Pontiac PrtM» Mondoy, Novombor 3, 1969 MONDAY R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C—On the Farm Scene 6 :00 (2) C — Sunr ise Semester 6:25 (7) C — Five Minutes to Live By 6:30 (2) C ■— Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Western Way: Untamed Land” (7) C - TV College-‘‘Effects of Resistance Movements” 7:00 (4) C - Today - A week in Washington, starts with guest David Brinkley, discussing the 1970 census, and a feature on student rebellions. (7) C — Morning Show — Dr. Paul ' Shu 1 m a n discusses diseases of the eye and contact lenses. 7 : 3 0 ( 2 ) C - News. Weather Sports 7:55 (9) News 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo . (56) Americans From Africa 8:05 (9) Mr. Dressup 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “Beloved Infidel” (1959)^ Gregory Peck, Deborah Kerr (9) Friendly Giant 8:45 (9) Chez Helene 9:00 (2) R-Mr. Ed (4) C — Dennis Wholey (9) C —Bozo 9:15 (56) Book Parade 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (56) Let’s Go Sciencing 9:45 (56) Art Lesson 9:55 (4) C-Carol Duvall 10:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C-It Takes Two (9) Ontario Schools I (58) Pocketful of Fun 10:25 (9) C'^-News 10:30 (2) C-Della Reese-Boyce, and Hart, James Cleveland and the Southern California Choir guest. (4) C — Concentration (7) R C — Mo,vl e-r “Critic’s Choice” (1963) Bob Hope, Lucille Ball (Part 1) (50) C — Jack LaLanne (56) Once Upon a Day 11:00 (4) C—Sale of the Century (50) C - Strange Paradise (56) Reason and Read 11:15 (56) Misterogers 11:20 (9) Ontario Schools II 11:30 (2): C-Love of Life (4) C /Holly wood Squar'es (7) C—Anniversary Game (50) C — Klmba 11:45 (9) C — News MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C —Jeopardy (7) R--Bewitched (9) Take 30 (50) C — Alvin 12:05 (56) R — Americans From Africa 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — He Said, She Said (4) C — News. Weather, Sports (7) RC —That Girl (9) C —Tempo 9 (50) C—Galloping Gourmet 12:35 (5iB) Friendly Giant 1:00 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Letters to Laugh-In — Mickey Rooney, ‘ Jaye P. Morgan, Nanette Fabray and Alan Sues guest this week. (7i C — Dream House (9) R — Movie: “Ap- pointment With Danger” (1951) Alan Ladd, Jan Sterling (50) R — Movie: “Letter to Three Wives” (1949) Linda Darnell, Paul Douglas 1:10 (56) Listen and Say 1:25 (4) C—News (56) R — Book Parade 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns ‘ (4) C — You’re Putting Me On — Tiny Tim, Phyllis Diller. Marty Allen, Brenda Vaccaro. Peggy Cass and Bill Cullen guest this week. (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal 1:40 (56) R — Reason and Read 2:00 (2) C - Where the Heart Is (4) C—Days of Our Lives n (7VC — Newlywed Game (56) R — Speaking Freely — New York Times art critic, John Canady guests. 2:25 (2) C — News 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light «i(4) C — Doctors (7) C —Dating Game 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Candid Camera (56) I n n 0 vations — Program examines Techite, a filament reinforced plastic mortar used in pipelines serving today's bustling cities. (62) R — Movie: “Crime of Passion” (1957) Barbara Stanywyck, Sterling Hayden 3:30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — Bright Promises (7) C — One Life to Live (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Human Relations and Motivation 4:00 (2) RC-Corner Pyle (4) C — Steve Allen — Allen Shemjan, Monty Landis and George Yanok guest. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Bozo' (56) R—Pocketful of Fun 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Kreskin, this week’s cohost, welcomes guests Peter Nero and Soupy Sales (7) R C - Movie: “A Distant Trumpet” (1964) Troy Donahue. Suzanne Pleshette (50) R — Little Rascals (56) R — Once Upon a Day (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Introducijig Norway” (9) R C-Flipper (50) R C — Lost in Space (56) R— Misterogers 5:30 (9) R C - Voyage to the Bottom of the !^a (56) R-Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver » 5:45 (M) Storyteller MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4)^7) C - News, Weather, Sports (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Bridge With Jean Cox (62) R — Ozzle and Harriet 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite '(4) C — News — Huntley. Brinkley (9) R — Dick Van Dyke — The Petries entertain two British rock ’n' roll Idols. '' (50) R — Munsters — Grandpa mixes a magic potion so Eddie can grow six inches to deal with the bullies at school. (56) History of the Negro People — Mississippi-born novelist travels to Africa to explore his ancestral roots. (62) C — Robin Seymour — The Orange Krush guests. 7:00 (2) C - Truth or ^ Consequences (4) C — News, Weather. Sports (7) C — News -Reynolds, Smith (9) RC-Movie; ”A Girl Named Tamiko" (1963) Cynical Eurasian photographer uses two women to achieve his ends. Laurence Harvey, Martha Hyer, France Nu-yen ^ .(50) R — I Love Lucy (56) What’s New — Young city boy spends his summer working on a Texas ranch. 7:30 (2) C — (Special) Race for Mayor — The two candidates for mayor of Detroit, Richard Austin and Roman Gribbs, state their views on the eve of the election. (4) C— My World and Welcome to It — Henry Morgan debuts in acting role of writer to whom Monroe turns when hb is having seal trouble. (7) C — Music Scene — Guests include Bobby Sherman, Johnny Cash, Lulu, Buffy Sainte-Marie and David Steinberg. (50) C - Beat the Clock — Jerry Stiller guests this week. (56) French Chef — Pastry, from appetizers to desserts. (62) C — Of Lands and Seas — Portugal i s visited. 8:00 (4) C — Laugh-In -Buddy Hackett guest-stars. (50) R-Hazel (56) World Press 8:iS (7) C — New People — Cara (Kate Heflin), about Th» Pontiac Proti, Monday, Novombor 3, 196 to give birth to the first baby on Bomano, i s disturbed that she and Toby have no way of getting married. 8:30 (2) C — Here's Lucy — After Lucy’s apartment is robbed, she installs an alarm system. (50) C — To Tell the Truth (62) R — The Nelsons 9:00(2) C —■ Mayberry R.F.D. — Sam hosts a ^ Russian farm expert who turns out to be a woman. (4) C — Movie: "Frankie and Johnny" (1968) Young' couple’s world consists of a Mississippi gambling-showboat. Eilvis Presley, Donna Douglas (Movie will be interrupted for coverage of Nixon’s Vietnam policy speech.) (7) C — Love, American Style “ Chris Connelly, Henry Gibson, Pamela Curran, Shelley Fabares, Kay Medford, Morey Am-s t e r d a m, Shari Lewis, Paul Winchell, Marty Allen, Eddie Mayehoff and Joe Flynn star in a series of love plays. (Program will be interrupted f o r coverage and analysis of Nixon Vietnam policy speech.), (9) C - What's My Line? — This week’s guests are Henry Morgan, Meredith M a c R a e and Gene Rayburn (50) R — Perry Mason ^(56) NET Jourhai -William F. Buckley Jr. Is seen through a series of his film statements on crime, the ghetto, capital puriishment. patriotism, communism and the arts. (62) R Movie: "Carson City" ( 1 95 2 ) Randolph Scott, Raymond Massey 9:30 (2) (4) (7) C-(Special) Nixon Address on Vietnam War Policy (9) C — Tommy Hunter 10:00 (2) C - Carol Burnett — Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, Dari Rowan and Dick Manin guest. (Ti.me approximate.) (9) C — Front Page Challenge (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) People in Jazz — Conductor George West and the Michigan State University Jazz Ensemble guest. 10:30 (9) Man Alive - "The Pursuit of Pleasure and Ail 'That’s Bogus’’ features a n encounter between two strong personalities — Malcolm Muggeridge and Nathan Cohen. (50) R — Ben Casey — Self-appointed social worker tries vaudeville tricks to cheer up patients. (56) R — Folk Guitar Plus (62) R — Sea Hunt 11:00 (2) (7) (9.) C - News, Weather, Sports ^ (62) R — Highway Patrol 11:30 (4) C—News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Joey Bishop — Eva Gabor is scheduled. (9) R C — Movie: "Faces of Fear" (British, 1963) Psychopathic killer takes pictures of the panic on the faces of his victims. Moira Shearer, Anna Massey (50) C — Merv Griffin (62) R — Movie: "Paris Express" (British, 1953) Woman flees killer on express train to Paris. Claude Rains, Marta Toren ^ 11:35 (2) R C - Movie: "I Deal in Danger" (1966) American ‘‘traitor’’ penetrates the Nazi high command in World War II. Robert"^ o u 1 e t, Christine Carere 12:00 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Pop artist Peter Mux guests. Steve Lawrence subs for Johnny. (7) R —Texan (9) Viewpoint (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:06 (9) C — Perry’s Probe - “ T4u^Disappearing Bachelor" 1:30 (2) R — Naked City (7) C — News, Weather (4) Beat the Champ 1:40 (7) C - Five Minutes to Live By 2:00 (4) C — News, Weather 2:30 (2) C — News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel T H • ^ Formerly L & F — HAVE AN EXPERT HELP YOU GET THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY Over 2.'4 ^ ear« Kxiierirnre Servi'iiju; OaklamI (bounty No Payment Is Due Until March, 1970 Siding Alumlfiyiii *r Vinyl Roofing a Quttort Storm Windows and Doors Awnings Porohoi A Patios Oaragot Oomont Work Insulation Poreti Inoloiurot Fonoot Iron Railing ttaps Trailar Skirting Kitohant Bathrooms Room Additions Family Rooms Attios A Dormors window A Door Roplaoomonts Hooting Oat and Oil Panaiing Oallings Floor Oovoring Oorpoting DoorwaMs Insuranoa Estimatas I WRITTEN QUARANTEE • LOWEST PRICES I * QUALITY WORKMANSHIP • FHA BUDGET PAYMENTS • NO MONEY DOWN ' Free estimates without oblioation — /i !\amr Vtnt i.mi irunt' HOME IMPROVEMEM I6S W. Monloulm, Pontiac Call 335-2102 Th$ W«0ffitr IWmI* (OtllHir«|«|) Horn* EdM6n BONTIAG press oh,m ^ fi rt''Si ,sfasisjg| iiiAit jWiiiwsJl&rt'9AJi.u uiiOi Vietnam Talk Tdnighf Nixon Going on TV WASHINGTON (AP) ~ President Nixon takes his Vietnam case to the nation tonight amid fresh speculation over the possibility of a sizable step-up in U. S. troop withdrawals. In advance of Nixon’s niuch-heralded 9:30 p.m. radio-TV address, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan, said “It is perfectly possible that all American combat forces can be withdrawn from Vietnam by July 1, 1970.’’ In Saigon, Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky was quoted as saying that “next year the (South Vietnamese) armed forces will be able to replace about 180,000 U S. soldiers.’’ However, Ky predicted “nothfng new’’ out of Nixon’s speech. ■The President himself maintained tight silence about the forthcoming speech and prolonged his weekend stay in seclusion at his fog-shrouded Camp David, Md., mountain retreat while working on it.. Originally slated to return to the White House yesterday, Nixon put off his helicopter flight back to Washington until today. In some ways the President put himself in a comer by announcing several weeks ago that he would make the speech. Related Stories, Page 6»S The days in the interim have provided time for a buildup of speculation that some ^ramatic development, perhaps even a one-sided cease-fire, was forthcoming. > “Great hopes and expectations are riding on this speech,’’ Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said during the weekend. ‘PRAYING FORT NEW MOVES’ Democratic National Chairman Sen. Fred R. Harris of Oklahoma said: “Surely now, we pray, he will set forth new initiatives — a standstill cease-fire and more rapid systematic withdrawal of our troops — which will permit us to end that war ...’’ Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, the 1968 Democratic vice presidential nominee, said over the weekend Democrats are willing to share political risks with Nixon if he “moves meaningfully toward disengagement from the war.’’ In the House 42 congressmen issued a statement that they hoped Nixon’s address “will make a substantial contribution to the early end of American Involvement in the war.” They planned a House debate tomoh'ow on the President’s remarks. Meanwhile, the committees which organized the Oct. 15 rallies went ahead with plans for more massive antiwar demonstrations in mid-November. STOPPED BY SHOTGUN BI,AST — A youth, tentatively identified as'Edward Louis Taylor, 18, of .Saginaw was wounded today when police fired a shotgun blast into this car during a chase after the holdup of two Birch Run gas stations. Taylor is being held as a police prisoner at a Saginaw hospital. Police are seeking a second male who leaped from the car and, after exchanging shots with police, escaped on foot. Blast Mars Cease-Fjre in Lebanon Key Off-Year Votes in U S. Tomorrow Af. Viefs Take 3 Allied Bases SAIGON Iff) — North Vietnamese forces launched new attacks in South Vietnam’s central Highlands today after driving allied troops from three U.S. artillery bases at the opposite end of the region. American Special Forces said the loss of the bases was a “major success” for the enemy. While U.S. and South Vietnamese troops along the Cambodian border in the southern part of the highlands braced for- renewed North Vietnamese assaults, the enemy struck nearly 200 miles to the northeast, along the coastal region of {he northern Central Highlands. it * * Some 200 North Vietnamese infantrymen and commandos launched coordinated assaults on two artillery bases of the U.S. I73rd Airborne Brigade north of the provincial capital of Bong Son. Firing rocket grenades, machine guns and rifles, the attackers pushed their way to the barbed wire perimeters of the two bases before American artillery, drove them back. ’The U.S. Command said at least two enemy soldiers penetrated the perimeter of one base but were killed or repulsed. The bodies of others were found in the barbed wire around the second base. REDS KILLED Headquarters tsaid 26 North Vietnamese were killed in the two attacks. U.S. casualties were one killed and eight wounded, the command said. Light rocket and mortar attacks were launched against other allied bases in the highlands. Including the headquarters of a brigade of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division at An Khe, 260 miles north-northeast of Saigon. <» American ogicers in the field told Associated Press correspondent Peter Arnett they believe the series of attack’s in the Highlands presage a large military campaign in the region, probably focused on the two important Special Forces camps of Bu Prang and Due LaR, near the Cambodian border and at the southwest corner of the highlands. An uneasy quiet fell over the two frontier caiiiips 110 and 135 miles northeast of Saigon after a weekend North Vietnamese onslaught that forced abandonment of three U.S. artillery bases in the Bu Prang region. Weather Outlook: It May Be All Wet Man’sJ}est friend for the next 24 hours may be his umbrella. Not much change in temperature is anticipated through tomorrow as a heavy cloud cover brings with it a threat of showers. * ★ Tonight’s low is expected to fall in the 35-40-degree range. Wednesday’s outlook promises that skies will clear slightly, with temperatures remaining in the mild range. it * * Winds are out of the west-northwest at 10-15 miles per hour. Precipitation possibilities in per cent are 30 today, tonight and tomorrow. The low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior io 8 a.m. was 44 degrees. 'SDS Recruiting Campaign at High Schools a Failure' WASHINGTON (AP) - Efforts by the Students for a Democratic Society groups to enlist MidWest high school students in a “worldwide war against U.S. imperialism” have ended in an almost total failure. Congress has been told. The high school students wanted no part of the SDS tactics, witness after witness told the House Committee on Internal Security, and in at least two cases got downright hostile. ★ ★ ★ A fist-swinging brawl ended a series of meetings in Columbus, Ohio, during which, two high school boys testified, member of the radical organization urged them to “kill pigs,” bum down a department store and join in “a big revolution” with the Negro poor. In Pittsburgh, high school students grabbed and ripped to shreds a Vietcong flag during a melee with nearly 50 SDS Weatherman girls — some of whom stormed the school barebreasted. FILMED INTERVIEW The drive to radicalize high school students was described in a filmed interview subpoenaed and shown at the House committee’s closing session last Thursday. The principal of South Hills High School in Pittsburgh, James R. Johnson, described for the committee actions of' female members of the SDS Weatherman faction at his school. He said about 25 girls, bra-less and with T-shirts pulled up to their heads, ran through the halls of the school shouting “Let’s break jail” and “Ho lives.” BEIRUT (AP) — Arab guerrillas blew up an American pipeline in southern Lebanon early today, half an hour after a cease-fire between the guerrilla high command and the Lebanese army went into effect. The charge that blew out two feet of the Trans-Arabian Pipeline — or Tapline — from Saudi Arabia to the south Lebanese port of Sidon apparently was set before the cease-fire became effective at midnight. Ten hours later, no Violations had been reported from Lebanon’s-eastern border -with Syria, the focus of t|ie past two weeks of fighting between guerrillas of the Palestine Liberation Organization and the Lebanese army. Repair work on the pipeline started immediately, and a company spokesman said oil should be flowing again by midnight. It was the second time this year the line has been sabotaged. CEASE-FIRE TALKS Agreement to a cease-fire effective last midnight was reached in Cairo by guerrilla chief Yasir Arafat and Gen. Emile Bustani, commander in chief of the Lebanese army. They also agreed to continue talking in an effort to agree on the conditions under which the guerril-ias will operate against Israel from bases in Southern Lebanon. Lebanese army units and the guerrilla forces facing them apparently were maintaining the positions they held yesterday. The only clash reported yesterday was a 30-minute exchange of mortar and tank fire outside Rashaya. The village comidands the supply route the guerrillas-are trying to establish from Syria to the camps they hold in southern Lebanon. I Pueblo Story Starts | I Today on Page D-1 ^ ’The USS Pueblo has joined that haunted fleet of ships whose ghosts remain long after they have vanished from the sea. ’The ghost remains to pluck our conscience and to'^remind ns of the men of the Puebitv—their suffering and the bitterness of their decisions about duty, courage, loyalty. * * * So interwoven are all the facets of the Pueblo story that to teU It at all requires telling it in full. That is what a team of Associated Press newsmen will do, starting today on page D-1. By The Associated Press Concern over law and order. President Nixon’s pblitical clout and New York Mayor John V. Lindsay’s driving effort for reeiectlon are adding up to one of the nation’s most important off-year elections. j ^ Much attention in tomorrow’s voting falls - on Lind,say. The onetime Republican glamor boy was considered a cinch loser four months ago but has rebounded to become odds-on favorite to retain what is often desijribed as the second-most difficult elected office in the nation. j, Beyond the New Voih race, though, political observers * are looking t o gubernatorial fights ip New Jersey and Virginia and mayoral elections in Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and Buffalo for indications on voter thinking. The balloting in New Jersey and Virginia is of particular interest because President Nixon has injected himself in both races in his first domestic political campaigning since his own election a year ago. NEW YORK POLL The latest and final straw poll taken by the New York Daily News shows Lindsay, running on the small Liberal and Independent tickets, with 48 per cent of the vote. Democrat Mario Procaccino 27 per cent and Republican John Marchl 23 per cent. Two per cent were dn- Related Story, Page A-8 decided in the newspaper’s poll, which has correctly forecast the winner in the city’s mayoral election ov^r the past 40 years. The fights for the other city halls are seen as tests of a curr^t thesis that middle-class America is in revolt over law-and-order and the aspirations d urban blacks. Detroit and Cleveland have Negro candidates for mayor, with Democrat Carl B. Stokes running-fw reelecthm in the Ohio city and Wayne County Autf-tor Richard Austin seeking a first term running the Michigan metropolis. Stokes, first black mayor of a major U.S. city, is challenged by Republican Ralph J. Perk with the race rated a virtual tossup. The key issue has been over control of the police force with the racial angle simmering below the surface. 2 Areas in County to Vote on Merger, Incorporation Residents in the Farmington area decide tomorrow on consolidation while voters in Wolverine Lake and part of Commerce Township decide on incorporation. Officials are expecting a heavy vote in Farminglon city and township. Wood Creek Farms and Quakertown on the proposed consolidation. * it * Voters in each of the four areas must approve consolidation for the measure to pass. If consolidation is approved, nine men will be elected to a charter commission to write a charter for the new city. There are 28 candidates. Five of the commission members would represent the township, two willl be from the city, and each village will have one representative. Quakertown residents also vote on a new slate of village officers, a village charter amendment, and a Detroit Edison franchise question. There ^ are five candidates for the two council posts and one each vying for president, treasurer, clerk and assessor. The proposed charter ’ amendment authorizes $1 salaries for the president, treasurer; assessor and the two coun-cilmen. The franchise question concerns granting permission to Detroit Edison to furnish all electricity in the village. ★ ★ ★ Residents in Wolverine Lake Village and an almost 6-square-mile portion of Commerce Township vote on the proposed incorporation as a home rule city. Voters also are being asked to choose nine charter commission members htim a field of 12 to draw up a clQr charter if incorporation is improved. 'Assassination Threat Growing' City Man Slain; r—y r- lull I" Toda/s Susp6Gt Is risid Press DR. MILTON S. EISENHOWER WASHINGTON Ml - “An escalating risk of tioii” exists ini' America today for other public figures and lower elected leaders as well as president, the National Commission on Violence says. In one of two weekend reports, the commission said public figures in and out of office should be afforded greater government protection. ^ ^ In the second, it warned that a “mosaic of disemtent” pervades the nation’s system of criminal justice, making control of violent crime a campaign with “no real hope for success” unless radically changed and adequately funded. Dr. Milton Eisenhower heads the Commission, which was named by former President Lyndon R. Johnson after the June 1968 assassination pf Sen. Robert F. Klmn^y. UNRESPONSIVE SYSTEM Without drawing a parallel, the commission pointed in both reports to increasing discontent with, and agitation against, what a significant proportion of the population feels are unresponsive institutions in society and government. Among the causes of discontent are ‘‘police lawlessness, degrading prison conditions and other deficiencies’-’ In criminal justice as well as the seeming Inability of theTHwr to fight back against expMtation, the commission said. Making a distinction between nonconsplratorlal assassinations — such as the murders of President John F. Kennedy and his brother Robert F. Kennedy by lone malcontents — and “political” as.sassinations in which an organized group uses murder to accomplish political ends, the_commission said: ‘‘Political violence In the United States today is probably more intense than it has been since the turn of the century. If civil strife continues to become more violent, political assassinations may well occur.” ‘RECOGNIZE NEEDS’ In its report on law and order, the commission said governments - local and state and federal -- must recognize needs of their citizens and act upon them if they are lo effectively enforce tMir laws. ' ' Noting that the nation spends ihore fdr xa^icultural subsidies than on elements of its system of crlihlnal justice — police, courts and the prisons — the commis.slon recommend^ increasing spending by $5 billion a year. Efforts by one government element in the fight against crime often undermine those of another, it said, recommending establishment of a National Criminal Justice Center to coordinate efforts. The Commission also called for increased legal aid for the poor such as that provided by the Office of Economic Opportunity, contending alienation and lawlessness are caused in part by landlords who charge exhorbitant rents, racial blockbusting, unscrupulous merchants tern that lets them get away with it. and a sys- A neighborhood feud Ihis morning resulted In the shooting death of Paul Parker, 55, of 472 Wyoming and the arrest of John Reed, 46, of 391 Vi Franklin, according to Pontiac police. Parker died at Pontiac General Hospital at 11 a m., shortly after having been rushed from a muddy vacant lot at Highland and South Boulevard. Police said he had been shot twice in the abdomen allegedly witj! a 22-caliber rifle that Reed had recently'purchased. folice are seeking a murder warrant against Reed. LONG-RUNNING FEUD Police said that Parker and Reed had a long-running feud and that Parker had allegedly assaulted Reed yesterday afternoon. At that time, Parker allegedly entered Reed’s home, argued and then slashed Reed’s cheek, an ihjury that required 10 stitches, r Parker told Investigating police then that Reed had started the fight when Reed hit him with a baseball bat. Lions Hoar Detroit downs S«a Fl^aneiseo -PAGEeil. Nareofkk Talk Waterford High sttideftte Vw evgagiitliat PAGE A4., THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. NOVEMRER 8. 1989 Crew of Hijacked Jetliner Assails FBI ROME (A Italiat| authorities questioned hijacker Raphael Minichielld again today l|n his isoiation cell as the FBI canje under attack from the crew of 1 the commandeered Trans World Airlines jet. Hie pilot, Capl. Donald J. Cook Jr. of New York, charged that FBI men in New York ignored his instructions to keep away from the plane when it made a refueling stq> at Kennedy Airport. A A ★ He said this upset the 20-year-old hijacker and he fired a shot into the roof of the cockpit. Cook said he had radioed Kennedy that the plane must be taken to an “isolated area to be rehieled as rapidly as possible." Instead, he said, a crowd met the plane and “the hijacker became agitated and began running jip and down the aisle.” TT WAS BLOWN BY FBI’ “I shouted for them (the FBI) to get away, but they 'didn’t move," Cook said. “They told me, “We’ll niove the plane when we get good and ready’. . . The whole thing was blown by FBI.” Later, on his arrival in the United States, Cook softened his criticism, saying, “They didn’t do i t intentionally.” He said he did not recall accusing the agents of acting like “idiots,” a remark attributed to him in Rome. At ihe*^I’s New York headquarters Friday, newsmen were told that Assistant FBI Director John M. Malone donned TWA coveralls at the airport, sneaked under the jet’s belly to try to get a clear shot at Minichiello, but then decided against it. GLISTENING QUEEN—The shapely form of the Cunard liner Queen Elizabeth 2 gleams undqr lights in dry dock at Southampton, England. The ship is there for her first checkup and overhaul since she entered the North Atlantic service last May. NO COMMENT BY FBI Neither Malone nor the FBI in Washington” would comment on Cook’s Police Seek Motive in Beating PoUce today are trying to determine the motive of at least three teen-agers accused of “severely beating” a Water-fmd Township man and looting his home eariy Saturday. ’They did heavy damage to the home in their spree, police said. The man, Ralph Lipsitz of 671 was in fair condition this ^ming in Pontiac General Hospital. Police and juvenile authorities are holding three suspected assailants. ‘W ★ * ^ Lipsitz, who police said is in his 30s, wa?. beaten about the face with a beer bqttig, accprding to detective Lt. David Putnam. He received severe bruises and a possible broken jawbone. * * * Police said the assailants made off with some jewelry and other valuables. The suspects were apprehended near the scene by Waterford Patrolman Daniel Coakley and Sgt. Alton Doud, IN COUNTY JAIL Being held in the Oakland County jail in lieu of ^0,000 bond is John Nicholson, 18, of 501 Granada, Pontiac. He stood mute when arraigned Saturday before Waterford District Judge Kenneth Hempstead on charges of breaking and entering and assault to do great b^ily harm less than murder. His exam was set for Friday. Two Pontiac juveniles, both 16, are being held at Oakland County Children’s Village. Police said other youths may have been involved in the incident. * ★ ★ Lipsitz told police he was awakened at about 3:25 a.m. by someone at the door. When he went to the door, several youths demanded money and he said assaulted him when he refused. October Offered Varied Weather Menu October served Oakland County residents a potpourri of weather—some sunshine, some fog, some rain, some snow. In all, there were 20 days of sunshine as compared to October 1968’s 28 sunny days. Housewives were happy, however. as there were three sunny Mondays to help with the fall housecleaning chores. Sportsmen and outdoor < only one Sunday of sunshine during the month. ■ The Weather High mercury reading of 79 degrees was reached Oct. 5. ’This was two degrees colder than the previous October’s high of 81 degrees. The thermometer slid to a brisk low of 28 degrees bn Oct. 22, repeating the previous October’s low. Last month’s mean temperature of 50.6 degrees was -2.5 degrees colder than October 1968. Total monthly rainfall of two inches helped alleviate the drought conditions and totaled .8 inch more than the 1.2 inches chalked up in October 1968. Snowfall in flurries was not measurable. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITy—Today and toni^t cloudy and not much temperature ' li chance of occasional p^ods of drizzle or light rain. Highs today 48 to S2, lows foni^t 35 to 40. Tomorrow mostly cloudy and a little warmer with chance of riiowers, hi(dis 50 to 54. Wednesday’s outlook partly cloudy with little temperature change. Precipitation probabilities in per cent today, tonight and tomorrow 30. IWnds 10-15 miles per hour north-northwest. Tediy III Pontiac LowmI lomporature preceding I At I e.m.: Wind Velocity, IMS Direction, West-Northwest , Sun sets todey at S:25 o.m. Sun rises tomorrow at 7:10 a.m. Moon sets today at 2:36 p.m. Moon risses tomorrow at 1:19 a.n U. S. Role in Laos Hit MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Union charged today that U.S. military interference in Laos has created an alarming and dangerous situation iii that Southeast Asian nation. The charge was contained in a protest address by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. Man Leaps From U. N. UNITED NA'nONS, N.Y. (AP) - U.S. citizen Tadeusz Rymanowstd of Hicks-ville, N.Y., jumped to his death from the 37th floor of the U.N. headquarters building today. chargei However an assistant district attorney in New York who worked with the FBI, Albert T, Taub, said Cook’s criticism was irresponsible and that the pilot was portraying himself as “the sole hero of the escapa^.” * * * Minichiello was questioned for three hours yesterday. He appeared calm and occasionally absentmlnded police said. He was allowed no visitors, not even his father, 80, who drove up from Naples. hope they will give him all the care necessary to make him right in the head again,” said Luigi Minichiello. * ★ * Italian authorities charged Minichiello with bringing military weapons into the country, kidnaping Airport Police Chief Pietro Guli, extorting police credentials from Guli, illegal possession of firearms, and personal violence against the plane crew. U.S, authorities charged him with air piracy, which cRp be punishable by death, kidnaping ahd interfering with the operation of a commercial plane. ’They have not filed an extradition request, however. NO LAUGHING MATTER THEN-Capt. Dohald Cook Jr., pHot of the TWA plane hijacked from California to Rome, is able to joke about thq affair aftCT returning to New York last night. However, he said the crew didnt find the FBI s actions in the case at all funny. Cook said the crew felt that actions by agents while the hijacked plane was being refueled in New York jeopardized [he ves of those aboard. Shown are (from left) First Officer Wenzell Williams, Cook, TWA President F. C. Wiser, Stewardess Tracey Coleman and Flight Engineer Lloyd Hollrah. Eight Are Arraigned in Narcotics Raid Eight young persons arrested Friday afternoon in a Sylvan Lake narcotics raid were arraigned Saturday morning before District Judge Carl Ingraham. All eight failed to post bond and are still held in Oakland County Jail. Two of the arrested — Joey Dye, 18, of •2336 Woodrow Wilson, Apartment 2, Syl- No Quick Action t on School Reform LANSING (AP) - The MichigM Legislature opens its fourth week on educatjbnal reform tornwrow with little to show for the previous three. ^ Lawmakers are running out of expep^ money — now cut off at $3,000 a yea^ and grumbling about having to work as the holidays draw nearer! ★ 4 They’ve taken the day off today — the Senate convenes at 8 p.m. tomorrow; the House at 2 p.m. Wednesday — so Detroit legislators may take part in tomorrow’s city election campaign. On the surface, the outlook seems bleak, for Gov. William Milliken to find his education reform package or major parts of it under his Ctaistmas tree. ★ ★ -A House Taxation Conunittee Chairman George Montgomery, D - D e t r o i t, predicted the Democratic-controlled lower chamber would be ready to act on the governor’s proposals “about the last week in April.” I van Lake, and Mike Hilyard, 23, of 5560 S. Commerce, West Bloomfield 'Township — pleaded guilty to possession of narcotics. They were fined $250 each and sentenced to 30 days in jail. Preliminary examinations were set for Nov. 6 for Larry Severs, 19, of 103 Gladstone, Pontiac, and 'Don Sloan, 21, of 7600 Cooley Lake, White Lake Township. Severs was charged with carrying a concealed weapon and Sloan with possession of heroin. Both pleaded innocent. ★ * ★ * Demanding a jury trial were Connie Hymes, 20, of 2336 Woodrow Wilson, Apt. 2, Sylvan Lake, and Connie Wickman, 18i of 4946 Reynolds Court, Waterford Township. Miss Hymes is charged with the s£fle of LSD and possession of narcotics. Miss Wickman is charged with being a disorderly person. Both pleaded innocent. Stan Doeman, 21, of 1894 Union Lake, White Lake Township, pleaded innocent to charges of possession of narcotics. His preliminary examination is. set for Nov. 5. Pontiac and Sylvan Lak/police staged the raid on Miss Hymes’ apartment Friday, confiscating more than $10,000 of Hnicfc® Birmingham Luncheon Will focus on Prejudice BIRMINGHAM — Prejudice will be discussed at a luncheon meeting Wednesday at 12:30 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church of Birmingham, 1589 W. Maple. Following the luncheon, four women, a Jew, a Catholic, a Negro, and a Protestant,. each will speak five minutes on “Roots of Prejudice.” A question-and-answer period will follow. ★ ★ ★ The women participating in the program are volunteer homemakers who will tell about the prejudice in their lives and the lives of their children and how they have been affected by them. Jerome Y. Halperin of Birmingham Ml address Yale L8w School students oiKreal estate planning. He is a partner and regional tax director of Lybrand Ross Bros. & Montgomery accounting firm in Detroit. Pakistan Riots Kill 7 DCCA, Pakistan (Jtl — Three hum dred persons were under arrest today after a weekend of rioting over language differences in which seven persons were killed and at least I20 hospitalized, the government announced. Proposal by AM A BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Robert J. Wolforth, 281 Douglas, has hpen named vice president and general manager of the Earl A. Thompson Manufacturing Co., Detroit-based special machinery builder. , ★ ★ * He will be responsible for the over-all management of engineering and manufacturing and will serve on the board of directors of the Thompson Division. ★ ★ * Wolforth was graduated from General Motors Institute with a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering. 'Medicredif' Plan Urged j WASHINGTON (DPI)—The American Medical Association (AMA) proposed today Congress consider enacting a voluntary national health insurance plan geared to tax credits. The AMA calls it “medicredit.” • The plan would allow individuals and families who buy private medical insurance to deduct a certain portion of the premium costs from their income taxes. How much they could deduct would depend on how much they owe in taxes, with the smallest tax liability drawing the largest credit. * ★ ★ For those in the bottom 30 per cent of taxpayers, participation in a private health plan would be paid for entirely by the federal government. The plan would not effect the govemmen’s Medicare program for those over 65. Medicredit was explained by Dr. Russell B. Roth, Erie, Pa., speaker of the AMA’s House of Delegates, in testimoiw prepared for the House Ways and Means Committee. Donald E. Peterson of 1659 Spotswood has been elected a vice president of Ford Motor Co., in charge of car planning and He will direct a new organization h the Product development group to pro vidd added emphasis on advanced plan ning. Petersen was formerly director ol the forward plans office for thi marketing staff. He had also been car product planning manager for the Fon division and latej*,^ for the produc development group. Edward L. Tappert, 1081 Rock Spring, has received the National Quality Award presented by the National Association of Life Underwriters and the Life Insurance Agency Management Association. He la with the American United Life Insurance Co. agency in Southfield. Brother of Girl Left on Highway Missing NATIONAL WEATHER — There will be rain tonight in northern New England BDdlaabeltfromLAulaianatothe Great Lakes. Showers are expected in the Pacific Northwest It will he warm in the Great Plains, cool in New England and cold in $he Northwest. BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (UPI) - A woman charged with abandoning her 5-year-old daughter oh a freeway has refused to answer questions about the disappearance of a second child, believed missing eight months. Sheriff’s deputies from Los Angeles attempted to question Betty Louise Fou-quet, 26, and her common-law husband, Ronald Fouquet, 31, yesterday about the disappearance of Jeffrey Lansdown, 8, the abandoned girl’s brother. On the adyice of her court-appointed lawyer, Mrs. Fouquet refused to talk with investigators. Officers dug up the backyard of the Fouquet home in the Bell Gardens section of Los Angeles Saturday night. They found nothing. FINALLY FOUND The Fouquets were arrested on child-abandonment charges after the girl, Jody was picked up by offices on a freeway between here and Los Angeles. She had been told to hold onto a fence until someone helped, and to say her name was “Smith,” police said. The child’s identity was traced through newspaper pictures almost a week after she was found. ★ ★ ★ Billy Joe Lansdown, 34, a mechanic from Camas City, Ore., contacted Los Angdes police and told them be was Jody’s father. He said he and BIrs. Fou- Sit had three children in their five-year rriagc., She Ipft hiip five years ago,-^ he said. Lansdown said he had custody of me of the children, Dena, 4, who was bom after they"* partwi. Another child, Timothy, 7, was with the Fouquets when they were arrested. Lansdown said Jeffrey also had been' in the custody of his mother and stepfather. A neighbo’ of the Fouquets in Bel Gardens said she saw the other children, but never Jeffrey, in the she lived next door to them THEY’RE NOT TALKING-Mrs. Bettv Bther children, Fouquet (left) and her common-law w . eight months husbatrf, Ronald, have maintained a ^ firm silence on the whereabouts of th! »" • Evangelist Talks at Waterford High Teens Get Dope on Drugs ANTIDRUG TUNE—A lyrical approach to the drug eoniii* pnu Phei# problem is presented by the Gonzales group. "Hiey are (from Rivera, Rudy Bustillos, CeCe LaCasse, Margie Pacillas and left) Frank Gonzales, his wife, Jeanne, Joe Costello, Eli Rene Alvidrez. Ry TIM McNulty WATERFORD TOWNSHIP -Waterford High School students “tuned In” Friday morning, and maybe some droppe