Th0 W^erfhmr THE PONTIAC VOL. 124 , — NO. 109 ’ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1966—38 PAGES UNITEO^^M^M^TERNATIONAL 10« Bond Issues Passed Pontiac OKs Transfer; Waterford Splits Township Approves 2 Bond Proposals By JOE MULLEN Waterford Township School District voters yesterday approved bond issues to construct a new high school, elementary school and numerous school additions, but left school administrators without funds to operate the facilities. In addition, school board incumbents Eldon C. Rose-gart and Norman L. Cheal were returned to office as a third candidate Lewis S. Long failed in a bid for one of the two seats at stake on the board. Approved was a $5,975,000 bond issue for additions and improvements to existing buildings as well as furniture and equipment fw these new facilities. Also approved was a $4.8 million proposition to erect, furnish and equip a new high school and elementary school and to acquire and improve school sites and site additions. Rejected by the voters were a $^,000 bolding proposal to erect, furnish and equip an au- RQSEGART ditorium as part of the new high school building and a $400,-000 issue to build, furnish and equip a swimming pool in the same building. ★ ★ ★ Also turned down was a one-mill tax limitation increase for a six year period from 1968 through 1973 for operating the new high school and elementary school. RETURNED TO VOTERS Since these schools would not be ready until 1968, the millage proposal could be returned to the voters either next June or early In 1968 and still provide the needed operating funds if it passes. It lost by only 85 votes in yesterday’s election, 8,411 to 2,471. Supt. of Schools Dr. Don 0. Tatroe expressed mixed emotions on the voting. “We are pleased with the (Continued on Page 2, CM. 6) Waterford Results (Unofficial Totais) Board of Education (Top Two Elected) Rosegart.......................^.....2,671 Cheal ...............................2,627 Long ................................2,124 Ballof Proposals $5.9-MILLION BOND ISSUE (Addition, and improvemant, to Misting facilities) YES .................................2,704 NO ..................................2,177 14.8-MILLION BOND ISSUE (New high school, atementary school and school sites) YES .................................2,683 NO ..................................2,193 $625,000 BOND ISSUE (New high school auditorium) YES .................................1,977 NO ..................................2,814 $400,000 BOND ISSUE (Swimming pooi) YES .................................1,818 NO ..................................2,962 MILLAGE PROPOSAL (One mlK to operate new facilities) YES ............................... 2,411 NO ..................................2,476 Ballots cast ....................... 4,900 Registered voters...................23,000 980 to Receive Diplomas Diiriomas will be awarded to 980 graduates in commencement ceremonies at Pontiac’s two public high schools tomorrow and Thursitey. An 8 p. m. commencement to. morrow is scheduled for the 438 students graduating from Pontiac Northern High School. Paattae CcaSral High SchoaPs daas of Jaw 1881- ^ atiMLiWtay. Dr. Harold E. Sponberg, Eastern Michigan University presi-doit, will deliver the Pontiac Nortiiem commencement a d-dress in the auditorium of the sdiool. His topic will be “The Becoming Journey.’* Speaker for Pontiac Central’s commencement at Wisner Memorial Stadium wUl be Dr. David E. Molyneaux, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Flint. His address is entitled “Barbarians At the Gates.’’ BOYS’ GYMNASIUM In case of rain, the Central ceremony will be held in the boys’ gymnasium of the school. Each speaker wU be introduced by Monroe M. Osmun president of the Pontiac Board of Education. Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. WhHmer will present dhdomas to Srad$|ptes of both scho^ RUN OCC TALUES - Tabulating a set of returns in yesterday’s Oakland Conununity College Board of ’Trustees race are (from left) Mitchell Tendler, OCC community reiations director; Presi- dent John E. Tirrell; and Mrs. Ernest Kaiser, secretary to the board. An unofficial election information center was set up at the college’s administration building in Bloomfield Township. 2 New Members Elected to OCC Board Two new members were elected to the Oakland Otxmnunity College Board of ’Trustees and one incumbent was defeated in a reelection bid in yesterday’s, school balloting. Taking seats on the board for the first time will be Ralph F. Tyndall of Royal Oak, who won a 4-year term, and Gordon Henderson of Beverly Hills, who took a 2-year term. Board Treasurer Vernon M. Fitch, 43, of 2950 Middlebory, Bloomfield Township, was the only incumbent candidate not returned to the board. All of the six trusteeships were put on the ballot yesterday for two 2-year terms, two 4-year terms and two 6-year terms. ♦ A ★ The board was organized two years ago when Oakland County voters approved a one-mill tax to operate the college. Five of the six original members yesterday were amcmg the Sunny, Cool Weather Will Follow Rain There’s a chance of more showers late this afternoon or evening with skies cloudy through the night. Low temperatures will fall into the mid-50s. Hie weatherman forecasts sunny and slightiy cooler tomorrow with highs reaching 88 to 74. Partly cloudy and mild is the prediction for Thursday. ★ ★ ★ Today’s west to northwest winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour will continue. RAIN COUNT Rain falling throughout the day and night measured .6 of an inch. The low in downtown Pontiac was 58 at 7 a.m. The mercury had edged up to 67 by 1 p.m. 14 candidates for new terms. The sixth, Frederick A. Chapman, said he would not seek reelection because he was moving to New York. With 27 of the county’s 29 school districts reporting, results appeared clear. Holly and North Oxford districts, with relatively small tunrouts had no tabulations by 11 a.m. today. The unofficial tally gave incumbents George R. Mosher and Mrs. Lila R. Johnson the two 6-year terms by healthy margins over the single challenger, Thomas J. McGee. ★ ★ ★ From the 27 districts reporting, Mosher received 15,355 votes, Mrs. Johnson 14,305 and McGee 12,230. BOARD CHAIRMAN Chairman of the board since its inception, Mosher has been a General Motors Corp. attorney for 12 years. He lives at 551 Mohegan, Birmingham. Mosher, 44, is a graduate of Colombia Law School and was a law instructor at New York University before joining General Motors. Mrs. Johnson, 39, of 12725 La- LI’L ONES ‘‘Let’s not tell Dad it’s broke. l^’U try to fix it.” Compilation ’ of Results in • OCC Races Here are the results in yesterday’s balloting for Oakland Community College Board of TYustees. The two candidates receiving the most votes for each term are elected. All figures are unofficial until certified by the OCC Board of Canvassers. 6-Year Terms Mosher .........15,355 Johnson ........14,395 McGee ............ .12,230 4-Year Terms Anderson........10,485 Tyndall ........ 9,270 Robinson ........8,733 Fowler ..........8,018 Fitch .......... 7,443 2-Year Terms Hackett ........11,915 Henderson ......19,999 Ballard..........9,473 Gell ...^........5,161 Nick . ;.........4,134 Czubiak ........ 3357 ....*.....""jgi.... Police Quell Chicago Riot CHICAGO (AP) - Police fought with more than 1,000 rioting Puerto Ricans last night in the second straight night of violence on (3iicago’s Nortiiwest Side. ,★ ★ ★ Seven Puerto Ricans were shot and wounded and 37 more were arrested before the rioting was brought under ccmtrol early today, police said. Police said one of the men was shot when he threw a fire bomb. Police officials said the other six apparently were hit by stray .bullets. ★ * ★ Hospital authorities had no count of the injured who were treated. STORES LOOTED Looting was reported in some stores in the area, where pdice ordered stores closed for the night. Glass from broken st(H% windows littered the streets where Puerto Rican youths walked with signs charging police brutality. i Puerto Rican spokesman (Continued on Page^ Cot. 6) Anderson, Mibalek Win in City By PAT McCARTY Pontiac School District voters yesterday handed William H. Anderson a four-year term on the board of education while returning incumbent Mrs. Elsie Mihalek to office for a third term. Five per cent of the district’s estimated 40,000 registered voters went to the polls to elect two board m e m b e r s and approve a transfer-of-funds propo-ition. A total of 2,073 ballots were cast. According to the unofficial tally, Anderson won 1,074 votes and Mrs. Mihalek 1,049. ★ ★ A Unsuccessful candidates for the two four-year terms were James R. Stelt, 40, of 261 Ottawa, 862 votes; Mrs. Susan L. Miller, 26, of 900 S. East Blvd., 745; and Victor L. Smothers, 47, of 203 Wolfe, 268. OK TRANSFER The board of education was given the authority to transfer Salle, Huntington Woods, is secretary of the board, ★ ★ ★ A graduate of the University of Illinois, she is employed as editor and publicity director of the Women’s City Club of Detroit. WOMEN VOTERS _ Mrs. Johnson is a member of the Oak Park-Huntington Woods League of Women Voters. Elected to 4-year terms were Tyndall and incumbent Earl M. Ander^n, 52, of 30159 Palmer, Madison Heights. Anderson won 10,485 votes and Tyndall 9,270 from the districts reporting. Unsuccessful candidates were Thomas W. Fowler Jr., 40, of 421 Lynch, 8,018; Harold J. Robinson, 34, of 139 Lakeside, Royal Oak, 8,733; and Fitch, 7,443. ★ ★ ★ Anderson is a former employe of the AFL-CIO Council who presently is unemployed. A high school graduate, he attended college for two years. Tyndall, 64, of 2436 Shenandoah, Royal Oak, retired last (Continued on Page 2, 0)1. 8) Returns in Pontiac Are Listed (Unofficia) Figurei) BOARD OF EDUCATION (Top Two Elected) Anderson -----1,074 Mihalek.......1,049 Stelt.......... 862 Miller......... 745 Smothers...... 268 FUND TRANSFER PROPOSAL YES............ 851 NQ........ ... 236 Ballots cast . > 2,073 Reg. voters . .40,000 Four Districts OK Operating Tax Increases Levy Renewals Gain Approval in 3 Areas; Swimming Pools Lose By JAN KLOUSER Bond issues totaling $23,913,100 were approved in separate ballot issues in five area school districts yesterday. Voters in four of the districts —Huron Valley, West Bloomfield — Clarkston and Farming-ton — also voted in operating tax increases. Tax renewals were approved in Huron Valley, West Bloomfield and Avondale. Swimming pool proposals were turned down in Huron Valley and Clarkston. Huron Valley The largest bond issue, $7,633,-100, was approved by Huron Valley voters, 1,412 to 1,114. The money will be used to build two 20-room elementary schools, two 22-room elementary schools, an addition to the high school, a central administrative office, to develop existing school sites and to purchase new junior high ANDEJRSON MRS. MIHALEK some $57,200 from debt retirement funds to its building and site fund by a 851-236 vote. Anderson, 53 of 2281 Ostrum, Waterford Township, is a former Pontiac School Board president. Last year he was beaten in his bid for a third term on the board by Dr. Robert R. ’Turpin. ★ ★ ★ Anderson is owner and operator of the C & W Pattern Manufacturing Co. CENTRAL GRADUATE He has lived in Pontiac since 1915, when he moved here from Oshawa, Ont., and is a graduate of Pontiac Ontral High School. Mrs. Mihalek, 44, of 1592 Vinewood was president of the Pontiac Council of PTAs in 1956-58. 26 YEARS A Pontiac resident for 26 years, she headed the Malkim Elementary School PTA in 1950-52, the Madison Junior High School PTSA in 195930 and the Pontiac Northern High School PTA in 1962-63. Her husband, William, is a millwright at Pontiac Motor Division. It will also pay for additional school sites, renovaticxis and additions to Highland Junior High, heating system improvements at Duck Lake Elementary School, For Other Area School District Results, See Page A-4 refunding of a 1957 bond issue and contingencies. ★ ★ ★ In order to pay off the bonds, taxpayers will pay a total of 7 mills for bonded indebtedness— an increase of 1.94 mills or $1.94 per $1,000 of assessed valuation over the present levy. ADDITIONAL MONEY If the district needs additional money to pay off the bond issue, it can borrow from the State School Bond Loan Fund. The 7-mill operating tax increase for three years was approved, 1,434 to 1,144. It brings the total operating levy to 23.70 mUls or $23.79 per $1,009 of assessed valuation. Voters approved renewal of a 3-mill operating tax, 1,459 to 1,127. The 3 mills will expire in 1968. * -k * A $650,000 swimming pool at the high school was turned down, 1,357 to 1,173. W. Bloomfield Township West Bloomfield School Dis-(Continued on Page A-4, Col. 1) In Today's Press Bosch Charges Fraud claims not likely to stir violence — PAGE B-12. Primary Fight Veteran Illinois solons face challenges — PAGE B-9. Area News ..........A-l Astrology ...........C-4 Bridge ..............C-4 - de ...C-U .............C4 .......C4 Spmt$ ............C-1-04 nentars .............B-N TV-Radto PnpuM CJ8 WIlNii, Enri..........on m: • BlAB Trouble Is Steep for Steeplejack I EAST LANSING (AP) - A steeplejack, who spept five hours overnight in a rainstorm trapped in a barrel at-tached to a guy win|(250 feet above ground, said today he is going back up as soon as he' dHes out. “It was a lousy way to spend the night,” said Sam Schreiber, 58, of nearby Leslie. “I’m cold and wet.” I He was not injured. In a dramatic rescue, hampered by rain, wind and communications problems, fellow steeplejack Bob Fin-ley, 38, of Eaton Rapids, climbed the tower and freed Schreil^r’s tangled hoist ropes. Both men descended I safely in barrels designed to take them, up and down the guy wires. The two self-employed steeplejacks were hired to clean H and repair the tower at radio station WKAR, educational broadcasting outlet of Michigan State University. , ★ ★ ★ * Schreiber, hired by Tower Builders Co. of Angola, Ind., ^ for the three-week maintenance job, said he would be back ’ on t|ie tower today. I GOT A UFT Schreiber climbed into the barrel and was lifted up the C guy wire about 2 p.m. yesterday. It was 9 p.m. when he : learned he was trapped. Other lines used to hoist the bar-, rel had become entangled with the guy line. ^ Newton said Schreiber was unable to free the lines (because of grease on the guy wire, buffeting winds and rain, which made everything slick. Schreiber had a radio, Newton said, but it was too large to operate in the storm. ★ ★ ★ > “They communicated by hand signals for awhile,” I said Newton, “but communications were difficult.” V Finally, Finley climbed 600 feet up the 1,000-foot tower I and lowered himself, in another barrel, down the guy line ^ to Schreiber's side. The two men were able to free I Schreiber’s barrel by 2 a.m. and both men were lowered I to safety. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 14, 1966 II Ky Gels Tough With Buddhists N Guns, Gas, Arrests Quell Demonstrations Power Project Bill Is Signed WASHINGTON-(AP) - President Johnson signed today a bill designed to make Grand Coulee Dam on the Columbia River the largest hydroelectric power project in the world. The $398-million authorization measure provides for a third power plant that eventually will add 3.6 milliozn kilowatts to the two-million kilowatt capacity of the iN'esent installations. ★ ★ ★ At the same time, Johnson sent Ckmgress a request for |3 million to start construction at once. At a ceremony in the White House rose garden, Johnson brought together representatives of Canada, the private and public power industry, members of Congress, and administration officals. Landlocked Moscow is sometimes called the “Port of Five Seas.” Canals and rivers link the Soviet capital with the Caspian, Azov, Baltic, Black and White Seas. Senator Sees Action Today on Safety Bill WASHINGTON (AP)-Sen. Warren G. Magnuson says he hopes for Senate Commerce Committee approval today of a bill requiring establishment of mandatory federal safety standards for cars. ’ However, other committee sources said such action today is extremely doubtful, if not impossible. “There are just too many issues still to be discussed,” one said. The committee, headed by Magnuson, completed its hearings April 6 and is considering a revised version of part of the safety legislation urged by President Johnson. The Washington Democrat said he expects the committee to approve a bill requiring establishment of safety standards. Johnson asked only that the secretary of commerce be given authority to act. Magnuson said the committee had reached tentative agreement on the general outlines of the proposed legislation but last-minute work was being done on details of the revised draft. The Weather SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Government security forces, with orders to give no quarter, iaid virtual siege to the Buddhist Institute today. With pistol shots and tear gas charges they choked off dozens of demonstrations after a mob burned three Jeeps and grabbed two submachine guns from American Military Police. One of the vehicles destroyed in Saigon was a U.S. Military Police Jeep. It was burned by an angry mob of 3,000 Buddhists. Rangers and riot police beat them back. Told to arrest draft-aged demonstrators on the spot and send them off to military service, troops and riot police carted away scores. Some wf ‘ clubbed, kicked and beaten. ★ ★ ★ Four hundred miles away the north, the chief of Premier Nguyen Cao Ky’s Buddhist antagonists, Thich Tri Quang, was in the seventh day of an anti-American, antigovernment hunger strike. An aide said his condition was “weakening and very serious.” A clandestine Buddhist radio, believed to be in Hue pagoda, said Quang’s heart beat had become irregular. KONTUM PLATEAU On the military front, chief interest remained centered om the battle of American and South Vietnamese troops against North Vietnamese regulars on the Kontum plateau of the central highlands. A U.S. spokesman said 465 of the enemy were known dead. The U.S. toll was reported to be less than a tenth that. Using radar guidance, two U. Navy F4 Phantom jets intercepted two Communist propeller planes over the North Vietnamese coast before dawn today and possibly shot one down with a Sparrow missile, a Navy spokesman reported. He said the pilots observed an explosion after the missile was fired and only one enemy contact remained on the radar screen of the guided missile frigate Coontz patroling in the Gulf of Tonkin. ★ ★ ★ Intelligence sources said another North Vietnamese regiment had crossed from Laos into the central highlands where U. S. paratroopers combed jun-gled ridges for other North Vietnamese regulars they have battled for a week. The reports said the estimated ,000 fresh troops could be trying to reinforce the battered remnants of North Viet Nam’s 24th Regiment or about to begin an offensive of their own under cover of the monsoon rains. One theory was that the Communists were planning to seize a provincial capital such as Kontum City to provide a showplace base for the National Liberation Front, the Viet Cong’s political arm. . Birmingham Area News Crackdown Is Promised on Traffic Sign VioMors eao't itagleW* JEEP OVERTURNED - Youthful demonstrators overturn a South Vietnamese jeep in Saigon yesterday during an antigovernment protest led by Buddhist monks. AP WIrwMwta Girl at left is shown holding a box of matches just before the jeep was set on fire along with an American military jeep. 'Reds Hope to Win With Aid of Dissent' DENVER, Colo. (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said today the Communists are relying on dissent within the Unit^ States and in allied countries to force a change in American policy and bring them victory in Viet Nam. But Rusk said “they will find that they are mistaken. When Hanoi realizes that its aggression will not be allowed to succeed, there will be peace." * ★ ★ In a talk prepared for the 57th convention of Rotary International, Rusk also called again for unity among members of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. STRONG LANGUAGE Using stronger than usual language, Rusk said “there is no prospect for resolving ultimately the problems that divide Europe if Western Europe is once Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Showers ending this morning. Becoming partly cloudy cooler and less humid this afternoon with a chance of showers hy late afternoon or evening. Highs 72 to 78. Partly cloudy and slightly cooler tonight, lows 50 to 56. Wednesday sunny and slightly cooler, highs 68 to 74. West to northwest winds 10 to 15 miles. Thursday outlook: Partly cloudy and mild. lOlST AIRBORNE U. S. planes scattered 80,000 surrender leaflets over the battle area and one of the six prisoners taken in Operation Hawthorne had a leaflet on him. LowMt 1*mptr»*ur» prtc«ding S Om Ymt At* in Pwitlic Dlruetten: W*it I Velocity 7 m.p.h. Weather: n Wednesday at ]:43 a Highest temperatur* Manday's Tamparatura Chart ! Alpena 7t 57 Fort Worth lEscanaba (1 54 Jacksonville Gr. Rapids 71 60 Kansas City to 56 Houghton 74 54 Los Angeles »0 62 Lansing 79 60 Miami Beach 14 75 . Marquette II 51 Milwaukee M 60 '' Muskegon 72 55 New Orleans 13 73 I Pension 75 49 New York '* t Traverse C. 10 53 Phoenix Albuquerque 93 61 Pittsburgh Atlanta 13 67 SI. Louis Bismarck 66 43 Tampa Boston 62 51 Salt Lake C. Chicago 77 61 S. Francisco I Washington 17 Abandon Hope for Boy Lost in Nevada Region LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -The search for 6-year-old Larry 'Jeffrey, missing for 17 days on snow-capped Mt. Charleston, 35 miles northwest of Las Vegas, has been abandoned. Sheriff Ralph Lamb said calling off the search for young Jeffrey was “one of the hardest decisions I have ever been forced to make.” Larry, who was hard of hear-iing, was dressed only in blue i jeans and a short-sleeved shirt when he wandered away from two brothers during a family picnic on the 12,000-foot mountain. Lamb said several doctors told him the boy could not have lived more than 10 days on the mountain. More than 300 persons participated in the hunt. AP Wlraplwlg NATIONAL WEATHER — It utfH be rainy tonight in New Engittid, the mid and southern Atlantic coastal states, the weatem Gutf region and the extreme southern plateaus. It will be cooler from the Lakes to the Mid-Mississippi Valley and warmer in parts of the central Plains. - » ^ "T Arms Pact Ultimatum Issued by Soviet Union GENEVA (UPI) - Hie Soviet Union today demanded withdrawal of American forces from Viet Nam as the price for any agreement on disarmament. The Russians made die demand as disarmament negotiations resufned after a sii-week recess. again to break up into a large number of free wheeling independent states with each nation clawing for advantage at the expense of its neighbors.” Rusk noted that at last week’s Brussels meeting of NATO foreign ministers “there was some feeling that the danger of war has receded somewhat and that intensified efforts should be made to improve East-West relations and to solve the grave disputes left over from the second World War.” ★ ★ ★ But Rusk quoted Paul Vanden Boeynants, Belgian prime minister, as telling the NATO meeting that beyond the Iron Curtain lie “130 divisions on a war footing supported by 6,000 aircraft and 700 missiles.” GRIM REMINDER Rusk reminded the Rotarians that when one thinks of reduced tensions “we must not forget O'Brien Files for Reelection Seeks 2nd Term as 17th District Senator state Sen. Carl W. O’Brien of Pontiac announced today he will run for a second term in the 17th Senatorial District, which ncludes Pontiac, part of Oakland County and all of Lapeer County. O’Brien of 513 Moore, filed the $100 fee rather h a n petitions with the secre- O’BRIEN tary of state in order to run in the Aug. 2 primary, he said. A Democrat, O’Brien, chairman of the Senate Conservation Committee, said he would run an “independent” campaign based on his Senate record. In addition, he said if elected he would continue to be a full-time legislator with no other outside interests. that five years ago this month we were threatened with war if allied forces were not withdrawn from Berlin.” ★ * * ‘The facts of the world situation,” Rusk said, “require that NATO remains strong and alert. They require that free nations not repeat the tragic errors of the past—that they not nnake one-sided reductions in defense that tempt adversaries to resort once again to force or threats. ★ ★ ★ That they not impair the security which the members of NATO have achieved for themselves and other free nations by their collective exertions, including the investment of more than one trillion dollars in defense since 1947.” Rusk said there should be negotiations between East and West, but “the NATO ministers —at least 14—agreed that there must be a common Western policy.” ‘OBSTACLE’ TO ACCORD He said there is some feeling in Europe—and in the United States—ftat the war in Viet Nam is an obstacle to new accords with the Soviet Union. Chicago Riot (Continued From Page One) said they planned a protest march May from Humboldt Park to City Hall in downtown Chicago. All the windows of a service station were shattered. A segment of the mob overturned a Jeep in the driveway. BIRMIf^GUAM enforcement of traffic si^ vio-lations throughont the city promised by the City Commission last night after it rejected a suggestion to concentrate on one particular area, w ★ Commissioner Ruth McNamee proposed that the northeast section be given top priority, in lieu of additional traffic controls which the police department say are not needed in the area at this time. In a report to the commission, Police Chief Ralph W. Moxley said two surveys of traffic token recently in the area of Adams School Indicate that conditions are nnder reasonable control and similar to other residential areas in the city. The studies were made after area residents complained that a traffic hazard had been created for children playing in the area of the school because of the closing of Oakland between Worth and Adams. rtk Moxley said that it was found in both surveys that 85 per cent of the drivers were traveling well under the legal speed limit. HIGHEST SPEED “Out of approximately 457 vehicles checked, only 21 exceeded the speed limit, with the highest speed being 30 miles per Ingraham also took iawe with 'v complaints that “No Through >' Traffic” violations for westbound traffic through the area were not being fully enforced. WWW “The signs are just intended as a deterrent,” said Ingraham. “I defy anyone to give me a ticket for using a public right of way.” School district voters reelected incumbent Pell , Hollingsbead with 1,923 votes and Elaine Weasels with 1,689 votes to four-year terms in yesterday’s annual school election. Other candidates were incumbent Louise C. Adams with 1537 votes; Herbt L. Ring, 533 votes; and Rose Mary Schneider, 344 votes. Police massed at the intersection of Western and Division, some four blocks from the rally, fired warning shots as rioters threw stones and bottles at the hour,’’ Moxley reported, police car. BOMBS THROWN Police chased the rioters west back to California Avenue where homemade fire bombs were thrown — lighting up the street as gasoline exploded. Blue-helmeted officers, with guns drawn and wielding heavy wooden night sticks, chased this group. Several shots cracked in the air. The seven men were wounded “The “stop” violations that were serious enough to warrant enforcement action, the report noted, were also within reasonable iiniits. It was found that only 52 of 472 drivers conunitted a definite violation of the stop signs during the survey. More than 200 policemen finally put down the riot after seizing dozens who refused to leave when given this ultimatum: “Go home or be arrest-e%oorimi i computer on premiMs. p Budget Tuition . . . 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SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 OBSTACLE REMOVED But one major obstacle to the movement of Ruby’s trial was removed Monday when a Dallas District Court jury ruled that the 55-year-old former strip joint operator was legally sane. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals—the highest court in the state for noncivil cases—had indicated that it would not take up the appeal of the mi conviction until the sanity issue was settled. w ★ ★ Ruby was convicted of murder March 14, 1964, in the same court — Criminal District Court No. 3—that adjudged him sane. The defense, claiming that Ruby was insane, had requested a sanity hearing a month after the conviction. It was repeatedly delayed for various reasons. The Texas appeals court, ordered May 18 that Ruby’s sanity We Design • We Manufodure • We Install • We Guarantee DETROIT (AP) - Harold M. Ryan, former congressman de feated by Lucien M. Nedzi for a second term in 1964, filed petitions Monday as a candidate for Democratic nomination as representative from the 14th Congressional District. Ryan, 55, was a state senator from 1948 1962. BE MODERN WITH NEW KITCHEN CONVENIENCE! . Unique one-handle faucet \ FERRELL, PLUMBING SOLID BRASS Phont: 338-2800 yes! yes! a thous^md times yes! You can get fummertime savings at your Olds E>ealer^ right now! Oldsmobile’s laving season is in full swing! And every day, new owners by the thousands are Rocketing into an Olds-filied summer of driving fiin! Get on over to your Olds Dealer’s and test drive the Olds you like best. Discover how much Oldsmobile cares about the things you care about* Your comfort. Your safety. Your driving satisfaction. See your marest Olds Dealer...the man who has everything for you! DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE, INC. 550 OAKLAND AVENUE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC. 6751 DIXIE HIGHWAY CLARKSTON, MICHIGAN HOUGHTEH # $ONS, 528 N. MAIN milT '' i M ROCHE$mUMI«Hi«AH>.^.«U/ J:' , THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE 1966 '’V ' s''' ' MARKETS Tte foOowIng art top prkaa covCTing gales of locally gpxmn produce by grawm and by than to wbolesale package lots. Quotatiou are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce rauiTS Apples. Dellcloui. Red. bu. Apples. Dellchus. C.A., bu. Apples, Jonattien, C.A., bi Apples, Meclnlosh, bu. Apples. Mecintasb, C.A., t Apples, Norltien< Spy, bu. VtOETABLeS Asparagus, di. belt. ....... Chives, di. bch. Kohlrabi, di. bch.......... Onions, green, di. bch...... Parsiey, Curly, di. bch.... LETTUCE AND GREENS Lettuce, Romaine, t Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-Prlces Mid per pound lor No. 1 live poultry: Roasters heavy type n-V'/i; broHers and fryers 3-4 ■"- DETROIT (API—Egg prices Mid oei doien by first receivers (Including U.S.): Whiles Grade A lumbo 3S-43: extra ...............rge 32-34; —------- -Chicago A ____r steady; Ing prices unchanged; 93 a i; 92 A 65V4,- 90 B 44',^; 19 I 90 B OS'.*; 09 C 64mmission and Oakland County Coordinating Zoning and Planning Committee, the Waterford Township Board last night approved three rezoning requests and rejected two others. The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (APl-FollowIng li J lelecfed slock transoctlons on t York Stock Exchange with noon —A~ Salat GenPrec 1.20 12 S2H S 24 53>/4 52V4 52^4-14 1 13V> 13'/i 13V^ - Vk 43 71’/a 70 71 — % , 131 104Vk 99W 101 - H » Sift SO'A 51 - 4k GenMills 1.40 12 4144 41Vk 4144 I 344k 34 34 - 4k AlcanAlu .90 Allag Cp 10a AllegLud 2.20 x2 11'A im 11'A -f AIMtChal .75 44 40 39'/k 40 + 4 854k 054k S5H -f-37 314k 304k 31 - Am Botch .40 10 2444 244k J iCrySug 1 iCyan 1.2! AmInvCo 1.10 AmNGas 1.10 19 42'A 42V* 42'A 3 184k 1B'/4 1S<4 - 24 17V* 17 17 - 4 5244 524* 5244 + 113 10V4 10 10'* .. 7 42 4144 4144 .. ... T&T 2.20 225 ! Am Tob 1.80 30 3 AmZInc 1.40a 1 3 r 1.40 ......... ...__________________d 3 235-240 lb, 23.50-24.50. . ^ ^ Calves 150. Vealers not established. ArmsCk .... Ashland Oil I AssdOG 1.40 Atchison 1.40 AtICLIne 3a AtIRIch 2.40 Atlas Cp .... 42 88'A 874* 8744 -1-1 Vi 21 14V* 15V* 15'* —1 30 544* 54'* 54'* - • x37 3444 34 34V* -I- ^ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)—Hogs 3 ---------g to 50 higher; 1 " lb 23.75.-34J0; mixed 1-3 190-230 Ibt 24.-L„„ .cattle . ,1,!IWi £ iBabcokW I Balt GE I. Beckman .i BeechAr .71 59 85 8444 85 —B— 23 3IV* 31'* 31V4 Nick 2.80a 25 19V* 89 09 - 4 Pap 1.20a 53 28'* 2744 28 - ' ... T*T 1J5 X4I 714* 714* 714k -I- 4 owaPSv 1.20 5 264k 24'* 24V* BOi^asc choice 900-1,375 Ibt. 23.30-24.50; several loads high choice and prime slaughterlSrl^.. i, ,. heifers 900-1,100 Iba 2SJ0-MJ0; 1,050 Ibt 24.25-25.25. Sheep 1,000; spring tiai mostly 50 loiaer; not established; lughtpr la aughter la laughter i rrlSSiy’V.^ Brunswick Bucy Er 1.40 15 98'* 9744 98'* Treasury Position 20 3244 32Vi 3244 6 17 1444 17 . - 2 21V* 21Vi 21V* + Vk 14 18'A 18 '*•' KayserRo .40 Kennecott 4 Kennecott wl KemCLd 2.40 KerrAAc 1.30 KImbClark 2 Koppert ■ “ Calif Pack WASHINGTON (API—The cash position Icalum Hec of the Treasury compared with corre- CampRL ' e a year a • 9, 1*44 I Camp Soul UjCdnPai 3 4,844,514,391.20 5 8,252,12B,579.14iCaroP LI ... DeposHs Fiscal Year July 1— _ .. Carrier 1.40 123,223J47,976.61 111 JOI,'” ------------------- Withdrawals Fiscal Year- , 134,318,493,055.27 120,320,704,439.26'Cater Ti X—Total Debt— ------- 322J48,I94JI3.24 Gold Assets— 13,532,737J93.44 14,293,004,035.24 CelaneseCp 2 Cent SW 1.50 Cert-tee Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUHTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative Inter-deeler prices of approximately 11 a.m. Inter^lealer markets OevEim 1.5< CocaCola 1.9 Colg Pal .90 rjllinRad .51 CBS 1.20b Citizens Utimies Class A AAonroe Auto Equipment Diamond Crystal ....... Kelly Services ........ Uohtwfc Rubber Co. ... Franks Nursery .......... . 10.4 North Central Airlines Units 8.5 Wyandotte Chamicel 29. MUTUAL FUNDS .30 . 254k 254k 25V* 44 414k 41Vi 414k -f ' 29 72'* 72 72 -F 18 174k 174k 174k -t- 3 204* 204k 204k - Vk 143 42H 42 42 25 29Vk 284k 2841 Keystone Income K-1 .. . Keystone Growth K-2 .. Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust .. Putnam Growth Television Electronics 11.25 14.42 12.54 5 21 20'* 21 . —D— x2 32 32 32 -I- 3 234k 2344 23'* + 14 284k 28V* 284k American Stock Exch. DIamAlk 1.10 I* Dow Chem 2 147 rt'DressInd 1.25 1 4 31Jk 3 83'* 81V* 82'* -114 48 874k 474k - 8k 28'* 274* 274k ' wolet .50 axAAagnel ArkLaGas 1.50 39 4 ouxerower duPonf 2.50( 2|Dgq Lt 1.5( ^ DynamCp 27 188 18444 18744 - Assd OilBG Atlas Cp wt Barnes Eng 74 3 11-14 3 9-14 3 2'* 2'* 2V*-H-14 Cfrywlde Rl^ Data Cont Equity Cp .18t Fargo Oils 11 27Vk 244* ; 2 38k S'* 38* Fly Tiger lilt 133 43V* Otb Oevcl 8 48* Sen Plywd it 51 19'* Giant Yel JOa 23 28 Goldfield 24 28k 0 13<* 13 13Vk+ < AAcCrary # , I 3tk 344 Scurry Reh SM W Air Signal oAa . tSmr R wt S 1V4 IV* 114. 4 144 t 2Vk « 281k II* »Vk 219 188k 24V4 2*'*-l- 4k 48 118k 3144 lUk-t- 8k IJSSTcp-j. Taclinicot JS 4 IlH 1141 — - 13' 444 441 _E— 152 1158k 1128k 1148* 42 13884 137'A 1374* - I tlV* 104* 1044 - 14 39V* 384* 314k -44 19Vi 19 19 - —F— 97 141 145Vi 164V* -2V* FstChii l.tl FI* Pow 1.21 I II ' 424* 4 II n 22 214* a -I- M 3844 394* 39V* 30 3»k a n ForcOair JO GamSko tJO OAcgM IJO OenAnAF .40 Can Xlg i“ «GanDvMm 1 30 5544 544* M 44 G«< ENC 2J0 SI 1088* IWVk IW4* 2 II u 2» _ _ 1088* 118V-----■- 718* 71 yb GarberPd .90 Getty Oil .10c Gillette 1.20 Glen AM .70 Goodrch 2.20 Goodyr 1.25 Granites 1.40 GtAAP 1.20a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West FinI Greyhnd .90 Halllburt 1.70 31 518* 514* 5144 + 11 274* 271* 274*- 2 45 2 291* 29V* »'* -t- 4 398* 398* 39'* 11 478* 478* 474* . - a 1444 14 l4Vk - 4k a 41Vk 41V4 41V* 9 2B44 21V* 2144 IdahoPw 1.30 Ideal Cem 1 IllCenInd 2.40 Imp Cp Am I m* 1784 17'* .. ! 343 340'* 341 -4 I 44 4584 4584 - ' I 45H 45 " (hdt.) Hlfti Law List Chg. taading ( iaichCh J 3 13Vi 138* Revkm 1.30 Rexall .30b Reyn Met .75 19 40H 4784 4784 - 8* 24 348* 34'* 34'* Safeway $1 1 StJosLd 2.40 Sanders .30b f 1.40 Schering 1 Schick SCM Cp .40b Scott PaMr 1 Scab AL 1.80 SearIGD 1.30 "■■burg .40 -.jrs Roe la Strvel SharenStl .80 Shell Oil 1.90 ShellTra .4le .............. 78* 78* -I- ' 4» 008* 79V* 80'* - ' 38 328* 318* 328* + 2 448* 448* 44H - ' 2 52'* 52'* 52V* - 13 21'* 21Vk 21V* - i - — 578* 57'* - ' 3 7 I 308* 30'* SIngerCo 2.20 Smith!' ---- 1 22'* BVi a'* + 9 4784 478* 478*-21 408* 40V* 40'* - 13 5484 S4V4 5484 ... 4 47Vi 47V* 47Vk-l- 2 22V*22V*BV*-l- 19 3Mb 34V* 348* -f 25 30V* 2986 30 - 5 2SV* a 28 - ) 4084 481* 48V*-V* StOIICal 2.50 StOIIInd 1.70 SIOilNJ 1.40e 14 2414 238* 1. 11 a>* 33V4 M'* -t 32 31H 3084 318k -I- 55 478* 67H 478*- a 43V* 42H 43V* + 44 728* 72'* r’- ^ 4 klP* 408* 4 SterlDrug .« StevensJP 2 Sun on Sunray 1.40a Swim Co 2 32 35V* 34'* 35 - ' 34 43 4284 43 -I- ' .............I 34V* — ' '3^ I 53V4 53V4 53'* . ! 17984 179 179 . > SI8k S18k 518* H ! Tampa El .52 ...I lenneco 1J4 Vk Texaco IJOa V* TaxETm 1.0s Vk TexGSul JO Taxasinat .40 ^ TexP Ld ^.35a ir Al 1 13 a 37'* 178k —K— 4 47V4 448k 448k 5 3484 3484 3484 » 1121* 1111* 1118k-11* ----- 3784 3784 -t- 478k ( Korvette I 1.40 Kroger 1.» * 758k 75 a 51<* 51 >1 3 a<* 2S'* a<* + ' 11 19'* 108k 19Vk + > 1 ui* ni* nvi -F ' 17 25V* 2S8k 258k - ' larSleg .40 diPorCam 1 L&Hd * LIvIngsO .43f 2 30'* 30'* MV* -F 15 50'* 50'* 508k -F 1 1184 118k 118k .. 2 75V* 75Vi ........... 42 748k 758k 758k-11* 5 784 784 784 -F 1* 31 638k 42 62 -18k UnItAirLIn 1 UnItAIre 1.40 " litCorp .40a Fruit .35e UGasCp 1.70 LonaSCem 1 LonaSGa 1.12 LongIsLt 1.06 Lorlllard 2.50 LuckySt 1.40b r 1414 14 11 27V* 271* 27V* , . 25 49V4 49 49'* - '* 1 411* 411* 41Vi 12 44Vk 43V* 43V* —M— 14 4384 43'* 431* UnIvOPd 1.40 Mr9nM?r 1 239 248* 88* 24 - ' 8 99V* 588* 59'* -F ' I »8* 29'A 298* ... MaWag 1.40 McOonAIr .1 McDonAIr w WarnPlct .50 WarnLamb 1 WashWat 1.08 WastnAIrL 1 ..... ^ 1;2 Merck IJOa Merritt Chap 4 528* 528* 5284 - ' a 2514 248* 8 -FI 19 av* 32H 328* -F ' 50 781* 7784 71'* - ' X2 848* 048* 8M -F ilaT 32 20284 2008* 20184 -31* TT 1.12 3 23V* 23Vk ai* ■ - —N— NatAIrlln .40 x49 09'* 178* Wl* .... BIse 1.90 Nat Can .50 NCashR 1.20b NatDalry 1.40 ■ ■ DIst 1.40 Fuel 1.40 NatGypi 2b N Lead IJOt NYCent 2.01a NlagMP 1.10 Nvtik Wit 4a 11 318* 388* 3081 27 a avk »* 49'* - 8* —T— 14 278* 27'* 27'* - 2M 114 111'* 112'* -3 S22V* BI* 22% ... 7084 701* 701*-a 208* 2084 2084 ... 1U 101V4 99'* 100% -F . 57 120% 11784 119 -1% 1 17'* 171* 17'* • 17 451* 451* 45'* .. 15 17'A 14% 1484 - V* 101 508* av* 50% - V* 4 41% 41'* 41’* - 257 93V* 90’* 92 - - II B84 a'* 321* - % 17 14 15'* 15'A- 24 a'* 2284 a 2 31% 31'* 31'A -F _u— 5 17'* 17'* 17'* 75 428* 41'* 4184 - The board also okayed a request to rezone from agricultural (ACM) to R-2 property on Elizabeth Lake Road near Dore-mus for construetkm of apartment complexes. REQUEST DENIED Rejected was a request to rezone from AG-2 to extensive (C-3) two lots on the southwest comer of Lochaven and Elizabeth Lake Road for establishment of a coin-operated car wash. Ihe board also denied a request to change the zoning from light industrial (M-1) to general industrial (M-2) five lots on Warren Drive in Fair- 12 53 52'* 52%-'* 12 37'* 37'* 3784 -F '* 4 48'* 47<* 47'* - '* 17 49% 448* 48<* - % i 29% 29'* 29'* -F I 21'* : 32 3384 33 - 7 32% 32'* 32% - % 24 44'* 43% 43% - —w— 15 14% 14'* 14<* . 10 38% 38 38 - I 51'* ' WUnTel 1.4C WestgEl 1.40 Weyertir 1.4( Whirl Cp 1.41 White M 1.4 19 31'* : I 31'* -F I 50% 50'* 50'* - 9 1214 32'* 32'* - 44 238k 23% 23% -F 5ht llO 7 5SVk 35 35 - ..... Rad 1 17 79 771* 71% -FI Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1944 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rafts o _______________________.... ..J quarterly semi-annual declaration. Special — ’ Mymants r are Mantlflad In the extras. b-Annual e—Declared or Mid ____ Is year. (-Payable In stock dui;- Ing 194S, estimated cash value on ex-dIvF 8 arrears, n—New ...............- . -?'a''lli and omlttwl, dtterred or at last dlvMand meeting. rid In 1944 plus stock in stock during 1944, ;alue on ex-dlvMend or ex.{ my is slowing down. The t^ti-mist says it is still growing but at a more moderate and therefore healthier I Among zoning change proposals granted was a request to rezone from small farm (AG-2) to multiple dwelling residential (R-2) and general business (C-2) a parcel at Hospital and Ckxtley Lake Roads for construction of a $3% to $4-million apartment and retail shop development. , Adjacent to Oakland Community College’s Highland Lakes campns, the 23-acre property is earmarked for 210 apartment units, a recreation area, a swimming pool, a putting green and approximately 90,000 square feet of commercial devdopmeht. Also approved was a request to rezone from single family residential (R-IA) to R-2 a parcel of land off Crescent I^ke Road north of M59 for construction of apartment units. Hie pessimist says retail sales! turned down in DAWSON Aixll and May. The optimist' WASHINGTON (AP) Teamsters Union President James R, Hoffa confirmed today that if he goes to prison he intends to resume control of the world’s largest union when he gets out. Without commenting directly on his two federal convictions, Hoffa said he plans to rewrite the union’s constitution to re-stwe himself to power if he be comes “unavailable” for a while. William D. Sheppard of 16320 Locherbie, Birmingham, has been promoted ~~ The appliaant George Bdechum, sought to operate a junk yard on the property. “All ■ want to do is to disassemble automobiles,” he said. In recommending d e n i a 1 of le request, the county coordinating zoning and planning committee had assert^ that a junk yard would be detrimental to the pet^le’s health and safety. Petitions against the proposed rezoning had been signed by 67 nearby residents and by 86 members of a new diurch in the area — the Waterford Township Church of Christ. ROBERT C. PATERSON cIb-Called. x-Ex dividend. y-Ex dl; l«nd and Mim In full. x-dl8—Ex distrit Ion. xr-Ex rights. xw-WIthout wi anti. ww-WItti warrants, wd—Whan d r tha Bankruptcy _______________lod by — .' fn^Foreign' iisua subi panlas. tn—Foreign issu tarast equalization tax. I 31% + Panh EP 1.40 ParamPkt 2 ParkaOav la Paab CmI 1 Pannay 1.50 Pa RR 1.40 Pennzoll 1.4. PepsiCo 1.40 PfIzerC 1.20a PhOlp D 3.40a 11% 1184 1184 v 23 22% 23 215 71% 70 71% 14 34% 34Vk 34% — '4 10 75V4 75 75 - •' *l S% SS- 3 108k 1084 1084 - r 50% 5484 57 -2'* Phlla El 1.41 PltPlata 2.40 Polaroid .20 105 143 I4m 142% -II Procter G 2 20 4S8k 2% 458k 2 7% 7% 7% I 57% STVk S7%- . I97J7-F5 J2 231.51+0.27 . 134J9-0JI 314JI+0.9S Higher grade rail .. Second grade rtl 10 Public utilities 10 Industrials . 83.30-0.03 77.21+0.10 84.29-0.07 13.11-0.09 . 08.80-03)7 Year Ago Ind. RMto UW. J!.-! ,S:i iS-! a*:! !S;) 440.9 171.5 1«J 3)4.4 ..457J 149.1 147.9 113.7 ..jaU 194.5 17M 351.9 451.4 149.3 142J “ Fisher Body Post for Area Resident The appointment of Robert C. Paterson as manager of th service parts activity for Fidier Body has been announced by Keith B. Willoughby, general director of Fisher Body quality standards mid service. Paterson succeeds John J. Flaharty who has been transferred to the General Motors financial staff. An Alfred P. SIomi Fellowabip winner, Patetson, of 2SK Depew, West Bloomfield Township joined Fisher Body to 1942 cot^ierative student at General Motors Institute. He was previously administrator of service parts activitiy. Same Figures Lead to Opposing Views By SAM DAWSON 4P Badness N«ws AaalyM NEW YORK (AP) -^Current perplexing business trends are at least letting you separate the pesaimisti from the optimists. Mostly they use the same sets of figures and come up with different interpretations or presentations. The pessimist says the econo- sajti consutom stUl ait bu more than a year ago. The worrier points to a drop to auto sales and {woductkm.lbe booster says Baton are still fadgb-er than to most prsvious yesrs —and another model year is just around the comer. Tile same divisioa to attitttk determines how you view die latest unemploynmt estimates. You can take alarm that the jobless rate rose in May. Or you can take comfort in the still rising total of those with jobs. The stock market’s steep drop and then its uncertain backing and filling can be viewed as a barometer of stormy weatho* ahead for the eomomy. Or it can be accepted as a healthy cooling of speculative fever. The more conservative-minded will tell you that inflation to here and the fiirest of ^ stiU more to Ss strong as ever. Others will tdl you that dw to-, ftotloa threat haa been curbed by the healthier pace the economy to now setting. Steel orders have been tolling. Some see this as a forerunner d a dull summer for the milb. But others say that udiile auto companies have cut back on orders, other industries are still ordering at a fast clip. And the auto companies are expected to come back to the mills soon with new orders for production of the 1967 model cars. TIGHT MONEY? The pessimist points to tight money as a cause for the doldrums in the housing industry. But the optimist thinks that home building has been following a normal course of adjusting to family formations— with the latter scheduled to rise fast in the remaining years of this decade. May Go to Jail Hoffa Says 1 Shall Return' Hoffa chatted amiably and Business Notes frankly like a man without a worry in the world, dpspite 13 years in pending prison md-tences, in an interview outlining plans for the Teamsters’ July 4 convention in Miami Beach. “It will be a very important convention,” Hirffa said — perhaps the most crucial in his nine stormy years as head of the giant unton. EXPECTS REELECnON Hoffa is expected to be reelected to a new five-year term by acclamation when the 2,200 conventim delegates meet. He spelled out fully for the first time the proposed constitutional change to create a new post of general vice president, or executive vice president. to a newly created post of executive vice president and operation man-of Breech Enterpirses in Birmingham. S h e p pard,________________ formerly gen- SHEPPAIU) manager, has also been elected to the company’s board of directors. The general vice president would automatically succeed Hoffa if he lost his appeals and went to [»ison, or b^ame unavailable for any other reason. If Hoffa again became “available” before the end of his regular five-year term as president, the vice president automatically would step back down for Hoffa to resume his post as union chief —all without a special conventirai or election. William C. N e w b e r g, 1411 Kirkway, Bloomfield Hills, has been installed as the 1966^ president of the Culver Club of Greater Detroit. He is president of the Posi-Trac Safety Tire Ctorp. in Huntington Woods. 2 GOOD REASONS “There are two good reasons for this,” Hoffa said. “First, it costs $2.5 million to $3 million to h^ a convention. Second, a special convention would create the program that you might not have fair representation,” because s(»ne union locals might not have the money to send delegates. Robert B. Cook, treasurer of National Twist Drill and Tool Co., Rochester, has been elected to the company’s board of directors. Cook is a member of the National Oedit Association and National Asso-on of Accountants. He resides with________________ his family at COOK 1455 Stockport in Rochester. John M. H a n 8 0 n, 2330 Garland, Sylvan Lake, is the new president of the American Association of Oedit Counselors. Hanson is president of the Michigan Credit Counsels and a Sylvan Lake city commission- The board of directors of Bank of the Ctomroonwealth has elected Kevin J. Kearney vice pree-ident in diarge of the newly f<»ined customer services department. He will be reqioD-sible for coordination of data processing and] to correqiond-ent banks and businesses. Kearney, his wife, arid fiieir three chUdren live at 2S23 N. Pine Center, West Bloomfield Township. i' C. Wilson of 8424 Buf-ommerce Townsb^, served on « panel dbcussion at a recent meeting of Provident Mutual Life Insurance 0>. of PhUadelphia in Sea Island, Georgia. Wibon, manager of the Detroit group office, dtocussed pension selling. ^ High interest rates are seen as hurting borrowers, especially smaller businesses. But another;^; . view of the tightness of credit to that this curtails some dangerous risk taking and thus helps keep the economy on an even keel. And the man giving to look on the bright side of things is « sure to stress that the savers are profiting from highw interest rates-and furnishing the capital funds that will finance future economic growth. The pessimist points to the roadblocks that are beginning -to trouble business expansion. He cites rising prices, skilled labor shortages, and competition of defense demands with civilian demands. But the optimist views this with less alarm. He notes that business is still planning to spend more this year for plant and equipment that it diet last. And he adds that any slowdown in the big expansion boom in the period just ahead will be just that more helpful in warding off federal tax increases. “For instance, it costs my ovm home local (Detroit) $50,000 to go to a conventi(»,” Hoffa said. With Hoffa’s eight-year jury tampering sentence under review by the Supreme Ctourt, and his five-year mail fraud soi-tence still to go before the U.S. Court Appeals, Hoffa, 53, is still a long way from prison. Even if his appeals fail he could be eligible fw paitde after serving onMbird of his sentences and could be free again before his five-year term as Teamsters’ chief eqiires. News in Brief Took vahied at $89 stolen fnmi the Slavsky-Davis Ctorp., 421 Ferry, \fice President Irving StoUman, 43,. of Oak Park reported yesterday to Pontiac police. Two watches with a total value of $150 were stfy quintqded in price to the years before Big Board listiiig and has since doubled to price. But the petite who bought the stodc to 1965 assumed a great deal man risk since the ooaqwiqr then was rtlatfveiy unknown. Generally, I believe it is good pidicy to pick your stodc firs! and regard the market where it is traded as striefiy a seqaadary ' ooosideralioa. (Copyright mi) ' ■ THE POXTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, JUNE U, 19M •Junior Editors Quiz on- MARBLES WASHINGTON (AP)-A federal court has subpoenaed the chairman of the House Ccmimit-tee on Un-American Activities to appear at the contempt of Conpess trial of the Ku Klux Klah leader Robert M. Shelton. At Shelton’s request, Rep. Ed- QUESnON: How are marbles played? ANSWER: Boys have played marbles since Greek and Roman days—and there have been many variations of the game in thaf time. But American children, nowadays, generally play “ringer.” For this, one marks a circle about 10 feet across. There is a “lag line” and a “pitch line,” as our diagram shows. Yon pat a marble in the center of the circle and arrange a dozen more in the shape of a cross, three on each side of the center. Then the two to six players “lag” for turns by throwing or shooting their large “shooter” marbles from the pitch line toward the lag line. The nearest shot wins first turn for its owner, the next nearest, next turn and so on. Then the players shoot their “taws,” (shooters) at the “migs,” “ducks” or “boodles” (ring marUes), trying to knock tiiese last out of the ring. If you shoot ont the most marbles, you win. Except for lagging for turns, marbles are shot by “knuckling down”—One knuckle touching the ground as the thumb snaps the marble out. You’ro not supposed to **hist*’__rsise your hsnd from lipuse Records Subpoenaed for Klan Leaders Contempt Trial win E. Willis, D-La., the committee chairman, was subpoenaed along with the committee’s staff director, Francis J. McNamara. They were toh) to bring along all committee records on thp Klan. The ^ouse group held hearings last fall into the Klan’s activities. Shelton was called as a witness but refused to testify. The subpoenas ordered Willis and McNamara to appear as witnesses for Shelton when he goes on trial in U.S, District Court here Sept. 12. Willis said the subpoena was served at hiipbome last Sunday night shortly before midnight. “It’s kind of unusual — I would say nervy rather than unusual,” Willis said in an interview, He added; “You can’t ignore a court order if it’s valid. But 1 don’t think I can do him much good.” ’The subpoenas requested by attorney Lester V. Chalmers Jr. in behalf of his client, Shelton, call for Willis and McNamara to present “all books, records, documents, correspondence,' transcripts and memoranda re-> lating to the organization and conduct and affairs of the Klan.” McNamara described Shelton’s petition as “a kind of fap-itas^C moirey”^ "i ^ , '^This Year, SAVE DAD MONEY BUY HIM A PORTABLE GIFT FROM HIGHLAND Highland hat th. pick of'th# portablat . . . th. BIG ••loction, a BRAND for .yery fott*, a PRICE for every budget! ... Choate from Zenith, Generol Electric, Wettinghoute, RCA Victor, Philco, Admiral, Motorola, Pana-tonic and othert! 9", 11", 12", 13", 15", 16", 17", 19" and 21" tcreent. Look 'em over, take your pick at Highland't unchallenged low pricet. You don't need ready coth. No money down. 3 yeart to pay. Reg. $149.95 $ A A 8 8 Save $50.07 ^ ^ $100 *7908 »84«» Slgj N« fuS. VnehW "li”; *11988 *14988 *11488 *12888 »111 *I89«« TeSSr Tesar *128 S, GOLF aUBS---USE POffTIAC P . Ip PLACE VDURS, CALL 3SM101. |k%lf%\ NO MONEY DOWN • 3-YEARS TO PAY APOUAWCE to. :i,* J J y ^