, / -Tfm Wtoffitr ; VM. Wwtbtr'MrtM VWMut Cmhi^, cekler Iwilibl. Chance ef mow flnriei THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 120 NO. 227 ★ ★ ★ ★ P^lftlAC. MIClIlQAJf. TUESbAY, OCTOBBE 80/ 1962-.28 PAGES vmrn'i^WM^’nuK^^ UF Campaign Nears Halfway Mark ^ Women Reach ★ it ★ ★ ★ ' V■ ★ it '•it' . it ' WASHINGTON (AP)-The United States aerial surveillance of Cuba, as well as Its arms blockade, has been stopped for the two days during which Acting U.N. Secretary General U Thant is conferring in Havana. Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense, announced at a Pentagon briefing shortlybefore noon the temporary suspension of the aerial surveillance. The blockade had been suspended at “We are not continuing surveillance today," Sylvester said, then added that it was suspended for Related Stories, Page 13 the two days of Thant’s meeting in Havana. Thant left New York this forenoon for the critical negotiations in Cuba with Prime Minister Fidel Castro. ★ w w Sylvester had no report on the Thant OH for Cuba, Hopeful of Success UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. Thant, acting retary general of the United Nations, left for Cuba today on a mission dedicated to "a speedy and peaceful settlement” of the situation which l^rought a world-^ alarming crisis between U.N. Refuses Margin Wider Than Defeat Last Year UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) --ifed Ghlneilitfersd a resounding defeat today vrhen the General As-.sembly rejected its latest U.N. membership by a bigger margin than a year ago. w * ★ 11)0 vote was 42 in favor, 56 against and 12 abstaining. Last year, the result was 36 for, 48 against and 20 abstaining. In both cases it was far less than the required two-thirds majority. The main switch was among some of the new African members. The vote was seen as a big victory for the Western powers who had strongly opposed the sealing of Red China. They argued that the Peiping regime’s military action against India demonstrated its Unfitness for membership. WWW At the last minute, some of the African countries came out for two-China plan under which both Red China and the Chinese Nationalists would get U.N. seats. They declined, however, to make a formal proposal. WWW India, as expected, voted for the Soviet resolution in spite of Indian charges that the Chinese Communists were carrying out premeditated aggression against Indian territory. In Today's Prass MoK/fig Hay , . . While sun shinas, Alabama GOP using anti-4rxfoellAgT^,PAa^ft> , ^ 'Mote Pay 'isfofo ,yylu^|h»t lot' fane High And mighty Khvpshchnu has down pr has lyit -A*, , IMMiivio the United States and Russia. Smiling and seemingly confident, Thant and an 16-man U.N. team took off by chartered Jet aligns a.m7 The pfin^^^ in Havana at 1 p.m. WWW He paused to make only a brief statement before boarding the Jet at Idlewild Airport. It was in response to a single question as to whether- he was confident of the success of his ‘T am looking forward to a fruitful exchange of ideas Cuban Premier Fidel Castro and other Cuban leaders with a view to achieving a speedy and peaceful settlement of the problem,’’ he said. Thant was accompanied by a U.N. team as he left to set up machinery for a U.N. check to make sure Soviet Premier Khrushchev keeps his pledge to remove Soviet missile bases from Cuban soil. In preparation for h|s trip, Thant held another round of talks Monday with top diplomats of the United States, Soviet Union and Cuba. TO LIFT BLOCKADE The way for Thant’s visit was smoothed by the White House announcement that at the secretary-general’s request it would lift the U.S.' naval blockade during h 1 s stay. Thant released a letter he sent Khrushchev Sunday expressing belief the situation In the Carib- results of aerial reconnaissanceicharge of analysis of the pictures. I making conclusions because therelof Sunday morning is too short to flights carried out by U.S. planes Sylvester said he now could *re certain evaluation procedures allow us to expect conclusive evi-Monday. mv “Analysis of aerial nictures *® Rut he harf a further esnia- Tii i - [T accuracy of the results Obtained. Soviet Premier Khrushchev If ie Heial ta LLzC L| MU iMOOhin IISIVF' ‘hat message that So- latiOII of inO uOlay in analyzing L«a#Arliil HiopInBAdl nnil a nuinatgiir. INIXINCLUsSIVKi „ie^* 1m rSikA itf/tt.M the reconnaiaaance delay in «®*lyz|®g material disclosed and a painstak- ling comparison of that material “All of this takes time, despite be dismantled. I with previously obtained material published reports to the contrary. He said he had talked this jin order to obtain accurate find- “In addition, the time since morning with top officials injings. One has to be careful aboutichairman Khrushchev’s messagel Sylvester would not elabor-(Continued on Page 2, Col. U LAND-WATER CRAFT — Two of the Army’s newest dual vehicles, a Land Vehicle Amphibious (left), and a Kristi were among nearly 30 troop carriers demonstrated on and around ,. Tlie demonstration was conducted by the Detroit Arsenal in Center Line to show the capabilities of these vehicles in remote areas. Vehicles Here 150 Persons Witness Demonstration are pulled out and the bases disnmnUed. Military and dvillatl yesterday were given a long look at the newest production and experimental armed forces vehicles. WWW Nearly 30 vehicles from the size of a scooter to several-ton armored tractors were demonstrated to 150 persons at a testing site just east of the city limits and on Galloway Lake. w w w The purpose of the demonstration was to show (he capabilities of vehicles being developed for use In remote areas — Korea, Viet Nam and southeast Asia. The Research and Engineering Division of the Detroit Arsenal in Center Line put on the demonstration, which included the testing of a few Canadian vehicles and some developed for the Marine Corps. WWW “What we wanted to show was the ability of these machines to operate in swampy areal,” an officer from the Arsenal explained. ‘I think we succeeded." w Sr w Land-water craft were demonstrated at Galloway Lake in (he afternoon part of the program. DETROIT m — General Motors Corp. reported yesterday record profits for the first nine months The world’s biggest manufacturing firm earned $962 million. The previous high was $913 million the first nine months of the h®om'^‘i“jJj“‘j^'J‘g^' year of 1965. Nirte^Motith Mark GM Profits Record High ESamings per share la the first nine months of 1962 were $3.36, topping the 1955 mark of $3.11. ^les for the first nine months this year also set a record. They totaled $10.45 billion compared with the previous record of $9.54 Bundle Up, It May Freeze Here Tonight Better bundle up tonight as temperatures are expected to hit a freezing 32 in the Pontiac area. The U.S. Weather Bureau said tonight will be mostly cloudy and colder but tomorrow temperatures will hit a high of 48. Pair and cool is the forecast for ’Thursday. Morning southwesterly winds at 10 miles per hour will become 10 to 25 m.p.h. late today and shift to northerly tonight. From 10:15 yesterday morning until the same hour today .2 of an inch in showers fell in ^wntown Pontiac. Prior to 8 a.m. the low recording was 38. The reading was 45 at 2 p.m. GM’s worldwide payrolls totaling $2.84 billion for January through September set another record. The previous top was $2.50 billion for the first nine months of 1960. This year’s third quarter earnings of $186 mUUon fell short, however, of the first and second quarters. The third quarter earnings came on sales of $2.7$ bUlhm. But third quarter results were considerably ahead of the same period a year ago when a strike in September crippled GM’s auto production. In the first nine months last year earnings totaled $528 or $1.83 a share. GM’s chairman, Frederic G. Donner, and president, John F. Gordon, said the company’s 1962 volume “reflected a continuation during the third quarter of a high level of general business activity and of consumer confidence together with a strong customer preference for GM products, both automotive and nonautomotive." Public response to 1963 automobile models was described as encouraging. Ford Motor Co. last Mrted a record nine-month profit of $350.4 million. Chrysler reported a net of $15.1 mijlion. India Turns Tables at last. Attacks Chinese at Border FROM OUR NEWS WIRES NEW DELHI —- Indian troops fought the invading Communist Chinese to a standstill today and went on the attack themselves at the eastern end of tlie disputed bolder. A government spokesman disclosed a series of “probing” attacks by the Indians for the first time since the Red Chinese stepped up»^ their invasion of the border region 10 days ago. . Battles appeared to be .sliaping up In the Himalayas as both .sides jwured in reinforcements. For the first time the defense ministry told of Indian forces own against the Communists. The only setback reported today was loss of one small military outpost on the Tibetan border in the center of the North East Frontier Agency. Bolstered by American and British weapons to be rushed here by air, a feeling of confidence swept the nation and shook It out of the despair created by a aeries of retreats since the Communists launched their offensive Oct. 29. A high Soviet military source said in Moscow that the Soviet Union would ship no arms to India since It supperts Red ChfaM’s territorial dlaims. TbiB mona.stery town of Towaiig and at Walong, 250 miles to the east near the Burma border. HELD ON ALL FRONTS’ Tbe Indian army chief of staff earlier told his embattled forces that the invaders were being held ‘on all fronts.’’ Observers also noted the slow-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 6) FIRB LEVELS BARN — Firemen from four North Oakland Oounty departments yesterday battled a bam fire on' the. Buckner-Wood Farm, at USO Granger Road; between Oxford and Ortonville. Another barn fire at 152 Taylor Road, Pontiac Tbwnship, destroyed 32 head of catfle. See story Page 10. 1 of cattle. S TheirGoal; Hit 100.3 Pet. 500 Attond Victory Luncheon Today at Elks Temple The Pontiac Area United Fund campaign has reached 45 per cent of it’s goal, with contributions totaling $318,496.48 to date. Fred V. Haggard, campaign ■ chairman, made the announcement today at a Women’s Division victory luncheon at Pontiac Elks Temple. The women’s division has already surpassed its quota. Haggard praised Mrs. Joseph Fox, women’s division chairman, and her committee leaders fur “having done an outstanding job in reaching their goal during the first 10 days of the campaign.’’ Some 500 women’s division campaign workers attended the luncheon. Mrs. Fox reported that the three groups in the division have surpassed their goal, having repledges of $28,296 or 100.3 per cent of the total «ivi> on goal of $28,214. ★ A ★ She thanked the women, noting that“theweatiter has been unfavorable but our women have never been daunted." Both the Lake Angelus and Waterford Township groups reported victories while the Pontiac group reported it still had work to do to complete its quota. Mrs. Earl White, Pon*'ic chairman, said her group has raised $15,549, or 98.1 per cent of its $15,848 quota. The Lake Angelus group foss raised $3,026 or 109.3 per cent of its $2,768 quota. ★ A A Waterford Township women under Mrs. Frank Rulkowski reported $9,723 received to date —101.3 per cent of the township’s $9,596.57 quota. A A A Reports were also made on the progress of industrial, commercial and professional campaign divisions. Buel Starr, plant chairman at Pontiac Motor Division, said the industrial division has raised ^1,977 or 43.2 per cent of its quota. 90% 80% m 60% 50% 40% Flashes DETROIT (I — Four men ■ were Injured, one critically, when an explosion occurred today In the hold of the sunken freighter Montrose during salvage operations. WASHINGTON (ff) - The United States set off a nuclear test blast in the atmosphere today in the Pacific Ocean area near Johnston/IsIand» (ho Atomic Energy Commisslen an- Avon Divorcee Arraigned for Embezzling A young Avon Township divorcee was arraigned yesterday in U.S. District Court, Detroit, on a charge of embezzling funds from her former employer. The Pontiac Co-op Federal Credit Union. AAA. Mrs. Mamie Dale Ostrander, 26, 2772 Leach Road, appeared voluntarily on a charge of obtaining fictitious loan from the credit lion, 156 W. Huron St., where she was head bookkeeper until a week ago. The FBI said that she was involved in embezzling $43,660 in the last two and half years, $23,-600 of which has been repaid. It was discovered just recently that the credit union had a shortage of funds totaling $20,000, said Itonaid J. Wilde, treasurer - general manager of the credit union. ' ' , . A A, A Mrs. Ostrander was charged specifically with embezzling $880 on June 16, 1960. BEGAN IN 1969 The Federal Bureau of Investigation, following its investigation, said that Mrs. Oatrander, 2772 Leach Road, began in June 1980, to take proceeds from the ^it union on loans that were made out in the names of fictitious pe^ ■ms. A' A' , t An employe of the dredit union since December 1989, Mrs. Oatrander, the FBI said, had pte-(Oontinuad on Page 2, Ool. D 30% 20% /$% w ’564.894 i500,rtS ’429,670 086,445 ^3,062 t2/(832 il76.m H0S9HS. ■1 THB PONTIAC FmS8, !ft7BSDAY, OCTOBm 80. im By The Associated ITom . i are on the verge of losing this Republican George Romney’s elwUon. and they’re afraid of loa- political nmtopcade raced thrbui^iNl”---- Western Mkdiigan yesterday, cov- ering a wide territory in his campaign for the governor's election one week from today. DemocrattC’Gov. John B. Swainson was jtart as busy in a more coaceidrated area in Detroit where his party has its biggest fol- WOMAN SAVED -.Struck by a truck, a car burst into flames yesterday on South Telegraph Road in Bloomfield Township. The driver of the car, Mrs Lois Breithart, 48, of 131 S. Ascot Road, Waterford Township, was pulled free by the truck driver, Jakes region and northern New England. Scattered showers are forecast for the lower bikes and the Atlantic Coast states north of Florida. It will lie ^ooMar In the Plains states, the Misshufppl, Ohio and Tennessee ' e Lakes area; wanner In northern New England vallays and the 1 awl the weslarh Campaigning in Detroit area’s 16th Congressional District, Swainson said President Kennedy’s name “is not on the ballot, but his program is before us in this elecUon - particularly in the election of congressmen.’’ Swainson spoke at a hmeheon sponsored by the district’s Dem-ooratic amgressman, John I^sin-ski. Romney toW a Muskegon mUy “there is a growing evidence of disorganization and confusion’’ in the Democratic campaign. He ffnirf this was shown by a Dem-ooratkj attack during the wedc on the Committee for Honest Elections formed by a nonpartisan group in Detroit to check on reg-istratkms and prevent fraudulent voting. ‘THEY’RE AFRAID’ Romney said, “Such near hysterical reaction by the opponent’s camp is not evidence of confidence and self assurance. They Fireworks Hit Negro's Dormitory OXFORD, Miss. (41-Students at the University of Mississippi bombarded the dormitory of James H. Meredith with firecrackers early today. But the start of classes this morning found the campus quiet. Meredith, a 29-year-old Negro, went to his classes as usual—his 22nd day—with no signs of trou- ble. The firecracker attack was the most serious incident since bloody rioting that greeted Meredith’s arrival on the Vill-white campus four weeks ago. The Army alerted an extra platoon of white-helmetcd military police but did not use them. Student leaders, faculty members and Army officers attributed the explosive campus feeling to Missi^ippi's coming football game with Louisiana State. No arrests were made, but the MPs chased students away from Baxter Hall, the ivy-coated itory where Meredith has a two-room apartment.' About 200 students peppered the walls of Baxter Hall with cherry bombs-small firecrackers which make a tremendous noise. Some were hurled by sling shuts. MADE APPEAL Student affairs Dean L. L. Love continually appealed to students to disperse and by 2 a m. the campus was quiet. ‘‘They’re taking their feelings it abwt the football game on Meredith,” said one student lead- There won’t be much sleep going on up here this week," said another, who asked not to be named. ‘‘All the hell raising will be about the game.” The university’s football team ■undefeated this .season—go« Baton Rouge Saturday night to play LSU. The Intense rivalry between the schools, both perennial national football powers, has made the contest a national«‘ sic in recent years. Army officers asked the aid of campus police in quelling (he disturbance, but Dran Love said they were insufficient in number \ handle any major disturbance. Officers said they did not want » have soldiers act against students unless It became necessary. Hopefuls Tear This Last Week He predicted Democrats ' frantical^ pudi more metrente panic buttons” before •lection day. SwatosoB toU • rally spoa-mnA by the OB aad Chemical Worfcm UaliB la Wyandotte there ii neliilag mroaf with At Maskegon Monday night, Romney declared: “I sense victory in the air. It is the cieao, fresh smell ol victory set lor me or the RcpabUcaa par^ fw the peo|de el “Michigan can match any state,” he declared. “Sometimes it gets me a Uttle exasperated to hear my opponent talk about jobs. 1 think what he js really interested in is my job and perhaps President Kennedy’s job.” In a speech to a group of public school teachers, the governor said he strongly favors federal aid to education and pledged he will work for hljdier pay for teachers. “Teachers,” he said, “should be paid at least as well as a middle-income executive in private In- City Atty. William A. Ewart today said that the police department’s recent “foot race case” has been dropped and won’t be taken before the Police Trial Board. Flights, Blockade Stopped (or 2 Days The case concerned two patrolmen who ran the length of the Madison Junior High School foot-field early one morning “in an effort to stay awake.” Police Chief Joseph Koren had recommended the sergeant OB duty at the time be (Continued From Page One) ate, but the meaning of his statement seemed to ^ simply that the Defense Department does not yet know whether dismantling work has. homiM: started. He was asked by a reporter if the United SUtes were not taking a chance in suspending surveillance for two days. Sylvester replied that ‘‘everymove that has been taken has been taken with consideration of all contingencies.” NO WORD ON SUBS He was also asked about the disclosure Monday night by an informed government source that two Soviet submarines had been detected and had surfaced in the quarantine-patrolled waters. In response, Sylvester observed that Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara had announced last week that the Defense Department would not be the source of information on movements of Soviet navy ships. failing to report the incident. Police Triat Board action became necessary when the officer challenged the penalty on grounds that the patrolmen were merely trying to perform their duties more alertly. “At a meeting between Koren and.staff officers,” Ewart said; staff was too trivial to warrant further action and the recommended penalty was withdrawn. Sylvester said that he would have "no comment, whatsoever on any Soviet ships of any sort.” The U.S. Navy’s ships and planes suspended the sfr-day-old blockade for two days as dawn broke across the wide area they are patroUiog to the Atlantic around Commnnist Cuba. The blockading force remained on station, ready to resume the quarantine if ordered to do so. The White House announced the ly night and said was being done at the request U N. Acting Secretary-General Thant. The U.N. official head-rd for Havana for talks with Fidel Castro lOn proposed U.N. supervision of the missile removal as agreed to by Soviet Premier Khrushchev. As a practical matter, the lifting of the quarantine for the lime betog means little. No Soviet ships wen :he qnarantlae that all those suspected of bearing offensive wenpons to Cuba had already disappeared Informed government sources reported Monday night that UJ. destroyers and aircraft had darted aifd trailed more than two Viet stlbnwrtoes for about two days last week in the quarantine TRAVEL SEPARATELY The Soviet craft were traiiedjtt ntil they surfaced and recharged their batteries, then went their way without incident, the said. The Soviet subs were traveling separately, informsnts Indi- fi Racing Officers Case Dropped Quake in Nicaragua MANAGUA, Nicaragua strong earth shock was felt at dawn today along the Pacific coastal strip. No damages were reported. Disneyland for Nikita? BARSTOW, Calif. (WB-A suggestion that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush-chev be Mlowed to visit Disneyland as a reward (or he^iiiig ease tensions in the C^ban crisis was offered today by neura-paper publkdier Charles K. Dooley. Dooley, who publiikes the Oeeert Dispaldi at this southern Califernto desert city, made the suggestion In ■ telegram to President Kennedy and Rep. Harry Sheppard. D^tolif. “In view of Khrushchev's decision to take a ^ sensible attitude in regard f to the Cuban crisis, the f Desert Dispatch believes m that he should be allo*ed | to attend Disneyland with ® his wife with the full protection of the U. S. armed forces,” the telegram « said, 4 (B2); wliile outdoor and reoreatkmal facilities niuit be estabUahed in commuhity busltwss (B3) zones. The changes to the city’s zoning ordinance were only two of several apfsreved by tto eom- ttie revisions are part of a long-range plan to rework the city’s zoning ordinance. Although trailer camps already had been covered by several restrictions here, they never have been restricted to qweial zoning districts, According to City CteTk Irene E. Hanley. India Attacks Red Chinese (Continued From Page One) tog up of the Chinese drive, possibly as tiie Reds regrouped for furtiier attacks. The spokesman announced the Indian forros had nnoved into a limited offensive action in the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA). w * ★ The use of heavy mortars in this and other actions marked the first time that the Indians apparently had been able to match the Chinese in firepower. Previous reports indicated that the use of heavy mortars by the Reds had been instrumental in the success of their initial drive through the Himalayan border re- The government spokesman's indicated that the Chinese tactics to their own advintage. Strong Indian forces were being rushed to the 2M!-mile-high Se to try to blunt a Chine.se threat to the thickly populated Assam plains. Informed sources said the Indians recaptured Jang, four miles east of Chinese-held To-wang, which put them in a better position for defense of Assam. Bimiiiighaiii Area News ^ To Umif Trailer Camps to Certain Zoned Areas BIRMINGHAM ~ The City, CommiMion last night voted to limit trailar camps anc' recreaUonal faciUtlM to specifically zoned areas in Blmtinjduun. .ceutlcal manufacturing (or / Parke, Divis & Co., luu been/ citein^ of tho eooBMuiy’i gestion committee sliioe 1H7. Anysfuture state Uoensed frail-' will he illowed only UjS. Rep. W111 i a m S. Broom-field. R-Oakland County, last night announced a new kind of foreign nd Oak- aid program that would send 0 lend County leaders to South America. In other action, the commission dedicated a former private thoroughfare, Old Salem Court, as a public street. Commissioners also acted favorably on a request by City Manager L. R. Gare, who asked that special sectkws of Muaicipal Parking Lot No. S at Woodward Avenue and Willetts Street be set aside for leased parking. Formerly, persons who leased parking spaces there could leave their cars in any section of the lot. This led to complaints by merchants and shoppers that the. best parking spaces nearest the downtown stores were being used by Oakland County would “iidiq>t the community of Cali, Ckilomhia, in the program which has received preliminary approval from the federal government. Broomfield ennounced the program, the first of its kind, at last night’s meeting of the Pontiac Leagne of Women Voters at Pontiac Northern High School. He outlined the plan to assist Cali, a city of more than . 400,000 and “a community just beginning to experience growing pains similar to those we had here to Oakland (bounty.” The lessees will be issued a letter directing them to park their cars in specified sections in the north and west areas of the Bloomfield said today the officials of Colombia have been contacted informally and have ex-expressed approval of the plan. HOPES TO SET PATTERN He hopes the Cali project will “set the pattern for the Alliance for Progress throughout Latin America.” lot. Norman B. Stanton, 1075 Oxford Road, is president of the Greater Detroit Council on Alcoholism, which starts a campaign to increase public knowledge of alcoholism Nov. 25. Nov. 25 through Dec. 2 has been proclaimed Alcoholism Information Week thronghont the country, Stanton said. He pointed out that the purpose of the campaign is to inform the public that there Is effective help available to alcoholics at the council’s center at 3919 John R Ave., Detroit. He Mid he worked out the program with the Agency for International Development during the past year because the Alliance was “unable or unwilling to nwve from broad generalities to specifics” and overseas assistance 'simply isn’t getting down to the people it is supposed to help.” Under the plan, Oakland County would supply Cali with land planners, en^eers, architects, public administrators, educators and iabsr I e a d c r s as Edwin F. Lau of 2745 Ayrshire Drive, Bloomfield Township, has been elected to the board of directors of the National Associa-on of Suggesstion Systems. Lau, superintendent of pharma- ; i Interior of Wrecked Railroad Car Gravel Truck Rams Train, 2 Killed ANAHRIM, Calif. CAP)-TWO paraoM died mid mora than N others were tnjurad when a gravel truck rammsd the entter of a train, i|wwlng rocks and for San DIago, were derailed in the wreck Monday. Tlw trudk as hunted to death. A train passenger was the other gm In the coachea. * a ♦ The impact broke the train in two; One car careened wildly into a trestle and a steel I-beam from the bridge railing speared into the Four cars of the aevemi^ar^San jSanta Fe train bound Eliegan, i rocks the Bile of golf balls from tite truck’s load rained down on TWenty-nIne passengers were hoepltalized, many with broken legs. Several others were treated at the scene and released, Identified. The passenger who died was a Navy recruit seated at the spot where the truck struck. When It hit, scats toppled, passengers flew through the air and “Tha front of the car Just a right back like a pteoe of r belzf rolled back ” , _ big hunka of gravel canm (lyh^ In,” a passenger, Army Pfe IMvin Best, 19, mid afterward. “One guy started yelling, ‘goodbye’ to his buddies.” The tram was traveling about 65 miles an hour when the ao: ddent occurred, C. R. Robirton, assistant general manager of Aan-ta Fe, mid. ............... County in Rian toAidCoWia Broomfield Announces New Kind of Program ’Piey would help Cali prepare plans to cope with its future growth, Broomifield mid. The population of Cali and its suburbs is expected to double within the next few years. The program would be organized andcoordinatedby Broomfield. County leaders would spend from a few weeks to a few months in the South American Broomfield said the area Is rich in natural resources tliat are not being utilized properly. Pair Swindles Woman,72,of Life Sayings Police today sought two elderly men who swindled an elderly Pontiac Township woman out of her $3,300 life savings in n “good faith” I Mrs. Barbara Plesha, 72, of 082 S. Squirrel Road, told sheriff’s deputies that a man came to her grocery last Wednesday and spoke to her In her native Yugoslavian tongue about buying her atore. Ra rehned yasisirdny, M-lelrod farter fay anetter man wfeMilMhrtNdiNtedf The sscond man related how father with a $M0 loan in ino and now that his father was rich he wanted to repay it wKfa interest before he died. w * ★ Ho showed her a roll of bills hich ho mid coaUrtned H0,000 and it was hers If aba would show him how much monoy ahi had put away In tha bank. When they ratunted from the ingaandthelrollofmoiMiyinliand-kwchtef aad ptecad tt la a wooden I bait was Own pni la a M htha Hvtef ream. Ute nfla'vttns PMHr wNM Pi When they dfaln’l return, Mrs. • slorn itext to t to ms cabinet diM R contained onlyjtewwwiter, (DM to tho aiw of currency. 1 .,v THB;V(M^U^^RBS8. TOBSPAY, OCTOBIR 80, 1868 Anatrix' Mdther| / pies at Age 95 ' teWORD, Mui. (AP)—Mn. Amy OUi Eerhart, gs, mothor of •vlatrix Amelia Earhart, died in a nursliig home^t^y. Her daughter vanUhed with nav< igator Fred Hoonan near Howland Island in the south Pacific during an aroun^the world flight in 1937. Mrs. Muriel Morrissey. • daughter with whom Mrs. Ear-hart made- her home in recent years, saW h«r mother did not give up hepe for the aviatris until INI. “ThM she resigned herself and came east to live with Although her daughter presumably died in an sir crash, Mrs. Earhart never hesitated to fly and used to fly from the.West Coast to visit Mrs. Morrissey, her only JFK and Nikita on Nobel Prize Secret List? OSIX). Norway (UP!) - Both President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khruschev are believed to be on the secret list of candidates for the Nobel Peace Prize this year, informed sources said yesterday. w ★ ★ However, the sources doubted whether the two world leaders would share the prize. They also noted that Khrushchev's Cuba offor had not increased chances for selection. ★ ★ * There is speculation the Nobel Prize committee could decide there is no . basis for selection of a candidate this year. Asks Divorce From Wife in A^stiralia DETROIT W — The International romance of Thonus Noland of River Rouge and Mrs. Shirley Thomas of NewcastteL>ustralla, Bs ended in dhroreu court here, Noland, tt, sued tor divorce yesterday. He complained his 85-year-old bride would not adjust to life in the United States and had packed up and gone home. w He said she lived with him for bs than two months after their marriage in Australia last Jan. 2. Noland was b bachelor until he went thredgh a trunk last year and found among his war souvenirs a picture of Shirley. She was the girl he met when his Army unit was shipped to Newcastle during World War II. Their wedding followed a renewal of correspondence and Noland’s trip to Australia to see her. Her first husband had died. ....★...★...★.... Noland's divorce complaint said the marriage didn't work out because she “would not discuss the problems that newlyweds should discuss’’ and that she stayed awake nights, smoking and taking sedatives. He also complained that she washed only her personal laundry and sent everything else out. ★ * ★ Mrs. Noland has until Nov. 21 to file a reply. Noland is a state food inspector. UNSING m - Pressure Is bto ing put on the State Civil Commission to reconunend a pay for state workers for next year. ■ w Two groups representing state workers urged pay increases at a Crash Kills Driver OPI — Clarence Del-den, 20, Petersburg, was killed yesterday when his car struck a tree along Summerfield Road, 20 miles southwest of Monroe. FreMure Gfoiq^s -2 W 9t90 p.M. REMINGTON llectric Shavur RECBNOmONED HoMt A FUU eUlOS For iMfor Mllon Automatic Yapoiiiers Electrie Heating POds^ }.-.*SSL 'THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 80, liwa nGOP Aims fof Lansing, i»; ... for Oakfcmd While Michigan Republicans hope for a change from 14 years Democratic rule in the state capital, it's the DemocraUc party ttwt's fighting to reverse things in Oakland County. Birmingham attorney George J. Fulkerson is waging an energetic campaign to unseat' RepuWican Congressmah William S. Broon^ field, who has represented the l«th District (Oakland County) in Congress since 1956 and is seeking a fourth term. Before Broomfield. Repub- I from a U.S. assistant secretary liean Geprge A. Dondero held of state praiiiiif hlni ^ “all the seat for U years, making a ‘ total of M years of nninterrpat-ed possession of the post by the GOP. The 36-year-old Fulkerson, v*o lives at 3160 Middlebui^ lJUie, Bloomfield Township has concentrated his attack on Bloomfield’s positions on domestic issues, primarily medicare, ON FOREIGN POUCY Broomfield, however, is em-hasizing his role in foreign policy. A member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, he says he is ‘ one of the most ardent sup-iwrters of President Kennedy’s bipartisan foreign policy.” He recently received a letter ydor help on the State Department’s leglilative Broomfield, 40, who lives at 1116 S. Lafayette. Royal Oak, when he’aiwt in Washington, la a inem-ber of the Far Fast and National Security subcommittees of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. His current concern, like that of most Americans today, is the Cuban crisis. The Pontiac Press local candidates to appear for Congress and the Others offices wUl be begins a brief discussion of the on the Nov. 6 ballot. Candidates Senate are presented today, later this week. a House rule requires a no vote from anyone introducing a motion to send a resolution back to committee for changes. Broomfield said he n.ade such a motion of hypocrisy in writing letters of ........... to higt • • Fulkerson, however, accuses because he wanted to make the him of "obstructionism” for voting against, a Sept. 27 congressional resolution authorizing President Kennedy to use force, if necessary, against Cuba. But Broomfield explained that ★ ★ ★ resolution stronger and give the President more flexibility in dealing with the Cuban situation. In a number of speeches in the county, Fulkerson has charged that Broomfield is against federal aid to colleges and accused him TAKES NO STAND Fulkerson, a strong supporter of President Kennedy’s medicare prpgram, says Broomfield refuses to take a stand on the medicare Meanudilla, he domiitently vottn 'against ^ vary programa which the peopid of the county need and have supporM in his polU and que8tlQnau«a,l!’-FuIkersoa claims. " xmtaeld, Whom cunpaiin . ... abhrevtated by a late journmeht of Gbngrees, blamee Democrats in the 1)ouse and Senate tor failure of federal aid to colleges legislation. , s lican incumbent of waging “a program of public deception by spending Inpayers’ money to ★ ★ He said Democrats preyented a compromise between House and Senate after the Senate tacked on a scholarship program to the House bill that "would have wrecked the student loan program now in effect.’’ Incumbent’s Stand Disputed GEORGE J. FULKERSON The statement of George J. Fulkerson is as follows: The overriding issue before Congress is medicare — the President’s national health care program for the elderly, financed by the individual citizen during his working years through Social Security and recently expandcid to cover those not now under Social Security by a special con-gre.ssional appropriation. WILLIAM S BROOMFIELD Candidates Agree on Tax Solut ion The statement of Congressman! Tax reform in Michigan is get-William S. Broomfield )s as fobbing a big share of the attention Ipws: With the threat of the Cuban crisis hanging over our heads, this is no time for partisan political considerations. We are relieved that, at last, action has replaced words in our foreign policy toward Cuba, and that the White House has met its Neither private insurance plans responsibility head on and has nor the current Kerr^Mills pro-1 left no doubt in the minds of gram can do the job. Barely 50 per cent of our senior citizens have private health insurance of any kind and even fewer will be able to afford it if proprosed increases go into effect. As for kerr-Miils, fewer than 2 per cent of Michigan’s sdnipr citizens were helped during the program's first year — and those who were forced to rely on it had to take what was virtually a pauper’s oath. We have heard cries that medicare is "socialistic" and that Kerr-Mills is a fine plan. Yet the charge of “socialistic” is much more applicable to Kerr-Mills, under which the individual has no choice of hospital or doc- tor. Khrushchev and Company as to what our position is. In the past, I have been critical of our policy toward Cuba because I thought it was too weak and vacillating to be effective. In (he House pf Represento-tives, I was sponsor of a strong resolution to give the President broader power to resist the Russian threat in Cuba, unilaterally if necessary. Although this strong resolution did not pass, I am happy to note that the President acted in the spirit of M resbIutToh T sponsored as he should have, taking the lead rather than delegating our nation to a position where we were followers rather than lead- Medicare, on the other hand, would allow him to maintain his dignity and his free choice by the simple means of contributing 25 cents a week while he is working so (hat he can meet his health care needs after he retires. n the race for Oakland County’s 12th District State Senate seat, and wth candidates agree on the main solution — a state income tax. Republican Farrell E. Roberts, seeking his second term in the senate post, voted for an income tax n the last session. His challenger, L e I a n d H. Smith, a Highland Park Junior College political science instructor in his first major political contest, doesn’t agree, however, that Roberts supports an income tax for the state. Smith points to Roberts’ later V 01 e to reconsider the tax and In view of my opponent’s decisive retreat, his current lip service to fiscal reform has a hollow ring.” sufficient support was available, Roberts says. Roberts, 40, of 2486 Lafay Drive, West Bloomfield Township, also sees the proposed new constitution s a crucial issue. He says the document is far superior to the state’s present constitution and claims Democratic opposition is strictly partisan. Roberts says his changed vote was dictated by parliamentary strategy. He did not want the income tax to pass without other parts „oLa total tax reform package and there were’t enough votes to pass the package, he explains. He voted to reconsider because a move to pass the total package could be made again when gree from the University of Michigan. Smith is a member of the Oak Park Board of Education, is a graduate of Western Michigan University and holds a master’s The 38-year-old Smith, who lives at 23014 Oak Crest St., Oak Park, considers the State Senate apportionment issue important.' ‘Oakland County desperately needs senatb reapportionment,’' he says. Roberts served four years in the state hou?e of representatives before he was elected to the senate two years ago. When not in Lansing, he shares a Keego Harbor law office with West Bloomfield Township Justice of the Peace Elmer C. Die-terle. An enthusiastic supporter FGeorge W. Romney for governor, Roberts served as an assistant prosecutor in Oakland County after military service from 1950 to 1952. He is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and has a law de- The City Commission will be sked tonight to approve a resolution authorizing the city to apply for its first direct federal loan for land acquisition in Pontiac’s second urban renewal program. Appraisals of properties to be purchased in the R44 project have been completed and most of the purchase prices have been approved by federal officials. This is the type of leadership we have really needed in recent months, not only in our resistance | to the growth of Communist mil-j itary power in Cuba, but in areas other than those of the military many parts of the world. Seeking Board Approval for Plans of New Schools 0 a r d members will also receive a copy of the official fourth-Friday-of-September enrollment report. The report is used to termine state assistance to the school district. The Pontiac Board of Education will be asked to approve architectural planning fora new junior high school and a new elementary school at its 7:30 p.m. meeting Thursday. The se.ssion will Ik* held in the board offices, 40 Patterson St. The c 0 n s t r u c t i o n of the new schools —■ to cost an estimated $2 million — was recommended for board study by Supt. Dana P. Whitmer at the Iasi board meeting. The $1.5-million junior high school would be constructed, for 600 students, at a site on the east side of Baldwin Avenue just south of the Pontiac city limits. I « A A ! Wanted: One experienced trial A site for the 10-room elcmen- lawyer to prosecute law violators tary school exists east of Cottage on behalf of the people. Wanted Street and north of Murphy Park.jbadly. The school is expected to cost an County Seeking a Prosecutor Experienced Lawyer Needed to Fill Staff estimated $457,000. A study is also being made to expand the Irving School blinding at 1830 W. Square Lake Road, to accommodate liliary services, physical education, music programs, noon lunches and meetings (or parents and pupils. Dr. Hliilmer announced. No such facilities are available at the school now. An exact recom- mendation Is being prepared for board consideration, Whitmer OTHER BUSINESS In other board business, members will be asked to discuss two requests from district teachers. One asks payment of all accumulated sick leave to the estate of a deceased teacher. The oilier asks for providing sabbatical leaves of absence. ‘ An independent audit of t h e acbool district’s books also will be presented at the meeting. Asst. Supt. William Lacy will preaent a report on educational Ipleviston and th« Khool district’s jdMi for its use. . Oakland County Prosecutor George F. Taylor wants him for his staff of assislanl prosecutors. Taylor’s staff has M FOUR ITEMS This is one of four Hems concerning urban renewal which will be on the agenda of the 8 p.m. meeting. The other three are title search and appraisal contracts needed for a revised R20 project plan recently proposed by urban renewal staffers. These items were deferred from last week’s meeting. The proposed revision ol Pontiac’s first renewal project area would see it exited to FARRELL E. ROBERTS The statement of Sen. Farrell Roberts is as follows: T li e constitutional convention was a mandate of the people with many nonpartisan citizen organizations actively supporting a calling of the convention. Democrats Insisted that it be ba.sed on partLsan lines. Today, because they couldn’t scuttle the sound recommendations of the delegates, they claim j, that eon<’on giuifetl. Because Republicans were responsible for writing this superior document, the Democrats are opposed to it. _________ I had the mo|t consistent .voting. man short of Its authorized | record for tax reform in the Sen- strength of IS assistant prosecu- (bis year. The tax package tors since J. Robert Sterling resigned Oct. 19 to enter private practice in Birmingham. I am unable to get an experienced trial lawyer for the salary the county pays,” Taylor said. He indicated tlie salary would be from $5,900 to $7,950, depending on experience. He said he needed an experienced lawyer because he does not have the time to train one in criminal trial procedure. His office is in bud shape because the vacancy Two prospects lie was sure would join his staff changed t minds and newspaper want ads have failed to produce any results. Unemployed lawyers may contact Taylor at the (Jounty Courthouse. this last session consisted of more than a dozen bills. We passed the income tax with only 18 votes and thought the rest of the package would follow. But Haskell Nichols announced that he could not support the rest of (he package. We were not about to loose a quarter of a billion dollar income Into the blue all by Itself. I c d to reconsider tlie tax be-e we could move again at a later date. Republicans have established two legislative study committees on [K'rformancc audits and the use of a business consultant firm to study state goverftment structure. The new constitution would allow the governor to replace 120 commissions with 20 streamlined departtnents. Tliose combined operations can save the taxpayers millions of dollars. LELAND H. SMITH Th statement of Leland H. Smith is as follows: Comprehensive fiscal reform is imperative. Tax relief for both business and consumer is long overdue. In line with the recommendations of many fiscal experts, I will work for repeal of the business activities tax, the personal property tax on machinery and tools, and the sales tax on food and drugs. Other business taxes must be adjusted. To make up for lost revenue we must create a flat rate income tax on both per- Oakland C o u n t y desperately needs senate reapportionment. I wholehearteflly applaud the recent decision of the Michigan Supreme Court which upset our present system of frozen senatorial districts. The people of Oakland County who presently make up 9 per cent of the state’s popnlatfoK and pay over 11 per cent of the state's taxes are entitled to 3 senators. I cannot accept the argument that the voters of this county cither less able or less i sonable than those from other sections of the state. The voters of the county voted against malapportionment in the election of 1952 which permanently fixed the boundaries of our present unequal districts. Surely nothing has happened in the past 10 years to make government by an outstate minority more palatable to the people of county. degree from Northwestern University. He Is an Air Force veteran of World War II. Statements of the candidates are under their pictures. Applying for U.S. Loan on (ommission Agenda We loan is expected to be about $1.8 million. It will eventually be paid back from proceeds from the resale of cleared land. quested several weeks ago by n •Pontiac attorney representing local bowling aUey proprietors. A resolution will be offered authorizing the purchase of 12 lots from J. L. Van Wagoner for the expansion of Kiwanis Park Stanley Avenue neat: Osmun Lake. City Attorney William A. Ewart rqwrt-on^fhwacceptanco of There are 43 parcels to be pur chased and cleared in the R44 project area, which lies, west of South Saginaw Street and east of the Grand Trunk Western Rail’s main line. options from affected property owners for the widening of Wrenn Street in conjunction with a proposed storm sewer project. tures and Increase the noncash credits claimed on Clinton River Also on tonight’s lengthy agenda will be the introduction and first reading of a proposed amendment to the city’s ordinance controlling opening and closing hours for bowling alleys. ALLEY HOURS The amendment would allow bowling alleys in the city to remain open later weekdays and open earlier on Sundays than the present ordinance Area Farm Owner Acquitted of Arson The owner of an Addison Township farm home that burned to the ^ound in July 1961 has been acquitted of arson charges by a Circuit Court jury. Marvin B. Lee, 26, had been charged in connection with a fire that destroyed his eight-room frame house at 2435 Tex- James L. Spencer, 21, of 1495 Main St., Lakeville, an employe of Lee, at the time of the fire was found guilty by the jury. But the charge against him was dismissed by Circuit Judge H. Rus- Judge Holland granted a motion to dismiss by assistant prosecutor Richard Condit, who said insufficient evidence was pre- Roars Around at 81 BOURNEMOUTH, England (UPI) - Annie Cleve was in a hospital today recovering from injuries received when her motor-The extended hours were re- Iscooter crashed. Miss Cleve Is 81. delufe Ouklaikl Conaty voters with qnestioBalres, pelli uA imnseaslcal fence - itraddlinf Fulkerson claims BraomfleU is afraid to debate him. Broenfleld served «i|U years itt the Stato LagMiltaN beiere his first tom la Csaf reM ^ two In the Stato Seaate and six la tta HoiM if BapmeMatives. ^ father of iiiree daughtors, Sroomfieht was (ira sMed to the Stote Legialaturs In AMS u repraaantattoe from tM fioaaty’s FHth piatrict. representative, speaker pro toil) of thf House, the youngest in MichlgSp history. Broomfield has declined a challenge from Fulkerson and an Invitation from the UAW-CIO to debate Fulkerson on the issues. He said the late adjuornment of Congreas, which he blamed on lack of leadership in Washington, prevented him from making any new commitments in his campaign schedule. During Ma six ywn aa a atai ■ », he « Fulkerson, a special'assistant attorney general for the state, has prketic^ tow ainoe 1669,'toe last five ypara to Oekland County. He waa an unsueceMlIul eandi-date for county prosecutor , two years ago and twice tought election to the Birmingham Board of Education. , ' Ur He is a gradtta\e of PonUac Central High School, the University of Chicago and the University of Detroit Law School. Statements by the two candidates are under their pictures. CONGRESSMAN BILL BROOMFIELD CONFERRING WITH SECRETARY OF STATE RUSK CUBA! WHO STOOD FOR ACTION? Congressional Record—House, September 26, 1962 MR BROOMFIELD . . . President Kennedy, in a speech as a candidate at Johnston, Pa., October 15, 1960, said tl ‘ It you c to lOirushchev? ' As President, he stated in his Inaugural address that-Let all our neighbors know that we shall Join with then; to oppose aggression or subversion anywhere in the Americas. And let every other power know that this hemisphere Intends to remain the mu.slcp of its own house. Mr. Chairman, I ho|)e every Member of tliis hoj|y supporting a recommittal motion stating simply this—that the Monroe .... . V . .. ___1 al__*.___ ........ ,n«vi;#1l.e KAkIn/l fha Pivittl. Doctrine has been violated, and that we are solidly behind the President in any action he may take in enforcing the Monroe pocirine. A loud and clear congressional voice to this effect will go fur ih .strengthening the hand of our President and expressing to the entire world the feelings of every American on this subject. MR. GRIFFIN. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? MR. BROOMFIELD. I yield to the gentleman from Michigim. MR. GRIFFIN.' I wish to commend my colleague from Michigan for the work he has done on this resolution and for his courage in offering a motion to recommit, which Would amend this resolution. As I understand the recommittal motlefn, it will Involve sevenil ill amendments but very Important ones. I should like lo ask the gentleman if I am correct in that two principal points are.J"; volv^; First, the eesolution amended by the gentleman’s rccommlttHl motion would recognize that the present Communist buildup in Cuba is a violation of the Monroe Doctrine, and the resolution reported by the committee does not; and second, it would add a new section to this resolution providing that this Congress supports the President In any such action he may take to implement and enforce the Monroe Doctrine throughout this hemisphere. Is that correct? MR. BROOMHELD. That Is correct. MR. GRIFFIN. Again I commend the gentleman for offering it, 1 I Intend to support it. MR. CRAMER. Mr. Chairman, will the gentleman yield? MR. BROOMFIELD. I yield to the gentleman from Florida. MR. CRAMER. 1 Join in expressing my congratulations to the gentleman lor proposing a motion to recommit that I think fills the gap that exists in the present resolution and gives It some real teeth. In reading the resolution, the committee hearings, and all other available information on the resolution presently before us I am led lo the conclusion that the resolution as presented would give the stirnip of approval in that 11 is not drafted in terms of what has already happened in Cuba, to the armed buildup that everyone admits exists. I may say to the gentleman that the gentleman from South Carollmi-(MR. RIVERS), on the floor a few mlnutea ago, told me tome fads with regard to the buildup in Cuba I had not been aware of before, the extent- to which long-range missiles are available In Cuba. I say that the military buildup Is unquestioned, and that that in itself is a violation of the Monroe Doctrine. THIS AD PAID FOR BY BROOMFIILD BOOSTERS MARGARET G. RITCHIE, TREASURER AmericalHonlsTV-e (Savings bank with spark plugs!) Rugged aluminized muffler. Fkmous Bulek comfort and Penny-wiae and pounda lightor than any ordinary 6, Buiok Special V-6 glvea you bettor performance, livelier action—and on leai regular gae-pernmllel (There’a an economical aluminum V-6 Special, tool). In addition to nimble action and frugality, look at all thoee other Special value dividenda; Choice of 3 silk-emooth tranamimione. New,‘*D6lcotron” generator. Electric windahield wiper*. r-o-o-m (enough for 6 toll onee) in AmeHoa’e only ka^ oar. All thle and a happy eurpriee low p Get happy . - • go Speclalt ’ealmidii^ecial .1 ' V ■ , / ■ . ■ THE PONTIAC PMBSS. TCESDAY, OCTOBER 80, 1062 7 Nfw Date for Sotolllti. CAPE CANAVERAL, (AP) oTecfinical tnn^Ies forced a one* lay postponem^ of an effort to launch a flaihing li«ht foodeUe latellUe to make mora accurate measurementa of the eardi. Hie riut ww readieduled for 3:30 a SOirm HAVEN Loans and dholarahkM to South Havoi school District pupiis who other-wise would be unable fi to att^ college are aims of the Form Scholarship Fund newly formed South Haven Omik munity Memorial < Scholarship Foundation, Inc. the nonprofit corporation is working through a memorial fund at the First Methodist Church of Pair Snatchfs $8^00 LONDON (AP)-Ttro robbers slugged a paymll messenger outside a bank Monday and snatched a bag containing 3,000 pounds* 38.400. BLOCK HOUSE — Joseph N. Blair works on a model of a building constructed of blocks in Detroit, an invention of his to get residents of Africa out of its mud huts. He claims his system would allow two unskilled men to construct a five-m house in eight hours at one third the conventional cost. Sheriff Candidate Slams Incumbent A younff man'$ Ant touchdown—whether Ulmhlhe celebration. Little thlnge are big newa to thoee who love you. Kenneth G. Hirt, Democratic candidate, for Oakland County sheriff, today accused his incumbent Republican opponent, Frank Irons, of conducting a “whisper campaignt^4igainst him.— Phone the Folks Long Distance Long Distance rates on many calls within Michigan are now lower than ever. Why not call now? Michigan Bell Teiephone Company “He has had some of his deputies going around the c o u n t y telling people that he can arrest me any time he wants to," Hirt charged. He doesn’t accuse me specifically on anything. He knows my recwrd Is excellent.’’ Hirt also accused Iron of using prisoners at the county jail for building and painting politicai to bring prisoners downstairs to work on the signs when he worked at the sheriff’s office. Hirt left the sheriff’s department about a year and a half ■•«««-....-.....-------------- Irons would not say why Hirt left the department. Hirt was a desk sergeant and auxiliary mounted police head in the department for more five years, Hirt said. PROPOSES PLAN Hirt also proposed a four-point program for making the county’ “antiquated law enforcement system adequate to the needs of the mushrooming area.” Hirt said this was done i he was employed by the sheriff's department and has been done this year. Irons said the charge was “absolutely false.” He said he has made any new campaign signs this year, but is using signs left over from previous campaigns. Hirt claimed he was asked to He urged creation of a Juvenile division, a vice squad, a central filing system and some form of civil service. He said the department has “just one man designated as juvenile and water safety officer, and he does a good job on water safety.” Hirt said there also was only ne man assigned to control vice. End-df*lloiiHi CLEUJUICE SUE WAnX*S awarantees every Item at lemrt 118 e«t Eaeh item is reduced a adulmum of 1/3 tma nie price it was ta oar stock before this clearaucet C3iar|fe aU your parchases! I ItllMlMiaSttAY OWiYt %lUr Phono SjmbSfeKwSty v/'jv,EN'S DRESSES -Third Fl( n Droaos, Miam and Hath. ¥m &9P9.W, Thoa SJ7. Now... 1X0 ao Siwot pfoas^ Miaa and Half Sian ¥«• Now.. 4,00 14Jr.DNaes.Worall.9e-12.90.HMa7X8.Now...............400 18 Jr. DroMSs.¥sral498.’rh(mia97.Now...............7.00 18 Jr. Droass. Won 17.98, Th« 12X7, Now............400 d^P«:MststaltyD»la^Wsra 11.98, Then 7X7.NOW........488 8 Mslomilr ShMlw,¥sw S.98498.Now...................1X8 10 ^Po. Mstornity Draws, Wsw 9.98, Then S.97. Now.8.88 14 Mstornity BIomss, Won 499, Thai 2.97, Now......1.88 7MttoniItySkh1t,Vsw8.99,Thsnl.97,Now................X8 9 Mstornity Shorts, P.Puili«n,¥sra 8.99, Hiob LOT, Now.... X8 FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor 1X2 8.9T C ¥liIto Nylon Slolsi^ ¥sra 8.98, Hwn 1X8, Now.... S Gras Point Handball. ¥era 15.98, Now.... SHaiidbafs.¥oral8.99.'nisn8X5.Now............... 98PrarfNocklscss,¥ewlX0,Now..........................M 192Borriiim¥owX0,llwnX2,Now........................-13 22 FV. 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UV Knhwhinwd 1X4Wm m i»» m remier GKORaim Pompidou. A defeat misquoted.) But aside from ould well produce internal crisis in leanings, is a high regard for ivance with the fate of the Fifth ^er artistic talent which not hanging In tha halanc. m«h. -««nl.«». Voice of the People: ‘ 1 *U.S. l^nds Don't Exut; Money Belongs to Vs* ' Let’s do away with the axprasskm “at govamment,aipansa” or paid Mr by “federal funds” and similar phrasss. ■ ' • 'It- 'it'" it report w somi projwit Udeh m Hill psy for. to oltsQ a poUtkdsn uW sa^ Push-Button Poker David Lawrence Sees: ‘Victory’ in Cuba Hollow and Sad WASHINGTON — It’s a hollow viet premier implied that “de-“victory”-if, indeed, it turns out fensive” arms supplied by the to be a victory at all. Soviets would remain in Cuba. It’s Nikita Khrushchev who trine and as other American presidents in the past have in---------- it. ★ ★ ★ This in turn could lead to serious disruption of the united front of the free world, on which no much depends in these perilous times. It was like this. Recently resuming seriously an early Interest In painting, for many years shelved as domestic and family responsibilities took precedence, she saw a photo In TIME that caught her fancy. It accompanied a report from the maga- 1 ... ______Anil ctK/vuroH ft iimeBo 11 accompuiucu a asv/... o Tf 10 tn hp honed that the French, zinc’s foreign correspondent and showed It is to be hoped tnai t group of Tibetan children having shown Admirable tragically old-looking for their years - the ment in their referendum balloting, carrying the younger, will exhibit similar sound thinking in the even more important elections next month. So who has come out with a net gain? ’The United States, in effect, has recognized the Soviet right to run Cuba and is not to challenge it by invading Cuba, as is required by an application of the Monroe Doc- Thus Khrushchev stays ... Cuba. He says in one of his two notes that he will defend Cuba time in his own way. (Copyright, INZ) ★ ★ ★ Our artist painted an oil from the photo and then, because of so much local interest, with offers to purchase, she wrote photographer Donald S. Connery for permission to sell (customary procedure In such cases) enclosing a photo of her painting of his photo ... I didn’t lose you there, did I? Well, sir, after an exchange of several letters via the magazine’s New York office, the correspondent, who was graciousness Itself and most complimentary of the work, ended up buying the painting himself! ★ ★ Never a Dull Moment in Theatrical Business To our lay minds, the convolutions of the legitimate theater are perplexing and a bit terrifying. The economics, agonizing and uncertainty of success attendant upon ^ column salute to the painter, and the conception, development ana wishes for continued enjoyment and launching of a stage production are profit from her avocation, of a soul-searing nature. “ ★ ★ ★ Financially, the ratio of successes to failures is appallingly low. The great majority of show backers — “angels,” as they are called In the trade — lose most or all of their investments. Many shows run an entire year on Broadway without so much as meeting initial costs. now is established as the man in charge of Cuba. It’s he who is dealing for Cuba with this country and with the United Nations, and it is he who will argue whether certain weap-| ons in Cuba ^‘defensTve’ “offensive.” ________________ It is the Soviet LAWRENCE premier who shipped the missiles into Cuba in the first place to threaten the United States. Yet, when he promises to withdraw q _ At night along about 10 know of hny tablet that would them. President Kennedy calls my legs get to jerking, gradually dissolve and keep the this a “statesman-like decision.” jg j, very uncomfortable blood sugar at the proper level. Inf Will not cost taxpnymi mvthtaif tat • alinplt fee. “Dm big expemn,’^ bn telle wilWioe. I “win be tekM cere of by tederel fende. ’ I Exeep^.fer ttahr cenIrMline th^ pcTMiel tta^pelitlelanB dent opend tbMr own mqney; AWtat >tlie President or Ibe OwptM ■pprevM I gIftV loan the money being epont I docia’t beleag te them. It Is tbe ttiptyeri." POWERS ‘ ★ ♦ ★ . , ^ I suggest the phrase “federal funds” be changed to tax- payers’ money.” The poople who come up with the money ihwU get proper credit. Federal iWideT Itels. Thet'i ev dough. 29S Cherokee Road i Howard 0, Powers Crane Criticized Triiose ShouMers for Recent Article Aren’t for Passing’ It is essential that certain of i drive my dau^iter to Willis Dr. Crane’s fabrications be ex- school and enter the school yard posed. Such statements by making a left hand turn off moron and feebleminded,” make On Oct 10 I was an effort to prove that our society is menaced by these individuals, signaling a left turn into the His article says; “We now have school. A gravel track passed me millions of actual feebleimlnded on the shoulder. The ichool w^ in this country! They help zoom ing lights were operatiiw end mis our welfare rolls." is a no passlng zone. I reiwrted Would Dr. Ckraae advocate we shoot or eradicate the IN,NS mentally-retarded chUdrea and adults In Michigan or the M,(N who live In Oakland County? Does he propose to the Interest of reducing welfare edits, elimination of those nafortimately born with mental deficiency? < He makes the statement that thousands of mentally-retarded “herded,” to polling places is a no passlng zone. 1....- mis to the sherifTs department and gave them the license number. I was told there was little that they could do since I was unable to give a description of the driver. WWW OathefoUowiagFridaylwas passed in the same rnenaer end again reperted te the phecUrs department. Te date.I have noies Ulllh ire wm IICIUOU, W pvasasio I'*—- and will interpret me actions of i„ the United States. I defy him chimmons Road the United States from time to t„ „ the existence of mis S?,?! practice. The article claims mat * ______ mentally deficient people vote in „ „ , great numbers and, merefore, MiSUSC Of FundS Dr. Brandstadt’s Mailbag: EeMSeemBestCure for * Jerking Leg* MaJndy If a would-be murderer points a gun at you and then suddenly decides not to kill you, does be immediately become a “statesman?” cause tax increases. We may not agree on the best method for UpSetS Taxpayer meeting the problem of me men- tally deiident, bu^e can^^^ basic Christian principles in supervisors. Those officials are dealing with thC less fortunate already paid a substantial salary, members of society. I hope that state officials stated that It is Just the readers have rejected this an oversight on the supervisors' „ a« .. Oakland County Council I’ll wager no expense has been ‘7" ihp lor Retarded Children spared on fittings and furnish- A - Several years ago, the _ plus weakness. c-„ne’s article regarding the conference room. Heaven SS'S mended is a high-protein, low^ Hiller’s. I am surprised The raffle _and we 11 be paying extra carbohydrate diet with enough Press would publish his column, for mat, too. fat to give the required calories. ____E. Newman__________ feeling. What causes it and what should I do? A - The cause is not known but it is fairly common in persons ■ ) are past 40 “Ever see fresh home grown sweet corn sold as snow swirled in around the roadside stand?” asks Edward Shields of the Press circulation department. After a head shake of unbelief, he vowed that Oakland County provided such a rare sight one day last week at the Beau-bein farm roadside stand on Orchard Lake Road, and that sales at SOc per doz. were Just as brisk as me weather. Hoping to throw some light on a recent So far as the Monroe Doctrine and the “traditions of this hemisphere” ate concerned, however, even a? the President and Pre- ,7 „asel hirsuMly"p?raIed*^^^^^ '"“diSreu^UML--—-— S“aiiaS-%vaff'«entt cigmitwBRANDSTAOT In Washington of the Soviet government operat- has been aa ing from Cuba were engaged in vised, dynamiting four electric power Although this may stations in Venezuela, and mus person in many waj^ It n was sabotoged a substantial part been shown of the 0»|»«luctloD of lt»t coon- 'A.'V M «»> A Taxpayer JFK’s ‘Reasons’ Weren’t Political First reports said it Will cost at least il.l-million a day until repairs can be completed. The United States government, moreover, has sacrificed an opportunity to liberate the drugs "have been^^ poor results. The Best r „ but with results are By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) I Tlidz I»qt resuiis are ...w ohfnS bv stretching first, cynical reaction that Pres-usua ly^tain^ by sueic a ^ out in bed. relaxing ana go g gcuon calling for a blockade to Sleep. ^ ^ ^ of Cuba for pure- jerking persists even after they . .. lo to b^ but since It never n«w Lkes them up after they have has been pretty mvcuHK ' HOping 10 uiruw suiui; iigiii wu a Technically, stagecraft Is probably inquiry about a Wilson’s Phalanrope. Amaicm quarantine e number one ulcer producer Mrs. .loseph Wilson blockade of Cuban ^rte is to be them up after they have JT" of 4470 Dickerson, reported that since sum- dispensed wito on the assurances gieep and since they lowntoman. ^ gray-brown birds, long bills of Khrushchev that his “officers” have it In the morning ^ The original opening-night pattern has been appearing from a production often is unrecognlz- nearby marsh to be fed. Their cry was a shrill squeal, noticed particularly in the male. (Seems as though most of the noise created in the world originates with the masculine gender.) t)le a week later. ★ ★ ★ During the tryout period, playwright, producer, director and cast usually enter upon a frenzied period of rewriting, shortening, improvising, strengthening and unending rehearsing — which they hope will remedy the manifold weaknesses revealed and make the embryonic vehicle acceptable to Broadway. Meanwhile, all concerned have een slowly but surely going nuts. There could be no better example r the Inherent inconsistency of the uslness than the musical, "Mr. resident,” which had its premiere in fMhIhgteh and was attendeT¥y a ody of the social elite topped y We Kennedy clan. ★ ★ ★ iiapciiocu wiui VII Miv Sleep ttiiu oiifw of Khrushchev that his “officers ” have it In the morning and “instructors,” as he de- fj,gy gro rested I can’t help scribes them, will change the believe that rest is the best miamilA KnoAQ «A tflAV wlll 110 . ___l^a This fall, the proud parents presented five babies—but they were all jet black ... I wonder how Mama squealed herself out of that one! Comparison of birds and coloring with Lird hook specimens pointed to a Wilson’s Snipe. And apropos birds, we learned at the lawyers’ luncheon table at The Elks (where many pearls of wisdom are dropped, and a few picked up) that pheasants were not indigenous to Michigan. ★ ★ W King-necked Chinese birds were imported and protected for ten years, opened to hunting in 1921. "(In“case any autoority HlTfors with this and wants to make a Federal case out of it. I’ve got a tanie-fuii of lawyers to defend me.) ------- but beiiev missile bases so they will no froatment longer be “offensive.” A United Nations Inspection team doubtless will take plenty of time to make sure it is distinguishing between the offensive and defensive character of any Q _ I am 3S yean old. i^rteen months ago I was stricken with sciatica. What can be done for it? The overwhelmingly convincing evidence of Russian missile base build-up on Cuba leaves room for ar- What hurt as much as anything was the fact that the President had been out In the Midwest calling lor the defeat of Republican leaders like Dirk-ten, House minority leader Charles A. Halleck of Indiana and Rep. Walter Jndd sf Min- national campaigning, Is not cancelling any of his scheduled speeches, although the general has come out In support of whatever Cuban policy the President declares. On the contrary, Elsenhower may step up his political speeches, which have been most effective. One further grain of satisfac- EDSON, and defensive character oi any a - Since sciatica is not a dis-military projects already set up case but a symptom common to in Cuba by the Soviets. different diseases, you must first NIKITA STAYS *’®''e your doctor make tests to For the plain fact is that pressure on the sciatic nerve Khrushchev ha^t agr^ to J Soviet arms be removed from " Cuba. The latest no room lor ar- gument against the rightness of in Congress as he got The his decision, whatever the mo- «»rn«tinn«llat" Renublicans tive. There was ^considerable gloom in Republican circles the day after Kennedy made his broadcast on Cnbn. The initial Impression wao that it could only mean a loti of Republlcon seats In the next Congress and All of them and more ItePuWi- pepubUcans can cans, too, had sup^rt^ toe ^ c„ban de- President’s foreign aid and other y^Iopmenta is that toe Presl-inlernational policies in Un- of gress, although rnfM delay demonstrates toe value of severely criticized in their home ^ opposition” to state for so doing. administration foreign policies. Without this Republican help, ^ ^incize them and egg him on. the President could not have hod ^^at the as good a foreign policy re^rd recent develop- in Congress as he got. The In- (o be on the actual tcrnatlonalist” Republicans did results. Anybody who not expect the President to en- -------u. j— dorse them says he does or thinks he does dorse them and they did toI want jg’jugj guessing, "rhe situation Is that. But they did think he might f|„jd cpp change, day to have stayed out of their districts jjj,y as a minimum favor and expres- v . , a sion of thanks for past help. "•PI?"* "t ■ 1. !I m Politics, however, is not a gen- Caribbean, at the United Na» tleman’s game, and the KepIlMys "A* There was also some Republican resentment that GOP con- have shown that they play politics hard and for keeps. W Sr The fact that the President took be removed from h— ^ . can resentment that uuu con- The fact that the President took U .1,- nnn h« found the B'!*"*®"** himself out of the campaign after letter from the So- H ‘h® cause can^ fomd me ^ Washington from their Cuba broadcast did hot mltl- ------------------c,n*al*nln8l«b.lokl.l»ta- .IMUM. ng policy was going to be. He obviously si The Country Parson he book^wM written by Howard Vprhfll OrrhlH^A-jSAY and Russel Crouse, authors ▼ Criiai UrcniaS lO- miiny Broadway hits; the director losHUA Looan, of equal rank; rmi-and lyrics were composed by iNO Berlin, another top talent; cast was headed by two of the Mrs. Bertha Hyatt of .W Oakland Avc.; 91st birthday. Mrs. Horton Graves of 155 Palmer St.; 88th birthday. John R. Williams HV.. of 311 Dover Road; Mth wedding annlvcr-IFIwt was ths opening - night oary. ' 'i' " .. ■ :i harmful and should be avoided. ' Sometimes removal of an hi-lected tooth or eOter chronic infection wOl cure selatka. Injection of the nerve Ugh te its course nwy five lasttag relief, but beoanse tt deen’t rc-■ move the cause, a recurrence ran be expected. A study by your doctor of your GOP leaders on a bipartisan ( nonpartisan policy. It was hailed to them cold on a take-ltor-leave-lt basla and they had to take It. piuim;o wiw |i«|niHir uvuhwm Ihau he can by appealing far -“'^1 tor Democratic congrets-I who, theorctlceny at hmit, to election day caa stUI materially ebange tbe outcome of even local eleetlons. If the new crisis ends reported voter apathy and brings out a record mid-term vote, that will be one net natlcsuil gain. On the other hand,,If bombs -are-toUliqHm-Wov. 6 and people can’t get to toe polls, toe next Congress might appr^ a big fallout shelter building program SO that voting booths can ta Installed In them tafore INI. Where toe PjnArwTu be byDemocriti ’*^A man like a plowshare, can take a lot of blows » and be starpened by them.’'* pblicans have been picking missed moot by Demotic lead- ---------------- themselves off the floor.f Tl» ers In Pennsylvania. Calitornia, A study by your doctor of your President’s new policy was, after GmnecUcul, Michigan, Oregon iwsture while you are walking, all. Just what they had been ad- and other key states wtare he standing, sitting and lying down vocating for some weeks. It was had be^ scheduled to iqwsk In may give a valuable due to a the tolUalive of WP &nate lead- the doling days of the campaign nerve strain and may lead to cor- “ ' ■ rective measures. Q the initiative 01 UAH' ssenaw ican- wp piiwuh w im vm vo oiniiu anu „my «,«. w w- cf Everctt M. Dlrkscn of Illinois. is at fumferalslitg affairs, live measures. that Was primarily responsible Former Prtakisiit Dwight D. I - I suffer from low blood lor too congrisaional resolution Els«ihower, who has been Kep-ar. Aside from die| do you supporting a firm stand on Cuba, nedy’s principal antefonlst In y,' ’ M;, TH& PONTIAC PEESS, TUgSPAY, OCTOBER 80, 1962 Ml at wvtn mliUan. WUHMEIIICA OBTIFUICK? Indmtrjt ind hal'd work brought Amarica luekand leadership Ip builneas and trade, it science and living standards and in moral influence. How long can this last? The future will tell. Leadership calls for leaders, and America will fall behind unleae its colleges develop enough men and women with the special training today’s problems de- But our colleges are in a squeeze. Some face shortages and in 10 years applicants will double. Wo need more and better laboratories, new facilities and, above all, many qualifled teachers. HILfl THI COLLEGE OF YOUR CHOICE NOWI Uarn hew yeu con hnip. Wrifo for a frM bookint to HIGHER EDUCATION, •ox 36, Now York Timm Station, Now Vork36,N.Y, PuhlitM M 0 publie $ervie* f*l eoop$ratioH with Th4 Advtrtiatng Council and the Newapaper Ad-pcrlicint Euccutiva Accociativn, THE PONTIAC PRESS -Junior Editbrt Quli on- INDIANS tiona little more than a year ago, First Deputy Anastas MUcoyan re^ marked that the Soviet Union’s greatest secret weapon was Nikita Khrushchev’s tongue. And, Indeed, the fasUdking Khrushchev tyas riding high. Be held the initiative hi Beo Un and used it to threaten te squeeze eat the Western allies QUESTION: How were arrowheads made? ANSWER: When early man found he could split pieces of one rock off with another and get a cutting edge, he bad taken a tremendous step in weapon making. Now he could make axes, spearheads, scrapers for softening hides, knives, and later, when the bow and arrow was discovered, arrowheads. Stone arrowheads were used, not only by Indians but by primitive people in many parts of the worid. Certain hard stones, such as flint and obsidian, have a natural tendency to flake off. The first step in making an arrowhead (I) would be to use a hammer stone” to knock pieces or "blanks” off a good bit of material. Many might be close to arrowhead shape. Often they split with one flat side. Mr. Stone Age Man would take a pointed bit of bone and peck around the edges until tte blank was arrow-head shape. Then (2) he would press with his tool along the edge. If this was done just right, a flake would drop off. By going all around the flint, breaking off chips, the arrowhead could be made razor sharp. With their wonderfully made arrow heads, Indians could kill the largest game. ★ ★ A FOR YOU TO DO: Start a collection of arrowheads. V> Whafs Become ofKhmshchev*e Big vn At a United Nat^ Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold for policies the Congo. He declared Nationalist China a ‘corpse” which should be thrown outQftbeU.N. Bast Germany. With his declared policy of peaceful coexistence, his call immediate freedom for all colonial peoples and for immediate and complete world disarmament, he souf^t to picture himself as a champion of peace standing against Western aggressors. Using Soviet missile and nuclear successes as his propaganda springboard, he sought at the same time to spread fear of Soviet power among small or wavering nations and the neuUls. Western peace organizations also became vehicles for his propaganda. In 1960 he reached a peak. In that year, at the abortive summit conference in Paris, he tongue-lashed the President of the United States. He demanded the resignation of Union will “randar the Cuban peo- to the Soviet Unkm In pie and their govemment all nec- essary assistance In beating back ■ I armed atM ‘ Tiwee are Mare tapertaat te the present, hi that year he had his emothmal moetiag with Fidel Cestn at the Vailed Nations and la that year declared: ”We consider that the Monroe Doctrine has outlived its time., has died...” In July 1960, he warned that the Soviet Union would use rockets against the United States if the U.S. intervened militarily in Cuba. He repealed the threat in April when be said the Soviet ample of one Soviet step hack-fevdayt ward in order to taka twa 'for- ■ie te eae of the great impeell-erables hi the preseat crisis. He made tt clear he had noli- C/WBNip ® into every walk ef Gdbaa life. Nonetheleu. events of the last prefe^ to let otfaers fight its wars and to avoid war itself. Khrushchev’s announcement that he is ordering his missiles in back home is a major retreat but not yet a retreat of historic dimensions. WHAT NEXT? Rather it could be another ex- OUR MEDICINE IS 47 YEARS BEHIND THE TIMES s «fM Met O-JIk-We IHtars b iHH mmtm frwB twMve |«r» bfatto. e •* Mto mUm day dapot. IwrorfM drees. eleelMl H H.fMITHf A«rUicmeBt> LAPSING i.fi - Sen. Frank D. eadle, R-St. Clair, yesterday defended the record of the legislature in mental health appropriations. Beadle spoke as a member of a Republican “truth team’’ that has been answering Gov. Swain-son’s comments on the legislative record. Swainson had criti-the legislative mental health appropriating record. Beadle seiid the legislature has appropriated an average of 178.3 million for mental health for the past three years. Appro-riations for the purpose'have more thpn doubled since 1M9 and have Increased an average of 12.15 million a year, he said. The future of Michigan’s mental health program is not a mat-of politics but of better management, Beadle said. “It is interesting to note that the governor’s great concern for mental health is not reflected in his own legislative record,’ Beadle said. “He did not sign his name to a single piece of mental health legislation during t h e entire period he served In tlw legislature.’’ prosecuting attorney mm REPUBLICAN ■■■I Tk( OiHiii CHsty Him iHmIi fw ACTION-JOlS-LnOERSHIPI ThiM in Oaklind County min who know your mods... Thiy hivi in outstindlni ricord of nrvici . . . They disirvi your voti Nov. 6th. I A diligint, didicitid public nnruil I Inititutid "Court of No Aicord’’ to protict Tun-igirs from stigmi of i crimiml ricord. I Sirvn all the paopli of OiMind County. gponforod hr Oakland Counff Ropublican Commllton Mental Health Record Backed America stands for in the world that there Is liUle compassion for them in their crisis, and co> llicidentally only modest inteif-est in what happens to their poor subjects. For years, India took the lead in proposing R|ed China for membership in the United Nations. *■•★ Nehru has accepted billions of dollars in aid from America on the one hand and has used the other to aim consistent blows at Uncle Sam’s whiskers. / Nehru has an alert and agile mind, and accepts no peer ps humanitarian. But it took hiih 13 days to utter even a “Tch Tch’’ in respect to Khrushchev’S’ orders to the Red army to go into Budapest and mow down the Hungarian resistance movement. He asked for what his treacherous ex-pal Mao is giving Wonder how Fidel Castro’s supporters — and, incredibly, he still has some in Cuba and elsewhere through Latin. America felt when Khrushchev made it abund- antly clear that he, not Fidel, is in ^phantrand now Castro has invited ThantHb Havana. Thant’s predecessors, Trygve Lie and Dag Hammarskjold, charge of Cuba? NIKITA DID IT Castro did not propose that the missile sites be ripped from his soil at the same time similar sites were to be destroyed in Turkey. Khruschev said that. He said it 6,000 miles from Castro’s headquarters, and without consulting Loco, as Castro’s classmates at Oil Tank Hit by Lightning GRAND CHENIER, La. (AP)-Fires at an oil tank farm, caused when lightning struck a tank of distillate, burned out early today. There were no casualties. * ★ * ‘The lightning came straight down and the whole sky seemed to turn red,” said Clyde Miller, an employe for Natural Gas Oil Co., tank farm. At W ★ The 6,600-gallon capacity tank exploded, spewing distillate over a wide section. The tank was owned by Sohio. Three other So-hio tanks caught fire, as did one owned by Natural Gas, which adjoins the Sohio tank farm. Deputies Seek Dog Pack in Ottawa County Raids HOLLAND UPl - Ottawa County sheriff’s deputies have entered a “wild dog” hunt in an effort to stop marauders on area poultry farms. One operator of a turkey farm some five miles northeast of Holland claimed 785 birds, valued at $1,800, have been slain by dog sio • noiJD BeauiiSil and Loaded tvidi Tdbie PoUfiMYthg lark for speed, power, safety. for§st Rangars bay tha lark for rugged stamina and dependability. taxt ajmators bay ib§ lark ~ tor outstanding economy and handling ease. Fasbiaa laadars bay tba lark for its style, beauty and distinctive design. ladiai bay tba Ifurk for ita luxurious standard equipment aaorawbara bay tba lark because alt'bf the above adds up to value. '<63i:AikK«~6aEaa%N From tha Advmnead Thinking of HAVI YOU WON ONt Of OUK 350 Ifttt CANS? Sm tha SIMkhaktr ad In tha Novambar fiiwi of Kaadat't Digatt mad hany ta your Studahakat Oaalar. Alio oak your Studa-kmkof Oaahr mhaut tha Avantl, tha Crvlaor and tha Hawk. - MASTERS MOTOR SALES nr. n, nn highland rd.| -I PONTIAC, MICHIGAN DAVIS MOTORS <08 N. MAIN ST. ROCHISTIR. MICHIGAN the University of Havana so appropriately nicknamed him. Caitro did not soggeit that if ■nch a deal WM accepted by President Kennedy a UJNt. eh* Gnba to confirm the elimination of the sites. Khrushchev made that decisim), which was diamqtrically onwaitf Castro’s threat to shoot any UJN. group sent to the island. Khrushchev wouldn't treat hlS dog like that. One encouraging aspect of the continuing crisis is the high regard all sides have shown for U Thant, the quiet, gutty, cigar-chomping acting secretary general of U.N.j The President finds it expedient to let the Burmese diplomat know precisely what the United! States is doing and prepared toj do if Castro's bases are not Junked. That's to be expected of an American president. HAS SPECIAL WAY But Khrushchev has been almost equally cooperative with much of the hut year bMort his untimely death la Africa. But Thant seems to have a ape-dal way of doing thlnp fairly and • lng.Hla one of vera paraoBal attach, iacladlng Hhe noisiest discoida in U.N. hla-^ that msaur af InvacMve tory. the demand of the 8o v 1 e t Union for “troika" rule of tha Sac-iwtariat. Parha'ps tha lacrat of his strength is his oftan-oxpreasod wish to flniah Out HanimaadcJoUi'a tarm of of flea and go back to work for Btt^na. SfR Him Ptrform Wprfti*g Champ «t MRncniluilim wiuitr S r.M. mA I V.N. N0IT8 nu urns generally in hot water with one or I another bloc inside U.N. Lie was | forced out of his position by the I! boycott of the Soviet Union and its' satellites, a boycott born of Lie’s determination to defend Korea. Hammarskjold was under se- SPECIAL Wednesday and, Friday Only! Of FRENCH FRIED TARTAR SAUCE liOUMAD Jouniony where sea food is a SPECIALTY! 3860 DIXIE HienWAY at DRAnON PLAINS iPollUCBl Adveitl»ement» WWj Well, GEORGE ROMNEY, what are you going to do about the mesi in Laitilng7 First, lot ma nay that only tha people lose from all the bickering in Lansing. All the people. Why all the bickering? The answer is that there ia no leadership in Lansing. Tha legislature cannot lead. No committee can lead. Only the man in the governor’s chair has the authority and tha raapon- othar fallow whan things go wrong and taking all tha credit when thinga go right. Wa all lose when there is no leadership. We either gat lop-aidad legislation which Buita no one, or wa gat deadlock. Tha people can't win when we have deadlock and division in Lansing. But no man, regardleaa of hia authbrity and reaponsibility, can lead unleas ha has developed tha ability to get people think* ing and acting together. Ha certainly cannot gat cooperation by blaming tha LEADERSHIP li nioiiiai^ aHaiaii” working together to provide a govern* ment that can gat thinga dona for all the people of Michigan. I’d Him to put my expariahoa in leading people #ith divane idaaa to wort for you. Will you givi ma a chance to PROVE what a naW team in Laming can do? READ <‘CAN CITIZENS SAVE THE STATES?" IN NOV. ISSUE OP ADVANCE AIaQAZINE ... FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON MY POSITIONS WRITE ME AT 000 INDUSTRIAL RUIIDINQ. DETROIT tf. . Aia. (AP)~ H^l>ncm ondlditet-hop* to tHE PONTUC PRESS. TU1b!sPAY. OCTOBER 80. 1962 Alabama GOP Using Anti-JFK Feeling ride into^ice in iraditionelly Democratic AlaiMma by itresiing the Kennedy admlniitration role in the recent rdSial criiii in Bo modern with MOEN HUMIING / adnfaiMrafion in Waihlng^Jiroaght federal court orders in In their most intense votO:iet> ting campaign in many decades, GOP challengers are puttim nnocrats ail the line from Congress to the county courthouse. Hie overriding Mue i i the of U.S. marshhie and fedi troops at the.'University of Mississippi, whelm the enrollment of Negro shMlent James ” ‘ ' touched off violence. Republican candidates have re-..linded the voters spin and again that it was a Democratic which nobiliaed the federal forms# •mi DIDt TOO* Democratic nominees quickly denounced the federal actkin, too, and recaliad that a Republican president, Dwight D. EMhower, sent troops into Little Rock, Ark., during the integration uprising there in Ml. One GOP froup. the 1 _ ery County Committee, keynoted the party's battle cry wife this slogan in newspaper ads: “Strike back at Kennedy—vote Republi- BAKER and HANSEN tmfwi INSURANCE -*ALLFORMS- HOMEaWNERS PACKAGE POLICY A SPECIALTY Phone FE 4-1868 714 COMMUinn RATIORAL RANK BLDG. POKTIAC Panamarflag Flies Beside Stars, Stripes PANAMA ifi-The Panama flag was raised alongside the Stars and Stripes at the U S. Administration Building of the Panama Canal Zone yesterday at a ceremony signalizing one of tlfb first concrete results of discussions on easing relations between the two countries. Hereafter the two flags will be flown from twin poles at the Following clashes over the is-le, President Eisenhower in September 1960 ordered that the Panamanian flag be fl the United States flag at the Plaza near the boundary line. President Roberto F. Chtari announced agreement on Oct. that the Panama flag henceforth would be flown wherever the American flag is displayed in the Zone by the civilian authorities. UAW Political Rally Slated for Grand Rapids GRAND RAPIDS «P) - United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther speaks Thursday night in Grand Rapids at a political rally to which regional director Kenneth W. Robinson says all UAW members in West Michigan are Invited. Robinson said they would get “an informed and accurate picture of this year’s Important and crucial election campaign.” Democratic candidates who normally would win without a fight have Republican of^sitkm for the US. Senate; three of Alabama’s eight seats in the House; two statewide offices; 28 seats in the 141-member legislature, numerous county Jobs. For the first timi within the memory of many politicians, Republican spokesmen are talking of the chances of victory. Always outnumbered in the past, they are counting on support from disgruntled Democrats. ANGRY BEFORE To a lesser degree, President Kennedy’s racial policies had antagonized many Democrats in Al-atoma befpre the Ole Miss inci-dent.'^’Federal agents have investigated Negro voter registration complaints in several counties, and Justice Department suits have two Counties—Bullock and Macon —to register more Negroes. U.S. marshals were sent Montgomery In May 1661, in the wake of “freedom rider” bus rioting, and feat, too, brought ou^ cries against the administration. Gadsden businessman James D. Martin was chosen by the Repub-lians to challenge Democratic Sen. LilRf rail’s bid for a fifth term. Martin has courted voters in ail comers of fee state in a stump-speaking campaign. The Republicans nominated only, three candidates for the eight U.S. House seats which will be voted on statewide because of the; legiilature’s failure to redistrict fee state last year, But the stale supreme courtito vote for them along with mied that each voter must mark three Republicans, his ballot for eight candidates for * * e congress, so the GOP put out at The ei^t receiving the most list of (ive suggested write-in I votes wiU be elected, regardless and urged the peoplelof party. •; ^ (AdvarUMnwinti ACCIDENTS DO OCCUR! You would be wise to protect younieif wit|i a little low-cost liability insuronce . . . just in cose. Better see us! HEMPSTEAD INSURANCE 102 E. Hmon St. FE 4-8284 “Please, no pictures, but you can say I fl^ve my all for our XTnited Campaigii.** GIVE THE X7NXTED WAYi CourUtytff AUmNORVELL AGENCY, INC. "Oimr 4ffTtmin qf DjUfegoiihed Ssrefee'* 70 W. Lowranco at Cass 332*0241 Elevator Falls; 22 Hurt . SAN JUAN. Puerto'rIco (AP) -A construction elevator plunged 14 stories to the ground after its j cable snapped Monday. Twenty-two persons were injured, eight drain comrnissioner mmmm republican ■■ TIM OiMiMl fesaiyiMM itisai to action-iOli-tiaoiMMiri ThMMROsWMdCooirtynjinwho ■ Ablr, opsmwMd- know imr M«dt... Tbty nivn in ■ An ouUlMidIni rnoord nl pubi MiWindIni tMofd of wrwlto . . . Thw 4SMr¥* ynw wfo Nov. «h. Tempos 4goes around acting like a V-8... mdiaHempesttsneiirVS actcfikeJ Sorry, you'm hot even warm. But you will bo when you first get your honds on Tempest s 326 eu. In. V-8\ and aait thoaa 2i atroutng. this Is an angina In tha gnat Pontiac tradition: smooth and.sUant nnd navar stralnad. Your daafar will bo happy to ghn you tho kayo to otthor V-6 or 4. Than won't you Hava fun choosing batwaan thami PontiOC Tompost SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED PONTIAC DEALER IN METROPOLITAN PONTIAC \ PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RITAIL STORI OINWAIL MOTORS CORMRATION IS MT. CUMINS, PONTIAC. MICH. JACK W. HAOrr' PONTIAC SALIS end SIRVICB N. MAIN STRUT, CURKSTON.* MICH. KIIGO SALIS «nd SIRVICC, INC. lOao ORCHARP UNI RD. KIKO HARROR, MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALIS 19 IROAOWAY «^j of pearl seeded chiffon. A fitt jacket of silk lace with scalloped neckline and long, snugly fitting sleeves completed the ensemble. Ute fire could have easily spread to other buildipgs on the estate, according to Brandon Township Fire Chief William Buckingham; Firemek initially battled the blaze from their trucks, then used booster pu^ to make use of the water in an artificial lake LSOO feotJrom the burping ham. Th^ ibre' was brought, under control arbnnd 8 p.m., according to Norman Buckner, 2720 Pine Lake Road, Orchard Lake, owner of the farm. MRS. DURAND C. HATCHER Her fingertip veil of illusion flowed from a small white pearl I and she carrM a Buckner lauded the efforts of the volunteer firemen. “Except for the splendid heroic Fall Revival AAeeting Planned in Rochester ROCHESTER - Rev. R. L. Rich of Hicksville, Ohio, will be the evangelist for Ihe fall revival which starts tonight at tpe Rochester Church of the Nazarene, 226 Walnut St. bouquet of cascading white carnations and Stephanotis. Karen Dennis attended the bride as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jim Jidas and Mrs. Don Donner. Kevin Harris, nephew of tte bride, was ring bearer and his sister, Ellen Marie, acted as flower girl. Dexter Kuklaw, brother of the bride, served as best man and ^ . ,j seating the guests were Jim Jidas The revival meetings, which, will be held through Nov. 11, arc| ^ reception was held in the scheduled to begin each day at i church parlors immediately fol-7:30 p.m. ’ [lowing the service. (Political Advertlaamliit) LLOYD L. ANDERSON state representative ■■1 REPUBLICAN Mi Thi (HMm4 CmMf iMis ilinSt l«r . . ACTION-foil-LESDtISHIPI ■ formedthupMlalUgislatlvtAudltCom-Thaaa ata Oakland County min who mittaa that wafehdoM govarnmanUI know your naadt... Thay hava an apandini of tha taipayar a dollar, outalandlni racord of aarvita ... ■ Stands lor NQ stata or city Mcomi taaai Thay daiarva your vota Nov. 6th, ELAKE 'iremeiir^ work and efforts of these golunteer fire departments this would have been dh even more disas^us fire,’’ he said. Damage on the Buckner-Wood farm was estimated at $10,000 for the building and $6,000 for contents, by Buckingham. Forty-four head of cattle were removed from the barn during the blaze. Buckner said the damage is partially covered by insurance. Lion Officials to Meet Here Regional Meeting Set in W. Bloomfield WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWN SHIP -- Lions Club officials froln throughout Oakland County are expected to attend a zone meeting Nov. 6 hosted by the Westlakes Lions Club. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. at the Twin Beach Country Club, 7625 Glascott St. Besides the Westlakes unit, other clubs to be represented are from Pontiac, Auburn Heights, Bloomfield Hills, Lake Orion, Huron Valley, Oxford, Rochester, Waterford and Wlx-om-Walled Uike. TROY — Six schoolboys and the wife of the Troy police chief were among the nine persons injured in a car-school bus collision at 3:10 p. m. yesterday “ E. Maple near Eastport. Among the officials to attend and the clubs they represent are District Governor Richard Young, Birmingham; Region I deputy district governor, Ernest V. Keck-onen. Royal Oak; Region II deputy district governor, Herbert Bliss, Washington; and cabinet secretary Ralph Alexander, Birmingham. The zone meetings are held as informational sessions for local Lions Club presidents and secretaries. The boys were in a bus taking them home from Poppleton Elementary School, 1480 W, Big Beaver Road, where they attend classes for handicapped children. Mrs. Leota Gratopp, SS, wife of Police Chief David E. Gratopp, was driving the bus when it collided head-on with a car driven by Mrs. John Powers of Clawson. Appoint Five loiinance, Build Southfield Center SOUTHFIELD-A five member authority was appointed by the city council last night to build and finance the first phase of Southfield’s proposed $7-mil-l lion civic center. | I cost of the first phase of the prbj-ject, which would include construction of a municipal building, recreation building and library. City officials appointed to the authority include Associate Municipal Judge Thomas Costello, Administrator Donald Vi Smith and Building Inspector Clayton Deibel. The other two members are Robert Fay, former member of the civil service advisory committee and a certified public accountant, and Richard Frey, assistant general manager of Northland Center, Inc, Plans for the civic center on a ’66:acre site at lOMs Mile and Evergreen roads have been under way for nearly two years. The city is sedking federal matching funds to help'pay the' According to Council President C. Hugh Dohany, the newly formed authority will build, own and finance the buildings. ’The city’s cost for the construction then wouid be financed through the issuance of buiiding authority bonds. After the buildings are paid for under the authority, ownership of the buildings would revert to the city, Dohany explained. Dohany said he expects the sale of $1 million in revenue bonds over a 15- to 26-year period at 3Mi per cent vinterest. Oxford Class Panel on Ruling Scheduled by PTA WALLED LAKE-“When Johnny Comes Marching Home — Reading!” is the title of a panel discussion to be held at 'niurs-day’s 8 p.m. meeting of the Walled Lake Junior High School Parent-Teacher Association. Methods and materials used In the school’s reading program will be discussed by a panel of teachers including William Floto, Bruce Reeves, Don Donigan, John Moffat and Dean Smith. The meeting will be held at the school, 615 N. Pontiac Trail. to 'Beg' for U N. Fund OXFORD- Underprivileged children of the world will benefit from the Halloween “begging’ tomorrow night by members of the Oxford Junior Methodist Youth Fellowship. All funds collected by the youngsters from Oxford Methodist Church will be turned over to the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund. SOUTHFIELD -* Circuit Court Judio Clark J. Adams yesterday dwifed a request for a temporary Injunction by the Detroit patbie Hospital Corp. to pertilit work to pro^ fi* CTrt4gi|^thig hospital in Southfield. Urn hospital sought to prevent the City of — CAROLYN S. SETTY ROBERTA J. BETTY Announcement is made of the engagements of Carolyn Sue Setty to Donald L. Myers Jr. and Roberta June Setty to Paul Li Farnsworth by the bride-elects’ mother, Mrs. Opel Setty of 84 Axford St., Lake Orion. Parents of the prospective bridegrooms are Mr. and Mrs. Donald L. Myers of 201 Lapeer St., Lake Orion, and Mr. and Mrs. James Farnsworth of Ferndale. Car, Bus Crash, 9 Are Injured The Southfield City Council refuse approval for the hospital on the residentially zoned land Oct. 16 after protests against it by some 75 residents at an earlier council meeting. , , Hospitals may be approved In the zoning category under the city’s zoning ordinance by the council “upon a finding that the thrown through the hus’ windshield and landed on the hood. Several of the other boys were thrown out of the vehicle’s doors. The bus is a panel truck-type vehicle with windows and seats. Mrs. Powers was also admitted to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital with an injmred rl|^t leg. Her condition is satisfactory. In serious condition at William Beaumont Hospital. Royal Oak. Mrs. Gratopp, of 272 Fabius St., is listed in critical condition in St. Joseph’s Mercy Hospital, Pontiac, with head, chest and knee injuries. According to police reports, Mrs. Powers, an expectant mother, said she was going west when the car in front of her stopped suddenly. She said she cut left to avoid hitting the halted vehicle. Police said her car cut into the left lane of the two-lane highway, colliding head-on with the eastbound school bus. is Miss Beverly Berry, 18, of Clawson, who was a passenger in Mrs. Powers’ car. 'Three of the six Injured schoolboys remain in William Beau-. Hospital. OTHERS INJURED John Buswell, 11, of 5820 Houj^ton St. is In serious condition with a skull fracture: Richard Thorne, 10, of 2438 Dalesford St. remains in satisfactory condition with lacerations of the face; and Michael Cook suffered head injuries and is also in serious condition. FORCEFUL IMPACT The impact of the collision was pf^uch force that Michael Cook, of 850 Hartland r ’Treated ai— Steve Jankowski, 8, of 5601 Wright St., Robert Erasure, 10, of 3112 John R St., and James Vodicka, 10, of 531 Sylvanwood St. Another schoolboy had been dropped uff at his home just prior to the accident. PHYLLIS R. HADDRILL Announewnent is made of the engagement of Phyllis Rosemary Uaddrill, daughter of Philip H. Haddrill of Detroit and Mrs. Muriel Haddrill of 514 General Motors Road, Milford, to Michael J. Maul, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Maul of Grand Blanc. The couple plans a Jan. 26 wedding. Denies Order JiidgB NixBt Injunction to Ctoor Hospital Plans interferliig with plans to build a Troy fo OK Bid hr Firehouse troy — Ttie City Omunlsslon next Monday will award the contract for construction of tta new Fire Station No. 1 on Big Beaver Road batwoon Rochester and John R toads. . , Fifteen bids, ranging from gn,-430 to $43,000, were received at last nlght’a oomm viewed by City Manager Dsvid E. Ftawilone and the city’s architects before the contract is awarded at tha apodal meeting 8 p.m. Moth use will not be injurious to the surrounding neighborhood-’* Approval was recommended by the city planning commission. The hospital’s suit contends the decision by the city council was arbitrary and capricious.” Its court action seeking a permanent injunction will be decided by Judge Adams at a later date. Circuit Judge Beer to Speak Before Group Circuit Judge William J. Beer will be guest speaker at the Nov. 8 meeting of the Oakland County Law Enforcement Association. The dinner meeting will be held ;4S p.m. at the Kingsley Inn, 1495 Woodward Ave., Blw •ttsit Mr. SMITH 0oe» to LANSING VOTE NOV. 6 R. C. “Bob” Smith Republican, Ponllao Suite Representative Jobs and Human Dignity Not Welfare aad Sympathy! Paid Ad by Friends (Pomicul AdTfrtiMinrnt) Top Farmers to Be Lauded at Banquet Farmers between the ages of 21 and 36 located In a U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce area will be judged starting this month when the U. S. Jaycee and the National LP-Gas Council search for the nation’s outstanding farmers. WWW more than 1,000 chapters of the U. S. Jayoees are expected to participate In this year’s program. Local winners will be cited in their commaaities at a farmer recepitlon program and honored at their state baa- Competition is based on farm tribution to civic affairs. Announcement of the four national winners will be made at a national recognition ^gram in Tulsa, Okla., next April. Area resident.^ were warned I that only children with proper UNICEF tags and canisters are authorized to collect for the fund. ’The canisters will be turned in at the church at 8 p.m. NEW ROYAL SIGNET ;• 78 NORTH SAGINAW STRBIT SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY ONLY! MUTTON LEGS (PoUtleuI AdTcrUiamentl (Polltloal AdvtrUiamenn SfKWMiwrf if OaUauS C«(inlp Napublican Commlliee h JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS WANTia) highest prices paid -WE PICK UP FE 2-0200 I eONTlAO aOUAP I . . . IZSNwIhSisimwSl ^fE2483l Oakland county^sheriff rmm republican ^mm Tin OiMiiii CmsIi Ihm iIi«4i Iw ACTION-101$-lEADERtMIPI ThtN in OiMtnd Counli Gi^ Oikipnd bw ind County |nit)li(;,iii BaaMa' auMt«.HMy ' «uMttawMW i.aii MJLAl Spoaiarad hr Oaktead Ceualjr Najiufcliean pernmiflM THE PONTIAC FREISS, TUESDAY, 6CTOBER 80, 1962 ^Pe. Set of bqportod CHINA at an Ebcedleiit Valne tXaiWVE; Pontlwi CIvU DafeitM DiMctor Divid 8. Taitto-day vanwd cttinmi that ‘*inva> alon*' of the city ii iminiiionk Itel said the Invaston li «qMC^ id to eoitto about awidowii toiBor> row. All availahli police htve _____ ‘many of whom will bo boardod,’*Twliaid. Memberi of this task force iviU be easily identifiahie, Teel added, by their ^bdwroat war cry; “Trick or treat/’ The warriors are amall-sised. Al-ttiough some mtches and goblins may be included in their ranks, their demands will be relatively CHADSWORTR: Flowers and Trimming In Sanuner Blue. Platinum Edge. Set Is Complete Service for 12 INCLUDES! 12 Dinner Flates-12 Salad Plates~12 Bread and Butter Plates-12 Fruit Dishes-12 Soap Diihea~ 12 Cope and Saueers—d Extra Cape for Braakape Insi 2 Flatters<-2 VOietable Bowlsol. Gravy Boat-1 Creamer 1 Covered Sn|ar BowL •69® Layawar or Sodgat Tm i I vis:- jEwatns, Trick or TVaat ‘BanCItr Comiiir 1 ofSficknevQuads I 01 msilOT UMO i^portontTolkTliandBy *InvaMn^ of City Neats govommentai observers give fancy names to tropical storms, these secret intelligence agents have deckled to name the invasion ‘Meat and Treat Hour.” tt is strategically slated (or t-7 "The method? Entice them v pai^ and entertainment. .They will pass throuMi borhoods taking an ap|W here, a candy bar there, and then be gone as if my magic. In fact, it is magic. A magic called Halloween. aTYHALLLOOKHtW City Hall will keep a close eye 1 the biurre little invaders. Head of the .city’s Halloween master intelligence bureau is David R. Ewalt, Parks and Recroation dl- Much in the manner that other ASTHMA (•MHicnm TheuMndi or m oro now findini womon ond ilmalo. oMi irioiblnt. c noM duo to I help romovo tbiok. conioot... ---------- ThM uouoUk OOMO broothliw (oot. ^oyo eoutblM! thui pronoMo oouildpr rioop. Oot MBNDAOO *t druilltlo. Obotr UP and tMl honor tool. First place winner gets a bicy> cie, a radio is second prize and wIiMver finishes third gets five silver dollars.' The city officials are cooperating wMi Parent-Teacber A«ao- There are also to bo three winners of one sliver dollar endi at every elementary achool in the Pontiac School District. in plans to contain the invading fsi^ at local schools. City officials recommend all etementary age parties run hram 7-8:30 p.m., so these mys-tmrkius little visitors may vanish by 8 pm. COUNTERATTACK Junior and senior high school parties will run from 8-10 p.m., with all oJ,der invasion units scheduled to be deactivated by 11 Ihe same strategy win be Initiated at 18:38 for Junior high schools and at 11 far the senior high division. Prizes for old soldiers will be a wrist watch, first; pen and pencil set, seomd; and 85, third. In a counter uttack to begin-at 8, the Intelligence bureau, heavy artillery support from secret service agents (the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce) win initiate some magic of their own. This operation they fendly refer to as the “CItywIde Mystery Treat Contest.” The secret service agents, in snappy military Jargon known as Jaycees, will draw names from a large basket of registrations marked “Elementary Division” at 9 p.m. Phone calls will be made to these invaders and if they are home and deactivated, they will win prizes. Dies in Coldwatnr Algiers (up» - Premier Ah- “S mmr ' ■■■ ■ J D.AM, tiAltm uerlll ilwi1llMl> M Wllh IllUfflU ttMiHHIft OOLDWATER (AP) --One of the four quadruplets of Mr. and Mrs. Hatty Stlcknay died Saturday at the Communi^ Health Cen- The quadf - aU boys ^ were bom Friday. All of the KB prizes to be awarded have been donated by the Jaycees. :. During the height of the invasion, p o 11 c e vrill appear in force on city streets In an effort to assure a bloodtess battle. The hospital reported babies A, C awl D holding their oWn. One month premature, they are being cared in incubators. A post mortem examination Sunday showed baby “B’ died of an iUneis of the lung membrane which occurs in premature babies. City officials have appealed to motorists to drive with care tomorrow evening. All jirecautlons are being taken to protect the scurrying little Invaders regardless of how “menacing” they look. Behind the masks are very precious visitors. iron RIVER (8)-Eugene, Moore, editor and manager of the fron River Reporter, has resigned to become secretary of the Ind^ndent Bankers Association of Sauk Centre, Minn., effecUve 40 Students to Be Paid to Foil Asleep in Class GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -Forty students from the Urdyers-ity of Florida will be paid f 10 a night for sleeping eight hours a comfortable bed. The students will participate in an Air Force study of ways to prepare pilots for long trips in space. They will be isolated in aound-proof rooms and wired for brain study. died was desigaated baby “B”. WeiSbiag I pouads 8 euaces, ha Editor Changes Job Slop lhal houffhvniifig and ptoading with landlordfy by owning your homo«.financod with our modorn, lowwcotl lean plan* — HOME LOANS---------^ Capitol Savinp & Loai Assi. April and May are usually the clearest months in the Philippines. Egtablished 1890 75 W. Huron St., Pontiac FE 4-0561 Cvstonsi PiiUng ia Itii •! l■il6iB9 KRAZY KELLY says: We would like you to visit our sine - just to aequaiat youRolf with the meichaiNlisa wo cany and the prices we ask. K is all aid ef this warid - wa dom ask yon to buy - just coma io and visit witb us. Rsnaodiar our shigan "it pays to pw us a by bafnis you buy.” M Money, wwn - No Paymants untO Dacendwr! Can Be Usilas-Baill-ln Now Ford Fairlane has hardtops and wagons! The hot new middleweight with V-8 punch goes full line for *63...wlth a lively choice of nine models... hardtops, wagons, sedans! Comb see what Ford Fairlane has for you now I 7wo dashing, dazzling new middleweight hard- the cheerful choice of two optional V-8’$ or a standard Six.) cart like the big ondal Four swank new middleweight sedanst Thanks to the magic of Ford's unitized construction; they all give you blg-c«r room, rl|lf and performance... in a mat and nltobte new size that's easy to park and handle and buy latAirl Costs less than some compacts. (You even have mwi——IlindlfrRaflhT^^ even more practical, It ctayi on the road and off the rack... with the help of Ford's Twlce*e-Vear or every 6,000-Mlle, Maintenance. As final proof of quality, consider this: Fairlane -like all '63 Fordi-carriei the 24-monih or 24,000-mlle warranty* pioneered by the Ford Motor Company. rrK>8t oara-freo ooTBl FORD MItitkWftUtrill »«WVy«oMET KwRisi'iMnn iS^hAsi AMiloKOirofONE I AMBWWUROrWWOUCnOM ■ TGCHNICOLORO niOM WARNER BRO AskU N Ouster forl MoosylTanisI’ of South Africa Colleges Make Knpwn Need for $16<4 Million UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (ffi -Saudi Arabia yesterday demanded expulsion of Soufli Africa from the United NaUons because it has refus^ to end its racial segregation policy. ' ★ * ★ Ahmad Shukairy, Saudi Arabian minister of state and delegation chief, specifically asked the United States to join in the expulsion action. Speaking in the assembly’s special political committee, Shukairy said “the case for expulsion is ripe enough and I move this honorable committee, with the United States included, to adopt a resolutioh for the expulsion of Soudi Africa from the United Nations.” The United States had denounced apartheid and supported assembly resolutions condemning But it has , been prominent among those countries that have have defeated expulsions moves in the past, arguing that keeping South Africa in the United Nations will provide an opportunity to press South Africa and persuade it to end its government segregation measures. ★ w * The United States also has opposed a severe diplomatic, trade and economic boycott against South Africa. Hong Kong colony is about the area of New York City. Coupler of Nuts Loosed Upon Nation^ By VERNON SCOTT UPI Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD-Hlde the kids, lock your doors and windows and put in a quick call to the nearest strait jacket dealer-you are about to be Invaded by a couple of self-confessed nuts. ★ ★ a During the next month, from California to Washington, D.C. multicolored truck will roll into scores of cities bleating for statehood for the Territory of Moosyl-yania. At the wheel will be Jay Ward, producer of Video’s “Bnllwinkle Show.” accompanied by Howard Brandy, Ward’s enthusiastic press agent. Moosylvania, an uninhabited island located somewhere between the State of Minnesota and Canada, is comprised almost entirely of swamps, marshes and ravenous mosquitoes. it * * “This campaign is a big deal,’ Actress OK After Surgery BEVERLV HILLS, Calif. (AP) -Actress Janet Leigh, who underwent an emergency appendectomy, was in satisfactory condition today. ★ ★ ★ Miss Leigh, 35, was rushed to Doctors hospital early Monday. The actress was formerly married to actor Tony Curtis. She married stockbroker Robert Brandt last Sept. 15. Only Family Sees Mrs. Roosevelt LUNCH DINNER COCKTAILS Dixie Highway Vz Mile South of Holly BHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYI DAIRY F««larlii( Our Fumouu Kosher Corned Beef SPECIAL LUNCHEON EVERYDAY NEW YORK (AP)-A family spokesman said Monday that Mrs. FYanklin D. Roosevelt was “holding her own” but still seriously ill. it * it Mrs. Roosevelt, 78, suffering _jiemia and a lung infection, was taken home from a hospital 12 days ago. Only members of her ediate family are allowed to visit her. Cumpitir Cl md Fr.« Purkins FE USSI ■ LAST TIMES TORiaW j The Miracle Woiker 1 AND |East of Kilimanjaro ittHootrioln-CRrUtitgroI STUfS TOMORROW L bcUIRMUINPOE^ Ol "BURN 1 WITCH 1 B1]BN”| ' WAR CENTENNIAL!' ■ The eereen has never known a love etory te compere with thisi •MM 0AVIDQSE12NICICS / MAROARnuiicH^ , GONE WITH fi WIND mfiKGABlE'ilENlBGH Ward said with hpt-eyed political partisanship. “Our enemies have spread the vile calumny that this is a publicity stunt for the show.” Asked precisely why he advocates statehood for Moosyi-vanla, Ward said blandly, “Don’t ask me, you’ve come te the wrong party.” Wa^ transcends the zany. He’s as mad as a hatter and proud of the distinction. SEE ROUGH ROAD Our truck is full of sweatshirts for Moosylvania ambassadors we select along the route -4ilso campaign buttons, ballons and other goodies,” he rambled ‘We have a loud speaker that can be heard for two miles. Press agent Brandy was beside himself with fervor. We’ll probably spend more time in jail than on the road,’' he said. “We are going to keep our eyes open for guys with nds, too,” Ward put in. “Maybe we can claim diplomatic immunity. In 30 cities we are holding the biggest contest in years. “We are going to judge each town on the kind of parade it puts on for us. The prize goes to the city that gives us the worst# parade. First prize is a ferocious live bull moose. AAA “There might be some organizational problems there. But the reception by our NBC-TV station managers across the country has been unanimous — they are all leaving town.” A A A Ward is convinced devious forces are at work against his proposition for making Moosylvania the 52nd state. “Our chances of making the grade are so dim we are leaving the Slst position open to anyone who might get in ahead of us,” he said. “I think our opponents have a weak argument against us—a place shouldn’t be discriminated against just because it has a little population problem.” He also has a ready explanp-tion for the vague boundary lines of Moosylvania; “Them surveyors keep getting swallowed up by quicksand.” memben «f Congress urging the statehood issue have been met with silence. But local officials the tour may be forced to take some kind of acUwi-espe-cially when Ward and Brandy letters to the White House and diambark from their track The trip should atimulate the white coat brigade. It’s not often they can bag two nute in Napoleon hate at the i AUCTION SALE V COORTY^WIIED SURPLUS PROPERTIES . UoveNber 14,1M2 In pUrsuanc* of th# provlslorw eontolr^ lOneous Roiolutioni Not. 3^7, 3845, 3878 ond 4028 os odoptud by the Ooklond County Bpord^of Supervisors at their meetings held on June 27, iveOi September 11, 1961, November 7, 1961 ond October 1, 1962, respectively, the follohving described surplus properties will be offered for sole at very attractive terms by PUBLIC AUCTION. Such properties ore offered for sole subject tO ;Oll governing restrictions pnd eosements of record ond the County of Oakland fnokes no worrontles or rep- ^ resentotion os to the condition of properties herein listed. The amount of the "Minimum Acceptable Bid" shown ofter eoch description is the minimum sole price. No sole con be mode for less than the minimum bid'* Indicated, ' IMPROVED PROPERTY CITY OF PONTIAC state senator ■■IM REPUBLICAN I Thi OiMirS Cmty tiM iUrSi tir ACTIOK-JOSS-LESOERSHiri ThMR Iff Oaklind County mon who know your noods... They have in ■ Attorniy. Mimbar, Oakland County, outstanding record of sorvice . --■* Thty dasorve your vote Nov. 6th •awa T. NURTNI SpoatoMd by Oakland Countr HupuMicoB CommUlaa W. Germany to Help India BONN, Germany (iT) — The West German government yesterday promised support for India in its clash with R^ China. This was done after Chancellor Konrad Adenauer received a letter from Prime Minister Nehru on the border fighting. Press Chief Karl Guenther von Hase declined to specify what form the support would take. “It is too early for that,” he said. ’The press chief reported Nehru described the conflict with the Chinese troops as a threat to India’s security and the peace of the world. Hospital Strike in Rome ROME l/IV-Doctors, nurses and other employes of Rome’s state hospitals started a new five-day strike yesterday for better pay and Improved working conditions. Special services were set up in the hospitals to handle emergency cases. PARCa ACCEPT. ILnm. S-Story Hoiiw, SS Franklin If g |||||| . Blvd., Lot M AMMUMr’a Pint 41. ^19.11011 ■ Zonlns pennitn neveml nuen. -wywww ZSIngle Home. 4S Cmw- $A glUl ■ fSU ^www VILLAGE OF MILFORD 3 1’% FmnM Home, ill Detroit St.. $4 9CA ■ Lot 1, Bhtek II, Plie%M’Add. Sub. fcfWWW TOWNSHIP OF SPRINGFIELD 4 Small Frame Cottn«»-l acre M. tf CAA _ R7N Crooby Lake Bond. B l nere ^ I SMIU ■ ol 8.S aoren NW% of SW'/a, Sec. nfvrww TOWNSHIP OF WATERFORD *2,750 5 Single Home. 7IZS Kllubeth Lake . Road. (Code No. W881 B-SA. See. " IS) Lot Hie approx 87%’ x 8M*. OTHER PROPERTIIS TO Bl OFFERED UPON WHICH ARE LOCATED CONDEMNED BUILDINGS NOT SUITABLE FOR REHABILITATION AND THE AMOUNTS SHOWN AS ACCEPTABLE BIDS ARE BASED UPON UNO VALUES ONLY, AND IN SOME INSTANCES, THE VALUES OF EXISTING WATER AND SEWER CONNBCTIONS ARE INCLUDED IN SUCH FIGURE. 6. 7. CITY OF PONTIAC * 650 ns Tnumnnln Ave. Lot 13S o( Auburn Onrdenn #t. Bldf. con-* luut be removed by 4S1-4SB Ea«t South Blvd. Lot 111 except S.1S’ Fnriy Farm Add. Oppotrfle Baldwin Rubber Plant. Bldga. condnmnnd and to be removed by pnrohauer. 451 Eaet South Blvd. Lot SIS ex-O eept 8.16’ Ferry Farm Add. Oa Oppoolte Baldwin Rubber Plant. Bldg, condemned and to be removed by the purohauer. *2,450 *2,400 9. CITY OF ROYAL OAK S.14S Cummingu Ave. Lot 8SS {A A|||| Prairie Lawn Acre* Snb. #S. Z-IHIil ■ - I muul be ACREAGE LOCATED IN CITY OF PONTIAC IN AREA ■ETWEEN FISHER ROOT AND OAKLAND AVE. 10. £ 11. jDlaa a.T.n.a. f»nli M U'ljr kMMarf. t.aa Dtrm, ■!»#• *r lua. FnulDtD M aUHiay A**. nwiMto «■ N’l, fM* k# a.T.n.n. B«II LIM. ■ullDklt for laUuitriM >r l*M. H. rMd dI Kw *16,200 *17,000 aM' trrnilDf*. *65,000 9,450 Mtl.ta D«r«a. ann #r Ihd. AMrki. l.aM* IrwilktD DM OaklaMi Art. AM# frimUt# B DM Watt Blv«. »M KDaattl EddU »IUi " D»arD«. Ijaw DM O.T.B.R. BtU LiMt DM 15. ODklsni • o.T.a.a. P t. rlikkDf-WDT. Mdm LIST OF TIRMS AND CONDITIONS OP SALE, SIDDINO INSTRUCTIONS, ITC„ WILL II MAILID TO PROSPICTIVI PURCHASIRS IT CONTACTING THI FOLLOWING NAMED ACINCT. SigHi bMarIng tb# “F«rctl No." havt btan pMtod on auck pafMl TINE and PUCE of AUOTIOR Said auction will bo hold in tha Sunarvisart' Room locotod on tho 4th Floor of Ooklond County Offieo Bldg,, No!. 1, Lofoyotto St„ Pontiac, Michigan, com-mdneing promptly at 1130 P. M., EST, Vmnosdoy, Novombor 14, 1962. This Boord, acting os tho ogont for tho 'Buildings ond Grgunds Committoo of tho Ooklond County Boord of Suporvisors, rosorvos tho right to withdrow ony of Tho ohoranihiiertbidnpnfteTrii^^ to tho timo ond doto schodulod for tho onction, or and oil bids and to woivo dofocts in tho ^ sold Buildings ond Grounds Committso gnd/or Onklond County Board of Suporvisors. OAKUND COUNTY BOARD OF AUDITORS COUNTY OFFICE BUILDING Hod. 1 iofoy«ttG*Sf„ Pontiac^ Michigan Tiltphont PEdfral 3-7&1, Ext. 81 I; \ Ttofi PONTIAC FEESS^ T0B8DAY, OCTOJBEB 30,1962 ;W'. Story of Cuba Far From Finishet * Wf JAMES MARUm WASHINGTON -- Hie abwftce i)f puUie SiMUog by the Kennedy ■dndnMratioD over peamier KbnHbdiev’f retreat on ChIhi la wdanlandalde. There eookl be Sun lamnlidiev, tbare art also tiro other food Masons for something kaa than rejoicing: Khruebchev stiil has to make good on Ms promise to puD his missiles out of CMw; and the troubie wMi Fidel Castro hasn’t been settled at all. If right now there is Kremlin ccmflict over the Soviet blunder and embarrassment In Cuba, open in all this as if bo srete a nobody. Yet, Just because the Sovt^ Un-ioo has been his lamta of supidles and Ms only raatiwpe of survival, Cartro can hardly afford a break wHh Khrushchev. hasn’t been. So hmg as he bosses Cuba he will be a menace to the rest of the Latin American countries through the internal trouble he can create for them. The Russim made no promises to 1^ Castro quiet. And Castro While Kennedy promiseiMf the i-thatthe „ id States would not invade Cuba, this did not say this country would not work for hjs downfall. Their inohlem is hot, without a direct American invasion. Yet, they can’t sit idly by while Castro, through his agents and local Communists, tries to wreck .one Latin Amertcan country after another. Since Castro couldn’t survive without Soviet sqpplies-for in- ly aubvandots he atteropta against Ms nslMm mmt be considered Soviet anhttoNl on as much as it is Chstie^ * Therefore the withdrawal of th» Soviet missilea, indeed of hdnSi the end Fort^asl * nIroU hU d«>tli . A»lralofr pointa th« w»». ’ ARIES (Mar. 31 jngtnull^, ..... «*?hu»U»m' to’”cDme'roirrni‘'to toteltL M»kc oth«r» »w»r» that you ar« vital, TAURUS (Apr. 30 to rood tor toting »n "Inward" yourwK. Follow through on -bay to "back tha unf "-Taiirua determination to GEMINI I May Sh'to . to pueh aside personal not the wise course. N nor day by challengin show Its hand. By so .............. . •■'trAN^£r‘J3«n^""^fi"'io7uT'‘/u or7|lnahtV.''^Vor!iH \he new. Be Independent li No time for ultra-conie....... LEO (July 33 to Aug. 311 Ctiknge ........ -ould prove Irustlatlng. Instead, wake your own changes. _ ■ MBRX IBept, 33 to Get. 381'. Tijke events es they coibe Apt to be day when others, no nietter how sincere tor the moment, prove less then _Blable^ Rely upon your own reso tees with "grain of ( SCORPIO (Oct. 33 .. - - . better methods Ho. Stress your abilities. Show ol^heri that you arc capable of. much more thuc current indications. Day to make- valu. ‘’’iAaiTrA'iUB (Nov. 33 to Dec 31 ( Cycle at peak: means bet on your own abilities. Judgment airt to e with imooih rhyti m ' born In June may APKICOHN iDei 33 w I to auistlmi .. ifiuAHIUS (Jan, 31 to Feb Ul Con tacts made at (joclal 'of workers proves valuaWe. Day to U SLpLrffii. V£T.‘*inft?: .... .. .. iiO): Take " route. Key te to be con- ..... hlle keeping eyes open lor new methods. Gradual chai - ----------- okay radical movcc. Advaiici offering constructive suggestion. IF WIDNtSDAT IS YOUR ItlRTHbAY . . you gre tble to handle facts, flij-rti, and you are syinpalhetlc to needs ,1; - r / % 4 " ' •V^iu’ ‘•yf ■ I' 'imtE Sorority Plans to Do-Si-Do .Zeta Zeta Omega Sorority will present its annual square dance, “Hillbiliy Hoedown,” Saturday 9 p m, to 1 a.m. at Knights of Pythias HaH on Voorheis Road. A four-piece band led by Stanley Weyer will be featured. General chairman for the dance Is Mrs. Gary Hether-ington. Mrs. Robert Lussier wit} be decorations chairman; Mrs. Harold Nicholson^ band chainnan; Mrs. Robert Turn-bull, publicity chairman; and Mrs. James Smith and Mrs. Lynn Wyckoff, ticket cochairmen. Tickets may be purr chased from any club member. Meet Man; Then Go on Foursome By The Emily Post Institute Q; A friend of mine called me last evening and said that her boy friend's cousin, who lives out of town, was visiting him for a few days and she wanted to know if I would like to go out with him some evening along with her and her boy friend, making it a foursome. I said I would. My mother thinks I was wrong to accept a date with a man who is a total stranger to me and said that the man will think me very cheap. What is your opinion on this? A: Your mother is right,, you should at least have met this man before accepting an invitation to go on a four-^sem» fw the evening with Mrs. Harold Nicholson, Motorway Drive (teft), helps Mrs. Gary Hether-ington, GtOeway Drive (center) and Mrs. Robert Lussier, Henbert Road, put . together two of the ‘'guests'* who will be And They Are All Different part of Zeta Zeta Omega's “Hillbilly Hoedown." The annual square dance will be held Saturday at the Knights of Pythias Hall on Voorheis Road. Mrs. Hetherjingiton is general chairman. Men Have Their Reasons The high rise look of a coachman coat prominent in the fall 1962 collection of OriginalOi this in red of Studies and Social Life double-faced wool has a black seal collar which can be. worn up close to the neck. Area Collegiafes Report on Arfivifics , Robin L. White, son of the Welton C. Whites of South ^ammond Lake Drive, was pledged to Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity at St. Lawrence University, Canton, N.Y. w w -e Thomas L. Lee, son of the David W. Lees, Bloomfield iiills, is a member of Deni.son iinlversity's student manage-Jnent team which la participating In a liine-college corporate management study conducted by lBtd)ana University’s graduate School of business. Teems at each participating i»llege feed management de-lision datavby mail to an Electronic compter at Indiana University which evalu- Geraldine Rernice Criss 1/ East Pike Street, daughter of John F. Criss, Dearborn, and the ItUe Mrs. Criss, ■ exchanged vows with Thomas Ellis Hunter, son of the Nelson K. Hunters, West Itdquois Road, ^irdqy, in St.i BenedkTs Church. ates students' business dcei sion-making abilities, w *■ w Hints Mairy Scribner, daughter of the Charles D. Scribners of Rochester, has pledged Alpha Phi Sorority at Duke University, Durham, N. C., where slie is a frcsh- Stephcn E- Hall, a student at Michigan State University, was initiated into Pi Kappa Phi national social fraternity. He is the son of the R. B, Halls of Birmingham and is majoring In economics. w w ♦ Area members of the women’s field hockey team at Kalamasoo College are Susan Wotila, soph'lu iv 1,1 kIu I of Mr. and Mrs. F'elix Wotila of Pontiac Drive ;and Marilyn Rae Coffing, freshman. Marilyn’s parents are the William Coffings, also of Pontiac Drive. Games will be played with Hope College, Michigan State University and Western Michigan University. A sectional tournament will be played Nov. 10 and 11 in Detroit. WWW The following students have been named to the dean’s list at Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart, Purchase, N.Y.: Mary Christine Powell, daughter of the Berhard F. Powells, Bloomfield Hills; Marian Kratage, daughter of Hunter-Criss Rites liu Aiiihoi, . '