PONTIAC PRESS Home ^O^fAC/ MP^HIGAN^ ^ift6gM»4--,^GES; Proud Pop of Pontiac's '1st Lady' Delay East Huron Extension City* officials today reacted with mixed emotions at news that the extension of East Huron Street <— one of Pontiac's major highway projects — will be delayed for at least another five years. ★ * ★ The delay was* revealed in State Highway Department a nouncement of details and a scheduled public hearing on the pro- PHIZES FOR THE WINNER — In behalf of Cindy Lou Walker, winner of the First Baby Contest, her father Merril K. Walker of 940 S., . Cass Lake Road, Waterford Township, accepts one of the prizes from a representative of area merchants, Homer Messenger (left), assistant manager of Kresge’s downtown store. On Walk- er’s arm is another daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walker, Judy, 3. Kneeling is* Deborah Walker, 9. Holding Geraldine Walker, 14 months, is Patricia Walker, 13.\ At right is Katherine Walker, 11. Cindy Lou is the sixth daughter .in the Walker family. pbsed $13 million M59 freeway between Pontiac and Utica. State Highway Commissioner tion of the portion from Pontiac's loop road east to the 1-75 freeway, originally planned for the second five-year program (1962-67), would not be placed under contract until sometime 1967 and 1974. There will Wot be funds available for this part of the highway, estimated to cost 'sonde $3.8-gnilUon, Before 1967, Mackie explained. 'DELAY DISAPPOINTING’ City Manager Robert A. Stierer said the delay “is a disappointment for us since we had hoped this could be scheduled before 1967 to coincide with construction of the loop' highway. “Howeyer, in a sense, It Is encouraging because, until now, the M59 relocation and extension of East Huron had merely been a plan. Now it is definitely part of the state’s proposed highway improvement program for this area.” City planners were also disappointed at the dcfay but added that, it shouldn’t hurt the loop road which is to go under construction next fall. it ★ * ■■ ■' “This will mean that East Huron cannot be a major access thoroughfare to the loop for several years after the loop is completed, •• but we don’t see that this create any immediate block, tdt normal traffic circulation on the (Continued on Page 2, CoL 5) Tshombe Sees Says U N. as Wrong Assembly to Consider Katanga's Peace Pact but Delays Okay Medical Aid By JACK BELL WASHINGTON UP)—Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, 2 New Divisions to Be Set Up oy End of March J Won't Be Ready for I Combat Till 8 Months Later, Say Officials/ WASHINGTON M—The' two new regular Army divisions are expected to be established by the end of J March, but it will t a k e about eight months of intensive training before they can be declared ready to ■ fight J Kennedy announced jMinn., predicted today that President Kennedy wUT med^^ionmtim oinheTwo'dl-, ............... ;“push very hard” in Congress for enactment of a med-jvisions, the 1st Amorod and the ass tisi .accused .the United Nations ofj This prediction by Humphrey, the assistant Senate|dlvisimis1 <8Ulal Arm*fl piinco}cl?}6eAmh reports that National! otfi,.talw Mai Will Employ 500 at Pontiac Mall -e .»- ■ French Settlers Galled to Arms by Secret Army ■ Blood Letting in 1962 j Has Left 63 Dead and ; 140 Injured j ALGIERS (A — Fresh blood flowed today in the (battle of terrorist grbups over the issue of whether " Algeria is to remain French. I The new year’s toll of | clashes between Moslems and Europeans soared to at | least 63 dead and more [than 140 wounded. Wards to Open St Scnibly called, to consider his agreement to end Katanga's secession frohi the Congo. ., After the president's speech, which took strong exception to two of the agreement’s eight parts, the assembly president announced the matter would be ■ referred to a .special commission. Tshombe said "the United Nations’ clumsy intervention under U.S. pressure" in Katanga last month had not helped relations with the central government. "Wo did not go to Nlw York fight the United Nations, but they came here,” he said. He finally asked for * fijje “not because we were tired of fighting itir our freedom but simply because the Katanga government wanted to put an end to the killings and carnage," he declared. Only 35 of the assembly member* were present. Nine opposition deputies from the Balubakat party were among those present. There would have been 36 members present, but stomped out angrily when there was a delay of 90 minutes in opening the session. The assembly failed to begin debate on schedule Wednesday when only 19 Chairman John M. Bailey has picked medical care as "♦the top issue to be plugged by party candidates in this year’s session. Humphrey said in an interview that he looks for "tough going” but believes a bill providing health care financed through the Social Security system can bo piloted through both houses. “The President must fulfill Ids campaign pledge to gel, this program enacted,” Humphrey said. “I think he Is going to push very hard on It.” Planners Veto 4th Shop Center Commission to Urge City Reject Request for Rezoning of Area 'Three's company and four’i crowd-"—that's the feeling of tl)f city planning commission about shopping cepters in Northeast Pontiac. * * * At their meeting next Tuesday ghl. city commissioners will get recommendation from the planning commission that a proposed rezoning of 37 Acres at North Perry and Arlene streets for a shopping center be denied. I Immediate” was relative. They noted that certain advance arrangements must be made, Including the mustering of a trgmew ork of officers and noncommissioned offirers and housekeeping preparations to receive the troops at Fort Hood, Tex., and Ft. Carson, Colo. The Pentagon has liekYlcd . group of regular armored, infan try and artillery units lo become (the nucleus for the two divisions. Together, they loial aboul 10,500 urn. Ai lull strength, the* new iivisions will number about 31,-TOO men in all. But the Minnesota senator was I The 21,000 soldiers need to fill •less optimistic about some of the I he divisions' ranks will be draft-other major proposals Kennedy is lees, who have finished eight weeks expected' to lay before Congress!of basic training. Defense nulbori-shortiy after if convenes next!lies said they do nol expect to ........ raise draft calls. After the new outfits ara j brought up to strength, they will The eighth full-line Montgoi Ward department Store in Detroit metropolitan area will open Feb. 1 at Pontiac Mall Shopping inter, S. D. Ward general manager of the norlh central region, and D. L. llershcy, retail district uger for the Detroit area, announced today. i Leslie M. Gilluin. a velei ,31 years with (he company manager of the new sic bd in (lie shopping ecu 'aph anil Klizn belli Other feature* include a diamond department, an oplieal department and a‘ key shop. Attached to the *tore is a mi ear auto service station. Moptgomery Ward will he tin first deparlmenl store to open ti the 300,000-square-foot shopping center which will have a c< pletrly enclosed mall healed Wednesday. HOPE FOR UNIVERSITIES said lie feels il h Congress will npp National Business Brokers Pontiac had requested that the residential property be rezoned to L commercial for a .proposed $3-mil-1 i«"' shopping center tentatively ® . l,>!illor1 IWfu tSIn-ja (UtAnnini, Co,,. all seats were filled the would have 72 members 12 appointed chiefs. News Flash WASHINGTON (AI*) — >'»■ >lm StciuilN, D-MIsa., announced day that Senate hearing* will •gin Jan. 28 on charges that the eiitagon ha* muzzled military icn who want to speak out (alnst communism. In Today's Press . Clamping Down Severe I b a f f ic penalties doubled In Iwo years. — PAGE 5. Lampoon Red Hungary lets people laugh ut regime -* PAGE 43. Faces Opposition Rights section lo be reported out' at con-con ■-PAGE 17. Move Expected- Portugnl has had stormy time In U.N. - PAGE 13. iscnibly calk’d Perry Plaza Shopping Ceil-■ludins r°r‘ j- More than 100 residents of the area turned up at a public hear-)j„ lag on the proposal at la*t night’s | planning commission meeting. 31 o*l came lo protest the project, David V mderVeen, of Ihe plan-ning alaff, said that u study of the area showed a major shopping center' was being planned on Walton (Boulevard near Perry .and the Glenwood Plaza Shopping Center is now under construction about a mile south of the proposed site at Perry and Glenwood. * * * ! In addition, planners explained |[Unit, there was a smaller shopping and East Roule- Kdltorial* ............. 6 Food Section ......24, 26-28 Markets -................34 Obituaries Sport* ,_........?. If TV « Radio Programs .. 43 Wilson, Earl _________ 49 Women’s Pages f..... 86-33 old to oducat^^H expressed hope, however, that some assistance for higher education can be obtained. A&ed how lie felt about Ally. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy’s failure to recommend any new civil rights legislation, Humphrey (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) put through a cycle of \anred Individual training, basic' unit training, division drills and field maneuvers. Only then will they be considered combat ready. A Pentagon spokesm Army hope's lo have t Armored- and 5ili Infuii With a gri Iniately 145,000 square feet the two-dtory department store' represents the fifth major expansion by Montgomery Want In Ihe lle'troit area in Ihe past three Tltc new Ponllnc Mall stoic will have some 350 full-lime employes, 500 ine-luding part-time help. Aiiconditioned, the store will lie ope'ii 9:30 a.m. until 9 p in. daily except Sunday. STORE’S FACtl/WIKS It features escalators, elevators, 45 merchandise departments, in-j luding a snack shop with 18 1 Two Moslems and a European wore killed and ,f ight Moslems were woOnded in Oran. In AI- : giers, three .Moslem s and a Euro- 'pean were injured? i The underground Freneh right- j In# Secret Army Organisation < ihe end of hies and 72 chairs, and ii anal ! sales cepl for a catalog store u lileli opened in dtiwntown Pontiac in 1941 and (hen relocated two miles of downtown in lute 1937. Montgomery Ward had no representation in (he (’online • I Wide The eatslog' store, presently located In Ihe Tel-lluroa Shopping Center on Telegraph road, will transfer Its facilities (a the new routine Mall retail *lore Feb. I, Ward slated. . A large and more expanded catalog order department will he established in the new rclall store to hi^ndic all catalog sales and accounts. [‘GREAT POTENTIAL’ | "The decision lo open a full-line ftropolilan urea." Ward Raid. "The other reason for locating in the Pontiac area was the excellent opportunity and great -potential of this expanding and growing com munit.s" Word further snld Hint during Die next III years predictions are tlliil Oakland County will grow 33 per mil In |iopulatloii and that Waterford Township I* expected to expnnd 53 per mil. gomcry Ward’s of Ihe si ores at should open by wecl^n April, and the lulling 3 L. Hudson Co. ii within llie first 1(1 days GMC Announces New Truck Line Features High-Torque Engine •ailed last night for a general mobilization of European settlers for a last-ditch fight lo keep the North African territory under France’s flag. Handbills calling on the settlers lo prepare to fight* were posted as-the belief spread that the way was at Iasi open for an agreement lietwcen the I)c Gaulle government and Ihe Algerian rebels lo end the seven-year-old war in Algeria. The handbills gave no further xl ructions hut a pi rale radio broadcast, onrher in the day predicted viclorv for the Secrc! Army in 1963. Terrorism ' surged up In most major Algerian cities. The attacks were Indiscriminate and followed no particular pattern. II was believed the Moslem nationalists were making a show ot strength to influence Ihe secret talks under way for several weeks between Ihe French and the Nationalists. And ...the European extremists ap|H‘«rcd trying lo foster the idea that France could not enforce an independence agreement against Ihe French settlers’ determined resistance. Three persons were killed and ::o wounded by grenades thrown into a crowd of Moslems leaving W((flnoxdnv nii yard. ."There Is already enough retail aytlvll.v In this area to handle capably the existing market far 15 years or more. Another center would detract from the property value of existing centers,” said James R, Bafe*, planning department director. "Because It Is near Madison lJunjor and Pontiac Northern IIlgK’ schools, this property, Is ideal for residential- development," he added. -* ★ ★ * That was enough for the 'commission. Tliey voted unanimously to recommend denial of the rezoning proposal. Versatility and a high-lorque V(> gasoline engine mark the new of heavy-duty tyeneial Motors trucks announced today by Calvin J. Werner, vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMCTruck and t'oiicli Division, Pontiac. He said the new scries mid on-no version add grealer depth lo GMCs models for 1962, giving Hie division ihe mo.sl complete' line of trucks and highway tractors in Its 53-year history. "The ..latest engine bring* a new hauling dimension to t h c GMC line by extending our V6 family Into the heavier hauling class,” he said. ‘broad line of diesel units, n ables us to offer an exl versatile line of trucks." I7K n KI<*ll\ni ENGINE Ihr KHP, other V# 'rnffinoH imrl betwer I GMCs powerful VI2 ( engine. Other V8 gasoline engine (available in light, .medium an heavy-dqly models are Ihe 30! 351, and 401. Mikoyan Off for Africa MOSCOW CAP) - Deputy PremierAnastus I, Mikoyan left by pluhe i cslay for an official visit to the West African republiepof Guinea and talks with President Diesel engine* Include tin* In !#* ■ j jv a ! line* 6, Vil and V8 units. llOlder lemperatures Besides offering the highest II | | _ is * (torque of any gasoline truck en- Headed Back to Area i£r™rr* Ignsolinc truck engine. Ol’ Man Winter Is on his way ^ modrl„ by 4ts a redesignated as the "6500 Series," scheduled to go into produce .tion in February, II will offer three OM<)lln»—Aral! aasrl. KmcK •■■* «•» sjs BST. l«l% Tfuiyl Osaolini back to town driving colder to peratures before tym. chance of a light Friday with Ihe high near basic cab styles: the 105-inch e flurries and continued cold .Is Saturday’s prediction. Morning southwesterly wlpdsat 5 miles per hour will beebme northeasterly at J[3. to 20 m,p.h. late totta/find easterly tonight and Friday. 51 Tht) lowest temperature 1n downtown Pdntlae preceding 8 a.m. was 26, The reaidinK at 2 pm. whs 21* -ntionul, 90-inch “B" conventional for operations where -over-all length "Is a vital factor, and -ihe 72-Inch sled .tilt cab. ' Most models In the scries have single rear driving hxIcs, but h tandem rear-axle model is available for operations whore extra, traction, floatation or load carrying capacity are required. Against Romney Seeking Office ! AMC President Says Directors Don't Want Him to Enter Race I’KTKOI T ifi Ceorge - 1 n ■ v soul Weslne,, lay that du e, - tors ol .' imeni-mi Molars Coi'|). have "mil dc il -vi ■ry dear' " that they don't wanl 1 inn lo n in fni i;m rmnr , if Micliii -an (Ins \ ,ear. , Itimiiii-y said the hiuml disclosed il* scnliir tents about • his |)0»SI Aile candid lacy at a nv'cting Dec. 18 in New York. The mei fling wr is culled, Rom- jney said. to bring directors up lo (late on "the contpetltlye slitui- 11ion and other dev elopmcnts I." His 1 possible c andiducj / was o ne of l" l he olhei r developments,’’ -Rom- WORLD’S VH gasoline truck, engine, largest of fti developing 440 pound-feet of torqUc at 1,400 rpm \ln Its 478-cublc-inch power - plgiift , Torque Is In the trucking Industry, Thick nhd Conch Division, announced. said. felt they should know I was Idcring (running) and that I not mude a decision," the i ’ president said, added that the board mem-"ccrtnmly were not telling to run. As a matter of fact,-made ir very clear that they prefer me not, to .run." chairman yf (Citizens and ia a constitution-vice president. He promised to deCldl- hn his gubernatorial candidacy by |Feh. 10, TWO THE PONTIACPRESS. THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 Soviet Slips Up onl rJPulls Boner in Picture! ^Against Gen. Heusinger; rjReds Admit it J j "»• MOSCOW (AP) — A phonograph! distributed by the; Soviet goverp-1 ment as evidence in its charges against West German Gen. 'Adolf Heusinger gave Moscow propaganda chiefs red faces today. * * ★ W . ’" Foreign Ministry officials de-clinedL_jmmediate comment when] tofii a photograph" they1 ImU rlis- i tributed—purporting to'show Nazi! soldiers burning a Russian village] at Heusinger's order—was actually one, the Soviet government-had previously -issued of Japanese spl-[ diers burning a Chrneise""vinager| BIG SI2PIT "We will investigate," they said. It was One- of the biggest propaganda slipups in recent years. I The news reached Moscow-In I the issue of the West German magazine Stern dated Jan. 7. It was confirmed here by reference to the original document. Have Mixed Feelings on &~Dee.._lZ. the Soviet government demanded that the United States turn Gen. Heusinger over to the Soviet .Union for trisi on war criminal charges. Heusinger, 64, was chief of operations of the German general staff until 1944, chief architect of the postwar. West German army and now is chairman of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization permanent military committee in Washington. The United States denounced the charges as a “crude propaganda maneuver.' Opposite page 8 of the official ■ "History of the Great Patriotic War of the Soviet Union" is a picture showing soldiers watching burning village. The caption says "Japanese Interventionists Burn a Chinese Village (Shanghai District, 1932)." At the Dec. 12 news conference, the same picture was displayed as evidence of an atrocity asserted to have been ordered by Heusinger in Western Russia. Mercury Plunges in North States; Florida Wxirmer By The Associated Press Temperatures dropped as much as 34 degrees in eight hours today ns a cold front pushed into New York State from the north. The mercury plummeted from 32 above at midnight to 2 below zero at 8 a.m. In Massenn, N Y. It dropped 24 degrees to 14 above in Syracuse and plunged 15 grees to 21 above In Buffalo! AWARDED Pl-AQUE — Pontiac Motor‘DfvP sfon received an honor award-plaque for Its • excellence in Suggestion Plan promotion at a recent convention in Cincinnati from the National Association of Suggestion Systems. Pictured is the award winning display "PONTIAC _ SUGGEST-O-LITES” and recipient of the plaque, William J. Malinowski, suggestion chairman at Pontiac. During 1961 a record number of over -2,200 improvement suggestions were put into use at the Pontiac Division for which employes .received, la excesA^oif ilTOjOQO. _____ Sukarno Tells Indonesians ‘New Guinea to From Our New* Wires MAKASSAR, Celebes, Indonesia -"West New Guinea will be ln-iuded in Indonesian territory this year and no fleet, no army, no force will stop us," President Sukarno declared today. Speaking to a - huge throng on this Indonesian * island, he firmly rejected-Dutch proposals for set-] tlement of the New Guinea dis- ] pute. built in the Portuguese colony of Macao over a period of several months and loaded aboard a Danish freighter bound for the Indonesian port of Surabaya Iasi September. President Sukarno ordered national mobilization last month and said he would invade West New Guinea unless the Dutch handed it over. He gave no indication of an invasion date. Kennedy to Leave Sukarno alerted hi* armed I forces more than two weeks ago to be ready to seize the disputed half of New Guinea but has not yet ordered a D-Day. The country has stepped hp its arms build-up off the shores of West New Guinea, however. „ The army announced that 10.000 veterans of independence -fighting against the Dutch arc‘ being re-| •med on Ambolna and other is-. I The palm Beach White House i some unid Kennedy will meet with Switches Plans, Florida Friday PALM BKACH, Fla. M - Present Kennedy switched plans today and decided to end his Florida sojourn Friday, n day ahead >f schedule. He scheduled weekend 'onferences at the White House or legislative and security problems. lands of the Moluc 150 miles off the New Guinea. The announcement closely fol-j f lowed a report from a high gov-y ernment source that Indonesia is willing to promise West'New Gui-itual self-determination if l the Duleh agree to let Jakarta take over the territory’s adminis-|(ration in the meantime. | A freezing drizzle mixed with •PRELIMINARY STEPS’ snow added more weather woes Col. Busjlri, military comma in New York State. Some schools|rl- „( the Molucca' hum, decla were closed because of glazed Chairman Wllburg Mills, D-Ark. of the House Ways and Means Committee Saturday morning-- roads. Much of the North britced for colder weather. Watertown, N.Y., had 6 below zero early In the day. and Sault Sle. Marie, Mich,., had K below. But, south of the cold 'front, the East enjoyed a warm-up. Fore-caaters fici'dicled highs in the 70s 'TfTSouthern Florida and in the 60s in Northern Florida as that state’s third cold wave within two weeks began to recede. . ,-cterans and their assignmenl^H -omhut units arc preliminary steps to "the march forward to stop the Dutch-created Papuan Rlate from operntlng and to hoist Indonesia’ red and white flag in the tn Informed sources in Hong Kong lid a shipyard in Macao has delivered’to the Ihdonesian marine' 'ps five 60-foot-long' motorized barges which could he used in a, landing on Dutch./k-w Guinea. Considers Law for Ski Lifts Swoinson May Propose State Safety Inspection; Comes After Fatality LANSING lIf) - Gov. Hwainson said today he may recommend legislation requiring stale ..safety inspection of all ski lift equipment in Michigan. Contrary to one report, he said. I here was no slate inspection of a ,'hairlift at Nub’s Nob near Petos-key -which went out of control Sunduy. Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said the President also will have other appointments that day, primarily with stall assistants, helore flying to Columbus, Ohio, to speak at a fund-raising dinner honoring Gov. Michael V. Disqllc. Kennedy has engagements Sunday with director John A. McCone of the Central Intelligence Agency and Gen. Lucius D. Clay, his personal representative in cri-i-laden Berlin. Today Kennedy dropped other ^Isiness and concentrated I weaving together his state of the union message — his accounting to Congress of what shape the ; country is in and what he think? should be done a I tout Kennedy originally had planned to rrnlajn in Palm' Beach until Saturday afternoon and fly direct to Columbus. Now his timetable calls for taking off by presidential Jet Friday at 4 p. m. EST, landing about Iwd m> Air Fot ■ Ua.< j later at Andrews , Md. ;, (Continued From Pagp^One) loop,” said James 'Reflates, Panning department director. The delay will pot have any effect on Pontiac’s urban renewar program since it had ^not been tabbed tor,, urban renewal credit. '* # The state will hold a public hear-..jg on the entire proposed freeway at 8 p.m., Jan. 11,. in the Avondale Senior High School gymnasium in Avon Township, ■ ★ —★ .★ Full details will be revealed at J the "hearing. proposal calls for the use o' Mt. - Clemens and East Huron -Street four lanes in each direction) to j Paddock Street from the loop,. Frqm Paddock east, the highway would become a four-lane divided, limited access freeway. Inside Pdd-dock, Mt. Clemens would be one way westbound, and Huron, way eastbound. * ★ ★ Each Would require' a 100-foot right-of-way, accoixUng to Mackie'. The 10-mile section , from 1-75 to. Mound Road would be placed under contract by the end of 1964 if proposed plank "ate approved by the U.. S. Bureau of Public Roads. Running along the Clinton River, the Pontiac portion could be developed-into a scenic parkway — jat least this Is what city planners '■have envisioned for many years. 1 ★ ★" * Mackie spelled out several details not formerly publicized. Preliminary plans call for interchanges in Pontiac at East Boulevard and Opdyke Road; outside the city at .1-75' and Adams, Crooks, Rochester, Dequindre and Mound roads. Also In Pontiac there will be overpasses at the Grand Trunk Western Railroad tracks west of Opdyke and where Mt. Clemens meets the freeway at Paddock. Other bridges are to be at the railroad tracks between Adams and Crooks roads; at Squirrel, Liv-rnois, Auburr., John R and Ryan roads and South Boulevard.-Pontiac streets which would be closed at the freeway include Michigan Avenue, Jesse, Astor, ! Midland,., Belmont, Tasmania, Ridgeway and Hilldale. The Day ip Birmingham /1 'j ; ‘ . City Commission New Building Schlosser, 38, of 5738 Berkley % Pontiac, has held his township post tor four years. He Will take over his Birmingham duties later this month, succeeding Andrew Butts, who resigned to ••take a position with a Detroit bank: . A replacement for Schlosser not yet been named by the town- R. A. AMBROSE Oakland County roads to be closed at the freewgy include Rie-gel, Mnft and Dorjs roads; Hazel-ton, Michelson, Newakwa, Short Ridge and Bishop streets. Most of these streets, however, would be connected by service drives on the south side of the freeway.; .. Between Paddock and the railroad tracks west of Opdyke, the freeway would be on a 200-to 300-foot right of way. From there eastward. It would require a SOO-fOot right of way. Until the Pontiac Section from the loop to 1-75 is completed, Auburn Avenue would no doubt remain as M59 from the city eastward to Opdyke Road, said a highway department spokesman. Try Lansing Teacher lor Obscene Mail Report That Son ol City Pioneers Appointed Envoy The Weather son of one of Pontiac’s pi-r families, Robert McCIintock of the Sti^te Department policy lannlng council, is reported, to five been chosen U. S. ambnssa- PONTIAC ANI) VICINITY — Mostly cloudy today with Jailing temperatures by afternoon. Cloudy and colder tonight and Friday with flha'nce of light snow. Low tonight - 25, high Friday 28. Northeasterly winds 15 to 20 miles today becoming easterly tonight and Friday. < Orr, 32,- Grand Rapids high school teacher, wag, killed when he was slnmmcd into a building housing the operating mechanism after the lift wept Into reverse, Several other skiers were Injured, "No stale official conducted ar Inspection of that lift,” Swninson [Chamberlain, told a news conference. "No Stale agency has authorization or Jurisdiction to conduct such an in- j moved to Call for spection.” The governor said it might belfamlly (her m | wise for the Legislalurr i*|slder enactment .of a la CHICAGO (IV- A Lansing, MichJ high school, teacher was one ol two men on trial in *U-S. District Court Wednesday on charges of mailing obscene matter as members of a male pen pal club. James Poulos, 41-year-old Lansing teacher and Glen D. Willbem, 58, an .Indiana University professor, were among 10 defendants named. The other eight waived jury trials. Judge" Edward B. Austin said he Wilt use evidence presented in hp Willbern-Poulos trial in reaching his verdict for the other eight. . ,, , S P ,.| The .10 defendants were among and Mrs. Charles ft Chamberlain r>2 indi (ed # ear ag0 ag a rWiq|t met her husband In Pontiac andLf a federal investigation into the W* t(LCa,,,or",a «,,eJr HAdonis Male Club, wedding. The couple raised their j Robert daughter Christine :. inspn z fequlr- i-1born some 50 years ago. jSays Pro-Western Prince However, Robert ami his wife Has Broken Promises Named toVacancy on Education Board . A veteran Oxford school official, R. A. Ambrose, has been named to fiU a vacancy on the Oakland County Board df Education. Ambrose, 66, of 57 N. Washington St., retired July l after 19 years as superintendent of the Oxford Area Community School District. He" replaces Rahsford Bromley of Lakeville who recently' retired from the board for health ret after four years of-service. * ★ G:*. 1 Ambrose was elected by the Board to serve until the spring election! County Records 1st Traffic Death Pedestrian, 71, Struck by Car in City, Heads List of '62 Fatalities A 71-year-old .pedestrian died yesterday after being struck by a car in Pontiac Tuesday eve-___________^ nlng Is Oakland Oakland Highway Toll in *62 BIRMINGHAM w Commerce Township building inspector Richard B; Schlosser has been named city building inspector by the City i a Hold of it candidate#, Schlosser 1$ o past president of the Southeastern Michigan Building Officials and In- He aUjo Is a member of the County’i traffic fatality of 1962. Walter C. Harbin of 166 Beach St., Pontiac, died 11:15 a.m. yesterday at Ponllac General Hospital. Harbin was critically injured when, according to a witness, he darted into the path of a car at Oakland and North Johnson avenues at 6:15 p. Tuesday. The driver of the car which Struck Harbin, Basil R. Butler of 10 TregenL St., said he swerved but was unable to stop in time to avoid hitting the elderly pedestrian. Witnesses said Harbin -rossed the street against the red light and ran into the path of But-auto. The driver was not held. ★ ★ 6 Oakland County recorded its first 1961 traffic death on New Day. Pontiac's first traffic fatality last year occurred Jan. 27. Great Lakes Lihe May Be Bought by D-C Transit Great Lakes TransIt'Corp., the bus line which ties Pontiac to Detroit and serves 20,000 residents of Oakland County, is being considered for purchase by a Washington, D. C. firm. ★ D-C, Transit Corp.'s First Vice President Morris Fox today said he had approached the parent American Transit Co. in St. Louis about purchase of Great Lakes along with Intertown Suburban Lines, which formerly served 14 downriver Detroit suburbs. ire ready, willing and able to move In,’* FOX said. He Indicated negotiations would continue. Great Lakes Transit runs mainly along Woodward Avenue and has an estimated 85 buses to serve Birmingham, Clawson, Berkley, Oak Park and the Northland Center area in addition to linking Pontiac dhd Detroit. ★ ★, *. The line was established four years ago when Greyhound Corp. sold".out local lines to other -interests. Says JFK to Push Medical Aid to Aged (Continued From Page One) -said he thought “there still Is much that ran he done on the executive front.” "I think the administration has in excellent record of executive action in this field,” He said-Personally,- however, I think some of thp civil rights laws should be strengthened, particularly in the field of voting, and I will support legislation of this kind.” durr Ch.r t^ ^|hnps by inspectors who now t -heck iXs'eh ? 4 "1 would not hesitate. (o i«)J j 4i ommend this lo the "LegiRlati ure,” h»rl1 4 l 23 he said. J j*|. Swninson pninirtl mil that (hej Auto Production Is Estimated at 122.400 for Week DETROIT (ft—Automotive News estimated today that domestic passenger car production in the United States this week will total 122.400 units. ★ ★ ' ★ Eight auto plants will work Saturday to make up lor some of the output lost on New Year’s Day, the trade paper reported. This week’s auto production will be up (M.9 per cent over the If ,204 assemblies in the like week n year ago, and 16 per cent higher, than the 105,022 units built in the week ended Dee. 80, number ol ski NATIONAL WEATHER—Snow and * now flurries 'are forecast lor tonight for (the North and Central Appalachhtnsv Lfikes, Upper and Mid-Mississippi Valle}; .and the/Rockies, with 'p*s«w*ionai rain In Ttflincssee Valtey, Central GpU, Texas Coast anr^North1 PadfK' states, It will bo much .colder tn the northern tier Irani the Rockies eastward and in Ihc Ohio and Mid-Mississippi valleys and cooler in the South and Central Plains and Rdckies. It . will be mUder in Am/ Southeast and the Carollnas. Funeral Service lor Dr. McMath Friday Morning Service for world-famous nstron-imer Dr. Robert R. tyoMalh. 70. ffllL be al 1|‘a.m, tomorrow In phrlst Church Cradhrook, With burial In White Chappl Memorial * * * ^ Dr. McMath, of 255 Lone Pine Court, Bloomfield Hills, died Tuesday of a circulatory ailment, i ills bodv is at the Bell Chapel of the William ft Hamilton Funeral Home, 820 E.. Maple Rdad, Birmingham, from noon today. * * . V Surviving are his wife, flip for-Mary Rodgi and two. sons have been quent visitors of his aunt and j ZURICH, Switzerland W*— Prince! uncle, Mr. and Mrs.-4. Stewart [Souymipa Phoumn, neutralist pre-| Production .of commercial ve-Farmer, ol 2972 Garland Ave., imlCr-designato of Laos, chargedjhldes will total 17,922 units, up the City of Sylvan Lake. )today pro-Western Premier Rcinee(11.4 over last year’s 16,087 but 18.5 ^ a a jBoun Oum has broken all his prom-jper cent under Inst week’s 21,981. ses for a (oafltion government Automotive News said the if national unity. .Studebaker-Packnrd stride and i Souvanna arrived here en route;one-week shutdown of the Wtllyo n Paris in attend tliii marriage'plant for inventory contributed to the decline from last week’s total. Before assuming his new duties, than in { McCIintock served as (J: S. am-jbassqdpr to .Beirut, Lebanon, ami 'was former ambnssndor tn Cam-;"! 1 bodlfl. He servedTH the diplomatic)01 a Uuugnter. service In various areas for ding to his aunt Building Officials Conference of Michigan and of America. The former carpenter is married and the- father of three children. the Southfield planning firm of Vilican-Leman and Associates has been appointed by’ the City Commission {to carry out the work made possible recently by a Federal grant of 832,009 for planning assistance. , A triparty contract Is dty, the state, who Is the ecting meat, and the consulting firm Is Am next-step necessary before the two-year planning program cun be Inaugurated. ' Birmingham’s share of thd project Is abotit $8,500. Hie funds will be used to finance surveys, aerial photographs and topographical maps- The grant was made under the )1 program pf the Federal Urban Renewal Administration. A film tour of the Orient, cimilar to the one to be conducted April 18 to May 22 by Oakland Travel, . Inc., 730 N. Woodward Ave„ will ited 8 p.m. tomorrow at the. travel agency. Mrs. Adah Gemi of Bloomfield HUIs, who has Jived in Japan 11 years, will lead the 85-day tonr. ★ ★ Hr The color, sound movie will show major cities such ag Tokyo, Nikko and Kyoto and other places that will be visited like. Mt. Hiei, Gifu and Takamatsu. Army Completes Troop Movement Along Autobahn. BERLIN (4)-mic U S. Army completed another troop movement along Berlin’s Communist-rtintrolled access highway today. Part of Company A, 3rd Battle Group. 6th Infantry, entered the East German autohann eh route to training in West Germany at 7:59 a.m. and cleared the final Soviet checkpoint four hours later, the army- said. No interference reported from the Communists, who call the, movements provocative. Another group of perhaps 50 men from the same company Is scheduled to make the trip Frtduy. Grippe Capcels K's Trip MOSCOW (AP) —Premier Khrushchev Is 111 with the grippe and has postponed a trip to Byelorussia, Informed sources said tonight. During the trip he had been expected to have a conference with Polish Communist lender Wladyslaw Gomulka somewhere near- the Soviet-Polish border. Farmer. Al one time, Mrs. Farmer ex-1 plained, the McCIintock family owned a great portion of downtown Pontiac including the property of the old court house site, and tjiat the family Tl'fll one trf jhe flw<-| pioneer groups to help establish! ’online. Says Hubby Was Cool, j Even Under Mistletoe I LOS ANGELES (AP) - Patty! Miller, 21, divorced caterer Ivan Mlllqr, 28,' Wednesday, testifying! cool and distanll. corroborating] witness. | Rose, told or giving a. Christmas party a year ago at which husbands kissed their wives, under the mistletoe. But not Miller, she said,' doughleh Madeline of Ann Arbor stepsons, Rbbert T. Garrison of -Fort Lnudefdide, Pin,, and ny R. Garrison of Birmingham;, a brother, Natl C, Mrifliith, nresident of DcJroll’s Whitehead nd Kales Co., and a Rlsirr,' Mri,-| Harold Edwards of Syracuse, N Y.'lands Is 76 depress. THIS AUTO SAFETY BELT MAY SAVE YOUR LIFE Fully oil Soclsty of Automotive tpoci. C(itHolan9 100% nylon woh- SAFITYBtlTS bing hoi tontllo ltr»n«tb ol OvOf <000 Ibol Fity ol) moliot ol corii ootlly and aukkly inttoilod. Como In lor your ...----- •«—||y.protoctlno Safety Dostgnsd s Aero , NEEDS -2nd floor (end ond jongii 'XfiJ Cirt and pre-' vd i -con COLORS S6 6I*( <■ m V Isch DISCOUNTS For T0NITE-FRI.-SAT. Electric Wire and Supplies . VL Approved—First Quality Covered R0MEX WIRE 14-2 nc WIRE % Per Ft, V 14-2 ROMEX and Ground . 12-2 ROMEX Wire......Per Ft, 4ttc 12-2 ROMEX ond Ground . .. Por Ft. 5'/jc Cut Any Length While You Wait . . Por Ft. 4c 9‘ ROMEX Wire Connectors for Vfr-IncH knockouts. 25e Toggle Switches-Each IQc Stiffllo Polo Switch. Nojimifot t)ii» price. ■ W TV Lead-In Wire ^1,49 inmlotod wiro, 300 ohm wlro . . 50 Ft. 20e WaRReceptacles -each 13c GE Silent Mercury Switch — COc Rnqulor ) I value — Siler*! operotion. Brown. . MeMW .............................................. Complete TELCO Kit thitdoor TV Aerial* Ready to Install i Square Deni fin LIGHT FIXTURES -6 6G Llots. Bulb ON fro. I 30° Octagon Boxes - each 9dc K.inrh with oalvanlzod (Inlih. .. .\...... ® 16* Switch Plate*-each Cbokit of motal or plaitic plat#* 9C 30c Ceiling Receptacles — each 24° 35* Current Taps--e^ch 27® 50° Friction Tape-roll / Lorgo roll ol bldtl InOion lapo lim-i ? o 1^-. CM Rubber Cushion Flashlight .31 If Vdluff*? ctHi; bosorkw ,o«(ro ,’. .* i -ofy-W kAwkAjK'Jirs> 97- ^MuLSEm B Llrciit nl ■ —2nd J/v THE Pd’NTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 THREE 20/000 Pounds of Clothing Goal for School Drive ■' The. annual Pontiac public , schools alothing drive X Seeking to meet a goal of 20,000 pounds of used clothing this year, Paul C. Allison, director of the drive, announced today. The drive w(U. be held Jan. 15- 19. All used clothing will be used to benefit Pontiac,school chll- In school! may call the nearest school. Collection wllTbe rxiade by the school or the neighborhood Parent-Teacper Association. REGULAR COLLECTIONS Regular -collections are made .through each of the system's dents. Hie schools are sending home "publicity explaining • the drive, ... .. -■ ' Clothing will bo distributed through local charitable organizations. “There is a particular need for winter clothing of all. sixes,” Allison. said;’ ‘‘however summer clothing will be accepted for use later in the year." • Titov Visits Indonesia JAKARTA. Indonesia OP) — ,Maj. Gherman Titov, the second Russian to orbit the earth in a space ship, arrivdd Wednesday for 'a Peek’s goodwill visit to Indonesia. SIMMS JANUARY CLEARANCE of MUEfUCMMUTEl MnSSUTBaSKS SIMMS BASEMENT WEEK-END DISCOUNTS Clearance of ‘Best Seller’ Group of RUGS 1.00 Values to 52.95-EACH Choice of assorted sizes, rugs including reveal* blet, bound carpeting, contour rugs, rubberized back cottons, solids, tweeds, hi-Lo etc. Big color selections. RAYON-NYLON Blend Blankets Big 72x90 Inch Size 1.99 Irregulars of $3.49 sellers —90% rayon blended with 10% nyloq. 3-inch satin bound, choice of 4-colors. • Easy to launder tool ooooooos TWIN or FULL $10.95 ESSSfig. W-1Extra fine quolity in frrnged 01 11 ' *®lid e°l0,,< prints, s whites. Choice of t> Repeat Clearance of a ‘Best Seller’ CNMrens’ SKATES 99 Perfect Skates - Imperfect Shoes Record low price because tha shoes failed to pass inspection, but the blades are perfect. Ideal for beginning youngsters. FIRST QUAUTY—Endicott Johnson MEN’S BOYS* Dress Shoes 3* Original $5.98 to $7.95 All 'Endweir or 'Crusader' quality in dress oxfords, sport loafers, moccasin toes, brown or black in all leather uppers in composition or crepe soles. Sizes 6 to 12 for men or boys 2'A to 6. Clearance Prices on Men’s Insulated U-Wear 77 6-o*. Weight JACKET and BOTTOM w W . —Both for , 100% Nylon inside and out, stitch quitted acetate—polyester—nylon insulation for warmth at sub-zero temperatures. All sizes swfall to eXTra-large. BETTER QUALITY —Jackef and Bottom Regular Values,,to $12.66-—100°/J Dqcron insulation, hand washable ... 5 or 6 ounce weights . . . also included are inner-outer I, Sizei large ahd extra large Grtly. TONITE-FRIDAY-SATURDAY Nationally Advertised Brandt CIGARETTES REGULARS per carton Plus 9c Tax KINO I FILTER > Per Carton ..Plus 9c Tax 221 231 .Camels, Chesterfield, Luckies, Pall Mall, Kents; Viceroys, Salems etc. You're assured of freshest smokes 'cause we Choice R.G. DUN or LaPALINA ’4” CIGARS BOX 50's — , R. G. Dunn Admiral A QQ or LaPalino Ideal. |«0« | RONSONOL •I Lighter Fluid a 15c Choice of 2 Styles Cigarette Lighters BOWERS or PIPE-LITER $1 Seller f 69e Choice of Bowers wind proof in gold or silver finish or Pipe-Liter Tn squeeze style as 100 ENVELOPES REGULAR 39c pack of 100 envelope* OC( in 6-inch ti 150-Fc. Combination Stationery Pack $1 Value 98 N. Saginaw —Main Floor He w)ll accompany President Sukarno on A trip to South Celebes Friday. . Seeks New Postmasters Lots ol people play dumb; unfortunately too many aren't play-tog. WASHINGTON 00 LiLLYS INSULIN U-45 99' LILLY INSULIN U-80 ^IMypos, your cholc# ot.-.,. * , . ’ J99 FEVER THERMOMETERS—Ea. 69' BIG DISCOUNTS on BABY NEEDS ENFAMIL Baby Formulas sit.- 19 059 1»">* |^for^ MEADS LACTUM Baby Formula Regular 29c„cans of Famous Lactum Liquid, sssssssssssssss 12.*2” Johnson & Johnson BABY NEEDS 19c BABY SOAP 3 BARS for?.....WJr BABY POWDER 73c Econo-Size....... 49* OIL—LOTION—SHAMPOO or CRIME ’M IM 98 N. Saginaw—DRUGS Meta Floor , I FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 4, 1962 '/ Don't Want World Should Pass By PHYLLIS IKSHWOT" % new YORK — Con*ider-able thoughts tar a new year, on and off the record: ' to remidn healthy, "Always one thing less than you think ypu can. do” — Bernard Baruch., "People are always telling foieto slow down, but I'm a limt belhsver in God, and I feel that God gives no orifTindividual too big a burden. As long as he sees you’re breathing ahd sleeping and walking, he knows it’s not too much.” — Jerry :.Lewis..... Births Ortego, Perry 8t. Bkilleru, 230 8. a r«ak*!^57 St. Joseph ■ w rh R. Hutchinson, St Matthews Samuel L. White. 1S1 Cedardale Glenn L. Holslngton, #80 Northfteld Ocoriie P Olbb, 158 E. Huron William H Elllett, 71 roster • Donald J Popoui, 3142 E Walton B ____—rd. 88 Willard rl J. Olson, 2885 Motorway ester C. Brewer. 300 W. Yale arise R. Thomas, 7320 N. Shake met D. Grant. 1230 Larch - ...t jp&M Thomas O, Muenatermar David W. Zuehlke. 679 8! Marvin C. Felt*. UJWO Rhode James E. Koenig. 47827 Roland llohry B Otteraon. 47814 Jeffr\ Donald F. Buner. M123 Peach ' : Emory N. 8ova. 8730 Mary Anr , Douglas J. Millar. 48778 Jour m to t, on “Loltgesity experts seem agree that men, at the moat, live Id one hundred end 10 years, but that pot even the mlrhcles of medicine can push us further than that It Is curious (and;lron-le) that persons with life Insurance, live longer than person* without It, and that persona with annuities — a small or Iargeln-come guaranteed throughout life — live even longer.” — George "Sure; I put unhappy, endings oni should pass me by , , ” — Ger-some of my mbvi^srW particular! trude Berg ^ philosophy, is that then, never get ,Aboutthe woridi havea curL what they go after Or when they { (g ^ ^ thisw&, wot H it's worthless « real living." - William Holden. “All my life I got up at six in' ”1 should say I am frequently the maining. You think I could frightened-