THE PONTIAC PRES VOL, 124 ~ NO. 211 ★★★★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1966 —42 PAGES uniters? % Weather os. wnm* mm* *m Mostly Sunny Uni fed Fund Torch Is Lighted to Launch Campaign LBJ, Soviet Scan N-Pact Viets Ask McNamara for More GIs SAIGON (UPD — Defense Secretary Robert McNamara heard an appeal today from South Viet Nam’s top military leaders for £ more American fighting men. Informed sources said he was considering sending the,first U. & troops into the Mekong River Delta area. McNamara spent most of the day la a “shirt sleeve working session” with Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the U. S. military commander, then sped under heavy escort to the offices of Premier Ngnyen Cao Ky and chief of state Gen. Ngnyen Van Thieu. U. S. troops -f now about 320,-. 000 strong — thus far have remained free of any large-scale action in the Mekong Delta south of Saigon and the action there has been carried out by South Vietnamese troops, sometimes with U. S. air support. ★ ★ ★ He brushed aside newsmen’s questions when he emerged from the sessions, but informed sources said both Ky and Thieu told him more American troops were needed to successfully halt Communist aggression in South Viet Nam. SPECIAL MESSAGE? There was speculation that McNamara carried a special message to the two Vietnamese leaders from President Johnson. Thiea and Ky will represent Sooth. Viet Nam at the Manila summit meeting two weeks from now. McNamara arrived here Monday for a four-day fact-finding tour for President Johnson. Sources said U. S. commanders told^him in conferences yesterday land early today U.S. troop strength should be increased above the 360,000 level which it is scheduled to reach by the end of this year. U. S. troop strength now stands at about 320,000. LI'L ONES ' PRESIDENT MAKES POINT — President posals for improving relations between the two Johnson and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gro- nations. Gromyko is attending the U. N. General myko are shown in the midst of discussions at the Assembly session and participating in talks with White House yesterday. They met to review pro- world leaders gathered in New York. “We should have pinpointed our recovery area a little better.” In Today's Press 1967 Budget | Waterford Township 1 Board sets public hearing | date — PAGE A-S. I Dr. Sheppard | Strict rules on news 1 media for hearing—PAGE B-4. Newspapers Arrangement, editing helps the reader — PAGE B4. Area News...........Ail Astrology ........D-2 Bridge ....... . . .M Crossword Puzzle .. .D-il Comics ......... D-2 Editorials ........A4 High School ..... B-l ....D4 .....M ...0-I-C4 ....D* TV-Radie Programs D-ll Wilson, Earl .....D-ll Women’s Pages B4—B-» Hunters Given Early Warning Woman, Boy Struck by Pellets; Home Hit • A Highland Township woman escaped injury although struck in the face with a shotgun pellet. ★ ★, . ★ a A 13-year-old Holly Township youth was also unharmed, despite being “rained on” by nearly spent pellets near Big Wilson Lake. ★ ★ ★ • Shot and BBs were reported^‘.‘flying all over” his-home . by an Orion Township man. ★ ★ , ★ • Three geese were shot on private property in Independence Township and an Oakland Township woman’s two pet ducks were killed by young hunters.' These were among first-day happenings of Michigan’s 1966 dnck and-geese banting season and proytoted a warning from Oakland County Under-sheriff Donald M. Francis. “I’d say we were just lucky so far,” Francis said, “but hunters have simply got to use good judgment and care when they’ve got a gun in their hands. * ★, * “Shooting on private property is by permission of the owner only, and even\in the case of some public waters, care must be used because of nearby residential areas.” *■ it ★ Francis also pointed out that reckless use of firearms and accidental gunshot injuries can result in suspension of a hunting license in addition to criminal charges. Congress to Freeze Administration Bills WASHINGTON 0 r- Flushed with adjournment fever, Con, gress is getting ready to lock the cold storage vault on a* dozen major administration legislative proposals on its way out of town. ★ ★ * After a huddle with Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen yesterday,. House Speaker John W.. McCormack announced a quitting goal of Oct. 22, He said the final curtain might be pulled even before then. “We have gone over the program very thoroughly and we see no real difficulty in being able to adjourn by Oct. 22,” he said. * ★ ★ Later, McCormack and Mans-field met at the White House with President Johnson and Viee President Hubert H. Humphrey. Sun and Showers Forecast for Area Sunshine and showers is the forecast through Thursday in the Pontiac area. ★ * -★ The weatherman promises fair and cool with lows of 30 to 38 tonight. Tomorrow will be warmer with highs climbing to 62 to 70. Thursday will be a little warmer with a chance of showers. Morning west to northwesterly winds at 15 to 28 miles per hour will diminish tonight. • ★ ★ ★ A mild 47 was the low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. By 1 p.m. the mercury had reached 60. Gromyko Sees 2-Nation Push Toward Accord State Dept. Agrees With Red Appraisal; More Talks Expected WASHINGTON (/PI —Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko says after meeting with President Johnson “it looks like both countries are striving to reach agreement" on a treaty to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. The State Department promptly agreed with Gromyko’s appraisal. Soviet-American talks on the nonproliferation question reportedly will resume in New York within a few days with William C. Foster as the likely U.S. negotiator. He is head of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. After Gromyko met at the White House with Johnson for an hour and 45 minutes and had a 2 V4-hour dinner meeting with Secretary of State Dean Rusk at the State Department, sources said both sides are in agreement that a nonproliferation agreement is desirable. ★ ★ ★ The sources said-“some of the underbrush” had been cleared away by the two meetings. AGREEMENT In general, under such a nonproliferation treaty, the nuclear countries would agree not to sell or give away nuclear weapons. And under the international pact, nonnuclear countries would agree not to acquire such weapons. Gromyko’s meetings with Johnson and Rusk provided fresh evidence that a aew era of friendly relations is opening up between the United States and the Soviet Union. . They could lead, in addition to the nuclear nonproliferation pact, to parallel reductions of American and. Soviet forces in Europe, to increased U.S.-Soviet trade and travel and perhaps, as officials here hopefully believe, to eventual Soviet peacemaking efforts in the war in Viet Nam. 1,500 Men, 26-35^ to Get Draft Exams Michi- LANSING (AP) gan draft boards 1,566 men aged 26 to 35 throngh physical examinations in November—first time since the Korean War this age group has been screened for possible military service. it it it Cal. Arthur Holmes, State Selective Service director, ■added that Michigan local boards have not yet received authorization to induct men over 26. Pontiac Prcu Photo Dr. Don O. Tatroe Pushes Button To Light UF Torch City Hall Lawn Ceremony A torch-lighting ceremony on the City Hall lawn launched the 1966 Pontiac Area United Fund drive last night. The torch, a symbol of hope to UF-aided area .families, will burn brightly PUSH FOR SAFETY — Birmingham Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley (right) and Delos Hamlin, (center) chairman of file Oakland County Board of Supervisors, look over file agenda for a traffic safety improvement conference scheduled for Fri- day. Handing out the schedule is William E.' Barber, specialist frthn Michigan State University’s traffic center. The imeeting is to take place at Oakland University. Group to Study Pontiac Plans Pick Frayer to Head Citizens' Committee The expanded Citizens’ Committee for Positive Progress last night elected Donald R. Frayer president and adopted a resolution urging further study of downtown Pontiac redevelopment plans by the City Commission, Frayer of Don Frayer Home Furnishings, Inc., 1108 W. Huron, Waterford Township, had been spokesman for the more loosely organized citizens’ committee which had circulated petitions prior to the Sept. 27 hearing on the Taubman Plan. The resolution passed last night extends the opinion expressed earlier in the petitions. “We, of the Citizens’ Committee for Positive Progress, ask that the City Commission of the City of Pontiac investigate and offer a cost analysis of the Taubman and the University of Detroit plans, considering all factors involved, such as federal, state and potential private funds,” the resolution says. It also asks the commission “to submit a public report of their findings prior to going ahead with the Taubman shopping center.” Following the election of officers, committees were organized to handle financial, legal and communication matters. The more than 40 persons attending last night’s session represented business, labor, cultural, church, fraternal and social organizations, Frayer said. They viewed a movie and slide presentation about the deck concept of city planning used in Hmtford, Conn., and San Francisco, Calif., and proposed for Pontiac by the University of Detroit School of Architecture. until the record $1,042,-000 goal is reached. Dr. Don O. Tatroe, general campaign chairman, lighted the torch after saying “May this torch symbolize the proverbial cdndle which each q£us lights in the campaign to keep ablaze included in today’s Pontiac Press is a special United Fund section detailing the operations of several of file 54 UF-supported agencies. those ideals of freedom, of concern and volunteerism which undergird our society.” He urged each listener to “fulfill his responsibility and opportunity for serving his neighbors” by supporting the UF. The drive to help operate the 54 P.A.U.F. supported agencies will end Nov. 4. ★ ★ ★ Several P.A.U.F. board members, campaign and city officials attended the torch-lighting. A dinner meeting at the Pontiac City Cliib prior to the cere-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) NATIONAL NEWSPAPER WEEK-OCT. 9-15,1966 i JA—2 THE PONTIAC *PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1966 UP., Belittles State Poll B> the Associated, Press I day, wfth trips Wednesday toj The poll, published in a copy- • G, Memten Williams set iwtjM^opiinee, E?caiMd»a and righted story in the Detroit Way on a flying campa%n tour] Ma^jiidte. ' . ' ; BMA of the Upper Peninsula after a * * *“‘*il “The only important poll will n be the one taken Nov. t on election day," Williams said I- Monday after learning he had »- dropped 2 per cent in the poll. learning that the latest political poll showed he lost ground in the campaign. Williams planned to visit Alpena and Sault Ste, Marie to- News, showed Sen. (Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., leading In the race with 51 per cent support. United Fund Police Draw Drive Gets Big Problem Under Way Assigned to Control 'Incorrigible' Drivers • (Continued From Page One) , v inpny was attended by many of LANSIN<; (AP) _ Secretary fie same men. d State James Hare has turned • The dinner was a contribu- over to Michigan police agen-vtion from , the First Federal cies the apparently impassible • Savings and Loan Association task of controlling the State’s .' of Oakland. totally incorrigible drivers.” • Tatroe, also superintendent of « *» *. „ . . apprehended a substan- ■y aterford Township Schools, tjaj number 0f these drivers, we lold diners they must ‘'dream!must recognize that it is beyond T e ali s tic, forward - looking!the capabilities of the enforce-ijj reams to help build the kind;"1®* authorities to control this of town we want to live in.” I***" Hare Monday. Vj * '* He defined incorrigibles Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., ‘‘several hundred whose driver i dinner j pledged help) . licenses are revoked, who are Hcontinuingto drive daily, and from the standpoint of the City j who continue to pick up reckless Commission and himself to driving, drunken driving and make the drive a success. |high-speed tickets.” THE BIG BOARD I Hare said be sent the names _ .. r _. _ . T, _ of “140 totally irresponsible and Donald J. Frey, P-A.UF. mcorrigible drivers >f this ecutive direct e^latned the t „ «0 ^ Ijce jurisdicUons progress report board on which and the state police campaign resuits will be noted. • _ ” . _ . Wz i _ TIME PROBLEM The board, tided “P.A.U.F. , . . Drag Race,” cnrrently has LTo 1^. PreVen' five cars, each representing a dve acUon Hare saul m an ,n- different division, at die start- S* »X>l cf) are . line I in the awful position of having * j to stake out one of the drivers’ At each progress report, die homes and see if they get in cars will be moved up to the the car to drive to work in the' * per cent line equaling the per,morning.'It represents a ter-] His opponent for gubernatori-cent of pledges received by that j rible time problem for police jal election, Democratic State division. |agencies.” jChairman Zolton Ferency, was ordered Monday to leave an entrance to the General Motors Building in Detroit. REMAINS THE SAME Williams was given 46 pm* cent—a drop from the' 48 per cent shown in support of his candidacy a month earlier. Griffin’s percentage remained the same as before. The Williams drop occurred with a corresponding increase of 2 per cent in those undecided. * * a ‘‘The poll is encouraging,” Griffin said, “but it gives us no reason $o relax.” He said the chaise in William’s percentage “might be due in part*- to my opponent’s ill-“ Williams underwent surgery fast August to remove kidney stones. He did not campaign for five weeks while recuperating from the operation. FEEL HE IS AHEAD Williams said he feels he is ahead in the race and he ex-| peels to stay ahead. Griffin shook hands with commuters Monday on a train from Pontiac to Detroit. * * * Griffin, who was in Washington today, planned to appear tonight on a telethon at a Detroit television station. Joining him tonight will be Gov. George Romney, who told voters in Battle Creek and Kalamazoo Monday that the Michigan Republican party has shed its image as the “big business party.” SPECIAL INTERESTS’ Romney said it’s the Democrats now who are “special interest” oriented. After taking care of official duties in Lansing as the Legislature convened today, Romney planned to march tonight in the Bronson centennial parade. If the police agencies are unable to control these drivers and keep them off the road, the secretary of state said, he is going to ask the Legislature to grant power to his officers to arrest the liard-core problem motorists and take them court. An outdoor report board is' located in front of City Hall. FUND GOALS Division chairmen and goals are: $108,930 advance gifts, Howard H. Fitzgerald H; $28,534 manufacturing, Robert Anderson; $35,572 women, Mrs. James H. Co wen; $694,064 G. M. industrial, Alger V, Conner ; and And, it’s up to the courts to] $258,501 commercial, Charles j take firm action, he said, ad-1 He planned to campaign to-Woodhead. ding: 'day among steelworkers at * * * | “Unless the courts do so, the plants in Trenton and Detroit Some 6,000 volunteers began police often feel they’re spinning and to attend an opera tonight. A guard told Ferency, who was greeting office workers, that soliciting wasn’t allowed. Ferency left and greeted workers at two auto company plants in Detroit before speaking to j Democratic dinner. soliciting an estimated 180,000 residents, employes and firms this morning. bring their wheels when they such drivers in.” \ Many of the drivers listed were in metropolitan areas — 47 in Detroit, six in Pontiac, five Lansing, four in Kalamazoo. ‘Some of them have been re-1 Clearance Denied Scientific Reports An estimated three out of every five persons in Pontiac,] Waterford, Orion, Independence, Oxford, and Brandon townshipsivoked for years, but have never! MADRID, Spain (AP) “r“ * “ ” ” e d by UF-supportedj ceased driving for a single spokesman’for the 17th lntema-1 department tional Astronautics Congress! are se agencies. SEPTIC EFFLUENT - Waterford Township Trustee Loren D. Anderson points out waste which has been clumped on a hilly area of White Lake Township by a septic task cleaning firm. Anderson contends the effluent flows down a hill into Waterford Township, confronting residents of Moun-tainview Estates Subdivision with a serious pollution prob-lem. He has urged immediate action to reetify the condition, ' 'Pollution Problem' Correction Is Urged Waterford,Township Trustee Loren D. Anderson last night called for immediate rectification of what he refers) to as one of the community’s most serious pollution problems. In appealing to the Township Board, Anderson said it is his belief the condition is responsible for the outbreak of four hepatitis cases in Mountainview Estates Subdivision this year. According to Anderson, a septic tank cleaning firm is dumping its collections in an isolated hilly area of White Lake Township which it leases. Andersdn contends the septic tank effluent rolls down the hill, entering ditches and pipes and winding up near the subdivision’s swimming area on the north end of Maceday Lake. He pointed out to board members the strong possibility of pets carrying the waste into homes in reach of children. RECOMMENDATION Anderson recommended to the board that White Lake Township officials be contacted immediately in an effort to stop the dumping operation. However, White Lake Township Supervisor Edward Cheyz said measures already have been taken to correct the situation. Cheyz emphasized that the owner of the septic tank cleaning firm has. indicated he will cooperate with Cheyz’ request to cover the dumping area with lime every , day. Anderson was directed by the Waterford Township Board to brief Director of Inspections E. R. Lawson on the problem for a subsequent report. Despite Anderson’s contentions, Oakland County Health Department officials claim the dumping operation is not a violation of state law.' They contend the sewage is absorbed in the ground and does not roll down the hill. Any lake pollution fs caused by septic systems of lake front cottages, according to the health Police Busy on Break-Ins Pontiac police have stepped up .investigation into nighttime burglaries in the city, following reported theft of more than $5, ‘ ia goods in break-ins at i service station and two city homes. Hardest hit was a residence in the city's south end, where Willie Woods, 36, of 603 Highland reported loss of a stereo console valued at $1,295 and $3,000 worth of clothes. Police said entry to Woods* home had been gained by prying open a storm window and then forcing a second window at the rear of the building. Burglars left, police said, by breaking,.*)pefc a temporary wooden door which Woods had erected following a previous break-in,*! his home. , * vtir" 'V A stereo and clothes were also reported taken last night from a home' at 559 S. Sanford on Pontiac’s East Side. Mary Neal told police two televisions were taken in additiort to toe stereo and clothes, with total loss set' at about $650. The front-door glass of the home had been kicked in to enter toe house, according to police. Theft of 315 cartons of cigarettes valued at $778 was' reported at the Tulsa Service Station, 701S. Saginaw. Station manager John Chonka said thieves bad broken a side window, and then smashed padlock on a storeroom inside toe station. Unpredictable) Inez Whirling to Death MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - As Hurricane Inez 'whirled toward her death over Mexico today, U.fJ. weathermen waved a thankful goodby to the most unpredictable storm ever to come screeching at them out of the tropics. It was 18 long, uneasy days from the time a U.S. weather satellite snapped the first picture of Inez off the west coast of Africa Sept. 23 until she smashed ashore in Mexico. ‘day,” he said. The Weather -su* tmm am Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly cloudy, windy and cool today with widely scattered brjgf showers. Highs 58 to 64. Fair and cooler tonight. Lows 30 to 38. Wednesday mostly sunny and a little warmer, highs 62 to 70. West to northwesterly winds 15 to 28 miles today diminishing tonight. Outlook for Thursday a little warmer with possible scattered showers. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 20, tonight and Wednesday 10. i said today four American scien-i jtific reports scheduled for pre-| k I 1 sentation were withdrawn at the /NO if OGf iGSS | last minute ory>rders of the U.S. State Department’s Office of] Munitions Control. in GE Talks The spokesman said the reports were withdrawn because of objections to their release by WASHINGTON, (AP) - The threat of a strike against giant General Electric Co. heightened Band of Cong Is Wiped Out Birmingham Area News Two Studies Accepted by City Commission BIRMINGHAM - Two major studies — one aimed at expanding the auto sales district, the other directed toward an underground parking tot in the Civic Center — were accepted last night by the City Commission. The commission took no immediate action on either proposal, but referred both for further consideration. The City Plauthlg Board was asked to sdbmit its recommendation on the land use Study, which involves the car dealerships oa south Woodward and the residential properties immediately to the west. Envoy Renews Peace Efforts UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Despite Communist rejections, British Foreign Secretary George Brown, was expected to make a new appeal for support for his Viet Nam peace plan today in a general policy speech before the IXN. General Assembly. Informants said Brown also would deal with other international issues and Would stress the role of. a strong, unified Western Europe as a force for peace. North Viet Nam and Red China rejected Brown’s'peace proposals in broadcasts today and repeated their demand for withdrawal of U.S. troops. The foreign secretary sought American reaction to bis plan at an hour-long meeting late Monday with U.S. Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg. Goldberg later told newsmen the United States was giving very thoughtful ednsideratiojr to Brown's proposals. /■ Brown earlier conferred7With Foreign Secretary Cprnelious Manescu of Roroania/the member of the Soviet bjdc which has retained the closest relations with Communist China. The commission directed City Manager'Robert S. Kenning to return in two weeks with a report on what action should be taken next on the parking facility proposed for the Shain Park area. , *r MS The planning and design study contains three schemes and an alternative for redeveloping the area hounded by Daines, Hunter, Lincoln and Ffoyd-Purdy. ALTERNATIVE RECOMMENDED The Detroit consulting firm of Crane and ptorwjc. Associates, which undertook the study, recommends that the city consider the alternative which would extend the present automotive facilities west to Ann Street. Under this proposal all homes on the oast stop of Ann would be demolished to provide customer parking for the commercial and business properties fronting on Woodward. The first scheme, based on ah Auto Mart proposal that first initiated the study, was termed Impractical by the firm ★ ★ About 25 acres in the study rea would be required and it is virtually'impossihle to assemble this much property to ac- A complish the objectives of th^ 1, the firm noted. IMPROVEMENTS The third plan would oifly improve the existing auto/iacilities without expansion. The feasibility study of the parking lot contains cost comparison for, numerous types of plans, ranging from $485,000 for a 344-car above-ground structure south of/the park, to $6 million for tour levels extending under the park and four levels above ground south of the park. Urban League Calls Meeting on Letter Ripping City Plan saigon, south Nam the U.S, Air Force and the Na- today despite intensified efforts (AP)—A diehard band of “Viet tional Aeronautics and Space of government officials who fear Cong guerrillas answered an Administration. a walkout would hurt the Viet American demand to surrender * * * Nam war effort. with a hail of bullets today, and A member of the U.S. delega- “No progress” was the report]an encircling force of U.S, heli-tion said none of the four papers {^Secretary of Labor W. Wjl- copter troops wiped them out. contained classified material, lard Wirtz and Secretary of * * * He said they generally were Commerce John T. Connor after! A U.S. spokesman said 1st >s Tuesday at 5:59 p. i Pittsburgh 65 65 t I. s. Maria 58 : M | reviews of previously released more than two hours of separate « material on U.S. space pro- meetings with both sides Mon-I grams and developments. day night. Sentence for Rep. Poyvell Delayed by Trial Judge nn us. WlAlHift BUfifAU NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are predicted tonight over tiie northwest' tind the eastern section of the lower Lakm region. There will be cooler weather east of the Mississippi, warmer temperatures over the Plains states. NEW YORK (AP) - A trial judge has withheld pronouncing sentence in U.S. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell’s criminal contempt conviction until he hears Powell’s arguments that the case was out of the court’s jurisdiction. ★ ★ ★ State Supreme Court Justice Matthew M. Levy said he would put off sentencing until he decides on the validity of the trial, boycotted by Powell and his attorneys. ★ ★ ★ The Negro congressman, found guilty by an allfWhite jury Monday of willfully disobeying five court orders in connection I with a $164,000 libel judgment against him, faces a maximum jail sentence of°150 days and a ! fine of $1,250. Justice Levy asked Powell’s four-man legal staff to present its arguments for dismissal in addition to a pretrial motion made before the four walked out of court last Wednesday. LEFT COURT Levy had indicated to the attorneys that their presence during the trial could be considered an acceptance of its legality. They maintain the court has no jurisdiction in a criminal proceeding. ★ ★ ★ The six-year-old case involves $164,000 in libel damages owed by the New York Democrat to Esther James, 68, a Harlem widow whom he called during i television show a “bag woman’ a’go-between used by corrupt police to collect payoffs. cavalrymen killed 33 Viet Cong and captured eight in a five-hour engagement near the central coast 28 miles northwest of Qui Nhon. i It was the only ground action of any size reported as U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara met with leaders of South Viet Nam’s military government to hear tneir assessment of how the war is going. ★ ★ ★ Vietnamese headquarters reported a series df small-scale Viet Cong mortar attacks on outposts 40 to 55 miles from Saigon but no major clashes. TRUCKS BOMBED Tie air offensive against North Viet Nam showed no let-i|p with American pilots flying 116 strike missions Monday. They concentrated on Communist truck convoys. A special meeting of the Pontiac Area Urban League board of directors is scheduled tonight following what President E. Eugene Russell termed “some question about the function of the executive committee." Russell, in a letter sent to the 19 board members, asked that they make every effort to be present at the 8 p.m. meeting. Russell said the meeting was called because of ‘‘considerable interest in redevelopment of the downtown area.”J -i The special session follows by I one week a letter from the league executive board criticizing Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. and members of the City Commission for what the letter termed “arbitrary” adoption of the Taubman Plan. The three-page letter the agenda of tonight’s city Commission meeting. CRITICAL LETTER The letter blasted the commission’s action as “stunning and appalling ... a ritualistic farce.” • At least one member of the board of directors took issue with the executive group’s stand, however. Charles F. Brown, Pontiac manager for Consumers Power Co., described the letter as “totally without authorization.” “I personally would not have supported such a letter,” Brown said, “and to my knowledge, it does not express the desires of the Urban League board ”, LETTER DRAFTED Russell said the statement was drafted last Tuesday at a meeting of the executive board. Present at that meeting and supporting the letter, according to Russell, were Thomas W. Fowler z Jr., first vice president; Julian A. Cook, second vice president; Mrs. Laura A. Carey, secretary; and Clarence E, Barnes, executive director. < Not present at the meeting, and, in his words, “wondering” about the letter, was William J. Lacy, executive committee treasurer. ★ ★ ★ “Since I did not attend the meeting,” Lacy said, “I don’t have the background of those who drafted the letter . . . and I don’t feel I can be helpful in terms of a comment.” Several other directors polled declined to comment on the letter, citing tonight’s scheduled meeting as an opportunity for discussion of redevelopment issues. BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Dr. Carl N. DeSilva of 2409 Brent-havep, has been appointed chairman of the Department of Engineering Mechanics at Wayne State University. He succeeds the late Professor Herbert R. Lissner who died in May. Supervisors to Meet Again on Fund OK Delos Hamlin, chairman of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, has called an Oct. 19 board meeting to overcome a technicality that would delay federal funding for the Keego Harbor water system. it i ★ • ★ Supervisors wjll merely go on record as formally accepting a federal housing and urban development grant of $302,500 for the Keego Harbor project. Per-diem cost of the meeting to the county will be $15 for each of the 85 supervisors and $25 for the chairman, or a total of $1,308. Another expenditure will be approximately $260 in mileage allowance to supervisors. The need for approval of the grant by the supervisors to meet federal requirements came to the attention of the county last Thursday, according to R. J. Alexander, director of the County Department of Public Works. The full board of supervisors had met the day before this notification arrived and were not scheduled to meet again until Nov. 10. Bonds tor the water system project [will be sold next Tuesday, according to Alexander. The contract has already been awarded subject to the sale of bonds. At Commission Meeting Housing Request Due Tonight A resolution from the city’s Public Housing Commission that Pontiac ask federal approval for 350 additional public housing units tot the elderly, heads to-The U.S. troops also reportedinijghUs City Commission finding 20 enemy dead at the . site of a B52 bomber raid last! housing commission proweek about 33 miles north of P°ses 250 units of public Qui Nhon. ' housing for the elderly be put In the 10 days of fighting, the U.S. cavalrymen have reported killing 470 Not® Vietnamese and Viet Cong and taking 503 prisoners. ) on the 90-acre site owned by developer Charles L. Langs. Langs plans a 900-unit housing development on land1" oh the sooth side of Auburn next to the projected osteopathic college. Local housing officials plan to ask. federal approval for 350 units to allow for a cut in the request. • ★ ★ ★ In related business, the commission will receive a letter from the Citizens’ Committee on Also tonight, the commission to receive letters from the Pontiac Area Urban League and the Oakland County chapter of tiie National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. An appointment to the Police Trial Board is also scheduled tonight. Wayne Anable, 642 First, has been suggested by Youth. The letter endorses “all Commissioner John A. Dugan. positive efforts” made by the city to alleviate the housing shortage and pledges the committee’s cooperation.. The commission also will receive a report on bids for the demolition of 13 buildings in the R20 urban renewal project. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER" 11, 1966 State Legislature Back for Brief Session ,g a i i tie MODERN WISH LANSING (AP) — The Legislature returns briefly to Lansing today, considered likely to ignore implied consent, ask questions about motor vehicle inspection, delay ' action on grand jury laws and approve a low-cost housing program. In addition, the Senate is ex pected to try to override Gov. George Romney’s veto of a bill eliminating the one - week period a worker must wait before he’s eligible for state unemployment compensation benefits. Rep. J. Bob frailer, the House majority flow leader, estimates lawmakers will leave the capital after tody a one or two-day session. Termed by legislative leaders l likely topass is a bill setting up a state housing development authority, empowered to issue up to $500 million in tax-exempt bonds. Money thus raised would go to nonprofit organizations which would use it to finance construe- H & R Block Go. i Income Tax School 20 E. Huron 334-9225 tionof low and moderate-income housing, paying off the bonds from the rent they collected. ★ * ★ In theory, advocates say, municipalities who lower property taxes on such redeveloped areas could profit because new industry might be lured in and decay of the areas might be stemmed. Also involved in the plan, said Rep. William Ryan, D-Detroit, would be rent subsidies, possib- ly aided by federal funds, of up i $33 a mqhth. v * “If we don’t increase somehow the supply of low income lousing, we will never solve toe problem to dislocation to people iy urban renewal and “ fay. way projects,” Ryan said. Trailer said implied consent legislation has no Chance of being given new life tins yew, although Romney has said he will Viet Question on Dearborn Ballot Argued DEARBORN (AP) - Discussion over Dearborn Mayor Orville L- Hubbard’s Viet Nam advisory vote is becoming > almost as knotty as the war itself. John T. Dempsey, Republican candidate for Congress from the 10th District, asked today that Hubbard and the Dearborn City Council put three Viet Nam questions on the Nov. 8 ballot to find out if voters are hawks, doves or moderates. A a A U.S. Rep. John D. DingeM, D-Mich., who is running against Dempsey, has already blasted the Hubbard proposal and suggested a pair of more hawklike questions. Dempsey said that none 6f the questions submitted so far “clearly asserts the real complexities of the choice which faces this country and none can result in a meaningful expression of opinion.” NO LEGAL FORCE Last week the Council approved a referendum which would not carry any legal weight and is meant only to show how Dearborn voters feel about American policy in Viet Nam. The proposal reads: I “Are you in favor of an immediate cease-fire and withdrawal of United States troops so the Vietnamese people can settle their own problems?’ New Road Idea Tests Chivalry DEER PARK, N.Y. (AP) -Highway chivalry, dying since the first motorist drove past a disabled horseless carriage, may get a chance for a virtually painless comeback. A Long Island firm is testing device which could make almost every motorist a Good Samaritan. By simply stepping on his headlight dimmer at night or flashing his lights during the daytime drivers will be able to tell a Central dispatching service the location of disabled cars along a stretch of the Long Is-Expressway near . Old Westbury. The two- to three-week test, undertaken by Airborne Instrument Laboratories with a $70,-000 grant from the federal Bureau of Public Roads, will record the number of drivers who feel helpful when things are made easy for them! BUNKS RECORDED If there are no actual disabled cars, dummies will be used. Headlight blinks are recorded on automatic devices located at several points along the highway, They, in turn, pass the location along to service centers. Signs along the roadway will explain the experiment and ask motorists’ cooperation-A final report on the test due next May. There are more than 8,000 inland lakes in Wisconsin. Red Guards Molded Into Reserve Unit Most to Venezuela’s working force, an estimated 34 per cent, is engaged in cattle-raising. TOKYO (AP) — Communist China reported today that its fanatic Red Guards have been organized into a reserve fbree for its army. “We are a contingent for both combat duties and for study and propaganda work,” one Red Guard told Peking’s New China News Agency. it- ★ ★ The report said the young Red Guards in their nationwide purge had uncovered “weapons and secret accounts kept by the class enemies in anticipation oi a hoped-for restoration.” The report did not elaborate. There have been unofficial reports recently that the Rec Guards have been organized into military-style units. The Commurfist dispatch appearet to be official confirmation to this. ARE LEARNING As a reserve force of the Peoples Liberation Army, the! Red Guard fighters are making) vigorous efforts to learn from I the PLA,” Peking’s news agen-cy said. “They are organized in com-, parties, platoons and squads. Combat teams are sometimes! set up to carry out given tasks.". The agency did not specify the; tasks assigned to the Red! Guards or whether the youths! were being trained in the use of j weapons. Communist China hasj an estimated 2.5 million men in its armed forces. ask lawmakers to reconsider it. The doctrine of implied consent would permit police to make chemical tests on the blood of any licensed motorist they suspect of drunken driving. Friends said it would be a valuable aid to traffic safety; foes Contend it could force an arrested driver to give telling evidence against himself: i Another traffic safety law Romney has promised to request would require each Michigan motorist to have his vehicle inspected annually. . STATISTICAL PROOF Trailer indicated legislators may ask the’ governor for statistical proof (hat such a law would trim the number of accidents on state roads. On another matter, Romney asked Atty. Gerf. Frank Kelley last week for any suggestions he might have on changes in the laws regulating one - man grand juries. The governor said he would recommend such changes to the Legislature. Kelley, however, said Monday he had talked with the state’s three current one-man grand jurors and with the criminal di: vision of his office. All, he said, “agree that such changes should not be considered at the brief session of the. Legislature to be held this week.” “Some feel that there are of possible improvement in' the grand jury law,” Kelley wrote Romney. “Some feel that substitutes foi* the one-man juiy might be considered. But all agree tlrat any major changes should be recommended only after careful and serious study, without the pressure of urgent time limitations." Kelley said proposals for possible change should be ready for consideration next year. CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD!... EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 3324181. Another Brand New Shipment Arrives Quilted Full-Size Bedspreads Irregulars of Value* to $29.95 Another shipment of the** fin* quilted spreads in colorful florals or bright solids in full bed *****, only. All Americon made quality — slight flows or* not noticeable and should not affect looks or wearing Spreads—Basement The Heats On! It 5* Is At Our House* Yes, it's always on at the exact temperature we want it at any time, day or night, all Winter. Know why? I'll tell you. It's simply Smith's Complete Heating Oil Service. First of all, Smith gives us Automatic, "Keep-Full" Service. We always know that there's plenty of oil in the tank without even looking. They give us complete Burner Service, too, whenever we need it. And all of their deliveries are accurately metered to the lastdrop. Then, of course, we take advantage of their Painless Pay Budget Plan that makes each payment smaller. And, last but not least, they have an insurance plan that pays all of our bills in case of sickness or accident. Can you beat all that? We couldn't until we called H. H. Smith. Why don't you? It pays off in peace of mind, greater comfort, bettpr health, easier monthly payments and no payments in case of sickness or accident. Come in or call OIL COMPANY 590 S. Paddock St. PE 2-8343 Member of Oakland Heating Council KE$P FILL SERVICE E^Pf End Window Problems! Why Put Up With Old, Worn-Out House Windows Another Winter? Nu-Sash gives a clean, modern appearance while giving superior insulation: keeps out dirt dust, and noise; snap-out for easy inside-the-house cleaning; increase property value; raise easily ‘ -never stick or bind. j-Sash is a window specifically designed to replace old, drafty, out-of-date house windows at amazing new low cost. Old, loose fitting, rattling, out-of-date house windows —the major cause of cold, drafty, breezy rooms and sooty inside window sills — are a thing of the past since Nu-Sash. Homeowners everywhere are finding that by converting to Nu-Sash aluminum replacement windows, complete and maximum comfort is gained without major remodeling and other unnecessary and costly home improvement projects. Nu-Sash is a window specifically designed to replace old, out-of-date windows. Furthermore, the Nu-Sash window is fully tested and proved by one of the greatest testing laboratories in the building products field. One of the greatest features of Nu-Sash is that the window is installed without touching inside plaster and woodwork. This means no dusty and dirty installation work. Expert workmen remove the old sash and track, insert new aluminum jamb liners and tracks, then custom fit Nu-Sash securely into place. Complete installa-. tion, which is included in the new low cost of Nu-Sash, is done fast, safely and expertly. Savings in heating bills will pay for a Nu-Sash conversion. Many more time and money saving features in Nu-Sash ere gained since the anodized aluminum unit never needs paint, putty, caulking and other yearly household work and maintenance. Nu-Sash qualify-for low-interest home improvement loans. The window is rated superior to standards set up by FHA for new construction requirements. The Nu-Sash window recently appeared in issues of the Better Homes & Gardens magazine. It was awarded the guarantee seal of that publication. For additional free literature on Nu-Sash, mail the coupon below. Price samples are also available upon request. NO DOWN PAYMENT • MAKE YOUR MONTHLY I ' , PAYMENTS WITH YOURFUEL SAVINGS I I TO: NU-SASH 1004 Joslyn Avenue Pontiac, Michigan 48055 A 553a Engineered and Test-Proved by Weather-Seal, Inc CALL 338-4036 | Please send me Free Details And Sample Prices on Nu-Sash, Member Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce j STREET . 1 CITY____ NO OBLIGATION • FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION I - THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1966 UNITED FUND One gift works many wonders GIVE THE UNITED WAY You’ll feel nine feet tall! When you give the United Way you can be proud-real proud. You have proved that your concern for your community js both real and continuing. You know that all through the year your one gift will work many wonders because the people-serving agencies that share it won't have to take time out for separate appeals. You give life, you give love, you give hope when you give your fair share the United Way. GIVE to your Pontiac Area BOWLING PROPRIETORS OF OAKLAND COUNTY AIRWAY LANES Pontiac, 674-0424 AUBURN LANES 27 Squirrel Road Auburn Haights, UL 2-1710 COOLEY LANES 7875 Cooloy Lake Road Union Lake, 363-3612 FAIRGROUNDS BOWLING 1000 East Huron Milford, 684-3265 HOWES LANES 6697 Dixie Highway Clarkston, 625-5011 HURON ROWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Road Pontiac, FE 5-2525 LAKEWOOD LANES 3121 West Huron Pontiac, FE 4-7943 MONTCALM BOWLING 30 East Montcalm / Pontiac, FE 5-2221 north Hill lanes 150 West Tienken Road Rochester, 651-8544 ORCHARD LANES 645 North Opdyke Road Pontiac, 335-9293 SYLVAN LANES 2355 Orchard Lake Pontiac, 682-0700 300 BOWL 100 Cass Lake Road Pontiac, 682-6300 WESTSIDE LANES 199 Orchard Lake Pontiac, FE 4-0168 WONDERLAND LANES 8265 Richardson Road Walled Lake, EM 3-7131 LIGHTHOUSE LANES 4443 Dixie Highway Drayton Mains, 673-7464 SAVOY LANES 130 South Telegraph Pontiac, 333-7121 MAVIS LANES 2430 M87 Holly, 6374521 SUPPORT YOU PONTIAC ARM UNITED FUND BSP sss ':pp|: THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1966 Problem Child Is Clinics Job Several Groups He Grow Info Big Brothers Fill Need in Boy s Life Mike is only 10. At 10, a boy wants a father to look up to — someone to share his interest in football, maybe toss a few after work. ★ * * His father died last year and it takes time and energy for his mother to play both parental roles and support Mike and his two sisters. Se Mike went without male companionship and guidance — that is, until he get a “Big Brother” from the Big Brothers of Oakland County, a United Fund agency. < This one-man, one-boy relationship. has meant a lot to him. He’s lost that sense of loneliness and insecurity now that there’s someone he can talk to. The Big Brother looks for the boy’s positive qualities so he can recognize and encourage the youth’s achievements. * * * He b u i 1 d s up his little brother’s confidence, not by preaching or criticizing, but by creating self-confidence, a most solid foundation. Kg Brothers treat their charges as worthwhile boys with potential, so that the boy eventually begins to think of himself that way. The voulunteer brothers are community-minded men, married or single, recruited to meet the ever-increasing list of waiting boys. ★ . * * . The two go on excursions, play ball, and talk about “manly” things. INCORPORATION Big Brothers of Oakland County has filled nearly 500 assignments since its incorporation in 1954. Yet dozens of boys are still waiting. All it takes is time and a phone call expressing interest. Big Brothers of America, founded in 1946, now includes 86 chapters serving 11,000 boys. UF Notes Imagine 54 separate drives. That’s more than one a week. You save time and money the United Way. If you’re a den mother, a Red Crossv-bloodmobile assistant or a campaign worker, you’re a UF volunteer. Thumb sucking, temper tantrums and running away may indicate a child is having difficulty growing up. Working with these youngsters who find it difficult to adjust to home life, school and > the community, is the job of the Oakland County Child Guidance Clinic, 113 Franklin. This United Fund agency offers psychiatric, psychological and social work facilities for the diagnosis and treatments of habits and personality and behavior disorders of children. The 437 cases last year were all concerned with Oakland County children under 16 years or still attending high school. ★ A * The most effective clinical child guidance, authorities say, is on the younger children because their behavior patterns are most easily modified. Understanding and skilled treatment can usually correct the problems of an 8Vi-year-old, the average referral age to the clinic. EXAMINED When a child is first referred, either by a phone call from the parents, the doctor, a court, or other social agencies, Ids background is thofoughly examined. Information is gathered from all available sources including separate parental interviews, psychological tests on the child, and interviews with the child. The case is then discussed by the clinic staff tokbw-suits in a decision for clinical treatment, the suggestion of other plans, or referral elsewhere. If die decision is for clinical treatment, and only 35 per cent of the cases discussed are, one of the two teams will begin meeting with the child. Each team includes a psychia- PLAY BALL—Detroit Tiger Willie Horton dhows a little brother from Pontiac how to hold the ball properly. He is one of many busy men volunteering time to help a fatherless boygrow up happily. trist trained in diagnosis and treatment of child behavior problems; a psychologist trained in administering and interpreting intelligence and personality tests, and two psychiatric social workers versed in exploring and helping to improve faifllly relationships. shortIne .Currently the Pontiac office shares a psychiatrist with an other clinic and is short one social worker. ' The primary method of treatment is a series of weekly interviews with file child. One or more team members will meet with the pattent somewhere in the clinic. The adolescent is given toys to play with so he will relax. How toe plays with them can offer keys to his problems. If the child sacks a “mother” doll, for instance, the psychiatrist may ask the child to describe his mother. * * ★ If the patient is older, the interviews will probably be conducted across the desk. INTERVIEW PARENTS Parents are also interviewed as the clinic recognizes that phiMren don’t live in vacuums. •lie environment creates, and when adjusted can help solve, a child’s problems according to Donald Baillie, administrative director of Oakland County Guidance abates, Inc. Often family unit therapy, during which an entire family openly discusses their problems, is utilized. While these interviews are often tense, and-poteitfialty eruptive, they can be instrumental in helping family members adjust to each other, authorities say. Each member gets to hear how the rest of the family reacts toward himself. ; i ★ '' * '* If clinical treatment isn’t the best wayr to solve the child’s problems, other methods win be suggested by the dime staff. Hie staff may suggest that the parents change their method of handling the child, ask that the child be put in another environ-ment such as a boarding school, foster home, or 8n> institution; or. make arrangements for the youngster to attend a modified ' school program. The child may even be referred to another family counselling UF agency such as the Family Service of Oakland County, 132 Franklin, Catholic M Social Services of Oakland County, 53 Franklin. United Fund Grows By the beginning of toe Depression there were 386 commu nity campaigns in the United States which gathered $84,-796,505 in 1930. Today there are 2,220 cam. paigns conducted in the 50 states which collected $584 mil lioit in 1965. Families Found for Youngsters “Children belong in -family homes” insists the Michigan Children’s Aid Society, an agency which finds families to care for homeless youngsters. If the child only needs temporary housing this United Fund agency attempts to find foster parents for the youngster until be can be returned to his real parents. Adoptive parents we found for those “clients” needing permanent housing and affection — because they either weren’t wanted or couldn’t be cared for at home. In 1965 toe Oakland County office at 132 Franklin placed 45 children in foster homes and arranged adoptions for 107 more. * * * i The increase in agency service over the year is primarily due to the baby boom of the 40s and the increase of unwed moth-das and teen-age marriage breakups. Now more children need help than there are homes for. ing up. The Clinton Valley Boy Scout Council, 132 Franklin, shows that getting older is both fun and educational through its programs for boys 8 years or older. BUILDING PROGRAM Their character-building program includes outdoor camping, the development of knowledge and skills through education and practice, pnd insistence on fair play and good citizenship, to prepare the boys to be mature adults. The Boys’ Club of Pontiac, 530 E. Pike, and the Auburn H e i g h t s Boys’ Chib, 220 S. Squirrel, Pontiac Township, are places to make new Mends and develop vocational, recreational, ancUeducational interests. They also offer developmental and social, and personnel counseling if wanted. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1903 It Started Red Gross Fund for Viet Disasters Getting a Boost The Pontiac Area United Fond is donating $10,764 as its share to help replenish funds drained by increased activity in Viet Nam and major disasters during the past year. The approved money is being sent to the Oakland County Red Cross to help them support the National Red Cross ptea for $9 million to ease the critical financial situation. Currently, money for. activities in Viet Nam is befog taken from the ergantatim’s limited emergency funds tad based on present treads, that fond wiU be depleted by Jnae 38,1987. To date, more than $3.7 million -above the originally budgeted $17.5 million has been spent. The disaster fund is also slimming quickly. DISASTER RELIEF From March i, 1964,; when the Alaskan Earthquake occurred* through Feb. 28, 1966, Hie national organization expended $48.3 million for disaster relief ina host of major disasters. Hurricane Betsy qnteed nearly $13 mi The Disaster Revolving Fund which held $28 million in June 1964, only held $2.5 million in Feburary 1966 rWj ★ *• * ; 4 Ne special disaster campaign for funds was conducted during that period. APDEDFUND6 All local Red Cross chapters are being asked to donate specific amounts for the emergency proportioned on the basis of peculation figures. : The Pontaic area donated a larger amount than last yew on the basis of a 169,918 tion figure. Leader Dogs Allow Blind to Move About To restore a blind man’s confi- i dence, give him freedom of movement. With a leader dog supplied by Leader Dogs for toe Blind, a United Fund agency located in Avon Township, a blind person | can board a bus, cross main j street or go to Detroit — alone! I He can meet people anywhere — and on time — when led by his dog. A Leader Dog owner is totally j blind or has only slight light { perception. He or she is over i 16 and in good health. *“* ★ * A Leader Dog is between i | and 2 years old, friendly and in ; good physical condition when j accepted by the school. German shepherds, Labradors and gold- ; f; Do Your Share, 1 It’s Only Fair £ What to give is ultimate- S j ly up to the individual. | | But the United Fund J | suggests: r “One hour’s pay per | Z montti.” { If each does his share, § f- the total load is lighter 1 I on everyone. jr* en retrievers, always donated, make toe best leaders.. FOUNDED IN 1939 The dogs reach the training farm, founded by-a group of Michigan Lions in 1939, four months before their master. They we taught how to lead safely through any problem area. Then the people come for a four - week session daring which toey will be reeducated both emotionally and physically for a new way of life. After the trainer matches the dogs to people according to their “personalities,” pedestrian practice begins in earnest on the streets of Rochester. ★ - ★ Adjustment to more hazardous traffic conditions is accomplished on busy streets in Pontiac. SELF-CONFIDENCE By the time dog and master leave, with the $1,750 cost of dog and training paid for by public donations, they are attuned to each other. * * * The man has gained self-confidence by placing his trust, in the dog and earned his freedom of movement. Three out of every five people in the Pontiac area use the services of a UF agency. CANINE EYES —'Leader dog IbiM guides bis master, Perry Moore of Detroit, down the steps. Blinded in a shooting accident two years ago, Moore, a former construction worker, now leads a normal Hfe working as a masseur. The 'pah* have been working together since a four-week training session at toe Leader Dog School for the Blind in Avon Township last August. Concerned community leaders initiated one consolidated drive, calling it the PAUF. ★ ★ * This was the original area attempt to plan, budget and raise funds for all the health and welfare agencies of the community at tiie same time. SAVED TIME The resulting organization saved time, effort and expense to both tbe agencies and local citizens. That find yew $321,889 was raised for 42 agencies. Last yew the Pontiac Area United Fond collected $1,842,688 for 55 agencies. And campaign costs were only 3.1 per centrist yew white they ran between 12 and 25 per cent for those earlier individual campaigns. * W ★ Long before 1949 there were men conscious of the need for community fund drives. * * ★ In 1887, two Denver ministers, a priest and a rabbi, united to seek funds for '23 charitable agencies which served the health and welfare needs of their frontier town. Waterford Woman 1 Morale of GIs in S. A Waterford Township woman, Cedle Y. Dumbrigue, has gone io Viet Nam as part of the Red Cross Qubmobile “morale liftingv program. Called “Cece” by soldiers, she helps organize group activities and team sports for servicemen on leave and in field hospitals. The Mrs. C Loon Lake The program Korea, was so the Department quested it be Viet Nam. * ♦ 4? * , Ariy woman between 21 and 35 with leadership ability and enthusiasm may apply to join foe Clubmobile program. The Oakland County Regional Red Cross, 118 Franklin, cob-ducts a blood program, water, safety and first aid instruction, » military families and a MORALE UFTER-of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. _ Shores, Waterford Township, welcomes Gen. Wallace M. Greene Jr., commandant of the UjS. Corps, to her American Red cross in Da Nang, South Viet Nam. She arrqajftkL..:. activities and team sports for soldiers on lPM8h^ and in field hospitals. Hftff mi3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1906 U aft United Fund Advance Gifts Chairman Howard H. Fitzgerald, II I CAPTAINS Edward Barker p. B. Eames Henry Gotham Everette Gustafson, M.D. Frederick J. Poole Pontiac Chairman Mrs. Sol Newhouse Waterford Cl an Mrs. Panl « mm tw SPECIAL ASSIGNMENTS 25 i* I Robert M. Critchfield Richard Fitzgerald Allred C. Girard Leonard T. Lewis independence Chairman Mrs. Robert C. Jones Lake Orton Chairman Mrs. Gilbert Adams Organization ( hart 'Campaign Chairman Dr. Donald O. Tatroe CM Industrial Division Chairman A. V. Conner Manufacturing Division Chairman Robert Anderson Commercial Division Chairman Charles Woodhead PLANT CHAIRMEN 1 Buick Warehouse Fisher Body Division GMC Track & Coach Pontiae Motor Division Edward F. Suda Robert E. Schaffer Norman F. Trost John F. Blamy I CHAPTER PLANS John Napley Women’s Campaign Chairman Mrs. James H. Cowen AREA CHAIRMEN AREA I Mrs. Dale Carney AREA IX Mrs. Joseph Corbiel AREA EH Mrs. Frank Gates AREA IV Bln. Robert Neigebauer BUSINESS CHAIRMAN - Mrs. Rudolph Hartman LABOR COORDINATORS I Chairman: Fisher Body Division GMTC Truck and Coach Pontiac Motor Division Lawrence Hartman Don Johnson Bob White John Maye I CHAPTER PLAN 1 CHAPTER PLAN 2 CHAPTER PLAN 3 CHAPTER PLAN 4 CHAPTER PLAN 5 CHAPTER PLAN 6 AREA CHAIRMEN AREA I Mrs. Elmer Barker AREA II Mrs. J. D. Boardman AREA III Mrs. Robert Eisele AREA IV Mrs. Leonard Cybul AREA CHAIRMEN AREA I Mrs. Harry Horsch and Mrs. Richard Johnston (Co-Chm.) AREA II Mrs. Vincent Bronsing AREA HI Mrs. Arnold Getzan BUSINESS CHAIRMAN - Mrs. Norman Raedeke AREA CHAIRMEN AREA I Mrs. Ben Cramer AREA II Mrs. Gene Burgess _ AREA ni Mrs. M. Mendez AREA IV Mrs. P. L. Brown AREA V Mrs. Carl Gilbert BUSINESS CHAIRMAN - Mrs. Tom Lhota ' LAKE ANGELUS CHAIRMAN Mrs. Ray Hayes Bate 4 PP\J - 'll . 1 \ 1 SMALL TEAMS j^j Harold Davis EDUCATION Mitch Tendler TEAM 1 TEAM 2 TEAM 3 TEAM 4 Let Your One Gift Work Many Wonders COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK SALUTES YOUR VOLUNTEER WORKERS - GIVE THEM YOUR SUPPORT, TOO IP?' Publicity and Promotion Chairman William Freshour Arrangements Chairman Ted Pearson Louis Gudin Press Lois Mandiberg Advertising Arthur H. Sanford Display Charles Cousins, Chairman Joseph Cox Roger Srigiey Edward H. Leland Radio Bill Morgan Speakers* Bureau William Belaney i PONTIAC WATERFORD OAKLAND UNIVERSITY INDEPENDENCE ORION OAKLAND CQUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE PROFESSIONAL A1 Little 1 PROFESSIONAL 1 PROFESSIONAL 2 Vice Chairman Harry Nicholie Bernard Salvatore John Radenbaugh Charles Pickford Robert Greening Ralph Eastridge Vice Chdtrman Howard Dell Richard M. Fitzgerald Byron Gilbert Sam Sjieehy Vice Chairman William Lacy Robert Elliott Carlos Corona Mel Vaara Lewis Mnndy Rex Wood Walter J. Fightmaster Vice Chairman Dr. Wallace Lee John B. Wilson GOVERNMENT Joseph A. Warren CITY COUNTY STATE FEDERAL WATERFORD ROAD COMMISSION Vice Chairman John Reinck John Witherup Dick Leuhmann Harold Wright Mrs. Dorothy Olson Irv Nichols dU Rational 1 Bank 20 OFFICES IN OAKLAND AND MACOMB COUNTIES Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1966 B—-7 From our Bulova Collection” Not just any gift is appropriate at Christmas. You'll want something special that you'will be proud to give — and will be received with equally proud pleasure. Bulova is your answer. # Area Kappas Celebrate Founding The evening group of file North Woodward Alumnae Association of K a p p a Kappa Gamma fratendtywill present Mrs. G r o e s o G. Vance of Southfield with a gold fleur de lis pin in observance of the group's founding. Mrs. Carl E. Waldrep of Kellen Lane wifi host the 8 p.m. cooperative dinner on Oct 18. Mrs; William Huette- man, director of alumnae for Delta Province, will speak. Chairman, Mrs. Carl W. Eiclcer .will be assisted by Mrs. M. Dale McKay, Mrs. Jon H. Kingsepp,.Mrs* Joseph Shaw and Mrs, Paul E. Finney. , Other 50-year Kappas residing in the area will also he honored at this time. They are Mesdames: CONCERTP "AY” 17 jewels. Yeilow or CUPPER "A" A practical 17 jewel watch. Waterproof*. Self-wlndin(. Luminous. No Money Down se, crown and crystal art Intact. - Convenient Terms l108 N, WKC HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES L SAGINAW FE 3-7114 V CHILDREN OUTGROWN THE WAGON? SELL IT WITH A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD! ... EASY TO USE. JUST PHONE 332-8181. DRESS SHIRTS humdsml the way you Iks than! I CUSTOM STARCH LEVELS AT YOUR REQUEST 44At No Extra Charge” o No Starch o Vary Lite Starch e Lit* Starch e Medium Starch • Heavy Starch • Extra Heavy Starch Shirts on Mangers Available at A Small JUMtHonal Charge 1"*^ Our Custom Service Takes 1 Day Longer Compare C anal Services. Our Customers Tell Us It's The Best In Town! CLARKSTONAREA: B«SuraToVi«it Our Drop-Off, Pickup Dapot In Th* PINE KNOB FOODTOWN MARKET A New Concept in Shopping Convenience Corner Sashabaw And Maybee Roads OKNBAILyiA.M.TOaP.M. SUNDAYS 10 TO S FATHER & SON CLEANERS Complete Shirt Laundry 956 Joslyn OPEN 6:30 A.M. to 6:30 PJM. For Pickup and Delivery FE 8-9209 George W. Barton; Richard Cummings; William A. De-Lee; Richard G. English; Earl G. Long; Harry Lord; C. Redman Moon; George H. Nelson; Lois T. Place; Ralph L. Skinner; William F. Taep-ke and Miss Hazel Potts. ' Ar A ..*', ■ Members of the morning group will gather for coffee Oct. 19 at 9:30 aon. in the Dowling Road home of Mrs. Frank A. Reid. 'Other Lands' in Spotlight “Far Away Places” was the theme of a program at Monday’s meeting of XI chapter, Delta Kappa Gamma Society. The group met in Lohgfellow School. Marietta Spring, Mrs. Robert Madden, Marla Jackson and Elisabeth McDonald spoke of foreign trips under the chairmanship of Mrs. Charles Smith; Hostesses were Margaret Luther, Katherine Baker, Violet Crawford and Joyce Sweet. '* Mm Anne H. Sharpe December vows are planned by Anne Hilary Sharpe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theophilus J. Sharpe of Richardson Road, West Bloomfield Township, and Pvt Timothy J. Leahy, son of the Ross L e a h y s of Lakeside Drive, White Lake Township. Her fiance is stationed with the U.S.A. Special Forces, Fort Bragg, N.C. About nine out of 10 women work outside the home at some time in their lives, statistics from the Women’s Bureau of the U.S. Dept, of Labor show. Mrs. Davidson Sims of Elgin, Tenn., recently of P ontiac, announces the engagement of her daughter, 0livia Jean Sim,, to Jtre Luther Wright, son of the J, J. Wrights of Cookeville, Tenn. She is also the daughter of Glenn Sims of Dayton, Ohio, and attended Tennessee Technological University. Her fiance was a former student at Bethel College, McKenzie, Tenn. Reception Reception in the Gingellville Community Center followed the recent marriage of Cheryl Ann Wheatcroft to Timothy Ray Weber in the Avondale Baptist Church. Their parents are the George Wheatcrofts of Hope-field Street, Orion Township, Mrs. Gwendolyn Weber of Murphy Street and George' Weber of Irving, Texas. PRINCESS GOWN Imported Chantilly lace over, taffeta fashioned die bride’s princess-line tiered gown and chapel train worn with a bouffant French illusion veil. Her bouquet held white roses and pompons. Attending their sister were honor maid, Sandra Wheatcroft, with Nancy, as junior maid, along 'with Margaret Felix and Cindy Wickman. Bridesmaids were Sharon Felix; a cousin, Mary Wheatcroft and OdOMCommins. Lynnette Wickman was flower girt and George Wheatcroft III ring-bearer. ★ ★ * William Weber was best man for his nephew with Robert, Thomas and Richard Sir-baugh seating the guests. MRS. T. R. WEBER Starch Hose? A tablespoon of liquid starch added to a quart of warm water is fine for rinsing nylon hose. It does not make them stiff and shiny yet makes them more run-resistant. Ceilings Come Sudsable New washable ceiling blocks, which resemble Vinyl flooring, are designed with tongue-and-groove edges for easy installation, are constructed for strong adhesion to the ceiling, and resist heat and moisture. Ince installed, here’s the washing procedure: ★ ★ * 1. Protect your hair, and cover the furniture. 2. Dust the ceiling with a long-handled mop. 3. Swish up a pail of warm soap or detergent suds, and fill another pail with rinse water. 4. Wash the ceiling, using i scrub brush covered with thick suds. Start in one corner and wash as much as you can reach comfortably. When that section is clean, rinse it with a clean damp cloth or spon 5. Continue this washing and rinsing, overlapping sections as you go. 6. Change the suds and rinse water often, because only clean water and clean cloths can do a clean job. LOVERS WANTED "Lovers of Tiffany and Tiffany Type Lamps andl Shades!" W« have a magnificent display of antique shades and lamps lor decorator minded, be different. See 876 in/ The Poor Boy Is the IN sweater! Knit several with long, short or no sleeves. Easy — just ladt, purl ribbing in sport yam. Poor Boy goes with skirts, slacks, suite. Pattern 876: sizes 32-34; 36-38 included. Thirty-five cents in coins for each pattern — add 15 cents for each pattern for ist-class mailing and special handling. Send to Laura Wheeler, in care of The Pontiac Press, 124, Needle-craft Dept., Box 161, Old Chel-Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Pattern Number, Name, Address, Zip. 1967 Success! Our new Needle-craft Catalog sparkles, with the best of everything — smartest knit, crochet fashions, afghans, quilts, embroidery, toys, gifts. 200 designs, 2 free patterns. Hurry, send 25 cents. 12 unique quilts from famous American museums. Send 50 cents for Museum Quilt Book No. 2. Value! Quilt Book No. 1 sixteen complete patterns. 50 cents. Schafer pmthe flavor back in bread THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1M0 Collegians Make News for Hometown Readers Walled Lake Is Setting of Nuptials A recent candlelight rite in St. Matthew’s Lutheran Freshman, Cynthia Gowen, a music major and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith C. Gowen of South Tilden Street was recently accepted, as a member of the Michigan State University Choir. REDLANDS UNIVERSITY Warren Cheney of Redlands , California mil spend the first semester of his junior year in Salzburg, Austria. With S9 other students, he will travel to son of Mr. and Mrs. Altai W. Cheney of Bloomfield Hills. WELLESLEY COLLEGE Among those receiving freshman honors at Wellesley College’s opening convocation’ in Massachusetts recently was Elisabeth A. Griffith. Her parents are the Thomas A. Griffiths of Birmingham. Freshman honors are awarded to students of outstanding academic achievement DEMONSTRATION SEE THE TRENDS FOR TOMORROW FROM THE NEW YORK SHOW Mondays October 24th ENROLL TODAY FOR CLASS Church, Walled Lake, marked the vows of Marcia Louise Feole and Pfc. Dennis Atwell, U.S.M.C., Camp Pendleton, Calif. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H a r 1 e y Feole of Stanfield Road, West Bloomfield Township'’were hosts at a reception for some 500 in the V.F.W. Hall in Whcom. * a A With her tiered gown and chapel train of white Chantilly lace, the bride wore a. pearl tiara with her veil of j nylon illusion. She held white roses, carnations, Stephanotis and ivy. With maid of honor, Pa- ! tricia Kamer, were bridesmaids Mrs. Harley Feole Jr., Mrs. Richard Feole and Gale Feole. Carol Turner and Mark Reid were flower girl and ring-bearer. Sgt. Dale Atwell, U.S.M.C., Chicago, was his brother’s best man. Tficy are the sons of Mrs. Anna Atwell of Walled Lake. Ushers were Harley Feole Jr., Henry Roeglin and Richard Feole. ★ ★ * The newlyweds left for a northern honeymoon. England, France, Italy, Switz- MRS. DENNIS. ATWELL erland and The Netherlands. | A music major, he is the PTAs in Action JXeumode idJi •CAREER GIRL" A NEUMODE favorite... walking sheer. Seamless or with seams. NO-BIND TOPS flfc 82 No. Saginaw St. Pontiac Eastern Junior High, PTSA, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in auditorium. Introduction of new teachers will take place: Longfellow, Thursday at 6:30 p.m. Cooperatie dinner'in gymnasium. Mark Twain, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in school. McCarroIl, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in multi-purpose room. . or clean carpet well-to-wall. Safe Blue Lustre re-brightens colors, leaves nap fluffy. Rent easy-to-use electric shampooer for $ t a day at Fillmore Hardware, 4180 W. Walton Btvd., Drayton Plains. Saturday Vows Are Repeated by Couple Lynne Alene Johnston and Seamair Appren. Thomas Baxter Cordingly were married Saturday in the Drayton Plains United Presbyterian Church and. later greeted guests in the Fireplace Room. * ★ ★ Their parents are the Irvin E. Johnstons of Midland Drive; Mrs. Burman Benscot-er of. Percy King Court, and the late Thomas N. Cordingly. * * ★ With her street-length Empire gown of ivory crepe, the bride wore a rose point lace jacket, a silk headpiece and brief illusion veil. ★ * * She carried white roses, Stephanotis and a white orchid. ★ * * Mrs. Tom Collins attended her sister and Kirk D. Cordingly was his brother’s best man. Tire bride’s cousin, Michael Johnston, ushered with Raymond Heaton. The newlyweds left for Memphis, Tenn. where he is stationed. The Lowrey Hilton organ sounds like an orchestra... A Baby sitting, service will be provided. Webster, PTA Fair, Wednesday from 3, to 7 p.m. Waterford William Beaomont, Wednesday, 7 p.m., third grade open house; Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., Fourth grade open house. Ropm mothers will be THURSDAY Della Lutes, 7:30 p,m. Open house and Bake Sale. Ex-PTA board members will host. Donelson, 7:30 p.m. Play representing parent-teacher relations with discussion following. Douglass Houghton, 8 p. m. Open house and business meeting. 5th and 6thr grade room mothers will be hostesses. Lambert, 8 p.m. Open house and business meeting. McVittie, 7 p.m. Open house and business meeting. Teachers will explain McVittie School hand bode for parents. Pontiac Lake, 7:30 p.m. Open ouse follows business meeting. Stringham, 7:30 p.m. New! principal will introduce new teachers. Jayno A. Adams, 7:30 p.m. | Open bouse and meeting. | Capital Tour for Naylors After Nuptials Returned from a trip to Washington, D.C. after recent vows in the Peace Lutheran Church are the Jimmie Bruce Naylors (JoAnn Voynar). Parents of tile newlyweds are the Joseph A. Voynars of Third Avenue, Mrs. Horace Naylor of Taylor Road, Pontiac Township and the late Mr. Naylor. With her sheath dress and matching coat of white satin brocade, the bride wore a shoulder-length veil. She carried white cymbidlum orchids^ and ivy on a prayer book. * * ★ Mr. and Mrs. John Martus (Brenda Voynar) attended the couple who greeted guests in the Voynar home following the ceremony. Leon Groggs Tel! Birth of Son Mr. and Mrs. Leon Grogg (Elinor Tuttle) of Parnell Street, announce the birth of a son, Leon Russel, on Oct. 3. Grandparents are the Harold Groggs of Rosewood Drive and the J. Gordon Tuttles of Portland, Ore. The engagement is announced of Cheryl Ann Schimmel, daughter oj Mrs. Nicholas Schimmel of Pickford Street, Novi Township and the late Mr. Schim-mel, to Richard A. Fish, mm of-Mr, and Mrs. Xavier Fish of Detroit. The Jack E. Bollards of East Montcalm Street announce the engage-ment of their daughter, Sharon K,, to Maxwell Walter Mainary, son of Mrs. Robert S. Boldrey of Young Street and Walter S. Malnory'of West Kennett Road. June vows are planned. Honor Miss Sherry 1 Sue Whitesell, daughter of the Joseph E. Whitesells of Lake Angelus is being entertained before her Saturday marriage to Gregory Leigh Spresney, son of t h e M. Elmer Clarks of Flint. ★ ★ ★ Recent hostesses were Mrs. Joseph UaBarge, Sunnybeach Boulevard, White Lake Township, with Kathleen Vangeloff; bathroom shower at Mrs. Lawrence Castagne’s home in Lansing; family party in Flint with Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Romanowski as hosts. ★ * ★ Still others were a pantry and spice shower in Mason with Claudine Collar, Mrs. William Crickmore, East Lansing and Mrs. David Houghton, Iohia as cohostesses. Completing .the list is Mrs. Gordon Johnson’s showier in Ypsilanti with Mrs. Joseph Baron, cohostess. Big Earrings on the Move Play it by ear and you’ll have the drop on everything. Earrings for the most exciting evenings are in giant proportions this swinging season. ★ ★ ★ Teardrops, chandeliers, spinning balls, mobiles and triangles are all the shapes. Sequinned, pearled and stoned are easy on the ears because they are light in weight. with drums and cymbals $1000 and everything! The new Lowrey Hilton organ not only has all the magnificence of tone and the tremendous versatility you expect of Lowrey—it has Reverberating Rhythm too! While you play your favorite songs, Reverberating Rhythm adds the exciting sound of drums and cymbals, bongos, tom-toms and wood blocks, rolling enare drums and crash cymbals! The Lowrey Hilton with Reverberating Rhythm Is an exciting musical treat—an instrument you'll be satisfied! with for a lifetime of musical pleasure. You Will Enjoy Shopping at Open Nites 9 P.M., Sat. 5:30 1710 S. Telegraph Road M MO* I. of Orchard U*a Avt. Lots of Free Parking FE 4-0566 1 FREE when you buy 7 g of Ashland Gasoline Here’s another bonus offer from Good Neighbor Ashland Oil Dealers... attractive, golden 12-ounce beverage glasses! You get one glass free with every purchase of seven gai- , Ions of Ashland Vitalized Gasoline. , „ These amber-colored beverage glassies are ideal for hoiiv day entertaining or for everyday table use, They have rolled rims and weighted bottoms to. resist tipping. Start ybur set now fOr tisfe duiM: irig the holiday season. They’re available at your nearby Ashland Oil Dealer who displays the "Free Golden Beverage Glass” sign! offer expires DECEMBER 15,1966 ASHLAND OIL A REPINING COMPANY PRODUCTS Paramount Beauty School 26 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC FE 4-2352 < Strictly, New, Different Handcraft Lessons also Table Decoration Classes Farming Now Christmas Materials Arriving Daily CTnrSa HANDCRAFT SHOP LR?(/ 9 366 Oakland Ave. FE 8-3361 WALLPAPER Fall Clearance Sale Rag.^1^ a Roll Now 99c Reg. 89* a Roll Now 49* Sale Ends October 15 WALLPAPER BARGAIN CENTER Corningware’s “Young Modern’s” *10-Piece Starter Set 16" Pieces that go from freezer to the lop of your stove or oven and then to the table! Blue Corn Flower motif on cream-white dinnerware. Set includes: 1, one-qt. saucepan and pyrex cover,' [, one and three-quarters saucepan and pyrex cover, 1, nine-inch skillet and pyrex cover, 1, one-qt. sauce maker, 2 petite pans and 1 • handle. Wiggs Your Bridal Headquarters WIGGS PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON ST. la Downtown Pontiac Ft 4-1234 Daily till 5,30 P.M. China, Cryttal, Cifti and Ethan Alton Furniture BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH RD. At Long Lake Rd. 644-7370 Mon., Timm., Fit, till 9 P.M. Comploto Furniture, China, Cryttal and GifU. ! / THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, OCTOBER II, 1966 D—8 WORLD PREMIERE—“Brighty of the Grand Canyon," starring Joseph Cotten and produced by Stephen F. Booth of Bloomfield Hills, will make its world premiere Thanksgiving week in the Detroit area. The film, based on Marguerite Henry’s prize-winning story, begins a two-week prerelease engagement Nov. 22 at the Birmingham Theater. ‘‘Brighty” is Booth’s first feature motion picture. Change in Attitude Greets Poverty War's Third Year WASHINGTON (AP) — Pres-,attempt to adopt a $2.5 billion ident Johnson’s campaign to rid| measure. The House had passed the nation of poverty began its third year Sunday still under heavy criticism from Republicans but filled with a sense of progress and accomplishment by its commanding general. a $1.75 billion bill earlier. President Johnson requested $1.75 billiion in his budget. During the past two years, there have been charges of poor administration by both Rpubli- Red Lights Going Out in Rio Zone RIO DE JANEIRO (UP!) Some of the red lights are go- out in Rio. The city fathers have decided to do away with Mangue (pronounced MUNG-EE), Rio de Janeiro’s oldest >ne of prostitution. Mangue is a . district of decaying tum-of-the-century frame houses nestled just five minutes by bus from the heart of the city. It lies between the smelly, festering Mangue River from which the district takes Its name, and one of Brazil’s largest breweries. The fumes from the vats give the Mangue the smell of perpetual hangover. The Chief citizens of Mangue are approximately 2,000 mari-posas (literally butterflies, but meaning prostitutes in Brazilian slang) who work in 30 houses. ★ ★ ★ Operating hours are from 5 a.m. to 1 a.m. Trices start at about 40 cents., Rio has seven other “ZoneS” but none is in business so many hours, nor at such budget prices. IN DOORWAYS Mangue’s girls Sit scantily clad in the doorways and the windows of the houses waiting for and beckoning to customers. Lately, they have been talking worriedly about the impending end to Mangue now to be an area for urban renewal. §1 | Says Its 'Japans uTi^mh isWB&cline FILM STAR—Toshiro Mifune, Japan’s foremost movie star, says the Japanese motion picture industry has fallen on hard times, chiefly because of television. Mifune is currently in Hollywood to put the finishing touches on his first American movie. And, says Sargent Shriver, jeans and Democrats. antipoverty director, the federal program has gained the confidence of governors, mayors, the business world, professional societies and, most importantly to him, the people. ★ ★ “One of the most significant things about the poverty p r o-gram,” Shriver said in an interview, “is the change in attitude by just about everyone. “When the war on poverty was announced two years ago, it was greeted with a lot of skepticism. First, they said there wasn’t any poverty in America. And when we showed them there was, they said we couldn’ do anything about it. “During our first year, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers attacked our pro-g r a m, but they didn’t this year.,” Shriver said. “Last year, mayors and governors were up in arms. But they have treated us differently this year. CHANGE “There has been an absolutely 180-degree change which has come about because they know we want them — the local communities — to plot their future. We want the people to plan their programs. “We have reached the point in America where the people don’ want the federal government to be the engine of social change. That’s why our program is different than the New Deal of the thirties. “The people want to do the work. They want to participate in the program. They want new structures — which we finance — but in which they work freely. That’s what community action is all about. And that’s why we are being accepted all over the country.” ★ ★ ★ President Johnson signed legislation appropriating $793 million for the antipoverty programs two years ago Saturday. Congress Voted $1.56 billion for the program this year. This week, ;the Senate passed a $1.75 billion bijl to extend the antipoverty prog r a m a third year after revolting against an Pontiac’s POPULAR THEATfcR Sundays' Con(imiout12 a°m. to 12 p.m, EAGLE 1 NOW SHOWING Jane Russell Dana Andrews “Johnny Reno” 2nd Big Hit! mammas Critics have said the Office of Economic Opportunity cannot administratively handle some of its programs and have suggested they be transferred to other agencies. CHANGE TUNE’ For instance, Republicans have suggested moving Project Head Start, a program for preschool children, from the OEO to the Office of Education. They also suggested that Job Corps, an in-center training program for school dropouts and one of OEO’s most controversial projects, be transferred to the Labor Department. First of all,” said Quiver, o u will notice t h a t they changed their tune. Two years ago, they didn’t want any of these programs at all. “Now that they are a success, the Republicans on the Hill want them transferred to another agency because they say the programs will be better administered. ★ ★ ★ I’m not against transferring some of our programs to other agencies, but I will have to be given better reasons. The only reason they want* the programs transferred is because they want to have control over them. They don’t have that control now. ‘You have to remember that the poverty program has the two biggest weapons in a politician’s arsenal: Money and jobs. And that’s what they want control over.” Shriver said he was against placing the Head Start program under the Office of Education because “Head Start has to be pliable, on its own. The OEO d i r ec to r said he doubts that the Labor Department would want tb handle'the administration of Job Corps. Not yet, at least,” Shriver said. “It’s too controversial and not a success. Buf wait in about six months, when it becomes a success, they’ll went the p r o-gram. Several houses already have been knocked down. Most of the water to the district has been cut off in preparation for further demolition. This has forced the remaining female “administrators” of the houses to buy water by the bucketful at extortion prices. One such madam complained bitterly that “it’d be cheaper for my girls to take their baths in beer.” POLICE AT WORK This is not the first extinction crisis faced by the denizens of Mangue. In 1943, police closed the zone. The result Was felt immediately. Mariposas flitted throughout the city, including some of the best residential districts — and before long the houses in Mangue were reopened, under police supervision. Minors, for erne thing, were po longer allowed to work in the profession. To the glee of Brazilian nationalists, some bordellos that had been in the hands of foreigners were nationalized. The mariposas are worried about their future after Mangue is closed, but not despairing. ’There will always be a Mangue, whatever they call it,” is the prevailing thought, “We will regroup somewhere else, and our life will go on.” HURON NOW!_______ CARY GRANT SAMANTHA EGGAR JIM HUTTON Starts WED. Walt Disney r^FlGHTiNG PKgiCE DONEGAL nCHMCOUXr Ethics of Human Experiment Subject of Academy Inquiry By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-TV Writer HOLLYWOOD — Japan’s foremost film star, Toshiro Mifune, has come here for finishing touches on his first American movie and he bears sad tidings of the state of the Japanese ema. He is a man! of medium] height, with a face and physique that indicate latent power. The face is remarkable; it has the peculiarly stateless look of • Anthony Quinn or Yul Brynner, and you get the impression that Mifune could play a variety of nationalities. THOMAS 1 By Science Service WASHINGTON - The ethics of experimenting on humans has been getting almost much investigation as the right and wrong of animal research. The U.S. Public Health Association has awarded a grant of approximately $100,000 to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in Boston to support an academy inquiry into the moral and ethical basis for research involving human subjects. Eight medical organizations have now endorsed the ethical principles approved in 1964 in the Declaration of Helsinki by the World Medical Association concerning human experimentation. Dr. Henry K. Beecher of the Harvard Medical School has charged in the New England Journal of Medicine that 22 cases of human experimentation had been either unethical or questionable, that is, performed without the patients’ full knowledge and consent and without promise of benefit. Dr. William H. Stewart, Public Health Service Surgeon General, told the American Federation for Clinical Research last April that one of the “pivotal clinical research problems the day” is the judgments related to the use of human beings as research subjects. “The decision to become a subject for research must be made by the subject,” said Dr. Stewart. “We may like it or not, but the individual subject and only he, with all his personal whims and superstitions and foibles, can make the im-' portant choice. “Being as fully Informed as possible, he can make the choice for any reason, or for no reason at all. The princi- ple involved is the same one that condemns Slavery and underlay the judgments at Nurenberg.” Prior to the Helsinki Declara-tion, guidelines for doctore in clinical research were provided chiefly by the ethical tendt to “do no harm” as stated in the Hippocratic Oath, and in the Nurenberg Code, adopted by the Nurenberg Tribunal in the Nazi war-crimes trials. The Helsinki statement emphasizes benefit to the patient who is ill. OBTAIN CONSENT Ecorse Pickets ECORSE (AP) - A group of former Ecorse public works employes Monday picketed the city hall of the Detroit suburb. They protested dismissal of 26 public works employes, saying city officials violated the city charter by firing them without regard to seniority. The dismissals came last week as an economy measure after a mil-lage proposal was defeated in an election. mmmxi 49saM? Dig into as many golden buttermilk pancakes as you can eat for just... Of course it’s Uncle John’s for Pancalms. But have yon ever tried his Steak Supper? WOODWARD AVE. and 1414 Mil* Rd. BIRMINGHAM lOOOI TELEGRAPH RD. The actor, 46, enacts a Japanese in “Grand Prix,” the racing film he made under John Frankenheimer’s direction last summer at tracks and courses Europe. Mifune was here briefly1 to dub a few lines onto the sound track in his phonetically spoken English. Before reporting to MGM, he paused for an interview, using as interpreter a young Japanese who had studied film technique at UCLA. Mifune shook his head ruefully when asked about his English. | “I followed the same plan that I used when I made a film in] Mexico,” he explained. “Then I memorized all my lines in! phonetic Spanish before I reported for filming. I had learned the entire and a tape recorder, I was able to learn the lines before each scene,” ★ ★ o Mifune is the most notable star to come out of Japan’s golden age of films, drawing praise from critics around the world for his naturalistic acting a “Rashomon,” “Yojimbo,’ Red Beard,” etc. He reported that Japanese films have fallen upon bad times. The principal villain: television. “Our film industry is going through the same thing that American movies suffered 10 years ago,” he said. “Not only las television' cut down on theater attendance; the Japanese have now filled up their houses with all the appliances available and are going in for car touring and other entertainment outside the home. “The Japanese film industry,1 which enjoys a monopoly by I controlling both the major stu-j dios and the theaters, has been steadily declining, and it hasn’t reached the bottom yet. The] leaders have been doing nothing about it, hoping that the industry will follow Hollywood’s example and start to rise again. “They have been cutting down! the costs of each picture and resorting to sex and violence, and that only makes the situa- J tion worse. The saddest part is the way Japanese film workers have lost their enthusiasm and spirit. The thing that impressed me about working for an American company was the devotion to the project on the part of bach film maker." rran KEEGO “BORN-FREE” u “The MAN CALLED color FUNTSTONE" Starts WEDNESDAY! The Declaration of Helsinki ‘Grand Prix’ script in English, states that if a pateint is legal- then 1 reported to the locationl ly incompetent, the consent of a„d found Out the script had] been entirely rewritten! But byi working with the dialogue cOach I the legal guardian should be obtained by the researcher, At any time during the course of clinical research, the subject or his guardian shonld be free to withdraw permission for research to be continued. The Helsinki Declaration supplements the Nurenberg Code in that it applies more specifically than the code to patients under medical care as well as healthy persons. Geauine, Delicioas Pizza and Full Course Dinners Spaghetti^ Ravioli, laSagna, Gnocci, Mostaociola. Each one prepared in dozens of delightful ways. Also a wide choice of American Dishes. For carry-out service on all items 693-1421 Bring the Whole Family to Pasquale’s By the Side of the Road on M-24 896 S. Lapeer Bd., Lake Orion FREE PLAYGROUNDS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES DRIVE- I N fe 210 I > I V E - I First Run! MIRACLE MILE 2935 DIX 1 BLOC - CHIIDI iip? SO. TELEGRAPH AT SO. LAKE At ^^^miRFw. WOODWARD L—FIRSTRUN •“AS FUNNY A MOVIE AS ANYL 1 AUDIENCE COULD ASK FOR! ” = 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY -, bu. .. cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Rad, bu. ... cabbage Sprouts, bu. . Cabbage, Standard, bt Carrots, dz. bch. .... Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 Carrots, topped, bo. Cauliflower, dz. ..'A... Celery, Pascal, dz. st Celery, Peace!, crt. . Celery, Rood, dz. .. St^sweeb J. dot. beg Trading Heavy Strong Market Rally Continues NEW YORK (AP)-Tbe stock market rally continued vigorously early today as many glamor stocksmade wide recoveries, leading was heavy. {tains of fractions to 3 or 4 points were scored by stocks lit office copying, photography, electronics, airlines and other sections of the list Blue chips also did well, most of their gains being fractional. General Motors rose more than a point, as did General Electric. Westinghouse Electric rose 2. IBM rose 4, Polaroid apd Xerox more than 2 each. OTHER GAINERS Up about a point were Eastern Airlines, Merck, put American World Airways, RCA, U.S. Rubber and New York CabtraL The top four steelmakers made fractional gains. Pennsylvania Railroad sold on a huge block of 81,000 shares, up % at 44%. ★ * ' ★ Polaroid opened on 13,700 shares at 132, a gain of 2%, and sold at the same price ah 3,000 shares. ★ ■ * *' jk Opening blocks toduded: Boeing, up % at 50% on 13,000 shares; American Telephone, up % at 51% on 8,600; and Ford, off % at 41% on 4,000. AVERAGE RISE Monday the Associated Press average of 60 stocks rose 8.5 to Prices advanced on die American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange om, % bu.2.75 cucumber, elicer*. by. ..Jjj Cucumbers, Pickles, bo.. Egg Plent, Long type, pk.............. Gourds, pk. ........................... ■-* Horseradish, pk. bsk.......... Kohlrabi, dz. bch. ........... Leeks, dz. bch. ............... Onions, green, dz. bch......... Onions, pry, 50-ib. beg ...... Onions, Pickling, lb. ........ Parsley, Curly, dz. bch....... Peas. Bladnye. bu. Peppers, Cayenn^pk^ AllegLud 2.20 Alley he 1.14 AtiiedC l.vob ABiedStr 1.32 AlltsChal .75 Peppers, Hot, pk. I Peppers, Pimento. ... Peppers, Red Sweet bu. . Potatoes, SO lbs........... Potatoes, 20 lbs. ........ Pumpkins, bu. ............ Pumpkins, Rm .............. Radishes, white, dz. bch . Radishes, Red, 1 dz. bch . Sauash, Acorn, bu. ........ Squash, Buttercup, bu. ... Squash, BaWMl, bu. ... Squash, Delicious, bu. ... Squadi, Hubbard, bu..............— —zz Squash, Turban, bu, .............. " ' lib AmBdcst 140 lurnips. i iwro ...................... yxz Turnips, dz. ..... —*• Cabbage, be. .......................... 1-8 Collard, greens, bu................... Kale, bu. ..............................t-S Mustard, bu.............................. r2 Sorrel, bo. .............................?-2 Spinach, bu. ........................... }•» Turnips. bu. _____js 1JB A Optic l.2Sb *- Photocpy ___Smelt 3 Ah) Sid 1 ' TBT 2.20 iSb 1JO AmZlnc 1.40a AMP ll Celery, Cabbage, dz. ........ Endive, pk. beW. ............ Endive, bleached ............ Escaro'e, pk. Met ........... Etcarolt, bleached, .bu. ........... Lettuce, Bibb, p. bskt................1* Lettuce, Boston, dz. ..................Mi Lettuce, head, dz. ...................JJt Lettuce, Leaf, bu.; ............• •• *•“ Lettuce, Ibomaln, bu. ............. Poultry and Eggs WhttM Grid# JS? large 4W9; lame 45-*» mjBuMk dUL smells 30-32. £vwns Grade A 44'/j-45; mediums 41-42. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS gX *K2g XVf’tiTWtfrfVewS CaEw”wea“^whotoMte*tniylng prides % to newer; 70 portent or better wad* A whites 43%; mixed 43%; medium standards 41, checks 34%. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) —_ (USOA) — , Live poultry: wholesale^“r VVhtteTadk fryer* Livestock new YORK (API—Feitowing b t selected stock transaction sen 11* ork Stock Exchange with neon | —A— Sales Chds.) High Ur- •-bbott Lab 1 » 374 17 G Accept 1.20 37% + ! Cp 27 S2 SI SIM -HJ 1* 23% 23% 23% + V 82 34%. 34 StVb + b 4 241b 24% 21% — V 82 21% 20* 20% + » 30 69 61% 60%-HV 8 71% 71% 71% + 4 103 50% 49% 50% +2 1$ 17% 17 17 + M 24 45% 64 64 —2 33 44% 45% 45% — V 2 15% 1S% 15% + V U fl*' Sjf $0% + % IS 17% 17% 17% + % 40 45% 64% 44% — 34 30% 37% 30 + 9 14% 14% 14% + 4$ 14 11% 13% ... 54 35% 34% 34% + 77 9 0% 0% — 7 37% 37 37 — 13 JMl .W% 50% - % H %:» 5% + % 11 aw 53% 53% —1% 23 15 !« 14% 1 22% 12% 22% + 4 43 45% 45% 45% — V 114 10% 10% 19% .+ 23 10% 17% 17% — H GPubSvc .49e - -tout 1.50 I El tit ____'»eifJc"to GerberPd .90 GettvOfl .too Gillette 1JW. ‘Id JB _______h 2.40 - Goodyr US GraceCo 1.30 Granites 140 GrantWT 1.10 G1A8.P 120a Gt Nor Rv 3 Gt West Flnl GtWSug l.40a Grevhnd .90 GrumnAirc 1 GulfMO 2.20a Gulf Oil 2.20 ‘ GulfStaUt 30 ArmooSt 3 Armour 1.00 Arms Ck 120 Ashland Oil 1 AssdDG M0 Afthlson 1.40 AHCLIn* 3a All Rich 2.00 Atlas Cp Avco Cp 120 Avndt JOb Avon Pd 1.20 14 IS 2t% 24% + If 45% 45% 45% + ' 114 27% 27% 27% + 1 4 57% 57 57 ... 30 70 77% 37% + I 43 20% 31% 20% + T SF 31 31 - M 1444 14 14 .. » ** ft* &- 282 50% 40 » n 33% 37% S% + % 7 15% j<% }£• + 38 21% 20 »% + ! 242 70% 47% 40% — 12 “§% 5t% b«m (bds.) High Lew Last Chg. (lids.) HIM Leer Last Chg. FruehCp 1.70 24 25% 25% 25% + % PltPlato 2.40 7 52% 52 52 —% Pit Steel H agymi & !5* W* !ZS + w Procto? g*! MM + % PuWklnd .341 + » Pullman 2 JO 03 mb 1 Gen f % + % A 4- % A + H RCA JO 'UbtonP 121 58% 54% 54% — % 14 5% 5% 5%..... 14 21% 28% 20% + % 112 40% 40% 40% + % 70 31% 30% 31% +1% 31 31% 31 34 + ■ 5 21% 21% 21% ... 14 34% 34% Mb + 77 35% 34% S + .4 9% 9% 9% i .. 1 57% + % 79 54% 54 34% 4 % + % * + % Roan Set .35* -tohr Cp ,30 toyCCola .40 ley Out .00* RyderSys JO Safeway St 1 StJosLd 2.40 SL SanFran 2 StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 . Schenley 1.40 Scharlng 1 SearIGO 1.30 7 33% 23 23 —1 Ml 25% 25 “■ -$ 30% 37% 9 40% 30%OP^nV 14 31% 31% 31%-% 25 41% 40% 41% +1% 16 9% f% 9% + % S 31% 31% 3f% + i 10 22% 22 22 —1 12 43 42% 43. +1. X39 32 31% 31% + % 4 If If “ Mi 14 4 3% 5 29% 29% 29% + % 7 14% 14% 14% + % Seers Re* la 72 4 Scab AL 1.00 12 ! Scott Paper l 53 9 SCM Cp .40b 371 5 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsurNoAm 2 -----OH 1.00 SharonStl .00 SheliTra J7e SherWrn 1.00 Sinclair 2.40 SlngerCo J.20 Smith K 1.00* SoPRSUB JO* SouCitE 1.25 South Co .94 SouNGas 1 JO SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.00 Spartan Ind ' Sperry Rand Square 0 JO StdBrend 1.JO Std Kolls ,13e 34 »% 74% 75% 4 0 7 4% 4% 1 74 25% 25% 25%..... ft 40% 40% 40% + H j 24% 24% r M i 32% 22% 32% + % 14 201 27 101 a Lai ijg 34 59 . — ™ __mind 1.70 44 47% 47% 47% + % «J 2.4«e 122 44% 43% 43% — % Ml tHo 7 44 46 44 + % H ^ ^ ^%U “ 4 38% 3Mb W%4 % 54 35% 35% 35% + % X50 41% 41% 41% + % ______________ 2 32 32 32 ,+ % Sunray 1.40a 20 20 27% 24 *-“• - I 37% 37 37+% —T— 10 27% 27% 27% + % 120 40% 01% 50 + % 57 10% 10% n% SlauffCh 1 SterlDrug JO Steven JP 2.25 7 25%, 24% 25% +1% 54 33% 32% 32% Tampa El .40 Teledyne Inc Tenrwco 1.16 Texaco 2.40* TexE Trn US TexGSul JO Texas Inst .40 — Textron 1J0 54 43% 42% I Thtokei_____ “Idtwat Oil ImRB 1.80a LMiglsLt LOO Lorthard 2.50 „ _____f pound _________________ .1 2435; choice » 1200 pound stoers 25.00 ‘ cSSCPa* » 14% ColfinRad JO 170 *4% CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API—(USOA)—HoflO HM butchers steady to 25 hlghar; 1-2 200-230 lbs butchers 23.00-23.50. Cattle 10,500; (laughter steers generally I slaughter lambs steady; chc 24.00-24.50. Stocks of Local Interest Figures alter decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a.m. interdealer markets change throughout the day. Prices ' not include MdM commission. I markup, markdown i AMT Corp. Associated Truck .......... Boyne Products ......... Braun Engineering ......... Citizens Utilities Class A Monro* Auto Equipment . Diamond Crystal ........... Kelly Services ........... Mohawk Rubber Co........... Detrex Chemical Safran Printing .......... Scrlpto ... Frank's Nursery North Central Airlines Unit Wyandotte Chemical Bid Asked .... 3.4 2 38 38 3* 11 43% 42% 42% . ■ 51 30% »% m + % 12 20% 20% 2s% + % S 15% 15% 15% ‘ | CBS 1.20b Col Gas 1.34 Col Piet Utt ComICre 1 JO ComSolv 1.20 Comw Ed 2 Comtot con Edit l.oo ConElednd l ConNGas 3.20 ConsPow 1.90 Contalnr 1.30 Cont Air .00 ContCan 1.90 Cont In* 3 57 31% 31% 31% + % a Sh n larquar JSb lartlnMar 1 MeyDSfi • McDonn JO McKess 1.70 -----Cp 1.70 MW Oh 1.25 Merck 1.20s AAnrChap l* Pd 1.40 gGWk 2a 0 28% 20% 20% .. 40 57% 54% 54% -It 31% 38% 38% + -12 4Mb 46 4«b + % 9 14% 14% 14% + % 34 43 42% 43%.— Jlf 30% »% »%- J 5 43% « 43% + 1 If 30% 38% 38% + ’ 17 274% 270 272 +3 4 29% 29% 2f% + j « r 2% MlnerCh MobilOil 1.40 —D—- 17 22% 21% 21% . 11 20% 20% »% j 5 28 iV/i 21 ■+ 30 55% »% «% + 94 93% 90% 90% - in 17 14% 17 3 29% 29% 29% -t 11 12% 11% JTVb + 21 20% 27% 27% + Doug Alrc 1b 1« Dow Cham 2 34 Draper 1.20r ** Dresslnd 1.3 .19.0 20.1 10.4 11J . .12.0 13.0 . 5.2 S.4: Qyq LI 1.30 0,0 0.4|OynamCp .40 17 21% 23% 23% - V 24 155% 154% 155 — J 0 27% 21% OTJ — V MUTUAL PUNDS Affiliated Fund ... Chemical Fund V........ Commonwealth Stock Keystone income K-l . Keystone Growth K-2 . Mast. Investor* Growth MmO. investors Trust Prippn Growth ......... Television E lechx>nlea . EG&G JO _ ElBonds 1.72 EIPatoNG 1 EmerEI 1.32 End John 5,.,rnM,K 45 25% 24% 2 STOCK AVERAGES CempUed by The AaseclMed^Pret^ lads Ralb Util Stocks Vi$r. oir mm--' U 111% 109% 109% —1% 44 14%. 16% l-_ 30 52% 51% 51% +1V - 10% 10% 18% — L tl 14% 14 —F— 511 112% 1W SO 11% 11 I 170j 172.7 347.0 J i FefderCp .40 FadDStr 1.7B Ferro Cp 1.20 Flltrel 2J0_ Flrettne I JO , S«V" ?m\ 6 33% 32% 32%- 51 20% 19% 19% + 15 14% 14% 14% + 22 19% 19% 19% + 21 27 34% 24% ... 9 43% 42% 42%— 25% 25% Mb.— ’ 9% 9W 9% + 1 irflnMar 1 102 17% 17 17 4-1 lyDStr 1.40 ll 40% 39% 30% ... jAm t 20% 20% 20% ... 1 24% 24% 24% + ’ 32 22% 21% 21% J 45 45 45 + = 12 42 41% 41 +1 x7 29% 20% *%-' 45 70 41% 40% + ; “ 22% 22% B% .. If 27% 27% 27%+ 1 222 23% 23% 23% + 9 ~ 23% 23% 23% ... Monsan 140b 133 42, 4l% 4H*-1 .——. 7 29% 20% 29 + 54 3 3M 30% ,S%—; I_____i .Tra.fV 1.12 ^ ’mi ’8% Jo% + NatOairy 1J0 33 33 32% 32% 24 30% : 15 S% i ifttj |; itGyps"2b’ 72-2» IJ2-; Lead 2.25* 31 54 SMh 53% — ’ it Steel 240 22 39% 39% 39% - J it Tea .80 2 14% 14% 14% — ’ vada P .04 12 33% 32% 33% +1 — see 11 15% 15 15% + I 16 22% 22% 22% + 9 44 54% 55% 56 + 9 26 t as r+i 117 40% 39% 40 - \ 24 42% 41% 41% -1 10 45% 44% tSW +1 3 30 29% 30 + 1 24 21% 20% 21% + 1 94 90% 88 00% + ! NEngEI 1.20 NY Cent 3.12 NlagMP UO Norflk Wtt 4a OltoMeth 1J0 Otis Elev 2 * Outb Mar .80 Owentlll 145 OxfrdPep JO PacG El 1.30 . f ffrol . PactAT 1.20 Petvwxto .43 “ nrney 1.50* . J PwLt 1.45 Pa RR 2.40 Penmoll 1.43 PepsiCo 1.40 -YUerif 1.20a >h*lpG 3.40a Villa El M8 30 50% 50 50% +1% 1.3 35% 35 35% + V 24 15% 15% 15% + 8 35 43% 62% 63% +2 41 14% 15% 15% + V —P— ft 2? 23 42 61% M +244 X 57% 54% BtotoMi 22 40% 40 _ 55% 55 ( 29% 29% 1 _ 23 34% 34% 36% -, 21, 28% ItadlM 497 132 128% 1» - % 53 41% 41% 41% ' M —ft— 372 4t% IL 41% +1% 12 44% 45% 44% + % 53 ir% 20% 20% -47 42% 41% 41% + 50 35% 34% 34% — 17 22%. 22% 22% + a *% 7% «%■+ i i 17% 13 + % 34 24% 24% 24% + 9 22 34% 34% 34% — ' 4 33% 33 33% + ’ 25 29% 23% 28% — 9 40 45% 43% 44%-1 17 24% 25% » + 1 28 45% 45 45% + \ i 34% 34% + % ! 88 + ^' 37 42% 61 42% +2% 20 33 32% 32% -. . 21 27% 27% 27% + 1 24 24 25% 24 ... 7 21% 27% 27% — 1 I 24% 23% 24 07 44% 64 ' MVb + % 30 19 : 47% 18 + % 143 74% 74% 74% 4- % 230 104% 1U%;i02% +1 lt% + - MR 54% 54% + % 10 34% 34 34% + % 173 54% 55% 55% +1 50 24 23% 23% + % 212 12% 12% 12% + % tl 21% 2T 21 ... I I 29 28% 21% +r- —V— 22 12% 11% 11% ... 17 n% 51% 51%— 14 »% 22% 22% — 134 48% 47 47% +1% 17 34 35% 35% — % 6 49 9 49 + % 154 40% 47% 47% — % 50 44% 45% 4Mb + % — [■ 47 32% 32 32 — % UGasCp 1.70 $1 41% 39% 41 +1% 27 2. . 3 24% 2 13% 13% + % Vaned 1.40a Varlan As vSelpwYar iPte JOa. ____iLamb 1 WashWat 1.14 Wastn AirL 1 WnBanc 1.10 WUnTel 1.40 WeiHbfl ilM Wfeyerhr 1.40 Whirl Cp 1.40 IMiMa M 1.00 Wilson Co 2 WlnnDIx • " 44 39% 30% 21%.... M0 35% 35% 35% + % 1 9% 9% 9% + % 45 50% 57% 57% +1% 11 44% 45% 44 +1% —V— 10 23 22% 23 140 27% 26% 24% .. ft 21% 2Mb 21% +1% III 42% 42% 42%-% —W-e \ • 0 12% 11% 11% 20 34 »V 34 12 21% 21% 21% 40 34% 14% 35% SO 24% 24%, 24% V 20% g% 3^4 44 29% 20% 29 4 37% 37% 37% 14 30% 30% 30% X10 44% 44% 44% 4 29% 29% 29% m Corp 1 179 144 140% 140%______ -StSht 1J0 21 28% 20% 20% + % Zenith Rad I 173 St 52% 52% + %: Copyrighted by The Aaeocletod Presa 1944 teles figures ant unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates Jendi In the foregoing tew* arc _________ disbursements based on the last quarterly ~~ lemi-annual declaration. Special or i dividends or payments^ not desig- vlng* fcwTnotes. Also extra or extras. b-Annual ____plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend,. d—Declared or paid in 1941 ■Bu -*-**• dividend. *—Declared or paw [rig 1965, estimated or (put up. k—Declared or paid , an accumulative Issue with i s In arrears, n—New Issue, p—Paw year, dividend omitted, deferred or ____ction token at lest divWend meeting. r—Declared or paid In 1944 plut stoat dividend. t-Peld In ttock during 1944, ............. IMdeMOfOK xr—Ex rights, xw—Without .. ww—With warrants, wd—When c xiivd. wl—when issued, nd—Next < Min' bankruptcy or receivership ng reorganized under the Bankruptcy i, or securities assumed by such companies. In—Foreign Issue subject to In Treasury Position WASHINGTON of ttie Treasury (AP)—The cash position compared with cor—- "oet. 4,V1H4 *®°: Oct. 4, 1 C*~1,547,542,675.10 S 5,492,009,150.30 Deposits Fiscal Year July • 3W19J40J10.73 il Withdrawals Fiscal Yeer- 45,037,742,700.90 04,205,444,196.54 X—Total Debt— 324,244,140,004.29 3M.514J17,947.42 Gold Assets— 13,257,541 J25.44 13 059,031,045.44 -........ tl 735J74J84.45 Buffer Bridge a Calm Scene 3*HoHon Team AcHve Despite War Rumbles REMILITARIZED ZONE, Viet Nam (AP) — Amid a military storm, a diplomatic calm surrounds the Freedom Bridge across the demilitarized zone’s Ben Hal River. U.S. Marines and North Vietnamese regulars die in the jed mud of the mountains south of the zone dividing North and South Viet Nam. ★ ★ ★ To the eait« the Ben Mai moves ever so slowly through sandy lowlands to the Gulf of Tonkin. The river forms the border between North and South VietNam. Almost daily, U.S. bombers and artillery pound the western side of the zone where UJ$. officials say North Vietnamese divisions operating below the Ben Hai have their headquarters.1 U.S. TROOPS There also is a buildup of U. S. forces below the zone. But each day about 9 a.m., there is a stir of activity in the compound of die International Control Commission’s mobile team 75 in the southeast comer of the six-mile-wide zone. ★ h * Four men — a Canadian, a Pole, an Indian and an interpreter -- climb into a white jeep station wagon with a white nag. The jeep drives to a loamy plain of rice fields and vegetable plots. Abandoned French blockhouses dot the landscape. TALK TO OFFICER At Freedom Bridge, the four men leave the jeep and walje under a red and white striped barrier. They talk with a North Vietnamese liaison officer and exchange official complaints of military violations in the supposedly . neutral zope. The team leaves.' Music comes from propaganda loudspeakers on both sides of the river. At a nearby village, a fisherman mends his net while he listens to the dries of. his children and a Bach concerto on his shortwave radio. • ★ • Hr * A monsoon drizzle persists. A lone South Vietnamese national policeman stays in his guard shack. Sometimes a shout is heard from the North Vietnamese side of the river. It is very still at the bridge, named the Freedom Bridge by the South Vietnamese government because it was a main avenue of exit for refugees from North Viet Nam after the 1954 Geneva agreement that divided Viet Nam. EIGHT MEMBERS Mobile team 75 has a total of right members -+ two Canadians, two Indians and two poles, With two Polish interpreters. Hie International Control Commission was established by the 1954 Geneva agreement. The commission’s function is to _ port any violations of the agreement By JOHN CUNNIFF ■ AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Is the term ‘corporate democracy,” which the securities business likes to brag about fo thej nation’s kh a r eholders, really accurate? : Or is the securi-'j ties business oligarchy? Does the totMi of 20 million share owners make the buai*| ness democratic? Or does the concentration of power among die experts add professionals make it a government of the few? Ibe questions arise when you view the enormous beddings and growing participation Of institutional buyers, when you consider the very active stock trading they have been involved in this year, when you realize the impact their big blocks of stock can have on prices. The term corporate democracy has become a common one in f Successruhfnvesting * American Stock Exch. (Ml) High Lew Lett citg. 1 20 20 28 - % •10g . 3 J0% 10% 10% M . ..-----A J0» 7 7% 7% 7%............ ArkLeGet 1.50 4 33% 33% 33%- % A|ex A Am mere Ated OIOII Atlas Co wt Barnes Eng Brez Lt Pw 1 Brit Pet .43* Can^opJilb 27 2 My, 79 1% 1% 1% 1% + % 19 10% 10% - % "H 0%; 1% — 15 015-14 0% 40 413-14 4 9-14 X . „ .. 31115-14 1% 115-16 -1-14 26 5% 5 5 -% 13 3% 3% 3% -V 24 30% 20% 20% — I 21 1% 1% 1%..... 9 30% 30 30 -*% 20 6% 4% 6%-f 37 3% 2% 2%-’ go Oils 17 2% 2 5-1425- 6 4 i 25% 24% —1% Fly Tiger 1. Gen Devel Gen Plywd Giant Yel j Goldfield Gt Bas Pet GUM Am uPOPOW HoernerWald .82 23 19% .... ... Hycon Mtg 13 10 9% 9% — % —- to? « » * mi 27 10% 10% 10% — -26 0% 9% 9%-1-14 30 11% 10% 11% + 123 2% 2% 2% — 6% 4% - ' 7% .. Kaiser Mackey Air McCrary wt Mead John .41 Molybden New Pk Mng Paneet rtf " I C Group fry Rain Sign*IOII A 1 13 Sparry R wt 161 BhMftam In . 2 »co?.*40 Un Control Jtxd 40 .... ... ....... Copyright by The Associated Press 1944 .10 Q J1-1 12% M Q 10-20 1041 16 7% . 3‘ 2% 2% _ . 19 21 2M4 10% - 37 37% 35% 34% -124 2% 2% 2% — 14 % 13-1413-16-1... 2 1% 1% 1% — % 26 14% 13% 13%—1% 149 18% 17% 17% - 13 23% 23% 23% ...... 161 4% 6% 6% - % .. 740.75—3.57 .. 103.02-1 JO DOW-JONES AVERAGES 30 Indus .............. 20 Rain- ............... 15 Utils ............... 45 Stack* .............. BONOS l8 Higher grade rails' ....... 10 Second grad* relit ....... 00.24+0.04 ** Prtille Utilities ...1... 02.71+0.02 Industrleli . 1 *3 A 2-Way StreBf ■ W^j0' Securities and Power CUNNIFF recent years, coinckfiug with a sharp growth: fat. stock owner-M ‘ - ' New York Mock LIS riiows ie tripled in number sine# M6L . M " ‘ • MANY2*R0GRAM8 ttoiiu no question about the grijtitp pqptiiariiy^cif: atodgi, prirtiy the result of eduCatiOMl iwagmas % the industry aixi its exriumgea. ■ Ibenation’s individual shareowners now hold stock worth more than MOO billion. However, biddings of institutions the investment companies and mutual funds, the insurance companies, schools,; foundations — are near areoord high now, somewhere near $100 billion. ★ ★ ★ Add to this another professional group, the $60 billion of ban k-administered personal trust funds, and these pros now have one-third of the value of all stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Joining this group as active traders is another category — the small but knowledgeable By ROGERS. SPEAR Q. “I expect to start buying stocks very soon. I’m a novice and 1 want to be systematic about my records. Can you make some suggestions which might help others besides me?” G.deV. A. Good, clear records are extremely important when preparing tax returns. Brokers normally send customers two basic statements: an invoice covering transaction and a monthly summary. The invoice shows date of transaction, stock purchased (or sold), quantity, price fees and taxes. The monthly statement lists all transactions during the period. In a margin account, it will include interest, cash deposits and withdrawals, credits for dividends received and stocks held in the account at the cut-off date. These statements will provide about all the information required for a reliable set of records. Transaction slips should be checked against monthly summaries end both should be kept in a' safe place for ready reference. I suggest also a supplementary tabulation of all trades in chronological order, using a ring-binder notebook. If you hold your own stock certificates, U section of the binder could be used for their listing. As you become more familiar with market data, you mby think of other details that will show you quickly and correctly how youare progressing. ★ Q. “A few months ago I bought 100 shares of Liqui-donics OTC. Its market performance has b e e n satisfactory but I’ve had no correspondence from the company. Can yon provide any information?” G.S. A. Published information / is scant, but I note that trading has been quite active over the summer among New York dealers. Bids touched a high of 25(4 in July and more recently are reported around 20. Companies whose stocks are traded OTC are not required to report quarterly. I find a report date of June 30 but no public announcement for 1966 related to that date. Why not send your questions directly to Liquidonics Industries, Inc., 200 Shames Drive, Westbury, N.Y.? (Copyright, 19(6) GM Fleet Sales Posts Realigned; 3 Get Positions A Birmingham man, Charles K. Latham Jr., of 871 Poppleton, was recently promoted to a new position of director of personnel services for Fisher Body Division. Latham, formerly in charge of salaried personnel a «t i ?It y* joined Fisher Body a* a labor standards clerk in Pontiac in 1940. After seevral promotions he returned to Pontiad & assistant director of industrial relations in 1946. He was appointed to his most reecnt position in 1955. Three area men have assumed new positions at General Motors Corp. through realignment of the fleet and government sales activities. A new fleet and government sales section has been created in the marketing staff to handle policies and procedures for multiple-unit sales. Robert L. Berg, 18584 Chel-ton, Beverly Hills, has been named manager of rentail, leasing and commercial sales for the new section: : BERG PINKSTAFF His assistant is Charles B. Pink i Staff, 32481 Evergr e e n,l Beverly Hills. Both men farina* erly were assistant directors in General Motors’ fleet sections. John D. Riggs, 450 BllUngs1 Gate, Bloom-field Township, was appointed manager of federal, state and municipal sales. He formerly was director of government sales. RIGGS Individual, the margin trader, the speculator. He is professional in his education and knowledge. / FELT IN TRADING The impact of this power is frit in the trading, for in recent months the Mg Institutions have been more active traders than before. When they; trade, they are able to unload or buy huge blocks. If a stock is tightly held, fids can have a sharp impact on prices. The activity of these groups means that much of the day to day trading ig donahy persons or institutions very highly expert compared to fee much-honored small investor. ■ It ★ , * • The small purchaser of securities generally is not a trader. His account often is relatively dormant. And his interest is seldom great enough for him to participate at a company’s annual meeting. To a great extent, the small investor is relatively^ poor informed compared to the pro. Commenting on the pros, Winslow, Cohu & Stetson, a securities house, said: it -k ★ ‘It is they who bid fee price up quickly before fee average investor "is fully aware of what is going cm, and it is again they who sell out when ‘fee story’ becomes public knowledge, securing for themselves a usually handsome profit.’^ Nevertheless, a* vast amount of information is available to the small investor merely for the asking, ranging from ABCs to highly complex professional studies. Is the interest and understanding there, however? Area Exec Is Promoted News in Brief Grant Spencer,^ 4841 Motorway, Waterford Township, reported to townsMp police yesterday the theft of a boat motor, valued a( $206, from his garage. * THOMAS Tools valued at $285 wer taken in a burglary at the Auto-Teria, 649 Orchard Lake, it was reported to Pontiac police yesterday. Theft of tools valued at $150 in a break-in at Downey Olds-tnobile Inc., 1084 Oakland, was reported yesterday Pontiac police. Ten pair of roller skates valued at $150 were taken early yesterday in a break-in at University Skating RJnk, 85 W-Walton, it was reported to P6n-tiac police'. Rummage sale. Thursday, October 13, 1966 from 9 a.m. to $ p.m,f and Fii^ Oct M»; from 9 a.m. until noon, at the First Methofilgt Church of Birmingham, wist Maple and Pleasant. Snack Bar and Free Parking. -rAdv.: MOM’s Rummage: Thursday 9 to 12. Indianwood and Baldwin. Ady. Odds ted ends rnmmage ’household). 292 Russell, off uiburn. Wed., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. -Adv. Business Notes George W. Thomas was recently elected vice president and director of. agencies fori Jackson Nation- [ al Rife Insur-1 ance Co., Jack-1 son. . Thomas for-1 merly with a V Birmingham in-1 surance Com-1 pany, lives fat I 1689 Witherbee, Troy. Paul Felice of 295 Pioneer was recently reelected a director of fee Michigan Food Dealers Association for a two-year term. He is part-owner of fee Fe-lice Quality Market, 1116 W. Huron, Waterford Township. Jessie r-Hahn Chrysler Ityfflouth, fee., was recently franchised by Kaiser Jeep Sales Coro. The firm located at 6673 Dixie, Independence Township, will handfe Jeep vehicles and approved special equipment. RMfe C. Spinning, Inc., advertising agency, has recently tnov,ed to fee South Adams Square; Building, 725 S. Adams, Birmingham. The agency handles industrial sporting and building product accounts. Snelling and Snelling Personnel Consultant firm recently opened a branch office in fee ^1 Pontiac State ora Bank Building, ™ Suite 1102. Donald McLean of 55 Oriole is office manager. McLean spent 18 years in various capacities with Consumers Power Co. He is a past president, treasurer and board of directors’ member of fee Femdale Board of Commerce. HO has been active in United Fund campaigns and Junior Achievement programs. BOND AVERAOM && artt #:i m s* Sfi is sm « MeLEAN David H. WARD of2496 Pine-vifew, West Bloomfield Township, was recently elected to the Oakland County chapter of fee National Association of Accountants. Ward is a supervisor at Touche, Ross, Bailey and Smart, Detroit. Four area persons were recently elected officers of fee Southeastern Michigan chapter of the American National Red Cross. They are Carleton C. Patterson Jr., 783 Pilgrim, Birmingham, as second vice chairman; Dr. Lloyd R. Hirth, 45288 Brownell, Utica, as third vice chairman; Roderio V. Wiley, 6425 Wing Lake, Bloomfield Township, as treasurer; and Louis J. Colombo Jr., 3635 Lahser, Bloomfield Hills, as counselor.