Ml COLOR The Pontiac Press, Friday, December 12, 1969 FRIDAY R — Rerun C — Color FRIDAY MORNING (56) Misterogers 11:30 (2) C—Love of Life (4)C — Hollywood Squares (7) C—Anniversary Game (50) C — Kimba 11:45 (9) C — News 11:50 ( 56) R — Memo to Teachers FRIDAY AFTERNOON . Brenda de Banzie 3:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promise (7) C—One Life to Live (9) C—Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) R C—Corner Pyle (4) R C — Steve Allen — Pat Harrington Jr., Alan Sherman and Stu Gilliam guest. 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Some Heroic Spirits: The Roles Reversed” (7) C - TV College -‘‘Conclusion and Analysis” 7:00 (4) C — Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 7:55 (9) News ' 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (56) R — Americans From Africa 8:05 (9) R — Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R — Movie: “The Pirate” (1948) Judy Garland, Gene Kelly (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R — Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C — Bozo (56) Rhyme Time 9:10 (56) Creating Art 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (56) Sounds to Say 9:45 (56) Stepping Into Melody 9:55 (4) C — Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C —- It Takes Two (9) Canadian Schools (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) C — Sesame Street 10:25 (4) C — News 10:30 (2) C — Della Reese — Rich Little, Johnny Brown and Jennie Smith guest. (4) C — Concentration (7) C — The His and Her of It (9) Ontario Schools I (50) C — Herald of Truth 11:00 (4) C—Sale of the Century (50) C — Strange i Paradise (56) R —Ready, Set, Go 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C—Jeopardy (7) R C — Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Alvin 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C-He Said, She Said (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) R C — That Girl (9) C — Tempo 9 (50) C — Galloping Gourmet 12:35 (56) Friendly Giant 12:55 (4) C — News 1:00 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In (7) C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Lightning Strikes Twice” (1951) Ruth Roman, Richard Todd (50) R — Movie: “Deception” (1946) Bette Davis, Paul Henreid (56) R — Creating Art 1:20 (56) American History 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — You're Putting Me On (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal 1:45 (56) R—Sounds to Say 2:00 (2) C — Where the Heart Is (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C—Newlywed Game (56) R — Stepping Into Melody 2:25 (2) C-News 2:30 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (56) R—Washington Week in Review 3:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C—Another World (7) C—General Hospital (9) R—Candid Camera (56) Interview — How the aircraft industry has discovered a need for a new generation of jetliners and the design concepts are discussed. (62) R C — Movie: “Triple Deception” (British, 1957) Michael Craig, (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo (56) Sesame Street 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas ■— Guests include Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn., Enzo Stuarti, Cindy and Joey Adams and the Box-tops. (7) R C — Movie: “Backlash” (1956) Richard Widmark, Donna Reed (50) R — Little Rascals (62) 2 — Bugs, Cyrus and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Chesapeake Bay Country” (9) R C - Flipper (50) RC- Lost in Space (56) Misterogers 5:30 (9) RC - Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea (56) Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) C — Davey and Goliath FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News. Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Segovia Master Class (62) R — Qzzie and Harriet 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke — Rob helps an old radio comedy writer make a comeback. (50) R — Munsters — While shopping for a kite for Eddie, Herman is hit by a falling safe, and workmen find that he has amnesia. (56) Beyond the Earth — “The Red Shift,” which helps the scientist determine the distance and speed of a planet, is explained. (62) C — Robin Seymour — The Frost guests. 7:00 (2) C - Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C News — Reynolds, Smith (9) R — Movie: “No Time for Sergeants” ( 1 9 5 8 ) Peacetime Air Force attempts to indoctrinate a naive Georgia farm boy. Andy Griffith, Nick Adams (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New -American brothers and sisters visit the Inca Indians in Peru to see how these once-proud people are living today. 7:30 (2) C — Get Smart -Mad pharmacist (Vincent Price) threatens to “freak out” Washington, D.C. (4) C — High Chaparral — Decision by the military to send a bounty hunter after an Apache puts the Cannon Ranch in the path of a possible Indian uprising. (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (50) C — Beat the Clock (56) Accent — Traditional Christmas music is featured with the voice of the late Walter Schumann. (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — “South American Byways” 8:00 (2) C — Good Guys — Claudia loses her diamond ring and plunges the diner partnership into turmoil over how to spend the insurance money. (7) C — Brady Bunch — Marcia runs against Greg for student body president and the fight carries over into the Brady home. (50) R C — Hazel (56) CPT 8:30 (2) C - Hogan’s Heroes — Hogan sets up Col. Klink in the antique business. (4) C — Name of the Game — While posing as a longshoreman to investigate conditions on the waterfront, Dan becomes involved in a struggle between two brothers, each seeking to control the local union. John Ireland, William Conrad, Broderick Crawford and Gene Raymond guest-star. (7) C — Mr. Deeds Goes to Town —■ Longfellow thinks his people have become too computerized. The Pontiac Prats, Friday, December 12, 1969 so he campaigns to have them meet and greet each other. (50) C — To Tell the Truth (56) To Save Tomorrow — , A visit to residents of Wellmet House in Boston, half of whom are mentally ill adults and the others college students who live with the patients helping them prepare for reentry in normal society. (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00 (2) R C — Movie: “Paris When It Sizzles” (1964) Movie producer tries to get his screenwriter to complete a screenplay, but the writer frolics around Paris with his new secretary. Audrey Hepburn, William Holden (7) C — Here Come the Brides — The long-awaited fight between Jason and Stempel takes place when Stempel’s sister comes to Seattle. Katherine Crawford guest-stars. (9) C — What’s My Line? (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — NET Festival — Program examines Brazil’s rapidly changing music scene. (62) R — Movie: “Court-Martial of Major Keller” (British, 1963) A man tries to convince his superiors that one of their officers is incompetent. Laurence Payne, Susan Stephen. 9:30 (9) C — Our Great Outdoors 1 . 10:00 (4) C — Bracken’s World — Kevin’s wife tries to solve her marriage problems by getting a job at Century Pictures — but she’s fired. (7) C -— Durante-Lennons — Mike Douglas, Norm Crosby and the Stoney Mountain Cloggers guest. St. Louis is saluted. (9) C — Windsor Raceway (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) R — Forsyte Saga — Soames has Irene followed to gain evidence for a divorce. 10:30 (50) C — (Special) Boxing — George Chuvalo vs. Jerry Quarry in a heavyweight fight from Madison Square Garden. (62) R — Sea Hunt Don Adams and Barbara Feldon9 as agents Max and 99, are trapped in a giant pharmaceutical time^~ release capsule by a mad pharmacist on “Get Smart Friday at 7:30 p.m. 11:00 (2) (A) (7) (9) C News, Weather, Sports (62) C — (Debut) Real Estate Corner — Homes and real estate are shown in the Metropolitan De- ONE nm nR FRIDAY troit area. 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Dick Cavett subs. (7) C — Talk Show — Soprano Dorothy Kirsten guests. (9) R — Movie: “Run for the Sun” (1956) Girl reporter flies to remote Mexican fishing village in search of an American author and runs into a Nazi hideout. Richard Widmark, Jane Greer, Trevor Howard (50) C — Merv Griffin *— Scheduled guests are Ann Miller, Mort Sahl^JJichael Crawford and E 1 o i s e Laws. (62) R — Movie: “Bailout at 43,000” (1957) Air force pilot’s relief at not having to test a new safety device is outweighed by cow ard-guilt complex. Paul Kelly, John Payne 11:35 (2) R — Movies: 1. C - “Castle of Evil” (1966) Group of heirs gather for the “reading of the will” at a Caribbean castle. Scott Brady; 2. “A Bomb for a Dictator” (French, 1960) Revolutionists plan to eliminate a. dictator via an elaborate plan which backfires. Pierre Fresnay, Michel Auclair 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Movie: “Port Afrique” ( 1956 ) Adulterous wife’s past comes to light when husband investigates her death. Pier A n g e 1 i, Anthony Newley (9) Viewpoint 1:05 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “Legal Aid” 2:00(4) C — News, Weather 3:15 (7) C — Wonderful World of Sports 3:20 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 3:30 (2) C — News, Weather 3:35 (2) TV Chapel Arnold Wexler (William Conrad, left) locked in a struggle with his brother for control of a longshore-man9s union local, discusses his strategy with Biancht (Broderick Crawford), a longtime friend and support-er, on “The Name of the Game99 at 8:30 p.m. Friday on Channel 4. THE PONTIAC PRESS S VQL. 127 — NO. 265 ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, I960 ' UNIASSOCIATED7 PRESS,0NAL —56 PAGES 1(K AP Wirephoto HUNT FOR ANOTHER VICTIM — Los Angeles County deputies search a well on a ranch where “the Manson family” once lived, looking for the body of a man who disappeared after reportedly quarreling with its leader. They ended their two-day search for Donald O’Shea, a stunt man and one-time beer-hall bouncer, yesterday but did not reveal what the results were (related story, page A-2). State Legislature in High Gear on School Reform From Oar News Wires LANSING - With what Gotf. William 1 G. MiUiken described as the “eleventh and a half hour” at hand, the Michigan Legislature has shifted into high gear in its handling of his education-reform package. The House scheduled an all-day session for today and an almost unheard-of Friday-night session and Saturday session to work on the program. ★ ★ * Senate leaders took a major step last night when they took a test vote on the two constitutional amendments in the governor’s plan. Both plans, one to revamp the State Board of Education and the other to institute a statewide property tax for schools, lost by wide margins in the test votes. But leaders said before the vote they expected to lose them and took them only to get a reading of the situa--tion. 12 VOTES SHORT The state board proposal, creating a five-member board appointed by the governor with the advice and counsel of the. Senate, failed on a 14-20 Vote, 12 short of the two-thirds majority required to-pass a proposed c o n s t i t ut i o n a 1 amendment. Before the crucial vote, Sen. Garland Lane, D-Flint, tacked on an amendment that would prohibit members from having any active connection with a K-12 school district or college. The amendment passed, 24-8. ★ ★ ★ ft Only 13 senators voted for a revised version of Milliken’s proposed constitutional amendment for a statewide property tax. Twenty-two opposed it. The governor suggested a 16-mill, open-ended levy. The Senate amended that to a 12-mill tax that could not be increased without another constitutional amendment and vote of the people. ALTERNATE PLAN An alternate property tax plan — calling for a 20-mill tax and a $3,000 homestead exemption — was voted down 16-19. The plan, offered by Senate Minority Leader Sander Levin, D-Berkley, was scheduled to be voted on again next week, along with the other two proposed constitutional amendments. Observers feel there is a good chance for agreement on the school board measure at least, “I think next week when the state board issue comes up again in the Senate the votes will be there,” Milliken said. “And we have had steady progress in the House. By no means whatever am I discouraged.” ★ ★ ★ Meanwhile, in the House, action on a bill to raise the state’s cigarette tax from seven to 11 cents a pack and bring in as much as $45 million for education reform was delayed today. Getting off to a slow start on four education related measures, the House wrangled through most of the morning over a bill to appropriate $100,000 for neighborhood education centers aimed at helping high school dropouts resume some form of learning. * ★ ■ * The crucial House vote on the Parochiaid section of the school aid bill was not expected to come up until next* week. PAST AND PRESENT — President Nixon walks through a White House doorway yesterday with former President Lyndon B. Johnson after breakfasting together. Nixon accompanied Johnson to his car after their visit. Grant for Center From U S-OK'd by State Senate Tax-Reform Bill Passes in WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate has overwhelmingly passed its veto-threatened tax Teform bill, sending it to a conference committee where House members wait with their own quite different version. ★ ★ ★ The conference committee has a heavy chore in reconciling the bills, but leading members of both delegations say they A wintry weekend is predicted for Pontiac area residents even though winter won’t officially arrive until Dec. 21.* The tf.S. Weather Bureau’s day-by-day forecast predicts: TQDAY — Mostly cloudy, chance of snow flurries with the high in the 30s. Tonight generally fair and colder,, low 16 to 22. Winds westerly 12 to 20 miles per hour diminishing and becoming light and variable tonight. expect to come up with a compromise President Nixon can sign. The Senate, which ended almost a fortnight of debate by approving the bill 69-22 yesterday afternoon, sparked Nixon’s ire by providing a 15 per cent increase in Social Security benefits and a boost in personal income tax exemptions from $600 to $800. The House will makes no provision for TOMORROW — Increasing cloudiness. Little change in temperature. High in the 30s. SUNDAY — Mostly cloudy, chance of light snow. ★ ★ ★ Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight, 20 per cent tomorrow. Twenty-six was the low thermometer reading before 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. By 2 p.m. ° the mercury had climbed to 29. either matter, although that chamber is considering a separate Social Security proposal. $5 BILLION DIFFERENCE 'Opponents rallied vainly against the bill Thursday, charging its d i f f e r e n c e s between tax relief and revenue gain Related Story, Page A-5 amount to more than $5 billion and is fiscally irresponsible. It was this cost that Nixon cited when he said he will veto the bill if it’s unchanged. * * ★ But afteF the vote, Senate Finance Committee Chairman Russell B. Long of Louisiana, a conference committee member said: “I am confident we can get this bill into shape so the President will feel he can sign it, even though he may not agree with every little thing in a 600-page bill.” ★ ★ ★ His House counterpart, Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., also was confident a com- Wintry Weekend on Horizon Senate promise would result in reducing the cost to meet Nixon’s demands. However, it seems certain the 15 per cent Social Security benefit boost, and many other of the tax breaks will be retained either in the tax bill or in separate legislation. MSU Supports OU Autonomy LANSING - The Michigan State University Board of Trustees today supported in principle autonomy for Oakland University, now an MSU affiliate. The trustees unanimously passed a resolution stating “that autonomy for Oakland University is consistent and desirable for the best interest of higher education in Michigan.” ★ ★ ★ Trustees also voted to enter negotiations with the Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine (MCOM) Concerning possibilities of establishing the Pontiac College as an MSU affiliate. Negotiations may begin Thursday. MSU was singled out by the State Board of Education this fall as the institution to establish a state-supported college of osteopathic medicine. IDENTICAL ACTION URGED The resolution on OU autonomy continued that the process which will eventually mean independence for Oakland University should coincide with identical action by the board of regents of the. University of Michigan in respect to its Flint and Dearborn campuses. MSU trustees voted to invite the U-M regents to meet within 60 days to discuss satellite institutions, * * ★ Trustee Donald Stevens of Okemos said: “Should the U. of M. regents drag their feet after 60 days, we should reevaluate the proposal.” , Plymouth /Trustee Warden M.' Huff noted that 60 is not a branch of MSU as the University of Michigan branches at Dearborn and Flint are. “I am willing to give independence to them today,” he said. Oakland’s chancellor, Durward B. Varner, said he sensed that the trustees would go along with the university's request for independence from MSU. ; Following acceptance by\ tt\e MSU trustees, of OU’s independence, the proposal wguld have to receive approval of' the state board and the Legislature. Spreen's Post Reported Filled DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit News Reported today that Patrick V. Murphy, former chief of police in both Washington, D. C., and Syracuse, N.Y., will be the next police commissioner of Detroit. A dispatch from J. F. Ter Horst of the News’ Washington bureau said Murphy had resigned his job as director of public order and safety for the National Urban Institute to take the job. ★ * * “The fact was confirmed by colleagues of Murphy here,” Ter Horst said. Neither Gribbs nor Murphy was available for comment on the report. Earlier this week Johannes Spreen announced he would resign as Detroit police commissioner effective Jan. 6 when Mayor-elect Roman Gribbs succeeds Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh. BROOKLYN NATIVE Murphy, a 49-year-old native of Brooklyn, N. Y., who has held his pre» ent post since last March 26, was reportedly sought by Cavanagh for the $30,000-a-year Detroit job before he hired Spreen 16 months ago. Murphy began his career in 1945 as patrolman on the New York City Police Department. rnmmmmmmmmmmmmwtmMm In Today's Press | Voting. Rights House passes substitute to I 1965 law - PAGE A-4. Black Panthers Beleaguered party looks to f self-exiled leader — PAGE A-8. . Airports Controversy swirls in county I - PAGE A-7. Area News ,,................A-3 gj Astrology D-2 § Bridge............ ..D-2 I Crossword Puzzle ....D-ll | Comics ...............D-2 I Editorials .......‘...A-4 1 High School .....B-l, B-2 § Markets .............C-15 § Obituaries ......... C-10 1 Sports ........... C-1—C4 I Theaters C4, C-7 j* TV and Ra^io Programs D-ll 1 Vietnam War News .....A-2 1 Wilson, Earl ........ C-7 I Women’s Pages _______ B-3—B*8 2 Yule Cartoon ____.. .D-l 1 . " - m m m, mmmmmmt w SPRUCED UP—David Mardis, 12, of 70 E. Yale wonders the Pontiac Boys Club treated to free haircuts and a visit from just how close a trim barber J. B. Gibbs of The Pontiac Mall Santa Claus yesterday at The Mall. The trip was sponsored by Barber Shop is giving him. David was among 40 members of the Pontiac Jayoees and The Pontiac Mali Barber Shop. A bill allowing the Pontiac Board of Education to accept a $1.1-million federal grant toward construction of its $5.5-million Human Resource Center has passed the Michigan Senate. The measure,* which now returns to the House for concurrence in amendments, is aimed especially at Pontiac, said Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, R-Water ford Township. Sen. Anthony Stamm, R-Kalamazoo, opposed the bill which passed, 26-9, because he said the Senate should be “a little hesitant’* about authorizing school districts to-use their own Binds for items other than educating pupils. Legislation: became Accessary when the state attorney general ruled against the legality of such a grant going directly to a school district. The opinion was requested by legal counsel fpr the Chicago regional office of the- Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), which fs making the grant. Rep. Arthur J. Law, D-Pontiac, sponsor of the bill in the House, has said he doesn’t foresee any problem with the bill passing. The HUD grant, the first that has been authorized Under the Neighborhood Development Program for construction of dual-use facilities for both community and school, is to help build a complex “knitting together the lifeblood of the city,” according to designers. ‘‘It will bring together the black and White, children and adults, residential and downtown areas, public facilities and the school,” said David Lewis of Urban Design Associates of Pittsburgh who designed the complex to house 1,800 students. 'Messiah' Set for Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) - A 80-member choir will perform a half-hour version of Handel's ‘/Messiah” in a Sunday White House worship service. , ■ The 250 invited guests will include members of Congress and their families, plus gome special guests of President Nixon and his family. Days Till Christmas A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1969 Philippines .End Viet Commitment SAIGON (UPI) - The Philippines’ 1,350-man commitment to the Vietnam war packed up and left for home today, the first Allied military contingent to withdraw completely. From it ceremony at their Tey Ninh base camp 58 miles northwest of Saigon, the Filipinos flew to Saigon and boarded ships for the trip home after three years and three months in the war zone. * * * Manila decided to pull out the group — noncombatant engineers, pacification workers and farmers — as an economy move after Sen. J. William Fulbrigbt, D-Artc., alleged that the United States had Moratorium Leaders Grope for New Antiwar Strategy WASHINGTON (AP>—'The Vietnam Moratorium Committee, claiming to have made the war "again the No. 1 issue in the country,’’ is groping for a Hepatitis Cases at Groves Eyed Oakland County health officials, are today seeking common links between 10 cases of hepatitis which have infected students at Birmingham’s Groves High School since Nov. 4. In Birmingham the number of cases of the liver ailment has risen from seven in 1968 to 18 this year, and the countywide total is up Bom 184, to 288. The increase has been labeled "significant” as opposed to “of epidemic proportions.” Investigators are checking the Groves victims, aged 15 to 19, to learn if they attended rock festivals, which Mrs. Donna Cavenee, public health nursing supervisor for the department, says are often a cause of the disease because of unsanitary conditions. "Drugs, of course, hre always a question,’’ she said. “Some have admitted their friends take drugs. Others said they had shared a needle with someone, and others said this was not a possibility with them.” Hepatitis causes liver inflammation, Jaundice, fever, nausea and stomach discomfort. new strategy after the October and November demonstrations that brought hundreds of thousands of Americans into the streets to seek “peace now.” December antiwar plans include widespread but low-key, local-oriented activities leading up to a nationwide Christmas Eve peace vigil. * * * The December . antiwar events represent a decided drop in protest activity, due both to recognition that i,t’s tough to compete with Christmas and the realization that the Nov. 15 march on Washington would be almost impossible to top. AAA* “We are undertaking a complete reevaluation of the direction we want to go,” said David Mixner, 24, a Moratorium coordinator. “We’re considering everything from nonviolent civil disobedience to congressional elections. ‘WAR IS NO. 1 ISSUE’ “Since we started in September, the war again is the No. 1 issue in the country,” he said. “We have already proved that these people are against it. “The country is never going to return to its days of enthusiasm for this war,” he vowed. * A A • The shift from centralized to local activities also represents the Moratorium’s desire to build a grass-roots opposition to the war translatable into power at the paid $45 million to keep them in Vietnam. A total of 2,200 Filipino troops arrived in Vietnam in September 1966. Some were withdrawn earlier. Ten Filipinos were killed and 34 wounded during their tour. MANY IMPROVEMENTS A press release said the Filipino troops had built 116 miles of roads, 11 bridges, 14 schools, 10 demonstration farms, two model communities and 54 refugee centers in Tay Ninh province, on the Cambodian border. Up the border from their base camp, U.S. troops yesterday and early today pounced on North Vietnamese gunners firing on American helicopters and reported killing 72 of them. ★ ★ ★ The GIs suffered no losses in the fighting in Phuoc.Long province 85 miles northeast of Saigon, headquarters said. Vietcong commandos attacked a 120-foot concrete bridge on Saigon’s main highway link with the southern tip of Vietnam during the night and destroyed thfe span. SPAN A SHAMBLES The explosions last night left the span, 85 miles southwest of Saigon a shambles, disrupting traffic from the southern Mekong Delta, the nation’s ricebowl, to markets in the capital. Military spokesmen said three government troops assigned to guard the bridge were wounded and one civilian was tolled in the attack. The bridge is eight miles south of Can Tho, the delta’s biggest city. * ★ ★ ★ The commandos escaped without apparent losses. Engineers this ihoming began repairing the structure, expected to take several weeks. Elsewhere on the battlefield, light and scattered fighting Thursday left 166 Vietcong and North' Vietnamese dead against Allied losses of 15 government troops tolled and 50 wounded. * * * One American, was killed and two were wounded in a brief clash 30 miles east of Saigon — the only. U.S. casualties reported from yesterday. The American unit found three guerrilla bodies. AP Wlrtphoto MY LAI REPORT—Herbert Carter, only casualty in Charlie Company the day of the My Lai massacre, goes over newspapers in his hotel room in Houston, Tex., -yesterday where, he has lived since his discharge from tile Army. Carter was a “tunnel rat” with the company and said he did not shoot any civilians. He was wounded when he stepped on a mine. 24 Men Probed on My Lai; Army Likely to Charge Most Birmingham Area / ■ 'T-fr Tis Season for Schools' Yule Concerts BIRMINGHAM — The school district’s annual holiday vocal* and instrumental music programs are under way throughout the district. All programs are free and open to the public. * * * Most of the programs will feature a variety of groups as well as solos and duets with orchestras or glee clubs. A * * The music Will be a potpourri of sacred and secular songs and cards from around the world. Traditional and contemporary works will be offered. Sr A ' A The schedule for the remainder of the holiday performances: Fr a n k 1 i n Elementary, 7:30 p.m. and Beverly Elementary, 8 pm.; Tuesday, Covington Junior High, vocal, 8 p,m., Walnut Lake School, 7:30 p.m., Groves High School, 8 . p.m., Meadow Lake, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday, West Maple junior high, 8 p.m.; arid Westchester School 7:30 p.m.; Berkshire Elementary, 8 p.m.* Seaholm High School, 8 p.m., Pembroke School, 7:30 p.m. and Adams, 7:30 p.m. A A Sr Other performances are scheduled on Thursday at Baldwin, 7:30 p.m., Evergreen, 7:30 p,m. Bamum, vocal at 8 p,m., Derby, 8 p.m. and Covington Junior High, instrumental at 8 p.m. Violent Storm H its West Coast WASHINGTON (AP) — Army sources say they expect charges to be filed against most of {he 24 soldiers and former soldiers under investigation in the alleged . massacre of Vietnamese civilians at My Lai. They estimated the probe will not be completed for about four months because of the widespread hunt for evidence. Interrogations resisted in more leads that have to be followed up, they explained. But (hi the basis of what has been By United Press International A violent storm over the Pacific sent 100-mile-an-bour. winds, rain, high tides arid deep snow against Oregon, Washington and northern California again today. A crewman from the French freighter Michigan fell overboard about 35 miles northwest of Newport, Ore., yesterday, and other crewmen had to abandon rescue attempts because of high seas even though they could see the man’s body 20 yards Bom the ship. Two persons were missing in a light plane on a flight from Eugene, Ore. Search planes could not take to the air ^yesterday because of the storm, but hoped to begin a search today. * ★ * The storm that lashed the Eastern Coast abated today, although snow flur-• ries and rain continued in the Northeast. Minor flooding was reported’in parts of New England, and hurricane harbor barrier gates were closed at New Bedford, Mass., and Stamford, Conn. Put- nam, Conn., had over two Inches of rain yesterday, and Boston had more than an inch of rain. 110 M.PJI. WINDS Wind guests of nearly 80 miles an hour buffeted Eastern Massachusetts. Gusts of nearly 110 miles an hour lashed Cape Blanco, Ore., where more than five* inches of rain had fallen by early today. Related Storyf Page A-10 developed so far, the sources said there probably will be charges filed against a majority of nine soldiers and 15 former soldiers, all onetime members of Company C, 1st Battalion, 11th Infantry Brigade. A A A First Lt. William L. Calley Jr., a platoon commander in Company C, is awaiting court-martial at Ft. Benning Ga., on charges ot pre of at least, 109 Vietnan and children. A decision i^ imminent on whether to court-martial one of Calley’s squad leaders in Vietnam, S. Sgt. David Mitchell, who has been accused of assault with intent to kill 30 Vietnamese non-combatants. Mitchell says he is innocent. In another development Thursday, the American Civil Liberties Union said the nationwide publicity about My Lai makes it impossible for Calley to get a fair trial. #' # The Army has refused to identify the 24 other men whose actions the day of Richard W. Haines, director of ad- * missions for Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., will address a Junior-Senior Parents meeting at Detroit Country Day School Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. The public is invited. * * + Haines, a 1960 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Lafayette, will discuss the realjty of college admission procedures, and the numerous problems faced by parents and students in selecting the appropriate college or university. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP —‘A group of Wayne State University students will present a Chancel Drama on Sunday at 8 p.m. at St. Andrew Lutheran Church, 6255 Telegraph, entitled, Gold, Frankincense, Christmas tree Ornaments, and Myrrh. * * A Following the presentation of the The Weather Restraining Order Sought on Loon Lake Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly cloudy, chance of snow flurries fills forenoon becoming partly cloudy. High in the 30s. Tonight generally fair and colder, low 16 to 22. Saturday: increasing'cloudiness. Little change in temperature; high' in the 30s. Sunday outlook: mostly cloudy, chance of light snow. Winds westerly 12 to 20 miles per hour diminishing and becoming light variable tonight. Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight, 20 per cent Saturday. Phoenix M 41 St. Louis 38 23 Tamos 70 55 S. Lake City 42 34 San Diego «5 45 - 40 II Washington S> 37 A suit seeking a restraining order to prevent construction of proposed apartments on Loon Lake in Waterford Township was filed today in Oakland County Circuit Court.: Named as defendants were: Township board member Herbert C. Cooley, Ted McCullough Inc., township planning commissioner James Clarkson, Paul Naz, Waterford Township, the township planning commission and realtor Leslie H. Hudson, who sold a land contract to five of the defendants. A .A it The stiit, filed by Attorney Seymour Beitner of 2978 Shawnee, Waterford Township accuses township officials of a conflict of interest in rezoning of the land for apartments. Hie suit also alleges that an incorrect map of the land up for rezoning was published in a legal ad and that a rezoning application before the township planning commission didn’t show the names of all persons who had interest in the land. ' . t ■ REZONED FOR APARTMENTS The township'board rezoned land Oct 6 from single-family to permit con- struction of 126 apartment units on 9.2 acres and 22 homes on adjacent land. It had been reported that: • Township board member and Pontiac police Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley was one of the recorded owners of 9.2 acres of lakeside land when he and the board voted to re zone it. (Cooley has contended his name appeared through an error.) ★ * * • Township board member and realtor Ted McCullough Jr. was also a recorded owner, but was absent at the voting. • Planning commissioner James Clarkson, president ol First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland, ’ became a recorded owner a week after the commission recommended the rezoning. He abstained Bon) d iscussion and votihg on the issue* *, i, * l • Planning* commissioner Dr. John Naz voted for. the rezoning recommendation a week before His brother, Paul, became a recorded owner along with the others and businessman Cyrus Lockhart. » Lockhart is president of Pontiac Farm & industrial Tractor, 825 S. Woodward. CHARGED WITH WIFE’S DEATH - University of Michigan student James Murphy, 21, heads for District Court to be arraigned on an open charge of murder. He was formally charged yesterday in the death of his wife, Gloria, 19, his childhood sweetheart. Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny said the couple had had “family problems.” U.S. Crime Rate Shown Leveling WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s soaring crime rate leveled off during the first nine months of 1969, but armed robbers became a much greater menace on city streets; FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover reported today. ;s# A ★ * Hoover said the ,over-all crime rate rose 11 per cent during the period — 8 per cent , less than the increase during the corresponding months a year ago, But, in releasing the quarterly uniform crime reports, he called attention to the 15 per cent jump in robberies, particularly an 18 per cent hike in armed holdups. ★ * 'A Hoover said street robbery made up more than half of all robbery offenses and increased 18 per cent, while residential holdups climbed 22 per cent during the period. * f * The report came shortly after Hoover released a statement in which he predicted “The soaring crime rate in the 1970s can be contained.” Cult Leader Charged in 7 Deaths NATIONAL WEATHER — Snow and snow flurries are forecast for an areli from the Great Lakes to the Appalachians. Rain is likely over the north and central Pacific Coast with the rain changing to snow inland to the northern Rockies. Generally sunny and dry weather is in store for most of the rest of the nation. LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Charles Manson, a tiny, bearded man with shoulder-length hair, was formally charged in the seven Tate-LaBianca murders yesterday as authorities investigated links bet«een~the “Manson Family” and other slayings. , Manson, 35, the accused master of a knife-wielding hippie cult, delayed until Dec. 22 a plea to seven counts of murder and ohe of conspiracy in the August fillings. . V,-* — Spectators in the jammed courtroom stood on chairs for a better view as the 110-pourid Manson was led in by three officers. He spoke out in a clear and resonant Voice when asked if he understood his constitutional rights. Manson, clad, in a filthy fringed buckskin outfit and moccasins, told Superior Court Judge William B. Keene that'he did not have the money to hire a lawyer, and the court appointed a county public defender to represent him, at least temporarily. Prominent attorneys are known to have offered their services free, and it was expected Manson would select one or more of them. , /■ '■*■ • Manson appeared calm, almost bored, during the 15-minute arraignment. As he was led out he smiled broadly at a dark-haired girl photographer. In view of a court order forbidding public officials to comment on any evidence in the case before tile trial, authorities will not elaborate on their investigation into possible links between Manson Family and several other Senseless murders in the Los Angeles area. . , . - A A A al. ^?owe.ver’ ®^t, EveHe J. Younger told a news conference shortly before the hearing an investigation of the role played by Manson and the five other defendants in the seven slayings was being pursued. He refused to elaborate. f m % Patrolman, Killed in Crash, to Have Full Police Funeral TROY — A full police funeral will be given to Patrolman Charles E. Smetana, the first policeman \in the city’s history to die in the line of duty. ■' Smetana, 33, of 17S6 Castleton died early yesterday morning after he lost control of his patrol car and smashed into an abutment at Big Beaver and 1-75, within sight of the police station. * ★ ★ He was answering’an accident call at 2:30 a.m. when his car apparently hit ice and skidded into PATROLMAN SMETANA the bridge abutment, according to police Capt. Robert Mortenson. . Smetana \ was taken to'William Beaumont Hospital, Roybl. Oak, where he died at 8:30 a.m. ' MARINE VETERAN He was a veteran of the U.S. Marines, served on the Detroit police force for three yean and had been on the Troy force since Oct. 1966. He would have graduated from Oakland Community College, Auburn Hills campus, next Thursday. He had been taking courses M police science for three years. * * ★ Smetana also was a member of the Troy Police skin diving team and had a private pilot’s license. “He was always interested in anything the police force did,” said one patrolman, “he made it his life.” SURVIVORS Surviving are his wife, Josie; two children, Angela 12, and Charles E. Jr. 9; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smetana of Monroe; and a sister, Mrs. Robert Bentley of Livonia. Funeral service will be 1 p.m. Monday at First Baptist Church, Troy, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy, by the Price Funeral Home, Troy. His body may be viewed after 1:30 p.m. tomorrow. 26 Junior Misses Seek Regional Nod HOLLY — Twenty-six local winners from Wayne, Oakland and Macomb counties will converge this weekend at Holly High School for the regional finals of the annual state Junior Miss pageant. Judges will select 12 winners to go on to the finals in Pontiac. ★ ★ ★ Hie Holly and Davisburg Jaycees are hosting the activities, which mil begin 4 p.m. today and continue through 10:30 p.m. tomorrow when the regional winners will be named. A pageant beginning at 7 p.m. tomorrow will highlight the two-day festivities. ’ HOST ASSIGNMENTS Contestants will be assigned to their host families today from 4 to 6 p.m. A meal will be provided for chaperones and contestants. Contestants, parents, sponsors and host families will meet in the high school student center for a question-and-answer session at 7 p.m. Interviews and rehearsals for the pageant will follow. ★ ★ ★ Pageant activities will include contestant introductions, talent competition, poise and appearance competition and presentations of Junior Miss charms to contestants by Mason Bell, a representative of Chevrolet Division of General Motors, the national sponsoring organization for the Junior Miss Pageant. Roger Horton, publicity chairman, explained the judges will be looking for the “all-around type girl. This is definitely not a beauty pageant,” he added. “Poise, personality and intelligence will be the principal factors considered in the judging.” ★ ★ it MTs. Richard Cronk, 5426 Holly, will be pageant choreographer. Bloomfield Hills to Open Bids on Water-Line Bonds BLOOMFIELD HILLS — Hie opening of bids on bonds for the city’s $3.4-million water line system will be Tuesday, according to City Manager Robert Stadler. Hie city recently let construction bids for file project to Gianetti Bros, of Utica. The contract is good for 90 days. ♦ Mt 1 %s Stadler cautioned there will be no guarantee that bonds will be let on Tuesday. it ★ He noted that municipalities and school districts have been having considerable difficulty in selling bonds in recent months due to the current 6 per cent interest limitation imposed by the approved a bill lifting the 6 per cent limltiation. ■ ★ ★ * ■1550 Union Lake Road, Union Lake 363*6286 * OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESSr~FilIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1969 A—S Fate of Tax Reform Lies in Hands of 14 Men WASHINGTON (AP) — Four-tee’s, recommendations, JM teen men, most of them fiscal they go to the White House the conservatives, all over SO and final design of the measure before among: themselves chairman only one not a congressional veteran make up the committee .charged with settling the differences between the House and Senate tax reform bills. rests alone with the 14 conferees —seven from each house. * > • in the ^conference committee, leach member does not have an Although each chamber must individual vote; rather con-approve the conference commit- ferees from each chamber vote casts one vote representing * experts CUTBACKS consensus. • i „ ... . . And unlike the original bills1 Known f^ Ws defens which were voted upon after ^PieUon allowance facing lengthy debate by the House 5*^“ <“ th« « LonS last summer and the Senate b„uilt a Senate P°"f ba»\«S Thursday, the conference com-£iends> av?” and lnfluenJ*: mittee’s recommendations can- H® e^cts the conference will not be amended on the floor. *?ack ,shaiS on ravenuf- APPROVALUKELY dr^ng tax biU amendments and produce a bill President Its report could be rejected, of Nixon will sign, course; but in its rash to com- Mills is chairman of M i a venvrr . ! plete action on the measure be- House Ways and Means Com- LANSING UPi — Michigan s State Prison of Southern Mich- fore Christmas if possible, Con- mittee and the acknowledged oldest prisoner in terms ilgan to the Ionia State Prison gress is not likeiy to throw out leading expert in Congress on or years spent behind bars has in 1916 and has been there since. , the conference committee’s tax matters. C0!?Pr?.mise\ . . Mills, 60, has indicated he will Longtime Con Near Parole been given a compassionate commutation of sentence by Gov. William Milliken. Castra Nova, 76, was sentenced to a life term for first degree murder from Detroit Feb. 16,1914, for the fatal shooting of a Detroit police officer. He was 21 years old at the time. 'He has served 55 years, going on 56,” said Frank Buchke, parole board chairman. is without a doubt the oldest prisoner in Michigan in terms of yebrs spent in confinement.” and the Democratic whip but lost a re- prised his colleagues and shat-| With Williams retiring, Ben-i for Senate and Housejelectlon bid this year. tered precedent by refusing toj nett becomes No. 1 Republican! serve on the conference com-'on the finance committee, and I mittee. {would be in line for the chair- Williams, retiring in 1970 after jmanship if the GOp should cap-r 22-year Senate career, acidlyjture^ Senate control in'the 1970 told the fjenate he Was so op- elections, posed to the provisions of' the) Other senators on the confer-bill approved Thursday he could ence committee are Albert1 not be a,,conferee. Sen. Jack Gore, D-Tenn., author of the1 Miller, R-Iowa, was named to provision increasing personal replace Williams. income exemptions from $600 to m the committee is $800; Herman E. Talmadge, D-Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, 71, Ga.; Clinton P. Anderson, D-Salt Lake City businessman, N.M.; and Carl T. Curtis, R-f conservative in outlook and Neb. serving his fourth term in the House members, besides Mills Senate. Republican Bennett and Byrnes, are Reps. Hale once was president of the Na- Boggs, D-La.; James B. Utt, R-tional Association of Manufac-1 Calif.; Jackson E. Betts, R-turers. ; Ohio, and A1 Ullman, D-Ore> Heading delegations to the try to bring the biU back as conference committee, which closely as possible to the dimen. SIMMS OPEN I to Mam DAILY TIL CHRISTMAS' pm] must reconcile the more than sions the House gave it, avoid-100 substantive differences be-iing the extra loss of revenue in tween House and Senate ver-the Senate version, sions of the tax bill, are Sen.1 chief Republican member of ; . Russell B. Long, D-La., and the House delegation, Rep. John Nova has been ailing and wilLRep. Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark. w. Byrnes, R-Wis., 56, has sup- i"e released as soon as the Ma- Long, 51, chairman of the Sen- ported Mills at every juncture The commutation of sentence comb County Department of! ate finance Committee and on the current bill, by the governor was made upon Social Welfare can find a nurs-jhead of a Louisiana political dy- rffi isfo to sfrvf unanimous recommendation of tog home in the county able to nasty that began with his assas- _ . . . .. „ the State Parole Board. The care for him. He has a sister a sinated father, Huey Long, has Sen ^oh" $ Williams, the 66- board said he had an excellent other relatives living in the worked at the levers of Senate year'o d Delaware “ePublican prison record. | Roseville area of the county power for more than 20 years, j” “ Nova was transferred from I who will be able to visit him. I He served one term as Senate has the reputation watchdog of the Senate, sur-| The Carstairs Crowd The light touch is their thihg. FIFTH $198 Codti #150 PINT $152 CMkt (tin Vi GAL $9.23 Garstairs Whiskey /1^ (\ Join the CkretairsOowd. Tool Firm Names Operations Exec The promotion of William McCorkle to director of operations of Tool Sales Co., was need by Morton L. Feldman, chairman of the board. McCorkle of 122 Abington, Troy, has been with Tool Sales since May 1966. He had been assistant to the president. Prior McCORKLE to his affiliation with Tool Sales, he had held sales and administrative positions with industrial , distributing and electrical products firms. ★ ★ * Tool Sales Co. is a distributor of a wide assortment of, production tools, abrasives, pneumatic tools and equipment. Headquarters are at 1401 Axtel, I Troy. Save up to % at SIMMS on Famous • DIAMONDS • WEDDING RINGS • BIRTHST0NES • WATCHES • WATCH BANDS Absolutely true—you con buy a quality jewelry gift at up to VSf off the regular selling price. And it’s FULLY GUARANTEED by Simms. You Can ojjo use our layaway — it's FREE. 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Saginaw St. Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street , RICHARD M. FITZGERALD Finance Officer Pontiac, Michigan 48056 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1969 JOHN A. RILeV Advertising Director G. MARSHALL JORDAN ‘Recall’ Bucks Secrecy A drive to recall four members of the Pontiac school board was initiated Sept. 5, and some 3,700 petitionary signatures have been turned in to the schools’ business office. But the number of signatures required to validate the recall vote ; shrouded in mystery. Business Manager Vernon J. Schiller said that signatures of 25 per cent of the school district residents who uvoted in the last gubernatorial election were necessary. But, he added, the figure was not yet compiled. Since the election was held a ye& ago, it would seem that ample time had elapsed to come up with an answer,, According to the City Clerk, 4,482 recall signatures for the City of Pontiac alone would be required, to say nothing of parts of townships in the school district. ★ ★ ★ But the proponents of the recall movement appear philosophical. When, they say, school authorities eventually divulge the number of signatures required, they’ll reactivate the petition drive and obtain them. 'Sit Up And Beg—Until Next Ju|y!' Ralph de Toledano Advent of Colds Is Chilling President Is a Political Wizard ‘Few Taxpayers Attend Waterford Board Meet’ A .f9.fi million civic center complex, including police station, circiiit court building and auditorium, was on the Waterford Townsjiip .Board’s Monday night agenda, ythere were all the concerned citizens who are going to watch over our tax dollars? You cannot convince Township officials that taxpayers are concerned when only a dozen people are in the audience. ★ ★ ★ ' The Board assured us this was strictly future planning. Oakland County said as. much before building a new auditorium. The Board states they must plan for the future. The people of Waterford must plan their future as well. The architect fees alone would be a step in solving our school problems. W. G. BUNCE 2100 FORTRESS, DRAYTON PLAINS Two Letters Discuss Waterford Schools I’m beginning to think that the people of Waterford Township just don’t care about our education. When we go on half days next semester we’ll have loads of homework. All the teachers will have time to do is explain the wOrk, with no class time to do it in. ★ ★ * I,also can see the taxpayers* point of view: They feel they have been taxed enough, which they have. Why don’t they change the school finance from property ,tax to personal income tax? People talk about how we’re going to be running this country in the future: how do they expect us to run it right if we don’t have the proper education? CAROL BRAMAN SIXTH GRADE STUDENT LOTUS LAKE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL I am a schoolteacher—a professional. If I fail with a child, it is more serious than if a worker in a Pontiac plant Wrecked an automobile part, The winter season holds numerous attractions for all, but the so-called common cold is not one of them. Well-named, it is as common as politicians’ promises, and is now poised for its annual attack with accompanying phenomena: sniffles, coughs, sneezes, chills, fevers and miscellaneous other irritants. Cold statistics on the seasonal onslaught of colds indicate that as many as 25 million Americans are cold-ridden on any given day before the current wave of misery runs its course in late winter. ★ ★ ★ Moreover, it is estimated that for 75 per cent of the U.S. population one cold per year is par for the curse, but an unlucky 25 per cent may suffer through four or more of them. Despite the amazing progress of medical science, researchers have coughed up little to combat respira- tory infections, which include colds, the leading cause of work absences across the land. One of the chief obstacles in their path is the fact that there are more than 150 strains of nose-based viruses; the kind most common in colds. Which, from the standpoint of numerical odds, is nothing to be sneezed at. ★ ★ ★ A cold usually lingers from three to ten days, with an average of about seven dhys. Since most cold panaceas treat symptoms not causes, this time element has been capsuled into a bromide which holds that if you treat a cold, it will last a week. If you don’t, it will last seven days. ★ ★ ★ So-o-o, folks, if the “bug” hasn’t yet nipped you, keep your fingers crossed, as we are keeping ours, and hope that it will bypass you. Achoo! WASHINGTON—In the minutes after President Nixon’s Nov. 3 Vietnam speech, William Lawrence of the American Broadeasting Co. accused the chief executive of being a bad politician. This was a surprising performance for a correspondent who had been one of the best and fairest of the New York Times before he traded the printed word* for the electronic message. Lawrence was proved* completely wrong within hours. Today we know that Mr. Nixon’s speech raised his Gallup poll rating to 67 per cent. riDe TOLEDANO Agqin, when the President unleashed Spiro Agnew, the pundits'on TV, radio, and the Eastern editorial pages again predicted that the ; White House had badly erred. J Where, they asked, was Mr. Nixon’s much vaunted political sagacity? UNCANNY ABILITY The answer, of course, is where it always was. For with' few exceptions, the President has had an uncanny ability to* sense the mood of the country. The returns are coming in from what the “effete snobs” of AgneW’s rhetoric call the “hinterland” or the “boon-docks” — and what others prefer to call the heartland of America. ★ ★ ★ They are also coming in from the South, terra In- Bruce Biossat Epidemic of Distrust Is Coursing U.S. WASHINGTON (NEA)-In ' America a worsening epidemic of distrust may do grave harm to the democratic process. R e-sponsibility for spreading the disease lies at many I doors. The conta-n h a s I reached the BIOSSAT point where many Americans no longer try seriously to determine when they are hearing at least approximate truths and when they are not. They simply retire to the fragile lomfort of believing that noth-. tg is to be believed. It is not just a matter of juung vs. old, establishment vs. antiestablishment, militant vs. moderate, government vs. press. The wounds of distrust cut deep even within these opposing categories of society. The immense growth of government in an era of social ferment, technological revolution, knowledge explosion and frequent war is a major factor, Men in political power are , understandably self -protec- / tive. Wars have matte It ' easier for them, since they can hide behind the shield of y security.” The AMOciated Fml I) Tha Plntia. ______ | canter ter 60c a woafc; la Oakland, Gmom, ------------___ Macomb. Lapaar and WadiMne Counties It Is $24.00 a year; aba-srfania la Michigan and oil oth.r places *- **- **-“ d States $36.00 a year. Member aFAK. War’s effect has been deeper than that. Somewhere early in our history, U.S. politicians concluded that Americans cannot absorb unpleasant truths but like to hear only a constant warbling of optimistic notes. Inasmuch as war i s inescapably ugly, brutal and chaotic, U-S- leaders have for more than four decades been cushioning that reality. ★ ★ ★ Vietnam, “television’s first "war," has by its living-room presence and vivid immediacy ripped away a part — but only a part — of that cushion. The reality, though still barely glimpsed, has had shock effect. A leader’s soothing words do not reassure, as they might have done in 1918 or 1944. MORE PRONE TO ERROR . By its very immensity, government has compounded; toe problem of trust. A huge bureaucracy is more prone to error'than a small one. Yet its size and complexity make it much easier to bury mistakes in little corners where even cabinet heads and presidents do not discover toefo. ' / / 1 ■ . Hr, ‘/A y jjh, Government's -growth has come, too, at a time when many of its tasks — geared to the scientific and technological Revolution occurring outside — have become harder and harder for the ordinary citizen to fathom. He is' almost wholly dependent on the translations to layman’s language given him by . spokesmen for toe experts operating “inSide.” Even outside experts seldom know enough. With no real check, the citizen’s trust is shaken. ; Today’s incredible social ferment — racial, student, lower middle class white — heightens further the distrust of government. ★ * ★ Amer icans, historically, have not often treated their leaders with high regard. Now they are throwing the whole process o f representative government open to question. Impatience, an old* American trait, has been fanned furiously, again' by the immediacy and high visibility television has given so many of the nation’s difficulties and conflicts. SEEMS IMMOVABLE Government seems the immovable glacier, and the mood of many is to melt it with flamethrowers. There is still much vital truth around us, some easy at hand, some needing diligent search. If government,, press and people do not soon put their sights on it, then the distrust all three have spurred could engulf fids society . in a firestorm of self-destruction. Verbal Orchids Mrs. Bonnie Hyde of 31 FifidiS; 85th birthday. Mrs. Joshua Marcum of Union Lake; 102nd birthday. Mrs. Jessie J. Friday of.Clarkston; 86th birthday. . Mrs. Anna Grant of Milford; - 94th birthday. Mrs, Mary Barker of 591 Kenilworth; 88th birthday. Mrs. George Drayton of Wixom; 84th birthday. Arthur Hoppe U.S. Can Help Others Bridge the Garbage Gap With the American land mass in danger of vanishing beneath an ever-growing mound of garbage, scientists have been working around the clock to meet the threat head-on. At long last, it can now be reported, a brilliant technological breakthrough offers new hope of stemming the tide of swill. ★ £ ★ The development is the work of a research team at the West Newton Institute of - Technology, headed by Dr. Russell Zimmer-rpan. It employs a freeze-dry technique similar to that now used to condense coffee and tea. ’ In laboratory experiments, Dr. Zim-HOPPE merman- was able to reduce 1,3 metric tons of garbage to a 16-ounce jar of shimmering crystals. He calls the resultant product, logically enough, “Instant Garbage:** GREAT POSSIBILITIES At first glance, the demand tor Instant Garbage would appear minimal. But .a two-year study by toe Passaic Center for Peace & War Research forsees “unlimited possibilities in tan ever-expanding world market.” As the center’s report points out, “Americans today, enjoy the highest per capita rate of garbage production (3,285 pounds annually) of any nation on earth. \ “Garbage,” toe report states flatly, “is by far and away the No. 1 product of our free enterprise system. It must be shared with toe less fortunate abroad. "In' country after country, we find a direct and unvarying correlation between the standard of living and the amount of garbage available — the less garbage, the lower the standard of living. From these statistics, it is obvious that only by increasing garbage production can the underprivileged nations ever hope to reach the economic takeoff point. MILITARY USES One 16-ounce jar of Instant Garbage, when mixed with water, the report notes, would supply the average Asian or African -peasant with enough top-quality American garbage to last hfe8 atyeur. />.,•/ / While (the report does not go into the military uses of Instant Garbage, it is known the Pentagon has the matter under study. Dropped in the enemy’s rivers and streams, Instant Garbage would .create instant pollution. Scattered on the enemy’stood area prior to a rainfall, the crystals might . well undermine his will to resist. ' JTS , * A. Experts have warned, however, that at present the U.S. licks the garbage capacity for both military and peaceful uses. They estimate production would have to double before America could hope to cover the entire planet in even a minimtQn blanket of garbage. But most observes feel that given American know-how and the ingrained American determination to scatter garbage, this is a feasible goal to include in toe American dream of making the world more like America. cognita to toe masterminds on Madison Avenue who control the electroniqmedia. | * ’ -!« It should be pointed out that Agnew has f reached otters besides toe ISoutherners and the Midwestfrners. This has already bfeeq attested to by the New York Times which reports th4i prevalence ; of “Spiro Is My Hero” bumper stickers north of the Mason-Dixon line and west of the Alleghenies. NEW CLIMATE Having as always a very cloudy crystal ball, I cannot predict what the long-range effect of Agnew’s ideological barnstorming will be. But as of the here and now, it has changed the nation’s political climate and forced the Establishment to fight on a battlefield not of its own choosing. It can change the subject by beating the drums against American “atrocities” in Vietnam. But while this impresses a handful of senators, editorialists and commentators, its impact on the country is not what a casual reading of the major dailies would indicate. ★ ★ * That change of climate can be discerned in the sudden desire of men like Sen. Jacob Javits of New York, Republican ih name only, to make his peace with the White House., Since Mr. Nixon’s Inaugural, Sen. Javits has be&n noted for his acerbic comments on all things emanating from the White House'— and he was among the first to take up arms against the vice president. He now calls for “unity” with the White House — an odd way of putting it, HI can handle 60 children two sessions a day more cheaply to the taxpayer, good. Then, why do they expect me to do so much* more than they with their own four or five? I’d like to handle 30 a day again end pray I do it well. So, dear Waterford parent, next fair where I cab teach 30 well, I will go. Do you blame me? . «' | A TEACHER ^Courthouse Lights Needed for Cleaning’ To the person who complained about toe lights at toe courthouse, how do you tfiink the courthouse is kept clean? A night shift works until 1:30. a.m. on all floors, and they can’t very well clean in the dark. NIGHT SHIFT EMPLOYE ‘Do Protesters Know They’re BeingTaken?’ When are the protesters and demonstrators going, to wake up to toe fact that they are being taken? I believe a handful of Communist agitators move into an area and start pulling the strings. The puppets—those naive innocents-begin toe dance. While the various minority groups look for a common bond to unite under, they overlook toe one common bond we all have—we are all Americans. JOHN DAGGETT BERRY’S WORLD-By Jim Berry “We don’t make idle threats, and if you don’t Agree to our terms for peace, we may get tough and withdraw MORE troops!’* I ' ' (Q) I have heard that Wernher von-Braun, the great rocket and space expert, is an atheist. Con you find out if this is true? K. D. (A) He has made several speeches on the relationship be-tween science and religion, and this quotation credited to one of those speeches indicates he* is anything bat an atheist: “For*myself, science and religion are like two windows in a house 'through which we look at the reality of the Creator and the laws manifested in his creation. As long as we see two different imqges through these two windows VMt we cannot reconcile, we must keep on trying topb-tgin a more complete and better integrated total picture of the Ul-' timate reality by properly tying, together our scientific and religious concepts. If we cannot do so yet, this is a matter of human in- adequacies, certainly not i tion of God’s perfection.’’ (Q) Could you please tell me If 250,000 men are needed for toe armed forces in 1970, how many will be called through toe Pontiac draft board? (A) fhat depends on the 'avail-ability 'of men registered and classified as 1A. The local board gets its monthly quota from the state, and the state gets its quota from Washington. These quotas are based on reports of the number of men examined and qualified that month. In other Words, the national office cannot ask for any more draftees from Michigan than this state has available registrants, and the state office cannot ask'the Pontiac board for any more than they have reported to be classified as 1A. THE PONTIAC TRESS, FRIDAY, DECKMBKR 12. Iftr>9 Fuzz' Inject New Note Into Drug War By YOLANDA BENAVIDES i The Bloomfield Township ” as the youth bureau I refer to themselves,! .to bast, an image, ncluding their own/ The image they, are most! :oncerned with is the glorified, mphoric domain of colored, >ills, marijuana joints or heroin njections that are taking an ilarming number of young on hazardous and illegal rides. •k it it In their attempt to help young violators break this threatening locial habit, they are also doing a public relations job for law enforcement officers. More important, the seven- j' man team is pushing a preven-live rather than punitive ap-j proach to what they call a ‘people problem rather than drug problem.” . 'If You've Got No Other Way . . You Bust Him' N v —Det. Robert Taylor Bloomfield Township Police Since last year the bureau hasi turned out over a dozen much-1 needed communication 1 i n k s applicable to all age levels, according to Dr. Gerald Tobias, director of juvenile services. For example in an effort to acquaint parents with the drug [scene the bureau recently put out a 16-page brochure entitled1 “Our Drug Problem.” * * * Aside from familiarizing the! reader with the type of drugs i circulated in the area, the [brochure also describes the effects of each drug, the drug] user’s slang and a description! i of the laws pertaining to! violators. I Members of the Bloomfield bureau also give drug lectures [ to community as well as parent groups. SIMILAR APPROACH The bureau has set up a similar educational approach to! inform young people on the hazards — legal and physical — ] pertaining to drugs. Since September, law ’en-j forcement officers have been! meeting on a once-a-week basis1 [with student representatives' from area high sphools to discuss such problems. . \ By next year the bureau hopes to formalize a similar [program for those at the [elementary-school age, ac-; cording to Dr. Tobias. On a more personal basis is! the predinner check where anl officer makes any informal' house call to the home of a [young person who might be ' inclined to take drugs. DETECTIVE ROBERT TAYLOR The visits are made at the! [request of a concerned parent,! friends, or even the school liaison officer. ★ * ★ “A couple of years ago, [parents would have pitched an Lack of Funds Perils iDem Confabs Clubs at Bethune ' Start Tonight And Looks Lighter officer out of their house under similar circumstances,” said Township Detective Robert Taylor. \ ' Today, howeVer, both Tobias and Tayldr find parents are not only receptive to initial help, but they often call back for advice even in the wee hours of the morning. The bureau is out to help those who want it. Sometimes, the help hurts. ★ * * As Taylor puts it, “If you've got no other way except to ‘bust’ a kid to make him suddenly realize that violations of this nature are law violations —• you bust him.'* ★ * * In several instances Taylor noted that young people are relieved when an outside force overrides social pressures. In fact, to get “busted” is now I "in,” they report. Airport Controversy Swirls Bethune Elementary School’s school’s program to change D m8 at meet tonight mid Toastmaster and Toastmistress pupils’ negative self-images to ^morrov^ in district co^enti^ | clubs are in danger of becoming positive ones. , month*, state due to lack of funds, ★ * * Democratic Catherine in according to school Principal! The two clubs, each with 10 “ 8 _ Hawkins. [fifth and sixth graders, write | Thfi mh District conventionj The dubs are part of the speeches on citizenship and will be heid at Eagle School, 14 [good government for delivery to;Mj,e and Middle Belt West Traffic Group Lists Programs such service clubs asCivitan,; Township. It’begins Ifiumnla Nporn RiisinpRK ________. ... . \ . 1®. He Fires His Pipe By HARRY J. REED Editor, The Pontiac Press What happens when you stop smoking a pipe after 20 years? Outwardly, you look at least 10 pounds lighter. You are They a so speak to ° her as k t ker8’ \ wooden fire pots. j' A ^ | groups, including other ^ ~ ] AN INVITATION TO NOWHERE-Unless you’re a lazy or nonclimbing squirrel, chances are you probably have better things to do than tramp up these rickety, weather- mKmesMMmmmmmmmmmmmm Pontiac Prats Photo by Rolf Wintoi worn stairs to find out what’s going on. The outlandish scene was found in the Holly Recreation Area. .If you’re interested, no Ro6.V.P. is necessary. 1970. • Inaugurate a regularly scheduled county.wide conference of traffic officials with major state universities and to cooperate on the dissemination technical information 'Booze Hits Brain'---It's a Plot By T. LARRY ADCOCK “The very first drink you take of an alcoholic beverage damages your brain permanently.” • ★ ★ it We get a lot of news flashes here in the city room, but none so “Miss Riddicks made a I engineering. [personal commitment last year • Introduce additional in- by also contacting various in- larities of Dr. Knlsely’s words - “sludge” i d«P‘h M location pro-|dividuals and groups to help the and “ageh’tination” — to those well-honed |B f phrases, "intellectual eunuchs” and “effete dorps of impudent snobs.” And the truth dawned. It’s another plot against newsmen — a monstrous plot against and adhere together in wads until the blood becomes, literally, a sludge.” The sludge, the professor contends, interferes with the passage of oxygen to the brain and, without oxygen, as we all know, the brain dies. We nofed with raised eyebrows the simi- Plane in Lot Not Ticketed A bulging pouch disappears from one hip pocket. One pipe, and often a spare, are expelled from side pockets. Piles of matches and a lighter also wind up in the bureau drawer. The pointed reamer no longer drills holes in your pockets. Pipe smokers of long standing, after ' shedding all the accouterments, have beenN known to gambol like astronauts on the moon —suddenly almost weightless. NOT BRAINWASHED Fingernails no longer emerge from a trip to a pocket edged in black from the accumulated tobacco dust. I was not brainwashed by the air-pollution crowd. I simply quit when I had a sore throat and cold, and didn't go back. Yet! The bridges weren’t completely burned, however. I cleaned up my two dozen pipes and put them away, I didn’t just cast those old friends away. I was tricked into pipe smoking as a college freshman but it didn’t take me 20 years to figure out the gimmick. • ATTRACTED BY SMELL I had never smoked but the smell of a pipe attracted me. The guy smoking the pipe doesn’t share the aroma, I found out later. So did my two roommates at the University of Minhigan, To cure me of the new habit which they felt was befouling our diminutive dwelling, they mixed pencil shavings and cut up rubber bands with my tobacco. the good name of those notorious tipplers, the newsmen. cXN'T bE communist However, we realized it couldn’t be a Communist plot. Not with the Ruskies’ love of vodka. ★ ★ * So we armed ourselves with nicotine, cy-clamates and monosodium glutamate and retired to the neighborhood auxiliary city room for several rounds of demon rum. Cheers^ To your health? MB . tJ OREGON CITY,-Ore. (AP) - grams as need is shown through school sustain the clubs, said jack Quintance, a sophomore at detailed accident analyses and Hawkins. Clackamas Community College,! recommendations of public of-j He also praised Freddie Corr,par|(e(| jiiegally Wprinpsrtay- ,1inj „.llt m t.,p , ficials. operator of the R os e1 a n d while attending classes. But he ' This amateur puffer didn’t know how bad the concoction was. • Institute a program of Skating Rink, Pontiac, who didn’t get a parking ticket. j ■ * * ★ roadway “identification a n d contributed $200 to Bethune i The campus patrolman saidi surveillance” which will result|School to continue its speakers’ he didn’t issue a ticket because in a continujng and systematic)program. Funeral d i r e c t o r; the vehicle wasn’t an automo-watch of the county’s entire Frank Carruthers also received! bile, street and highway network. Hawkins’ praise. jt '*■ Quintance arrived in his light plane and parked it in the faculty parking lot. He said he did it to arouse Interest in aviation at the school. Develop and conduct a program to acquaint citizens with the function of traffic engineering and its unique role in accident prevention. • Continue to promote the use of safety belts, but a reduced rate of intensity. Hawkins said the club has received about $80 this year am) will probably be used up after one more speaking engagement. The plot literally backfired when the stink and smeek drove them first under the covers, and then out of the room. One result of quitting is that your sense of smell becomes more acute. Perhaps it returns to its native, unbesmirched state. Completely accurate dinner details from 40 yards downwind can often be noted. But, the ultimate reward is improved relationship with the wife. It doesn’t come in the form of less ashes on the carpet, or no holes burned in chairs or suits. The man who gives up pipe smoking has more pocket room to carry things for his wife. ' . (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the first of a three-part series on Oakland County’s airports. Now owner of two — one developed and the other slated' for development — the County Board of Supervisors has found itself the center of controversy.) By JEAN SAILE How far should codnty involvement in airport development extend? Some administrators and elected officials view .the provision of airports as a duty to the futuriT— akin to the construction of interstate.highways for increased car traffic some years back. * * ★ To nonflying taxpayers, such involvement is, however, often viewed as subsidizing_“a hobby” — a misalignment of priorities. Oakland-Orion Airport on Giddings Road in Orion Township is the center of the present controversy. County-owned, it consists of two and landing strips^ hangar space for 46 planes and a small terminal building. HOMEOWNERS ALARMED ' 7 Viewed for development sui a general aviation facility and variously estimated to cost as much as $50 million when complete, the airport is looked on with alarm by nearby homeowners. „ County officials say 80 per cent ot development costs are, however, recoverable from state and federal grants. 'it' ; Sr i:'\ Close to $700,000 has already been invested at the site for land acquisition and various studies.and plans. No money has j(et been recovered from the federal government, (however, half the land costs or $325,000, is anticipated* There are citizens who think and say money spent on airports is ill spent in a day of pressing social problems. • -# . * * ; The sides were drawn no closer through action taken last PATTERNS — A light cover of snow turns a lowly marsh into a thing of beauty; a quiet, reflective place, where shadows of winter’s barren trees only emphasize the solitude. This idyllic setting is.in Oakland Township off Harmon Road east of the village of Lake Orion. It has throughout Oakland County for those who want 1 minutes away from the daily rush. week by the Oakland County Board of .Supervisors to begin development of the Orion airport. THIRD AIRPORT EYED Even as money was being appropriated — $25,000 for q study now and as much as $225,000 earmarked in the next year — there were some supervisors considering the need for acquisition of still a third county-owned airport in the southwest area of the county. Meanwhile there is talk of a vote to rescind the appropriation at the next board meeting at 9:30 a.m. Thursday. Such a vote would require a two-thirds majority, and whether those opposing Hie Orion appropriation can muster that many votes is doubtful. , ‘ Pressure' has reportedly been applied to Board Chairman/ Charles B, (Edwards' Jr., a Democrat, who voted for the funds. Edwards seeks chairmanship of the board next year, and Democrats are said to be considering the withdrawal of support from his candidacy as a result of his vote. Edwards voted first to appropriate only $25,000 for a study at the airport, but when that measure failed he threw . his support to the final-motion which earmarked the ¥ total sum of $250,000 for airport development, but which appropriated only $25,000 at this time. w. a l a ; “They (the board) can withdraw that $225,000 at any time,” Edwards said, “and they must vote to approve any of its expenditure — to get it released from the special con-‘ tingency fund.’! * “The study is long overdue. We’ve got to make up our' minds whether we’re going to proceed out there or not. This is the way to do it,” Edwards said. THE PONTIAC TRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, I960 Harried Panthers Look to Cleaver By KEN HARTNETT i If Cleaver returns to Califor-, and nla, he faces imprisonment as a JOHN S. LANG parole violator and for jumping WASHINGTON (API ______ Self- on charges of assault with JRrtAfWldrSfeijften}! to kill and1 assault^ Cleaver is seeking to arrange feMfe weapon But the deepen-his'return to the United States .ing Panther-pplice crisis pre-where his armed revolutionary sumabiy has :increased pressure party-reeling under police on him to give up his self-propressure—is hurting for leader- claimed exile. ehlp ' Black leaders say the police Twenty-four hours after two (raids have brought an upsurge Panthers were slain in a shoot-1 in pro-Panther sympathy, yet out with Chicago police, sources!the Panthers are without the said Cleaver contacted U S. dip-'widely known leaders needed to lomatic officials in Algiers and i take full advantage of the situa-asked for a passport to return to i tion. America where he is wanted on latest CLASHES a fugitive warrant. § The Chicago and Los Angeles * * * (raids were the latest in a series Cleaver didn’t get the pass-.jof acti0ns that the Pan- port, the sources added, but in thers say have resulted in 28 later discussions was told h?|Panther jeaths-a figure the could get a certificate of ldenti- panthers failed to document ty that would allow him to trav-[and which Justice Department el to the United States. ! officials say is exaggerated. As Cleaver was making the frpouenrv and intensl- w*“‘ “ Inquiries in Algiers, signs were! b 8 hand °n 8 m' mounting in J^’^ some is having an impact on DEMANDS FOR PROBES Panthers are revolutionaries on j America,s ghe?tos more pro- the ropes. found than anything Panthers 4-HOUR GUN BATTLE {could muster with their Marxist On Monday, a police raid on ideology and weapon-wielding Panther headquarters in Los ways. Angeles resulted In a four-hour a * * gun battle that left three police- “The effect is very telling on men and three Panthers wound-(groups that don’t agree with the ed. Nineteen Panthers were ar-panthers ideologically,” said rested. (Lucius Walker, executive direc- Two well-known Panther lead-1 tor of the Interreligious Founda- Panther lawyer Charles Garry of San Francisco says the incidents add up to a campaign of 'genocide on the Black Panther party.” \ “Poppycock}” replied a Justice Department spokesman to charges made by1 Garry and others that the Nixon administration is the concertmaster for an elaborate and planned police crackdown on the Panthers. But there is little question that an intense hostility exists between police and Panthers. One high federal official put it this way: 'It seems every time cops and Panthers meet they shoot each other. Fear plays a part. It’s been some years since I considered myself a cop, but I know if I were back on the street, I wouldn’t want to have to stop a black man, or especially two of them. The friction is so intense, with Panthers you keep where Panthers “have been i bullet holes, and the wall ad-murdered by law enforcement joining the bedroom door was officials.!’ \ | unmarked. , The American Civil Liberties Union called for the National Commission on Violence to probe killings in Chicago which “seem a part of a nationwide pattern of police action against the Panthers.” The Chicago and Los Angeles shootings heightened \ police-Panther tensions which have been building in major cities since early 1967 when the Panthers began publicly displaying their weapons—first on San WWW | Francisco streets and later even And moderate Roy WUkins of (at the California state capitol. the National Association for the PREVIOUS INCIDENTS Advancement of Colored Peo-l The 'fiercest previous battle pie, told an interviewer the inci- came in April im ln Oakland, dents “take on the aspect of a Calif It left Panther Bobby Hut-vendetta ... it looks suspi-lton dea(]. cieaver and two po- ers—Huey ,P. Newton and Bobby Seale—already were in jail. Stokeley Carmichael quit the party last summer. Other party leaders are dead. Dave Hilliard, Panther chief of staff, faces trial on a charge of threatening the life of President Nixon. tion for Community Organization—IFCO. 'It’s not an ideological ques- Dec. 20. tion. It’s a question of black survival,” Walker said. “Black people of all ideological persuasions have been made to realize I that all blacks are vulnerable.” Demands for public hearings into violence that ofteh erupts when police and Panthers meet grew louder after the raid lnj Chicago last week ln which two Panthers, Including Illinois Chairman Fred Hampton, were1 shot to death. $ix black congressmen, led-by Michigan Democrat Charles C. Diggs Jr., announced yesterday they would hold an unofficial fact-finding hearing in Chicago cious.” Chicago police reported the 10-minute gun battle began when they arrived at Hampton’s apartment at 4:40 a.m. last Thursday to search for weapons. They said a woman in the apartment opened fire with a shotgun. NO SIGNS A later Inspection of the apartment by a reporter closed one 'Small bullet hole in the apartment’s front door. The door showed no signs of a shotgun blast. It was still on its hinges. The one wall of the living room visible from the front door licemen wounded. This year there have been a number of incidents, Including: A A ★ July 16—Two Chicago policemen and a Panther were wounded in a gun battle that erupted while officers were investigating a burglary. Two Panthers were arrested. July 31—five policemen and one Panther were wounded in a shoot-out at Chicago Panther headquarters. Officers said they were fired on from the building’s roof, but Panthers said police started it. Aug. 17—In Kansas City, a po-(liceman was wounded by a girl- was marked by a small cluster (friend of a Panther whom of bullet holes. No bullet holes officers were arresting. Police could be seen in the dining room returned the fire, killing the and kitchen. I woman. Sept. 22-In Milwaukee, three The National Urban League wired the attorney general requesting federal grand jury im quiries in every Jurisdiction In the front bedroom, three walls were pocked with bullet holes. The wall beside the bedroom door was unmarked. In the rear bedroom, where Hampton died, the same was true— three walls were ^riddled with Panthers were arrested and charged with firing a shotgun at a policeman who was walking his beat. Sept. 36-In New York, a policeman was struck by a shotgun blast while attempting to ienter an apartment. Two Panthers were seized. Opt. 1—Two teen-agers de-scribed as Panthers, were arrested after a shoot-out with police in Jamaica, Queens. , A> A A Oct. A-Seven Panthers were arrested and one was charged with attempted murder after two policemen said they were fired upon from the' roof of the party’s Chicago headquarters. Nov. 13—Two police and one Panther were killed in a 16-minute shoot-out when officers re-, sponded to a call that four armed men were in an abandoned Chlchgo hotel, i ★ A A In addition, 14 Panthers indicted tor conspring to bomb New York department stores and subway facilities have been in jail for seven months in lieu of bail ranging up to $100,666 each'. And in New Haven, Conn., more than a dozen Panthers are held on various charges in connection with the May 21 murder of a party member. MEMBERSHIPS ERODED' There’s little doubt that the incidents and arrests have eroded Panthers membership. One estimate places, their nationwide strength at under 1,000. ppliisp si A A Ideological differences i and I (the need to tighten security have led to purges in some cities. Cleaver’s return—if It occurs -^could help rally white radicals to the Panthers’ side. And some radicals see it as essential for the party’s survival, Give Jim Beam. A rare gift for 175 Decembers. T. Jeremiah Beam make* Jim Beam Bourbon just like genera-f tion. of Beam, did before him. And he gift-wraps It in i handsome holiday package. Cive Jim Beam to wine of your friend, and you’ll sort of be doing what the Beam, have done for 175 December.. You’ll be giving a bit of yourself. And that a •till the rarest giftof-all “World’, finest Bourbon .irtce 1795. $4.77 FIFTHS $9.61 PINTS INCLUDES, ALL TAXIS 86 Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiikey Dietilled and Bottled by the Jamee B. Beam Distilling CA. Clermont. Boom. Kentucky. LAUREL • Electric Blanket THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1969 ONE COLOR A—9 Adams Is Ending Brief, Brilliant Stint as Interim EAST LANSING (UPi)-Walter Adams, a classroom teacher, became acting president of Michigan State University April Fool’s \ Day. It was no joke, but there were a lot of laughs anyway. I ' > u. * .. More Important, the 46-year- When Adams took the interim saying “Administration’s not appointment, he immediately ruled himself out a? a candl-i date for the permanent post by my bag.’’ v L‘ * \s . * \ ★ •' t 1 , j With a straight face, he en-dorspd Gen. Charles de Gaulle, old economics professor threw for the job because of his “ex- away the book and established a new style for administering the nation’s turbulent campuses. He did it with love and laughter. WALTER ADAMS cellent combat record. TOUCH OF IRREVERENCE He Irreverently referred to the formal “search and select fion” committee of students and facility assigned to find a replacement as the “search and seizure’’ committee. He put everybody on, and the students loved it. More than 12,000 of them-signed petitions asking Adams to reconsider his decision to go back to the classroom and throw his hat Into the ring for president., ★ * * * Former critics of the liberal Democrat praised his work and’ said he’d make a good one. Adams humbly declined and asked people to please believe be wasn’t interested. When Clifton Wharton^ Jr., the first Negro ever to be* named to head a major predominantly white university, was selected by the MSU Board of Trustees,1 of the 40,000-student campus Adams couldn’t resist the Irony, was sort of a symbolic bridge 'v’xm. hnaaffifStfs He called Wharton the gceat|nah, the ever straight, always emancipator who’s going to deH aloof “builder" who directed |liver me from bondage.’’ •' IMSU for 28 years, deveIoping.it I If Adams was often irreVer-*ato' 0l?e nation's most -ent, he was never irrelevant. Prestigious state universities. .Students, uptight with bigness „ * * , * . ,, and the mechanization of their. Hannah ruled through his lives, found a kindred spirit indeans, and- excePt1 on formal .the cigar-smoking Adams who occasions, was seldom seen at icould talk tough and act deci* c ose rang® by students, sively when the occasion de- .... . . „ manded or keep his cool-and „Alt]’°“gh he Personally signed wit—when it was time to “cool;? ! jP.!?m??-’ Ha?na.^’ It baby.” joined the Nixon administration; ’ ’_ as director of the Agency for SYMBOLIC BRIDGE International Development, was His brief tenure as president'not considered “approachable”1 by students. But he was a man; for his time. MEN OF THEIR TIME Adams precedes another man of his time—Clifton Wharton, a Negro. It’s a time when MSU, like other universities, is attempting to bring more blacks, students and teachers alike, to the campus; when MSU, the pioneer land-grant college, directing its resources to the explosive urban centers instead of to rural and international extension work; when students especially don’t much care about, a man’s color as long as he does his job. The job, as Adams sees it, is jto be visible to students—to bej ‘their man." ! 'T’ve set up a priority system,” he said in a recent interview. “Students first, junior; faculty next, then senior faculty, then the deans, then the e s, then the outside groups.” 5 . ' NO LOBBYIST Who, then, is going to lobby the lawmakers and the founda-' tion moneymen and hold hands with the alumni? That’s a problem,” Adams said. “I don’t know. But if you pay attention to these groups in the traditional way, all your worries will be over because the store is going to blow up.” Adams, wearing a mismatched Adams did his thing as acting •.sport coat, tie and slacks, president. I moved restlessly to the window] ‘‘The thing I’ve contributed of his third-floor office. jto campus is love and laugh- * ★ * jter,” he said. “Giving the feel- ‘This office is obscene — air ing someone cares. Giving a conditioned, soundproof. You’re sense of laughter. This is a hermetically sealed in here.” |very serious generation and !an OVERVIEW .V ' • lthey d00’1 laugh enough." I He walked to the window and RETURNED looked down at students. j Laugh they did. And they 359 95 PARK FREE in our lot at rear of store or 1 -hr. in downtown parking mall — just have ticket ; stamped at our cashier’s office. EASY CREDIT AT WKC-90 Days Same as Cash or Use Your Mastercharge Credit Card A ROOMFUL OF Eontg Arniitm BEAUTY AT ONE LOW, LOW PRICE! COLEMAN’S FURNITURE MART Guarantees Christmas Delivery *279 REGULAR >399®° VALUE It All... • Beautiful COLONIAL SOFA Matching LOUNGE CHAIR Complete with OTTOMAN Lovely SWIVEL ROCKER COMFORTABLE CLOUD-SOFT CUSHIONS, SPRING FRONT AND RICH FOAM RUBBER Choice of 200 Colors and Fabrics to Brighten Your Living Room Perfect combination of charm, comfdrf and casual good IbokjsF1' Authentic Colonial .styling with big wing-back sofa and match- ' ing chair with ottoman in Early American inspired tweeds. Swivel rocker covered in handsome co-ordinated print to complete the grouping — See it now at Coleman's Furniture Mart. -You'll love it in your home! 536 N. PERRY OPEN NITES TILL 9 ^ A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1969 My Lai? Son My? Both Right! SAIGON (AP) — The site ofifrom one map to another. The the alleged civilian massacre at Vietcong frequently apply their My Lai has been called at least own names, half a dozen different names, | ' * * * some of them fanciful. These in-l The name most commohly elude Son Myl, My Lai, Song My, misspelled is one of which there Tu Cung, even “Pinkville.’’ ijs no dispute among Vietna-Some of the confusion results |mese, the village name of Son from the complex governmental My. It is often spelled Song My. system in Vietnam. Provinces;,. nisTRirTC are divided into districts, which 1U ul3,mu,a .» , in turn are organized into vil- ,QuanS Ngai Province has 10 lages, each made up of a series districts. One of these is Son of hamlets, which sometimes- Tinh, in which there are several as in the case at hand-are villages including Son An, Son broken down into subhamlets. Thanh, Son Hoin, Son Hoa, Son ir if -t, Quang and Son My. Further complicating this, * * * place names are sometimes al- Son My v111 a g e is a 10-tered at official whim and vary!square-mile area of, hillocks,! rice paddies, tree lines, swamps and clusters of hamlets, bordering the South China sea. ★ . ★ xv ★ At the time U.S. troops entered it qp March 16, 1968, Son My village was made up of! three hamlets. One of these was My Lai, pronounced Mee-Lie. It had six subhamlets numbered My Lai 1, My Lai 2, etc. ★ * * The killings occurred in two neighboring subhamlets, My Lai 4 and My Lai 5. APPEARS ON MAPS For administrative purposes the My Lai complex is now re-Iferred to collectively as Tu Cung—a name that also appears elsewhere on maps of the area —and the subhainlets have different names as well. My Lai 4 is now called Thuyen Yen, and MyvLai 5 is Truong An. ! * * ★ As for the term “Pinkville,” I the best explanation offered by U.S. officers is that some military maps used in the field, usually those scaled at one centimeter to 50,000 meters, show congested population areas in pink. ★ ★ it Officers say the term ‘Pinkville” has nothing to do with the political coloration of any village. AP wirtphoto CHECKING MAP - Rep. Leslie C. Arends (centef), R-111., and Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (right), D-S. C., check a map showing the My Lai region in Vietnam. With them is CWO Hugh C. Thompson, a helicopter pilot at the time of the alleged massacre at . My Lai, who testified yesterday before the congressmen. IN III II TOY! S ALH GUi N : SALE 50% WAS is Kenner Paint Wheels . .68 .34 Cartridge for #1441 1.38 .69 Lakeside Quizz Game .44 .22 Cotton Magic...... .68 .34 Cotton Magic 1.43 .72 Louis Marx Design-All 4.88 2.44 „ „ Zeb Zachary 2.88 1.44 „ „ Capt. 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TELEGRAPH Christum» Appliance, TV Shoppers Don*t Ever Forget ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1969 Dutch Handle Large-ScaleIntegration Job Smoothly AMSTERDAM (AP) — EveryiDutch than wo are; They all had Dutchman knows that more I a photo of the queen and a than SO,0000 black, brown off-white colonials from,.Holland’s crumpled East Indian empire have moved in among the canals and windmills. Not very many give it a second thought Dutch flag.” It Wasn’t 1uite that simple, g Many of the migrants were ter-t rifled by the thought of a Euro-d pean winter. They were intimidated by the bustle of Dutch towns. Many men had been em-The home of Erasmus and in Dutch colonial offices, Spinoa, early apostles of toler- ^ the army and police forces, ance, has accomplished a Thousands had^ be trained for large-scale mixing of racesne^JoDS- ... against a background of world wh€n sa" .men racial discord | carrying their baggage from r (ships a good many concluded “It’s a crazy world,” the of-“They fit right in,” a taxi flciai said driver said. “We don’t think; much about race here. Hitler STARTED IN 1945 did that and look what happened The migration started in 1946 to him. In 100 years, the .way soon after the end of World War things are going, there will be H- It gained momentum as the only one race anyway.” nationalistic movement * if if donesia burgeoned and finally , m . _ .. „ forced the transfer of soverelgn- ” Bj'ggS * Shit ty to the Republic of Indonesia conductor said, "thats all that / 194fl matters. EYED BY SOCIOLOGISTS 1 Thousands of the migrants Sociologists from afar have had been employed directly by come to see how the Dutch have! the Dutch, on plantations or in pulled off such a smooth job of the colonial government and integration. They come espe-jwere compromised with the ex-cially from England, where a treme nationalists. There also Jobs for the immigrants. But Dutch generosity, traditional iterance and humanity opened dots to the refugees. WARTIME FEELING “I believe we had the wartime feeling that we had to go hand in hand to solve this problem," one official said. “We were al- ways an island in Europe fur political and religious refugees. They helped us with their industry, finance and intellect. ; , * * % 1 “You can see every color here and they can go. anywhere.. It doesn’t matter to a Dutch family if a son or daughter marries a colored,person as long as he speaks Dutch and 16 oLtbe same intelligence.” , w w Jit Mixed groups are often seen on thes streets, in cafes, in hotels. The Dutch suit' teams do Indonesia to help immigrants make the move. Other teems came on the ships with them, advising them of Dutch life, making medical examinations, preparing them for new jobs and a new life. * | * * ' ★ Boarding houses were ready in Holland to care temporarily for the no# arrivals. Housing was allocated on the basis of jobs available. The immigrants wens purposely scattered all, over the small country dn more than 50 communities. Settlement in the larger cities uke Amsterdam and The Hague was limited, to avoid the growth of ghettos. Clock Repair / ■ ' Antique Clock Specialist* a Sales * Service (Stint ISIS. Betas, Bitmh»*he"» 646.7877 THE FACTORIES SAY NO! BUT FRETTER SAYS YES! TO LOWER PRICE CUTS! million former colonial subjects from India, Pakistan, Africa and the West Indies have settled somewhat uneasily after a querulous welcome. were many descendants of mixed Dutch-Indonesian marriages through the centuries of Dutch fule. The Netherlands was still suf-r fering from a long occupation j by the German army. There s was a shortage of housing due 1 to wartime destruction. Indus- Renee Short, a Labor member of the British Parliament, said after a visit here: “Immigrants to the Netherlands are accepted by the whole community. There {try was lame, is no sympathy among the * Dutch working class for any ra-| Dutch officials give full credit cial discrimination. We have a i to the United States for Mar-good deal to learn from them.” shall Plan ^aid which^helped to Holland is the most densely ‘ populated country in Europe, I 939 to the square mile. The non- I white population now is about I 2‘i per cent of the total popula- I tion of 12 million, compared to 2 I per cent in Britain. ★ ★ ★ How did this country absorb the immigrants, most of whom I had never seen a snowball? ANSWER ‘SIMPLE’ “It’s simple,” says an official I of the Ministry of Cultural Al- I fairs, Recreation aqd Social ] Welfare. “Most of them speak our lan- I guage. They are mostly people who have the same religion as we have, Catholic and Protestant. Most of them were more I BUY NOW NO PAYMENT j DUE 'Til fOs MARCH f 1970 General Electric 9 TRANSISTOR TRANSCEIVERS Zenith B Transistor AM Radio $A88 s29” $4995 restore industry and provide SALE TODAY ||i FRIDAY m ’ p Ifi SALE SATURDAY 10-9 8N SALE SUNDAY10-7® AUTEN FURNITURE 6605 Dixie Hwy, Clarkston 2-WEEK TRIAL ON ANY COLOR TV YOU BUY FRETTER'S PORTABLE TV's Top Brands, All screen sizes FANTASTIC SPECIAL PRICES ON HUGE SELECTION OF FLOOR MODELS, DEMOS, 0NE-0F-A-KIND!APPLIANCES,TVantlSTERE0 Zenith 16" Diag. PORT. 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