The Weather UJ. WmHnt Bweie Fereeast Cloudy with possible showers. (Mails on Pag* I) VOL. 124 — NO. 162 THE PONTIAC PRjJ«feOVER PAGES ★ ★ + ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1966 —44 PAGES un'teSs^t&tI«*Sjohal 10e Accord Is Reached in Airline Strike Pontiac Pratt Photo GRADUATION KISS—Cherie Timbrook, 6, gives her mother Mrs. Donald Timbrook of Madison Heights, a kiss of congratulations following Oakland University’s commencement exercises while brothers Michael, 15, and Tom, 8, look on. Mrs. Timbrook, mother of nine children, ranging in agrfrom 2% to 16, received her bachelor of arts degree at Saturday’s graduation. Mother of 9 Wins Bet ... Becomes Teacher By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press Three years ago, Mrs. Donald Timbrook of Madison Heights placed a bet with her family against great odds ... a bet, that she, a high school dropout and mother of eight children, could go back to school and become a teacher. Saturday, at Oakland University’s commencement, the bet paid off. Mrs. Timbrook received her bachelor of arts degree in the school of education with departmental honors in English. Taking time out to have her ninth child during the second semester didn’t interfere with Mrs. Timbrook’s A-minus average. She attended class Additional Photo Use of Birth Curb Pills Is Supported Page D-2 on Wednesday, went to the hospital that night and was back in class on Monday. Mrs. Timbrook dropped out of high school af 16 to marry. Her husband Donald, now a truck driver with an area firm, was her baby sitter while ...she attended class. “Going to school was pretty bard the first year or go," said Mrs. Timbrook. ★ ★ * “My husband is no hand to help with the housework and getting the youngsters into the habit of doing things for themselves wasn’t exactly easy. “But we made it. We have -- (Continued -on-Pago3,Xol.5).~ | In Today's | Press Chinese Labor * North Viet Nam gets £ help in repairing bomb \ damage—PAGE A-12 / California | Democrats back open * housing law, in contrast 1 to GOP-PAGE All ) Moon Orbiter I In position to photo-I graph starting Thursday I -PAGE A-3 | Area News ..........A-4 | Astrology ..........C-8 Bridge ............C4 Crossword Puzzle ... D-9 Comics ...........C-8 Editorials ........A4 Martas —..........C41 Obituaries .......D-2 Sports .......C-l—C-4 Theaters ........ Oil TV-Radio Programs .04, Wilson, Earl ......04 Women's Pages B-l-B-3 WASHINGTON (AP) >- A government-appointed medical advisory committee says the use of oral contraceptives should continue while studies of possible harmful effects are expanded. The committee noted “certain very infrequent but serious side effects,” but it said in a report released last night that it fotnul^lro adequate scientific-1 data, at this time, proving these compounds unsafe for human The Food and Drug Administration appointed the 10-member committee last year and FDA Commissioner James L. Goddard said steps are planned or already have been taken to implement its recommendations. The recommendations include a tequiraatecq that aj| awl cqa,-. traceptives be unifotroy laSieled with warnings of possible serious side effects, and oliminaUon of restrictions on the length of time women may take the pills regularly. Goddard also announced expansion of some present studies (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) It'll Continue Cool, Cloudy The cool, cloudy weekend weather should continue through tonight and tomorrow with a strong chance of scattered showers. But tomorrow may be slightly less humid. The low tonight should be in feeble* 60s and high tomorrow 7040. Light winds from 5 to 15 miles per hour are ter&ari. Cod and clou# is the forecast tor Wednesday. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. was 64. By 2 p.m. the mercury registered 80. f JbETJ Name City Man to Track Probe Oakland County grand juror Circuit Judge Philip Pratt today appointed a Pontiac attorney as special prosecutor in the Hazel | Park R ac Track probe. Named to the 1 post was Je- :\ rome K. Barry, a former vet-: eran assistant| county prosecutor. Barry, 39, of 183 E. Iroquois, will be responsible for all of the legal aspects of the new investigation into alleged criminal activities at the track. BARRY Wayne County ProbeMulled DETROIT (UPI) - Wayne County Circuit Judges meet today to decide whether to create a second one-man grand jury as'requested last week by Atty. Gen. Frank J. Kelley. Most observers feel the 24 judges will grant Kelley’s request for the grand jury to investigate crime in Wayne County However, there was some doubt raised about who will be named the grand juror. Circuit Court Judge Edward S. Piggins has been conducting a one-man grand jury into alleged crime and corruption in Wayne County, but his term expires Aug. 31. ★ ★ ★ Some judges have argued it would be illegal to reappoint him. PETITIONED . Kelley petitioned the Wayne County Circuit Court Thursday to authorize the new grand jury. The petition said he had reliable information of criminal activity and corruption in Wayne County, including the Detroit Race Course. The grand jury was initiated Thursday by the Oakland County Circuit Court bench after State Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley leveled charges involving the drugging of horses, bribery, offtrack betting and fraud. ★ * ★ Pratt was named Friday by other members of the bench to head the investigation because of his experience with grand jury procedures. Pratt concluded a year-long grand jury investigation of Royal Oak Township in June. During that time he issued 20 indictments involving 23 persons. The appointment of Barry was announced just before Pratt left for Lansing to ask the Michigan Supreme Court to provide a visiting judge to handle his docket while the investigation is in progress. Pratt explained today that he has the full cooperation of the prosecutor’s office in the investigation, but that a lack of manpower makes it impossible for a full-time man to be assigned to the case. * ★ ★ fil chose Barry because of his prior experience and his knowledge in the criminal field,” said edge in the criminal field,” said Pratt. “I have a high regard for his ability.” ASSISTANT PROSECUTOR Barry was an assistant prosecutor for eigh years, resigning in January 1965, to enter (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) U’L ONES “Watch out some grownup doesn’t throw in a bar of soap and spoil all the fun.” REACH SETTLEMENT - P. L. Siemiller (left), president of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists, and William Curtain, chief airlines negotiator, talk early today near the aid of a 20-hour session which produced a tentative agreement in the 39-day strike. Striking workers must approve the settlement before it becomes effective. British Close In on Killers LONDON (UPI)—Police acting on underworld tips raided several London homes before dawn today and said someone would be charged soon in connection with the murder of three unarmed British policemen. ★ ★ ★ “It is possible that we will charge somebody this afternoon,” a police spokesman said. He did not stipulate the nature of the charges. Authorities were holding an unidentified man taken into custody shortly after the tore? police were shot Friday on a quiet London street. The man reportedly was the owner of the station wagon used by the killers to escape. He told police he had sold the vehicle only three hours before the shooting occurred. ★ ★ ★ While police scientists searched for clues in the abandoned station wagon used by the slayers, contributions poured into police stations throughout the country for a national appeal fund established to aid survivors of the dead policemen. One anonymous donor gave $280,000. ★ $ ★ Sir Joseph Simpson, metropolitan police commissioner, said late last night police would seek assistance from the underworld in tracking down the wanted men. LBJ Sure of U.S. Viet Victory JOHNSON GITY. Tex. TAP) .i,—rn President Johnson says weekend talks with Get). ■William C. Westmoreland shored up his conviction that American and allied troops “will not be defeated by the Communists in Viet Nam,” AX^mntomsttake-owr "Mine longer ju t improbable. It is impossible,” the President said after he and Westmoreland, ES. commander in Viet Nam. concluded a review of the status of the war. Talking with newsmen on ■ {be front lawn of tooLBJ ■ ‘ Ranch, Johnson tempered his statement with these words: “No one can say how many TiSS^irWne^S^FEowlOTg' we must persevere. Hie American people must know there will ie So quick Victor, but toe world must know that we will not atilt’" l’ Westmoreland, fielding a flurry of questions from reporters, said additional troops will be needed in Viet Nam before the end of the year. He said it was impossible to determine now the extent of the increase. ★ ★ * The general arrived at the ranch Saturday evening but his Rr.e&enc£..remamed secretuntil he and his wife attended church service* Sunday with President anurafs. Johnson. Westmoreland spent about 18 boors at the ranch before heading back lor Viet Nam. The general, who described toe conference as “officially profitable,” left with instructions from Johnson to tell his men that “their determination and their courage in Viet Nam will be matched by a dedicated resolve and support here at home,” Like Johnson, Westmoreland praised U.S. troops. “They are a credit to America ami our society,” the four-star general said. “Their mothers and their wives can be truly proud of their attituted, their courage, their understanding of toe situation, their compassion, their integrity and their endurance.” Westmoreland was asked about the constituent assembly elections coming next month in South Viet Nam. He replied that While he is a military map rath-er than a politician, “we do feel the election has high prospects of being successful.” WAR HERO MEETS PRESIDENT —r Army Capt. William S. Carpenter, recommended for toe Congressional Medal of Honor, talked with President Johnson yesterday at toe President's Texas ranch. While fighting hi Viet Item, Capt. Carpenter called for a napalm attack on his own company in $______________ • an effort to repel the Viet Cong. In the center is Gen. William C. Westmoreland, U. S. Army commander in Viet Nam. Hie general conferred with the President and met with the press while at the raneb. Workers Must OK Pact Terms of Negotiators Mechanics' Vote May Be Held Tomorrow; Package Said Higher WASHINGTON l/PI— A settlement agreement in the 39-day airlines strike was announced today, subject to a vote of approval by 35,400 strikers against five major airlines. Assistant Secretary of Labor James J. Reynolds said in announcing the tentative contract agreement that a vote by the striking members of the AFL-CIO International Association of Machinists would be held “possibly qnd hopefully tomorrow.” First Comments on toe agreement, from big units in New York and Chicago,, indicated that schedule could be met if details were relayed to toe locals in time. But at midmorning, some four hours after the daybreak announcement of an agreement, spokesmen were saying they did not yet know just what was in the package. Union President P. L. (Roy) Siemiller said meetings of the strikers around the countoy would be called as soon as possible to explain the terms of the agreement and take a vote. SECRET TERMS Terms of the contract agreement were kept secret pending the vote but informed estimates placed the total three-year cost at some $90 million, or about 8 per cent per year. Top mechanics now make $3.52 per hour, plus fringe benefits that bring a total to around $4 per hour. Asked how he felt about toe settlement, reached after 20 straight hours of Labor Department talks, Siemiller said: “I’m tired. Let’s go home.” Reynolds called the agreement a “memorandum of understanding” and emphasized it was not final until approved by the strikers who voted down a previous agreement negotiated in the White House. * ★ ★ ★ If approved by the striking mechanics, it would bring to an end the longest, biggest and most costly strike in airline history. NO PREDICTION While Siemiller declined to predict the outcome of toe vote, the settlement in addition to reportedly containing considerably higher wages and benefits than "toe rejected White House package also contained a cost of living wage escalator clause. The wage escalator had been one of toe union’s most vital demands from toe beginning of toe long dispute and its absence in toe earlier ...• by strikers in many areas for iliming OvWR tnf Wnffr IWWf agreement July 31. Reynolds said “it isTair Agreed ment reached by the parties. It was not in any way forced upon .. them.”-^-L—— He said the agreement covered all the major issues affecting strikers on the five airlines — United, Eastern, National, Northwest and Trans World — plus all local issues on the individual lines. Pontiac Sales for 10-Day Period Continue High Sales of Pontiac and Tempests in the first 10 days of August continued near-record testis, Thomas L. King, Pontiac Motor general sales manager announced today. In the Aug. 140 period; 19,* 186 Ponttecs were sold, Klng ie-ported. .. _ ftUfcfci This total is surpassed otiy by the 20,837 unite sold to toe same period s year ago. & Ar-1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1966 After Chicago Marches Whites, Police Clash By die Associated Press Thousands of rioting whites clashed with club-swinging policemen in Chicago Sunday night after three separate civil rights marches into all-white neighborhoods. At least 16 persons - including five policemen — were injured and police arrested 21 persons during the melee. ★ ★ ★ Police swarmed into Marquette Park on the city’s Southwest Side and knocked several persons to the ground with clubs as thousands of white persons ^sts. The violence erupted after a leader of the American Nazi party called on white persons to march into Negro areas. The violence came after the civil rights marches into Gage Park, Bogan and Jefferson Park neighborhoods to protest alleged housing discrimination. * * ★ Marquette Park was outside I the area of the civil rights marches, but the demonstrators were met with volleys of rocks and bottles which resulted in some injuries and several charged with inciting to riot in the aftermath of three days of violence pleaded innocent before Record’s Court Judge John Ricca. The judge set a hearing for the four, described by police as members of militant civil rights groups. A relative calm settled over Detroit, Lansing, Ypsilanti and Muskegon, Mich., ■ scenes of outbreaks of violence last week. stormed through the park. John Patler of the American jpg - tion.” I Soon after his talk, rioting white persons roamed the park and hurled bottles and rocks at passing cars of Negroes. SHOTS FIRED Squads of policemen withdrew to regroup, and when reinforced. swarmed down a hill into the melee. Officers fired shots into the air. Angry whites yelling, want white power!” and “Kill the niggers!” bombarded a caravan of cars carrying marchers into the Gage Park area. As civil rights leaders prepared to meet tonight to discuss plans for their next demon-tion in Chicago, Rep. Roman C. Pucinski, D-Ill., said he would introduce a bill in Congress which would give courts the rights to limit the number of marchers in a civil rights demonstrations. n JAMES C. O’CONNOR Death Claims James C. O’Connor, of 814 Menominee, an Oakland County official for 33 years, died yesterday. He was 76. O’Connor joined the county in 1925 to supervise construction of the former County Contagious Hospital and then became superintendent of the facility. He held this position until 1956 when toe hospital building was leased to the City of Pontiac. He served on toe staff of toe County Board of Auditors until his retirement in 1958. A life member of Elks Lodge No. 810, O’Connor is a past commander of the Cook-Nelson American Legion Post. •k ★ ★ The Elks will conduct a Lodge of Sorrow at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. The Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. REQUIEM MASS Requiem Mass will be 10 a.m. Wednesday at St. Benedict Church, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Surviving are two brothers. Elsewhere on the racial scene More than 3,000 whites at a Ku Klux Klan rally in Raleigh, N.C., jeered a small group of Negroes who sat in on the meeting but helmeted officers kept the session under control. Six persons, including a Klan security guard, were arrested. All but two of the Negroes left during one of the speeches. At Detroit, four Negroes Pontiac Cyclist Critically Hurt in Crash With Car Israel, Syria Report Clash Stories Conflicting on Air, Sea Battles JERUSALEM, Israel (UFl) Israel and Syria clashed in and air battle over the Sea of Galilee today. Conflicting reports said two Syrian MIGs were shot down and four Israeli patrol boats destroyed. The clash erupted before dawn near toe border area where Israeli and Syrian jets tangled in a supersonic dogfight July 14. An Israeli military spokesman said Syria started the fight by opening fire from shore guns on stranded Israeli fishing boat and a patrol boat that had come to its rescue. * ★ ★ Syrian jets then joined the attack and Israeli Air Force planes intercepted them, the spokesman said. CLAIM KILLS He said two Syrian MIGs were shot down in the dog fight and the Israeli jets then wheeled and silenced the shore batteries on the Syrian side of Galilee. Galilee — or Lake Tiberias as it is sometimes called — is on toe border between the two feuding countries. The Syrian military spokesman said in a Damascus radio broadcast that three Israeli gunboats were destroyed and eight others set afire. A PROCLAMATION—Fred Schram (left), president of the Oakland County Retirees Association, holds a proclamation from Michigan Gov. George Romney announcing Retirees Day, Aug. 13. Pontiac Mayor Wil- Pentiac Pr»»» Photo liam H. Taylor Jr. (middle) hands main speaker Lt. Gov. William Milliken the key to the city at a picnic Saturday celebrating Retirees Day. A Pontiac youth whose motorcycle collided with a car last night was listed in critical condition today at Pontiac General Hospital. James H. Brady Jr., 19, of 150 Chamberlain was injured in collision with an automobile at the intersection of North Perry and Joslyn, said Pontiac Police. ★ ★ * Driver of the car, William D. Stouffer, 16, of 1428 W. South Blvd., Avon Township, told police he was making a left turn and didn’t see Brady. The accident occurred about 9:15 p.m. Milliken Lauds Area Retirees Mother of Nine Becomes English Teacher in Troy (Continued From Page One) “Your group is doing more than any other organization I! know to meet your own problems on a people-to-people basis” Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken told members of the Oakland County Association of Retirees (OCRA) at a picnic at Hawthorne Park Saturday. The picnic and a car parade highlighted the local observance of Retirees Day in Michigan. Milliken, who is cochairman of the State Council on Human Resources, added that retirees are the second greatest potential reservoir of volunteer workers. He praised OCRA members as people “who see in retirement real and challenging opportunities for services.” ★ ★ ★ Milliken ended by commend-l ing the retirees for their “community efforts” since they showed “other communities the quite a satisfactory routine worked out now. “We work together until it’s done. It’s great raining, for toe youngsters. Asked if she would encourage others to follow in her path, Mrs. Timbrook didn’t hesitate. ★ ★ ★ 1 certainly would”. “But before they move, they should take a realistic look at what they feel is important. MORE REWARDING’ “Time normally spent amusements, say watching television or going bowling, will have to give way to studying. The Weather THREE HOURS The Syrian spokesman also said the battle lasted thre hours. He made no mention of air losses. He said Israel started the fighting at 5:30 a.m. when a patrol boat crossed toe armistice line and engaged a Syrian outpost on Galilee’s eastern shore. Syrian positions returned the fire, knocking the Israeli boat out of^ction. About an hour later, a flotilla of Israeli patrol boats with air support raced to the rescue of the foundering Israeli vessel, Damascus radio said. Syrian Air Force planes intercepted them “destroying three Israeli vessels close to the Syrian shore and setting fire to eight others further from the shore,’ the Syrian spokesman claimed. way. Other guest, speakers were Pontiac Mayor William-H. Taylor Jr.; Bruce Annett, president of the Pontiac Area United Fund Board of Trustees; and AFL-CIO labor staff representative Arthur Heaton. OCRA president, Fred Schram, who sent the petition to Gov. Romney requesting a Retirees Day Proclamation, introduced the speakers to the over 150 picnickers. w****^™“TWTJSr Weather Bureau Report -.. PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy with chance of scattered showers later today. Highs 72-80. Showers or thundershowers likely tonight. Lows 60-66. Partly cloudy, little temperature change and less humid Tuesday. Highs 70-78. Wednesday’s outlook partly cloudy and cool. Winds light south to southeast 5-15 miles today. Precipitation probabilities today 20, tonight 50, Tuesday 20 per cent. T*S»y Ml Po Uvifeit IWWrttw* p At t a.m.: Wind vi Sun ritet Tuesday at 5 Moon utl today at 7:* Moon rim Tuesday at Thl* Data In 14 Years -■ TfVrtffll ftffiynt*y"j>SH t Highest temperature ...........78 ...... ?5 iHfenMIKiWNt lather: Cloudy and cool. Sunday'a Temperature Chart H_____ _ I \Suiwt Gd. Rapids 77 41 Fort Houghton ” " ' Jacksonville 90 7' Angeles 86 nt teach 17 Muskegon 71 Pettston Albuquerque 93 Atlanta M Bismarck 75 SO Phoenix 105 71 Boston 76 63 Pittsburgh Chicago 79 70 St. Lk. Cl.. Cincinnati 02 72 S. Francisco Denver 90 55 S. Ste. Marla R Detroit 72 42 Washington 70 75 79 67 NATIONAL WEATHER-Rain and showers are expected tonight for portions of Texas, Oklahoma and Colorado, Great Lakes region, Mississippi Valley, Ohio Valley and northern Atlantic Coast states. Cooler temperatures are predicted for toe south central states while it will be wanner along the Pacific Coast Gov. Romney Keynoter for County GOP Name City Man to Track Probe It's Bulldog's Night to Howl Birmingham Area News License Renewal Out for Motorcycle Firm BIRMINGHAM - In accord-ice with newly adopted regulations for motorcycle rental agencies, the City Commission will advise a local agency that its license will not be renewed for next year. The agency, Vigon Corp. 784 S. Woodward, Is operating within 500 feet of a residential district, which violates toe new ordinance, according to toe commission. Since toe agency has been In operation under a license Issued prior to the new amendment, it cannot be revoked. The license expires in December. The new amendment also establishes hours of operation for motorcycle agencies and stipulates that an applicant for a rental license must provide $5,000 surety bond protecting the city against any damage caused by a motorcycle. The Vigon Corp., managed by Donald Gonczy, is the only motorcycle rental agency in Birmingham. pass a civil service examination witoing 90 days after appointment. Preference will be given to veterans. ★ * * Local residents of Birmingham will be given priority, but applicants need not be residents of the city. For further information, contact toe postmaster’s office. Gov. Romney will keynote the alt land Cnuntv Republican Convention Wednesday at SoulhTIGT® High School, 10 Mile and Lah-*r. The conventions of the 18th and 19th Congressional Districts will begin at 8 p.m. for the purpose of electing delegates and alternates to the state convention. The f u 11 county convention will follow to act on a report of the joint committee on resolutions and any other business concerning both congressional districts. A total of 167 delegates and alternates will be selected for the state convention, to be held Aug. 27 at Cobo Hall in Detroit. On Thursday, Romney will start his election campaign in Oakland County by visiting seven area firms and a hospital. VISITS SLATED Beginning at 11:30 a.m. Romney will visit the Michigan Bell Telephone Co., Southfield, and the following Troy bi Walter P. Hill Co., Industro Motive Corp., Michigan Timber, C.S. Wagner Corp., A.M.T. Corp. and Northland Plastics. He will conclude his visit with a stop at Community Hospital in Madison Heights at 4:10 pjn. (Continued From Page One) private practice with attorney Paul Meredith in Bloomfield Hills. P p aTV said the Hazel Fark probe, while centered on the track win regtitre a large staff of investigators which will be provided by the state police. Lt. Raymond McConnell of the state police will be in charge of the investigation. One problem yet to be solved from the appointment of Barry is a hearing on a new trial for Harry M. Belcher, convicted more than a year ago jjj murdering his wife and six children. *" BATH, England (AP) — Youngsters of the world were advised today that Bulldog Drummond, the clean-living fictional adventurer of the 1920s, was a better man than James Bond. The Rev. Edward Rogers told delegates from 38 nations at the World Methodist Conference that Bulldog Drummond was a “good English gentleman.” "He had a rather dim wife whose main job was to get into scrapes that he could pull her out of,” said the Rev. Mr. Rogers. “There was also a nice vil-lainess called Irma, who, if she did kill you, would do it reluctantly.” “Personally, I felt education was toe more rewarding. It waas kind of like filling in a crossword puzzle with all the right words and it gave me a feeling of exhilaration. “But someone else might have a different outlook. I would also suggest that a person wanting to go back to school should enroll first in night school to prove to himself that he’s really serious ab the whole thing. ADVANTAGE ‘If the challenge turns out to be fun, then school’s for him. “If it is a chore, forget it. It will only end up making his family miserable and himself. “Actually,” she continued, “people Idee myself have a distinct advantage in going back jto school. “We have lived and our value system is firm. We know what | we want and don’t have to waste 1 time hunting for a sense of values or philosophy of life. Education is a painful experience for the youn& Many of them are in college because their parents and society materialistically tie success with a diploma not because they are challenged by the excitement of education itself.” A new member of the Troy High School facaHy, Mrs. Timbrook will teach ungraded English in toe fall. “I’m particularly excited by Troy’s creative modular approach to education because it parallels my method of raising my own youngsters.” Applications are now being accepted at the Birmingham post office for city carriers. The starting salary is $2.64 per hoUr and the positions are fulltime year-roundl jobs. Applicants must be 18 years of age or older and possess a valid Michigan motor vehicle operator’s license. They must have a safe driving record and be able to pass a practical road test. Applicants must apply for andjsome 840 miles to go. Tanker Sights British Rowers NEW YORK (UPI) - Coast Guard search and rescue headquarters here reported today that two British paratroopers rowing from the United States to England have been sighted in the Atlantic well on their way to their goal. Hie sighting of Capt. John Ridgeway, 27, and Sgt. Shay Blyth, 26, was made Saturday by the British tanker Haus-telum, which gave the two men food and water. The vessel reported both men were in good health and their 22-foot rowboat appeared la good condition. They started out May 25 from Cape Ood, Mass., with Land’s End, England, as their destination. According to the Coast Guard, they have covered about 1,900 miles of their journey and have But James Bondi, “He’s wholly different tekfs hi.T women where lie finds them and he finds them pretty well anywhere,” oatd tbe revT erend. i"'ii iii'it * The woman "l^ reaTTf S woman at all. She is just a rather pleasantly scented plaything to be used for an hour or two In a contest of violence that borders on sadism. And that is accepted. “There, in my judgment is the measure of our contemporary standard^ noraHty,” Birth Curb Pill Use Backed (Continued From Page One) of possible adverse effects and said other studies are being planned. 18 YEARS At a briefing for .newsmen, doctors said it would take at least 10 years to determine whether there is a relationship between the pills and the devel-known number of years to determine whether use of the pills induces development of diabetes. , The doctors said the pills are regarded as 99 per cent effective in conception control. The committee,'after saying in its 21-page report that it found no adequate scientific data at this time to prove the Is unsafe, added: ★ ★ ★ ‘It has nevertheless taken full cognizance -of certain very infrequent but serious side effects and of possible theoretic risks ' by animal experi- mental data and by softie of toe metabolic changes in human beings. MUST EVALUATE RISKS’ “In toe final analysis, each physician must evaluate the advantages and the risks of this method of contraception in comparison with other available methods or with no contraception at all. j “He can do this wisely only when there is presented to him dispassionate scientific knowledge of the available It was brought out the manufacturers of the drugs have had 110 deaths reported to them which allegedly could have been associated with taking of the oral contraceptives. * ★ ★ But the committee emphasized that the conditions which caused the deaths also occur normally in women who have never had the pills. Will Arraign Area Man on Kidnap Count A Highland ^ownsHTp~'iriaS faces wraignmont oB a charge, of kidnaping after allegedly forcing his way into a home and adbucting a young girl early yesterday. Robert L. Adams, 21, of 2764 Davista was apprehended by Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies some three hours after he fled a Highland Township home ^^li^eaMW^OTmeToTfiffiffi of 2153 Dean, JtigMapd Township The girl was staying with her fpvndmother at the residence of Carl Thomas, 2453 Davista, when Adams came to toe door about 2 a.m,, deputies were told. “Don’t move or I'll shoot,” Thomas quoted Adams as saying. Adams had “something like a gun. barrel” in his hand, according to Thomas. Adams dragged the girl from a bedroom at the rear of home, Thomas said, took her to his automobile in front Of the house and fled. DUCK LAKE ROAD Connie said she was taken to the rear of a church on Duck Lake Road, where she said, Adams “tried to put his arms around me.” Adams who deputies said had been drinking, fell asleep, enabling the girl to escape from the car and run to the Weldon Bondeson home at 5185 Duck Lake Depities responding to a call from Bondeson followed Cormiers directions to the church, where they arrested Adams in Ms car. dinnerware sets at lower reduced prices 20-DC.WtBrchtR* ■gzLJL— " —u.r»i dinner F .______________________________ 45-pc. semi-china sefs compare to $29.95 seller, service Tor 8. dinner plates, bread/bulter, cups, saucers, fruit dishes, sugar bovrl, creamer, platter etc. Choice of 4 . solid colors. 2" T99 28-Pc. MELMAC dinner «•*• ft eluded. Choice of 8 colors. Compare to $34.95 sets. m glaze 9,ovybo«r ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY^ AUGUST 15, 1966 Education Innovation Brings Grant in Troy TROY — Not content with es-j tablished patterns and methods in education, Troy High School last tall began implementation of a program designed to find a better, more productive learning process — one that would be more stimulating and personally satisfying to each individual student Hie program has been successful to the degree that the Charles F. Kettering Foundation, a national education research group, has recently designated the school one of the 12 moat innovative schools in the country. As such, the school has been awarded a $25,000 grant from the Institute for toe Development of Educational Activities (IDEA), a project of the Kettering Foundation, to finance a study of the new techniques and to disseminate the results to other schools in file country. Principal Joseph Bechard said the school’s chief innovation Fair Crowds Set a Record Curtain Comes Down on Annual 4-H Event has been use of a “flexible mod-ular scheduling system.1 it it it Under the system, the frequency and length of class meetings are determined by a computer on the basis of the type of instruction, the subject and the kind of students in the class. IN MODULES A class day, he said, consists of 2$ 15-minute “teaching modules.” An individual class may vary from 45 minutes to 1% hours. Some classes meet daily while others may meet only once a week. In the latter category may be shop, lab, art and similar coures where a minimum of actual teaching is necessary. Although the weather for most of the week was far from ideal, attendance at last week’s Oakland County 4-H Fair topped all previous records, fair officials estimated this morning. Although actual attendance figures are difficult to calculate, parking receipts indicated that this year’s fair was the best ever, according to Richard Brown, county 4-H agent. Tuesday’s opening night crowd of some 5,000 was unquestionably a record, according to observers. Rainy weather fra* the next three days slowed the pace somewhat, but visitors took advantage of Saturday’s sunshine to pack the fairgrounds again. it it it ■ The fair closed Saturday night instead of Saturday noon, as in the past.. IN PREMIUMS Some 1,200 4-H members were paid more than $2,000 in premiums on their entries. The 4-H fair office, where the monumental task of administration was conducted, was housed in a 35-foot mobile home donated for the purpose by Colonial Mobile Homes Sales, Inc., 25 S. Opdyke. The final list of State Slow winners, who will take their exhibits and demonstrations to East Lansing Aug. 23-26, was submitted as follows: The student is provided workroom and is allotted a certain amount of time and is encouraged to use it to work at his own pace on class related projects. SCHOOL DAY Last year, students averaged 53 per cent of their school day, assigned classes and 47 per cent working on their own in individual or lab study. Large grot | small group seminars and team teaching are other areas the high school has been ex- *11. Ro-i... Grand Champion pen of three—Ronald Hesa, Ro-Hi. Reserve Champion pen of three—Rut-sell Hate, Ko=HI. Junior $pewm*n*Mp—Ronald Meet. R6- ftTSfflSW. LarTB«rua."as ass Theresa Donovan. Subnovice S—Ute Miller, Jack --- ----- Lynn g, Novice—David frleba, Karen Gratl, Vivian Upton, Nancy Milligan. Gradual* Novlc*—David Milligan, Pocchlola. Open—Pat Armstrong, Beverly Hillman. """MW IMMIlNNSI&iimrwr Orion villa. _ Ayrthlg-Grand, Reserve, Senior Champion, Norman Mill*, Oakhlll. Brown Swiss—Champion, Joe Lozier, Jersey—Champion, Rot* Th*rloi, Oak- Reserve Champion Brenda Lang, MIHt _. - I ■ Doug Canfield, serve Champion, and Produce of John Middleton. East Orion. Production Class (all breadtl-Branda Long, MHtord. Senior Showmanship L. C. 9 Oakhlll; Brenda Long, MllfOri Middleton, Bast Orton^ Quarterhors* Pleasure Cless-Cham-plon, ^HO^LM.* Britches; Pam ilnvSMLmia^Chanv ^^Ttor^i^^St^'JSy tavoy*. Straw Hats; Roberta Wood, GHigenvIM. stock Hen* Hatter—1 and Judv Bommarlto, Ro-HI; Mike M'ltord; * and under 3: Robt Ginqellvllle; Broodmare: Gloria DIckMn. Paint Creak Veto; Champion, Robert Wood, GfngtHvltN) Reserve, Laurel H Re^st*red*Qwrterhcne Hatter-Grand sra-raw™®®. — Stock Hen* Pleasure—Champion, h Hon* Honemanthlr-Champlon, —“ Lima Brtf--m Pleasur Grand Champion Horsemanship-Donna HomrtdL. M|------- -------------- pack!. Little Trail C*— Galtewv n-»nd Champion—Kris Knox, Galloway Bechard said a team usually consists of from four to sue teachers, all specialists in the same subject. They plan together the teaching of the subject to a group of from 60 to 150 students. They choose one teacher to lecture on the subject to all the students in one large class. The other members of file team sit in on the lecture. The large group is broken up several times a week into groups of 10 to 15 students for small seminar classes monitored by team members. The seminars provide more individual attention and encourage learning through discussion and free exchange of ideas among students and teachers. Bechard said the system aids teachers in becoming better teachers and makes best possible use of teacher time and ability. The $25,000 IDEA grant provides funds for the hiring of a research director and a director of demonstration. The research director will evaluate the effectiveness of present innovative programs and will assist the faculty in introducing further improvements into the curriculum. The director of demonstration will serve as a communications link to make the school’s innovations widely known, understood and adopted by other school systems. In addition, the school will be aided by consultants from the foundation and by meetings between Troy faculty members and teachers from other. Kettering Foundation schools' It is hoped that such discussions will promote further curriculum improvements in the cooperating schools. The IDEA program, now in its first year, is based on the belief that education should be tailored to the individual and that a climate of inquiry is sential to a sound educational system. The program is designed, said Bechard, to break down the resistance to change that has for years retarded the use of new educational ideas. Sets Garage Sale ROCHESTER — The Rochester Jaycee Auxiliary wig sponsor a garage sale Saturday at 307 Linwood, one block off Main. The sale will start at 8 a.m. and last until all items are sold. Clothing, furniture, household equipment and toys are among the items to be offered. State Road Toll 26 Avon Couple Killed LEADER—Mrs. Thomas Duke (right), Torch Drive residential chairman for Commerce, Novi, Lyon and Farmington townships, goes over the organization chart for this year’s campaign with her new division leader, Mrs. Robert Gilmore of 1651 Wilkshire, Wolverine Lake. Mrs. Gilmore will be in charge of organizing and supervising collections from Commerce Township residents during this year’s drive, Oct. 18 through Nov. 10. Home Rule City Petitions ■Go to Novi Council Tonight NOVI — New petitions to incorporate the v i 11 a g e into a home rule city will be presented at tonight’s council meeting. The new petitions specify no city class but stipulate that the new city would have home rule. The latest petitions would replace those already on file calling for incorporation of the village into a fourth-class city, which does not include home rule or provision for a city Ibis latest incorporation effort is headed by the Committee for the City of Novi, of which C. A. Smith is a representative. ★ ★ ★ The committee’s effort to gain fourth-class cityhood for Novi was made after petitions the group filed last November for fifth-class city status were declared illegal Oakland County Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore ruled jvember. that the village did not meet the state statute requiring that the area must contain at e a s t 500 persons per square mile to qualify for home rule. Smith has said that the group is seeking incorporation to prevent annexation of parts of the village by neighboring cities. Township Supervisor Hadley J. Bachert maintained that any home rule incorporation attempt is illegal since the village cannot satisfy the 500 persons-per-square-mile statute provision. If the village should incorporate, only the 2 per cent of the township’s land area that is now separate from the village would remain outside city control. ★ ★ * The incorporation question probably could not be submitted to the voters before early No- By The Associated Press Three persons, including an | Avon Township couple, died Sunday in a fiery crash at a southern Wayne County intersection where, two weeks earlier, five other persons lost their lives. The three victims brought the unusually high Michigan traffic death toll to at least 26. In addition, a Farmington township youth drowned yesterday in Long Lake, Grand Traverse County. Sheriff’s officers reported that Donald Nelson Jr., 17, of Palmoral Way, drowned when he fell overboard from a boat while fishing. Russell O. Williams, his wife, Gloria Jean, 25, of 2685 Melvin, Avon Township, and Willie M. Holcomb, 21, of Detroit, were killed in a head-on collision af 1-75 and Fort St. near Rock-wood. The driver of a third car involved in the crash, Donald Yoder, 54, of West Liberty, Ohio, was not hurt. Yoder said the Williams car was turning off the highway onto Fort when Holcomb’s southbound car crossed the median and struck the northbound Williams car. The struck car burst idH flames. Holcomb’s car then veered into Yoder’s car. On July 31 five persons died in a two-car crash at the intersection. Two Detroit Police detectives were killed Sunday night when their squad car was struck by a vehicle at an intersection on Detroit’s west side. Killed were Detective Marlyn W. Bateson, 26, and Detective William Bell, 39. Detroit police said the officers were on their way to investigate a reported family disturbance. They were thrown from their car and died at the scene. Also killed in weekend traffic accidents were: Two Huron County men Sunday in a near head - on auto crash on M53, one and one New-Student Registration AVON TOWNSHIP - High school students who moved into the AYondale School District over the summer months will have the opportunity to enroll before the rush of the first day of school. Lowell C. Ruggles, Avondale High School principal, said a counselor will be on duty to enroll students Aug. 22 through Sept 2. ★ ★ * Those new to the school, are urged to call the school counseling office for an appointment. Classes will begin Sept. 7. At Mental Hospital Famous Stale Dairy Herd to Be Sold Arrangement have been made for sale of the internationally famous dairy herd at the Ionia State Hospital Mental Health Department Di-rector Robert A. Kimmich, I. D., last week signed a sale contract with the auction firm of Miller and Miller, Rives Junction, The 78-head registered Holstein herd, operated for more than 40 years at the hospital, will be sold at public auction sometime in October. The Miller and Miller cattle sales firm will handle sales details! The auction is expected to draw buyers from throughout the nation, due to the excellent stock involved. it it ★ 'Reason for the sale is that agricultural therapy has not contributed significantly to patient treatment at state hospitals for several years,” said Dr. Kimmich. ~luty Was Dry August Rains Helping Crops LANSING tft— Rains since Aug. 1 have improved prospects for all growing farm crops in IlicHgan, Bufmor£1TVSKRB to an oyer-all harvest jer tMnlrWTSf reporters say. %e Federal-State Crop Reporting Service listed all but southern lower Michigan under pasture conditions ranging from very poor to severe drought as of Aug. 1. Most of southern lower Michigan was listed in poor to fair condition. The hot, dry July hurt Michigan’s vegetable production this year, with declines ranging from 11 per cent for carrots in 33 per cent of lettuce and celery, file service reports. ★ ★ it. July rainfall was considerably below normal in most areas, except for Monroe County, where extremely heavy rains, hail and wind on July 12 caused widespread damage to crops. MOISTURE LOSS In most sections of the state, the service said, loss Of soil moisture to air and plants has exceeded the rainfall abuse late in May. At Alpena, it said, there Hm» no measureable rainfall frian June 20 to July 19, while rainfall totals ranged down to 25 per cent of normal to May and Jmnirme mi umtiai section and to 10 to 20 per cent in much WfSIM The wheat harvest came before the (fry conditions, and Michigan farmers had a record yield of 41 bushels an acre. Barley also escaped serious drought damage, yielding 48 bushels an acre, compared to 38 last year. Oat yields were down from 49 to 46 bushels an acre, and hay prospects are for a yield of 1.85 ton an acre, same as in 1965. # it * Indicated corn yield is bushels, same as last year, and soybean yields are expected to be up frohi 39 to 40 bushels. BEANS SUFFERED Dry field beans suffered in the drought, and yields are forecast at 1,050 pounds an acre, compared to the recent averagd of 1,320 pounds. The beans also suffered last year, yielding only 8S0pound8. # it Only vegetable crop expected to' increase this year is cantaloup, with production forecast at 256,000 hundredweight, up 3 per cent from last year. Other forecasts: snap beans, 52.000 hundredweight, down 26 per cent; cabbage, 574,000 hundredweight, down 32 per cent; carrots, 1,008,000 hundred-IMP celery, 501,000 hundredweight, down 33 per cent; sweet £•*?, 720.000 hundredweight, down 18 percent. Cucumbers, 84,000 hundredweight, down 14 per cent; head lettuce, 210,000 hundredweight, down 33 per cent; onions, 2,208,-000 hundredweight, down 18 per cent; green peppers, 78,000 hundredweight, down 26 per cent. ★ ★ ★ Tomatoes, 546,000 hundredweight, down 15 per cent; mint for oil, 45,000 pounds, down 12 per cent; strawberries, 30,360, 000 pounds, down 22 per cent. The service also reported Michigan milk handlers pro-| 4,949,000 pounds of milk in 1965, down 4.8 per cent from 1964. In 1965, milk used for manufactured products accounted for 40.2 per cent of all milk and cream delivered to plants and dealers by Michigan farmers, compared with 45.2 per cent in 1964. I “Patients are responding more rapidly to other types of therapy at Ionia, as well as other state hospitals; they are being discharged sooner and are not available for large farming operations. “In addition, most of the patients at Ionia come from industrial areas and are returning to industrial jobs.” Dr. Kimmich said B. Dale Ball, director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture, had been instrumental in developing the herd to Its nationally famous status over the past fifteen years. .......—— ★ ★ ★ .Briar la hemming <>[ Agriculture last fall, Ball served coordinator of institutional fanners and herds in addition to his deputy director duties. WORKED CLOSELY During this period, he worked closely* with officials of the Department of Mental Health as wvisor dn breeding ’find fflSfr About 2,000 Americans die annually of diseases traced to malnutrition. Dr. Kimmich also commended Ionia dairy herdsmen George Mitchell for Bis work in establishing the herd as a world leader. Slock from the Ionia State Hospital Holstein herd helped build many of Michigan’s top dairy herds, according to “Surplus animals from the herd have been highly desired by dairy operators through toe years,” he said. “Butterfat production is presently at a level of more than 600 pounds per cow per year.” it it it The actual sale date will be announced soon, and the Miller and Miller firm will advertise widely in the United States and Canada, Ball said. Sale proceeds after expenses will go into the state general fund. One hundred sixty thousand students took the draft deferment tests given by toe Selective Service System. Car in Madison Heights Saturday. \ David B, Nagelkfrts, 20, of Grand Rapids, Saturday when car in whfch he was riding ran out of Control west of Hastings and collided with another auto. \ Vernon Frank Thrush, 18, of Farwell when his car overturned on U.S. 27 near Mouitt Pleasant Saturday. Henry Fulton, 67, of Benton Harbor, when struck by \ car Friday night on the 1-94 busi-ess route. \ Edward Romanik, 37, of‘Berk-\ ley, Saturday when he drove his car into the path of a New York Central freight train at the Van Horn crossing in Trenton. Sylvester Weathers, 41, of Roseville, Saturday in Clinton Township when he lost control of his car and struck a utility pole and a tree. Other drownings: One-year-old David W. Hall drowned in Grand Rapids Saturday in a pail containing about six inches of water. Michael Milczanowski, 22, of Grand City, drowned in Eight Point Lake Saturday on the Clare-Osceola County line. State Police said he was swimming K « " i from a boat. Robert Henry Wilbur, 25, of —------------------------- Saginaw, Sundky when his motorcycle was struck by a car from behind while traveling east on U.S. 10 in Bay County. Paul Monroe, 17, of Mount Clemens, Saturday when struck by a vehicle while attempting a left turn from Garfield onto Nineteen Mile in Macomb County’s Clinton Township. David Lee Anderson, 19, of Elk Rapids, Saturday when run over by a car while lying on a road near Elk Rapids. Mark Goddard, 4, of Burt, Friday night when struck by a car on a Saginaw County road. James A. Howard, 73, of Dearborn when struck by a car as he attempted to cross a street in Dearborn Saturday. Betty Jane Kanonik, 36, of Madison Heights when struck by quartet miles north of M81 in Sanilac County. The drivers of the two cars involved in the crash were killed. They were Dennis Per-cell, 17, of Port Austin, and Archie McDonald, 54, of Bad Axe. Jane Elizabeth Farrell, 24, of Spring ’Lake, died Sunday Muskegon’s Hackley hospital of injuries suffered in an accident Saturday that claimed the life of her one-year-old daughter, Sarah. The accident occurred on US. 31 near Hart in Oceana County when the Farrell auto collided with one that was attempting to cross the highway. * it it Judy Halderman, 19, and her son Doug, 2, of Angola, Ind., in flaming three - car crash on U.S. 27 south of Coldwater Saturday. Henry J. Johnson, 30, Detroit, Saturday night when his motorcycle was struck by a car in Detroit. Leon W. Raymer, 31, of Romulus, Sunday when his car overturned on Euroka in Wayne County’s Taylor Township. Alfred Washington, 44, of Inkster, in a car - truck accident in Detroit Sunday. School Board to Consider 3 Appointments HOLLY—Three appointments are on the agenda for tonight’s special meeting of the board of education. The board will consider recommendations for appointments to director of instruction, princi-' of Holly Elementary School and an assistant high school principal. The board will also appoint one of its members to serve on the Oakland County School Budget Review Committee and set a date for a budget hearing. OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE Announcement of Continuing Education Courses FALL SESSIONS Day and Evenings-September 8-December 23, 1966 Auburn Hills Campus Highland Lakes lampus 2900 Featherstone Road 7350 Cooley Lake Road Auburn Heights, Michigan Union Lake, Michigan COLLEGE CREDIT COURSES COLLEGE CREDIT COURSES Accounting Physical Education Accounting Physical Science Biology Law Enforcement Art Biology Life Science Spanish Business Recreation Anatomy 8 Mathematics Chemistry Supervision Physiology Manufacturing Typing Chemistry processes Drafting Dental Assisting Medical Lab. French Shorthand Drafting Techniques German Office Skills Economies Medical Assisting Electricity Music Life Science Stenographic Practice 8 Electronics English College Community Chorus Physical Science Spanish Reading Improve- Physical Education Marketing ment 8 Study Physics Skills - American Government American Literature Psychology freash Typing*. .... .., Cooking 8 Baking Shorthand —— Food Service Foundations of Feed Preparation Modern Society German 1 ADMISSIONS REQUIREMENT All high school graduates are eligible. Non-graduates of high school may also apply. If other evidence indicates to the satisfaction of the college authorities that the student is able to do the caliber of work required by the college, the student may be admitted. DAILY SCHEDULE"" Course worlci^ypeT^eniiSFan^^ through Friday. REGISTRATION Advance Registration August 16 and 17, 9&0 d.m. fd 9:00 p.m. ..... Regular Registration August 29 and 30, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Late Registration August 31, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m Students must be admitted and interviewed prior to registration STUDENT FEIS/TUITION 1 Residents (those who either reside or work regularly in the College District) paytf $10 enrollment fee, $10 student activity feo when enrolled for 6 credits or more, $10 per credit for the first three credits and $7 per credit for the subsequent nine credits. The maximum fee for rosidants of tho College district is $113 per session. For Further Information - Contact Admissions Office OAKLAND COMMUNITY COLLEGE 1480 Opdyke Road Bloomfield Hills, Michigan 48013 Telephone 647-6200 sissy tfMyjuife. West Huron Street Ponthfc, J Michigan 48056 MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1966 Rich.** 1L ......... Treuurtr and Finnic* Offlpar • H. Kmuu, n Idtat nnd MHn Uu McCvur O. HihuuMm It Seems to Me . . Force Is Simple Necessity in Capture of Criminals Following current riots, The New York News sent its Inquiring Reporter into Harlem with this question: . “With all the charges of police brutality, have you ever seen an act of police brutality?” ★ ★ ★ There were six interviews and five answered a flat “no!” The sixth said he had not seen police use force against rioters and armed lawbreakers, but he had heard of it and figured it was necessary. This term, “police brutality,” has been seized upon by lawbreakers in a wide variety of cases. What is a policeman supposed to do when he encounters a man engaged in a criminal act? What is he paid to do? What would YOU do? ★ ★ ★ “Force” and “brutality” are not interchangeable. Force is a prime necessity when criminals and lawbreakers defy the blue-coats. When the day comes that it isn’t used, we can save a lot of salaries by sending all the officers home. Of course, the resulting damage to people and property will be too staggering to contemplate. ★ ★ ★ ^ Local police, State police, the sheriffs department, the FBI and all kindred agencies of law enforcement are paid to keep you — and you — and you — safe from personal assaults and your property from harm, theft and defacement. When punishment is outlawed and marauders run wild and unchecked, we’ve reached the end. America is no more. ★ ★ ★ Any criminal, any lawbreaker or any beatnik that resists and defies the law must face and expect rough personal treatment. How else can you keep the peace? This isn't brutality. Consult the dictionary. How can the situation be handled otherwise? If there were any way to count the cases of assaults on officers, I’d wager these would out-measure the actual cases of “police brutality” by about 1,000 to one— or more. Officers, do your duty. Society stands behind you. Thinking citizens back you Post-Wedding Problems .... TV networks are a bit startled at the wave of criticism over their coverage of Luci’s wedding. It was badly overdone. People got sick of it. ★ ★ ★ Further, the President is still hearing from disgruntled Democrats across the country who weren’t invited. Obviously, one lone church couldn’t seat all the “deserving” henchmen who would have overflowed the Mich- igan football stadium. A huge list of important people right in Washington was necessarily by- ★ ★ ★ The back stair gossip now suggests sister Lynda’s wedding won’t be the same plush-horse deal. Lynda lines, TV cameras and billboard announcements, anyway. The Johnsons learned something the hard way. Beatles On the Skids . After cme of the most meteoric surges to fame in “musical” history, the Beatles have hit the skids with .,equal momentum. And well they sheuMr ------------- Ar Ar..... Ar John Lennon, one of the quaint characters, said: “Christianity will go. It will vanish and shrink. I am right and will be proved right. We’re more popular ----- tiffin tlmns right now. I don’t know which will go ’—flwr wek-V rott «r - Christianity.” —............. ★.Ar.—..-.. Few half-baked dimwits ever voiced a more shocking idea than this sacrilegious declaration. The Lennon person is now in the hands of his manager who enters frantic denials, disclaimers, explanations and “interpretations” of what the "doit meanii -——— ★ ★ ★ Television stations started a spontaneous campaign to leave Beatle records in deep drawers. A couple of European countries have, too. This may bring sad- .. ness to some but there’s a note of exultation to millions. ” popularity with Christ’s sets some kind of a record for crass stupidity. And in Conclusion .... Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: j Joey Bishop did so wep with the Late Show, he’ll have one of his own this fall. CBS promises a third and an independent group plans a fourth...........Airlines report wholesale lies from would-be passengers. The main “reason” is “sudden death.” American now checks with the funeral home.............. Churches across America are making strenuous efforts to promote young peoples’ societies. ★ ★ Ar Filing out of the All-Star game in Chicago, I heard many football buffs say: “Green Bay’s ROSS LEWIS, MILWAUKEE JOURNAL Dominoes David Lawrence Says: Voice of the People: ‘Home From the Wars’ Foiled by Airline Strike Last week a nephew of mine returned from Viet Nam. lie was flown from Saigon to California, given money for his fare thefce&t of the way to Pontiac and left to make his own arrangements io get here. Due to the airline strike, all trains and buses are booked far in advance. Did the Government think he could walk home? ★ ★ ★ Doesn’t the Government care enough about returning soldiers to see that they get bark to their home states? When tjjjgy are going into the service, transportation is provided. Why can’t this be , reversed? 1 ' 1 Ar A’ A I don’t think the United States is showing much respect for these boys! MRS. WAYNE BRANDON 1265 AIRWAY A Quiet Comment on High Cost of Living I would like to know if people who earn $1,500 per mouth and can’t live on it, ever wonder how in the world a couple on Social Security (about $270) can exist? ' SOCIAL SECURITY LBJ Losing Majority on ‘Rights’ the team to beat this fall.” . . . ........Ancient people blamed summer heat on Sirius, the Dog Star. It arises and sets with the Sun during the hot months and1 “doubles the heat.” ............ The hardest luck gtiy of “the” wedding was the bloke who had to pay for a new outfit for his wife so she could watch the TV show in style. ★ Ar ★ More than 100 Rolls Royces have been purchased here lately. The bulk have been the simple, mine run model that goes at $20,000. ........The new Aladdin Hotel in Las Vegas has an ail-girl band with topless costumes to boost at- WASHINGTON—A political party may have as much as an approximately two-thirds majority in both houses of Congress and still fail to pass bills recommended by a president who is of the same party. [ A bipartisan coalition is today emerging LAWRENCE in Congreses and is proving that extremism cannot command a majority. President Johnson-now is losing his majority on some issues under the heading of “civil lights” becnuse' he has recommended the passage of a law which would interfere with the right of citizens to dispose of their property to whomever they please. Authority was given two years ago to Mr. Johnson to use the granting or withholding of federal funds as a means of controlling the educational systems of the states, and this, too, is currently producing widespread dissatisfaction. * ★ ★ Resentment has grown so strong that the Republicans are abandoning a temporary coalition with Democrats in the North and forming one of their own. PREVENTED DEFEATS They had managed for six years to save many administration measures on “civil rights” from the defeats that would have ensued if dependent on the votes of Democrats alone. Now a new coalition of Republicans from suburban and agricultural areas in the Northern and Western •HIT tnlnlay ffifh Southern Democrats and Southern Republicans, who think about the same on “civil rights.” The realistic truth in August is that the demonstrations have been revealed as toolset wtramista all the way from trouble-making Nazis to MMHmttod propononts of “nonviolence.” a...a... Jg... A grand jury in Cleveland tendance. L.V. gambling has suffered “since Nader” and so have race tracks in Florida and New York..,. .... Overheard: “A canoe is like a young boy. It acts best when paddled from the rear.” ...... ffi|. I wonder if the Board of Education should provide more parking places at Wisner Stadium.......... .... Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s—my youngest grandson who is “the most perfect baby in the whole world.” (My wife says so.) ..........the J’s — leaders responsible for these riots and race disorders. —Harold A. Fitzgerald headed by Louis B. Seltzer, eminent editor for many years of the Cleveland Press and a “liberal” in his thinking, now tells the sad story of how demonstrations are taken over by malcontents. RED SYMPATHIZERS Some of the evidence points to Communist sympathizers. There is proof that explosives were assembled and certain targets for their use wore agreed upon in advance. It is easy enough to brush all this, aside as a natural accompaniment of street demonstrations, but undoubtedly some of the* Negro leaders have overplayed their hand. Instead of reducing racial tension, the effect has been to increase it. Cries of “black power” have resulted in talk of organizing “white power” in the coming elections. TRAGIC CONSEQUENCES These are tragic consequences and cannot but retard the adoption of measures that ought to be passed to improve the lot of the impoverished, irrespective of race or color. An era of bad feeling has begun which may not .subside for a long, long time. * ★ * Congress, sensitive to the emotional reaction of the electorate, is worried as to toe effect of it all on the November elections. Says ‘Truth’ BUI Needed to Combat Deceits Your editorial “Truth in Packaging’’ hits a sore spot. If Federal and State controls already exist, why is a new measure to be termed “pernicious,” “iniquitous,” “calamitous?” Existing legislation is obviously ineffective. Beef stew labels depicting luscious chunks of meat belie the granulated mass inside the can. One 3% ounce commodity sells at three packages for 79 cents while another brand retails at two packages for 53 cents for a 3% ounce size. These examples will give you a fair idea of toe problem. A •* ★ I believe these “gimmicks” are deceits calculated to reduce the shopper to n “to H— with it” attitude by which the most highly-udvertised product is most likely to wind up in toe shopper’s cart. ★ ★ A It is too bad humanity is not governed by a built-in sense of decency instead of toe universal self-interest which makes such legislation necessary. MRS. C. BROCKAW WATERFORD Bob Considine Says: Black Day for Britain Not So Bad After AU White Lake Township Disposal Problem Citizens of White Lake Township have been informed that the problem of control of effluent disposal pertinent to the establishment of an Automatic Laundry on Round Lake Road is toe responsibility, of toe elected representatives of toe’local self-governing body. Interested residents should come to too next board meto tag, Tuesday at $ p.m. at the Township Ball.. Let’s find Ml where our elected leaders stand. MR. AND MRS. RICHARD GRAY UNION LAKE, MICHIGAN NEW YORK - People . . . places . . . prestige . . . Britain officially closed its ancient Colonial Office, chiefly for want of patrons. On toe same black day, toe institute of physics and the physical soci-ety black- balled Prince conshhne Philip on the grounds that he is not an eminent scientist or Nobel Prize winner. These dolorous signs of the times, these sad additional fadings of the tone-honored prestige of Empire and Crown, came hard on the heels of the prime min- istor’s decision..to..ration just abont everything British exeept Rolls Royces and mini-skirts. * ★ ★ But bleed not for our best ally. Its soccer team beat West Germany for toe world’s rhnmpjnnphip before 400 million real ana lelevlSM TBns. lilt Ilf*1 ‘iW1 ,?et where it will ontoe union' Jac™ mi And who really wants to belong to a club that has 6,000 members, none of whom fly a jet, play polo, or squirt hoses on photographers? Britain rules . the soccer world. Everest was a shorter climb. Staff Sgt. Barry Sadler, composer-singer of “Ballad of the Green Berets,” has just won another Gold Record and lost a gold stripe. Somebody higher in rank but hardly income didn’t like something the Special forces hero did recently at Ft. Bragg, where he is assisting in the training of new Green Berets. Perhaps it was because he had cracked up his new Mercedes inside the camp area. Fortunately, this doesn’t leave toe sarge earless. He can always borrow his wife’s Mercedes. Anyway, it cost Sadler a stripe. ★ ★ More than 5 million copjes have been sold of an album born of a casual meeting Sad- ler had with Robin Moore, author of the best-selling book about the Green Berets. Moore wrote toe lyrics, arranged for toe young soldier and his git-tar to get a hearing at RCA-Victor ... and toe rest is, well, “his” and “her” Mercedes. Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. John Cowe of 2053 N. Hammond Lake Road; 52nd wedding anniversary. Question and Answer Isn’t there something I can dip a silver'chain into to remove tarnish quickly? READER REPLY Oakland County Agricultural Extension personnel found a recipe in their files. Place piece of aluminum foil (n enamel van. Do not use aluminum pan. Cover tarnished silver with following solution: 1 teaspoon-salt and 1 teaspoon baking soda for each quart of water. Boil two or three minutes. Remove silver and. dry with soft cloth. Not recommended for antique silver or hollow-handled knives. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages SowlngtheWind? The Chicago Tribune ~ people sit getting hurt. every , day In “civil rights” marches into white neighborhoods. Hundreds at police have to be mobilized to provide protection for these nuisance demonstrations. Scores of persons are arrested on each occasion. The tar-get communities are reduced to tumdlt. “I have never seen any-” thing so hostile and so hateful as I’ve seen here today;” the Rev. Martin Lather King said after the disorders hi the Chicago Lawn-Gage Park area Friday. What did he expect? His tactics are designed to incite crowd fury. If the marches are intended to convey anything, it is the sentiment, “Give np your homes and get ont so that we can take over.” That I will hardly inspire any love. | ★ ★ l*i I The “civil rights” marchers are only hurting themselves and their cause. Chicago is retrogressing to the condition of a frontier town in early days, where shots are fired in the air and challenges to combat are hurled. The town marshals are busier than in a TV western. Why are they making phony civil rights marches? All for what? Simply because a lot of misguided people are induced to slog down sidewalks in quiet communities at toe behest of King, Raby, Bevel, and the rest of the crop of pqM professional agitators. What do these agitato?* think they are accomplishing? “I "TigvrtCYhrthte—-p mtpow myself — to bring this hate into the open,” King says self-righteously. Who gave him the commission, and what is the result except to Inflate his vanity? ★ ★ * The time has come when the great body of tin* and decent Negro Chicagoans '-W King off their backs. They have found homes here, and opportunities seldom found in southern states. Their incomes have enormously improved. They have the impartial protection of toe law, and they are accustomed to peace and order. They are contributing to Chicago, not trying to tear Chicago down. What recourse is available to thorn? -Why not a great petition, or a hnge rally, to signify^ to King and his imported troublemakers that Chicago Negroes want an end to this campaign to stir up the antipathy of white people and want to give the races a chance to live in harmony? ★ ★ ★ Sunday’s march was through toe Belmont-Cragin neighborhood, a community of modest but good homes. Families ordinarily would be enjoying the chance to ait on toe front porch raiding toe paper, to sprinkle their lawns and work to their gardens, or to go to the park or beach.n tasteodrthoy *ro confronted By I wafer pwwiatai' of; strangers carrying signs and posing as mmtyrs. Hie spectacle is repulsive to fight-thinking people. ♦ * ★ ■ -It is time that Chicagoans of color who of necessity cannot avoid the implication that they somehow support or condone this kind of tactic make it unmistakably clear that "TBgyw W King aulhia snri la».. stay out of Chicago, and that they wfflf make tt equally clear that they will join in no campoffr to bait their white fellow townspeople. * ★ ★ The economic waste of di-vertlng overworked police to protective duty after they have already worked two or three shifts is a drain on their physical well-being and on the taxpayers. So is the job of clearing np the litter and repairing toe damage. But toe wont effect is on the perves and temper of the pleople. All of toil Is too high a price to pay far feeding the Rev. Mr. King’s ego, and that goes for his aides. - THE PON'HAC PR&SS, MONDAY. AUGUST 15, 1966 Revealed by X Ray mt ti Evidence of 1 N Star AP Wirephoto SUSPECTS IN MURDER—Edward Anthony Lynch, 34 (left), of Sitverton, N.J., was arrested Saturday and charged with the murder of Mrs. Dorothy Louise McKenzie, 45, found shot twice in the head in her automobile last week. New Jersey police are still looking for John Nuneviller, 35 (right), a Philadelphian who for the last month has been living in Silverton. Nuneviller is suspected of aiding and abetting | in the murder of Mrs. McKenzie. California Dems Add Plank Supporting Open Housing Law SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)i Angeles organization, which had — The California Democratic] supported her. Brown also had party, voicing determination to supported Mrs. Warschaw but postulated but never before de- By JOSEPH L.MYLER WASHINGTON (UPI) - A team of Washington rocket astronomers has reported X-ray evidence of what may turn out to be the first “neutron star” ever discovered by man. ★ ★ ★ This star, if further investigation certifies its existence, is a tiny invisible object, smaller Qian many a mountain on earth, whose matter is so tightly packed that a single cubic inch of it would weight a billion tons or more. In terms of astronomical dis-In terms of astronomical distance it may be “very dose” to the son in the constellation Scorpios. Die X-ray evidence was reported at a recent meeting of the American Astronomical So-city at Cornell University By Dr. Herbert Friedman and his associates of the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL). ★ ★ ★ Neutron stars have long been speak out on campaign issues in without much enthusiasm, the gubernatorial election, is supporting the state’s contro- After Warren’s victory, the versial open housing law. delegates rewrote a human Delegates to the party’s state|r|8hts plank of the platform Central Committee meeting. cifically to oppose repeal of the Sunday added that plank to Democratic Gov. Edmund Brown’s reelection platform. ★ ★ ★ Last week Republicans at their state convention had joined gubernatorial candidate Ronald Reagan in favoring repeal of the open housing law, the Rumford Act. Die Democratic delegates took their stand after a close chairmanship election. They elected Assemblyman Charles Warren, a hitherto little-known Los Angeles attorney whose supporters induded some of the ' more liberal Democrats. FUNDRAISER Supporters had claimed that Warren’s opponent, Carmen Warschaw of Los Angeles, an outspoken millionairess, was more interested in raising campaign funds and in planning strategy than speaking out on issues. Mrs. Warschaw’s defeat, 447-443, was a blow to a powerful segment in the party, Assembly Speaker Jesse M. Unruh’s Los Rumford Act. Saturday, the convention killed a repeal proposal. Instead, it adopted a platform plank opposing repeal of any antidiscrimination laws but not specifically mentioning the controversial Rumford Act. BROWN PROPOSAL Brown, in fact, proposed s bipartisan commission for “pro-' posing amendments to, or substitute for,” the law. | Central Committee members sidetracked to a committee! tected. Their matter is nuclear. Atoms of the kind of matter with which earthlings are familiar consist mainly of empty space — dense nuclear cores surrounded by distantly spaced planetary electrons. REDUCE CAR Crush the atoms of an automobile, say, into their nuclear dimensions and you would have an infinitesimal mote as heavy as the original object. From time to time, every hundred years or so, a massive star toe and there in our galaxy experiences rapid gravitational collapse when the nuclear fires at its center burn out. Die result is an “implosion” which compreses an already dense core still further while blowing surrounding material far out into space. Such stellar catastrophes, known as supernovas, have often been observed in die long span of history. | For a brief time the star will shine visibly with the power of hundreds of millions of suns and then fade. In some rare cases, according to theory, the innermost cores of supernovas are squeezed to nuclear densities. ★ * ★ These remnants, containing as much material as a sun i volume no more than 6 to 10 miles in diameter, are fantastically hot. TIGHTLY BOUND They are so dense and so tightly bound by gravitational forces, however, that they can shine” only in the invisible X-{ ray region of the electromagnetic spectrum. As far as visible light is concerned they are dead. | With high-soaring rockets fired at White Sands, N.M., Friedman and his associates have discovered about 25 X-ray sourced in the heavens. These rays are too feeble to penetrate the earth’s absorbing atmosphere. They are too weak, in fact, to pass through a sheet of paper — a circumstance which toils something about toe paucity of matter in the vast reaches of interstellar space. Some of the X-ray sources have identified with visible objects, such as the crab nebula, remnant of a supernova which did not become a neutral star and can still be seen with tele- So far, however, the X-ray source in the direction of Scor-pius has not been identified with any object known to out there. JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTED — HIGHEST PRICES PAID- We Pick Up FE 2-0200 | PONTIAC SCRAP | (Advertisement) Fed Up Working So Hard And Earning So Little? resolution calling for a halt to ^ , been stuck in a job APPROVED FOR VETERANS IP war in ViPf Mam onA for . ^ . ... the war in Viet Nam and for immediate negotiations. Father Is Held FLINT (AP) - A Burton Township man is being held by police in connection with the reported shooting of his son Saturday night. Robert Hedrick, 22, was listed in fair condition Sunday. His father, George L. Hedrick Jr., 39, was arrested by deputies called to the scene of the shooting. that doesn’t pay enough, here’s how to go about getting a better one. 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Get the facts National School of Home Study, i Dept MW7, Box 64, The Pontiac Press, Pnotiac, Mich. 48056. pick out any coat from our entire stock and pay 20% less than the regular price during our AUGUST COAT SALE THIS LUXURIOUS PURE CASHMERE TAILORED HAND-DETAILED BY ALPACUN .•/ and HAND-DETAILED BY ALPACUNA Unusually fine silken cashmere — tailored by a maker famous for the highest quality tailoring. Choose from several models, all -.-Jflto.qjjd vicuna shades. Actually. tTmcoatisi^u^su: __value at its regular price. This salt presents a splendid opportunity to add a luxurious coat to your wardrobe at much less than you'd ordinarily spend. REGULAR PRICE $135. 20% OFT Bf AUGUST...$108 TAKE ALL YOUR FILM TO THESE HITE PHOTO DEALERS PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC PONTIAC ARROW DISCOUNT DRUG 450 East Pika, Corner Sanford BART'S PHARMACY 974 Joalyn cr. Tennyson CAMERA MART 55 S- Telegraph at Huron PAT'S PARTY STORE •04-906 Baldwin CORVETTES ENTERPRISES 661 East South Boulevard DOUBLE D. DISCOUNT 28 N. Saginaw at Lawrence ELIZABETH LK. PHARMACY 380! Elisabeth Lake Rd. nr. Winding MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. Telegraph & Elisabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac Mall PARSON'S DRUG 1990 Auburn at Crook* Rd. SLANKSTER & JONES PHARMACY 284 State St. nr. N. Johmon A. J. STARK PHARMACY 909 South Woodward THRIFTY DRUG 140 N. Saginaw THRIFTY DRUG #2 6 South Telegraph cr. Huron YANKEE STORE #56 2135 S. Telegraph AUBURN HEIGHTS MIRACLE CAMERA SHOP FENTON ORCHARD LAKE WANT SAVINGS DRUG 3341 Auburn Road BERKLEY ■"BOBS''-S, Telegraph BILL MEIER STUDIO DANDY DRUG Miracle Mile Shopping Center BLOOMFJELDHJU.S 100 S. Leroy HOLLY * 3236 Orchard Laka Rd. OXFORD BAKER PHARMACY 2600 W. 12 Mila nr. Coolidga BERKLEY PATENT MEDICINE 2646 Coolidga nr. Catalpa ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. 2540 N. Woodward BRIGHTON DICK'S REXALL PHARMACY 107 S. Saginaw St. HOWELL JACK’S CAMERA SHOP 40 S. Washington MITCHELL'S DRUG STORE 2 N. Washington BIRMINGHAM AREA •■ ADAMS ..PHARMACY— 1955 S. Woodward nr. 14 Mile LELAND DRUG 201 W. Main CLARKSTON JOHNSON DRUG 117 W. Grand River KEEGQHARBOR cas& MK*.pharmacy ROCHESTER PAYLESS DISCOUNT 511 Main St. ftOCHlSTII CAMERA SHOP 505 N. Main St. 1996 Southfield at 14 Mila Rd. O’DELL DRUG 10 S. Maine 5000 ^B8BBESPB?I8®18F LAKE ORION "troy BI-LO DISCOUNT PHARMACY 6565 N. Telegraph nr. Mapla BIRMINGHAM DRUGS COMMERCE LOWEN DRUGS ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. 329 S. Broadway 72 W. Maple 1220 S. Woodward HARRY C. HAYES DRUG UTICA CRANBROOK DRUG 2511 W. Mapla at Cranbrook DANDY BEVERLY DRUG 31215 Southfield nr. 13 Mila 111 Commerce Rd. cor. S. Commerce Rd. DRAYTON PLAINS GRIGGS DRUG STORE 2 South Broadway at Flint MILFORD ARNOLD PHARMACIES INC. 39040 Van Dyko at 17 Milo DANDY DRUG 45580 Van Dyko DEMERY & CO. 200 North Woodward ETON PHARMACT THRIFTY DRUG #3 4965 Dixie Highway SHUTTER SHOP 310 North Main St. UTICA HOBBY SHOP 46231 Van Dyke at Carpenter 221 N. Eton nr. Maple nr. WHIiamt Lake Rd. NUYI WALLED LAKE WESLEY DRUG #1 100 W.\14 Mile Ed. nr. Pierce LEE DRUGS 4390 Dixie Hwy. nr. Sashabaw NOVI REXALL DRUG 43035 Grand River nr. Novi WALLkD LAKE DISCOUNT 707 Pontiac Trail nr. Mapla TOP QUALITY HITE PROCESSING . OVERNIGHT The ONLY lab in Michigan c ompletely equipped to process and print all popular snapshot, movie and slide films. mo iwh THE T*(7NT1 ACTIIES57 MONDAY, AUGUST 1986 FREE It HOLES OF QOLF Putt - Putt AN New Greens Lite* For Nite Play OPtNOJULY • a.m, til 12 p.m, Bill* Din. PIZZA Deliver and Carry Out JOE’S FAMOUS SPAGHETTI HOUSE 1IM W. Huron, Pontiac FE 2-0434 - Open Till 3 A.M. PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND HOME ..... with Modern Woodmen1 low-cost Mortgage Insurance Not Self-Satisfied Sammy Davis Remembers Hard Times M. E. DANIELS District Representative 563 West Huron FE 3-71II MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA BUY, SELL, TRADE USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! HER FOURTH BORN ON AUG. 14-The newest addition to the Gabriel Michel family of Detroit arrived right on schedule yesterday, Aug. 14. She will share the birthday with three others of the eleven Michel youngsters. Mrs. Margaret Michel looks down at her latest daughter who has not been named yet. They now have six girls and five boys. Students Will'Swallow' This Course With Ease LONDON (AP) - Britain’! Academy of Wine announced today it is starting a schoolroom course on how to drink. ★ ★ ★ There will even be homework, WOODY MARTENS and FLOYD RANA Now Appearing at Airway Lounge at Airway Lanes. MON. Thru SATURDAY URBAN RENEWAL GROUNDS PIKE and SAGINAW STREETS TOMORROW DOORS OPEN 1 AND 7— PERFORMANCES 2 AND 8 P.M. With a bottle of wine to take home. Most of the first pupils are expected to be young executives. By BOB THOMAS | AP Movie-TV Writer I HOLLYWOOD-Sammy Davis Jr. took a match from his gold I match box’ and lighted the cig-larette he drew from the matching gold cigarette box. I Such baubles mean much to Sammy, who fought his way I from poverty, his sheer talent winning him stardom ____________ and riches de- THOMAS spite small stature and a homely kisser. It also pleases him to make gestures such as a recent one in Atlantic City when he paid refunds to an entire dinner audience because his voice had frozen during a performance. “I had to,” he explaihed. ‘Those people had paid a lot of money for a performance that1 couldn’t give them. These were people who see me only once a year; they’re not the ones who make the shows in New York or Miami. MOTHER WORKED Besides, it was Atlantic City, where I had starved, where my mother worked as a barmaid. I owed it to them. The impulse cost him about $4,000—‘‘‘and the owner thought I was nuts.” But Sammy had to prove something—Jo others and to himself. the title of his best-selling autobiography. “Yes, I can.” He seems determined to continue proving that he can meet new challenges in his professional life. “You’ve got to do that in this business,” he argued over lunch at the Brown Derby.. “I’ve seen too many talents work up to success and then coast on it, thinking that it will go on indefinitely. It doesn’t. Pretty soon those people look around the business has passed them by. FORGET IT “The show world moves too fast nowadays. Fashions change and audiences change. If you don’t keep trying to change with them, forget it, buddy. One exposure on Ed Sullivan and the whole country knows your routine. You’ll find the audiences mouthing the punch lines with you if you try the same jokes on them.” As usual, Sammy finds himself locked in frenzied activity. He was here to record some numbers for his own company (MBD after his wife May Britt Davis) which releases on leader Frank Sinatra’s label, Reprise. He played a wacky role in a Wild Wild West” TV series, did a cameo on “Batman” and was taking off for a date at Harrah’s Lake Tahoe. That has been the nature of his life, and it is expressed in John Baker, an executive, ^--------------------t------1--- explained: “We felt that many| young chaps who have been educated at free state schools are today in jobs which require them to deal firmly with wine butlers, and order their wines in easy impressive manner I with no slipups or embarrass-: menK” PAID COURSE Baker said the course willi start next month and the tuition will be $79.38. One semester, he said should lead to a diploma. Pilot Whales Rounded Up in Florida MARATHON, Fla. (AP) -The Great Florida Keys whaling If the student drinks at every lesson, this could be one of the year’s best bargains in imbibing, if not in education. * ★ * “After each session,” said Baker, “a bottle of wine with the label removed will be given to each candidate for appraisal and discussion at the next class.” Sponsored by the PONTIAC LIONS CLUB expedition appeared to be over today, and tired conservation agents certainly hoped so. The agents spent two days towing stranded pilot whales of! sand bars and herding them through channels back to the ocean. Saturday and Sunday, an estimated 60 of the 7- to 17-foot whales swam aground on the Florida Bay-Gulf of Mexico — side of Grassy Key, north of Marathon. * * * A dozen or more of the blub- J He said the chairmen of 1,200 jbery visitors died before theyj big British companies will re- could be aided. Agents tied i ceive a prospectus suggesting ropes to the others’tails, tugged In color, Walt Ditnoy'* “LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N.” “Bun Appaloosa, Run” Starts WEDNESDAY! DORisninr ROD TAYLOR ApUR GODFREY i He’ll continue with night clubs, concerts and guest shots until he goes to London -next year for seven months of “Golden Boy” which’he played for a year and a half on Broadway. * ★ * “I made the most money for any star who has appeared on Broadway,” he adds. TEPID REVIEWS During the run he made a film for his own company, “A Man Called Adam.” It has been released to tepid reviews, but Sammy said it is doing good business. His television series last spring added to his income, if not his glory. What’s ahead for him? * * ★ “More challenges,” he said. “I did the movie because 1 wanted to perform in something dramatic on the screen; always I had been associated with light comedy. I’ve been able to do dramatjc roles in television, but never in films. I want to do more, and I’d like to act in some straight plays, too, perhaps on a limited run in the summer “You got to keep moving in tjjis business, or else they’ll catch up with you.’' Tuesday Only Special! NOW! HURON at 1-3-5-7-9 W T/ieQHOSTahd MR.0MEN TECHNICOLOR LI Starts WEDNESDAY! WALT DISNEYS LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, U.S.N. I dickVAN DYKE - nancy KWAN m MUST SEETHE WIDEST, FUNNIEST NEW DAT! DAY HOD TAYLOR ARTHUR GODFREY ’N PAN AVI SION’ AV.METROCOLOR / M ALSO: THE SANDPIPER COMMERCE Union Lake and Adults $1.25 Haffarty Road Children Under 115-0651 12 Free NOW “1000 CLOWNS'’ “NORTH TO ALASKA” TUESDAY LADIES' DAY 10:48 a.m. to 5:M p.m. LADIES 50c MEN Me Pontiac's POPULAR THEATER Week Days: Continuous 11 ajk to It p.» Sundays: CMthnwus It «.*. to It y.M. EAGLE Starts TUES. CHARLTON RICHARD HESTON BOONE ‘htfWAR LORD TECHNICOLOR® PANAVISION® ■■iANDHH “SINK THE BISMARK” that they should send young executives to the drinking course. ALL WELCOME “Anyone will be welcome, however,” said Baker, “and we hope, in time, to get the trade unions interested. After ail, you never know where a union negotiator may be heading these days. The Social Security. Administration employed 39,903 persons [last year. them to deep water and drove them under a bridge into the Atlantic. LIKE SHEEP Lt. Edward G. Little of the Conservation Department said his men splashed the water with paddles to herd the whales toward safety. “It’s like driving sheep,” he said. Pilot whales ■ periodically strand themselves on Florida beaches but they usually appear on the Atlantic side. Reserved end Admission Tickets on S3T» Tomorrow Iff CALBI MUSIC CO,----------115 N. Saginaw SI. MavyTests Viet Patrol Boat r’™3' Hy J^ehce - SOLOMONS, Md. - A River Patrol Boat (PBR) identical to those used by the U.S. Navy to keep the Viet Cong from crossing South Vietnamese rivers is now at work in Maryland, armed with 50-caliber machine guns and radar. Capable of speeding at 25 knots even when fully loaded, the 31-foot craft is serving as a floating test bed for the Naval Ordnance Laboratory test facility here. It is the only boat of its kind on the East Coast. Though the PBR’s hull is lightweight fiber glass, the crew ts protected from enemy fire by annorecbdeckmg. A rotating pillbox on the foredeck houses twin machine guns, white «'Ktii^wespoB A total of 160 boats have been ordered for Viet Nam ....duty------------^— A/UUAAAAAAFREE PLAYGROUNDS • EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES AAAAAAAAAA z IMPORT*! — EXCEPTION: — NO ONE ‘ Z UNDER Z WILL W — ADMITTED — UNLESS • ACCOMPANIES lev HIS PARENT] I That Kind i Of Woman' YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 When news stories refer to "guldeposts” or “guidelines,’t they usually are discussing. a-new educational programs b-wages and prices c-Antarctic exploration 2 The House last week passed and sent to the Senate the Administration’s civil rights bill. The House version forbids racial discrimination in the sale or rental of. a-all homes and apartments b-single family homes c-many larger housing units 3 Billy Hitchcock became the new Manager last week of the...baseball team. a-New York Mets b-Atlanta Braves c-Plttsburgh Pirates 4 Acting under the 1964 Civil Rights Act, the federal government has charged 75 employers with unlawful discrimination in newspaper help-wanted ads. The Act covers discrimination because of sex or religion, as well as oolor. True or False? 5 Many nations are,urging UN Secretary General Thant to seek a new term when his present ope ends in..... a-November of this year b-December, 1967 c-April, 1968 PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1 ..lunar a-lsolate 2 hamlet b-having to do with the moon c-long speechmaking to". ----,---------------- deity vote.............. "T.....priority d-order of importance 8...filibuster e-small village PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1...Paul Revere 2.....Masarwa 3 ..Everett Dirksen 4 ..Head Start 5 ..Allen J. Ellender a-Senate Minority Leader b-8enator from Louisiana c-Allied troop operation in Viet Nam d-educational program e-legendary lost African tribe found * VEC, Inc., Mtdlion, Wisconsin The Pontiac Press Monday, August 15,1966 []!») 7temP% Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. Portugal now has Europe's longest 2..... new weapons blamed for decrease in numbers 3..... unmanned capsule test scheduled Saturday marks seventh anniversary of statehood 6.„.. Aug. 19 set aside to honor this activity hay fever time 7*.... . honeymoon place for the Nugents 0° Oejy 9 D *\! greater numbers expected to fly this fall 9.....___________ IA IS. Congress probedprice 10..... new model of Soviet weapon In North Viet Nam FAMILY DISCUSSION QUESTION What are the advantages of finishing high school before starting one's job career? Thii Quiz Is part of tho Educational Program which This Nawipapar furnishes to Schools in this araa to Stimulate Interest in Natignal and World Affairs as an aid to Developing' Good Citizenship. HOW DO YOU"RATE ?" (Score Each Side of Quiz Separately) . . ____. ' 71 to 80 points - Good. 91 to 100 points - TOP SCORE! 61 to 70 points - Fair. 81 to 90 points - Excellent. 60 or Under???- HW ' Save Thfi Practice Examination.1 STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS 1-0110*8 *r-8 (0*L Jo-9 Ja-S Id-9 ffl-E iH-l *V*1 iZIffl) 108WAS (hfl lt-9 l+l fo-l mi JLUVd 0-9 J»*t <•** #3 ill JLMVd •-S ieiLU-8 lq-t la-2 fq-| t| mvd I THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 15, 1966 The following ate top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Thursday. Produce Stock Flies on Airline News Apples, Astracan, bu. .. Apples, Redborn, bu. ... ■ Apples, Redbird, bu. ... Blueberries, 12-qt. crt. . Cantaloupes, bu......... Peaches, Redhaven, bu. Peaches, Sunhaven, bu. Pears Clapps, bu........ Beets, topped, bu. ... Broccoli, db., bu. ..... Cabbage, bu........... Cabbage, Red, bu. . ' Cabbage, st. bu....... Cabbage Sprouts, bu. . Cabbage, Standard, bu Carroty, dz. bch...... * Carrots, Cello Pk., 2 a * Chives, dz. t Cucumber, slices, bu....... Cucumber, Dili, % bu....... Cucumber, Pickle, bu....... Corn, Sweet, 5 doz. beg . i Dill, dz. bch.............. Egg Plant, % bu............ Egg Plant, Long type, pk. Kohlrabi, dz. bch.......... Leeks, dz. bch............. Onions, green, dz. bch. .. Onions, Dry, 50-lb. Bag ... Onions, Pickling, lb....... Parsley, Curly, dz. bch. .. , Parsley, root.............. Peppers, Sweet, pk. bskt. Peppers, Hot, pr. bskt. .. Potatoes, 50 lbs........... . Radishes, Red, . Rhubarb, outdoor. Squash Acorn, bu. Squash, Buttercup, Squash, Italian, % Squash, Summer, Tomatoes, bsk. Turnips, Topped NEW YORK (AP)—The Stock Market advanced ih early trading today as airlines rallied on news of another proposed settlement of the long strike. Trading was active. Airlines were bought on able blocks at the opening. They remained substantially higher even though some of their best gains were trimmed. ★ ★ ★ Steels posted a string of gains, j> mostly fractional. Eastern and National Airlines ? were up about 2 points while “ TWA climbed almost 2. Ahead * more than a point were Pan American, Continental, Braniff and American. STEEL ADVANCES U. S. Steel advanced close to a point while Bethlehem, Republic and Jones & Laughlin were among steels which posted fractional gains. Gains of a point were made also by Douglas Aircraft, Xerox and Control Data. But du Pont was down a point. Little or no change was shown by General Motors, Ford, Goodyear, International Paper, Santa Fe and Reynolds Tobacco. • Parke-Davis gained 1 and G. D. Searle a fraction following a favorable report on birth control pills. OPENING BLOCKS Opening blocks included: Eastern Air Lines, up 1% at 95Vi on 8,000 shares; Sperry Rand, up V4 at 33% on Continental Air Lines, up 1% at 77% on'16,000; Pan American World Airways, up 1% at 69% 6,500; and American Airlines, up 2% at (Hi 6,600. Prices rose on foe American Stock Exchange. Fractional gainers included Signal Oil Seaboard World Airlines, Mead Johnson, Data-Control Systems and Barnes Engineers. The New York Stock Exchange Car Sales Up for the Month Yearly Trend Trails Record '65 Tallies DETROIT (AP) - U.S. auto sales were up ^lightly in foe first 10 days of August but calendar year to date sales remain some 200,000 units off the record 1965 tallies, preliminary figures showed today. Truck sales continued to boom. Aug. 1-10 sales were 189,895 compared with 166,344 fen* foe same period last year. However, there were nine selling days this year compared with eight ‘ ist year. Calendar year to date sales totaled 5,059,692 for 1966 compared to 5,259,553 at this point ‘ ist year. Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. both showed slight increases over the Aug. 1-10 1965 period. General Motors Corp. and American Motors were off I slightly. | Ford sold 51,571 cars in foe period compared with 50,127 for the same 10 days last year. Ford year to date sales are 1,491,630, up from the 1,488,374 sales recorded at foe same point in 1965. Ford Division said combined car and truck sales in the first 10 days of August were a record 57,390 units. This included 44,841 passengers cars and 12,-549 trucks. The old record, set in 1955, was 54,172 on 45,068 passenger cars and 9,104 trucks. Ford truck sales through Aug. 10 were 345,657 compared to Chrysler reported passenger lies of 31,461 for foe 10 • day period, a 16 per cent increase over foe 27,045 reported 19T sales for the Aug. 1-10 period. Chrysler calendar year to date sales showed a three per cent increase, 868,852 in 1966 compared with 846,022 at foe same point last year. Dodge truck sales for foe first 10 days of August were up 16 per cent at 2,869 compared with 2,465 for foe same period last year. , General Motors reported sales of 101,052 cars in foe first 10 days of foe month compared with 102,113 in the Aug. 1-10 period of 1965. GM calendar year to date sales were 5,059,-692 for 1966 compared with 5,-259,553 at the same point last year. GM reported Cadillac deal ers set a 10 - day sales record with 4,231 deliveries. The old mark was 4,140 in 1955. GM said a record 17,777 commercial vehicles were sold for foe 10-day period, up from foe 16,653 reported in foe first 10 days of 1965. This included a record 14,252 Chevrolet truck sales, surpassing the Aug. 1-10 1965 mark of 13, NEW ENGINE — This new high performance V8 engine is to be introduced in 1967 model Buicks. The engine will be offered in a 430-cubic inch model and a 400-cubic inch size. The bigger version, which will power Electra, Wildcat and Riviera models, will develop 360 horsepower, while smaller engine will churn 340 horsepower in Gran Sport models. Expectations Better for Fourth Quarter By SAM DAWSON AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - Business is halfway through the 1966 third quarter today with much of’its earlier hesitation overcome and expectations growing for a record fourth quarter. Even some of foe Wall Street I bears are wondering if the] mer slump has been milder than many feared. low point hasn’t been reached or at least sighted. With the 66fo month of foe business upswing rounding out, foe economy shows many signs of starting a new climb. Wage-price spirals and Viet Nam War costs are capturing the attention now that a few months dominated by fears that busi-was overexpanding and consumer demands nearing satiation. Housing is still a drag. This may continue for a time, money stays tight. The $3 billion pump priming which Congress is fashioning for foe home building industry would take some time to show up in construction. American Motors reported sales of 5,811 cars in foe first 10 days of foe month compared with 7,059 for the same period last year, AMC year to date sale* for 1966 are 163,922-down from foe 200,697 reported at this date a year ago. But the auto industry, foe other much publicized laggard, jJ confident that better days are all but here. Detroit reports that production schedules call for the industry to turn out more cars next month than in any previous September. And salesmen claim they will sell about one million of the remaining 1966 model cars before foe new ones hit foe showrooms in force. At foe halfway mark, foe third quarter already is shaping up as one of foe best. The sum- American Stock Exch. list of Mlectcd dock transactions i American Stock Exchange foregoing table are a ‘--tod on the last quarterly declaration. Spatial or or payments net *—■- foo?note« *r* Wen,tfi*d 1,1 ____ ,___ ______ dividend. _ dividend, d—Declared or Mid to. plot tfqck dlvlttond. e—Declared or para tog 1965, estimated casTi value on ex-dlvl-dend or ex-distrlbutlon date, g—Paid last year, h—Declared or paid I 39% 39% 39% . c—Liquidating paid in 1965 (lids.) High Low Lad Chg. Aerolet .50a AmPetrofA ,20e ArkLaGat IJO 11 I Asamera 222 311-16 3 5- . _ I m-WHM Barnes Eng J1 33% 32% 33%+V BrazLtPwl 16 6% 8% •%... tamp* - Can So Pet .41 15-16 1 15-16 115-16... Cdn Javelin 21 1% 8% 8%... Cont Tel .40 28 22% 22% 22%+ €reoteP-2.60e 9 9J%3*%33%— Equity Cp .189 18 3% 3% 3% . Fargo Oils 421M6 2% 2%.. Fly Tiger 1.241 125 44% 44% 44%+ % Gen Devel 69 5% 5% 5%+ % Gen Plywd It 3 16% 16% 16%+ % m | 6 3% 3% .. 10 10 8% 10 m EKOdW EatonYa "G&G -2u , JlBondS 1.72 , EIPasoNL 1 i Enter El 1.32 mi End John K j Erie Lack RR 114 93 0 EthylCerp .60 *3, ijw EvansPd .60b toj ’Ju flJ 9L6 Ev,r,hp “P S! !?•? in? r—Declared or paid in 1966 plus s dividend. t-r-Pald In stock during estimated cash value on ex-dividend distribution date, z—Sales In fulL cId—Called. x-Ex dividend. v-Ex dM-end and sales In full. x^lt-Ex distribute! xr-Ex rights. xw-WIthoto Warmth. ww—With warrants, wd—When dtt-Ibuled. wl—When Issued. nd-Moxt day 11% 11% 11%+ « 47% 44% 46%+1% L (to d ...r. my fl . 440.2 165.1 141.8 302.3 F 445.6 166.0 143.5 306.4 F . 466.5 174.5 150.6 220.2 F .. 481.8 14M jS-2 331.4 F 36 15% 15% 15% + % 6 24% l£% 26%-% 3 13% tf% 13% —% 4 65% 65 65 -.% 12 28% £ 20 -% 2 47% 47% 47% '• 12 47% 3% 47% 32 11% 11% H% 44 17% 17% 17% 4 45% 45% 45% 3 73% » fl S3 fSS ®......... .« 39% 39% 39% 1 Peab Cool 1* PennDixle .60 Pdwidy l.50a Pa PwLt 1.48 Pa RR 2.40 If 13 10 — _ 1 Z3 23 22 + % 171 S% 69% 69% 4- % 7 5% «% 33% T ! 11 H 77 77- +0 3% 2S JStT 1 10% 10% 10% — 1 7 51% 58% 51% - 1 7 32% 32% 32 . . 9 51% 0% f!% + 1 2 M 17% 17% + 1 21 45% 65 65 -1 3 Sk 62% OHb + ' 1 66% 66 •# —1 '.7 3l% 31% H%^ 4 46% 46% 44% + U 2 21% 21% 9%-rW 24 49% 49% rot* — u, 12 52% 51% PITTSBURGH, Kan. <*-F. W. Brinkerhoff, Kansas editor and publisher, died Saturday at age 81. Brinkerhoff was editor and publisher of foe Pittsburg Headlight and Sun. ContPo Nat Bk... expand further. State and local Spending has gone up, despite the check of high interest charges on some new project planning. Business concern as Labor Day approaches is focusing more and more on Washington. What Congress will or won’t do in the final rush to adjourn as election campaigns warm up captures a top place in the list of uncertainties. DAWSON SEE HOPE Many of the key statistics show the third, quarter outstripping the second — although admittedly much of the gain each quarter this year has been due to rising prices and only partially to increased output. But business shrugs this off as something to be expected when a business upturn is 5% years old. Consumer spending is rising faster than in the late spring, skilled labor shortages due both Part of the total is due to higher to foe business boom and foe prices. But much of it is due to growing defense needs — all increased employment and these complicate foe business higher wage scales. More peo- outlook at the upswing’s 5%-ple have more money to spend year mark, for goods and services, as well as to meet higher price tags. COMPLICATE PICTURE Wage demands, rising prices, The gain in summer jobs has been especially marked this year. And foe Armed Forces have been taking more young men, cutting the drag which a high jobless rate would have ' ad on foe economy. Business spending for new plant and equipment continues to increase with still more in prospect. This tends to keep the economy booming this summer, and will speed it further this fall. HOLD COSTS But in foe long run the new production facilities will help hold down costs and keep supplies closer to demand, thus moderating the price inflation. Inventory building still holds fairly closely in line with sales, postponing at least foe day of reckoning which many past ' isiness booms have faced. Government spending has made foe most consistent advance of all this quarter and defense outlays are likely to Two of 3 Exiles Would Return'd FidelFgIIs^PqU Business Notes W. Robert studt (JM5738 todr iLeven, Waterford Township, has Inc., as assistant office manag- MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A survey shows that two of every three Cuban refugees here would return home if Fidel Castro should fall. ■k k ★ The poll, conducted by a research ftrnrftr-theUn^ of Miami, asked: “If Castro were bverlfiri^^ ; willing to go back to Cuba if you had to start a whole new '|j| tin, if you couldn’t get back the job, land ’ ' “ He was formerly manager < Shidf Derrick you had before «be| X Charles Derrick of 5788 B Hie answers; Yes, 64.5 per cent; No, 14.2 per cent; The rest undecided. News in Brief Burnham, Bloomfield Township, has been namd senior vice president—marketing, a new position at Vernors, Inc. Derrick is a former vice president of foe Pepsi Cola Co. and Schweppes, U. 6. A. Vito Craparotta, proprietor of Vito’s Market, 3210 Joslyn; Pontiac Township, has been fined $150’ and had sales permit suspended for seven days by foe State Liquor Control Commission for selling intoxicating beverages to a minor. The theft of four 45-caliber pistols valued at $80 in a break-in at the U.S. Army Training Center, 40 Walnut, was reportad||D Pontiac police over foe *Wjj||| But they are more likely than not to give the boom new impetus — in dollar terms at least. Business volume seems headed firmly for a new high. »- * % By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I hold Sperry Rand, which hasn’t paid a dividend for some time. Should I continue holding or is it better to sell?” L. w., N. P. A) A surprisingly substantial sarnings report was released by Sperry Rand for foe first fiscal quarter of 1966-67, ended June 30. Sales of more than $35$ million set'a new record for the period by advancing 31.4 per cent year-to-year. Net per share tripled to 44 cents from 14 cents earned in the like period in fiscal ’65. Continued gains in UNI-VAC and Sperry Gyroscope operations were back of these sharp increases. Such tinex-peeted improvement in Sperry’s fortunes chunges-foe-outlook -so ■ am now willing to advise you tohold Sperry.- -The shares have acted well despite foe vagaries of foe general market. There seems to be reason to expect them to work somewhat higher in foe period ahead. Shortly after the release of the favorable earnings report came a company announcement that the directors hope to rqflime dividends pn ffrft.qnm-mon “in the not too distant future ’’__________________________- customary among growth situations, such a dividend may be rather modest, so if more income is a requirement, further strength in Sparry shares would furnish the opportunity for a switch to such an income issue as Philadelphia Electric. Exam Ajsked ih Wife's Death Q) “Self-employed at 71, I am married with a daughter in college. I own 4$ Sears, Roebuck and 80 Am. Telephone. Should I borrow on my life Insurance to add to AT4T or bay a third issue?” E.J. A) I cannot agree that you should barrow on your life i*> surance to buy another stepfc. If ym opuld without loss — you haven’t mentioned foe cost price switch 38 shares of ^ CASSOPOLIS (AP) - Bernard Thielman, 31, of rural Dowagiac demanded examinhtion Saturday. He is charged with first-degree murder in foe pjstol slaying of his.wife, Jane, 24. TbteL.. ........ man was ordered held wmWW*. Sulphur, yfjg bond by Justice of foa-Taylor who set Aug, H. ft s can Telephone into P||C THE PONT1AC PRESS, JdONBAYVAUGUST 46, 106ft N. Viets Eluding Trap . SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — U.S. cavalrymen threw heavy ground fire at North Vietnamese troops in the la Drang Valley today while Air Force planes blasted the foe with rockets, but the Reds apparently were eluding an attempt to trap them. Rain and mud, plus thick jungle, hampered U S. maneuvering. Communist troops brought down a 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Division rocketfiring helicopter in flames before breaking off at midday a fight that blazed most of the night. Its four crewmen were killed. A second chopper was shot up. ★ * * Over-all U.S. casualties were described as light. The enemy toll was unknown. The U.S. Command reported the loss of two more American planes over North Viet Nam and said two more apparently mis-token attacks were carried out on friendly villages in South Viet Nam. The attacks were under investigation, spokesman said there was no immediate evidence that Americans were involved. MORE TROOPS Allied ground strength was being bolstered even further. volved. South Vietnamese- authorities are investigating. -The attack in the demilitarized zone was carried out by unidentified aircraft. A U.S. spokesman said a preliminary investigation showed no U.S. planes in the area at the time. About 300 South Korean soldiers arrived as a vanguard of a full 17,000-man division due next month. The United States beefed up its strength Sunday by sending a 3,800-man light infantry brigade fresh from stateside training to jungle posts about 50 miles northwest of Saigon. The mistaken attacks on! friendly villages came Friday! and Saturday, a U.S. spokesman said. The first, on a village in the Mekong River delta, resulted in the death of five civilians and the wounding of 15 others. In the second attack, four civilians were killed and 35 wounded in the southern part of demilitarized zone between North and South Viet Nam. Two other erroneous attacks ist week had been reported earlier. The circumstances of the attack in the Mekong delta were not clear. A U.S. military spokesman said it had not been determined whether the casualties were caused by aircraft or artillery. He said the villagers were caught in an action involving South Vietnamese ground pellets through windows and forces and supporting aircraft I rushed inside, and artillery. Near the back door outside, Shots Fatal to Mother, Two Girls INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -It was near noon when Marguerite Sikes returned from church Sunday with her two teen-age daughters. Within minutes, gunshots rocked their ranch-type home. A passerby saw one of the girls in the yard cut down by a shot. He rushed to a nearby service station to call police About 30 policemen crept toward the house, fired tear gas ■ v; . /-v-,i One unconfirmed report said helicopter gunship was in Neither Side Is Prepared to Press Plateau Fight CHU PO^G, South Viet Nam (AP) — Digging in along ridgelines and hillsides in the heart of this border mountain chain, U.S. cavalrymen prepared today for what could become the climactic battle of the central Vietnamese plateau. The Americans have been squared off with North Vietnamese troops for two days. Fire fights have been frequent. ★ ★ ★ Both sides are reinforcing, neither side is yet prepared to press the fight. “I tell you one thing,” said Maj. Gen. John Norton, com- mander of the 1st Cavalry Airmobile, Division. “This fight is going to be fought carefully.” ENEMY HELPED Norton’3 caution is understan- Police said Sikes, a real es- in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. nwwiig Lduuvii is unuciMem-,uiwi. ncaiujr dable. Everything favors the its bullet clip empty. __ __________, _______ enemy in this treacherous, rain-| Mrs. Sikes died en route to a a.m. Wednesday at the Voor-| drenched battleground of sharp hospital. jhees-Siple Chapel, with burial! ridges, dense foliage, and rocky mHjNMjNtMnHM ravines. The Cambodian border is just few thousand yards to the west, an easy enemy sanctuary. And American troops are in the heart of the Chu Pong area southwest of Pleiku, for the first! time in the war. Ex-Firm President From Holly Dies Howard M. Smith, 68, of 13499 W. Laneden, Holly, a former president of American Spring of Holly, Inc., died Saturday McLaren Hospital, Flint. Service will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Dryer Funeral Home in Holly with cremation in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. * ★ * Surviving are his wife, Myrtle; a daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Walker of Charlotte, N. C.; a son, Howard J. of Annapolis, Md.; a sister; and seven grandchildren. two policemen found Mrs. Sikes, 42. She was wounded in the abdomen, but managed to say “My youngest daughter is in the house.” BODY NEARBY Nearby was the body of] Marianne Sikes, 17. In the living room, was the body of Dianne Sikes, 14, who is believed to; have been shot in the front yard! and dragged inside. In a bedroom, where he had barricaded himself, lay Henry Sikes, 62, who, authorities said, killed himself with a shot jin the chest. Nearby was a rifle, ANOTHER OU FIRST—Receiving congratulations from Oakland University Chancellor D. B. Varner (second from right) are (from left) Lawrence Coon, Rochester, N.Y.; David Field, Brunswick, Maine; Linda J. Kluss of 3193 Livernois, Avon Township; and Gerald Compton of 115 Campbell, Rochester. The four graduate students were the first to earn master’s degrees at OU. Miss Kluss and Compton are OU graduates. Coon graduadti from University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y., and Field, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine. Deaths in Pontiac, Neighboring Areas Claudie W Key l*w0 brothers, Dr. Aaron D. of * Orchard Lake and Dauhue A. Service for Claudie W, Key,'of Chelsea. 151, 221 Chamberlain, will be 11 James A. Smith Service for James A. Smith, tate agent, had been divorced Aug. 5 from Mrs. Sikes after 20 years of marriage. She charged cruel and inhuman treatment. A receipt found on Sikes indicated he bought the gun July 5. IP Key died Saturday. He153- of Pontiac, will be 1 p.m. to-was employed at Pontiac Motor]01.™ at 1Coats/onfrrf,1 «ome’ Division |with burial in Oak Hill Ceme- tery. Illness Fatal to Girl at Fair A 13 year-old Lyon Township girl, suffered a fatal asthmatic attack while at the 4-H Fair Saturday, according to Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies. ★ * * Dawn Hardesty of 9385 Currie was pronounceddeadon arrival at Pontiac General Hospital - shortly after- 6 The girl fell unconscious at the fairgrounds at Perry and Walton in Pontiac township and failed to respond to first aid ad-, ministered by deputies at the scene. U.S. ground troops could not even see supply helicopters whirring 50 feet overhead today because of the thick jungle canopy. Some helicopters positioned themselves by radar and threw off supplies. few wounded Americans were pulled out of the jungle by hoists in predawn extractions. Other wounded are still lying in the depths of the mountains, awaiting removal. CASUALTIES American casualties are light. Communist gunners shot down a cavalry rocket ship heli copter in flames, killing all four crewmen. Another was badly shot up and landed tail first, but the passengers, including the replacement for a wounded company commander, survived. * * * The weather is “the worst I have seen” said Gen. Norton, whose outfit- has been roaming the central plateau since late July searching for three North Vietnamese regiments. He estimates that the remnants of three battalions are dug in at the Chu Pong Mountains, probably with i regimental command post. Up to now, the Chu Pong area has been regarded as too tough to fight in. Norton decided otherwise. Flint Driver Hurt in Crash A one-car accident early yesterday on Oakland near Monti-cello has hospitalized a 34-year-old Flint man. Gerald M. O’Connor is listed;Funeral Home, with burial in in fair condition at Pontiac Gen- Oak Hill Cemetery. eral Hospital. Pontiac police said O’Connor was injured about 6 a.m. when his car went out of control, crossed Oakland, and ran into a culvert. Gas Station Robbed in Bloomfield Twp. Woman,Mcmr HuniwtlrmW= Oh Area Road Surviving are sons and daughters, Jerry of Pontiac, Mrs. Donald Hicks, Leroy, Deloris, Mrs. George Scott, Larry, Linda, John, Helen, Crystal, Janis, Paul, Jack and Michelle, all of Rochester; three brothers; sister; and six grandchildren. John H. Riker Service for John H. Riker, ( of 167 Coleman, Waterford1 Township, will be at 1:30 p.m. ! tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Mr. Smith died Saturday. He was formerly a mechanic at General Motors Truck and Coach Division. Corinne L. Bentley HOLLY — Service for Corinne Bentley, 10-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Bentley of 205 Le Grande, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Calvary Methodist Church. Burial will be Lakeside Cemetery by the Dryer Funeral Home. Mr. Riker died yesterday. He was a retired Pontiac Motor Division employe and a member of First Presbyterian Church. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Clare Scriven of Pontiac; and In Social Security 'Benefits Below Payments' NEW YORK (AP) — the Tax]foundation says it excluded in Foundation, Inc,, gays that a 2J:[itg computations. y«ar-oklmaB-wiw>fitartBW(ffk.|].-r-~—'J£LSZ±1 ing today and retires at age 65,1 The study also said there is a can expect his Social Security possibility m many indusfriea pension benefits to total about that the rise in Social Security $13,000 less than he will have tax rates may incline an em-paid in taxes, plus interest. ployer to try to cut his share of ★ ★ * the tax bill by using more labor- The foundation reported Sun- sav‘n8 devices. A Highland Township woman and a Detroit man were admitted to Pontiac General Hospital following a two-car accident early yesterday. Mrs. Ingrid L. Doran, 54, of 3301 Highland is listed in fair condition, and Robert H. Earle, 24, is reported satisfactory. day that he will have paid, over] The foundation is a nonprofit the 44 years of working, Social organization which examines Security taxes totaling $32,500, the focal aspects of governr including.-mtercsr^""3W”“'pfimCTr' [cent. He can expect to draw a __ ...... ■mwt iil'' ■ ■ . , fits 1 Ex-Druggist, 5.65 PCT. The present laws calls for Social Security takes to rise to a maximum of 5-65 per cent of the first $6,000 of annual earnings in 1987. That will include .4 per cent for Medicare, which the Oakland County Sheriff's dep-A bandit robbed a Sunoco sta- uties said a car driven by Mrs. tion at 18^1 Tdegraph, Bloom- Doran collided with another au-field Township; at about 1:20 tomobile at the intersection of yesterday morning and escaped Highland and Ormond in White with $46. I Lake Township. * * * Earle was a passenger in the Floyd Howard, owner of the second car, driven by Dolores service station, told State Po- Hays, 26, of Detroit, She was lice the intruder had his hand in treated at Pontiac General and his pocket as if be were holding released. a weapon. I --------------:---*— He said, “Hand me all the j Lightning not only bums down money or I’ll kil, you,” ac- ] barns and kills pastured ani-cording to Howard. mals, but is probably one of Witnesses said the band! t, the chief causes of rusty fences, wearing a brown suit and brown Lightning discharges itself along hat, escaped in a car with four the top wire of fences, burning other men. {off the galvanized coating. City Man Robbed by 3 Armed Men A Pontiac man told Pontiap police he was robbed at gunpoint pf $100 early yesterday by three men I who approached him in a phone booth at 402 Orchard Lake. Richard Martinez, 24, of 19 E. Iroquois said he was making a phone call when the men came up, asked him how long he would be on the phone, and then pulled a gun when Martinez stepped out of the booth. ★ * . * The three fled after taking the money, Martinez said. Store Owner Dies of Illness Retired Pontiac area pharmacist and drugstore owner Edward L. Mosure died Saturday after a lengthy illness. Mosure, 64, of 5481 Pontiac Lake, Waterford Township, formerly owned and operated Oak Pharmacy in Farmington and Mosure Drugs in Pontiac. He was a member of the National Association of Retail druggists and the Farmington V.F.W. Post. Service will be at 2 p.m. to morrow'at the Pursley Funeral Home, with burial in Waterford Center Cemetery, Waterford' Township. . ★ ★ Surviving are a daughter, Elaine S. of Grand Rapids; two sons, Edward J. fit Waterford Township and John B. of Grand Rapids; a sister; and two brothers. Four Injured in M24 Crash Three members of a Ferndale family and their aunt were admitted to Pontiac General Hospital yesterday with injuries suffered when the car in which they were riding struck the rear of a car oq M24. Listed in fair condition are Linda Repket 17; Cheryl, 8; Den-alf children cd Mr. and Mrs, Wjlbur Bepke; and Mrs. Maybelle Repka, 54.-----1-1Z Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies said the four were passengers in a car driven by Leo M. Sensky, 18, of Detroit, when the accident occurred about 10:30 a.m. in Oxford Township. Sensky told deputies he was traveling about 70 miles an hour when his car hit the rear the other automobile. .: Mechanic, Oxford, driver of the second car, was injured in the collision but was not hospital- The child died Saturday after odist Church with burial in a short illness. Surviving besides her parents are one brother, Wayne, and one sister, Lori Ann, both at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meakin in England. John L. Dalgleish OXFORD TOWNSHIP - John L. Daigleish, 77, of 1621 Ray died yesterday after a long illness. His body is at the Flumer-felt Funeral Home. William Maddren WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP—Service for William H. Maddren, 49, of 2164 Deering will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. Burial will be in Pine Lake Cemetery. Mr. Maddren died Saturday after a long illness. He was a representative for industrial chemical manufacturers. Surviving are his wife, Hil-dred; four daughters, Mrs. Gene Dunn of Lake Orion, Mrs. Michael Griffin of Detroit and Diane Lynne and Candice Hope, both at home; and one brother, Richard H. Maddren of Birmingham. Dawn Memorial Cemetery from the Flumerfelt Funeral Home. Mr. Wilcox died Saturday following a brief illness. He was an employe of the Koenig Coal and Supply Co. Surviving are his wife Mary Jane; two sons, Raymond R. and Hazen A., both at home; two step-sons, Larry R. Collier at home and Woodrow Collier Jr. of Oxford; two step-daughters, Rose M. Collier of Oxford and Suzanne Dunn of Lake Or- n. Also surviving are two brothers, Rev. Roy Wilcox of Romeo and Raymond of Sault Ste. Marie; and three sisters. Lloyd Zablocki COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Lloyd E. Zablocki, 51, of 4829 Halberd died yesterday. His body is at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Mr. Zablocki was a superintendent of the Ford Motor Co. plant in Sterling Township, Macomb County. Surviving are his wife Esther; his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Zablocki; a son, Paul of the U. S. Navy; a daughter, Sheila at home; two sisters and a brother. Middlemen Hit on Food Hike Freeman Is Convinced Someone Profiteering WASHINGTON (UPI) — Agri- u 11 u r e Secretary Orville L. Freeman is convinced the Federal Trade Commission investigation of soaring food prices will show profiteering by middlemen. , ★ ★ " * Freeman told United Press International in an interview made public yesterday that the farm-not responsible for rising prices. But, he said, “somewhere along the line, from the farmer to the consumer, someone is getting more than a reasonable fair share for services rendered.” The secretary said the farmer was getting only half-a-cent more than last year for the wheat going into a loaf of bread, while the retail price went up 3 cents. The rest, he said, “went somewhere from the time the wheat left the farm till it reached the consumer.’’ ★ ★ ★ He said that “In the last year, and particularly in the last month, a sharp jump in food prices ... in relation to ... the farm price, has led everyone to feel that someone is profiteering along the line.” FTC PROBE Asked what the administration was doing about it, Freeman said he has requested the Federal Trade Commission to investigate “to determine if . . . there is a villain in this chain from the farmer to the consum-sr. 1 “It seems to me,” he added, ‘that more than a fair and reasonable markup somewhere along the chain is being asked, and has been asked in the .last few months, and we ought to know who that is and where that is and to take corrective action.” ★★ * Freeman expressed confidence that,the “force of public opin-would bring some food prices down after the FTC spotlights that “somewhere, someone has done some profiteering.” Oxford Township Dwelling Burns OXFORD TOWNSHIP - An old vacant farmhouse at 1625 Coats burned to the ground early this morning. Township firemen said the blaze was report-at 1:18 a.m. and was extinguished about two hours later. The house had been vacant about two months, said a department spokesman. No damage estimate or cause of the fire has been determined. Blanche Stieglitz CLARKSTON—Private service | for Miss Blanche Stieglitz, 84, of 5075 Clsrkston will be Wednesday at the Manley Bai-tev 'FuneralHome. Btrmlng-ham. Cremation wlll be m White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Miss Stieglitz died yesterday after a short illness. She was a member of the Christian Science Church of Boston. Surviving is one brother, Van jReade Stieglitz of Bloomfield CEMETERY MARKERS Monuments fiom $195 Markers mmm INCH MEMORIALS, INCT 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Piates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices Memorials for over 72 Years GlannWilcox OXFORD TOWNSHIP—Service forGlenn-WHew? §4* of 2425 W. Oakwood was to have been 2:30 p.m. today in Free Meth- . Due to the death of Charles W. Anderson Annett Realty East Huron at North Perry WILL RBI CLOSED Monday Afternoon, * August 15,1966 Oarl QY. Q)on TDonal) 3f~ Johns Every Detail Is Important.,. We do everything carefully at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. We just would not have it any other way) The little things of the funeral service are always important and mean much to you. It may be an extra effort to call a relative, or special care of the flowers, dr some other item that is most appreciated — so we do everything well arvd carefully. (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Q)oneb (Patlcin On Qur 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC I D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, AUGUST 1571966 IF YOUR SAVING FOR YOUR FAMILY'S FUTURE... OAKLAND Save Where You Get More! Our high rate of 4%% compounded and paid four times each year... an actual annual yield of 4.318! This is the Highest return on regular insured passbook savings in Oakland County. PLUS Accidental INSURANCE that matches every dollar of your savings up to $10,000.00! As your savings grow, you automatically increase the amount of your accidental life insurance at no cost to you. 761 W. HURQN STREET Downtown Pontiac — Clarkston — Drayton Plains Rochester — Walled Lake — Lake Orion — Milford lupersoft black or olive WWyT. .....niMi nniOpipm.......*143 Jim REG. $179.95 Traditional Recllna-Rocker In luxurious Matelasse. Choose olive,, gold or blue. Also available feieoey Me due tor VlnyL now sal. priced M49 RECLINA-ROCKERS AT BIG MID-SUMMER SALE SAVINGS! TRADITIONAL STYLE SHOWN rag. *119.95NOW World famous La-Z-Boy gives you style to enhance any decor plus deep man-size comfort for rocking, lounging, watching TV or full bed reclining. Thomas Furniture gives you Mid-Summer Sale savings on your choice of 5 popular stylesl Each features La-Z-Boy's exclusive 'Comfort selector' that provides a built-in leg rest that adjusts to 3 comfort positions without reipliniflg ^I fobrjc coyered styles include arm eovers and headrest at no^extracKargeT" v.«A»N of fern green matelasse or bronze on willow green tweed. LA-Z-SOY'S EXCLUSIVE RECLINING MECHANISM These Redino-Rockers adjust tor perfect TV rocking, lounging or full bed reclining. Sc ‘ the mechanism carries a lifetime warranty. PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW • FE 3-7901 OPEft MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 I DRAYTON 4945 DIXIENWY• OR 4-0321 OPEN M0NDAY< THURSDAY, FRIDAY 7lt*9 ||||N sunmrsah FEATURING A SPECIAL PURCHASE OF U-Z-BOY RECLINA-ROCKERS WITH NEW COMFORT SELECTOR! LA-Z-BOY G. $169.95 modern Reclina-Rocker ■ytStlf'ETOtW^et T5tlw,t-geWw-Wve gged tweed fabrics. | now sale priced REG. $169.95 Colonial Reclina-Rocker in your choice of persimmon, olive, gold or marine rugged tweed fabrics. now sale priced *149 “BAP-MOBILE”—Brian Sprouse enjoys a ride ginia Baptist Hospital’s new “Baptist bright red wagon has been placed in pediatrics for transferring youngsters to and from X-ray tory departments. Brian is the son of Mr. and Sprouse Jr. of Lynchburg, Va. 'New Birthrate Reins Needed' Beehive Type of Life Looming—Biologist Viet Fighting WESt VIRGINIA — Pfc. Charles E. urd, Sandyvllle. Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS. .TEXAS — Lance CpI. Bobby L. Eaton. 0dessa. From missing to dead — hostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA - Spec. 4 Don R. Sain, aratoaa. ILLINOIS - Pfc. Dale Rock Falls. MARYLAND - Spec. 4 PENNSYLVANIA - Pic. Larr arner, Loganton. Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY Pfc. Harlin Harris Jr. Pfc. William J. Hobart Pfc. Edward M. Sleben Pfc. Gerald P. Trlttschuh AIR FORCE Motor Wllliard S. Gideon Cept. Robert J. Sandvlck Cap*. John H. Wendell Jr. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY COLORADO — Spce. S George L. El Colorado Springs. KENTUCKY - Spec. 4 Lawrence Peek, Louisville; Pfc. Douglas A. Jo xi. Vine Grove. PENNSYLVANIA — Pfc. Tyron Burse, McKeesport. SOUTH CAROLINA - Pfc. Samuel R. Moser, Greenville. WYOMING — Pfc. Douglas T. Patrick, Casper. MARINE CORPS. PUERTO RICO - Staff Sgf. Edward T. Crooks, Vieques. COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) —A Yale biologist warned today that mankind is headed for a “beehive type existence” — and worse — unless it checks an eve r-increasing population through intensified voluntary birth control. Prof. Clement L. Markert said that, unless checked, the present annual world population growth — fastest in history — could push the world’s present three billion people to 150 billion within two centuries. ★ ★ ★ Birth control measures are available to stem and reverse the tide but these are not being sufficiently employed, Markert told an international meeting of 6,000 biologists. “Only psychological considerations stemming from an enlightened culture can bring about population stability short of a beehive type of existence," he said. In remarks prepared for the 17th annual meeting of the American Institute of Biological Sciences, an organization representing most of the world’s organized biologists, Dr. Markert, president of the Institute declared: “Either the birthrate of the world must come down, or the death rate must go . “There is no escape from balancing the equation of births and deaths. Nature’s processes are certain, ruthless, unemotional, impartial and as sure as death,” Dr. Markert said. “If man does not control his numbers voluntarily, then we can be sure that the traditional methods of famine, pestilence end war will provide us with highly unpleasant limiting controls.’’ He said the present two per cent annual rate of world population increase began about 20 years ago. The scientist said that if that rate had prevailed from the time of Christ “there would be about 20 million individuals in place of each person now alive, or 100 persons /to each square foot.” I Dead Listed in WASHINGTON OB - The Defense Department announced today the following casualties in the Viet Nam War: Killed in action: NEW YORK — fftc. Robert G. roll, Albany. j NORTH CAROLINA — Spec. 4 Glasco J. Fryer, Rosehill. OHIO — Spec.,4 Danny O. Prince. 0> - Sgt. Henry L. Cramer, ej'Ptp'. Joe L. Hill, Coquille. I CAR~..............— ‘ II, Spartanburg. fry, Lynchburg;