V Tfi* Weather * V^» Wtiftir Bircti Fw«fMt ' —----- THE PONTIAC PRESS ONE COLOR m Home Edition VOI,. 119 No. 103 PONTIAC,* MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. ARGUST10. 1961—40 PAGES 0,^A^^T^*™*no*AL Report Allies Having Troubles Deciding on Reprisals Against Reds ISAAC SMOOT REV. ALLEBACH Flora M.; a son Richard of Orchard Lake; a grandson; and a brother, Stanley J. of Pontiac. Service' will be held at 2 p.m. FTiday at Sparks-Griffin Chapel. Burial will follow in Ottawa Park Cemetery. CAJ6&, Egypt — A major shakeup of the United Arab] ‘ Cabinet' was an- Republic’s __________ ____________ nounced today. President Gamal Abdel passer abolished the regional I cabinets in Syrik and Egypt, wingiiig both in to a revamped Ventral one. Lake. He urged pleasure-seekers not to take ugneceaauy risks to prevent further tragedies in Oakland County where 23 perseaa already have drowned this year.. ’ A Brandt Writes to JFK for Action Close Entire E. Reich Border West Berlin Crowds Shout Angry Protests Check to Help Students LEAPS TO FREEDOM — Tuesday afternoon a West German policeman in Berlin noticed this East German soldi**? edging away from the rest of his unit. The soldier signaled to the policeman that he intended to escape. Photographers pn the Western side of the border ir n»Mu turned their cameras on the other members of the East German unit arid they turned their backs. At this moment the soldier broke for the . 4-foot-high barbed-wire barracade and jumped . over. "Thank God,” be said. "Now I'm a free man." Could Involve 23,626 Men Army Alerts113 Reserve Units WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Army announced today it alerted US Army National Guard and Army reserve units for possible call to active duty. Only one Michigan' unit, from -Ann Arbor was included. The Army said the units, which constat of combat, combat support and port operational organizations, will total mom than 33,-CM officers and men at full strength. The Army did not set a date for calling the units back to service. It said that the time of calling the units will "depend on the developing situation.” Tim alerting of the 113 i throughout the United States-was part of an over-all Army program announced by Arjny Secretary Elvis J. Stahr Jr. to meet the Ber-" lin crisis. The Army said these units win receive' trained reinforcement Earlier Story, Page 8 from the Ready Reserve mobilization pool to bring them to full strength. It said these units will receive additional weekend duty traning at their home stations beginning very soon. Besides alerting the Reserve and Guard units, the Army announced! the following directives: landry, —Enlisted men whose- term **w® toT reappointment, ex-would expire on or after Oct. 1 P«w*d disappointment after a but before June 30 of next yearj l®crf* ballot saw Capsalis win his will be extended for a period not) ***** to exceed four months. j "This means that District 7 has > representative on the hospital which would otherwise expire between Oct. 1 and next June M will be extended by one year. —Six months’ enlistments will be restricted to youths under 20 from Sept. 1 until next December. ENCOURAGED TO VOLUNTEER —Reserve officers serving two-year tours will be encouraged. to volunteer for additional active duty but if volunteers do not meet requirements, these officers will, be extended up to one year. —Selected individual and officer reservists not now in units will be recalled to active duty for,, not more than 12 months unleu there are enough volunteers, to till the need. Three Men Are Chosen for City Hospital Board BERLIN (£t — East Germany’s Communist regime turned its territory into a virtual prison camp today by extending its crackdown on travel to the West to its entire border — far beyond the confines of Berlin. In divided Berlin itself, West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt told 200,000 cheering Germans he has sent a ^personal letter to President Kennedy that “Berlin expects more than words, it expects political action.” Angered by Western delays in reacting to the Communist clamp-down on tlie flow of refugees, the demonstrator* carried placards saying “Kennedy to Berlin,” "Betrayal of the West,” "Enough protests, Let's Act,". and "Quiet Please, a Lot^of People Are Still Asleep.” ~~' Soviet Col. Andrei L Solovyev, commander in East Berlin and highest official to receive official Western protests so tar, refused, to be worried by the clamor over the barricades of barbed wire, tanks and gnns that has stopped the flow of East German refugees to the West. He has not*,answered the protest of the Western military commanders Tuesday. But replying to another protest of nearly two Weeks ago against harassment of East City Commissioners named a new face to the Pontiac General Hospital Board of Trustees last night and reappointed two other men. In appointing Alex Cgpsalis, 221 Ottawa Drive, to the board, commissioners dropped .Cecil J. Cosgrove from the 11-member body. Rev. Theodore R. Alle-bach and Isaac Smoot were reappointed to four-year terms. Press Veteran Dies in Hospital Dropping Cosgrove brought a blast from City Commissioner Robert A. Landry of District 7 where Cosgrove, 224 Whittemore lives. OFFICERS AFFECTED —Officer* currently serving six months' active duty will have their tour of duty extended for a period not more than one year beyond the six months. —O f f I ce r s commissioned through the ROTC program and not yet or active duty will be ordered to active doty for 34 months. ______________'/ —Overseas tours for Army per-sonel will be extended after Oct. These tours will be extended board," said Landry. "It seems strange that the majority of the commission chose to ignore the recommendations of District 7, but majorities have, a way of changing." The'latter remark was a reference to next spring’s City Commission election. .There was a fifth nominee, Bert’ Hensen. financial secretary for FontiSc Motor Division Local' 653, UAW, who also lost out in the secret ballot. The' appointments mean that the six months in* such places as Ja-|board will probably elect its 1961-pan and Germany and three!62 officers tomorrow night, months in Korea. I The Rev. Mr. Allebach and Cot- ★ * * grove were orginally appointed to —The draft will call 25,000 men [the board in December 1956 and in September and an estimated Smoot in June 1957. Their terms 20,000 in October. —The Ready Reserve obligation sad enlistments of personnel In reserve units and the Ready Reserve mobilization pool expired in June. Capsalis, 40, is director of per- ’ sonnel of the Bendix Corp. research division in- Southfield. In Today's Press It'd Pinch Peace Corps Know-how welcome in Colombia—PAGE 10. *1 Love You' Ana News ...............tt Comics .................33 Editorials ............. • Markets .............. 34 Obituaries^....—.;... .18, Sports.............< ■ .30-33 Theater* ........ ...80-37 TV ft Radio Programs ...M Wilson, Earl....... ....30 Women’s Pages .......81-84 I |Resident of Pontiac IS year*, I he also teaches business management and administrative methods j Hi the Continuing Education De-j part men t at Michigan gtate I’n-| Iveralty Oakland. Capsalis, married with fhr£$ children, holds a master's degree in management from. Wayne State University and is currently completing work towards a doctorate in philosophy. The Rev. Mr. Allebach,- pastor jof Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church, has served on several board committees, including public relations. Smoot, a Pontiac Motor Division employe, has been active on the personnel committee. Earl M. Treadwell, circulation manager of The Pontiac Press for the past 34 years, died early this morning at University Hospital, Ann Arbor, after an illness of several months. He was 57. One of the many members of The Pontiac Press family to be ght up in newspaper wdrk, he began a* a newsboy delivering Press papers when only 8 years of Note Threatens Luis Arroyo. NEW YORK Michigan Will furnish 828 young men for induction into the Army next month in the largest draft since June 1960, the State Selective Service Board said today. Oakland County’s five boards will supply 103 draftees. The state quota isA part of the national call tor Warning that Moscow was using Berlin in an effort to split-the (Continued on Page 2, Oak 5) 25,000 men in September. All the inductees will be volunteers or nonfathers over 21. An additional 3,PM registrants win be ordered to take prela-duction physical examinations next month, said Gol. Arthar A. Holmes, State Selective Service director. It's Blankets Tonight, Mild on Thursday Tonight will he fair and a little chilly, the weatherman aaid; The low will dip to the high 50s. Thursday’s high will hit near 82. Holmes said there has been no change In classification policies covering occupational, dependency -and student^eferments. However, he said, many college students have failed to notify their local draft boards of their student status and of their plans to enroll in the fall term. He said they should do so without delay. The Oakland quotas: Board 13; Board 66, 13; Board 67, Board 321, 12; Board 323, 18. EAST LANSING If! - Traffic accidents have Jellied 913 persons in Michigan so far this year. Provisional figures compiled by state police showed today. The toll for the same day a year ago was 893. For the next five days temperatures will average near the normal high of 78-83 and normal low of 57-62. Friday and Saturday will be I move In again Sunday and Precipitation lot the period will total about one-quarter inch scattered thundershowers Saturday and Sunday. hfoming northerly winds at miles per hour will beoome north-cast to' east at 8 to 15 miles tonight and southerly tomorrow. Henry H. Fowler, acting secretary of the Treasury In the absence of Secretary Douglas Dillon: and Pul Nltze, assistant secretary of defense far security affairs, also took part. This was the third meeting otthe Allied planning group in three days. The Western powers were reported to be having serious difficulty deciding on what precise reprisals they might adopt against the Communist closing of the border In Berlin, even though they i had agreed Monday that counter-measures were needed. Reports in diplomatic quarters here and in press dispatches from abroad indicated that an old Allied split might have developed over the new issue—with»West Germany favoring the strongest possible retaliatory measures and Britain opposing any immediate action. Such speculation lacked any official confirmation. Sixty-one was the lowest torn- DEALS WITH FUTURE......... Grewe said on leaving the session today that it dealt with "the future and not immediate aspects” the Berlin problem. He declared that "such meetings will go on for a long time.” Then, when he was questioned about reports of discontent in Germany at the lack of Allied counter he said: “I must say there is a certain disappointment in Germany; this is a further reason to speed up our work here.” The western pewers were HP ported eonsktaring n trade embargo on the Communist Moc to retaliation If the Communists blockade Wert Berlin. m , . But official sources indicated the West would not impose n perature in downtown Pontiac pre- kW embargo i ceding « a m. The leading at 2jure against the dosing of the bor-was 79. (Continued dt Page 2, Ort. 6) What's Wrong in This Picture? n* INVITE. TRAGEDY — Too many people In any boat threaten . the life of each, [warns Sheriff Frank lions, recalling the recent I death of two Pontiac women iri an ovfarowded boat on Cass \ r A'-- V: THE FOyTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AtJGtJST 16, 1061 SCHOLARSHIP BRIGHTENS FUTURE — Daniel R, Taylor (right) of 798 Pensacola St. It all smiles as he is being handed a check for $300 by Monroe M. Osmun, Pontiac clothier and board of education member. Taylor was named the first of four annual winners of grants for the Monroe M. Osmun Scholarship Fund. Wouldn't Be Going Otherwise* Overjoyed at Scholarship "It means Just about everything to me." said Pontiac Centred High School graduate Dan Taylor. The 17-year-old Pontiac youth was talking about a check for $300 which will enable him to ( Michigan 8tate University this bn. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Taylor of 79$ Pensacola St, was overwhelmed by the news that he had been awarded the first of four grants from the Monroe M. Osmun Scholarship Fund. "I wouldn’t bo going tl weren't lor this. It’s about UAW to Ask GM Anew for Price-Profit Formula meet Important thing that ever happened to me,’’ Taylor said. The fund, established last April from the sale of tickets to a testimonial dinner in Oimun's honor, split into four scholarship grants, one each year, Taylor ranked 42nd in a gradu-ting class of 491 last June. He I an honor point average of , DETROIT Iff) - The United Auto Workers Union stye it likely will nek anew today or Thursday the price-profit formula of General Motors Corp. DM twice previously has told the August Days Delightful Over Nation By The Associated Press Pleasant mid-August weather prevailed over moat of the country today, with precipitation gen-eraBy confined to widely scattered showers and thundershowers; ..Temperatures were in the 60* across the Northern tier of states, ranging into the 70s elsewhere accept for a few 80s in the extreme South and Southwest. . Somewhat cooler temperatures were expected during the day tepm the Great Lakes and the Ha Valley eastward and in the nsftbem Rockies and northern plateau states. Warmer readings were on tap south of the Ohio Valley westward to the central UAW that prices are none of its business and that the union bargains only for wages, hours and working conditions. This is the sixth week of new contract negotiation* In the auto Industry. Present pacts expire Aug. 31. UAW Vke President Leonard Woodcock conceded the third request on ISM would be aimed to support an appeal to the National Labor Relations Board to force GM to turn over the figures on which it bases prices and profits. A * A Woodcock said the question had been reviewed with UAW President Walter P. Reuther and the union's executive board over the weekend. In-making the union’* second request Woodcock had naked for data an what be said wee n price-profit formula of 99 per cent alter taxes. Woodcock insisted that the union did not want to inspect books of GM or to "violate their confidential information.” He said the union needed the price-profit formula to figure out what it might gain in bargaining without increasing car prices and thus adding to inflation. .307. ♦ • a a He was described by teachers as "reserved, well-mannered, a credit to the school and valuable member in a wholesome family.” Dan wants to be an acccount-aat. In high school he maJared la math, English sad social studies. He was admitted to the Honors College at MSU and awarded a $360 honors scholarship in June. Dsn’s lather has been forced by illness to work only part time in ' s Job at Benson Lumber Co. Dan got a Job with F & F Lawn Service, a Drayton Plains landscaping firm. A ‘But my earnings plus the MSU l«cholfmM§jtllhwqfiIdn’t give me enough to enter this fall,” he said. The Osmun scholarship will do The Weather Full DA Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and cool today, JWfh 79. Fair and cooler tonight, low SI. Tomorrow partly cloudy and a little wanner, high 82. Northeast to oast Winds • - IS miles today and tonight becoming southerly On* rwr A«* la Pmtiaa Highest temperature ............ Lowest temperature VC1': v. .. Wind velocity t at. p. h. Mean temperature ............ *■ Weather—Sunny. TaetSay’• Temporal*!* Chart Detroit sr o at. Louis „ „ Duluth is m (asTXT o. it i post Worth S3 tl 6. Francisco ss It Houghton It SS SJ. Mart# IS St Jacksonville SS H Tampa (i 14 Kansas City S3 ST hmmC. SS Grewe said the protests would be dispatched to Moscow in the very near future. There was no similar w quick action with respect to tact that on Monday the Allied representatives here agreed that sicli measures should be taken. Sovi#f»' New Weapon Plotted: Water Skis - m _ i Auuionuai indicated tow „ Od}f. (UPI) — A they were unable to agree Soviet engineer la Leningrad h>»*acUy what they should do, airmailed a request to a maau- A A A — ■ pteaaure boat pow ta addition the reports from Lon- City Commissioners agreed last night that the deaths of two children by drowning in Murphy Park July 28 should be investigated and their families compensated, if this is deemed appropriate. C*ty Manager Walter K. Will-man said no claim has been filed wtth the city by the families of., the drowned children, Sarah Lee Perkins, 8, of 404 Elm St., and Lamberto Lomus, I, of 411 Elm St. *1)16 investigation by Willman and City Attorney William A. Ewart was approved after Commissioner Milton R. Henry suggested that the city was liable, at least in part, because the spot where the children drowned was not fenced off nor posted with warning signs. A ♦_ ft ' Henry and Commissioner Robert A. Landry contended the city had at least "a moral obligation" to help out the families financially if necessary. The children drowned la a waiter hole in a remote ravine on the south aide of the East Boulevard park. Robert A. Stierer. assistant city manager, said the hole is periodically created by heavy flow from a storm drain careying waters from the GMC Truck & Coach Division area. The rash of the water scoops away any fill dumped by the city, he said. Since the tragedy, the dty has Authorities indicated today that!dumped chunks of cement at the ex-j spot, he added. complete catalog, ■pare parts list, photographs and technical data." L. H. Mytire, vice president of Western .Cteor Corp., ant# "The day Khrushchev takes up water ■kHng, the world will breathe n ) NEW UNION-HALL— A wide expanse of glass is featured In this artyrt’s view of the proposed 5200,000 union hall now under way tor Local 594, UAW, representing GMC Truck A Coach Division employes. Going up ,on a four-block site on Bast Boulevard‘Ifetween Midway and Wilson statets,' the attractive, one-story structure will be only a few blocks away 'from „.the South Boulevard plant. The Union has bean saving up building funds since 3955. Architect is Robert L. S^oboda of Detroit. . * /•/,' don indicated that the British government, whatever the position of its representatives here may have been Monday, was actually opposed | iking any measures at all because of tee refugee situation. A A A ' The London viewpoint was said t be that the crackdown on capees from communism, though technically a violation of '16-year-old occupation agreements, actually bad not involved the rights of the Western powers In West Berlin. Assistant Secretary of State Foy D. Kohler has been the regular representative for the U.S. government to the AIRed planning and policy-making committee of diplomats. Grewe sat in again today- for West Germany. British Ambassador Sir Harold Caccia, who was away earlier thia wok, joined the meting this resentative, Lord Hood, British minister here. 1 • , , 'A,A A, The French Representative Minister-Claude yebel. French President Charles Gaulle will- interrupt his summer vacation Thursday to return for i| National Defense Committee pwet* I ing op Berlin, Informed sources ■air today in Paris. 7 Tift PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY* AUGUST Id. 1^61 ThrKe I Vast Chinese Army With A-Arms Seen LOS ANGELES (AP>-The Australian ambassador to the United Staten predict! that Red China will have a vast army with nuclear weapons within 25 yean. Sr Howard Beale, addressing a Town Hall meeting at the Bilt-more Hotel Tuesday, said Red China would have a population of a billion people and the third largest industrial output in the world by 1986. A' * OP ' A. “But the per capita acreage of her arable land is relatively low,” he said, “so that she has economic as well as ideological reasons for casting envious eyes upon ‘the rice basket’ comprising the cdun-| tries adjacent to bar.? He warned that concern over Berlin should not result attention to the “oonttnuiig menace’* in the far East. Says NATO Forces Should Be Beefed Up HALIFAX. Nova Scotia (API- Rides in Style Away From NY Welfare Center NEW Y.ORK (API—Most of the welfare clients who picked up federal surplug food at new distribution points •Tuesday walked back Prime MinMer John Diefenbaker tothe*f nearby low-in- come housing projects. But one portly gentleman, who got his two bags of food after showing the surplus food certificates sent to him by the Welfare Department, had other ideas, ft ft ft tine length, the other slung over his shoulder, he walked to the cupjty hailed a taxi, said Tuesday that all North Atlantic Treaty Organisation nations should bring their forces up to strength, “n6t by way of threat but as an indication tit the fact that the NATO nations are serious and united.” Hie West should maintain witty but show a willingness to negotiate in the Berlin crisis, Diefenbaker said in an address beforejtossed his supplies inside, climbed a Canadian Weekly Newspapers in after them and was drtVTO Association meeting. . away Released Early Kennedy Gives States $818 Million 6 Weeks Ahead of Schedule WASHINGTON (AP) — President Kennedy has released to the states SQ8 million in federal aid highway funds six weeks ahead of schedule.______/ Hie White House said Tuesday’s directive was part* of the acceleration of file highway program to spur tly..nation's economy. Kennedy took similar action {May 17 when he ordered the lease of $00 million which not intended to be turned over to states until July 1. ' The money freed Tuesday was to have gone to states Oct. L The announcement said President’s directive will enable states to expedite planning and construction on die interstate highway system and other federal aid highways. White House press secretary Pierre Salinger said Kennedy had initiated die sped-up to prod the economy. Asked if the economy still needed prodding, Salinger replied that it did. The funds ordered released Tuesday comprise the allocation to the states for the second quarter of the 1962 fiscal year which began last July 1. Wyoming's first newspaper dates back to 1869. School Shortages Dwarf Estimates PHILADELPHIA (AP)-The research director of the American Federation of Teachers Raid to-; day a survey shows the classroom and teacher shortage is “far larger than any previous estimate.” The director, Dr. George S. Reuter Jr. of Chicago, said the survey adds ’’overwhelming evidence to the .need for federal aid for education." , <- In a report tor the federation’s 45th annual convention, Reuter said that out 0*420,304 pubtic higb and elemeftary school classes surveyed, 106,398 reputed 30 to SO or more youngsters enrolled. the ideal elms size is generally recognised to be 25 or ires. ID Badges to Be Issued to Billy Graham's Aides PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Local officials of the Billy Graham crusade say they will issue counselors new identification badges with different color and design to prevent use by unauthorized persons of some 4,000 badges reputed stolen. . Charles Riggs, director of counseling for the evangelistic beam, reputed the theft Tuesday. He said the badges were in postmarked envelopes destined tor the counselors who will assist Graham in his forthcoming series of meetings. The meetings open Sun-1 day in Convention Hall. W'sLeeManin Ducks Left for 27 Stitches PITTSBURGH, Pa. (AP)-Tsie-vision actor Lee Marvin ducked the wrong way in a fight scale Tuesday night and got ptmehed In the face, opening a wound that required 27 stitches. Actor Martin Milner threw the punch while filming a scene for the television show “Route 66’’ In a restaurant in the City’s HL Washington section. The producer of the show, Sain Manners, explained: “Marvin was supposed to ducic to the right, lilt he ducked left Instead.” ^ • 1 DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL L DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL [ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL [ DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | Padfc al 400 Shoals Kleenex Tissues 2,Kb 43® Regular Me packs featuring j thr pop-up dispenser opening, a Soft tissues. Limit 4. 1 -Mata Floor j i-Foif TRAHSISTOM Radio Batteries 3-S7e D-volt batteries for most all transistor radios. Famous long-Ufa import. Reg. DIM. —Mata Floor Goaaiaa Fverecdy Flashlight Battery 10° The battery wMh nine lives ... regular sue battery Is leak-proof. Limit A. - —Mam Float Lading' Fool wear Summer Sailcloths ££ 1M Gay sailcloths tar casual and sports Wear. This extra low pries while supply lasts. ...'vsritotamoaA Durable All Flattie LAWN and □... GARDEN DOW 50 * 97' Regular 11M value—wtth standard brass coupling to fit outside faucets. Limit M foot. —dad Floor 7-hoca GLASSAKE Oveuware Sets Sl.50 07c Value Set has oval casserole with cover. 5-Inch pie piste and 4 against oven heat breakage. -tad Float Fall Pattern* Included Yard Goods Values to 69c #i|v YARD iall •took includes fancy prints, solids, polished cottons, plaids and tall patterns. No limit none Choice of 2 Styiot ** Ladies' Nylons 3*1*1 First, quality and tmgutars group. 00/1& and 51/15 In dart*' or UgM seams. SUv^Wi to lW-< TOMORROW (THURSDAY m Afternoon and Evening ) NOON ’til 9 p m Be Here When the poors Open at 12 NOON! ft-9 Bargain-Packed Shopping Hoars ft eiii kim jimmj "9-HOUR SALE" Special Prica Tags Art in Evary Dept. Through All 3 Floors of SIMMS This adv-full of super-bargains arc but a few of the super savings that await you at SIMMS tomorrow. Every item is GUARANTEED BELOW "Regular” PRICE! You owe it to your pocketbook to attend this money-saving event to learn how much MORE YOU CAN-SAVE at Simms during "9-HOUR SALE” event. Sorry-—-NO PHONE or MAIL ORDERS at these super-low prices. Rights' reserved to 'limit quantities ion ’some items! so that more customers can share in the Savings. • Shop Every Department of All 9 Floors** MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Eatiie Stock of Sc 1 Chewing Gvrns ■ »-» Regular 51 carton of W packs of j gam- jKrigicy^-Dsech'Nutr uratyBA, g etc. Umll 1 carton. g CANDY—Mala Floor 1 DeBchlert Monogram 6° Cigar «‘i,s Ltf ^ 1 1 RexUlAZ 11 J>0 -_pack - of- 2S. amooih ’smoking cigars. Deschler's Mono-| gram cigars. TOBACCO—Mam Flaar MMIMMMHMMMMMMMMMMnMIlHM 2 or 3-Ring Bite Canvas Binder | r.(- QQc ne Ov Holds notebook filler paper — choice 1 of 1 or 3 ring styles. Limit 3 per | person. BUNBR1EO—Main Floor i 'Farkway' 5-Holer 1 Filler Paper » £7c Ul >v Regular 55c pack of 350 sheets of ruled paper .for 2 or 3 ring binders. Limit 3 packs. •UNDRIEa—Math Flaar DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS For Feminine Hygiene 1 Kotex Napkins 48* I16 Regular $1.13 puck of 45s. Soft, absorbent quality sanitary napkins. Unit 1. ^ DRUGS—Mam Floor 1 Famons NUTRI TONIC | cum Permanents si.75 ACC Seller Nationally famous ‘Nutrl Tonic' permanents tn super or gentle forms. COdMETIC#—Mola Floor Fnh Vi-Grain Size Saccharin Tabs. ■sgalsi *1.41 nton T Deodorant 1000 Ofic for AU Regular 50c pack of LOO# tablets — the perfect sugar substitute for people who can’t use sugar. DRUGS—Main Floor 2,v 66° Twin pack of 3 deodorants — easy roll-ou stylo, no fuu or muss. Limit 1 pack. COSMETICS—Main Finer Royal BRUSHLESS Shave Cream rf A Pound llmi Regular 00e value — full pound of famous ‘Royal Brushlosa' shaving cream. Limit 2. DRUGS—Mala Floor Famou 'NESTLES' Colorhue Shampoo & 49' Wash color back Into .your hair with Colorhue ghgmpoo by Nestles. Assorted shades. CXMMHlCfr—MaM Floer ■ PHOTO DEPT. VALUES BARGAIN BASEMENT Mart Nylon Reinforced 1 All First Qulity j Cushion Solo Sox 1 Boys’ Knit Shirts' loo 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Ligiid TURTLE WAX' Auto Polish $2.00 Sella- White ENAMELED Wood Toilet Seats 20 QAe I *4.95 O' 09 i im HARDWARE—tad Floor | HARDWARE—tad Floor Woven Willow—OVAL I Safety Zipper Top Clothes Basket | Rubbish Burner 139 1 $L98. ii 29 $2.00 1 39 | $1.98.1 i Value I | Value Xll Airs burner with raised bottom ter complete burning of troth. Large capacity. Limit 1. - sturdy side ttrri | HARDWARE—Sod Floor j mmrnmmmrnkimmiieimmmmummmmmmmammmmmnmmm Sot of 3 Lengths | Rabbit Ear—Indoor Honker's Chocolate 59c Cocoa Mix Full Pound 31< Mixes Instantly in, hot or cold liquids. Makes delicious ehoco late drink. Limit S. CANDY—Main Floor Extension Cords 83e $1.75 Value TV Aerials 77‘ NAVIS or D/rn-X/SS Talcum Powdor Reg. 69c 39° Choice of striped c Ideal for beach \ sports. Rises “ ‘ N’> WEAR—Rasemont § Fine Imported talcum li LENTHERIC NuTaa Sob-Tab Lotion IReg. 75c Jc Oonutno Lentherlc suntan lotion (or a tan without a bum. Limit I per porson. . DBUOi—Mala Ftear Choice Entire Stock Mea’s Straw Hah *1.89 JI0 Setters MEN'S WEAR—Basement Zipper Float—Benia Men’s Jackets 37 1W 1 «* 1 ■ Value '■ i Choice of entire stock o ! styles u MEN'S WEAR—Basemi h Cent denim, la blue, fwowarar.gbar-i coal colors. Full nipper front, slasd 9 pockets. Rlees 30 to 4*. I MEN'S WEAR—Raeemeat $1.49 Value Ret has one cord each of I and U-ft. cord*. Ideal for b Limit 1 set. ELECTRICAL—tad Floor j r black and white or color tele-don reception. Brings In sharp d clear pictures. Limit 1. ELECTRICAL—tad Fleer 9x24-Inch Size. Rubber Stair Treads lohnson's Fentons "RAID' Spray Famous RONSONOL tighter Fluid Reg. 49c Large g-ounce pour spout “ rotu light; 25° TOBACCO—Mata - Finer 50c Each 28c! s 97 or brown colors. NORELCO Floating Hoad Electric Razor $29.95 Value e without Irritation, cora and case. SUNDRIES—Mala Floor Famons EASY-OFF Ovei Cleaner 69c JH V® f Jar Ironing Hoard iPail and Cower Set 5-lack Rubber Cup "draw4 PUmgM* Reg. 59c 27c Plumber’* friend — unplug stopped up drain* and sinks. 34-lnch, wood handle. ■AkhWARB—tad Floor' 5 Vs-FOOT Size Cannon Beach Towels *2.oo V 29 Value t 2 far I $2.50 i Values to $8.00 Men’s Shoes Your — J99 Choice T Only IX Loft—Amaricaa Hand Lawn Mower $12.95 Value 9s7 HARDWARE—and Floor Full S'/a-foot length. 36-Inch width. 1 choice of loafers, .oxfords.' : Brown stripe design. Quick drying §§ chukksboots, etc. Broken else, terry cloth. First quality. B 12 ... not in arery style. DOMESTICS—Basement 1 SHOES—Bsl MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Ciils' and Ladies' I Choice Assorted Styles Sommer Blouses | Ladies’ Skirts ^ 59*12 50° SU25. 17^1 tfill1 !L# I (| Q i spoil- M Detuxe i HOUaEWA REft-^-tad Floor S HOUSEWARER—tad Floor Adjustable Type GILLETTE Razor $1.95 Value 1" With the micro-adjustable fee-ture—dial the shore you want. Oenulne Gillette Safety Rasor. DRUGS—Main Floor ANSC0 All Weather Camera Film K Choice of ’P0PETE' Movie Cartoons . Famous ‘Caloala' Rath Powder $3.00 Value Refreshing, relaxing both powder for after the bath. Cods and tooth es. 3 •* 79‘ 50E 79‘ Regular 11.50 pack m gae - i*o . m ■UlM Bj d film E Choice of Fopeye the Butcher, Indian *■ —• w Fighter, Deeps so Diver, 'Sing of the I Jungle. Reg. IMS rr-’ A-'V "1 fat Household fix# Rubber Gloves 2prs 49c Regular Me it pair — handy housonold gloves protect hands Mamet water ana detergent!. DRUGS—Mala User Unbreakable—Individual >: Instant 'Charcoal' Ice Cube Trays | Lighter Flaid lei d|Tc Many Uses Wilh Curved DuPont Sponges Reg. 89c 39° 1‘V4nch . curved f ponce—euper absorbent for ear washing and In tho house. THxOVliXlsMnch slue. HOUSEWARES—tad Floor styles and colors, sleeve H Wash •« sleeveless. Otrls’ 3 to ltl checks. I Including midriffs. Ladles’ 30 to J*. i gists 10, _ .. —, ■ __ CLOTHINO—Mala Floor R CLOTHING—Main Floor MMMNMM Anericsn Made Qulity Arndt* Styles—LADES' Bills’ Pedal Pusher Bermudas or Capris 50°! S r Value s i $1.59- Choice of n and floral pockets. Risei 1 fabrics In stripes O With bslta to match, side tippers, ta. Elastic hack, m too. Stripes, chocks, floral prints. . m.,., Broken sgta| - M ** CLOTHINO—Mala Flaar g 79c AQcl Keg. ■ $TC Value i|Q I 59c Makes a trayfnl of lea c you use as many at you nesd without j using the whole trayful. HOUSEWARES—tad Floor Folding Wood Frame Camping Stool $1.00 RnlfC Value 68' - Sturdy wood frame, durable ___ seat. Folds tar storage or carrying RUBBERMAID Rubber Shelf Kushion For Outdoor Cooking *%£ Shakers $1.98 Value 7f Arts — salt sad pepper foods at a Natural Straws—Bandy Whisk Brooms For. Toilaf Tanks Toilet Top Tray suoo Value 5t° Maks a Shall lastaatlr Jiffy Shelf Rtekor $1.19 Value Ton can make l 27' Ladies' Summer Stylo Nylom Parses $1.95 Value 50* $1.98 Value $1.95 Value , 30, laches long, llVlnch width. Ribbed rubber *- —* Rod or yellow. HOI OQc j-. 39c .SS^S OO ^ SeUer mi i protect ibolvau. iuCEWABy ■■ tad __the house and *_______ i car. Metal cap handle with tg-up ring- -t- i HOUSEWARES—to* Floor 4-foot Glass Casting Rods $1.00 Value 67c Fully waahable nylon purtoo In drawstring and some Slpper-top etylos. For ladles and teenMers . CLOTHING—Main Floor Table of Odds V Ends Simmer Wear ' Values sum Oilfs’ midriffs, polo shirts. CLOTHING—Moia Floor mmmmmmmmmmm 7 Walk 'n' Wear Cotton Ladies’ Slips 97° Full slip* with nylon trim*, also pHsssum group. White only ta slset 34 to W._s CLOTHINO—Mata Floor Child’! Short Sleeve Polo Shirts Awl* Regular 30c value — easy ta Jttp an rib nock wMh button tap. Tallow and rrean stripe pastels. Rises L COUNT PapAffmsiW Store 98 N.^ojinow $6 09338846 jrotiB •v—'■ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 19, 1M1 'High Command Jq Meet Threat TSi Reds Urged ^WASHINGTON (AP) - D Obot Lodge urged todey cm 3a “aort cl tree world high Band" which could (lAddjr i mw threats and mow* npr ;",V: •'' - -.•] I'filp $b|f jWp ha ; Lodge chief of this country’s UN. deitgotirn during the Dwight j) Elsenhower administration, strongly aupported a proposal by President Kennedy to act up a govermait disarmament agency. MSU Extension Hoad Takes Pakistan Post MARQUETTE (AP) — Dr. Daniel Sturt, director of the Micbi-gan State University Upper Peninsula Extension Sendee, announced Tuesday he will leave the poet tor a Job in Pakistan. Sturt, director of the UP Ex-tension Sendee since US7, will be made chief adviser to the HSU-Ford Foundation Educational De-veloptnent Project In Ptobewar, West Pakistan. The project is assisting In the development of an academy and an educational program for the country’s villages. Dr. IM Blank, now serving as assistant district director, will succeed Shut la the UP poet WiW SKIM Tart car (tope jut paet the 17S0-foot mark, Than how fkr ft g«ee on half cap of onliaary paeSm wbhont Platformate. Platformate k Shell's extra mileage ingredient. Here’s how the test it run. A half cup of guoline without Platformate is carefully fed into die fuel syitem. The cu is started, accelerated and held at an even 30 miles per hour until it runs out of gas. Same car stops Jam before ISOMoot mark. That’s how far k pm ou half cup of today's Super Shell with Platformate. Same driver. Same tat read. A half cup of today’s Super Shell twretotog PUrf—w...» it used. Drinks again at 30 mQes per hour, car runs out of gas near 1800-foot mark. Super Shell wins by well over 40 feet. Imagine the extra distance a full tankful of Super Shell can give you. MILEAGE TEST; — Shell test crew shows how one of the 9 ingredients in today’s Super Shell gasoline boosts mileage to give you top performance One of the nine ingredients in today’s Super Shell is a mileage booster called Platformate. Its components release 11 per cent more energy per gallon than the finest 100-octane aviation gasoline. Here’s how this extra energy is converted into extra mileage. tt costs quite • lot of money to put X Platformate In today’s Super Shell. One of the reasons: Shell makes Plat-formate with a precious platinum catalyst Eight million dollars' worth. But Shell believes that every dollar is well spent The dramatic mileage test above shows why. Platformate is so packed with energy that ft helps today's Super Shell take a conventional car, like the one you drive, measurably farther than a gas-oline without Platformate. How much farther? In repeated tests, an average of 48 feet per half cupful That may pot sound like much. But in 100 miles of driving, that 48 feet turns into 2.5 extra miles. A nice little bonus, no matter how you look at it note: Platformate gets its strange name from the platinum re-forming process which Shell scientists use in making this , extraordinary ingredient Huge pressures and temperatures up to 1000 degrees literally tear petroleum apart and then re* form it into super-energy components— such as benzene, xylene and toluene. These three, working together, release 11 per cent more energy than the finest 100-octane aviation gasoline. You now knowhow one of Super Shell’s nine ingredients helps to give your car top performance. Each of the others does an equally important job. example : Shell’s unique TCP* additive can help restore lost power—can make plugs last up to twice as long. Now—Hof Weather mend Now that it’s summer, Super Shell's nine* ingredient formula is adjusted to fight hot weather stalls-and give you top performance when highways sizzle. You can now get Super Shelly Hot Weathefyland at all Shell stations. Keep it in your Unk. lt just might saveyou a lot of trouble. TIN 9 ingredients in Super Shell-and what they dote rive veer ear ten performance #1 is TCP for power, mileage, and longer plug life. #2 is “cat-cracked" gasoline—for power. #3 is anti-knock mix to resist, all kinds of knocks. #4 is Alkylate to control “high-speed knock.* #5 it Butane for quick starts. #6 is Pentane mix for fast warm-ups. #7 is an “anti-icer" —added in cold weather. #8 is gum preventive to keep carburetors dan inside. #9 is Platformate for extra mileage. At Shell, 1997 Scientists are working to make your car go better and better f THE PONTIAC PftJSSS, WEpifrESDAY, AUGUST 18, 1961 FIVE Idea to Aid West Berlin: Open U.N. Area Off By K. C. THALER LONDON (UPI) — Western planners are considering the possibility of establishing a United Nations regional headquarters in Berlin a longterm guarantee for the independence of the divided city. The plan is one of various blueprints for a solution of the explosive Berlin problem. The Idea stems from recent suggestions that the United Nations be linked with the Berlin Issue, by either seeding a token force to the city or guaranteeing any future settlement. Its supporters believe that the establishment of a regional United Nations headquarters there would offer a* continuous safeguard against Berlin's absorption by Russia or the East Germans into the Communist orbit. • dr ’■ jm 'it It has even been suggested that the entire UiN. headquarters be moved bom New York to Berlin. Soviet PnpfUer Nikita Khrushchev has been calling for its transfer and could therefore hardly object to the idea in principle. However, the talk now is only about possibly establishing merely a Geneva-type European headquarters In the embattled city, leaving the U.N. headquarters in New York. ALL EYES ON CRY Berlin then would become the gathering point of representatives from all over the world, including neutrals, end aU eyes would re-4 main focused on the city. This, lt|Q Drlarlr /Jnannrl is held, would force Russia to keepjy I NcMj MUlldpcU, her hands off it. Any Communist interference with Berlin’s freedom would become evident to world ptabHc necessary for Berlin even if some sort of settlement is reached with Russia, to prevent the process of silent Communist infiltration. • * * The plan also has shortcomings, however. Some diplomats feel the establishment of a United Nations headquarters deep inside the boa Curtain area could be exploited by Russia to influence delegates from the uncommitted nations. On balance, though, the plan Is believed to offer more advantages disadvantages. The advocates of the project fed 'that permanent safeguards will be HEAD FOR- for a Special Summertime Treat PEANUT BRITTLE Crisp, crunchy ond chock full of nuts, about that? .. 2440 WOODWARD AVE. Open Daily 10 to 8:30—Sunday 11 to 5 I MBBBBBBNMHHBMIBBBBMNBBBBBBHM 27 Vietnamese Killed SAIGON, South Viet Nam (I) The kidnaping of eight Catholic priests and the killing of 71 Viet Cong rebels by an ambushed ranger company was reported Tuesday. Saigon newspapers said the priests were seized Friday,as<4hey traveled down a river in the swampy Mekong Delta Region southwest of Saigon. The reports said the ranger company was ambushed the same day In nearby Kleh Tuong Province which borders Cambodia. How ! JUNK CARS WANTED - HIGHEST PRICES PAID -WE PICKUP FE 2-0200 Asks More Attention to I Home accidents are nearly 15jring in industrial places, lt*>h***g , times ag numerous is those occur-1 mines and quarries. tf riMUfii LEAVES CATHEDRAL — President Kennedy leaves St. Mat-hewf Cathedral after attending noon Mass Tuesday, He walks with David Powers, White House receptionist. Tuesday was the feast of the Assumption in the Roman Catholic Church,........ LANSING UK—A safety expert says NUchigan should devote more] attentioh to the efficient operation] of Its van highway systm. Planning and construction of adequate highways solves only hall the problem of motor vehicle transportation, said Louts R. Moron.v, of Washington, D.C. Morony, director of the taws division of the Automotive Safety Foundation, appeared Tuesday before Gov. Swalnaon and other state officials concerned with highways] and traffic safety. State agencies, working with the] legislature- and private citizens, should concentrate more effort on such things as driver licensing and behavior, vehicle maintenance and operation, rules of the road, traffic control systems and traffic law enforcement, he said. Kill School Bond Issue KALAMAZOO <1* — Voters in the nearby Bangor School District have rejected, by a 5-3 ratio, $920,000 bond issue fo finance foe construction of a new Ugh school and gymnasium. Guarantied by Zenith's 10-DAY MONEY-BACK___________ ECONOMICAL NEW "56 HEARING AID Small. . tuil-powered! e Operates lor only about 10$ m a week! ^ Convenient fingertip control I Combines famous Zenith Quality with maximum ' performance and economy! Ask about 1-Ypar Warranty and 5-Year Service Plan. A model for ovary type of electronically correctable flooring loss. 11 W. Lawrence ORWANT HEARING AID CENTER FE 8-2733 Gets 7 Months m Jail for Insult to Adenauer BONN UR — A Bonn court sentenced a German to seven months in jail today for insulting Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and foe Federal Republic. The court aaid Werner Barke, 61, a salesman, had sent letters to follow countrymen proposing that Adenauer get out of the government and enlist in the French Foreign Legion. The letters suggested that the 85-year-old chancellor ahould “make himself useful aa a cook, latrine orderly and general clean- Can Start Airlift Within 24 Hours Named Sales Manager ] DETROIT ® — The Faygo Beverage Go. announced foe appointment Tuesday of Theodore T. Bachman as general sales manager. He formerly was general sales manager of Midwest Coca-Cola Bottling Go. of Toledo. By G. MILTON KELLY WASHINGTON, (AP) - J Richard B. Russell, DGa., said [today that if foe Commui blockade West Berlin, the United States has the capability to start airlift within 24 hours, should a move be decided on as a countermeasure. But Russell, chairman of foe Senate Armed Services Committee, made it clear that he does not believe' there will be a blockade. He gAve no indication as to whether he thinks foe administration might order an airlift in foe event of a Berlin-blockade. The Communists Tuesday night threatened to blockade Berlin as they did in 194849 if the Bonn government puts an economic pinch on East Germany. The West German government had been reported considering a trade embargo after the Communists blocked the flight of East German refugees. Specials foi Thin.. FriU Sat. aid Mob.—Opes Fri. and Mon. Eves, 'til 9 P.M. | AUGUST BEDDING SALE!| Trade-In on Your Old Mattress or Spring Regardless of Age or Condition! A REAL BARGAIN—HAS 180 COIL SPRINGS I But Washington and London re-] portedly oppose any drastic West German action at this time, and government of . Chancellor] Konrad Adenauer has said would act only in accord with its Allies. BLOCKADE UNLIKELY Russell said he would be “very] much surprised”, if Soviet Premier Khrushchev pushes,the Berlin crisis to foe point of a block, ade. Other congressional sources have expressed similar view Pentagon spokesmen have said] J. S. airlift capability is better] now than it ever has been in the] past. Russell told a reporter Moscow apparently hopes to achieve Its] ends without a war by picking off] by one the He said he Berlin crisis as p egy. As he sees it, Russell said, Khrushchev “hopes without a war to get one by one things which, if he tried them all at once, precipitate a war." Aiid because of this strategy, | Russell said, he doubts the Communists will attempt at this to blockade West Berlin—a city ■urroupded by Communist East Germany. Small Down Fayawit Easy Terms! HOTEL SPECIAL Innonpring MATTRESS (Twin or Full Site) MATCHING BOX SPRING SAME LOW PRICE! Rep. Price...$39.95 I Wyman's Low Sale Price .. $29.95 ] YOUR OLD MATTRESS or SPRING TRADE-IN . . $10.00 ] Antibias Campaign of JFK'Unequaled' WASHINGTON (AP)-A Negro] official of the State Department] declared Tuesday night foat the Kennedy administration has embarked on an unprecedented cam-] paign “to root out racial discrimination” in foe United States. * e * He advised American Negroes to stop complaining about foe lack 1 new civil rights legislation. In a speech for a meeting of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Carl T. Rowan said: “There hasn't been-even a remote chance of; getting meaningful (civil rights) legislation out of this Congress." Rowan is a deputy assistant secretary of state for - public affairs' and a former Minneapolis paperman. YOU PAY ONLY ACA Woven Heavy Duly Striped S Ticking. Don't compere this mot-trass with the cheep mattresses mode up for soles. $20°o EXTRA SPECIAL ... WHAT A VALUE! TRADE-IN ON YOUR OLD MATTRESS OR SPRING ON THIS SEMI-ANNUAL OFFER! 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SKIPPIES by Formfit style 810 White. S.M.L.XL. *695 Fiber Feels s §M static at reyen, iectste, rubber, cotton, and nylon eieluiive of Jecorilioa. Shown with new Madcap bra with ^ , petal toft inner cap. liner for added uplift. White. 32Ato38C. No matter what your Bgmra. Walla's expert carsettetee will III you to year haul advantage Foundations Dept: . Second Floot A260 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 18, INI ******_*• Wtwiw n. Xut M. Tuimu, '• Real Communism Test Is Do They like It? If the Voice of Americt needs any assistance In finding food for Free Western propaganda, the large numbers of East Germans who are fleeing to freedom are providing it. ★ ★ ★ Nikita Khrushchev, Soviet Russian Premier, has made a pro* ' found impression on one group of people he may not have thought about when he began getting tough with the free world. He has convinced the people of cap* ' live East Germany that their escape route to Western Germany might be cut off just as it*has. As a result the numbers making their escape to the West has increased greatly during the past few weeks. ★ ★ ★ Almost two thousand persons fled during one recent twenty-four hour period. East Germany has become one of the few areas in the world where the population is decreasing. We who have been born to freedom mistreat it and criticize its weaknesses and its minor penalties. But those who have lost it, have learned what it means to be the victims of a cold-blooded dictator who regards human rights as a commodity he may dispense as he chooses, and take away whenever he wishes to do so. ★ ★ ★ Freedom is a shining goal to these people of East Qermany, even though they may be going to a strange land, without money, without definite employment, with ho friends to assist them in getting started in their new home, wherever It may prove to be. Life-la East Germany Is drab and stark. Work is scarce and pay is sma&'-And M ine dare call his soul his own. Freedom beacons to these people. It is a bright light shining in a world of darkness. They are fleeing while they may. The East German police stop those they can, but thousands slip through their fingers. ★ ★ ★ This exodus should be held up before the whole world lor it shows the plight of those peoples whom the Communist dictatorship has taken over. Attention should be called to it time after time, and its lesson pointed out. Communism is fine for Kkrush-chxv and a few of his fellow bosses, but it is bestial living for a vast majority of the people in the satellite countries. There seems little doubt that the Red leader Is preparing to draw down the iron curtain more tightly around East Germany. .All who dare and can, are fleeing while there still is time. great lengths' to apply scientific tests. it it it ____Two geologists at the Univer- sity 6t California at Berkeley used the poUssium-argon dating technique to determine the age of the rock strata in which the skull and teeth had been found. They ran ten different tests, extending over a considerable period. Taking the average of the ten samples, they estimated that Zinjanthropus, ns Leakey-named his find, livsd 1,750,000 yean ago. After sitting on his scientific bombshell for almost two yearn, he has just announced It. So, if this figure stands up in the light of still further tests, they’ll have to start rewriting the textbooks. ★ ★ ★ Other archaeologists have since made observations which tend in a general way to bear out the great age of this newest find. They point out that when they believed that man did not exist more than one million yean ago, it was hard to believe that he had been able to develop into his modem counterpart in so short a time, for evolution works slowly. But if, Indeed, man has existed on the earth for nearly two million yean, then it is easy for anthropologists to believe that he has been able to develop to the stage of today’s human beings. ‘Why Must We Pay Postage for Russian Propaganda?9 As the Independence Hall Group <5* Chicago moved out o( the International Trade Fair, ‘they said they were unhappy over the Fair permitting the Yugoslavs to pass out pamphlets containing Red propaganda. Tb quote the aaaociatlon'i President Sidney L. deLove: "We believe that the liberty beU cannot peacefully coexist with communism." aa aeenteag flager at kina. • _ Vi ||i|j 1, I do not know bow many yean the U S. has paid the 2nd dam postage rates for Russian mail devoted to literature, the science arts, some special industry or information of a public character, but I do know that during the previous Republican administration, all mail was screened. Any Communistic propaganda was held until the addressee was contacted. * * ...it >......... New we learn that PreaMeat Kennedy rated the mail Is te be David Lawrence Says: West Must Be Bold in Berlin Deal 8e the "Educational Literature" Is arriving In ton lets, already addSnaaad individually. We pay the postage. At the same time, the UJ. is spending |U0 million a year the world around in news, radio, library and TV operations eaienut^ to defeat Moscow's unrelenting propaganda drive against freedom. Eva M. Wright 4410 Elisabeth Lake Rd. ‘Cubans Even Fight Tax Free Proposals Among Themselves’ Get Vote of Parents’ H°w can we ever expect to get ReMmt ot the Avondale School along With the Castro regime when DWtrict approved a proposal by a th^re having fist fights among n ^ margin that brought a 3J “em**lve*7 min levy for five yean and would not inctwaae taxes. Paging Social Security; Man’s Aging Too Fast ’ Anthropology experts are going into tail-spins as a result of the latest discovery ;ln their field. For a long time it has been be-, lieved that the earliest men to appear in the world lived no more than one million years ago. That is what the textbooks said. Scientists were as nearly agreed on this point, apparently, as scientists can be expected to agree on anything so open to argument. ★ ★ ★ Bat in 1959, Louis Leakey, a British anthropologist, found the skull and teeth of a primitive man in Tanganyika Oldvai Gorge in , East Africa. With the skull were found some erode stone tools. By his own calculations he felt certain that this nun had lived almost twice as long ago as thegenerally accepted beginning of the human age. But rather than upset his colleagues before being reasonably The Man About Town Centennial Farms Pontiac Area Still Has Few That Are Not Marked Dawn: What has sunrise* as toeaatifol as any sunset, bat meet of as do net see thorn Word comes to me from the Michigan Histories! Commission that Oakland County is lagging In its designation of centennial farms. in proportion to the number of farms in the county, the percentage of those that have qualified to display the^ centennial sign and receive the certificate covering the fqcts, is below the average of the other counties Jn the state that were among those first settled. If your property has been in the name of the same family for 100 years or more, it is entitled to receive this highly honored distinction. < Simply'write the commission at Lansing, and they will send you a blank to be filled out with the required Information. You can glean this from your deeds and abstract, and it will require only a few minutes of your time. . Then return this blank, and it will be placed in its order for confirmation. When Ahat time broached you win receive your certificate and toe marker, to be placed in a prominent place on your property. There Is no fee or charge. A notable recentrecognltion of an Oakland County farm is that of Earl Voorheia in Springfield Township, jmd he proudly displays the marker on a cement foundation. The original deed for this farm bears the signature of US. President Martin VanBuren, and is dated on Aug. 18, 1837, being 124 years ago today, and the same year that Michigan was admitted to the union as a state, and Pontiac was incorporated as a village. Talks with several Pontiac downtown business people shqw that (at street level), the coldest spot fat winter is at Saginaw lad Huron Streets, and the hottest spot la summer is at Saginaw and Lawrence Streets. Returning from a 700-mile swing around Northern Michigan, Mr. and Mrs. Orson Blakely of Lake Orion did not see a deer — until their return to Oakland County. LAWRENCE IN EUROPE - "We will use any ruse, dodges, tricks, cunning, unlawful methods, concealment and veiling of the truth.” The foregoing sentence is written in the Communist party platform first proclaimed in 1919 by Lenin, This has never been withdrawn or revised. When Nikita Khrushchev recently restated die party platform and amended it in many particulars, he left standing the doctrine quoted above. All Communist sets, therefore,, must be judged by that blunt formula of deception, whether it be the violation In Berlin this week of the four-power agreement signed in 1949 or of t disarmament “treaty" if one should be signed with die Soviets. The Allies are building their hopes on a new agreement to be negotiated in the next few months to nail down their rights of access ■ ' to West Berlin. * But the CommaaM party doctrine Indicates that the Soviets would not hesitate to disregard these pledges whenever they decide It le expedient te de so. Indeed, Premier Khrushchev told the British ambassador only a few days ago, in discussing the existing Allied treaty rights in Berlin granted in 1943 and 1949, that these were "unreal and irrelevant." This is not surprising, coming a* it does from a government that has no regard for morals or for the sanctity of a written pledge. WHAT TO DOT But what an the Allies to do about It? Up to now, the procedure has been to make speeches, carry on conferences between foreign ministers and ambassadors of the West, and discuss privately a series of oounterme«suref->mUi-tary, political and economic. ★ * •* ‘ While military preparations are important as a defensive precaution, neither side is likely to make a move in the direction Of military action unless the other does—-and West would have to be "re- administration then was a word examined.” Then are hints of a used widely to describe the then-trad* embargo This naturally exifti American policy toward urniitfi anviatv in ntninoau rirrlai arouses anxiety in business circles, and already in London aome authoritative British sources am saying that an economic embargo is not practical and would mean that Western exports would suffer. But If bombs begin tailing on . Hence the world has to cfeooao now between preventive policies of a draatle nature or a drifting policy that gives to the enemy i ‘Protestant Children Are Taught, Also* In answer to "Grandmother," Protestant children are taught the same as Catholic children about lies and morals. My daughter also has been attending Catholic teen-age dances and last week was asked to fill out a curd about her church affiliation. She omitted answering questions and signed her name. I have asked my daughter net te attend any mere dances although many of these children who belong to that ebarck attend other leea-age activities with her. Aa far as the boy lying, I fully ____ ___ understand his embarrassment and proponen’t’s~