MARS STUDY DELAYED — Navy Com- mander Malcolm Ross and Dr. John Strong, John Hopkins University astrophysicist, hoped to soar 80,000 ‘feet today in this balloon gondola. But they never left the ground. Low hanging clouds and snow at Rapid City, S.D. had of the Office gondola. forced postponement of the high altitude flight. The telescope on top will enable the pair to study the atmosphere of the planet Mars. Cmdr. Louis P. Pressler, Here head of the air branch of Naval Research, checks the U.S. Planning to Test Khrushchev Intentions FROM OUR NEWS WIRES BERLIN — The U.S. Army is ‘expected. soon to move another truck convoy in a test of Soviet) Premier Khkrushchev’'s West to quit Berlin. | Russian soldiers Friday blecked | The convoy incident was the! a routine three-truck Army con- ifirst harassment of Western forces} voy seeking to cross Communist East Germany to West Ger- many and heid it for 8, hours. The Army said the Russians. broke established procedures by making unacceptable demands to inspect the trucks. Normally heavy civilian high- way traffic was moving west to- | day without hindrance, Rail and air traffic also were normal. most of their supplies by rail.) , Soviet Premier Nikita | chev’s hands, * * * vin Berlin since Khrushchev opene ‘his campaign. But the Soviet d [oand to inspect U.S. Army trucks Khrush- Khrushchev might want the Ber-| lim controversy to help build pres. intentions | sure for a summit conferénce, these | concerning his demands for the) officials said, compliance with inspection * con- trary to established procedures. “The vehicles were and returned te Berlin by Armer- | representative of Maj. | Barksdale Hamlett, U.S. Arm y commander in Berlin, visited Karishort (the Red Army head- qd: quarters in East Berlin) and c-| immediately released.” crossing East Germany is an, old A spokesman said Hamlett's rep-| lissue. The Allies claim the Rus- resentative protested the Russian Proposed law from the Supervisors aging editor on July 1951 Y|sians are entitled only to examine refusal to let the trucks through. | [inter County Committee at a meet- |trucks’ manifest papers. ‘American soldiers have standing)!" The U.S. Army announced last/orders not to permit inspection. * ‘midnight: “Three U.S. Army vehicles wer { * * e, There has been speculation here \held at the Russian checkpoint at|that the Russians might block al-' P Rapced ¢ to Bail ay in Utah ‘Blizzard’ t 7 Airmen Lost in ni Oakland fo Push Hunters 1 ight-Clad Men for Legislation Down in Cold, on Lake Levels Rough Terrain H unters Trek Northward, rs Ignore Rain | Dies Stricken From Our News Wires Generally poor weather and | above normal temperatures” | ‘ throughout Michigan failed to Only Pilot Picked Up County Supervisors Get darken the spirits of an esti- | | So Far; Plane Crashes mated 400,000 deer hunters today opening day. | Proposed Law Which! | 250 Miles Awa Clarifies Procedure Y Showers were expected to continue throughout lower Michigan teday and tomorrow OGDEN, Utah a — Res- Oakland County—known cue parties spread out over | | ‘create a smoother pro- western sections had a little search of seven lightly clad ‘cedure for establishing lake snow, However. temperatures airmen who bailed out’ of ‘levels. | | he J s ats eC HOEY ‘copies of a proposed 32- | cates i woe Selec lyr one Power The pilot, Capt. Harry O. page law drafted by the late | anxious hunters who left home | __‘s Blount of Clearfield, Utah, | far in advance of today's opener i. ® ; e | 2 pener ras or ‘Harry J. Merritt, former Robert B. Tarr | were joined this morning by late | was found early today, eight corporation counsel, and | comers and weekend-hunters. hours after he and his crew ‘Robert P. Allen, assistant | tee. | Press Managing Editor. Hunter traffic wag extrenie- Later in Hospital [ere 950 miles north of here in t is expected that the new pro-! . ° ly heavy at the Mackinac | EN: |posal will get top priority from! Stricken During Sleep; Bridge. At 11 a.m. yesterday MADRID. Sp: w= Tyrone Blount said the men jumped Oakland lawmakers in Lansing as) Had Heart Condition 15,782 cars had crossed at the a ane Yrone | out at 10-mile intervals between | | | | but the forecast called for slightly cooler temperatures, for its 423 lakes—will push| for legislation next year to a vast area of snow-swept northeastern Utah today in Upper Peninsula hunters in the | averaging about 35 degrees quick- ly burned it off Weeks of planning and prepa- ration were climaxed at 6 ‘ a disabled C119 transport plane during a blizzard last night. Supervisors of the county, - have been provided with am tired from the long lines of near parachuted to the ground. bumper-to-bumper traffic at Other crew members were still Dies at Meeting. times 35 miles long on such bot- | Actor, 45, Collapses missing | tlenecks as US. 23, at Bay City. | ON Set, Succumbs Hour with one engine failing, the plane corporation counsel, with ithe Drain Commission of-; Power, 45, died today of a heart they try to get through its 1959) bridge carrying 42,611 hunters. attack. 74 and ati Ft. Bridger, Wyo., and Hunts- jlegislative program to aid the The figure surpassed the total |2''@cK. The screen and stage star, vi, pean, just east of here, He county | for the season in 1956, when “2S stricken on a movie Set. tag weber County Dep. Sheriff Basically, the new law ‘ ‘polishes | Pontiac Press Managing Editor 38,413 hunters crossed the “Solomon ,and Sheba.” in) which Gerald Wasa he hed ths up the procedure’ for the establish-1 |Robert B. Tarr died in his sleep) Straits. he was faying opposite Italian men jump fat intervals because > » . ; last night in French Lick, Indiana, actress Gina Lollobrigida ment of lake levels, according to . _ tending the As. During the entire 1957 season , . he Wag Unfamiliar with the ter- |Allen. In the past, he said, con-/Where He was atten g : 52.500 hunters crossed the n Power complained. as he had rain. | =, > ring aa ade - BSC 1e ew > , fusion and difficulty have been en- S°ciated Press Managing Editor's | Mighty Mac for the first time, °©t™ for several days, of a pain! waymant said the missing men, countered when the county acted/Convention. Michigan traffic ia his teft arm and abdomen trapped in an early-winter bliz- junder present lake-level laws on’ He complained of feeling ill fol claim od the | ec tl fine tn inani zard, could be “anywhere between the books lowing the evening meal, but felt ‘ le lives of five men He was rushed to a Spanish (72'". ; i ; | | ican military personne! after a |46out the validity of our procedure! Gen, jin asked that the U.S. vehicles be {pointed here and Evanston, Wyo.,’’ but ‘Blount said later the men had left | the plane within a five-minute pe- riod and he believed they would the! be found within a 10-mile radius of iS where he was found, about eight | miles east of Huntsville. headed for deer hunting expedi- hespital and died an hour later. tions in the 24 hours before the | Ted Richmond, producer of the season opened at 6 a.m. today. | picture, was at his bedside. Most highways were wet and | visibility limited. Occasional ey it was indigestion. He had suffered a slight heart attack 12 years ago, and had had a heart condition Allen listed the major assets of the new law as: (1) The method | of financing for level establish- ment is spelled out completely — ak chee: _ in this one law to preclude refer- | Widety-known throughout Mich- ence to several acts, and (2) The | igan and nationally, Tarr served His wife of less than year, \former Debbie Ann Mindardos, fexpecting a baby in February. method of notifying residents of | 85 national president of Sigma | ~_ * * IN RUGGED TERRAIN establishment hearings is made | Delta Chi, Professional Jour- | oo had been married to) Dep, Sheriff Blair Findlay said more definite. | nalism Seciety, and was also & Expected Today a3 ~h actress Annabella and to the _ is extremely ru ed an | past president .of tite y rugged and “There has been som est . : . Canada produced) ontiac ), : M crushed chest, broken neck and safely in the fifth annual observance of Traffic Safety Jews and Protestants, in In an Official proclamation, Gov. when we drive.” The Governor urged “clergy- men of all faiths to offer prayers, together with their congrega- tions, for deliverance from the evil recklessness, carelessness and disregard of precious hu. man life upon our highways.” In Pontiac, the observance -of Traffic Safety Sunday has been endorsed by the Safety Committee of the Chamber of Commerce, x *% * To drive home to motorists the importance of safe driving, the Pontiac Dept. has the last, death car involved in a city traffic fa- tality on display at the intersec- tion of Saginaw and Huron streets, Police officers are handing out . safety literature in Comm: with the day. Admiral Dies wi Chelle : WASHINGTON ® — Adm. Leonard) B. Sou Sunday tomorrow. With Mrs. Wilson is daughter Susan, 1‘2 years | commander of | aireraft of age. The car next to the officer is the last one involved in a | of.the ith Fleet, was | city traffic fatality. SAFETY MESSAGE -— Mrs. Max Wilson, 473 S. Opdyke Rd., receives safety literature from Pontiac police reserve officer John Cox, 37: E. Longfellow Ave., in connection with Traffic Safety ‘Friday Night Accidents | Claim 5 Lives in Ohio, :4 in Indiana —t in By The Associated Press, -Five persons have been killed | in Ohio and four in Indiana in railroad crossing accidents that’ happened much the same way. * * * . i Both happened Friday night, And in each a car collided with a Penn-| syivania Railroad passenger train. | t The Coshocton County sheriff's oftice said the Ohioans had left a tavern in a car shortly before the collision at a crossing qa mile south of Coshocton, * * * For a time authorities thought a «ixth person, Jerry Clough, 23, of Coshocton had been in the car and. survived. They found him in a hgs- pital suffering from shock. Later they learned that Clough had been in the tavern with the victims a short time before the accident but not in the car. He suffered shock when he learned of their deaths. Those killed were identified Mrs. Margaret Stiteler, 35; Miss Jose- phine Stiteler, 18, Miss, Phyllis’ Holder, about 17, Mrs. Bonnie) Grace, 29, all of Coshocton; . Carl Ames, 22, of nearby Fresno, believed to ave been the driver. No one on the train, the fast St. Louisian, headed for Columbus, was hurt. In north central Indiana at their home community of Ham- jet, Mrs, Amelia Laux, 44; her sou, Joseph, 4, and her sister, Mrs, Leona Blum, 63, died at the scene of a similar accident. ‘The husband and father Victer Laux, 44, died on arrival at a hospital. .A watchman said Laux drove) stopped, then) fo the crossing, pulled around him onto the tracks. Officials said flasher lights were ‘has 162 FRENCH LICK, Ind. (AP) — There'll probably be fewer news-) papers in 1985, but they're likely ito be bigger, bulkier and more ‘colorful, a North Carolina editor predicted today. Winding up the 25th anniversary ‘convention of The Associated ‘Press Managing Editors Asgn., Sam Ragan of Raleigh, N.C., lookeq ahead toward another quarter-century in newspapering. * * * Ragan, who is executive news ‘editor of the Raleigh News and Observer and newly elected APME treasurer. sandwiched some warnings in with his fore- casts: 1 is be- “Today's newspaper THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1958" Fewer Newspapers? Michael J. Ogden of the Provi- dence Journal-Bulletin stepped in- to the presidency to succeed Cole-; man A. Harwell of the Nashville Tennesseean. The APME directors also elect- ed John H. Colburn, Richmond (Va.) Times-Dispatch as vice president to succeed Ogden, and J. Edward Murray, Los Angeles Mirror News, to succeed Colburn | as secretary, Roderick J.. Watts, Houston Chronicle, was named chairman of the continuing study of AP’s news report, and E. T. Stone, Seattle Post - Intelligencer, ‘was named vice chairman, The board chose Miami as the site for the 1 convention. Pre- viously, chosen ‘sites are Seattle, 1959: Williamsburg, Va., 1960, and Minneapolis, 1961. Oo LOS ANGELES—The Los Ange- Launching Investigation t Earth's Last Frontier out that the ocean’s depths, and coming too impersonal and aloof. les Herald and Express says 4 its life. are equally as important But I am confident that it will new scientific investigation into se-'as outer space, saying: ‘recognize more fully its function ‘of not only reporting the news but jinterpreting it and explaining how and why events happened. 2. “Are some newspapers not getting too big? The trouble with) a lot of Sunday papers is that they are not so fascinating that you | can’t put them down, but that you can't pick them up. “Newspaper publishing today, but a warning = ad, is big business, and must be sounded against the dan- sources of the oceans. 'ger of acquiring a big business | psychology. Some way must be| ‘found to cut ‘drastically the cost of peatecine a pewsreper.* vaste that the caged fewer daily newspapers| 1933, and he predicted | further shrinkage, more group ownership and more monopoly control by 1985 “The economic aspects of pub- lishing have brought about a mo- nopoly as natural as a city 's “ terworks or telephone system.’ added. Ragan than in * * * serious and light summing up of the five-day convention in the as- operating at the crossing. ~ sociation's birthplace. You Just Stop Car Tokyo Parking Easy Page TWO — 2c-1 & OL — 36 Spart — Tokyo Parking — Mar TOKYO (AP) — Tokyo, which claims to be the city with the world’s worst driving conditions, is probably the - easiest city in which to park a car. If there’s no space, > you just double park—or triple park. * * * Driving. in the Japanese capital is a horror. The speed limit, ostensibly 25 m.p.h. is governed only the top speed of the car. Taxi drivers — Japan's unguided ground-to-ground missiles—whip nonchalantly unwritten rulegig: th has the right ‘of way. through red lights, and the ; yautgmobile which is passing Officially, traffic drives on the left, but the usual route is closer to dead center. POTHOLES ADD SPICE To add spice to the game, Tokyo’s roads are incredi- bly potholed, and a driver can shatter a spring on almost any main street. But Japanese driving reaches its peak in the parking system. Double parking, particularly by Tokyo’s 126,000 taxis, is illegal but common. many streets are only narr creates a problem. Few cars get ticketed. Since ow lanes to begin with this The latest scheme to combat errant parkers is an embarrassment program, with police pasting big red stick- ers on illegally-stationed vehicles. No fines or penalties are involved. * * ‘The idea is that the driver will be sufficiently pun- ished. by the loss of face he suffers by being publicly demonstrated as a lawbreaker,” a newspaper explained. The stickers wash off easily. Spring Returns | Rain Sweeping Mid-U.S. By The Associated Press Moderately heavy rainfall licked the mid-continent today amidst another surprisingly wide belt of spring-like weather. Cool Canadian air streamed through the Northwest and upper The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau deport PONTIAC AND VICINITY —Occasional raim teday and tonight. High today 2, law tenight 54, Temorrew cloudy with showers likely, high 53. Winds gentle, variable teday. Today in Pontiac Sat temperature prececing 8 am At 8 ain: Wind velocity Direction, south-southwest Sun sets Saturday at 4:10 p Sun rises Sunday at 724 an Moon sets Saturday at 953 por Moon rises Sunday at 12.13 pn 10-15 mph Downtown Temperatures lootnds 58 ep eee Friday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown se eeteees coun A lo Weather — Rain One Year ‘Age in Pentiee Highest temperature ...... Lowest temperature . Mean —e peeineceowae lace: Weather — Rein. Highest and Lewest Temperatures This Date in 64 Years 71 in 1928 10 in 1933 Priday’s Temperature Chart 45 eS . 64 44 Los Angeles 68 52 74 49 Marquette 60 39 Bismark 38 25 Memphis 69 61 — 82 73 Miami 81 78 = - reorient 67 44 Charleston mneapolis <9 38 Chicago 7) 34 New York €1 56 Cincinnati 68 67 aha 54 46 land 65° «58 Peliston 69 41 ir 70 #27 Pt urgh 69 56) oit 65 67 Bt. Louis 67 - 60 : 46 29 8. Francisco 62 46 ‘ Worth S 4 . 8. —_ 2 pe % Rapids ray. City 49 34 Washington 76 54 7 67 ttle 42 33 62 Tampa 87 48.5) iGreat Lakes region, clearing a) path for snow and snow flurries. The Weather Bureau forecast a’ six-inch fall by tonight in snow! warnings for Nebraska, the Da-; kotas, and Minnesota. Overnight snow of about an inch, fell in the northern plains. Traces of snow fell in higher elevations of Nevada and California. Heavy overnight rains the ‘the mid-Mississippi Valley. Southerly winds that fed gulf moisture for several days touched off the rainfall. In Arkansas, Wal- nut Ridge reported nearly 2 inches while Little Rock caught a soak- ing from 114 inches. West Plains and Farmington, both reported more than an inch of rain. Dyersburg, Tenn., had 1.30 and Belleville, Ill., across the Mississippi River from St. Louis, reported a similar amount. To the west, light rain sprinkled the Pacific coastline from Wash- ‘ington southward through central California. Mild, balmy weather cut a wide swath from the southwest through the lower Great Lakes region to the Atlantic seaboard. Tempera- Mo., were expected in many parts of that belt. Friday, East, mid-Atlantic area and the Ohio Valley belied the autumn season. Chicago had a 71, a record for the date. ‘Shell Quemoys Today TAIPEI, Formosa (®—The Chi- nese Communists opened the 85th day of the offshore artillery war with a light shelling of the Que- 69| Moys today. The closing session brought both, * | lashed | Missour#Arkansas area and: 70-degree climes in the} crets of the sea, mysterious, unexplored frontier of this plant.’ 'following dedication of the Beau- ‘dette Foundation for Biological Re-| search The foundation is engaged in ithe first program of its kind in| iscientific research aimed at rais-| ing staritards of living of West, ‘Coast Latin America’s people. through utilizing unknown | * * * In dedication ceremonies at the foundation's Solvang laboatories, Publisher David Hearst, of the Los ‘Angeles Herald-Express, pointed j Jordan's Appeal Rejected by Dag | Says Hussein Incident Isolated, Not Threat to Middle East Peace UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ® — Secretary General Dag Hammar-| skjold has turned down appeals ‘by Jordan to bring before the Se- curity Council charges that Syrian jets jumped King Hussein’s va- cation-bound plane and chased it back across the Jordanian frontier, it was reported today. Hammarskjold is said to have told Amman that he sympathized with its plaint, but felt the inci- dent last Monday was an isolated one that did not endanger Middle | East peace. U.N. officials have pointed out that Jordan did not ask Hammar- skjold’s special representative in Amman, Pier Spinelli, to get clear- ance from the United Arab Re- ‘public for Hussein's flight. Thus they felt it is not up to the sec- retary general, but Jordan her- “the last great) " was under way today,| re-| “While attention of the world, and a great part of science it- self, is dedicated to sputniks and rockets exploring the mutlti-mil- lion miles of outer space, we are participating in the official birth of a project dedicated to exploring an equally, if not even mere important area." He said the sea, to which the Beaudette Foundation is dedicated, offers scientific opportunity which can “result in giving life, and bringing life-giving benefits un- known to us now, to people every- where, especially in areas where it is a daily struggle to obtain the bare necessities of existence.” * * * The foundation was established by Palmer Beaudette, who has been interested in biological sci- ences throughout his life. Five years ago, at 39, he enrolled in the University of California at Santa Barbara, to undertake inquiries in biological research. Hearst pointed out that Beau- dette three years ago began to de- velop, and designed and built at his own expense, the Solvang lab- .foratory. Dr. E. Yale Dawson, outstanding rine botanist and former associ- ate professor of botany at the Han- cock Foundation at University of Southern California, is director of the foundation, of which Beaudette is president. * * * Beaudette is the son of Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Beaudette of West Hu- ron street. Hunters Report Early Success Pontiac, Auburn Pair Bag Trophies Early as Season Opens |self to seek any Security Council action. Officials in Damascus and Cairotave asserted they did not know Hussein was aboard the plane. Robert Tarr Dies at AP Meeting | (Continued From Page One) ‘1, 1901, he attended Greensburg, Pa., schools, graduating in 1920. He married Florence Larned Tarr of Ann Arbor May 9, 1925. He lived at 561 W. Iroquois Rd. ,and was a member of the Congre- |gational Church. Surviving are his wife, two sons, dames L., of Champagne, lll. and David R., a weteat at U. of M. Funeral arrangements have not been completed at the Sparks-Grif- fin Funeral Home. 2 Elderly Women Injured in Collision | A two-car collision at M59 and Airport roads this morning re- sulted in injury to two elderly area women, according to Waterford ‘Township police. x * * One of the drivers, Margaret ‘Ann Burt, 76, of 2144 Willthite.St., Waterford Township, and her com- panion, Amelia Mary Pearson, 777, of 52 S. Genesee St., were taken to Pontiac General Hospital for treatment, Police said the driver would be ‘released but her passenger, who ‘was thrown from the car, suffer- admitted. Neither injury was con- sidered ‘‘serious’’ at the time, ac- cording to police. * * * The driver of the other auto, Martin D. Woods, 18, of 21406 Parker St., Farmington, was unin- jured, according to officers. The ,accident occurred at about 10:20 tures in the 60s, possibly higher, | No Agreement at Geneva GENEVA (® — The East-West technical conference on preven- tion of surprise attack held its sixth meeting here today without reaching any agreement on an agenda. The center of religious activity among the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico is the ‘‘kiva.”’ a circular, underground chamber equipped with an altar and mural decora- \tions. ing head and arm injuries, was! As far as early morning re- ports went today at start of the Michigan deer season, the “home guard” didn't do as well as those who traveled farther afield.. First reports of success for area sportsmen came from John H. Yeomans, 3147 Adele Terrace, Lower Straits Lake, and Charles Evon, 3156 Caroline. Au burn Heights. Yeomans called his wife from Houghton Lake to tell her it finally happened — he’d bagged his first buck in 18 years of try- ing. “It’s a big one, tod,’’ he ex- ulted. John headed for home after the call. He shot his deer within minutes of opening time. ‘Tm wondering where he put the deer,” Mrs, Yeomans said. Evon, 17-year-old Avondale High senior, got his buck at 7:45 a.m. at Gladwin, where he was hunting with his father, * * State and county ee officers | reported heavy concentrations of. north-bound hunters on Dixie high- Med with the worst jamming at) he East-West division of M23 and. Mt at Standish. Hunters’ conning, and from Standish to the Straits area, state police reported. Both Yeomans and Evon plan to enter their bucks in The Press “big deer derby.” Avon Township Man Shot While Hunting An Avon Township man is listed in satisfactory condition today at Avon Center Hospital after being accidentally shot while hunting near his home Friday afternoon. Marion Knisley, 29, of 1800 Ham- lin Rd., was struck by about 20 pellets from a 12 gauge shotgun in his abdomen and right forearm, said Oakland County sheriff's dep- uties, Knisley told deputies that he was hunting for rabbits in a wooded area on: Hamlin road near the Grand Trunk” Western Railway trecks and Crooks road. He was with his brother-in-law, the same address. The shot was fired accidentally by Degroot, striking Knisley, —— to dep- uties, ‘McNivern Hotel Burns FRANKENMUTH (UPI)—The MeNivern Hotel was badly dam- aged by fire just before midnight | Iast night. Damage was estimat- ed at $25,000 to $30,000. cars | were jammed as far south as Pin- | identified as Roger Degroot, 23, of} from the same desk. RED-HANDED — Caught by a hidden camera as he into a desk drawer at the United States Information Agency Major Hampton, 25, convicted yesterday in Washington in the theft of 49 cents. The picture was introduced at his trial, which ended yesterday. The camera was planted after a series of thefts - a Seba sf water resources peli’ 5 State Fails to Match Federal Aid Oakland County could have had half again as much federal assis- tance in vocational rehabilitation this year if the state had allocated more funds, according to Dr, Lynn M, Bartlett, state superintendent of public instruction. “The federal government is en-. couraging every state to rehabili-| tate more of their disabled citizens into employment,” Dr. Bartlett said. “It offers federal money to the extent that matching state funds are provided. This year, close to $700,000 of the federal funds allotted to Michigan are not being claimed, “Tf this money had been matched by the Legislature, it would have ‘\been possible to provide 50 per cent more service in Oakland County." Dr. Bartlett.said only about per cent of those who need re- habilitation service in Michigan actually get it and the state stands \44th in the per capita amount appropriated for rehabilitation, The Liz Taylor's Girl Pneumonia Victim HOLLYWOOD (AP) — Sobbing, Elizabeth Taylor learned Friday that her 15-month-old daughter has pneumonia. The baby’s condition is ‘serious but not necessarily’ critical,” the UCLA medical center reported. The actress and singer Eddie Fisher took Elizabeth Frances, her daughter by the late showman Mike Todd, to the hospital Wednes- iday night. Doctors said then she had a respiratory ailment. Miss Taylor, wearing a hooded i turquoise sweater and black Capri ipants, spent 45 minutes Friday in - Crewmen Leap Rehabilitation Funds Needed national average is 12.1 cents a person, .he said, while Michigan spends 8.8 cents, In Oakland County last year, 271 persons were rehabilitated into paying jobs, said Ralph E. Cummins, rehabilitation counsel- or of the Division of Vocational Rehabilitation, A total 820 persons received service aimed at preparing them to hold jobs, Cummins said, at a cost of $60,706. * * * About $17,000 went for appli- ances such as_ artifical limbs, braces and hearing aids; another $26,000 was spent on school and on-the-job training; while the rest went for medical treatment, hos- pitalization and other services. “The Oakland County area re- ceived benefits far greater than the amount of ‘rehab’ funds spent, however,” Cummins poifit- ed out. The average weekly earnings of people rehabilitated in Michigan last year was $52.72, while before rehabilitation they earned only $6.69, he noted. Using this comparison, Cummins estimated that the 271 persons re- habilitated in this county were able to increase their earnings last year by $650,400 or more than 1,000 per cent more than what rehabilitation cost, From Airplane la ward where the baby is in an joxygen tent. Eight Men Land Safely in Utah, Stricken Craft Crashes in Idaho HUNTSVILLE, Utah (AP) Eight airmen abandoned a crip- pled Air Force C-119 transport plane over northeast Utah Friday. The plane crashed about an hour later in Idaho, about 250 miles miles north of here. The pilot of the plane, Capt. Harry O. Blount of Clearfield, Utah, was found safe early. today by the Weber County Sheriff's Jeep Patrol. He-said the other sev- en men aboard the plane bailed out safely at approximately 10 mile intervals between Fort Bridger, Wyo., and Huntsville, a town about 40 miles north of Salt Lake City. * * * Blount met search parties in the Magpie Canyon area about 12 miles northeast of here, After loading supplies of jeep fuel and food, he planned to go back to help Hunt for the other airmen. * * * : The plane had radioed Hill Air Force Base near Ogden that one engine failed at 12,000 feet, shortly after’ the aircraft flew over Fort Bridger, Wyo, The Civil Aero- nautics Administration said the pilot's last message was sent while the plane was over this area. ICBM Firing Called Off by AF for Second Time CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) —A powerful Atlas missile sat poised in the open for several hours but the shoot finally was called off early today for the sec- ond time in three days. The Air Force announced that once again technical troubles de- layed the latest effort to fire the nation’s intercontinental _ ballistic missile. The launching plans called for a 3,000 mile shot across Ti Jennings Memorial tal, De- “i troit, following a Brey: eal ‘He was the president and found- er of the Detroit Mailing and Bind- ing Co., a life member of Ionic Lodge 474, F&AM:; Detroit Com- ,,|mendary, Moslem Shrine and Pal- = Production Up Despite Strikes Output Within 5 Pct. of Pre-R ion . Peak; Sales Advance industries, tion edged upward’ last month to within about 5 per cent.of the pre- recession peak. The Federal Reserve Board re- ported Friday that output of the nation’s mines, mills and. factories rose 1-per cent in October to aver- age 9 per cent above. the reces- sion low point. This brought the board's index of production to 138 per cent of the 1947-49 average. In its monthly summary of bus!- - ness conditions, the Reserve Board said there were widespread gains in the nondurable goods in- dustries, including textiles, appar- el, jeather goods, foods and bev- pe work stoppages in the auto and glass industries helped keep production of durable goods at September's level. ‘The board’s report that retail sales had advanced by 2 per cent in October came as good news to economists who“ had been some- what disturbed by a decline in such sales during September. In another sign of improving economic conditions, the board said construction activity and new housing starts climbed higher last month. Mel Ott Badly Hurt GULFPORT, Miss () — Mel Ott, Detroit Tigers radio-TY an- nouncer and one of baseball's all-time greats, was critically in- jured in a two-car collision Fri- day night. Doctors said today they were hopeful of his recovery. Ott’s wife was injured and the driver of the other auto was killed, See Page 13 for the complete the Atlantic. story. “He's driving a little Volks. | | wagen." ‘Donors Needed in Area * Blood Bank Dangerously Low “This time we really need it,”"|she said this Monday’s donations ;Was the plea of Mrs. A. H. Mag- | nus, Pontiac Community Blood ‘Bank chairman, as she referred to “live saving blood.” Pointing out that the local bank boy, Jackie Stockwell of 580 N. ill, NEEDS YOUR BLOOD — This four-year-old is one of many Oakland County residents who are or have been in accidents and need blood. Jackie has anemia, an illness which may require to the bank are the only new hope that the area can keep a ‘fresh supply”’ of blood. The bank will accept blood do- is now 400 pints low this month,| nations at the Elks Temple, 114 * Cass Lake Rd., Orchard Lake Ave., from 2-5 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. No appointment is necessary but to insure prompt service, donors may call MI 6-1313 or FE 8-3937 for an ap- peintment. Pontiac Press Photo up to 50 pints of blood to correct it. Mrs. A. H. Magnus, Pontiac Community Blood Bank chair- “man visits Jackie in St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. To the right is Mrs. Alex Barazani, an American Red Cross Gray Lady, The county has already borrowed from other counties. Our shortage is due to the fact that several in- dustries cancelled their monthly banks this fall and the response of everyone this summer was slow. * * * In her emergency appeal for - blood, Mrs. Magnus added that be- sides whole blood, which is used for transfusions in major surgery, childbirth and accidents, four de- rivatives are made from blood re- ceived by the Red Cross at these banks. There is a constant need for whole blood since its usefulness is limited to 21 days, she said. Plasma is used for shock and treatment of burns, gamma glo- bulin is used to fight measles and polio, serum albumin is used for patients with kidney and liver dis- eases, and fibrinogen, the fourth derivative, is given during cardiac and lung surgery. ote * * The Red Cross collects, proc- esses, types, stores and distributes the blood. Lately, the refrigera- ‘tors have been emptying because ‘residents are not responding to ful- fill this urgent need for blood... “a community responsibility,” she explained. Traffic Club to Show Films of Prison Riot A film of the Jackson Prison. riot will be featured at the 6:30 p. m. Monday meeting of the Pontiac Traffic Club. Trooper Harold Wade of the Pontiac Post will show the film at the meeting to be held at the s Waldron Hotel. ' Rios of this tavere:, hs It} Four pence a night for bed "Six pence with | No boots to be worn in bed = ‘to sleep in the No dogs allowed upstairs e+ Neo beer allowed in the kitchen No razor grinders or tinkers taken in, - and) No more than five to sleep in one |Shift closets, stumble through bed dark corridors, barn-like kitchen which is‘ almost as modern as the McKinley Repub- muded eer ae tale uae ing room furniture, an up-to-date kitchen, and an interior paint job. British Price the tavern was~ overpriced. An/ cated public servant as Sherm el . Adams, It was this rug, accord. | The Adamses will truly be gulfs the viewer as he remembers! ing te Sherm's testimeny, that | Missed in Washington. ¥ - Early-rising Sherm, no night owl, 26 Local Men accepted few social engagements, but he was a mainstay. of our square-dance circuit whose queen Burl Ives, Gio Rose'Lee, sal Thurs. : cDhe for West. Berlin? People aol te Escapes During Target Practice ment and said the West has lost|years for pore kh omen Pontiac, They were: Daniel H, Mo- its rights to stay here. the smoke and fire of a : : : practiee bombardment and dasbed| reno, of 426 Midway St.; David W. Re me inn a heey aot aaa -|Pointer® of 199 Wall St: Charles _ MICHIGAN PREMIERE This was in denial of a state * “I . 1 A, Stark, of 365 S. Marshall st.: department statement yesterday | Pursuing police and bloodhounds| Sa eid Soe. Hew ae REE the occupation is not based on : cNei Potsdam bat on the military their practice. By a they Also from Pontiac were: Gerala| (Finland—1955) defeat of Nazi Germany. = up the — again, Butt's trail G. Mudge, of 194 Seminole Ave.; |} rite Pte pannes Film Fest, The same view was. expressed pct ; — = pra Se ” ise “re East newspa ee aries pann, of 369 Howard u . b Sig Me Peg the 8 ‘Do-It-Yourself’ Thieves ns St.; Kenneth L. Buckley, VENOM and ETERNITY , rance—1953) ern arguments in support of Al- Cart Off Grandstand nay wal tie iy aa Py “a film designed to shock you, to | Shd.anonpetinn. sete nak Seahle. ‘You Can Beat A Bomb’ to Be Shown to PTA ROCHESTER — “You Can Beat the A Bomb” and “Pattern for Survival” are the titles of the two civil defense movies which will be shown at the Parent Teacher Assn. meeting Monday at Hamlin Ele- mentary School. The business meeting will begin at 8 p.m. in the multi-purpose room of the school. ‘The executive board will meet at 7 p.m. PASADENA, Calif. (AP) °— Stolen: One Rose Parade grand- sembled made the thieves’ work easier. ~ . ; Wayne Morse Has Plan CORVALLIS, Ore. @ — Sen. Morse (D-Ore) says the a develop an_inter- national system of justice to replace military defense, Poston Trails Drunks All Over New York By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Tom Poston is quite a student—of drunks. “tf I can do it without being observed, I'll follow a drunk all over New York... no, no! not drinking with him!—studying him,” Tom told me the other night at dinner. He was drinking milk. Tom, not being a punster, didn’t say that _ New York is a lush field for drunks, but I’m sure he agrees. “[ find my best drunks at forenoon ~ ghi> sailings,” Tom said. “They always get ' served champagne. That’s dangerous on an empty stomach. Very-.sedate people suddenly burst into song—then they look around as if to say ‘WHO DID THAT?’ A funnier sight is two very sedate drunks, , WILSON: one trying to take care of his buddy. And him usually drunker than his buddy is!” _All Tom’s assiduous research prepared him for his great Tole—Miles Pringle, who drinks two bottle of scotch and is still able to cross-examine himself in a court—in the George Abbott-directed show, “Drink To Me Only.” Tom also pre-- tended to be drunk one night on Steve Allen’s program and - so convinced his colleague Louis Nye in. a@ sketch that it was hard to unconvince him. Bi cose “Steve planned this trick on && The loss was reported to Pasa-| dena police Friday. The fact that the grandstand hadn’t yet been as-} A.3.C. David E, Black, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Black of Clarkston, recently was home for 30 days from Little Rock AFB, Lit- Five ‘portraits of area residents which were photographed by -Pon- tiac photographer Dimitri LaZaroff have been selected for display this weekend at a-+Detroit photo show held at the Light Guard Detroit BLACK * NORMAN CARLSON Airman 2.C. Billy Ray Norman, son of Mrs. Lawrence Tunny of} 470 Oakland Ave. is stationed in Korea. Airman Norman entered the Air Force Aug. 4, 1955, receiving basic training. at Sampson Air Force N°Y. He then was sent to a Wholesale Coffee Price Cut 2 Cents NEW YORK (® — General Foods Corp. today lowered the wholesale price of vacuum-packed Maxwell House and other brands of coffee two cents a pound bringing prices to their lowest level in eight years. Armory. x +* &* | The display is included with the} works of other members of the Detroit Assn. of Professional Pho- tographers, * * * The residents are: Dr, William} H. Marbach, pastor of the First! Presbyterian Church; Carol J. Tuttle of Lake Angelus; Miss Tut-| tle’s boxer dog, Nathan; an oil. portrait of Leslie H. Hudson, state: we representative, and an oil pre-| Join Marines \During October A total of 26 men from the Oak- U.S. Marine Corps during the month of October according to fig- ures released today by the Pontiac Marine Recruiting Substation, * * * Of the enlistees, 10 wee from is Mrs. Herbert May, the former Marjorie Merriweather Post-Toasties fortune fame. Marijorie's first square dance of this season is scheduled for Dec. 4, and no one _who has attended the land County area ehlisted in thejothers can “believe that this one will be quite the same, Imagine a Washington square dance without the usually ‘icy Sherm affably swinging the ladies, while his smile stretched from here to’*here! Post of Moon," by Jules Verne. Rare Mole Cancerous CHICAGO — The chance that a mole is about one in a million, a Fecemt study indicates, Tab Hunter, Gua Wax ing Fri.: “Love and War,” Robert Wagner. oa Sa Qu “Outer Space," a een of Zsa Zsa Gabor: * “From the © h to sae "develop into skin cancer } i Gene A. Reas, of 211 Going t Enlistees from the county were: | Dwight B. Moulton Jr. of Auburn Heights; William E. Grant, of In-| dependence Township; Jimmie W. Watson, of Avon Township: Joseph insult you, to outrage ones The most Picker film in the history of the ema with Jean Cocteau—Andre Marios and Jean— Louis Barrault, ‘CLAWSON PLAYHOUSE GREAT FILM SERIES Alcorn says he plans to remain, Republican national chairman despite the party's overwhelm- ing defeat in congressional elec- tions. fommen Porhree 4 Mi. Rd, 2M E. of Woodward” JU 8-3977—Park Free raiSAT. STARTS } SUNDAY—3 DAYS ONLY a Come as you are! Bring the family! is the to go, Wed. revdey, November i 12 JU $-3077 14 Mile Rd. 7 L, Hill, of Bloomfield Township: 2M through ‘he Ught Guerd Franklin R. Bsn of Pontiac _ Smoking Section-Pree Parting ber 16 at pA yo : : wnship: a lenn H. Ray and Bu (a ea ae Armory, 4400 st Eig | —— oe both of Wa- Color “with trations Ontnte Pans Mile Road {at Ryan). - . AP Wirephote Others from Oakland County a ADMISSION: JUST THE TOOF OF US—Sixyear-old Nancy pumpkin she's carved for Halloween. Its teeth | REre Guy Dembsy Jr. of Oxford; Go 7 s ee _ As Cowan proudly displays the almost-toothless (or lack of same) almost match her own. ee noe ry pel ie Ecard A Shatrering Experience... ian - y = You sill NEVER... ‘ ville; Alexander D. Millar and Mi-| r chael J, Oliver, both of Wixom: run NEVER... FREE PARKING» Ne S O f Ser ° P | = Douglas W. Battles, of Royal TIMES ; W vice / erson ne Rounding out the list of county | bi ym: A “ee > ms é enlistees were: James E. Reh- Saturd. eas Tt 2 woldt, of Leonard; Edward A. Ma- _ pm, 4 Army Pfc, Theodore Carlson, sonjis now assigned to the U.S. Navalltle Rock, Ark., where he has been|haney, of Farmington: and James Sunday— 1-8 p.m. : | of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Carlson of|School in Norfolk, Va, to study|stationed since May W. Green, of Berkley ‘EVENTS ° 86 S. Marshall St., has been sta-\electronics, a ’~ ok * + tes ake tioned at Wurzburg Germany for wy The former Clarkston High| The men were flown to San Di- tehen of Se ‘bits ; the past year as a clerk in Head- . . ego, Calif., for 12 weeks of recruit ' . quarters Office. School student received basic train-|training, after which they” will be new equipment, lectures, Recently he and a friend spent ing at Geneva, N.Y. and has been/transferred to Camp Joseph H. emonstrations, shooting a 15-day leave touring several Eu- stationed at Selfridge Field and/Pendelton, at Oceanside, Calif. for sets, something for every- ropean countries. Of special in- Amarillo, .Tex. He will be dis-|five weeks of individual combat one— amateur or expert! é terest was a trip through the Alps, charged next May and expects to/training, ed by the a gondola ride in Venice, and a re-enlist. : ierietnell pd sight-seeing tour of Rome, Monaco, The Most Unusmal Motion Michigan ; Ri Isle of Capri, and the French Pontiac Photographer Alcorn to Keep Post . Picture Ever Produced! Photo pe cg viera. . . — § to Show 5 Portraits WASHINGTON @ —~ Monde wa ae friendly FREE PRESS 1, “FIEND WHO WALKED THE WEST” 2. “NAKED. EARTH” Thrills in Africa 3. “WILD DAKOTAS” 8 Louis as a tribute to his ability to meet any emergency on camera. “All afternoon at rehearsal, Base, Cheyenne, Wyo. for teletype oper- ator training. In March 1957 he was assigned duty in Korea, after being stationed at Pease AFB, bridal portrait of the former Helen’ Schmidt of Birmingham. YOUR OPPORTUNITY The cuts, effective Monday, bring to 23 the total wholesale reduction in the past 19 months. Other brands affected are Sanka, Yuban and Bliss. ‘food chemist, must be embarrassed by his son’s jokes because earl, brother. I sent out for beer which I pretended to drink but didn’t. “In a western sketch, I was — supposed to,-pull.out a gun He was to say ‘Drop that gun.’ I pulled out a pack of cigarettes instead.” ' Louis was,to fire the gun when he finally got it, “but I'd removed all the blanks,” Tom said, but Louis ‘cov- ered’ by stabbing Don Knotts with an imaginary knife — so help. me!” ex- claimed Tom in admiration. POSTON “Then in the dressing room, I told him, ‘Louis, I wasn’t! drunk. That was tea in that whisky glass.’ He didn’t want to believe it. I guess he liked me better drunk.” ek * 7% Tom has now established himself as a gifted actor after) | his first fame as the one of Steve's men-on-the-street who couldn't remember his name. He’s a young man to be reckoned with inthe drama literature of our time because he efhjoys playing pranks — such as his hoodwinking of the press by claiming to have been born practically everywhere. “The first time I was born, I was born in South Africa— because 1 was in an English play,” Tom admitted with a sly grin. The rlext time I was born, I don’t remember, but the next time I was born after that, it was on a boat off North Carolina. I just said it for meanness. “The next time I was born, it was in Columbus. My father was at Ohio State getting a degree in dairy chemistry and aay patio was ire 40 5 figured ital be 8 .good place to be born.” What. story ippeats to be tree. ‘Tom's father, a Boston Tom once said he'd lived at 29 addrestes in Ohio because his father was “a traveling salesman”—of It was time for Tom to get drunk. “Is it hard?” I asked It’s hard if you don't know how to,” Tom said ... That's _|Hilleliff St, A former Waterford of 40 Chippewa Rd., recently was) vba xommene N.H. His wife, Candis, and four-month-old daughter are Ford Leonard Wood, Mo, is Army Pvt, Daniel D. Combs, son of Mr. The company attributed the re- residing in + egeragiagr ductions to modest declines in the GMTC Employes : a price of green coffee. Uabetgoing bie "\ealaiee atl” the new supermarket prices will Federal Credit Union be around 90 cents a pound. to save, to finance. to benefit with your fellow employes in the x & and Mrs, Daniel L, Combs of 614 Township High School. student, Pvt. Combs entered the service in Sep- tember for three years. Prior to enlistment he was employed at the S. S.. Kresge Co., Miracle Mile! Shopping Center. COMBS -=—- CROSS Airman 3.C Larry L. Cross, son, of Mr, and Mrs, Ervin Cross of! 356 Hillcliff St., attending jet mechanics school, A former Waterford High School; student, he enlisted May 7, 1958. for four years’ duty and received} basic’training at San Antonio, Tex. | He may be written A.3.C, Larry L.. Cross, AF 1 , 3342 STURON, Amarillo AFB, Tex. * * * Daniel Irving Maloney, son of Mr. and Mrs,. Irving D, Maloney home on a 14-day leave after com- pleting recruit training at Great! Lakes Naval Training Center. A 1958 gradyate of Cathedral Central High School, Detroit, he (Copyright, 1958) entered the service in July, He & # NO STIRRING! Rev Satin is homogenized. You just open the can and start right in on your paint job. Even more important—you escape the pitfalls of inadequate stirring. Homogenized Rev Satin gives you a beautiful, smooth job every time. It’s perfect for every room in your home—iucluding kitchens and bathrooms. OAKLAND FUEL & PAINT 436 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-6150 PARK FREE REAR of STORE STARRING. as S BEFORE YOUR EVES- The covered wagons blaze a historic trail across mountain and river! “BRIAN RICK - RITA MALA STEVE AEITH JASON GAM POWERS: BRODIE UNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY , FIRST SHOWING in cs: CITY of PONTIAC “THE NAKED AND THE DEAD” | ALO nit 7 FF ROR RAOND, Set !