IpfH T|i#W#of/»er , U.». •uruiu r*r^;t , Colder pDBrmB •,;Tr^;’ VOL. I2I NO. 217 ’ <★’,★, ★ ★ ★ THE PONTIAC JPRESSi FRIUAYV.NOVEMBER 22. 19(>3 — ji4 PAGES- onited*i ImppJnds^^Million/Ppunds ‘ — ~ Mover Has Goods on Army ITA, Oa. (JPi ~ More than one million pounds df household goods owned by militwy farhilies statipned all over the world j have been impounded by a man who claims the government owes him $23,539 for storage. J. W. Spence, president of Spence Transfer and Storage Co. Inc., of Augusta, is confident the money will be ~’v forthcoming. ‘.‘The first time a colonel somewhere wants I his furniture and can't get it because I’ve I got it locked up, I’ll get my moneyi' he said I last-night. ^.... ★ ★ Spence said he would not release any government shipments until he was paid $23,539 I for services rendered prior to and since Aug. I 16, 1963. 7 ! FIRM DISQUALIFIED ! On that date his company was disqualified [from participating in the movement-of ' household goods from nearby Ft. Gordon and ' also disqualified as agents for national houSe-; hold .goods carriers contracting' with Ft. i Gordon." . At that tima, MaJ. Gen. Eugene A. Salet. f'^ . Gordon commander, Spence was participating in peti which were not In the best interest of gw* ernment. The Federal Bureau of Invesifllr gallon is atill investigating the case. || -Spence reported he was-getting the runaround by the government. ★ ★ ■ J “I have not been told why I was disqualified. .. I’ve been discriminated against and treated unkindly,” he said. ‘‘The only answer when I call (Ft. Gordon) is ‘We’re not allowed to discuss it with you.’ ” ' He estimated, that in addition to the $23,-539 he’s lost about $50,000 in business from Aug. 16 until the present as compared to; previous years. i i ■ . " ■ \ . i "I fully expeeV to be reinstated to do business at Ft. Gordon,” said the native of Augusta. “I’m as qualified as anyone in the United States. Our-service is second to none.'’ Meanwhile, Spence is holding 466 lots of hdusehold goods which belong to Army fam* ilies and. waiting for a colonel somewhere to pick tip a telephone and demand his furhb ture. ‘ ■■ City Teamster-Gets Probation { Convicted of Folse |ntry, Embezzlement Pontiac Teamster Local 614 President Leaun Harrelspn was placed on two ^ears probation *4n Detroit’s Federal District Court today 'for embezzling union funds and falsifying union records. ^ . f ffarretson, who was sentenced by Federar District Court 4udge Fred“W. Kaess, was convicted by a Jury Sept. 13 of two embezzlement counts and two counts of records falsification. f •' w . , ^ The verdict came after a four-day trial in which Pontiac caterer Maurice Croteau testified „ he accepted'fwo local 614 checks totalling $500 from Harrelson toward payment of a 1960 campaign advertisement. PHONY RECEIPTS Croteau said he gave phony catering receipts for the'chicks because he was asked Jto do so. Harrelsbn’s conviction bars him from holding a union office under the Landrum-Grlf-fln Act, the law under which' the charges were brought. Two weeks after the trial, Judge Kaess denied a defensq motion for acquittal on grounds that the embezzlement indictments were improper and the charges should have .been “con-' version of union funds to another.” ★ ' * Conviction on such conversion charges would not have barred Harrelson form holding union office.' , ...1 Harrelson has remained as Local'614 president pending a possible a|^eal,^owever. The advertisement at issue in case was part of *an unsuccessful campaign against a Ponflac city charter amendment that ^rmltted the city to fire former pence Chief Herbert Straloy. Congo Is Expelling Russian Mission ' LEOBOLDVILLE, The Congo (;R—The Congolese government is expelling the Soviet diplomatic mission from Leopoldville for the secohd time in three years hut Premier Cyrille Adoula says he is not severiing| diplomaticTelations with Moscow. i The prenfrier charged the Russians yesterday With subversive dealings with^ ' ' T“ antigovernmeht exiles Box Contains $1 Million of Mrs. Williams^ ;gcross the Congo River in Brazzaville. Adoula' Set no deadline for Soviet Ambassador Sergei Nemt-chlna and his lOO-member mission to leave. He said this would be covered in orders from the security police, adding that he^ thought the Russians probably would be given 48 hours. Adoula said his government will consider the credentials of any new diplomats the Soviets might want to send. > o ★ He warriied that the Russians will not -again be allowed to maintain subh a large staff. NO REACTION There was no immediate Moscow i reaction to the expulsion order. I Adoula indicated be was aware the Soviets might retaliate by breaking diplomatic At Royal Oak Bank ANDY J. SALKOVICH Reds Hit U.S. Over Convoys In Today's' Press Ruuia Reporter revisits Soviets, 27 years later PAGE C-W. R§tard9cl Chfidrfh Part two In a series discusses'a $peclal group .. PAGE B4. Area News ..........A-4 Aetrology M Bridge ............. Comics ........... C-7 oriels ......... A4 MprkeU .............p-4 aeries .........D4i «!• '...........B-1 Sports .. .....D-I-tf4 Theaters .......C-S^-C^ TV-RadIo programs D ll Wilson, Earl . .Woman’s pages K-l-rPd Adoula said he did not have sufficient proof to support charges by members of his government that other Communist bloc nations and the United Arab Republic also were trying to subvert his government. expulsion order came two days after two Soviet diplomats were manhandled and arrested on their return from Brazzaville, the capital of the Congo Republic. ■ Officials said documents found on them proved that they had been in contact with anti-government; exiles, led by Chrls-tophe Dbenye, head of a Lum-umbist group, and Andre Lub-, aye, a Kasai extremist leader implicated In* a recent plot to arrest or rpurder members of Adoula’s goyernment. The ^vlet government delivered a stiff protest against the treatment of ihe diplomats, an(f U.N. Secretary-General U Thant appealed to Adoula to give them diplomatic protection and immunity. County Grid Stars Picked Tomorrow Tomorrow Is the day out-' standing football players of Oakland County will be hon- DETROIT (AP) - More than,$l fnillion In securities and cash was found yesterday \n the safe deposit box of the late iMrs. Henry P. Williams, mother of former Michigan Gov. Q. Men-nen Williatns. 'A * * The inventory,, made by Wswhe County Treasorer Louis H. I^unk and the admlnistratbrs of her estate included more than 41,000 shares of stock in 67 different firtps, bonds valued at |171,900 and $10,000 in cash. ' -k ' -k k Mrs. Wiillfipis’ will leaves the bulk of her estate to nin^ grandchildren. It was filed Tuesday. She ,4ij^ Saturday at 80._________ ' t' ^ The annual All County (ootbnli t« . with the honor tedms |ln classes A, B and C, as cho*i sen by coaches with cifopera-tion of The Pontiac l^i^is, will be found In Satui^y^s Grid-Iron Green. Football fans won’t wial lo miss It! MOSCOW (AP), - The Soviet Union accused theJCnited States today of trying to make the rules for Soviet policing of Western convoy traffic on the Berlin autobahn, The Russians warned they would not perniit ihis. ^ ^ ' 1. A Russian. n.’s Fort Worth division in a speech prepared for a bipartisan breakfast arranged by the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce. OTHER OFFER The subcommittee has heard some testimony that .the Boeing Co. of Seattle, Wash., offered a cheaper and better plane. “There has beeii a good deal of discussion of the long and hard-fought competition to win the TFX contract but relatively little discussion of what this plan* wttl b« abVe to do,” the ; Jackie Ref urns! Rocket Due by the beginning of the, second term. “We firmly bdjieve that before the residents 'ot the Pontiac School District are asked to support a renewal or an increase In the school millage,” said Billings, "a definite, course of immediate action should be revealed to the school community.” Wliliam h: Anderson, board president, denied Billings’ to Political Life AUdjence Charmed Antonio Visit to Put U.S. Past Russ Warm, Rainy Prediction if or Pontiac Area Scattered showers piay arrive any time through the weekend. Rain is forecast for tonight, tomorrow and„ again Sunday night qr Monday. Temperatures for^ the next five days will average 6 to 8 d e g r e e s gbovd the normal high of 43 aiid normal low of 30. Tonlght’sf idW Is expected beardjijemW to reply, said the board WoulcK take tlie matter under consi^raliqn. Winds southerly at 10 to 30 miles per hour! today and tonight will shift to north lo northwest at to to 25 m.p.h, lomor- FORT WORTH, Tex. J4’^-Jac. queline Kertnedy., perhaps re-idctantly. islback in politics and she’s a good Campaigner. Her smilif charmed thousands in San Antonio, Houston land Fort Whrth Thursday as she began al^hrec-day Texas tour with h# husband, the President. \ » Shte made a Ispeech ahd drew cheers and appteuse. _ She Ignored the well charted plans of Secret! Service agents and shook hand.s with .hundreds who were forced to slay behind rope barricades. \ When'the .Khiliiedys \arrived at Carswell Air Force Base outside Fort Worth shortly bcfoii; midnight Thursday, and F i r sH Lady walked seWrai' hundred' yards along a Ibped barrier, shaking- h a n d s and chatting with the crowd, , HANDSlIAklNG Act Again when the Kbnnedys reached the Fort Worjh hotel where mey spent the night, they headed (qr Uife, nearest throng and wont through thell- handshaking act. Pamela Turnure, nedy’s press secretary, asked If thp First Lar enjoyed the experience. He. sAid that once it is in operation it will give the free world an aircraft that no other on earth can- iriatch. k, 'k k “11 Will be the first operation-/' al aircraft ever produced that can literally spread its wings iri the air,” Kennedy said. / SPENDING "iN TEXAS / Hitting theme he also sounded at Houston Thursday night, Kennedy said that one of/eycry 20 dollars of ,prime miluary procurement contracts is ucing spent in Texas. He addcij' tliat the state al.so has a combined military .’- civilian Defense Ite-partment payroll of more than $1 billion a year.' ’ “I do not recite these facts for partisan purposes, nor are they the result of any partisan effort,” he said. “They arc the result of America’s determination to be strong and this state’s contribution tp that F0RT» worth (UPI (-President Kennedy sgid today the United States early next year will test a rocket booster so powerful it will pul the nation strength.” far ahead of Russia in the s|)acc i ca,„ppig„ing wUh all his vigor, ... I of 19()0j^lhe^Prcsident appearedi The President, campaigning ; wclf oil ItisI way toward enforc-as though it were election | j„gL unity among Texas Demo-tlmc In Texas, told a rain- | L Weghrds as vital to ills soaked! cheering crowd out- reelAcllioitiin 19M. side his hotel that tlA ro<;ket ! \ TV ^ booster will be the most pow- ] - ,\\ erful in history. . i ■ AlMitmgfe) there was no con- T.e or„w* cs,jn.a,.d b, PO-lffijSSf lice at 5,000, roared appi oval, 'political arhi around * * '* ^ i Scn( Rhhih Yarborough. His ao- The integrated audience in a |i„n\ntad(! it unlikely that eltner parking lot outside the Rotelifjnv, John B. Connally or Vice Texas where Kennedy pnd'his ,pfi.,,i(ien'i Lyndon B. Johnson re, Mrs. Kenl-iretary, w a « rst Lady ha4 rience. | “Wa' have no segregated schools 88 such.” Anderson said. “If they are segregated, it is because of housing patterns and We have no control over housing, 45^ pattdrhs.” ' . ' ■ Billings replied that his group, which has “no more than 50 members,” was “concerned with the condition, hot the cause.” BOARD TO CONSIDER - « ; ir x iiuhi auuuKl’m --—i -..... .1, ,a hk Anderson, who was the oidyL FoiTy-slx was the low temper-1 nedy has made Ralph *' • the nHiro In rfownlown Pimliac prc-1 band since he became the Dcm- alk by JohrusOn. .Shiv R P , wile spent the night cb^rc(ihW,j^^ould likht the liberal Texas ‘concerted (Alii,‘l^litljatoi’ in this spring’s party ‘ ' H{plmary even had they wanted 'to do ,so. . DEMS joisAfiREE call for .....- i- win success in sMi^,;.-, FAR AHEAD’ He told the crow& ilie .Saturn rocket booster will put the United Stato,s far ahead of the Soviets in thrust and in the pay-load it can carry, The President spoke brljSflyi to the crowd. He stood ‘ headed and without despite the chill rulit. He apologized for the absej of Mrs. Kennedy, hut ekplaiiidc .that it took the First Lady loHgt er to get organized in the morning — though she “looks better She loved every minute of than we do” when she Is fin-it,” said Mrsi Turnuj-e. It was the first day of the; Vice Prosidenl I.yndon H. first stumping' lour Mrs. Ken-1 Johnson introduced llie Pi’cSi- atlirq Ip .downtown Pcmliac prc-1 band since eeding 8* a.m. / ' ' — rechrillng was 56. I ‘ t yru- Uttiiu 9111V-C nv Mz.-vwsss'v 1...^ . -y Al l p.m,', thd ooVatic nominee for President Yarboniugh ahd f.ov. llh lIMiO.’ „ ■ I f I Connally. / J 0 h h‘ cp'ient among Demo-the state, which” the ....... carried "by 46,233 ol mii|i( n votes in 1980, and j needs Ipady next year, rests on ctialroversy between' s liberals and conserv- i^dllv has been hostile to mgh’s renomination for was no out- ,•* inson’i oppo- si >, ( ■ ' IS vice president and COnmWiy have ba«n close polltl cal'alltos apd Yarborough hasi Chafed undcf Johnson operktlofif be thinks have denied hlitl pa* -ironage he should have had av (Coiitinuod on Page 2, Col. 4) ^ ,.'l V- 1 m -fi' ' I * ^^ONTIAC PRESS. JFRimY.^^bVgMBCT 28, 1008 GERTRUDE C. NOVAK Widow siirs Baker Probe Tied to Senate. Aide by Husband's Affairs Who it announce. 1/-believe former Vice Presi- WASHINGTON (AP) - The' testimony of a Washington wid-,ow has opened new aventues of; Senate investigation into the tangled business affairs of Robert G. Baker. < diairman B. Everett Jordan of the Set^te Rules Ck>mmittee gave this word to newsnien H Thursday after Gertrude*C. Novak had been questioned in secret for 2 hours., The North CJarolina Democrat said Mrs. No^k had supptiqd some documents or| dea^ii^^ with Baker by her late busb^dr Alfred. Jordan said (he cdn^t-tee did not get into the matter of Ngvak’s death—it occdrred in March 196l2( and was ruled ^ suicide—but will do so later.' Baker, 35. resigned as secretary to the Senate's Democratic majority Oct. 7 ami® allegaticjjis that he used his p(|sition to fur-(thef his private business interests. Among them jvas a luxury motel at Ocean City, Md.. which he operated" whh Novak ^d No- -Nb'Draft Seen by GOP Chief X : ^SX...i.OUIS (AP)-Republican National Cltairman William E. Miller warned GOP presidential hopefuls they will have to work for. the Republican nomination because there will be no draft candidate. • “I ,think anyone who wants hb nomination in 1964 ought to be' about -it right now.y Rep. Miller of New York,said. “Anyone who just sits by expecting to be drafted will be disap-Ijointed:” Thus far, he satd, it appears that the nomination will go either to Gov: Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York—who has announce,d as a caddidate-^r Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona s lamb will, soon Policeman in Holdup vak’s brother Donald. N(JT IN TOUCH Jordan said that as faf as he knows, .the committe^, its counsel and its investigators have not been in toupn with -Baker since the inquiry began. It was authorized two days, after Bar ker resigqea. '' He said that Baker will be called when the conupoiUee ia (tontinued From Page One) tended tp get into it as he watched me. He hit. a car as he droye out and I picked up a stone and struck his car with all the force 1 could muster,” added Helsom, of Southfield, a student at Wayne State University. Davids said Salkovich told him of bei’n g chased by a bank employe. Hel quoted the trooper as saying: “Th^^ when I came to. It would hr^ been so easy to turn and put the gun oii hh Salkovich wasmwjflg he had borrowetfmorn a fellow trooper wdiite^is own was being repaired; Davids said. Cufrubes, 69,, father of t h e sl^aJa^ bwnei*, said Salkovich Z in the shop, waiting for .Joyes to paint the dented right rear fender, when FBI agents stopped in with descriptions of the holdup car. IT CHECKED Jtrminphqm Area News , City XoungsfeifHoping W^herman Is Wrong dent Richard'M. Nixon "when he says he is not a candidate and does not intend to jse a candidate.,” Miller- said. ENTER PRIMARIES Miller callet^ for Republican presidential aspirants to enter state preferential primaries. He. said If anyone-won all the pri-maries-^as President Kennedy did on the Democratic side in 1960—the Republican convention could not deny hup the nomination, Milfer is in' .St^ Louis fpr, a, two-day, 13-statf» regional Republican meeting jthat ends Saturday. KMINGB^M -Aw.c’! Weatherman be a good skatal Hat’s the idea pf BirmlBg** ward to the traditional Thanksghlnf openbg of fho municipal lee rink at Lineoin The Recreation . Department had been depending on a cold wave expected to hit the Midr west this weekend. , But; today the fiveday forecast predicted rqin, with temperatures in the loW.60's. He expressed optimism about Republican chances in 1964 to win the presidency ind a majority in the House of Representatives. ‘ , I He told a news conference,the j Republicans wouldj gain in thC j South, Midwest. and. Texas, | where “Kennedy had better; get political or he just might be in trouble there.” target AREAS Rep. Robert Wilson of Califo^ nia, chairman of the GOP gressional Campaign C^mlit-i tee, said the party hpr designated 23 congressiMW districts in the Midwest ja^argCt areas. Republicans to pick up 11 or 12 seab^ these areas, he said, He/^lined to name specific tncts, but said the GOP exited to pick up an additional congressman in Ohio, Illinois, Missouri* Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. w I"' ■ exhibit at the New York World’s Fair, weighsi only about 50 pounds. Built in Detroit, they will be'used to landscape part of a Futurama “ride into tomorrow.” on Convoys (Continued FVom Page One) have held up three AmoricaA convoys and one British convoy al Soviet chdickpoints on >the autobahn beeaivse the convoy commander)^ refused to allow their men tebe counted. During the six-^eje period .since Oct. 10, a numb)?r\0f other .Allied convoys with few! 30 passengei-s have nu ■^We hope to gain at least 20 m trip withoat ii PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)— A prominent educator charges,, a vigorous campaign has tnounted, in and: out of Congress, to provide federal fupds for private and parochial schools all the way froip kindergarteri ^through college. -j congressional seats in the South,”,Wilson said. “This is in somO areas where we have not had a candidate before. To newsmen’s questions, Mrs. Novak said there was no connection betweep the Baker case and her husband’s death. Of her examination by thfe^ committee she would say only that it Was “very thorough.” Mrs. Novak has been an employe ofi the Senate Small Business Committee (for 13 years. After her husband’s death* she became Baker’s partner in the motql operation. ' “I -looked at the description. and I went back in the shop and looked at that car,” Cutrubes said. “It checked and I called the police after, the trooper went away.” ttalknvlcli’s commanding ol-Iteer^ Bgt. iMfevent, made' the arrest. “He was a good officer, Stevens said after turning Salkbvich over to FBI agents.., “It's just one of those things that happen. You know how it is—sometimes your mind plays tricks on you. Salkovich was a patrolman on the Oak Park police force for 18. months before' joining the state pblice in 1956. He is a graduate of both the Detroit and state police academies. Avert Strike at Pontiac Division A threat of a strike at Pontiac Mptiw- Dtvlfldh was averted eany today When union arid management negotiators reached agreehient on grievances and other issues. The settlement came at 12:30 a.m. to climax four weeks of daily negotiations. If agreement had not been achieved a strike deadline wag set for 7 p.m. today. “Ail operations at the Pontiac home plant will continue in their ndrmal manner,” stated T. B. Bloom, personnel director.. ■ence. - The Russian note thalT the Americahs articically — -prm^ed thwdelay-Nov.'d-d and that it was a result of “unfortunate actions” by U.S. officers in charge of the donvoy. It said ‘some irresponsible American officer could spark off dangerous incidents.” ' ^ It warned that “ the'qntire responsibility for possible lundesir-abie consequences of the violation by American servicemen of control procedure at Soviet checkpoints will rest entirely with the American side." J The Weather Full U. S. Wedther Bureau Report BONTIAC AND yinNITY-Clouqy, mild and becoming windy today with sejaUered showdrs and thunderstorms t'd-day and tonight, hijgh today 64. Low tonight 45. Cloudy V showers and turning colder Saturday, high 52. Winds Ing to 15 to ^ miles today and tonight shifting o north to northwest 19 to 25 miles Saturday. ' John Maye, president Of UAW lAical 653, said the package settlement has-be^ approved by the union bargaining team and UAW Interriational. It does not require membership ratification lie said- SPEEDUPSi GRIEVANCES Maye ■ said accord was reached on 179/ spe(|dpp complaints and over 100 safety grievances. , Settlement of speedup issues will result in Pontiac Motor hiring a ipimber of new workers, Maye said, but he would not specify how many. For the first lime the ixim-pany and union established "model.mix” formulas for the sequence ip which different Pontiac and Tempest models will move along assembly lines, Maye explained. , ' Future safety ferievance.s' will he immediately referred to a meeting of the plant supervisor, the worker, and'his union ropresentative, Mjiye said, rather tliah be dc^ed for action on other level ;ar hller, exdcutiv? seere-^Jary of Hhfe Council of Chief State School Officers, made the rating vote in a lii session Thurs- it without a, convi^i day. ! .1 - f,, ■ Fuller said “the campaign is< active and gaining strength. Unless it is blunted the public schools will be financially under- Texans Hear Kennedy Talk (Continued From Page One) the state’s only Democratic senator. The other Texas' senator is Republican John Tower. Without ■ saying a word, Kennedy signaled his intentions by inviting Yarborough to rid^ the presidential plana from Washington io San Aiitonio yesterday. When the Air Force jet rolled lo a slop Kehnedy |>roke protocol by having Jacqueline Kennedy, precede him doiyn the rftmp. The PresiWent qsuaily goes first, but Texans arq touchy- about such matters. Behind the preRldeiitlal couple, Yarborough and Rep. Henry B. Gonzales, ^Tex„ came down ihc steps waving iind smiling; They wJre, Installed ill the fourth car of a caravan which wound 20 miles through Brooks,^ Air Force Base. Far enough back of the President. they got recognition from crowds Which lined liighways and the streets. if all of this seemed to lack substance, the implications were nyl lost on Texas Democrats, skilled in the kind of poker the Pic.sidciit was playing. The signs wcl-c rather plain that Kennedy was betting on Yarborough’s renomination and wanted nu feuding and fighting. NA'IIONAL-WEATHER .-Showers dre due I tonight oVer Pacific Northwest with snow at higher eleyMiDn8..Sho|wers Him are expected from eastern seettens of south and central Plains through the lower and'mid Mississippi Valley to thc^, lowiir Lakil/ while light snow or flurries will fa|l over nort|f-^ aaatem parts of. Plains through upper Mississippi Vajlcy to upper Lakes region. It will be warmer in mucii of eastern third; of the and Pacific Northweat and cooler from-aaatcro Plains to Midwfist. GAoIre, of Ni Chrttfot^ limtiftnu. • Odmpitft with fnvtlopet • biMKi (»r*ettnEi» lliol you. VCMJ oion.’c«n . . . PHOTO «.d. yuur luvoriie itiapaiol A>S About Canli l.«m ColwmiM.'- :> -',1, ; J.''--'-, i*v,‘ .1-: 23 lo( , ....2.98 30 (or.......5.98 Comnwre.^ Cordt li. ____ AssAsA To Aid Private Schools e^Mi hu^mmal report to the caunc|l. Jhe council adopted mined in thousands of Americail communities.” The council is an organization «f state superintendents and commissioners df education from the 50 |statCs and from U.S. possessions overseas; The council, “Fulli^r said, is / wmmfttea by jwllcy Ttb oppose legislatloi} whiifh wpuld splinter the public tax " distribution to privat tiohs 'of education at for the inslifutrbnar schools or colleges. The copncil does ngit Object, Fuller said, to the use of liberal tunda by private colleges and universities “for such, noninsti-tutional uses as researchl contracts, scholarships, fellowships and the like.” $1.00 Hoiflf Any Pair of Famous Brand lee Skates lifSiimiB Free Layaway. i anWlfou pwnny nwr® than th» advpr- i [ tiswd pric* .. so gpt first choic* on our fin* eolac-I tionthiewMk-ondl FIRST QUALITY AMERICAN Made! [ Uneendlti«iKillv BV"mnhMK| by th* fameut malc«r« and Simmt—a I doubU guoffantan thot otwiii you of wiw for your monny HyAl Save On ICE SKATES at SIMMS presented a one-act farce, “Final Dress Rehearsal,’I: ‘ , Dimitry Moshko^ Service for Dimitry Moshko, 75, of 1645 Woodward, Bloomfield Township, will be 2 p.m, tomorrow at the, D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will' follow in .Oak Hill Cemetery, Waterford Township. w. Moshko, an employe of the Detroit Free Press maintenance department, died yesterday after an illness of twq months. [ GIFTS For Tho Homo Aro Lastinc GIFTS UYAWAY For CHRISTMAS Now F.S. It Will Coat You Loit HtrwToo! SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street STORE Extra Larn Siia 69 X 42 X 22 Inch IBiggur than ih« avuroge vyardrobu - — holdf up tp 42 lull Itngih garmant*. i Sliding doort, top thall hots, thou rock. Waldud con-itruclion. Small dalivary jehorga. Uaa It Anywhare — 46 Inch Long All Purpose Cabinets $29.98 Value A* ihowh —. choice of 3 liniiha*. Stdra* oyar 200 racpi^rii, hold* TV -or Hi-Fi Soli; uia a* liquor cabinet ale. Smoll lativery charge- ¥fsilonzi Room Divitlor m 2-Lamii OaMiift $39.95 Value _______~ 69" high 12" Wide 32'' " long with brq»i plat* polat, *lldlhg daari. With ^llsl i^ragsiaiiiiii SMvel Top Cesk $39.98 Value I A* *hown~all ilatl, ■ lini*h, 46" wlda, Mr. & Mrs. Platfohii Rockeb 34” vcmmM ^ VOL: 1^1 l^fQ. 247 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOV/^MBfiK. 22, 1963—44 PAGES cwnim'ISS&iKi Down ty Assassin's Bullets CENTER^UNE (^— A rock thrown by a bank Iteller led; to the arrest of a stiate polideman on hank robbery charges last night, DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — President end the trooper i^inO|iee-- ... .. ■... . .. fully admitted the $3, holdup, his superiors sai^. > Andy J. Salkovich, 32, a se' year\veteran of the force, was' arrested' at the Center ’Line State Police F*ost. , “Ii| I could tell you why, I’d tell you — I jiist don’t know,'* he told State Police Cajft. Pred Davids. Bank teller Frank k Helsom : chased Salkovich from the National Bailik of Hoyal Oak after yesterdhy afternoon a rock that'dented his said. told police which had ghne, and officers alerted repair shops hi the area. A1 Cutrubes called to report the car had been in his repair shop and gave police the jUcehse number, officers said, ' I Salkovidh, married and father of three children, was ’ arraigned on a bank robbery charge today before U,S, Dls-;frlct Judge Fred W. Kaess in wtoetroit. His bond was,'set at j Uuable to furlift lL ho - was retained In custody I Handcuffed and Ip custody pf a U.S. marshal, the trooper looked straight ahead in his hflef court appearance. The arraignment is only a formality. Salkovich, unshaven and wearing no tie, wap led into the court room by the marshal. Salkovich had his paycheck in his pocket and other money, too, when he wgs arrested, Davids shld. the trooper had ho known pressing bills, he -added, and made 17,224 a year .as a trooper. POINTED REVOLVER A teller, Mrs. Gayle Robin-^ son, 24, said | n|ian with a brush-haircut pointetj' a revolver at her, handed; her a green plastic bag and said, "Fill it up." Mrs. Robinson said ’ she warned Helsom as the bandit ord Offer or Lions Accepted DETROIT iAP)-D,j>troit Lion stockholders today vjlted to accept a million oRclr of industrialist VWilliaifi Clajl Ford to purchase the Natioribl Football lUague>s Detroit ifranabise. About N per cent oLthe 144 stoofchoiders yated In favor of the sale. The move also dissolved the Detroit Football Co. Ford,' In a brief statemenl! after the r ing, said he was forming a neW corporation call Detroit Lions Incorporated, pf which he will be sole owner. turned to leave, and Helsom pushed the alarm button and chased the man out of the In Today's , Press The 38-year-old vice Tjresident of Ford Mbtor Co. hhs been president of the Lions for the past two and one-half years. HIGHLY GRATIFIED Ford told the stockholders teat he was'“highly gratified at the result," He said he would have no announcement to make at this time with respect to management and coaching, s t a f f s, since an evaluation is now under way. Ford said such announce-ments would be made some time after he assumes control of the company, oh or after Jan. 10, 1964, closing date of his offer. ,, Ford is expected to immediately petition the National Football League for acceptance. Wprmer, Rain Seen for Area Kennedy was given blopd transfusions tod4^^ at Parkland Hospital in an effort Jo save his life after \he apd' Gov. John Conndlly of, T^xas were shot in an assassination attempts.-V" .'-V' ^\dent Kennw and \gIov. Hohn Cpnnallyrpf-Texas Te shot Irpm ambush t from ( f no^ lay. It wak no^ kho^n whether cither was kil The President was shot just as his motorcade left downtown Dallas, jumped up and grabbed Mr. Kepnedy. “She cried, “Oh, no!” AP photographer James W. Altgens said he saw blood ort the President’s head. Altgens said hh heard two shots but thought someone was shooting fireworks until he saw blood bii the Presidelit. Altgens^ said he saw .no one with a gun. y . AP reporter Jafk asked Kenneth h’Don-nell,, presidential assistant, if Kennedy was dead. O’Dpnnell "gave no answer. Kennedy was reported. taken to Parkland Hpspiial, near the Dallas Trade Mart, wvhesst he was to have made a Speech. Bell said jfennedy was transferred to an ambulance. He lay on a seat of the car. Bell reported three shots were fired as the ; motorcade entered Jhe Triple underpass which leads to the Stemmons Freeway route to Parkland Hospital PandeAibnium broke loose around the scene. The Secret Service wav^ the motorcade on at top speed to the hospital. Even at high speed, it took A Pontiac parte ft t group charged the school < board last night with “de facto segregation" in some local schools. Charles E. Billings, 236, Gage, stating he represented a parent group, said Pontiac has several elementary schools that are totally segregated, one junior high —Jefferson—totally segregated, and anothfei^nlor' high—Eastern — ranldly becoming segre-gated;/ > "lifonr opinion," Billings said, this typle of classroom situation presents an extremely unhealthy school atmosphere for all. students in the Pontiac system, particularly the Negro ^ild." Billings wasaccompatiied by Dr. Rigoberto M. Guzman who said he was -U spokesman for the local chapter of the National Association for the Ad-vancempift of Colofed People. Bipings told board members that a Supreme Court decision declhred the “separate fbut equal" doctrine unconstitu*^ tional and sald‘‘1^t applied to “any segregated .school district in this qatibn." | r' He asked the board to submit a plan of action (to end any school segregation in Pontiac) by the beginning of the seedfid term. "We firmly believe that before the residente of the Pontiac School District are asked to support a penewal or an Increase in Tthe school millagef’ said Billings, "a definite course of immediate action should be revealed to the school community” I ' William H. AndersoL, board -president, denied Billings’ charges; “We have no segregated schools as auch," Anderson said. “If they are segregated, it is because of housing patterns and we have no control over houfeing patterns.” | - Billings replied that his group, which has ' “no more than 50 members,” was “concci'nedwith the condition, not the cause.’" BOARD TO CONSIDER Anderson, who was the only board mepiber to reply, said the board ‘ would take the matter under consideration. The school board president said that the only way to avoid segregation because of housing patterns would be to transport pilipils. He did not think this would i^oive any- Dr. Gu'zraan said he would present the board with a list of questions on tee present racial pattern in Pontiac schools. He said he wodid ask for a racial) count of ; pupils and contracted personnel. He also-will seekj a count on the Negro dropout rate. Impounds Million Rounds nearly five minutes to get the car to; the ambulance entrance of the hospital. Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson was in a car behind the President’s. There was no immediate sign that he was hurt. In fact, there was no evidence at all at what might have happened, to Johnson since only the President’s car and its Secret Service followi-dp car went to the hospital. , The’ President had landed, only a short time before at Dallas Love field and tvas Tdrlvlrig to-fhe trade mart to deliver a luncheon. speech sponsored by ,three Dallas organizations. -Bell said g man and a wom- President Kennedy Pp/iftoc'i fioonb/ef October ' was oner of the wi's besi In Its Wco-imlc history - PAOjE i hfprded Children Part two In a series scusses a special group PAGE B-7. \ rea News ;...A-4- .....a.C.7 ....fi-7' ....... Markets .............D4 ...........D4 > ....■;1M \ .k,..0-I-D4 ..............: TVeen elected a trustee of Olivet OoUege. Chairman of the board of the Michigan Life Insurance Co., Royhl Oak, Umb attended Olivet for two years before transferring to the University of MkMgan to specialize in banking, economics ai^ business admfeistration. Mrs. Francis C. McMath, 3249 Bradvay, Bloomfield Tbvrtishlp, has teen appointed to the newly formed planning and resources council of iSkidmore Cbilege in Saratoga Siprings, NY. .1- 1916 council will a|d the college’s board Of trustees in realization of a multimlllion dollar program for a hew/campus. ^ijne 230 members of the Bir- mingham Newcoirters Club welcomed Si prospective mbtnters' at a noon luncheon yesterday at the Conununity Housa The 12-year-old club now has 604 members, hccording ro Pres-, ident Mrs. Jack Bickhart. . Under the ^direction of Mrs. ^nest Jackson, the Drama Ckh -presented a one-act farce, “Final Dress Rehearsal.”' Dimitry Mtehko ' Service for Dinwtry Moslj|o, of 1645 Woodward, Bloomfield Township, yvifll be 2 p.m. tomorrow jat the D. E. Pursley Funeral Home, Pontiac. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Ceme-‘ tery, Waterford Tbwnshlp. Mr. Moshkp, an employe of the Detroit Free' PresfA maintenance depfartment, dkd yesterday, after an illness m two months. ' $1.00 Holds Any Pair of Famous Brand |C8 Skates In Simms Free Layaway: an SPEEDUPS, (JRIEVANCES . Maye said accord- was reached On 179 .speedup com-plaintij and over 100' safely grievances. ' V Settlement of speedup issues will result in Pontiac Motor hiring u number of new workers, Maye SHtd, but he would not specify how many. For the first time the company and uhlon established ....... “'model mix” forrnrilas for thS "'city ^0 sequence in'which different,Pon-‘a Tempest models will miiwBukce 54 47 ;move along assembly lines, nSw YorK"* si 51 Maye .explained. Phimt* 59 Future safety grievances v»ill r"u“'aiy* 4^80 immediately referred to a s' Francisco 59 .9 (meeting of the plant .supervij-Tampa 8j'll* | or, tlu' wot'ker, and his union ropresenlallve, Maye said, rath-•er than be"" delayed for action on other levels. er to get organized in thf morning — though she “looks better than we do” when she is fin-, ished. Vice President Ly ndri.ri I Johnson introduced the President. He was flanked during his talk by Johnson. Sen. Ralph Yarborough and- Gov. John Conhally'. ‘ARGO’ SINGLE or DOUBLE RUNNERS Boyt’ori Girk Ice Skates Pontiac Woftion Brings Dov/n Poe —Without a Gon NATIONAL WEATHER Showers are due tonight over Paclfk Nprthwest with snow at higher elevations. Showers •iio are expected from eastern sections of south ahd central Plains through tte low([f and mid Mississippi Valley to the lower Lakes, while light'anow or flurdes will fall over northeastern parts of Plains Jjirough upmr Misdssippi Valley to uppeT Lakes region. It will be warmer In mucMf castdfq third of the nation and Pifeiflc Northwest and cooler from eastern Plains to Midwest, t \ A Pontiac woman ,bagg^-a deer in Bloomfield,.«;Townahip last night -v without a license and without a gun. Mrs, Howard Dell, 20) padded Ipngues. 4900000 ••••••••••••••••• ••••)«f**«*****aeo *ARC0’ Genuine LEATHER SHOES On BOYS’ & GIRLS’ '' i“, ■ '1 '''ip ^ I ' r ' ' 4-^ $39.95 Value SE x 42 X 22 Inch '1’°" oYerogo rjWardrobe ~ holds up to ||42tfull length gormeqtt. I jSlidtng dqor>. top ihelf hms, || jhoe rock. W^d?d coh-!);|structlon. Small delivery _[_Jchorge. Ice Skates Draper, was driving north on\ n.\ Telegraph about 7:30 p,pi. when she saw two animals — she thought they were dogs if leap in front of heV auto. ) *f)nc hit the hood. Pulling onto the shoulder, she was informed by Bloomfield Township police that a dpe was imbedded in tne radiator Of her car. Damage to the vehicle was psiin.ated at $250, apd the police took the venison to turp it over to the State’Conservation De-parinientr"' i I BOYS’ HOCKEY - Sizes 18 fo B GIRLS’ WHITE - Sizes 11 to 6 BOYS^iUCK ~ Sizes 13 to 6 ,Aiw first leo(hor shops on Ichrpma stool blodOS. Hockpy Iskcnos ijaro in hwO-tono color. lAlc Jtayo pod^dd tongues,/ ) ..•••••Ooooooooooooooooooo **!*■ I ‘EMDICOn-UOHNSON’ M«lc6 LAOIES’^BOYS’ Figure SKATES l|t« It Anywhart -y. 46 Inch Long M Purpose Cabinets $i9.95 Value As shown -7 choice pi 13 fihlshiis. Stores' over I 200 records, holds TV [ or Hi-Fi Sets, use os liquor cabinet etc. Small delivery charge. ^ iredenza koom iivider 2tLamp Cabinet $39.95 Value shown j—* 69" high 12' It 32" long with te poles, illding luxe wolnul ilnllh. Small I Filf i ttoraga Oibinat 2I>5 Iwivel Yep Ifetk 21“ $39.95 Value HAi' shown—all 4tee lenamel ilnllh. 46“ wide. l30" high, 18“ deep..,! pSinall delivery charge. MEN’S 4 LADIES' Sizeji ■/ B0^SI»8 3-4-8. .'4C.4T B\ptk leather uppere lor jvfeh' pfnd boys, iteyl bibdes, Indies' 'white • leather,! sturdy „'i)teel tladei. Aden's isheo 'jd 12, including 'DIcW Bditon* ekoteii »to. ') ' ,Mr:; 8 Mrs. Platfqmi Rockers 34" ! Si 38" iMra. fSlaiF ■ Sill bock end relcrn - deep uphdliiered rqickeri. ■ Hardwood home In mahogany llnish. Smoll delivery charge, Modem 2-Se*t BWen and Ohair CENTER LINE (^ — A rock thrown by a batik teller led' to i the arrest of a state policeman 6n b^nk robt^ery charges last nifeht, fully admitted the $3,156 holdup, his superiors said. Andy J. Salkovich, 32, a seven-year veterart of the force, was arrested at the Center Line State Police Post. —. “If I could tell you why. I’d tell you I just don’t know,” he told State jPolice Capt. Fred Davids. , j Bank teller Frank E. Helsom chased Salkovich from" the tional Bank of Rbyal Oak after, I the robbery yesterday aftemooif and threw a rock that dented his car, police said. A Witizen told poUqe which way the car ha^.it^ne, and of-flchrs alerted repair shops in the area. Al Ciitrubes called to report the car had been in his repair, shop and i|ave police the license htiinber, officers said. . Salkovich, married and father of three chiidren, was arraigned on a benk robbery I charge today before U.S. Dis-' trict Judge Fred jlV. Kaess in Detroit. His bohditwas set at g25,000. Unabie to fitrnish it, he was retained in custody. Handcuffed and in custody of a U.S* marshal; tlijS trooper looked straight ahead in i his‘ brief court appearance; The arraignment is only jS ftirmallty. Salkovich, unsnaven arid Wearing no tie, was led ipto the court room by the marshal. -Salkovich had his paycheck In his pocke^ and other money, too, when be was arrested. Davids said. The trooper had no known pressing bills,! he added, and made |7,224 a year as a trooper. \P0INTED REVOLVER A teller, Mrs. Gayle Robin-aon, 24, said a man with a brush Haircut pointed a revoiyrir at her, handed her a green plastic bag and said, “Fill it,up.” , Mrs. Robinson said she warned Helsom as the bgritflt turned to leave, and, yblsom I pushed the alarm Imttpn and Xchased the man |^ll|,f''pf the for Lions \ Accepted .DETROIT (AP)r-Detr,oil Lion stockholders today voted todiac-cept a ip, millioij. offer of industrialist, William Clhy Ford to purchase l(he National, Football Leag|de’^ Detroit franchise. About 94 per cent pf the 144 stockholders yofed In favor of the sale. I' The move also dissolved the Detroit Football C6. Ford, in a brief statement after* the meet- t oday's Press '' ■'"'v Pontiac's Boomkt October was bnp of the , area’s best in Rs oco* ndmlc history -i- PAGE C-*. ; m Hofardod Children Part two in a series discusses a special group -PAOBB-7. I Area N«wti . Astrology . V ; Bridge ‘A- ...A-4 :i.07 :..C4 .....M iis'v;\r:.......A-i !, Markets i,D*l \OMtuarles D4J ....... ^Tvlidlo frogranrt D4l a, Earl........IWIj I -figes' ing, said he was forming a new cocporation call Detroit Lions Incorporated, of which he will be sole owner. ' the 38-yeaf-old vice, pres|d( of Ford Motor, Go. has been president of the Lions for the prist two and one-halLyearis. HIGHLY gratified Ford told tile stockholders PALLAS f dent Kennedy and Gb John Connally of Texas'^ were sjlo^ from ambush, today. It was not known, whether either Wes' killed. j The President was Altgens said he heard two shots but thouight sOmeone was shoopng fireworks until he saw blood on the President. Altgens said 1 he Saw no one with a gun. AP rep^tenJack Bell 1 asked Ke^eth O’Doh-nell, presidential assist;^^ ant, iif Kenney. Was dead, |xl’Ponl|[m^ gave no ansfwer. ’ ' Kenpedy was reported taken to Parkland Hospital, near the Dallas trade Mart, where he was to have made a speech.', Bell said Kennedpi was transferred to an ambulance. He lay on a seat of the car. BelL reported three" shots were fired as the motorcade entered the Triple underpass which leads to the Stemmons Freeway/jfoute to Perk-land Hospital , . Pandemonium broke loose around the scene. The Secret Service waved the motorcade on at top speed to the hospital. > Even at high speed, it took iegteoalion Charged in City Schools that he wm “highly gratified at the re.sull.’ He said hC would have no announcement to'make at mis tinm with respect to manam-mein and coaching staffs* since\an evaluation Is now under way. Fprd said such« n p o u n c.e-menis would- be made some time after he assumes control of the compririy, on or after Jan. It), 1964, closing date of his bffefT ' Ford is expected to imme-^ diately petition the National Football League for acceptance. Warmer, Rain Seen for Area Scattered shewers may a r -rive any time through the weekend. Rain is forecast for tbpight, tomorrow and again Sunday night or Monday. ’ Temperatures for. the hext five days will average S to 8 (1 e g h e e 8 above high of 43 and normal low of 39. Tonight’s Ipw is eiilpricted to be near 46. Forty-six was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a.tin- At 1 p.m., the; recording was S6. News Flash NEW YORK (UPD-TIfe/ New York Stock Eichauge/, I the l|>k*»simi ehang|M ulfo closed. .A Pontiac patent gi^oup changed the .school* board last night with l“de fpeto segregation” in some local schools. Charles Billings, 236 Gage, stating he i'ppresentea a parent group, said ffontiac’has several elementary schools .that urp W" tally segregated, one junior high —Jefferson—totally segregated, and another junior high—Eastern 4-rapidly] becoming segregated.. T ■ “In our opinion,” Billings said,-‘this this type of classroom situation presents pn extremely unhealthy scheoi. atmosphere for all sMents in the Pontiac system, /particularly the Negro child. ', Billings was accompanied by Dr. Rlgobcrto M. Guzman who , said he was a spokesman for the ideal chapter of the National Association tor the Ad-, vancement of Colored People. Billiijgs told board members that a) 1954 Supreme Court decision deciardd' the “separate but equal” doctrine unconstitutional arid said it applied to, '“any segregated school district in this nation.” A , Hy asked the board to submit a plan of action (to end any school segregation in Pontiac) by the beginning of the second term- “We finply believe thrit before the residents of the Pontiac School District are psked to support a renewal or an increase in the school millage,” said Billings,“a definite course Of immediate action should be revealed to the, school community.” William H. Anderson, board president, denied Billings’ charges. “We have no segregated schools as such*” Anderson said. “If they are segregated, it is because of housing patterns and we have no control over housini; patterns.” Billings replied (hat his group which has “no more than ' members,” Was “concerned with the condition, not the cause.' BOARD TO CONSIDER Anderson, who was the only board member to reply, said the board wpuld take the rnatter under coifisideration. jj The school board president said that the only ^ay to avoid segregation because of housing patterns would be to transport pupils. He dM npt think tijis * would solve anything. ' Dr. Guzman Said he would present the board with a list of questions on the prepnt racial patterinrin Pyntiac schools. He sairi he would ask for racial /count of pupils and contracte/l personnel. He also will seek a count on the Negro dropout' rata. A^oyer ffas Googis on Arrhy nearly five minutes to get the car to the ambulance entrance'of the hospital. Vice I President I.yndon B. Johnson was in a car behind ' the President’s. There , was no immediate Sign that he was hurt. In fact, there wps no evidence at all at ijfhut might'have happened to Johrisort since -only the President’s car and its Secret Service follow-up car went to the hospital. The President had landed only ji short tiipe before at Dallas Love Field and was driving to the trade mart to deliver a luncheon speech , sponsored by three Dallas organizations. Bell said a man and a worn- I \wlll he e said AUGUSTA, Ga.|W --r Morri than one million* pounds of househoM goods owned by military families 8tationri(|\yll over the world have been ImpoimdM by iimay claims the government owes\hltn $||p,!)3^'for storage. J. W. Spence, Transfw and Stora||ri GqJ gilista, ik confident fijirthcoming. \ ' ■ ‘!.The first' time a o)Ioiifil sot /ti|k furniture and epA’i grit It/j^aitsri I’ve gqt it locked up. I’ll get my n ;&'st night. :m N , ■’. ★ /,;Hk ?/ Spence said He wopld nhl ljr9lesi| anM gov-iBrnment shipments until/hi Was n|id |iil3.5!IO 'for services rendered pmrm andlinrie lAug* ■'16,1963.' , ' / V FIRM disqualified/ U On that date his Ooippj|tny Vas di ffoml participating Ri the movei^ household goods from; nearby Ft. .also disqualifirid as agentp for na hold goods carriers contractii^ /With Ft. Gordon, ,■ j. f \ J At that time* Maj. Gen. , Salet, Ft. Gordon comniander, said Sprince was participating iln activities which were not in the best imerest of government. The Federal Bureau of Investl- j gation Is still Invostigating the case. '' Spence reported, he was getting the run-ttroundlby the',government. ★ J ^ j “I have rtrit bepn told why I Was jdlBialined. .. . t’vp been discr^inalcd aga^ and heated upklndly,” he saip. “The onljJilnswor when I call (Ft. Gordoii) Isi ‘VVe’rj|not al-I lowed to ijdlscussi it with yoW^ ” losIes pUSIN^SS He estimated that in addltjoiyiFthri/$23,-539 he’s lost about $60,000 iW^ Aug. 16 until the present 1 previous years. ' "I fully expect to he reinstated to d‘improper and the Charges should have been “conversion of union funds to another." / C 0 n V Iction on conversion Charges would not have barred , Harrelson from holding union > oMoe. ■- ! f .ilaprelson, s former state rep-r<*etitative, has remained as lA'al 614 president pending 0*1 possible appeal. , . • j \ .If i! Si— liT .X-.;4 ” ;:■ \: .' ■, '.'il*».J ^ PONTIAC PR^SS, FRIDAY,vKOVEitBER 22. 1968 ;ii No Draft Seen -^r ST. LOUIS (AP)—Republican 'dent Richard M. Nixon when he. National/ehairman William E. ' says he is not a ’candidate and does not intend to be a candiw date,” Miller said. ENTER PRIMARIES Miller called for Republican GERTRUDE C. NOVAK Widow Stirs laker Probe \ Tied to Senate Aide by Husband's Affairs WASHINGTON (AP) - The testimony of a Washington widow has opened new avenues of Senate investigation into th€ tangled business affairs of Rob- "-ert-Gr Balter.-------: .Chairman B. Everett Jordan of the Seriate Rules Coinmittee fhie' WI gave this' word to newsmen Thursday after Gertrude C. Novak had been questioned in secret for'2 hours, Miller warned GOP presidential hopefuls they will have to work for the Republican* nomination because there will Be no draft anrtCK who ««s|e7SXfflSliX“£ ought to .bout jt.. right now " Rei;. p,e,igent Konnody Miller of New York said. ^ny-L.^ on the Democratic side in one who just sits by exp^ting Republican .conven- could not deny him the Jhu.s farThe said, it appears 5, ^0^3 for a hat he^nomina ion wilLgo ei-|^ / ^^^al- Re- her to^ Gov. ^elson A. Rocke-ip^ ^^,3^ ^„ds Sat- fejler of New York—who has an-; > nounced as a candidate—or Sen/ / * * ★ Bairy Goldwater of Arizona - ^bout “Who It seems to me will shon ; Jan chances in 1964 to °"S.o I tatives. I He told a news conference the j Republicans would gain in the {South, Midwest and Texas, i where “Kennedy had better I get poiitical or he just might be I in trouble ther#.” ^ ' 1 ‘ . Policeman in Holdup , The North Carolina Democrat said Mrs. Novak had supplied some documents on dealings • With Baker hy her late husband, Alfred. Jordan said the committee did not get into the matter, of Novak’s death—it occurred Ip March 1962 and wqs ruled a su-icide-^but will do sto later. Bakery 35, resigned as secrS-‘ tary to the Sendte’sr Democratic majority Oct. 7 amiti allegations that he used his position to* further his private business interests. Among them was a luwy motel at Oceah City, Md , which he operated with Novak and Novak’s brother Donald. NOTjIN TOUCH r Jordan said that as far as he knows, the'committee, its counsel and its investigators have not been in touch with Baker since the inquiry began. It was authorized two days after Baiter resigned. He said that Baker will be called when the committee is ready. , 1 “ lewsmen To newsrnen’s questions, Mrs. Novak said there was no connection between the Baker case and her husband’s death, Of her examination by 'the committee she would say oniy that it was “very thorough.” Mrs. Novak has been an employe of the Senate Small Business Committee for 13 years. After her husband’s death she became Baker’s partner in the motel operation. (Continued From' Page One tended to get into it as he \yatched me. “He hit a cap as he drove out; and I picked up a .stone and; struck his par with afl the force I could muster,” added Helsom, of Southfield, a student at Wayne State University. Davids said- Salkovich told him of being chased by a bgnk employe. He quoted the trooper as saying: “That’s when 1 came to. It would have been so easy to tur.n aroupd and put the gun on him.” '• Salkovich was driving* a car he had borrowed • from a 'feI)o"w trooper While* his oWn was being repaired, Davids said. Cutriibes, ^9, • father of* t h e shop’s owher, said Salkovich was in the shop, „ waiting- f 0 r employes to pairil the dented right rear fender, when FBI agents stopped in with descriptions of the holdup car. ijr CHECKED I looked at, the description, and I went back in the shop and looked at that car,” Cutrubes said. “It checked and I called the police after tho trooper went away.” Salkovich’s commanding officer, Sgt. W alter Stevens, 1 made the arrest. “H? was a good officer,” Stevens said after turning Salkovich over to FBI agents. “It’s just ohe of those things that happen. You know how it is—sometimes your mind plays tricks on you,” Salkovich was a patrolman on the Oak Park police force, for 18 months before joining the state police in 1956. He is a' graduate of both the Detroit and state police academie.S'. A threat,of a strike at Ppntiac Motor .Division was averted early today when union and management I n e g 0 t i a t o r s reached agreement on grii ances and other issues. The Weather Full U. I Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Cloudy, mild and becoming windy today with scattered showers and thunderstorms today and tonight, high today 64. Low tonight 45. and few showers and turning colder Saturday, high 52. AVinds increasin .............. ■ ■ ................ easing ti> 15 to 30 miles today and..^tonight shifting north to northwest 10 to 25 miles Saturday. Ona Y*«r Ago In Highest lempernluro Low*»t tomperotyre . Mesn t»m()er*tuie Weether—PSrlly cloudy; target areas iltep. Robert Wilson of Califor-ni^chairman of the GOP Congressional Campaign Commit-JeL said the party has designate 23 congressional districts in the Midwest ^s target areas.-Republicans hope to pick up 11 or 12 seats in these, areas, he said. He declined t6 name specific districts, but said the GOP expected to pick up'hn additional congressman in Ohio, Illinois, Missouri, Indiana, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. . NOT PAUL BUNYAN-This modern lumberjack doesn’t' nteed Paul Bunyan’s strength to carry this tree. The tree, one of almost 500 being constructed for - the General Motors exhibit at the New York Worldts Fair, weighs only almut 50. pounds. Builnn Detroit, they will bp 'nwd to landscape part of a, Futhrama ,“ride*Iirt\ tomorrow.’'* ; . -V__________ _____ Rocj' Settlement of speedup issues Jwill result in Pontiac Motor niring a number of lers, Maye said, but he would *' pot specify how many. For the first time the com pany and - union established “model mix” formulas for the sequence in which different Pontiac and Tempest models will niove along assembly lines, Maye explained. Future safety grievances will be immediately referred to FORT WpRTH (UPl)-Presi-dfent Kennedy ^laid tddgy the United States early next year will test rocket booster so powerful it will put the nation far ahead of Russia in the space race.- - !.'■ , - The President, campaigning as though it were election time in Texas, told a rain-soaked, cheering crowd oht-side his hotel that thp rocket booster will be the most powerful in history. The crowd, estimated by police at 5,000, roared approval, j 'Die Ihtegrat^d audience in a parking lot outside tbb Hot e 1 Texas where Kennedy and his wife spent the night cheered his call for “concerted effort” to in success in space. He told the crowd the, Saturq rocket boosted will put the United States ter ahead of the Soviets in thrust and in the pay-load it can carry. The President spoke briefly to the crowd. He stood bareheaded and without a raincoat despite tpe chill rhin. He apologized for the absence of Mrs. ^Kennedy, but explained Ithat it took the First Lady long-T to get organized in the morn-ng^ though she ‘looks better ihari we do” when she is finished. .. Vice President Lyndop B. Jlphnson introduced the President. He was flanked during his talk by Johnson, Sotj. Ralph '•'irborough and Go)/. John innally. PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A prominent educator charges a vigorous campaign has been mounted, in and out of Congress, to provide federal funds for private and parochial schools all the way from kind'ergarteri through college. ★ ★ f Eljgar Fuller, executive seci tary of the Council of ,Chi« State School Officers, made th!e charge in his annual report ijq the council. The council adopteid it without a djssentingrVote in a* closed convention session Thurs- . Fuller said “the campaign is^ actiye and gaining strength. Unless it is blunted the public schools will be financially under- Pontioc Woman Brings Dov^fi Doe —Without a Guf} A Pontiac woman , deer in BldOmfield Township last night — without a license and without a gun. < Mrs. Howard Dell, 201 Draper, was driving north on Telegraph about 7:30 p.m. when she saw two - she thought they were dogs - leap in front # her auto. Oneihit the Pulling onto the shoulder, fehe was informed by iBloomfield Township police that a doe was imbedded in the radiator of her ear. W Damage to the vehicle was estimate at $2.5(), and the pi^ice took the venison to jurn it over to the State ConseSrvafion Department. I NATIONAL WEATHER -Fadfic Northwest ivith snow •Iso are expected front eastern Plains through the lower and lower Lakes, white light snow eastern parts of Plains to upper Lakes region. It will third of the nation end Pacifi eastern Plains to Midwest. Educator Charges Plot J mined in thousands of American communities.’^ , The council is an organization* of state superintendents and commissioners of education from the 50, states and from U.S. possessions overseas. 'The council. Fuller i^aid, is* committed by policy “to oppose any legislation jwhich would splinter the public tax do|lar for distribution to private institu-, tions of education at any level for the I Institutional use of the schools or colleges.” The council does not object. Fuller said, to the use of federal funds by private* colleg^ and universities “for such nopinsti-tutiohal uses as research contracts, scholarships, fellowships and the like.” The Saturday schedule fe'I-3:S6„p{m, and 7:30-10,.p.m. and -that for Sundays i» 1-3:30 p.m. and 6:30-9 p.m. $1.0(|! 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