The Weather us. WnlMr «vr|M FtrKnt Snow Mixed With Rain THE PONTIAC PRE VOL. 124 — NO. 230 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1966—76 PAGES UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL UNMANNED POLICE CARS—Pontiac’s first snow of the season covers the city’s unmanned police cars. For the second time within two weeks, only a handful of detectives and patrolmen reported for work today. Su{«rvisory personnel attempted to fill the gap caused by Oie “rash of illnesses” to policemen. 42 Pontiac Police 'Sick'; Chief Says 'No Emergency' By DAVID J. COOK Only a handful of Pontiac police detectives and patrolmen reported for work today as 42 men called in sick and unable to work their scheduled shifts. it was the second apparent protest in two weeks by members of the Pontiac Police Officers Association (PPOA), presently in the midst of a wage dispute with the city. The illnesses included 10 patrolmen scheduled,, to vork last night along with 15 patrolmen and eight detectives scheduled for today. In addition, nine men asked to woit an additional shift at the conclusion of their regn. lar afternoon duty yesterday said they were “sick” and unable to. Police Chief William K. Hanger said the city “faced no emergency as yet” because of depletions in the 117-man police force. ★ ★ ★ “We’ve got some tired supervisors (captains, lieutenants, and sergeants),” he said, “but right now we’re able to man our assignments on a nearly normal basis.” CALL UNANSWERED Only one call — a complaint of unauthorized parking on private property - went unanswered through the morning as staff officers manned patrol cars. Patrol Bureau Commander Capt. Harry Nye, who slept only two hours last night between impromptu work shifts, said a required minimum work force would “positively” be on hand this evening. “Wp’re alright so far,” Nye commented, “but I anticipate (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) In Today's Press City Affairs Ordinance introduced regulating Christmas tree I sales — PAGE B-6. * Milliken, Bruff ‘Also rahs’ hope to ’ j, emerge as ‘also wons’ on I Nov. 8 - PAGE E4. Merit Systtem Voters to decide on | plan for county employes I; i - PAGE B-8. :' . Area News ...........A-4 i \ Astrology ..... . ... E-9 ^ I Bridge ............... E-9 J I Crossword Puzzle . . . D-9 j ^ Editorials ............A-C ! Education Series . . . E-19 | i Food Section ..........C-9 I Markets ............D-2 f Obituaries .........D-3 I Sports ..........C-1-G4 I I TTieaters .............C-8 | TV-Radio Programs D-9 I I WtmWa Pwea B-l-iM | N. Koreans Kill 6 Yanks N-Arms Accord NearinU,N. Unit UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (if)—The U.N. General Assembly’s top political committee was expected to give overwhelming approval today to a U.S.-Soviet appeal to all nations to refrain from any action that might help spread nuclear weapons. Informed sources predicted the East-West proposal would receive almost unanimous support in the 121-nation committee, with only Albania voting no -------------- and France probably abstaining. The 38-nation resolution was introduced as a stopgap measure until an accord can be reached on a treaty banning the sprepd of nuclear arms. Agreement cm that pact has been held up by Soviet sus-IHcions that die United States would find some loophole to give nuclear arms to West Germany as a member of an Atlantic nuclear force. State Drivers Face Retesting New Law in Force on Suspended Licenses 'Pay Hikes Will Mean City Deficit' Any pay adjustment for city employes will almost certainly cause a deficit in the City of Pontiac’s 1967 budget, according to City Manager Joseph A. Warren. Warren released a letter last night at the City Commission meeting in reply to sue citizens who had written him of their concern over city employe wages. Led by police and firemen, city employes have sought pay hikes to keep them in line with similar employes elsewhere. City officials have said the city does ndt have the money for increased wages. Warren detailed the history of recent pay increases — one in 1964 and another last year, pointing out that the city corn-par^ favorably with other areas until last June. ★ ★ ★ Patrolmen and fire fighters are paid $6,084 a year to start and receive $7,059 after three years service. After five vears patrolmen can advance to a senior patrolman rating and receive $7,228 a year. DETROIT PAY Warren said “unbelievably large pay adjustments” made in July in D e t r 0 i t kicked off a series of pay adjustments for municipal employes in the Detroit metropolitan area. Pontiac’s unusual budget year (a calendar year) results in the city Just now preparing its 1967 budget. While agreeing that a pay adjustment was essential, even if it meant major cutbacks in services and personnel, Warren indicated that even at present pay rates it was going to be almost (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) The United States is reported preparing to change the wording of the treaty draft it has proposed in an attempt to reassure the Soviet Union that no nuclear arms will fall into West German hands. ★ ★ ★ Red China’s fourth nuclear weapon test last week and its announcement that the warhead was carried by a guided missile has increased clamor for a nonproliferation pact with the loudest demands coming from nations within firing range of the Chinese. ‘NEEDLESS CONFUSION’ India has urged that ah the nuclear powers be obliged ^ halt atanic arms production under a nonproliferation pact, but Western delegates complain privately that the Indian demand creates needless confusion and will aohieve nothing. ^ . LANSING (AP) - Some 9,307 Michigan drivers whose licenses were revoked or suspended recently will have to undergo extensive testing to get them back. Secretary of State James Hare said tvxlay. Hare said the drivers lost their licenses during August and September because of too many violation points, mental or physical incompetence, or failure to comply with the state’s financial responsibility laws. A 1966 state law. Hare said, empowers him to set stan-daids for retesting revoked or suspended drivers. Many such drivers are in trouble, Hare said, because they fall to practice — and may have forgotten — the good driving habits they had when they werq first tested. And if a driver really does know good driving practices, repetition of the written and road tests may serve as a forceful reminder to return to them. Hare said. NUMBER’S THE SAME—New 1967 license plates went on sale yesterday at secretary of state offices. George F. Adams of 2779 Campers, Highland Township, coincidentally received the same number as he had this year. Adams purcluased his ’67 plates at 10:55 a.m. at the Pontiac office. Last year he said he didn’t buy his plates until about 2 p.m. in the afternoon of the first sales day. Carpenters to Return on Friday if Pact OK'd Carpenters are expected to be back on the job Friday in Oakland County if they agree to a new pact with contractors at a mass unionship meeting in Detroit tomorrow. If the agreement is ratified it would end the n^onth-long strike by some 17,000 carpenters in five Southeastern Michigan counties. Tentative approval was given yesterday by officials of the Carpenter’s District Council in Detroit and four employe groups that had opposed the carpenters demand for a separate insurance fund. The ratification meeting will be held at 8 p.m. in Cobo Arena. The mass meeting was called rather than each local holding its own in an attempt to have the carpenters return to work as soon as possible. The reported agreement provides that contractors contribute 30 cents of a worker’s hourly pay to the fund. The contractors presently are providing 15 cents. The agreement reportedly also calls for a wage increase of 10 cents an hour immediately and another 10 cents starting May Reds Ambush Gl Patrol Near Armistice Line One Soldier Survives the Attack; Incident Is Worst Since War End SEOUL, South Korea (/T) — North Korean troops ambushed and killed six American soldiers and one South Korean below the armistice line before dawn today while President and Mrs. Johnson slept 30 miles away. The incident was the gravest involving Americans since the Korean War ended in 1953. It occurred eight hours before Johnson left Korea for the United States, but there was no indication that t h e President was advised of the ambush. In Anchorage, Alaska, the traveling W h i t e House said President Johnson has asked for a complete report on the incident from Gen. Charles H. Bo-nesteel, commander of the U.S. 8th Army in Korea and of the United Nations Command there. The President met with Bone-steel yesterday when he visited American and South Korean troops during his stay in South Korea. GI SURVIVOR There was one survivor from the U.S. 2nd Infantry Division patrol. Wounded by a grenade but reported in good condition, he said the attackers wore North Korean army uniforms. A spokesman for the U.S. 8th ' Army said the attack occurred under a full moon and the firing was heard at the patrol’s base camp. ★ ★ ★ A motorized patrol was sent out to investigate and found the bodies and the wounded man. 10 Die Fighting California Fire “If that mutt of^ours is a Boxer, he sure spends a lot of time on the canvas.” L. HARVIY LOME "state SYLMAR, Calif, (ih - A blast of flames sweeping up a steep hillside snuffed out tlie lives of 10 fire fighters in a crew of 25 battling one of four brush fires in Angeles National Forest. The men were veterans, known as El Cariso Hotshots, from Riverside County who had specialized in combatting the hottest of forest fires in Montana, Idaho, California and Oregon. But they lost yesterday to that unpredictable quality of all fires —■ the wind behind them that kicked up before they could escape. “It’s something every fire fighter thinks about—a sudden gust of wind,” said U.S. Forest V Service spokesman Don Porter ^4n reporting the death toll^f a blaze that swept 2,100 acres. ★ ★ ★ Names of the dead were withheld pending notification (rf next of kimNine otHie 15_mrvivms^^^ in the crew were in critical con- dition kt the Los Angeles County' General Hospital’s Burn Center. FIRE CONTROL Suppression leaders said the fire was 90 per cent contained early today. Of the other two fires, one on Camp Pendleton Marine Corps reservation in San Diego County swept 1,900 acres. In Ventura County, a 300-acre blaze burned inland from U.S. Highway 101 through an oil .tank farm witlumt damaging _ structures. First Snowfall Blankets Area Pontiac’s first snowfall of the season blanketed the area early this morning. Drizzle and hght flurries during the night turned to a blustering snowstorm by 8 a.m. The U.S. Weather Bureau predicts cloudy and cool tonight with periods of snow occasionally mixed with rain or drizzle. Low tonight is expected to drop to 25 to 30. Cloudy and colder with occasional snow and a high in the upper 30s is tomorrow’s forecast. A chance of snow flurries and cold is the outlook for Friday. The Weather Bureau said the snow was caused by a low pressure area moving northward from northern Georgia. * ★ ★ The ground and hard-topped surfaces are still relatively warm and there will, be considerable melting that will vary with the surface, the Weather Bureau said. A freezing 32 was the low prior to 8 a.m. in downtown prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. The mercury had moved up to 34 by 1 p.m. In the Santa Susana Mountain^ west of the Angeles crest'fire, two blazes scorched more than 150 acres. ★ * * The death toll was one df the worst. In 1956, a fire in the Ina-ja Forest above San Diego took a similar number>f--li«s. In 1933; 29 died in a brush fire in Griffith Park, Los Angeles. ■k * t I The inforno of flame coursing through Pacoima Canyon in the AjJgele&jcresLiirfijsas. touched... off by, a downed power line. Election Preview Wondering where area candidates in the Nov. 8 election stand on important issues of the campaign? Then read tomorrow’s Pontiac Press, containing statements of local, state a^ judicial candidates and those running for office in Waterford Township. , mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 2. 1966 LBJ Is Back on U.S. Soil ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP) — President Johnson returned Tuesday night to American soil and promised that America will take a firm anU-Commupist stand in Asia—“and you can put it in your pipe atKi smoke it.” Returning from a seven-nation tour, Johnson was greeted by several thousand residents of Alaska's largest city in a steady, but gentle, midnight rain. ♦ ★ ★ The President told welcomers at Elmendorf Air Force Base, four mites from town, that United States is taking a stand in Asia—and Viet Nam—and “that stand is going to come true.” Wearing a hat at a rakish angle and an unbuttoned white raincoat, Johnson stood on the doorsill of his limousine — head po(^>ed up above the roof— for much of the drive into anchorage. SMALL CROWD Although the dampened late-hour crowd was the smallest of his 31,000-mile journey around the Pacific, the President took his auto microphone in hand to urge repeatedly that his greeters “move back a yard there’’ and let the motorcade proceed. One feature of the reception was a bonfire in the center of a block destroyed in the 1964 Alaska earthquaJce. ★ ★ * Approaching the blaze, Johnson spied a welcoming banner suspended from two aerial fire ladders, making pn arch across the street, and said: “Thank you very much, firemen. Come on down to the fire” When he got to the bonfire site, a local singing group broke forth "over the public address system into’“Deep in the Heart of Texas,” drowning out Johnson, who was trying to compete over the smaller loudspeakers mounted in the trunk of his car. SINGERS QUIET “We’re not in Texas tonight,” he said, and stared stonily toward the singers a hundred yards away. They subsided. Viet Nam was the theme of his impromptu speech in Anchorage, too. He said the United States won’t permit the Commu-, nists to take over South Viet Nam—that if they succeeded there, “they might be in Dutch Harbor tomoitow.” Dutch Harbor is a community in Alaska’s Aleutian islands. The President said he did , not believe in iporing a fire “until it gets to your front yard.” VIET l^AM AIM ^ He emphasized again that his aim to get Communist North Viet Nam to the negotiating table, “and the sooner they realize it, the better they’ll be.” ★ ★ ★ - In remarks prepared for an early morning gathering in Anchorage, Johnson summed up his arduous trip, saying: * * * “It has been the most rewarding, the most thrilling, the most encouraging journey of my life. I believe it may also have been the most important and the most historic.” Wealer's Dirty Politics Hurling Slate Candidates By the Associated Press ipaign trail, the winds are blow-In some of Michigan’s tight i mg cold—so cold, in fact, races for public office it’s still hard to tell how the political wind is blowing. * * * But for candidates on the cam- 42 on Pontiac Police Force Call in 'Sick' (Continued From Page One) trouble if and when these 16-hour work shifts start piling up.” The rash of reported_____________ drew fire from at least one city official. CALL IT STRIKE “They’re actually on strike,’ said Mayor William H. Taylor Jr., “It’s just a different procedure.” Sgt. Herbert C. Cooley, PPOA president, said however, that the association “cannot condone” the use of purported illness as a protest “I’m no fool,” said Cooley, “but I cannot say I have any information that these men are not in fact sick.” ★ ★ ★ An anonymous message scribbled across on the department bulletin board read, “Let’s notify all departments this time and have everybody off . . , even the rookies.” PREVIOUS WAVE A previous wave of reported illness Oct. 21 failed to affect the detective bureau, with about 15 patrolmen calling in sick. eral campaign a^jearances had to be canceled Tuesday and today. Reports of heavy snow in the Upper Peninsula have forced cancellation of Democratic bernatorial candidate Zolton Ferency’s scheduled plane tour of the Upper Peninsula. Bad weather forced the twin-engine DCS plane carrying Republican candidates through the I Upper Peninsula Tuesday to forego landing at Marquette and Ironwood. Heavy snow, limited visibility, iff crosswinds and icy runways prevailed as the plane flew over the Marquette airport while the candidates spoke to the disappointed crowd below through the pilot’s radio linked with the port’s loudspeaker system. At Ironwood, Gov. George Romney, Sen. Robert Griffin and -stream. ★ ★ ★ FOR YOU TO DO: Since this illustrates one of the le-markable things in nature, clip out the drawing and article to paste in your scrapbook. Sex Clouds Issue of Airline Service ^ST By DICK WEST United Press International WASHINGTON - The other morning on my way to work, I stopped by the airport and Uspent a few min Butes interview' ping passengers. I wanted to iget their reac jltion to the dis-between airlines and Rep. Martha W, ■ Griffiths, D-* Mich. ------ Mrs. Griffiths has challenged the requirement that stewardesses must “young, attractive and single.” It is her contentiMi that homely old married stewardesses could do the job just as well. She said the emphasis airlines put on sex appeal is “an insult to every man who rode a plane.” And besides, she said, a stewardess wouldn’t be less attractive after getting married. I am pleased to report that if the passengers I interviewed are typical, Mrs. Griffiths’ report is absolutely right. The first man I spoke to had just landed on the shuttle plane from New York. “Pardon me, sir. Would you mind telling me whether the stewardesses on your plane were young, attractive and single?” “Oh, yes. Yes ideed. Very-much so.” “And did you feel insulted?” “I have never been so insulted in my life.” “You resent the airline’s emphasis on sex appeal, is that it?” “No. I was insulted by a stewardess. When I asked her for a date she said she only went out with men who were young, attractive and single.” The next passenger I approached had flown in from Chicago. “Sir, do you think stewardes ses would be less attractive afte^ she is married. “No married men wouldn’t give a single girl a second glance.” “Why are you talking so loudly?” “That’s my wife standing over there,” Pollticol Ad.wtlMm.nt THE MAN TO JUDCE ROBERT L TEMPIIN Preferred in Lawyers’ Official Poll for CIRClJITjmCE OAKLAND county' /0/\ 4m Bimm SMu wiM A 2-Piece Set of American Tourister Luggage ^ ^ Register any day this week for a 2-Piece Set of American Tourister Luggage. Nothing to buy you may register daily and need not be present to win There Are Hundreds More Bargains Throughout the Store! Ladies’ Knit Suits Regular to *45^ ‘29 Girls’ Jeans and Slacks Regular to *5®® 339 Boys’ Famous Make Denim Jeans Regular *5" 299.399 Ladies’ Winter CoMs Regular to *65^ ‘29 .. ‘54 Girls’ Famous Make Sweaters Regular to ^8®® 499 Boys’ Famous Maker Sweaters Regular to ^13^^ 6^’ and 799 Ladies’ ' Fur Trim Coats Regular to U35 *59 - *199 All size ranges, beautiful fabrics topped with lavish furs. Children’s Snow Suits Regular to ^22 13” »19” Men’s Suits Our entire selection of Embassy Row, Grenadier, Executive, Hammonton Park and Kuppenheimer. Regular to *135 *89 -^119 Ladies’ Famous Brand Dress Shoes Regular to *17" 990 Ladies’ Half SUps Regular *4^ 199.„d2’’ Ladies’ Loafers Penny-Tassel-Italian Regular to ^9®® 5”... 6” Men’s “Executive” 2-Pant Suits Regular *89®* ‘76 Ladies’ Blouses Regular H.OO J99 Girls’ and Boys’ Shoes Straps ai Monls Regular to ^9®® 3” Young Men’s Student Suits Regular to *65*^ ‘35 .. ‘58 ■ Ladies’ Lace Panties Regular 89« Men’s Famous Brand Shoes Oxfords-and Slipons Regular to ^12^ 6” Men’s - Sweaters Palaver and Cardigan Regular to *20 7"^ 8” j Use A Lion Charge Plan With Option Terms BERNARD PRESSLER Highlight Horn Units at Concert Two instrumental ensembles will appear in concert Thursday evening at Pontiac Northern High School. The Ball State Trombone Choir from Muncie, Ind. and the University of Michigan French Horn Ensemble will present programs in the Little Theatre at 8 p.m. ® On Friday, both groups will appear in a recital-clinic at a session of the Michigan Education Association District VII meeting. Bernard 0. Pressler directs the Ball State group. Del Wise, instrumental director of Jdin F. Kennedy Junior High School is a former member of the choir. Prof. Louis J. Stout directs the U of M ensemble which has been playing for the past seven years. The musicians gave a concert here in May. Both men will conduct a discussion - workshop in their fields. DIsinfectanfs in Your Wash Health authorities generally agree that laundering with hot water detergent, followed by dryer-drying or air-drying in sunshine out of doors, is a safe procedure for ordinary home laundry under normal circumstances. However, U.S. Department of Agriculture research indicates that using a disinfectant such as a liquid chlorine bleach during laundering can help prevent possible spread of d i s e a s e-causing bacteria if there is illness in the family or neighborhood — especially when using public coin-op laundry centers or other communal facilities. PIANO SALE snciu ornmes! THE POXTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 2, 1066 PRICED FOR <399 Hare's yoor chance to INTRODUCE YOUR CHILD to the Wenderful World of MusicI We must deem out holdovers, discontinued models and Christmas trade-ins to make space for Kimball pianos of the new year. No Money Down No PoymP. 'til Jan. 27 Gallagher MUSIC CO. Open Nights 'HI 9 1710 S. Telegraph Paw Peiking FE 4-0566 B—8 Fim«Ftmtl»mr«Stmc01917 Custom - Upholstered Decorator - Styled Select From 12 Popular Styles Shown! Choose Your Own Fabric! An exciting and important telling event! Select yoor custom-upholstered chairs from any of the 12 styles pictured. 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Free Parking Front and Side of Store pg 2-8348 Crisp linesln a hi-bock lounge with button-back cushion, loose seat cush- 0jegie Measures 28%W x 37D Colonial Wing choir with button-back cushion, box-pleated skirt. Measures 37Hx32Wx340. TIIK PONTIAC rUKSS. WEDNESDAY, XOVEMBER 2, 1966 C-1 AP Wiriphoto ADDING A TEAM — Commissioner Pete Rozelle (left) of the National Football League announces that New Orleans has been awarded a franchise in the NFL ddring a press conference yesterday in New Orleans. Next to Rozelle is Louisiana Congressman Hale Boggs, who helped push the pro football merger bill through the House. At right is Louisiana Governor John McKeithen. In background is Tex Schramm, president of the Dallas Cowboys. Barons, Dondero to Visit Hungry Grid Rivals Whacky Big Ten Race Muddies Bowl Picture CHICAGO (AP) -Except for the consistency of Michigan State, the current Big Ten football race has to go down as one of whackiest in history. It could get wackier. Bogged down by an 11-16 record against nonconference foes and with Michigan Stajf ineligible for the bowl bid because of the no-repeat clause, the Rose Bowl picture remains muddled as ever so far as the Big Ten is concerned. Purdue and Minnesota, currently running one-two for the bowl bid, “can’t afford to look ahead” to their Nov. 12 meeting in their coaches’ words. Jack Mollenko^ of Purdue and Murray Warmath of Minnesota made this clear to the Chicago Football Writers via telephone Tuesday. Both teams hit the road against improving opponents this week and if both lose, the run for the roses could turn into a seven-team race with two weeks remaining. Purdue is at Wisconsin and Minnesota at Northwestern. OUT OF RACE Aside from Michigan State, only Ohio State and lowh have been mathematically eliminated. Purdue holds the upper hand with<^ 3-1 record to Minnesota’s 2-1-1. The other five teams dll have two losses. We can’t afford to look New Orleans to Field'67 NFL Team By contrast, Wisconsin and Northwestern have split even in their last three games. The two teams tied each other 3-3, went conference victory each and then were stubborn in defeat last week. Wisconsin bowed to Michigan 28-17 and Northwestern lost 22-0 but made second-ranked Michigan State struggle all the way. MORE OFFENSP No team has improved in the league as much as Wisconsin,” said Mollenkopf. “Their DondPark in City Plans Several Offers Made for Ownership NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The name and owner hasn’t been decided but New Orleans will have a team in the National Football League when play opend next season....... The NFL franchise was announced here Tuesday by Pete RozeOe, the NFL commissioner. “New Orleans has the population (about 1,053,000), it has the sports interest, it has the weather,” said Rozelle. “Geographically, it fits into our plans and more important at this time it has the very attractive stadium available for the 1967 season.’ The stadium is the 82,500-seat Sugar Bowl at Tulane University. However, city officials were hoping to construct a domed all-weather sports stadium which would be home to the football club and available for other events. Construction depends whether voters in the state approve a constitutional amendment Nov. 8 authorizing the project, which would be paid for by a tax on hotel and motel rooms hereabouts. Rozelle said no one has the inside track in the bidding for ownership of the New Orleans club. By the Associated Press Great things have been forecast for the young and hustling Boston Bruins, whb gave the National Hockey League-letding Chicago Black Hawks a swipe of the claw Tuesday night. The Bruins tossed a stonewall defense and the sharp goattend-ing of Bemie Parent against Bruins' Hustling Kids Pin 3-2 Loss on Black Hawks the Hawks to walk off with a 2-and John McKenzie scored Bos- 2 victory. The loss was the first in five games for the Hawks, showed the effects of a six-day layoff. The triumph enabled the Bruins to bounce out of a lastr place tie into third place, one point behind Montreal and tinree behind the Hawks. ; Wayne Connelly, Rt Martin Spartans' Jones Leaving Marks in MSI) Grid Book “We are going to immediately go into an investigatirm of the financial responsibility of those who have applied, their back-glNmnd, their character and this might take a couple of weeks,” he added. It was learned that Louis J. Roussel, a New Orleans oilman-financier, has lined up enough solid support from NFL club owners to block any other applicant. Other applicants included Jack Sanders, a wealthy contractor who played with the Philadelphia Eagles 20 years ago; John W. Mecom Jr., millionaire Texas sportsman, and Edgar B. Stern Jr., New Orleans television station owner. The new club will be given special concessions enabling it to draft men from the college ranks and also from other NFL clubs to stock its roster. However, details have not been settled. Rozelle said Tulane Stadium is one of the sites being considered for the playoff game between the champions of the NFL and the American Football League. Pittsburgh Drops Vet George^zo PITTSBURG (UPI) Rookie Ron Meyer, who set 18 passing records at South Dakota State, joined Pittsburgh fropa the Staler taxi squad Tuesday. The National Football League 4eara4mtKticedwrah'm«B vet-teran quarterback George Izo. EAST LANSING (AP)-Help-ing Michigan State win 21 of 27 games in the last three seasons, halfback Clint Jones has carried the ball more often then any Spartan in history. Other MSU records are falling or are in danger this year, most for offensive p«rfbrmances. But junior defensive end George Chatlos set a school record by causing an opponent to fumble in each of the Spartans’ first six games this year. Jones has carried the ball 345 Knee Ailment Keeps Apisa on Sidelines EAST LANSING (AP) -Indications mounted Tuesday that a knee sprain will kee]^ Bob Apisa, Michigan State’s leading ground gainer, out of MSI game against Iowa Saturday. Apisa attended practice in Icweat clothes and ran little while sophomore Regis Caven-der worked in the fullback position in play polishing drills. But the injury to the Hawaiian fullback, who has run 444 yards in 84 carries, is not considered serious. Starting halfback Dwight Lee also ran some plays at fullback, with reserve Dick Berlinski moving into Lee’s position. Also in sweat clothes and suffering from a knee sprain was Keith Redd, the center for kicking plays. Kick team center assignments likely will go to Rpn Ranieri in the Iowa contest. MSU will be seeking its eighth straight victory against the Hawkeyek, who are in the Big Ten basement with a 1-4 conference record. MSU is 5-0 in the Big Ten. PONTIAC TOUCH FOOTBALL Packer* ....................... * Motoriaiart SaMIt* ........k..... 6 Hutchinson Trailtr ....... ......s Orchard Lanes ............. .. s Motormart Bandits 22, Hutchinson Trailer times in three years, moving him ahead of Lynn Chandnois’ four - year record of 321. He needs only 23 yards against Iowa Saturday to move into fifth place in career rushing yardage. He has 1,543, compart to 1,566 for the current fifth place holder, Sherm Lewis. Jones also ranks fifth in career points with 122 and is tied for fourth in career touchdowns with 20. ton’s goals Whiie Fred Stanfield and Stan Mikita counted for the Hawks. Mikita’s score came with 24 seconds remaining make the game seem much closer than the score indicated. LOOKING BETTER But the victory actually was carved out of the efforts of bunch of youngsters who promise to make the Bruins a solid contender in the near future. Parent, 21, turned back 22 of diicago’s shots while defense-men Bobby'Orr, 18; Gil Marot-te, 21, and Joe Watson, 22, kept the Havdes on their heels throu^ sheer bustle and determination. Boston’s victory came on the heels of an 8-1 defeat to Detroit. TOP RECEIVER He is third in career pass receptions with 32. Teammate Gaie Washington leads in that department with 89 receptions for 1,533 yards. If Washington can catch two more touchdown passes this season, he also will hold the record in that category. The record 14 and he abeady has 13. Fullback Bob Apisa has bp-come only the third MSU player ever to score' nine or more touchdowns in two different years. Barefooted place kicker Dick Kenney has moved into fifth place in extra points with 40. - AILING LAKER Speedy halfback Don Guibord of Waterford Our Lady of Lakes will be restricted in his maneuvering by a badly bruised knee Sunday when the unbeaten Lakers entertain Femdale Township gridiron. “It’s a good feeling to win from a club like Chicago after losing the way we did to Detroit,” said Coach Harry Sin-den. Sinden admitted the Detroit defeat “influenced me to start Parent.” Boston got a fine effort from defenseman Ted Green, who took a full turn for the first time since last January when he suffered a knee injury. “I got plenty of rest,” said Green in reference to the five penalties he pulled. The Hawks had a man advantage on five occasions but it was no help. Only one game is scheduled Wednesday in the NHL, and that finds Montreal at Toronto. Lady Golfers After Texas Title, Cash AMARILLO, Tex.