The Weather M-*- WMlh«r kurnu Fartnil Partly Sunny •' • V THE PONTIAC PRfesS Home Edition ' VOL. 125 — \o. 144 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDi^^||^,'JULY 24. 1907 —44 PAGES BJ Aides Putting on Allies the South Vietnamese, the Koreans and the Australians — will have consider* able hearing on how many more Ameri-csm troops are sent to Vietnam. SAIGON (B— Some observers in Saigon (»nsidi»> fhe tour of the Vietnam allies by Gen, Maxwell D. Taylor and Clark Clifford to be more important than the recent visit to Saigon by Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara. ★ . i -k Although Taylor dfenied it on his*ar- squeeze for more troops on the govern-ment of South Vietnam, Tliailand, South McNamara on his visit two years ago spent little time with Vietnamese officials. Taylor and Clifford have sched-pled several hours with Chief of State He said much emphasis would be put on the regional and popular force militia who are supposed to guard the rural areas and pro^de much of the security for the paclflcation pro^am. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in South Vietnam, indicated yesterday that the United States wiU taorease -^ts -advisees'-wMi Korea, Australia, and New Zealand and the Philippines. How many they get especially from The United States is pressing the South Vietnamese for greater war efforts, and Saturday Ky announced a 55,000-man increase in the armed forces and a reorganization of the military stsucture. pines has been asked to provide advis ers also for these forces. Congress NojjGonvinced Tax Hike Is Necesssary Korean sources in Saigon indicate that Korean military leaders would like to ipbrease its forceJn Vietnam. It is considered unlikely that President Johnson would have sent the two men around to the the allies if he did not have advance indication that some of them are willing to increase their contribution. WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Johnson has failed so far to convince Congress that a tax increase is absolutely essential. A UPI poll of the 25-member House Ways & Means Committee and the 17-man Senate Finance Committee discloses that Johnson has not yet got the votes to win congressional passage both committees are persuaded, passage of a tax bill is impossible. tax boost. A majority of members on each committee said they want to be convinced that a tax increase is necessary. Unless Of the 15 Democrats on Ways& Means, only five who responded to the survey said — with qualifications that they would vote for an increase if Johnson submitted a bill. Of the 10 Republicans on the key House committee, eight demanded cuts ♦n domestic spending before even considering whether, a tax hike was necessary. In their meetings with Vietnamese officials, Taylor and Clifford also are ex-.pected to stress U.S. • feelings that the upcoming presidential and legislative elections must go off without a hitch. Rumors about the election include talk of military coups and political deals to nullify progress toward and elected government. Sources in the U.S. mission feel there is substance to some of the rumors. Taylor and Clifford probably will stress the importance Johnson and the U.S. government place on the elections and how crucial it is that nobody tips the boat. WHERE VIOLENCE BEGAN—This section of 12th Street, areas where 600 National Guardsnpibjoined 600 Detroit poUce-about three miles from downtown Detroit, is where racial men in the embattle areas. Smoke rises from a fire-bombed violence broke out yesterday. Rioting spread to surrounding building. Detroit Riot^Toll Mounts \ ‘HARD TO AVOID’ •Rep. Joel‘t: “Bfbyliffifliva;; don’t see how a tax increase can be avoided with a $20 billion deficit facing ■Puerto Rico. Vote U. S. Troops Ordered In ■9 % / But Rep. James B, Utt,^TCqUf., said be was opposed to a tax inqfpase and believed the administration could reduce spending to avoid one. Gives, Support to Ccrfhrndnvvealth .. WASfjflNG’TON (^1 President John-seh ordered fediihd t .......... from; where the rioting, looting and fire ly underlined the unique quality of De- - Only three members of^the Finance Committee, Senators! Albert Gore, \N Jjl^AN, P.R. UP) Supporters :omn^wealth government in Puer- Tenn., Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., and Thrus-ton B. Morton, R-Ky., said a tax hike was needed. to Rko "today had the vote of confi- Of the other 14 who responded, 12 said they were either generally opposed, wanted more information from the ad-ministratibn, or had not made up their minds. they wanted from island voters, but thdp* next move wasn’t clear. In M victory statement Sunday night, form^. Gov. LuiS Muno? Marin said were no immedihte plans to re-any additional powers from the area today and prcumsed every needed assistance in handling the riot which has ravaged the city. Johnson also drafted Cyrus R. Vahce, former deputy secretary of defense, to fly to Detroit for conferenoe to determine exactly what conditions are and what federal help is needed. The troops are being flown to Selfridge Air Force Base, about 30 miles from Detroit. It will be up to Johnson to issue additional orders if they are abtoally to be sent into Detroit. took its heaviest toll in property damage and injuries. Of the five dead, only . two were Negroes, the looter shot today, and the East Side fire death. r ‘k|fiirin of unrest over vast and not necessarily attached areas. The discovery of the body dramatical- •ADJUSTMENTS’ POSSIBLE PRESIDENT NASSER Nasser ^ays Door Oodn for Accord At a July 18 news conference, Johnson issued another call for a 6 per cent . across-the-board surcharge on personal, and corporate income taxes. But he add-” ed there may have to be “adjustments.” CAIRO (ffl — President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s new budget being published today calls for sacrifices to enable war-crippled Egypt to struggle on against Israel, but Nasser says the door is still open for a political settlement. In a broadcast speech last night, Nasser said he had “no objection to conferring with the Americans” on restoring peace to the middle East and hqii instructed Egypt’s United. Nations delegation “to meet with the Americans if feasible.” Pontiac Div. Tops 10-Day tales Mark 1, Munoz hailed the outcome as prool that, Puerto Ricans support commonwealth “as the only political form that is fully adapted to the needs of Puerto Rico.” . Commonwealth received 425,081 votes, 60.5 per cent of the total; statehood receive 273,315 votes, or 38.9 per cent, and independence received 4,205, six-tenths of 1 per cent. Most ■ independence groups boycotted the plebiscite. Preelection forecasts had said commonwealth would need at least "60 per cent for a clear-cut victory. Meanwhile, the death toll mounted to five and the number of injured climbed near 1,000 today. Property damage soared over $10 million. Mel^ Flares inKeegoHarbor Most recent riots — like those in Newark, Harlem, Rochester, N. Y., and the Watts section of L<^ Angeles — were confined to Negro glwtto areas. The call for federal help came after Romney and Cavanagh had braved sniper fire to tour the stricken area that stretches seven mtles outward from the downtownrarea. “The looting and continne,**| said the mayor, “and I «qi concerned about what seems to be aSeamiva} atmosphere.’* Fires set yesterday ranged unchecked in many sections as rioting coursed crazily through an ill-defined area cov-. ering more than one-sixth of the city, the nation’s fifth largest. A melee last night on Willow Beach Drive in Keego Harbor resulted in the- hospitalization of one man and necessitated medical treatment for at least six others. X Joseph Yousif,p33, of Highland Park is reported in fair condition today irt Movie houses, bars, liquor stores, $«cy-ice stations and many other businesjsra connected with leisure were ordered closed as rioting "reached a peak last night., (Continued on Page A-2, Clo|. 5) Pontiac Motor Division reported today that its sales for the second 10 days in July were the highest for this period in the history of the division and ■it marked the fifth successive 10-day period Pontiac dealers have set a new record. Gov. Romney retired to his home in Suburban Bloomfield Hills for a nap, after touring the city with Mayor Jerome Cavanagh and wiring 'his plea for help ‘ to Rjn^ident Johnson and U. S. Atty. Genip&nsay Clark. Elemrats of the 5th Army in Chicago and the 101st Airborne at Ft. Campbell, Ky., reportedly are standing by to move into Detroit. • t. Joseph Mercy Hospital. He was reportedly a guest at the home of Sam Namy, 1990 Willow Beach, along with several other persons who sought refuge from the Detroit riots. In all 20 people were reported at the,Nai°y home. Weattiqr Outlook: Hot, Less Humid LI’L ONES Nasser’s speech, his first In six weeks, was considered surprisingly restrained in tone although there were plentiful references to the United States.-The Egyptian leader again blamed It for the Israeli victory in the .lune 5-10 war but revised his charges. , Thomas L. King, Pontac’s general sales manager, said that the sales of Pontiacs, Tempests aiflf^’irebirds totaled 25,422 for the July 11-20 period. They would join more than 7,000 state police, city poUce and National Guardsmen already on patrol ’in the smoke-shrouded streets. The use of firecrackers and resulting name calling between the Namy residence and 11 pqpple at the Donald Likens boQse, 1984 Willow Beach, resulted in a fight, according to Keego Harbor Police Chief James Sisk. A drop in the humidity it promised by the*” weatherman though daytime temperatures will remain in the 80s through tomorrow. It will be fair tonight ^^qi^ows falling in the 60 to 65 range. Romney said experiemse had shown that the second nl^t of racial rioting “usually was wone than the first.” Thi§ conTpai^s to the 25,019 new cars Sold last year which" was the previous Pontiac record for the mid-July period. “Now you can tell everybody you had lunch at the Captain’s table.” The latest deaths were that of a Negro looter, shot down in a supermarket by a Negro guard, and that of an elderly Negro found burned to death in an alley on the city’s East Side. The later was the first death reported on the East Side, almost a dozen miles Nasser dropped his claim ] during the war that U. S.-planes attackep the Arabs. Instead,, he said President Johnson engaged in deceptive diplonmtic maneuvers which tl^ ohii^s will be appearing m fqtiffe ^itions of 1116 Press. Bloomfield Twp. Compromise worked out on tree protest.—- PAGE A-4. “ Oakland U. University gets t.C-10 Editorials.......... ■ • A-JO Markets ................ D4 Obituaries D-3 Sports ............. C-1-C4 Theaters .............. C-8 ’TV^Radio Programs „ .. D-O Wilson, Earl ..../....... M Women’s Pages ...... B-1—B-3 A—2 I'UE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 24. 1067 U. S. Worried About Resale of Aid Arms WASIINGTON (AP) - The Defense and State departments are concerned that military equipment supplied to sdme U.S. allies is being resold as surplus hardware to nations erh gaged in arms races. Townsend W. Hoopes, deputy assistant secretary of defense for international affairs, told a Senate Foreign Relations subcommittee his department seeking ways to head off future arms transfer. State Department officials, including Secretary Dean Rusk, have replied repeat^ly that countries .denied y.S. arms would turn to the Soviet Uniqn, thereby increasing Uiat country’s influence in the areas involved. Jeffrey C. Kitchen, deputy assistant secretary of state for politico—military affairs, reported there will be 7,000 lM47 and M54 tanks among the ku _ plus arms in Europe by 197l| “We are darned conceified about those tanks,” 1 mented. Kitchen said the anticij^ated surplus would result from accelerated arms sales to West Germany to offset U.S. expenses in maintaining military forces in Europe. They testified last March. April and June at a series of hearings by the subcommittee on Near Eastern and South Asian affairs studying arms sales. A heavily censored transcript was released today. But testimony of three principal witnesses remains classified and none of it appeared in the transcript. They a^e Lt!, Gen. Joseph F. Carroll/tfirWtOr of the Defense Intelligence Agency; Lucius p. Battle, assistant secrSaiy of state for Near Eastern and South Asian affairs, and Battles’s deputy, William J. Handley. Subcommittee Chairman To prevent surplus U.S. hardware from moving into the world market. Hoopes said the Defgnse Department is, 4hinking of offering a financial indiicA ment “so there would be no incentive to sell it to Africa or Latin America, for example.” Two Pontiac ,,p61ice officers saved' a teen-age girl from drowning early yesterday, according tq a policft department spokesman. • In a stateYidit'TcSSKpaSpng ..the transcript that American . arms had found their way into countries never intended to receive them and private firms were making extraordinary profits in the resale of U.S. arms. ‘REVISIONS NEEDED’ “Revisions in laws pertaining to this matter are urgently needed,” he said. The subcommittee witnesses also included Samuel' Cummings, president of the International Armament Coip., Alexandria, Va., reportedly the world’: Wgest private dealer in mili-arms. Cummings testified that thousands of surplus tanks now in Europe will be available for sale throughout tljp world within the next few years. The hearingp are part of closer congressional look at the whole issue of U.S. military aid to foreign nations. Current policies have been criticized on the' ground arms supplies have contributed to world tensions 2 C/fy Police Rescue Girl in Crystal Lake Capt. Harry ^Nye, patrol bureau commander, s^d Patrolman Dennis Metryhowski and Sgt. Thomas Hereford responded to a call at Crystal Lake near the 200 block of Branch about 5 a.m. Both men entered the watei* nd Metrynowski , submerged himself to pull Sandra Johnson, BirmingKam Area News Parking Ban May Be Shelved permanently ban parking on Maple in the central business district may be shelved by the: City Commission tonight. In a report to be submitted to the commission today, City Manager Robert S. Kenning recommends against the removal of parking along Maple at this time. Ponllie Prti* P TO RIOT SCENE - The first group of National Guardsmen attached to the Pontiac Armory head for riot areas in Detroit. Twenty men under the command of Lt. Elmer Claycomh moved out about 9 p.m. yesterday. Each man was equipped with three clips of ammunition, according to Guard spokesmen. Area Aiding in Riot Control Military, law enforcement and fire-fighUng personnel from the Pontiac area have been sent to lend emergency assistance i n today. Detroit. More are expected to leave today. Some elements of National Guardsmen attached to the Pontiac Armory at 40 Walnut left for Detroit at 8 p.m. yesterday. As of 9 am. today, 101 troops from Company B the 225th Infantry Airborne Divi-s i 0 n were in riot-stricken areas ther^. went in to assist Wayne County sheriCo men about 10 p.m. yes-terday and refarned at 5~t R}. They provided traffic control on Telegraph Road entries to Detroit. Mpre men, equipped with,^hort and long-r a n g e tear gas pro-jectiles^are expected to go tonight. Those at the scene Iw s t night were accompanied by 12 officers in four cars from the Waterford Township Police Department. They were dispatched along Eight Mile^Road. At this time, softie 20 men 17, daughter of^‘Mrs. ” Fannie the, Pontiac State Police Johnson of 265 Branch, freel ably be called to Detroit. | post are in Detroit. ' i from danger, accoiding to Nye.l Eight Oakland County'Sheriff! A State Police spokesman said morning will be sent today, ac-★ * w iDepartment officers in two cars more than 700-officers, or about cording to-Nye. He An armory spokesman said a tdal nf - 182 officers and men, under the command of Capt. half of the entire Michi) force, are assifting there. BIRMINGHAM A plan to' 19-June 17, according to Ken- impact of the change was im- A study of a test fa ning, reveals that the of through tpifflc movement and the lessening of traffic congestion. . . . does not offset the negative impact of the change.” “While it may be difficult to judge the long-range traffic changes resulting from the lest,” Kenning said, “the visual mediate.” Romania: End AAilitary^Jllocs ’BUCHAREST, Romania (AP)I In a major foreign policy — Romania's Communist party speech before the National As-chief, Nicolae Ceausescu made sembly, Ceausescu also warn^ a strong plea today for abolition Arab countries that Romania of the Atlantic Alliance and the I recognized Israel’s right of ex- Warsaw Pact, demanding withdrawal of all troops, including Soviet forces, from foreign territories. istence and would not support Arab attempts to destroy Israel any new war. He said all'leaves and vacations for State Police personnel have been canceled. Five men and a punnping engine from the Pontiac Fire Department were dispatched to the John R-Seven Mile Road area of Detroit at 3 a.m. today to assist controlling blazes set by loqt- Assistant Chief Lee Nye said he had no word as to whether apy of the men were beleaguered by rock and bottlethrowing rioters as waS reportedly the case elsewhere in Detroit. Relief for the men sent in this ical attention, but was not apparently seriously affected by the near-drowning. Detroit Riots Halt State Army Drafts LANSING (AP)—State Selective Service Director Cbl. Arthur A- Holies today said all selective service inductions for W entire state will be postponed for the balance of the wee^ because of the tense racial situation in Detroit. Holmes said he felt selective service should not send nyen into ,Detroit from other ar^as of the state until he is positive the situation is well under dontrol, In addition, fie said, lit was feared that employes ofjthe Detroit selective service headquarters would have difficulty in ■ itting to work to pr^ess the The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau/Rcport PON-nAC AND VICINITY - Par^ sunny and less humid today. High 78 to 85. Fair tonight. Ldwr )H) to 65. Mostly sunny: tommorow with little temperatucr’change. Westerly winds 5 to 15 miles. Wednesday's outlpdk: Increasingly cloudiness aod warmer. Percentage chance of rain: toddy, 20; tonight, 10: and totttorrow, 10. ’* - Federal Troops Are Ordered In (Continued From Page One) S. Viet Patrol Kills 25 Reds U. S. Infantry Wipes Out N. Viet Company He said his regime considered the abolition of all m^^^ry blocs an essential preconoltion to a worldwide detente. "* 'The withdrawal of all non-European troops from Europe, and the withdrawal of all the troops from the territories of other^sjptates, the dismantling of foreign mijitary bases, and the abolitlon^f military blocs would have a^partScularly positive ef-fecC” he declared. SEPAftA'rlrnNE It em^a^iz6(j[jthe determination to foBow' an independent line in defiance of Soviet pressure, illustrated Sunday by a thinly veiled appeal in the Soviet party newspaper Pravda to get back in line in the Warsaw Pact military alliance. Ceausescu “Isaid Romania had chosen an independent stand at SAIGON (AP) - The South Vietnamese army patrolling the southern half of the demilitarized zone kiHed 25 North Vietnamese regulars Sunday about a mile inside the once-neutral area, a South Vietnamese spokesman said today. Elsewhere, U.S. 4th Division infantry with massive artillery wj»pfld .atit ib« Juna A jybsoow. summit cci\P; the cent namese company in the central highlands near Pleiku, killing 124 of an estimated 150 enemy soldiers. ference, where it refus^ to sig motr “bi Many banks did not open. Schools were dosed in much of the The two major universities — Wayne State and the University of Detroit — called off classes. y gi, SMOKE STILL RISES ^ As Cavanagh and Romney toured, smoke still rose from the blocks-long sections, torched by looters in an area that extended from the swank shops of downtown to slums-up to seven miles from the center of the American pilbts attacking North Vietnam struck north of Hanoi at the vital rail links with Red China. They reported no meetings .with enemy MIGs and no losses to ground fire, U.S, Marines and South Vietnamese troops first invaded the demilitarized zone in mid-May for a massive sweep of positions the CommuniSs had in the southern half of the zone. After running series of battles, the Americans and South Vietnamese withdrew. The entire riot area is predominantly Negro. Negroes make up about 30 per cent of the city’s 1.7 million people. As day broke! mobs evaporated and the littered streets ap-.peared deserted. Isolated shots rang out throughout th^ area, however, and the (Occasional breaking of glass and nearly constant ringing of ■ burglar alarms could be heard. REGULAR PATROLS Since then, American troops have been back only once, but the South Vietnamese have made several patrols in and out of the zone, their headquarters disclosed today. The spokesman implied this was a regular thing and further patrolling in thq zone cbuld be expected. The U.S. Command said 22 ^ericans were killed and, 39 funded in the action west of Pleiku ,and that eight enemy Napoleon called Engtand _ ---- v-tc uuiiuaj 111 A|navua, uic ou* pris^rs were taken. Most of viet Communist party newspa-thp American losses eccurred in per, urged Warsaw Pact countries .to treat the alliance “as a!“nation of shopkeepers” when rocket barrage at the start of vital, creative working coopera- he and Czar Alexander, of Rus-the foi^-hour engagement in thejtion in military and political sia, were trying to stop English steaming jungle. 'questions.” Itrade with Europe. 1 velocity J-IS r One Year Ago In Pontiac Hlshast. temperatura.............. Lowest temperature Weather: Sunny. Hlghait aml_Lawa>t Tamparaturai Thia Data In fS Yaara n l»33 Downtown Tamparaturi Hlgheit temperatura MeaS, temperature ^Wea1h(^ Saturday, Sundalra Tamparatura Chart ^ent .. . _ Bay City bT as Fort Worth Od,- Rnptds BB "AB Hetena Houghton 7B M Kansas City •ansing BB 72,, Los Angeles 90 B7 Aarquetta B4 62 a Miami Bch. 86 78 AusKegon 82 71 Milwaukee' 90 69 >elston 84 58 Mew Orleans 90 raversa C. 86 64 tlew York 84 ilbuquerque 98 73 Oiitaha 89 Atlanta 82 67 phlladelphta 92 „ dismarck 87 48 PhoenUT 102 >’ Boston 81 72 S. Lk. City 94 OAiChicago 86 70 S. Francisco SB 86 Cincinnati 88 .74 S'. S. Marie 84 56 87, Denver 85 55 Seattle B3 36 I Detroit 85 72 Washington 92 74 , NATIONAL ifEAT^R'— Showers and thundersho^vers ' V.are forecast UMgbt in tlu fastem coastal states, the southeast section of the country and portions of the Pilaus -region. Drizzle is expected-Int-the Pacific Northwest. It will be cooier«in the lower Lakes area. \ \ i RIOT AREA IN DETROIT—The northwest and west sides of Detroit (shaded area) were the hardest hit in’the rioting yesterday and today. There have been several incidents of flre-bomblng and looting! report^ in other sections of the city as well. Gov. Romney has ordered 7,000 Michigan National Guardsmen into the riot-torn city. $4,500 in Items Stolen in City Farmers Add to DeConick Reward Fund Overtaxed firemen, forced by lack of manpower and the danger of snipers, had to let many fires go unchecked. More than 1,000 people were arrested, some of them whites who joined the looting as the day and night of rioting wore Tfie tunnel and bridge To Canada, however, which lies across' the Detroit River from the city, were closed to traffic. Items valued at more than 34..500, including business machines, surgical supplies and drugs, were stolen from a Pontiac firm and a doctor’s office in the same building, it wa^ reported to city police Saturday. Officers said the thief entered Advance Laboratories, 675 Orchard Lake, through a basement window. A $700 microscope and an EKG machine were among the loot taken there, police said,— The doctor’s office was then entered by smashing through a glass door, according to police. t ...A' A supgipal instrument pac|k valued over $1,100, plus various medicines, were taken from there, police said. Officers from the police identi-fiqatioiL bureau investigated at Farming associates of Edward. Emmett DeConick, brutally slain July 3, have added to the reward offer for his kill; ers. The Southern Michigan Cooperative Growers Association has raised $6|00 to add to the $6,000 previously being offered. The Pontiac Press is offering a reward of $1,000 and the De-tPoiMNews $5,000. DeConick, 63, of W W. ~Mttp t —West Bloomfidd Township, was killed by a group of'four intruders who burst into his home. They beat and shot him to death, also shot his sister, Kathleen DeConick, 73, in the left eye, and took approximately $25,000 in cash, jewelr ‘'and checks. Miss DeConick Is recovering including fingerprints. DETROIT (AP)-The Army’s Corp 0 f Eugineers has announced the appointment of Lt; Colonel James E, Bunch as district engineer of the U.S. Lake Sprvey in Etetrpit. Bunch replaces Lt. Co. William J. Schuder, who left to attend the Industrial the scene for physical evidence, ftwlrer7W0ttfHis-8m4 to Jaeiog .Colteg.eijfihe Armed Forces in-kept under guard. ..... ““ , The three dead included year-old white woman shot by a sniper as she rode in an auto, a white man shot down by a merchant as he emerged from a store carrying loot, and a sniper killed by a Guardsman. It was in the 12th Street area on the near West Side about three miles from downtown Detroit that the riot, apparently started earljj yesterday With a police raid^ a Negro after-hours drinkiQg spot. tngmeer Named Washington. The center of the community became a moving automotive throughway and not a leisurely pedestrian - oriented shopping center,” he added. PARKING REMOVED Parking has presently been removed from one side of Maple, but the action in this case was taken by Ihe commission to allow construction on the ring oadrfito proceed unimpeded, ^hls was done^only as a tomporair measure and had nothing to do with an earlier plan to remove, parking, permanently. V Kenning suggested that .the JornmlSStori” review ■ "the r Maple parking problem after the ring road has been in operation for a year. ‘-4 “At-that' time, the yity com-mission may consider further the thought of the urban designers for the removal of parking and the narrowing of the street to one lane each “way through the center of town. REDESIGNED He said that under this plan th« present two lanes now used -for parkinig would be redesigned to % p^strian scale. Kenning noted that the purpose of the ring road is to provide an alternate route which would facilitate traffic movement through and within the central business district. ! sign a Communist declaraf cause it containpd some points of view which were not in keeping with the position of our party and government.” “Friends of the Arab people, we have always manifested our solidarity with them,” Ceauses-declared. “But we wish honestly to tell our ‘Arab friends tliat we do not understand and do not share the. position of those circles which speak in favor «of 4he liquidation of the state of Israel. 'We do not wish to give advice to anybody, but the lessons of history show that no people can achieve their national and social aspirations against the right of existence of another people.” PEKING TRIP Delegates also were to hear Premier Ion Gheorghe Maurer report on his apparently unsuccessful trip to Peking this month aimhd at improving Red China’s relations with the Soviet Union. Without mentioning Romania by name, a mildly worded article Sunday in %-avda, the So- WINDSOR, Ont.'(AP) - Cu.s-toms and immigration officials tqday ordered the border sealed betousen - for “ap indefinite period.” More than 4,000 Windsor residents normally commute daily to Detect to work. A smaller number of Detroit residents work here. Windsor-U. 5. Border Closed Many Windsor residents spent the night at the river front watching numerous fires across the river which colored the sky. Flashes- and flames could be seen through the pall of smoke that hung over the city. Closing of the border, for the first time since race riots erupted in Detroit in 1943, forced many U.S. residents to st-ay in Windsor motels and ho-tels. Only Detroit residents wefe allowed to return to thfeir homes-from Windsor during the curfew period, and they were warned: “Go straight home. Get off the streets as quickly as possible.” Canadians in Detroit were allowed to return to Canada. But a number who went to Detroit Sunday by bus were stranded for many hpprs near riot-hit sections 6nhe downtown area. Cosf or 1/Ving, Gr/evances Are 4ufo Contract Topics DETROIT (JPI - Cost-oC-liv-ing allowances and grievance procedures are expected to be major topics of discussion as negotiators for tlie auto industry this week begin making counterproposals to the United Avfto Workers. Although the industry has been mainly on the defensive during the first two weeks of negotiation, listening to suq^ top union demands as gUiaraili^ teed' income and profit shaHt%, there are indications that a real battle may develop over «ome comj^ny proposals. Negotiators are bargaining for conteapts covering some 700,000 workers jit General Motors, Ford and Chrysler to replace the three-year pacts that expire W. e:' ' — ■^Unrealistic, unreasonable, and unwork^le,” have been the terms most trequently Used by industry bargainers to describe the Tjnion’s demands, j. FOUJIW SUIT Ford will make its counterproposals Tuesday, with GM Chrysler expected to follow -auiUatei:,,.,,.______ ‘We will outline areas of the working agreement that we have found troublesome in the past an(l which we feel, could stand some improvement!” explained one Ford negotiator. One company complaint involves so - called “grievance mills,” local UAW units which file a series of grievances on fhe same subject. The cost-of-living ajlowances, ndiich provide a boost or cut in the worker’s p^eheck every three months based on changes in the consumer price index ^nts the U.S. Bureau of Laboi^te-l*Tase tistics, is- . another proraion wWeb the company wants altered. INCRjEASE TOTALS Since 19M, increases h^e totaled 18 centsr'an hbur. ‘ “These increases , must be giv-ep ftol recognition in negotiating a new„ Agreement,” said (3M’s chief negotiator, Louis Seaton, vice president in charge ojf personnet of the cost-of-living hikes. The companies say that much publicity has been given to recent wage settlements in other industries, which they say are merely catching up to wage lev-^ els provided auto workers through the cost-of-living program. “We’ve paid 18 cepts an hour already that w& want credit for , in the new contract,’’ said Seaton. ' “They want us to reach a set-[ement and then subtract 18 from it,” replied Douglas aser, member-at-large of the UAW exeguUve board and director of the union’s Chrysler department. HOURLY AVERAGE The average hourly wage of fir auto^ofkef is $3.41 ing to the Bureau of Labor tistics., ■' Seaton said at the openldg contract talks toat only about three million workers, about one third of them in the auto industry, out of some 70 millioP piran- ‘. ufacturing and noBmantrfpctur-ing workers in the United States have cost-of-living allowances. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY'24, 1967 A-^ Will Teach Optics Course XX OU Gets Top Scientist 3 Appointee/ to Staff; 3 Promoted One of the world’s foremost space-age scientists is coming to Oakland University to teach a pew graddate course in coherent optics. The Michigan State University Board of~Trus((ees has named Keeve M. Siegel of Ann arbor as visiting professor for “Seminar in Coherent Optics.’’ John E. Gibson, dean of Oakland University’s School of Engineering, said the creation' of the new graduate course 1 put OU on “the ^threshold of an exciting frontier of sci- al television via holography and superprecise surveying techniques, among other pos-sibiiities. Through the fledgling Educational Division of KMS Industries, the class lectures will be recorded on video tape and made available to universities ‘throughout the world. within 20 years higher educa-tieli will rely heavily on such TV-taped lectures. - His KMS Industries does advanced work in coherent optics and is involved in the production of scientific games, investment advising and educational systems. Commenting on his choice of Qakiand University for the establishment of the unique seminar, Siegel said; “I think it will prove .to be a good place to start giving live Siegel, formerly professor oft lectures oh coherent optics and electrical engineering at the seeing what the reaction is L Univer.sity of Michigan andj Frankly, 1 feel universities all head of the U-M Radiaiton I'O-lover the world will be interested ^ boratqry, was the founder andifn using the tapes of these Ici former president of Conductronitures,’’ He now heads KMS Industries; Inc , Which he founded this year. [tProf. Siegel is world-famous for" his . early workaon radar.: '^scattering and electromagnetic,! ^ propagation,’’Gibson said.' HEADS TEAM ^ Siegel is now heading a team of nine experts — all of whom He said he believes that Ifealth Center Contracts Let Three new faculty mepibers have been appointed at Oakland University and three *»Qthers have been'named as acting department chairmen. Tlie new appointments are: Patrick J. Johnson Of St. Clair Shores to special instructor-in education from administrative assistant to the dean of educar tion at Wayne State University. Harold Olofson .of Los Angeles to instructor of sociology and anthropology from UCLA; David Hoover of Plymouth, N. H. to instructor of music from Plymouth State College. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Come In The SIMMS CAMERA Depf. For These BIG DISCOUNTS tODAY-tUE$. and WEDS. SALE DAYS CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St KN TMHTE1IL9PJI. TUES. and WEDS. HOURS: S A.M. to S;30 P.M. SIMMS 9 Grant Given to Continue Cell Study Contracts totaling $666,566: have been awarded for construe-1 will participate in the .OU sem-it'o’’ of Oakland University’s Stu-| inar — in pioneering new usefH^nt Health Center, of coherent tight such as is pro- Work on the building wiU be-duced by laser action. soon, and it is expectSfl that - .j .u ’ it wiil Ije completed by March. Such beams provide the pos- ,xf,e center will provide medical ■sibility of extemely wide-band for students and Itaff communication links for apace 13^,^ 22 beds. / ' applications, three-dimension- . . I Contracts for the budding near Matilda it. Wilson Hall were awarded to: Bundy Con-striictlort Co. of Pontiac. $358,-860; Laya_Plumbing and Heating Co., Detroit, $192,540 and Fred W. M o 0 t e Electrical, Pontiac. $55,991. The project will be financed through borrowed funds which will be repaid from the university’s student health fee of $5 . , . per .semester for full-time stu-* .. ,.QaUaj}d..,.Wmyfer.silly..haL.xe-,4je«to. - s-*- - -..- * \ccived a $40,000 grant to con- w * * i uniie the trail-blazing research' . - . university professor And Exterior of the one-story struc-1 his wife to unlock the njys- ti'r®^''^^ bric* and precast tery of how‘fells live and die, *4 * ^,.^CILITIES It was one of 12 grarits-ao. u will include offices for doc-' taling $289,5.50 recently given tors and a medicar director, the university by various fed- living quarlffs for round-the-eral agencies. clock medical attendants and The $40,000 grant from the examination first aid, physical National Science Foundation therapy, and six hospital care will suppoft research for a rooms, two isolation wards and two-vcar period under the di- ‘wo solariums overlooHing the rection of Herbert Schuel, as- ’a^e in f r 0 n t of Vandenberg sistant professor of biology, ; t^all. and his wife Regina, a re- i search associate. The Schufls have been seek-i Ing for two years to isolate; -particles of cells- (lysosomes)i which are capable of\ dcstroy-l ing the cell. They vt-aiTt toi study the properties of lyso-i gomes. ★ * ■ g As a result of similar work,' scientists have Isolated cellu-| lar components, viruses (polio,] influenza and p^sibly tumor-j genic viruses) and other sub-! microscopic entities In pure, fortn and in quantities previously unattainable. VALUE OF STUDY. [ Scierifists believe '^HBt studies of these substances can! provide insights- into the detailed stVucture and function of individual cells. | , ■ Hr j The potential benefits to medicine afp very great One possible application Ls the potential isolation from cancer' tissue of viruses that may ini-' tiate and perpetuate human 1 cancer. ! Burglars Pick DJs' 'Top 150' SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) -| Disc jockets at Sarasota radio .station *WKX,Y were wondering Sunday if the records they play might be too popular. ★ * * ★ . Before dawn Sunday, burglars entered the station. TJey nored thousands of recortls in the library, but took 150 discs that are on the station’s current ^play list. -ir '"”A—4i THE royriAC riiKss, Monday, julv 24, i967 Compromise Is Reached on Tree Removal BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-A compromise plan has apparently satisfied most residents along Square Lake Road who were protesting the removal of a line of trees for a road project. * ★ ★ The area concerned is a line of homes on the south side of the road, parallel to L75. About 135 old trees stand in the. right-of-way desired by the Oakland County Road Commission. The street is two-lane unpaved and full of chuckholes due to the severe spring and summer weather. John A. Kaichen* of 2674 Lamplighter, a lawyer and president of Concord Green Associaton, said an apparently satis^c- 1 Truck Sinks in Mud, Killinglvarn^an, as Road Toll Hits 12 twy solution had been reached at a meeting attended by about 100 residents, township and road commission officials. Kaichen said road officials gave an explanation of why the road had to be replaced along the line of trees. The county offered to replace the trees with new ones in a compromise move. MOST WEiE SATISFIED “This offer seemed to satisfy most of those present,” he said. The protest to the plan was made by several home owners associations in the area and was joined by the Bloomfield Hills School District. They originally proposed placing the roid to the north. The County Road Commission meets W^rrow and is expec-ted to proceed with their plans, delayed two weeks by objections. NEW BRIDGE FOR ORTONVIhlfe\AWorkers are replacing the small bridge over Kearsley/creeKon Mill Street in Or- tonville. The county is paying tjie cost of $27,363. The road is expected to be reopen^ by mid-August. Rose Twp. Trailer Park Hassle • Apparently Headed for Court Again By The Associated Presa An Osceola County man who\ apparently suffocated when the cement mixer truck he was driving .submerged in mud was among 14 fatalities in Michigan this weekend. Twelve died in traffic accidents and two drowned. The Associated Press count started at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight last night. Bruce Branson, 23, of' Evart in Os-. County di^ Sunday in the cab" his cement mixer truck that sunk sight io.ijtud. Police said he apparently, tried to steer the truck around a mud puddle on a gravel road near Sears in tlie Qpunty when its front wheels went off the road and he was unable, to turn it back. ★ * ★ ' The truck, loaded with cement, sub-~ merged in mud, with only the top of the ntRbr showipg, police said. Pohce said it took a drilling rig, bull dozers and three A-frame wreckers to haul the truck out. Branson was dead in the cab, they said. rural road near ^Clark of control on a Lake Saturday. * * * Tommy Lee Weaver, 26, Flint, killed Friday when the car in which he was riding ran off a road in Flint and hit a sewer pumping station. BROWNINGS Drowning victims: 'Wilfred C. Moulds, 20, of Munising, when he disappeared while trying to swim across Island Lake in Alger Ck)unty yesterday. Donald C. Reeves, 15, of Grand Rapids, Saturday night in Green Lake, near Moline, 15 miles south of Grand Rapids. Garbage Pickup Rates Soar in Rochester Bids ROSE TOWNSHIP - The township’s leghl battle over establishment of^.pro-posed mobile home park is apparently far from over. Circuit Court Judge ArUjur Moore ruled last week in favor of the toWhship in a two-year-long litigation. today, Tom Dillon, attorney 3-Day Paul Bunyan Festivity StartsSunday in Union Lake Novi Turns Down Zoning Request tor Apartments NOVI—The Village Council has refused rezoning for a 95-unit apoftment complex near "Willowbrook subdivision on the north side of Ton Mile Road, The Alger F. Quast Real Estate Co. - of Detroit requested rezonihg, of 6.56 acres from residential to multiple dwell-mg. The council followed the recommendation of village planning consultant, .. Waldemar Johnson of the Waring and Aug 1. Johnson firm, Detroit. Planned was a cooperative type of complex, where residents own their own apartment, said Alger Quast. His firm has owned the land for five years. Quast said he has no plans for the land now. The council also approved rezoning of 30 acres from paultiple dwelling to agricultural. The land is located on Pontiac Trail west of West Road. It is owned by Ralph Buffmyer who operates a golf driving range adjacept ‘ttf^he 30-acre parcel. Eveil Withodt- lhc fabted Bhbe" Blue Ox, Union Lake’s 12th annual Paul Bunyan Days should be quite a whing-ding. The event is set for July 30, 31 and Aug. 1. A parade at 2 p.m. Sunday will begin , the festivities. It will feature the River kouge Drum and Bugle Corps, the Ravens, the Scotch Kiltie Band, old-fashioned cars and commercial floats. A fire department water battle and a boat parade are slated for the afternoon. Monday will offer an all-day |olf tournament, a pet parade, a waler-fpoflt show and a fashion show. ■k * -k A bike parade' will run on Tuesday, Imlay Councilmer\^7^y years ago Invited to Hear Cityhood Report Republican Director for Avon Twp. Named The appointment of Donald R. Hansen as Republican township director for Avon Township was announced today. Hansen, 177,Nesbitt Lane, will coordl- -nate and organize party activities in the townkhip!s precincts, according to county GOP Chairman Joseph R, Farnham. Hansen, employed by Ford Tractor as sales cooridnator, will work tinth 63rd Legislative District Director £) a v i d Evans. - y IMLAV^ITY - Village councilmen are invited to a planning commission meeting at 7 p.m, Wednesday to hear professional planners tell oflhe steps necessary to achieve incorporation. ■> In other recent business the group heard a report on the current sidewalk repair program. Village Manager Harvey Weatherwax said 1,897 feet had been constructed in residential areas at a cost of $2,866. Another 800 feet of repair is due, he said, some of it in the business district. The council has voted to purchase a new fire siren to be mounted atop the village’s new fire hall. The old one at the other end of town will .he abandoned, Weatherwax .said. Mayor pro-tern Keith Clark was named the town’s delegate to the Michigan .Municipal League state conference in September at Mackinac Isla?id. Weatherwax was named an alternate. gme and'^ concessions will fee opeh' trofti 3 to 10 p.m. during Paulvjpunyan Days. Carnival, pony and helicopter rides are also included. Organizations can make reservations for concession booths with either Art Marohn at the Family Shoe Store or Bud Holznagie at Holznagle—Pasehke Flowers. Those interested in entering the boat parade can get entry blanks at Clark and Vis Pharmacy. Chairmen of the affair are Elton Black, funeral home owner, and Mrs. Vincent Sebastian', assistant manager of Community National Bank in Union Lake. Burnell Fraser, owner ef A-1 Tile afid Carpet Co , is assisting them. * * Paul Bunyan Days began with the celebration of the opening of the Com- Indian Insignia on the bank’s cade influenced the naming of the 'event, said Mrs.' Robert FuHon, pub-iTcity. chairman for this year’s affair. After the bank’s opening, thfe village expapjfled with a post office and stores. Instrumental, in organizing the first affair were Jolm Clark, drug store owner; Jim, McKibben, hardware store owner; Marohn and Fraser. foe Mohave Plantations, said his client plans to ask for a rehearing and Will possibly appeal the case. The properly is about 40 acres immediately sou^ of the-village of Holly. Th^ area is zoned for industrial use and the lawsuits questioned use of the land, as proposed, , > ★ ★ * Township residents- Voted twice in ref-- erendums on the Issue, voting narrowly to keep toe mobile homes oat. The finn took Hie case to court and . -olaotions l^ eet- that tKey~^hOukt-be allowed to proceed with construction. WRIT DENIED Dillon said Judge Moore denied the firm a writ of mandamus on the fiasis of “deed restrictions” on some of the lOTd purchased .for the mobile home site. The restr'^ctioils were on construction of roads, the attorney said. Dillon questioned the rising on the basis that denying road construction would make the property “land-locked” and not suitable for any sort of development. Residents of the township objecting to the deyeloRtnent are also involved in the rawsuit, represented by Jack Baldwin, a Birmingham lawy,er.*» The township is represented by its attorney Robert Mcl^enney., * " The mobile home site firm has claimed a constitutional que^ion is involved in allegedly being depnVed of use of their property by the'township’s zoning. y 'is,' In Oakland Twp. other persons who died over the weekend are: Edgar C. Mass, 53, of Armada, when the car he was riding in yesterday ran off Thirty-Two Mile Road and struck an abutment in Macomb County. ★ * k Dealus Wilkerson, 55, of Lawton when he was struck by a traUuoat a railroad crossing in Lawton. FATAL COLUSION Robert C. Crissman, 32, of Kalamazoo, in a head-on collision with a car driven by Marie Hustafa, 18, of Kendall, on M40 about eight miles north of Paw Paw Saturday. Rudolph Porter, 20, of Detroit, when Hbe tent Cowtfnl trt the was riding .«nd struck a utility p61e in Detroit near his home Saturday. Judy Euwema, 2, of Marion, when she ran in front of a mobile feed grinder on a rural road near McBain, in Missaukee Copnty Saturday, Lloyd O’Dell, 30, of Manlo". when he was thrown from the pick-up truck he was riding in as it ran off a Wexford County road and struck a tree near Manton Saturday. WARREN MAN KIU.ED Wayne Monroe', 25, of Warren, killed Saljirday in a two-car crash on M97 in Metro Park, Macomb County. Robert L. Wilson, 24, of 3536 Jackson, Highland and Robert A. Brown, 47, of 3455 C^mond, Davisburg, struck by a car Fnday as they tried to run across heavily traveled 1-75 in Genesee County.’ /Gary Lee Sanford, 22. of Jackson, 'thrown out of his car when it went out ROCHESTER — The high cost of garbage and trashr pickiip as-reflected 4n bids 94 per pent higher than last year is expected to have some impact on the City Council meeting tonight.' ' Manager William Sinclair $aid that bids opened last week revealed Veterans Disposal Service of Avon Township, low bidder* to have increased , the pickup rate from $1 to $1.94. He said the price included pickup, transportation and disposal. Veterans runs its own land-fill operation, a necessity under state health laws. The total -village bill for the service per the ’new bids would .be about $54,000 a year, ’Sinclair said. The increasing cost of services was also reflected in paving bids for .Alice and Griggs Streets. Sinclair said prices quoted were 25 per cent higher than budgeted. He said some alterations in the costs ' would be attempted, but that the bids allowed for rising concrete prices. W. Bloomfield fo Air School Cost Analysis WT:ST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The board of education will hear a budget analy.sis of the final architectural plans for the new Frank Doherty Elementary School at a special meeting tonight. The hoard recently approved the plans for the school to be opened in September 1969. It will be located on Walnut Lake Road between Orchard Lake and Middle Belt roads. . 4^ * ★ ★ Construction work bids will be received by the board Aug. 15, A.sst. Supt. Harvey N. Sterns said. Head of Brandon Twp. -School Board Eleicted BRANDON TOWNSHIP - Ronald H. vSutton has been elected president of the Brandon Township Board of Education. Other officers elected were Leslie Wright Jr., vice president and Donald J. Carter, secretary. Raymond Har^ was reelected as treasirref. - The board also awarded a^wation from “a grateful school district” to, previous board members Larry Wood, re-^ tiring president, and Dr. Paul F. Shoeif.’ Little Pig Is Pet ByJEANSAlLE OAKLAND TOWNSHIP - Bally was never meant to be a pig. It could only have been a. quirk of nature that .gave her a long snout, a curly tail and a pink and black bristly skin. She’d have been much more, at-home in do^' hair.' - Sally is a four-month-6ldi house-broken lady-like pig who inhabits the farm of Wallace Chamberlin at 811 Letts.. She was Identified as a Hampshire by 14-year-oW John Chamberlin who scanned the encyclopedia to ver|fy her heritage. ,i A gift io the farin from a man whjo had received the piglet as a comic present shortly after its birth, Sally does not In Lake Orion Hearing Tonight on Budg^ hearing on operation of the cemetery, plumbing and ^^ages !®^ >u^et noW set-at mechanical refrigeration plus a new $198,106, IS scheduled during tonight’s heating, code are up for adoption. NEW FEE SCALE council meeting. The meeting begins at 7:30 in the village offices. Also up for cAnsideration and approval Is the contract with Bruno Leon and Associates of Detroit for preparation of-a land use plan fqr the village, prepara-•tory to its application for federal 701 planning funds. ' Th' ..^****y recognized the convenience in being ab)e ta signal when she wanted to go outside, and once warm weather began she followed Chamberlin about his chores and even now, continues to follow along behind the tractor as he hays. Victim of a sad experience, Sally bears the scar that took nine stitches to close when she fell down the coal chute aUthe house about a month ago. |t’s left a pleasing dimple on the part of .her anatomy most commonly referred to as ham. • ★ ★ , Reverting to pigdom only on the enticement of a mud puddle at the end of the road, Sally relishes chicken feed and silage for her frequent snacks. SCRUBBED FOR DEBUT She enjoys a bath as given by Peggy who diligently scrubbed her for her debut with the camera. ; The Chamberlin farm, some 350 acres, bOasts steers, chickens, a horse, sheep and five dogs including three poodles. The acreage, used to produce corn, wheat apd oats, has been in the Chamberlin family for 125 years. It’s probably the first time it’s produced an intelligent pig that comes oh name, oinks for water and «nks when into the barnyard. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JULY 24. 19G7 •1% P, '.sgSss ■ W ■ B.S SSS 3SSSS •S 2I§§§§§ = =silspi I JJiylil 5S''n^‘ES®*oS ft elA28850 ^5SS2S sissiiistii 000000 00 CN o o o CO CO ■ i2 s 1 8w 1 6 ® 1 0 '4 0* S' 0 I a u ? w""i I ■c cA a <0^3 CS & 0 c-o 0 §ll in ' o» 0 X ,gal ?? Hi 111 svi S'Sl^g illllll •S 5 5 0»9o»o>o)o>o>oio>0»m o>S Me4Csir4CHf^eMC>40 'O I 1 : : i <0 CJ> K : : : ; co oo : lO • ^ c3 ^ ^ 5 j ’ +7- , ■■» 66.y $ 00 9 r-j 660$ O . 66 0 $ -00 9 .66^ $ 00!» o^a ..anoiDvi33^ ^ p^.. : r'j 66-7$ 00 . o.a 66'!^'$ “? 66^$ ■ 66 C$ “s ■'"* oNoaDva II j5>DLj3 .'I'^^l I“^A®J)'P o ■'Oj -»j Ajjai uou,o3 %50l usdj5 puo pjo6 'snir 'au!o[ jiosj^ag ,u,vo jnQ 36!^ 6ol$ 691$ 3Q9 6^8 Ot' i 6sa ^ 00 2 Ss3 P'-JOH ,' HIC3. 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Rosie is seven years old and came from the Brookfield Xhteago Zoo. Sex of'her offspring won’t be determined until she starts taking her motherly responsibilities a little less seriously. . Black Power Confab Seeks Race Separation , By AUSTIN SCOTT NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Black power, for one year an unclear rallying cry shouted at civil rights rallies and scrawled on walls during riots, has taken on meaning distinctly opposed to present American society. Hie first national conference on the once cloudy concept produced a string of resolutions Sunday that would, in effect, set up a black-oriented society distinctly antiwhite, anti-Christian and antidraft in tpne. ‘starting a national dialogue on the desirability of partitioning the United States into two separate nations, one white and one black.” With almost every fpction of the Negro community represented at the start of the four-day meeting, it was clear at the final session Sunday that the militant separatists had won. One enthusiastically supported fesblulibn “caTfed PROPOSALS CHEERED The nearly 1,000 delegates, many in Africa-derived clothes, cheered every proposal for black-oriented financial, educational, employment and law enforcement institutions, including paramilitary training for black youth. Some termed it the start of ‘‘Uie black revolution.” products of Negro artists and irofessionals more closely to ‘the needs of black people.” Speakers who used the word ‘Negro” were shouted down. WHITE MAIf’&CREklTION’ ‘‘The Negro is a white man’s creation,” one man shouted. Black people do not vyish to be absorbed into the white community. Our interests are in conflict. A deep distrust of white society was evident afe the delegates cheered through proposals to set Up permanent contacts with African nations, independent, black-controlled political parties or Volihg blocs"' and i • "file breaking up ^ of Negro families —Cassious Clay—is returned his by white slaveowners, the segregation that once sanctioned wholesale lynchings and, still exists in schools, housing and “Black people have been psy- chologicj|y handicapped be- cause have no national homeland, pur physical, cultural and nioral standards are not thoSe of white society^’ Most of the dozens of resolutions put great stress on the troUbl^ history of Negroes—the unwilling removal- in chains _ ---------------------- from Alnc'a,'""The sysfehiillc ‘CULTURE NOT ACCEPTED’ Many argued that the U.S. attitude toward Negroes over the past-500 years now prevents its culture from being accepted as-ajyay of life. They included: • A demand that black athletes stay out of both the Olympic games in Mexico City and out of professional boxing linlir ‘‘Ministei^uMmmaH' ATi^ heavyweight title. A boycott of “every black church and all religious institutions that do not join the black revolution.” Christianity was termed “b white religion that has taken the diamonds and minerals of, the world in ex-bhange for the Bible—a bad deal.” > • “A black militia to train hlack families in all aspects of self defense and racial survival,” and a school for black political organizers. A “black university,” a ery congressman who yot^ to^ unseat Harlem’s Adam Clayton Powell, then almost booed his son off the platform when young Poweli tried to explain why his father had not kept his promise to show Up at the conference. Powell is subject to arrest in . New York on a criminal contempt charge. ^ “He’s gone fishing,” shouted one woman, referring to Powell’s stay on the fishing island of Bimini. “He didn’t do right. He should jiave copse here when he was supposed, to.” Proposals were adopted call- ‘black national holiday,” a re-ing for a black power lobby i fusal to accept birth control pro- Wa^ington, criticizing commu-grams and a national antidraft niepions. media, and urging a movement. “Our position is hellj nationwide boycott of all no, we won’t go:” shouted one|products that sponsor television workshop chairman. |and radio boxing piatches un- The l?onferehce t^ensure3",Tv-"tTes gets his title back. Nasser Calls on Arabs to Wage Guerrilla War Egyptian President Gamalj Abdai Nasser last night exhort-1 ed the Arab world to accept its! defeat by Israel as a lesson froni God and to wage a village-! by-village holy war of liberation! like the Vietnamese. j In . his first public speech! since he offered to resign June; 9, Nasser again -accused the Unit^ States of helping Israel during the six-day war last month. He said America gave ................................ and^sent U.S. planes and vol-; unteer pilots to help Isrhel during the fighting. “God wanted this to be. a lesson,” Nasser said. "We ac- cept His test as our fate and we are confident that He will be with us if we choose the path of Jidad (Holy war) and will grant us victory if we~afr determined to win victory.” Nasser hinted the Arabs might launch a Vietnam-type guerrilla war. “We read every day of the Vietnamese people and hoiV they| inflict losses on the Americans by using small rior in any war to the Vietnamese.” In Jerusalem, Israeli officials declined conunent on Nasser’s speech until they could study .the fhll text. ON SALE NOW! anneuf ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY ^ Special! 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Hence, residents face one of'two possible^ solutions: 1— Increased property lax. 2— A third income tax. Probably a fej>" diehaiKis will suggest no tax at all. This last is unthinkable. Pontiac can’t g?ove backward. ★ ★ ★ This city must keep abreast of other conftiiunlties, other prosperous areas and sister cities across the Nation. This tax increase faces every town and hamlet in the Country that is moving ahead — or even standing‘still. This impossible third alternative is simply a step backward »towards a ghost town. As the Mayor has said: “We will let the' voters themselves decide which path thcjf, wish to follow. The Cpmmissioiif will accept their decision and go forward accordingly.’’ ” Mr. Taylor speaks wiseh*. This important question will be placed in the laps of the voters. Who is better qualified to select the route they wish to follow? As The Press has said before and will say aga^n —we believe the property increase is the better and fairer of the two methods. ■A". ★ ★ Plenty of time exists to discuss the matter in detail and all of the voters will be fully advised before they goto the polls. The decision is theirs. We go forw"*rd accordingly. Voice of the People: Spending of Tax Money Questioned by Taxpayer Seerfe every time the City needs more money to operate, it threatens to curtail iservices, such as firemen, policemen and other city employes. ★ ★ ★ Now that we have a committee to investigate all these problems, how about checking on all political appointees? Maybe if some nonessential employees were eliminated, we could save enough money so that it would not be necessary to have a city income tax or raise property taxes. ★ ★ The firemen’s request for a few cents raise was denied due to lack of funds. At the saiqeiime t\u- the City Manager hired an assistant at over ! 000 a year'^salary. Where did this money <;ome from? FRANK C. PAVLINAC 615 THIRD ‘All Able-Bodied Persons Should (iet JobS' I agree with the letter, from Janie Collins that all able-bodied persons on the rolls of the welfare program should be required to report to MESC immediately. , If they refu.se any job they are offered they should be dropped from wClfar# •’ then and there. Why should we citizens who sweat blood for our money have to support these^ople? Never Even Allowed On The Ranch Before David Lawrence Says: The want ads of this paper are bulging with jobs. There is a shortage of men for many jobs due to the many men, who have enlisted in the armed services and are fighUng in Vietnam- At least 70 per cent of those on welfare could find jobs if they’d make a small effort. MRS. lORETTA FISHER 2 Soldiers’ Viet Views Helpful 3607 MARINER DRAYTON PLAINS Suggestion Rejected . Birmingham’s City Commission slapped down Judge Arthur E. Moore’s latest Idea. * It seems the august city fathers to the south aren’t in favor of the Judge’s suggestion that we try and curb the current crime . ''itftuftfldn ■' in.lli'is' "area' hy" SdkrcTi'- ing suspicious looking vehicles for weapons. No, sir. This is an iiiva-/-‘doflteof privacy. Aren’t burglars ^ entitled to their best chances to get aw:ay? Why pul roadTilocks in the paths of oiir finest criminals? ★\ ★ ★ ■ . Most pTOple doubt whe.ther Com--Ttrtsstmfer T: iivd««Mi^eak§'-the citizens at large. WASHlNGTON-Two lettS —one from an Army captain and.the other from a Marine corporal serving in Vietnam— have come to this*^rresp&ti4i^ enfs attention. ' ^ Kingswood Headmistress . . . . Educational circles are losing an able and assertive administrator in le current departure of Marion iDALE from Kingswood School/ mbrooit. - For nearly two decades she has been at the helm of one of the outstanding girls’ schools in ^ Artierica if not, actually, in the front of educational delivitieg. and Kingswood’s growth is significant ^ , proof. The wailing list is long and formidable. ★ ★ ★ Miss Goodale will be married, shortly and all her friends here rejoice in this decision. In the meantime, Kingswood will be fortunate to have They both give views on t h e Vietnam war which can be helpful not only to the peo-■ pte-bBthbomef including the! critics, but also | to the persons in government LAWRENCE? responsible for the making of war policy. States Is not fighting to win." “To my knowledge the post of Haiphong has not yet. been bombed nor blockaded by our superior naval forces. MAIN SOURCES “Multimillion-dolfar aircraft on f i I 3^^t r pushcarts instead of striking the main sources of supplies reasons to make an all-out effort to win the War in Vietnam.' I agree with the protests and proposals of Janie, Collins. If these people want to go first class, let them pay the'rates. BRUNETT FROM BROOKLANDS are cpn fined to bombing trucks^%irt roads, bridges and _^any of my friends arc drad now and I have Come close to death. All this sacrifice and still no all-out effort. Victory has no budget. Victory is not easy; it takes courage and risk. ‘Police Need the Right to Stop and Seareh’ A police department can ido only what the public will allow. Many crimes could'be prevented if our police department had the right to stop and search, suspicious persons. A person with nothing to hide would not object to this. The crime rate is rising and .something must be done to curtail it before it is unsafe to leave our homes. The ultimate cosLof anything less than complete vic- WORRIED ABOUT CRIME “Certainly it would seem that there are many strong ~ victory itself.” Capital Letter: world. She has consistently held her institution in the very fore- Dr. John R. O. McKean caiT^hg oh in her stead. An Effective Proposal . An eastern legislator wiH intro— duce a bill making castration mandatory for rape. Well, why not? The^guilty beg'for it. j If a man becomes so wrought up that he loses all self contro 1 j, shouldn’t he be rendered impotent as .a protection to all femininity? Many figure they \^n’t “get caught" and - if 4hey do, thoy’H worm - their way out. This proposal ought to be exceedingly ^effective. The actual attack that precipitated the bill took place in a Long Island church which a, sixteen year old high school girl had visited to pray for her brother in Vietnam. Castration seems woefully insufficient for a cur like this. The army captain wrote privately to his brother, who senft the letter to this correspondent. It says in part: “Prior to my coming to ' Vietnam, you will remember, there existed many doub^% my mind about the war. After having lived here and fought her^ in the delta for these three months, my views have changed a great deal- ★ * * V “I see the South Vietnamese people struggling under the yoke of Vietcong terrorism. They are ^ oppressed people who are attempting to live in pfeace, and to achieve some sort of political and economic stability. -Humphrey’s^wropefrip^ Shows Concrete Results A recent article referring to Wide Track Drive stated that the first two causes for accidents were due to drivers not being alert. I have lived in several states and nowhehe have L found a rhain “round about” such as Wide Track with such lack of advance notice on which lane to move to in Order to get off at a particular street. It is not the lack of drivers being alert, it is the lack of the City to furnish signs to guide a person as to what street is next and which lirtie gets'you off. NEBRASKA Press Reader (iives His Definition of Chaos By RU'ftl MONTGOMERY WASHINGTON - Hubert H. Humphrey’s recent swing through Europe has produced tivo cDTicrete “I . told the story both to public officials and overseas newsmEn wherever I went. Chaos is: continuing to think of city planning as one building at a time, as opposed to total community planning. W. KOMAY W. HURON “Although the tactics and terrain differ greatly, it is not hard to equate this war with. one that the United States was engaged in on her own soil not too many years ago. results which set it apart j from the largely cere- I monial trips | unde rtaken i by p r e V ious | vice presT-dents. • By feeding back to Pres ident Johnson and Secretary of State Rusk the information gathered in talk» with European leaders, we have made soHie adjustmenjs in our nuclear nonproliferation treaty- which give it a “Since4heft, 4he r eal A lean story is getting much wider play in the European press." Question and Answer Such accomplishments are a tribute not only to Humphrey’s persuasive powers, , but to the*wide leniency :whiciT -LBJ has grated his No. 2 man. No one knows the frustrations better than LBJ, and it is to his credit that- he uses shis subordinate teammate constructively, and shares some occasional glory with him. (DIsthbutMl by Kina FMturt* Syniliciti) I understand there are recordings of reading materials available for handicapped people who can’t read hooks and magazines themseNes. Where can I find out about getting some for a member of my. family? ' ----------- DAILY READER REPLY Persons who are'blind or suffering from diseases that make normal reading habits impossible are eligible for such recordings distrilmt^d by the Library of Congress. Send the/ applicant’s fuU name and addreSs, along with a stdtement from a doctor, registered ni£se or other medical authority, to Division of the wind and Physically Baudicapped, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20542. « CRIES OUT And in Conclusion . . . . Jottings from the well-thufnbed notobooknfycun; peripatetic “The suicide rate among physicians is disturbingly high," says The Manchester Union Guardian, “but among psychiatrists it Is higher than any other occupational group.’* in the Great Hereafter, I’ll remember not to be either . . . ;.....a Russian correspondent wrqte his home office that; “U.S. automobiles are so Inefficient they are currently^ ^being^ pushed along the road by boat|s. Photo enclosed" ......... Ralph Nader who earns his. living panning successful organizations, is now taking on the gas companies. it ir it .T rusted scouts a d vise’ me Carol Christenson rates as one of the attractive girls in the area....... .......... Personal note to David Gray: MHd the picture. _____________ ... CAROL . . Chris Columbus’ trip over here cost $12,000. Our bureau- crats can’t go from the Senate Of fke Building to the Mouse Of-fice Building for that today. . ................Indiana’s Jim McDaniels is rated the top high school basketball player in the JNalion. Two months ago he missed seven feet by a quarter of an inch. Probably he’s .seven one today:V....................If you paid asjnuch as $4,281 in Federal income lax, you’ll be happy to know you kejit-our great government running for just one second. “The American ^soldier in Vietnam reads the newspapers about the peace demonstrations that pepper the larger cities in the United States. ‘readrng,' W 'nerve in their conscious and subconscious mind cries out in frustration to the American people, ‘Why don’t .you understand?’ ” better chance of acceptance. • By outlining to foreign governments our pressing need for help in feeding hungry peoples of the world, ■ we have secured a pledge from Britain, Germany, the N e t h e r*l ands, Belg|ufn, France, supply million tons of grain. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Commutation St. Louis Globe-Democrat The other letftr — which came direct to this correspondent from a Marine corporal who has served many months in .Virtnam—says; Humphrey concedes that this is a piddKBg amount in view of the enormous need, Inq it is more than they havWver previously promised makes us’ joint partners\in a humanitarian effort. “The purpose of this letter is to express With growing shock the realization in myself and others that the United Ambassador 'Henry Cabot Lodge says those stupid dehionstra-tions in the U.S. are doing more than any single thing to keep the Vietcong pepped up and active. In Hanoi they’re read as national disunity ...........I’m told Jackie GlSuvsoi^ gets his hair “done’) pnee a week and^ disgorges $35 ........ AVtock-' ‘ holders group- in a Massachusetts company is circulating a petitioi) de-'* manding guaranteed annual dividends ......... . Dept, of Cheers and Jeers; the C’s the junk, mail campai^i the J’s — the junk mall. —Harold A. Fitzgerald Verbal Orchids Of the n d n p r 01 iteration treaty chantes, HHH says: “Npt only did\wr allies have some Ideas wwthy of incorporation, but thk face-to-face talks indicated Ihlit our own proposal neeired some modification.” In 1964 President Johnson, ' in a move ^which he can scarcely contemplate with pride, commuted the sentence for extortion of Lawrence L. Callanan to resume hiS active domination of union affairs. It is now revealed in the Gtobe - Democrat that this same union txmtributed the staggering sum of $52,0(W,‘ so far as is* presently known, to Mr. John^n’s presidential campaign ihat ye^r. climate in St. Louis have , become far worse since Cal-lanan’s active re-entry into the unToK are- na in Missouri. Mrs. Harry Lehman of m3 LaDue; 86th birthday. /lr. and Mrs. Emmet Balfey of QrtonviHe; 55th wedding anniversary. Frank Leonhardt of Hubbard Lake; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Grace Munro of 712 N. Mill; 81st birthday. Mrs. ^^Evarts The vice president feels that among the most important aspects of the trip was his success in “getting across the American story” to Europeans, who hear mostly about our crime wave, rioting and Vietnam dissenters. The steamfitters also contributed $10,800 to the campaign of A^. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy for the United States Se^^. Any application for commutotlon or pardon must have toe approval of the attorney general. The LBJ - Callanan case cries aloud for*'explanation. We are not suggesting that the President of the United States or the attorney general received contributions in payment for a jcommutation,^or :that they even knew that the contributions were made—although $52,000 is a great deal of money as a contribution even to a President, and $10,-000 even to.a Kennedy. In att probability nothing can be done about the present mess, as the damage of the commutation and the huge contributions is'already past history. 1 ,, ★ /aL , What ca^ be dqne, how- ever, is to pass legislatiun that will prohibit massive political contributions, even under the mockery of bcliigr' ‘voluntary." If it is wrong for businesses to make any contributions at all to political campaigns, and it Is, and if it Is wrong for individuals / to contribute more than a/ modest, sum to politic^ campaigns, and H is, then iL is . just as wrong for unions to make contri: butions exceeding those of . businesses < of 1107 Airway Drive; 87th birthday. ACCOMPLISHMENTS “I vfent from country to qountry,” he says,'"‘explaining what we are aedbmpUsh-ing in the fields of science and technology, water and air pollution, heakh, education, traffic safety, jobs for youth, and poverty. > The steamfitters are a small union of only about 1,100 members. Their power comes from their ability to lay a lug on toe'members ^fnc;.,what is called a “volun-' tory" politicid'fnnd. This union was notorious-' before Callanan was ' from prison and ■rfved his commn- s printed In ■1 all AP U' ■ ; The,^t1se acts* li delivered by carrl«.fw SO cents a weeS; ttBere, nielled In Oakland, Ganasae. L«>-IngstOT. Maot^b, Lapeer aM Waablenaw Countlet If It SIS,00 a and toe labor ypHan* payable hi erivanee. Postage has bean paid at ttia, Ml The foundation of America rests on the integrity of its public -officials. It is a frightening thing for there to be suspicions that favm can be bought, yet these suspicions must inevitably exist and will continue to exist until the Congress of the United States passes a law /which places union contribiitioas,.r* voluntary or otherwise, under the same prohibitions which r,elate to corjiorations and- individual^. Standing Room The Nantucket /Mass.) 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Traffic safety spokesmen have been trying for years to get the Michigan Legislature to pass such a measure — permitting chi^cal tests of susp^ted drunken drivers and permitting revocation of the operator’s li- Attorneys In the Legislature have been thwarting them for years — voting implied consent bills down or keeping them safely bottled in the juldiciary committees — because of their view that the principle is unconstitutional. . been drinking at a tavern and a bowling alley. Police arrested him at'the hospital for driving under the influence and directed doctors to take a sample of his blood for chemical analysis. vited of traffic law violatiws, threaten to take their case to the highest court in the land. F^w do. Schmerber did. IN LOS ANGELES Enter Armando Schmer^r. Schmerber’s ■ automobile encountered a tree in Los Ai;tgeles one night in November 1964 after he and a companion had Schmerber’s attorney advised him not to consent to withdrawal of his blood and he didn’t. The blood was taken anyway; results of the chemisal analysis were admitted as evidence against him at his municipal court trial, and Schmerber was ■ convicted. And, despite the argtunents that have been used against implied consent for years—that jt violates the right to - due process and protections against self-incriminaUon and unreasonable search and seizure—the U.S. Supreme Court upheld his conviction on June 20, 1966. ^isseriting Justice Hugo Black termed “extraordinary,” and it left opponents of implied consent with much less amtnuni-tion than they had had before. EXTRAORDINARY’ DEQSION Black noted the (^urt has-interpreted- the self-incrimihation clause of the U.S. Constitutiotv’s Fifth Amendment as meaning the state may not compel an accused person to hand over his papers to be used as evidence against him. s> Many indignant persons, con- It was a 5-4 decision which "It is a strange hierarchy of values,” he said, “that allows the state to extract a human being’s blood to convict hfm of a crime because of the blood’s contentSi but proscribes cpm-pelled prqciuction of his lifeless papers.” * ★ ★ But Justice William J. Brennan Jr., writing for the court ' majhrity, said: “We hold that the privilege protects an accused only from being compelled 'to testify against himself, or otherwise provide the state with evidence of a testimonial or communicative nature, and that the with- draVt^ Of blood and use of the analysis in question in this case did not involve compulsion to these ends.’,”^^ Although upholding the chemical test in Schmerber’s particular case, the high court went out of its way to point-out that it might reljpt'differently to differ- ent circumstances. According to legend, the dis- tance flf one yard was established % Hertry I as the length between his nose and the end of his fingers whc* his arm was outstretched. a AAONOAY-TUESDAY yWoNTGOMERY WARD Sayeii 3ss/4» Save! 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SATFRDAY 0:30 \.M. TO 0:0() P.M. SI NDAY 12 NOON TO r> |>.M. . 6,i2- l').10 f" " THE POOTIAG PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JULY 2i, 1967 B—1 Mrs. Leland Strayer, a widowed homemaker, on the staff of the ftomemaker Service of Metropolitan Detroit, points out something amusing to Angela, 20 months, while Daniel, 3, {center) Girl Has Three Choices Shou^^L eave Uneasy Position DEAR ABBY: I baby-sit for this couple who have two small children. The wife #orks a night shift. She always asks me what time her husband comes home. Sometimes he stays out very late and barely beats her h^e, but he. tells me to fell his wife that he got in early if she asks. I hate to lie, but I hate to get the husband in trouble, so what should I do. QUESTIONED DEAR QUESTIONED: As I see it you have three choices: ) • Tell the husband you are through lying for him. (Prepare to be fired.) • Tell the wife if ?he wants to know what time her husband comes home, to ask HIM. (Prepare to be fired.) • Simplify matters, and quit sitting for these people. (P.S. I recommend the was out of order because there was no anniversary to celebrate. A thoughtful gesture under the circumstances would have been to invite the widow out for dinner and the evening to be sure she wasn't home alone, brooding. -^jifiiMit.Jivjflg.iL,da.wa ^adx.taiul “new one.” DEAR ABBY: I am a normal 17-year-old girl with very strict parents. The only time I get away from home is to spend the week-end with my girlfriend, and then I run with a pretty wild crowd. I’ve never been thrown in jalt or anything like that, but most of my friends have, and I know a person is judged by the company shp keeps. Only by consistent good bfehavior, and staying strictly away from “bad” company, can you prove to people that you aren’t the kind of girl they thought you were. * * 4* DEAR ABBY: I have a very nice electric clock. It’s a small one in an attractive wooden case and I keep it on a drum top table in the living room, but my wife say% that according to Emily Post, it is not permissible”'to,4)ut a clock in the living room. I finally got a date with a decent boy for a change and I acted as nice" as I knew how. All he got from me was a goodnight kigs^ After two dates he .stopped calling me. He must have heard about my reputation and it scared him off. I enjoy it for my own pleasure, and it’s handy so I don’t have to go elsewhere for the time. I am 78 and my wife is 74. May 1 have yourvppinion? I thank you. F.A.W. It.) DEAR F. A. W.: A clock belongs where it affords the most convenience. Leave it in the living room and tell your wife that Abby says it’s all right. DEAR ABBY: Last night my husband accused me of every dirty thing in the book again, and Abby, he has no reason to even suspect toe. HE is the one who runs around. Then he teUs me he can do anything he wants to do, go anywhere he pleases, but if he cAtches me making one wrong move, he will throw me out. The only place I ever go without him is to the store, and then I walk as I have no car. I was 15 and he was 19 when we were married. He was my first and only Abby, hq«( can I let him know I’m really not that bad, and have a bad reputation only because of my friends? I like him very much and wonder if you can help me get him back? . BAD NAME DEAR BAD NAME: Unfortunately a reputation^iai^ l>e damaged overnight, but it cam-bc repaired that fast. You earned it, so now you had better set How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, in care of ’The Pontiac Press. For a personal, unpublished reply,^ enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send |1.00 to Abby, in care of 'The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600i P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. sweetheart ind he knows it. We have three beautiful children. I am so nervous and upset fiWB all his false accusations I am going raid at 22. What can I do, Abby? My religion doesn't permit divorce. He beat me up last year and the court made him go to a psychiatrist. He went four times and then he said the doctor told him he didn’t hpve to come back any more as he was in better shape than most people who are walking around. Please help me. ^ NERVQUS WRECK DEIAR WRECK: Don’t accept the,word 'Of a man who is obviously still disturbed. As his wife you have the right to know exactly what the psychiatrist told him, - so inquire directly of the doctor. If you are a “nervous wreck and going bald at. 22-’’ you should get help from a doctor bn how to cope wRh a sick hus-1. Or talk to your prie^ or a lawyer about arranging to live apan. DEAR ABBY: My sister-in-law’s husband passed away a year ago. They would have had their 25th wedding anniversary June 5. I got a call from her sister telling me that Joan (not her real name) was, going to celebrate her silver wedding anniversary. I said, “How can that be? Joan's husband Is dead.” She told me that-Joan had pitched In on everybody else’s 25th wedding anni-. verSary gifts, so why should she be gypped? I didn’t wapt to get into an argument with her so I gave her the five'dollars. (A few of the others didn’t.) Abby, am I dumb or behind the times or what? Is it really proper to take up a, collection for a woman’s anniversary gift when there’s eiiiiliic P|iu Photos watches intently, and “Butch,” 6, concentrates gn his own artistic effort. Mrs. Strayer’s pink dacron uniform bears the emblem of the Homemaker Service. ------------ ♦ She's Not Wrong to Mention This Upcoming Event By EUZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: Recently my boy friend in the service asked me to become engaged. He then called his parents and informed them of his intentions. The next time I spoke to his mother on the phone, I mentioned the engagement since we both knew. I was informed by my boy friend that this was a breach of etiquette and definitely the wrong thing to do. Was it? — Confused. . Dear Confused: Technically it was up to yoiir boy friend’s mother to speak first and tell you how happy she waS. .However, it would seem very peculiar if you talked with her, each of you knowing the other knew of the engagement, and neither of you referred to it. Since she didn’t, it was perfectly-natural for you in your enthusiasm to speak of it first. It may not have been “according to Hoyle,” but it was certainly not wrong, or-iq^poor taste. Mrs. Stfayer, in herrolTl^'^or^ma^^^WK!eT’ and attention tfiese children need during mothers absence. .At the If your boy friend gets upset over trivial things like that, maybe yoq had better think twice before the wedding. FRANKFURTERS Dear Mrs. Post: When frankfurters informally in those.... small paper nbldeB,'T5hlRRd’^ tto same time, she’s relieving the mother’s anxiety about the Mldren during a period of hospitalization! at^th frankfurter and its roll alone? — Bai :P. Volunteer Acts as Extra Mother By JUNE ELERT familiar with the family or individual What is “Homemaker Service?” needs, such as a relative, friend, doctor. Homemaker Service of Metropolitan teacher, nurse or social service agency. Detroit is a “home help” service that is Dear Barbara: The paper or cardboard holders are made to protect your fingers from grease, mustard, etc. Use them, sliding the hotdog out a bit at a time untU you are near the end and in danger of eating the paper, too, and then discard them for the tost mouthful or two. available to residents of,Wayne, Oakland and Madomb counties. It serves families in which hospitalization, illness, death or desertion of the mother or other responsible adult causes a breakdown in the pattern of normal living. \ The agency will send a homemaker to (ill the role of substitute mother. The. homemaker is chosen on the basis of personality, physical,.^nd mental wellbeing, kindliness, and good humor. She has been through a four-week course of training designed to eq'uip her with knowledge of nutrition, child care, and understanding of emotjohal problems. She is a staff member of Homemaker Service of Metropolitan Detroit and is carefully supervised by a social worker. She is a member of a team serving many different kinds of people in various" problem situations. 44eaf](quR/(](Mi As substitute mother, she will provide the warmtji, security and support chil-dr^ need during a crisis period. , She will keep the household routine going by'doing light housekeeping. She dusts, mops, makes beds, washes dishes, does light laundry, ironing, shopping, dboking and proindes personal care that iaof a non-nursing character. pers is an emergency service, t h e length of which is determined by .an evalutoion of the extent and probable dui^ation of the crisis. Service can be giv^n for from one day to six or possibly Aig^t weeks. Homemakers are day workers, usually arriving at 7:30 a.m. and remaining in the home until 5 p.m., Monday through Friday.-f This .service is also available to the aged, ill, or disabKd, who need competent temporary help to allow them to remain in their homes, and to mothers who need temporary relief from the care of a retarded or disturbed child. The cost of this service varies accord- Shop in Air Conditioned COMFORT%V\t ink to the ability to pay. Servicd is given onAtht AF WIrtphOM Mrs. Jbseph p. Kennedy,.right, Another of the late President, John F. Kenned% d:B^ einbraced by her granddaughter Kathleen Kennedy, daughter ot^en. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NYL as they nrH^s 72)td..................................... ” - —- celebrdted Mrs. Kenri9S^s 72ftd birthday in Hyannis iPord','“ Mass., BEHIND TI^ES Saturday. Kathleen is her oldest granddaughter. - onXthe basis of need and will not be denied to those who cannot pay a fee. Determination of the fee is based on family income and expenses. The maximum rate charged is |2 per hour. Homemakers are not available to families where both parents are employed. This Is not a baby-sitting service per se. Servli^e is not available to mothers during normal pregnancies, nor in situations where nursing care is required. A branch office of the agency, serving the-people“«f Pontiac and surrounding area, was established last ^ring. It occupies office space in the Catholic Social Services Builditig (m Franklin Boulevard. It is partially Supported by the Pontiac Area United Fund. Application for service can be made in person or by telephone during office hours, 8:30 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Y Requests can be, made by anyone COOLSAVm Genuine CERAMIC TILE from 33 c Sq. Ft. Vinyl Asbestos TILE First (tuaiity - Grease Proof Light Colors-Marble Chip Design PUSTIC WALL TILE 1c-2c-3c Ea. GENUINE VINYL SANDRAN A'-y-n'WlDE $|S9 Sq.Yd. I sLQuality INLAID LINOLEUM TILE WE BUY QUSS FE 4-5216 LAMPS AND _ LEADED CLASS „ SHADES! AAICA^ 29< SOUD VINYL TILE Each V VINYL RUBBER TILE 9"x9" 151 Open Mon^ Tbui«.» Frf, t to • Tumm Wad., Sat., 9 ta • . NlWSOlPS PONTIAC MALL 22H ILIZttCTN LK. HO FLOOR' SHOP ^.I . _ .. Tl', TrtE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JULY 24, 1967 PEARCE Floral Co. To Remind You during )uly and August. We will be closed on Wednesdays Please plan your visits and 'phone calls with this in mind. Phone FE 2-0127 Polly's Pointers Tell News of Coming Marriages In Area New Uses for Ribbon DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is for Gladys who wants to know . what she *can make from the wide ribbons bows on florists’ bouquets. I make padded coat hangers by first winding strips of muslin around a’wood hanger to pad! it. AA^g’/ig Cutting ufliG 9^ini8fiing lTouc[i68 Then fold the ribbon in half and stitch together with a long stitch. Pull the stitching up to make gathers and slip on i the hanger. 4Jse pinking shear to cut a narrow strip of ribbon to make a bow to tie at I the top. I have a “rainbow” | of hangers in my closet. — i PHEBE DEAR POLLY - I have kept hoiise for 19 years and am fussy about both my house and my own appearance. I have my hair set every week or so and am able to keep it in good ^ape with the aid of hair spray i^ND-a knitting needle, SO anew B-E-/I-U-T-I-F-U-L SPECIALTY STORE I wear it teased and sleeping flattens it but I find a knitting needle works wonders to pick up the hair from underneath. Also it is ideal for scratching without disturbingi^ the hair as a rattail comb does. — MRS. L. C. DEAR POLLY - I do hope one of the readers can tell me how to dye a 9xl5-fopt ’cotton|L*; rug. I have heard of usin| a well-known dye and a stiff broom to apply it but do not know the exact amount of dye or water to use for this size rug. - MRS. H. B. A. Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Carson of West Columbia Street announce the engagement of their daughter, Judy Lee, to Jerry W. Self, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Self 6f Ne w Albany, Miss, Mr. and Mrs. Robert X. Foster of Highland announce the e n‘g age-ment of their daughter, Susan, to Lawrence Edward Hopp. He is the son of the senior Lawrence Hopps of Rochester." The engaged pair will be students at Wayne State University this fall. Juanita Graham and Frank A. Baker Jr. are planning vows in October. He is a graduate student at the University of Toledo. ^Parents of the couple are Willie L. Graham of Detroit, Mrs. C. R. Graham of Linda Vista Drive arid the Frank Bakers Sr. of Toledo, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Haskel Elkins of First Avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Nancy Jean to John Preston Lilliquist, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Lilliquist of Newport Street. The students at Oakland University and Michigan State University, respectively, are planning November vows.' The Mount Blanc tunnel 7V* miles long, is an all-season link b e t w e en France and Italy through the Alps. Price of Corporate Wife Image iSKeumode By BETTY CANARY I am wondering if the image of the “corporation wife” is changing. I know when Bob was tion and all, but she wa^ glum pour quarts down the drain and set the bottles around.” “Does the company have mdny set policies?” I asked. ‘No more than most, I jguess,” she confided. “I have FIBEREDCK. NYLONS WHITE COLtAR GIRL FIBERLOCK the tiny mesh lengthens the life of your‘nylons. WHITE COLLAR GIRL beautiful plain knit nylons with famoue t-NO-BIND TOPS anfl reinforced toes and heels I made a tqrible mistake hired bv. his company, they!*^®^ night. The boss ordered didn’t, interview me or ask iflf'rst and then I asked for the 1 played bridge or anything.!same thing. Only 1 pronouncedi4.months-old son They just inquired about HIS 'i ^rrectly. !at ■^inceton, and mother was education and experience and; * * * ' jsweerenough to sell her dia- qualifications. ’ J “®®f.Vmonds so we could join the right '“i help Hank! He s -o They don’t ask me to conven-if"" " ^ ' P = "‘‘P ftions either, so 1 thought all thisiDP'nT Soap, you see, and UUI19 ClUICl , 1 UlUUKIIt' O** lino ., 1 T -A i . , r, stuff was either fiction or passe. !®''^" ^ ^ doesn't get pro- cause of the ugly rash 1 get, I| ------------------ met a young wife who was| attending a convention with her husband. I was browsing around in Brentano’s book st6«i,iwhen I heard a gasp and saw this girl plunge her head inside a book shelf. ■ SALE ’ SECOND WEEK HONEYBARE CANTRECE MICRO Smooth, smooth dress she gentle, clinging fit Nude heels and demi-toes. IT’S A SECRET Naturally, I asked, “Are you all right?” and she whimpered, “Don’t tell you aaw me here! Please don’t tell!” 1 It was a"case of mistaken! identity. She thought she had; met me at herTonVentiqn. After i she "was somewhat calmed, I Took her out for a cup of tea! and she told me the whole ! sordid story. ‘ , i “My husband Hank doesn’t! care—that I read, I mean, " .she sobbed. ‘ It’s our secret.” "i ‘ I'll bet you're supposed to bei playing bridge right now, aren'ti you?’ HI-FASHION CASUALS Over-The-Knee $1.19 Knee Highs $1.00 L O^eumode Shops She brightened. “But I lied;” she said, and a crafty gleam came into her eye. “1 said I had to have lunch with a client’s wife.” I said, ‘Tin lunching with Laura Walker —Skidmore, you know.’ ” myted TOO soon we can stay in tmsliouse I()ngTn6u^Tfriur-'"“““* nish it. “i Tove our house,” she sai