Thw WwaffiT 7 Partly ekwcfy, m||d THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY. |^MAY 25, 1903 --28 PAGES Home Edition 121 UMITID PRZU INTERNATIONAL Mystery Blasts Strike Capital of Louisiana No Date Announced No Injuries Reported From explosions — Two mysterious blasts went off in the Louisiana capital early today — one of them shattering more than 30 windows in the skyscraper state house Huey Long built and in three other nearby state buildings. The other explosion roared on the Louisiana State campus some four mileaway^ rocking students out of their bunks in the stadium dormitory. AP Pkolafat GUESS AGAIN — Seeming extra security for their nest may be what attracted a eouple of thrushes to build atop a deer’s antlers at a park in Denmark. Actually, it’s only a picture of a deer. One of the thrushes — probably mama — sits in the nest which rests atop the picture’s frame. i-Waler Lovers Foiled No injuries were reported. Police said they were unable to explain the explosions, neither of which detonated against any buildings. A cache of nearly 2M. practice bombs Were found in weathered ^ crates near Ope'siusas, some CO miles east yesterday. But they turned out to 6e ‘’dummies” and officials made no tie-in of the two incidents. Tm at a loss to attach any significance to it (the explo-sions).’ “ in Lakej^ilching Try Paitco Chief wuigate White of Baton Rouge said. “We don’t know what was the cause of it all right now." The city has not been a scene of demonstrations singe Decent-Neighborhood ‘■b(U!mwmg’^is traditi^ police dis^rsedi nrhaTgalllng at times. A cup of sugar here, an egg there. Williams Lake area residents distressed at the low ■ ■’level of their lake at- tempted to “borrow” some U.S. Will Fill water from adjacent Mace-| * * day Lake last night. Renews Threat to Assistjsjand With#^wer Observers Say Castro Finally Soothed Over Removal of Missiles MOSCOW iJF> — Premier Khrushchev today accepted an invitation to visit Cuba and renewed his threats to unleash Soviet nuclear power to defend the Caribbean island against invasion. Both pledges came In a joint communique at the end of the public phase of the nearly month-kmg red carpet reception for Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro. a crowd of demonstrating Negro students with tear gas. j Two previous mystery blasts occurred in the capital this I year—one at a life insurance j. company and anpther at the LSU campus. -V *%> DEATH COMES TO OLDTIMER - The State-Theater is almost gone. Reduced to a pile of rubble and twisted steel, this once proud resident of South Saginaw Street is a victim of Pontiac’s urban renewal program. Symbolic of an era when rmflM rr«»i Pheto downtown Pontiac boasted a half-dozen movie and vaudeville palaces, the State came tumbling down this week leaving only two survivors, the Strand and the Elagle. Complaining of several yearsitoday and were told ^ a^m'tl I § w |rtf fnfilA onpwkoIjN ___________■? I Police tegan an intensive probei GM Stockholders Heof* Donncr Iflflv on/4 UTArA in\A k«t * v w • of futile appeals to county drainjhe spotted a car speeding away jofficials, some 75 men armed'from the stadium right after the' Laft by Brifoin hammer,ex£losion. * attempted to open a sealed cul-| The student said the car jvert between Williams Lake and'seraped a traffic si»i. losing its OTTAWA (APt - The United Maceday Lake. ^ !right front door handle and States hastpled^ to take Qver>„ ni» of chrome major strategic targets left un-; a dozen sheriffs, state police dropped trim. The car’'. TfilT company’s”™ Gov. Wallace Ponders Move n his- F85. the Buick Special and the . . ^ pre- Pontiac'TempesI come "the normal yardstick for vious billion dollar profit was I from those in exterior and current anrtual passenger car; in 1955. ,interior trim. ,n^s” in^ the United States. ,i,„i q** The GM president did not of- |chairman Frederic G. Donner of ,33 said.l^'cally announce the new model. General Motors said yesterday here this week said they were not able immediately to confirm the information. But one official said, ‘‘It makes sense.” Lemnitzer and his staff are cur- rently negotiating with the British of the two lakes. County, The Williams Lake crew went lenged by the U.S. government „. I work at 6 p.m. Maceday Lakejhis pledge to block integration at residents called for sheriff’s dep-|the University of Alabama, was uties an hour later. {planning his next move today in Police swarmed to the scene to'his sovereignty dispute with fed-prevent any clash between resi-{eral authorities. Gordon, speaking at the 55tli an-i nual meeting of” General Motors J"‘^^‘‘' _______ ____i: base auto, sized between the' er indirectly, that a new car — by.*’®*' i^ootify it by name. Donner and Presidem John “ be added to the: . Jfe^4ok^^loekh^ how- 4964 line. Fremont, Calif., plant This will be a 115-inch wh^kJ ‘‘will begin assembling small-size Buicks,.. Oldsmobiles, regular Chevrolet and the near-; Pontiacs and Cbevrolels this to-the-compadt Chevy II. j fall.” BODIES SIMILAR Gordon disclosed that the Wil- It will have the same basic'ndngton plant, which had been body R-ame of the Oldsmobilel (Continued on Page 2, Col. 8) Negro Leaders, Bobby Confer Discuss 'Explosive^ Race Issue in North shareholders, expressed confi-: dence in prospects for continued growth of the automotive industry. They said that 1963 business for America’s largest manufacturing firm should top the record-breaking profits of last year if economic conditions continue at the current level. Cnir^n told over 5,500 stock- the Royal Air Force’s 180 V-bombers are to be deployed within the new inter-Allied nuclear force. The delicate and complex problems involved were discussed at some length by Lemnitzer and British Defense Minister Peter Thorneyefoft inOttawa last week. In Today's Press !!be comply with a federal judge’s summons to court. motorists. The Williams Lake residents had already dug a 50-foot trench, about four feet deep, in an old stream bed from Maceday to Williams Lake Road. They'd just drilled through cement plug whien work was halt- novelist James Baldwin, singer Lena Home and playwright Lorraine Hansberry among those taking part. Ideal for Spring Sports and earnings set records, and sales in the second quarter are! being sustained. , j 620,001 IN APRIL The auto company president lid that GM delivered 620,000 passenger cars during April andi Red Flops Report evidence of k Russ space flops, deaths : p -PAGE 12. K Foreign Aid Rock bottom is one b £ lion under JFK request— I PAGE 13. I Sugar Warnings { Agriculture Dept, warns I ‘‘specqlative bubble” to ! burst-PAGE 12. Astrology ,14 Bridge 14 Church News ... 9-11 1 Comics 14 1 Editorials 4 Home Section 15-18 i ObitOaries 19 1 Sports 26-21 Theaters 1M3 TV & Radio 27 / Wilson, Earl 27 y Women's Page ..8 1 ■ ^ The segregationist governor, himself a former stale judge, was ordered yesterday by U.S. District Judge Seytoura H. Lynne yto appear in Birming- ^_______________________^ ham for a June 3 injunction ithe first 20 days of May, nearly bca*’*"g- ____^.000 more IhmJhtsimjJar . , , , . , „ Lynne set tlie bearing on a Jus-' ed before water be^n to flow, Department petition for in- Truck sales for this year are; junctive restraint of Wallace, whoi®''®'' ^OO.OOO. an increase of 14 has vowed he will keep NegroeslP®*^®®"* ‘ of the University of Alabama.' GM last year had a profit of High of 72 Expected Sunday Spring'sports enthusiasts should find tomorrow’s weather forecast agreeable. Partly cloudy skies and mild temperatures are foreseen. A high of 72 is predicted. NEW YORK (AP)-Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy met yesterday with several prominent Negroes: reportedly to discuss ways of combating racial, discrimination in the North. A Justice Department spokesman in Washington confirmed that Western diplopiats said the visit pulled the Soviet premier out of a political hole. Cas^ and Khrushchev arrived at Khrushchev’s haliday retreat on the Black Sea coast yesterday for a rest. The communique, issued by the Soviet news agency Tass, said Khrushchev accepted “w)jfa grati-ude” Castro’s invitation to visit the first Socialist state |n America.” No date was mentioned. Turning to the defense of Guba,~ the communique added: “In the course of talks between comrades N. S. Khrushchev and Fidel Castro It was confirmed by the Soviet side that if an attack was made on of the com- United SUtes President not to invade Cuba, die Soviet Union will fulfill its intemational duty to the fraternal Cnbaa pe^ and will ropder it the neees-sary aid for the defense of the' freedom and independence 4if thiTCnban republic with all the means at its disposal. The organizers of aggression should remember that an invasion ofcub..inpuc. But tte spokesman said be Knew nothing about another meeting that Kennedy reportedly had with the heads of major hotel chains on the question of racial integration in No showers are expected-at-least until late tomorrow. The outlook for Monday is mattered showers or thimder-showers with little temperature change. The Washington official said the attorney general’s conference with the predominantly Negro group was one of a series he is holding [with civil rights leaders through-;out the country. devastating nuclear missile war.” UJS. CHALLENGES (ABtato Dqiartment spokesman Washington challenged the communique’s reference to a commitment by President Kennedy not to invade Cuba. He said the no-invaskm pledge was offered “fm* sontothing the Russians never delivered—that is, on-site inspection in Cuba” to verify the removal of Soviet “offensive weapons.”) The communique’s hard language and heavy stress on Soviet pledges to aid Cuba agahst The, spokesman did not elabo- ;^y gyack appeared d*«*g‘ml la soothe the stiU-ruffled feelings Waterford Township Justice John E. McGrath, legal counsel for the committee, said he would petition Oakland County Circuit CJpurt Monday to order an injunction restraining anyone from reclosing the drain. “It is illegal for anyone to obstruct a natural waterway,’’ he said. Barry promised, “I will recommend to the board- of supervisors that this stream be opened and controlled” Us part of an over-all study of lake level conditions. Winds today are mostly south-southeast at 5 to 15 m.p.h. The lowest temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 40. At 2 p.m. the mercury measured 69. The New York Times said the I meeting, held at an undisclosed Manhattan location, w'as attended by a dozen Negroes and several iwhite persons, j GROWING TENSION of Castro at the withdrawal of Soviet missiles last fall. In Waterford Township Set Water Project Timetable The missile pull back apparently figured prominently in the Cas-tro-Khrushchev talks. Western «d>- 1 . , , , servers here have called Cuba one Accordmg to the newspaper, thei^ the tenderest spots in Khrush-Igroup reportedly told Kennedy Uhev’s poUtical armor {that an “explosive situation” had ★ * * ■ mracerelatiois iff thel to,, . ... t. t -______________ It it was. potentially at ^ ^ iorts to woo Castro over the past month have paid off. The con- Construction contracts on thej about a year after work begins, 17-million first phase of Water- Seeterlin said, ford Township’s proposed central Paper Hikes Prices DETROIT oW-The Detroit Free Press announced price increases yesterday, effective Monday. The week-day daily edition will water system will probably be awarded by February, according to Township Supervisor James Seeterlin, All existing piping will be utilized, Seeterlin said. Specified in this phase of the over-ail $12-miilion program arei Inability to sell revenue bonds a desired interest rate and the Financing is expected to be provision that the township must Numerous roads throughout the h^ied through 30-year general (^pect one and one-half times the township will be torn up on one obligation bonds with the Oakland ^ reouirements each vear ®*ies at 50 of-Heart Attack Union Lake Man Hurt in Car Mishap A 50^year-old Union Lake mUn was injured last night when The car he was riding in went into a skid aikl hit a fence in Commerce Township. NEW YORK (AP) - Orville Dryfoos M president and ]^b-| f Commerce lisher of the New York T^s, U^g^ jg Pontiac General Hos-From the base camp came new|died today in the Columbia Pres- 3 ^grtebra. details of Wednesdays unprece-byterian Medical Center, of ai*^Tj,g ^g^ pgy, jj dented feat. ^ heart attack. Williams, 20, of 8175 Commerce Hornbein. who wilh Ui^d Dryfoos entered the hospital onij^gj^ „gg ^ggtgj in- “,1^ h^ftoj April 15 for rest from heart strain. I jgjies j,e told police he did not ridge, said they Hg became president of the know what haoDened 2-Car Crash Injures Pair unconquered west ridge, said theyj He became president of tne ^hat happened to make chmb^ p^t of the way in Com-T-jnjgs 1957 succeeding his ^im lose control of the car. munist-held Tibet. I father-in-law, Arthur Hays Sulz- ----------------- 5 revealed a butane cook- jberger. He became publisher two 'lyears later. U.S. Retains Walker Cup A Pontiac Township t e e p- the summit by the south rTdge. WITTY NOTE ager and Waterford Township: ‘ burned their beardsl On becoming pr&ident, he reman are in satisfactory condition L|f .. Dyhrenfurth said. ' ceived a congratulatory and witty terfay at Pontiac General ^s- ^h^y jj,e 29,028-foot'note from Sulzberger, who re- TURNBERRY, Scotland (PI - pital with injuries suffered in a pggk at 8 a.m. and arrived at called that he himself had sue- The United States retained the head-on auto collision on West 3.39 p ^, I cefeded his father-in-law, the late Walker Cup, emblematic of Walton last night. ★ « « . Adolph S. Ochs, as publisher. | world amateur golf supremacy, . . * * I Oyhrenfurth said that Bishopl Dryfoos participated in some of:when Bob Gardner of Elssex The injured drivers wr^om-jand Jerstad, while on the way the negotiations in the 114-day I Falls, N.J., defeated Mike Uint, kr®' I ’ u’ 1 by foe south ridge. New York City newspaper strike 3 and 2, and gave the American and ^rse L. Hazelett, 33, of 2276 53,^ Hornbein and Unsoeld ap-{that ended March 31 but the chief team an insurmountable 11-6 Newberry. j preaching the top from foe west negotiator on the management edge today in the two-day corn- ridge. side was Amory.H. Bradford, vice [petition. Four matches were not Bishop and Jerstad wait^ for president and general manager of yet completed. Waterford Township police said ^ _______ the accident occurred just east;throt’her tMmlor severa^^ of Huntington Park at aboutjUnsoeld and Hornbeirt" reached the Times. 11:20. Both drivers were alone. On N-Forc© the summit at 6:30 p.m. and descended to meet the others. DarYness clbs^ in and, unable to find camp 6, they spent the night in the open—without tents or sleeping bags. M B^sidents of Lake Oakland • •'* ’ - 5i Heights As.sociation contend that <7' 47 Mllwauki City Oaa Ttar Aca la FtaUac Hlcbnt temperatura .. .. ..... Loweit Umperatura ............ Mean temperature ............. Weather—Mottly tunny 71 foe tank, if located in the Walton-New Yofa''‘64 M Main area, would depreciate their Philadelphia 54 40 prooertv Values. Phoenli *5 60. e Ore. 55 45 i ’n>e association has anthor-7? *’> Ized its attorney to take neces-sary steps to baiLthe erection of a tank in their area. Some large, sparsely populated mas^mllte township 1^ affected by the first phase of the next December, water program. i ^ 55 63 Phoenli 10 54 Ptlan - 72 55 Ptlan 75 54 Reno . . 75 52 Bt. Loul! 51 45 60 30 8 Uke City 70 * 70 40 Fran. 55 51 BeatUe .. .. 50 30 Wathlngton 57 47 These talks will continue now, ♦ * * I This Warmadeknovrn by rank-foP-ran*tfog American officials! u .. . Residents living in eight sec-'ing U.S, officials when foreign Washington hopes that ^ m order to lions of foe southwest portion of and defense ministers of the 15- much will be done before De- uinans tne w^ NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers are forecast for tonight for the most of the northern and central Plains into the middle and upper Mississippi Valley and ex* teepne western Ohio Valley with a fe# scatter^ light showers posstUe over parts of the northern Rockies.'jColda* weather will move into the northern Plains and tipper Mi^issii^i Val-Iqr and parts of the western Plains. From the eastern Plains io tfie AflqDtic, paiUer tenqieratures will prevail. Ask NATO Ideas OTTAWA (AP) — The United: The multilateral issue was not States expects its allies to come: officially the agenda of the Ot-forth with constru^ve ideas con-lj3„3 ceming the proposed multilateral' „ .■ nuclear force for the North' At-j‘*a¥-UM«icial^y4tWMoneof the 1Y,.!y__nre!ni»lion ~ ^ the NATO (founcil meets in Paris vate taffis between the fiiihlsters. One of the changes during Dry- The Americans, trailing 6-3 after yesterdV’s play, took^aU-' foos’ regime at the Times was^^ this establishment last year of a West- morning and dominated the em edition, published in Los An-|afternoon singles as well. (See geles. [earlier story Page 20.) Nikita Plans to Visit Castro's Red Island (Continued From Page One) . sensus of more than a dozen important dip.Iomats was that of political trouble. The communique said Khrushchev has agreed to alter a trade the tOTvnship are excluded. Also not participating are areas west of Williams Lake and Maceday Lake and a large district north of Jayno Adams School. The toirnship’s ground water source has been termed ade- nation defense organization left cember. Canada’s capital. In three days of deliberationa here toey accepted the integration of NATO’s existing nuclear armaments into an interallied force. , -V.- —--------- The interallied force tea modest qaate.for water supply in the ifirst step,"the United States be- fg the idea, and the Germans, foreseeable fotore^________ 1**®''®?:: **“‘^*' ®*’®“*‘* *®®** tbeltf^ugh originally baffled by the .JraT'-™ ---------------------n:.-!—.1 ... As things stand today, the United States has the backing of two major NATO powers, Britain and Germany. The British, U S. officials noted, have wanned up price of sugar, now about $280 i a ton. This means the Russians will take over to some extent the support the United States gave pre-CAstro Cqba by supporting the price of its prime crop. Eventual water service from I «sfog surface ships in; the Detroit system is at least 10 ®! ‘h®^“'Istead of submarines, now support years awav Seeterlin said' I*’®™*® meeting of Paesident Ken-, the U.S. jilah wholeheartedlv. ^ ^ ' * nedy’and British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan last December. Whether the township ever ties'. into this supply line would have AKMfcu i-L.E.H i Flint Central -Hits PCH for 2nd Season Shutout little material effect on the water system cost, the supervisor said. It uKmU ifierely be a matter of connecting township system [to the Delroff lipe. This would consist of a fleet of 25 surfoce vessels with a total of 200 Polaris missiles, manned by niixed crews and financed by the participating nations. Flint Cenfral this morning shut out Pontiac Central, 3-9, L I for the second time this season. * France, however, remains op-1 it was the opening game of a posed to the idea and French wisner Stadium donbleheader. sources stress that to believe President Charles de Gaulle would change his mind in this respect is. as one of them put it: naivejself-deception. f Paul Kiasloit hurled a three-hitter to defeat the chiefs. Lefty Paul Oliver yielded three nneamed rnas to lose hit first start of the season. HEALTHY SQUALL — Salk polio vaccinations were given migrant farm laborers who come; to work in Oklahoma. The . health department took dwt clinics to the workers at a labor camp near Bixby this week. The girl’$ mother holds a card showing the shots were received. ' > f '/f THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, MAY 55, 1963 , TIIRE^ Author*Edu^qtor Diet MTODLEBURY, Vt (AP)~Dr. Frank E. Howard, M, author and educator, died Thuraday of heart attack. „ CCJMPIETE OPTICAL SCUVICt PONTUC MAU OPnCALCINTR Qua iiie« *tin!ia Mi-im SIBtfr REBINDING. S$ CHRISTIAN LITERATURE ?? SALES jj: 39 Oolclond Av. FE 4-9591 Mt Everest? Phdoey! SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. (,A]P) — The mountains between Victorville and San Bernardino can’t compare with Mt. Everest, but climber Cliff Adair took a handicap. > He tried to nuke the 100-mile trip on roller skates. him in Big Bear City, the fog slowed him for a time and sore feet finally stopped him for good in Running Springs—ZD- miles from his goal. The 24-year-old skating instructor rolled out of Victorville Thursday. His destination: San Bernardino; his route: the freeway winding through the mountains. The Highway Patrol detoured ing the 1963-64 season. Reverend to Sing Opera WUPPERTAL, Germany (UPD-The Rev. Helge Bickeland has been granted a year’s leave so he can sing lead bass with the Wuppertal Opera Company dur- stting 'XRAMPED" At Your House? ADIHHIOOM ROVYOUTL NO MONEY DOWN - FINANCING ARRANGED TO SUIT YOUR NEEDSl * Dormers • Family Rooms e Recreation Rooms FREE PLANNING • FREE ESTIMATES 7 YEARS TO PAY-NO PAYMENTS TILL FALL 10 SIMMS IS OPEN Tonite 'til MONDAY STORE HOURS ARE 9 o.m. to 10 p.m. P.M. PARK FREE in City Meter Lots PoBllaa ^r«> Phot* SEEKING CAI TITLE — Five* contestants are vying for the title of CAI Queen. Reviewing contest regulations wiUi CAI director Robert Bauer are (from left seated) Carol Morris and Nancy Doimer and (from left sUnding) Judy Stranahan, Julane Ihrke and TWary Hickman. The winner will be crowned June 16, the final day of the 19th annual Free Fair of the Waterford Township community center. Get Salary in Silver HOLLAND GYl—Some 490 employes of the H. J. Heinz Co. plant here jingled 30,000 silver dollars yesterday as they Titan 2 Missile Passes Test Two Charged for Contributing to Dem Party MOUNT CLEMENS - TWo CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) men charged with an illegal ■The Titan 2 missile has passed a j 11,000 contribution to the Dem-key flight test in its development jocratic party were free on |500 America’s most powerful mili-jbond today pending examination An armored delivery truck carted in some 1,900 pounds of the coins for the payday by which t h e plant sought to illustrate, its contribution to Holland's economic well being. Its payroll last year was more than ^ million. Heinz workers, normally paid by check, will be paid in $2 bills next week to continue the demons tralionr Iowa grows oats on less than one^sixth of its land but is a chief pro^cer. the Gemini two-man spacecraft. One of the 10-story-tall rockets smacked a target more than 6,500 miles down range Friday and the Air Force called the launching completely successful. I Recent Titan 2 rockets have been plagued by second stage propulsion troubles, Changes were made in a suspected area in Friday’s missile and a project official said the corrective .measures worked fine. Engineers also made fixes aimed at further reducing missile vibration during the Gemini flight which is scheduled late next year. The pair, Edmund Pawlega of Roseville and Peter Hodges of Hazel Park, stood mute yesterday to the high misdemeanor charges before Macomb County Justice Francis A. Castelucci. NEED A HELPING HAND with your HOME BUILDING? SeeJJi^out A Helpful HOME LOAN When* you're planning to build or buy your dream home, stop in and talk with one '~ofl5inHriendly-«ismselpr^ in our private counselling rooms. We'll do our best to orronge procticol fmoncing^ryour——-- _____" .■_________ We fwl that home*ownership is a strenghtening factor inIhe community and ^uld be encouraged to the best of our business ability. Your application will receive prompt, personal att^tion . . . a speedy committal. Oakland County*$ Largeit Mortgage Lending Inatitution 761 W. HURON-PONTIAC __________St,—Pontme 407 Main Sfioat—RocItMtar ' 1102 W. Mopl* Rd.-Wail«