Tini Weather Pleasant THE PONTIAC PR VOL. 124 NO. 212 ★ ★ *★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1966 —68 PAG] LBJ Proposes Social Security Hikes Commission Has Heated Sesiion Topics of housing, downtown redevelopment, politics end race issues sparked a heated City Commission meeting, last night. • Principals in the discussion included City Commis-' sioner T. Warren Fowler Sr., John B. Maye, president of UAW Local 653, Robert Newby, head of the Progressive Action Committee for Equality (PACE) and Charles M. Tucker Jr., president of the Oakland County chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). Much of the talk centered on PAGE, its activities and statements. Fowler shgrply criticized both PACE and Newby. Fowler said, “At no time has he (Newby) accepted my advice. He’s tried to stab me in the back with the longest knife he could find.” Newby replied that “we have said nothing we have to be ashamed of, we’ve always sought the truth and a bit of human dignity.'” » WILLIAM H. TAYLOR JR. Mayor Views Taubman Plan Says Only 1 Design Under Consideration Mayor yyilliam H. Taylor Jr. last night attempted to Clarity, a few issues in conjunction with downtown P oil t i a c redevelopment. Taylor pointed ont that the Taubman plan was the only concrete proposal under consideration. He maintained there were not two plans for downtown redevelopment. “There are not two downtown plans. We do have a developer, but we do hot as yet have a concrete plan.” The mayor said developer A. Alfred Taubman would present his plan and then it yould be considered by the commission. AGREED TO LOOK Taylor added that Taubman had long said he was flexible and had agreed to look at the University of Detroit layout for Pontiac. The mayor, however, pointed out that if such things as walkways were put into the plan, the city would have to pay for some of these things. Also last night, Taylor disclosed that Taubman’s quarter-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) In Today's f Press City Affairs | Hearing,set for sale of 3 renewal land.—PAGE B-6. 1 Prices Tumble* 1 Food chains in Chicago | area cut costs of nonper- | ishables. — PAGE A-0. 1 Veteran Newsman | News has been Charles § Dudley’s beat for 65 years. | — PAGE A-7. Area News :..... A-4—A-5 f -D-ll I .. E-2 - Crossword Puzzle Comics ...... Editorials ........ ... Find Section .. E-a-E-10 § Markets C41 Obituaries ......... B-* Sports ......... D-l—D-i Theaters ..... ... C-1A TV-Radio Programs D-ll Wilson, Eari ....D-ll Women’s Pages .. B-l—B-4 FIRST LADY WELCOMED—Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, arriving’ with tte President for the opening concert of the National Symphony Orchestra’s season, is welcomed by Van Cliburn, piano Soloist at last night’s affair in Washington. Dr. Howard Mitchell, symphony director, is between the two as Mrs. William H. Sullivan, president of the Daughters of the American Revolution, greets the President. He said the six commissioners (in reference to the majority that approved the Taubman agreement) did not have a monopoly on brains. Therefore, he contended some questions raised were completely valid.. NEVER PRESENTED Newby said that charge was based on the contention that the Taubman plan had never been presented to the Civic Improvement. Advisory Committee, or (he planning commission. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. replied that the Taubman plan had been outlined to city planners in a joint meeting with the commission. Maye pointed out that the housing problem was not just Pontiac’s, but an area problem. He urged that surrounding suburbs be asked to help solve the housing shortage. ★ ★ Noting the heated discussion, Tucker suggested that the commission plan an informal meeting for a private discussion of the problems under debate last night. Five Detroit Youths Nabbed, Linked to Auto Theft Ring 3 Men Lead City Fiscal Study Unit The nucleus of a broad base committee to study Pontiac’s fiscal crisis was named last night by Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. Taylor announced that Robert R. Eldred, Edward' E. Barker and James L. Howiett would head the new Pontiac Financial Study Committee. Eldred, executive vice president of Community National Bank, is to be chairman of the committee, which results from a series of two meetings with community leaders on the city’s financial plight. The committee, to be selected from about 35 names turned in by Community leaders, was charged with making: • An analysis of the present financial problems facing the dty today and recommendations for increased revenues. • A more extensive and detailed study to provide a long-range financing plan for the future. 1 Taylor said Eldred and Barker, president of Pontiac State Bank, represented broad experience in banking and financial matters^ Howiett, meanwhile, a local attocWy, headed a similar study commuted for the Pontiac School District. . Th e cbnunittee’s projected short-term study is expected to be keyed to a possible spring vote on some proposal to provide more general fund revenue. Wixom police and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies last night and early today took into * custody five Detroit youths, cracking a suspected stolen-car ring. „ , ' ★ ★ ★ Wixom Police Chief Darcy Young said arrests of the five, along with apprehension of a 16-year-old juvenile culminates nearly a month of investigation. Held at the Oakland County Jail on $2,500 bond each following arraignment for pos|-session of stolen autos are Charles Reed, 20; Ms brother, Danny Reed, 18; Ray Dan-ids, 21; William Justus, 21; and Joe Blankenship, 18. The Reed brothers, Daniels, and Justus were arrested at their homes yesterday on warrants. ‘ Wixom Justice Elwood Grubb scheduled their preliminary examination for Oct. 21. WAIVED EXAM Blankenship, said by Young to have been caught by State Police troopers yesterday on I-696, waived examination and was bound over by Grubb to Circuit Court for trial. Young credited success of the investigation to efforts by State Police, Sterling Town- snip authorities, and police in several areas of Macomb and Wayne counties. He said 24 cars — most of them 1966-model two-doors with four-speed transmissions -- had been reported stolen from plant parking lots throughout the three-county metropolitan area since about Sept. 20. The stolen automobiles, which 4,000 GIs Arrive McNamara in War Zones Ll’ir ONES “Sure niy teacher’s nice to you, but you don’t have to sit in the front row every day.” Housewives Angry He Saw Too Much! I RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - “Woodsman, spare that tree!” may be an old saw but a group of suburban housewives found out that it doesn’t cut like the gasoBn’e-powered kind. These (Jays a good power saw can level a 30-year growth of woods before nature lovers can even get a hearing. When such a sawer showed up yesterday and began ripping into a grove of pine trees in a quiet Henrico County neighborhood, Mrs. Walter Hyer Jr. and some of her neighbors were incensed. Since .the grove borders the TuckaKoe Elementary School, they called the principal to protest. ★ ★ '★ " Re referred them{ to the superintendent of school construction ajnd maintenance, *rho, it turned out, was in Utah. Young said have all been recovered, were then taken to various locations in . western Oakland County and stripped, usually in a partly-hidden wooded area. Taken from the cars in the stripping operation, according to Young, were transmissions, power train components, electrical systems and “practically anything ushble." SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) - U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara toured quieted battle sectors of South Viet Nam today as 4,000 fresh American combat troops arrived in the country. The new troops, the last contingent of the 4th Infantry Division, brought the American force in Viet Nam to 325,000 men. . As the buildup continued, ground fighting subsided into small skirmishes. But on the political front dissension flared between northerners and southerners in Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s cabinet. ★ * ★ Five civilian ministers from the Mekong Delta were reported threatening to resign. LEAVE TROOPSHIP The 4,000 fresh American combat troops, comprising the "Ivy” Division’s 3rd Brigade, began coming ashore from a troopship at Vuhg Tau, 40 miles southeast of Saigon. Their arrival brought the division to full strength, making it the fourth complete U.S. Army division in Viet Nam. In addition to the 325,000 American soldiers in Viet Nam, there are nearly 42,000 troops from five other allied nations and some 705,000 South Vietnamese under arms. ★ ★ ★ U.S. strength is expected to reach between 370,000 and 400,000 # men by the end of this year. McNamara, after two days of military briefings in Saigon, flew to Phu Cat, the case in the central coastlands for the U.S. 1st Cavalry’s Operation Irving, which has given the allies the war’s biggest bag of North Vietnamese and Viet Cong prisoners. ★ ★ * Maj. Gen. John North, the 1st Cavalry’s commander, briefed McNamara on the operation, in which South Korean and South Vietnamese troops are also taking part. Masked Pair Take Cash and Valuables Two masked bandits armed with a sawed-off shotgun and a chrome-plated revolver tied up four persons at a Pontiac restaurant early today and es-, caped with $400 in cash and valuables. Also taken — .but recovered ’by Pontiac polite shortly after the holdup — was a late-model car belonging to one of two customers in the restaurant’s bar. The robbers, one wearing a silver Halloween mask and the other shrouded in a hood, came into Fortino’s Steak-house at 1250 W, Wide Track about 12:50 a m., .police were told. • Joseph Fortino, owner of the restaurant, said one of the bandits told Fortino, a waitress and two patrons, “Get down oh the floor on your faces and don’t look up or we’ll kill you.” , ★ ★ * Fortino was then forced to open the cash register at the bar, turning over $335 cash to the robbers. CUSTOMER ROBBED After relieving Robert Grange, 57, of 91 Wall, a customer, of $15 and a watch valued at $15, the two men then tied the four (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 109 A secretary referred them to the county school superintendent, but he was in court. IN THE WAY A call to Henrico Supervisor L. Ray Shadwell Jr, yielded a reply that the, trees were a school board matter. It seemed there was to be an addition to the school and the trees were in the way. Finally, somebody called State Sen. William F. Parkerson Jr., who lives in the neighborhood, and he arrived at the site with the architect for the school addition, Macon G. Norman. There, surrounded qy the neighborhood women, they discovered a 40-foot error in the plans tor the project. The trees didn’t have to foe cut after all. But by that time dozens already were. Would Mean 10 Pet. Boost for Pensioners $100 Minimum Urged for Monthly Checks; Target Date Is 1968 BALTIMORE, Md. 10— President Johnson outlined today a broad blueprint for at least $2.2 billion of increases in Social-Security pensions. Under his proposal, the average pensioner would get an additional $8.50 or more a month. The President said he wants Congress to approve average benefit increases of at least 10 per cent. And he proposed minimum monthly checks of $100, compared with the present $44. Some Republicans, noting Johnson made his pronouncement less than a month before the Nov. 8 election, accused him of playing politics, But many Congress members from both parties said Social Security benefits should be expanded. None of the hikes would take effect until Jan. 1,1968 — another election year. Johnson sketched out his proposals — details will go to Congress in January — at a Social Security awards ceremony here. FIRST STOP The federal pension program, which ships monthly checks to 22 million Americans, has its headquarters in Baltimore. Maryland’s largest city was the first stop on a two-day presidential tour that will have avowedly political aspects. Johnson was bound for New York City and the annual Columbus Day parade — plus some speech-making urged upon him' by Frank O’Connor, the Democratic candidate for governor, and Democratic House members seeking reelection. Road Crashes Claim Lives of 2 in Area ! Two accidents, one in Farmington Township yesterday and one in Troy today, claimed the lives of a 16-year-old Plymouth boy and a 26-year-old Troy man. Detroit State Police said Artie Pack Jr., 16, of Plymouth was trapped and burned to death in the cab of a rubbish packer truck after it collided with another truck at 5:05 p m. yesterday at the corner of Eight Mile and Haggerty. Arthur A. Truszkowski, 26, of 6638 Ljvernois, Troy, was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following an accident at 3:28 a.m. today at E. Square Lake near Rochester in Troy. Troy police said Truszkowski . apparently fell asleep in his car and hita tree. State Police said Pack was trapped in the cab of a truck driven by Fredrick W. Collier, 20, of Belleville. Collier was taken to the University of Michigan Hospital. The driver of the second truck, Donald M- Carless, 23, of Plymouth was not injured. Not Quite So Cool in the Area Tonight Sunny and a little warmer is the forecast for Pontiac area residents. * ★ ★ The weatherman predicts partly cloudy and not so cool with lows of 42 to 46 tonight. Mostly sunny with little temperature changes, highs ranging from 64 to 68, is tomorrow’s forecast. There’s a chance of a few showers Friday. Today’s westerly winds at 8 to 16 miles per hour will become light variable tonight. ★ ★ * Thirty-seven was the low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The thermometer registered 54 at 1 p.m. 1 NATIONAL NEWSPAPER WEEK-OCT. 9-15,1966 PonflMfefii® Area Sewer System Plan City of Pontiac officials will! The trunk sewef, known as answer a loud “no” to the see-| the Galloway Creek Trank, and request to join Oakland would parallel the future Clin-County’s proposed Clinton-Oak-' ton-Oakland interceptor ia the land Sewage Disposal System, j northeast corner of Pontiac. * * * The Oakland County Depart- According to discussion at an ment of Works has want. informal meeting Monday, theLj pontjac ^ reconsider its de-City Commission is to continuejcjsjon ^ out 0f the interns plats “to go it alone” in ^iceptor system, which is to serve struction of a sanitary trunk1 seven Pontiac area coramuni-sewer on Pontiac’s northeast jjjes frorn Waterford Township side. ___ - to Avon Township. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER lg, 1960 Taylor Reviews Taubman Plan (Continued From Page One) million dollar “good faith” deposit to the city had been made. As part of toe regular agenda, the City Commission last night received two letters, one from the Pontiac Area Urban League and another from toe Oakland County chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). LETTER READ Signed by Charles M. Tucker Jr., president, the NAACP letter was read. It asked that a statement made at the public hearing on the Taubman plan agreement by a NAACP spokes- j A recent letter from County! DPW Director R. J. Alexander: asked for the city’s reconsideration on the basis that toe participating communities appear ready to move ahead on the [ sewer line, j NOT APPROVED 1 Alexander said yesterday that: only Avon Township has not approved its contract for the $28.6-; million interceptor. , He said the various contracts were being rewritten to meet some of the objections raised by the township, includ- | fog a slight redistribution of the cost Alexander expected that signed contracts from all the proposed participants would be! 3 PRINCIPALS IN TRIAL - State Sen. Bernard F. O’Brien Jr. and his wife, Mary Louise, are shown during a r e c e s s in his morals trial. He is charged with soliciting Michigan State University coeds to pose for AP Wirephelo nude pictures. Two of the students—Christtae LaGassey. 20, of Honolulu and Linda Out-calf, 19, of Ann Arbor (background) — gave testimony yesterday. O'Brien Likely to Testily Today in His Morals Trial - > - . . . i UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.j LANSING (AP) — The inoralsl would testify and attempt to re- placed before the city again in (AP) - Nationalist China de- tria, of Democratic state Sen. fute charges that be asked a two -to-three weeks. j dared todaythatpeace will n®t gernarcj p O'Brien Jr. contin- 122-year-old college coed to pose I be restored in Viet Nam "until ues jgj** w^h O’Brien likely!for nude photographs and en- 'Peking Sure It Can Win With Force' 'Captive Yanks Wen-Treated' Officials 5ee No Sign of N. Viet Brutality WASHINGTON (AP) - For scores of hopeful and worried American families, U.S. offi-had good news:' Their captured or missing husbands and sons may be receiving decent treatment as prisoners of war in North Viet Nam. The officials revealed Tuesday the United States now has some evidence that American pilots held in prisons by the Hanoi government apparently are not being mistreated or brain- However, as it stands now,! the Communist aggressors are to take the stand barring reconsideration by Pon-j convinced that they cannot win Ag the defense prepared to tiac, the contracts will again; by force.” [continue introducing its 20 or man be included in the com- have to be redrafted and ap-i mission’s official minutes. Tucker reiterated an NAACP request for representation on the city’s Citizens’ Improvement Advisory Council and the downtown liaison committee. Meantime, the Urban League letter, which characterized the commission’s okay of toe Taubman agreement as a “farce, was not read. proved by the remaining munic- “At present they are not so ipalities. convinced,” Ambassador Liu ULTIMATUM GIVEN |Chieh said in a policy speechl .... i prepared for delivery before the | Earlier this year, the c 11 y' 119-nation U.N. General Assem-j handed Alexander a 45-day ui-bly ..0n the contrary, they be-timatum to get the Clinton-Oak-ijjeve that they are already halfland contracts approved and the way t0 victory.” sewer project under way. * * + t Pontiac dropped out when the Liu asserted that’ neither, deadline passed and all toe con-; North Viet Nam ngr Red China tracts .had not been signed. I wants a political solution in Viet, City officials have gone ahead! Nam, in drawing up plans for the Taylor said this was because gage in sexual intercourse. ,* | * The girl, Marion Lukens of more witnesses, O’Brien said he Santa Ana, Calif., a senior at Busy Session Lifts Hope for Adjournment Michigan S t a t e, University, j charged O’Brien with soliciting I such acts and with being a disorderly person. I Each charge is a misdemeanor carrying a maximum penalty of a $100 fine and 90 days in jail. Ingham County Prosecutor Donald Reisig said O’Brien, for technical reasons, could be convicted of no more than one of the charges. WASHINGTON (AP) - Hopes for adjournment of Congress CHARGES FRAME-UP ___________e Galloway Creek sewer, feeling only language they un-before the end of next week toe tetter had been released tojthat sewer service as soon as derstand is the language of [mounted today after one of the news media prior to being sent possible is imperative for de- force and violence,” he de-jbusiest legislative days of the to the commission. , velopment of an estimated 1,- clared.1 SPECIAL SESSION I* arcf“ northeast cor-jTOpic 0F meETINg O’Brien contends in statements to. newsmen he was “framed” by an “insurance lobby” which opposed two bills At a special meeting of the Urban League board Si directors last night, called regarding toe tetter sent to the commission, board members Charles F. Brown, Theodore B. Bloom, Dr. Jaap Detevte and Harry J. Reed protested the “abusive” tone of the letter. it h it The tetter, composed by the executive committee of the league and signed by league President E. Eugene Russell, strongly rebuked the City Commission for failing to heed public sentiment expressed at the Sept. 27 public hearing on downtown redevelopment. Endorsing the tetter were Rabbi Ernst J. Conrad, Mrs. Laura A. Carey and several other members. No action was taken oh the tetter. ner of the city. Truckload Falls on Matt In a burst of speed Tuesday,- he introduced in the Semite. , P® I® : the House and Senate acted on 0’Brien, a freshman Democrat ’ - . -- ........P c,many. major pieces of legisla-j from Detroit, was defeated in ■jtion. I the August primary election. Leaders have set Oct. 22 as Defense attorney John O’Connell said Tuesday the trial ! discussed in a 50-minute meet-jing late Tuesday between Brit-j ister Andrei A. Gromyko Bul ,tter Tuesda>' f it it ^ some were saying Oct. 20 looked Brown told newsmen the talkj*ood-1men*ers' \ was “very very good, andito return home.to dev?te Coach Division employe was in-j fondly and very frank, and fcfe for the * The S2 meets today two the°plant ^ “ It was the second meeting for ^ SM ff 0 K on Hie victim, Ralph Moorehead, toe two ministers in three days.!one of. three.. remaining ap-of 2521 Gerald, Avon Town- j; ’------------—— ship, was admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital foUowing the1 accident. The plywood was being transported on a fork truck when the! stack shifted and toppled on Moorehead, according to a company’ spokesman. Moorehead! was not operating the truck. Charge Foils Cong Ambush! propriations* bills — a $406-mil-lion District of Columbia meas- The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Mostly sunny and a little warmer today. Highs 62 to 68. Partly cloudy and not so cold tonight, lows 42 to 46. Partly sunny Thursday with little temperature change, highs 64 to 68. Westerly winds 8 to 16 miles today becoming light variable tonight. Friday’s outlook: Showers and turning cooler. Precipitation probability less than 5 per cent today and tonight. Ten per cent tonight. Tuesday in Pontiac At I a.m.; Wind Velocity S Direction: West Sun lets Wednesday at S:S7 p.m. Sun rises Thursday at 6:43 a.m. Moon sets Wednesday at 5:29 p.rr Moon rises Thursday at 4:51 a.m. Downtown Temperatures High! COMPROMISE BILL Then it expects to send to President • Johnson , a compromise $4.1-billion appropriations j bill to finance public works | projects across the nation. | DA NANG, South Viet Nam Next it will turn to a bulky j (AP) — It was a day the ser-foreign investors tax bill de-geant won his sixth Purple (signed to make it more attrac-Heart, stabbed a Viet Cong with tore for foreigners to invest in I his knife and heard the enemy America. I wounded coughing and moaning! The <' administration has ■all around. j pushed strongly for the bill, I In the first 15 seconds, toe which passed the House in June. U.S. Marines took heavy casual-!Supporters said it should unties - and fought back. prove America’s position in tar * .★ * ternational balance of pay- “We messed them up, I guess, | merits. ! because they expected us to However, the Senate Finance I run, and my gangsters don’t Committee used the bill as a jwork that way. They just ran vehicle on which to hang 25 ex-|the hell in to them,” said Sgt.'traneous amendments, includ-l !Clovis Coffmann, 34, of Rich-ling a broad proposal for govem-jmond, Va. “We charged andlment financing of presidential broke their skirmish line.” j campaigns, i The Marine reconnaissance i This amendment promises •platoon had been in the field two considerable Senate floor con-2,[days this week, observing ene-troversy probably will continue beyond today. He said he will call witnesses to vouch for O’Brien’s character and testify that toe senator was at his office at the time Miss Lukens charges the illegal solicitations were made. ★ ★ ★ A Lansing Township Justice Court jury of three men and three women is hearing the case. Tuesday’s testimony dealt, in an apparent defense attempt to discredit Miss Lukens as a witness, ^with a rape accusation the girl made two years ago against an Air Force officer. VOLUNTARY ACT The officer, Capt. Donald H. Osterhout, 34, of Lockbourne AFB, Columbus, Ohio, took the stand Tuesday. He said he had had sexual relations with Miss Lukens, but testified she submitted voluntarily. Miss Lukens testified Monday she had gone with Osterhout against her will from an officers’ club on the base to a Columbus motel where toe in-, cident occured. Also testifying Tuesday was Lt. Col. James Dupler, Who, at the time of the incident, was staff judge advocate at the base. Dupler said he interviewed Miss Lukens at the time and quoted her as saying Osterhout Water Tower to Be Fenced In BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP A fence will be constructed around the water tower at Maple and Lahser in an attempt to prevent further incidents Such as the one last month in which a 14-year-old boy was kilted in fall flam the tower. < The Township Board Monday night awarded a. contract to the U. S. Steel Co. for $1,011 to put foj> the fence. ‘The fragmentary and unreliable evidence weihgveis that they’re being decently treated,” high State Department source involved in POW negotiations said. “There’s no indication of brutality or mistreatment in the North.” The official added: “But we don’t like to say they’re not being mistreated when we can’t get anyone in” to inspect the POW camps. RECENT STATISTICS Recent government statistics show that 54 men are known to be POWs, 65 are suspected captives and about 140 pilots are missing in North Viet Nam. Many military sources, however, believe that as many as ift pilots are imprisoned in North Vietnamese TOW camps. ★ ★ * For their wives and families information is scarce’ Some wives have told how they learned their 'husbands were alive only after seeing their photographs in propaganda pictures released by North Viet Nam. Some State Department officials expressed regret about a misunderstanding in the widely publicized case of Lt. (j.g.) Diet-er Dengfer, the German-bom U.S. Navy pilot who escaped from a Communist prison camp fmk summer and lived to tell of the mistreatment he and others suffered; ★ ★ ★ They pointed .out that many Americans did not realize Den-gler had been shot down in Laos and mistreated by the Communist Pathet Lao — not the Nprth Vietnamese. MEA Voteq In DEARBORN (APj-The Michigan Education Association nouhced Tuesday that teachers in two school districts had named the association as bargaining agent with school boards/Dearborn 8 voted 135-93 for the association and Lincoln Park voted 260-240. In each case, toe teachers turned down toe Federation of Teachers. Legislators Ignore Prod b% Romney LANSING (AP)—Legislators, planning just a brief midcampaign session, worked out a short agenda .Tuesday despite Gov. George Romney’s listing of nine .pages of items on which he said “action is needed now. Republican Romney’s specii tessage to toe , Democratic -controlled Legislature was big as toe message (State of the State) he sent us in January,” said Senate Majority Leader Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit. ’ * - ★ . ★ “Much of this is political, coming in one month before toe election with an agenda like this,” Dzendzel added. ★ * * Majority Democrats plan action today on a housing authority to provide housing for k>w-income families, a plan to revitalize dying lakes and proposed changes ih state property condemnation laws. TO FIGHT VETO Dzendzel said the Senate would try to override Romney’s veto of a bill that would have eliminated the one-week waiting period before unemployed workers start receiving unemployment compensation benefit®. * ★ ★ The housing authority, dying lakes and condemnation proposals were among 13 items Romney listed. In other action Monday night, tbe board passed « resolution denying a claim against the township. HO USE FELL Mrs. Little said a suit was filed against toe township when the wall of a house under construction in Bloomfield Village collapsed as toe result of water draining down a MU. She said tha( drainage was not handled property in the process of construction of a new school at Covington and Quarton. “This is the school’s responsibility,” she said, “and our attorney recommended denying the ciaim.” Boys from Birmingham and Bloomfield^ Hills participated in the All-Indian Camporee this weekend at Stony Creek Metropolitan Park. A first place prize in the Dakota observation game was awarded to Birmingham Troop 1627 and a'second place award went to Bloomfield Troop 1035. Archery and buffalo roping contest awards were given to Charles Schwarzwalder of Bloomfield Troop 1047, Greg Kamp of Birmingham Troop 1029 and Jim Nelson of Birmingham Troop 1827. Chief of Police in Area Quits Norman Dehnke, chief of police in Bloomfield Township since 1957, has resigned his position effective immediately because of “situations that exist within the poUoe department.” A /* ★ in his letter of resignation submitted yesterday, he said he was quitting because of his “‘inability” tq/cope with the situation and “for the good of toe department, the township and for my own well-being.” j* , Dehnke, 40, said today that during the past six or seven months, attempts to unionize the department have caused internal and external pressures. “I’m going to take it easy and get back in shape both physically and mentally before I decide what to do,” he said. ‘I’ve been in police work almost 20 years and I’d like to try something else.” . I , rr 07 uays ns ween, uwcivuig chc-;uu»udv. - . / * « - . „ ~ M » rwi «™.., mi 63 my movements and gathering! The House has agreed not to!ha““®ed ho, force physically.. “ v Bfe) m m‘ intelligence about 10 miles south take any votes today because aL , ®fld h>s myestigation 57 m io» Angeies 73 63j0f q,u Lgj. Three times the Viet inumber of its members were tor1^105®0 msumcient facts to si M £$££ 79 61 Cong hit them with grenade andjbe absent at Columbus Day cele-lwarrant formal charges.” 45 39 New York 67 $1 _jfi. ihralihnc Mean ternjwature ..................t Weather: Mostly sunny Highest and Lowest Temperatures TMs Date In 94 Years Rail Union on Strike Despite Court Order Earlier Tuesday William Wil-: kiq, 22, an MSU employe, testified he saw O’Brien and Miss Lukens in a parked car on the j campus May 27 and wrote down 1 the auto’s license number. Fortino's Robbed by Masked Bandits (Continued From Page One) I Whatever ; He Writes I Is Wrong I A bad-check suspect is I held in the Oakland Coun-I ty Jail following his arrest I by Southfield police I yesterday. | In the suspect’s posses-| sion when taken into cus- I tody, according to police II were: 1 a Twenty handmade 1 1 drivers’licenses from sev- i I en different states. " I a Fifteen license {dates 1 for car, trucks, and boats, I from (he same states. ‘Official” rubber Dehnke, 100 Alice, Bloomfield Hills, was a policeman in Detroit for eight years before joining the township department in 1954. f> pJ Township Cleric Mrs. Delores |.V. Little said the resignation I was accepted with regret bell cause “he has done a good job ijfor toe township and his shoes || will be hard to fill.” i get up -t tower mw said Tovnuhp Clerk Deloris V. Little, “bat we feel It is a good idea to take every precMun passible.” Fourteen-year-oM Anthony Mitchell, 420 Martell, Bloomfield Hills, died after falling from the 130-foot tower on Sept. Israel, Jordan Exchange Shots TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -Israeli and Jordanian forces exchanged fire for 20 minutes today after an Israeli army patrol strayed into Jordan’s territory during an early morning fog, an Israeli military spokesman announced. ★ * ★ He said one Israeli soldier was wounded in toe border clash near toe Mejami settlement southwest of Afuleh, and that Israel had reported the incident to toe tJ.N. Jordan-Israel Armistice Commission. 8 Organizers Being Sought by County OEO The Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity is seeking to hire eight additional neighborhood organizers to work with low income families in poverty areas of the county. A salary range of $4,200 to $5,400 is specified for the jobs which are open to both men and women. Areas where new organizers are needed include the McConnell School area in Pontiac or a resident of Pontiac’s Spanish-speaking community. Others are Highland Township, Royal Oak Township, Hazel Park, Royal Oak-Ferndale, Clawson - Troy arid Novi-Far-mington Township. Applications are available at the antipoverty program’s central office, 1 Lafayette. Simms, 98 H. Saginaw St. 1 KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — man of the/uriion, said he has A strike by the Switchmen’s[“received/no official word of the] Union of North America against'restrafoing order and the strike| the Rock Island Railroad is in is stiff in full swing.” Steinbeck! full swing despite a temporary said he would be the one to call m restraining order issued early off tffe strike if the order is victims with lengths of table-11 stamps bearing the names j today in Chicago by Judge Jg^served j cloth and fled. > ' 1 different firms, seph Sam Perry of U.S. District ★ * ★ Left bound on toe floor be-1 •Blank checks drawn Court / I Steinbeck said the union’s j sifdes Fortino and Grange were § on 20 banks purported to * * * / I general chairman, L. C. Chish- Daisy Mitchell, 36, of 40 Murphy, § be in California, Illinois, A railroad spokesman said the olm. is en route eastward to a waitress; and Lawrence B.li Ohio, Wisconsin, Texas, Thomas, 22, of 809 Northfield, f the second patron. ’ § , NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain and showers are forecast tonight for parts of the Plains and Mississippi Valley into Texas and the western Gulf Coast. Rain will fall in the central and northern Rockies, turning to snow in higher elevations. It will be warmer in toe central states and cooler in the Plains. order would take effect just asimake himself available for soon as it could be served I talks, presumably in Chicago, against ‘ varjous union offi- The strike started at 9 p.m. 6ers.” Tuesday and halted freight traf- The strik.e involves a griev-;fie over the line’s 14-state sys- as “probably white,” each about! a nee vyith the line at Eldon,item and forced about 14,000 6-feet, 165 pounds. One wore a The bandits were described ! Indiana and Missouri. Southfield' authorities said a description of all the confiscated items had been setit via teletype to the Federal Bureau of Iowa/ • j commuters in the Chicago area;full-length black topcoat, and | Investigation for an foter- to Ponca City, Okla., Tuffy i to find other transportation car- the other a dark jacket, police|f state check. ^Steinbeck, vice general chair-1 ly today. | were told. 'PANASONIC' FM/AM Table Radio 3995 $49.95 Seller i Provides amazing Hi-Fi performance. 10 transistors, 7 diodes phis 1 rectifier. Brillipnt styling plus truly sensitive FM/AM reproduction Tuned RF stage for FM. Extra-powerful 6VV' PM dynamic speaker plus 3 vy of output provides magnificent foli-bbdied sound. AfC control, Walrtut fcrain style cabinet. ; : RADIOS — Main Floor Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1966 State Campaign Trail Rocky for 2 Hopefuls By the Associated Press Michigan’s two candidates for the U.S. Senate rampnigntyi at opposite ends of the state Tuesday, each having less than grabbed newspaper headHnesI grand juries until last year, withTtalk about organized crime “and then only as a result of since early in IMS” But, the specific requests of Gov.' be said, Kelley sHdp’t call any) Romney." highly successful days. Democrat „ G. Mennen Williams begatrhls day at Alpena where he was greeted at tlfc city airport by a group of Young Republicans bearing banners promoting his opponent Republican Sen. Robert Griffin. ★ ★ ★ At Sault Ste. Marie later in the day, Williams was greeted by cold wind, rain and even fewer Democrats than at Alpena. Some M guests braved the bad weather to appear at a dinner in the Sault Ste. Marie Armory which had been set up for 250 persons. FRIENDLY TERRITORY Williams planned to leave Republican country today for friendlier territory—flying to the Democratic strongholds of Menominee, Escanaba a n d Marquette. Meanwhile, Griffin drew friendly but not overly enthusiastic response in (me of Williams’ old campaign stomping grounds—Detroit’s historic Broadway Market. ★ w Griffin strolled through the market shaking hands with the luncheon crowd and stopped in at food shops and counters selling such delicacies as pastrami, papaya juice and peanut butter. i At one point, two men, identifying themselves as independents, questioned the senator but remained, they said later, unconvinced of Griffin’s views. VIET NAM IDEAS Questioners seemed particularly interested in the Republi; , can’s ideas concerning the Viet Nam war. Griffin told them: "I think we should e phasize the use of air and sea power, getting our ^called allies to put up more ground troops. I don’t think it makes sense for the United States to provide all the land troops. ★ * ★' Another Republican, House Minority leader Gerald R. Ford of Grand Rapids, also called for more support from American allies in Asia Monday at a luncheon speech in his home town. “We are engaged in a great crisis in Southeast Asia. We’re attempting to meet aggression head-on, and you would think some of these nations would join us in the conflict," Ford said. Zolton Ferency, Democratic candidate for governor, told a group of retirees in Detroit Tuesday the aged are shouldering a tax burden “far out of proportion to the rest of the American economy," He said Gov. George Romney “has shirked his responsibilities in this area and has even thwarted advancements toward a better life for our senior citizens.” Meanwhile, Lawrence Linde-mer, Republican candidate for attorney general, told University of Michigan Law School students Tuesday night that an attorney general must “subordinate (his) interest in press releases to effective enforcement of the law.’’ * * ★ Lindemer said Democratic Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley “has S. Korea OKs LBJ Visit Fund SEOUL, South Korea (AP) The South Korean government has earmarked. $216,000 for expenses of President Johnson’s visit Oct. 31-Nov. 2. * * * The special expense was approved at a cabinet session Tuesday. T» BtfUlc,, nil er writ* H & R Block Co. Income Tax School 20 E. Huron 314-9225 SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. Shop —Main Floor 5-Hole Ruled Filler Paper 59c 98c value, 500 sheets ruled filler paper fits 2-or 3-ring binder. Limit 2. Sundries—Main Floor FREE 14-oz. Bag BRACKS Kisses With Any Halloween Costume 5-Cup WEST BEND Automatic Electric Percolator $8.95 value, made of easy - to -care - for polypropylene. Completely automatic, scuff resistant and dentproof. White with blue cornflower design, complete with cord. Appliances—2nd Floor1 4»» JBL °m By PROCTOR GAMBLE Hidden Magic Spr $2.35 value. Made with Flexinol to hold without stiffness. Regular or extra Cosmetics—Main Floor Norwich 5-Grain Aspirin Tablets 89c value, bottle of 250 fast-acting tablets to relieve headaches, muscle aches. Drugs-Main Floor White Hardwood Teilet Seat 1.99 First quality smooth hardwood seat fits most fixtures. Limit 1. Hardware—2nd Floor Permanent Type Furnace Filters 20x25x1-inch size permanent type filter can be cut to make your own size. Reusable. ; Hardware—2nd Floor Over 6-Ft. Tall - For Home or Office Steel Shelving Unit For use wherever selves are needed — In home, office, garage. store, etc. 36" wide, 12" deep, 75" high. And you can take them with you too. Hardware—2nd Floor 6? Liquid or Creme Heads Up jj* 79c value, 4-oz. liquid or 3-oz. creme, 'Heads Up hair grooming from Gillette. Drugs-Main Floor Tablet or Liquid Geritoi Tonic 1.77 $2.98 value, a highly fortified vitamin fqod supplement. . Drugs-Main Floor Large 17x28-lneh Shoe-Boot Caddy 1.27 Deluxe style holds shoes, boots, overshoes, etc., foi* kitchen, office, porch. Limit 2. Hardware—2nd Floor Holds 1 PLThermos Lunch Bag 1.59 Keeps food hot or cold, perfect tor travel, picnics, etc. Holds 1 pint thermos bottle. Housovyoros—2nd Floor $1.49 group Includes Cinderella,-down, witch, lion,' Munster. Sizes S - M - L $ 1.89 group includes Flipper, Wendy, Skipper Astronaut. Sizes S - M - L $2.95 group includes Mustang, Heidi, kids sizes S - M -L $2.95 group includes adult sizes and junior 16. Sundries—Main Flebr ‘Spartus’ 40-Hour Alarm Clock 1.59 $2.75 value, wind-up alarm clock with metal ivory case. Factory guarantee. Sundries—AAain Floor Ingraham ’Autocrat’ Pocket Watch 1.95 $3.25 volue, dependable Ingraham pocket wafeh with second hand. Factory guarantee. Sundries—Main Floor 5Vi-Qt. Stainless Steel Dutch Oven [Heavy duly dutch oven of stainless steel, for cooking, i roasting or stewing. Fittings are of solid heat-resistant V bakelite. ' J Housewares—2nd Floor I 24* ‘Adorn’ Self-Adhesive Contact Paper 24c* Reg. 49c. Decorating plastic, wipes clean and sticks where you want It. Large -assortment of patterns. , Housewares—2nd Floor 98 North Saginaw Street . SIMMSb^ers Porcelain or Aluminum Covered Roasters Your choice of ovol or oblong roosters with built-in gravy welt Small or large size. ' ... Houseware*—2nd Floor Where the Real BIG BAR6AINS Still Live > MR. 19TH DISTRICT CONGRESSMAN During The Last 2 Years Your Rubber Stamp Voting Record Shows That You Support Inflation-Not Economy WHY WOMT YOU Help Curb Unnecessary Government Spending? WE CANT AFFORD THIS HIGH COST OF LIVING - LETS Return To Responsible Representation VOTE FOR McDonald C0N6RESS ★ ★ * REPUBLICAN “thinks For Himself— | Acts For /” 11)U* Advertisement Written By and Paid By The "BACK JACK" FOR CONGRESS COMMITTEE Jean Mogle, Committee Chairman Status of Major Legislation “...you’ll be a Man, niy son!” RUDYARD KIPLING i"»| w "if ★ «|n|A ★ * as YEARS OF * $ Star-Spangled ★ * Security '★ * FOR AMERICANS £ \ *41-19*%* Budyard Kipling appreciated better than most the making and meaning of a man. And if he were alive today, he’d undoubtedly have applied the famous quote above to America’s newspaperboys. By faithfully delivering the news day-in-and-day-out, fair weather or foul, a news-paperboy learns responsibility at an early age. Tie learns enterprise. Dedication. Dependability. How to fill an important place in the community. And he learns the value of money and saving, too ... and of looking ahead to the $ future. That’s why many a newspaperboy develops the habit of buying U.S. Savings Bonds regularly. Maybe to help put himself through college someday. More than that, newspaperboys^ have done their communities and their nation a real service since 1941, not only by buying Bonds themselves, but by helping to promote and sell Savings Bonds and Stamps, too. The nation’s brothers and dads in Viet Nam thank you. The Treasury Department and Uncle Sam salute you. And someday, when you’re a Man, my son... you’ll thank yourself for having been a newspaperboy. NOW- Savings Bonds Pay 4.15%! Interest on new E and H Bonds you pur* chase has been raised to 4.15% when held to maturity. E Bonds mature faster —now in fust 7 years. Your old Bonds will earn more, loo. Savings Bonds ore better to buyt and hold, than ever. Buy U.S. Savings Bonds no* 4.1®* This ad sponsored by Osmun's THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1966 B-5 DESTRUCTION - Only twisted wreckage remains of what was a cotton gin in Gonzales, Mexico. The facility was hit Newsman Surveys Inez MAKIi|!iP8i AP Wire,hot, with the full strength of Hurricane Inez, which roared through this area Monday. Inez, which had moved inland 24 j hours earlier.) By GARY GARRISON BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) — The destruction was terribta and complete. ■ Our plane couldn’t land, but the littered, twisted path of Hurricane Inez through the rich farmlands north of Tampico was clearly visible. * + * Her grotesque footprints led from the blue waters of the Gulf of Mexico for 100 miles to the west, where she tore herself to pieces in the rugged Sierra , Madres. were littered with >f tin from roofs, por-homes and even a small airplane, twisted as if made of cardboard. COVERED BY DEBRIS The runway at the Tampico Airport, like much of the surrounding area; was covered by debris and water. Gonzalez, a tiny community northwest of Tampico, was heavily hit. Huge cotton gins, constructed of tin and steel, lay crumpled like broken toys. * * Tall palm trees were felled, cotton fields were underwater, homes were unroofed, trucks overturned and moored airplanes i»tcbed around by the 135-mile-an-hour winds. Ambulances were parked1 around the town as the town dugi cut from the storm. ROARING RIVERS Once-peaceful rivers roared at high speed. Where the muddy water of the Rio Soto La Marina emptied into toe gulf, an ever-increasing circle of brown fanned out into the blue waters. ■- * - ;★ .- IT' It was near toe mouth of toe river, about 100 miles north of Tampico, that Inez went inland. From toe air one could trace toe hurricane’s route by toe swath of downed palm trees. The area’s rich cotton crop appeared almost a total loss. Much of it was underwater, FLOODED itbADS Roads were inundated, particularly in toe rural arei ' Near Tampico, toe Tampico- of cotton, valued at more than $M million, were believed destroyed. Motorist Killed DEARBORN (AP) - A car whipped ottt of control and skidded Into a ditch Tuesday in Dearborn, killing the -driver, Leroy H. Atwell, 38, of Garden City. Ciudad Mante highway was open and fiUid with traffic as rescuers moved in to aid toe thousands left homeless marooned. WWW In Tunpta), a Gulf port city of 200,000 persons, between 1,500 and 2,000 homes were reported destroyed mid toe dty was without lights, water and telephones. __ l^e city was virtually ringed if-g, 0f ~ Piles with flooded fields* hut tarffle in,Tpn r ,c* the harbor channel moved freely. . A * ' * , {haw found a way to fast relief from) in.- ... itching and smarting of plies. They urn The Mexican ministry of na* Mlghmil coollns tional defense said it had no formula - peterson-* ointment. confirmed reports at deaths. I No wonder one sufferer writes. "The Some estimates of the damage MeW*w ,nd *fnart,n* ware reiiewd, and r7/T!T" ” Slept all night. PRTEMON'S Ol N*- ^y^^lMENT Is marvelous." isc, all druggists. $50 million. About 350,000 balesjaa delighted or money back. G«t Relief Now WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sta- strictions on use of funds and|Senate: approved different ver-tus of major legislation: 4 administration of programs than1 sion. ECONOMY Senate. Negotiations under way REDISTRICTTNG TAXES — President proposed!*08 comProm*se verslon- House approved a bill to limit two steps aimed at curbing in- CIVIL RIGHTS ' I gerrymandering by requiring flatten. One would suspend for HOUSING — President’s om- that congressional district be 16 months the 7 per cent in- nibus civil rights request would compact and composed of popu-vestment tax credit originally outlaw racial discrimination inflation within 15 per cent of the voted to spur expansion. I the sale or rental of housing; “ideal" average for each state. * w * seek fair selection of state and ★ * * Die other would suspend for|federal court juries; provide Senate: Judiciary Committee the same period the speeded-up|new leg?1 protection against vio- approved a revised bill, pros-depreciation on real property. , fence directed at Negroes and ipects clouded. House: approved bill sweet- rights works; and give toe jus- HOME RULE ened with some modifications. !tice department new power to Ad = Lsb. ti ha■ This downward trend in dairy farming is statewide, according to Dr. Failing, but above average in Oakland County because of the rising demand for acreage. Area Collision Hurts Woman Injured when her car collided With another automobile yesterday, a Mt. Clemens woman is listed in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Bill Perryman, 30, suffered lacerations in the accident, which Oakland County sheriff's deputies said occured at the intersection of Opdyke and Featherstone in Pontiac Township. ^ Deputies said Mrs. Perryman’s vehicle collided with a car driven by Frank Geler, 45, of 3459 Mann, Waterford Township. The impact drove Geler’s car into a bus, emty except for the driver, John W., Murphy, 33, of 60 S. Marshall. ★ ★ Both men escaped serious injury, as did one passenger in Geler’s car and three passengers in Mrs. Perryman's automobile- A Pontiac man was sentenced , Thoma* M, Agorgianitis yesterday to 1 to 4 years in the state prison at Jackson for fe- THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1966 hs in Pontiac, Nearby Areas lonious assault in the shotgun shooting of a co-worker in January. \ James Daugherty, 24, of 91 Wall pie a dad guilty to die charge last month in Oakland County Circuit Court, six weeks after being returned from Chicago where he was apprehended by the FBI. Daugherty j a m p e d bond while waiting- to stand trial for the shooting of Richard Leverette, 39, of Detroit. Both worked at the GMC Track & Coach Division in Pontiac. Leverette suffered leg wounds when he was strode by pellets after being ordered out of his car by Daugherty at the intersection of Opdyke and E. South Boulevard, Bloomfield Township. No explanation was given for the shooting. * * * The prison term whs ordered by Judge William J. Bed: . Girl Sought in Brawl Case a police car. Gloria J. Harris, 19, of 58 Wall had been freed on $100 personal bond when arraigned following a brawl between Pontiac police and a crowd at drive-in restaurant Sept. 1. ★ ★ ★ Judge Cecil B. McCallum ordered the warrant after the girl did not return for trial sched-Municipal Court yesterday. Thomas M. Agorgianitis, 15-year-old eon of Mr. and Ids. Tom Agorgianitis of 2264 Pauline, Waterford Township, died yesterday after a long illness. His body is at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Thomas was a member of Andrew Episcopal Church, Waterford Township. Surviving besides his parents are a sister, Patricia L., and a brother, Mark S„ both at home. OBIT Mrs. Preston Barbour Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Preston (Gladys) Barbour of Escondido, Calif., will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Cypress View Mausoleum in San Diego, Calif. She died yesterday. Mrs. Barbour, a member of te Order of Eastern Star, Chapter 228, had owned and operated the former Beauty Centre in Pontiac. Surviving besides her husband is a brother, Charles Watr son of Escondido. Mrs. Joe Felice Requiem Mass for Mrs. Joe (Rose) Felice, 62, of 281 Dick will be 10 a.m. Friday, at St. Benedict Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at and Mrs. Edsel Beagle and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Huron, all of Milford. Mrs. Word M. Davis ROCHESTER — Service for Mrs. Ward M. (Hattie) Davis, 00, of 429 Parkdale -will be 1 p.m. Friday from Pixley Memorial. Chapel. Burial will be in Prestonville Cemetery, Washington Township. Mrs. Davis died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Reed of Rochester; a daughter, Mrs. Homer Warm) of Rochester; four grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Lesley Wereley HOLLY - Lesley Wereley, 82, of 107 Oakwood died yesterday after a brief Illness. His body is at the Dryer Funeral Home. 9 Months: $370,000 City Fire Loss Climbs j A $125,000 blaze which swept a Pontiac auto dealership I Sept. 11 has pushed damage figures for the year higher by 1 40 per cent, according to a Pontiac Fire Department report. 1 The fire — at John McAuliffe Ford, Inc. — boosted total | residential and commercial damages for 1966 to $310,000. | This is neuly $26,000 less than through September I 1965. I The report, submitted by Fire Chief James R. White, I also showed an increase of 16 fire calls in September over a the figure of 193 recorded for August. Gardge Blaze I Waterford Group Backs Ruins 2 Cars ) Fire Dept Millage Plan be granted suffrage because of i their interest and knowledge oL< the issues and because they are old epough to fight tar their; country. '* T f ' ”• f VanNatta explained the county’s millage proposition (¥« mill for a five-year period) for establishment of a park system, previously endorsed by tile GWCC, Two cars, worth an estimated $400, were destroyed early today in a garage fire at the Earl R. Hall home, 741 Gertrude, Waterford Township. Confined to the garage, the fire erupted shortly before 5 a.m., according to township fire fighters who remained at the scene for neuly 1*4 hours. Destroyed were 1959 and a I960 model cars. The extent of damage to the brick garage, which is attached to the home, was not immediately known. Cause of the blaze is being investigated. Group Urged to Study Tots' Crib Deaths Before one of toe largest turnouts hi its 5%-year history, the Greater Waterford Community Council (GWCC) last night endorsed the township tire department’s millage proposal to be decided in the Nov. S election. During parts of the three-hour meeting, in which about 20 political candidates gave brief speeches, more than 140 persons were in. attendance in the Pierce Junior High School cafeteria. The GWCC gave its support to the fire department proposition following a talk by Township Fire Chief Lewis Goff. The (firemen seek a one-mill levy extending over a 10-year period to finance the purchase of fire hall sites, motor vehicles and fire fighting equipment and to maintain vehicles, equipment and fire stations. It A bench warrant was issued yesterday for the arrest of a Pontiac, girl who failed to ap- oulJai | „luum „UFC vv.,» pear for scheduled trial on a The Rosary will be recited at I charge erf malicious damage to 8 p.m. tomorrow in Donelson- Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Felice, a member of St.j| Benedict Church, died yester-| day after a brief illness. She|| had also been active in the Ital- The decline in mohetary damage has been accompanied by a reduction in personal injuries, according to the report. SE£, INJURED Six persons required medical treatment resulting from fires in the first nine months of 1966, compared to 13 in a similar period of 1965. The report noted only a small difference in the number of false alarms. Of a total 1,893 emergency rims up to the end of September, 322 were in response to fake alarms. Last year the ninth-month figure was 319. An Independence Township couple is interested in forming a Pontiac area affiliate of the newly organized Michigan elation for Sudden Infant Death | Study. I Consisting of about -20 mem- II bers, the organization was 11 formed by a group of parents I b e c a u s e of the unexpected ||deaths of their babies from sud-| ||den death syndrome or crib1 I death. ■ II Hie group meets in Livonia the last Friday each month, according to members Mr. and Mrs. David Mott of 5069 F r a n k w i 11, Independence Township. A decrease'in fUdsjn bgdjngs was offset, therepprt | Purpose of ^ association, ac-“* j cording to the Motts, is to help Orion Youth Fined lor an Illegal Entry A 19-year-old Orion Township youth was fined $50 plus $10 court costs yesterday after pleading guilty to a reduced charge of entering without permission Dillman’s Norge Equipment City, 932 W. Huron, Waterford Township, Oct. 4, Appearing at his examination before Waterford Township Justice Kenneth Hempstead, Brian E. Hendrix of 860 Beardon had Besides the candidates, Michigan State University Trustee C. Allen Harlan of Birmingham and Kenneth VanNatta, Oakland County director of parks and recreation, spoke. )“• “v7““" T7 H51Si Harlan, an advocate of the been charged with breaking and 18-year-olds’ right to vote, told|fnf™8 .^re pleading guilty the audience these youths should '10 the misdemeanor. j * * * ! Hifidrix was arrested in Dill-man's by Waterford Township and Keego Harbor police Oct. 4 after e m p 1 o y e s arriving for work noticed a window had been broken. Troy Girl Hurt by School Bus Veronica Devine, 8, of 425 E. Big Beaver, Troy remains in serious condition t o d a y hi William Beaumont Hospital, after being struck yesterday by a school bus. ★ ★ + She sustained a brain concussion at 7:30 a.m. as she attempted to cross 16 Mile Road near her home to meet the east-bound Guardian Angel school bus. She was struck by a westbound Hoy school bus. Tools Stolen at Building Site of City Church Burglars who broke into a church building under construction early yesterday took assorted power tools valued at more than $700, Pontiac police were told. Site of the break-in was St. James Metbodist Church at 465 W. Kennett, being worked on by the Cole Construction Co. of Detroit. .it ★ it Police said thieves entered the building and then pried open a closet iwhere the tools were kept, removing several drills, sanders and grinders. auuvc in uw iuu* | ----------— —— \— -——-----------------y — r, ian-American Club Auxilary I showed, by a rise in the number of brush and grass fires and the Altar Society of berg reported, church. | I Firemen handled 233 building fires through September § of this year compared to 286 in the comparable period of 1965. The number of grass and brush fires so far in 1966 is 182, however, as against 127 for the first nine months last year. Surviving are her husband; two sons, Paul J. and Jim, both of Pontiac; three daughters, Mrs. Sam Calabrese, Mrs. Giu-lio Bemero and Mrs. Rudolph Fortino, all of Pontiac; 19 grandchildren; and a greatgrandchild. ' Also surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Theresa Felice of Pontiac and Mrs. Giovannina DeLuca I of Windsor, Ont. bereaved parents' educate the public to the seriousness of the and promote a research program. Membership is not limited to persons who have lost a child to crib death, Mrs. Mott said. She added new members are welcome. Debate Set on Vote at 18 Thief Does the Cakewalk The Oakland County Young { Republican Club will sponsor a j debate Tuesday in Birmingham; ' on the question of lowering the1 voting age to 18. The 7:30 p.m. program will] be held at the Communi tylgia Reyes and Louis Avila were House, 380 S. Bates, and is open'married and the guests danced to all young adults. j happily^ GLOBE, Ariz. (AP) — Geqr- Members of the University of Michigan speech department will debate the proposal, which will appear on toe ballot in the Nov. 8 general election. But, Georgia’s parents reported later to police, a thief made, off with the three-tier, $20 wedding cake complete with a miniature bride and groom. Ninety-eight per cent of Turkey’s more than 30 million inhabitants are of the Islamic religious faith. PUSLIC SALE On October 17th at 9:4J e,m. at 3260 Elizabeth Lake Rd., Pontiac, Mlclu a 1961 Chevrolet, Serial No. 11111F187117, will bo told at Public Auction (or cash to highest bidder. Car may ba Inspected at above address. P. FERRAN General Motors Acceptance Corp. October 12 and 13, 19*6 Man Pleads Guilty to Market Break-In INC. To the Creditors, It an,, - -------VI Land Company, Inc., a Michigan corporation, and To Whom It May Concarn: Please take notice of the approaching dissolution end termination of the cor* porate existence of Melnzlnger Land voted to dlssolvt told corporation. You art requested and notified to 1... any claim against said corporation oithar with tha corporation at Its last regl-*-"' office, 29)1 Warner Drive, Green --------- P.O. Box 237, Orchard Lake, Michigan, or with Its attornoy, William 6. Giles, Esq., 2433 Cadillac Tower, Def Sen 48226; said OaHp to bo before October 37, 1966. Melnzlnger Land Company, Inc. by: ERNEST MBINZINGER President and Treasurer October 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,1, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, IS, 17, II, 19, 20, 21 A man accused by Pontiac police in connection with break-in at a city market entered a plea of guilty yesterday in Municipal Court. Clarence E. Douglas, 23, of 449 S. Edith admitted possessing stolen property of under $100 value. Judge Cecil B. McCallum set sentencing for Oct. 17. Douglas was arrested Oct. 3 after a burglary at People’s Market, 100 Bagley. Contract Given WASHINGTON (AP)-Award of a $6.4-million Army contract Continental Motors, Muskegon, Mich., for 15,500 engine assemblies for Vjuarter-ton utility trades was announced Tuesday by Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich. .NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING NOtlOO ll hereby given of a pub hearths to tw held by I TowmMp Ptonr'— “— From Residential I and Commercial to Residential II (Multiple dwelling district)-Pert «t the S.E. 'A of Sec 24, TIN, R8E, White Lake Two., Oakland Cty., Michigan described as follows: Beginning at a point on the E line of said Sac. 24 A also the center line of Williams LIC Rd. at tha S.E. corner of Hurandeie No. l Subdivision located S 0- OO1 45" E, 987.58 ft. from ' i East Vi corner of said Sac. 24; said East BaMfciiBteU " ,E» 917M IPWWPN a»“ si- n W, 220.96 ft; thence N O' 11* 30" W, 190.00 ft; thence S 09* 32' 29" W, 440.00 ft; thence N 0* 11' 30" W, 379.31 ft; thence N 89* 5T DO" W. 334:10 ft; thence N 0* 0T *" E, 147.00 ft; thence N 89* 33*- 21" E, it of beginning. Property hae 917J8 ft. frentet williams Lake Rd. north of Elizabeth Lake Rd. A located between Douglass Houghton School A Hurendale Subdivision. present. A copy dI the Zoning gather with 0 of the prop** is en file at the office of the Ciertc end may ba examined 1 changes TewnanS CHARLES HARRIS ft STANLEY FREVILLE Loud, Loose Dogs Face Law's Bite WOLVERINE LAKE -A “get tough” policy will go into effect this weekend against residents who allow their dogs to run loose or dogs grating a disturbance by barking late at night. Village President Oscar Fritz said that dogs allowed to run loose will be picked up and owners of dogs disturbing the peace will be tjeketed. “We have given the people warning after warning and' it han’t done any good,” he said, “so we have to start using stiver Murle Parmelee Word has been received of the death of former Pontiac resident Murie Parmelee, 69, of Parma, Ohio. Service was from the Mallchok Funeral Home, Parma, with burial in Crown Hill Memorial Park. Mr. Parmelee, a former employe of Michigan Bell Telephone Co. in Pontiac, died Oct. 7 after a long illness. He was a member of the American Legion. Surviving are his wife, Esth- r; a son, Jack of Waterford Township; a grandchild; brother, Vem of Waterford Township; ami a sister, Mrs. Milton F. Cooney of Clarks ton. Mrs. Elsie M. Parrotte Requiem Mass for Mrs. Elsie M. Parrotte, 84, of 791 Melrose frill be 11:30 a.m. Friday at St. Michael Catholic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. The Rosary will be recited at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. Parrotte, a member of St. Michael Church, died yesterday after a long illness. Surviving are a son, Raymond Heiligenthal of Pontiac; four daughters, Mrs. Cecil Dusten, Mrs. Eva Beaupre, Mrs. John SChatzley, and Mrs. Fred Huber, all of Pohtiac; 17 grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren. Lonny R. Treadway Service for Lonny R. Treadway, 12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Treadway of 2340 Waterford Township, will be 11 a. m. tomorrow in Sunnyvale Chapel, Waterford Township, with burial in Crescent Hills Cemetery, Waterford Township, by the Coats Funeral Hone. Lonny died yesterday after a long illness. He was a member of Sunnyvale ChapeL Surviving are his parents; sister and brother, Laura and Dale, both at home; and {grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Sinkler and Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Treadway, all of Pontiac. Gregory E. Beagle MILFORD—Service for Gregory E. Beagle, 11-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harris), 886 First, will be 1 p.m. to-at Christ Luther a Church. Burial will be in Ilford Memorial Cemetery by Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. The infant died yesterday after a short illness. Surviving besides the parents are a sister, Kimberly Beagle at home; and grandparents Mr. THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1966 The following are top prices covering Saks of locally grown produce by growers and sold by the® IB wholesale package tote. “ ‘ bona are furbished by the t Bureau of Markets as of Slow Stock Market Declines Produce NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe stock market eased early today slow, semiholiday trading. Hie decline followed two days Of vigorous recovery from last (■week’s stiff setback. Many j-gj banks, insurance companies lyjother financial institutions were 3!»| closed in observance of Colum-Jjslbus Day. ★ A ★ Except for the higher-priced, {more volatile issues, losses for 4jq most stocks went from fractions JJj! to about a point. Xerox lost around 2. IBM and Zenith slipped about 1% each. ADVANCED POINT Polaroid advanced a point after erasing a loss taken at the opening. Boeing and Eastman Kodak were off about a point each. . Brokers saw the list as backing away from an overhead resistance level based on past performance of the stock charts. n ★ * Fractional losses were shown by RCA, United Aircraft, Gen- eral Electric, Texaco, Lorillard, Union Carbide, New York Central and many others. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: American Telephone, off y« at 52% oh 6,000 shares; Polaroid, off 1 at 122 on 5,000, and Ford, off % at 41% on 2,000. Tuesday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose 1.0 to 273.9. Prices worked irregularly low-r on the American Stock Exchange. GE Walkout Draws Closer WASHINGTON (AP) - The mammoth General Electric Co. appeared headed today toward the biggest strike in its history in a showdown climaxing yean of strained labor relations. Moments Businessmen Human By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - In their official pronouncements, businessmen sometimes sound as stilted, as practiced, as thoroughly pre-j pared to make the “right”! statement as the] most adept politician. But in their] less demandUm moments their] m e n t s] sometimes a re more .to the The giant firm, with more tan $ft-billion a year sales of. a multitude of products from light bulbs to jet aircraft engines, , , . . ,. faces a walkout by some 125,000 CUNNIFF selves, rather than the drivers. COSTS MONEY “We have a direct, selfish interest in preventing accidents because every accident costs us money,” he said. Is the auto at fault? “We believe the cause of accidents is 10 pet cent the car, 30 per cent the environment and 60 per cent the driver.” Philip Spurn, the former head of American Electric Power Co. and one of the great innovators of the light and power industry, is known for Ns complete dedi- The New York Stock Exchange » 4m 4m 4m -t 2} 35 34%, 34% 13 22 2m 2m 41 a m 7% 5 171* 17 V, 17% 1 » 18 12 40 35% 35% 35% workers at 12:01 a.m. Monday. 'There is an explosion brewing here,” said a spokesman for 11 unions that have banded together tills year for the first time to take on the big firm in contract negotiations. ★ ★ a President Johnson, who named three Cabinet members to try to resolve the tough dispute, is reported ready to invoke an 80-day Taft-Hartley injunction to halt a strike because of production vital to the war in Viet Nam. City Resident Pleads Guilty to Brawl Role Charged with resisting arrest in a near free-for-all at a city drive-in restaurant, a Pontiac man entered a plea of guilty yesterday in Municipal Court. Johnnie Johnson, 22, of 415 N. East Blvd. admitted his role in an Oct. i brawl involving Pontiac police and a crowd of some 50 persons at the Mary E Cafe, 565 S. Saginaw. ★ A ★ Judge Cecil B. McCallum set sentencing for Oct. 17. At the same time, McCallum dismissed concealed weapons charge filed against Johnson following the same incident. A woman who allegedly assaulted a patrolman in the fracas and a girl accused of damaging a police car are still awaiting trial. News in Brief The theft from her home of vacuum sweeper and rug valued at $200 was reported to P 0 n t i a c police yesterday by Flora Jackson of 31 Franklin Blvd. Rummage Sale Guild No. 2, All Saints Church, Thursday, Oct. 13. Exchange St. entrance, 10 a.m. —Adv. Rummage sale. Thursday, October 13, J966 from 9 a.m. to pjn., and Fri., Oct. 14, from a.m. until noon, at the First Methodist Church of Birmingham, West Maple send Pleasant. Snack Bar and Free Parking. —Adv. MOM’s Rummage: Thursday to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. * Adv. Rummage Sale — Kingsbury School at VFW Hall, Oxford, Thurs., 13, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Fri., 14,10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Sat., 15, 9 a.m. to noon. —Adv. Garage rummage, Clothes, Miscellaneous, Fri. and Sat, Oct 14, and 15, from 9 to 5 p.m. 2484 Liverpool, Bloomfield Orchard. —Adv. Rummage, American Legion, Thursday, Oct. 13, Friday Oct. 14. 1340 Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. •Adv. American Stock Exch. _______NOON AMERICAN NEW YORK (AP) - Following li a ..it 'of selected stock transactions or **'-American Stock - Exchange 39.127,734.28840 withdrawals Flscsl Year- . 334,222,225,434.51 314,503,503,510.50 Geld AIMS— 13,257 541425.44 13454,888,483.42 G Accept x—Includes 828t.21S470.78 —“ — lect to statutory limit. echnlcol .40 37 14% 14 H ...„ 172 21% 20% 20%+ % 31 23% 23% 23%— *' 3*4 7% 7% 7%+ I 4 24% 25% 25%+ % 454 *4% 43% 43%+1% sonality of the speaker. For example: fitting in his office some time ago, Thomas J. Watson Jr. belittled the popular tale that International Business Machines, which he heads, demanded conformity in its workers’ dress and behavior. it * it The lights went dim in Watson’s office and a wall panel parted to reveal on a screen a life-size photo of the elder T. J. Watson, dressed in a sporty outfit that included checkered socks. Thomas C. Morrill, vice president of State Farm Mutual Auto Insurance Co., was asked to comment on the insurance industry’s role in preventing accidents: The request was made after congressional testimony grant, looked down at the Statue of Liberty from one of the huge windows of the Harbor Club, high in a Manhattan skyscrap- Hunt Bargains -Mart Analyst BABSON PARK, Mass.-’Tt’s time to forget the Dow-Jones Average and start shopping for bargains in quality stocks,” declared Roger Spear, president of Spear & Staff, Inc., investment advisory firm. “I don’t rule out the possibility of lower levels,” Spear said, “but I expect 680-740 on the Dow to be the broad staging area from which a new bull drive will start. “The investor who keeps holding off in hopes of determining the exact bottom of the current market slump is 1 i k e 1 y to end up buying at higher prices than are currently available on a Large number of substantially undervalued issues,” Spear added. Spear issued a similar “Forget Dow, look for bargains” advisory on May 29, 1962, just previous to the bottom of the sharp market drop of that year. AAA He said today : “I think the market, now down some 250 points since last February, had already adjusted in great measure to the uncertainties and problems that now exist the highest interest rates in 40 years, the uncertainty over the war in Viet Nam, the possibility of lower earnings in 1967, and tax increase which may not have to be enacted after all.’* Sr>E Year Ago .« 194* High . 423.1 154.9 1414 510.0 1M.I 172.1 537.9 211.9 178.5 | . .. 381.0 143.9 130.2 03 523.3 194.5 1713 358.5 451.4 149.1 1*2.* 308,r that put a large part of toelmorning. Then you can literally blame on automobiles tbem*,Me the folds in the drapery of the l»|y. But at night the lighting is poor.” In toe midst of the financial community at the corner of Broad and Wall, the skyline ascends in a jagged/semivertical tine like a bullish stock market diarL In the midst of it is Trinity church. Inside, near a sign that reads “Priest oh duty from U:30 to l:3p for consultation,” Gram Bernard C. Newman often sits reading or meditating. Nave problems Do Wail Street brokers, cation to work. Spurn, an immi- strong-minded men of opinions, _____a i-l-j rnimp hprp eppkin? flrfvio#*: “Her lighting, yes, it is excellent at certain hours of toe Ponitac Exec Is Promoted A Pontiac man, George E. Tewksbury, has been appointed superintendent of inspection Pontiac Motor Division' s pressed metal, ■ frame and plat- ™ ing plants, it was announced today. T e wksbury, who lives at 564 E. Pike has been assistant TEWKSBURY superintendent of inspection of the pressed metal plant since 1963. it it it He joined Pontiac in 1937, became inspection foreman of car assembly in 1949, and general foreman of inspection in 1961. come here seeking advice": “fltey do,” be reptied. “They come here for the service and then I might get a call later in the day from someone with a personal problem.” What advice do you give tom? A •* i * ■ • “I let them talk about their problem,” he said. “I never give advice. I listen.” Frank Sharp of Houston, Tex., a builder with Mg ideas. Sharp is producing a $500-mil-lion town in his own image and calling it Sharpstown. As far as the eye can see from his wide-windowed office comes the glint of Sharpstown rooftops. Frank Sharp once had only $150 in capital. MUST SUCCEED / Looking from his office window, Sharp commented, “If you do anything you must succeed in it or else you develop a disposition to fail.” He picked up binoculars and surveyed his enormous town. “This way I can check what floor they’re on in the condominium, or the paving, or see how the theater is coining,” he said. A A A “In this business,” he continued, “you never get a sense of accomplishment. You’re always wondering why in hell you can’t do more. Anytime you think you’re great you’re in trouble.” By ROGER E. SPEAR Q. “I’ve been told that dividends remain the same regardless of the price fluctuations of a stock. Is this true?” A.B. A. Yes, under normal conditions. Corporate profits are shared with stockholders by the payment of regular cash dividends, The amount of the dividend is determined by net income Snd the corporation’s policy of paying out a percentage of its net earnings. This may range from ten per cent to 75 per cent. So long as earnings are well maintained, the divi-usually secure, despite daily priee fluctuations. “ if earnings slide-off and this continues, the price of the stock will decline. If the gap narrows between net earnings and the payout, doubt arises as to the safety of the dividend. If the stock continues to decline, the relation of its price to the dividend pushes up the yield, until the latter may arise above toe interest rate paid on savings accounts and other fixed income investments. Should a stock yield eight per cent in contrast to an average interest return of 4V9 per cent, toe higher yield is ti danger signal. The next dividend declaration may be lowered; or if the corporation is facing some unexpected adversity, toe dividend may be eliminated. ★ * * Q. “You sometimes refer to a member of the New York Stock Exchange. Are these members elected in some way?” S.T. A. To become a member of the Exchange, it is necessary to buy a “seat” This is a personal franchise, purchased from someone already a member who intends to withdraw. But membership is not achieved automatically. A thorough study is conducted into the personal and business background of the applicant and toe transfer of the seat must be approved by a two-thirds vote of the Board of Governors of the Exchange. If approved, the member then receives the right to trSde on the Exchange floor. The sale price of a seat runs high. One recently exchanged owners for $220,000. (Copyright, 1966) NEW OFFICES—This model depicts toe 30,000-square-foot building being built by Geh- ringer and Forsyth, Detroit, on Woodward, just north of Long Lake Road. Building to House Detroit Firm A new building to house display rooms and offices of Gehringer and Forsyth, Detroit, under construction on Woodward, just north of Long Lake Road. Hie 30,000 - square - foot building is scheduled to be com- pleted and ready for occupancy la the spring, according to Ray E. Forsyth, president tit toe organization. Half of toe new space will be utilized by the company, tiie remainder by tenants. Building costs will be between $500,000 and $600,000, according to the president. Gehringer and Forsyth are developers, designers and sales engineers for automotive producers, principally in the upholstery fiehL