The Weather O.S. WnUmt BurMu FWvcnl CoM, _ ___ THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition -VOL-122---3“ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1964—32 PAGES ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL Wsappears arXSeneva JFK Probe Hears Reds Concede BRIDE .AND BRIDESMAID - The i tient was Virginia Olsen when admitted to Pontiac General Hospital late Saturday. To- new name, Mrs. Richard Carlsen. Virginia Pontiac Prtss Photo was married at the hospital yesterday after an auto accident that took the life of her bridesmaid, Barbara James, late Saturday. nurse, acted as bridesmaid. kiile Wedding Held Despite €rosi Mrs. Rkhard Carlsep started her first day of married life this morning in a hospital bed. How did It feel to be a married woman? “No different.” said the yep'^lS^Frlde, who was married in a quiet, simple ceremony in her room at Pontiac General Hospitar yesterday. ★ ★ ' ★ She was in good spirits today, considering the tragic turn of events that had nearly canceled her plans to wed Richard Carlsen, 22, of 3044 Bark-man, Waterford Township. CAR CRASH Late Saturday night, returning from her wading rehearsal, Virginia Olsen was involved in a two-car collision on Telegraph Road near the Pontiac State Police Post. Her bridesmaid, Barbara Marie James, 20, of 382b Percy King, Waterford Township, who was driving, was kilied. She was the daughter of a head nurse at Pontiac General Hospital. Virginia suffered facial injuries and her mald-of-honor, Diane LaBurn, 17, of Detroit, suffered a broken arm. ★ ★ ★ ' Driver of the other car, Allen H. Cooley, 21, of 355 Third, and two passengers. Star L. Farina, 27, of 128 Washington and Elaine Young, 22, df Washington, also were treated at Pontiac General. Cooley and Miss Farina were released and Miss Young is in satisfactory condition. Carlsen and Miss Olsen were to have been mafrled at St. James Episcopal Church in Detroit Sunday. NAVY ENSIGN Instead, Carlsen, commissioned Friday as an ensign in the Navy/, and his bride said their vows in a hospital rwm. Mrs. I^awrencc Nichols of 130 Green, a nurse was the bridesmaid. Parents, grandparents and a few friends watched Rev. Garfield Brown of St. James marry the couple. Today, Mrs. Richard Carlsen was asked to sign a hospital form. She reacted eagerly. had to use my. new name,” she said with a sudden flash of happy pride. ■ It had. been a weekend of happiness and grief. Funeral arrangements for Miss James are being handled by flie Lewis E. Wlnt Funeral Hopie bi Clarkston. Service wiU be held at All Saints EpIscoiSwI Church Tuesday at, n a.m., wlffi burial to follow in ^wa Park Cemetery. Sjte lis survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert S, (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) DETROIT (AP)-Republican Govs. William W. Scrantwi of jPehnsyMnia W. that the strength of Sen. Barry Goldwater’s campaign for the GOP presidential nomination had “diminished” in their respective states in recent Their comment was in an answer to a question at an im-tu news conft HbweverTSaranton told a later news conference that if the Republican convention weretomor-row, Goldwater would come into It “with the most delegates.” Hd Bloomfield ^ Gazed Down Gun Barrel ByPATMcCARTY In his 18 years of police work, Chief Norman Dehnke several times has witnessed the slow, torturous death of men shot in the stomach. The Bloomfield Township police chief remembered these incidents as he sat looking down the barrel of a ------------------4'13-gauge shotgun for nearly a half-hour early yester- Attention, Skiers: Heavy Snowfall May Hit Area Attention, all skiers! There’s a possibility of three to 10 inches of snow this week. Temperatures will average about five degrees above the normal high of 33 and low of 20, 00 Wednesday's precipitation may turn out to be rain. There will, however, be snow flurries Thursday and Friday. Temperatures will vary widely each day. Tomorrow and Wednesday will be warmer: Thursday, colder; Friday, warmer; and Saturday, colder. The low before 8 this morning was 14. By 2 p.in., it had reached 29. In Today's Press ^ Smoking Principals say teens aren’t quitting g;- PAGE 29. Malaysia ^ foreign ministers conference near breakdown — I Dutch Crisis New political pair emerges — PAGE 32. Area News Astrology Bridge t!omlrs Editorials Markets Obituaries . .Spmis .. . Thenters TV A Radio Wllsoa. Earl Women’s Pages .........2« 17-19 .........22 ’rograms 31 12-11 day morning. The man at the other end of the gun knew his thoughts goaded him between gulps of beer. w ★ ♦ ‘He kept flipping the safety on and off and telling how hard It Is to die from being shot in the stomach,” Dehnke said. BACK AND FORTH “'The safety is on the back of the trigger guard dnd his finger kept going back and forth.” The 25-miaute ordeal began when Dehnke entered the home of Holly Course, S0» “to try and talk some sease hito him.” Police had b the house at 2805 Franklin by Course’s son Jerry, 17. The youth had made the call the height of a family arpment. 1 ' * ★ When Patrolmen Curt Gren-nler and Lyle Howard arrived at the scene, they found Mrs. Leleah Course, 46. and her aon out in the road. HAD ANOTHER They said they had taken one loaded shotgun from Course but that he had another. “We tried to coax him oat,” aald Howard, “but he Just sat (Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) TAIPEI, Formosa (API Nationallii China announced today it has severed diplo-matie relations with France, China Jaa. tl. MoffieT of Oswald WASHINGTON ((P)—Mrs. Marguerite Oswald, 56, carried before the Warren Commission today what | she called “new evidence” in an attempt to convince | the investigating commission that her son, Lee Harvey Oswald, did not assassinate President John F. Ken-nedy. Mrs. Oswald has said she expects to contradict the testimony given by Oswald’s Russian - bom wife, Marina, 22, in four full days of questioning by the commission last week. The elder Mrs. Oswald, ciad in black and wearing her gray hair in a tight bun at the back, , ,was guarded by the same Secret Service agents who pro-Romney dnA-Scmuton, 4e€ted-her-daughter^tewHast— week. She seemed wiillng to stop tmd talk with reporters as she Barry Strength Has Shrunk Romney dnA-Scra Agree on Assessment arrived at commission head- ARRIVES AT HEARING - Mrs. Marguerite Oswald quarters, but the agents gently enters Warren Commission chambers today with a handbag and firmly swept her along into df “new evidence” she claims clears her son Lee Harvey Uie elevatOT- leading tc4he-hear-—4)swald e noted In the southern ■ains. | ' ' \Mullinix Is Veteran Trial Board Member A veteran member of the Pontiac Police Trtal Board, Cecil C. Mullinix, today said |ie would .seek the District 5 City Commis.slon candidacy in the March 2 primary. Mullinix, 49. of 571 Lowell made the aanouncement shortly before noon and said he planned to file a nominating petition at the city clerk’s office tills aflerndon. He is the fifth person to seek the District 5 commission seatr w ★ ★ Senior member' of the trial board. Mullinix is a former vice chairman and chairman of the board REVIEW BOARD He also served four years on the Tax Board of Review from 1958 to 1962. Miillinix is a trustee ot Oakland Park Methodist Church and Is on the board of directors of the Pontiac Urban Uague.------- * * * A Pontiac Motor Diviston employe since coming hefe in 1942, he Is currently a machine oper-alw in tlie sheet metal plant. * * * He has been active In UAW Local 653, serving nine years on a shop committee. He is a past committee chairman, was president of Ixical 653 for two years, and serves on the local’s bmird of trustees. PARTY CHAIRMAN Mullinix is also chairman of the Democratic Party In Pontiac. He Is married and hat oae son. This is his first attempt at gaining a city commlsslM post. In deciding to run for the of-fice, Mullinix said, “1 think the people of Pontiac are looking for new leadership, and they’re not happy with the present com-mission.'' lie said he fell Ihnl ' Imlh tlie preseiil nnd former commissions fiUlled together, in cliques, end that's not the way to think aluml itio g«)d of nl| tile peo-pie.” I i the center of performing arts during the summer. This will enable students, other young people and adults to take' advantage of the wealth of musical talent avail-' able on campus and utilize them as teachers. These teadiers will 6e"‘ not only members of the Detroit Symphony but musical artists from around the world. After this happens, Varner expects a general strengthening of OU’s music department. ARCHITECTS PLAN The architectural firm of O’dell, Hewlett & Luckenbach is working on plans for the orchestra shell and the roofed-over eat 2,000 people. These will be built about 200 yards north ot Meadow Brook Hall, between the hall and Walton Boulevard. Varner said that by placing the musical facilities In this spot families would ultimately be able to come to the campus and enjoy a complete cultural complex. Tliey could spend the afternoon seeing Meadow Brook Hall and viewing its great art masterpieces, have a picnic supper and stay for the evening symphony concert, He stressed the fact that Informality will be the order at concerts. Thc.se are not social affairs. They are for the benefit of everyone.” (with this In mind, admission to the concerts will be low.) Varner paid particular tribute to Mr. and Mrs. Roger Kyes who developed and encouraged the Wter^lglnaHy- and- ~who helped clear away Initial obstacles. He commended also tile Seinon E. Kiiudscns who have agreed to liead a committee, to work on further details for the project. •k It it He paid tribute to the memory of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Wilson who left a fund to be used for the betterment o( Pontiac.Trustees of the fui)d have given $35, 000 for construction and $20,000 for operating expenses the first two years. Top Russian Agent Delects at Geneva tContlnueti From Page One) Nossenko because they had believed he may have gone to j<'ran<r listened to im a j He served as Uw clerk for the late Circuit Court Judges Frank L. Doty and II. Kiusel Holland while attending law acboel. He had been a partner in i Detroit sales promotion and advertising b ' NO! NO! NO! NO! - “Sparc those lovely locks! "The Beatles cry as Terry McDermott oT Kssexvllle, Mich., enacta t hair-cutting aea-alorv McDermott la an Olympic apeed-ekatlng gold i^icdallst and a barber by trade. Second . . . ' ■ from the right in the frightening scene is Ed Sullivan, on whose show McDermott and the English lads with shaggy hair appeared last night. New$ Flaih WASHINGTON (if ~ President Johnson, derlarlng thnt Americans need, want and can afford “the best of health.'’ urged Congress today to vote medical insurance for Iho aged this yea^. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, EEBRUAKr 1071964 THREE Man and Space T Does U.S. Want to Keej^Moon Secret? By ALVIN B. WEBB JR. HOUSTON (UPI) - On the doorsteps to space, or one foot in the twilight zone . . . America’s space agency has -^r had-Hi plan afoot to clas-dfy toe moon. “Classification” is a pet techi nique used by governmoital agencies to stamp a secrecy label on something that, for one reason or another, they don’t want anyone else to see. It would be tough to put the entire moon under classified It would, however. tion (NASA) to keep any details of the lunar surface a secret, since it has the only wherewithal this side of the Iron Curtain for getting a close-up look. ~iSEi««INE^eTURfM That, infdrmed sources said, was what NASA had in mind when it dispatched a . special operative to Pasadena, Calif., to examine about 3,000 pictures that the 804-pound lunar probe was supposed to televise to earth in its plunge to a crash landing on the moon. His job, It was reported, was to decide which photographs would and would not bO’released to toe public, i' You will see some good pic-! told mpn. “But you may not be al-— lowed to see toe best ones. Not for a while, anyway.” Ihe theory behind all this quiet .maneuvering, according to the report, washJTirevent the release of any detailed lunar g^pgraplQf pictures that would 8^ the Soviet Union any steps in its own plan for putting men oii .the moon. NOBODY SAVED As it turned out, nobody was saved anything—except perhaps for the NASA operative, who was spared the task of wading through 3,000 photographs of the moon on a Sunday afternoon. Ranger-6 simply refused to take any pictures, classified or otherwise. It hlindiy smote the moon in another multimil-lion-dollar U. S. lUnar failure. Whether the secret move .. would be attempted on Ranger- 7, now set for early April, remained to be seen — althougl) some observers recalled that NASA didn’t give up the first time when on previous occasions, it classified weather forecasts and the names of American astronauts. Saturn rockets may come and Ranger lunar probes may go, but 11,600 pounds of sand and Ernest P. Snavely are assured of immortality in someone’s memoirs someday of life at Cape Kennedy. IMPORTED SAND During a lull In preparations for the recent Saturn-Ranger space doubleheader at the cape, one newsman discovered an intriguing line in NASA’s press kit, to wit: “11,600 pounds of sand as ballast” for the .second stage of the Saturn-l superbooster. The Joyful chase was on. NASA, it was discovered, was somewhat sand-sensitive. Cape Kennedy is a veritable sandplle itself, but toe space agency spurned a chance to buy toe product locally for $26, and instead had It shipped in fronii more than 100 miles away, at a cost of |228. NASA hastened to explain that not just any old sand would do fbr the proud Saturn. The stuff had to be heat-treated, to bake out the moisture. No bno around the cape had an oven big enough to cook that much band. To be on the safe side, the agency brought an even 15,000 pounds df sand. Presumably, there Is 3,400 pounds of back-up sand still stored In NASA’s supply shops at the cape, Ernest P, Snavely, other hand, doesn’t exist and never did. He showed up as a mythical “hero” when toe space agency poHtely declined to re-^ veal the name of the wwker who had failed to "remove a test plug and thus caused a two-day delay in the Saturn-1 launching. Snavely was dreamed up by SWEETS for Your SWElTHEART V2-lb Brach... . 59c 1-ib. Braeh... .98c 1-lb. Brach.... .1.49 1-lb. Brach.... .1.95 2-lb. Brach.... .3.49 ye-lb.SitooHamelfon .29c Vt-lb. Siteo Hamelfon .49c 1-lb. Siaco Hamalton .98c Musical Jewel Box m 999 lirrorad lid H|| missile wwker of Ean Gailiei Fla.,” (as in “Cto^ goUy! ) who stei^ed forward to accept toe burden of guilt for toe embarrassing postponement, His explanation for failing to wise dull and fruitless after- remove toer plug, as revealed in a “news release,” does not bear repeating in a family newspaper. But tois mythical presence did toighten up an other-' noon. And neltoer Snavely nor that sand will soon be forgotten around the space port. Bucky Harris managed a record eight major league teams. (AdvtrtiMinttrt) WomenPast21 WITH BUPDER IRRITATION AtWr 11. eommon KldiHar or Bladder Irritations affect twice as manr women as men and may make you tense and nervous from too frequent, burnins or itchlnc urination bothday andnlsht. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and suffer from Headaches, Backache and feel old, tired, depressed. In auoh irritation. OYSTEX ususdly brings fast, relaxlu comfoft br PEN T0NITE 7IL 10. SIMMS 25 SOUTH Saginaw Street'STORE L’Aimant Fragrance by Coty (rive Frnfirnnt L’Aimnnt Solid Cologne... 1.75 Dusting Powder..2.00 Creamy Perfume. 1.85 Ravlon Lip Coloring Kit $6.23 valua - 5 full lira Je WE llpilicks. Each In a dif- ■ ■ ^ laranf color gl Spray Cologna urocluctory slzas In Coty, ovion, Dona, Max foe-,r, Sliullon, ale. r liquid ikin .achel with boiiul lit# lollel waiar free., ISO 250 Lanthario Twaad Oologna $3.30 valua - (raownl TWaad cologna makai o parlactValanllnagllt. 233 Ayart Trio Sat ‘.so valua rtologna, and and liody lotion iiid bulli ell. 89' •attary Mantoura Sat Bufit, i»>ll.l>ti, lrlmi,fllaa ' Sale, atlsy to uia. Bol-larlai Ineludtd. 333 Ilaotrla Hair Dryer $18,93 voh»a 10“ Battery Teeth Bruih $19,95 valua -a tO(cll,gl( 11M . Valentine*s Day is February 14 a-‘******* itAAM mao This date last year was 131. BrothefhocxJ Dinner Set by Churchmen . WALLED LAKE - Plans for the second annual Brotherhood Dinner have men of seven local churches dividing duties. Oakland County Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer will speak at the Feh. 18 event at Walled Lake Metho-dist Church. _____ in'Shel^Twp. ..... Philp of the host church was appointed general chairman of the dinner. Ar-rangements for the speaker were completed by men of First baptist an(L St. -Matftfiw_L^— eran churches. ★ ★■ ■■ ★ ThFrest of thVprogram “v|ir~ be set up by those from St. Anne Episcopal and Shepherd of the Lakes Lutheran churches. ^ OTHER DETAILS Publicity is being handled by delegates Irom Crossroads Presbyterian Church, while decora- • Tions and other dinner matters are being organized by Methodists. escaped convict from Missouri, who came north to see his wife and two sons visiting here, was captured'without a struggle "last night. Tickets have been distribut-. ed to all participating -ctoarcherby “Hanrtd-‘Bulgarel=- -li of St. Williams Catholic Church. Carl R. Cole, serving four yeara^JoFliFeafcing and entering, had escaped from the State Reformatory in Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 2. When Shelby Township police Ipatned he was at a home in the area they sent for help in apprehending him from Romeo County sheriff’s deputies. Officers entered the home by both the front and back doors and surprised Cole sitting in a chair. He offered no resistance. Shelby Police Chief Robert Smith said he would consult the county prosecutor today about proceedings tq return Cole to Missouri. Ali men of the area are invited to attend the 6:30 p.m. event. Church offices should be contacted no later than Thursday for reservations. The dinner was originated last year to foster interfaith activities in the community as a means of promoting brotherhood. Civil Service Eyed TROY — The Troy City Commission will again consider the question of civil service for city employes at tonight’s meeting. A proposed civil service ordinance will be reviewed by commissioners. Owners Carl, Richard and John Buechler Survey Damage Hothouse Rhubarb Festival Planned for Feb. 29 in Utica UTICA — A cooking school, rhubarb hothouse tours and crowning of the 1964 Michigan Rhubarb King Will highlight activities at the ninth annual Michigan Hothousp Rhubarb Festival here Feb. 29. The day-long event is sponsored by the Utiea Rotary Club, the Michigan Cooperative Extension liervice and the hothouse rhubarb association. Fesilvities are scheduled to begin at 9 a.m., when competitors enter their rhubarb, rhubarb dishes ar.d centerpieces for judging. 'This year the festival will be held in the Knights of Columbus Hall, 44425 Utica. OTHER ACTIVITIES Alsu on the program will be a 1 Rochesler-fire Caused by Careless Smoking ROCHESTER—Careless smoking started a fire in the Rochester Secretarial & Answering Service office yesterday, which caused an estimated $7,000 damage, Fire Chief Lyle Huchanao said today. Alerted by a passing news-paperboy, the Rochester Fire Department reported to the scene of the blaze, above the Hartwig Real Estate offices, Before firemen were able to extinguish thejiaines the fire hai,408tn5yed^ the building’s T'oof,, as well as part of the attic and east wall. Buchanan said the fire starl-hd when Oakland University icnior Jerry Korte, 23, one of the two boys on night duty at, ' the answering service, dosed off and dropped his cigarette on the couch. The other student, Gaer Gucrbqi, 20, of RoMvIlle, ’rtx|, 3 who WH.S not on duty, was asleep. BUKNIN PILLOW Korlo awoke, found the couch pillow biirnlng, drenched it with water ami placiHl it on the buck |M»rch of the second story office at 128 W. Unlvcrslly. The next thing he knew the glass of the back door blew la and he saw flames licking at the windows. From New Baltimore, the student has • previous record of “wonderful service," Mrs. Belly lievick, owner of the business, said today. Although some wires were burned' along with the roof, attic and back por»’h, the answering service was In operation ahorl lime aflcr the mishap, Mr.y. licvick said. Buchanan ihfd Utc building Is fully Insured. He addtnl that the stole roof Would have to be replaced as a result of the fire. smorgasbord, featuring prize-winning rhubarb desserts, from II a m. to 5:30 p.m. In addition, sandwiches, Jbev-eragrs and fish and chips will be served throughout the day and evening. The festival officially opens with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 1:30 p.m. A cooking school s|>onsored by Consumers Power Co. will begin 15 minutes later and tours of the rhubitrl) houses will bo offered from 2 to 4 p.m. MAGIC SHOW________^ -________ A half hour of magical entertainment Is prondsed from 2:30 to 3 p.m. when “Magical Mol’’ Eisenberg displays his talent for the crawils. RHUBARB AUCTION Immediately following this the prize-winning rhubarb will be HuctloruHl. A swond cooking 8ch(K>l will close out the daytime acUvUles, beginning at 4 p.m. Evening events will start at 8 p.m., with music by the "Rhythm Nheiks" In Uiq .ballroom'of the hall. During the Intermission thla year's Michigan Hothouse Rhubarb Queen Cheryl Cottrell, will be IntiHHluciHt along with her Climaxing the day's activities, tlie 1964 Michigan Hothouse Rhubarb King' will be announced. Ho will be the grower whose rhubarb Is judged best among the many exhibitors. FUND FOR CillLDItKN All |)roflts from the festival will t)c coiUiItAited to th« Macomb Cotinty Crippled Chll-dron'i Fund. Vi.' '■ THE KEY TO YOUR NEW HOME 1*1. Lnwrtne* S». - Ponftoe 407 Main So«*t-Rech*it*r 1 lOa W. Map!* Rd.-WoHod Uk« 9700 OrtanvIlU Rd. - Coe. M-15-ClortiifoB 441 * Oiiila Hlghwap-Dnivlan fHalni 391 N. Moin-MIHofd 471 W. Br»adwoy--Lak« ‘ 1 •] f THE PONTIAC PRESS. kONDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 1964 FIVE Dr. Wayne G. Brandstadt Says: Shingles^an Be Very Serious Disease The days when a shingle was poral punishment on a wayward child are gone. But shingles is still a punishing It is caused by a virus. In children and young adults the same virus causes chicken pox. As age ad-vances, the number of of shingles andj the severity of] PONTIAC MAU OPTICAL CENTER DEffliiBlEEiLLD 0^11 tn ~B.30 PM' at plagues so many of the older victims. In another stlidy, a weak so-lution of procaine was injected annoying itching will persist for several months or even info the vein. Tbis treateaenf had to be repeated sever a 1 times in some victims, but gave condition for which nothing could yield to modern medical methods. Early Morning Fire Hits Hotel in Roi Rome (AP)—An early mining fire in the Hotel Alexandra in Rome’s fashionable Via Vene-to sent guests hurrying into the street today to escape clouds of noke. “ FHremen put out the blaze in half an hour. They said it^rob-ably started from a short circuit an elevator Auto Engineer Expires SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (AP) —Finley Robertson Porter, )92, pioneCT airplane and automobile engineer, died Saturday. He was born in Lowell, Ohio. Congress to pass a bill creating the National Service Corps, which is to play a top Tote in "President Johnson’s war on poverty. Andersoft is a retired Navy officer, and ,-foe.iirst skiplJer -Of the nuclear submarine Nautilus. . PENNCREST DELUXE AM/FM-FMS DANISH STYLED STEREO CONSOLE! • Danlih Modem •tyllf»0 • Qllod Walnut Vonoor • Rocord itoroQ* d Diamond noodia • 4-tpeakeri 10-tuba power In AjM~FM AC »larao amplifier with 3-po»itlon •witch for Intemoi/eKternal e*ten*lon •peokpr»l 4-tpeed automatic VM changer with 11'' turntable complete with FM Stereo. Radio Included. Reg.34r 288“ PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE 'T' THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1964 HAROLD A. nrZOERALD Bakit J. Sm John A. Ruit AdyertUIng DlrMtor O. itlAMHAti JOtBAM It Seems to Me____ Chinese, Russ^ian Differences of Great World Importance —The world is witnessing an even more curious turn of events than is normal these days. For a considerable time^ Russia was the well established viUain in occupies this dishonorable foie with her customary suavity and eclat. But i^e hasra rival. ~ China won’t stay hitched. ★ .. ★ ■ ★ -....... Hence we have the curious spectacle of the most belligerent country of all, finally winning the rather unexpected enmity of a currently weak and yet potentially heavyweight giant. Our own cue is to stand on the sidelines and applaud silently. -^hie“^HK»ttf8HeH*v-s-remarks and one that has persisted to- the-Point It may never die is his infamous: “We will bury you.” ★ ★ ★, Now Mr. Mao says that he propoi^es to bury Mr. Khrushchev and the balance of his marauders. So we h-plc slogan which apjjears in Latin over the entrance reads substantially: ' ‘WTnhTnglsn’l import ant. What counts most is to have compeled.” ★ ★ ★ The games were nccepled on tlxl.s basis and went forWurd happily , until the Russian stumble bums dost aerated the kcene. With them, wln-r|tng Is so Important that their athletes kre all professionals. Not only do they "pliy for pay” but they play Hie” opponent, 74- AAA year-old Sen. Young, into a ^ ^ " space capsule and rocketing La Taylor is finally getting him Into orbit. around to a divorce — the Mex- ------------— lean variety — while Burton has f «e# shucked his own wife as a noble never LiOSl concession to “law and order.” The Indianapolis Star And thaU noisy, ill-mannered Other packages can get dam- KUhe, wh..h«l th. t "btr Rey iiulds and their so he could consort with Lizzie, ------:--------- yammers away as he fights to j} c nick the Taylor bankroll. Afnateurs What tripe we spawn at times. The Chicago Tribune —------ It is no hews that the United AnH ih rntu»1l1fiinn states has been out of the money illlU 111 IvUllVlUSlUn » . . In all eVents but two at the Win- Jottings from the welLthujnbed ter Olympics in Innsbruck , . , ( . A A. tria. The Soviet Union has run notebook of your peripatetic re- show, taking six porter; gold medals, five silver, and Robert Sylvester, New York iou*" bronze, with more in pros- »e.A.Aa„:..every..™,AAh.»f.„ CroStirK lowers his voice an octave and starts and bronze medals in the wom- to be charming to some befuddled en’s slalom events, child. 1 get up arid go to )he rest ro6m.” AmenI fVwg has U 11 e r 1 y that we are represented by a failed to learn a primary funda- team of amateWs, both men mental’ of childhood: we laugh with *'“* r™®": '"’’‘I®,. “'® , ''““i ,, . A A A,- slans have been taken almost them and not at them. ■ . ......... from the cradle and placed The newest dan^ craze is the under a rigid discipline of the “swim" and It's/^o Indecent most state to attain mastery in their 1 , u d that according to the Constitution of the United .Stales, no one person'can bold more than one Job or dut^, paid by the government. ) do not know If I am right: but If this is right, I would appreciate someone answering this and explain to me how If is that Senator GoMwater, R-Arlx., Thurmond. IKS.C., not only hold tile dntief they have in (he White House, hut iiso major (Continued on Page 7, Col. 1) 7V' \ 1/ t. T ■ - /- r ' 'f'A rivf V" h,, \ ‘T ■h -,f..; ... j ■. - 5HE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1964 SEVEN Voice of the People (Continued from Page 6) generals of reserves carrying out military duties and being paid fw such duties. ^ ; v ir I am sure congressmen and senators are allowed so much a year and probably added expense money. I do not know exactly how mucraTnalor g«>Mal^hes.=faiLI assume it k fi-nm ^is oon up a year. How is it, then, that they hold both duties, being paid for botii? I am me a lot of taxpayers would like to know, regardless of whether they are Democrats or Republicans. Orchard Lake J. D. ' .. . ★ ,^i*r ..-.... - ..... (Editor’s Note: Reserve officers are only^aid when they are on active duty. Usually this is for approximately a two-week period each year.)’ , . ‘Why Didn’t Jaycees Work for College?’ Arrest 'Solver' iJfKADeath Charged^ m FBI Impersonatien NEW YORK (ff(-Peter Hurkos, who^s^ he has^ sixtii sense helpful to plice in miurder investigations, has been charged with_/mpersonating an PBI agent. He is accused of having told some gas station attendants that he was an FBI agent re- It is unfortunate that the Junior Chamber of Commerce, who [«»» D»Has where he were concoued about the future of the cidzens, :^e not as fte_ ass^aton of gr^ive in helping to bring the Osteopathic College to this city' as th'ey:,tirere-gettiHt^-a-nCTLmnendment to the charter. ThThos^HalTp^^ bccn ^i ggeat help to^ many unemployed as welPas bringing^ew people to the city. Regretfully ‘CoacHos^Not Concerned About Color’ Z Coaches-aH-havft-ane-^ieciilinr prapnalitv trait — they like to win! So l am certainJf PCH had boys who could out hustle and out shoot those now wi the team, Mr. Zittel and his staH couldn’t care less what color their skins were. tendants called police. The "••pfirpnrte Dec. 10 at Wauwatosa. Wis.. led to Hurkos’ arrest ye^erdayjn a Manhattan hotel. He has done a fine job at Central this first year and has team that he and his school can be proud of. A White 1941 Gririaate ‘Indian People Worse Off Than Nepo^: In Milwaukee, the FBI said Hurkos had showed, tha attendr ants a rifle with a telescopic sight and ulso told them he "was en“Toute to take pairt in the Frank Sinatra kidnap investigation. FAli, ON HEAD Hurkos, 52, claims to have at-lined powers of extrasei pm'ception—a sixth sense rough-ly^efined as mental telepathy-ie“fell on his“ head 21 This racial thlnf-tias been going on too much. ’me~ccflorBd^’«»**^g®- people have rights, but if they would look back they could see how much they have advanced in 300 years. Just what is their complaint? Look at my own poor Indian people, especially in Arizona. Look how they lack fbr things. They are the ones that need equal rights. ★ ★ ★ I’m part Indian myself, but right is right and I say the colored people are pushing too much, too fast. Let some of them~ visit our Indian reservations around this big country. Then let them cry “equal rights.” I can’f even find work myself. They won’t hire me In these factories. How far have my people advanced In the 300 years? L. J. T. Letter Comments^ on Late^President We have read items concerning the assassination in Dallas. The . M A. If ... --------- uuv;auijuy w ucov..i voices from controlling minorities rant agapst hatred,jntolerance ^^jj4tinerant shoe salesman and bigotry. Those who did not vote for Mr. Kennedy can’t help tioned in the cases. but ask: Do you seriously think he was elected president of the United States? Lebanon, Pennsylvania ‘Waterford Taxpayers Agrainst Library’ The taxpayers of Waterford Township twice voted “No” on jtwo different library proposals. This should be a pretty strong indica- of a minority pressure group and ignored the wishes of the majority. I wonder if this same minority group carries enough weight to re-elect thehi the next time around. “ We received a Federal grant for $30,000, we do not have to repay this grant, but we do have to match it. This is costing us $32,000. W{B have thousands of dollars worth of maintenance equipment setting outside in ail kinds of weather, Why not get some housing for it? We have only one juvenile officer to handle ap ever increasing problem in our township. No funds for more, help? I wonder if we now have funds to match the Oakland County Road Commission’s for our road program? ★ ★ Our Chief of Poiice was caiied on the cWpet to eiflUain the purchase of siww tires for our poiice cars and yet no qualms about committing us to a two or three hundred thousand doilar library that we told them we could get along without. Board meetings are open to the public. Why not attend a few? Waterford Township Mrs. John Hoke ^;Historiao's Wife, 82, Dies in Virgmio Town CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) — Mary Helen Lambert J(*ns, 82, wife of Jay W. Johns who has restored a number of historic - Virginia homes, died Saturday. Johns, a former Pennsylvania industrialist, is owner of Ash Lawn, the home of President James Monroe, and head of Stonewall Jackson Memorial Inc.,^ which has restwed the JacSon home in Lexington. Mrs. Johns was born in Pennsylvania. 7 Feared Dead in Ship Crash BREMERHAVEN, Germany (AP)—The Americp, freighter Blue Jacket and the German coastal freii^iter pick collided in fog early todaj^. The' 295-ton Dirk sank and seven of her ei^t-man crew were leUeyed lost. ROME (AP) — Vencenzo Bel-lezza, 75, conductor at New York’s . Metropolitan Opera House, from 1926 to 19», died More people travel by rail in lighthouse off the Weser River | Saturday of a heart ailment. He Russia and Japan tlian in any i estuary. i directed the Italian Comic Qp- other country. _ I Tugs rescued one man of the 1 era from 1911 to 1914. The colltoion occurred near a Dirk's crew and found one body.! Helicopters of the West German armed forces circlejd the _area searching for bodies. ★ ★ * ■ The 8.090-ton Blue Jacket' reported little damage and ho injuries. She is operated by the U.S. Department -of Commerce with San Francisco as home port. Famed Conductor Dies NEW ICC FORMS . $21.91 per M . $30.97 per M . $33.00 per M Security Doewmontt — printeci fb' peciru SOO ...... . .. $10.90 100 ......... I9.H Imprinting Available 6RE60RY, 167 N.Woodword •peciricotioni on quoted boti* & THOM X'MUNGHAM ©7a Through last Wednesday, he worked with police for eight days in an attempt to solve the stranglings df 11 women in the Boston area since June 14, 1962. Atty. Gen. Edward W. Brooke of Massachusetts said Hurkos, after examining evidence in the slayings, maintained that all 11 crimes were cqmmitted by one man. And, a spokesman for Brooke added, Hurkos provided a de-^ scription of the killer that came 'uncannily close” to describing EXACT AGE Hurkos told authorities "^fliimTlfW^itoW Jr^ 57, and~4he salesman is exactly that age, Brooke said. Brooke’s spokesman emphasized that the salesman “was already under surveillance” at wishes the time Hurkos supplied the description. 'The spokesman added that riurfcoa-did not cause the-sales-J-man’s arrest or confinement. ★ * ★ He said the salesman “was committed to a mental hospital by his doctor, not by police or by Hurkos.” The date of committal was riot disclosed. -miwwmxam imruc Diesel Expert Dies SWARTHMORE. Pa. (AP)/ Max Essl, 59, German-bortv-ei glneer credited with irihova- ! tions that aided the di^liZation of U.S. railroads, diqiirSaturday. Essl, 'a U. St resid^t since-1927,^ ' had headed his own building contracting firm since 1951. NowyoiL, con have thif BLENDED BIFOCALS Give you a better appearance and Nmoother. focut by removing the obfectlonable dividing line Till* now bifocal has llio look of togular glasses because the dividing line is !nvisible.iNow you can enjoy vision without annoying Jump, blur or distortion.. i and you’ll thrill to a younger looking yon. BUDOiT tIRMS AVAILABLE 4 COMPETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS S. SASMAW ST. —ElevertoT Service ttrAII Floors " • Provincial • Colonial • Traditionol“0^dcLernr^=^A4Hby Afnerico^s Leodingt'Aanofactyrers! OPEN TONIGHT -JiL9-PJL_ Complete decorator- chosen living room FE 2-2895 NO MONEY DOWN MONTHSTOPAY We Va coordinated a complete living rjo6rT>ahsemble and cut the price on all seven pieces. YotZget a loi:ge, luxurious sofa, matching chairy co^iaif step tables, two lamps . . . all at^$ low pitife./^^ and chair are new Kroehlar designs, bujHorbeauty and comfort. Reversible; zif5perecl fodmr^ cushions. Covered in durable nylpprabrics. ' Dinette Group So good-looking, with its borderod life-timo plastic top and tho six matching two-tone chairsi A bright, colorful note in your kitchen, occenteo by mirror-polithed chrome. Use the extension leaf and extra chairs when you have a crowd around the table, or fpr casual entertaining. Choice of colors. 1.00 WEEKLY 109 N. SagirtaW St. E. STEINMAN, O.D. WARD-WAY BUDGET PLAN ^ • No Intoroit • No Conying Chargo H Paytnont« At Our StoM;_^ || ^*yoti miiat bo Niiliaflrd — lliia w«* giiariinti***’* OPEN MON., THURS., FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. : 17-19 $. Saginaw St. downtown PONTIAC Ff-; 2-12.7/ ' ' ■ . ' ’ ' I ■’ FREE PAR|f his most tragic foes. Fires last year cost nearly ^ 124X» U.S. lives. America has -more..stockhold-ers than union members. Worn* en outnumber men among the 17 milHoh who own shares ini industry—and housewives make • DCneNEOTOruXATMIV/tNOU • SUCnONAIM STOPS SPUSHAACK • CCNTMS irSSLF, CAN’TJKIO AllOUt • TAPDWO TAIL OWES AIR-TIGHT FIT ____dfAmerKans this year are* ex^ wniiM iQiwfMB nerted tn cAnd qaitia am on Feb. 14, because that is the time when doves begin to pair. pected to send some 480 million valentines. ____________ Fire, man’s greatest friend Protect Your Family’s Home_l: withDeoples-Home Mortgage Cafloeltatiofl-Ptarh [f you are buying a home ~ or intend to buy - you should know all about this plan. Find out how it die, how it frees them from worry of monthly mortgage payments, from struggle for extra income Get the facts on Peoples-Home Mortgage Cancellation Plan at no obligation. Contact Phone FE 4.35.^li 1044 Josl3nn, Pontiac FflANK A. AGEmV INSURANCE if tional group. POSTERIOR SIZE A government bureau reports that the average man’s posterior. covers 179.4 square inches and exerts an average pressure 92LjiQundsLjor each squm ^es to-keep his ence secret. It was Benjamin Disraeli who observed, "Every man has a right to be conceited until he h successful.’’ ~ notables- four of them children. “Every cloud has its silver lining but it is sometimes a little difficult to get it to the mint’’-Don Marquis. Il.is_often smd there’s no, place like home. Well, fii England there’s a hamlet call^ ‘No Place” with a population of 289.---------------------: .%und advice: “The education of teen-agers would be insured if parents would pull a few wires: television, telephone and ignition”^^^thoHc Di^st. PETS COSTLY Dead are Mrs. Delores L. Cole, 30, her daughter, Wanda, 11, and sons, Jackie, 5, and Jim-miCr 4,^ and Phyllis Xooley, _9, aUofBall. * The high cost of living has caught up with cats and dogs. Some of the nation’s 22,000 veterinarians charge $5 for an of- call. A major operation f’^lus convalescent carp for a pet can cost $1,000 or inore. IVtanymilitary services-hav^ offered a money bonus to spur enistlments, but when the U.S. Coast Guard was organized in the 18th century its lure to sailor volunteers was “a half gill irf; rum” and two pounds of soap.”, Quickies: Americans wear out ) million decks of playing cards a year. Women con- sistently leave longer cigarette^ butts than men. There are more than 8,000 drugs in use today, including a tranquilizer for minks to make them more reproductive. Julius Caesar de- Five Persons Die iri Crash of Traijr, Car Scranton Trip to Michigan 'Not Political' DETROIT (AP)—Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton, whoJias .said hejBwld^rceepf "Q® that President Johnson a draft for the Republican presidential nomination, was irc Michigan mday ^“adverflsing Fimnsylvania, not myself;” Red Patsy, Says Rdtnney (ap^Jdichi-i gan^E,=Geofge W. Romney is using all the bricks in the book in federal budgeting and ' ■ flaking Uie United Slab a “patsy” for the Communists. Romney, appearing Sunday on radio and television programs. Sen. Bariy GMdwater, E-Ariz.,—— loi criticism. Rononey said he could not understand Goldwater’s positions or cbril rig^, labor laws, col-lective bargaining and foreign - affairs. It -Johnson resorts “biltnowisefore Supporting the civil rights BALL, La. (UPI)-A trip to worship services yesterday ended in a spectacular car-train Missouri • Pacific passenger train slammed into a car at a crossing only a few yards from the church, spilling bodiesand wreckage alwig a 1,600 foot section of track. Several bibles bdwiging to the occupants of the car also were found along the right-of-way. TOP MAFIA SUSPECT-Pietro liTorretta, called a top Mafia chief by Italian author- and a luncheon speech to the ^ to tricks to make it look like he Economic Club of Detroit. He is cutting spending and at the said he wants to give Michigan same time bringing in more “a realistic picture of what j revenue,. Pennsylvania has to (rffer b'usi- i nessmen.” Declaring “freedom is in ney said “I believe our most urgent domestic problem is to wipe out human injustice and discrimination agdii® the Ne- groes.” A meeting with Michigan Republican leaders also was on tionai police and soUleia He told' newsmen at Detroit s^ped down on his hiding Metropolitan Airport Sunday plara. Torretta, abused of },g ^,as not an acttvrxan^ booby-trapping a police car in didate for the presidential nomi-which seven were killed, was I nation and “I can’t imagine^y seized while asleep, and is series of circumstances^tiraL wanted in connection with at would result in a d'raft: These least a dozen murders. - things just don’t happen in the The nation’s per capita food bill is expected to soar to a record $400 in 1963 against the modern political world.” treat i The marshes of Louisiana, consisting of about 7,400 square ________________________________ $394 per person of a year pre-lmiles, contribute to a lucrative i announced candidates h®^been vious. I muskra^t industry.............. meaningful, and he singled out jely responsi-because it has a soft policy toward Communism. Romney, who has declared hlmselT available for T draftTbr t h e Republican presidential nomination under eondKlo w ^ ceptabla fo him, said the possibility of such a draft was “unlikely.” He said he was not“seeking” r “aspiring” to the presidency. At the same time he said he did not believe the campaigns of fejteral government and wants some type of medicare program for the aged whfoh would combine private and public plans. . in general views lie expressed earliw-on the weekend in. newspaper interviews. In the lat® he charged Washington has been “soft” toward Communism and that the present trouble in Fidel Castro’s Cuba was a result of Democratic failure to stick with commitments to kee|T communism out of the Western Hem-li^ere. TWO INJURED Two other Cole children, Sydney, 7, and Eugene, 2, were in, critical condition. Mrs. Cole’s_ husband, James, a irikmah for'Missouri . OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUNDAY 12-7 ^ i SUN cific, usually rides the train that; was involvi^ in the collision, i Yegerday he^ was on another Red China Fair OK'd TOKYO (AP)—Japan has ap-proved~.staglng of XfommunigL Chinese trade fairs in Tokyo arid Osaka in the spring-and-sum- J.ebanon Brain Center BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A! computing center has been; opened at the American Unlver- j sity here. It’s the first electronic brain center for any Mideast ed- vised one of the first known ucational institute. PART i. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for. each correct l~The firat Gold MedaLlor an Amer ican at the Winter Olympics was won by Terry McDermott, of Michigan, in the ..... competition, a-figure skating; b-tobogganing; c-speed skating 2 By a 48-45 vote, the {Senate refused to inplude that part of the tax cut bill which would have. a-helped families of college students b-lncreased the capital gains rates c-lowered the tax rate ' 3 Opponents of the civil rights bill In the House of Representatives tried to delay a vote by....... a-fillbustering b-adding amendments c-removing parts of it 4 American citizens began to leave.last week,. gfter the U.S. Embassy there was bombed. a-South Viet Nam; b-Cyprus; c-Malaysla 6 Acting under the Rio treaty, the Organization of American States ....» Panama’s charges against a-ls investigating b-refused to Investigate o-transferred to the UN PART II-WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. a-striking of one thing against another _ . 3...Impact b-Homethlng left over C-zigzag skiing 4....slalom 5.....residue d-dlfference e-snub PART III . NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the •1..Jean Saubert a-Olymplc skating star 3..M.Esther Ifotcrson 3.....Marlna Oswald b*ilrai '64 U.S. Olympic . medal winner o>President Johnson's assistant for oon-Bumcr affairs ..Lidiya Skobllkovu d-Lynda’s White House ro^mute ■ e-(|uestlbned by a Presidential fact-finding group 'P VECrfflg- rMsdfwn 1, Wit.________________________________________ Save Thli Plrsctiee Exeminallon! students Velueble RefereMe MeteHel For Eaemi. answers ON REVERSE PAGE 5,,...Warrlc Lynn .Smith The Pontiac Press Fcbniniv 10, 1961 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. (a) Peace Corps’ head adds poverty fight to duties (b) 1-day racial boycott called largest In nation’s history (c) strike caused trouble for "Queen Elizabeth’’ ST. LOUIS (d) costs New York L City 100 million, gallons a day s..... (f) downed a helicopter In the Congo (g) Feb. 7-13, their week ASH WEDNESDAY (h) 300th birthday this, 5..... (i) forty days to Efls- ......... (j) Mexican President to meet, with President Johnson this month HOW DO YOU RATE? (Sa«M lt«h $Me «f Qulc $«|MNtaly) tl »e lOOpelsM-tOMCOai! •Me VOpelnta^bMeUem. 71 to I0|wlnto-Qoe4. SI to 70 pelnti - Fair. 40 er UMlar777. H’mm; Otfli li pert of MvoalleMii Itosram wM«h TMi Newipapwr tomldwi to SeNseb In riJi area lo Mimilato IntoreW to Nallerwl and WbtM Affein sasn slJ to OevGlepIng Coed Clllssmlilp. PRACnCATGIFTS For Your Valentine! All Specially Priced to Make Shoppint and Givins a Pleasure! SHETLAMD ELECTRIC BROOM I Doce eyerylliinfc a iirooin, diiFt I i;® ino|i. rur|iH ewei*|i»*r, iIiikI |ian amlliriihh cun do .. bcm>r! Over ] Vi II.P., motor. Swivi iiozxle. .•UciMher I/J95 ivcl lic/id, Jilf G.E. DELUXE PORTABLE MIXER Mixee, brat* and wliipe in ^ _ oiiiIk! Conife willi a drink mixer 7 ^OO allsrhinent and lienirr ejector. Jl Rival Eltotrlo Can Optntr... Ml ADMIRAL 4-TOBE CLOCK RADIO PROCTOR 4-SLICE TOASTER Stunning white cabinet w itii euey* to-read Idsck-fuce radio. ~m O pO •-Tranilstor Portabla.. 9.66 I 9-Volt Tram. Battory... 210 rontemponiry etyled toseterwilh Proctor’s fabulous Select’ronio -* g-w oo Oolnr (lontrol makes one to m Voo four iliofs. Ckrbme with white ..f. » M punrle. PRESTO PORTABLE HAIR DRYER Tbcrmoxtuticully conirolledi bon* net i'ilH over the largest rolleni.. sirup it to \oiir wiii>t or »boul«ler. IjOngcord. 997 UNIVERSAL STEAM ’N DRY IRON Thi.< ligbiMeight 3-lb. iron glides along on exclusive sleam-flow 'eiii» boi in ;10 seconds! CJR hdiric-guide dial. GLENWOOD PLAZA-North Perry Street at Glenwood -'Tt- 'I'EN THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1964 IMevemiemeiiu Burial Insurance Sold by Mail Israel Water Rese({arch Offered to All Nations . You mky be qualified for not burden your loved h funeral and other expeiaes This NPW policy is especially helpful tct those between 40 and 90. No medical examination ne- o^i^Tine legal reserve LIFE INSURANCE. ... No agent will call on you. Free information, no obligation. Tear out this ad right now. y . t ^nd your name’ address and year of birth to: Central Security Life Insurance CO;, Dept. C-136, 1418 West Rosedale, Fort Worth 4, Texas. \ JERUSALEM, Israel (AP) Israel will give countries all over the world-^nd especially the thirsty^ Middle East—^ej;e-sulta of a big research program on desalination of water, Prime' Minister Levi Eshkol said Sunday. ! In an official statement, he expressed deep appreciation to [U.S. President Johnson for his ' announcement Tlarsday-^-on-American cooperation with Is-jrael over effortg^o find water i desalination methods. NEW acres , of mud and naked steel year ago now are a well-paved, partly l^dscaped city. The 1964-65 New York World’s Fair^ia almost ready for its 9 a.m. April 22 opening date. “We’re well Tiown~ttie home^ stretch nbW,"::Krid one fair official, “and believe me, you can feel the tension and excitement in the air.” With roofs on about 85 per cent of the exposition buildings and multimiliion-dollar exhibitors setting up their displays, QUESTION: How^did sagas come to be written? ANSWER: On many a winter evening long ago, Norse families grouped around the roaring fires, which in their dWeliings-were^often in the middle otlhejMitt7 to stories about great heroes ot legends of the Scandinavian gods. These stories were the sagas, either sung or told, —often by spectol^ngettxalM l'skalds,^^^^^^^ In the 800’s and 900’s A.D. the Vikings plundered Europe and then-s€tUed dowa-.ta,iolonize Iceland. Many of the finest sagas developed in Iceland during this period. Such were the famous written sagas of Snorri Sturlusen, composed during the llMW’s, which tell us so much about Scandinavia^poetryrlfisto7-afld-mythok®^---------y——— Other Icelandic sagas give fascinating details about Leif Ericson’s trip to Vinland the Good, or America, in A.D. 1003. ............ Although they are not always historically accurate, the give us a vivid idea of life In the Viking days, and of the Ideal of courage which inspired the Norsemen to deeds of extreme daring. -.★' ★ FOR you TO DO: Can you guess where it was Leif Eric-soti really Janded in America and stayed for a while—Maine, Cape Cod, or further south? Recently, remains have been found which experts say pinpoint the location. It is in an isolated area in the northern part of Newfoundland. APPLIANCE BUYERS! OLLIE FREHER SAYS: WHATYOUWHTTfrfAY? YOU NAME IT, m 60T JI! :: i2i,yi fretter Orfgltlul IHtcounli-rt Thu week af Fretter'i, we've priced 11 84 appliancei, TV's, and stereos at rock bottom figures, in fact most every Item on our floors has been reduced for this once o year event. YOU NAME IT, AND WE'VE GOT IT, ranges, refrig-•rptors, washers, dryers, TV'*, Color TV's stereos, dishwashers, etc. And they ore all prichd at within pinnies of cost. Aisle after Aisle of brand new 1964 merchandise await your selection. Don't Forget, NO MONEY DOWN and no payments Your Choice 129" 19" Zenith Portable TV Whirlpool Diohwooher Pre-Year Model. Your Choice 149" Westinghouse 12 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator, Hot Point 3 Cycle Automatic Washer. HOOVER CONSTELUTION The canister that offers mpie of what you wont in o cleaner. FREE! 5 lbs. COFFEE If I can't beat your best price and service. NY Fair Gets Finishing Touches are beginning to show. If we didn’t watch it. some of these exhibitors would be cutting ribbons and opening thoir displays today,’' the spokesman said. More than 4,800 construction workers still are at the site in Flushing Meadow, Queeps, putting the finishing toudiea ea the great halls. Dominating the scene is the 13-story stainless ste^ globe that is the symbol of the fair, the Unisphere. From it, spreading out in all directions, the miles and miles of sidewalks now being poured, shaded ,by mot-e than S^OOOTecently planted trees. _ Fair officials expect 70 million persons to attend the fair’s two six-month runs. It win be closed during the cold weather months." Visitors already are a problem. RARD^TIME^ ■ “Ever since the buildings .began to take shape months ago,” the spokesman said, “we have had a pretry hard^ time toying to keep spectators from popping' onto the grounds for an early look-see.” Now they can see only tee shape of ^excitement: ever, before visitors may see Public Opens Its Heart, Aids Mourning lamily support the 12 searchlights beaming a 12-billion-candlepow-er columa hito............... KANSAS CITY, Mo. W Warm-hearted citizen^ have Angelina Grant, 45, who died 18 days ago. She will be burled tomorrow. The husband and 10 chil-dre¥ of Mrs. Grahf w a $613 funeral for her, but couldn’t rahe the $325 down The family’s plight became known through a story in yes-terday’s Kansas City Star. The public’s response was prompt. Before nightfall about idJ)een:pl£dg^.___ Blaine Wellen, operator of the funeral home.ythen said he wanted to provide the serv-ice free, but a c^mitleeTlF^ sisted on paying his costs. The bill was set at $350, and was paid. PARTING GESTURE . 'But we really want to do this free,” said Wellert. “ cause of what has happened, it might be a parting gesture. I don’t know if we are going to be in business much longer. In the eyes of the pub-lice we are ogres.” Ollie Grant, 67, head of the temily, is listed by the state as totally disabled. His monthly income is $361 from Social Secnri^ a World War I pension and a Missouri old-age pension. The fatodly moved here from Arkansas in 1959. Grant woHted as~a7jffite washer. The 10 children range in age from 4 to 22. Seven are _ at home. Two s and 20, took jobs cutting v for the funeral. Mrs. Grant, will be buried at Goodrich, Kan., 60 miles from Kansas City,-jv h e r^ Grant grew up. flffflQirRhee Gets Personal Property SEOUL7 SduHT Kdrea ljr — South Korean President Chung Hee Park has ordered that deposed President j S y n g m a n Rhee’s personal property, now in government custody, be returned to him, a spokesman said today. Rhee, 88, was deposed after a student-led revolt in April I960 and left the country the next month as a political exile. He is in a Honolulu hospital. the exhibits of the 24 states, more than 40 foreign countries, many industries and religious groups. Fair officials tiiem-selves don’t know the particuL JO’S nf some of the closely guard-ed display secrets. Some exhibitors have announced their„ plans. money TREE ■They include such things as the international money tree, “growing” the currency of many nations outside the Amer- ican Express eiAibit, the -Thd U.S. Rubber^^Ferris wheel, an 80 - foot ^mtomobile tire. —The five - sided Kodak picture tower which will display 3Q-by^36 - color prints and.support a picture -taking deck for camera fans 30 feet above the fair. GOMBUS-nON ENGINE -The 35-foot internal combustion engine through which visitors to the Chrysler exhibit may walk. —'Hie heliport on its tall stilts, containing the Top of the it already in op- HTwili he dpening day, how- which will lift 420 persons into an overhead theater. giant dinosaurs, one measuring mJeetT^frftedSine^^ the closed circuit RCA color television network with cameras and screens; the Polynesian women divers who bring up. pearls from an artificial lagoon; an “Atomsville” for children only; the Ford Co,’s_“Mag- _ ic Skyway” ride _created by Walt Disney. For the footsore, Simmons beautyrest has created “rest alcoves” for 30-minute catnaps on electrically adjustable beds. Frightening Asthma Attacks End kr Minutes Ar New Formula Unblocks Lung Passages Fast New Medital Fommla Restores Free Breathing Withont Vaccines. Shots Or Narcotics. Calms Anxiety. No Prescription Needed. formula that stops frighteninf blMka lung .__„...... Medical testa prove this formula, promptly restores frae breathing, so calms anxiety and relieves the worst i of«sthma—the straining j; the w ing, the terrible fear of suffocation. painful shots LThis formula is so safe when used as directed, it can be sold without pretcitption in tiny tablets caUed BRONITIN*. Doctors know that when asthma len, lung passage bocoma blooked, ■ "trapped” ii air IS . less and leas oxygen can enter, r BRONITIN, with two asthma reh»--ing medicines that doctors prescribe for their patieiitir, acts quickly to open bronchial tubes and loosen the! mucus that blocks lung passages. Trapped air is released and new vital oxyien enters the lungs. The result is: free breathing Is rrotpi^,^ tension eased and so fears are calmed in ijifniitea-^ffelrers ca now look forward to restful sleep. Get BRONinN—available at aU Your Clioice 189™ Your Choice 399“ 12 cu. ft. 2-Dr. Automatic R«-frigarator, Hot Point Doluxo Diihwothor with mapio top. Zonith 21" Color TV, Zenith | 3 way combination TV-Radid- | Stereo. | new STEREO I *^-iMICRO-TOUGH FIRNOALI STOM-I01 W. • MIW-U 14401 O^n Mtn. thni Pri. till !• ItM |tt. I to I Ss Mtn. thni PH. MM ItlilO'-■ V . , ; 'f;/, ''Safety, DepeiidabJlity, Cleanliness . . . You Get All 3 When You Get New AAobilheat Fuel Oil From Gee!" For over 38 years Gee has been winning and holding warn'' friends and customers with better quality fuel. Today, as in 1925 you can depend on Gee for Safety, Dependability and Cleanliness. There is no safer fuel than oil. There is no more r^endabt¥fju«l Oil distributorfhan Gee. The cleanliness in the preparation of Gee's better quality fuel oil, the cleanlirless of delivery and tljie clean burning qualities of New AAobilheat assures you of complete heating satisfaction, regardless of the weather. Now is the time to switch to Gee . . . Dial Ft 5-8181 Get Complete Heeting Satiifaction nut Holden’s Red Trading Stamp* No Matter Where You Live ... You, too, con onjoy compUto hooting ootisfac-tion oe our modern OMC truji:ki, metor oquippod for accuracy and radio diipatched for foetor eorvico, diatribufo b*ttor quality fuoi oil in Pontiac, Drayton Plaint, Waterford, Clarketon, Orion, Oxford, Rocheitor, Auburn Heighte, Bloomfiold Hilit, Koego Harbor, Woilod Lako and tho turrounding oreq. May we terve you? Dial FE S-8181. You Gan Depend on Gee! An Important Moitagt to You, Who Heat With Coal.. GEE POCAHOHTAS “LITTLE JOE” THE *u puerasE I STOKER COAL ANSWERS TO TODAY'S NEWS QUIZ Pontloo’s Oldest and L*rgosl Leeelly Ot end Operated New Mobillieet Oittribul PART It t-et t-ai l-b; 4-b| S-a. PART III 1-ei2d|l-ai4-flil-b, part III! l-b( >•01 l-ei 4-ei i-d. ^ SYMBOL QUIZ! 1-b| 2-ji t-d; 4-ij 8-at 1*011*h; 0-gi 6-fi tC-a. ’If ' ' THE POXTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. EEBBUARY 10, 1^64 ELEVEN My-Bird ---^UPERiRTGHr QUAmr PORK LOIN SALE! forP^dling -Nazi Hate' SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) An ex-convict and s^-styled ^^^lericaI^^Naa-0FgaHiMF^eB^ Benton Harbor, Mich., was released from solitttty-confine ment on $5,000-bond Sunday, facinff jcharges of preaching hatred. IMAMS Alexander de Fields, 25, was charged a warrant sued for his arrest under an obscure' 1947 Indiana law for- D0 Fields, who termed him-sejf an “extreme right winger,” was accused of placing anti-Negro and anti-Semitic pamph-1^ on car windsfii^ds Th a parking lot in nearby Mishawaka last Tuesday. An anti-civil rights demonstration threatened by de Fields failed to material-^ ' Bend De Fields contended the state law was unconstitutional and said he surrendered to police Saturday because he wanted to contest tbd antihatred statute. Before his bail was posted, de Fields said that when he was freed he would continue trying to organize dn Ameri'*an Na7.i Party chapter in South Bend. He served a three-year prison term in Michigan for breaking and entering when he was 18. tokfBaoyed by Oregon Tour Plans to Hunt Votes in New Hampshire ALBANY, N.Y. »» - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, buoyed by public response to his weekend campaign tour of Oregon, will hunt for votes this week in New Hampshire’s presidential preference primary. The New York governor, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, has scheduled 27 publW activities in 24 New Hampshire communities between Wednesday morning and Friday night. He and Mrs. Rockefeller returned yesterday from an Oregon swing that, he called “a marvelous trip.” “I’m really thrilled,” he said. “It is remarkable in what has been called ‘Galdwate country.’ ” IN PRIMARIES Rockefeller and Sen. Barry (ioldwater of Arizona are in the Oregon Republican primary election May 15 and the New Hampshire primary March 10. “Ikmwit’rainiplilllllght, Rockefeller said, “but I have a feeling of real optimism of what can be the outcome of the primary In Oregon.” At stake In Oregon are the state’s 18 votes at the GOP National Convention. Rockefeller concedes that (JoWwater holds the edge at thh moment. The governor and M Rockefeller, who expects child in June, were greeted by enthusiastic crowds at stops Saturday. They traveled from Portland to Medford to Salem, the state capital. SURVIIV SHOWED Rockefeller’s Oregon campaign chairman, William Walsh, said a survey showed Rockefeller’s Portland appearances liad swung rnany to hi,s aide, including some G o I d w a t e “ liackers. ■ Full 7-Rib Portion At a. nows conference in Port’ land, Rookefcller said “There was a very warm and friendly |]<'spon|| to Mrs. Rockefeller Here in Oregon.” ^ :/i ' ,/• Super-Right" Skinless SemtBondeis rf UlLY COOKED Loin End Portion Center Pork Chops Whole Lb. 57 No Center Sliced Removed GOVERNMENT INSPECTED. SOPER-RIGHT" QUAUTY Freili Fffers Fryer Parts Legs . . . Breasts “ 55^ with riht attaclMd Ground Beef 39t ib.43* 3 LB. PKG. OR MORE 4 I JANI PARKER I Sandwich Rolls AiP SAVES YOU MORE ON MANY, MANY LOW MEAT PRICES Not Just a Few Specials! You Con Put Your Trust in "Super-Right" Meats "SUPIR-RIOHr* QUALITY BEEP Cube Steaks.... ^89* ALLGOOD BRAND Sliced Bacon 4F|2*.79‘ "SUPER-rSIhT" bacon niick-Slictd . .. 2 89* .r.ni G,.d. "A” Orjongc ■ANQUET BRANDOM $f< banqu*' I OiBNBIf ^^SulSburv S»«k .__ 00 Rump Roast..../' 89* STANDING—4tk AND 5Hi RIBS _ ^ BeetRiMoa$t.^Jt89‘ Beef Rib Steaks .. • 89* SLICED ..^<1 Beef Liver... «45* «37* WHOLE OR Rll HALP -Pofk- iiUiiii(t«fr • COUNTRY STYLE Si r-RI6HT« FANCY Eight (rClodi POUND BAG 1 49 A&P Instant Coffm |.P SPECIAL! SAVE Bc^ANE PARKER W OFF A&P't Fine Shortening dexo 3 ^49* 5. OPP LABEL Y ^ Spry Shortening .\ 3 can 72* DONUTS Plain, Sugared PKG. or Cinnamon ... OF T3 19* liceil Bacon .. ~aUPM-RIOHr‘ SHANK PORTION M CD Smoked Ham ... .^ 43* WHOLE, PRESH emee Stewing Chickens. » 39* FROZEN—-5-LB. BOX 1.S9 a A Cod Fillets..... » 29* CAP'N JOHN'S—I-LB. PKG. 49* ^ m Tlih Sticks... 2 vifif 65* FOR PRYING OR BROILING Halibut Steaks ...» 49* TRY THEM BROILED M ^ Salmon Steaks .. .^>^69* LB. BOX 1.19 _ ^ ize Shrimp , » 69* SHILL ON—5-LB. BOX 1.19 Navel Oranges BAHAHAS California 138 Siie 3 "■ 1 00 10 LB. viNE-Rire Tomatoes ^ Whin Hohm Evapowtod ^ « 99* ANN PAGE QUALITY Jont PaHier Variety Salad4>resslng^ * STOKELY'S ^ * Tomato Juice 3 79* LIGHT, CHUNK STYLE AGP Tuna .... 5 “ 99* STOKILY WHOLE KIRNIL OR CRIAM STOKELY'I CUT GREEN BEANS___________3 ^ 49* STOKILY'S. CATSUP... 2 s; 27* breads 5..q< LOAVIS GrWt Lukas Mushrooms 'Sr 5 «-<>«■ 99* IHWIO I# CANI W m Jen# Porker All-Butter 49. A Regular 09c Value Chocolate Brownies Prlo.i EIMftlv. ThrVTUfMUy, PMt-^lJth la •» l.0».rii Mlchlg«a ARP I.H' M TM« OMAT ATI ANTIC A PACIPIC TIA COAtfANY, INC. AMIEIU'S DIPINOAEll lOOD MIEtNONT SINU IIS4 MARVEL Choeelete, Vanilla NeupelHan, Pudge Merble or ttilteracefcA Marble Ice Cream Vanilla NeupoMa ar iuttereeeieh A 49 FMdq$ici|is 12fo»49* #■ cXrton t . . .k TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1964 When you’re planning to feed a laf^ crowd, you have to check on table service. Mrs. Harold J. Abrams, Alice Street /left), and Mrs. Louis H. Golden, NoHk Lake -Angelas Hrive, work on preparations for Sunday’s first kosher-style smorgasbord at Temple Beth Jacob, Eliza^ ~ beth Lake Road. - Club Hears Speech on Infernal Journey By SIGNE KARLSTROM ing time at Acapulco are Mr. The dining room at Village and Mrs. Alfred Macksey Jr., Women’s Club was crowded and the Charles Patterson?, to capacity on Wednesday____________________________ Mrs. Irvings Bteinmany Gkippewa -Road, (right) is well known in Pontiac for her blintzes. She and Mrs. Sherwin Birnkrant of Sylvari Lake KaxtepuiThundreds of l>lintzes in the freezer for Sunday’s smorgasbord. Serving hours are 1 to 7 p m. and reservations may be made by calling Temple Beth Jacob Wednesday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tickets will also be available at the door. Af Annual Meeting ——^ '—— ’ __ DAR Discuss Defense Not Proper to Entertain in B^oudoir By The Emily Post Institute Q: I rent a room to a young ________________ ______ They Won't Belii^ If him to her room, ,.... ................. I think she should see him in the living room, or if she does ask him to her room she should leave the door ajar. Do you agree? A: I most certainly agree. If she has Uie privilege of using the living room, she should see her friend there, or if this is not satisfactory becaufe of others coming- -in -and out -and. she cannot talk -to him undisturbed, she should leave the door of her room ajar. Tell Truth to Neighbors Q: The other day I went to the beauty shop to which I_ alwa5fe“|[0,’fOT pennahmit wave. My regular operator was finishing a customer when I arrived, and she asked one of the other girls to shampoo my hair. I would like to, know if I should have given the young woman who washed my hair —a-teparate^4ipr-or-.shoiiLjny„ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: This may sound like a silly problem, but it is very serious to me. My -husband trav^ ds a lot ond T-am terrified to stay alone at night, so ^ ^e gets me a room at a mo- ^ tel while he h Bone. _.______ .1 getaH up-1 s e t s e veral • days before ABBY he leaves and I'm unbearable to live with. I realize how stupid this is, and we really can’t afford the extra expense, but I just can’t help myself. problem that I don’t tell peo- er6 brought more to -pie about it. When niy neigh- shores than an accent. bors see me coming home the brought knowledge, ambition next mpniing,JUan-4fflagine ana talent. —--------------- What should I tell theih when they ask me where I was the night before? ..- . AFRAID TDEAR AFRAID: Tell ffiem you spent the night at a mo- These are the things that made America great. Dr nttacht*d to the pres- Elaborate SwiU embroider^ by Naef with Us happy frosting flowers, is gently shaped into this short and puffed and the train sweeps back in .stately motion. All embracing ts the cathedral veil of easy sheath by Antoinette for Em- Hwiss tllusidn with its small cupped ............ The nnekt^is wide \ cap enriched with matching Swm bossy Bridals, and inw, the waLst high, the sfeeves embroidered flowers. $49.1. r Tills melh(«l helps a bride kwp an accurate list of who sent what If she sends her thank you notes all at once. Gifts should be acknowledged a.s as iKKssIble. InvltatiotKs should be addressed and mailed about three weeks lieforc the_ ceremony ;1Ta also a good time to have your hair styled and pernmnented. AAA ' All parties and showers should ttike place two to four weeks before tho wedding. .Showers should be given by friends, but relatives may give parties. AAA Tlie engaged couple should visit the florist together. Tho bridcgnwm will be responsible for the bride's iKHiqtiel. the boutonnieres and ttia corsages for' l»lh niothers. The rest of the flowers are the bride's res|X)nslbtllty. ' A A A llie bridegroom s h o u I d have a checklist of his own for the last few weeks before the wedding./ .*! * * He sh(»uld ctwmse gifts for his Im'sI man and u.sbers. plan the honeymoon, mrailge tor ■dlls wedding apparel, act as hist for a dinner for tils al-tendanls, and give the clergyman’s fee to tile heal man to present after the ceremony Card Party to Benefit Foundation Phi Kappa Tau chapter. PI Omlcrpn National Sorority Inc., have completed plans for tho annual benefit card parly and style show. They met recently In the home of Mrs. Robert Hausmun on Breaker Street, Fashions from Nadon’s Miracle Mile store *wlll highlight the Feb, 20 affair In the First FtHleral Savings of Oakland civic room. Chapter members will provide refreslimenta and d(H)r prizes. Ponailons will be fbr the Carolyn Carr chapter of Oakland County Children’s Lteu-kcmln Foundation. Mrs, Hausmun Is general chairman for Ihe state convention May lfl-17 in Kalama-/iH) Mrs, Joanne Itoe cM'lialr-inan and Mrs Alvin I left Is Imndling puhllcUy. Guest for Ihe meeting was Mrs, llobciT Nellis. MRS. ANTHONY SPENCER JEROME Afternoon Candlelight Glows for Ceremony - The Xhrist ,E p I s^o p a 1 Church In Dearborn was the .setting for the marriage on Saturday of Ellayne Veronica Class to Anthony Speqeer Jerome ill a midafternoon candlelight ceremony. Tile bride is the daughter of Mrs. Sara June Glass of Dearborn and the junior Benjamin Jeromes of East Quarlon Hoad are the brldegr(M)m’s purei^ts. Fashioned of white pcau de sole appllqued With re-embroidered A ten con lace, tho bride's gown swept Into a chapel train. The bodice featured a Sabrina neckline and wrist-point sleeves. PEARL -flARA Her bubble veil, of French Illusion was filled to a pearl tiara. She carried Stephimollfi and lilies of the valley, j Willi maid of lionor, Lynne Frail I n g. Ihe bridesmaids were Jill,,Jerome. I'lnda l,e- Tourneau and Chri.stlne G( lins. ★ A A They wore willow grei peau satin with floor-leng overskirts and matching Di bow headpieces. Their bo quels of Queen Anne's’ lai were blue. Tracy Glass attended Ir sister as flower girl. AAA Jeffrey Jerome was h brother’s best man. Job Braid, Robert Agit and Gai Newmnn comprised the usb list. Concert for PTO Die John D, Pierce PTO meeting will he held Wednesday at 7::i() p.m, Die pierce instruuieiilal and vocal music groups, will perform, Mrs. William Aebersold, principal, will present attendance areas for lluf coming sclusil year. \' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 10^ 1904 THIRTEEN JX^umode rSAUL I Free Gift Wrappi|ig 82 N. Saginaw St. for those wKo PERSPIRE HEAViiy A new anti-perspir-ant that really works! Solves lu^mrm prob- despair^ help. M Bible by new type of formula devised by a . young genius ijn pharmacy and produced by a triislwoFtnV SO^^yeai^old taboni^ tory. 90-day supply. $3.00 plus tax. At leading drug and toiletry counters. Gentle fluid forrnula^tlH>atented i^on^*^ ~p1te- ribbon position- Also, sometimes an error in typing is noted after the paper is removed from the machine. VALENTINE SPECIAL PERMANENTS —Reg. S25.00 for Bleached or Tinted Hair . .$20.00 Reg. $20.00 for Normal Hair ....$15.00 Schoolgirl Special................$10.00 All Includs: HilrcuK il»mpo« and Ml, color or cromo rInM. $2.00 BEAUTE’ RAYE 219 Auburn Ave. — Park Free — 332-2837 HARD OF HEARING ThisBEEQSQis Valuable it will'bring you ^EE^lNFORMATiDN^ - about tho amazing now CONSUL ^ Behind the Ear Aid ADDRfSS.............................. CITT............................STATE.. Maico Dotrolt Co., 522 David Wh»noy Bldg. DWroit 26, Mich. WO 1-2691 Maico Medical Village 31815 SoulMiold Rd. Birminghodi, Mich. 644-2175 SAVEu.,o^100 on a magnificent IVIagn