rhe Weather U.S. Weather Bnreau Forelmit Colder (DeUlli Pace *) THE POJSTTTAC V'OL. 121 NO. 18 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTlAC, MICH1GA^^n7 TO FEBllGARY 28, 19();j-68 PAGES / UNITED ®P^S$^mTERSlONAL M'k Soft-Pedals Mao to Get By WILLIAM L. RYAN News Analysis AP Special Correspondent Premier Khrushchev’s latest pronouncements in the interminable dialogue with Red China may mean a Peking-Moscow meeting to explore the painful Split in the world Communist front. This does not mean the rift is closing but rathlfFtfiat Khrush- chev is anxious to remove the /war of words from public view and take it backstage.. In his attempt to accomplish this, Khrushchev has applied the soft answer to turn away Red Chinese wrath. Only hours after Peking had lashed him violently, demanding an apology for his attitude m the quarrel over how world commu- nism should be advanced, Khrushchev replied with notable mildness. He reminded the Red Chinese— and those who side with Peking— that only Moscow is strong enough to go to their aid should they be in danger. He said he would be willing to go ta the aid dPany Com- munist country attacked by “the imperalists.” But he thoughtfully singled out by name Cuba, Red China, Ndrth Viet Nam, North Korea and East Germany. . PEKING SUPPORTERS tion that Khrushchev fears paper tigers and thus sacrifices opportunities for i ccgnipunism to advance swiftly, particularly in the backward areas of Latin America, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. . The Comnaunist parties of North ’ Viet Nam and North Korea side with Peking in We quarrel. They support the R^Chinese conten- East Germany’s Communist leadership has been nagging , A Khrushchev on the issue of West Berlin, which he virtually promised four years ago to deliver to them. And Cuba, of course, was included in this blanket pledge of Soviet protection for a spc- ‘ cific purpose. , The Red Chinese claim Khrushchev .showed the white feather last October by agreeing to withdraw Soviet mi.ssiles from. Cuba after the Kennedy blockade showdown. ■^-Patiently. Khrushchev re- peated in his speech to a Kremlin election rally Wednesday that he did what he did to “arrest the oncoming avalanche of thermonuclear war.” He said he had definitely not ‘■left heroic Cuba at the mercy of the big sharks of American imperialism.” He assured Cuba of Soviet support in any "hour of need.” 9 Die in Blast of Jet Tanker at Alaska Base Explodes Over Guard House, Smashes Into Nearby Highway FAIRBANKS, Alaska (^) —A KC135 jet tanker off from Eielson Air Force Base exploded over a guard house at an entrance to the field last night, killing nine persons. All seven aboard the n'anc were killed. The other two (Ued when the explosion flattened the guard house and a nearby waiting room." 'Bias Sickness Everywhere' A witness said that as the plane passed over the guard house, flames appeared and then it exploded. The four-engined plane veered to the left and crashed about a quarter of a mile from the gate. It smashed into the i Alaska Highway, which runs by the base to^ Fairbanks, 26 miles to the north. I n- Kennedy Offers Specific Plan for First Time Appeal to Congress Calls tor Work in Voting, School Areas Officials said they did not believe any traffic was passing at the time. On board the KC135, used to refuel Strategic Air Command bombers in flight, were the pilot, a copilot, a navigator and fourj technicians, the tanker was on, a refueling mission. i WASHINGTON (I?) —Preisident Kennedy ap- Bosch, Johnson Get Together SECRET WEAPON?-ls the city really going into the rocket launching business? What is this that looms before our eyes? These are questions tliat passed through the minds of many persons hurrying along Montcalm Street this week. What looks like a giant rocket against the bleak dawn of a winter morning, is really Just part of an elevated water tank going up near Pontiac Motor Division. It will be used when Pontiac gets its new water supply from Detroit in early summer. The gate where the guard house and waiting room stood is about 200 yards from the end of ‘.he runway, used by the plane. The brick guard house, where one air policeman was reported; stationed, and the frame wait-j ing room were demolished. | The Air Force said the body j of a guard was found, but whether the other body vas | that of a civilian or serviceman was not known. 4 Ships Head for Island Few Red Troops Depart Cuba Wreckage was scattered for a quarter of- a mile beyond the point of impact, and large oiid-dles of fuel burned through the night. The wreckage and fire blocked traffic about. Iwp l.our.^ A temporary road was bulldozed around the crash site. From Our News Wires ] to be on the way to Cuba. The I WASHINGTON — One Soviet' ships have a potential capacity ship carrying a small number i to haul away eight or nine [of troops has left Cuba under thej thousand Soviet soldiers, new Soviet promise to pull several i presumably^ the one ship known| thousand out of Cuba by March 15.liner'report that there was complete Reporting this'today, officials [Baitika, reported Fe^. 21 to have cooperation between the air force L'kiixu ar/k bnnwn nrWVi n iinHAt^rminnH SIlH tho ('CntPRl iniClllCICI Fitch, Army intelligence chief, as today’s witncsscss. The committee yesterday lieard air force intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Robert A. Brietwei.ser Mercury to Slip in Snowy City pealed to a divided Con-Igress today to reinforce ithe Negro’s right to vote and to attend desegregated schools in a na|i| he said “the cl of discrimination” still exists nearly everywhere. For the first time, in a special message, Kennedy outlined a specific civil rights program to Congress. In addition to legislation directed at the ballot and the school 'house, lie asked for an extension of the life of the Civil Rights Commission, with expanded du- Reds Held for Ruining iSEI Dominican said four other ships arc known Iset out with a then undetermined!and the central intelligence agen-'number aboard. HT thv air reconnai.ssance of ★ * * Cuba last fall. Greek Freighter Sinks BREST, France (/PI - The 1,.337-ton Gr6ek - freighter Ilekta ran onto rocks off the French Atlantic coast shortly after midnight and. sank. Authorities said three of its 19 crewmen were missing. 'TT" In Today's Press Probe awarding of plane contract to high bidder — PAGE A-2. At Odds Dorns, GOP cast bipartisanship a.side over ■ Cuba - PAGE IM. Big Boy Blues AulO midget loses slwro of market to GM, too -r PAOi: B-6, Area News ...........A-4 Astrology ......... P-i .Comics ...............W Edlterials .V A*8 Food Section U-9—B-12 Markets P'2 Obituaries ......... P'8 Sport-s ......C-tl-C-JS IHeaters TV-Radio Program* B-17 Women’s P’ges / o' . Blast Hurts 12 'Was Like Howitzer Shell Dropped' Tirpes news service report that the Russians had notified the United States that a force would be left on the island. Asst. Secretary of State Robert Manning said: “We have received no such notification. Nor have we drawn any such inference from any communication or conversation with them.” POMONA, Calif. -like someone dropped Howitzer shell.” "It was I 103mm Tliat was liow a witness dc ;ribed the aftermath of an ex plosion' and fire which shattered a missile test area at General Dynamics, Pomona plant last night. Twelve persons were jured, five seriously. “It blew the hell out of llie test ca,” the witness said. C. D. Cornell, assistant to the president, said the blast oeciirred while scientists were shock-test-ing a missile. Cornell said the type of missile and nature of the tests were classified and could not be disclosed. The plant does research, development and production of tactical guided missiles, amdng them tiie Terrier, Tartar, Redeye missile.s. i C-orncll sai(|| most of the damage .was fromHhe explosion. The fire was quickly extinguished by the plant fire department, he said. An inve.stigation will b^ made to determine the cause df* ’^Ich have been offered to |he the blast, Cornell said. The Times story said the notice from Moscow was interpreted in Washington as meaning a pull-out of up to 7.000 men, leaving aboul 10,000. The Senale Preparedness subcommittee today summoned the intelligence chiefs of the Army and Navy to tell their stories of the Cuban missile crisis. (.'hairman .John C. Stennis. D-Miss., listed naval intelligence chief Rear Adin. V. L. Lawrence and Maj. Gen. Alva R. Flashes SAGINAW (AP) -triet .Indgc Frank died today. ^ U. S. DIs- V. Picard TOKYO (AP) - Cpmmunist China said today that Peking will never bow to the “master-to-their-servants” attitude in bridging the Moscow,,Peking rift. WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States Is drafting a proposed new nuclear test ban treaty embodying cohcessions |foviet I The weatherman dished up a variety for Michigan today, including heavy snow in the south and 22 below zero in Pellston. The Pontiac area came up with two inches of snow and moderate temperatures. But the weatherman said he Stennis relayed parts of Briet-weiser's testimony after the' cksed hearing. The chairman .said Brietweis-er did not indicate there was any gap in reconnaissance when the job was transferred from CIA to the Air Force just before of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) J to 5 above-zero and the high tomorrow near 23. Cloudy, not so cold and a chance of more snow is the outlook for Saturday. Seventeen was the low recording in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury had climbed to 31 at 2 p.m. The program outlined in. this message,” Kennedy said, “should not provide the occasion for sectional bitterness.” Yet While House officials told reporters they recognize the built-in possibilities of a filibuster by Southerners in a Senate which has just rejected a bid to clamp down on filibustering. They said, though, that the program was thilurcd in realistic stylh, that it ought to be passed, and there is a good chance it will. SANTO DOMINGO, D.R. (UPD—Dominican authorities today held at least 10 pro-Commujiist demonstrators who broke up the inauguration parade of PresP dent Juan Bosch with shouts of anti-American slogans and battles with police. Bosch apparently was undaunted by the disturbances yesterday before a host of, foreign dignitaries, includ-. Official Slain in Windy Cify Chicago Alderman Was Negro Leader From Our News Wires Chicago Alderman BenjAmin F. Lewis, his hands handcuffed above his head and four bullet j holes in the back of his skull, was . 8/ye “s « .sihcc. nfglit with the low sliding down jp'mancipatioh Proclamation, the pdfilical heariqtrar President’s message said, slavery has vanished but progress for the Negro has been blocked and delayed too often, UNEQUAL EQUALITY “Flquality before tte law, ” lie .said, “has not always meant equal (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Juniors a Phone-y Lewis, 53-year-old Negro leader of the Democratic forces in the tough West Side 24th Ward, was killed just two days after he w overwhelming re-election to second term in the city council, ing Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson. Bosch launched his term as the Dominican Republic's first constitutional president in 34 years by naming a cabinet composed lairgely of members of his own pftrty. Tite lone independent in the cabinet is Andres Freites, currently ambassador to Washington, who will serve -«s foreign minister. He is considered friendly to the United States. Police swinging rifle butts WASHINGTON (/P)-Thc Tliat first Sunday, (Jeorge parents pf George Basle called the wfeather nine were puzzled but proud times, By Feb. )0 he hart lliat somclioW he had—railed t he weather 42 learned to dial tlie Weatli- times. Tlien the Basies er Bureau for tlie latest forecasts. "We thought it was real cute and smart,'' said his mother, ■ Mrs. George A. Basle. "It was a Sunday he first did it. George ccived their teleplione bill. Surprise, it came to $33 for toll calls. Why? George's call.s all had lieen to tlie Weather Bur- was iiraying .so bad for it I'uu in New York City, to snow so lie could play Instead of dialing 936-In it, and lie went over 1212 for tho recorded to the phone and dialed Wasliington weather fore-the weather all by him- cast he had, in each of self. He thought he was real big. “My husband was proud, very proud. He was walking around with his chest the 42 calls, prefaced the number with 212, the New York City area code for distance dialing. erythiiig lurneit out. Only 6, and already out good for poppa and lie can dial tlie weather. George. Tlie telephone Police and politicians said the slaying miglit have been the work of a bandit. Merlin Nygren, chief the uniformed police, said e was evidence that a rear door liad been forced and a lock had ticcn inilled out. At police headquarters and in j city hall, there were also fears that Lewis was the victim of a “political execution” in the tra-I dition of liloody (Chicago elec-tlionmiATtlTnr'Whirh"thrtr--bnrk'4^ 1 the (Ibys of the notorious chanting anti-American slogans near the parade reviewing stand. At least 10 demonstrators were arrested and several were led away with bloody faces. .Johnson and Venezuelan President Romulo Betancourt were hustled from the reviewing stand by security guards to the safety of a nearby building. Bosch reportedly remained on the stand until order was restored. "Girc us this day our Bloody 2mh’’ Ward and the hine guij squads of gang-Al Capone. wis defeated Jeff Clifford Alford in Tuesday's election by a margin of 12-1. Lewis, wliose vole was reported unofficially as 12,189 to Alford's was formerly a city building inspectOf. We were amazed he could get it so rapidly all the time, even when t h e weather was bad. " the company canceled charges after he explained what liad happened. George Basle (Util!/ bread." Matt. 6:il He was the first Negro to serve as alderman of the 24th Ward which is estimated to have a population 80 per cent Negro. Eugene Belton, the first policeman to enter tlie office and a liigh school elassmale of Lewis, identified .the boay. Belton said Lewis' hands were liandcuffed in front of him, and a burned-out cigarette lyas between the fingers of one hand. A man . should pray. Tlvf: Master said . . . For no more than hi.s daily bread, ' Some people starve themselves to be . . . More comely or more miserly . . . While others eat more than enough I ... Of rich, expensive I food and stuff . . That ( undermines their future ' health ... Lord, give one day’s food and wealth ... Let me know values, rights and beauty . . . And carry out my bounden duty, JULIEN C. HYER 1/ I THE PONTIAC VllESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28. 1963 Probe 'Irregularities' in AF Plane Contract WASHINGTON (H ~ Sen. John L. Mcaellan, D-Ark., laid today he will expert the secretaries of defense and Air Force to explain what he termed "unusual” steps in the award of the TFX warplane contract. General Dynamics Corp. of Ft, Worth, Tex., won the awarf last December over the rival bid of the Boeing Co. of Seattle, Wash. ★ ★ ★ , The contract itself amounts only to $28 million, but the Defense Department estirhates the cost ultimately will rise to $6 5 billion - not all of it going to General Dynamics. It calls for final design, development and production of 1,700 revolutionary type fighter-bomber planes for the Air Force and Navy. The Senate’s Investigations snbcommittee, of which McClellan is chairman, is investigating whether favoritism was involved in the awarding of the conteact. The hearings 111 cioted, but censored transcripts of the proceedings are being made public. Documents placed in evidence before the subcommittee yesterday traced four instances which military evaluation boards had held that Boeing had submitted a better and cheaper design. But the boards were overruled by civilian authority "at the secretary level” in the Pentagon. Roebrt E. Dunne, a subcom- staff lawyer, and Air| Force Col. Charles A. Gayle testified that after the third re-j versa! of the evaluation groups, the Pentagon gave $2,5 million apiece to Boeing and General Dynamics to finance a reiprk-ing of their rival designs, and ako authorized previously forbidden guidance to both bidders. Cold Air Mass Spreads Into the Midwest Out to Make Retirement Sole Issue FLINT (ilV-The executive board of AC Sparkplug Local 651 of the United Auto Workers Union unanimously endorsed yesterday a proposal to.i BRAKE TEST-Oakland County school bus By THE ASSOaATED PRESS Another mass of Arctic air, fanned by northerly winds, spread into the northern midwest today. But temperatures appeared moderating in much of the eastern third of the nation after Wednesday’s severe cold from Maine to northern Florida. Readings ment benefits the sole economic bargaining goal in 1964 contract talks with General Motors Corp. Local 651, which has 9,250 members, is teaming with the 20,000-member Chevrqlet Local 659, in backing the proposal. The two locals combined make up approximately half of the UAW membership in GM’s Flint plants. The locals propose that retirement be bas^ on years of employment rather than age. They suggest that present contract provisions on wages and fringe benefits be retain^ and that bargaining on economic demands be limited to the retirement proposal. This would not limit, however, bargaining on noneconomic demands, such as working conditions. The usual retirement age for UAW members now is 65. The basic rate is $2.80 a month for each year of service. The locals propose that a worker with 25 years of service could retire at 50 per cent of his base pay on a 40-hour week, and a worker with .30 or more years of service could retire at two-thirds early retire-1 drivers test each other’s brake reaction “speed in a bus driver education course conducted by the Oakland County Board of Education. From leff are Clyde A. Daub, 224 Longfellow St,, driver for Pontiac schools; state police trooper Lawrence E. Miller, 4915^ Walnut Lake Road, West Bloomfield Township, a consultant in the course; and Mrs. William Shaw, 94 Poplar St., West Bloomfield Township, driver for Bloiom-field Hills School District. New Congress District Counfy Split Probable two Congressional districts appeared almost a certainty today! following introduction in the legislature yesterday of four gressional redistricting bills. All plans would put a part of By JIM DYGERT „ ^ 1 i islature yesterday of four con- Splitting ^ Oakland County mte J redistricting bills. 'Bible Read in School as Moral Need' President Appeals for Civil Legislation (Continued From Page One) treatment and opportunity. And the harmful, wasteful and wrongful results of racial discrimination and segregation still appear in northern Florida. Readings were service^ ‘ WASHINGTON (UPI) - An at- virtually every aspect of national 15 to 25 deuces higher from hejof h.s base j^ay_ The employed ^ Pennsylvania school life, in virtually every part of the lower Missis-sippi Valley north-j would pay this benefit until tne| ,, , . , _----------:—i „ the Ohio Valley into the middle and northern Atlantic region. It was still chilly in the southeast but temperatures were much higher than 24 hours earlier in most areas. The cold air dipped southward into northern Florida. Readings were mostly in the 30 or upper 20s, including 28 in Tallahassee, Fla. is eligible to draw Social Secur-iseveral skeptical Supreme Court, Kennedy credited his admin-. ° Aft imcHppc that RmlA readme in^ s ____________...uu « *«««. ity benefits. Employe Pleads Guilty to IRS Embezzlement [justices that Bible reading in with a sparkling two- Pennsylvania schools is for a ^gj,^rd on civil rights. But |“morai” not a "religious” purpose. I Attorney Philip H. Ward III, representing Abington, Pa., Town-DETROIT (AP) — Mrs. Savan- 'ship School District, appeared be-nagh Warren, 35, a former Inter- fore the high court in the second ^,3 nal Revenue Service employe, day of argument regarding the As the fresh batch of frigid cold,pleaded guilty yesterday to 22 touchy question of religion in moved across the Canadian border’separate counts of embezzlement public schools. The justices yes-into the northern Midwest, the, involving IRS refund checks. terday heard a Baltimore case mercury dropped below zero in Mrs. Warren, who resigned which dealt mainly with use of many areas It was-15 in Pellston,!Feb. 20 after 17 years with the the Lord’s prayer at daily opening Mich., -9 in Marquette. Mich., -8 HiS, is charged with bilking the exercises, in International Falls, Minn., and I government of at least $14,300 ^ard defended a state law -7 in Eau Claire, Wis. Isince 1954. requiring at least 10 verses of I the Bible to be read without , ....................... 1 comment at the start of each - ............ I school day. The law is being j challenged by a Unitarian pie, Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. the county into the new 19th district Michigan received as a result of the 196jl census.’ ’The plan most likely to be passed by the Republican-controlled legislature and approved by Gov. George Romney would put all the county west of a north-' south line coinciding with Inkster Road (60 per cent of county area), plus the City of Pontiac, in the new district. ■*r ★ * Bills introduced yesterday in the Senate by Sen. Farrell E. Roberts, R-Oakland County, and in the House'Tuesday by Rep. Henry M, Hogan Jr., R-Bloom-field Township, contain this plan. The plan is considered to have approval of most Republican lawmakers. It also would include all of LlV^ ingston and Lapeer counties in the new district, giving it a population of about 336,000. Republicans would have an edge in the district, which probably would raise the OOP’s margin in the state’s congressional delegation from ll-7 t» 12-7. Two bills introduced by Rep. Joseph Gillis, D-Detroit, would include the western portion of Oakland County with a part of Wayne Education: The main request here was that Congress authorize | j„troduced by Rep. he said a broad national effort still is needed, an effort, embracing state and local governments, private citizens and organizations and the congressional machinery. His requests for legislation are expected to be submitted within 10 days or so as three separate bills. They fall into these clas.sifica-tions. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Light snow ending early thiS; morning. Slowly clearing “this* afternoon, high 25,-Fair and colder tonight, low 5. Friday partly cloudy and coid, high 23. Winds becoming mostly northerly 10 to 18 miles this afternoon and tonight. adn'^ffTfbm Iheofl^y.” ■ t Kan»kii City 58 :il 21 MaraurUt .. 25 MtiKkraim Uydlatoii^ lIlKhMt tempeniture U)«eit tcmp«ratui« Mean lemperaturf Wa»th«r: Clouilv i nliht. communities which need and -Schempp, who ‘tave^r^hn: financial help. know-how and money lo pusn ue-1 . Ferndale, Hazel Park ” segregation in public schools >n|aria,,Madison Heights with southern Macomb County in a new district, and merge northern Ma- dren in Abington. High School. 2. Civil Rights Commission: comb County with the Thumb Ward ran into a barrage of First set up in 1957, the corn-questions from the bench when mission goes out of business he tried to explain “morality cut, next November unless Conyess ---------------- ------------icSr'TeiBeHy'asied wit area. The bills were referred to the I Traverac Cliy . NATIONAL WEATHER - There is a chance of brief rain or snow in northern middle Atlantic states and rain in southern portions tonight. Snow is expected in the Ohio and Tennessee valleys with showers in Georgia and the Central Gulf coast. Showers are forecast for the northern Pacific Coast and occasional rain in the north and central Rockies with snow flurries in the higher elevations. It will be slightly warmer in the Nm^wesl««l TTOrtherh^ iittle change elsewhere.^ Report Russ Leave Cuba (Continued From Page One) fensive missiles were found on the island. On another matter, several senators hung a "home consumption” tag on Soviet Premier Khru-schev’s threat to annihilate any nation which attacks Cuba or any other Communist country. Sen. John Sparkman, D-Ala., a member of the Foreign Relations Committee, said Khrushchev was engaging in “more braggadocio for home consumption.” He noted the Soviet leader spoke at an election rally, “although I don’t know what an election rally really means in Moscow Sparkman said that in the past Khrushchev defended his backdown ip the missile showdown over Cuba by citing U.S. missile might. "These new statements seem in sharp contrast," Sparkman said, “but I still don’t believe he wants a nuclear war." ■ Any Shoe Size— Shoe Shiner A, $3.00 box of 50 smooth smokers. Limit 2 boxes. Xing Edwaid $3.00 box of 50 King Edwerd Imperials. Limit 2 . boxes. •••••••••a•••••••••• BOOK MATCHES -------------^ SO Pads lj|Re gular 25c i*c » r t on. Get ^1,000 lights. ^ Limit 2. ‘AVON’All Metal Fingeqjail Clipper Reg. 25c C At shown — sharp cutting edges. With I nail file and key chain. Genuine *GEM' All Metal Toenail Cliii PLASTIC COATED PLAYING CARDS 75c DECK Wipes cte a dump doth. 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(UPIl-Wisconsin I proud of its law requiring all ew cars to he equipped with seat belts, but no one is sure the law has saved many lives. , Alan Willoughby, coordinator of the law requiring seat belts on ail post-19d2 cars, explains: “When someone doesn’t die, it is difficult to say he would have died without the seat belt. The hand of God fits in there. "We hope to indicate that a large number of people are being | saved by using the belts.’.’ he said. I “The news media and wire services have been a big help by publicizing every accident where a belt is credited with an escape.’’ A change was recently made on the uniform accident report filled out by all officers. investigating accidents to determine whether seat belts were present and whether they were being used. “But we don’t have a large enough figure ta be-sifnificant* ly important,’’ Willoughby said. “Several incidents hdve come to the motor vehicle department’s attention of accidents where seat belts have enabled a person to escape serious injury.” In one such case, Robert Smith of Sheboygan was involved in a nine - vehicle pile - up with his compact car struck by four trucks. Smith, who was Wearing his seat belt, jumped out of his car and walked a safe distance from the scene as other cars began piling into the wreckage. Officers searching for a missing corpse, believing no one could have survived the accident, were; amazed when Smith came back,' suffering only bruises, said Wik loughby. One survey by the state highway patrol did indicate that 45 per cent of the motorists who did have belts were using them, indicating a need for a greater education program The department has produced a poster featuring a photograph of astronaut Donald “Dekc” Slayton of Sparta, Wis., wearing an auto seat belt to promote use of the belts. According to Willoughby, the greatest apparent value is that! the belts are available if a motorist wants to use them. “Having the belt m an auto by law so it is available for u.sd eliminates the primary half of the decision,” he said. “If there were no belts in the | make the decision to use car and a person wanted to use I them.” them, he wqtild have to get the ★ ★ ★ belts, install them and then | Willoughby added that as a re- YOU'LL Find What YOU Want at I the LOWEST PRICE on SIMMS 2nd Flooi! -No Mail or IPhone Orders at. These Prices 2nit Floor HARDWARE DISCOUNTS J or 12 VoH-Single or Dual luto Headlites AAr I Regular $2.50 Value Each J Sp.ilrd bc.im lights for sinfilG ^ or tlufll syslenr,. 6 or 12 volts. Limit 4 per fuslompr I to 6a$ Tank—Cleans Carbnietei ‘CUM-OUT’ Carburetor Gleaner Regular $1.50 can . full 16 .ounces ,cleqnsi out fuel line and car"E buretor of vfarnish and | gunk. Limit 3 cons. 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Fomous names including .'Molly Goldberg' in all the wanted colors. Come, see for yourself. VI-DAYLIN 096 i^jMETRECAL 144 ■ '"1 / Regul.ir $1.85 value — the s.tfo. I • '.y sane way to reduce. Assorted fla- jj| Why Pay More Than SIMMS LOW DISCOUNT PRICES on Prescriptions? --------Because Simms was the original dis- S',S'" ite’tii 9u. FiMay mt Salordiy llom: 9 JLM. to II P.M. £AII Special Prices Tonile-Frie^l. Easier to Clean and Yqu Get Extra Wear 100% Nylon RUGS ,E BBER Back 99 ^ > - • DEEP-CUT PILE ' ^ L foam and RUBBER Backs r • for BEDROOMS—LIVING — —and TRAFFIC AREAS Choice of 14 colors including white . . . rec-tangulor, round, oval shapes plus contour to fit' around bathroom stool . . , gay or soft tones in all colors... , oil with non-skid bocks . .. guoti-. onteed underpriced. % ••••••••••••••■•••••••••••••*A******* Rugs-Carpets-Runners Comp.ire the price and qualify here at Simms, big selects n t,f colors, sizes for any room in your home. Come to Simms for the best rug at lowest prices. Up io 3x5 FT. RUGS Regular values to $5.00, jm mggk Choice of colors, all 1^ 36-inch widths. ■ IV with non-skid ■ ^ backs. Save ■ Jiere. . Values to $7.00 —-durable tufted rugs with non-skid backs. Variety of colors. 6-FT. Carpets & Renners Values fo $5.00 —• solids and tweeds In assorted colors. Non skid backs, 2 foot widths. 3x5 FOOT Carpels Values to $7.00 —- many colors to choose from. Durable' Carpeting with non-skid li.icking. , , , VWashable COTTO* 9x12 FOOT Rugs 12" Regular .jralu«pJa.E22lS5..^ cut pile cotton rugs in decorator colors including white. Foam rubber backs makes 'em he flat and nori-skid, bound edges. Small deposit holds. * 3x5 Ft, Rugs $5.95 Value — 1 variety of solid ^ r 4x6 Ft. Rugs mnie $7,95 Value — your choice of U| colors • 6x9 Ft. Rugs $12.95 Value — ( choose f rom | many colors ... ' 9x9 Ft. Rugs.j^QQ $14.95 Value—1 llvll a big rug inlH many colors 72s90” r lUUKEIS 179 I 2 for I $3.50 t ,, rayon with 6% nylon for extra durability. Choice of popular solid color.s. Wide satin bindings. Slight Irregulars of better blankets. 72x84” ‘Ombre’ Blankets 'BEACON' Eirsf polity 179 Warm rayon end nylon blenclnrl l^lanfcb hy Bnricon. Oinbin (iiillnnii as ijitiurml. r 'rf-r ■' y ^ . ^ — THE rON'flAC PRESS. THURSDAY, t'KBRUARY' 28.~ TOO Restrictive Milk-Pricing Bill Filed in Lansing Would Prohibit Sales at Loss Calls for Creation of Unfair Trade Act LANSING WV- A new version of the milk-pricing bill, killed by a governor’s veto in 1961, rode into the House atop a landslide of last-minute legislation yesterday. ★ ★ ★ The' bill, proposed by Rep. Andrew Cobb, R-Elsie, would we-ate an “unfair trade practices act” for the dairy industry and place restrictions on a broad range of business activities. Its key point is si ban on retail sales of selected dairy the retailer,” which is defined tn the invoice cost pins business expenses. liie proposal is designed to prohibit super markets and other large-volume retail dispensers of dairy products from underselling smaller retailers. ★ Former Gov. John SwainSon vetoed a similar bill in 1961 on grounds that it would not, as its backers contended, protect the smallfer retailers and bring reduced prices to consumers. The controversial 1961 bill would have forced retailers to sell at invoice cost plus eight per cent, or an eight per cent markup, unless they could prove their cost of doing business were less than eight per cent. I The present bill differs, in that! a retailor’s prices of milk and other products would be deter-. mii^ and set by thft «tate agriculture director on the basis of' average costs of a ‘“represen-tat^e group of the same type ol seller’’ in the same area. ' t -k * Other provisions of the lengthy bill would bar the use of so-called “loss leaders,” or low-priced products on display to lure customers, cooperative advertising, “double” trading stamps and prejpiiums, and supplying of signs PROMOTE FIRE SAFETY-Two members of the Addison Township Fire Department deliver fire protection decals to Bob Eckalbar Jr, 8, who is confined to his home at 71 Division St., Leonard. Representing the North East Oakland County Firefighters Association are Addison Township Fire Chief Edward J. Porter (left) and Assistant Chief Elmer E. Powell. Bob is the son of the Robert H. Eckalbars. ■ mm:. Public to Aid Hospital Fund and fixtures to retailers by dairy your jife," MILFORD —“You couldn’t make a better investrtient to save suppliers. Cobb is chairman of the House Agriculture Committee. St. Mary's Sets 2 Fairs This Year Area 'Decal Project' to Aid Fire Fighters “Better to be safe than sorry.” This old cliche may well apply to a current project undertaken by the North East Oakland County Firefighters Association. The organization is distributing decals to be posted on hoibes of cripples or invalids to guide firemen in rescue efforts in case of emergency. The decals, which are painted red and white with a large “1” in the center, are placed at strategic locations on the house. The larger ones are affixed to the front and back doors to alert firemen that a home-boUnd person lives inside. The three smaller stickers are for the bedroom windows where I the invalid sleeps. 1 ORION TOWN.SHIP committee of St. Mary’s-in-the-Hilte Church will stage two fairs thi.s( year instead of one to avoid the risk of being rained out. The committee decided to postpone the ham dinner usually served in connection wjth the' fair To a lafer dale, making room to move the summer fair under cover in case of rain. Set for July 20, the Outdoor Country Fair will again feature games, kiddioland, a white elephant sale and home baked goods sale. With these words, residents in the 10-township area surrounding Milford will be asked to contribute to the Huron Valley Community Hospital building fund. A goal of $1 million in public subscription has been set for the drive, which gets under way Saturday with a morning kickoff meeting at campaign offices, 447 N. Main St. a,e. ship. Lake Orion, Metamora Township, Oxford and Spring-field Township. Any member of the association can be contacted to obtain the decals at no charge, according to Edward E. Emeigh of the Gin-gellville department, association president. He said that the decals would serve as invaluable aids in locating occupants of homes who are unable to move quickly in case of an emergency. Cycle Races Sunday at Huff Lake ORTONVILLE Motorcycle racing and an 'aerial sky-diving exhibition will be featured'^it Sunday’s “Youth Benefit Program’ to be staged on Huff Lake. Sponsored by the local Junior Chamber of Commerce, the event will begin at 1:30 p.in. Single and side-car racing by members of the Larks Motorcycle club as well as a spectacular aerial exhibitionliy the All American Sport Parachute Team of Romeo will highlight the activities. ------------------------------- Proceeds of the event will be _ied by the Jaycees to finance youth activities sponsored by the club throughout the year. This event was inadverten^ ly Reported earlier as scheduled to take place on .Saturday. FARMINGTON --- Construction ]s slated to start tomorrow on this city’s new $125,000 municipal building, City Manager John Dinan said today. A Public Safety Department building on the site was torn down earlier this week to make way for the new city offices. The 6,000 square-foot building will house the municipal offices, Art Courses Offered byCtarkstonClub CLARKSTON —The Village Friends 'of Art will sponsor a 10-week ceramics course for children beginning Saturday. The group also will offer a course in basic drawing for adults starting Monday for the same period. Children will attend classes each Saturday from 1 to 4 p.m. in the old Methodist Church on Buffalo Street. Instructors will be Eleanore Steiner and Ingvar Dav- Adult classes will meet each Monday from 7 to 10 p.m. at 150 Clintonville Road, Independence Township. Kate McLean will teach this course. 177 Highway Victims EAST LANSING (UPI) - State police provisional reports today Showed 177 persons have died on Michigan highways this year through yesterday. The death toll at the same time last year was 163. , chairman of the campaign, esti-The fair mated that the hospital will cost close to $2 million. -A ★ W He said he expected government loans and loans from hospital building funds to make up the balance. Progress reports on the drive Win" W''gIVeh'~emy ‘ Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., Hutchins said. On Oct. 19 a Fall Harvest Festival will feature the annual ham dinner, with Christmas gifts and ornaments being offered to holiday shoppers. General chairman of the fairs this year is Benedict Welte, 936 Pine Road. taken out of the organization’s general fund. Each of the nine-member departments has the stickers for use upon request in any of the villages or townships which they serve. The departments arc Addison Township, Brandon (Orton-viirc), Gingellville, ft a STe y" Township, Independence Town- Rochester Lions Plan Filmed Tour of France ROCHESTER - A guided tour of France on film will be offered by the Rochester Lions Club at St. John Lutheran Church Saturday at 8 p.m. Narrator will be Ed Lark, not-i as a “perfectionist with a camera.” The color movie titled “Provincial France” and shows glimpses into “real' French living. Church Plans Review of 'The Grandmothers' AVON TOWNSHIP.- University Presbyterian Church here will feature a review of the pioneer story, “The Grandmoth-at Tuesday's 9:30 a.m. session of “Coffee-Break ’63! ” Sitters will be available for preschool children at the church, 138.5 Adams Road, welcome. I Sue lo Stop Construction, ot Sanitary Sewer Line' SOUTHFIELD - A city couple and a grpup of citizens who formed the Southfield Taxpayers League have filed suit in Oakland County Circuit Court to prevent construction of a $1.7-million sanitary sewer trunkline , along the Rouge River. Mr. and Mrs. James D. Evans, 1005 Rotlgemortt SL, “and the League seek an injurtetion the city, the Oakland County Board of Supervisors and the county DP\y. They claim the sanitary sewer is unnecessary because they and others “have invested large sums of money for proper sewage disposal systC'ms.’* The area’s sewage is presently handled by individual septic tanks. The county DPW, currently purchasing easements along the .sewer’s planned path, is handling Visitors are The project under an agreement Iwith the city. The suit charges tlje sew6r would not benefit homeowners in proportion to its costs, would require an illegal tax to pay for it, and is being built under a state law permitting the sale of county bonds that is unconstitutional. U. OF M. RESEARCIIEItS .STUDY ICE - Starting on a three-month trek across the Antarctica's Ross Ice Shelf is a six-man glaciology research team from tlie University of Michigan, Anb Arbor, Rl(|ing the load motor-toboggan is Dr. Walter llofrmin. Munich, Germany, leader of the team. The group Is measuring movemeli^it and change in t|ie world’s largest mass of floating ice. 1 The suit further alleges that the city’s agreements with the sewer violate the city charter.^^*®^™’ The city Advertising Olreetor 'BAnv J, Rtra Circulation Manager < Local AdverUslng Realism Becomes Part of Viet Nam Action U. S. servicemeil looking down the gun barrels of Communists in Viet Nam now have the official okay to fire first. ★ ★ ★ . •Helatcdlv, this change in strategy comes after more than i)0 Americans have been killed in the guerrilla fighting there. ★ ★ ★ with,extraordinary zeal, only two lost court days were chargeable to the jurors—to allow one to recover from a bad cold. Three of the original 16 and. alternates were excused for one reason or another; the rest stuck it out despite occasional aches and sniffles. Said one, “1 felt like a soldier doing my duty.” ★ ★ ★ On a first-name basis within two days, the jurors held a World Series pool, decorated the jury room for a The archaic “code of the West” in Christmas grab bag and made plans which the hero lets the villain get for an annual reunion. -- „ off the first round will now be a thing of the past, fortunatdy. , in a training situation, just advising the native troops. However, ferrying the locals into batties with the elusive enemy has involved U. S. servicemen. Some .Americans wound up teaching the Viet Nam men how to die. ★ ★ ★ It’s a pity we couldn’t have juridical standouts, changed the rules earlier. Some of the Americans who died for a v^ry shaky government there might still be alive. Most pleasing was Federal Judge William B. Herland’s trib- Government to award a Distinguished Service Cross to those who perform outstanding acts of responsibility and patriotism, and you should be the first recipients.” To which we add a journalistic^c-colade to the dedicated group of i Voice of the People; -‘AdministrationWaste Calls for Written Protests’ In two years, 145,342 persons have been padded to, ^^e federal payroll. This makes Andrew Jackson’s “spoils system iMk lUte penny ante play^ by penniless people. Though a Navy man, Ken-nedv tos ilterally outflanked Jacksom ■the biium “news weMiwm;, »• hangs the political enemy both foreign and domestic » against democratic people who ^eed^ know absolute truth. The “defidt’spending’'of the whiz-klds is shnpiy in hopes that one will mysteriously receive a windfall before the first payment is due. The foreign aid policy of the administration is a lump sum endowment to countries which already offer serious competition to higher standard Industry. ^ ^ A letter-writing deluge must indeed be started to dro’wn out the greenback bonfire of the administration. As our U S- Congressman Broomfield is strongly against any too-powerful central government, he could use any letter bullets we can lend ^ 2100 Woodward Ave. ______ ‘Be Well-Informed ‘Social Security Before You Vote’ Hike Is Needed’ The Yo-Yo David Lawrence Says: Castro’s Dislodgement Solution to Red Threat The United States and her allies currently have been concerned primarily with the military build-up and reduction of Cuba’s military potential. But with the minimization of that threat, another, related to the dissemination of Communistic ideology in Latin America, continues unabated. ★ ★ ★ American officials say that (he Cuban government has given financial aid to the pro-Castro Revolutionary Union of Ecuadorian Youth. ★ ★ ★ And it is estimated that between 1,000 and 1,500 persons from other Latin American countries traveled to Cuba in 1962 for ideological indoctrination in guerrilla warfare. ★ ★ ★ Since Castro’s fiscal position is virtually at the breaking point, the source of funds for Communist subversion of neighboring countries may cause wonder. The principal financial aid comes from the $1 million a day that the Soviet Union is said to be channeling into the Cuban economy. In addition, the Castro regime has had a recent windfall from the $2.9 million hand- “We could put a man on Mars by 1990, but it would cost $1 billion,” says a scientist. He’s probably mistaken. Between now and then inflation would doubtless run the cost up to $1.9 billion. Kennedy Blunders on Budget One of the biggest problems facing the people who will be vot-—Qjy thg proposed” constitution-this April is becoming well-informed enough to make an intelligent decision. Newspapers or groups which attempt to educate the people on important issues . must be wholly objective. Organizations, which believe in fair hearings, must tell the whole story. Since sections of the proposed constituta} had unanimous support, why^^wen’t the people allowed to vote on these separately? President Kennedy wants to give us a raise in social security.' This is4ong-ovcrdue..-SQdal Sfir-curity was passed during the depression when you could buy pork chops for 6 cents a pound. It has never been brought up-to-date. How can older people pay insurance, doctor bills and other expenses on $40 to |80 a month? WASHINGTON — A bill reducing income tax rates will be en- The Man About Town Mait^ Has Twins He Hits Fruit Jackpot Winning Bonus Banana By HOWARD HELDENBRAND Twins seems to run in the family of Darrel Priestly of Waterford Township, a Twin Pines milk route deliveryman. Grocery shopping a short time ago, he included some bananas. When one of them was peeled, it was found to be twins . . maybe, like the Colonel’s Lady and Judy O’Grady, they were sisters under the skin! ... My trouble is, I just don’t have will power. Anyhoo, what you see is pretty rare. In fact, like Washington winning the pennant, it practically never hap- acted by Congress some time this year. In the measure will be some provisions called “reforms'’ but hardly any of the major proposals which the administration has submitted. This is the outlook today on Capitol Hill, and President Kennedy is prepaned to accept the result as a compromise. He has not given up his drive to get the “reforms” he wants, but the 0 p p 0 sition in Congress is too' formidable fori him to let a has-l sle over these' “reforms” kill LAWRENCE all chance of passing a tax bill this year. "What we need,” says the President, “is the bill this year, and nothing should stand in its way." The President, in his speech here to the bankers, did not touch on these problems except to say that “We must use prudence in the management of our wages and prices.” Wh'en — after reading his prepared address — he was asked specifically by one of the bankers if it wasn’t “more important than previously to prevent wage rates from increasing faster than productivity,” Mr. Kennedy replied: “I would think that wage rates would .follow — I hope they would follow the general guidelines which have been suggested on several occasions, which are tied to the principle which you just described, that wage rates should be tied to productivity increases.” (Copyright, 1963) Why is it that neither body of the proposed legislature is based solely on population? How does one justify the fact that the minority will be allowed to rule? George McCart 201 Linden Road The raise in social security would do more to help our economy than a tax cut. It would pul the money in the right hands. Bertha Taylor 316 S. Anderson St. ‘Americans Entitled to Know the Facts’ Tells of Strength Russia Has in Cuba Bob Considine Says: Rusk Manages Temper Before Truculent Texans Odds against twins In the human department are about 200 to 1. But bananas! That really gets astronomical. I As for example. One local fruit house handles about 45 cases per day, averaging 35 pounds or a 10 t a 1 of 1.575 pounds. At three bananas per pound, in 26 ed over by the United States last^De- monthly business days vou’re thinking about cember. to .eover. ihe...release jmy proprietor fnend_£ai^J;i^ hadn’t'seen a dual job in many months. If you want to give your slide rule a real workout, all you’ve got to do is figure out how many produce sources there arc ailing Bay of Pigs prisoners. ★ ★ ★ . Also, our experts believe, $1 million or so has probably been drained off from the $5.'l million in food and medicines which recently effected the felea.se of 1,100 more prisoners. That amount was earmarked in ('uba's 1962 budget for the import of medical supplie.s, the expenditure of which was unnecessary in view of the ransom supplies. These revelations today strengthen the view that there can be but one satisfactory long-range solution to the dangerous situation in the Caribbean. That is the overthrow of the bearded tyrant and his Red hierarchy and the return of the islanffimnd its suffering people to,democratic sdvereignty. Mr. Kennedy made it clear this week to a symposium on economic growth, sponlored by the American Bankers Association, that he still prefers a tax cut with “reforms.” If, however, there is no tax cut at all, he predicts a deficit bigger than the one President p:isenhower encountered after the recession in 1958. Mr. Kennedy’s exact words cau.sed" an arching of eyebrows. He said: “In other words, the deficit, without a tax cut, would then be far higher than the projected deficit we face with a tax, cut — higher even than the record deficit' of $12.4 billion which followed the recession of ..1958,,oidy xJe W^JPJMllhj. J the President of the United HOUSTON - Secretary of State Dean Rusk met the press, the blunt-spoken Texas press, here Tuq,sday eyeball-lo-eyeball. He did not blink. “We understand that Kennedy has your successor already picked out,” barked a young reporter. “What do you say to that?” The secretary of state gazed at the young man with interest rather than rancor., “As far as Ii know, there has | been no discussion of that,” he' said thoughtfully. CONSIDINE He paused to await another question from interrogators but there was none. “Castroism will not be accepted as a part of this hemisphere. The shipping to Cuba will become insignificant.” (Editor's note: Only 12 ships arrived at Cuban ports during January past, as opposed to nearly 100 in October.) Then Mr. Rusk said, “We watch with very great concern any action that would be taken to export communism from Cuba.” Late last December, Rear Adm. O’Donnell, one-time commander of the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo, said, “Cuba is stronger than it was before the missile crisis.” Sen. Kenneth B. Keating warned that Russian strength had multiplied tenfold since October. On Feb. 3, Edward Martin, Assistant Setretary of State for Latin American affairs, confirmed Keating’s statement. Reports obtained from Cuban exile organizations, with underground contacts in the Island, more than confirm the statements. In December, 41 Soviet bloc ships unloaded military equipment, troops and civilian supplies. At that tirpe, 16 more ships were already tied up and another 18 were on the high seas, en route, Cuban Information Service Miami I agree completely with The Press editorial on the Cuban situation. This is our country and the people have the right to expect our President to tell them what is happening and where things stand. This isn’t a private business that belongs to a few men. It’s our country, our money and our affair. Mrs. Edna G. Smiles A woman seeking divorce said her husband paid more attention to television than to her. Maybe because he couldn’t turn her off. Having something coming back is what makes some people get their income tax report in well ahead of time. School kids in the south got a day off while teachers checked papers. A whole day to sit and worry. In Washington: Congress Still Mulling Requests So the secretary of stale had one of a number of other unrelated queries rising from the floor and he never got^around to doing , in the country, how many eases they process per month, how many . . . Holy Toledo, I’m going to have to lie down. Rut, a stunned bow of deference (o our Top Banana on the singular--double, 1 mean -banana he uncovered. The poetic reference the other day by a lady to the ice-fishing specialty of her lius-liand evoked a few icy thoughts from Charles (lied) Hewitt States had submitted a budget which provided for a surplus of a half-billion dollars. That is how quickly a deficit can Unbalance the budget.” But what is the explanation of President Kennedy’s own forecast of a surplus that turned out to be a deficit? In January 1962, Mr. Kennedy told Congress that the budget for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1963, would show a surplus of $.500 million — a balanced budget with a modest .surplus. TomMgTiHi^ys'fMP’Wdllir be a natural human reaction if people in public office gave honest vent to their true feelings. Why didn’t he challenge the questioner and say to him, “You may be right, for all I know. But where did you get the Information that led to your question? I’ve Just leased a house and pul my kids in school in Washington. ' “What do you know, sitting here in Houston, that hasn’t been told to me during my daily meetings with the I’re.sident?” By PETER EDSON WASHINGTON (NEA) -The 88th Congress is now nearly two months old. But in the words of House majority leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma, “It hasn’t ,..j£lk,cL,ycLr of 57 Shirley St,-a pretty good journeyman ice fisher himself. He says that the ice in the inland lakes is the usual 15 inches thick but, oddly, in the Flats near Anchor Bay it is only about 10 inches . . . Something here, it seems, that doesn’t meet the eye. Lengthy Federal Trial Sets Record in NY Outrunning the majority tof its Broadway shows, New York City A1.SO, he quotes a contractor friend, who is always digging into, things, as authority for the frost in the ground being five to six feet in contrast to the normal Guess about all we can do is chin and bear it. Verbal Orchids to- George F. Harris just saw the end of the longed”crim- “Jj cjarkston; 82nd birthday. * Inal trial ever held before a Federal Fred II. Main court jury. It lasted just 23 days less of Hochester; 8,'lrd birthday, than a year. Mrs. Helena Ward The jury had seen l,89q exhibits of Oxford: 9lsi l^irthday. and heard 109 witnesses give, 26,731 .. p.g« of tertlmony. '»» «' Clemen. St,; 5411, «.cdd,„g :,r,ni . versary. ^ ^ ^ ^ Mrs. Charles H. Rorabachcr of 143 Summit St.; 91st birthday. €arr.yinjr on (heir assignment Yet, before many months had passed, a deficit was indicated, and the latest estimate is that the red figure will be around $8.8 billion at the end of the fiscal year this June. The year 1962, moreover, wasn’t regarded here as a recession year. In fact, Mr. Kennedy in his speech to the bankers this week said: “The American economy is now in Us twenty-fourth month of recovery.” This means “recovery” started Just after the Kennedy inauguration a convenient date, politically speaking. WHAT HAPPENED But how did the President make such a mistake if it wasn’t a recession that produced his deficit? The official figures in his budget messages explain whal. happened. Mr, Kennedy estimated his receipts for fiscal year 1963 at $7 5 billioti more (hart they are turning out to be, and he permitted ex Bcnses to go up by an additional |L8 billion over his budget. TRUCUI.ENT IKE About the only time I evL‘r saw a fierce reaction from a public official came from Gen. Eisenhower during his .second news conference as a politician. “Explain your association with Alger Hiss,” some guy yelled to him out of the blue. Ike wheeled on the questioner with a glare, clenched his fists and started off the platform in the bloke’s direction. Cooler heads prevailed, notably Jim Haggerty’s. -----:— ----, Every session of Congress is different, he explains. You have to wait till it gets organized and settles down to business before you can get the feel of it and make any predictions or even gues.ses on whqt it might do. ---------- Some of the elements shaping up the record which this Con-gre.ss will eventually make are out In the open, ] however, and are [worth keeping in mind. For one J thing, the Presi-EDSON dent has sent about a dozen messages to Congress and there are more to come. sues in the President’s tax plan to fight over, it is doubtful if a tax bill can be pflssed before Labor Day. Other legislation, including an increase in the national debt limit, will be whatever can be passed between or •afterihetartitMlmtHe^ ------- Nobody seems to know just how badly' the President wants his vast programs for medical care of the aged, general and mental health measures, everything in the omnibus aid to education message, the youth programs, t h e farm programs. The mental retardation and National Service Corps proposals are the only really new apples in the barrel. All the others have been taken from the freezer to which they were consigned after Congress Ignored them last session. It was intended to be a one-shot emergency measure to relieve unemployment in 1,200 depressed areas. Some 2,900 local projects were approved in 900 areas, but Mckl«&-oLa»pli«a-.. . tions for another billion dollars’ worth of projects for which no funds arc available. Area Redevelopment Administration, in charge of the program, has had to stop processing applicalion.s from 90 areas to concentrate available funds in the 240 areas hardest hit. This has built up a tremendous pressure in Congress from local communities to get more projects approved. It would be no surprise if Congress extends this program on its own. Most itqporlant of the lot is the tax message. It is at the top of the White House “must” list for action this session. And it is the one thing that can keep the Congress on the job for a long session, which this one problibly will be. If the President is merely polishing them off again to make the record of his requests look good, that’s one thing. If he really wants thqm and will make a fight for them, that’s somethinjg else. Even so, there arc marfjr grave doubts that measures like the medicare plan under Social Security, or the aid for only public primary and secondary schools, can be passed this year. Though he did not choose to challenge the young man who would boot him out of President Kennedy’s cabinet, secretary Rusk, sounded off with vigor, his ev Hays Industries, Jackson, Mich., autohao-tive parts firm, has declared a three-for-two common stock*split, peyable April 2 tb holders of record March 8. Ttje resulting new shares will earn a regular quafteriy cash dividend of 25 cenjs each payable April 2i9 to holders of record April 8, a spokesman* for the firm said«here. Sign Aaron Copeland I ANN ARBOR (» - Composer Aaron Copeland will lecture at' the University of Michigan’s' tiiird festival of contemporary i music, March 20-29, the univer-j sil^ has announced. ' YOU WILL LIKI OUR BUSINISS MITHOOS^ ^ _ IMPERIAL—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH—VALIANT SALES BIRMINGHAM swvici • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH • 912 S. Woodward Phono Ml 7-1211 n comparisori“wHh" XrgentM were any supermarket in the world. They sell literally carloads of groceries every day. Through t h e checkstands, past the jingling cash register? stream almost unbelievable quantities of foodstuffs. Every day each supermarket sells more than 4,000 quarts of milk, I 70 to 80 sideji of beef, four tons I of cheese, eight to 10 tons of ' sugar, iWif tons of carrots and five tons of potatoes, to name a few of the faster moving products. , Customers line up an hour before the stores open. A man stands at the door all day to regulate the number of incoming customers to keep the store from becoming overcrowded. Each store serves more than 70,000 cus-tomers a week. ...... .... In these days when supermarkets are taken for granted in the United States, they are revolutionary in Argentina. The fact that they have been such a booming success indicates that both privately-owned or government-backed project's to help raise LaV ~ in American living standards can be highly successful if money is coupled with know-how and individual initiative. The supermarkets here represent a stride into the 20th century for Argentine food marketing w'hich for ages has been based on a philosophy of high mark-ups, low turnover and “customer be damned.” SUCCESSFUL COMBINATION The foundation of the supermarkets’ “overnight” success is a combination of technical and financial know-how, individual enterprise and big money. The supermarkets are called Minimax Markets and are owned by the Bockefeller brothers’ International Basic Economy Corporation (IBEC). The methods which spelled for Minimax Markets in and' per- fected in IBEC’s operations id Venezuela and Italy. IBEC plans to follow up the . initial success by expanding into other areas. They will build an ice-cream plant and a bakery here soon. Supermarkets’hit Buenos Aires like an idea whose time had come. The first one opened in April last year- the second in June. More are being added. ★ it * Grocery stores in Buenos Aires are like the ones which served the United States at the turn of the century. They are small, poorly lighted and usually untidy. They are strictly high markup, low turn-over operations. Food is crammed into whatever space is available — on, the floor, hung from the ceiling, dangling from the walls. The storekeeper waits on one customer at a time, toting up the bill with a stub of pencil oh a tom hunk hf wrapping paper. Megnwhile all the other cus-imers *- whether two or 10 must wait their turn. paid off in Argentina. Laying aside the obvious need for big 'ffidiniey To finals ation, perhaps the greatest single factor in IBEC’s supermarket success is the personal Initiative, contagious enthusiasm and professional excellence of Minimax general manager Richard Boogaart. IBEC started groundwork for its Argentine operation a couple: of years ago, The^ organization already had a thriving poultry operation here and thd^ government under President Arturo Frondizi welcomed new industry. Boogaart came to Argentina soon after the operation began. NON-STOP OPERATION Minimax employs more than 600 persons to keep shelves stocked, vegetables packaged and merchandise moving. It is a 24 hour a day, seven day a week business. .The stores run three eight hour shifts a day. Power and water — highly essential commodities in supermarket operations, are both in short suppiy in Buenos Aires. Frequent power failures threatened to wreck refrigeration systems -and sent the cash registers loco. The stores, now have their own generators and a system of auxiliary pumps to keep water moving! in the refrigeration systems. ★ ★ ★ Hub of IBEC’s Argentine oper-| ation is a,modern warehouse with thousands of square meters of, floor space stacked high with' merchandise. The warehouse is headquarters for the wholesale outfit that supplies the supermarkets. ★ * Boogaart says once they catch These grocers boy case half case lots from wholesale houses. The resultant book work is fantastic. Wholesalers’ accounts are crammed with thousands of small entries —“Pablo Rodriguez Grocery, one case of peaches, half a case of tomatoes.” NEW ATMOSPHERE .. ... Minimax markets create an entirely new atmosphere in food buying and handling. They buy carloads of goods, not case lots. ’They display the merchandise in clean spacious stores where customers can select what they want runaway success of from neatly stacked display is- supermarkets, IBEC will probably turn its DACSA toward supplying other grocery stores with lower priced higher quality goods. Experience in supermarketing in Venezuela and Italy has SotIsfacHon Guaranteed or Your Money Refunded Open 'HI 9 P.M. SAVE ^29-GOMPLETE water system WATER SOFTENER, HEATER AND PUMP 76 *317 JMO MONEY DOWN -----— ^ water softener,— softens, filters, rerhoves iron .... SISSI • 30-gollon, glass-lined gas water heater with automatic Honeywell controls . .. .49.88 • Fairway "High and Dry" jet system. '/a-HP pump mounted on 20-gal. tank.........98.88 Shop for your water system needs the smart,- economical way ... at Wards! You'll find everything you need: fittings, accessories and instructions. HOtfJtS Monday PONTIAC MALL 682-4940 Telegraph a| Elizabeth Lake Bd, y\AoNTGOflAEBY WARD 3-DA SAL whole trailerlead of tires! RIVERSIDE PASSENGER AND TRUCK TIRES-AU fACrORY’FRESM, GlfARAHTMMD 8 69 * 6.70-U Iwbe-lype blackwell 15-MONTH RIVERSIDE NYLON Here’s a quality tire at a hard-to-beat price . • ..flood mileage and traction plus skid-resistance you can appreciate. Not a second...not a retread, but an all-new Riverside with strong, Nylon cord for blowout resistance. AIR CUSHION NYLON Guaranteed 18 MONTHS. 4 full plies of Nylon cord; multi-row tread for safer starts, stops. Size AIR CUSHION NYLON Tube-type Blackwall Size Tubeless Blackwall 6.70-15 10.88* 6,70-15or7.50-14 13.88* 7.10-15 13.88* 7.10-15 or 8.00-14 15.88* 7.60-15 15.88* 7.60-15 17.88* Whitewalls $3 more.^Plui excise tax and trade-in. Mounted free. RIVERSIDE SAFETY NYLON —21-MONTH GUARANTEE 4 full plies of Nylon for nn extra blowout protection. Proven "Best by test" In its class for tread wear, performance. ------- 6.70-15, 7.50-14 tubeless blackwalI....M.8B* 8.50-14 tubeless blackwall.....16.t8* RIVIRSIDE ST-107 NYLON -37-MONTH GUARANTEE L88* 1«.70-U 16 *Att prices pfwi exdie lax end your old lire. Built to outperform new-cor tiros! 7% deeper tread/ 4 full plies of DuPont Nylon. Over 3300 ___ _______________ troction-sipes. WgsIiwgH 6.70-15, 7.50-14 tubeless blackwall*... 7.10-15 or 8.00-14 tubeless blackwall.. .20.lt* SPORT SPECIAL NYLON -27-MONTH GUARANTEE A high-quality tire for mg ' MQ* compacts and import SSO cars. 4-ply Nylon; mod- ■ 9,«o'.is ern skid-resistant tread ”desrgn:'~-“—.—... *5.50/5.90-15 tubeless bIa'ck.........W. 5.00/5.60-14 tubeless blackwall ....18.81* *flui excite hx and Irada-ln. Momiltd free. TRUCKERS! POWER-GRIP HEAVY SERVICE NYLON Combines the best of rib and traction design for year 'round use I Tough,4-ply Nylonbody - • ^impact reisistonce. -6.50-16, 6-pIy rating. 7.00-15,6-pIy rating. 12 |95* ........17.95* ...................20.95* ♦ Wm excite lax. No Iradt ln required. WARDS AUTO PARTS FOR SAVINGS AND VALUE VOLT REOULATORS Brand now I Equal to or better than original equipment. Guard against overcharging. Low at..4*99 15,000-MILE SHOCK ABSORBER r ^99 > lech NEW FUEL PUMPf ■ Built for 50,000 miles of service I Perfect replacement for single-action pumps. Low a......... Equal or exceed original shock absorbers^ Give a smoother, more comfortable ride. Fit most cars. WARDS RELINEO BRAKE SHOES 3” Set, exchGHg# 25,000-mlle guarantee! Bonded, bond-feitod and cotitour-ground for good fit. Equals,original I NOW, GET ALL THE PARTS FOR YOUR CAR AT WARDS . You'll find a complete selection of top-quality parts—-equal to or better than the original equipment—and Ward-priced to save you money.^ Installation available. • Storo Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. AAon^oy thro Saturday Pontiac Mall Phone 682-4940 Tolograph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. THE PONTIAlC PRESS, THURSDAY. FEBRrARV 28. 10r>3 A—0 . »»» . M ONTGOWIERY WARD ! SAFER! HERE’S HOW IT WORKStl Imaginel You can buy the things you need | now and for the months ahead at low, pre-1 season prices... take immediate delivery... 1 pay nothing until Mayl Or, pay just $5 and I Wards will hold your order ’tH May 15. You | choose the plan ... you’re the winner either | wayl Styrefoiim flvHrtloi^ tanks for more safety 12' SEA KING AUTOTOP ALUMINUM BOAT Ughtweight-~i»*f you're off to your favorite fishing spot! Aluminum hull—practically maintenance-free; designed for stability, balance. 14-ft. aluminum boat............*184.88* 650-lb. boat trailer. ............*117.88 900-Ib. boat trailer; reg. $149. *1^.88 *P.aAfoclary SIA KING 5-HP MOTOR—ANGLER’S FRIEND It's quiet—5 sileqcihg features smother sound. It’s smooth—surges to 12 mph, slows to V/z mph for trolling. Economical, tool Full gearshift; waterproof ignition; 6-gaI. tank; Lyfanite corrosion protection. SeOjIOng 40-hor*epower outboard motor.$319.88 No money down ITS"' No monoy down Tf SWINO LOCKS Orip. M, HBMIy, won 1 Iwlit, illp ^! r«lly oMombl.d. P Croubor and MOI || •ro prO'W.ld.d. £5 No-mr swiNo Snol li firmly mottnf.d—won't ^ lip whtin moving. ^ ij SMOOTH SUDS | i No thorp ipotil |j; Idgtt or* copjMd |i> | for odd.d lof.ly. j ji I] 23% SAVINGS NOW! 10 WAYS TO HAVE FUH OH WARDS 34.95 GYM SET SALE-PRICED FOR THRIFTY PRE-SEASON SHOPPERS Buy now, pay in May—and savel Provide your small fry with all the slides and glides of a fun-packed playground within the safe bounds of their own backyard. Compact 10-play set has everything—2 swings with gym rings, trapeze bar; air glide; lawn swing; thrilling 7-ft. rust-reiistant slide. Top bar 8'6*', legs 7'A" long, with colorful all-weather finish. 26 pay *S deposit, no more till May J VERSATILITY! WITH Mir 28" ROTARY TILLER WITH REVERSE Powerful, 3-HP favorite prepares seed bed^, mulches, tills 26*' path up to 9*' deep. Has unbreakable steel bolo tines,"Easy-Spin" starter and handlebar controls. 24''RIDING MOWER DELUXE FEATURES, REAUSTIC PRKB This powerful 4-HP Garden Mark has a fully-enclosed forward-neutral-reverse transmission, safety foot clutch plus blade clutch and a whole lot more. See it I M48 i99 STORE 9}30 Ajyi. lo 9:00 P.M. HOURS: Wo"***^ ^turday Pontiac Mall PHOr^E 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizabelh Lake Road A THE PONTIAC PRESS. THCBSDAY, FBBRUARY 28. 1883 ASSOITED TIER ail VMJURE SHS SAVE $10 ON 7-PIECE DUiETTE WIDE SELECTION OF FABRICS. COLORS regularly. 2.98 Choose from a wide selection of fabrics and colors. These quality sets are sure to brighten your home and please your pocketbook.. MARntOOFTOreHNS TO 59 Re«.M.9S 36x48'' table top Is white with ^ fancy gold screen print, contrasting NO MONEY DOWH brass-finished opron and legs. High-pressure, heat-resistant plastic table top defies stains or mars. Chairs are upholstered in easy-cara matching plastic; floor glides ora self-leveling. 60"' long with leal. M ONTGOMERY WARD SALE FOR THE HOME WHEN ALL AMERICA CETS ITS FINEST HOME VALUES Coast to coast, and year after year, thrifty Americans wait for this big Ward event to save on furnishings for a single room or an entire home. They know they’ll find fashion-right style and lasting quality ot truly Important savings. Come in today! TABLES OF SOLID MAPLE, 10% OFF! CCBR*e.si«.fs Salem Square* oc-casionals in authentic Early American maple. Step, coffee or end table styles. jL EARLY AMERICAN SOFA OR A PAIR OF SMART CHAIRS NO MONEY DOWN ON CAEDITI - • All 3 pieces coordinated for tasteful room decor e Tweed pattern in 4 colors, or multi-color print EoVly American charm In a sofa, or wing choir and swivel rocker, oil three with the up-to-date comfort of reversible Word-foam* cushions and foam-filled attached pillow backs. Chair and Rocker with roll arms;, sofa with accents of maple-finish wood. STORKLINE CRIB FULL 6-YEAR SIZE-SAVE *8 NOW! Double drop sides, and 4-position steel spring. Nontoxic teething roils. White, maple or wox birch finish. 240-coil "Tiny World" mot-tress, rcg. 22.95, now 18.88 24 88 49 raff. 69.9S a 612-coll mattress or box spring, a Quilt Queen Supremo^ull or twin sire Fodm or innerspring mattress flange-stitched at edge to keep ticking always tout! Ward-foam* cushioned, with quilted surface. Imported gray/ gold damask ticking. Box spring, some low price. STORE 9:30 AM. to 9:00 P.M. HOURS: MONDAY thru SATURDAY Pontiac Mall Phone 682-4940 Telegraph at- Elizabeth Loke Road |. SAVE *20 on luxury buddine \ RSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 10fi3 'I ■ A—11 mM: MONEY'^^'l 3 DAYS OHLY! carpeting reduced 4 TYPES: DUPONT 501* AND CUMUIOPT* NYLONS, ACRILAN* ACRYLIC, WOOL! AAontgomery WARD lOyRS: 9:30 AM. to, 9:00 P.M. ;T0RE Monday thru Saturday Pontiac Phone 682-4940 Telegraph at Elizojbeth Lake Kood L TIIK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBBDARY 28, 1963 Pretty foed Ufces Life Among Ruins ST. LOUIS (UPK - It all Greek to pretty Elizabeth Brokaw, but not anymore. Miss Brokaw, a Washington University graduate student here, can boast that she was on the spot with archeologists to help uncover old worlds ip Greece. again. She wants to be on spot whe^ find Agamem- MTOnt'"''' l*C^«nking. —~ npcient story gw» Agamemnon ^a.s slain by his wife. Clx;4* ^ hifi re- ^fr T^oti was Siam uy wife, Clyternnestra, after his turn frotp ,j,j.^jan War. The archeology student was chosen last summer to join Or. George Mylonas on his annual summer project of excavating at Mycenae near Argos in the Peloponnesus. e Mycenaean excavations are jointly sponsored by the Greek Archeological Service and by Washington University, where Dr. Mylonas is chairman of the Department of Art and Archeology. Dr. Mylonas took his wife, daughter and son-in-law with him. Miss Brokaw’s joh was to record and cdtalogue any discoveries during the excavating. Excavating, Miss Brokaw says, is not just pick and shovel work. First, you’ve got to know wherg to dig, and that’s whShe Dr. Mylonas came in with all ^is knowledge on the subject. Gels 2-Year Term for Stabbing Pair , A Waterford Tovm- shipman accused of stabbing his wife and her coworker last May was ordered wsday to serve two to foy in prison by L rnnway. 2825 oids-St,; ided guilty Feb. saultV of folo"'0“® ®‘abbing occurred outside Conway-s i„st after his Conway’s j„st after hi: wife Melvg „ and Carl A. Bohn °?'»7'Lmons Road, Waterford Township drove up Bohn’s car f.^'^^he drive-in res- We Intend to Make an IMPACT with These Low, Low - Priees! Huriy, P' ^ Hurry, Huny! 2 LIVELY GOLD FISH For example, an indentation in the ground might be the sign of a caved-in tomb. Or there might be a certain rock in the ground which could be the piece of an important wall covered for ,centuries. jow_-i-iD. orovc up — 1 Bohn’s car Jfhe drive-in restaurant wh^ ” v|rs. Conway and Bohn worked ’ Even the laborers who do the digging get excited on finding the trail of something important. Miss Brokaw said ^ey can tell from the sound whether or not it’s pottery or stone underneath. After exploratory trenches are dug with pick and shovel, arid if there are signs of a possible discovery, small knives are then used. The dust is swept away . with paint brushes. Nothing is used to damage any possibly itn-portant find. While Miss Brokaw was on the job, a network of corridors, staircases and rooms was uncovered. Found in one chamber: gold, ivory, beautifully painted vases, two small libation tables and a vase fragment bearing an inscription in Mycenaean script. But the most exciting find was the discovery of what seemed to be the base of a figurine. “They found the hem of her skirt first;’’ Mi.ss Brokaw recalled. “Then, slowly and carefully they uncovered the rest of her — a beautiful terra cotta figurine” j Miss Brokaw hopes to go back H'T by Q pj,one Pole HOLLYWOOD (UPD - A hap- I less motorist nainted this slogan on the neat ^ound dent in his front fender “Help telephone poies.- Ford’s dashing J^ersonal coupe from Englaj^d There arc many sport coupes tliat cos( luipdrcfis, yes, even tliousaiids more* llu>" Hie captivatii'l^ Capri, Hut tlicrc's not a .solitary ()n„ Ford's most personal coupe fioi" l'.iigla„^j lor the appeal of ng/i/ design. I.iixuriotis Comfort It’s a two scater (or most ol your (|,.j , I "ivitig hut tlicrcs s|)aee lor the occasional extra im^^onger. UphoLstery is solt English leather laoj,,^ over foam rubber for the contoured bucket (jar- peting is deep tufted, bound, '‘od wall to wall. You get a padded (las|,, „ car wide parcel tray plus a spacious g|,)yj.'|„(.kcr. Nimble Performance (Japri's eiigirie is rally bred. 4 eylindeuj ()^^.^|,oiid valves. Zero to (j() very briskly. Disc brakes up iront. same as used on (-.xpensive racing niaobincs-They’re lade free! Tninsinissioii is 4 sp,.,.d with your choice of column or floor shift. Wliy not let a Capri tell you the rest of jjj. ^fory itself ':' You’ll agree it’s... Best of the imports because best of all LLOYU MOToil^ '^232 S. SAGINAW ST.-Fj^ 2-9131 'Y.'#, .'V AYTINAl VITAMINS , MINERALS I Health maintenance I m«I. k,ith 1 mineral. *130 I Bottle of 100.V COMPLETE WITH COLORED CHIPS AQUARIUM-SEAWEED WITH AHY PURCHASE OF ’2.00 OR MORE Tobacco Dept. Excluded AYTINAL , MVLTtnf' VITAMWS Alookbetlor, live better A'TQ formula. .£t^ TONI RAYETTE AQUA NET PROFESSIONAL HAIR SPRAY HOME PERMANENT MFR. LIST PRICE $2.00...... $117 MINTS^ Choice of Flavor* Bottle of 100.. KOTEX or Modess Box of 12s Roflulaf Of Soper ■, . > ■ - ^ ^ Your Choice I OR FRIENDSHIP GARDEN HAND & BODY LOTION I Activated lanolin keeps 5.00 Value BONNIE BELL TEH-O-SIX LOTION Pint Si» $069 FEVER THERMOMETER ORAL OR S-Grain aspirin TABLETS 100s j 39c COnON TAIL m ^ Iq-tips 19 DESERT FLOWER ^3 S r VALUb r MAALOX ugin ML ,88‘ i ,li!i % ? dristan 1 NASAL SPRAT mf m 64< ^ 98c Value ^ 25« ^PREPARATION‘S • “H” rectal : OINTMENT y^-PricK 1.00 Siztt TOSSY WIND and WEATHER LOTION n sucaryl “ LIQUID 2.98 PINT SIZE $|79 MURINE EYE DROPS Reg. 1.19 Value 76' X AO * VITAMIN C 250 mg. POTENCY, 100 TABLETS, REGULAR $1.49....... COLGATE, GLEEM “irr^EST" TOOTHPASTE jg 59' mntnu, JOHNSON’S BABY POWDER 69o Value 43* RUPTURE-EASER 86* % INSULIN 99*1 ThrlHy’s BOTTLE OF 100 MULTIPLE VITAMINS WitK B-12 2.98 Value $|19 ALL U-80 INSULIN BOTTLE of 100 ^ VITAMIN A ^ 1 25,000 UNITS ^^.39 Value 7Cc ^ EMPIRIN 1 I U rniMPOUND * • Orthopedio Appliances • Back Supports • Elastic Stookings • Both Male and Fomale Oraduate Fittori • Private Fitting Room (Thit tervice at t only) COMPOUND 100 TABLETS 1C PRESCRIPTION FILLED DY US QUALITY DRUGS LOWEST PRICE 148 North Saginaw Huron Street 4895 Dixie Highway Next to Food Fair ENDEN Dandruff Remover * SNMiraO . %99‘.^ ”, V . '4"m W i‘r J* 1 » » y « k. 1*" ■* *'■ •“ ^ **' ' •' *' ’'''i'*" *' *■'■'»* t *' 1 *' * 7 • > .' ■ V ■' ■. ”'- ' ■' ■' -V.. ■ “‘V, THE PONTIAC PRP:SS, THURSDA^^ FEBRUARY 28. 10(^3 A—13»^ Survey Shows That Some Schools Penalize Steady Daters By The Associated Press A spht check of schools throughr out Che country showed today there are some that battled to discourage steady dating « their students. The penalties for violation erally were not as stringent as with exjpulsion for such activity, cisco public, schools, Dr. Harold that imposed at St. Michael’s Ito-man Catholic High School in Jersey City, N.J. The going steady practice among teen-agers there was dealt a blow by the administrator who threatened his students I want them to look over the Spears, has not taken any for-field. I don’t want any forced mal action against steady dating, marriages,” said the Rev. James <” he added, “has been good and most young people look upon steady daters as liwe-cure and immature persons.” McManus said pastors can expell students “if steady dating gets out of hand,” but he re-lAafhed that he knew of no such recent cases. Chicago’s public school system. a spokesman said it was not considered feasible to try to set up a blanket rule on steady dating for its 21 districts, “each with a territory as large as many^ cities.” Charles Carrol of Carrolton, Md., the last surviving signer of the Declaration of Independence, lived until 1832. / J BANS GOING STEADV-Father James A. Carey, shown in a classroom at St. Michael’s High School in Jersey City, N.J., told students of the school yesterday that they would be expelled if they continued to go steady. Father ylF Photofax Carey, head of the 6(X)-student parochial school, announced'the rule will go into effect Friday. His action won approval of parents, and while some of the students felt the rule harsh, they agreed to obey it. HIGHLAND MEANS SAVINGS Hus all these extras !rf ii. ij'-f 4 * sv* • ■\" . ;^-v\ ‘ - .^ Tllfe i>ONTIAC PllEi&S; THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 19(>3 Childs IQ Relative to Teacher-Parent BY PHYLUS BATTELLE IchiWren from backward homesl in test scores, while those in [their scores occupy a narrow[sible IQ of a normal child are thelsw ^ 2 wT"announced by Ford ' drop in IQ from year to year. I vocational schools dron.. I rahae. [teachers and parents who can’t I too preooupied with the score., plant was announcea py ----------- new YORK - Actress Jill St. vocational schools drop., srr.rj 1 teachers and parents who can’t I too preooupied Ford Motor to Eipond Monroe Pidnt Capacity DETROIT (/PI - A major equipment expansion for its Monroe Motor Go, The company said it will increase the flex^iUty of bumper stampfttg putpu|. '"1^0 new employment is contemplated at the plant which employs approxinuately 1,500 per.-'sons. claim that the intelligence quo-] tient (IQ) tests are valid. Miss St. John, her press agents ecstatically re- .»> vealed when she i|, ,4 -j first showed up Hollywood, has an IQ of 168. Later she mar-r i e d Lance Re^ ventlow, heir to B a b s Hutton’s multimillions. Traffic Judge Stalls His Car I on Freeway || DETROIT (UPD - A traffic judge has found out that a freeway is wonderful to drive on PHYl LIS i no place to be stalled. RATTirtiP ! Judge John D. Watts, after mtimiinons^ indicate \hat' waiting three hours for help Would this not '"d'cate that, broke down on rating is authen- her “genius’ tics? Ah, but there are always those who doubt anything. And there are plenty of people who doubt that the IQ tests currently being given to America’s youngsters, from nursery school up, have any real, permanent significance. In itself, says Henry Dyer of the Educational Testing Ser- 1-94 near Dearborn, decided that a phone system should be installed on every expressway. Watts said: “In Cleveland, they have free telephones 1,200 feet apart on freeways. They 1 tell me it works wonderfully.’’ The judge asked police Supt. [ Eugene Reuter to call a meet- ' ing of the city's Traffic Coordi-j nation Committee to study the vice, “a score on an aptitude test 1 matter. State highway and tells you nothing about a partic-; Michigan Bell Telephone Co. ular child’s native ability ’’ ............... boys than girls. At the very bottom, in the dunce department, again there are more boys. RATING CAN VARY But being a dunce one year doesn’t necessarily mean that a boy—or his sjster—will stay in that lowly category for long. Over a period 10 years, ?ay between the ages of 6 to 16, a | child’s IQ rating may vajy any-i where from 10 to 40 points. Since two-thirds of all children rank between 84 and 116. it is| easier to see, then, that it’s pos-| sible for a child to jump from a | sort of below-normal IQ to darn [near genius in a decade! | This would be made difficult for him, however, in schools which like to use the intelligence test as a solid indication of whether students should be put in “fast,’’ “average” or “slow” [classes; a kid labeled “slow” is AP Photofmx Lot likely to get the educational TOPS TICKET - Democrat Ilus W. Davis relaxes alter .aadboost his 19. In a book, “The Schools,” somel points are brought out which! parents with children of relative- j ly low IQs will want to read—and parents of children with high IQs may choose to ignore: i officials are being invited to sit in. This Course Is Called Advanced Kindergarten MEMPHIS m - Young Keith winning the nomination for mayor of Kansas City, Mo., in the preferential primary held this week. He wilt meet the runner-up. Republican Dutton Brookfieid in the March 26 runoff election. — ( School Board President Quits After Harassment Author Martin Mayer re-counts an illustrative story about a teacher named Frances Harmon. Miss Harmon was called in by an assistant principal who bawM her out about the performance of her pupils. In rebuttal, the teacher told him, “these kids can’t learn anymore!” [ The principal said, “how do know they can’t learn any Some people are brighter Ipianiken reported graphically on than others. In the same way his first day at kindergarten: | that some are taller, have bet- 1 "Well,” he told his grandmoth-ter vision, etc. er, “We sang a while. Then we But a child’s experiences, en-'eried a while. Then we sang agon has resign^ as president^f vironment, and his ability to con-while.” the R'f^mond &hool Bojird^^ “How do vou know it’s a slow centrate at a given, hour, in a* -------------- blamed personal harassnrient of given room, when a given test pon't Forget the Kids b's ^ j’’® ^ figure it out all by yourself, or is given, are every bit as impor- ennea to give ueiai s. , did somebodv tell vou? Go ba6k . 1 SAN PEDRO, CallI._(UPn ,-! HIx rexlBnaOonl^ RICHMOND tTL-Gordon Fergu- n,(,re' “It’s a slow class.’’ dined to give details. , SAN PEDRO, Calif. (UPI) His resignation followed voters’, Thus, how can you separate Liquor store owner Matsumaya rejection for the fourth time in! , native “intelligence” from the Miyu thought he could explain one year of school tax increases i J ’ _ nresent dav’s excerience-^ Iwhy a robber took' sqda pop as in a special election during the So, Miss Harmon said, I present days experie^nce. |^^y back there and taught them For instance, one would assume ing in his g^away car was a| ---------------- more, and they learned it.” j that children’s IQs would increase woman and several small chil-j The nation’s recreation fleet, they grew older; Howqver, dren. [has grown to 7,000,000 boats. I The only limitations on the pos-, OPENING SPECIALS HOURS: M0N.,THURS., FRI..SAT. It TUES.,WED.9*6 nastic rWall Tile 2,.V Jlow plo«»ic liU at o n»w low prteo: fmcLaaoi, to do oithor full bothi oi TUB Am Yon Get: • 40 Sq. Ft. Tile • t Oal. Mastic • 10 Ft. Cap • 1 Spreqder 10 Ft. Stripe • P Cleaner ALL run $^5 FULL BATH AREA >bw Get: ALL FOR no Sq. Ft. Tile > 20 Ft. Cap • I Claanw » 20 Ft. Stripe V t Spreader I 2-Oal. Maatic • 10 Ft. Baia $1595 VINYL > ASBESTOS TILE 7'/2! 9x9 $5.99 Carton ARAASTRONG'S TESSERA $^95 CORLON LARGE and SAAALL ROLLS QENUINE Ceramic TILE 39 ffr ARMSTRONG'S INLAID TILE 9x9 S®,. MEN FREE! Use Our Tools LADIES FREE! RAIN HATS-No Purchase Neeettary Pure Vinyl Tile 6 Coieri 9! Random Asphalt Tile FRONT DOOR P|ARKING 'PoMfiao Mali 73ie /V<7oe- 3 t \ \ hi Shop (1 k 2Blks.W.*f ( 5 { 5 rcleqrnpfr f S VI Vl 2255 EU2ABETH LAKE RD. FE 44B161 20 W. ALLEY ST. (Rear of Pike St. AAP) SAfElWKIfS 144 N. SAGINAW (Temporary Store) DISCOUNT SAVINGS PLUS!... AT WKC's TEMPORARY LOCATIONS! NO MONEY DOWN - YOUR CREDIT IS Gl - 3 FULL YEARS TO PAY WKC’S WAREHOUSE, 20 W. ALLEY ST. (Rear of Pike Street A&P Store) OPEN THURS. FRI. MON. NIGHTS til 9 WKC’S TEMPORARY LOCATION 144 N. Saginaw Street y , \ f 'r ' Against lax Would Prevent Detroit Levy on State Workers A Union Lake' labor jmMUator and a Warren attorney have filed suit in Wayne Ck)uaty Circuit CJourt to stop the City of Detroit trom collecting its ijncome tax from state employes Who work In Detroit but do not live there. Daniel Mt Gallai^er Sr., 54, of 9155 Lohgcroft St, Union Lake, and Don BInkowski, 38, Warren, both employed by the Michigan Labor Mediation Board in downtown Detroit, claim the tax is unfair to state employes who have no say in where they are asslped. Their suit charges that “em ployes of the State of Michigan are forced to work at the Cadillac Square Building in Detroit for the convenience of Detroit residents. “It’s unfair to tax us just because we are forced to work in a city with an income tax,” they said. Gallagher and Binkowskl said they and many other state employes perform much of«their work outside the city. They also claimed they received no city services or benefits because state and federal funds maintain the highways and freeways they use. ^ “If the courts do not uphold our position, I suggest the state legislature move the state offices out of Detroit,” Binkowski, a former Constitutional Convention delegate, said. Tiny TV Camera May Be Monitor hr X15 Flights WASHINGTON (AP)>-A televi sion camera no bigger than i pack of cigarettes is on the drawing boards/ to monitor the instrument panel during X15 rocket plane flights. It will be mounted on the pilot helmet, like a coal miner’s lamp and will see whatever he sees. The compact camera, now bein developed, was one of many ad vanced projects described for the House Space Committee by Raymond L. Bisplinghoff, director of advanced research and technology for the National Aeronautics and Space Administra- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,-FEBRUARY 28, 19G3 Romney Signs His First Bill; Benefits Area Boys Pay Penny for Hitching Post PEA SHOOTER—Inspector on hands and knees checks the bore of this 30-foot rolled steel launcher for a U, S. Polaris missile made at Sunnyvale, California. LANSING - Gov. George Romney Tuesday signed into law his! first bill since taking office — to clear the path for sale of De-quindre sewer construction bonds in Oakland County. The biU, the first passed by the 1963 state legislature, requires that the State Municipal Finance Commission approve or disapprove the issuance of such bonds. ’The sale of $5.6 million in bonds to finance construction „of jBfl^ the $ewer in southeastern Oakland County was held up vdien the finance commission refused to act in December, saying that state law did hotHPeqa* act on them. Claude Stevens, the county’s bonding attorney, reconunended sale pf the bonds be delayed because of prohibitive interest costs Tadpole Crisis Shakes 'Em Up in Freight Office MEMPHIS, Tenn. (/P) - A tadpole tangle, created a crisis that never will be forgotten at a Ireight^ffice here------ — Deciding to venture into the bullfrog business, Wallace E. Johnson ordered a batch of frogs and tadpoles from a St, Louis firm. The. shipment arrived on a Friday but nobody could locate Johnson to make delivery. The men at the freight office were nervous wrecks by the time delivery was made on Monday. They had spent the whole weary weekend pouring fresh water over the tadpoles. Keep Fire Trucks Down on the Farm GLENDALE, Arlz. (Jfl —Gayle Cate and Bobby Wagoner, both 13, don’t ask for any favors when tiiey ride into tOWn. The two rode in on their horse Sugar to buy supplies. Dlsmountlng,~4hey hitched him to a parking meter and dropped a penny in the slot. Standing nearby, patroliban Or-val Wilmer musisd aloud to by-, standers, “Wonder where I’ll put| the ticket in case the horse overstays the time?’’ j But he didn’t have to worry. The boys got their saddle soap' and were mounted up in plenty he said would be incurred without the commmission’s approval. Pistol-Packin' Students Studying Mental Health ANN ARBOR (Jf) - Some 65 University of Michigan students are packing pistols to class this week. I They are state troopers, attending a week-long institute on mental health and its relationship to enforcement. WEST BEND, Wis. Wl-A Wls-)nsin farm, appropriately named Fire Bell Farm, boasts the best fire protection of any in the country, | The owners, Keith Pranz and! Wesley Kramlich, are volunteer, firemen who collect fire fighting! equipment, all in working order.! They now own 11 pieces, includ-' ing an 1875 Silsby steamer. i A truck is always ready for ah emergency and they have answered fire calls in the nearby area. They also have assisted the regular West Bend Fire Department. WE'RE MOVING OUR STORE! All Merchandise Will Be Sold ot A FRACTION OVER COST All Types Musical Instruments, Amplifiers, Luggage, Jewelry and Men's Clothing EDWARD’S OUTUT 18 S. Saginow The tag, which should have been on the crate with the 12 frogs instead of the one. with the 6,000 tads, read: I insured for $20 each.” Grand Rapids Resident Named to State Post LANSING W - The appointment of Richard Stuur of Grand Rapids as chief examiner of the State Banking Department has been announced by Banking Commissioner Charles Slay. Stuur has been a senior examiner with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. BIG SPRING SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED! PEBHA-LDT BBAS-GIBDLES PANTIES GOWNS IN OUR BOYS' AND STUDENTS' SHOP everybody’s singing the praises of ■WHITE iB/i'sr -nioy. the trim good looks of your favorite -|«. tailored in rugged, Sanforized Twill in . off-white^ shade. Sizes 27-34 ■ It Come on In to our Pontiac Mall store Saturday Mar. 2; register .ITwlln, n.™ .. 2 P -. TP. cord player! He'll autograph your records, too. Permo-Lift Strapless Bras $5.00 to 12.50 Perma-Lift Padded Bras 3.95 to 5.00 Perma-Lift Garter Belts 2.50 to 3.95 Perma-Llft Long-teg Panties 6.50 to 15.00 Perma-Lift Bras ........; 2.50 ta B.95 Porma-Llft Girdles , 6.95 to 13.50 Perma-Lift Gowjis ... 13.95 om PONIMC mill sto«i opsh every nue to »p,m. GEORGE'S DEPT. STORE 1 FRIDAY-SATURDAY and MONDAY ll LADIES' DRESSES II $0 ■ ■ to 6.99 ■■ to 10.99 4 LADIES' COATS rr*9‘‘fi9 UNIFORMS ‘3.88 $6 MATERNITY I DRESSES ‘2-*5 %-Price Were 79.99 SOQ 5129 FLUBBER 59^ $5 LADIES' BETTER HATS $29 LADIES' FORMALS ‘9.00 FUR COATS-STOIES *49^*99 I W-Price 1 Wet0 $99 ^l.»3 $10 LADIES' MINK HATS *5.00 LADIES’ SPORTSWEAR $1 11.99 Value Blouaes SJciris 89 C 3.99 Blouses I, Skirts UDIES' LINGERIE -Price I and Mot* Slip! Gowns 09 $1.99 LADIES' GLOVES 9T $1.00 NYLON SOCKS 47< L2.99 Canteibary SWEATERS *5.77 LADIES’ BRAS-OIRDLES $0881 %-PrJce and More,I Wore 10 4.00 50 -s- 0 89c NYLONS SEAMLESS 33< LADIES' ROBES V.-Price Were (o 3.99 $2 !jT-*4 $3.99 LADIES' PURSES 97^ $3.99 LADIES' SLACKS ‘1.88 GIRLS'-IIOTS' JIORETS $0 ■ I rare II W 14.99 W More Than Vs-Price Were 10.99 >/r-Price Were . 12.99 GIRLS' COATS $fi V;:r $Q n '/r-Price Were 19.99 GIRLS' SLACKS or BLOUSES ‘l-‘2 BOYS' SHIRTS, undershirts 25*-79’ BOYS' PANTS DUNGAREES $1 ^$2 %-Price Were 1.99 GIRLS' DRESSES $|00 $2®8 '/j-Prlce : Were $.99 TOTS' GIRLS' Cotton Ponts Hurry—Hurry BOYS' SHIRTS GIRLS’, BOYS’SHO-SUITS $0 vji" $0 ■1 Vr-Price Were 8.99 TOTS' BLANKETS BIBDSEYE DIAPERS flito’s PAJAMAS-SHIRTS > $^88 MEN’S SHIRTS-PANTS $10.99 MEN'S SWEATERS ‘3.88 MEN'S JACKETS “.ss-Sli 5111 10.99 ^ 24.99 1 ^ $3.99 MEN'S HATS-CAPS 59^ MEN’S SOITS-GOATS 2.99 THERMAL UNDERWEAR 99< £*10=19 29.99 ■ W ■ W 19c DISH, WASHCLOTHS 9^ 5.99 Full, Twin BEDSPREADS *2.66 39c THICK Cannon Towel 19' tHI^AGINAW ST. NEAR HURpN FREE RED jSTAMPS ll MUSLIN SHEETS II $1 $0 ■ ■ I # 1 BETTER BLANKETS 1 vt $1 $0 1 1 - V GEORGE'S 1 >EPT. STORE 74 N. Soginow Neor Huron Free l>owntown Parking \ / ^h'- ■: THK POKTIAC RIMY'Ml MRRMY IT HUMES -HiraiEi-simirs Ninic mil stme V" now... for tf If you're already a Leatherneck Twill customer (and there are literally thousands here in Pontiac) we won't have.to say another word except ^'rush." But if you've never had the experience of wearing one of these remarkable suits, read on. Virtually ho other fabric gives so p/uch wear, yet has such a fine "hand" and handsome appearance. Leatherneck Twill is woven of long-fibre Australian wool, which is first twisted like a cable for tremendous strength and resilience. Add to that the fact that these suits have an extra pair of trousers, and you have a suit you'll enjoy for a long, long time. And they're beautifully tailored in a handsome 3-button model, with single pleat trousers; in new medium and dark toned muted patterns. You'll find them in a full size range, 36 to 46; regulars, shorts, longs, extra longs and some portlies. Naturally, at this price the quantities are limited, so this offer is for Friday and Saturday only. OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 P.M. r.' / ERESS TILL USD AY, FEBRUARY ;28, : PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. B—1 Oakland U. Has Its Own 'Sports Spectacular WHO NEEDS FLORIDA? — A favorite place for students seeking after-class relaxation is the huge pool. While it isn’t regulation Olympic-size, the pool is larger than most in the metropolitan area. Most so-called Olympic-size pools actually aren’t, Oakland U’s athletic director Hollie Lepley pointed jjut. An added feature of the pool is underwater windows tha^, allow instructors to observe the progress of students in perfecting their swimming form. Dedication of the new Intramural Sports and Recreation Building at Oakland University is scheduled for March 15, ,\^ In the meantime students are using most of the facilities. These include swimming, diving, gymnastics, dancing, basketball, tennis, volleyball, weightlifting, tumbling, trampoline — oh yes, and skiing on a slope outside. Indoor archery, ping-pong and handball will be added later. ★ ★ ★ The $1.5-million structure wSs designed for intramural activities, but it can . be adapted readily for spectator events as well. The b u i 1 d i n g was opened officially to the students last month. Major construction was completed in 15 months and paid for from regular tuition fees. Sports and recreational activity isn’t regimentated. Participation is left up to the students. Instructors are available if the students wish. ★ ★ ★ “It’s all here when the students want to use it,’’ athletic director Hollie Lepley said. And use it they do. ROOM TO DANCE -i- The new intramural building at Oakland University is more than a gymnasium. Here, Frances Swobdda, 19-year-old freshman from Rochester, practices modern dancing to records in a multipurpose room which serves as a studio. THE MOST IMCREDIBLE OFFER IN ROSE JEWELERS 39-YEAR HISTORYI STMIIIESS smi CIOKWARE Packaged wiih each sol is the guarantee of a nationally-famous manufacturer of cookwrre • • . but the price is lo low we can’t name the brand! HUGE -GYM — The gymnasium is large cnbugh to enable a variety of sports to be played simultaneously. The floor is marked off for four basketball courts, tennis and badminton • ( S. '■ ; . - , ^ ‘ ' , I , , I , THK PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2^ 1903 WHITE BLANKET FOR DIXIE — This was a typical scene in a Raleigh, N. C., residential district yesterday after a late winter storm dumped several inches of snow on that state from its Atlantic coastline to the mountains in the western regions of the state. 'Mona, My Long Lost Love!' By ARTHUR EVERETT NEW YORK (AP)-It was love affair that b^jan nearly 28 years ago in Paris in the late summer of 1935. In nei^boring Germany, Hitler was rearming. To the south Mussolini’s Ronuui legions were mas^ ing against Ethiopia. But Partli and now the cider lapped in the kegs. ^e had come up from Italy much earlier. But Paris was her home and she was French to her fing^tips, as much a part of the city as any boulevard midinette. True, she was an older woman. But tan a youth ever really learn to love until just once he has sur-j ed States and she stopped off in the Metropolitan Museum of Arts. It was her first visit to the Unit- \ Fifth Avenue and hurried inside Washington, then came on to New York. Joyfully, with great anticipation, I planned our rendezvous. It was a cold, clear winter day She was waiting as I knew she woiild be. The galiery was crowd-as it had not been when last met. Others Clamored for her when I arrived at 82nd Street and attention. I stood in silence. Time to put on the lights... our li§ht touch suits by Hart Schaffner&Marx Ughter weight fabrics in suits with the Ughthearted feel of Hart Sdmfifner & Marx “total lightness” tailoring... the young*as-8pring look of HS&M’s slenderizing styling. Treat youre^ fe a sprinig spruce-up today with a suit from our HS&M collection. From $85.00 fklcMinsanSs WE PAY YOUR PARKING SAGINAW at LAWRENCE ' Open Monday and Friday Nights Until 9 P. M. BIRMINGHAM—272 W. MAPLE Open Thursday ond Friday Nights Until 9 P. M. THE STYLE CORNER OF PONTIAC was gay and unconcerned, and ro-,rendered to the beauty and charm mance as always hung in the airiof feminine maturity? i like a haze above the Seine. ! MET IN LOUVRE I had come down from Norman- . . . i is: nJn .( rt— ' .ppi. itoon, were k,ng 1^.^;.;;- I went away, back to America.' aie stdyed behind. The years 11 irln^ passed. War came and blotted out JUUyt* j the sunshine that had ^ne upon I us when we met. ' P(l]ci\/C FnrP* m North Africa, in bleak en-I I Icampments, I encountered coun- . - f jtrymen of hers, Frenchmen flght- Voaront Gone save me word of her. jwllh other refugees in Paris, she had sought sanctuary from the in-; MOUNT HOLLY, NJ. (AP) —ivader. But she was well, safe, stllli Samuel L. Poole, who put the smiled. i hoped I might soon bej charitable instincts of a Judge to her again, a severe test, has been removed gut for me, the war ended be-from his jurisdiction. ifore Paris was liberated. Oncei Municipal Court Jirige Wilbur S. again I crossed the Atlantic, leav-lippincott dug into his own podk-|mg her behind. And once again' et and gave Poole bus fare to his'the years began ticking away. Myj home town of Atlantic City, 70 Lady of the Louvre still waited.j miles from here. Police made sure 3ut my chances of returning( Wednesday that Poole got on the bus. seemed to recede, then she came to me. Poole, 51, appeared before Lip-plncott on Feb. 8 for the secoikl time on a vagrancy charge. Poole had just completed a 20^y jail term for vagrancy and he asked to be returned to his “warm cell.’’ Lippincott obliged. Acting Couple Planning Marriage on March 15 i SANTA MONICA, Calif. (AP)-' Actor Joseph Schildkraut took out Let out last week, Poole was a marriage license with actress picked up a third time for vagran- .Leonora Constance Rogers in San-‘ cy and appeared before Lippincott ta Monica Superior Court Wednes-Tuesday night. This time Lippin- day. cott declined further “free public lodging.’’ The judge Instead product a |5-doIlar bill, which he turned over to Poole saying it was for a “one-way bus ticket back to Atlantic City." ^hildkraut, 66, and Miss Rogers, 31, said , they plan to wed March 15. SchUdkraut’s first wife, Maria, died a year ago. It will be Miss Rogers’ first marriage. 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SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH AAARCH 6,1963 LOOK FOR THESE I.D.L. DRUG STORES IN YOUR AREA! SCHLIHTDRUG 660 Auburn Rood, DRAYTON DRUO FURTNEY DRUO ODELL'S DRUO PARSONS DRUO 6ALU6HER M-59 4410 DIxIb Hwy. DrNytM Plolni/ Mich. 974 Juflyii, PoAtiflC, Midi. Clurbton, Mich. 1990 Auburn Road, PontiaC/ Mich. DRUG 7544 Highland Rd., 1 Pontiac, Mick - K, ' , ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28> 1963 B-a Congress Not f^okey, Just Builds Momentum Slowly By DICK WEST , WASHINGTON (UPI)-There has been a lot of talk this year the system under which Congi'o.ss operates and whether it needs to be modernii|;ed. Sonte deep thinkers seem to feel that the legislative machinery as presently constitut-s ed is too oum-Ibersometo I permit Con- f gress to meet i its responsibilities in the I space age. In support of I their position, I they point out II h a t although a p proyimately two months have elapsed since the current session began, hardly anything has happened. I have no Intention of getting involved in this controversy, but I would Tike to do Biy bit to keep at least one aspeict of the record straight. Contrary to the way It might appear to the naked eye, Coii-gress actually has been rather busy this year. It’s Jtist that it Decides to Switch Units; So Army Chap Deserts CATTERICK, Yorkshire (UPI) -Peter Duncan, 18, was sentenced to nine months detention Tuesday because he joined the British army twice. An army spokesman said Duncan deserted his Royal Fusiliers unit and Immediately signed up for a 22-year hitch with the 25th Royal Signals Regiment because he wanted to learn a trade. hasn’t done ainything very noticeable. I have been looking over the legislative calendar ahd 1 find that, going into the last week of February, the House of Representatives already had'pass^ two bills. One of them extends the time for filing burial expenses for veterans. The other authorizes the armed forces to provide equipment and other support for the annual Boy Scout Jamboree. ^Neither is exactly earth-shaking, but they certaidly should quash any complaints that Gbn-gress is prone to dalliance or is composed of slugabeds. NO ENNUI The Senate, it is true, has not been quite as productive as the House. By that I mean that the senators haven’t passed any bills as yet. This is not a sign of ennui or lackadaisical behavior, however. The Senate has been having some trouble getting or- I can appreciate its problem because I often have trouble getting organized myself. Even so, the Senate has managed to pass five resolution^ In one resolution, it notified the President that a quorum was present on opening day. In another resorutioh, it hdti-fied the House that a quorum was present. The point I’m trying to make is, the fact that nothing much has happened in Congress does not necessarily mean that Con- I has been standing still. Anyone who has spent mueh time around the Capitol can tell you that it’s possible for nothing to happen even when Congress is going full blast. Training Programs Set for Upper Peninsula • LANSING - The State Department of Public Instruction reports that two new training programs have been approved for the Upper Peninsula under provisions of the Area Development Act.' The programs will offer 12-week courses in short-order cooking and baking for 25 trainees at Ironwood and 20 at Sault Ste. Marie. COMPACT TRACTOR — “Mini Clarkor,” tiny tractor—only 36 inches high—is dwarfed jby rear wheels of conventional farm tractor. Its designer says it can pull two®’tons with ease, and that its 10-horsepower engine will run all day on two gallons of fuel. Qayton^s Frigidmre ^^Smart Shoppers Sale^^ is really Something! WIKI ^FRIGIDAIRE YOUVIAKT APPLIANCE OUR HUGE SELECTION OF WIOOELS, SIZES AND COLORS LETS YOU PICK THE BEST BUY FOR YOUR BUDGET! 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LAST CHANCE FOR FREE Dryer Wiring on Detroit Edison Lines! olsctrlA 4 colors or white ^208 00 with trad# Where Quality Furniture Is Priced Right 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH Free Parking in Front of Store 3065 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD COME IN TODAY OR PHONE 682-1100 Open Monday and Friday Evenings ’til 9 f NOW MOKE THAN EVER. IT COSTS NO MORE TO BUY THE BEST - FRIGIDAIRE THIR PONTIAC PRESS. THtJRSPAY^ FEBRUARY 28, 1963 bipartisan foreign policy.” Despite! Hickenlooper, who heads the thfe, he contendad ttMt Republi-Senate Republican Policy Corn-cans contribute lOO per cent to mittee and is hip party’s senior ‘'unity in time of crisis” involving member of the Foreign Relations I decisions in which they didn’t Committee, said that up to now share. |GOP members have never been Crushed in Congress^Fighi Over Cuba .... _ . . . . ' _ -r .u- __ in matters of the nation, itive action for peace is coi Really Want Full Employment By NORMAN WALKER Associated Press Labor Writer MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — The POLITICAL POSSIBILITY By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) - With Democrate and Republicans shaking Accusing fingers at each other, bipartisan foreign policy has touched bottom in Congress’ frustrate uprpar over the Soviet takeover of Cuba. . Since, the 1940s when the late Arthur Vandenberg, R-Mich. started it all, it has been political ly fashionable for office seekers end holders to proclaim their adherence to the idea that partisanship stops at the water’s edge. B i partisanship has been re-served for programs, such as' foreign aid, where the executive felt he needed every vote he could scrape up in Congress to.put over proposals that lacked political appeal among the voters. But when it came to such decisions as those of former President Harry S. Truman to send American fighting men to Korea, Congress learned of the decision only after it was made 2 CRITICISMS Similarly, the present disturbance stems in significant part from (1) President Kennedy’s rejection of Republican contentions ! consulted in advance about major decisions The Republicans first were stung into action by a Feb. 17 attack by Sen. J. William Ful- bright, D-Ark., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, on New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Sen. Barry Goldwa-ter, R-Ariz., and Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa. Fulbright accused them of au- tlsanship in matters of the nation- P®®®* thoring “irresponsible, parusan at-al interest.” ce • , . ; . tacks on foreign policy.” He sug' gesied he was at the point believing that the “Republican party has decided to abandon bipar- Shorter Work Week's a Labor Symbol __ . _ • j lo «.* >• total will mount 400.4KX) a The studv said about one mil- terest in Congress make this alstandard work week is cut.’ dim prospect now, [shorter work week is more a sym- «u 'bol of orpnized labor’s genuine upward jump — and the concern over continuing high un- ^pi^cfo leaders fear a fifth post-employment than an .mmetUate BELL goal The steady clamor for a 35-hour week is a way of drawing attention to the fact that the idle rate has been stuck at over 5 per cent for more than five years— meianing five out of every 100 workers can’t find jobs. What AFL-CIO leaders actually want, they made clear at a 10-day session concluded here Tues- recession is an early probability —the groundwork carefully prepared by labor for the 35-hour week may suddenly pay off in a burst of new political support. The labor leaders are not entirely agreed among themselves on the best way lawmakers should legislate a shorter work we€k. in Cuba and (2) GOP claims inaiu*>j- —- Rerablicans were not consulted production economy. They feel it S SJ; telded Ust Oc. will «ke drnuc 6.v«-nme„. ac before nenneay uwiucu laoi. --- -- - tober to order a quarantine on tion to get it. arms shipments to the island. * Party leaders were summoned They propose a ueep u«x cui olan to the White House at . the time, along with more public works and at all ^e Their testimony is unanimous that forms of deficit spending to In a new brocnure released although their comments were asked for, they were told finally that the decision already had been made and would be put into effect, aiuii^ wuii iiivtc other forms of deficit spending to i» • Trau- increase purchasing power and de- day S ____j mAntfi for a shorter work weeK, mand for goods and services. nicii« •«. « ..................- -- , The 35-hour work week is anoth- Meany said: »rgue only toat er available tool, but the lab-the prosperity of the United States er avaiiau ^ ,___________ . employ- This and other actions have led Sen. Bourke B. Hickenlooper, R-Iowa, to declare “there is no State's Needy to Get U.S. Aid LANSING (AP)-Michigan will receive federal grants of $19.9 million for aid to needy children, the aged, the blind and disabled adults in the first quarter starting Jan. 1, reports the U. S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The amount is based on state estimates of how much It will need in . the current quarter. Over or underpayments will be adjusted in future grants. The grants for the quarter will Ihdude $8.2 million for old age assistance, $2.7 million for medical assistance to the aged, $7.7 million for aid to families with dependent children, $249,224 for aid to the blind and $950,216 for aid to the permanently and totally disabled. ★ ★ ★ The federal share is determined by a formula involving the state’s' per capita income. 'The remainder is paid from state and local funds. 'Crime Preventer' Jailed BIRMINGHAM, England (IJPD-Former policeman David O’Connell was sentenced to jail yesterday for stealing . from parked, cars. He said he “wanted to] leach motorists to lock up their vehicles as I was Interested in preventing crime.” if unemployment should take a The pamphlet makes a point that nationwide employment increased in the 1953-62 period only three-fourths as fast as the expansion of the work force. At that rate, the AFL-CIO said, the job- less total will mount 400,4X)0 a The study said about one million jobs would be created by every "hour cut from the present standard 49-hour work week. At that rate a 35-hour week would wipe out alt present unemployment. year. “Reducing working hours may not be the best way to create jobs,” the AFL-CIO pamphlet said. “But shorter working hours can and will spread employnient to some extent.” \ . QUOTE ‘SENATOR’ Denying tfiis, the Republicans pttxluced a document containing nine quotations from Kennedy, as a senator, raising ned with the international actions of the Dwight D. Eisenhower administration. Their prizq was a June 14,1^. Kennedy quote accusing the Eisenhower administration, of “the lack of long-range preparation, the lack of policy planning, the lack of a coherent and purposeful national strategy backed by strength.” The words might be dlfferen-but the theme seemed familiar, Former Policeman Admits Ale Theft - LANSING OP) — Former police man Keith -Siegel, 39, ChwgeC with the theft of a case of ale was assessed $100 fine and $56 costs in municipal court following his guilty plea to a simple larceny charge. ' Siegel paid the fine and costs as in which he said the Eisenhower In county jatl. ® f^ministration ‘‘sacs in apathy” of the force for 18 years, admit-so far as “a CbnstrucOve foreign td taking the c®®® ^ policy is concerned, insofar as pos- the warehouse while on duty, Waltpr Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, said he feels the 35-hour week may well be too sharp a cut for some firms and industries. He favors, instead a basic 40-hour week that could be adjusted automatically according to economic changes. George Meany, AFL-CIO president, likes the straight 35-hour They propose a deep tax cut week approach. He said he isn’t incy ^ I-________^ nKniit Ftoiither S plan. DON'T PAY MOREl discount CONSUMERS DISCOUNT CENTER I7B Norik Saginaw • Poirtlac OPEN 9 FREE PARKING NEXT TO OUR STORE er available tool, Dui me iai> ---- or leaders prohahly recognlie that must he hased ujmn Mi emp oy-opposltion expressed hy President ment, and we W Kennedy and the seeming disin. ment Is possihle oid)^ it ui< IT WILL PAY YOU TO COME DOWNTOWN ! MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS typewriters MEN'S and WOMEN'S JEWELRY at REDUCED PRICES BEN’S aid SAUL’S LOAN OFFICE 15 N. SAGINAW ST. BOB HOPEIS PEPSODENTDOUBOi FMURE' SAVE i on 3 Pepsodent Adult Toothbrushes Rec. $2.07 value pay only oo^ plus ® SPECIAL MOVIE TICKET OFFER* ♦Detail* on ipaclal pack Reg 1 00 Your Choice Hair Dressing TOP BRASS OR COmiAND j 1.20 Valwel HILINE CURTIS I SUAVE SHAMPOO II PILIOW TAIK" Day In, Day Out You Can Always Buy Every Second Gallon of VICTOR PAINT VICTOR PAINT CENTERS 158 N. Saginaw Downtown Pontiac Open Mon. end Fri> 9 to 9 OTHER HAYS » TO 6 (Cloaed Cunday). . 906 W. Huron Opp. Tol-Huron Conter tCloaed Sunday) 4518 N. Woodward et. 13 and 14 M Writing Pad • Calendar • L*n#r Opener • Pen Holder • Pen Special Terms >46" 144 Ooklond ii: ': ' ' .:.^ 1 . “ ' ^ i THE PONTIAC PRESS, TITURSDAY, FEBRI^ARY 28. ?Qfi3 B—5 Battle Against Nature Persists in India Invasion Areo^ HIMALAYAN MONPAS - Most Monpa people of Towang, a Buddhist monastery town high in the Indian Himalayas, wear yak-skin with tails hanging down on all sides to carry off rain water. These people remained in the area while Communist Chinese occupied that part of India’s frontier. 17 County Motorists Lose Right to Drive and Roy Smith, 2301 Fordham St., Keego Harbor. ★ ★ * Leroy F. Edgerly, 607 Knowles St., Royal Oak, was ordered to show proof of financial responsibility after conviction of negligent homicide. Drivers’ licenses of 17 Oakland County motorists were suspended or revoked recently by the Michigan Department of State. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility after convictions of drunken driving were: William E. Benson, 482 Lakeside Drive; Vern Taylor, 2173 Kllngensmith St., Robert E. Clark, 1275 Golfview Drive, Birmingham: Calvin C. Goodman, 3081 24-Mile Road, Rochester; and Thomas B. Teague, 1420 Livernois Road, Rochester. Unsatisfactory driving records caused the following to lose their licenses: Lawrence D. Bentley, 108 Col- lege St.(, Holly; Paul J. Kam-yzek, 804 Shortridge St., Rochester; and Gary F. Lucking, 307 N. Connecticut St., Royal Oak. Ordered to show proof of financial responsibility due to unsat-s f i e d financial judgements against them were: Alvin R. Benton, 431 Howard McNeil St.; Nevil Rose, 1191 Atkinson .St.; Warren W. Donley, 21681 Church St., Oak Park; James E. Dubry, 34 E. Elza St., Hazel Park; Allan W. Kerr, 6492 Hermana St., West Bloomfield Township, Richard 0. Lee, 946 N. Rochester Road, Troy; John N. Neil-■ sen, 21681 Church St., Oak Park; Asks Marines to Patrol D.C. WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Texas congressman proposed yesterday that U.S. Marines patrol the streets of the nation’s capital “until crime is abated.’’ " ★ ★ ★ The bill was introduced by Rep. Omar Burleson, D-Tex., chairman of the House Administration Committee. “It’s a pretty drastic step, I’ll admit,” Burleson said, “but it’s needed.” By HENRY S. BRADSHER TOWANG, India (AP)-A battle persists in Indians North East Frontier Agency, though the Red Chinese invaders have withdrawn and the Indian troqps they routed have never returned. It’s the age-old battle of a simple, pastoral __________ people to wrest I BACKGROUND | an e x i s t a n c e ------- from grain fields and herds in the high Himalayas. I n miniature it’s the pounding I-----—■■■■■■■, of grease from I OF THE news! wet raw wool by a pigtailed Monpa wonoan squatting beside a white stone fountain in this 350-year-old Buddhist monastery town. Or the struggle of families down the mountainside toward the Towang River, thousands of feet below, to live on the harvests of barley and millet from terraced fields and provide through icy winters for their pigs and chickens and shaggy yak. ★ ★ ★ In the past India’s government has kept most outsiders from the 31,4,38 square miles of the North East Frontier to allow its 336,000 people to, progress into the modern world in an unhurried way that ' I would preserve their traditional lvalues. POLICY QUESTIONED This “philosophy of NEFA,” like the Indian defense policy that proved inadequate, is now being questioned. If and when India builds up a military shield around the territory, it may institute changes to speed up the process of modernization. » Some of these tribesmen fifed south when Red China sent its brigades across the crest of the Himalayas last fall to enforce its claim to thousands of square miles of disputed frontier territory. ★ ★ ★ But most were scarcely touched by the ebb and flow of lowland soldiers who, invader and defender alike, panted for breath in the thin, cold air. Towang is two miles high. Indian civilian administrators and police are back. NO-MAN’S-LAND Militarily the agency area is a no-man’s-Iand. Perhaps a hundred miles'separates the opposing armies. The Chinfese»«re presumed to be camped on the Tibptan side of the McMahon Line, the frontier 12 miles'iiiorth of Towang. w ★ ★ The battered Indian army is rebuilding in the area of Tezpur, a city in the flatlands of Assam State 90 miles southeast of Towang. Prime Minister Nehru Ml I I I'v'i i"i'_ JUSr SAY ^XHARGE IT”] GLEN WOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY NEAR PADDOCK VISIT OUR PET DEPARTMfNT YOUNG HAMSTERS 69 each With Puirchase Of Food Kit 98c Consists Of Food—^Treot Nibble Without Food Kit 98c DOG gnd CAT FOOD CANNED DOG FOOD Pass V Boots 2 for^29c 15-ox. Pass 'n' Boots 3 for 29c 8-ox. Tabby ........2 lor 31c 15-ox. KItKat .......2 for 31c 6%-ox. 9 lives.....2 for 27c 6-ox. CANNED CAT FOOD Rival Dog Food.. 2 for 38c )-llj., lO-or. Red Heart Dog Food 4/65c T-lb.cdn Ken-L-Rotion . . 2 for 54c 1-lb., 10-oz. Cans Ken-L-Rotion.........27c l-lb., 7-oz. Jar Frltklat Vetf . . Pard . . Mb., l-lb. Mb. l-lb. PURINA DOG CHOW 2-lb. box . . 39c S-lb. bag .. 15c 10-lb. bag 1.3T FRISKIES MIX 2-lb. box . . . 39c FRISKIES MIX 6-lb. bag . . . 76c FRISKIES CUBES 2-lb. box . . . 39c 2 for 43r 3 for 27c 3 for 5Tc 3 for 51c GRAVY TRAIN 2-lb. box . . 39c 5-lb. bag .. 75c 25-lb. bag.. 2.87 OIJR WEEKLY SERPRISE SPECIAL ONE SPECIE TROPICAL FISH 21 EACH EVERY SATURDAY QUANTITY LIMITED STARTER AQUARIUM SETS Reg. $11.96 Value ^88 CONSISTS OF BOOK-5-GALLON TANK-FOOD FILTER-FILTER FLOSS-TUBING PUMP-GRAVEL, PLUS $3.00 FREE TROPICAL FISH BIRD FEEDERS ON SALE Hanging Feeder, Free Wild Bird Seed. . .1.88 Standing Feeder, Free Wild Bird Seed 2.88 You Can Always Depend on K-marf Quality has decided against returning his troops to tjie vacated territory at this time, feeling it might provoke another armed clash- In .Texpiir, a city wfclich the Chinese menaced but never 'reached, open-front shops are busy and government offices bustle with activity. Tezpur has recovered from immediate effects of its moment of panic last November when thou- sands fled south across the Brag-maputra River. However, the people are apprehensive about the possibility of another Chinese attack. They talk in terms of when it may come, rather than if it will. Warn Onl^ Alaska as Radioactivity Up WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Public Health Service (PHS) today reported that rajdioactive fallout increased slightly in several parts of the nation during January but only Palmer, Alaska, was getting a warning level dose of any kind. ★ * ★ For the f i f t h consecutive month, the PHS reported that Palmer received a 12-month ac-cumculation of iodine’131 that was above the federal radiation council’s “acceptable health risk” guide. Despite increases in some cases, none of the 62 radiation monitoring stations across the nation recorded .monthly or yearly accumulations of strontium 89 or the more dangerous strontium 90 that were anywhere near the warning range. 15 of 17 Chinese Win Dash for Freedom HONG KONG W-A Chinese construction worker was"" killed and another captured by Communist border guards in a mass flight into the nearby Portuguese colony of Macao Monday, Hong Kong newspapers reported yesterday. Fifteen other workers succeeded in crossing the border, the reports said. Viet Cong Beaten Bock After Overruning Post SAIGON, Viet Nam W — About 300 Communist guerrillas over-r a n a government outpost 90 miles west of Saigon yesterday, killing seven of the defenders. South Vietnamese a i r force planes strafed the attackers and forced them back into the jungle. There was no immediate report of Viet Cong casualties. ' Bandit Had His Choice ^Service Store KANSAS CI'TY, Mo. (,AP)-A bandit showed a pistol to clerk Lloyd A. Anderson Wednesday night and demanded the rnoney in the liquor store’s cash register, ‘ ‘ ★ A "jGet it yourself,” Anderson re, torted. ‘‘This is a self-servicq store.” Thq holdup man helped nimselt, JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE FE 2-0200 iSiaiYiefe... idojubiii ■ -McT Dry Cleaners and Shirt Launderers'' Both Locations — Tel-Huron and 26 E. Huron Yotf pay no premium for the exceptional quality In these luxurious men’s suits “Golden Emblem” suits are the result of 22 years of Robert Hall specialization and know-how. The choice worsteds are among the finest loomed in America. The meticulous tailoring is exacting to the smallest detail. Select from a wide range of spring shades in the newest models. These are suits you'll be proud to wear and every one is guaranteed to give satisfaction or your money is refunded.44R®to499® Theresa never a charge for alterations at Robert Hall SUNDAY PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN PONTIAC—200 North Saginaw Street * IN CLARKSTON-WATEftFORD on Dixie Hwy.-Just North of Waterford Hill J -M=±t i__ ^ THRjgofeA0 * Midget Joins Auto Firms in Wailing GM ito 6.1 and Studebaker from 1.2|dustry, By BEN PHLEGAR ___________ AP Automotive Writer to 1.1. . [price clas$% The biggest gala DETROIT Midget Motors,)RWGH ON OTHERS. ]ln 1962 oame to 0« Inc., ol Athens, Ohio, had a oom.!^ Midget doe« really mtod not M ».»» .1 jAi. t beinfif included with the giants'tore taxes, mon problem with Chrysler, industry. But from a pres-| Imports dropped again, taking Ford, Studebaker and American standpoint it was rough on 4,9 per cent of the total market Motors last year, the others. j Its volume increased over 1961 Ford’s share was its smallestj but its share of the market took in a decade. Chrysler slipp^ to a heaung Iron. Genera, Molora. “ T^aS“car'“,T . * * , . only non-GM make to show a Official registration figures are yeaf-to-year percentage increase, now in. They, show Midget ,,y\mgrjpan Motors.took less of boosted its voluW 12,2 per cent_ g„y t|n,e Although considerably shy of studebaker’s slice Pontiac’s 41,8 [»r cent increase thinnest since it switched it compared favor Jly w 11 h j jgjg Ford’s more mode.st 10.6 per cent ★ gain. divides cars into five compared with 6.5 per cent in 1961. Volume dropp^, too, for the foreign cars. The 339460 total was the smallest in five years. CAME CLOSE The Detroit companies came 'Entj Paylea Paydays Unddt New Constitulion' unusually close in this assessment of the imported car market. Virtually every domestic estimate of the total volume said Imports would account for 300,000 to 350,-000 sales, a figure being repeated in 1963 forecasts. Outside of the live major BWnufaciiriir reptfi-tion figures list a catch-all category called “miscetleneous Romney says that if the\pro| adopteX 1 Oov. George) under the proposed document, ,posed the state, could borrow up But while Midget was show-ng a tidy s»les increase, the new constitution is adoptt Compacts generally slipped a igan would not have apothef .nay-notch, from 32.8 to 31.9 per cent, less payday such as occurred in even though registration of the 11 1959. The new constitution would protect against another nay- share of total sales taken by up more than 290,000, the 9t4 h 0 r s e p o w e r Ktag ^ combined total of 2,211,-; Midget cars ($ . Rambler was the leading ie'cg*^|,avd^v and Improve the c"m in m rwh makeS Falcon second and its cent in 1961, when ii maraeiea jj ^ p^g. j . _ cars, to .0024 per cent in Falcon edged Ram- bler BILLBOARD DISPLAY - These outdoor signs appeared in Vallejo, Calif., yesterday along heavily traveled U.S.40 between the Bay Area and Sacramento, the state capital. The mailing address, yet to be posted, is said to be that of Dr. John Richardson, a coordinator of the John Birch Society. 1962 When it sold 166. The other companies suffered j„ ,j„e with the reduced share ^ an even by compacts were the changes Motors accounted for 51,8 per groupings of the cars registered. R, L. Polk. & Co., which acts to 9.6, American Motors from 6.3 as statisticians to the auto in- Motors accounted for 51,8 per *cent of all sales, most in its history. Ford was off from 28.5 per jcenl to 26.3, Chrysler, from 10.8 bills on time,” Romney a Republican meeting in Livonia last night. Under the present constitution, Romney said, the state has the authority to borrow only |250, 000 — enough to run state operations for less than half a day. The governor observed t h a Detroiter Presents Plan to Tanganyika Armful of Blocks May Help Solve Housing Problems d strengthen the building. The other holes could carry DETROIT OB—Alnan with an) inches thick apd almost one armful of wooden blocks hopes foot square. i . , , i he has the answer to low-cost ^ parties both a tongue and a housing in undeveloped parts of gnj jg go designed that it the world. [cannot be installed incorrectly. And Joseph Blair, 58, a Det- i ★ ★ * rolt hotel owner who claims | Other pieces of slightly differ-a varied background as an in- jent shape allow corners, windows, ventor, plans to start putting doors, and leveling off for a roof. ^ ^ ^ up buildings in Tanganyika iThe blocks are placed with one UNSKILLED LABOR this year. |point down, so that a wall would appear made up of diamondshaped blocks. The blocks carry holes through them lengthwise. Alternate holes would carry rods or dowels and cement to bind sulation. He has a working model and quickly and easily constructs walls, dohrs, windows and corn-1 with the scaled down blocks, j Blair contends his plan for a home made of blocks can be erected for considerably less than 920,000 in the African republic. Blair contends skilled labor would be needed only for the foundation and for the roof. He envisions the foundation being laid one day, the interior and exterior walls being erected the next day by two men who need This would be a minimun, one-story, four to five room home. But says Blair, it would be far better than what most of thg natives of Tanganyika now have. ‘‘You should see how they j . f. ^ ■ . It A-Site Construction! Slates Show some kind ol home,” said I no special training or skills, and the roof put up on the third day. He says the U.S. State Department has shown an Interest in the plan. Blair also says some domestic firms have talked with him about the idea. His blocks could be, he says, [cast from clay, cement or plastic. I w ★ ★ ^ Blair met Sheikh Amri Abedi, then mayor of Dar Es Salaam, iin 196i when he visited Detroit. Abedi told Blair of his country’s housing problems and Blair says [he started working on a way to 'overcome them. Union Workers Halt I City Coin Clubj To Offer Legislation for Service Corps The native of Atlanta, Ga., was Invited to Tanganyika for the country’s independence celebration last December and, as guest of the government, he met with several officials and described his plan. It was well-received and he has been invited to return this spring with formal plans for a start. ★ ★ ★ Blair says the first thing needed will be a plan to cast the blocks. He estimates this will cost less than $100,000. Then, he says, he wants to build a mobile or portable plant, costing about $40,000. The bespectabled man sayS the Tanganyika government will pay him for his time and will work out a royalty payment for the use of the blocks. “And you don’t even have to go out to the outskirts of the cities to see mud huts, either,’’ he ad- NEVADA TEST SITE, Nev. CB The Pontiac Coin Club, spon-j —Construction at the atomic test'sored by the Pontiac Parks and site was delayed further yester-jj^^gg^jj,n Department, will hold| day when 2,000 employes walked),. . ' ... . oil their Jobs in sympethy