The Weafher U S. WMtIwr >urMU Poracatf Cooler. THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 122 m 219 PyNTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY. OCTOBER 19. 19(11-42 PAGLS Red Boss Pledp Coexistence THUMBS UP ^OR HURDLER-An upraised thumb and gold medal signify victory for Pontiac’s Hayes Jobes at the 1964 Tokyo summer Olympics. The HO-meter high hurdles champion has indicated he will give his medal to the City of Pontiac, his hometown, and where the Hayes Jones Community Center was recently opened. Hayes Jones Will Donate Olympic Medal to Pontiac TOKYO — A grateful Hayes Jones announced t^iat he would give to the city of Pontiac tRfe most treasured possession he has ever gained in athletics—the gold medal.he won Saturday night in the World Olympics. Jones won the gold medal in the 110 meter hurdles in a time of 13.6 edging Airport Grant Is Disgusting, Says Official A federal grant of $5,400 for Pontiac Municipal Afrport, instead of an expected $40,677 77 appropriation today drew the fire of Homer D. Hoskins, airport manager. Johnson Says Reds, US. Off to Good Start Warns .Congress of« Nuclear Blackmail by Communist China WASHINGTON —President Johnson tells' congressional leaders today that tjie United States has made a “good begin-. ning” in relations with the Soviet Union and hopes the Kremlin will join in renewed efforts to block any further spread of nuclear weapons. Johnson stre.ssed both these points last night in a report to the nation in which he also spoke of the pos.sible u.se by Red Say Hoover in Grave Condition NEW YORK (AP) - Former President Herbert Hoover passed a comfortable night and V- massive ipternal bleeding stopped, but "the outlook is grave," a medjcal bulletin said today. _ *' . ★ ★ ★, The bulletin said the 90-year-old patient was in a "state of unresponsiveness." Dr. Michael J. Lfepore, Hoover's personal physician, issued the hulletin at 10:30 a.m.^ No further report wSs planned before 4 p,m„ .except in the event of a significant change in condition. Dr. Lepore's bulletin said; "The gastrointestinal bleeding has been arrested and his blood count has been restored to normal. out Blaine Lindgren of Cleveland who was clocked in 13.7. Anatoly Mikhailov of Russia was third, also in 13.7. Jones, who also^ announced recently that he was retiring from competition after the Olympics, said, “I hope that Related Stories, Page C-2 this medal will be an inspiration for the children of Pontiac to do what I’ve done here at Tokyo.’’ “Remember, I was favored to win this ^vent in Rome, and I failed, 1 kept telling mvself this time that 1 was going to do it. I didn’t come all this way to finish fourth. * * * “I would have been satisfied will allow us to build only the with any medal, but this is one taxi strip, ” Hoskins said.. i really wanted. I know all my * * . *. home-town friends were really Nearly $2.5 million ip match- pulling for me to win.’’ ing funds was approved by the Federal Aviation Administration^ RECEIVED SUPPORT for airport construttion pro- Jones received vocal and grams in the state. ^ moral support at Tokyo from WASHINtiTON (AP) - Two „ major networks, ABC and NBC, turned <^n a Republican request for equal time to ans^yer President Johnson's radio-TV address to the nation and CBS said it would await a ruling by the Federal^ Communication Commission. China of "nuclear blackmail ’ against other countries, now that it has exploded its first test bomb. He warned, furthermore, that what he calls China’s “expensive and demanding effort (to JAYCEES AID CAI — A check for $3,000 to cover cost of blacktoppmg the parking area at the front of the Waterford Township Community Activities Inc. building was presented by Ted McCullough (left), president of the Waterford Township Junior Chamber of Commerce, to CAI executive director Robert Bauer. Funds fornthis gift and other community betterment projects of the Jaycees are raised through such activities as the organization’s annual home and sport show. ’^However, the massive loss of blood into his gastrointestinal tract has resulted in the accumulation of toxic products in his bloodstream which have induced a state of unresponsive-ness,”'the bulletin said. OUTLOOK GRAVE "Efforts have been undertaken to clear his system of these toxic elements, but the outlook is grave," it added. A press spokesman for Hoover declined to elaborate on the “state of unresponsiveness’’ mentioned in the bulletin. But the spokesmah said: “He’s making a good fight of it.- TMr-rTs/'Mrn /im A • pl^hscd. He’s UtilKUlT (A') — American Motors Corp. and the been seriously ill before and HERBERT C. HOOVER Air Crash Kills Soviet Marshal 18 Persons Aboard; Many Top Officers Kelvinator Unsettled 3-Year Pact at AMC 1 with the way federal funds are being handled," Hoskins said. Hoskins had planned to use the federal matching funds for an $81,355.54 construction program which inriuded a taxi strip at the nortS end of the airport, three fire truck stalls and spare for maintenance equipment. The $^400 iri*’matching funds olve aiju uciuajiuiiig cuuii t t *a ^ a build nuclear weapons) tempts United Auto Workers Union reached agreement to- recovered. Of course, he’s 96 other states to equal folly - day on a new three-year contract covering AMC’s ™p*0yes and continuing wi^?. profit sharing. struck him darly yesterday. He Left hanging, however, was agreement on a new His Waldorf Towers suite pact that would cover t.Uh S.r. 3,000 in AMC’s Kelvinator for two years. > appliance division at * ★ * Grand Rapids, Mich. ^ afternoon medical bul- . „ ,1 , said Hoover was “comfor- A cont nuing walkout there and in no pain.” The bulle-conceivably could cut of the tih, signed by three physicians, company’s automobile building. that Hoover remained crit-Doors and fabrics for car^ are jcgiiy iH.” made there, as well as refrig- County Execs Favor Barry LARGEST GRANTS his No. I fan, his wife Odeene who was able to attend the “We continue to believe,’’ Johnson said, “that the struggle against nuclear spread is as much in the Soviet interest as in our own. We will be ready to join with them and all the world — in working to avoid it.” At the same time the President announced in his radio-television address that Washington will continue to support the limited nuclear test-ban treaty which the United States, the 35 top-level Michigan ih- Soviet Union, Britain and more dustrial anci business executives than 100 other nations signed who have endorsed Republican last year. France and Commu- candidate Barry Goldwater, nist China did not sign. Michigan Citizens for Goldwater- “We call on the world — espe- MlHci announced today, cially Red China — to join the ★ ★ ♦ nations which have signed that The county executives include treaty,” Johnson said. Ernest Breech. 1268 Long Lake, Four Oakland County men are grators and the like. Another shut-down threat was on AMC’s horizon. Borg-Warner Corp., which supplies transmissions, is in new contract negotiations with o I d contract extension on a day-to-day basis. Both AMC.and the' UA\V pre- “Blood loss from the upper gastrointestinal tract has con-tinue'd but if^appears lessening. Replacement of blood by transfusions has kept pace with the -losses which have been large,” the bulletin said. "His blood pressure, pulse and vital signs are stable. ’ The prognosis is extremely The largest sing'e grants of Olympics as a result of a “Jones $1 million and $426,000 went to TAtun>* d ^ Flint and Detroit Metropolitan Airports respectively. * * * Hoskins, who will be fn Washington Wednesday for a C i v i 1 Aeronautics Board hearing on Cleveland and Chicago flights from the local airport, said he will question the low construction grant while in the capital. In Today's Press Spies in Sky defense Dept, says Russian satellites used as spto — PAGE A-2. Labor Dispute New British government faces dock strike threat - PAGE B-6. Viet Attack Hanoi charges U. S. planes bombed buffer zone — PAGE A-7. Area News .........A-U Astrology .........B-8 Bridge B-8 Comics ........... B-8 Editorials A4 Markets ...........C-8 Obituaries ....... C-l Sports . C4-C-7 Theaters ........ TV-Radio Programs C-U Wilson, Eari .... C-IS Women’s Pages During the 1960 Olympics in Rome where Jones won a bronze medal for third place, a similar fund made it possible for his parents Mr. and ' Mrs. Jesse Jones to attend. A graduate of Pontiac Central in 1956, where he led PCH to two straight state championship track titles, Jones continued on f to Eastern Michigan University where he set numerous school and collegiate records. CENTER NAMESAKE k Just recently the new epmmu-nify center on ^ Wessen street k was named in his honor. Now 26 years old and the father of a two-year-old son, Jones said he would continue in sports as a trainer and possibly later as coach. After being presented the gold medal he said,' “There’ll never be anything like it again in my life, no matter how long I live.” His wife, Odeene watched proudly as he stood on the top level of the victory stand to have the ribboned initial placed around his neck. --------------, —------p, _ , j A u cAiiciucijf The meeting with congres- Bloomfield Hills, former presi- Rambler and Ambassa- guarded, especially in view of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) f’°'‘d and a member production would be the patient’s advanced age.” oL the firm’s board; John Bu-'resumed tomorrow after a four- gas of Bloomfield Hills and Ir- day strike in support of UAW ^ ^ ^ ving Duffy, 85 Manor, Birming- contract demands on AMC. J^e bulletin was issued by Dr. ham, both Ford vice presidents; This would leave General ‘ Hpover s and Ormund E. Hunt, of 1650 Motors Corp., the world’s No. 1 pSterln?;nH"i r li Rathmor, Bloomfield Hills, a automaker. Hie^ly one shut by Ser^ PaHerson and J. Beall General Motors director. strike. ...... “ ★ ★ * Death Takes Ex-Head of Labor Dept. NEW YORK (AP) - James P. Mitchell, 63, secretary of labor in the Eisenhower administration, died today in his suite at the Astor Hotel here. He apparently suffered a heart attack. A physician was with him when he died, the hotel said. Mitchell, big and bluff, but with an air of relaxed charm, had. little formal education but a vast backeroiind in personnel manageme"! when President Dwight D E'senhewer named him to the r' ,bino( ip 1053, He had been an exoert in labor relations for New York department stores, civilian manpower chief for the armed forces during'World War II and assistant secretary of the Army. LUKEWARM AT FIRST Organized labor was lukewarm to his appointment at first. Later, AFLrCIO President George Meany was to refer to him as Hie greatest secretary of labor this country had ever had. The formation of a Michi- AGREEMENTS SIGNED jijeil MacNeil, a press spokes- gan Committe»> of Industrial- GM and the other two mem- man for Hoover and former ists and Businessmen for Gold- hers of the Big Three — Ford assistant managing editor of the water-Milkr was a direct re- and Chrysler—reached national- New York Times, said the cur-action to ei%rsement of Pres- contract agreement ahead of rent illness began at 3:55 p.m. (Continued ^ Page 2, Col. 7) AMC. Saturday. WIFE’S TEARS . Tears streamed from the Oyes of Odeene unable to control the joy she shared with Hayes in his proudest moment. - „ ^ ‘Tm so happy for him. No one dm reaUy know how much administration, this means to him and how ^ ^ miidi te .mM 10 lor Um- S sell rnd lor Mo l«nil, An d friends in Pontiac.” ' R-. Slat* No. 17 • /J ' 'V' ''' FIRST TOWNHOUSE - Developer Charles L.' Langs unveiled the first units of his Pontiac Townhouse Apartments over the weekend. Four ntodels w^e opened to Hie public at East Pikq and ^uglas. Langs plans a ' 1, [ PWltiK PrtiS PMt« total,of 65 coopernHve.apartment units oh the R20 urban renewal Site. It is the first development of 4ts kind in '4he urban renewal project. I BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) — An airliner carrying oobnut 18 persons headed by Marshal Sergei S. Biryuzov, who became the Soviet armed forces chief in the Khrushchev administration, crashed and burned if) a fog today. ★ * ♦ ‘All aboard were killed. Groping for a landing after a flight from Moscow, the four-engine plane smashed into Avala Hill, which rises to a height of 1,700 feet 10 miles south of Belgrade. It hit a wooded hillside a few hundred yards from a marble monument commemorating Yugoslavia’s Uiiknown Seddier. Biryuzov, 60, was chief of a Soviet delegation Jo attend the celebration yesterday of the liberation of Belgrade from Nazi occupation in World War II. The delegation included many other senior officers of the Soviet armed’forces. * * ★ The plane radioed for the last time at 5,000 feet, contacting the control tower of Surcin Airport, eight miles north of the capital^ The crew was given permission to descend to 3,400 feet. Then radio contact was lost. ^ ROSE IN COMMAND Biryuzov rose last year from commander of rocket forces to chief of the general staff under the administration of Nikita Khrushchev, who was deposed last week as premier and Communist party Chief. Tanjug said the group included several corps commanders as well as Marshj^l Biryuzov. Biryuzov, as commander of the &viet 37th Army, contributed to defeat the Germans ia, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Romania. , It was the worst air disaster in Yugoslavia. -CATCHES FIRE The plane struck Avala Hill about 120 feet below the summit. The plane immediately caught fire, witnesses reported. Debris was scattered in an area of more.than half a mile. Fire brigades and ambulanc*es lushed to the scene. Police cordoned off the area. One engine pf the plane landed just below a hairpin road leading to the top of the mountain. Indian Summer Tepee-toes Away It looks like Indian Summer has. folded its tents and slipped away. ★ * ★ For the next five days; temperatures will average three -degrees below the normal high of 60 and normal low of 43. Snow fell briefly this afternoon and scattered snowflakes are expected to go^on the warpath late today. The mercury sulked at a low of 40 before 8 this morning and by 2 p.io. had only crawled to 49. , J'' New Leader Makes First, Talk,on Policy Soviet Cosmonaunts Greeted-in Moscow; Nikita Still Missing MOSCOW (J>)—Tire new leader of the Soviet Union, Leonid T. Brezhnev, proclaimed today a policy bf peaceful coexistence with the. We.st, disarmament and equality among Com-muni.st*parties. Brezhnev made his first per-■sonal statement of policy since the removal of Nikita Khrti-shchev in a speech to a. Red SquarO reception' for the three latest .Soviet cosmonaut.s. Brezhnev made no reference to his takeover last Wednesday of Khrushchev’s position as first secretary of the Soviet Communist party. Khrushchev has disappeared since then. In a 20-minute address from atop Lenin’s Tomb, Brezhnev said “.some people, express disquiet that the Soviet Union is fwf ahead of the United States” . in space flight. Some estimates say two years ahead, some five years, he added. ★ * ★ "We are pleased that the Soviet Union is ahead, but we do not consider cosmic research as some kind of a face,” Brezhnev said. It is part of Soviet creative, work in all fields for the benefit of man, he said, COSMONAUTS WELCOME Thousands roared their vvel-come to the three cosmonauts, the first a week ago to circle the earth in a multi.seat spacecraft. Brezhnev, Alexei N. Kosygin who took over Khrushchev’s job as premier, President Anastas I. Mikoyan and Mikhail Suslov, a member of the party Presidium, were out at the airport to meet the three. The cosmonauts had flown 1,250 miles from space headquarters. They hugged the trio — Col'. Vladimir Komarov, commander of the spaceship, scientist Konstantin Feoktistov and Dr. Boris Yegorov. ★ ★ ★ After a^ triumphant ride frond the airport, the new cosm.o-nauts, the members of the party’s Central Committee presidi-um and five of the previous six cosmonauts lined up atop Lenin’s Tomb. W^ves of cheers swept the vast square between the l^emlin and a 19th century department store. SOLEMN OATH Komarov, spoke after a brief opening of the meeting,, saying he and his comrades took a solemn oath before setting out. They pledged to “^e all our skilj to fulfill the tasf« entrusted to us,” he said. “We will meet you in Moscow with all thie honors which you deserve,” Khrushchev had told the cosmonauts .Monday as they circled the globe. But he was not at. the scene he had dominated for similar receptions of cosmonauts. Reading through glasses and wearing his hat and overcoat against the damp chill, Brezhnev told the crowd standing, under the Kremlin walls that a Leninist policy would be followed. He emphasized the "Leninist principles of leadership.” This was a reference jo collective leadership rather ,4han one-man domination of the Soviet government. ★ ★ ♦ The Communist party paper Pravda has accused -Khrushchev — since his unexpected fall — of developing his own "»ult of'personality” and ignoring others. PEAC^UL COEXISTENCE SoviW foreign policy, Brezhnev said, is built “on the u,n-shakeable basis of the Leninist , |CJpntinued on Page 2. Col. 6) Vvjl; ' , ;v THE I’ONTIAC 1»RESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1964 Red Satellites Used as Spies? , WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense experts said today they are sure Soviet Cosmos satellites are being used to spy on the United States. The Soviet Union last Wednes- day launched the 48th in a series of Cosmos satellites which the Russians describe as unmanned, scientific spacecraft probing radiation belts and ^ other phenomena. Predict China Has 2nd Bomb Rusk Says New Test hKay Be Made Soon WASHINGTON (AP) - US. officials believe that the Chinese Communists may soon explode a second nuclear device.. Secretary of State Dean Rusk said Sunday in a television ininterview that a second explosion might be 'forthcoming. The first blast, last Friday, was predicted by Rusk in a late September statement. His forecast was based on U.S. intelligence information and estimates of jthe Chinese Communist nuclear capability. At that time it was generally believed by Washington authorities that the Chinese would probably use up their supply of nuclear explosive material in one shot. But the test they conducted Friday was described by American nuclear experts as having a low yield. Such a blast would not require an especially large amount of fissionable material — uranium or plutonium. The Chinese are known' to have a number of atomic installations. SAME IMPORTANCE Officials said that a second detonation would not have any greater military significance' than the first. All agree that the Chinese will require 5 to 10 years to accumulate even a modest stockpile of atomic weapons and the bombers or , rockets to deliver them. The immediate significance of China’s entry into the nuclear arms race is to be found in the effect on Red Chinese prestige and on the opportunity now created for the Chinese to engage in nuclear diplomacy. President Johnson referred in his speech to the nation Sunday night to the danger of “nuclear blackmaii’’ and offered assuri ance to China’s neighbors that j they wiil have strong U.S. sup-, port if they ever need it in resisting efforts to pressure them into knuckling under to Chinese Communist demands. The Russians have been sending Cosmos satellites aloft since March 1962. Some still are in orbit, following paths that take them over the United States at altitudes ranging from about 120 miles to nearly 300 miles. At such altitudes, sophisticated cameras can get" clear and detailed pictures of features on the ground. 300 MILES UP - U.S. reconnaissance satellites — about which the Air Force and Defense Department are silent — are believed to operate at about 300 miles altitude while passing over Soviet and Red Chinese territory. Information from these U.S. Samos reconnaissance satellites may have played a part in alerting the United States weeks ago to the imminence of Red China’s first atomic test blast, which occurred last Friday. Reds.Pledge Coexistence (Continued From Page One) I princiQlc of peaceful coexistence.’’ He called’a reduction of international tension "the only ^ , j A ^ \ aspects of U.S. space endeavors I policy reasonable under modem I , j ■ I 9c pnntlirpH hv pflmpra.Q niinnt? I conditions" and said “all honest Birmingham Area News NASA Spacb Pictures to Be Seen at Cranbrook -BLOOMFIELD HILLS-Many people must agi'ee” “We stand for complete dis- 1 for ening the United Nations “in the interests of peace,’’ Brezhnev said. “We stand for effective security in^rope.” He advocated Snity of the world Communist movement — which is now torn by the dispute between Moscow and Peking, with some parties trying to keep neutral. JUDGE HONORED - Oakland County Circuit Judge Arthur E. Moore, chairman of the board of directors of Camp Oakland, shows Mrs. Moore the plaque he received yesterday in recognition of his services to the youth camp. The honor was bestowed at the board’s annual meeting. If so, it would have been a joint effort with U2 planes which Rep. Chet Holifield says have been providing pictures for three years on what is believed to be Red China’s atomic energy plant. Holifield, a California Democrat, is vice chairman of the Senate-House Atomic ;,Ener-gy Committee. Space agency officials say the United States knows little about Cosmos hardware — the rocket that launches it, the satellite itself or its equipment. NEW SYSTEM With its claimed new antisatellite system, the United States presumably could shoot down the Cosmos satellites if it considered them a serious threat. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara claimed last month that the American antisatellite systems had scored several successful intercepts of U.S. satellites up to hundreds of miles above the earth. However, any U.S. moves against the Cosmos satellites would almost certainly at least be answered in kind. The United States iJrolilably would ^be the blinder of the two without its reconnaissance satellites, since much of the Soviet Union and all of Red China are closed to inspection. Russians and others enjoy greater freedom of movement on U.S. soil. Camp Head q[ Association Is Honored Ways-Barry by Directors WASHINGTON (AP) - rt,, . ; Barry Goldwater took up the I prospects tl A ^ ^ civil rights question fodav - GoLate: Arthur E. Moore, chairman of , the board of directors ^of Camp ' The Soviet party wilt tight for : strengthening unity on the basis of equality among Communist I parties, Brezhnev said. He added that “correct correlation of interests’’ woula be observed. BLOC REACTION I This appeared to some non-, Communist observers ’ to be a j pledge to other Communists — particularly East European I ones — that Mosco'w wtwld not I under the new leadership at-j tempt to push them around for i Soviet nationalistic purposes. Brezhnev said the Soviet Sen. I through Texas, .and said h i s | party will continue to work for there "looked question today — Goldwater even joked about and said he may remind the ; being hit by an egg on the cam-1 ■ nation in a televised campaign paign trail, nd, was honored yester- ^ jjjgt “free-1 He said being hit by an ibgg day in recognition of his serv- j ^ j association cuts two isn’t band — if you see it com. ices, devotion and understand-1 ^ ing of the many children ,3nd ; ’Re biican PresW^^^^^ youth to whom he has dedicated briefly on civil his talen^ ^d his en^gie^’ | ^ before ime 300 Camp Oakland President Carl: j^lblican staff metpbers and 0. Barton presented a plaque to | volunteers, ’ the judge on behalf of the i a meeting of world parties, “which may and must assist in the achievement" of unity. as captured by cameras during the last five years are soon to 1^ displayed at Cranbrook Institute of Science. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s "Photography from Five Years of Space’’ will open Oct. 26 at the institute. The 94 photographs, mostly in color, depict highlights from the government space agency’s four major program fields — manned space flight, space sciences, applications and advanced research and tecbhology. A Visual record of recent space developments, the exhibit provides information to assist the general ptiblic in understanding U.S. space science and technology. Camera buffs will see it as a collection of outstanding photographs by NASA, Life magazine, National Geographic and New York Times cameramen. SIMILAR FILM They will note that many of the photographs were made •with 35-mm cameras and film similar to that in general use today. The show will remain at the camp’s board of directors at; ^heir breakfast meeting was their annual meeting in the j,ut the door was open ppmn ninino hall . .... camp dining hall. JuSge Moore of 1407 Vin-setta. Royal Oak, was one of the founders of the camp for underprivileged children which is located near Oxford.' while, and a reporter heard Goldwater trace his campaign travels in a largely lighthearted speech; Wilson Aide to See Rusk Next Week Red China and its supporters, plus Yugoslavia,' refused to attend the meeting that Khrushchev was working for. Some other Communists have opposed it indirectly for fear it would lead to a permanent split in world comunism. “In the sphere of home policy,’’ said Brezhnev, “the party regards as its main task to de.-velop the productive forces of our society, to raise steadily on this basis the welfare- of the institute through Nov. 22. Hours are 1-5 p.m. every day except^ major holidays. There is an ad-^ mission charge. The new Birmingham Masonic Temple at 357 S. Woodwird, will be the scene of a public installation of Eastern Star of-fioecs Wednesday night. Brnminghahi Chapter No. 220, OES, will hold its 67th installation at 7:45 p. Stephen Ksycinskl Service for Stephen Ksycinski, 55, of 124 Alice, Bloomfield Township, will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at the VaSu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, ’Troy; Mr. Ksycinski died yesterday after a brief illness. He had" been an employe of A&P Food Stores for 23 years. Surviving are his wife, Agnes; a daughter, Mrs. Sandra G. Murdock; a son, Stephan G., at home; a brother, John Kent and a grandson. Says Reds Off to Good Sfart LONDON 141 - Britain’s newisgoviej people, to develop Social-foreign secretary, Patrick Gor-i ist democracy in every way." ship, and A)ex Busby, 327 S. (Continued From Page One) sional leaders, both Democrats and Republicans, was scheduled for the White House early this afternoon. It was set up at the end of last week. Officials said that the President would cover substantially (he same major points wkich be made in bis television broadcast on last week's sensational developments in the Soviet Union and Red China. Johnson’s reaction to the ouster of Soviet Premier Khrushchev and its significance for the United States, as he sees it, covered both the possibility of dangerous future crises and the hope that the new Kremlin leaders will undertake new measures to strengthen world peace. WAS LEARNING In his address last night. Mrs. Clifford Ross., 1299 ^ Northover,-Bloomfield Town- He told of the address on don Walker, accepted today an Khrushchev, saying that he was In addition to being reelected as chairman of the board, ah office he h{is held since May, Judge Moore was also recognized for “leadership in the development of outstanding programs on behalf of children and youth, and particularly for his inspiration and imagination „ „ „ which conceived and continues' ..j hadn’t wanted ty bring this to help Camp Oakland.’* : politics at Ikl," Goldwater Bartog was also reelected to! ggij the board, as were Robert W.; But. he said, he had felt he Chambers. Robert Dearth and j ^lust make his point on freedom Mrs. Ben D. Mills, all of Bloom-1 association, field Hills, and I. W. Robert- civil r i g h t s he delivered in Chicago last Friday. G o 1 d-water said in that speech that “forced integration is just as wrong as forced segregation.’’ The Arizona Senator told, the GOP workers he had worked on that address “for weeks and weeks and weeks. invitation to visit Secretary of INITIATIVE State Dean Rusk in Washington | He said the party wants the next week to arrange for a con-1 Soviet people “to live better, in tinpation of British-American a more cultured way, so the cooperation. i people's initiative will come into A Foreign Office statement, play.’’ announcing Gordon Walker’s! This was an assurance that visit Oct. M and 27, said. son of Birmingham, all vice FREEDOM TO ASSOCIATE ^ The announcement came after presidents. “There’s a freedom to asso- Gordon Walker called in U.S. Other board appointments in- ciate and there’s a freedom not j Ambassador David K Bruce for eluded Mrs. Walter Gehrke of to associate.” Goldwater told | a survey of British-American re-Pleasant Ridge, Edward H. Ler- the Republicans. ' ; jations and of the world situa- chen of Bloomfield Hills and Goldwater said the Chicago j tion in general. Dr. Bruce A. Kresge of Roch-, s p e e ch was well - received ♦ ★ ★ ester, two-year terms. | |,y ^egro leaders there. I R was in the course of their Appointed to one-year terms i He did not anme them. | meeting that Gordon Walker were David Levinson and Her-' formally accepted the invitation bert H Gardnes of Birmingham! Negro came | extendi to him by Rusk. The and Robert P. Dick of Oxford. speech, and | (,ad a 30-minute conversa- Over 170 directors and friends ^ switched his presi-. j tjon over the telephone yester-of Camp Oakland attended the ' Goldwater | jay. “The purpose of the meeting will be to give the two foreign ministers an early opportunity to review matters of common interest and make arrangements for the continuing consultation which has been traditional between the two countries.” Khrushchev’s emphasis of an [ improved standard of living had I not been abandoned. As Khru-j shchev had noted before him, ' Brezhnev said “We understand full well real difficulties along our road." Woodward, will take office as , “guilty of dangerous advcif-, . .. ture ” as in the Berlin and Cu- worthy matron and worthy pa-tron. Mrs. Paul Wogan will be in-iftalled as associate matron and William Morgan as associate patron. from mistakes and he was not blind to realities.’’ Mrs. George W. Crater Service for former Birmingham resident Mrs. George W. Of Khrushchev’s successors, Johnson said they are younger men who may be “less rooted in their past,’’ and they are said “to be realistic." ‘We can hope that they will At the turn of the century, an average cow produced 3,600 pounds of milk a year. In 1963, the U. S. average was 7,545 pounds. The Weather lAPA Awards 9 Scholarships for Latin Study Majel C.) Crater. 56, of Royal share with us our great objec-Oak will be 10 a m. tomorrow tive; the prevention of nuclear at Christ Giiurch Cranbrook. I war," he added. Graveside service will be 2 p.m. i * in Memorial Park Cemetery, ! He said the change in the Battle Creek. j Moscow high command means Mrs. Crater died Saturday aft- at least four things for Ameri- ; meeting. column. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTBAC AND VICINTY. Variable cloudiness through Tuesday with light showers through most of the area today, tonight and Tuesday with chance of some snow flurries tonight. Cooler today and tonight and cohtinued very cool Tuesdq^. High today 48-54, low tonight in the 30s, high Tuesday in the 40s. Winds mostly west to northwest 10 to 20 miles. Wednesday fair and a little warmer. Teamsters Pick Romney, LBJ T9d«y In Pontiac Oiroetkm: West. Svn sets Monday at Saturday and Sunday In Pontiac Hlotiest temperature ur;---------- Weather: Fair, Or. Rapids it 34 Hojjgh^ ■ - 0-33 Jacksonvilli Angeles 7t ni Beach iS , Albuquerque S7 't Cincir*^- Oenvt PhoenI* Pittsburgh Cincinnati (I : DETROIT lAPt - Some 2.00 Goldwater said he might later ;use the civil rights, speech “nationally.” He did not specifically mention television, but indicated {that was what he had in mind I by adding it might be used ^when there 4s sufficient money to finance such an appearance. SPEECH A REVIEW In 1 a r g e measure, Goldwa-members of a Teamsters Union | ter’s speech was a review of his council endorsed Democratic i last campaign journey, liberal-* President Johnson and Republi-1 jy peppered with quips, can Gov. George Romney fori „ ^ reflection ^undsv President Johnson, Goldwa- James R. Hoffa, president ofi » Teamsters Joint Council 43, had urged the members to support Johnson and Romney new television program. He’s going to call it ‘Me the People,’ ” Goldwater said. The Teamsters picked Johnson over Arizona Republican Barry Goldwater and Romney over Democratic Congressman Neil Staebler. The council is comprised mainly,of union stewards from Detroit. Hoffa stressed earlier that the International Teamsters Union, of which he also is president, has neither endorsed Romney nor Johnson. He said neither man had asked his or Team-[sters’ support. j Hoffa told the council: “I say to you we cannot allow hate to I win and cannot support Barry i Goldwater in 1964.” An ovation greeted this re- He told of campaigning Gordon Walker called in Bruce, one authorized British official said, as a demonstration of the keenness of Britain’s .new Labor government “to reaffirm the anxiety of the United Kingdom to maintain the Anglo-American alliance” Greek Prince Gets OK ATHENS, Greece (AP)— Prince Michael of Greece has received King Constantine’s permission to marry a Greek commoner, a palace announcement said today. Michael, 25, a cousin of the Greek monarch, is engaged to be married to Marina Karelia, 24, daughter of a Greek industri-world communism. MEXICO nTY - The Inter-American Press Association Scholarship Fund today announced the award of nine journalism scholarships to United States students and working newspapermen for a year of study in Latin America. Scholarships to Latin Americans for a year of journalism studies in the United States will be awarded next March. ’ The winners announced today are: Truman E. Becker of Chicago, III.; Carlos D. Conde of Dallas, Texas: Virgil E. McMahan of Washington, D. C.;! Thomas J. Nolan of Miami, | Fla.; Margaret C. Sands of Sanrt Barbara, Calih; Charlotte A. Shaw of New York, N. Y.; Kenneth W. Thomas of Washington, D. C.; John W. Wilson of Carmel, Calif.; and Allep Young of Liberty, N. Y. Information and application blanks should be requested from the lAPA Scholarship Fund, 667 Madison Avenue, New York, er a lengthy illness. She had taught vocal music classes at Barnum, Derby, Groves and Berkshire schools and was a member of the Mich- cans: KEEP VIGILANCE First — the men in the Krelin remain dedicated, dangerous igan Eklucation Association and Corftmunists” and the United the National Education Associa- States must maintaifl ‘‘steady tion. ' i vigilance” at a time of trouble Surviving besides her husband [ in the Communist bloc because are a brother and a sister. _^ea Executives Favor Goldwater N. Y. (Continued From Page One) ident Johnson by Henry Ford II, Ford Motor Co. president, and other industrialists, said Ty Gillespie, Michigan director for the Goldwater organi- BOSTON (UPI) - Sen.,Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., today described the June plane crash in which he broke his back “a toboggan ride” along tree tops which ended with “a tremendous impact.” In his first news conference since the accident exactly four months ago, the Massachusetts Democrat divided his time about equally between politics and de^ - tails of the twin - engine plane mark But Hoffa’s urging of i crash which claimed two lives, j support (or Romney brought a Included in the list were; Donald Kiger, president of the Detroit Edison Co; Charles Mott, of the Mott Foundation and a General Motors Corp. director; S. S. I&esge, founder of the variety, store chain and of the Kresge Foundation: and James Boyd, president of Copper Range Co., Houghton. U.S. strength “holds the balance firm against danger.” Second — “There will be turmoil in the Communist world.” But the President said that the preoccupation of^^ Kremlin chieftains with Communist problems is not all bad “because men who are busy with internal problems may not be tempted to reckless external acts.” Third — The forces working for greater independence in Communist-governed Eastern Europe “will continue to have our sympathy” and he added: “We will not give up our hope of building new bridges to thebe people.” Fourth — The course now followed by the United States “must continue to prove that we on our sidb are ready to get on with the work of peace.” Sen. Ted Kennedy Talks About Plane Crash, Politics NATIONAL WEATHER — Scattered showers and snow showers are forecast for the lower Great Lakes tonight. Warmer temperatures are expected from the northern Rockle to the middle Mississippi Valley and ,,qoqler from the, (Jreat Lakqp and the north Atlantic Coast states to thw southern Plpina and the "Gulf Coaf», states. : — few-boos. ' ! Kennedy, lying on his back Hoffa said he didn’t think i orthopedic frame, said supporting Romney for gover-i I*® thought the overriding na-nor would take votes away from I 11 h n ■ I consideration in the Johnson. , Nov. 3 election will be who' The workers are intelligent the p e o p I e feel is Speaking in the directors room of New England Baptist Hospital, his description went like this: The Senate voted on the historic civil rights bill early in the evening severaHiours later than had been expected. ident Johnson will win the confidence of the people.” He said he thought his own reelection should be base^J on his record during the past two years in the Senate and the programs he has supported. Kennedy’s beautiful blonde wife, Joan, sat in a chair near his head during the 35-minute meeting with newsmen. He wore light blue pajamas and w h i t e' socks. A shert covered his midsection. His toes and feet moved .almost constantly. , PLAN^^CRASH I The first half of the confer-: “After ahliour and 30 ihinutes ence was devoted to his de-1 there still seemed a good dis-scription of the plane cpasjt | tance to go. The pilot said ^#re which occurred as he vyas en were a good‘many storm areas' He, Sen. and Mrs. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., aide Edwin Moss and the pilot, Edward Zimmi, took off from Washington oh what was expected to be an hour and a quarter flight. j enough now that they don’t have equipped in these perilous route from Washington to the and we had to take a more de-Uo lopk for the tail of the dpnkey days to provide leadership for [Deraoeratic State Convention at vious route ” He said the pilot an order Jo vote,” ,he “I felt the power go on lln the plane . . . which seemM for some time to be riding along , the tops of the trees just like a toboggan ride ... like we did that a few seconds, then there Jaraa a tremendous impact.” He said his seat was thrown against the roof. He was corn stuous of the plane sliding along ,the ground. 'There there was a pileup, then a tremendous im; pact, ujen silence | * 1 ■t... THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAV. OCTOBER 10, 1904 The area of the Italian South i speaking, has the lowest | Tyrol, which is partly German- centage of illiteracy In " speaking and partly Italian-1 — only .6 per cent. Use SIMMS No-Cost Free Uy-Away For CAMERA GIFTS -And At THESE PRICES, TONITE or TUESDAY Would Be the Time To Start On CHRISTMAS GIFTS CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Choice ‘SYLYANIA* or ‘GENERAL ELECTRIC [^lyf /?omney, Staebler Keep Stumping AG-1 Flash Bulbs Large TV Viewing Style ^ ‘Mansfield' ^ nm Movie Editor & Splicer All mefal construction with new ' film notcher feature ... 400 ft. reel :| capacity, large viewer. Comes with Mylar tape splicer. :j$l holds in free layaway. FREE 8mm Rewind Set With Purchase Any Movie Projector The South figures large in Sen. Barry Goldwater's election plans. He is counting on many Soutliemers voting Republican because of the civil rights bill and state’s rights. Humphrey, in speeches in southern Florida Sunday, said; 1. Johnson is a southerner and southerners won’t forget it. 2. That no matter who is president, he will have to' enforce the Civil Rights Act because it is the law of the land. 3. Goldwater “whistles Dixie ; in the South, but poses as a' Champion of -civil rights in the North.” ‘ 4. Goldwater has voted in the Senate against Southern-interest; legislation, including measures on tobacco and cotton. LIKE SHERMAN To one group Humphrey said, “What Sen. Goldwater would do to the South would make Gen. Sherman look like a friend. At a Tampa news conference he dodged a question about the political effects of the Walter Jenkins case, saying only that it was a ^rsonal and family tragedy for Jenkins, who was a presidential aide. He also said There has been no violation of security.” Republicans have arguecMhat Jenkins, because of his police record, would hpve been vulnerable to blackmail and thus a security risk. century,” he told a crowd of more than l,000l “ANTI-EVERYTHING” Goldwater and his running-mate, William Miller, are “the anti-everything spiritual descendants of the ‘Know Nothing Party’ of the 19th Century,” he added. * * *• The .American people, Staeb- ler said, “are disgusted, at the increasingly blatant appeals to bigotry, hatred and intolerance —at the sly efforts to set against race, class against class, region against region” by Gold-water and Miller. ★ * * Staebler’s running mate, Robert Derengoski, was^ honored in his home town-^Manistee—Sunday by the celebration of “Robert Derengoski Dav.” U S. Sen. Philip Hart. 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Smart colors. ‘Shopcraft’ ELECTRIC^ 13/S” Drilk 2nd Floor HOUSEWARES DISCOUNTS Save Ironing of Wash Pants Trouser Greasers 7Vr Set 37 e — oil metol creasers slip i legs. Let dry, and you ve eliminated ironing, size pants including new slims. Heavy Gauge ALUMINUM Roast S Bake Pans $1.29 Seller-now 14x10x2 inch aluminum pan with built-in Jiondle-grips. Open pan method of [oosting and baking with this item. So Many Uses With This Smart _^ip ’n Dip Set 1-Pail Does The Work of 2 Twin Water Pails c Poly plostic poirKwith divided other. lor rinse. Assorted colors, in stock. QSIMMS..?* V2-Gal. ‘Aerowax’ w.V Self-palishing floar wax won't ever yellow. Easy on, easy to shine. Limit 1 ■can per person. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAV. QCtrORER VX VrunhUde, heroine of Wag-| ner*s open, was a real person, | the dai^ter of Athanagild, king of the Visigoths. Wagner used her life story as a basis for his ‘ series ,7 lou ilrrp ond (Utftr trom u, Btcktcbe and feerold. tlrod. 1. In »ucb Irrltatlbn. CYSTEX By HAI. BaYLE ^ ! NEW YORK (AP) - Things a columnist might never know if' he didn't open his mail: ; Fi^s made gardening easier in ancient Egypt than it is in the .suburbs now. They were walked across a prepared field and seeds dropped where their feet made an indentation. A female codfish yields up to nine million eggs in a season, and if later she meets .one of, her children she just shrugs her gills and swims by. It *s hard for her to be proud of her own,-because she isn’t sure that what is hers is hers. * ■ * / 4r' Traffic repaifider: although most of lie driving is done by day, j»i|ht makes you three • GROUP PICTURES $2.00 • NON.GLARE ELECTRONIC LIGHTS • CHOICE OF SEVERAL POSES • NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Plus 50^ Handling & Mailing LAST WEEK ... NOW THRU SAT., OCT. 24 Kresae's 10 A.M. till 7 P.M. DAILY times as likely to be involved in a fatal accklent. How' much can you eat at a tim^ An Australian once j ^rl]M ‘ISO oysters in an hour. I An East German .sausage lover once swallowed 17 links in'^ seconds. And a Chicagoan who had no stop watch on him con-^ sumed 77 hamburgers at a sitting, and arose without hiccups. QUOTABLE QUOTES Quotable notables: “A hero is an ordinary man who is brave five minutes longer." --- Ralph Waldo Emerson. Happy birthday: The oldest continuing daily U.S. newspaper i% the Hartford. Conn., Curanl, born 200 years ago. * * * If you want to walk on the largest carpet in the world, you i might step upon the one that floors the New York Coliseum. I It covers two acres. The place to go if you want to light your cigar with a faded dollar is the Fed^al Bureau of Engraving. There they burn up to $30 million of jivom out currency every day, hot including Saturdays or Sundays. HISTORY LESSON History lesson: Can yop name the only U.S. president who was the son'of a physician? He was Warren G. Harding. Is there an old person in your family or neighborhood who isn’t getting what-he’s entitled to? The Social Security people say they know of at least a million elder Americans who haven’t applied for checks they are entitled to. ★ ★ ★ Folklore: If the turkey has thicker feathers than usual at Thanksgiving time, it will be a long cold winter A dream in a strange bed will c-'me true. Talk to yc'urself a.nd you hear the devil. Worth remembering: "There are no problem childr-n — only children with problems” — Arnold Glasow. WATCH WALKING Watch where you walk: The American Medical Association estimates that 40,000 of us each year are hurt trying to stroll through glass doors and glass windows. * ★ ★ A toothache is the same everywhere, but if you live in a large town you probably visit a dentist nearly twice as often as one who lives in a small town. ir -k it Nof, what do you . think a funamb list is? He’s a tightrope walker. Help to the other fellow is as old as mankjnjl. But one of the first known adrnonitiohs to human charity was expressed about 2,000 B.C. in th? Hammu-rabic Code: "Justice be done to widows, orphans, and the poor.” It was Nikita Khrushchev who observed, "Comrades, we live in a splendid time” Vehicle Inspection Endorsed by Jfiycees SAULT STE. MARIE (AP)-Legislation calling for uniform vehicle inspegtion as a traffic safety measure was endorsed Sunday by the annual fall conference of the Michigan Junior Chamber of Commerce. The 800 delegates also instructed their representatives to the International Junior Chamber Congress opening in Oklahoma City today to oppose a proposal by Asian groups to strike the Chamber’s “faith in God” tenet from its constitution. Post Office Shows It Has Good Memory i SEATTLE (APJ—Jack Flynn said Saturday he'd received a postcard from a World War I buddy. Harry J. Bowen, in Ishpeming, Mich. It was postmarked Sept. 18, 1962 and addressed to Eden Valley, Minn. "You really have to hand it to the postal department.” said Flynn. 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FRONT DOOR PARKING Tom/ioc Mali 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE I FE 4-5216 £i.fZ^BerH d.AK£ ftp.- ^/oor 1 Shop Hi Hi 2Blks.W.f Q w Tele^ragh 1 APPLIANCE BUYERS I OLLIE FRETTER SAYS: GROWING FAMIUES NEED MORE ROOM YOU CAN ENLARGE ^ REPAIR . MODERNIZE NOW! WE HAVE A SPECIAL PACKAGE^HOME LOAN SERVICE To meet your needs NO DOWN PAYMENT • NO LEGAL FEES Oakland County's Largest Mortgage Lending Institution \ 761 W. HI KON-PONTIAC 16 E. Lawrrnrp St. —Ponliar .351 N. Main - Milfot-d • 407 Main Slrrri — Rorheiilrr 4416 Dixie Hkv. — Drayton Plain* 1102 W. Maple Rd.-W alled Lk. 471 W. Broadwdy-Lake Orion ^ 5799 Ortonville Rd. Cor M-15-f;iarkM6n 2 WESTINGHOUSE ADMIRALJDOLOR TV GAS DRYER SALE EASY ■ REFRIGERATOR Oilad Walnut, KELVINATOR - NORGE SPIN-DRY WASHER ■ 1 2 Cubic Ft., l«tro Lorgu fr.uicr Wood Consol# MAYTAG, - HAMILTON, ate. 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MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, I9(1J Liberalization Brought About His Fall / Khrushchev Impact Was Tremendous (EBITOR’S JVOTE - The 11 years of rule in Russia by Nikita jSi Khrushchev changed the history of the_ iwrld. Note, as the Soviet Un^ embarks : on a new era undet new leadership and Khrushchev fades fr^ the scene, a distinguished foreign correspondent sums up the momentous Khrushchev era.) By K.C. THALER LONDON. (UPI) - Nikita S. Khrushchev, the shepherd who beoame^one of the most powerful men in the world and has shaped its course for decades to come, is gone from the Kremlin. He has been ruthlessly, suddenly and purposefully c o n-signed to^the ranks of Russia’s old age pensioners. Nikita Khrushchev himself might be the first to say, that’s how it must be. That’s how it is in Russian political life. That is hoiii. it was when Khrushchev himself took ovei‘ 11 years ago. History will, perhaps, judge Khrushchev a little more kindly than have his immediate associates. It will accord him, whatever the verdict, a prominent Church Confab Slates Debate place in the annals of these Upies. alians. The. Southern diocese oppose the recommendation because of statements attributed to the council, which supports the civil rights piovement. ASK TO REFRAIN Members of the diocese of Mississippi have offered a reso-hj^n asking that the council "refrain from the issuance of statements or pronouncements . . . without the presence and vote of a substantial majority of the membership of the respective bodies.” ' The Mississippi resolution also asks that the council stop “issuing slaten^nts or pronouncements which advocate or] oppose specific political action.” High churchmen are against Episcopal involvement in the council because it is an organization of Protestant churchis and high churchmen (Prefer to be known aS Catholic. ’The report on the council was ordered by the last Episcopal convention three years ago in Detroit. The answers lie in communism itself, in Khrushchev himself. The .very liberalization he brought about was his undoing, triggered in large degree, it is generally believed, by his handling of the Sino-Soviet dispute. •k * Where Stalin, in such a situation, would simply have ordered his opponents shot, Khrushchev under his own rules of the game had to justify himself. And, falling to do so, pay the penalty of dismissal. Nikita Khrushchev’s beginnings showed little evidence of the power and statesmanship time was to bring to him. Indeed, there was little to single out Khrushchiiv when Stalin died in 1953 as anyone different from the rest of the Stalin gang. BLOODY PURGES ’Through the bloody purges of the 1930s in the’Ukraine, Khrushchev was an eager and keen collaborator of the ironfaced man then sitting in the Kremlin. He shed te?rs at Stalin’s deathbed on March 5, 1953. In the mysteries of Soviet politicking, the change came softly. Three years after weeping at Stalin’s bier, Khrushchev ripped the mask from the late dictator and identified him as a mass murderer and maniac, a man who placed himself above the people. ★ ★ ★ Soon thereafter he had Stalin’s preserved body removed from the Red Square mausoleum it shared with that of Lenin, and reburied it near 4he Kremlin wall. END OF CULT He pronounced the end of the “cult of personality" which he said had been built up in the Stalin years and had been the shield behind which “Bloody Joe" had run his tyrannical rha-chine with Secret Police Chief Lavrenti Beria as top executioner. V Today, paradoxically, Khrushchev himself stands accused of the same crime of personal cultism. But in those early days of his power, Khrushchev laid ]^e foundations of the domestic and foreign programs that were to so change the face of the Soviet Empire. He moved forcefully to get rid of (he Stalin “hard-liners." Before 1953 was out, the feared Beria was toppled and later shot. Then in July 1957, as Khrushchev seized the reins of control ever more firmly; came the removal of the so-called antiparty trio of Georgi* Malenkov, who served so briefly as Stalin’s successor, V. M. Molotov, the old “hard rock” foreign minister of so many war and postwar conferences, and Lazar Kaganovich, who had been a deputy prime minister under Stalin. old Stalinists didn't :hrushchev’s liberalizing moves, and they went. B u t times already had changed and they weren’t shot, merely shunted off with pensions or to minor jobs. ol lik^hr With the.se hard-line Communists out of the way, the b a c k o( any organized opposition to Khrushchev and his ways was broken. A few months later, in October 1957, he removed Defense Minister Georgi Zhukov frorn control of the army and got the armed forces under his own control. By the end of.l957 Khrushchev was ready for a full-scale assault on the old policies and r e a d y to put in motion the sweeping CTtanges- he ^had in mind. * ♦. * (Next: Khrushchev devel.ops the three main themes of his rule). Thru the Storms of Tomorrow ... Today B. F. Goodrich KOROSEAL Rigid Vinyl Doors and White Clear Through Non Conductore Call for appointment ALL WEATHER WINDOW CO. Mambar of Pontiac Arao Chombar of Commarca Waterford OR 3-5588 SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE Just In-Easy Washer and Sain Dryers 17-lb. Whiripool Dishwasher $15990 Wbirlpooi 14 Cu. Ft., Bottom Freeier, Dork Copper or White $24988 TERMS AVAILAILE I2S W.'Huron ELECTRIC FE 4-X525 COMPAHY President's Lady Bedspread Woven for Lasting Loveliness 3150 Volue Twin or Full Prasidant't Lady will enhance your bodroorti for many yearj to You will find it's lasting loveliness appropriate in any setting. Pra-shrunk, permanently puffed, machine washable. 100%'long stapl^ cotton. 2-P'c. 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Dress sizes 10 to 18 and 9 to 17. *12.50 Dress-Shaper bra style 0574 with the bare-devil plunge. (Rigid Material all Nylon Interlining, Polyester [Spun Dacron], Nylon, Elastic: Nylon, Polyester, Lycra Spandex,) 32A to 380. #4 OO Formfit*^ Rogers 48 WMt Hum street THE PONTIAC PRESS . Pontiac, Michigan MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1964 HAROLD A. riTSOERALD Bowui B. rtTj«nu» n And' John A. ItiUT •unUry and Admtulnf Dl It Seems to ^e .... French-Speaking Canadians Rebel Against the English If he thinks Johnson will win, he intends to vote for Ooldwateh. And if he figures Goldwater’s “in,” he will vote for Johnson. His reason is interesting. ★ ★ ★ “Neither is strong enough to fill the biggest office in the world," he says. “Hence, the winner must be restrained during his incumbency by the knowledge that half of his fellow countrymen aren’t in sympathy with his principles. This should help keep Johnson from spending the entire national income. It should keep Goldwater from breaking comforting international silences with more harebrained ideas. “Both men desperately need Kelp, guidance and counsel. If either rides into office on the crest of a tidal wave, he may . conclude he’s invincible and * ready to buy the fallacious fatal belief that the “king cah do no wrong.” ★ ★ ★ Personally, I plan to cast a ballot for Goldwater as I believe he is the better qualified of the two. The other idea may appeal to some. ^When the British Queen had difficulties with French-Canadians, it high-lighted a situation that is becoming worse. ir .it it ‘ The schism between the English and French-speaking Canadians widens with the passage of time. Apparently the French-Canadians are becoming more belligerent. They are adamant in refusing to accept the English language and resent British - Canadian rule. Many C. S. citizens are mystified the first lime they visit sectj|M|^f Canada lo find French e^rany spoken; and in many cases, as the predominant tongue. They have their schools where French is sp(»ken exclusively. Many hockey games are broadcasted in both languages. ★ ★ ★ The French want independence. It’s that simple. They want freedom from all English or British domination. Usually, language differences like this are resolved with the passage of time and the dominant language slowly takes over, but the French-Canadians want no part of any temporizing procedure. ★ ★ ★ ---------------------------------------- The problem is baffling and ill CoilclUSion . . . becoming increasingly vexatious. * No simple solution is in sight. '^Jottings from the well-thumbed The British Queen was actually notebook of your peripatetic re-hooed by hot^iheaded sectors of porter: the French group. Signs in Polly Bergen is one of the “clean- >>ench suggested she “go univeiBe. Her home. This, of course, is em- . .,1, barrassing to her loval subjects. The battle rag?s on. ater. night clubs, oil wells, records. There’s no immediate solution. real estate and publishing ventures ------ has passed the million mark....... Solid South .... . ■ - . Eastern newspapers are dis- Many people are honlstly puzzled phenomena which by the blind adherence of so many causes^ogs to yowl at certain pieces Negroes to the Democratic ticket. them remain if if ^ 3t others. “Pavanne” seems The Southern States have especially aggravating. Try it on been the leaders in holding Ne- your own private pooch. ....--------- groes down for a 100 years. . Gambling'on the 1964 world series These Democratic areas blocked set an all-time record. The old pros integrated schools. They blocked backed the Yanks and were almost . integrated churches. They swamped with takers, blocked integrated lunch rooms. . ^ Stated simply and bluntly, they „ , , ... , j Purely personal nomination led the fight against all Integra- . • n B , B for an especially attractive .'oung lady in the area: Matilda They wer.nl fool,nj. . Witoo (on her , Negroe^were^kepl^own. slsi birthday) The Southern states have been is'ewsVa'per the traditional stronghold of the men ^ay Mel Democratic party. For generations. Allen 4 a s I we’ve read of the “solid, south.” pretty upset at ' ^ That meant solidly Democratic — losing the ' ,*. > • and solidly against equality for col- world serie.s ored people. For years there wasn’t broadcast after BBk even a Republican ticket on the bal- ® ' S h t " yenrs lot in many southern states. And . The As^iciated Press files hosts of Democratic centers didn’t 3 ^ allow Negroes to vote, anyway. It more than 100 countries. was jolly well understood that col- ......... Overheard: “Years ored people were to keep away from ago, they pinned price lags to the polls on election day. bathing suits. Now they pin the They weren’t even registered. suits lo the price tags.” ...... i^ i^ i^ *• • • • Braun says in 25 M hen equal rights suddenly became a big National issue, it Angeles will be an was the staunch Democratic hour and a half.,......... . southern stales that led an all- l anslng has a life- out battle against it. Some of PainUnK of herself over them haven’t s^urrendered now. fireplace. The catch? She’s And yet over the years, the complefely undraped. Democrats have always banked ★ ★ ★ on a solid, overwhelming Negro ’ Miniature transistor TV sets are vote. having a big run. Philco has a three Why? inch screen in limited production and Sony has a four inch job on the ' market..'..........About 30 Jap- Unique Idea.... anese girls marry U. s. soldiers each Here’s a unique idea. week.............du Pont will dis- A citizen who ppssesses all his tribute 23 million shares of G.M. marbles says he will make up his stock before.-the spring deadline. mind on a presidential selection the .............Dept, of Cheers and day he walks Into the voting booth. Jeers: the C’s—Hay^s Jones; the J’s ' Voice of the People: Union Official Explains Policy of Strike Benefits The union does not give out cards to get surplus food. Surplus food, is given out by the county. We give a letter stating the employe is on strike, and we state the amount of strike benefit funds he receives and the day he receives them. We give the letter to any member who asks for it. As for paying on different days, the State unemployment system has used the last number of your social security for your pay day, and it has worked quite well. This is the only way we can handle 15,000 members. All the people canceling and writing checks are volunteers. They receive no pay for the hours they spend at the union hall, only their regular strike benefit check. RALPH ASHMEAD COMMUNITY SERVICE COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN LOCAL 653, UAW ‘Unhappy With Handling of Surplus Food’ Damocles’ Two-E4ged Sword I am on strike and stood in line with hundreds of others for surplus food. They had one man filling orders and acted like they were paying for the food. . ... Write yoiir congressman to get someone that will do the job. E. P. ' David Lawrence ^ays: Questions on Proposed City Income Tax K Ouster Outweighs U.S. Race The intention, of the Pontiac City Commission to impose a city income tax oh residents and non-residents working in Pontiac poses unanswered questions. WASHINGTON - Change has coni’e. P’or better or for worse? Last week can, '^thout dra-m a t i c exaggeration,. be described in TV vocabulary as “the week that was,” but it must also be called “the week that still is.” It will continue to shape the destinies of mankind for future weeks andl perhaps (orI years to come.f Important as* domestic issues lAWRENCE and presidential contests may be t- -sentee C o n- RUTH gress, fear ofMONTGOMERV crime has become so prevalent that women, who in recent years have become afraid "to leave their homes after dark, are now fearful even of taking a daytime stroll alone. Meyer‘strode should have been its safest segment. A street parallels it on the opposite side of the canal. Had it not been for that fact and the quick-wit-tedness of a truck driver, her suspected murderer would probably have escaped. President Johnson recently* confided to a publisher that "the only issue that could defeat me is law and order. ” Why, then, should we wait until after the election to get some action on the lawlessness which Is turning our capital city into a jungle? ______ “Great little system! By getting down c ONE time you’ve kept me down on mine ever since.” Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The senseless murder of a vibrant, life-loving, . youthful President in Dallas last No-'vember horrified the civilized world. That was the act of a misfit who had once defected to the Soviet Union, and U.S. presidents inevitably run such risks from hate-filled punks who resent a Law Construction Digest may nevertheless be defined as medicial care for the aged, the helpless, the incompetent. The average husband is one who lays down the law to his wi{e and then accepts all the- amendments. The ruthless slaying of beautiful, 43-year-old Mary Pinchot Meyer on the canal towpath In Georgetown this week w«S shocking evidence, however, of a ^uly sick society. In Washington within the last year or so, a congressional secretary was attacked while praying in church at noon, a brilliant young Yak student was brutally murdered while walking his dog in the^ capital’s most exclusive residential section, a woman was raped in the laundry room of her high-class apartment building, and countless other women and little girls have been dragged into alleys, murdered or raped. / WENT FOR WALK Mary Pinchot Meyer, niece of the late Pennsylvania Gov. Gifford Pinchot, and a friend of Ja^ueline Kennedy, ji^d been painting in her artist’s Studio. Turning an electric fan on the painting to hasten its dryr ing, she then went for a walk along the historic towpath at midday. The path along which Mrs. Dents Push Medicare Chicago Tribune For several years the Democrats, posing as the party of humanity, have been puling for a medicare bill which would take care of many of the admittedly burdensome medical expenses of the elderly, includ-,ing a certain amount of care in a nursing home. Is nursing home care medical care, or isn't it? If it isn’t then why is it included in the medicare bill? If it is, then how can tlie government say that in some cases — and the ruling probably would be applicable in most cases — it is not? Or does nursing care qualify as ‘‘medical’’ only when the government wants to provide it? Lost Revenue Scandal Sheet, Rotary Club (Graham, Texas) A task force made up of two past Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff— four - star General Twining of the Air Force and four-star Admiral Radford of the Navy — plus former Defense Secretary McElroy and three members of Congress from Military Affairs Committees of the House and Senate, now has come up wilif a report fully justifying and approving the same proposals that Senator Goldwater made. This report emphasizes the danger in depending on fast communications from the President to an attacked area after war has been launched by the enemy. our cities lost during the horse ^ Yet when an individual taxpayer undertook to provide the same care for his ag^ mother, the government did an about-face and said it was not a deductible medical expense unless the patient’s main reason for entering the nursing home was to obtain medical treatment. and buggy days because no one thought of making a piggy bank out of every hitchirig j The Dallas Morning News Goldwater Support The Shreveport Times BULLETIN! A poll reveals that the United Stales will elect -two presidents and two vice presidents, a claim made by no other pollster. This was taken at the Democratic and Republic can headquarters. Now if a patient it in need of specific medical treatment, the chances are that he will go to a hospital instead of a nursing home. By inclnding nursing home care in its own •medicare plans, the government would seem to be acknowledging (hat nursing home care, even though not directed at a specific ailment, Senator Goldwater now is supported by Generals, Admirals and o^ers of past high government '^positions who know that always — since battlefield nuclear weapons first were developed by this country under President Eisenhower in the 1950s — the NATO commander has* had the authority to use them at his discretion under certain conditions of attack. hii Tllg PONTIAC PRESS. >^QXDAY, OCTOBER 19, 19C4 A—7 Sciy U.S. Planes Hit Viet Buffer Zone SAIGON. South "Viet r»am (UPI) — Communist North Viet Nam has alleged that “U. S. fighter-bMnbers” strafed and bombed Red villages in tlje demilitarized zone tetween North and South Viet Nam. Rddio Hanoi claimed the air raids occunW Friday and Saturday. The broadcast alleged loss of lives and properly damage. The (Jommiuiist statement said the planes came from Laos and South Viet Nam. The statement, however, did not say the air strikes were made by planes of the U.S. Air Force or hy planes piloted by Americans. * ' In the past, Conununist references to *‘U,S. fighter-bombers” often meant planes made in the United States and be-Ibnging to the Laotian or South Vietnamese air forces. ' In Saigon today, there was |t’s new new new cold wave! PREENOL neutralizer—Proteinized waving lotion—and even proteinized end papers eliminate frizz or dryness. Luxury features never offered before at this price. ON SPECIAL SALE $^45r Reg: $10.00 Miss Zotos inct. cut 'n set NEISNER’S 2nd Floor PHONE FE 8-1343 another indication of the United States’ deepening involvement in the undeclared war against the Communist Viet Cong. First TIME For the first time since the Korean War, the U.S. Army authorized soldiers to wear the insignia of the U.S. Military Assistance Conunand Viet Nam (MACV) as a combat patch. The United States officially is not at war in Viet Nam and its military personnel are only advisers. The Defense Department, however, has authorized the awarding of the Combat Infantryman’s Badge and recently began decorating U.S. servicemen with wartime miiitary medals and awards. fragments from a hpmb explosion. The incident was said •to be the first act of terror-, ism in the resort city pre-vionsiy considered safe. Cap St. Jacques is popular with U.S. servicemen on leave. South Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Khanh usuaily spends the night there Instead of in Saigon. , , The announcement that t'h e MACV insignia could be worn as a combat patch was made in the Observer, an official publication of the U.S. military headquarters here. PERMANENT PART It said officers and enlisted men could wear the combat pqtch ,as a “permanent part of uniforms throughout their military careers.” At Cap St.. Jacques, a seaside resort 40 miles southeast of Saigon, a U.S. Army enlisted man was wounded slightly Saturday night when I be was struck in the neck by Khanh- warned* on Saturday that present methods of fighting the Communist Viet Cong are ineffective. “The Viet Cong,” he said, “are masters of subversive warfare, and we cannot beat them on this ground.” U.S. military spokesmen in Saigon refused immediate comment. Neither would they say whether Khanh was pressing for an attack on North Viet Nam or the supply routes over which Communist raiders are infiltrating South Viet Nam. Three Tots Netted | in Police Roundup . ERIE, Pa. (UPI) - Police rushed to a downtown clothing stoi^e yesterday and surrounded it when a burglar alarm went off. Surprised officers found three children inside the building. The youngsters, two brothers ahd a sister aged 3 to 7 years, were turned over to juvenile authori- ties. t r NOBODY LIKES TO GET PUSHED AROUND So get our Guaranteed Winter Service now. 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