5 Sentenced in Commerce Twp. 'Glue-Shffl$t$f^W$ By DAVID J. COOK five persons arrested Tuesday night and held tar illegal possession of beer and contributing to the delinquency of minors were leach assessed $6 costs yesterday after pleading guilty to entering a house without per-, mission. Paying the fine were William The Weather u.s. WMttnr Bureau For tea W Partly Cloudy (IMMIt on PtfB » Mathews, 34, of Indianapolis, Ind.; Rodney Nickerson, 25, of 3153 Chenoa; brothers Cephls and Troy Fuson, 19 and 17, of 2977 Fisher; and Dennis R. Pur-dam, 19, of 3208 Barberry, all of Commerce Township. David E. Thompson, 17, of 525 Laguna Court, Wolverine Lake, pleaded not guilty and is scheduled for trial Dee. 28. . White Lake Township Justice Richard L. Murphy said those arrested were Involved in a “neighborhood problem.” * it it* “It’s really not too big a thing,” Murphy said, “and I think it’s been taken care of.” Deputies arrested the six along with two boys aged 12 and 14 and a 13-year-old girl. Also found in the unoccupied house at 1495 Oakley Park, deputies said, were several cases of beer, wine bottles, and a “sniffing” bag'contain-'' ing airplane glue. Assistant Prosecutor Robert Leutheuser, who issued the order for the entering without permission warrant, noted the penalties for that charge were the same as illegal possession of beer and contributing to the delinquency of a minor. it * ★ .“All three charges are misdemeanors,” he noted. “As for the sentences, they are entirely within the discretion of the judge. “I assume he acted with full knowledge of the circumstances;” INVESTIGATION The “circumstances” had been under investigation for about a month, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s Sgt. Harry M. Mauer. Maur declined to comment on the sentences handed the five. He revealed, however, that the 14-year-old boy apprehended in the home Tuesday night had been found by deputies at the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) THE PONTIAC PRESS 10= VOL. 124 — NO. 267 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1966—84 PAGES umED^&^TES.oNAL Romney: Need Tax Hike LBJ Calls Lull Wedge for Talk$ NO PARKING — A. L. McGinnis of 167 W. Kennett surveys the ponn«t Prt«» riot# by Edward r. Nowe damage caused when an automobile smashed into his home at about - then damaged two shrubs and two trees before crashing into the 2:20 a.m. today, Pontiac Police said Mrs. Margaret Harriman, 44, of house. Mrs. Harriman was treated at Pontiac General Hospital and 3406 Grafton, Orion Township, lost control of her car, left the road, released. Under County Rule TeamStef M()Ve City Airport to Enter New Era Snarls Detroit By L. GARY THORNE Bom in the prosperous pre-Depression 1920s, Pontiac Municipal Airport is expected to enter a new era of development under its new owners. Details remain to be worked out by administrators of the respective governmental units, but the County Board of Supervisors yesterday voted to accept the transfer of the airport from the city. Included among the details is the actual date (probably around Jan. 1) for swapping the daily operation of the 438-acre airport in Waterford Township. Prime objective of the transfer, accomplished for the price of two downtown properties owned by the county, is expan- sion bf the onetime cow pasture. The airport — already rated one of the busiest in the state— is to be developed to provide a Big If' Facing Auto Industry DETROIT (AP) — With reports on year-end prospects in from three of the nation’s four major auto makers and tye mood in the industry today appeared best summed up in one word: If. 0 That was the theme of, review-outlook statements yester- Weather to Stay the Same—Dull, Cloudy, Cool Little .change in temperature is expected through Saturday. ★ it ★ The weatherman predicts fair and a little warmer tonight with the low 26 to 32. Partly cloudy w i t h - season - temperatures, the high in the 30s, is the outlook for tomorrow. * ★ * Today’s light southerly winds at fi to 16 miles per hour will continue tonight. 'Twenty-four Was the low recording in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury stobd at 34 at 1 p.m. ** W Rank-and-File Rebels Stand Behind Hoffa DETROIT (AP)SyRebellious rank-and-file Teamsters curtailed transport in the Midwest commerce hub today in a display of support for thfeir leader, James R. Hoffa, and anger at the Supreme Court decision that may send him to jail. But Hoffa hurriedly acted to cut short the 24-hour walkout of truck drivers, Teamsters officials said, by calling tor a mass “back-to-work” rally at 10 a.m. in Detroit’s Cobo Arena. Officers and some other members of Pontiac Teamsters Local 614 'attended today’s meting at Cobo Arena. But it was not known whether they would support a walkout. The Teamsters chief was scheduled to fly to Detroit from Chicago after Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh appealed by telephone and telegram for Hoffa to intercede. Cavanagh had warned Hoffa, who was in Chicago on union business, that the proposed daylong refusal to work would cripple Detroit. Some 45,000 Teamsters work in and around the Motor City. * WALKOUT LIMITED But the walkout appeared limited to over-the-road, or long distance, truck drivers. Throughout Detroit, short-trip drivers of bakery, laundry, food chain and other trucks reported for work as scheduled, without noticeable absenteeism. Morris Coleman,'a trustee of Teamsters Local 337 in Detroit, announced Hoffa’s plans for the back-to-the-job rally. By daybreak, hundreds of Teamster- drivers failed to report for work in the Detroit area. “I’ve got 50 men Who haven’t reported,” said an Associated Transport Inc. spokesman. Other firms, primarily day operations, reported their truck drivers were telephoning to say they wouldn’t be im 1 f ^ ft: In Today's | Press Holly Annexation I Majority at hearing op- § pose proposal." — PAGE | H-l. JFK Book Jackie may relive hor- , # ror to block publication. | - PAGE E-12. Spanish Vote | : Support for Franco plan * fe unexpectedly heavy. — S PAGE C-2. | Area News .......... H-l I I Astrology .......... E-14 1 p Bridge ..............E-14 1 § Crossword Puzzle .. H-U 1 | Comics ............. E-14 i | Editorials ........... A4 § I Food Section ... E-2—E-3 1 | Markets ..............H-2 1 1 Obituaries ......... E-10 | I Sports D-l—D-5 1 I. Theaters .......... E-12 | i TV-Radio Programs H-ll I - Wilson, Earl.....H-ll 1 P Women’s Pages B-l—B-7 1 | Yule Features A ll, E-4 § / See Related Story, Page D-6 day by Henry Ford II, chairman of the Ford Motor Co., and Roy Abernathy, president of American Motors Corp. They closely followed the tone of an earlier year-end statement by Frederick Don-ner, chairman of General Motors. The year-end statement by Ctuysler Chairman1 Lynn Townsend was due late today and was expected to make the industry uncertainty unanimous. Traditionally the, most outspoken of the auto chieftains, Ford talked with newsmen at his annual review-outlook meeting yesterday of his hopes for labor peace in the upcoming contract year, resurgence from a current sales slump and renewal of consumer confidence. NEW CAUSE He injected a new cause for uncertainty when he became the first top auto executive to predict that some safety standards that may be required by the federal government on flwttW-de)s would make It impossible to build certain cars, forcing v some plants to close down. high caliber air service for Oakland County. EXPANSION COSTS Confronted with almost insurmountable expansion costs, city officials relinquished the airport because it was thought that air service was more properly a function of county government. Hence, county officials face the not-so-easy task of expanding and improving the airfield. According to most observers, the most immediate expansion will be the acquisition of land and air easements for the installation of an instrument landing system (ILS). ★ ★ ★ To be designated a clear zone, the land — about 15 acres — is located east of Airport Road and includes some 19 homes. Because the city had signed a 1962 contract agreeing to acquire the necessary land and easements for the ILS and failed to do so, federal aid for airport improvements was shut off. Pontiac had to reject a $14,-440 federal grant because of the strings1 attached to it. The monies were to go toward construction costs for an addi--j tionai T-hangar. Total cost Of the expansion (Continued on Page A-16, Col. 1) By the Associated Press President Johnson is seeking in Christmas truce proposals a new opening for talks with Communists on ending the war in Vietnam. Johnson made known through a White House comment last night that he was ready to discuss an extended cease-fire in Vietnam, including a freeze on troop reinforcements “if the other side is responsive.” When Press Secretary Bill D. Moyers was asked whether that meant the U. S. was ready to talk over with the other side in the war the specific issues of an extended cease-fire and a “stand fast” by both sides, he replied, “Yes.” Meanwhile, the Soviet Union today combined an announcement’ of plans to increase defense spending in 1967 with another attack on the Uj: S. for “criminal aggression in Vietnam.” ★ ★ ★ Russian Finance Minister Vasily F. Garbuzov set the defense budget increase at 1.1 billion rubles ($1.22 billion) or 8 per cent higher than the 1966 figure. WAR NEWS In war news, U. S. warplanes straddled Hanoi with bombs for the second straight day yesterday, the U. S. Commnad announced, but intense ground fire and a missile-firing MIG downed three of the American raiders. Targets for the air attacks were the truck depot and railroad yard bombed yesterday and missile and antiaircraft gun sites. Vietnamese military headquarters reported four widely separated Vietcong attacks in which defending government units were badly mauled. ★ ★ ★ B52 bombers struck twice today, both times inside the demilitarized zone separating North and South Vietnam. Expert Wants Three Per Cent Put on Income Governor Spells Out Need for $200 Million in Fiscal Reform Talk DETROIT UP) — Gov. Romney said yesterday the state needs $200 million dollars more if it is to meet fund ’ requests and continue present services. A tax increase is necessary, he said. "We need tax action or’.we; must cut services,” he said. See Story, Page D-7 “and cutting services is unthinkable.” A University of Michigan economist said the answer lies in a three per cent state income tax. Romney and William Haber, dean of the university’s college of literature and a professor of economics, spoke at the Michigan Conference on Fiscal Reform for Quality Education. The governor noted that the State Constitution prohibits the . Legislature from spending more money than the state takes in. “It is inconceivable to think in terms other than tax action,” he said. NO ALTERNATIVE Haber told the conference delegates he sees no alternative to a flat rate state income tax, The tax, he said, should carry exemptions of about $600 per person. He also suggested a sales tax credit of $12 per person. The credit, he said, “would ease the burden of lower income groups who spend most of their money on taxable items.” He estimated a three per cent flat rate tax would produce $350-million to $400 million a year, but would reduce sales tax income by about $100 million a year. Oxford Girl Dies as Auto Strikes Tree An Oxford girl was killed last night when the car she was driving skidded off an icy Oxford Township road and slammed into a tree. Dead is Sherry A. Kelley, 18, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Kelley of 19 Glaspie St., Oxford. A passenger in the car, Hazel Britten, 17, of 577 Broadway, Oxford, is listed in satisfactory condition at Lapeer County General Hos- • pital. ★ . ★ ★ Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said it took rescuers about 90 minutes to dig the Britten girl out of the wreckage. ★ ★ ★ | Deputies said the accident occurred about 6:15 p.m. on North Oxford, south of Ray. Review of Pail Study Planned Grade Separations Eyed at 2 Crossings City officials and representatives of Grand Trunk Western Railroad will meet tomorrow to. review preliminary findings of a grade separation study of two rail crossings, ★ * * An engineering study, financed jointly by the city and railroad, is under way of the Johnson and Huron crossings. Cost of the study is estimated at $22,500. • Purpose of tomorrow’s meeting is to review problems, and decide on one of several alternatives to be further studied for a grade separation at Johnson. The Johnson crossing has been given priority because city and railroad representatives thought information gained there would be useful in-approaching the more difficult problems involved in grade separation at Huron. For Teen Girl Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 143 Last Year to Date 152 Shopping Can Be'Tough' . XEDITOR’S NOTE - This is the fifth in a nine-part series on tips for Christmas gift buying.) By JEANNE NELSON Shopping for the teen-age girl can be “tough" (that’s great) or “whipped" (and that’s not so great). In either case get a firm grip, on yourself before you start gifting a go-go. You could start with a tiny gold baby ting. These are initialed and worn on the little finger. They start at $5.95 with engraving extra. A wallet that boasts 100 windows for $1 has just enough room for pictures of the whole crowd. They’re available in red, green and black. . The "Grannies” are back but this year they have become flannel nightgowns. In a variety of patterns and colors, they will cost from $4.98 to $8.98. As even shopping - weary mothers know, lavender is THE color and so it naturally follows that any girl caught without a lavender sweat shirt is definitely whipped. Some come as low as $1.99. In’the Mod world, white seamless hose have taken hold in a big way.' A pair would run under $1. A pair or two of instep straps will turn last year’s plain pumps into the bejeweled look of today. Each pair costs from $1.50 to $2. A sturdy watch can be glamorous, too. The one we saw has five different colored bands and faces to coordinate any outfit. It’s priced at $16.95. A lipstick tree would be just right for a teen's vanity or dresser. Costing about $5, it comes with It tubes of Hie latest shades. & Essentially, [fcit^'oUicMlv have indicated that the current study by Harley, Ellington, Cowin & Stirton, Inc., of Detroit, is an attempt to determine the construction problems and cost of the two grade separations. FURTHER FINDINGS Grand Trunk agreed to pay half the cost of the "study: '' Further preliminary findings are expected before the end of the year, but several weeks will be needed for a final report. The study of grade separations was initiated Yht( .'city because of increased traffic on both streets. HI ONES !| day brainwashing it over.'* ' ‘ ' % $ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1% 1M6 Publishers Cool About Romney DETROIT (AP) - Michigan Gov. George Romney, who appeared an unannounced candidate for the 1968 GOP presi- Police, City Meet Mediator Fact-finding into the Pontiac Police-city pay dispute resumed behind closed doors today, with state-appointed examiner Harry N. Casselman meeting alternately with city officials and police leaders. It was the fourth meeting between the city and the Pontiac Police Officers Association (PPOA) since the State Labor Mediation Board stepped into the wage crisis early in November. The previous three meetings had been open to the public. Casselman, a Birmingham attorney, said he had received no word from either side since urg-i ing them to get together informally following the last, fact-fending session two weeks ago. dential nomination, has a long way to go before support from newspaper publishers, an informal poll indicated Wednesday. Only one of eight publishers interviewed said Romney should be nominated. The publishers were in Detroit to attend meetings with the Big Three automakers—Ford, General Motors and Chrysler. a * * David Bradley, publisher of the St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press & Gazette, who indicated Romney should be the Republican candidate, qualified lus remarks* by saying Romney ’has a long way to go to project his image.” ★ * * “Romney is probably leading in the thinking of Republicans,” said Richard L. Jones Jr., publisher of the Tulsa (Okla.) Tribune, “and people are :urious about him. Birmingham Area News School Secretaries' Pact AWARD WINNER - Hie Birmingham Bloomfield Bank — Wixom Branch won the Award of Excellence in the recent National Architectural Design competition. It was designed by architects Ziegelman and Ziegel-man of Birmingham. BIRMINGHAM - A contract which grants wage Increases retroactive to last July has been signed between the Birmingham Board of Education and the Birmingham Association of Educational Secretaries. The new three-year contract includes a salary increase ranging from $300 to $977 at the beginning levelio $582 to $2,175 at the top step. ♦ ★ ‘h A contract for custodial and maintenance employes will be presented to the board of education for ratification Tuesday. ingham Masonic Temple Association board of directors. Elected with him were Ernest W. Montgomery, vice president; Charles T. Buchan, secretary; and Willard C. Paul, treasurer. * * * A board of trustees was also set up for the Birmingham Ma- County Sewer Project Clears Important Hurdle Barry to Make Study for Area Trash Facility The Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday authorized Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry to conduct a study for a countywide refuse disposal facility. It also named him to implement plans for the rubbish and garbage plant once the study is completed. Barry had been selected as the implementing agent by the board in September, but later it reconsidered the action and gave Barry the power to only head the study. The federal government, which will pay two-thirds of the estimated $100,000 study, then informed the county that before it approves the grant application it had to know who would carry out the program. CARRIED GRIFFIN I think they were amazed not so much by his reelection but because he carried Griffin along with him." ★ * * For all his “evangelistic zeal,” Romney doesn’t have the support of GOP politicians, said Francis L. Dale, president and publisher of the Cincinnati Enquirer. “Romney is a fine man, but not a politician.” * * ★ Dale said the Republican nomination should go either to name that can sweep the country or to former Vice President Richard Nixon.” Ship's Captain Back on Stand Oakland County’s giant $33-| million Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor project, which would lead to sewers for a large slice of the county, cleared an important hurdle yesterday. The County Board of Supervisors approved the $17.4-mil-lion bond issue, contracts with s e v e n of the eight participant communities and plans for the project. Also approved were plans for the Galloway Creek sewer arm, which runs across a portion of north Pontiac, and is expected to cost $760,000. Construction costs of the Clinton-Oakland project are to hit $17.4 million, but interest charges (at 4% per cent) may push the final cost to approximately $33 million. Pontiac is the only community that has not signed its Clinton-Oakland c o nt r a c t, although county officials still have Pontiac in the plans. Approved in separate action by the county board, the Galloway Creek sewer may be constructed ahead of the rest of interceptor if any delay is encountered, assuming tile city decides to have the county construct the trunk sewer. CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) Capt. Thomas J. Connelly of the E. Y. Townsend, sister ship of the ill-fated Daniel J. Morrell, returns to the witness stand today in the U.S. Coast Guard inquiry on the Morrell disaster. ★ ★ ii- Others expected to testify are J. F. Perrine, chief engineer of the Townsend, and Capt. James Van Euskirk, master of a Ford Motor Co. ship, the Benson Ford, which was on Lake Hu-Nov. 29 when the Morrell sank. The granting agency, the Public Health Service of the Health, Education and Welfare Department, demands compliance with state statutes. In Michigan, only the drain commission or road commission are authorized as implementing agents for refuse disposal plans. The ways and means committee and tike drain committee of the County Board of Supervisors recommended that the drain Connelly, under questioning commissioner be impowered to all day Wednesday, said the implement the program. Nov, 28-29 storm was the worst It has been estimated that the he has ever seen in the Great study will take eight months. | Lakes in his 27 years as a sailor. The Morrell is believed to have broken in two before it sank to the bottom of the lake during the season’s most violent storm. Twenty - eight crew members lost their lives; ★ ★ ★ The sole survivor, Dennis C. Halle of Ashtabula, is expected to testify later. Two men charged with murder pleaded guilty to lesser . fenses yesterday in Oakland ! County Circuit Court. u'1/ I T I l Jack W. Young, accused of|| VI lip I fflfl I An M first-degree murder in the June | I Ulv I1 vw LV/IJ | The Weather HmmmmmmmssMmm ua Full 11. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly fair and a little warmer today and tonight. Partly cloudy and a little colder Friday. Saturday’s outlook: Partly cloudy with seasonal temperatures. Highs today 35 to 40, lows tonight 26 to 32. Light southerly winds 6 to 16 miles today and tonight. 2 Killings Resolved in Guilty Pleas City officials have concern that the creek sewer would not be ready to provide sewer service for a proposed new Catholic high school in the northeast corner of the city. Consequently, Pontiac has not signed the Clinton-Oakland contract. Next step for the Clinton-Oakland is application to the State Municipal Finance Commission for its approval to issue the xids. County Department of Public Works Director R. J. Alexander said today that plans for the interceptor are already in hands of the Michigan Department of Health. Meanwhile, the Clinton-Oakland project is also involved in a suit filed by Rochester area residents. The suit alleges as illegal a proposal to return to Rochester any tax money collected from Rochester property owners by Avon Township to make payments on the system. 5 Sentenced in Glue Case (Continued From Page One) same home one day before “in a drugged condition.” “The kid had been reported missing from school, but we did not hear from the parents until about 8:10 p.m. Monday,’’ Maur said. ‘He was found (at 1405 Oakley park) along with a 19-year-old girl who had been living there. “Deputies reported to us that the boy’s eyes were bloodshot and dilated and he seemed intoxicated, although they could smell no beer or liquor on his breath.” The 19-year-old girl, Sandra Preto, was charged at that time with contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Arraigned before Commerce Township Justice John C. Weick, she is held at the jail in bond of $1,000 pending preliminary examination. The Awjard of Excellence was awarded to the Birmingham Bloomfield Bank — Wixom Branch recently in the Seventh Annual National Architectural Design competition. The building, designed by architects Ziegelman and Ziegelman of Birmingham was prefabricated and assembled on the site, “providing a practical solution to the need for quick action in providing a branch banking structure.” The award stated that “without disguising its transitory character, it conveys through its beauty of proportion and elegance of detail a satisfying air of serenity.” Firm on Oil Ban UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — African members of the U.N. Security Council reportedly have refused to drop demands that Britain use force to cut off Rhodesia’s oil supply despite Western gamings such demands are doomed to defeat. John C. Filkins, 21751 Coral Gables, Southfield was recently elected president of the Birmr Detroifer Killed in Viet Action WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Defense Department yesterday listed one Michigan serviceman among 21 killed in recent action in Vietnam. ★ ★ ★ He was Army Spec. 4 Thomas G. DeTamble, the son of Mrs. Della DeTabmle of Detroit. sonic Temple Endowment Fund eonafating of W. Carleton Scott, Ernest W. Montgomery, Albert J. Bozzi, Clarence W. Blenman, W. Lyle Bones, John D. Mackay and John C. Filkins. The “Jolly Roger” was the Mack flag of piracy. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St.r SIMMS Specials in Eleetrenies and Transistor Sifts on Sale For Today-Friday-Saturday - Electronics-TRANSISTOR Oeot. 'REALTONE JADE' Model 162 for local area AM broadcasts. With case and battery. $1 holds. It is not what he has, nor even what he does, which directly expresses the worth of a man, but what he is. — Henri Frederic Amlel, Swiss philosopher. 20 bludgeon slaying of his wife,! was allowed to enter a plea ofj| manslaughter before Judge Ar- j thur T. Moore. || Julian H. Moore pleaded I guilty to carrying a concealed 1 weapon in the fatal shooting . of Mrs. Roenehl Nash, 30, a I barmaid at Harry’s Bar, 465 f S. Sanford. ii Young faces a maximum 15- j year prison term for man-p slaughter when he is sentenced Jan. 19 by Judge Moore. ★ ★ ★ A first-degree murder conviction. carries a mandatory life sentence. CLAIM ADMISSION When Young, 34, was arrested by detectives from the sheriff’s j department the day after then murder of his 30-year-old wife, j he reportedly admitted the slay- j ing. He was taken into custody I at Unionville in Tuscola County where he went fishing with a. friend after the killing in his home at 3940 Crooks Road, j Avon Township. NATIONAL WEATHER - The Weather casts only sparse precipitation tonight. Snow and snow m with rain will fall on extreme northern New England, and showers are forecast!for the lower Mississippi Va Extreme southern Plaids and north Pacifjc Coast.* ^ 31 Moore, according to the pros- j it n ecutor’s office, apparently was|f| Anjirei 75 m act'ng in self-defense when he Beach m .« sHot and killed Mrs. Nash dur-M 26 ing an argument in the bar | Sept. 18. ■i * * * ! Moore, 21, of 319 E. Wilson, initially had been charged with j first-degree murder, but the charge was reduced to second-degree murder at his prelimi-nary court examination. ! FACES EXTRADITION ) \ He still faces an armed rob-bery charge in Waterford Township, and extradition proceedings for transfer to Chicago l where he is wanted by police | on a Murder charge. According to Witnesses in the baf, Mrs. Nash, 201 Prospect, struck Moore first in the head with a glass while he was arguing with another customer, and pointed a pistol at him. He fired two warning shots before two others struck Mrs. I Nash, they said, j Judge William J. Beer will I r-ij sentence Moore Jan. 16,* The of-, tense carries a maximum five-year prison sentence^ Need License Santa’s helpers operat- I ing Christmas tree lots in Pontiac during the holiday season are required by a newly passed city ordinance to pay a $3 license fee and post a $25 | i bond. | The new ruling, passed 1 by the City Commission I Nov. 7, is directed pri-I marily at maintaining fire | | safety standards and at * I clearing lots of unsold 1 trees. • * ★ ★ Operators not obtaining a license, failing to post the security bond, or not removing unsold trees | may be fined as much as $ $90 and are subject to 90 ® d a y s "in the Oakland County Jail. City Fire Marshal Charles Metz will have supervisory authority over the lots under provisions § of the ordinance. w New Hi-Fashions 50 Different Shapes Gift Pendant Watches j Styles for the Ladies on Your List Hi-foshion imported pendant watches for round the neck . .. smart shapes to choose from — 50 assorted ones iihjJfact’.H Yellow, white and fashion col- I ors to pick from- Long nontarnish chains to hang these pendant watches. Come, sHH #nd save at SIMMS. Watches not necessarily as pictured. See H! Try H! Buy H At SIMMS - Famous N0RELC0 Carry-Corder ISO Cordless Cartridge Tape Recorder eEIlf 4 6-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radios 369 'RHAPSODY' Hi-Power 8-TRANSISTOR Pocket Radios 479 . . . Loads in Seconds . . . Records For An Hour 89»* Charge It With Any Major Credit Card I Snap-in tape cartridge, flick a switch, and record anywhere. iFully portable tape cartridge ‘ 'CARRY-CORDER' is easy to load, Oasy to operate, too. One switch for Instant load and play-, v bock. Complete with deluxe carrying, case, mike with detachable switch, mike pouch, 4 tape cartridges and patch cord. A Christmas special for thitentire family here at Simms. 98 North ' Saginaw Get Polios Galls Plus FM-AM 5-Band Aircraft and Marine Band A*Shown - Use Your Credit Card to Charge It at Simms Flick the knob and hear dramatic police calls, marine and aircraft as well as fine FM broadcasts plus regular AM stations. Color coded, lighted band indicators identify your channel. Leather cose— only weighs 5 pounds. 2 antennas, dial lamp, earphone, jack. AC jack, and optional AC adapter. . Solid State FM-STERE0 Multiplex and AM 2-Speaker Tablet Radio 49" I *<*>■ ■ f 5 ‘Alaron lib. 421’ Compact Size & Portable Tape Recorder 4-transistor portable WUMmmam&mSm ,Qf* recorder in "ovel cabinet —os shown. Complete with microphone, earphone, batteries 3" reels and sample tape. Only $ 1 holds in free layaway. 2-Way Battery and AC Operation ‘Awia’ Portable Tape Recorder t THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1966 i BARGAIN BARRAGE from The House of BARGAINS - SIMMS MMS Open Everyday 9a.ni. te 10p.m. 'til Christmas Every Gift Under Your Tree Will Cost Less If You Get ’em At SIMMS ... ’Cause We Guarantee Cut-Prices - Even At Christmas Com par* Simms prices on comparable items anywhere and you'll see what we mean, that our prices stay cut even at Christmas. MaiW stores get their highest prices of the year during Christmas, but at Simms, we still sell for less because more people buy and we are happy dome —:l lions of doltfars in business with profits in pennies. All specials good Thurs., Fri. and Saturday and all prices subject to stocks on hand also reserve the right to limit all quantities. Save On ICE SKATES at SIMMS Men’s War Hockey Skates Choice of men's tubular hockey skates or black figure skates. Leather lined in ral sizes 7 to 13. wJ Ladies’ Insulated Figure Skates , Better figure style skates are insulated for warmth while skating. Sizes 5 - 6 • 9 -10 only. Regular $ 10.95 value. Kids’ Double Runner Skates Genuine 'Arto' double runner skates for the beginning youngsters. With leather uppers. Sizes 11-12-12 only. —Basement // | Simms [f'$| Price Just 3«7 Figure and Hockey Skates Your Choice * Girls’ White Figure * Children’s White Figure * Boys’ Black Figure * Boys’ Hockey Skates Endicotf-Johnson or Arco skates in girls' and children's white in sizes 11 to 5, boys' black figure and insulated skates in sizes 12 to % regular style boys' hockey style in sizes 12 and 13 only. Girls’ and Ladies’ Figure Skates White Hi-Style arq. •97 ^97 3«8 Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Ideal for Gifts or Winter Vacations Traveler Luggage 225 Ladies'_ 1*50 Beauty Case....... JL § $27*50 Ladies' * w A2S 21" Overrate...... J[5f $27.50 Men's -■ aoie 21"Companion.... JtJf $32.50 Ladies' AA7S 24" Pullman......&& $42.50 Men's n ■ e a 3-Suiter..............31**° $40.00 Ladies* 01)00 Royal Traveler luggage makes a Wardrobe...........A 99 welcome gift or as personal lug- $42.50 Pullman gage. Made by Samsonite of long 26-Inch Case......A*f ' wearing vinyl covering with lustrous linings. Complete range of colors. ’ $42.50 Men's 0075 — Basement 2-Suiter Cose ...A 99 We Also Carry Conbplete Line of Samsonite Silhouette, Contoura or Streamlito Luggage Main Floor CLOTHING DEPT. Ladies’ Flannel Pajamas-Gowns Gown* tizat 1 an IS to 40........ I Gowns Siztt 1 no 42 to 48........ 1 Gowns sizts <139 BO to 52........, A Cuddly warm. cotton flannel, full cut for comfort. First quality with lace trim. Sizes 32 to 40 Pajamas Fin, quality, 100% 'Wf • withTailoaid 019 I ise. A.sarl.d M 1 [■' -Main Floor Nylon Hose • Seamless % Fiat Knit • First Quality 4» 3-pr. 1.45 The one gift every woman can use. Lovely sheer nylon hose, regular $1.00 valuer in your choice of beigetone, cinnamon or jet brown. —Main Fleer Chenille or Tenycloth 3 Ladies’Robes Choose from solid color or prints in warm chenille or, terrycloth robes. Button front style, some sleeveless ones, too. Sizes 10 to 42. —Main Floor Electric Guitar Solid Body Cutaway Style Simms Price 18®5 A new item and at Simms of course. A small size electric guitar for the beginner with beautifully finished rosewood solid body. Not >a toy but a real' musical instrument, complete with cord, pick and instructions. AMPLIFIERS from G1LM Sundries — Main floor Main Floor SUNDRY DISCOUNTS Norelco 'Flip Top1 Men's Electric Shaver |§^§!S ‘Chicago’ Roller Skates 11«« Genuine leather shoes on Chicago rollers with plastic wheels for rink use. White for girts and worpen and black i and boys. All s -Basement I The world's most popular shaver, features self sharpening rotary blades, flip top clean-. Sundries— Main Floor ing and on/off switch. B**m*unraa«*OT*t**iMwww^^ Newest Model Ronson Cordless '■Hi ■«HWy' Electric Shaver $38.95 List Pries 50 Different Models 'TIMEX' Wrist Watches Man’s • Woman’s - Boys’ - Girls’ 95 to 4S.OO 6 Including !7 jewel, self-wind and electric models for everyone in the family. Sundries—Main Floor 7-1 nch Size ‘WISS’ Pinking Shears Perfect gift for the woman who i Saves time, effort and money. Handy 7-inch size for all purpose use. Sundries—Main Floor 688 Don’t Discard Worn Out Batteries ‘FEDTRO’ Battery Charger Empty Zippered Leather Drop Kit 1BL4»s Others from 98c to 7.95 Genuine leather drop kit with zip closing for shaving needs! Your choiceof black or brown. Sundries — Main Floor Petite Size Toy Typewriter 95 Simms Price 19 Small typewriter with bail bearing > carriage takes standard ribbon. Complete! with carry case. Sundries-Main Floor Pen and Pencil Set $2.95 volue, Ideal slocking sluff.r, hi and pencil set with chrome H finish. Gift boxed too. :|F Sundries—Ma in Jlaor SIMMSJL Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. ‘OSTER’ 2-Speed Liquefier-Blender 22 88 Enjoy spin cookery with this el trie blender. Stainless settl < ting assembly, 4-cup glass c! Decorative Set of 4 Prism Litas Graduated Height Build Healthy Bodies ‘EMENEE” Muscle Builders 99* Up To $1.99 [ Values I Your choice of adjustable chin j bar dumbbells or rower. Limited ! su pply of each in stock. Sports—2nd Floor' fiVa-Ft, Lifetime Scotch Pine Christmas Tree 14*7 Lifetime vinyl Christmas tree of I istic scotch pine. Complete ] stand—not as Shown. Hardware—2nd Floor 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS For Large Holiday Parties Gift Idea For Your Handyman Powerful Black & Decker Electric Finishing Sander Kit 23" Model U140K withWijjHP.; 2.2 amp motor velops 4000 rpm. Complete with 20' sheets of semdpape g can of famowood filler and plastic storage case. Hardware—2nd Floor ^ners^erTiTg^GirnTF in Carry Case rustic cut Simms Price 544 Dual heat soldering gun with 2 trigger positions, spotlight. Complete With accessories and plastic carry case. Tools — 2nd Floor Ideal Gift for The Hostess Sunbeam Automatic Electric Party Grill $17.88 A07 Value .11 IF 9 Only Automatic grill that makes twelve bite-t size treats- So easy and quick to use. Most treats are ready in 90 seconds. Limit 2. Appliances — 2nd Floor «*qwa»CMea*BwaB«R^^ FOR TOOLS or FISHING TACKLE Tool Box All Steel With Lock 288 All stee| ,14-1 nch toot box with divided puli up fray. For tools or fishing tackje. Made in USA Not as shown—Model 5314. All Metal Bond Box with Key Size 11 x7’/4x3 Vi inches. With lock and key...£> Hardware—2nd Floor Genuine ‘SUNBEAM’ 1 Electric Trimmer For Hedges and Shrubs $34.95 Valpe 2188 Model HT200, lightweight, single bladed steel cutter bar, automatic hedge ieveler, chrome plated wrap around handle. -*■ _______ Power Tools *- 2nd Floor ‘Fostoria’ Grille-Waffle Baker Mmf9BB9995MM99EflEiaiaimyMBMW9l THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15. 1966 j&ntally Fit Than Civilians' DI AN, Vietnam (AP) — The hi Vi mental health of American soldiers in Vietnam is better titan civilians back home enjoy, according to Capt. Jimmie R. Clemons, psychiatrist of the UJS. 1st Infantry Division. The Dallas, Tex., doctor says he has found a much rate of seriously side or psychotic people am wig the GIs — despite the threat of death or maiming, plus loneliness or boredom — than in the general population of the United States, a * fig Clemons sees about 100 patients a month from among the division’s 16,000 men. Most of them show up at his cubbyhole hospital office with minor emotional problems, some of them for follow-up interviews. That is less than 1 per cent. Among his monthly callers “only two or three are psychotic, a much lower proportion than you see in stateside practice.’* NOT TYPICAL The soldiers, of course, are not typical of the general U.S. population. Most are young. They are usually buoyed by good morale. And when they falter emotionally, they receive prompt attention, on the scene. ★ ★ ★ Both psychiatry and the U.S. Amy’s attitude toward emotional and psychiatric ailments have progressed far since World War I, when soldiers who broke up were called victims of shell shock. In World War II another name was battle fatigue. Late in that war, psychiatrists began realizing and correcting a mistake. ★ ★ ' ★ The mistake was to take men with psychiatric problems out of their units, at the front or el: have enlisted trained in soda] spot emotional symptoms an! begin early first aid. COMMUNITY CENTERS The counterpart at borne more use of general hospitals for psychiatric patients, and the growth of community health centers providing a variety of services. Some of Clemons’ patients are men emotionally torn up from having seen close friends killed or severely wounded in combat. 'I don’t consider them seriously 111,” the captain said: “We keep them here”—in the clearing company hospital at this -“for a couple of weeks, giving them drugs to combat anxiety or depression, letting them rest, giving them counseling. Like anyone who loses someone in his family, they of-through periods of mourning and depression, sometimes with anxiety about themselves thrown in.” ★ ★ * But most men are sent in bemuse of conflicts between personality and situations. A man may be at loggerheads with his sergeant and “he begins having anxiety. I try to find out why he is having trouble. Sometimes he might do better in a different company.” FAMILY PROBLEMS Family problems back home, about which the man .can do nothing at this distance, gives some men emotional storms. Many, when their morale suffers, develop psychosomatic complaints — such as stomach or back pains. Soldiers, like others, often, find it embarrassing to be referred to a psychiatrist. The stigma that “having to see the where, and send them to rear area hospitals. That, Clemons said, broke a familiar tie and began a divorce. FAR FROM HOME It was comparable, in civilian life, to dispatching the mentally ill to distant state hospitals, far from home. To the patient, this meant he was considered really sick. So they tended to stay prisoners of disturbed minds and often of inadequate care. * ★ * World War II taught that the farther the soldier was sent back for treatment, -the less likely he was to return to duty. ★ * ★ By the time of Korea, psychi- atrists were treating men as close as possible to the physical scene of their troubles. ★ ★ * That policy is being continued shrinker meant you’re . is still strong, Clemons There’s still, resistance to admitting that one’s emotions can become tied up just as can a stomach,” he observed. “But if we handle a man’s problems right here, he gets to feel that bra not so sick after all. And when we send him back to his unit, he feels that whatever was wrong with mustn’t have been too bad. “Furthermore, he is still in the division, still is part of it. U)uif( OPEN TIL 9:30 Every Day Til Christmas TURBAN TEMPTRESS ONLY $400 Cloud-soft im ported Italiqn mohair fetch-ingly draped turban makes the perfect cold weather companion. And you'll love so much luxury at so small a , price. A variety of color to choose from. One head size fits all. How many for you? Millinery... Third Floor Books ... Mezzanine ,\J 0*0gad jAf? Ah - r * r / WmUmjXA ttrfUuA! 1 SATURDAY: ONLY DEC. 17,1966 see masterpieces in Mink* at incredibly Low Prices during our spectacular Gift Fur Showing Natural Mink Stoles....................................$ 199 Natural Mink Stoles and Capes In Fashion Shades.........$299 Natural Mink Stoles and Capes ....................$499 to $599 Natural Mink Jackets in Fashion Hues..................... $699 Natural Mink Short Coats,for High Fashion .. ......... $999 Black Dyed Broadtail-Processed Lamb Jackets...$199, 1$2$9, $399 Natural Full Length Mink Coats.* $...................■?. $1399 For furs of high quality and high fashion at truly tremendous savings, this is the event,you shouldn't missl Each magnificent fur has been individually-selected for superlative, quality, fine craftmanship and tontour styling by Mr. Hy Selby, our own 'New York fur consultant. Gome meet Mr. Selby who'll be glad to advise‘and assist yog in your selection of a precious fur fashion. Fur Salon, Third Floor. • Fur products labeled to show country of origin of imported furs. ' rabbit coats, natural and dyed $139-$179 Pastel dawn or natural ranch mink stoles Natural mink capes double fur collar stoles THURSDAY, DECEMBER IS, IMS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Amo McCvur County Raises Flag on City Airport Culminating many years' negotiations, Oakland County yesterday as-sinned control of the Pontiac Municipal Airport. The transfer of ownership was formalized by unanimous approval of the county board of supervisors following a 6 to 1 favorable vote by the city commission. The move should prove mutually beneficial. On the one hand it relieves the City of a facility that had become a financial problem. On the other, it vests operation of the airport in a government agency in a position to improve and expand it. ★ ★ ■ it ' On the premise that a fair trade is no loss, the . City exchanged its $1.4 million equity in the 40-year-old airport for two pieces of downtown property: the site of the old courthouse at Saginaw and Huron now utilized as a parking lot and the building at No. 1 Lafayette now occupied by several county departments. Both properties hold prospects of becoming valuable city assets. Pontiac will immediately fall heir to the $20,000-a-year parking income from the Saginaw-Huron property, while the County will have continued occupancy of the Lafayette 8treet building for two years pending completion of the new wing of the courthouse on Telegraph Road. County authorities envision development of the airport in line with the master plan prepared for the City in 1963. ★ ★ ★ Pursuant to it, plans for an instrument landing system would be pushed with eventual construction of a north-south runway. The total concept represents some $9 million, 75 per cent of which would be contributed by Federal and state agencies. The Press congratulates City and County officials on the constructive action taken to provide an airport reflecting the growth and progress of our dynamic area. Murray M. Ashbaugh The many friends and former as- -sociates of Murray Ashbaugh were saddened to learn of his death in Texas where he had lived since his departure from the local scene 10 years ago. A native of Hillsdale, Mr. Ashbaugh came to Pontiac in 1932 to become identified with the old First Nation a 1 Bank. As the Depression deepened bringing about the national “bank holiday” and subsequent reorganiza- tion of many financial institutions, he served successively as conservator or receiver of several area banks. Mr. Ashbaugh’s experience in the field of finance led to an appointment in the City Treasurer’s office in 1949. He served as treasurer from 1953 to 1955., ★ ★ ★ '■ i Always interested in civic affairs, he was active in many social and community-betterment area? and an enthusiastic supporter of any worthy cause. The passing of Mr. Ashbaugh at 81 ended a full life enriched by personal achievement and service to his fellows. ASHBAUGH Coach, Team Take Beating From Lions ‘Fans’ After floundering through the 1966 schedule, Detroit’s Lions wound up on a sour note last Sunday. But no less sour was the conduct of fans who intermittently chanted the departure of Coach Harry Gilmer and, as the dejected squad left the fipld at game’s end, pelted him and his players with snowballs. ' Although Gilmer is unlikely to be named “Coach of the Year,” his personal cohduct has been admirable throughout a season of frustrations. Kooky conduct on the part of some players compounded by flouting of hi sauthority by others have but aggravated the woes of a losing season. Yet through it all, Gilmer has been ever the gentleman, for-baring from answering in kind the disparagement of players, fans and press while preserving a demeanor of tolerance and courtesy. ★ ★ ★ It is reprehensible that, in a city noted for good sportsmanship, a clutch of “sick” spectators' would inflict public humiliation on coach and team. ★ ★ ★ We suggest that those who evidently found pleasure in torment would reap even greater enjoyment at a bullfight. Crime Lab’s Duties Expand Associated Press News Analyst .WASHINGTON - Was this the moon-shiner who made the whisky found in the cans beside the still? He wasn’t there when th e government agents found the cans. But he was tried and convicted. The soil on the cans and the soil on his gloves were found to be the same when they were sfent to a laboratory in the basement of the Internal Revenue Service building in Washington for analysis. This laboratory, now about three and a half years old, is one of the most sophisticated crime detection centers in the country. It is still in its developing stage, with a lot to learn, but it is learning, under the direction of Dr. Maynard Pro. It has not been widely publicized and probably few employes in the IRS building ever heard of it. * ★ ★ If they did, and wandered down to the basement, they might miss the inconspicuous sign on one of the doors which simply says: “Neutron Activation Analysis."-'1" bootleggers The original idea was to help the government fight bootleggers. But its work steadily expanded. Now state'police departments-come there with crime problems, along with Post Office inspectors and the Treasury Department’s own Secret Service and Narcotics Bureau. State and federal courts have accepted evidence from the laboratory. As an example of searching for certainty, take the question, in simplified language, of proving a certain bullet made a certain hole in a piece of cloth, say a man’s coat. RESIDUE IS LEFT When a cartridge explodes, firing a bullet, gasses leave a residue on the bullet and some of this is left on the cloth. By making both the bullet and the cloth radioactive, which means activating in an atomic way various kinds of particles in both, the scientists try to determine whether the particles activated in both are identical. Here are some of the other areas the IRS laboratory gets into, although only a fraction of them: Take a piece of hair found on the cuff of a man’?., pants and a hair taken from the head of a woman he is suspected of killing. Everyone’s air has a peculiarity of its own because of differences in diet, climate, and so on. Or take a case of attempted rape where the accused man claimed to be somewhere else instead of at the scene of the alleged crime. As part of the prosecution, soil found on his shoes was sent to the laboratory where it was compared with soil taken’ from the woman’s yard arid with soil taken from the place where he said he had been. .He was convicted. 4 MARLOW You Have A~Bandaid Handy—I Hope!' 3JtU«0 SJXWt ‘ Let’s Draft All Mothers Who Abandon , Our educators, government specialists and congressmen are in Chicago making changes in our present draft laws. I’d suggest to Senator Kennedy that women and girls be drafted who abandon their children. ★ ★ ★ ................. . Also, have their pay sent home to help pay a full-time baby sitter so the father could spend more time with his children instead of pulling a lot of overtime or two jobs. Maybe these women would think twice before leaving a home motherless. Why must their ihpocent children bear it all? LARRY MARINO 824 ROBIN WOOD Says Outlook Has Changed Since Election Governor Romney seems to be in a hurry to be President and the Republican victory has already caused people to slow down on buying—depression is the word. Governor Romney wants to blame it on President Johnson but before the election it was big “I" with the Governor. CLC Discussions Continue on Teen-Age Conduct I am white, seventeen years of age, and I’m proud of nr race. But why do many people condemn the Negro race? I’m just as proud of Negroes as I am of whites, and sometimes prouder. ★ ★ ★ I think all Americans are equal in aU ways. There are good and bad in all races. PROUD OF ALL RACES David Lawrence Says: Republicans Have ’68 Complex WASHINGTON - Republican governors and leaders in Congress are giving the impression that they are more interested at the moment in selecting a pres iden-tial candidate for 1968 t h a n they are in terpreting the will of the peo- LAWRENCE pie as expressed in the elections last month. Instead of beginning to organize a constructive opposition which will affect the course of legislation in the next two years, they seem to be concerned primarily with evaluating the respective ambitions of potential candidates. Actually, the Republicans really don’t have -a united party yet — only a lot of splinter groups. tax receipts by a sound fiscal policy than it is to raise tax rates and disrupt the economy. It is unusual for a party that gained as many seats in Congress and as many governorships as did the Republicans in the elections last month to spend the 30 days thereafter in relative silence, avoiding outspoken comments on the principal issues of the day. It is of less concern now to know who the Republican presidential candidate is going to be in 1968 than what kind of public sentiment can be built up in the next two years by the party itself. COMMON CAUSE « There is always talk of unity inside the party out of power, and this doesn’t necessarily require the immediate development of alternative programs. Tlnity, however, comes when common cause is made on the people’s grievances and there is general recognition of the weaknesses of ar incumbent administration. Hence it is politically of paramount importance that t h e electorate be made aware of the true meaning of current policies and legislation. (Copyright, ItM, ■’uMlihtri N*wspap*r Syndic*!*) Smiles Some women’s bank accounts are mostly a system of checks and unbalances. When you gripe about conditions, remember this is the generation that coined the phrase, “I couldn’t care less.” ★ ★ When mom bugs dad about making some home improvements, he responds by raising the roof. Interweaving the problem of juvenile delinquency with that of the Civil Rights movement is incongruent and inconsistent. If “Concerned Citizen” is really a Negro, one may conclude that he has become too deeply involved emotionally to render an intelligible evaluation of the situation. ★ ★ ★ Statements made by the editor were vague and warrant further clarification. He stated the letter was “an unusually penetrating analysis.” Of what? Concerned Citizen touched on Several. He further stated the letter presented “one of the most important problems before the Nation today.” Which problem? The writer inadvertently raised several. BOOKER T. YANCEY 220 W. PIKE (Editor's Note: The answer to question one would be “today’s existence.” The answer to two would be the same.) ‘Many Cars on Road Are Safety Hazards’ Every day as I drive delivering flowers I see cars that are safety hazards. I wonder if the police can do something about this, I try to keep my car in shape. 1 * TRYING TO BE A SAFE DRIVER Encourages Support of Prayer Amendment Christ was bom in a stable for He had been barred from the inn. Today in America, He has been barred from our public schools. Like the innkeeper, are we not turning our backs on Him? On December 25, we celebrate Christ’s birthday. Have you included Him on your Christmas list? If not, may we suggest an inexpensive gift — one five-cent stamp and a letter to your senator in Washington urging support of Senator Dirksen’s Prayer Amendment which will be presented to the Congress of the United States in January. CONCERNED The v o t in g in the recent elections reflected the opposition of the country to many of the things the Johnson administration and the Democratic majority in Congress have been doing in the last two years. But, ever^ so, none of the potential candidates of the Republican party for the presidency has ventured to articulate the wishes of the people and to dedicate himself to the causes which prompted so many millions of people to vote against the Democratic party a month ago. Thus, for example, not much has been said publicly about the abuse of power by the administration’s officials— both in the Department of Justice and in the Department of Health, Education and W e If fare — in applying the laws of Congress on the “civil rights” issue. , CONTINUED FAILURE Nor have Republicans analyzed for the people what the continued failure of the administration to approxQh&te a balanced budget can mean to the nation’s monetary unit./ Certainly the country is concerned about a possible tax increase. Republican leaders, however, haven’t joined together to express a viewpoint that would reflect the thinking of the entire nation — which is that it is better for the government to economize than to keep on spending, and that it is better to stimulate the collection of more Verbar Orchids . Charles A. Hayward of 225 W. Hopkins; 93rd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Ira J. Davis of 32 Easy; 56th wedding anniversary. Guy Beatty of 1011 Boston; 86th birthday. Frank Ousnamer , of Ortonville; 83rd birthday. Lester L. Cooper pf 9625 Commerce Road; 80th birthday. i Bob Considine Says: Ky Shows Why HeRates Faith, Support of U.S. SAIGON — A talk with Premier Ky swiftly explains the stout defense made of him by our top people here whenever he is accused in the U.S. of being too flamboyant, t o o mercurial, too inexperience d, a born dictator and not quite honest. Ky is as CONSIDINE frank as they come. He made that abundantly clear in the course of an hour of give and take with a team of visiting reporters. . He’s as honest as they come, everybody on our side who has done business with Mm swears, from Ambassador Lodge and Gen. Westmoreland down the line. He contemplated throwing the CBS man out of Vietnam but changed his mind and fumed disgustedly, “My God, with all the money the United States is* pouring into this country I could steal a million dollars a day and it wouldn’t be noticed. Why should I steal peanuts from a racetrack?” JOINT RULE IMPOSSIBLE He thinks it's all well and good for elements in the United States to want him to come to some kind of accommodation with the Vietcong but says to heH with it. “Never, never, never!” he said to us, shaking his fist for added emphasis. “My position is a logical one. It is impossible to have joint rule by people who believe in the democratic way and Communists.” ‘Careless Drivers Cause High Premiums’ Recently a young man in a left-turn lane blew his horn at me for getting in the wrong lane then passed me at 45 in a 35-mile zone on the wrong side, slowed down to sit almost through a green light to hold me back, and finally decided to make a left turn without a signal. Drivers like this are the reason for insurance preniiums being what they are, /If they would show more respect and pay more attention to the lanes and signals, our highways would be much better to travel. FIFTEEN-YEAR DRIVER WITH NO TICKETS OR ACCIDENTS Calls Attention to City Traffic Problems Citizens have been concerned with the traffic problem on Montcalm between Glenwood and Ivy. At the Pontiac Motor parking lot entrance both eastbound lanes are making left turns, tying up traffic from that point to North Saginaw. We have taken this up with UAW Local 653 and Pontiac Motor, but nothing has resulted. I have also contacted the Porttiac police traffic bureau with no results. ★ ★ ★ I am grateful for the efforts in slowing down the traffic on West Kennett, but ho\y about some law enforcement on Montcalm? A. L McGINNIS 167 W. KENNETT ‘Was Unable to Obtain Christinas Stamps’ I agree that the Christmas stamp this'year is one of the best, but when attempting to buy them at the main post office on West Huron I was told they didn’t have any more. You would1 think the main post office could see fit to have these once-a-year stamps on hand. JRW That he is all warrior, too, He suggested tartly that we in a land.whose troops have reexamine the recent history a disheartening desertion rate, of Poland, and China in parti-goes unquestioned. He led the cular, two countries wherein first raid on Hanoi and the U.S. used heavy pressure dropped his bombs on target to cause recognized govern-though wounded on the way ments to integrate Commu-in. nists into their administra- * ★ * tions. His detractors harp on per- * * * sonar traits. They call him “I love my country too much Captain Midnight when he to be a part of anything like wears his tight-fitting jet-black that,” Ky told us. “Even when pea-jacketed uniform which he our elections come and the tops with a lavendar scarf. people should elect a Com- His fault-finders assume, munist to office, a Communist too, that inasmuch as he pos-v. in any disguise, I'll refuse to sesses great power in land, serve with him.” he must be growing rich. CBS screened a news feature recently which suggested that the 20 per cent “skim” off the top of the pari-mutiiel play at the Saigon Rqeetrack somehow finds its way, or some of its way, into his pockets. ★ ★ ★ > The latter charge burned him up. ----------===== Question and Answer Socialism and communism stand for total government control and are called “far or extreme left.” Anarchy, or absence of government, is “far or extreme right.” Why then is the Nazi party, the National Socialist Workers Party, always referred to as being “right wing?” ■ -feT KORKY / 7, ■ ' REPLY' ' , ' Apparently it’s bad usage that became popular. According to Professor Huebel, Chairman of Oakland University's political Science department, “The labeling of parties or movements right or left is a misleading shorthand that came f r o m the seating in the French parliaments. At one time the parties of the Republic sat in or near the center, and monarchists sat on the right-^-as newer parties formed, they sat further to the left or right to distinguish themselves. The Communist party sat on the far left next to the Socialists, but that didn’t mean Communists had any real acdord with Socialists. Anarchists don’t even belong on this misleading scale—they would have preferred ‘government’ by unions or. guilds or some other ‘natural’ group: The Nazi movement was a hybrid, borrowing symbols and techniques from the Socialists and Communists, including some government ownership, but also appealing to tfie conservative parties with strong emphasis on nationalism!” .. ^ * MAKE (MB PACES, New Era for City Airport Under County Supervision THE PONTIAC PRESS, THufesPAt. DECEMBER 15, 1066 necessary for the ILS was es-ja child of adventure with|last year estimated $9.2 million timated at $477,600 in 1962, but Charles A. Lindbergh's nonstop would have to be put into airrising costs are expected to havejAtlantic solo. Pontiac Municipal' port improvements in the next ballooned this, according to city Airport was conceived out of a five years to accomplish the | officials. I$190,000 bond issue floated May!master plan by 1970. An esti Born when air travel was still [9,1928. | mated $7.8 million would be !o- — i INITIAL TOUCHDOWN fal funds the balance com , ... ing in federal and state aid. An open cockpit Stearman | ■'from Flint made the initial! * * Nj touchdown on the sod field on! r"e rePor* a*so projected a I Oct. 14,1928. |net loss of $172,018 for 1966-70 An C ATI a I I aiiff i The airport’s original !if airP°rt operations remain as Vll jUUdl LdWy rating gave it an excellent |they are. However, if master reputation, but may have ! plan improvements -are made a| WASHINGTON (AT) - Auto ^ , CLlT 1” Workers President Walter The ,ate Homer D. Hoskins, Jeered in the same period, re-Reuther said Wednesday the!one of **•* ®™t Pilots to use suiting because some improve-prospect for social legislation int **** aiH* a‘rPort manager ments would not immediately the new Congress “is not as a quarter-century, t new revenue M-----*— - --------J1941-1965, once commented that 8 wrevenu - Reuther Hopes Vietnam Injuries Reunite Michigan Father and Son couraging as many people, * VT iNPTPRnmT l thought it was the morning aft-|the A1A rating often returned to NET PROFIT er last month’s election ” hapnt the airport in its quest Meanwhile, city officials pro-Reuther, here for a meeUng for imProvement funds- IfeKT-! «et Profit of $11,337 of the AFL-CIO industrial union' * * * jfor 1966 with airport revenue department of which he is pres- In the ear'y 1950s, however, projected at $110,994 and expen- ident, said while not as much 50 T-hangars (used to house! ditures at $99,657. broad social legislation could aircraft) were added. Other * p * be expected as from the last! city-paid improvements in re- Incorporated into the city’s Congress, some "very substan-cent times included extension of 1967 proposed budget, expenses tial” improvements could be! Ibe east-west runway and thejwere expected to top revenues made in Social Security, medi-|Para,lel taxiway and improve- by $7,814. City officials said the cal care and educational pro- nients in the lighting and fenc-1 difference was because im-grams ing. • proved maintenance was planed * ★ ★ I TERMINAL BUILDING .for 1967. Reuther declined comment on! The terminal building, built at FA^E BURDEN his recent differences of opin- a cost of $374,104, was complet- bounty officials, who are exion with AFL - CIO President ed in 1960. jpected to form an airport au- George Meany. He said he . m ... . . .. . thority to govern Pontiac Mu- would not bring up the matter . . 1Q-„ . nicipal Airport, face a heavy .ttte.wo-dayn.eeUngoHhe tlna"clal bunle" « j g — most half the federation's 13.5] million membership. .GREAT LAKES, HI. (AP) A father and son whose paths never crossed during months of action hi Vietnam are together at last — in the Great Lakes Naval Hospital. Navy Seabee Evart McIntyre, 44, of Cadillac, Mick, is being treated for a badly fractured foot His son, Marine Pfc. Edward McIntyre, 20, is recovering from combat wounds in the bade, shoulder, both arms rad both legs., Although they didn’t know it, they were only five miles apart on Sept. 28 when young McIntyre was cut down in a Viet-cong mortar attack. Edward’s father was stationed at an airfield. BUY, SELL, TRADE... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS «»» Days later fl didn’t know about his i BACK TOGETHER - Navy Seabee Evart McIntyre (left) and his, 20-year-old son, Marine Pfc. Edward McIntyre, trade experiences while recuperating from injuries re- ceived in Vietnam. The Cadillac, Mich., residents were evacuated on the same plane last week. jury until five days later when I was notified by my company donunander,” said the elder McIntyre. Last week, the father’s left foot was broken in five {daces by a piece of machinery at an airfield construction site. ♦ ♦ A Father and son were reunited when they were placed aboard the same plane for home. The elder McIntyre, a first clan petty officer and a veteran of 18 years in the Navy, said he had no objection to returning to Vietnam after his recovery—“It’s as good as any other assignment.” Edward had a different view: ★ * * “I don’t particularly want to go back to Vietnam. My heart just isn’t in it” We Deliver or right up to NOW CHRISTMAS EVE! OPEN EVERY NIGHT-FREE PARKING DOWNTOWN A Real Gift! FOR YOU HOME General Electric PORTABLE .DISHWASHER p MAPLE CUTTING TOP 14-place setting capacity ri no bl’,n.7 JL. ^Christmas Price Reduced *30 FRIGIDAIRE Deluxe Washer End of Model Sale! *177 ;<)()!) HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC Open Evenings ’Til fHiristmas 51 W. HURON FE 4-1555 E—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15> 1966 Book on JFK Death Faces Court Fight By RELMAN MORIN AP Special Correspondent NEW YORK (AP) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy says die Is prepared to relive her grief and shock after the assassination of her husband in order to legally block publication of a book about the tragedy. The outlook for bo* is horrible, she said. ★ * * The book, which the Kennedy family had authorized is “Death of a President,” by william Manchester. It describes the assassination of President Kennedy. in Dallas, Nov. 22, IMS, and the events in the days immediately afterward. Mrs. Kennedy calls it “tasteless and distorted.” “As horrible as a trial will be,” she says, “it now seems clear that my only redress is to ask the courts to enforce my rights.” COURT ACTION Her attorneys said they are preparing papers seeking a temporary injunction to stop the book’s publication and would file them in two or three days. Summonses already have been 1 served on Harper A Row, bode | publisher, and Cowles Communications, Inc., publisher of Look magazine. The magazine, which report, edly paid Manchester 1650,000 for the serial rights to his book, scheduled publication of the first article for Jan. 10. Harper & Row plans to bring out the book next April. WILLIAM MANCHESTER The impending lawsuit, and a mention of “inaccurate and unfair references to other individuals” in a statement by Mrs. Kennedy about Manchester’s book, may throw some light on long-standing reports of friction between the Kennedys and President Johnson. It assertedly began on the plane that brought Kennedy’s body from Dallas to Washington after the assassination. A freind of the Kennedy family said Manchester’s book depicts Mrs. Kennedy as having been “upset because LBJ kept the plane on the ground too long in Dallas, waiting to be sworn in as President.” ANOTHER VERSION Another version of this incident is that Mrs. Kennedy and Kenneth O’Donnell, special assistant to the assassinated president, boarded the plane and ordered the pilot to take off at once. Johnson reportedly countermanded the order. Sources close to the Kennedy family said Manchester’s book contains “other things that involve LBJ which are distorted and unfair.” ★ it- -it Last Nov. 22 — the third anni- versary of the assassination Malcolm M. Kilduff, press aide in charge of the presidential changeover at Dallas, said in an interview: ■i think that there are things that happened, especially on the plane coming back, that could be embarrassing to both the Kennedys and the Johnsons. He declined to go into details. INTENSE MOMENT Kilduff added that in the emotional intensity of the moment “some of the old 1960 wounds were reopened, rehashed, thought about.” This apparently referred to the bitter struggle between Kennedy and Johnson for the Democratic nomination for president that Kennedy won. Nevertheless, Kilduff said, “Johnson showed concern for Mrs. Kennedy and members Of the Kennedy family during the flight from Dallas to Washington.” Last Times Tonite "Glass Bottom Boat” "Alphabet Murders” EAGLE Pontiac’S POPULARTHEATEIt Wttk Itoyti tt ».n. to II mi. luMtoyti f—"— “ '~ *- ““ Friday and Saturday 3:30 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. TEENAGERS UP TO 2S Ef|c With this Tsars Old 3U COUPON Ift-lMSs EhiJl “There was no his part as has been implied by others in the recent past,” Kil-3uff said. To support Mrs. Kennedy’s contention that Manchester’s bode violated the terms of the agreement under which it was written, this and other episodes may be aired. FULL STATEMENT Mrs. Kennedy’s full statement lid: “Look magazine, Harper & Row, and Mr. William Manchester have repeatedly made clear that only legal action can alter their insistence upon publishing at this time — without regard to accepted standards of propriety and good faith, and in specific violation of my witnesses, my contract with Mr. Manchester mid the dignity and privacy which my children and I have striven with difficulty to retain — a premature account „ the events of November 1963 that is In part both tasteless and Chester would exploit the emotional state in whidi I recounted my recollections to him early to 1964, and I am equally shocked that reputable publishers would take commerical advantage of his failure to keep his word. To the author and publishers, this bode will be only their work; but my children and I will have to live with it for the rest of our lives. 'As horrible as a trial will be, it now seems clear that my only redress Is to ask the courts to enforce my rights and postpone publication until the minimum limits of my family's privacy can be protected. " * i Manchester said, “I have confidence in the book. I think it will stand on its own. I ask only that people give it a chance.” William Attwood, editor-in-chief of Look, issued a statement Wednesday night saying cancellation of the scheduled publication now would amount to “censorship of history.” He said Look intended to go ahead. REVISIONS MADE Harper & Row said the firm had made four sets of substantial revisions to the book at the request of Mrs- Kennedy and other members of the family. After the first series, the firm said in a statement, the Kennedy’s officially notified them 'members of the family will {dace no obstacle in the way of publication.” ★ ★ ★ A source close to Mrs. Kennedy, who called the dispute “this sad story,” gave this version of the events that led up to it: 'Early in 1964 it became apparent to Mrs. Kennedy and other members of the family there would be sensational versions of the assassination. They were getting many queries. 'Mrs. Kennedy felt an obligation to speak to history. So, for the double reason of taste and history, it was determined to serve the national interest in one good accurate account.” DOCUMENT SIGNED The source said a “memorandum of understanding” spelled out the terms under which Manchester, selected by the family would write the book. It was signed by Sell. Robert F. Kennedy and William Manchester. It is dated March 26, 1964, anc contains 11 clauses. The Kennedys consider two of these have immediate bearing on the case One reads, “The completed manuscript shall be reviewee by Mrs. John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy and the texi shall not be published unless and until approved by them." * * * The other reads, “The book may not be published before Nov. 22, 1968, unless Mrs. Kennedy designates a prior West Berlin Elects New BERLIN (AP) - When rich Alberts was nominated to succeed Willy Brandt as mayor West Berlin, he was described as “a politician who has the courage to be unpopular.” Wait Berliners already have nicknamed him Henry VIII he is the city’s eighth mayor since World War II. * * * Swarthy, heavy-set and with slight limp in his right leg from an automobile accident, Albertz was elected Wednesday by the West Berlin City Parliament by an 86-39 vote. Albertz’ term runs until next NATION’S TREE — The National Christmas Tree, a 65-foot red fir from California, was test-lighted last night on the Ellipse in Washington. In the right background is the Washington Monument. President Johnson is scheduled to flick the switch for the formal lighting of the tree tonight. Nader Raps Ford on Output Warning Its inaccurate and unfair references to other individuals, in contrast with its genersous references to all members of the Kennedy family, are perhaps beyond my prevention; but to expose to all the world at this time all the private grief, personal thoughts and painful reactions which my children and 1 endured in those terrible days does not seem to be to be essential to any current historical record, I am shocked that Mr. Man- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sargent Shriver says he has no plans to resign as head of the federal antipoverty agency. But to hear him tell it, neither is he sure how long he’ll rema the job. It sounds confusing, Shriver agrees. and shall be published at a date thereafter as shall be mutually agreeable to the contracting parties.” Mrs. Kennedy, the source continued, then gave Manchester two long interviews in early 1964. STATE OF GRIEF 'She was in a state of grief, of course,” the informant said. 'She was not self-censoring but relying on his agreement not to publish anything that would be offensive to her!” 'The material is offensive in that it delineates her feelings during that period,” the source said. “No woman would want these things disclosed to the world.” The Connecticut River is 3 miles long. 'Offers Tempting' WASHINGTON (UPI) - Auto safety critic Ralph Nader branded as “industrial extortion” today a warning frtm Henry Ford II that the auto industry might have to shut down production lines unless the government modifies its new safety stan-dards, f 1 Nader claimed that there was no reason why the auto makers could not meet the 23 standards issued earlier this month for 1968 model cars. * *. * But Ford, chairman of F\>rd Motor Co., thinks differently. He told newsmen in Detroit yesterday that many of the standards proposed by the new national highway safety agency were ‘unreasonable, arbitrary and technically not feasible.” | March, but he likely will be reelected since his Social Democratic (Socialist) party traditionally has been strong in Berlin. , HIS OWN MAN Described by those who know him as his own man, Albertz, 151, will have no easy task filling the shoes of the immensely [popular and diplomatically effective Brandt. His most immediate problem arranging Christmas wall passes after a month’s stalemate with the Communists over terms. refugee himself, Albertz born Jan. 22, 1915 to Breslau, now Polish Wroclaw. He became a Protestant Reform Church minister, but started his political career after World War II as a refugee official. Before that, the Nazis imprisoned him for six months for holding prayer services for pt litical prisoners. In 1961, Brandt named him fe’ head the Berlin Internal Affairs Office, which gave him contra! over the city’s 14,000-man police force. No Plans to Quit—Shriver and The linezt theatre seats stalled at tbs Hans Thestrs. The seme as mod is the Fisher Theatre, betrait. Now at 7 and 9 HURON SARGENT SHRIVER 'Girls, Ke Your Shirt On' “That’s why I dislike talking about it,” the head of the Office of Economic Opportunity said an interview. “Every time discuss the subject, it becomes more confusing because my statements are misinterpreted by someone.” He did attempt to clarify the situation. ‘DONE A WHOLE LOT’ | “I have no immediate plans, ■j be said. “I’m not dissatisfied I with my work. I don’t want to sound tike an egotist or any-| thing like that but I do believe -we’ve done a whole lot here." But: “I’m tike everybody else, I guess,” he said. “I look around and I have got some very fine offers. We all love to go on to bigger and better things, you know, finding the big challenge.” ★ ★ ★ “I would like to say to you now that I don’t plan to resign but the moment you walk but the door, the President might telephone me and tell me he has someone to take my place,” he added. “I have always liked to feel that anytime President Kennedy (Shriver’s brother-in-law) President Johnson wanted to assign me to other duties or to replace me, they could do so without having any difficulty.” Japan Truck Hits Children; 5 Die NAGOYA, Japan (UPI)-Five kindergarten children were killed and 20 others injured today when they were hit by a dump truck loaded with sand. The accident happened as the schoolchildren were about to cross a national highway to western Japan. Ricardo C Valdez NORTH and SOUTH : AMERICAN RECORD SHOP Top kits. Country A Western j Mexicanos, Nortcnnoi, Texan-os, Puertorriquenos, Y Latinos j en General. 13 N. 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'The commission will not tol-—erate it in the state of Michigan,” said its outgoing chairman, Donald S. Leonard, in a quick response to m inquiry from a representative of the Michigan Temperance Foundation. , House of Seafoods • Live Lobster Tank FROG LEGS Roadhouse Styl. French Fried Gulf SHRIMP Golden Fried Maryland SCALLOPS Broiled LOBSTER TAILS Broiled WH1TEFISH LOBSTER Nawburq OYSTERS on the Half Shell SALAD TABLE All you wish to bat, help yourself or ofk your waitress to serve yew salad with your choice ef our homemade sauces, lazy n dish and a relish dish. ‘ Try Our Special Steak Dinner Also Selections From Our Regular Menu SOME CHOICE OOLF LEAGUE DATES AVAILABLE FOR 19*1 NOWI WINTER RATES ENTERTAINMENT Q0LF & AMID I COUNTRY ULUD MOREY'S. 2211 Union Lake Read off Commerce Road Much of the speculation on Shriver’s leaving the agency began last month when he 5 called a news conference to ex-| 5 plain cutbacks in the antipover-i g ty program because of lack of funds. The news conference and his subsequent statements have been interpreted as Shriver’s way of telling Johnson and Congress he doesn’t expect the agency’s fiscal 1968 budget request to be cut. riillllliiiiiiiiiiiniiij|||i|||||||||||||llll|iAAUAMMIMMMMIJIJJJIfJ!JJjfJif!«lll) NEW! All-Purpose Portable ORGAN FUN FOR ALL AGES . Plays on batteries or electricity! Play it anywhere! Indoors, Outdoors, at Parties! Our all-new “Prestige" Organ is light-weight, easy to carry and operates on batteries or electric outlet. Easy to play, too, with rich full tone. Fun for alt ages! COMPLETE WITH BOOK 29 95 GRINNELL^, Pontiac Mall, 6^2-0422 Downtown Pontiac, 27 S. Saginaw St., FE 3-7168 I Ei THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, TOM A Division of the S. S. Kresge Company with over 930 Kresge, K mart and Jupiter Stores. 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