moment — although at times, he admitted, things got pretty trying. 0) “I have been watching Hi’iigiiet, listed on the New York StiK-k Exehange, for many years. It never seems to move much, although it Is often very active. Do you think this stock will amount to anything after so many years’."’ .1.1*. A) Many people are interested in Benguet, largely because it is probably the lowest priced stock traded on the Big Board. The company mines gold in Hie ’hilippines and also has some rhrome and timber production. Heiiguel sells its gold to the i’hllippine government and is paid subsidy in peso's which sometimes f I p c t u a t e rather widely in relation to the U.S. dollar. Earnings last year — in dollars — came to $0.15 a share and were below those of a decade before. The shares have made no progress since 1955. I regard them as highly spe-culalivc and would avoid them. Roger Spear’s new 18-pagc Guide to Successful Investing is now ready. For your copy, clip this notice and send $1.00 with your name and address to Roger E. Spear, in care of this newspaper, Box 1618 Grand Central Station, N.Y.C., N.Y, 10017. (Copyright, 1965) 510 Expected to Die CHICAGO (45-Heavy highway traffic over the long Memorial Day weekend could take between 430 and 510 lives, the National Safety Council said today. The period covered by the estimate will run from 6 p.m. lo-caL time Friday, May 28, to midnight Monday, May 3,1. Loans to Business, Individuals Top '64 DAWSON By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Americans’ monthly payment debts are 11 per cent larger thanayear ago. Business, too, is borrowing more. New York bank loans to commercial and industrial concerns have risen $1.4 billion I since the first of the year. In the like period of 1964, they dropped by $574 million. The n a t i 0 n * s commercial BSnks as a whole have been net borrowers for 12 straight weeks from the Federal Reserve banks to meet the demand for loans from business and individuals. When money is easier and lending demands liess urgent, the banks have, nest eggs of excess reserves in the centraFbanking system. Are debts, business and individual, rising too fast and too high? is this a sign, as ' sotnetimes in the past, that the business upswing is peaking? . Is the net borrowed position of the conunercial banks a warning that the Federal Reserve is tightening up on credit to keep the economy from overheating? ^gl Some bankers are anSwehng “not necessarily” to ail three questions. DELINiuENCY Delinquency of installment loans has risen very little. And this Is reassuring. A worrisome factor: repayments of outstanding installment debt is taking 14 per cent of disposable income —what’s left of an individual’s income after takes. That’s a new ;h. At the same time, bot^-owers have been taking on new installment debt at such a pace that they are pledging 16 per cent of. thejr disposable income for., future payments. This, too, iS a record. Bankers say this is manageable for most families — unless times suddenly turn bad. The rise in loans to business by New York banks of late has been chiefly to retail stores, public utility and transportation companies, apparel and leather goods producers. Earlier in the year, loans were heavy to makers of machinery and other durable goods and*to commodity dealers.. Bankers say the rising demand for loans is due to the general upswing in business and is actually smaller in relation to the growing economy than in past booms. Therefore, it needn’t foretell an economic downturn. SPARINGLY InJact, many companies have been borrowing sparingly, because they’ve had more profits and more cash flow from such items as larger depreciation tax write-offs 'on which to draw to meet financings needs. The bigger total of loans is due to the fact Ufat everything is bigger — the nation’s business, the demands of consumers, the population, the number and size of firms. As for the apparent tightening of bank credit in recent weeks, some bankers hold that reserves actually have increased this year — but not as fast as the demand for loans from individuals with rising standards of living and from business seeking to keep up with the expansion of the economy. “Total reserves have surged upwards almqst without interruption ever since the onset of the 1960 recession,” Morgan Guaranty Trust Company economists note. Available bank funds have gone up even faster in the business upturn that started eatly in 1961. Part of this is due to a huge flow of time and savings nmney into-the commercial banks in the last five years. But monetary authorities have been in an expansionary mood, too. The Morgan Guaranty economists note that the Federal Reserve in the first four months of this yeaf along added more than $600 million to these n SMALL FACTOR If money looks a little tight, right nowy^yjey add, a new monetary policy may be only a __ small factor. It could be that: “Fast as the Federal Reserve is running, private credit demands are running a_littlje..faster.” r'. niK I*()NTIA(; 1*HKSS. M()^DAV. MAV^ 24. 1005 ^ Deaths in Pontiac Area rURN H. TUBBS Service for Furn H, Tubbs, 80, of 71 Ogemaw will be 11 a.m. tomon ow a1 (he Dnnelson Joliiis Funerul Home wttb burial In Wblle (luipel (;omelery, Troy. Mr. Tubbs died Saturday after a long Illni^Ms. Surviving In addition bis wife. Myrtle, are five sons, l,e-Koy, Kugene.. Newton and William, all of Pontiae, a n d ris of Hay (;ity, and eight grand ebildren I,. <’. (OWFN BlIlMlNtUlAM Service for L. C. Cowen, 88, of 740 Oakland was held lhi.s m o r n I n g at Manley-ltailey Funeral Home Cremation was af While Chapel Mtnnorial (,'remidoi y Mr. Cowen died Saliirday af t(T a short illne.ss, A retired real estate broker, he was a ■ member of the Birmingham Unitarian Church, Surviving are his wife, Itufh; . A, Bauer of Arlington, Va ; (jjie sop, .lohn (’ of Bloomfield Township; and three grandchildren OllVILLK JAMUS II. F(M)TK MILFORD TOWNSHIP-Service for Orville James II. Foote, 20, of 950 Duck Lake will be I p.m, Thursday at the Richard son-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will Im^ in While (Jiapel Memo rial Cemetery. The youth died in an auto ac cidcnt yesterday Fimyivii Fimyiving are his mother, Mrs. Vernon F'‘oot(>, with whom he made hl.s home; two brothers, Janson B. in the U S. Navy and Sidney B. at home; and a grandfather, William Paton of Dctroil. MRS. WALTFR MARKLINF COMMFRCK TOWNSHIP Service for Mrs. Walter (lola Betty) Markline, 07, of 5928 Pickbourne will be II a.m, tomorrow at Flfon Black Funeral Home Burial will be in Commerce Cemetery. Mrs, Marklitn* died Saturday after a long illness. Surviving besides her h u s-band are two sisters and two grandchildren. MRS. MOIIIIKI.L M. JONKS AVON TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Morrell M. (Joyce) Opens Fight For 'Right to Work' Ban JOHN M. WALSH WOLVKRINK TOWNSHIP Service for John M. Walsh, 55, of 2120 Newport will be Ifl a m. tomorrow at Richardson B i r d 'tineral Home. Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Mr. Walsh died Saturday after a long illness. He was a tool InspectoT. His body will be at the funeral home after 8 p.m. twlay. Surviving arc bis wife, Mary; two sons, Thomas J. and Mark D., both of Walled Lake; and one brotluT. Washington (upi) - Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz today opened the administration’s fight for repeal of the '’^aft-Hartley Law provision permitting states to outlaw the union shop. His testimony touched off sharp debate on the issue. Wirtz told a House Labor and Education suKbommittee t h e controversial provision allows states to limit “the right to decide” rather than guarantees the right to work. Nineteen states have adopted so-called right-to-work laws under the provision. Rep. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mlch., who supports the right-to-work laws, asked Wirtz who spoke for the nation’s “unorganized workers” at the hearing. Of approximately 70 million employes in the United States, he said, only 17 million were union members. Wirtz replied that as secre-“ tary of labor, he represented all the workers, unorganized and organized. “Thdt,” he added, “is my oath of office.” Griffin also complained that governors and attorneys general of states involved in the issue were not on the witness list of the hearings. ROMNEY OPPOSED Subcommittee Chairman Frank Thompson Jr., D-N. J. replied, “If you like. I’ll have Gov. Romney come; yes, my governor, too.” Gov. George Romney of Michigan , is opposed to state laws banning the union shop. Griffin said that Congress would be doing “a disservice” to the nation to repeal Sec-^'tion 14-B of the Taft-Hartley ' Law. He said the “issues of civil liberties and individual rights are invoived.” But Thompson told his subcommittee that Section 14-B “bad law and bad logic.’* He said: “it offends the Constitution, because oncer federal jurisdiction is asserted, it should prevail.” , - " Wirtz was the first witness at the opening of the hearings, which are expected to run two weeks. Jones, 72, t)f 26.S2 Hillendalc will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Don-elson-Johns Funeral Home, Burial will be in aii Imlay (!ily' cemelery. Mrs. .lones dle Scholarship Debate Robert Sullivan, 17, a senior at Pontiac Central High School, won third place and a $800 scholarship Saturday in the 18th John S. Knight Scholarship Debate at Royal Oak Kimball High School. Son of Mr. and Mrs. I.ewis Sullivan of 215 Pioneer, Robert’s debate topic was: “Resolved: That nuclear weapons should be controlled by an international agency.” Court Voids Red Mail Curb Unanimous Decision Hits Postal Detention WASHINGTON (AP) 'I’be Su|)reme Court struck - ' r- 1 ' ' ' ' 'I SQUEEZE PLAY The driver of the sports car esca|>ed with minor Injuries in this wreck In .loni^sboro. Ark. Police said the big Americanmade car was slopped, preparing lo make a left lorn, and the sports cur was slopped behind it when the truck slammml Into the rear of the sports car. The sports car driver, said he saw the truck coming and lay down in the sent. For Top Federal Posts LBJ Pushes Hunt for Female Talent WASHINGTON (AP) Presl-dinit Johnson has applied additional beat in bis talent hunt for i‘ womi'ii in lop government jobs. He’s sent out word around the Dunlry and through .some key women to keep suggestions coming lo chief talent .scout John W. Macy, head of the US. Civil Service Commission. And the results were shoWing this week with the appointment of the country's first Negro woman ambassador. Mrs. Patri-Roberts Harris of Washington. is to represent the U.S. in Luxembourg. She’s the third woman Johnson has named to 1 ambassadorial )>ost. Besides that, llie President look the opportunity to needle a bit when 10 men were honored in a White Hou.se rose garden ernony as winners of goverrr-ment career service awards. deputy assistant secretary of state for public affairs. $26,(KK) POST Only this monh, lie pul Eileen Hernandez, assistant chief of the California Fair Employment Practices Division, into the $28,-0(M) post as a member of the new Equal Opportunity Commi.sslon. The President has gained spmg and lost home, too, TWo very prominent Kennedy women appointees have resigned their posts, MILS. HARRI.S CITES ODDS “Where are the women?” the Presidqnt wanted to know. He said he couldn’t believe “The odds are 10 lo nothing in favor of men when it comes to making an award bused on merit.” “I think sometimes we men are inclined lo think that be-cau.se we weigh more, are taller and our shoe size is bigger tbal this is also true of our intelligence and dedication,” he commented. Mrs. Harris, the President picked Mrs. Frankie Freeman of St. iiouis as the first woman member of the Civil Rights Commi.ssion. And, he promoted Charlotte Moton Hubbard to the highest ranking federal agency jmst ever held by a Negro woman - Saying he’d never found this so in his 35 years in public service, Johnson declared that promotions and awards in government aren’t based on the race, religion, political party or sex of the individual. From the very start of his administration, Johnson has made his position clear. HANDLES OATH He summoned Texas Judge Sarah T. Hughes, one of the few Women on the federal bench, to administer his oath of office after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. She thus became the first woman in history to swear in a president. Only a few months Inter, in a splash of publicity, Johnson named 10 women at one time to high posts. And, he chose a dinner of the Women’s National Press Club to do it. To date, Johnson has named some 90 wonjen to executive positions, but most of these have been appointments to commissions and advisory bodies on a per diem basis. His talent tabulators also report that during 1964, 418 other women were appointed by agencies and departments to posts paying $10,000 or more and that 1,553 women were promoted to such high-paying jobs. ACCOMPLISHMENTS The President frequently makes announcements updating these totals and. pointing with pride to his accomplishments. Just how good the record is, though, is hard to say, since comparable figures are not readily available. Nonetheless, he has scored some historic firsts in putting women into jobs heretofore held exclusively by men. These include naming the first woman member of the Atomic Energy Commission, Mary I. Bu.nting, president' of Radcliffe; the.first woman ever named to the Interstate Commerce Comiriission, Virgini^i Mae Brown, Pliny, W. Va.; and the first Tvoman to serve as assistant secretary of agriculture, Dorothy Jacobson, Minneapolis. He’s also given high posts to Negro women. In- addition to Arrest Teens at Weekend Beach Parties By United Press International The beer-and-beach tbeme prevailed again at several Lake Michigan beaches over the weekend. So did the arrests. Authorities in Berrien County arrested 60 teen-agers for possession of intoxicants at raids on beaches in the St. Joseph and Benton Harbor area Saturday and Sunday. More than 25 of these were arrested at Warren Dunes State Park near Bridgman, ' most of them from northern Indiana. At Grand Haven, Ottawa County officers arrested more than 15 youths at the Grand Haven State Park beach. The teen-agers were in two separate parties. Officers said quantities of beer, and whisky were confiscated at the Grand Haven beach parties. Most of the charges involved possession of alcohol by minors. At Saugatuck, which last year Was one of the big trouble spots, officers reported things were fairly quiet. The Saugatuck beaches are being heavily patrolled. One was the first woman White House physician. Dr. Janet Travell. She returned to private practice in Washington. And career diplomat Eugenie Anderson, 55, Rwi Wing, Minn., the only woman chief of a diplomatic mission behind the Iron Curtain, resigned last December ns minister to Bulgarin. She said at the lime she would continue in diplomatic service “in any position I am given.” But, so far she’s been given no new assignment. .Johnson maintained in April 1984: “My whole aim in promoting women and picking out, more women lo .serve in this administration is to underline our profound belief that we can waste no talent, we can frustrate no creative power, we can neglect no skill in our search for an open and just and challenging .society.” NOTICE OF PODUC SALE Nollcp Is h«r«f)y given sby the signed Ihel gn Thursdey, Mey 77, at 10 o'xiock a.m. at 109 Second L Rochester, Oakland County, Michigan, I 1959 Cadillac Devllle ■ • lumber 59L084537, it auction. Inspec- Street, Rochester. Oat Igan, the place ol i signed reserves the t NATIONAL BANK OF DETROIT 339 Main Street, Rochester, Mich. By: H. G. SMALE, Assistant Instaloan Manager Starving Woman and Man's Body Found in tjome DETROIT (AP) - A starving woman was -^ound Sunday in a Detroit home in which police also found the body of a man. Mrs. Ida Mae Bowden, 60, was hospitalized for acute malnutrition. She was reporte4,. in critical condition. The body of Charles M. More- head, 60, was fwnd at a table in the house. Ponce said he ap- parently suffered a fatal heart attack. They said he had been taking care of Mrs. Bdwdqn, who liad been ill. Officers said Morehead had been dead for four or five days. They said the Woman weighed only 65 pounds when they found her.. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING .. .Nqtice Is hereby given that a public hearing has been scheduled by the Pontiac City Commission to be held Tuesday, June e, 1965 at 8 o'clock p.m, E.S.T. In the Commission Chamber, City Hall, 450 Wide Track Drive East tor the purpose ol amending the Zoning Map ol Ordinance No. 944 known as the Building Zone Ordinance to rezone to Commercial 1 and Residential 3 the following described property; Commercial 1—The North 250 of the. East 400 feet Lof ' 3, Assessor's Plat Residential 3—Lot : scribid as: Beginning at the ........ east corner ol Lot 309 of East Side Park Subdivision; thence North sr 47' 10" East 75 feet; thence 01 87* 47' 10" East along the North Dne of Cottage Street extended E erly 547.30 feet; thince North Of 55" west 700 feet to a point In -Southerly line of Whillemore Avenue extended Easterly; thence South 87* 47' 10" West along the said Southerly line 547.30 feet; thence NbrtH Of 59' 55" West 50 feet; thence Souft 87* 47' 10" West along the Northerly line ■ of Whiaemore Street extended Easterly 75 feet to the Southeast corner of .Lot 294 of East Side Park Subdivision'; thence South Of 59' 55" East along East line of said Subdivision 800 feet lo point of beginning. Also, that part of Lot 4 of Assessor's Plat No. 141 lying Easterly of a line 293 feet W*st. of and parallel to the North and South Section line of Section 34. Also, except the North 250 feet of the East 400 feet of Lot 3, Assessor's Plat No. 141. By Order of the City Commission ----1 May 20, 1945 OLGA BAgKELEY, - City Clerk' May; 24, 1943 Drivers to G^t Safety Unit's Questionnaire \- Interim reports on the Ifctlvl-tles of the Oakland County Safoty Coinmitleo were prcBcnl- ed at n meeting of the commll-■ l?r lee’s Ixtard of directors recently. Seven committees presented reports, which Included the dis-•usslon of a questionnaire which will be distributed to 100,000 citizens riext week. The 17-questton document Is being sent out In hopes of finding sfune answers to the euuses of Oakland County’s high accident rate. 44ampre questions to be asked are: “When were you Inst in a traffli' aciMdent?” and " are traffic signs and signals in the ountry easy to see and understand?” \ The questionnaire will be distributed through places of business, civic and professional groups, unions, f^ictorles and tubs. COMMUNITY LEADERS rile Traffic Safely Committee is made up of 190 community lenders working wilb technical experts from the Highway Traffic Safety Center of Michigan Stale University Under the auspices of the Mott Center. A June 28 target date bus been set for the completion of all studies. Robbers Take $400 From Oxford Firm OXFORD - About $400 was taken from the Newels Lumber and Coal Co., at 52 E. Burdick yesterday, Police said the exact lime of the break-in was jpot established but that it w’as reported at 3 yc.sterday by Manager Milton Francis. Access was gained through a window which had been pried open. Youth Is Found Dead in Car Near Howell MILFORD - Orville J. Foote, 20, of 950 Duck Lake was found dead in his car Sunday In a pasture near Howell. Police said Foote apparently fell asleep at the wheel, veered into the pasture, and .was asphyxiated by carbon monoxide fumes. Waterford Students Leave for D.CTHp A group of 36 ninth graderti . at Crary Junior High School, Waterford Township, will tpave by bus today at 7 p.m. to visit the nation's capital. Traveling With the students will be soclaCsclencir' teacher James Matteson, Mrs. Mattoson and Mrs. Sonju Zoch. They will return Fr|day. Highlights of the trip will be a visit to the White House, the House of Representatives offico building and FBI headquilrters. Hospitalized After Crash A Pontiac Township man Is in satisfactory condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a two-car auto accident Saturday at North Perry and Ken-nett. Wilford W. Bates. 50. of 2410 Lapeer was Injured when his auto collided with n car driven by Shirley 11. Grassa, 22, of 2931 Rambling Way, Bloomfield Township. She was treated at the hospital and released. Report on Education ALLENDAl.E (AP)~The Gov-ernof’s blue ribbon committee, created to make a study of higher education In Michigan, presents its recommendations tonight In a panel session open to the public at Grand Valley State College. 2420 F NOTICE TO BIDDERS d propot«lt will b« rocolvud by ^„jird of County Ro»d CommlMlonort i« County of 0«kl«nd »l thoir offlcni. « Rodd, Pontlic, Mlchl- Slandard Time, Tuejday, Juno 8, 1945, and will be publicly opened end read at 11:00 o'clock a m. of the »eme day for furnljhlng Pojjenger end Truck TIree and Tubei— 1 Oakland County Road Com- The Board r a right to ralecf and lo accept the propoiali that In the opinion ol the Board It In the beat In-lereal and lo the advantage of the Board of County Road Commlaalonari of the County ol Oakland. Michigan and the County 6t Oakland, Michigan. BOARD OF COUNTY ROAD COMMIMIONERS OF THE COUNTY OF OAKLAND, MICHIGAN ROBERT O. FELT FRAZER W. STAMAN SOL D. 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