The Weather UJ. WMther Buruu Portent Cool (Dot of it on P*gt » VOL. m — NO. 189 CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — Bringing home a bundle of seven space records, the Gemini 11 astronauts rode to a safe pinpoint landing in the Atlantic today to climax a sensational three-day mission. it ★ ★ America’s newest heroes, Charles Conrad Jr. and space-walker Richard If. Gordon Jr., ended one of man’s most significant space adventures when they splashed into the sea with- Osteopathic Hospital to Hike Wages Wage hikes have b e e n approved to make Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital employes among the highest paid in Michigan, it was disclosed today. Edward Derbabian, chairman of the finance committee of the hospital board of trustees, announced the wagh hikes, which are to be implemented over a three-month period beginning Oct. 2. Cost of the salary increases is expected to total nearly 1500,000 a year, he said. An estimated 500 employes are affected. The wage boosts, which vary from 25 to 60 per cent for nursing personnel, result from a salary review begun in January by the finance committee, according to Derbabian. He said the wage review is not complete and would continue. ★ * ★ Based on the proposed wage scale for nurses, Derbabian said the new osteopathic hospital employe salaries would be the highest in the city and among the highest in the state. NEW RATES The hew minimum salary for supervisory nurses will be $670 per month with a maximum of $804. Staff (registered) nurses will receive $603 a month to start with a maximum of $723. New wage scales for other nursing personnel include $450 to $540 per month for licensed practical nurses and $354 to $396 for nurses’ aides and orderlies. Supervisory nurses at Pontiac General Hospital are now paid $583 to $699 per month, while staff nurses receive $525 to $630. At St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, the wage range for the same two categories is $630 to $766 and $520 to $663 respectively. * ★ ★ “We’ve tried to keep costs down,” said Derbabian, “but found it affected service. We now are striving for the best qualified personnel in all areas.” Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital officials said the employe wage hikes, while designed to be competitive with other hospitals and area industry were .aimed at adding personnel to expand the hospital from its present 176 beds to its rated capacity of 400 beds. In Today's Press Red Guards Chinese Communist leaders clamp down on youths — PAGE E-14, School Affairs Pontiac enrollment is nearing projected fall figure — PACE B-8. Area News .........D-8 Astrology .......D-19 Bridge.............B-» Crossword Puzzle .. E-13 Comics ..... .......D-li Editorials ............A-l Food Section —D-2—D-3 Markets Obituaries ........D-5 Sports ........E-l—E-5 Theaters ......... D4 TV-Radio Programs Bril Wilson, Earl . . . . .E41 Women’s Pages B4—B-5 THE PONTIAC in view of crewmen aboard the aircraft carrier USS Guam. “This old world looks pretty good from the deck of this carrier,” Conrad told the cheering crew of the carrier. “But I’ll tell you something else, it lodes great from 850 miles up.” * ★ ★ The smiling, heavily bearded astronaut was talking about Gemini ll’s record-breaking trip yesterday to) the “top of the world,” "We had a very good flight,” Conrad said, “and after a couple nights rest we’ll be ready to go again.” An electronic chauffeur, an automatic system being tried for the first time, steered them through a blazing reentry through ti>e atmosphere and parked them just about two miles off the Guam. This was closer than any other American manned spaceship has come to its main recovery ship. Gemini 9 held the previous mark, 3% miles.. ★ * * Gemini 9, however, still holds the record for closest to the aiming point — an area in the center of the landing zone. It missed by only 300 yards, while Gemini 11 was more than a mile off that mark. However, officials considered this good shooting for a first try at the automatic reentry system, which relied on the spacecraft computer and guidance system. Gemini 11 dropped into the sea at 9 a.m. EST while sailors packed the deck of the carrier to cheer two fellow Navy men. Conrad is a commander and jprdon a lieutenant command- i° Helicopters were overhead (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Where Gemini 11 Splash-Down Occurred Senate Passes Base-Pay Bill $1.60-Per-Hour Plan Awaits LBJ Signing WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislation sending the minimum hourly wage to $1.60 in 1968 — above the government-recognized poverty income level — and extending coverage to eight million more workers awaits President Johnson's signature. The Senate approved the compromise bill 55 to 38 yesterday in almost' exactly the form, the President requested after rejecting Republican efforts to send it back to House-Senate conference for-watering down. Major provisions would: Increase the present $1.25 minimum wage to $1-40 next Feb. 1 and to $1.60 a year later for nearly 30 million workers now covered. Bring under the act for the first time roncivil service federal government workers, some farm workers, nonteaching employes of grade and high schools, and employes of hotels, motels, restaurants, laundries, transit systems, colleges and universities. Broaden coverage to medium-size retail stores, bringing 1.5 million additional workers under the wage and hour law. The $1.60 minimum would bring to $3,328 the gross income of a covered employe working 40 hours a week for a full year. Equality of Opportunity in Schools to Be Studied A citizens committee study will be conducted to determine and comment on the equality of educational opportunity in t h e Pontiac School District. The board of education last night formally resolved to sponsor the study, expected to take 12 to 18 months. John F. P e r d u e, who became the district’s school-community and human relations director in July, was named to coordinate the study. He cited last night’s action as “a very important step in the right direction to improve our school system.” ★ ★ ★ | While tile study will disclose weaknesses within the district, it also will indicate where there are areas of strength, Perdue said. Outlining the first steps in the program, Perdue said he . will meet Tuesday with representatives of the State Board of Education and the Michigan Civil Rights Commissioili who will serve as consultants for the study. Letters are to be sent out immediately seeking the name of potential members for the committee..'9 “We hope for 100 nominees from which the board can select 30,” Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said. ★ ★ ★ Perdue said he hoped the committee could be organized by November or December. SCOPE UNDEFINED Scope of the study has not yet been defined, but Whitmer noted it will involve “an assessment (Continued on Page 2, C61. 4) New Effprt on Bias Bill Debate Due WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said today he will make a new effort to halt debate on the civil rights bill. A showdown vote would come ' Monday, and the Montana senator acknowledged in an interview that the chances of success are slim. But he said he believes supporters of the measure will come closer than they did in the initial effort. That 54-42 roll call, late ye» » terday, fell 10 votes short, of the two-thirds required to limit debate. It all but doomed the bill. Mansfield said he expects to submit the petition today, MONDAY VOTE Under Senate rules, that would bring it to a vote at 1 p.m. Monday, an hour after the Senate meets. Mansfield said he thinks the new cloture move will win the backing of three Democrats absent on the first roll call, and added he hopes to pick up more Republican backing. The measure’s open housing section has been the focus of a week of off and on filibuster against''even taking it up formally. ★ ★ ★ Mansfield indicated, in advance of today’s decision to try again, that he was pessimistic. NOT CHANGING MIND “You know as well as I do,” Mansfield told a reporter who asked about the outlook. Cloture probably will not be invoked unless Republican leader Everett Dirksen of Illinois drops his opposition and Dirksen says he is not changing his mind. Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., the bill’s floor manager, said he had recommended a new debate-halting effort. He, too, conceded it would be difficult to change enough minds to reverse the outcome. Gov. Romney Opposes Tax Credit Repeal Northerly Winds Send Mercury Tumbling to 46 Morning northerly winds riding in at 8 to 18 miles per hour brought temperatures tumbling from a high of "76 yesterday to a low of 46 at 6 a.m. The weatherman predicts fair and cool tonight with lows in the 49s.. Partly cloudy anti continued cool with highs Of Cl to It Is tomorrow’s forecast, aal there’s a chance of showers Saturday or 9oday. Rainfall lor the period will total one-tenth to one-quarter inch over the weekend. Rain falling late yesterday was too tight to measure. At 1 p.m., the thermometer hi downtown Pontia^ registered 14. NEW YEAR CELEBRANTS - Rabbi Israel Goodman of the B’nai Israel conservative congregation, 143 Oneida, holds the scroll read at Rosh Hashanah services last night as David E. Utley, congregation president, replaces the crown. The service marked the beginning of the Jewish New Year. City Synagogues Fete New Year Hundreds of Jews in the Pontiac area gathered In synagogues last night to observe Rosh Hashanahj open* ing services of the Jewish New Year. According to the Hebrew calendar, the year 1966 is the Hebrew year 5727. Rabbi Israel Goodman chanted the liturgy in. Hebrew and David E. Utley assisted in the Erev service at Congregation B’nai Israel by * AP Wirtphoto MIXING BUSINESS, POLITICS — GoV. Romney, who opened the Michigan Chamber of Commerce public affairs conference in Lansing yesterday with a blast at President Johnson’s fiscal policies, is shown here with Creighton Holden, board chairman of the businessmen’s group. LANSING (AP)—Gov. George Romney told an audience of businessmen yesterday he opposed repeal of the 7 per cent investment credit allowed business firms under federal income tax laws. “Discouragement of plant expansion at this time is exactly the opposite of what we should be doing,” Romney told a public affairs conference of the Michigan Chamber of Commerce. . He also said be is recommending “commitment of $29 to $30 million over toe next six months in owner-occupied FHA insured mortgages in Michigan” to spur toe lagging bome-building industry. Romney, frequently mentioned as a possible Republican presidential candidate, said i President Johnson “could have taken fiscal action last winter” to head off “the inflation and uncertainty we are currently going through.” He did not elaborate. * ★ * He said a major cause of/inflation was “ait excess concentration of economic power on tiie part of both employers and unions.” Romney cited as an example the recent airline strike settle-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) reading the? liturgy in English and leading responsive readings. Rabbi Philip Berkowitz presided at Temple Beth Jacob. Soloists were June Benton, Duncan Sells, and James Rosenthal. Charles A. Wilson, director of music, was at the organ. Jacob Meyers sounded the shofar at the Temple last night, and Rabbi Goodman at Congregation B’nai Israel this morning. Rabbi Ernst Conrad conducted the Rosh Hashanah observance for the New Temple of Bloomfield Hills with a service in the Unitarian Church. ★ * * The Jewish New Year is markedly. different in character from the joyous, exuberant celebrations of ojther faiths. SERIOUS DAY It is a profoundly serious day, during which Jews come together to pray, to examine their acts, and their relationship to ‘God and to each other, to remember the past and dedicate themselves to the future. j£ Rosh Hashanah is the first of the great “Days of Awa,” a 10-day period culminating in the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, which begins at sundown on Sept. 23. ★ tt The traditional Rosh Haha-nah service centers around prayer and sen examination, but reaches an extraordinarily dramatic climax when the sho-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) LTL 6NES “Daddy’s so cute’when he’s mad. You’d think he’d be happy when I tell him.” German Sub Sinks; 20 Lost HAMBURG, Germany (UPI) —The West German submarine Hai (shark), once a scuttled Nazi U-boat, cracked open and sank in a sudden North Sea storm between England and Denmark, the West German Defense Ministry said today) Twenty-one men were aboard. There was only one known survivor, the chief petty officer, who said the Hai “sank in seconds like a stone” after a storm ruptured her hull just south of the Shetland Islands, about 200 miles east of Tynemouth, England. The chief petty officer, Hans Silbernagel, was picked up by the British trawler St. Martin early today, 12 hours after tiie sub sank at 6 p.m. yesterday (noon EST). Silbernagel was quoted as saying water burst into tiie engine Troom. The captain ordered crew men to don lifejackets and abandon ship. ★ ir ★ He said most of the crew had no chance to escape because water pouring in through the cracked hull caused the U-boat to sink in seconds. TRAINING CRUISE A defense ministry statement said the Hai normally carried a 17-man crew, but this time was on a training cruise hhd carried 21 men. " '* * ■ * The Hai, built in 1945, was scuttled in the Baltic after World War II. The ll«oot-long sub/ was raised and rebuilt in 1157/ It was being used in antisubmarine warfare and wis an route with three other German subs from the Baltic to Aberdeen, Scotland. A former captain of tie Hai described the tMtaat as a “moot seaworthy” craft THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1966 OLDS COUPE - Oldsmobile Motor Division’s “Delta Custom” coupe shows styling introduced by the division last year in the Toronado model. Division officials cited the Toronado as influencing engineering in each of the five model lines introduced today. The cars may be seen at Pontiac area dealer showrooms Sept. 29. \Blrniinghom Area News N Citizen Group Tells Why Bond Issue OK Needed Toolboxes Stolen, Hold Rat Poison Two missing toolboxes containing packets of highly lethal rat poison are the object of an alert issued today by Pontiac police. In '67 Oldsmobiles Oldsmobile Motor Division, i- citing the “highly successful” •1 Toronado introduced last year, 11 today unveiled its 1967 automo-8 biles, “strongly reflecting” the style and engineering of the To-* * * Ironado. The packets — filled with The new models will go into various powders including ar- the following Pontiac area deal-senic ami strycnine were apparently taken yesterday af- ternoon from a station wagon belonging to Patrick Dischinger, a serviceman for Arwell Inc., pest exterminators. Dischinger said he dis-' covered loss of the black, heavy fiber containers after retundng from a personal call to Pontiac General Hospital. In the toolboxes, Dischinger told police, were a score of powder-filled envelopes, each marked, with the word “Poison” and the symbolic skull-and-cross bones. ★ ★ * Police said even small quantities of some of the chemicals could be fatal if swallowed, dr ★ ★ Anyone having information as to the whereabouts of the toolboxes is .urged to contact Pontiac police at 110 E. Pike immediately. City's Synagogues Observe New Year (Continued From Page One) far (a hollow ram’s horn) is blown. The soiind is piercing and powerful- JSg ★ ★ Over the centuries it has symbolized many things to Jews, ancient and modem — a calf to battle, the tearing away of the old year and the past through repentance and forgiveness, a plea to God that He remember man, and an alarm to rouse man from his moral-’indolence to an awareness of his responsibilities to God and his fellow man. er showrooms Sept. 29: Taylor Chevrolet Sales, 142 E. Walled Lake, Walled LakdT Haskins Chevrolet Olds, Inc., 6751 Dixije, Independence Township; Honghten & Son, Inc., 528 N. Main, Rochester; Suburban Olds, Inc., 565 S. Woodward, Birmingham; and Downey Olds, Inc., 550 Oakland. The new styling, according to Harold N. Metzel, division general manager and a General Motors Corp. vice president, ‘particularly apparent” in the ‘88” and “98” series. ★ ★ ★ “These cars, with a five:inch reduction in rear deck length and a corresponding increase in the hood and front fenders, clearly suggest the profile of the front-wheel drive Oldsmobile.” KEY CHANGES Metzel revealed important changes aimed at consolidating and realigning Oldsmobile’s product lineup. . In the medium-price class,’ he said, “we are introducing the new Delmont 88. To be offered in a pillar sedan, a hardtop sedan, a hardtop coupe, and convertible, the Delmont 88 may be ordered with either a 330 cubic-inch or a 425 cubic-inch engine, each with its own drive line and rear axle. Metzel added that the 425-inch Super Rocket engine continues standard on the Delta 88. With a more luxurious interior and exterior identification specific to this series, the Delta 88 is offered in four body styles. “taking its place in our price range just a step above the Delta 88, is the Delta Custom," ' operated door opening assistor. by Junior High School and This makes it possible to swing!Groves High School, expand and the door open with a minimum (improve facilities and purchase of effort.” Styling changes include a new The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly sunny with some cloudiness at times and cool today, highs 62 to 68. Fair and continued cool tonight, lows in the 46s. Friday partly cloudy and continued cool, highs 64 to 70. Winds northerly 8 to 18 miles today diminishing tonight. Saturday’s outlook — considerable cloudiness and cool with chance of showers. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 5; tonight less than 5; Friday 10. BIRMINGHAM - A “Yes” vote on the $9.8-million bond issue Oct. 6 will mean schools will be able to “offer each student the best curriculum and teachers available in classes of j a reasonable size,” according to the Citizens for Birmingham Schools. The committee, which is promoting the bond issue, points out that because of a rapid increase in studpnt enrollment, the physical facilities of some ! of the schools are not adequate. Crowded classrooms hinder the efforts of the classroom teacher to reach apd teach each student, the committee states. I H| _ - Enrollment figures cited by! continued. The Delta Custom ^ committee show than en-l is designed with sporty flair and; has by an erJ is available as a hardtop coupe { ------ 6 - -— ' Toronado Style Is Evident! Completion date for most of the projects is September, 1968. If the bond issue passes, debt retirement taxes will be increased about six-tenths of a mill. The district presently levies 5 mills for debt retirement. .. * * * Only property owners in thei district may vote on the proposition. Merit System Vote Is Urged County Unit Wants issue on Fall Ballot , ,4 c, age of 1,000 per year since 1962.1 Oakland County officials yes- a hardtop sedan. The-Star-, the fi s are fj.terday recommended that for- fire will no longer beoffered nal u -s expecQ° ^ t h j s!mal county adoption of a merit “The Tornado has been im-j ^ stU(jent increase will ^(system, or civil service pro-proved in many ways for 1967, , t about im be put to the voters Metzel continued. “We’ve engi-ldents 8 (Nov. 8. neered a smoother, quieter ride j * * * | The recommendation by the without sacrificing any of the P(of ^ ^ issue wiii personnel policies committee of car’s handling characteristics. |alIow £ ichooli to construct the County Board of Supervisors! NEW FEATURE (a new elementary and junior will be considered by the full “A new feature of special in* high school, add classrooms toiboard Monday, terest to the ladies is a spring- several elementary schools, Der-| Next Tuesday is the deadline _, . ----:---->k.. t .. „ t -_ jjjjgi cAk~.i —w jor submitting an election proposal to the county clerk. Hie board of supervisors authorized the merit system last April and it has been activated as an informal county program pending voter approval. Members of the personnel polices committee decided that the Nov. 8 election was a better time to present the issue rather than waiting two years for the next regular election. Purpose of the merit system is to assure that selections, remuneration and treatment of county employes is based on merit. Lowest temperature preceding 8 At ( a.m.: Wind Velocity 10 Direction: North Sun sets Thursday at 4:40 p.m. Sun rises Friday at 6:14 a.m. Moon sets Thursday at 7:31 p.m. Moon rises Friday at 8:21 a.m, Dawn town Temperatures s ________y In Pontiac (las recorded downtown) Highest temperature ............ Lowest temperature ............. Mean temperature..........f Weather: Mostly -sunny Way One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature .............. 73 40 Kansas City 74 SI 54 34 Los Angeles 88 43 72 42 Miami Beach 00 75 50 43 Milwaukee 44 SO 74 45 New Orleans 88 73 40 35 New York 76 43 49 Phoenix 81 73 Albuquerque 70 3 grille, flush-with-the-hood headlight covers, new tail-lamp styling and optional specially designed sporty-looking wheel discs. In Oldsmobile’s low - price market, the division is producing the F-85 in three body styles, and the Cutlass m five including a new convertible. Because of its sales popularity in 1966, the Cutlass Supreme, representing the top of Oldsmobile’s low-price line, has also been expanded to five different body styles. , Plan to I Tax Credit Hit by Romney (Continued From Page One) ment, which allowed the machinists union considerably more than the 3.2 per cent annual wage increase recommended by the President’s Council of Economic Advisers. “The national policy of giving one group full advantage of the national productivity increase will put us eventually in the same position as ‘great Britain, which is fighting for its economic life,” Romney said. About his mortgage investment proposal, the governor said: ‘For many years our various state retirement funds have been invested in FHA insured mortgages on large multiple units *or high-rise apartments, many of them outside of Michigan and not all of them good investments. “At my instruction the state treasurer has investigated the possibility of investing these funds in $l-million blocks of owner-occupied FHA insured home ‘mortgages. “Upon his recommendations and based upon certain criteria which will insure the best possible investments, I am recommending such a new policy, . “I am speaking of the investment or commitment of $20 million to $30 million over the next six months ...” The public affairs conference continues today, with 14 other candidates for statewide office scheduled to speak. sites for future buildings. ADMINISTRATION BUILDING A new administration building is also planned. School Equality Study Planned (Continued From Page One) of the present provision for equal educational opportunities” and will help the board in charting a course for the future. “The board has been sensitive to the many-faceted problems of intergroup relations which relate to public education,” Whitmer said. ^ PERDUE WHITMER While if is Relieved that much progress has been made in the provision for equality in educational opportunity for all, continuous progress must be made in the years ahead.” e afternoon; windy night Chicago Cincinnati if Temperatures Denver l 58 S. Francisco 72 I 59 S. S. Maria 44 I 49 Seattle 58 52 r 47 Wathlngton r NATIONAL WEATHER Showers are expected to continue in the Northeast tonight with scattered showers fore-< cast for the Carolina coast and eastern Gulf states, southern Rockies and central Plains. Cooler temperatures are predicted for the eastern half of the country. . 1 4^ Labor Board Airs Sheriff's Dept. Ispue An all-day hearing yesterday aimed at clarifying who employs Oakland County (Sheriff’s Department personnel was adjourned and will resume next Wednesday. Sheriff Frank Irons, county officials and representatives o f the sheriff’s department union, The American ’ Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes (AFSCME), testified before the State Labor Mediation Board in Detroit. The sheriff had been designated the employer in the union petition but the County contends that the board qf supervisors has the budgetary control. He noted that both the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and the State Department of Education concur that such a study would be valuable. NATURAL RESULT Whitmer said the study is a natural result of the board’s in tegration policy statement adopted in 1964. He referred to progress that has been made in the last decade in the areas of pupil and staff placement, educational programs and school facilities. This year, he skid, all but one or two of the district’s 36 schools have both Negro and w h i t e faculties. * * ★ Negro and white administrators and specialists serve in leadership positions within schools "and the central administration,” he said. 28 SCHOOLS Whitmer also noted that during the 1965-66 school year, of the schools had both Negro and white pupffS. * * i It is recognized that a number of the integrated schools have a predominately white or Negro pupil population,” m i ’ ’ I i * * * Resides staff and1 pupil integration, the study also is expected to deal extensively with the quality ol educational opportunities in the district and with school curriculum. School Confab EAST LANSING (AP)-More than 650 school superintendents are expected to attend the 37thj annual conference of the Michigan Association of School Ad Ministrators at Mackinpc Island Sunday through Tuesday. Astronauts End Record Space Ride (Continued From Page One) swiftly and dropped frogmen into the water to attach a flotation collar. HOISTED ABOARD Twenty minutes later a helicopter hoisted the astronauts out of the floating spacecraft and deposited them on the carrier. Dressed in their space suits and flashing broad smiles, Conrad and Gordon stepped onto the Guam’s deck. I They were welcomed by space agency and Defense Depart-! ment officials and then stepped to a microphone to make brief statements. w * * The ship’s band had a field day. While the helicopter, approached the spacecraft, the band played “The Eyes of Texas Are Upon You” and "Somewhere Over the. Rainbow.” GET PHYSICAL As the astronauts stepped onto the flight deck, it struck up “Hi Neighbor” and “Anchors Aweigh.” After the brief statements, Conrad and Gordon went below deck for physical exami; nations. They are to stay on the Guam overnight flying to Cape Kennedy tomorrow to begin several days of debriefings with experts. They were scheduled to arrive at the Cape about 8:30 a.m. MANY RECORDS The carrier hoisted the Gemini 11 spacecraft aboard exactly one hour after touchdown. It will be examined carefully by technicians. Hie astronauts set record after record as they circled the globe 44 times, traveling nearly 1.2 million miles in 71 hours 17 minutes. Among their many feats, they flew higher and faster than anyone else, scored man’s'fastest rendezvous and docking' with z target satellite, and demonstrated that two space vehicles can fly (formation in space while tied together by a line. The record setting continued right up to the final minutes, when the astronauts set their automatic pilot and flew a “hands off ’ reentry — the first ever attempted. Hie purpose was to evaluate whether man can perform more effectively as a controller or an observer during this critical phase. • -7 / \! ,«■./ * I SIMMS Discount Annex 144 N. Saginaw Simms new annex store is just a year old... so we’re having our very i*t hitiimv sjue ... ..and instead of a cake, we're cutting oUr low prices more— so come in for a slice of the savings. Look inside for many other unadvertised specials. FREE — portable all-channel TV SET - no purchase necessary.. Come in and a’sk for your free TV prize ticket — no purchase ^required. Drawing to be held on Sept. 26th. Winner will be notified. open tonite 'til 9 p.m.—Fri. and Sat. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. snack tray tables - 5 for • king-size 22xl6'/2-inch trays ’* brass finish tubular legs fit over lap • tray with casters also serves as storage rack • all metal • floral decorated • limit 2. _____________ 1 •' 291 ‘Mirro’ pressure cookers • popular 4-quart size • exclusive-pressure regulator • cooks all foods better • locks vitanVins- and minerals in • limit 1 cooker per persbn. 5M Tlayskool’ tyke-bike • $5.95 value • sturdy tyke bike for kids 1 to 3 years of age • forIndoor and outdoor play • 18x18x5Vi inches • seat 8" from floor ‘ non-toxic colors. ___ 2*i 20-pc. ‘MELMAC’ dinner sets 'MELMAC' is practical and carefree < normal use • set has 4 each of dinne bowls • bread and butter plates • 't break, chip or crack under plates • cups • saucers • soup assorted colors to choose from. 391 West Bend' TEFLON coated covered saucepans 1 -quart size super-durable 2-coat DuPont Teflon finish • extra heavy aluminum ware ** cook without sticking • clean without scouring • $3.69 value. $5.39 value 3-qt. a41 covered saucepan . . ........L 1« decorative metal wastebasket >■ • 1.39 value • beautiful brass finish • antique embossing • 13 inches high • handsome accents for any room in your home • limit 3 per person. early American hassocks • covered In heavy gauge vinyl • provincial print • podded for comfort • maple finished legs * 24x16'/2x14V2 inches • green/gold print • regular $10.98 value. c sponge rubber floor mats • famous brand • 15x27 inches • sponge rubber floor mots reduce fatigue • use in kitchen, laundry room * wherever you stand for periods of time • assorted colors. 5L 391 61 C electric hair dryers $19.88 value • genuine 'DOMINION' brand • lighter • quieter • portable electric hair dryer goes where you go • dial temperatures from cool to hot » plus a free manicure set. THE PONTIAC PRESS MAKE OVER PACES ~3T r PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1966 B—1 V- ——■—— * : r \ % COLLECTION SCULPTllRA Fashioned from the, richness of 18 Karat gold, each masterpiece settingreflects Rose Jewelers creative mftamanahip in golden settings for precious gems. From 5150.00 to $1509.00 dtpending m wight and tat <•/ diamond tdtM. AH madeU available prict range: Pendant Loveliness A parade of fashionable pendants ranging from dazzling Diamonds, Opals or Catseyes to enchanting Blade Star Sapphires. BUDGET TERMS ■ 90 DAYS SAME AS GASH ■ IS MONTHS TO PAY rac-m-nNwitjNiaw i»u 27* : I 81 Teladyna Tenneco 1.16 39 20V Texaco 2.40a H Hi TexETrn 1.05 TexGSul .40 TexPLd .35© UnOCal 1.20a 20% 20* + « 66* 67*%k 34 18* 18* 18* - J 41 1243/4 123* 123* —V 4 WJi 14* 14* + * 18 48* 48 48* + ’ 19 14* 14 14* 1 ’ 5 62* 62% 62% + 1 k 2.30 5 56 InitCorp .* Jn Fruit .! UGasCp 1. US Lines 2b USPlywd 1.40 US Rub 1.20 US Smelt 1< 5 31* 31 91* + McCree Given Oath as Judge 3rd Negro to Be on U.S. Appeals Court DETROIT (AP) — Wad Hampton McCree Jr., 46, placed left hand on 2 raised his other hand and pledged that he would dispense justice equally to the poor and the rich. Thus, in a brief ceremony Wednesday, McCree became the third Negro in the nation’s history to serve on the U.S. Court of Appeals. ★ ★ ★ ‘He will make a distinguished addition to a court which hhs a very proud tradition,” said Appellate Judge Clifford O’Sullivan of Port Huron, who presided over the swearing-in ritual. Some 140 persons jammed into the federal court chambers in Detroit to honor McCree, a soft-spoken man with a reputation for fairness and incisive decisions. SOAPY ON HAND Among the spectators was former Gov. G. Mennen Williams, the man who singled out McCree in 1954 as the first member of his race in Michigan to wear the robes of a circuit judge. Williams was making his first public appearance since undergoing a kidney operation several weeks ago. ★ ★ ★, Little more than an hour before the swearing - in ceremonies, McCree was hearing an antitrust suit as a U.S. district judge—a position he had held for the past five years. ‘‘Under a special dispensation, I’ll be hearing some other cases remaining on my district court docket for a while yet,” McCree1 explained, wouldn’t want to dump the whole load on my successor.” When he assumes his new | Dst, McCree will sit on the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals bench in Cincinnati, serving Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee and Kentucky. He will remain a resident of Detroit. Latins Nominate Pontidc Leader Thomas Chavez, president of the Pontiac chapter of Latin Americans United on Political Action, has been nominated for the office of state chairman of the group. Chavez of 122 W. Fairmhunt was nominated by the Lattsing, Adrian,. Jackson, Capac, Grand River and Pontiac chapters. The election will be held Jan. Mad Fd 2.56e 7 21% S MagmaCop 3 7 46% ' Magnavox .80 226 56 .1 Marathn 2.20 57 57 ‘ MayOStr 1.6 8aar£ McDonAIr .< McKess 1.78 13 13% 12 12 - 62 30% 19% 20 - IS 40% 40% 40% + 11 30% 28 26 - 11 24% 24% 24% -17 27 26% 26% + 44 51 50% 50% + ' 5 32% 31% 32% + 25 70% 69% 70%-43 25% 25% 25% + 36 23% 23% 23%-X35 27% 26% 26% -66 71 76% 76% .. 3 7% 7% 7% .. 22 42% 42 42% ^HH6 18% 18% 1 MontDU 1.40 MontPow 1.40 MontWard 1 Morrell J5p Motorola 1 NatDairy 1.40 Nat Dlst 1.60 Nat Fuel 1.60 Nat Genl .20 NatGyps 2b N EngEI 1.78 NY Ottlt 3.12 NiagMP 1.10 Norm Wit 6a NA Avia 2.80 NorNOilfJO Nor Pac 3.60 1 NWBan 1.70a I 57'A I 42 154% 153% 153% + X6 20% 20% 20% + —N— 22 45% 44% 45% + 4 45% 45% 45% + 15 46 45% 46 + 6 31 31 31 - 9 30% 30% 30% + 25 24% 23% 24% 4 US Steel 2 345 3 19 70% 69% 70% + —V— 7 25% 25% 25% + 2 21% 21% 21% westgEl 1.40 “'tyertir i.4l ilrlCp 1.61 White M 1.81 Wilson Co 2 "InnDIx 1 + I 31% : i 21%,+ Worthing 1.20 50 29 —X—Y—Z— Xerox Corp I 201 189% 185% 186% YngstSht 1.80 8 30% 30% 30% Zenith Rad 1 26 66% 66% 66% . Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1966 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of d dends In the foregoing table are ann vldend. d—Declared or paid In us stock dividend, e—Declared or | i far this year. I—Payable in stock i g 1965, estimated cash value on ex-< •nd or ex-distributlon date, g—Paid tar. h—Declared or paid after stock « ind or split up. k—Declared or paid tar, an accumulative issue with ( mds In arrears, n—New Issue.' p—Paid Is year, dividend omitted, deterred or i action taken at test dividend meeting. -Declared or paid In 1966 plus stock Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-The Cl of the Treasury compared > sponding date 0 year ago: Balance-?*,rt 1*’ ** Deposits Fiscal Year . 25,003,076,937.25 Wlft>draw6l|_Fltcol Ye; 35,375,306,421.08 x—Total Dabt- 324,692Jl 9,718.82 Gold Assets—. 13,258,288,892.66 13,856,959,272— x—Includes 8266,221,602.28 debt not sub-lect to statutory “ 20Jll 5,960^42.85 *28,198^27,854. 318,508,165,033. Jitrlbuted. wiTWH 19 24% 24% 24% - 09 75% 73% 75% 4 '• OxfrtPap .1 „ .. 4% 4% 4% Copyrighted by Ths Associated Prats 1966 pa)r hiii .15e ---------------i--------- Fan stool Mat FoddarCp .60 i FadDStr 1.70 I Dlvtoands Declared 1 Ferro Cp 1.20 Po- Ilk. at Pay- Filtrol 2.00 Rate riod Record able Rrestne 1.30 130 176% 174 174% + —F— 32 14% 13% 14% + 2$ 22% 22 22% + 3 12% 12% 12% 8IMULAR Marlene Indus! .125 .0 ’ Motorola Inc . JS O ■i Triangle CondICM JS O , ui Ittywood ....... .35 Q 0 Fla PL 1 4 FMC Cp 9-29iFdodFair PacGEl 1.30 Pac Ltg 1.30 pac Petrol PacTOT 1.20 Pan Am .60 PanhEP 1A0 ParkeDav la Par ampler 2 Peab Coat 1 PennDIxle .60 Patmoy l .SOa PaPwLt 1.10 W§ a 10% 10% 10% — % Pennzoil 1.40 3 16% 16\ 16 PepsiCo 1.60 15 45% 44% 44% - %|PfliarC li«e 7 73% 73% 73%+ % Phdp O 3.40a 21 34% a«k 34% 4- % Phila tog 4 16 15% 15% — % Phil I —P— 21 29% 29% 29% — 10 24 24% 24% . 17 9% 9% 9% - 5 21% 21% 21% 103 S«% 56 56% + 11 34 33% 34 + 36 27% 27 27% + 6 76% 76% 76% + 4 35% 35% 35% — 10 9% 9% 9% - 22 B% 51% *1% + 3 JM 30% 30% + 86 «%- 45% 45% + 47.11 76 70 + 37 S9% 58% 59% + vldend. y—Ex divi-x-dls—Ex distrlbu-xw—Without war-into, wd—When dls-ued. nd—Next day Stocks of Local Interest Figurea after decimal polnta are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from (he NASD are representative Inter-dealer prlcei of approximately 11 o.m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not Include retell markup, markdown commission. AMT C ro Bl? **k*d. Associated Truck' Boyne Products ............. Braun Engineering ... . Citizens Utilities Class A . Monroe Auto Equipment .... Diamond Crystal :........... Kelly Services ............. Mohawk Rubber Co. .......... Detrex Chemical ............ Safran Printing ............ Scrlpto ........... Frank's Nursery ............ North Central Airlines Units Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund .... Chemical Fund _______ ______ Commonwealth Stedk .......... Keystone Income K-l ......... Keystone Growth K-2 ....... Mass. Investors Growth'...... Mass. Investors Trust ....... Electronics ______ Seriously Troubi Inflation International By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business News Analyst NEW YORK - The economic inflation that has brought a fever of interest rate and price increases in this country is just a g 1 i m P e e of | what is happening around the world. Inflation, the threat of it.J is not a domestic ailment; it in interna-i tional malady. CUNNIFF Some nations are in serious trouble because of rising prices. In Brazil, for example, an item that cost $3 in 1955 might cost $100 now. And in Britain, toe situation has been termed grdVe. * ★ ★ Inflation is caused by an excess of total demand—from government, labor, consumer, businessman, military—on the supply of goods and services that can be produced. Sometimes this demand to fueled by the availability of too much money. LOWER DEMAND The problem can be reduced by lessening demand. For long time, rising interest rates were iised to take toe enthusiasm out of buying and borrowing. Just as toe high cost of a suit of clothes lessens enthusiasm for it, so does toe high cost of borrowing lessen toe demand for money. Hie Federal Reserve, which regulates the supply of money, has recently been closing the faucet, lessening the amount of cash flowing into the economy. The administration also has acted. By recommending that tax credits to business be suspended, President Johnson undoubtedly has made businessmen think twice before committing themselves to spending programs that would put more demands on the economy. These measures are mild \$ien compared with what has occurred in some countries. Most of the major industrial 1,200 Yanks Hit Beach Near Neutral Zone in Viet SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Ships and helicopters landed a reinforced battalion of U.S. Marines three mileis south of the demilitarized zone tween the two Viet Nams today to help choke off infiltration by Hanoi’s regulars. A barrage of shells and rockets diumed beach areas in advance, fhe Communists offered no resistance. More than 1,200 American Leathernecks moved in to give a hand to two battalions of Vietnamese government troops Already in toe area. Briefing offi- News in Brief Charles Ball of 2823 Island Park, Waterford Township, told police that a figurine displayed near his driveway was stolen last night. Value is undetermined. The Ladies Auxiliary of Old Mill Post 9422, Veterans of Foreign Wars will have a rummage sale at the Post Home, 1400 E. Commerce Rd., Milford, on Friday and Saturday, S^pt. 16 and 17, \ -Adv. Rummage S a le. Clarkston Community Center,*Sept. 16,9-9, Sept, 17, 9-12. Clarkston Farm and Garden Club, —Ady. Rummage Sale, Four Towns Methodist Church. Fri., Sat Sept. 16-17. Cooley Lk. Rd. Loch-even. 9-12. —Adv. Neighborhood Rummage Sale - Quality items — Toys, clothing, household goods, misc. Friday, Sept. 16, Saturday, Sept. 17, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. 1101 Dudley St. Off Featherstone. (Herrington Hills). —Adv. Rummage: Friday, Saturday, a.m. -12 on lawn. Christian Temple, 505 Auburn. —Adv. Rummage Sale—C.A.I. Building, Waterford Sept. 16. —Adv. cers said the sweep is aimed against North Viet Nam’s 324B Division, apparently resupplied, regrouped and moving again after losing nearly 1,000 men killed in Operation Hastings in July. 1 ★ ★ ★ The action developed as the U.S. Command disclosed American combat deaths over five years in Viet Nam have the 5,000 mark. Seventy-one deaths last week pushed the total to 5,034. Over-all, 238 of the allies were killed and 42 missing or captured during the week, while enemy losses were put at 1,166 killed and 218 captured. South Viet Nam’s armed forces lost 174 men killed and 34 missing. 450 WOUNDED In addition to the 71 Americans killed, 450 were wounded and eight are missing. That compared with 74 killed, 570 wounded and 10 missing in the week of Aug. 28-Sept. 3. U.S. squadrons pressed the air war on both sides of the border. U.S. headquarters announced two planes — an. Air Force F105 Thunderchief and a Navy A1E Skyr aider — were shot down in raids on North Viet Nam Wednesday. A helicopter rescued the Thunderchief pilot. The Skyraider’s pilot is missing. These brought to 370 planes toe announced losses over the north. Business Notes Sidney C. Skarr of 801 W. Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills, has been elect-ed assistant vice president in the Metropolitan Division of toe Bank of Commonwealth. Skarr was formerly with toe Irving Trust Co., New * SKARR York, in toe ° loan administration department. Windsor Fund . BOND AVERAGES National Bank of Detroit has announced the establishment of a Trust Department staff at its West Maple • Cranbrook office for the convenience of area cus- ____tomers. io 79 'i?I? The staff will include Thomas 8w 9.80 w. Payne of Birmingham, Ar-17.U 18.62 thur J. Menlove of ^Southfield and Frederick s, Strong III of I Bloomfield Oils. STOCK AVERAGES Cumgited by Ttw Auactated Pro* * JOSEPH L. FOURN Waterford Man Elected Head of Traffic Club nations have Seen forced to tighten their .bells. PRICE CONTROLS Belgium has adopted price controls, the Netherlands has both monetary and ffscal restraints, Germany has wage and {Mice limits. The measares have been very pronounced in Britain and Canada. Finance Minister Mitchell Sharp shook up Canadians last week by warning of tax increases, by postponing toe government’s medical care program, and by deferring other spending programs. * ★ f One of Sharp’s measures gives a good picture of how government can lift or lessen demand. For each house built during Canada’s severe winters, the government had been paying $500 bonus. Because this was spur to spending,’ Sharp said it will be discontinued. Harold Wilson, British prime minister, also felt obliged to shock Britons into the realization that they can’t live high without working hard to earn it. TAX INCREASE Wilson’s steps included increased, taxes, an increase in bank lending rates, a cutback in government spending. ‘‘Our measures," he said, ‘‘have administered a shock, as they were meant to, to toe economy and the whole British people.” Wilson said the nation had to become more productive and that Britons had to limit their standard of. living. ‘‘Living standards can rise only by more output per man,” he said. In other words, by hard Work or more work or by more prodUc? tive factories and machines. Wilson was particularly chagrined by the fact that, although British workers have increased their productivity, they took it right back ‘‘in the form of fewer hours worked, in increased leisure.” Americans, by comparison, have barely pulled in their belts a notch. £r cent. * ★ * Q. “Would you rate Uaited Asbestos, a Canadian stock listed on the American exchange, as a growth stock?” A.S. A. No, I would not. Its financial record over the past decade. does not conform to the pattern set by genuine growth stocks. A growth issue is one that shows over a period of years a consistent trend of rising earnings and dividend increases which seem likely to continue. These J in turn give buoyancy to the tot; Cos J. Couretas of r. J. aw. ™d, Boutell Driveway Go., Inc., secretary; and Gene Jonas, Pontiac Motor Division, treasurer. owT 7 Donald E. Miller of ‘ Iroquois, is attanding a man- 5] Prey. Day 72.7 90J 80 0 II 11% to |l% oivh ox a t ''• iwm mpn ■|J% 31% ~ * j3j Htet< 03.7 4)% 42% + V. 1965 LOW 99.3 __J mL 4i*e iff 1SS aujager’s seminar at toe" Washing-4»j too 7 139 j 294 Ir00 National Insurance Co’s. 2™ *“I ms ^ home office In Evanston, 111. L 13.-C Miller is the Pontiac district 149j 162.6 Mf manager for that company. : 8149+0 .09 from their cash payouts and are purchased for capital enhancement rather than current income. Sometimes investors mistake a sharp — but temporary-lift in earnings for a couple of years as indicating growth. Actually the uptrend should have solidly established itself for five years or longer. (Copyright, IK* / sflvjpnww Hockey Club Seeking D T/iE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1966 Hockey Club Seeking Hew Players, Sponsors The Oakland County Junior be in the Detroit Hod Wings’ Hockey Club will begin tryouts Saturday night at Detroit's Winter Wonderland rink with a big question dominating its prospects for 1966-67. Who’s going to pay the bills for the team that was last year’s state junior champion? Arrow-smith has dropped its sponsorship of the squad following a change in the hierarchy of the fjrm. Coaches Claude McLaughlin apd Jim Garrison are as anxious to find an ice hockey conscious businessman as they qre a high SQoring winger to replace Walled Lake’s Bud Williams, whose playing this s Backfield Problems Plague Oregon State's Mentor system. Any boys 16-19 yew old living in Oakland County are eligible for the tryouts that will ran the next three Saturday nights at Winter Wonderland on Schoolcraft east of Southfield. Playing experience is not a prerequisite. The club is a member of the Detroit Metropolitan Junior Hockey League and the season will likely begin late next month. Additional'information regarding the tryouts or the sponsorship is avatiable from Garrison Wolf pack Looks Tough i may at LI 3- TIGER PAW HEADQUARTERS KING TIRE CENTER 31W. Montcalm FE 3-7068 Mo!LThe$75' Tire IF IT SAVES YOUR LIFE ONCE IT’S A BARGAIN! 8.28x14 Th« new U.8. ROYAL MASTER with trade-in. Other elzee prloed accordingly. •plus siki tax end MN excise tax el “ Popular ■ ■■■■■■■■ei|;Oypj|)Nwaewwe>w i While They Last! * Brand New TAKE-OFFS 6.95-14 Narrow Whitewalls OTHER SIZES PROPORTIONATELY PRICED ■■M . --------COUPON--------.! King Tire Center Challenge for A Michigan State football team which Head Coach Duffy Daugherty says can be anything from e x c e 1.1 e n t to mediocre opens its 1966 campaign against tough but North Carolina State in Spartan Stadium Saturday. A crowd of about 50,000 is ticipated for the intersectional staged before Michigan State return to school for fall quarter. If the full student body and faculty. were on campus, the game would be a near sell-out at perhaps 70,000 or more. Game time is 1:30 p.m. The North Carolina State challenge is expected to be an un-jusually difficult one for an opener. The Wolfpack is defending co-Champion of the Atlantic Coast Conference and the predicted winner this fall. It has returning 31 of 40 lettermen. It is on a five-game winning streak. It has been building carefully for this season because a new stadium is to be dedicated in Raleigh. Earle Edwards, its cellent head coach, is a former Spartan assistant coach who would like to beat Michigan State so badly he can taste it. NC State is loaded with top players. Being ballyhooed for all-star honors a(e such as line- |j backer Chuck Amato, 250-pound defensive tackle Dennis Byrd, wingback Gary Rowe, defensive end Pete Sokalsky, offensive guard John Stec, offensive tackle Steve Warren, veteran quarterback Charlie Noggle and fallback Bill Wyland. ★ * • ■ * The Spartans are concluding what was generally a good preseason practice period. Team conditioning appears fine, se-injuries to key players were avoided and some replacements for departed veterans seem to be developing nicely. Hie rebuilt offensive and defensive lines, where nine of 14 regulars had to be replaced, will get their first big test. New regular quarterback Jimmy Raye should be cleared for play following a minor foot injury in last Saturday’s final scrimmage. This is the fourth game be- tween the two land grant schools. The last previous one 1929. Michigan State leads. 2-1. The game is the annual Band Day. Some 36 Michigan high school bands numbering 3,000 pieces will perform with the 175-piece Michigan State Marching Band. Wolverines Taper t ' ■ /- Off Nearing Debut ANN ARBOR (AP)—Michigan i junior Ernie Sharpe have been Coach Bump Elliott put his Wol-! alternating, verines through a “light but) * * ★ exacting’’ workout Wednesday! Detwiler, who suffered in preparation far the season opener against Oregon State Saturday. Elliott said he still has not made up his mind about the starting left halfback job, where veteran senior Jim Detwiler and Beavers Have for Opener Senior Quarterback, Secondary Will Have Tests at Ann Arbor CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP)-Ore- Crystal Ball Gazer Sees Wins for MSU, Illinois U.S. Net Stprs Edge Aussies ROCKVILLE, Md. UP) - America’s Dennis Ralston and Charlie Passarell won opening matches Wednesday in a ing Davis Cup preview series against Australia. Ralston, Amcerica’s No. player, from Bakersfield, Calif, defeated Tony fRoche 13,11, 64 after Passarell, from Santurce, P. R., outlasted John Newcombe 7-5, 2-6, 7-5 before a sellout crowd of 2,000. Irish Waving Grid Banners Early at MSU- EAST LAPSING (AP) -Only 10 gatnes early, a light plane circled around Michigan State’s football Stadium Wednesday, pulling a Notre Dame banner: m “Go Irish, Beat State.” I MSU doesn’t meet Notre Dame until Nov. 19, in the Spartans’ last game of the season. Busy preparing for Saturday’s season opener against North Carolina NEW YORK (AP) - The accent is on accents this week as college football opens up full-scale with intersectional forays, new coaches and untried hep-hep boys at quarterback. The. accent remains the same . - a bit of Tennessee molasses i|drawl stirred, with Brooklynese dese and dose — but better days are ahead on tile old crystal ball. The opening fling: Michigan State 28, North Carolina State 14: Grab a look at the Spartans’ new pineapple, sophomore Charley Wedemeyer of Honolulu. 18; The Cornhuskers have back 42 of the 57 behemoths that almost beat Alabama in the Orange Bowl. Arkansas 27, Oklahoma State j ; Harry Jones runs over youj and John Brittenum bombs you from the air. The Porkers arel good again. | UCLA 28, Pittsburgh 14: severe knee injury which idled him njost of last season after ai sparkling sophomore year ini 1964, underwent surgery during the winter. He has survived contact work so far, but hasi yet to be thoroughly tested un-g°n State opens its football s der fall game conditions. son against Michigan Saturday “I probably won’t make up, With the defensive secondary my mind who will start until; and the quarterback spot the just before game time,” said El-1 big question marks liott, “but both boys >vill Paul Brothers was a standout Play” I signal-caller in his sophomore * * * year, but last year as a junior Meanwhile, Elliott announced completed only 36 per cent of that Ray Phillips and Jim Hri- his passes. Coach Dee Andros bal had won starting offensive! has been trying to find out in | tackle jobs. . | practice if Brothers can keep his old job or if it will go to Steve Preece, a sophomore. Injured Player 8 Still in Coma PRINCETON, N!J. (AP) OSU was completely wiped out by graduation in the defensive secondary. Newcomers Charlie Olds, Jim Scheele, Don Welch and Major Lincoln have been battling for halfback posi-: tions. Scott Eaton and Scoo Davis are the prime safety quarterback, will make Dave ftailback Douglas Boe was listed!1 Hart’s debut as Pitt coach a j in critical condition Wednesday,'LETTERMEN ON LINE nightmare. jfour days after suffering ahead! The Beavers have 23 letter- IUinois 19, Southern Methodist lwiury in a footba11 scrimmage men, most of them on the line.' 15; The Illini romped 42-0 last sesslon- J Andros said his most consis- year but remember they had aj * * * lineman in practice has Nebraska 23, Texas Christian;man named Jim Grabowski. j Boe- 19, had collapsed into a been Jim Wilkin, offensive left Penn State 181 Maryland 14: but a spokesman at tackle Joe Paterno and Lou Saban take Pr,n,'“t''" jjgg||j|j —! Browns' Veteran Defensive Back Given Release # iWPiiiMiWiiilMi r SMOOTH AS SOX The Kessler secret, CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Defensive back Bemie Parrish, State, MSU Coach Duffy i|£ hi? e*hth year ^ thJ Daughter commented, “I I Cleveland Browns, was released could care less” about the I on waivers by the National Foot-Notre Dame message. jj ^ League club Wednesday. ' The Browns said Parrish, 40, had 'asked for his release and left the club. This was the second time the former Florida star parted with the Browns. He announced his retirement prior to the 1965 season but changed his mind a few days later. over new reins but the man to watch is P-State’s quarterback' Jack White. * * * Oklahoma 14, Oregon 8: The Sooners’ Gomer Jones has reshuffled his coaching staff. Look for fresh vigor. His departure cut the Browns’ roster to 39 and reduced the Army 30, Kansas State 7: The *iead^ffiter ■ ..tackle, according Cadets will hit a little harder for jto athletlc officials. „ j Tom Cahill, the former plebe! ~ j coach who had to organize! quickly. Georgia Tech 20, Texas A&M 14; Kim King and Lenny Snow are now poised juniors for Tech, but the Aggies are always tough. Princeton Hospital said he was The only new offensive line showing some signs of regaining j starter is s pi it end Harry consciousness. The spokesman Gunnel-, who is a 6-6 basketball said he faces more surgery. player trying football for the Boe, a graduate of Lane Tech- first time. In a scrimmage for nical High School in Chicago, touring football writers, Gunner had been considered the Tigers’ played only half the game but third-string tailback. He was caught six passes and scored injured when he landed on his the only touchdown. Oregon S|ate Is counting heavily on its running backfield, led by fullback Pete l*i£er, who Florida 17, Northwestern 14: Steve Spurrier is close to Frank Sinkwich’s all-time rushing record in the Southeast. Puke 25, West Virginia 8: Al Woodall, the towering Devil quarterback, makes Tom Harp’s debut a Pleasant one. | Unfortunately for the Braves J Andros he expects to fjnd . ! I ! ! . . . Je™s W S?uthern California | tiie sight of the cozy ronfmes of |out how Ws team reall J number of defensive backs to 14: The Longhorns unveil their Richmond’s Parker Field was dojng i when Oregon State five. The’club normally carries I-formation with Bill Bradley at j even more inviting to the Toron- pjayg southern California at Richmond Happy j amassed more than 1.009 yards in Home Park; but Leafs Win last year. Wingback Bobby Grim also returns, but graduating halfback Fred Schweer has been replaced by a sophomore, Jerry Belcher. By The Associated Press „. A return to their home park! ne Beavfers compiled a 5-5 was all that was needed to perk! record last year despite a diffi-up the Richmond Braves’ hitters | ^schedule. They are rated a in the International League1®11 J?orf In Ath' playoffs. j letic Conference this year. a minimum of six defensive backs, and another player will be added promptly but has not yet been named by the club. Favprite Plays MIDWEST: Kansas 20, Texas Tech 13; Missouri 18, Minnesota 14; Purdue 27, Ohio U. 7; Iowa 28, Arizona 13; Indiana 19, Miami, Ohio, 8; Michigan “ i State 13; Wisconsin 25, Iowa Fla. 15; Wichita FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -.State 14, SoithernIllinois 8;DayETu, tana faced young Mike Estep of Dallas, Tex., today in his opening bid for the Colonial National Invitational" tennis championship. to Maple Leafs. (Portland. The Beavers’ only Toronto Quthit Richmond 12-10! other conference games are and outscored the Braves 7-6[against Washington State Oct. Wednesday night to take 3-0 29, Washington Nov. 12 and Ore-lead in their best-of-seven final gon Nov. 19. Besides Michigan, series, and the second of two!a Big Teq opponent will be homers by Jim Russin was the j Northwestern Oct. 8 at Corval-deciding blow. Tis. Julius Kessler Company. Lawrencebury. Indiana. Bfended Whiskey. h6 Proof. 72V1% Grain Neufftl Spirits- Kessler the Smooth as Silk Whiskey, full 8$ Proof. *4»9 now \ Santana, the reigning Wimble-1 don champion, is top-seeded and thus favored to capture the crown that brealy eluded him here two years ago. A TREMENDOUS BUY FOR YEAR-ROUND DRIVING BETTER-STRONGER 100% Guarantee 6.00- 13 6.50- 13 7.00- 13 645-14 6.95-14 6.00- 14 6.50- 14 7.00- 14 7.50- 14 TUBE or TUBELESS $995 7.35- 14 7.75- 14 540-15 6.85-15 6.00-15 6.50-15 6.70-15 7.35- 15 7.75- 15 1141KXTIU FOR WHITEWALLS 8.25-14 145—14 8.85-14 8.001-14 8.50- 14 I 940-14 9.50- 14 7.10-15 | 740-15 I 8.45-15 5.00-15 | 8.85-15 540-15 | 9.00-15 5.1S-:S I 9.15-13 Ml 95 1. GUARANTEE that titos a* to ba FREE from all defects In workmanship, malarial and road hawd for tha Ufa of tha original flood. If thaw tiro* should brook or blowout, wo will raplaca at NO COST TO OUTER. Z GUARANTEE that if you got a punctura, wo will rapolr In our soivtoo department at no charge. We Honor AH Major C rod it Cards CUSTOM RETREAD ftt Mt. Clemons St, Cor. Ee*t Btvd, Pontiac Opoe 16AJL4 PJL DeHy Phono 314-0915 VoSa ROYAL TIRES JBwflNMrW 8* Imap jwwropart fo the (rustic MMMnAWWMWfl Pitt in Timley Practice ’•] PITTSBURGH (API — Pitt's. “I’ve spoken to several doc-’ ( football players will stay out tors about Hhis and also read ] several articles on it, and it jus,t makes good common sense,” Hart said Wednesday. ‘.‘If we wait until Friday evening to go on Coast time, the hoys’ bodies will not have time to adjust.*’ SOUTH: Kentucky 15, N. 0; Georgia 18, Mississippi lerbilt 25, The Citadel i Ne^UM«VcoSst«teNuh T*x“ su,e ,4'(late tonight, two days before FAR WEST: Washington State 10, Cell- the Start of the Season — with fornia 1; Air Force 19, Wyoming *14;: . , , j _ , _ Washington 20, Idaho i3; Stanford 20, san permission from Coach Dave Hart. The Panthers, who play UCLA a Saturday night at Los Angeles, v will begin living oh Pacific Time today. They will practice Hart said the adjustment tonight at 16 p. nr., go to bed won’t be so great once the at 1 a. m., and have breakfast squad gats, to Los Angeles Fri-Friday at 12:30 p. m. . ' (day night. NEWMAN’S ‘5FAHTAN HURRY!! ONLY A FEW LEFT THEY'RE GOING FAST! FULL-SIZE POLARA *2,250 ® All Colors to Choose From Financing No Prbblem These Prices Good Only At • ■ • HAMIT NEWMAN’S ‘SPAKTAN 855 OAKLAND AYE. mma i t l i -rfj