Jh$» Weather Not 8o Cold' (Mailt m patt » THE PONTIAC PRESWKf iV 1 VOL. 123 NO. 6 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. 3ATURt)AY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965-412 PAGES By U S, Grand Juries Hoodlum-Bank link Probed U.S. Legation Hit in Hungary mavrt . Library in Malaysia Is Attacked by Mob BUDAPKT, Hungary -Nearly a thousand Conunu-nist-led students today staged a vicdent anti-American demonstration and some of them broke THREE OF A KIND-AU three children of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Reppuhn, 3157 Sterling, Pontiac Township,—Gwenlyn, 2, Christian, 1, and Dawn, 3 weeks, were bom with two teeth. According to Ih-. Melvin A. Noonan, a Birmingham children’s dentist, an dccasional ^^O^y, Page 3 . birth of this kind is not a rarity, but“ three ^ in one family is a “one-in-a miUion” occurrence. into the building of the U.S. legation here. Search Still On Fires Kill 9 Children for Hubbard jp gay Qfy QpJ QfjiQ Mayor Being Sought in U.S. Rights Case By United Press International Slogan - shouting Hungarian, African and Asian students protesting U.S. attacks on North Viet Nam smashed front windows of the legation building in Budapest’s Freedom Square. Some broke into the basement and caused damage to tito snack bar and movie, a legatioa .spcAesmaa said. Legation officials guarded the Say Mobsters Have Control in Some Cases Report Subverting of Fiscal Policies; Not Tied In With Failures WASHINGTON (API-Authoritative government sources said today federal grand juries are investigating reports that a few banks have been taken over by wealthy hoodlums of the nation’s organized crime empire, the Cosa Nostra. BOMBS FOR VIET REDS-U. S. airmen pile up 750-pound aerial bombs at a military air base at Da Nong, South Viet Nam. The weapons, stacked up without fins, are the largest being used in air strikes against North Vietnamese targets. House fires took the lives of three children in DETROIT » _ D.WI, U8 ^ mmSaU contolued a »»rc jumped from a sors!” and hurled stones at the day for the eli^ve Orville Hub- Second-story window. legation. ^ ^ ^ bard, mayor of Dearborn who jn Michigan, all three children of a Bay City has been sought since Hiursday , .. . . to face charges in a civU rights --------- case. dawn fire which de- Deputy marshals Kenneth stroyed the family’s 75-Lewis and Richard Hollerm year-old home, failed to ^ KiUed were Daria Kay Her- home or office y^rday. They ^ Marie Berber, 1, and Area Temperature No one was injured, but damage caused inside the building was considerable, the spidies-man said. Kosygin Says Communists Strong Enough for 'Victory' “will continue ^Ir Jinamy MHchel, 10, son of j • ■ •• M •riaidinj AVy svai vi over the weekend, said U.S. Lawrence Herber by a Attorney Lawrence Gubow. previous marriage. dkeet defiance ef a federal court,” Gobow sahL He laid the 01-year-oM mayor “obviously knows he is being sought uud this is uu uct of open defiance of federal uo-tborities.” In Ohio, five.of th« viotims were identified os children of James Catshaw and his common-law wife, Mrs. Ora Grissom. T|e sixth victim was believed to be Mrs. Grissom’s niece. MOSCOW Wi—Premier Alexei imperialism. Victory will be Still, there is hope that the Kosygin boasted today that ours.’’ Communista wtil come to regard LIBRARY ATTACK Communist fwces are strong cleaR their attacks on South Viet Nam In Kuala Lumpur, capital of enough “to stop the aggression . ujg as too expensive an undertakiBg to Nudge Upward js iS dSKloS: by a mob of about 200 youths. He made the claim duHng a S!?t)*driSSi’u.s“^r^oIit*3 “***** Nature wiU give the mercury ^rt^of a largCT LefUst demon- South Viet Nam. Officials maintain the United a slight b«st tomorrow ^ tehTafion. KoJe^Hie official Dew. agency ^ ing It up to a warmer high of ' Tn« minfMi hl« refnark. son adntinistration was official- that would amount to surrender 34 to 30. Windows of the Ubrary were remarxs. ^ proposals for a of South Viet Nam to the Reds. * i, it smashed with poles, rocks and Kosygin recalled that he negotiated settlement of the GOOD WAY 1.11 hcowu,..!... («»,»», These sources, who asked not to be named, said in interviews that in the few such cases under study, mobsters (rf the syndicate are making a shambles of good banking practices with methods that flout the traditional comer-stones — integrity and trustworthiness — (rf the American banking system. One goverameat official emphosiied that gnmd Jary semtiny of the reported tMte-overs is coacentrated oa banks ttm fai opcratlsa. He said there has been no allegation that aeveral bank fafi-ures of the last year are in any way connected witti file synB-cate’s new intorcM in boDkiiig. Only a handhil of banks art involved so far, the sources tcrid the Associated Press. aid to Communist North Viet peared (diilly. Cutshaw was booked at Lucas with a low of 10 to 16 predicted. ~ dnriiiv a «tan in Hanoi Fair SI*. lorec^l fci they want us out of South Viet ...a ..-.-w the demonstrators and police Hubbard did not appear for county'jail as a material wit- ^ evening, to be followed by greeted barbed wire barricades Turning to the situation in Viet out peace talks and that it —u .. increasing cloudiness tomorrow, at key intersections. Nam, the head of the Soviet de- up to North Viet Nam and Com- * * * * it * ' it it it legation said that both sides munist China to halt guerrilla Mrs. Grissom was in Maumee Today in Pontiac, the low Downtown streets were had reached agreement to stop attacks on South Viet Nam. Valley Hospital recovering from mercury reading preceding 8 aggression in Viet Nam, Besides, there is a recent operation. Cutshaw re- ^ emergency curfew was Tass said, turned to the house at 8 a.m. thermpme- gjamped on the heart of the cap- ★ * * into hysterics and col- t®r registered 25 at 2 p.m. in jtal. Major thoroughfares were ‘‘Our forces,” he stressed, the downtown area. deserted. „ “are superior to the forces of Official said privately the Nam, a good way would be to United States has never ruled ga|| off their guerrillas and __ scheduled arraignment Thursday on charges by a federal grand jury that he violated the Civil RlghU Act ^of 1870 and conspired to violate the act. ACCUSED OF CONSPIRACY Hubbard was accused of con- and spiring with the two top police lapsed, officials to deny equal protec- IDENTIFY VICTIMS 41 t 41.- »- . nooriwFm victims were identified Robert Cutshaw, 3 monttis; timism here that the one-day lull in terrorist attacks in South Viet Nam will have any lasting significance. leave the country alone. White House Press Secretary George E. Reedy refnsed to comment on a propoMl by U.N, Secretary General U Thant yesterday that both sides in the Viet Nam conflict DRAINING ASSETS But in those banks where Gosa Nostra figures are reported to have moved in, investigators are cheeddng aHegatkns that ra(^ teers are draining the institutions of their assets and destit^-ing capital structures with unsecured loans to cronies. Cosa Nostra — Italian tor “onr Iking” - is the natisn-..............of Billy Cutshaw, 4; Thearl Grissom, 8*: James Grissom, 7, Mary Ann Grissom, 14, and Geraldine Loy, 3, a niece of Mrs. Grissom’s. Geraldine’s parents tion of the laws to a Dearborn home owner whofe house was stoned by a mob. ' ’The demonstrators attacked the honse on Labor Day 1983, ia a mistaken belief that a Negro family was moving in. Dearborn is an almost aU live in Toledo, white-populated suburb of De- poy Grissom, 11, who , jumped to safety, was listed A warrant for Hubbard’s lar- in fair condition in the bos-rest was signed yesterday by pitai with face bums and an Federal Judge Fred W. Kaess. injured foot It was requested by chief Assistant U.S. Attorney WHilam Merrill. gotiations. In South Viet Nam, U. S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylcn* said today South Vietnamese war nwrale has been boosted by the U. S. bombing raids on Conununist North Viet Nam. He expressed belief the Hanoi “Smaller donations are also company holding the property, cinb bnUdiag, and there are regime is “thinking hard” 880 women’s whether to continue North Viet church Nam as a safe haven for the Fund Deadline Near for YWCA world affairs and reap mil-Uens of dollafx annually from gambUag, narcofici, rackets and semilegttimate baMaess enterprises. Having purchased cbob^d of a bank, one investigatinr said, the (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Elsewhere in the nation. Contributions to the 'YWCA. building fund are urgently nrgently needed to show com- their option will expire in two sought as a March 1 deadline panics and other large con- weeks. At that they must have clubs, for raising |150,000 to purchase tributors that the community reassurancp that there will be groups.” Mrs. Emerson said. Viet Cong, the 0. L. ^audette house ap- supports the YWCA and shares funds to purchase the property. “Some of these bold regnlar .me vfar proaches, according to Mrs. Wil- our vision of what the YWCA w.vriuinuiicip ' nieetings in the Franklin Ham J. Emerson, president of can become in Pontiac,” Mrs. Street building, the board of directors. Emerson said. While the financial drive con- tinues, YWCA officers are plan- In Today's Press ^ wound in Edgewood, W^. Maytag, and an anonymous gift, Huron from Central High School. The body of Melton Fisk 42, helped to bring the total con-was found lying outsi^ the fam- tributions to date to almost $32,- At the ■same time, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Khanh, South Vietna- 4.4.4.VO, «.,4 “Othcrs hBvcconsidcrcd meet- niese armed forces commander family of six was wiped out by «ntribuUons of $1,IW board of director has ^ng „n making maximum use ®’ and the national strongman. aiffWUdS^sh^^^ Tr’ of BeaudetteHouse when the ack of parl^ppace have made told a paratroop unit the war _4 J. C. Penney Co., Mrs. N. E. buy the-brick mansion across organization, hopefully can ‘t impossibl?.’’ must end this year. ivfoo onH on snnnvmmic ffift Pfiirnn frnm p0nfrnl Hicrh it it it move from its cramped quar- .*Tiie armed forces of the ’ll (rnnHn.w-( nn Po»» vT ^ Stronger measures, tf aecessary, to make the north’s rolers reslixe that their plaa to take over Saoth 2 More Weeks for Auto Plates Later Hours Planned During Final Period Waterford Township rapped for pumping out flooded basements — PAGE 18. I ily home. He'had been kiUed qqq I by the shotgun blast. I Inside the gutted house wf^e i the charred bodies of his wile < Mary, 38, and their four chil-! dren. Unless thepocan make a new agreement with the real estate “Pontiac has no. women’s (Continued on Page 2. Col. 3) Elderly Care | ’Three plans now under I consideration — PAGE 7. | Strike Ends Most longshoremen go back to work — PAGE M. Astrology ............ 18 Bridge 8 Church News........ 11-13 prossword Pnxiie .....II 6imic8 ............... 18 Editorials ............ 8 Home Section ...... 17-21 . Mnrkets ............ 24 j Obituaries ...... .... 25 Sports ............ 21-23 ’Thenters ............. H TV & Radio Pmgrams 31 Wilson, Earl ... SI Wonien’s Pagies .. 14-15 Chamber Fete Set March 10 The annual banquet of the P()htlac Area Chamber of Ctom-merce will be at 6:30 p.m. March 10, at the Elk’s Temple, 114 Orchard LakS. The speaker wUl be T. Austin SauQders, president of the Michigan State Chaiqber of Ctom- Tkkj^ts are $6 ^ person and are available throu^ the (^ham-bertrffices. In addition to Saunders talk, CQh{|jdian.JUrreU Fox wiU perform. .' Viet Nam is doomed to fail-nre,” Khanh said. 0>mmunist China issued a formal statement of protest today aghlnst the air strike Thursday in North Viet Nam. It said a war cri^ threatens all of Southeast Asia. The statement, carried by, Peking’s official New China News Agency, charged the United States wants to spread the guerrilla war in South Viet Nam to the Commuqist north. WAREHOUSE EXPLClDES In Saigon, a miU^ warehouse used for storktg oxygpn tanks blew up this evening, cfst-ing a pall of smoke.om Saigon. MSst af Stofoa’i fire brigade whs' called oat to stem the flames becMne sf fears ’Two weeks from tonight is the deadUne for purchasing 1965 au-tomobQe license plates. Secretary of State (rffices are open from 9 to 5 during the week, and until 1 p.m. Saturdays. They wiU remain open until 5 p.m. on Feb. 29-27 to accommodate latecomers, however. The Antomabile dob of Mkhigaa offices expect to re-maia opea after the asoal 12:39 pJB. Satorday ctosiag htonr m the last day for plates. This year Ucense plates may be purchased without presenting the auto title. Registration certificates and fee are all that are needed. Pontiac office of the Secre-taryjQtState raports it baa s(dd approximately 9.600 more plates than at this time last year. YWCA HOPEFUl^This is the Beaudette home at 289 >W. Huron, which the YWCA is hoping to purchase thiough the current building fund (hive. An option to purchase^to^pim on March 1 and the committee is hoping to get enoi^ con-tdbutkma j)efore that to justify renewal. 'Hm goal of .the buiklint^ hind is $150,000: ^ - other oxygen sheds. The ei^osioo was Inside one fContinuied on Page 2, .6ol. 1) The Auto Club offTce here estimates they are 2.000 plates ahead of'last year: Statewide, sales arg about IS per cent or . 500,080 |Mtes over last year at Uusthne. . I^: i THE PONTJAC press, SATURDAY, rSBRUARY 18, 1965 Kosygin Says Reds Strong (Continued From Page One) of Saigon’s main Vietnamese military compounds, ta a one-story concrete warataouse. ★ « ♦ Authorities declined to say whether they thought sabotage was involved. YANK NOT HURT There were no rC{)orts (tf serious casualties. Only one American adviser worked in the compound and he was not hurt. All (rf Saigon is Jampy with expectation of new Viet Cong in view of this week’s air raids on Commimlst North Viet Nua. Earlier today, planes dumped tons of leaflets over the city, giving details of the air rai^ and explaining to the people why they were carried out. ★ ★ * Along with the jitters over possiMe return strikes from North Viet Nam, a twin-engine aindane that failed to file a flight plan put the newly installed U.S. Hawk antiaircraft missile battery to a test at Da Nang air base north of here Friday. The plane proved to.be friendly, but not before causeing a combat alert. TRACKED PLANE The Hawk battery’s radar tracked the plane and jet interceptors scrambled and escorted it toward the base. The incident underscored that the missies, coupled with a radar system, were ready for a possible air strike from Communist Nordi Viet Nam. On the fighting front, reliable U.S. military sources disclosed today that all but five mountain tribesmen and four American advisers in a 140-man South Vietnamese company deserted on call of Conununist guerrillas in a fight for a hill last Wednesday and three Americans were killed. ★ ★ ★ ’They added that the fourth American adviser, identified as Spec. 4 James H. McLean of Los Angeles, is believed to have beoi captured. LOUDSPEAKERS ’The U.S. informants said the Communists approached the hill at Due Phong, 85 miles northeast of Saigon, with loudspeakers. “We only want to kill the Americans,” the Communists called out. “All the rest can go free if they leave their weapons behind.” Before dawn the Viet Cong launched a final assault on the well-fortified camp atop the hill. The three Americans and the five Vietnamese mountaineers were found dead the next day. U.S. authorities said they are investigating the report that 97 per cent of the popular forces company — a sort of home guart force — left the camp vMthout their weapons. Reverse Twist to Sea Story SAN DIEGO, CaUf. (AP) -The plot: A freighter runs aground near a small island during a heavy storm. Fearing the worse, the captain orders all hands lo abandon diip. The hands readily agree. When the storm subsides, the crew returns, patches up the and nurses it to its home port. At least that’s how it happens in the movies. A ★ A ' However, that isn’t the case with the Liberian freighter Irini Stefanou, which ran aground on San Benito Island off Baja California last week. The captain ordered his crew to safety but when he later told them to return, they refused. Now, only he and three other officers man the damaged freighter some 300 miles south of San Diego. GREEK DESTINATIW4 The ship’s crew — 20 sailors — are ensconced pn the tiny WILUAM DALZELL Travel Series Will Feature 'Caribbean' The audience at Tuesday night’s Kiwanis Club travel and adventure lecture will be treated to a series of two-week cruises to the Caribbeiui on film. William Dalzell calls his talk ‘Cruising the Caribbean” and takes the armchair travelers to the Bahamas, Curacao, Caracas, Martinique, Granada, ’Trinidad, Jamaica and Haiti. AAA His color camera captures the beauty of the West Indian Islands, as he takes cruises on a great liner and sleek wind-januners. The pictures show the bridge and wheelhouse of a great ocean liner, and digging for treasure on a^desert island. island with about 20 yards of water between them and the ship. TTiey say they’ll leave only ^ a ship that will take them to Greece. Their ship, they say, is unsafe and may break apart. A A A Nonsense, says the captain, who maintrins the ship is perfectly secure. ITie ship was on a voyage from Canada to England with a cargo of lumber and wood pulp valued' at $800,000 when it struck a reef during a stwin Feb. 3. SHIP’S OWNER It is owned by Northern Ships’ Agency, Inc., of New York. Salvage crews working on the damaged freighter say the self-imposed castaways are leading a quiet life -r eating, sleeping, swimming and writing letters to their families in Greece. They grabbed food, clothing, bedding and other supplies when they left the ship. On the rocky beach they found two wooden shacks and began housekeeping. AAA When a ship comes by they signal with flares or meet it in their whaleboat. Always their request is the same: A ride to the mainland where they can get a ship to Greece. Always their request is denied. The sailors, most of whom speak only Greek, are not alone on the island. The native pop' Illation consists of approximately 15 fishermen and lighthouse keepers who bring them water but speak only Spanish. SMALL ISLAND W. R. Probert, president of Catalina Airlines, assisting with salvage work, said the island is three-quarters of a mile long, a quarter of a mile wide and covered with brush. ‘‘I suppose they can fish,’* he said, “and I know they write letters. Yesterday I brought back a load of mail and noticed one of the letters was addressed to the Coast Guard. Where the return usually goes, they had written ‘Help!’ On the back was written ‘From-the ship-wrecked crew of the Irini Stefanou.’ ” AAA The Coast Guard says it will not become involved because the sailors are not in danger and that it is a Mexican matter. Officials of General Steamship Corp. of New York, agent for the 425-foot liberty ship, say they do not know when repairs will be completed. GASH IN HULL The ship has a 50-foot gash in the hull. The Weather Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Partly coludy and colder today with a few snow flurries this morning, highs today 20 to 28. Fair and cold tonight, lows 10 to 16. Tomorrow increasing cloudiness and not so cold, highs 24 to 30. Ttday In PnntlK LowMt Icmpcrnture preceding I tjn.: U At • eJX.: Wind Velocity 10 m.p.h. Direction: Nortftwett Son Mts Saturday at «:0] p.m. Son ritat Sunday at 7^11 a.m. Moon aelt Sunday at <;S3 a.m. Moon rises Saturday at 3:11 p.m. Downtesm Temperalures I....... II 11 a.m....... 23 1.......1* 12 m..........23 One Year Age in Pontiac Lomest temperature (Continued From Page One) radeeteers are free to use its charter as a license to steal and turn the bank into a convenient clearing house for hot nHmey. Courtney A. Evans, former assistant director of the FBI, toM bankers’ convention last September the FBI had evidence that criminally run banks are used to conceal transfer of hot money from gambling and other radiets into legitimate trade NO NAMES As fbr the few banks said to be involved, government officials refuse to name them'or .tbrir locations since investigations are under way, and have been for months, by at least two grand juries. Bat the most reliable information is that the hoodlum banks, as investigators call them, are mostly In the East and Midwest, and are not confined to large cities. How does “the mob” get control of a bank? And how does it use the bank once it takes over? With minor variations in each case, the following general pattern is followed, according to government experts: It begins when underworld YWCA Fund Deadline Draws Near (Continued From Page One) with the property and surfaced lor off-street parking. It will hold 60 cars. Contributions of $50 and over to YWCA Building Fund, since previous listing: J. C. Penney Corporetion .... 11.000 N. E. Meyteg ................. I. Semon E. Knudsen Weether: Pertly cloudy FrMey't Tempereture Chert Alpene 3l S Port Worth 41 .. Eicenebe 24 0 Jecluonuille U S* Gr. Repkti 42 0 Keneev City 31 II Houghton ll 0 Lot AngelA 13 41 Lenting 43 IS MIemI Beech 76 73 Merquette 26 4 Mllweukee 35, 10 MuUegon 42 II New Orleent M 43 Pelitton 34 4 New York 44 41 26 4 Seettle 16 20 Tempo II -22 Weehlngton NATIONAL WEATHER - Snow and flurries .wUl faU > tonight in the tier of states from Rockies to upper Mississippi Valley. Occasional rain is likely in southern Appalachians. It will be sl^Uy wanner in.Gmt Plains and cooler in nortii )>abmc Atlantic states, Rock^, ^ Coast except Florid^ , from Mississippi Valley, to Mr. John Herrlt, Mn. C. A. HerrIt end Mri. W. Porker ........... Anonymous .................. Mr. end Mrs. L. R. Sempton Mr. end Mn. John Allen ......... Elllolt Engineering Co. ........ Mr. end Mrs. Bryen Kinney ...... MIttet Amy end Cora Krueger .. Mr. Frank Mowbray .............. Mrt. C. I- ~ ^ W. J. I I. Aaron Rikar . Mr. and Mrt. A. H. Kamp .... Mr. and Met. John Thort, Jr. Oakland C^ty Council AFL-CIO j: Police Hold Man After a Shooting at Home in City Pontiac Police are holding David L. Smkh, 36, of 273 S. Jessie on a charge of investiga-tioh of attempted murder after a shooting last night at the Smith home. A ' A A Officers said Smith took three shots at his wife. Moggie, 26, with a 12-gauge shotgun .as ahe ran toward a neighbor’s home for help. Mrs. Smith, told police her husband had, chiAed ^ threatened her'earlier with a knif^' She was not hiirt. CRASH IN MIAMI-Firemen ba^le flames in a business district of Miami, Fla., today, after a fiery plane crash in which two were killed. The plane, belonging to a Latin American firm, just missed hitting a thickly populated residential area. U.S. Investigating Hoodlum-Bank Link kingpins accumulate hundreds of thousands of dollars in hot money from the rackets. Much of this money is funneled back into Cosa Nostra operations, but a considerable amount — called mattress money — lies around untouched in shoe boxes and other caches. BUYINTO The racketeers look for a bank to buy into and put their loot to work. Besides providing a clearing house and a way of doing business, a bank is a handy dodge against government scrutiny of their financial dealings. And it provides an aura of respectability. Next the syndicate chooses its “nominees” — front men to handle the aetnal paperwork of baying and running the bank. There nsnally are two or three front men, one of whom acts as an overseer for the syndicate. These nominees buy out a cou-pie of big stockholders for the bulk of tl^ controlling stock. While the federaj government must approve initial charters for banks, there is no official clearance required for stock transfers. WORD SPREADS Wohl of mob control of a Undiplomatic? Again Suspend Smoker The 16-year-old daughter of Detroit’s Swedish consul, whose recent suspension lor smoking in school was. lifted as a “diplomatic courtesy” was asked to leave school again. When Berit Johansson and two other girls were caught smoking in the Bloomfield Hilh High School they were given 20-day suspensions. Berit’s fathqr, Edward Johansson, 6345 Sheringham, Bloomfield Township, interceded with school authorities, saying “In Sweden the highest considerations are always extended to the diplomatic American family. I humbly request the same consideration for my family.” Berit was permitted to return to school after three days. The girl says school Superin- tendent Eugene Johnson told her yesterday that she was being suspend^ again. The decision came after a student council recommendation. Johnson refused comment on 'his decision. English Cry 'Wolf/ but It's No Folse Alarm DUNSTABLE, England (UPI) —Police appealed to the public today for help in tracking down a Canadian timber wolf which escaped from Whipsnade Zoo. Thirty policemen and a number of zoo employes are trying to 10 c a t e the animal. Zoo officials said it is not considered dangerous to humans unless it ismolestedor cornered. A spokesman said it may return to the zoo Of its own accord. bank circulates rapidly through the underworld. Suddenly scores qf bank accounts of known hoodlums in an area are transferred to a single bank. There is virtnally no limit to ways the Cosa Nostra may nse a bank once R has control. Government experts say the first step is'to install a friendly ivesident, vice president and cashia-. Then, as one government investigator put it, “all the sound banking practices you ever heard of are tossed out the window.” He outlined this pattern: 1. The bank makes large, unsecured loans to friends, relatives and associates of the racketeers — no questions asked, no credit checks, often no collateral. Sometimes a scrawled “he’s okay” from a top mobster is sufficient for a loan to go through. A A A 2. From borrowers not directly associated with the rackets tonk officials accept favors or gratuities, such as new cars, for granting unsecured loans to bad risks. FAllSE NAMES 3. 1110 bank may permit racketeers to open bank accounts under phony names to hinder tax scrutiny. 4. It will purposely keep bad books and records hi an effort to dond the channels followed by illicit funds and to camon-flage the crime syndicate’s financial activities. 5. The bank is used as a clearing house for checks obtained as payment for gambling losses. These funds, one source said, run into millions annually. The practice aids both the bettor and gambling house seeking to cut down gambling taxes by obscuring the fact that the checks are gambling payments. AAA 6. Hie bank will furnish good credit references on all of its hoodlum accounts. DONT REPORT 7. Bank tellers will fail to turn in the required treasury currency returns reporting abnormally large deposits of currency and coins, which often signify gambling proceeds. Thus the treasury will be deprived of the “flag” that helps it ferret out such proce^. The grand jury investigations are proceeding slowly, but officials say they expect some indictments will develop. Birmingham Area News Bloomfield Twp. Library Proves Popular Place BLOOMnELD TOWNSHIP -Patrons have been checking books out of the new Bloomfield Township Public Library at the rate of about one every 15 min-' les. Reviewing statistics for the first three months of operation. Library Board President John D. Rums^ reports the facility rapidly is hecoming a popular place. Hie figures were accumn-tated from OcL 21,1M4, when the library opened, to the end of Janniuy. During that period, the staff recorded a cumulative attendance of over 10,000 persons and a circulation of almost 14,000 books. AAA The library temporarily is located in the CTiateau Devon Building near the aouthwedt corner of 1^ Lake and Telegraph. CARD APPUCATIONS Since opening day, about 1,800 individuals have applied for borrowers’ cards. Hie number is in addition to the 3,808 famUy cards which have been issued to township residents throngh the Baldwin Public Library as the result of a . contract between the library boards of the neighboring commnnities. The contract provides township residents with full access to the Baldwin Public Library and reciprocal services at the township facility to residents * Birmingham. AAA For its first fiscal year, 1964-65, the township library has paid Baldwin 132,513 based on a prorated share of use. COST INCREASED For fiscal 1965-66, the cost wiU be increased to $40,060. Funds for the payment and for operation of the township facility come from a 1-mill 11-bmry tax which was voted in April 1963 and became effective a year later. Still other statistics Indicate that with the library’s first an- nual book budget — ^pptoxi-mately $20,000 — director Rose Vainstdn and her staH selected a nucleus collectioa of 5,000 bo(du. AAA In addition, 12,000 volumes are on long-term loan from the Michigan State Library. BOOKS ADDED New books are being added to the shelves regularly — over 700 were received during January. The library also Is snbscrib-Ing to over 110 magasines and five newspapers. Library hours are noon to 9 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday; and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday. City Teachers Demonstrate Representatives of the Pon-tiaq Federation of Teachers (PFT) demonstrated for between 40 to 60 minutes yesterday afternoon at the School Administration Building at Wide Track and Auburn. The group, which total^ about 40 persons at one time, but included as many as 60 to 80 demonstrators, walked and carried signs. A A The demonstration was held in protest of a recent school board decision to recognize the largest teacher association as a negotiating agent. The Pontiac Education Association with 564 members was recognized. ’The PFT (AFLraO) has only about 300 members. Cold Chills Snow-Hit Areas ^By The Associated Press (told weather zeroed in on the snow-covered areas from the eastern Rockies into the north central regioh today, adding discomfort to the massive job of snow removal. A 'A A A mass of arctic air, clear skies and the heavy snow covei‘-ing combined to drop temperatures below zero across sections of at least 10 states. The frigid belt covered areas of Minnesota, the Dakotas, Montana, (tolmrado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Wfiaooaain, Michigan and Iowa. AAA The' mercury plunged to 26 below at Hibbing, in northern Minnesota. - Two heavy snowsotrms hit moat of the cold belt in the last week. The second was described as the worst- in many years in some states. CIjOSED SOHKX^S The storm farced hundreds of schools to close, stalled thousands of cars and jammed trai- The tfhinket of white in u|^|^ Michigan and other Midw^ areas hit storms aver- aged about tWbfeel, with more* than four feet in some parts of Marquette, Mich., beside Lake Superior. AAA The icy . air moved southeastward and cold weather was the immediate outlook for most sections east of the Mississippi River. Strong winds fanned the cold air into western New York' State, ending Friday’s springlike weather in some areas. Temperatures dropped to the 20s at Rochester and Buffalo after high marks Friday of 64 and 60. The tail end of the storm whipped sections of the Great Lakes during the night with snow squalls and icy winds. COLD FROiyr A cold front moving across the eastern ’coast 'toward {he Atlantic triggered rain from Maine to northern Florida. More than three Inches of rain drenched Tallahassee, Fla., in a 12-hour period. Dr. James E. Henderson, 765 Oakleigh, has been named chairman of the Albion College Alumni Action Program for Ex-ceUence (APEX) for the Bloomfield Hills area. AAA Henderson will work with 45 area alumni in behalf of projects included In the colic’s 10-year $2(Mnilllon development program. Man With Two Lives to Leave Wife OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - When Omaha sportscaster John F. (Fritz) Johnson is released from the hospital he’ll live apart from the photographer’s model he married here. Johnson’s lawyer made that report Friday.* He explained Johnson’s 1962 Omaha marriage to Nancy Zimmer probably is void. AAA Hie man who Omahanas have known for nearly eight years simply as “Fritz” undoubtedly is the missing Lawrence J. Bader of Akron, Ohio, attorney Harry Famham said. A A A Bader was married and the father of four. Relatives said Mrs. Bader collected $39,500 insurance payments, plus Social Security and a J^avy pension, after Bader was declared legally dead. REMEMBERS NOTHING Fritz Johnson has said he remembers nothing of being Bader. He now is hospitalized whi'e doctors probe for an explanation. Famham met late Wednesday in (tokago with members of the Bader family and later told Johnson and Nancy what lie had learned. A A A “This information, coupjed with what we already had,” he said, “left no doubt that FrKz Johnson and Larry Bader'are one and the same.” . “Under the circumstances,”' continued Fpmham, “Fritz and Nancy are iq complete agreement it would not be proper for them to live together as man and wife until thh^ matter is resolved.” HOSPITAL VISIT Nancy has remained in seclu-sion,«risiting Fritz in the hospital smd looking after their two children. There has been no indication how long-Johnson will be hospitalized or when a medical report will be released. Cars In Minneapolis Are Trapped By Snow At Curb Dogs' Hearts Transplanted PHILADELPHIA (AP) Three Stanford University surgeons reported Priday'*that they had performed 35 consecutive dog heart transfers and experienced (Hily six operative deaths. A ★ A Hie report was made at the 26th annual meeting of the Society of Surgepns by Drs. Richard R. Lower, Eugene Dorn Jr.,-and Norman E. Shuman of the Division of Cardiovascular Surgery at the Stanford School of Me^cine. v AAA the surgeons said that the 29 dogs surviving operations lasted until rejection or death from toxicity ‘occurred. Seven animals received no drugs ' and lived from four to eight days. The others ieceived drugs on a variable toosage schedule.