I Th9 Wpaib^r 0,1, Wtilhtf fumu Hliimerii laitiwroi* V^OIj. I2M NO. 1)7 ★ ★ ★ ★ I PONTIAC PRESS »()NTrA(. JdlCHICAN. MONDAY. .MAv/ll. nxo :^0 I‘ \(;ks ONE COLOR Memorial Day Edition AhHOrjAieo pwfchh S. Viet Losses High in Fierce Cong Attack MEMORIAL DAY, 1965 Iraffic Count Moving Closer to Record Toll Official Denies Report Red Chinese Leader III Highway Fatalities 40 Per Cent Ahead of 1964 Holiday rty Tli«‘ AfiKorlntHl I’roNs Dciilli.s ill j^roiip.s of five and even .six were lockH inj> Iho Momoiial Day W(‘('k(‘iid auto accidoni loll toward a Jiiiin r('cord at the l)(‘}|imiinft of llu* last day of tli(‘ tlii(*t'-day lioli-day period. „■ Uv<‘s wnc licliiji 8imll<‘(l out III (lie nvcni(4(“ nilr of iiioic Ihmi six an hour licforo Ihc aficr nililnlKlil lull. Ilowuni Pyl(% presulciil of (hr NntfoiUil Sutety Couiuil, Kiiid: “It In conceiviiblc Hint it roulil be the worst Memorial Day weekend on ree-ord unl«'i|it niolorisls ehaiiKe their drivinf* pattern.’’ TOKYO 1/11 A lied (’hlne.ie ofllHiil In I’ekinK loday di’ hied reporls lhal Mao T/,e Iumk 1h HcrlotiHly III ■'Chairman Mao i.s in excellenl hi'allh I Just .saw him yeslerday," l.iao Cheniiclilh, a memher of the ChinoHe Com muiiial iiiuly's Cenlial Commillee, lold a rorre.siioiideril id Ihe .lapanrse newa a|.;encv Kyodo The Kyiido eorrespondeiit re|Mirted that other author itative soiirees 1n Ihe I'hinesn eapilal said Mao Is la ^ood health and attended a lii|;;h party meeting yesterday. Mao, 7I. ha.s not hccii nmi in piihlie Hlnce April ill when he reeeived Wing Ciiidr, Ali Sahry, an HH.soelale of ITesi deni Carnal Ahdel Nasser of Kgypi 'Ihe Itrill.sh goveiament said yes(<‘rday il has reeeived repini ', Irom I’eking lhal Ihe Chinese CommiinisI leader may have Hiilli-red a slroke, The Hrlllsh slalemenl, however, slressed lhal Ihe iTporhi were .speeulallve and were heing Irealed as such. 500 Casualties Claimed Over Outpost Clash Two Americans Listed Among Dead; Planes Hammer Enemy Units MAO r/i: rtiNt; Oakland Schools to Seek Area Man Crushed by Hit-Run Car With fatalities running 40 per pent ahead of last year's pace, Pyle said, “the toll looks eer lain to lie on Ihe upper end of oiir estimate” By .lOK MDI.I.KN Oakl.'ind Schools will .sock a half-mill lax increase for speeial education on flic .hint' 14 .school election ballot. ^ One major rea.soii for Ihe millaj.;e hike, aceordiiif.; to Oakland Schools’ officials, is a inessinji; need to expand if^ peireplnal de- SAKiON, South Viet Nam (/!’) U S. Air Force and IVlariiK' ('orps jels sirnek id Communist posi-lions in (pliant! Nj4ai l*rov-ince loday afln’ three days of hard fi>.;h|injf in whieh an esiimaled SOO jjovern-iiK'iil troops were killed, woumh'd or missin}». Ciiotficial reporl.s said two U S, Army iiu'ti yvere killed In till' action West of Ihe provincial capital, and lhal a U.S, airman was wounded. A 2.') year-old H I o o m field Town.ship man was in critleal condition this morning afti'r Ix!-ing struck l)y a hil-and run ear while he was changing a flat tire The council had e.stimale.d , traffic deaths for llte 78-tiour weekend, (i p.rn. local lime Fri day to midnight tonight at 4:i() to 5It). At 9 a m, lOST loday lh(! nationwide total was .‘IliO. Port Huron Drops Out of Airline Battle velopmcnl and adjusted study pi-ograms. The eounly .school system’s special education program was f o r (■ e d to abolish »‘xpatv.sion plans in Fehruary, I9(i4 due to a lack of funds. Arthur W. Landry, ’271 Concord, was heing Irealed at SI. .lo.sepli Mercy llospitid for .severe chest, hack atui alxlominal injuries. IJ.S. offietnls also reported ir>5 other government easiial-(ies ~ :I5 killed, 20 wounded and KM) missing — at (he Khe TrI outpost near the border with North Viet Nam. The Viet Cong overran the post Friday night. A government relief force retook it Saturday. The Viet Cong struck back, .dispersed the relief force and esr'uped before a second relief force arrived. Much of Holiday Attention Is on Arlington Ceremonies ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - At each of the 130,000 graves in Arlington National Cemetery, a tiny specially placed American flag flutters for Memorial Day. People come by the hundreds to lay wreaths — at the grave of a relative, a friend or an admired hero — most among groups taking turns conducting brief ceremonies at the Tomb of the Unknowns. So it has been on Memorial Day year after year, in somewhat similar fashion since 1868. Observances arc held at the nation’s other 84 national cemeteries, but the Memorial Day focus is on Arlington. That’s because its rolling hills contain the bodies of more noted Americans than any other. They lie among the thousands who won no acclaim nor medals. A book published on this Me- morial Day, “Arlington, Monument to Heroes,” recites the names and deeds of many of the most illustrious dead. And it gives in up-to-date detail the history of the hallowed cemetery, taking the reader on a kind of walking tour. RETIRED COLONEI. The book is by John V. Hink-el, a native of Washington and retired Army Reserve colonel who has long been a student of the lore of the city. its sprawling acres and he set out to make uninhabitable the house where Lee had lived. Meigs ordered its rose garden turned into a burial ground for soldiers. MANY TRAGEDIES Among the more spectacular tragedies; A head-on collision on a desert highway near Nccdlc.s, Cajif. Saturday killed six persons. The only survivor was a 12-year-old girl. An amerst identical crash in the High Sierra foothills near lx)nc Pine, Calif, killed five persons, among them (he parents of the only survivor, an 8-ycar-old girl. A collision on a freeway north of San Jose, Calif, killed three men and two women. North Ontral Airlines (N('A), which has sought to drop service to three Michigan communities, has won one battle. Port Huron has given up trying to keep NCA .service. City Since (his curtnilineiit date, sehn<)l superintendents in the eounty have requested that 17 in<»re pereeplual development and nine adjusted study classes be established as soon as funds are available. Rloomfield ’rownslii|) polit.'C said Iwuxlry was changing a left rear tire on Hie sluxilder of West Maple east of Franklin when anotlx'r vehicle swerved off the road and crushed him against his car. In Quang Ngai, 6.') milc.s southeast of Ihe big Da Nang air base, U S, officials said the Viet (king appeared to be pulling back. Tlie origin and purpose of officials there have said filing thc.se plia.ses of special cduca-a petilicm for judicial review ii„„ ,night best bn illustrated of a Civil Aeronautics B o a r d by tracing the experiences of (CAB) ruling would be too cx- fictional' first grader. His TTie five persons in Landry’s car said the other vehicle, possibly a ligllt-coforcd car, continued cast on Maple after the 1:56 a.m, incident. The government ru.shcd in reinforeemcnls, but a counterattack was delayed, apparently because of had weather. 2 BATTALIONS Senior U S. military .sources said tjjey had confirmed the pensive. Pontiac and Cadillac-Recd City, however, have filed for a court review of the Feb. 15 CAB order that would permit NCA to drop service (o e could be Billy. these cities. Hilly is not learning letter sounds at the pace of the other first graders and, while even the poor readers in his class have gone throug’;i several School Loan OK'd forClarenceville This Memorial Day wHi attract visitors to the grave of President John F. Kennedy. And Hinkel has a special chapter on.this most recent major addition to the cemetery. He describes the daily line of "reverent pilgrims” which flow past “like a river.” Not far away is the grave of Pvt. J. F. Kennedy, who died May 16, 1864 and one of the first buried in Arlington. REMINDER The L-.shapcd row of graves Meigs ordered still remains. So do two other Meigs creations— the tomb of the unknown dead of the War Between the States with the remains of 2,111 -unidentified tTnidn soldiers and the Temple of Fame, a memorial to George Washington and to 11 Union leaders. Another head-on sma.shup near Abbeville, La. yesterday look the lives of five teen-agers and critically injured two other persons. 5 YOUTHS DIE Five boys of high school age were killed in a collision outside Gallatin, Tcnn. Three 16-year-pld boys and a 26-ycar-old truck driver died in a crash at an intersection near Grand Island, Neb. The review application would l'<>f NCA service. Meantime, Pontiac has a second petition before llx' CAB for .southbound air .service to Chicago and Cleveland. After a conference with Uic principal, Billy’s teacher refers the boy for psychologi-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Similar authorization also was given to several other school districts throughout the state. Highest borrowing authorization was $180,000 for Adrian Schools. Initial reports said the heaviest losses were suffered by the 39th Ranger Battalion and the 3rd Vietnamese Marine Battalion, The marine unit was said to (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Meigs himself is buried at Arlington. The government had seized the mansion and its grounds lor $26,800 because neither Lee nor his wife could come forth to pay the taxes oh it personally as required by law. The Supreme Court 20 years later voided this (Continued oh“Page -2, CoU 8) Two boys were killed yesterday near Terre Haute, Ind. when they and their mother stepped out of their stalled car and were run down by another car. The mother was seriously hurt. Escape Artist Finally Captured A young couple engaged to be married next month was among Prison farm escapee Clifford ry says West pulled a gun and sought to disarm West. Neither kidnaping and assault with in-West, captured Saturday a^yn^jdnaped him. man was seriously injured. murder, holding a/state trooper captive in trash u u i h .ton Mrs. Perry said she first while flpeing' police demonstrat- West is held In lieu of $25,- learned of her husband’s e x- ed his will to escape from the The chase ended in a crash 000 bond a walking exam- perience when a fellow officer moment he walked away from at Fremont, Ohio, as Perry (nation June 8 on charges of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Camp Pontiac in White Lake In Today's Press five persons I killed S a tu r-day night in a Collision near Up- Racial Scene 13 arrested in Georgia community — PAGE 2. Spying Modern espionage is long on drudgery, short on glamour — PAGE 21. Baseball PCH reaches quarter-i finals in tournament at : Jaycee Park — PAGE 17. i Astrology , <........20 Bridge ..............20 . Crossword Puzzle . 29 : Comtes 20 Editorials .......... 6 Obituaries ....... 10 i Sports 17-19 Theaters 28 ^ TV & Radio Programs 29 Wilson. Earl 29. ( Women s Pages 13^15 Hinkel writes it is ironic that this most revered of cemeteries for American fighting men became a burial place because of an act of spite. MANSION INVOLVED It involved the Custis-Lee •mansion which overlooks President Kennedy’s grave. That im-: posing home and land George I Washington raice owned was ! built in 1802 by his adopted son, i George Washington Parke Cus-tis, to house the first president’s relics. Thundershowers Will Accompany Wgrmer Weather Mary Anne Custis, h i s daughter, married Robert E. Lee and lived with him there : until Lee went off to com-i mand the Confederate forces in the Civil War. The weatherman reports scattered thundershowers are headed this way, due to arrive tomorrow afternoon or night with temperatures a iittle warmer. • Showers may be expected again Wednesday and near the weekend. Lows will be near 46 to 54 tonight. High temperatures tomorrow will range from 72 to 80. per Sandusky, Ohio. The couple was John Hayman, 20, of Carey, Ohio, and Judith Lucius, 18, of Tiffin, Ohio. The repord number of traffic deaths for a three-day Memorial Day weekend was 431 set last year. The lowest total was 204 in 1948. The record high for any three-day holiday .period was 609 during the 1955 Christmas seasop. -RECORD NUMBER An Associated Press survey ot highway fatalities during 6 p.m. Friday, May 14 to m i d n i g h t Monday, May 17, tallied 387. In the first three months of 1965, traffic deaths averaged about 100 a day. , The Army quartermaster general in 1862 was Montgomery Meigs, a former Southerner who. Hinkel writes, “kept his most violent diatribes for his own p r e V i 0 U.S commander— Robert E. Lee.” This morning’s light and variable winds will become southeasterly at 5 to 12 miles this afternoon increasing to ft to 16 m.p.h. tonight. No Reports of Injuries Meigs arranged for the. Army to take pver the mansion and Forty-eight was today’s low recqrding prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. At 11 a.m. the reading was 69. . . TOKYO (UPI) - A sharp earthquake rocked Tokyo this afternoon. There were no immediate reports of - injuries or damage. . The quake hit at 5; 38 p.m. (4:38 a.m. EDT). Township May 7. State Police figured West, 19, of Monroe, had stolen three cars and a bicycle in his first few hours of freedom early this month. The twO-wheel bike was reported stolen near I.apecr where police found a smashed-up car they suspected the fugitive had stolen. West was captured Saturday after a wild, 50-mile police chase in Michigan and Ohio. Meantime, the wife/of Richard Perry, 35, was tending the family radish patch and two young sons while her state trooper-husband was held captive by the armed convict during the high-speed chase. ‘NO CHANCE’ “I guess I nevpr had a chance to be worried,” said the 29-year-old housewife. “The best thing about this is that I didn’t know^ .. . until I knew he was safe.” Her husband spent. a harrowing hour in the front seat ■Of a stolen car. At, the wheel was 19-year-old West. When Perry stopped West’s car near Monroe Saturday, Per- RELIEVED TO SEE HUSBAND - Mrs. Barbara Perry^ displays her relief as she is reunited with her husband-, Michigan state trooper Richard Perry, who was reportedly kidnaped at gunpoint by a White Lake fown- AP Piwtoltv { ship prison farm escapee.’ Perry spent a harrowing hour in the front seat of a» stolen car as Clifford West, 19, of Monroe evaded police in a 50-mile chase which ended in a crash in Fremont, Ohio. i-' TWO TilK I’ONTIAC niKSSv MOND/VV. MAY iM. WHUi 'Success' Reported in Race With Moon Correct Leak in Spacecraft SANTA MONICA, Calif. (API A jel Iransporl, loaded with delicate instruments and laeing with the inooti across the South l‘a(-iflc. Iius given scienllals the longest probe In man's hl.sloiy Into the (sindltloiiN ol a solar (■clip,Me, Tlie imKin won the rac(\ Imt during the !l ininulcH and 42 mcc ond'i the airplane was cloaked III il'. shadow Sunday, liisliU' niehl.s liioiinicd In 111 viewing porl.H on Uie plane's lieielage recorded moiinlalii.s ot data wliicli will lake inonllis lo ana A .siiokesman lor llie U.S Na-lional Aeriinaulic.s and Space Adniinisiralion said il a|)pcai(‘d llic NASA spon.sored mission was a 100 per ccnl .succesH. NASA Mcienll.sls and '.space Rights Ruling to Set Pace? experts from Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy and Switzerland -30 men in oilconduebid 13 .•separate Investigative project,s di^,signed to chart the lurlndeiice of the solar almo .sphere and the reaction of earth's n|>|ier alnio,s|ihere and lonoMpliere lo the alirujil Inter nipt Ion ol .sui'iliglil llud oc(nirH with eclljsse A WIIU': HAND Sunday's ecll|ine covered a IIK) mile wide hand tidin Hie northern lip of New /.ealand il. IMNI mlle.s eastward to the coa.sl of I'eni. Tlie eclipse, the 3nih, and third longest, total solar eclijise of this century, was visi tile only Irom a few Mieirsely inhahiled Smith 1‘acitlc isle.i. The chief dilfieulty in track ing th(? eclipHC wa.*j that il oc eurred in .such a remote purl of the world. The four engine NASA jel left llllo, Hawaii, at li :>3 a in lo lnlerce|)l the eclip.se jialli ahoiit 2,110 mil<‘s southeast ot llllo. Gemini Preparations Return to Schedule Area Builder Tries to Halt Commission I'ONTIAC (Al'i The Stale Civil Uighl.s Cohirni.sslon .says a pending law.suil "very well could be a landmark ca.se cerning our jurisdiction in housing matters" The suit involves a Negro schoolteaclier from Inkster and Birmingham builder William .1 Pulte. llie teacher. Freeman Moore, made a telephone negotiation with Pultc's firm and sent a $1,000 dc|K)sit to build a liome in Beverly Hills, between Birmingham and Southfield. Fullc has a.skcd Oakland County Circuit Judge k’rederick C. Ziem for an injunction to keep the Civil Bights Commission from taking jurisdiction in the dispute. BRIEF FILED In a brief filed by Fulle and his attorney, Dean C. Beier said: Representatives of the plaintiffs met with Freeman M. Moore and ascertained he was a Negro. Prior to cashing the Moore deposit check for $1,000, William J. Pulte, Inc., determined not to enter into any contract for the construction of a dwelling in the North Georgetown Green subdivision with any person not of the white race, whereupon the $1,000 deposit check was returned to Mr. Moore.” The [ilane met the Ocliji.se right oil the dot of 17 si'coiuls jiasl 11:17 am. Dr. Michael Bader, director of NASA’s Ames Besearch Center at Mountain View, Calif, and leader of the expeclition, (ermed the maneu ver ail uiu>()uale(l example (if lircclsion flying ami navlgalion. Then the jel went in inirsult of the ecllji.se. Aided by tailwiruls. Hie jot flew at 587 miles per liour, managing lo slay in Hie oVal sliadow of flic moon for nearly 10 minutes as tlie eclipse swept eastward at |,700 m.p.b. The observation jicriod wns more lliati twice lliat of any jire-viouH eclipse tracking fliglit. CLEAR VIEW The plane flew at an altitude of 39,500 feet—above five-sixths of the earth’s atmosphere— wliere tlie view was extraordinarily clear. Obvious visible phenomena, a sjKikesman said, were liil*gc prominences on Hie sun; brilliantly sliining Jupiter on tlie sun's corona; long, flashing corona streamers and tlie corona’s great vale of gas, extending millions of miles from the sun’s surface. As the eclipse finally outdistanced the jet, the plane wheeled about and made for a refueling stop at Tahiti before returning to Hilo and its laboratories, where scientists said they would spend months in assessing the scores of observations captured on their instruments. The mission was part of the International Quiet Sun Year, a worldwide cooperative study during the low point of the sun’s ll-year cycle of sunspot activity. The brief added:"........It ap- pears almost elementary tliat the commission is without authority to assume jursidiction in the area of private property rights. Legislation may some day establish that jurisdiction, but it has not as yet.” Pulte and Beier declined to comment outside the record. Moore was not available for comment. CAFIi; KENNEDY, l■■ll(. (AF) FiejiHriillmiM moved lot wnrti tiKlny lor liic imllmi'M miml am-hilioiiM Mpac(‘ fllglil alter lechiii-ciaiiM ran down and coi reeled a wali'r hoikagc pnililciii In I lie Gemini 4 Mjiaceciail 'I’lic leak, (llscoveied early .Siiiulay, liail Ihrealeiied to delay the Mcliediiled laiiiicli 'UiiiiMday ot aslnmauls JaimvM A McDc vlll and Edward II Wliile II on llu-lr four (lay .space joiinicy Tlie National Aeronautics and .Sjiace Ailmlni.slrulion .said llial | a llle NiipiHirl .sv||4ein packagt^ damaged liy llie*aking wale liad been replaeed 'nie package is used lo remove carlKin dTox ide frong the capsule. Nine mile.s .soulli o f file Bahaniian i.sland of Han Halva dor, Hie liny (Sihle sliip Omega waited for tiigh winds apd seas lo .subside so il can grapple for Hie lirokeii ends of an undersea cable used' in the Gemini pro ‘gram. The cahle rims 1,5(81 mile.s from Cape KemuHly lo Antigua, and lias several Batianilaii Hacking stations connected lo il. Birmingham Area News Romney Will Address Cranbrook Qraduafes BUJOMFIEI.I) HH,LS - Gov. Getuge. Botpney and M>'a. hill/, nbelli B. Hull, (llreelOr of n new girls' school In Massaclinsedls, liav(( l)((en named commence menl Hpeakers for (.'ranlircMik Losses Heavy in Viet Clash ((kmllniHsd Eisim Fage Oms) liav(( HuffeissI at leasl IMI casual lies, including 20 dead. A.STBONAIJTH A-OK De.sjiile Iroulile.s ' Ae Ph(>(»i.« willi llielr Gemini 4 siiacecrafl, aslronani.s .sjiace snitN ye.sterday, Tliey are conllnuing I'ldward Wliile (left) and- .lames McDivilt pre|mraUoiis at Cape Kennedy hir llielr iiiaiiagtsi liroad smiles as lliey posed In their sclicdiiled lour (lay orbital fllglil. VITAL FUNCnON Hjiace agency officials said Hiey liopcd il could be repaired in time for the landing of GemI ni 4 the point where il .serves its most vital function. But if il iiasn'l, lliey added, radio com-mmiicatlon.s could be used. Between Saturday night and Sunday morning, 32 pounds of water leaked into Hie spacecraft’s lithium liydroxide container. The device, in addition to removing carbon dioxide from the spacecraft, also sup plies drinking water for the astronauts, and jirovides a cool ant. McDivilt and White .scheduled for the longest flight yet in Hie U S. space effort-a 62-orbit, 97-hour, 50-minule global whirl designed to test tlie effects on man of prolonged exposure to space. They will attempt the world’s first space rendezvous effort. While plans to venture out of the spacecraft, held lo tlie craft by a 25-foot tether. He will approach another orbiting satellite —the second stage of the Titan 2 rocket which is lo boost the two Air Force majors into space. Humphrey to Deliver Talk at MSU Tuesday EAST LANSING (AF) Vice President Hubert Humphrey is expected to speak Tuesday to a Michigan State University Peo-ple-to-People group. Carl Rowan, director of the U.S. Information Agency, also is scheduled to speak. The Weather ■ f Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly cloudy with a warmer trend today, tonight and Tuesday and scattered thundershowers likely Tuesday afterpoon or night. Highs today 68 to 76. Lows tonight 56 to 55. Highs Tuesday 72 to 80. Winds light and variabie this morning becoming southeasterly 5 to 12 miles this afternoon increasing to 8 to 16 miles tonight. Wednesday outlook: Showers and thundershowers and little change in temperatures. : Wlhd velocity, 3 rt (M recorded, downtonvn) Sat. t temperature . ... 54 Meen temperature Weattier: Saturday p day cloudy. Escape Artist Finalty Caught (Continued From Page One) came to her home after it was over. "I want you to know, first of all, that he is all right,” the officer said. “Before I say anything else, I want you to understand that.” ‘WASN’T SURE’ But she wasn’t sure until her husband came home from* his job that night. “Thank God, thank God,” she murmurred as her sons pressed noses agajnst t h e front window. Perry took his wife and sons, Douglas, 5, and David, 3, to Monroe’s St. Paul’s Methodist Church Sunday. The Rev. Charles Beynon talked about how happy he was to see the Perrys there, together: ' Tile ranger bultallon, which was moved in yesterday ns a relief forett, was reported stir-rounded and ent inlo Uiree hcc-11(111.1. 'I’wo of tliem were virtually willed out. HEAVY LOSSES Police Arrest 13 Persons in Georgia Protest Marches By The Assoeiated Press Aiilliorities arre.sled 13 per- at Grawfordvilje, Ga. ove lilt; weekend a.s Negroe.s at templed unsueee.ssfully to into grate two wliite Baptist elinrch-es and lield another series of protest murclies. Negroes llien marclied around the courthouse in protest to tin arrests and later jiIkiuI 200 held a rally lliere The Negroes iilso picketed tlie residence of Lola H. Williams, county school superintendent, until they were told that a resident was ill and ordered to leave. The plekeling was in protest to tlic failure of the scfitKil board to renew contracts of six Negro teachers, an action wliich touched off the demonstratitms la.st Wednesday. FIELD WORKER Willie Bolden, a field worker fqr the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said refusal of school authorities to renew the contracts meant that “we are going for everything, including the public accommodations arid the churches.” Elsewhere, civil rights workers at Bogalusa, La. called off plans for a march oii city hall and said they will go to court to seek adequate protection for picketeers and civil rights demonstrators. * * Bonnie Moore, a field secretary for the Congress of Bacial Equality, said picketing of downtown stores would continue while a suit is filed in U.S. District Court seeking to have city, parish and slate law enforcement officers protect demonstrators. He said leaders also would seek a ruling on the constitutionality of a Bogalusa ordinance requiring a 48-hour notice prior to a parade. TEMPERS FLARE Tempers flared Sunday night 3 two spectators were ejected from a Ku Klux Klan rally on a “You try not to worry,” said \ Mrs. Perry. “But the though^t is always there. If you keep thinking about it, you become a ner- j vous wreck.” Wall Opened to W. Berliners On* Ytir Ago In Highest temperature . Lowest temperature , Mean temperature ...... Weather; Fair. U.S. Treasurer Still 'Serious' DARBY, Pa. (UPI) , — The Treasurer of the United States, Mrs. Kathryn O’Hay Granahan, remained in serious condition at Fitzgerald-Mercy Hospital today following brain surgery. NATIONAL FORECAST — Weathermen predict showers and Ulundtershowers tonight over the upper and middle Mis-sissif^i Valley and northern Plains. It will be unseasonably cool over the Northeast and fr^m the northern Plains west to the Pacific Northwest and warmer in the upper ;• • • Valley. / ' Mrs. Granahan, 69, a former congresswoman, had a blood clot removed from her brain last Thursday night. She was stricken last Tuesday at Atlantic City, N. J., where she was to have addressed a convention of the Pennsylvania and New The visiting period is the last Jersey bankers associations, i of four agreed on last fall by w * ★ I the West Berlin and „East Ger- The hospital reported Mrs. i man governments. fiirm near l.clianoii, Oliio, for allegedly tmiking pro-Negro remarks during a Mjieecli favoring wliile supremacy. Bolli were hu.stled lo llieir ear. When the auto was cauglit in a Iraffie jam, many of Hie 300 s|)ectaU)r3 gatlicrcd around it, cursing, kicking and shaking their fists. Music, improinplu speeches and chatting untlpr the’maple Iree.s liad higlilighled Ihc (lay’.s |)h)gram in Hie four-day rally vylilch winds up today. At Tuscaloosa. Ala., Vivian J. Malone made liislory when she liecame the first Negro ever lo graduate from Hie University of Alabama. "B feels great, it really does,” she .said. PICKET CATHEDRAI. An integrated group of about 30 clergymen and others pieket-eti file Episcopal (lathedral of St. Philip in Atlanta, (!a., where a .segregatml private .school lield baccalaureate exercise.s. Two years ago, tlie selitsil refused to enroll the son of Dr. Marlin Luther King Jr. The pickets, organized by Hie Episcopal Society for Cultural and Bacial Unity, protested use of the church for tlie schtMil and called on the church to de.segrc-gatc the school. School officials say tlie ehurcli and scIukiI severed their ties more tlian a year ago. At New Orleams, more Hum too Citizens Council backers picketed a small Roman (.’atlur-lic college in a fashionable residential district while labor leader Walter Beulher spoke at commencement. A biraelal group of counter pickets arrived and police quickly mingled among the pickets to prevent any encounters. Seek Half-Mill Tax Boost (Continued From Page One) cal testing since he seems mentally handicapped. Perhaps placement in a special education room would be best for him. Smaller classes, lc.ssons paced more slowly and special planning might help him make up for his own inadequacies. FLYING COLORS So, Billy is tested. He comes out with flying colors. There is 10 mental retardation. “We used to think this is where the problem ended,” said Dr. Leon Hall, coordinator of psychological services for Oakland Schools. “We sent boys like Billy back to his classroom stamped normal and concentrated on the children who actually were fpund to be mentally handicapped in testing.” BERLIN (AV-The East German Communists opened the Berlin wall for the second time this year to allow West Berliners to visit rela.tives in the other half of the divided city. The Communists have issuPd passes to 643,209 West Berliners for the two-week period. The pc-casion is the annual Whitsun an experi- holiday, June 6-7, i mental program, the adjusted study classes were granted state, recognition and became Dr. Hall pointed out that after years of experience with special education j it has been determined that children like Billy, despite normal intelligence, behave as if mentally handicapped. GENERAL PROGRAM We are not teaching these children through general education programs,” Hall said. He cited the adjusted study program and the perceptual development program, t h c most recent additions to Oakland Schools’ special education. ' • havcL trouble in understanding which sound of a word comes first, whether reading is done from the left or right and in distinguishing foreground from background. Their classrooms are divided by .screens into cubicles so each child can work on individually planned lessons with a minimum of distraction. The child placed in adjusted study classes is usually drivpn by emotional turmoil into a behavior problem while the perceptual development child is usually handicapped by a minimal brain disorder that keeps him from' organizing his work as other children do. Presently the school system has 13 adjusted study classes restricted to 10 children and eight perceptual development classes with a limitation of eight youngsters. Neither program is permanent as the objective of both is to equip children to eventually return to regular classes. Major Issues Face Congress WASHINGTON (AP) - Congress comes to grips this week" with majo. ddjmestic and foreign issues in a swift step-up of activity. About 1,000 persons jiad crossed, over to East Berlin today a few hours after the wall was opened. Each West Berliner with close relatives in East Berlin is limited to one visit. A pass is valid from 7 a.m. until midnight. entitled to state subsidy three years ago. The perceptual development program was started four years ago and is classed experimental. Granahan was showing some I The other wall Spenings were improvement but her condition last October - November, over remained serious because of th| C h r i s t m a s and during the severity of the operation. I The two programs are similar in that children must be of normal intelligence, but lagging behind their classmates to qualify. The child who simply can’t stay in his seat long enough to learn is found in both .classes. Children placed in perceptual development classes The $3.37-billion foreign aid authorization measure passed by the House last week faces a stiff test in the Senate late in the week. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has produced a measure,calling for a complete overhaul in two years of the foreign aid program by a special commission. For the next year, it would provide somewhat less funding — $3,352, billion. The House takes up Wednesday legislation for a $4.8-billion cut in federal excise-taxes, wiping out most of these, A major item is the elimination in stages Irom now to 1%9 of the 10 per cent tax on automobiles. SpokesttUm mi id only 80 men Hu^ 26(K StSthmun battulion liud been accounted for. A VietnamCNc lieutenant who wns with the battalion said the rangers made four attempts to break out of the eti-■irclemeiit. lie said tbc guer- rillas attacked tbe battalion’s beadqinirters clement wilb mortars, rockets and machine guns. Other reports said the headquarters was overrun. Tile Viet Cong kept up their |)rc.s.sure on tlie oulpo.st of Bit Gin, about 10 mile.s west of the provincial capital of Quang Ngai, and the scene of some of the heaviest fighting. They hit the post with mortars and used loudspeakers in an effort to intimidate the defenders. .School and Kings wood .Scitool (.’rnnlirook Gov. Romney’s mat Mitt Is one of '/li hoys grnutialiiig tills year from Graiilirook Hcliool. V 0 r III e r lieuilmlstreMM of (Yint'ord A*’“deiiiy, Goiieonl, Mass., Mrs. Hull Is director of Simon’s ItAck, which will open next year iq Great Barrington, Muss. Stic is a mcniher of Hie hotutl ot trustees of Miss Hall’s .Scliool Plllsfleltl, Mass : a past pres-itlent of Hie IleadmIstrcHses Association of l|ie East; and a mcmlier of Hie executive hoartiH ot tlie National Goiincll of In depemlcnt Scliools add Hie New Engltmd Association of College.s and Secondary Seliotils. Cranbrook School’s c o m-rnencement exercises are scheduled for II a m, and Kings-WoihT.s id 3 |i.m. June 12 in Gluisl (,’liiircli (’nujliKMik. Tlie Hlrmlngliain Board of Education will lioltl a special mecl-ing tomorrow night to disciLss the status of current building programs. Heading the agenda will be reports on plans for Covinglon Junior Higli Scliool and a new administralion liiiilding. Ciirricnlum rcporls also will be presented during the 8 p.m. session. Ceremonies of Arlington in Spotlight Air sii|)port was called in ind tlie weattier in tlie area deterio rated, making bombing and strafing difficult. CAPTURE JUNK To the north, In Quang Tri Province bordering North Viet Nam, government forces captured a Viet Cong junk, killed six guerrillas and captured five. (Continued From Page One) iinil Cu.slis I.ee gave title to Hie governmeni tor $150,(8)0. military .spokesmen said. Four platoons of U.S. Marines were airlifted to an island off the coast of Quang Tin Province, just north of Quang Ngal, on a search operation. They killed five Viet Cong, wounded One and picked up six suspects, spokesmen said. On the political front, a stalemate over a reshuffle in Premier Phan Huy Quat’s Cabinet went into its second week. Quat planned to replace Economics Minkster Nguyen Van Vinh and Interior Minister Nguyen Hoa Hiep, but the two men have refused to resign. Chief of State Phan Khac Suu has refused to confirm their replacements until Vinh and Hoa resign, saying Quat does not have the right to fire them. Suu has confirmed the nominations of four other men to Quat’s Cabinet. . REPLACEMENTS Quat named Nguyen Trung Trinh to take over the economics portfolio and Tran Van Thoah to take charge of the interior ministry. They have been oppos^ by several political factions, including the Vietnamese Nationalist party. U.S. Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor has postponed a routine trip to Washington until the situation clears up. He was scheduled to leave last Friday. In the air war against North Viet Nam, U.S. Air Force jets yesterday made their closest strike yet to the North Vietnamese capital. They hit an ammunition depot 45 miles south ol HSnoi. The pilots reported 60 per cent ot the target area was destroyed and other parts moderately damaged. Hinkel notes another irony of Arlington history: On tlie first Memorial Day in 1868 it was called Decoration Day Southern women were curtly refused permlsston to place flowers on Confederate graves. Union graves were covered with flowers. BLUSTERY WIND “1'hal night there was a blustery wind~and in the report, as report has il,” Hinkel wrote, “mp sentries found the Confederate graves buried under flowers blown from the Union graves.” Hinkel recounts in capsule the deeds of many of the noted men and women who lie among the ’’serrics ranks on the quiet green slopes of Arlington.” He said in addition to the unknowns at the tomb, there arc nearly 5,000 other unknowns buried in Arlington. The roll call of famous generals and admirals who lie in Arlington stretches back through all of America’s wars to Revolutionary days, and several generations of some noted Army and Navy families rest together. There are such names as: Gen. H. H. (Hap) Arnold, Gen. Clair L. Chennault, Field Marshal Sir John Dill, Maj. Gen. W. J. (Wild Bill) Donovan, Maj. Gen. Merritt A. Edson, Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger, Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, Adm. W i 1-liam F. Halsey, Adm. William Leahy, Lt. Gen. John A. Lejeunc Gen. Payton C. March, Adm. David Nixon Porter, Gen. Philip Sheridan, Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, Gen. Jonathan M. Wain-wright and Gen. John J. Pershing, commander of American Expeditionary Forces in World War I, who at his own request got “a plain GI headstone.” Big Push for Mining MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico is considering a variety of measures to stimulate its-mining industry, including possible tax breaks, according to Jose A. Garcia, president of the Mexican mining chamber. i All This Week at Simnriis Gompletis WATCH OVERHAUL Willi PARTS an(d LABOR ot th(S price . . . your watch will be disassembled, cleonSd and oiled, m i — adjusted ond timed electron!- ' Ltm colly, genuine factory parts used and you get full year guorantee on labor. Farts, include stems, crown, mainspring ,or balance stoff at this price. “Bodly rusted watches, automqtics, chronos and broken crystals at smoll extra cost. OVERHAUL AND WATCH CLEANING Only . . . S.95 SINortIf WATCHES -Mein Floor SIMMS,™ ■' .iVf, 'r 111 •() N I' IA r i • u kss, M () n i ) a v, m a y ;m . i uoh TiniKK Prince Ranier Has Begun Modernization of Monaco MONTIO CAULO, Moiinco (NEA) — A serpent lurks in this miniature Garden of Eden wlii('li was once llic. playK(>iind of Itiissliin Kintid dukes, Jet sel tors, International tyc(K)i!H and Klnfj Earouk, Tire Mone{(us(iueH iJiallze tliat all was not well when they IIh tened to Prince Uainier'M IINir* annual ''inesMaKe lo Ihe people ’’ 'I’lie hroaendltiires l>ut not enough to pay for ambitious renovations. ^hlle Hainler did not mention Ihe (ireek shipping mag nate hy name, everyone knew wlu) he was talking alamt when he spoke of “certain Monegas (jue Interests’’ who were n o t pulling their weight in the ambitious modernization program whlcli his governineni had al ready iMigun. Itainier Is not alaait lo al low an eslhhlisInMl cartel of lurn oflhccenlury huslnessmcn, for cigners at ihal, lo wreck his long range plans lor tla^ devel opment of his country So the pressure is on and Ar istotle Ouassis and the SHIVI are <-onsidei‘uhly less complacent than tlu*y were several ye ago. Thief Dupes Pawnbroker NASIIVII.UC, Tenn. When ftawnbroker Clarence Uosen-stein found his portable television set at home missing, along with |4d in cash he to«ik onotiier look at the set he had lakuti in for $40 at Ids shop a few Iwurs earlier, 'I’urned out to ho his own. .(.'harles Waller Burkes, 32, un-ii w a r e he was |>uwntng the pawnbroker’s own set, had given ltoM(»nslein his coireci name and address lie wiis Jailed on burglary charges PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL CENTER Onassis controls Ihe ' Sociide deg Bains de Mei" th<^ Sea-Bathing Company which was founded in 1110:i. This, in effect, is a state within a state, almost as archaic as its name. ONASSIS CONTROLS Holding more tluin half of Ihe; million shares of SUM, as d. is always referred to in the prm cipality, Ona.ssis controls what wOrc once the main attractions of the .'IfiH-acre rtuilm — the (!a.slno, the old luxury hotel.s, the (-'afe de Paris, the posh Moide (.'arlo Beach, tlu‘ Sport ing Club and five night clubs. But times have changed and the former vacation habitat of the wealthy is now badly in need of adjustment to changing world conditions. The old Monte Carlo buccaret-table habitues are disappearing. And tile younger people who are left simply do not have t h e same kind of money to sfiend and would rather play the slot machines. Rainier contends that the Ouassis group is hidebound and stuffy, is allowing the luxury hotels to fall into disrepair, cares nothing about the standard of living of the Monegas- ques and is continuing a dis-ncirniiu “riile-or-niin’’ policy. astrous “rule-or-RIGHT OF VETO Though the Prince has th e right of veto on all major appointments to the board of directors, he would prefer not to use it since the SBM employs more than half of the principality’s 22,300 people, including the 3,039 native Monegasques. The SBM also pays the state 10 percent of its gross profits. This amounted to about $8 million in 1963. So the situation remains a stalcmetc. Rainier’s dream is to make Monaco a holiday resort for the young. The first part of the va.st undertaking has b e e n removing the railroad which snaked along the coast and putting it underground, thus making available valuable building sites. This was started two years ago. NEW BEACH 'fhe new artificial beach will be available to tourists next year. With more medium-priced hotels, the Prince hopes that tourists will extend their slay in Monaco instead of visiting for a day for a fling al the gaming tables. RIDING COMPANIONS -Jim Gillespie of Mackinaw, 111., taped a wooden perch between the handlebars of his bike so he could take two owls for a ride. Jim apd a friend captured the 9-^week-old owls . iq woods near their home. Rrinnr In Vniir Bring In Your ^Memorial I Pictures to Simms for I Developing and Printing! 24 hr. Developing FILM Service Black V White Prints From All Popular Size Films Try Sirntm lor lliosr? sfmr iol lilclimc cjnd (adefirool pritils. [nlnrqcd soper-sizo doled ond deroled od()es. You're quor-' onleed perled pi mis l)y tiecirie fye Ilirocess otid you poy only lor r(Ood prints. And it rusts loss ot Simms ol course. T^HNICOLOR Color Film Processing Mailrd iHrert lo Your llomf 891 KODAK Film Processing Mailed To Your Home 8mm Roll, Super 18 Roll, 35mm-20 /^n^nSuper Slides and Instamatici. |39 ■ Genuine Kodcik color process! cfrrect to your home —buy 'en Simms, 8mm Magazine | Loads........I g IS moiled for less Ot 20 36mm Slides 230 36-Exp. Roll...I FREE ‘Flip-Page’ Photo Album Wtth KODACOLOR PROCESSING Leave your Kodacolor film here at Simms for fast, low cod processing . and when you pick your films f up you'll get absolutely fre^ I'this Flip-Page Photo album with plastic pages for your snapshots,_________ Kodak Kodacolor Films C Freih doled color' lilm by Kodok-lor 620-IZ0-127 size 84' ‘ANSCO Cadet II’ 11-Piece Flash Camera Set _____ J can take black 'n' whites plus color snaps indoors and outdoors with this outfit. Complete with bulbs, film, batteries, only $1 holds. Alaron 'Sound Max’ Transistor Jape Recorder Compare $17.98 798 Complete with microphone, sound tape, take-up reel, earphone and batteries. Not exactly as shown. $1 holds. 9-Transistor Transceiver 2-Way Walkie-Talkie Outfit Complete with Batteries apd Case 'Winston' powerful channel 14 tronsceiver to tolk and listen without wires. All metof constn^ction, telescopic antenna for more range. $1 holds.,in layaway.. SIMMS..?* CLOSED TODAY For ‘MEMORIAL DAY’ PARK FREE In Simmi Lot Naar tha County Jail-180 Slapt to Stora, 9j m.fo 1150p.m. Morning SIMMS..m.,HSIMMS&HSIMMS..l. Famous ‘Early Bird’ Discounts for You ‘Wide-Awake BARGAIH HUNTERS’ 314-Hour Sale! Super Discounts In Every Department, On Every Counter, On All 3 Floors! Be Here When Doors OPEN at 9 A. M. HAIR SPRAY I ......................................... 46*^ I'.n, ( 0111(1 Kiddy to buy (ind s VALUES GALORE IN EVERY DEPARTMENT SHOP and SAVE on these DOOR-BUSTER VALUES! KKip I i.| ( A',11 '.AVIN( (i.lvritnrd 1,pc, Mil-, nml (il • Rights reserved to limit all quantities-All prices subject to Slocks on hand. Sorry, no phone orders at These Low Prices! Prices for 3Vz Hours Only! PRICES SLASHED! WEMENDOVS SAVLYGS! Store OPEN 9 AM. to 9 P.M. TUESDAY SIMMS.E.. leurnloVlay ‘VALENCIA’ HARMONICA 29* Full,’reed harmonico so. ybu epn [Jltiy limple or -Main Floor I’mit 1111'; i'().\nA( Md'jN.v, Mo.NnvW, man ;»i. Mafia Target of New Attack Police Given Hand by Italian Republic iKkMi'; S<>( l liiivc liilli'd il a wity III nil* Iti-iiilii Mtiiimillnl Irlcd Iml fuili'd Id Hliimp II mil IndlvIdiiiilM who li'V lo.llplil il (llHop|)i‘iir or turii op ili'iid 'll" r: Mil- Molio. Ihc SIHIion "lioiioml s o (• 1 <• I V" ol Cl imi‘, wlio'ic power luoi Mlicichcd from I'.ilmiio 111 New York 'I'hr llidlan rcpniilic (lecidiMl liisl week |o liiiiiicli a iiixv iillack attains! (hr orpaiii/a <5^ I Catalog Art Pieces I nOMI*: (API Fivo million I ail obJw’lH are lo ho oatalof^iiod i hy llio (jovortimoiil lo holp li'Mok down an ovor InoroaMliin houl hv thlovpH jpiioralintf IP iniiHoiima and privaio colloolioiiM. lion. The cliamlicr jimlicc and io-Icnor coinmiliccs volcd into law a measure lo increase llio niiin | iici ol uiipli'aaani lliini^s polici* aiid llio jildiidary can do lo fuis-peeled Mafia lypes. | I lltM I I K.Ill Hilt lltAINKU I'ldH plane M'eii lakliii; off from a field In Cohim iios, Ohio, IS llie T 2lt Hoeki've Iwin |ol Irain er, iirodueeil hy Norih Amerieim Avialion's Cohimlm.s divisoiii II is llie firsi prodnelioii model and will he used hy lh<‘ Navy in the hiisie Irainini-; eomm.and al I’onsaeola, i‘'la., and Meridian, Miss, Foriv five olliers are on order, ' ' DISUKK.S MATFK ■ Kslliyr, a duck iidopled hy Ihree Colin Collene sliidenls al V\;ilervdle, Maine, walks lo ela.sses Willi one (il her owners, Delilne Anulliii of Qniney, Mass Aller living in ii Women's dormilorv siiiee Faislei', I'lslher loinid the Wiiler ol Colhs '.s Johnson rood levidlinp and liiniisl lip al llie Iralernlly Imii.se |o Wiileir lelevlMoo idler hein|4 -pe leased hy the ^rlr,——n Hot Springs a Truce City' "I.aek of evidence" has been ' Hie moHl friisiraling sinmhiini’i hli.iek in Hie decades lonj/ Imllle | ii),;alnsl Ihe Mafia w lines? No (I Sicily lias I aii\lliini;. Gangsters' Era Ends at Resort Tiny Texas Town Oasis of Alcohol TIlADFMAItK Sicilians who turn apainsl Hie posnip, I Malia IMI'AfT, Tex, (Ill'll No map shows Inipacl, and il has no jMist office, no church, no School, Jl is a thriving commim liiwyi ity. Whaf does Impacl have, Hicn',’ Impact has legal hoo/e, Hie only legal booze for 40 miles around. It is an oasis in dry territory, stiic-k on the edge of the city of Abilene. Iinpiiet has been referred to ns an ‘'Impact molar." lio is Hie presideni of an insurance eompaiiy” Sorrells filed a suit for iii-! corporation. The suit hit Abilene like a bombshell »n Feb. 2, IIKifl. .Somehow the rumor ^ started that Ihe idea of ineor-I iMirating Impaet was to sell I liipior. j Perkins does not remember now where llie liquor idea came into being. killed willi Hie para" a sawed,off slioignn Hial lias heeome Hie soeiely's Irade-mai'k No h ii s i n e s s eaii 1h' slarled, no job foiiiid. no road Imill, no |)olilieian eleeled in Sicily without Mafia approval, /rlie new law, however, in-ereases court p o w e r s. 'I he judieiury now can; • Plaei' snspeels under special surveillance, bar them from given areas or confine them lo in any part of apjilies lo siis-previpp.s Mafia I land. Tli(‘ mohsler? Hie miderslanding. abided by Italy. Th(> law peels with no record. • Jail lliost' who The H a p I i s I ami Melliodisl churches and C!hureli of (Jirist opi'rale three colleges in Abilene. If is a dry city of 109,000 residents. The stream of traffic lo and from Impacl indicales they are cither curious or tliirs-' fy- The mayor of Impaet - - pop^ Illation 20-2.5 families: size 47 acres — is Dallas Perkins, 39, a former traveling salesman and public relations man. AVID AD READER Perkins graduated from selling aspirin into public relations. He formed a public relations firm in Abilene called Impact, lnc\ Mrs. Perkins, according to her husband, is'an ayid reader of classified advertising. Thus began Impaet, Tex., the incorporation of which dry groups and the city of Abilene f 0 II g ht all the- way through the Stale Supreme (.'ourt. "If crept in soniewliere," lie said. "I don'l rememlier if we thoiiglil (jf il lirsl Or whellier one of Hie 'weP rumors just sounded like a good idea" UNANIMOUS VOTE Antiliquor groups organized to fight (be incorporation. Abilene's city commissioners fried to take it in. Riif on Feb. 13, I960, resident of Impaet voted, 27-0, to incorporate. break eon-I for terms of six months lo I wo years. • Har Hie .suspeeled Mafia members from working as mer-eliaiils, wliolcsalers, |) u I) I i e works eoniraetors or grantees of irrigation rights. • IJfl Hieir driver's license and send Hiem lo jail for six moiiHis lo Hiree years if they gill driving without a MOT SPlilNC.S, Ark (API Tlie deatl) of Owney Madden, one of (he lasi of Ihe proliihilion dlrys racketeers, ended an era in this lillle hill eonniry resorl. II was a period Dial saw Hie big names of gang.slerdom gather liere lo lalk hnsine.s.s or relax wllhoul their guns. Hot Springs was a Iruee lown, an "open city" (o the gi'iierafion of lough operafors who moved (0 ||„, lop i„ he(>r and rackets!air and sunshine during iirohibition and later gambled in the plush easinos (loy,.; wliieli operaled openly ‘Madden, who was one of '['""if"-;' f'"’ a, .enhir^ allhem, died here April 24. Ihough Hiey were and slill are. was buried here, where he bad A'^ansas law. lived for'ilO vears in <|uiet reiire-1 '<<>• Springs, Hio.se who did ment after two decades of vio-, I»" when lenee in New York and New l''<“y‘ '<'W" were u.shered I, out hy local authorities Hie iimlerworld York slate iiidlelnieni Hial he l.oeal oliieials ami Hie kingpins masterminded a proslitnllmi of crime agreed Hpil llol ring wilh an annual ineomr Springs would he a "no guns" $io million. 78 NORTH SAGINAW STREET SPECIAL TUES^ * WEDWESDAT ONLY! | BEEF HEARTS 29 Grade 1 CHUNK BOLOGNA 29 I 'I'lie big names in nalinnal ' erinu' eanu' here, hallied in Ihe j hot .springs, fished on a 100mile chain of lakes, relaxed in Ihe and - Federal agenis got on tlie trail of Alvin Karpis, Public En emy No. 1, who was .suh.scEiiient ly captured in New Orleans. TIu' lale Sen Esles Kefauver of Tennessee, when chairman of the Senate rackets investigating Hulx'ommiltee, called Hot Springs Ihe rendezvous of the racketeers, where deals were made, territory divided, plans' laid. Hot S|)iings advertised It.self as the spot when' the "world bathes and ploys" and its economy catered to the bathers and VOUME inCLUDED In making Hot Springs liis LAW OEFICIAI.S permanent residence Madden i-iw eiiforee- dillered from Ihe oHiers. „||i(.jals did not ob.serve UNDERWORLD FKiURES i the saneluary "iinderslanding." the gamblers. Regardless of your age. Regardless of what else you may eat. You need the 86 nutrients in milk—for vitality. Milk is essential to every balanced diet; every weight control diet. That's why everyone needs milk's 86 nutrients. Including you. Michigan Milk Producers Association Owned And Operated by 11,000 Mirhiyan Dairy Farmer$ : hav II hen 1930s, lhaf: in Hie middle lieci Hut uiuh'rworld figure.^ always had a home ne; warm, bubbling mineral .springs: Alfred Lamb, wanted for of this city of 27,000, neslled in I Unce bank robberies and rnur-Hie fooHiills of (he Oiiaehila OWER COMPANY LAWRENCE ST PONTIAC, MICHIGAN “ NAME-.-. ADDRESS.-CITY.... Alt (illmclivo lamp ot cm e(|uolly allidctive price . Solid- copper construction Will] Hack finish, eagle Imial. New, exclusive "Snu(|-I it" windows ollow complelo cleaning williout Cl tool! .Check this exceptional bargain! OFFER LIMITED Buy Now and Save! While you’re visiting our sales floor see the Charmglow GAS FIRED BARBECUE! Chormglow's perfect host gas-fired barbecue ” offers a new, yet proven method of outdoor barbecuing, Itxgives you all tlie charcoal ■flavor of outdoor cooking without Ihe dirt, without the bother and without the frustration. It elimimotes the mess and fuss of handling dirty ashes and dirty charcoal. All cast— oluminum construction makes the Charmglow the weatherproof gas-fired barbecue. Consumer Power Downtown Appliance Sales Open Friday Evenings to 9 P.M. aEA: ■ -I S- I ■ . » TIIK 1‘ONri/VC MONDAY. MAY ai. nm.) FIVK Meteorologists Believe Man May Be Able to Limit Destruction of Future Twisters WA.SIIIN(j'l’()N ■ Mitt*!orolo- glNlN ll«(ll(*vo tIiMt man may M()in«(lay be able lo Unyarl lor-iiadoea, llie ad edyos. Sevoral lnvoly colors lo choose Irom. Clinryo Tnbledolhs , . . Fourth Floor Tamous Make Blotter DISH TOWELS 3->l Idmous imikn sllijlil lrini|u Collon oi\d royon blend bh type dish lowels. Slrlpnd. Towels... fmirih Floor Your Choice 2 Styles RUGS 1^(5 <'>6 W(smldihil blend ol ors. Mill liinn wir.liiililn iinil iliy- rlorul l\)rcalo SUM IS $jv/ ( iHHC.n (mill .link, bh)n, In .onibnil.i.llnn-fiennln, linens . . . I on. lb I loor Kodol" l illod COMFORTERS ^5 00 lol"f l-iilynsler lovely (ill ovf lloral piillorn. I brow Stylo (iiilllnd IM-DSPREADS s(i bom solid or prInM In ) stylo brds|iiortd». Full/ f|iillled U) llio floor. Assorted Itnibpronih . . , toiirlh FIdor Women's Summer DRESS SHOES $g90 Selnrlpd f|ioup ol women's summer shoes. Dorks, posieli, and (vhllo. Not oil sl/es In all colors. Women's Shoos . . . Street Floor I TUESDAY ONLY Sicicked Heel Walking SFioes $^90 SHOP WAITE'S TUESDAY NIGHT 9:30 UNTIL 9 P.M.... CHARGE YOURS. Seim ted proup (d sloi kerf heel wolkiiifi shomi. llloik, brown, white, bone or poMol colors. Notoll sl/o. Women's Shoos . . . Sirtmf Floor Misses' Bleeding Madras Jamaicas Misses' Assorted SWIM WEAR $2 99 Reg. 12.99 lo 14.99 ^5 99 Aulhonlic Indio bleedlacj modras lamrilco's. Fully lined, many assorted plaids. Si/es 7-15. Sportswear . . . Third Floor lorgo osnortment of fabric lo choose from. 1 ond 2 pieie styles lo choose from. Swim Wear . . . Third Floor .Misse.s' Dacron & CpHon SKIRTS Dacron & Cotton ROLL SLEEVE BLOUSES 99 $2 97 choose from odions, A-lines and slim styles. Also some rover.kible skirls. Sizes 8 lo 18. Charge It. Sportswear ... Third Floor Famous moke dacron ond rollon roll sleeve blouses. Bermuda and cot)verlible collars. 28-34. Blouses . . . Third floor WosFioble Estron CULOnES Estron Brunch COATS ^5 00 ^5 00 Beautiful print Estron culottes, round ruffle nock. Misses and hall sizes. Charrjo Yours. Dresses... Third Floor Zipper closing brunch cool has Ihort Sleeves. Colorful prints. Sizes 10 to 18. Charge Yours. Sportswear . .. Third Floor Patch Bledding Madras Jamaicas Misses' All-Season RAIN COATS »3 99 ^8 99 Authentic Imilia Bleeding madras jamaicas. Fully lined. Assorted plqids. Sizes 5 to 15. Charge it. Sportswear . ., Third Floor Choose from Baimacian, Ck®*-terfields and reversibles.' Styles. Sizes 8 to 18. Charge Yours. Coats . . . Third Floor Misses' Nylon Tricot, SHIFT GOWNS Reg. 6.00 $397 Famous Maker Panfy Girdles & Girdles S $397 100% nylon with sheer overlay. Pink or bljua trimmed with lace, tompletelvf 'Washable. S-M-L Loungewear . /VSecond Floor Famous moke slight irregulars. While only in long and medium lengths. Sizes S-M-L. Cljarge . Slimwear ... Second Floor Boys' shorty PAJAMAS '~^oys' Plaid Walking Shorts Reg. 2.29 ond 2.99 67 ^1 77 Choose from solids, stripes and noveltiei. Middy style- Elastic waist band. Sizes 6^ilo 16. Boys' Wear ... Second Floor Many assorted plaids to choose from. Machine washable. Ivy styling. Sizes 6 to 18. Boys' Wear ... Second Floor Infant's & Toddlers. SUNSUlTS Toddlers Dbl. Knit TEAM SWEATERS 67^ n 99 Choose from ,'solids, florals and novelties. Boys and girls styles. Elastic wa^ band top. Infonts... Second Floor 100% combed cotton knit. Shrinkage controled. Wrinkle resistant. 3 colors with royal trim. Button front. Infants . •. Second Floor Girls' Subteen Jamaica Shorts s $29^ Girls' Assorted Dresses $227 Reg. 6.99 Choose from solids, plaids and novelties. 100% cotton or dacron qnd cotton. Folly lined. 7-f4. Girls' Wear . .. Second Floor Choosd’ from 100% cottons or Dacron and Rayon blends. Com’-pletely washable. 2 and 3 piece styles. 7 to 14. Girls' Wear ... Second Floor rnmous Make STROLLER DRESSES Reg- 12.99 to 14.99 $g00 Arnel jersey print stroll-^ er dresses have zipper ! aild button closinrjs. I Short sleeves. Many ; assorted prints to ' choose from. Easy ',1o core for just J wash and’wear. Sizes . , .,T 12 to 20 and 12'/2 V r V 'd to 2416. Charge If. Misses' .Nylon Tricot Lace Trimmed HALE SLIPS Reg: 4.00 $297 Choose from lace ond novelty trims. Perfect fit, won't ride up. Side and bock pleat. While only. Sizes S-M-L Chorge Lingerie ... Second Floor Women's LOAFERS New knit"fit lining for soft super comfort, cushioned sole. Choose from black, jgreen or tan. Sizes 5 to 10.' Narrow and mediurn Widths. Buy now dufihg this low, low price, v W '$ Shoes... Street Roof Men's Solid Color Short Sleeve KNIT SHIRTS $288 Rof). 3.V9 , 100% combed cotton knit shirts in solid colors willi con-■Irasting collar trim. 3 button uJackot tront with breast ipoi kol. Action' knit underwarm gussets. Crcun, Navy, Yellow,Tan. S M-L-XL. COTTON JACQUARD DRAPES Key. 7.99 SWxSI-inch Keg. 14,99 . Width '/2x84" Reg. 18.99 DWx84-lnch $6^4 401 Seamless HOSIERY 3(0,$] 75 -.1 i|ii,illly r.eanilc'.n hn'.iery LadieY Woven . Colton Gloves $197 3.U0 ^ I Poublo woven cotton glovoi are luirul stitc.hod ond embroidered. Button trim, black, while. Sizes Accessorlos ... Street Floor Ladies' Swiss HANKIES Ladies' Summer JEWELRY 297^ QQc 2.00 y y ladies omtiroldernd collon hankr Ins, (dioose from while ond as-, sorlnd pastel colors. Charge’ Yours. Larlios' costume jewelry In a large selection o( summer necklaces, pins and matching earrings. Charge Arceuorios . .. Sirnol Floor Jewelry... Street Floor MEN'S FAMOUS MAKE LEATHER BELTS Men's Genuine Leather Wallets 99c Top quality leather bolls In many assorted stylos and widths. Sizes 30 lo 40. Charge Yours. Men's Woor ... Street floor Men's Short Sleeve -SKIRTS JACS $2^ Reg. 3.99 $097 and 5.00 Sinart new shirt jacs in solids and 5Lfi|)os. One piece California Iy|i0 collars. ' Sizes '' S-M-L- Mon's Wear ... Street Floor Non-Burning 20-10-5 LAWN FOOD ^1 87 Reg. 26.99 TWx84-inch Reg. 2.99 Valances $1844 $244 • Snow white 100% cotton draperies. Completely washable. Charge Yours. . , Draperies.,. Fourth Floor Bag covers 5,000 square feet. Liglitweirjht easy to handle. Slow -releasing lightweight ver-miculite-base. Garden Shop ... Lower level 2-Speed, 20-Inch ELEC. FAN' 19.95 ■ 16’" Manually reversible fan for exhaust or blowing. 5-year warranty. Portable, easy to carry. Fans... Lower Level Shetland PORT-O-VAC Shop and $10 99 Compare I Cleans rugs, hardwood floors. Feather light easy to carry. Ideal for quick clean-ups: _ Housewares... Lower Level 9x12 Ft. Reversible Waol Blend OVAL BRAID RUG $2/77 10-Drawer Unpointed CHEST Shop and , Compare *21' jr)100 • Green or Brown • Approxirrrafe Size \ , • No Rug Pad Needed • Wool and Rayon Blend Matching sizes also ovaiable ■ , ^ ivujiwniiiy , Ulow pV^l * Rugs ... Fifth Floor Ideal for that extra storage space you've always needed. Ready to point or varnish. Housewares... Lower Level $299 Top grain cowhide leather pass case or thin fold, models. Choice of brown - or black, smooth and grained leather. Mens VVoar, .. Street Floor MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 3.39 2 tor $580 Kentfield Customairo Collection fn Snap fab or button down collars. White and colors. Sizes 14'/2-17. Men's Wear ... Street Floor Deluxe Mirrored Door SPACESAVER tgzz Deluxe 2-shelf with mirrored door sliding cabinet. Adjustable height. Chrome plated legs. Housewares.,. Lower Level Eureka Deluxe ' Floor Polisher *45 Polish and wax floors, scrubb carpets. Instant Toarij .rug shampoo attachment. Lifetime sealed bearings. Floor Polishers... Fifth Floor Deluxe 8-Web Aluminum Chaise Reg- $Q 9.98- t O 88 5-position chaise for ' care-free living, Folds compactly. "Do’ublo orm and non-tilt legs. Furniture... Fifth Floor Eureka Cannister Vacuum' Sweeper Special Value *34 Complete with oil ottachm.ents. TVs HP motor. Includ^"tod rack. 1 year warranty. Vacuum Sweepers Fifth Floor M mK - THE PONTIAC PRESS 4B WMt Huron Stnwt l*on(l«c, MlrhlRun MONDAY, MA\ ill, Mmr> IvUrlltH^r' Spirit of Heroes Is Aju^eless rn:y^\' iijiiroii oui jxilirii fllicsl ci/i/iir Id/'. (•nmiiir ^kix hi'i'n i‘> 111,1 .ludii,' /'/,,'/i|i r, ulii\ i$y (in( In ,ti D(.i; riiii.ii* nt \i i Mixed Wllh the '.oil n| ii Imiulred laiHl.s are the dust a n d ashe.s nl lliou.'aiiid:. Ill Ameiieaii.s Idir many (i| Ihei.e Amei iean,'. Iheie ale well lendn Id' r.ri .n i)(;i': ntA iT find never have meadow witli line upon line ci'osxe.s iiiul .slar.s, , For numy, lovinp liand.M lon.sen the aoll iind Wider I he’ M p r i n j.; Ilowi'i'.s, l''or some the (iravi's lie hi'IMnd im|)assiihle b;ii riers, iineared fori and unseen, I'nil SOUK' Iheie iOe niiuked I’rave.s been exeepl. as fhi' sea iind the earth are llu' universal j,;raveyard of man’s niorlal reinains. Many of lh(' praves are a[;ed now and the dust iind ashes liave fiUered througli the soil and only IIh' mark ers bear testiinieiit to wind had been. Some are fresh, tlie {;round still mounding. Some, at IbLs momnit, are dug but unfilled, and the bugler is just pursing his lips. ★ ★ ★ Today, acroHs this gnuioiis land all AmericanH slop for a moment lo remember why (hese grave.s had (o be. Memorial Day is not Ihe only day we remember, I he only day we rededieale ourselves, lhal we give Ihanksi— it is the day we do Ihcse things together, at the same time, as ii nation. We honor our heroes for their selfless devotion, thank them for their total sacrifice and pledge them, in return, our dedication to the invaluable, im- ’asorablc inheritaucc I h c > i|ucat hed. ii'ic I;. a soltiK'.ss on I Ik* liind liK'.s,s only t h(* si mug call id lord and our sln*ngl,li comc.'i I mm our united remeinbruiu'es iind oiir (•(.lleetlve hdih. ★ A ★ And as my hdtii ti'lls me lliid Ihe .Mild is imiiKatal and niuifrakl, sn it I ell,', me tlmt my eomnideH In arms, and lliose belore thc'in, look upon ii.s today and hear us. They know we icmeintier, tliid W(» are giideftil and they know 11ml Irei'dnm itiid justlee idiKle in ineieiising scope in the liilid. ★ ★ ★ One thing more we owe to them, iiiul tlmt is lo make them proud This wi' can do by ilelending and lu'rpi'tualing what tliey died lo Iniild Ameriea, Voice (if the People: A Taxpayer Comments on Uepresenlalives’ Pay 'rhe Stale lepresentaliveH, so-ciilled, because they only represent themselves, failed to pa.ss many bills vitally important to the welfare of the State. As tar a.s they were concerned it wa.sn’t a complete failure since they miinaged to steamroller it |f),0()0 a yeitr raise in pay for themselves. It’« too hud the laxpuytus nre powerless lo ilt> anything about It. It doesn’t seem to mutter whieh political parly is in office—the uhiises continue year after year. AAA 'I’o my wiiy of thinking they otighl In hi* ,slripp(*d of llii* [lower to s(*t tlieir own siiliirii'S, II llii'ir p/iy could be determined by Ihe .unounl of work they accomplish on bchalt of the stale they are suppo.sed to re|)resent, lliey would lie forced lo take a $5,000 year cut iit salary. ANOTHER TIRED 'I’AXI’AYER I understand there was only one (lissenling vote against the move lo raise our legislators’ pay. We should find out who was biiive enough to object and give liirii our full support. Wo are taxed now until wo can't soi* dayllglit. , And The End Not Yet ViewH Avoit I'owiiHliip Zoning Onliinince Communibis Confused Does De Gaulle Have Pattern? Dominican Red Threat Is Faded Hy I.KON DKNNFN I'AUIS (NKAi I camo lo Franco lo ask "What does President De (laiille wanr,’" I pill flu* <|iii*slion lo one of Franee'.s top mililary oxperls who knows Charles do (iaulle inliinaloly. "t doubt whollior Do (iaiilli* himselt knows, " tin* goneriil ropliod. “Ilo has illusions about roslorliig Franco’s old glory. Ilo is consistent in bis dislike of Americu. Itiit bo sootns In ban* lost all touch with political reality. " The offie<*r added: ‘‘ITosidenl .Johnson and the United Slates are our last hope not only in Kiiropp hnt also in Viet Nam and South-easi Asia,” My WII.I.IAM ItYAN inilwd sort of slioeked surprise hIMA, Pern Vl’i As of now, ,il lln* U S. nelion lo somi*lhing ly Coinmnnisl (’asiroisi Ihreal closely approaeliing apalhy, de-eapilali/.i* on Ihe Dominican ■> .spile pnhiie deiiiineiidions of Washinglon (*nianaling daily Hepiihlie crisis .seems lo have collapsed in halin Ameriea like a piineinred balloon. Danger that exlremists still will try remains, hnt there is no in(ii(*alion they arc ready lo lake full advantage of whal or dinarily would ho an altraelivo opportunity for them. Their eonfusioii s(*(*ms lo stem from (ho split in Ibo world Communist niovoinont, with its inoossant warfare between pro-Chinese and pro-Moseow ele.ments. from Peruvian leader,* The politieiaiis evenlly consider denouncing Washington a political neeessilyV Hut (*ven these outbursts are\imeriug off, amt the U.S. si(l(“i)b the story gradually is a way into the pres A leftist lance, polled || rhal it called i Highway Menaces Rate U. S. Role of Dishonor There is little douhl tlmt if elections were held in France today, De C.aulk* could win another term a.s president. Ordinary Frenchmen love nothing hetler than to be reminded of I heir emuitry's p/ist glory, and De Gaulle has been feeding lliem doses of nationalism since tie came lo power in 1958. France glso has benefiled, despite the threat of inflation, f r o Vn West Europe’s economic recovery sparked by massive American aid after World War II. Making the Social Register may be a commendable accomplishment; getting your name on the National Driver Register is a downright foolish one.. Maintained by the Bureau of Public Roads in Washington since 1951, the Register holds the names TOP COMBINATION Rabid nationalism, and economic prosperity are a political combination that is not easy to beat. Because he obviously aims to weaken NATO by forcing the United States out ol Europe, l)c Gaulle has also gained the backing — or benevolent neutrality — of the French Reds and their Russian masters. In this country, a.s in others in liiilin America, the two wings are industriously hi'aling one an-olher over tlu* liead wilirwords. The danger stems from a like-Ijhood that the Dominican crisis will impel the two Communist wings to compete in taking advantage of it. COMPLETE SURPRISE The failure of the extreme left to spark widespread violence in the wake of the Dominican situation leads the experienced observer in Liytin America to suspect tliat wliat happened in Santo Domingo on April 24, when ‘‘constitutionalist” officers staged their revolt, was as much a,surprise lo Communists in this area as to any one else. ' ,. suits which surpriset zini*’s editors Ihem.scives, who (*onc(*(i('(l: ‘ Tlu* revulsion has not been lo the extent we thought, " Of those polled, more than 1'!, per (*<*111 Ihoiighl the U.S. action in Santo Domingo Juslifled, a Ihird would say only lhal it might have been hasty and only a Ihird would say outright il was wrong. The remaining few had no opinion. (JAIlNliNG SUPPORT II appears tlial in tlie nor|h-ern her of .Sopth Ameriea, U.S. Dominican policy fared hetler Ilian might have been expected. Tlu* action has been widely la-nu-nk'd, but it also has been receiving a fair amount of support from more conservative elements wlio felt there was danger of a Castro take-over and no time for consultation with members of th<* Organization of American ,Stat(*s. My alarm and anger at Ihe new zoning ordinance proposal governing mnleriids, miu*hinery and autos on residential property leds me to apologize for Ihe spirit in which 1 s|)oke at the meeting of Avon Townshil» Hoard. AAA Government controls should he only In Hu* amount nee(b*d lo achieve legitimate goals. Committees aiut officials have the resjionsibility to consider all whom they serve, for a failure lo appraise Hu* view of one citizen is a denial of a consUtutional right and makes n mockery of oiir freedom. One member of the zoning board (tfafeil he felt that (riietors, boats and other possession not under cover were detriu ling from the beanty of (he iielghborhoiMf and degrade the property around it. An effeelive eleim-iip wns aeeom-pllshed by the ordinnnee jtow In the statute, but some Irrational citations have beei/ issued also. Is an ordinance designed lo give inspectors authority beyond reasonable limits an infringement upon personal liberty and the guarantee of justice for all? If the hoard can honestly say that this ordinance is enacted in the ideal of our (l(‘mocracy, I will withdraw my objection in (avor of right. ^Hikc l)<‘inoliHlinl l>y Hit and Run Driv<‘i' On May 25 about 11:45 a m. someone ran over and demolished our son’s new bike. It was parked on the curb at Melrose and Pennsylvania in Perry Park. Would he have hit and run if Eddie had been on the hike? MR. AND MRS. DONALD HAWES 7()0 STIRLING Cdpitol Letter: ^DiHilliiHioncfi by 'Action of Lc^ikliiliirc LBS Aide Championing Rail Research Program Nevertheless, there are increasing signs that De Gaulle's popularity has reaelied its climax and is already on the decline, Aiiv-of drivers throughout the Nation thing is thus liable to happen between now ‘ whose licenses have been withdrawn December when the French presidential for drunken driving or involvement in a fatal accident. ★ ★ ★ ( There are presently about 620,000 names on file, and the states are checking their driver applications against the register at the rate of 500,000 a month. Here’s how the system worked in a recent case, as reported by Highway IJ.ser magazine: A midwestern applicant for a Ij^' cense in Florida indicated on his form that his license had never been suspended or revoked. He was, accordingly, issued a license in that state. Meanwhile, his application was routinely checked with the clearinghouse in Washington, touching off de.spised the 10 millionth search of the register. The register’s electronic computers disclosed that the man had in fact previously lost his license in Illinois and Missouri Ion drtinken driving. *■ ; * ★ - ■ ★ ★ , As a result, the license granted . him in Florida has been reveled and he faces prosecution for falsifying his application. To date, some 75,000 identifications of law'-breaking drivers have been made by the National Driver Register — 75,0iil|0 potential accidents that aren’t going to happen. ol(‘clit)n.s arc .scheduled to be held. There are even wishful thinkers, in Paris who hope against hope that the 74-year-olO president is too ill to run for reelection. FOREIGN ROLE However, it is not domestic politics but De Gaulle’s erratic foreign policies that have brought about the decline in his prestige. Even his strongest backers are increasingly worried by France’s i.solation in the ranks of NATO. There have been reports in Santo Domingo and elsewhere that the revolt was part of a carefully considered plot, and these persist, on the assumption that the Communists are lying low waiting for (he next phase of a long-range plan. Rut in the present state of Castroism and the world communism movement’s confusion, it seems difficult to credit /iny-tliing so Machiavellian. By RUTH MONTfiOMEUY ■WASHINGTON- .lolin T. Con-' nor did not become President .lohnson's eommeree minisler lo piVside over the liqiiidalion (»f railroad empiri*. Instead, the new secretary is planning a dy- wliich must depend on government (leeisions for adoption.” 11 is for this rea.son that they ;ire asking Congress to appro-priale a $20 million research fund to get the ball rolling. The 1905 session of the State’s Democratic legislature has been about as potent as a defective firecracker. Its linescore for the five months of legislative agony is No Runs-No Hits-Many Errors.’- It booted its last chance to partly redeem itself by killing the cdmpulsory vehicle inspection bill. Ar A: ★ Since a sizeable number of highway casualties are traceable to automobile components that have become impaired, our legislature may well claim an assi.st in the future killing of an indefinite number of motorists. DISILLUSIONED VOTER ‘Tie will never gain the support of the Russians and their Elast Fduropean satellite but he has already lojst the confi-(fenec of France's traditional Western allies, ” said a promient French political commentator. Attempts in other countries tS^ spark violence in response to' the Dominican events seemed' uncoordinated, improvised and poorly executed. The extremist elements appeared to have been unready for this crisis. It is a mea.sure of De Gaulle’s isolation lh;k on the 20th anniversary of Hitler’s defeat the only message of congratulations he received was from Walter Ulbricht, Rus-East German puppet and the most *ven behind the Iron Curtain. On the other hand, Britain’s Prime Min-i.ster Harold Wil.son„ in an obvious dig at de Gaulle’s ^odd-man-out nationalism, warned at the NATO meeting in London that “there is no greater delusion than the feeling” that the We.st ‘<^^an solve common problems on the basis of adventures in nationalism.” Verbal Orchids to - PUNCH IS SLIPPING FNen in the universities, ordinarily hotbeds of Castro-Communist a g i t a t i 0 n, extremists seem to be starting lo lose .some\ of their punch. These days something new appears to be developing in"' the universities. Many students now are truly students, anxious to catch up with the 20th century, spurred by their countries’ future prospects. The. superabundance of students in raw and humanities, pfeparing for careers of. politics, is beginning to decline. Prospects are that, this downward trend will develop and have a profound impact on Latin American politics. Y namic forward thrust to give America the world's most up-to-date transportation .system— especially by rail. ' 'As usual with Johnson and Connor, the emphasis will be MONTf'.OMERY on a private enterprise-government partnership. A .successful businessman rather than a dreamer, Connor is championing a $20 million research program destined to mee the future transport problems ns our population soars toward the 200 niiljion mark iwo year s hence. ' Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Bold Attempt Life Lines RUTH William Z. F" osier, former head of the Communist, Party, USA, predicted in his book, Toward a Soviet America: “From^ e a p i I il 1 i s m to communism, through the intermediary state of socialism, is the way American society is headed.” At the 21st Communist Party Congress Nikita Khrushchev said: “Society cannot leap into communism without going through a Socialist state of development.” Two years later, he observed that “socialism is the first stage of communism.” would be seized. Every mine, pinery, lumber factory and yard would be Snatched by the state. F]veryone would work for the government. His earnings and his job would be stipulated by some bureaucrat. There would be one television station in every big city. There probably would be only one radio station. He visualizes sleek trains racing through'the night at 1,50 miles an hour. MORE EFFIJCIENT Connor is particularly anxious to speed up railroads and reduce rate costs boeau.sg he believes they make more efficient use of .scarce,}high-priced land near rtietropolitan areas than do the highways on which cars roll into cities. Almost four 'yearii ago Herbert Aptheker, U.S. Communist editor and writer, prophesied:/‘The majority of the American people will want communism. Right now, they want socialism, and socialism becomes epmmunism.” Thus, the difference between the two systems is largely one of timV ing. What we would read would be speeches of the government heads and department heads and special articles from t h e government. Most all news, advertising and personal items ■about individuals would disappear from the columns. Newspapers would shrink to four and eight page news. Comic strips would disappear. Real estate agents? There would be no such persons. Churches would become state property and many would be converted museums. The younger generation would be discouraged from going to church.' and the great opportunity to rent a small apartment for about five per cent of their salaries. The collectivist program ia to destroy America by weakening it economically, political!}', militarily, and morally. Therefore, the Soviet government watches closely every move that pushgs us further toward complete socialism. By the same token, the Communists are the first to howl when anything or anyone impedes that advance. Church tnvitation The Holland Evening Sentinel Worship is the natural and spontaneous response , of the,^ human spirit to the goodness, mercy and love of the Creator, Ynanifested in the daily blessings He showers upon mankind. It is the abnormal man w|io does not vrorship. , Mrs. Lou Neumann,-of Rochester: 83rd birthday. Mrs. Margaret Lehman of 2100 Woqdward; 87th birthday, George Addison of Lum; 82nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Bone of 2310 Mapiecrest; 51st wedding anniversary. It,can produce resistance to 'inter-rAinable s t u d e n t turmoil among young men with no place fOogo except into politics and no way to get to the top save’ -through demagoguery. INDIFFERENT ATTITUDE He points out that on the same width of land, rails carry five times as many passengers as cars and buses. Tbe same is true of rail-bauled • freight versus trucking. Like the President, Connor champions a high-speed rail service from Washington to Boston, the nation’s! highest density population corridor. Suppose the United States became Socialist or Communist. What would life be like in America? We turn to Walter Mikelson, ^ What would happen to our pay scale? In Russia,/the farmers make $5 a week in cash, and $5 a week in meats artd vegetables. They g e t about an acre and a half of land to raise foods to sell. publisher of the New.Ulm, Min-^ ^|i,w«rk’ers get $18 to $20 a week nesota Daily Journal. After re- ' Both think private enterprise will meet the challenge, but that private capital cannot finance Here in Peru, the public at- expensive preliminary research titude toward the Dominican “because of the large risks in- crisis has developed from an volved in developing systems turning from a 60-dhy trip 16..... Russia’ and satellite Countries, he stated that under socialism in America:. . Every industry, railroad, airline, bus{/ine, "bank, newspaper, television and radio station, school and university, and factory would be taken over by government. Every' farm, creamery, cheese factory and condehsary ..., ----------- Press Is entitled exclusively to “the use for republl-cation of all local ndws printed' In' this newspaper as well as all AP The Pontiac Press Is delivered by carrier for 50 cents a week; whefe rrAilcd- in Oakland, Genesee, Livingston, Macortib, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties It is ,$18.00 a year; elsewhere in Michigan. and all , other places In the United States $26.00 a. year. All mail subscriptions payable in advance. Postage has been paid at the 2nd Pontiac, Michigan. Member of / Tbe church is the b^eadiight of civilization, directing the progress of the human race toward a higher standard of morality and greater efficiency. The church is the stabilizing power in society that makes for the safety of life, security of property and the enforcement of laws. Without the church fn the community none of these coifd be guaranteed. The church is Hie” lighthouse ' which guides Us over storm-swept seas to tht safe harbor on the eternal shore. Why not accept the invitation and go to church next Sunday? ' I "1 1. Sail Days Recalled by N-Ships WASHINGTON—Nuclear ships have acliieved a curious sle[» Imckwonls in sea iravel. /rhe revoluliiiiiary vessels are (la/./.liii|{ thrawhacks lo Ihe age of Nall when a ea|)taln never had lo secfk land lor Igel. Just as the old, wlnil-ilrlvea iiieieof-wur speiil lAoiillis In distant oceans, so a unclear aircraft carrier can circle the globe lor years wltlionl fuel stops, the National Geographic Society says. In conlra.sl, coal and oil pow cred Hhi|)K innst make fre(|ucn( ref lading stops, The United Stales aircraft car lice Plnlei pi Ise, largest a n d inoHl powerful ship ever built, can roam the seas for years without refucdlng. Us eight atomic furnaces develop more than 200,0(K) liorsepower to drive tli li:i,:if)0 ton ship at more than 20 •knots. Tlicrc is no need for luigi find tanks. SUHIVtAfUNE TIUI'S . Submarines, first lo ii.sc iiii (dear propulsion, not only knife under the North Pole but can (dride the globe wilbout suifac-ing. The first atomic icchrcakcr, Itiissia’s l,cnin, has been hat tering Arctic ice five years. Tlie 440-horsc p o w e r h o ii s e roams the polar seas all winter '.vithoiit refueling. Us nu-(dear engine generates enough steam to melt extra-thick iCe. The fxTiin has been so successful that the Uussians plan lo build a fl(>el lo keep the Arctic waters open to. shipping year-round. The N.S, Savannah, first nu-(dear cargo-passenger shiji, jirc-views future merchant fUsds, l.auiKdicd in 1002, the .sleek, OOI)-foot vessel cruises Ihiee days on a teaspoonful of uranium oxide pellets. 14 (;m)hau trips The fuel load of just 111) pound.s ()f uranium 2.')r) (!an drive Ihc ship :t00,000 dniles, or’ id times around the world. A conventional ship the same si/e would r(>guire 100,(MH) tons of fuel. Harnessing atomic energy on the high seas may bring more than bigger, faster, longer-ranging ships for peace and war. Specialized vessiils such as fish-processing factories, research laboratories, and mining ships will be able to operate at sea for months without returning to fueling ports. Nuclear s'hipping experts enthusiastically predict giant sub-marinr; tankers that will operate like crewless guided missiles between ports of call. A nuclear-powered hydrofoil liner may whisk hundreds of tourists to Europe at 70 miles an hour. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by n a nil e of father): Robert D. Marlin, 5565 Sutters Lane, Birmingham , . Crankshaw, 31060 E. Rutland Birmingham William D. Powers, 11309 Erdmann Utica Kenneth D. Wieten, 2761 Buckingham Daniel Douglas, 828 Harlland, " burn Heights J Bathurst, Au- , 18580 Devonshire, Bir , Schlikckbier, 5252 Cok Michael A. Leonard, 27215 Spring Arbor Southfield ^ David " '■ . Chambers, 1572 Emmons, Blr- Mimeographing Churches — Schools 'Groups . CHRISTIAN , LITERATURE’SALES 55 Oakland Ave. Ft 4-9591 1;^ rorvi riAc ruKss, mondav, .MA^ ai. iimi.i HKVKN Kii S . Pkaii WOii 3*- 1 iJ KEEF»S F»RI GES 5 DOWN CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY IN OBSERVANCE OF MEMORIAL DAY Deep, deep Forfrel/nylon pile 24x36-in. fringed area rugs 4.99 Area rugs for the discriminating! Lush Fortrol* polyester- the fiber that keeps its promise, skillfully blended with nylon to give you rich, yet washable area rugs in 8 vibrant decorator colors. *«<•«. 7.W. hhrr In,. 27x48" 7.99 36" round 7.99 3x5' 13.99 4x6' 19.99 Knx a,,,„nu„wlf Jumbo width, washable, white antique satin draw draperies 2.50 Extra wide draperies at less than most regular widths! Richly textured rayon antique satin that washes easily—does away with costly cleaning bills and adds beauty to any room in your home! 60i<63 " $3 pr. 60«B4 ' $4 p>. 90>84" $8 pr. ...... ■' ‘ ...... ' ............... U.H L»!l«» SALE! styles washable cotton slipcovers Sfrclch-fo-fit renew like upholstery! Machine washable, yarn dyed for permanent color. Nosag ruffled skirls. Green, brown or gold. Strctch-to-ti4 iota cover $11 Choir $5 $ Early American print slipcovers in durable cotton- full box pleats, reversible cushions for double wear. Cord well seams. Ivory, nutmeg. 5 Soto bed cover $9 Choir ............ Hide-o-bed cover $11 Soto cover . Chair covers Tier and valance Fiberglass) sets Dacron/rayon no-iron panels Sale!*^ Plastic lac^ 54x54“ tableclotll Luxury quilt top printed bedspreads New Virtron pillow by Seal of Quality Stripe or solid Cannon towel sale 1.84 1.29 2.44 7.99 2.88 38< Yes! Ag entire set of washable no-iron Fiberglas*’*' glass 36" tiers in exciting prints for less than $2! Use in kitchen, den, rec-room Won't fade or discolor, ever! Beige! Pink| Goldl^ Olive Melon! White! Durable and long lasting! 40x81" figured knit Dacron'*^ polyestef/ray-on panels hold their shape after laundering. Buy, savel Lace patterns of white on col- \ ored or white grounds. ' I4«72" J.44 54»90" 4 44 ING SCARVES ound Wc 12«18" Delicate floral print, elegantly colored to blend with any decorl 100% cotton is machine washable needs little or no ironingl Full or twin. Drapai 6.99 Pr. Shami 2.99 aa. Soft! Comfortablel Shape retaining! Mildew resistant, moth-proof Virtron'^’ polyester is odorless, non-allergen-ic. 27x27" size. Cotton tick. Special sale in time for the swim and shower season! Stock up on big 20x40" solid and stripe towelsl Perfect for the lake or pool. Matching woih cloth. .. » for $1 SPECIAL! Four passenger lawn swing wifh a shady canopy Attractive blue and white swing is a haven of restful shade. Practical too! Strong tubular steel frame holds steel swing. Oval steel contoured seats and backs with turned in edges for safety! Easy fo use big 30 Cup coffee maker 9.88 6.94 3.97 19“ rotary mower with 214-hp, 4-cycle engine 39.89 Folding aluminum chaise for relaxing and sunning Completely automatic, keeps coffee hot till served. No-drip spigot. 1" tubular aluminum frame with durable plqid plas-tic cover.. 6' size. 6.89 Tubular aluminum chair folds compactly to carry 3 99 King .size! Decorated metal trays. Brass finish Jegs. - One with casters.. Staggered wheels for no scalp cutting. M.ulcher plate, wheel bearings never need oil. Cuts V2"-2'/z'' heights. Hqndle controls! Lounge has 4 pqsitions for reading, sunning or just plain loafing! Green webbing with mylar occents.'Alum, -frame. Built to -take years of hard knocks, slay comfortable, good looking! Green plastic mylar accented webs wipe clean.-----^ OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Droyton Plains open Son. noon to 6^. DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS i',1 M'' VI'' - I.Lit ■I ■ 't KlfillT I’HK I»ON}IAC' rUK-SS. MONDAY. MAY ai, WESTIMOHOUSE 10- R.frlg«ro*« Swing-out j. rt#«vtNUt *iTM imi price out _ M PRY EVEN UESS $1Ah ^ I i|0 rnicE CUT l||#{ 4-speed portable RECORD PLAYER RCA WHIRLPOOL 14-cu.-fto 2-DOOJ*^^^ tkf EVEN »» WITH lETNE PRICE CUT COMPACT 2-CU.-FT. refrigerator j ,„poct W«' '«/ M92 PHILCO 15-CU.-FT. FREEZER Supormarkot “D’Y ®500 lb..1r...n‘.«d.D«Mock. Roomy door »torogo. If .PriM»F.O.B*Stor0 riiKi i*()NTiAc: riu’.ss. MAV ai. iimj.5 NIN K- ' Resettlement AKCXSOMHO. Cliiiim (Al*) Six liundml vlllnK<‘M Imvo been iiuindatod by a lake backed u|i behind the completed Volta Hiver Dam, and BO,000 Ghanaians had to move. Tlie Volla ‘ River Aiillioilly made elaborate plana liul found the two - year reHotlleinent pro-^'lam a dellcab! maUer tor aiiidl farmei’H loti^ rooted lo liny Jimmie plola near olmcure liamlolN. Some 12,000 "nuclear type" lionsea were hulll. In 02 replace-incnt vlllagCH. They are con < rcle-woiKl alinnlmnn .slruclurcM uilh a single coinplelcd room ,)cr family. Inhabitanls were ex-pecled lo add two, ol.lier room.s ilK'mselveH with malerial.s sup plied by the government I'be ,>j*}lM)el|) Involved )n completing the hoincM ha.’i re(|uired more government aN.sislanc Ilian originally planned, Kaya I'rank .1. Dobson, a Canadian who lieads the Volta River An ibority. I'KOPLP: VARY I'opnlatlonH of new lownNht|is vary greatly to suit llie trilial ;ind otlier uifiliation.s of ttie people. New Ajena, l.'l miles from tlie original Ajena, ab.sorbcd 21 villages and will have more than 400 houses with 2,200 residents. 11 smells of new lumber and iresh paint but it already has I he almus|)her(‘ of a community. A sign at ti)c Volta saloon invites one to "slip in for iced beer,” China Air Travel Not Designed for Jet Set (mm'OlVH Ncmc on a four (>l Commuuinl China, llw ahum. Paper hags held al the ready, we look off Hgaln . You clatler away Into Ihe air, surrounded by baggage carried In Ihe cid)ln along with Ihe pas s(uig<‘rs and assorted Itenm of freight Spring winds were lilowpig I heir hardest and It was a bumpy passage south-war lo (Changchun. Al Changchun, the lcm|)era-ture ha altitude look lt.s loll of eardrums but Ihe pilot achieved his goal he hit a calm patch that lasted llirough the entire flight, and Ihe ,sea slugs stayed where they belonged^ A bumpy landing*al Peking and llu^ flight was accomplIslKsI six hour.'i for some (100 miles The only olbt'r plane on Ihe Peking liirumc was ii Vi.scounI, used by the Chinese ITople’s Airline on the run soulh from Peking lo Canlon. There fire no jels Ihe Peking airport, even Ihough It is about 30 miles from lown, isn’t big enough to take them. At the conclusion of (he jou<’- 'Plie $19ti. million Volla River hydroelectric scliemc is a multipurpose project designed after |li(> Tennessee Valley Authority. It alms lo control flooding on ihe Volla River, provide enough electricity for all southern Ghana with enough left over to jiower an aluminum smeller, at-tr;uT now industry and provide thousands of jobs. 'I'lie man - nnidc liik(> of 3,27r) .s(prare miles •covers 4 per cent of Ghana’s-surface. Some $47 million in U.S. funds helped finance llie darn and an other $100 million from America is budgeted for the aluminum smelter. Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery Stops Itch—Relieves Pain pcial) - New York, N. Y. (Si.e.i Pur the first lime BClence ims fuun(t\a new healing subHlimco with the aHtoninhing nhilily to shrink hemorrhoids, stop itching, nml relievo piiin — without surgery. Ill one hemorrhoid enso nfter nnothor,"very striking improvement" wus reported and verified hy a doctor’s observations. ed promptly. while pam 11(1 Ml King I (shrinking! took place. Ami most ama'/.iiig of all -this improvement was maintained in cases where a doctor’s observations were continued over a ||eriod of many months! In fact, results were so thorough that sulTerera were able lo make «uch astonishing stato- meiils as "Piles have ceased tube a problemi" And among these sufferers were a very wide variety of hemorrhoid eondilions, some of 10 to 20 years’ standing. All this, without the use of iiareotles, aneslheties or astringents of any kind. The secret is a new healing siihslanco (Rio-Dyne®) - the discovery of a world famous research institution. Already, Rio-I)yne is in wide use for healing injured tissue oh all parts of Ihe body. This new healing suhstanee is offered in SK/iponitori/ or oinl- II*. A.sk for individually seah/d Ointment with special api oator. Preparation H is soul all drug,.eounters. coot) mws... for those who hav'e hern < rxperiri, leiiig (Hffieiilty h( obluiiiiilg automobile iiiNilt'aiiee . . . and, for those who reee iilly eaiieelleil out . , . wh alever the leasoii. In K out of 1 0 siliiiilions we e.m provide fiiHl line eoveruge anil iiroteetioii equal to yone require- iiieiits. < Gaiileil, at the hegim.i ing,' lliis type of iiisiiraiiei > inighi rail for a some what higher rale 1 liiHii iiHii ul . . . Ill 1, tin • iiolley eiirries pro\ision | foe >.»il y itreniiuni I'edin i lioii III ei-ited hy a ill ixing r< Moril. wi-ilc nil I'nrms of I.N.SLItAlNGI'i mill uce qiial-il'icil lo |tlnii II complete progriiiii of l■lsul•a^ce I'i'oleelioii. Our 50 yrnrs —three geiirriilioi|s-^ii the ■iisuniiire liiisiiirsB ill tills area (|iiiilif1es (is for ileilieiileil, |iersoiiiili/.e«l serGee to our rliciits. Let’s talk it o(ei- . , . we’ll gluilly work out a plaii wliieli might be tlie answer to your problem. . FRANK A. ^ INSUKAM K ic 1044 Joklyn, Ponliuc Phone I K 4-:L';:{r> Aluminum SIDING and TRIM $98 ihli Olamorowi All-Nsw (^UnbO% GIANT SIZE ALL-WEATHER FUN ROOM poQiJ, $Q69 Nothing loinparot with this andosure! O ...... OPEN SUNDAY 1 10-6 P.M. I oowmiv.r I [oil Sid. I lirtningham • SoulMi.ld I ToUd. 8-9 P.M. n. J-V4J2 1 AV. J.35VI I PH. l-lliol Royol Ook It. 7-J70o| CM i.«l RfYNOlD'S roil with a vi.ll •• our plant ontl thowroom ;4 ipeid for space? need another bed? having extra guests? relax-^Thomas has the answer! SLEEP SOFAS by ROWE COLONIAL, TRADITIONAL AND CONTEMPORARY YOUR CHOICE AT A VERY SPECIAL SAVINGS a plush, roomy, luxury sofa- by day that transforms into a comfortable’ bed that sleeps two at night! TKN MUK PON'I IAC. I*HKSS. MONDAy. MA.V Jll. ltMl.5 Thunderstorms Hit Southwest Southern Plains Feels Winds, Hail, Rain Hy l lic- Asso< Inlnl l*icss ThimthTRlunir, lnillHcd lli<-,S(Hilliwt'^.l fiml llir MMilliiTii I’l/IIIIN lii(lii\ willi (l.iiimKiiid \MikIm imil ;inl nl rilll'dioil ^ M MM |.I a dll oil iho hiKli U.I\ :iiul Imir Nrllldv old lo lid dc.illi 'I’lic I’iiMidi'iiii, 'IV\ VMimaii’.s liiisliand and Iwo olli-ds OM'apdl I'liiint'l rlijlj^fe*. W'dc m^IuAI llloMK llic New MiAiro Tr\a i liorild, ca.'.l III AIImi(|iii'1 i|in', and 'III iinlo', iiorlliwf'd of I.uli dork, Tr\, A|)|iardill\ llir\ raiiscd no major daiiiai:r TKI KS I I'HOOn:!) Ilijjh winds iiprooird lirrs al III Paso, Trx Hail and wind-dnu'H rain knorkrd mil Irlr-plioiH' srrvirr al Dell ('d\ and Sin ra Hlaiu a O'Brien Seeks Committee to 'Clear Bills' I.ANSINC nil'll - Sen. Carl W, O'Mrien, D-Ponliae, Snturda,V called for ercaiion of a rules roiiiiidllce In l>olli llic .Senule and llolisc |o clear the legisla live ralendara ol apecial Inleresl lulls. Ilo/ens and do/ens of hills .specilic InleiasslH of reeord-loilMes, municipal judge.s, (fill coiirl Indies, appnd.s nils indues and Supreme mil iiidpes clullei nor calen Believe 124-Year-Old Ex-Slave Oldest, Lone Civil War Veteran JACKSON, Miss. (API A Jackson Civil War historian believes that Sylvester Magee, a former stave who elaims to be ViA years olit, is the only surviv tng veleran of Hie (,’lvil War. "He Is aefnally the oldest (ilvil War ‘sdldier," A P. An 2 State Youths on Honor List nOMK l•'KOM Tim* Onecn Kll/.ahelh II ks greeled hy Urdi'.li Prinu' Minisler Harold Wilson al London’s Walerloo railway slalioii lollowuiK I"’'' relurn yesterday from a slate \ isil lo West (lermany. ' Nearly all of Ihem called for expanding Ihe power of these judges, adding new Judge ships and increasing Ihe jiay," he said Weofher Boosts Erhard Leaves for Visit Record Turnout in u. S.,Talks With lbj WON’T VOTI') "I refuse at this point lo vole for any more of tfidse specific inleresi lawyers’ hills unless we have some commitfee lo .sort out Ihe go(sl from Ihe had,” O’ltrlen said. "TIk- ot World's Fair In Kansas, a twisler de-Mroyed a harn near Ho/el, rU) miles norltiwesi of Dodge City. Newkirk, Okla. reported had j Slones Ihe size of golf halls fell] (dong wilh 140 inches of Iwo and oti(‘ ludf hours. Most other sections of Ihe nation had fair weather. Unseasonable coolness persisted from | the Great Lukes to New England., I Police Baffle 1,000 Youfhs in Utah Riot NEW ^()I{K lAPi The New York World’s Pair, hesel hy lalling allendanee since Us ,sec-on'd sea.sou slarled last monlh, Sundiiy had a crowd of 2lir),r)liH Ihe largest lor any day in its history. The lurnoul was unofficially attributed lo a combination of fine weather Sunday iuid Saturday’s rain, which ciiu.sed many per.sons to posl|)one their visit for a day. The attendance was 1,011) over Ihe old record of 264,r)f)2, set on Sunday, Oel. 11, 1904. The previous high during Ihj current final sea.sou was 177,’20 on S.'iliirday, May If). Total allendanee during Ihd first 40 days of this .season is J,-770,r)20. This is l,80:i,:ir)l behind! the r),0.ti,fl71 at the Same time last year. liONN, Germany i.P Chancellor Ludwig Erhard left today lo see President .fohnson on a lour (la.v\ visit lo Ihe Uniled Slates. Eoreign .Minister Gerhard .SehiSK'der accompanied him. t eommillees' have spewed these; hills out wilhhul eonsideraliou for Ihe public or Ibe senalors.” Erhai'd will n'eeive an honorary (jegn'O Ij’om Columbia Uni-ve'rsily tomorrow and sts* Ihe President op Eriday. Freighter in Straits Crash Heads Home JOHNSON Cn”V, I’ex (AP) Two Michigan youngsters were among 121 oulsianding second ary school gradual(‘S named Sunday by I'resident Johnson as Presld(“ntial Scholars of 1905. Marie Kathleen Carr of Elint and Roland Wagner Sherman of Gro,sse Poinie Shores are among those invited lo a White Hous(‘ ree«‘pllon .lane It. lOaeh will receive a hron/.e nushiHifi^i bearing Ihe legend, "Presiden Vial Scholar of 1905 ’’ The awards carry no financial aid, but While llon.se aids said lhos(‘ needing it were almost certain lo get scholarship grants. The parents of Ihe young .scholars also will be invited to the While House, but Ihe government will pay ex|)cns(‘s only for llu‘ youngsters. (hews, founder of the Jaeksop Civil War Round Table, s.-id today, "but there are no official records. "He fought tor the Union al Ihe ,siege of VIekshnrg in llltk't hefore they were snpposcnl lo put fdaves lain Ihe army but when word got liack lo Presi' dent Lincoln of Ihe slav()s fighting then, he pul a slop lo Suggest 2 Pesticides Be Banned on Food diiddrln hh |»i’Ohlblled fr<>m use on 55 vcgetablea awd 9lh'*r food commodities. WASHINGTON (UPl) 'I'he Eo(kI and Drug Adminisirallon has leiitallvelv |)ro|H)sed I h a 1 sslieldes - aldrin a n d I |)(\sl or. (Ponehon The agtuicy l'’rlday (iidUsI for reevaluallon of tlu' use of Ihe Inseelleldi's \Vlthin tlii ee il A So llricf. And \vl So Siiirerc 31 jAm k flliljll 203 Bodies Recovered at Mine Blast Scene DETROIT (AP) - The Norwegian freighter To|Hlalsfjord, which rammed and sank the limeslone carrier Cedarville in a Straits of Mackinac fog May 7, is en roul(“ home up the St. Lawrence Seaway. NEW DELHI 1,11 - Re.seuei teams have recovered 20:i | burned bodies from Ihe Rhori coal mine in eastern India. Th(' mine was devastated by an explosion and fire h’riday. Estimates of the dead ranged between 2,50 and 400, and the search for bodi(',s is continuing. Ten (’edarville crewmen died in the straits collision and 25 wer(> resciK'd The Topdals-fjord’s bow, winch hit the Cedarville broadside, suffered only minor damage The Noi w(!gian ves.sel loadcsl a cargo of automobiles, refrigerator motors and tobacco in Detroit Saturday. News in Brief John .1. Jones of 1758 Torry, Rirrnlngbam, Saturday reiKirted tbe theft of a 14-foot aluminum boat at Voorheis Lake, Orion Township, according to sheriff’s deputies. Beverly Roberts, .'1092 Adams, Avon Township, Saturday night reporR'd the theft of a coat valued at $59 at Ihe Community Activities Inc. building, 5()40 Williams L a k e, Waterford Townshij), according lo t o w n-ship police. Magee’s ease came lo light wluni Arlinglon Jones, a Hal lle.shurg alloriH'V, had Andrews (piestion him Mage** liviot alone lii a nnuiovvn shack In HallU's burg wllhout |)lumblng or elec-Irleily. TWO HOUR QUIZ Andrews, 54, who has writh'ii a nund)(*r of unpuhll.sln*d theses on various phases of the Civil War and plans a Reconstruction book, .said he-^was extremely sceplit'al Indore a two-hour quiz session with Mage*', Andrews has memorized num erous details of the Mlssl.ssippi campaign, from soldleis’ paraphernalia lo down-lo Ihe ndnule limes Union forc(>s enlered Jaek.son. He found Ihe illiterate Magee knew those things, (oo. "It nearly floored me," he said "II knocked me for a loop. "He de.seribed the forlifiea-llons al Vicksburg, how lh<“y were built, how they bui'ied tlie soldiers. He would have had lo hiive s(‘cn Jackson then, to hayir seen Vicksburg, and Ihe battle of Champion’s Hill” Andrews said he was positive of the truth of Magee’s .story of johdng Ihe Union forces at Jackson in May lIMiJ ainl serving at Vicksburg in the siege, being wounded twice there. A t 4/ f f f ,ii: i. j) federal _ „ , - ,jir? 0» Oil) ^PirHinr^- illiSB/ ji Jyomum- Aokm y \i/ \i/ \i/ ■aggaUBOl! W 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC BURIAL INSURANCI SOLD BY MAIL $1,000.00 or moro. luuod lo dg* 90. No ogonl will coll. No mod-icol oxom. Monoy bocli guoron-loo. OID LINE lEGAl RCSCRVE ad today. Wriloi Cxniral Socur-lly LIU, Dopl. H-2086 Mil VVoit RoiodaU, Eorf Worth, Toxai. NEW! REDUCE EAT Mnd LOSE UP TO 6 LBS. A WEEK CAPSULES! Easier to lake and mote effective than the powdered and licp iiid fo(xJ supplement, and costs less including Capsules suited to you INDIVIDUALLY by Lie. Physician, M D No Gastritis or irregulatity ilh AAedic-Way caps. DON'T DIET JUS I EAT! As thousands have done, you can lose 5, 50 or 100 lbs. and KEEP If OFF! MEDIC-WAY MEDIC-WAY 335-9205 7 Ollicet In Oxhixnd and Wayna CounUti — On# in MIricIa N SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AID—Police used dogs, tear gas and night sticks to break uj)! a disturbance by an estimated! LOOO teen-agers in a City Park Memorial Day gathering. Capt. E. G. Cederlof .said tbe disturbance began when Ihe teen-agers threw bottles at officers attempting to stop two unidentified persons from fighting. Two policemep were injured, • neither seriously, and officers said two youths were hospitalized with head injuries. A number of automobiles parked in the area were damaged. Eight youths, police .said, were held on charges ranging from assaulting a police officer to use of abusive language and failure to disperse. Police, assisted by off-duty officers, sheriff’s deputic.s and highway patrol troopers, took almost two hours to disperse the youths. Former Judge Expires RUMSON, N.J. (API -Thomas J. Brogan, 76, former chief justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, died Sunday in a nursing home where he had lived since a serious illness in 1961. He resigned from the bench in 1946, after serving 14 years, to- return to private law practice. iBeautifiil and Economical I ' Let our experience guide you in the selection of a (amilyi^monuiri'^nt. i Made of Select Barre i Granite tfiat 's ' guai ’ ahteed, a Bdrre Guild | Monument is a perma- V. J \ rent tribute to your Monuments family name. monuments From $195 MARKfRS^ From *35 INCH MEBORIALS INC. • R Ferry F| 5-6931 Memorial Pork WKC Phone FEdenI 3-?m WE ARE YOUR HEADQUARTERS 108 NORTH SAGINAW FOR FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES Here is where you will find a complete selection of Frigidaire appliances at the lowest possible prices ... os a result of our carload buying policy. Here is where you'll . get complete service after the sale by factory-trained experts. Here is where you cqn arrange your credit terms to your complete satisfaction with up to 3 years to pay. Lowest-priced 2-door from FRIGIDAIREI WKC PLEDGES TO GIVE YOU THE BEST VALUE! Come see the big 120-lb. size top freezer! 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Among t^iem she included the “fun seeker" iind the “Inlei'iniltent Ht, Nlch olas" Dr. Uernh-e U, Neugarlcn Tunde her obHervallons at a U.S, I'uhlic Health Service confer* cnee on research in aging ‘ She said the tael that grand parenthood now occurs at car iicr ages is respcuisihlc for the cliangc In the traditional con cepi of grandparents as rather autlioritaritni patriarchs and matrhiridis wlio ruled the roost over both younger gcneriitions, “The fun seeker,” she related, “Is the giandpareid wliose rela lion to the child Is ehae loae 1 to a> . BUST, raise, „ shape t firm WAlSr, t HIPS, lose •* THIGHS, lose • 1 to a* ’ CALVES, lose l/2toll/2» ' Lose !• - 0(f.Ankles “ BODY WEIGHT lose 10 to SEPARATf DEPTS. FOR MEN I NORTH PERRY TinvrONriAC: IMIKHS. IMokuAV, may jm. iuha ia>;vij5N enneiff ALWAYS RRST QUAUTY ^ limited time! save 344 on each ensemble! PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. To 9:00 P.M. ir ------------- ■: i' rnr, i*(HS’i’iAt rUKSS. M(rN'l)AV. INIAA’ ill. British Criminals Turning to Tougher American Methods It In (lividliii; Into Iwo groiipN llii^ ptiiimiMN uiid llir pdilorm , l,()NI>ON (Uri) Ciimt' «nd I 'llir lime litdlowi'd w»*ii|K)nfi e III iliNli ci iiiiliial NlnilKld London, f n'zor, ment chopper, bicycle Until furlly rccciilly, criine ‘ •‘“•n. “**'hamlle iind blHckjack had heen very coiiservalfve , “ nre being pushed out by such here and criminals were mainly {American rdinements as A few years ago a gang chief (lie rugged individualisis they I sawedoff sholguns and pistols TIUtitJKllMKN had In lead his mi‘n personally In any quai rel with another group. Nowadays, wllh the successful examples of tlielr Ainerl can counterparts before them, they hire ra/orrnen or Irigger- • In the days and books of Charh’s liIckiMis They rarely iiNcd gmis I'liey N|M-nt years perleclliig skills ' like picking |MiCkels. Their sources ol Income were ihaln-ly iionxlolenl cilines rohliery, ganibling and the "priileclioiL" III hookmakers. 1 nllkc the rc.'it ol tile counli \ llic nndci woiid rc.sl.sli'd ilie nev ideas from America lliil lliis I: li ne no longer. Till' Mrilisli criminal has novi a(ccpled (hat slugging a iiiai with a gun hull and taking awiiy inah ope Ills w.dicl ellnilnales a long prcnliccship in picking pockc Last tlecember “Itlnek Iteceinber" ns a newspii|>er named It there were a re<’-Old initnber of killings iind woniidlngs In llrlliiln, most of them by guns. I''ivc gangs of bank bandlls carried .sliotguns or pistols Itaiik lellcrs were given inslriic lions nol (0 argue with armed rolilici s, Mime of Whom arc trig gcr-happy Cancer Victim Fund to Aid Tot Controversial Bomber Unveiled ^on West Coast men, depending on how severely Ihey wani an opponent punished The ra/.or can sometimes he more cruel than the gun -*• maiming for life by cutting the tendons behind the knee or other multlatlons are not uncommon. itriles the IS. These contact ilut what really w< Yard are the plaimei men may have no with crime other than to think out the plan and pass It to a confederate who orguhl/.es the operation. When Ilie acinal raid is < uid a * * * liuhmg enough, and police chance lor survival resl.s In] The speelalors, mo.slly Noilh counleiing lh(‘m wllh such Nol long ago one gang leadei Ihrealeiied lo "crucify'' an cue my. He gol as far as having him nailed lo the floor Ihrough | his Icglllmale hiislness office Ills knees before he rclenleil. W A Ar * * * 'lie gehi his payidf Inter iiiul A One missing giingsler recenlly ' indircclly A planner niiiy have niverslid had Ihe honor, acconling lo im been hehliid Hie greid Irani rob ■connaiji dei world leporls, ol being hery of $7 :i ndlllon two years aw'ailing h ii r I e d In ccmeol, iippiirenlly | ago Ahoni $(i'll million ol (he the flrsl timi' Ibis lillle Midia j cash Is sllll missing. dis i‘lup Sdilland I \ iii(l m.iy ari'CHl an enlire giing aiid ycl nol nah its most |m I porliinl na'inher Ihe pl.aniier, INCREASE LIVING SPACE , iKsilmenl hy an unidenlified j American Aviation Inc cm methods as seciel clo.sed circuit j who Is InsHo IhInk up anolh s|)ecialisf al Maidiallan s Me ployes and newsmen, were on lelcvlslon camera.H surveying | of Ihe hrllliiinlly organi/cd high rnorial hostiilal for cancer and liand Saturday when Ihe jilane crime spols. The new Scoliiuid! viiliie raids on hanks, dl.aniond allied diseases. j was rolled out of ils hangar here Yard hiiilding now nearing com-1 mciclamls and mair iriicks * * * , ' for Ihe fir.sf time, Ils maidcsi plelion will he an eleelronic ar | which have hmai .so successful I'ans and slock car race diT flight is .scheduled for .lulv ,s(sial iigain.st (Tiiiilnals, i in Hie pa.sf few viaiis. ■.... conlrlhulcd more than $!KMI Bachelor Party Tour For Men and Women Who Are Single Caribbean Cruises 7 Days Bermuda M801P WONDER TOURS of EUROPE $599 21 Days All Inclusive Have Your Vacation Planned by PROFESSIONALS--------FREE AMPLE FREE PARKING BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE OQO QQIQ 2227 S. TELEGRAPH (ARCADE) UOtfOU I O recenlly ill an AshvHle Ir The Asheville newspajicrs made a piihlu' appejil and sonasine coiilrilmled ji round Irip airline lickel I’alrick's father is iineni-ployed and his molher Works in a drug slore UAR, Zambia Agree on Friendship Pact Let BIG BEAR Craftsmen EASE-THE-SQUEEZE At Your House! I.U.SAKA. Zambia (AIM — ITesident Uarnal Abdel Nas-.ser's Uiiiled Aral) Hepuhlie and I’resident Kenneth Kaiinda of Zambia - formerly Northern HtKKlesia have signal a friendship pact deelaring inlen-fions (o iaerea.se trade, cultural and technical cxcfiangcs. FREE ESTIMATES Arab Mid-East Gets First National Park ill ii ifi'li (fUitrnnlvvil \ BIG BEAR CONSTRUCTION CO. 739 North Perry FE 3-7833 I .IKIfUSALKM, .Iordan .Sector j (ATI - Jordan has establi.shcd I the first national park in the Arab Middle East, King Ilus.sein annouiic(‘d. Tlie l.riOO s(piare . mile de.sert park incliide.s an oasis willi Ihe only permanent water su|)ply in the Jordan desert, and a 700-I year old castle once used as I headquarters by Lawrence of ! Arabia. ★ THE (;OOD HOlISEKEEPlN(; SHOP of POINTIAC ★ HOIKOrailK SAVE tt OPEN TOMORROW TILL 9:00 Floor Samples ^Demonstrators Scratehed—Ma'rred—As Is 51 W. HURON All Hew Items-Fully Guaranteed REFRIGERATORS TELEVISIONS RANGES AIR-CONDITIONERS WASHpRS DRYERS FREEZERS STEREOS PH; FE 4-1555 ★ The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP of PONTIAC ★ ■J ,1 .1. VJ ‘ ' i.)., L D D E HOME FURNISHINGS "NAME BRANO MBRCH/kNOISE AT REAL DISCOUNT PRICBr LOCATIONS ALL OVER MIC WORLD WIDE'S 15 GIGANTIC CHAIN STORES IN MICHIGAN ARE CELEBRATING THE GRAND OPENING OF 3 NEW STORES IN PONTIAC, JACKSON AND KALAMAZOO. DURING THIS GALA CELEBRATION WE'RE OFFERING HISTORY-MAKING SAVINGS!! 2-Pc. MODERN LIVING ROOM " us Your choice of colors. All foam reversible cush-frimlytailored modern design. 4-Pc. 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O lililiiSi* *119 WESTINGHOUSE COLOR HOME THEATRE • COLOR TV * STEREO • AAA/FM RADIO 3-UNITS INI CHOOSE FROM MANY SmiSH CABINETS • modern • EARLY AMERICAN • PROVINCIAL PER WEEK Is All You Pay At World Wide CLOSED 3 GIGANTIC LOCATIONS SERVING PONTIAC TODAY • MIRACLE MILE DRAYTON PLAINS CORNER OF • CREDIT SHOPPING CENTER • SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE HWY. AND OPEN T’9 TELEGRAPH RD, 5050 DIXIE HWY. TELEGRAPH YOU NEED ' ^ J 1 1 'J ' ■- ^ " 'b', TIIK PONTIAC PHKSS. MONDAY. MAY .11. imJ.V TIIIHTF.KN Coll)(‘r-t Vows Spoken ill IMiilndelpliia off on It fionoymoon In I'ueilp Hlio mid th« Virgin Islu^ds arc the Nicholas Colberts who were wed Saturday in St. Peter’s Church, Ph|l ndel|)liia Parents of tlie foriiter .lac fjiienette Cuttirniriga Chesley are Mrs, Alfred ,1, OHtheimer III and CaHlIemmi do Tolly (Ihesley of Whltford, Pa. The bridegroom la the son of the I. e H t e r L. (^oltan ts of llloimifleld IIIIIh. I AMII.Y VICII, A veil of heliiooiii Diu heNS lace belonging to Mrs. Colbert compfemented I h e bride's gown and train of silk faced beau de sole and Ivory Alen-con lace, Sb<^ held a (uayer lasik covered with while orchids, .Slcplmnolis, mlnialure Ivy and Verona fern. A * W Honor aHendanIs, Mrs, Scoll .1, Cummings of Wayne, I'a. and Marllia Pitman of Pblladeipbla, wore Kmpire gowns of melon linen. In ice pink linen w e r e lii'ldesmaids I'rlscllla Morris, Wllllamaburg, Va.; Mrs. Sara h Colbert Noble, battle C! r e e k; Cherlyn Caldwell, qalexico, Calif, and Marilyn Pollers, Kssex PeUs, N .1. l<'our year old Margaret Osl belmer and .S,n r a b Noble were flower girls, itltOTIIKIt I-esler I, CoIImtI Jr. of New York City assisled bis brother as besi man. Ushers were I,ee ll Abernalby, Denver; lllcb iinl b' Cllinaii, Santa Itosii, Calif : Donald II. ilaugb, Cbarleslon, W.Va.; Doaald cm, bailie Creek and Scott J Cnminings. A rcceplion in The llarciny l((llowc(| I be late iitternooii ceremony performed l)y ,)o-septi Kocl Jr. * A * The bride attended the University of Denver, Mr, Colbert attended Williams Col lege and the Dniversily of Denver The c o u p I e will re.sld<‘ In Denvei'. There's a Dynamo Behind New Center lly JANKTODICLI, l*oiil|ne I'resa Women’s Kditor Shakespeare wrote nlaail llie seven stages of man; Priscilla Jackson talks idaad the seven stages of a woman’s tile Mrs .laekson has engl neered three Siiceesstul con ferences on wom«ai She In tlie originator of tlic new (^)ntlminm Center for Women |o be esiabllslied nn del it Ibrei* yeai grant of $ll>0,0()0 fnun tlu' Kellogg Foundation. A A A What sort of person is Priscilla Jack.son'? How has she achieved the success she has when five years ago, she was a homemaker will) her three* cbildren in .school' This small bnmette packs more energy than many a fiKithall player. And some limes you can almost laoii tier computer like brain click Ing as she gels an ld(‘a and H lo V 1II Chancellor I) It Varner All He Spends Is Energy He Walks and He Talks by AbICAID VAN BDIIFN DHAH AbbV: I’ve known Hus guy practically all my lilc. We grew up together. Ill's sort of like one of the fiiinily, I) .sometimes lime (about twice a week) he calls iind says, “How about meeting me after work? 1 haven’t got any money, but 1 can walk you home and we could talk.’’ Now you know when we get borne we at least have to hpve ii snack atrd, a lot of times, il’s a complete dinner. Abby, 1 don’t expect trim to take me out to dinner twice a week, but ' it bothers me that he .should lell me he has no money, as though, if he had money he’d be somewhere else. After all these years I wonder if I really knovv him. Any advice? N.Y. DEAR N.Y.: You “know” him nil right, but you don’t . '.‘no’’ him enough. Next time he pulls the “no money, but I’ll walk you home” routine, loll him you’re busy. After three months of this treatment, if he doesn’t ask you “the” question, you’ll have the answer. ★ ■* ’ ★ DEAR ABBY: I live in a small town in Indiana but I read your column in the Chicago American every day. You are the only one I can turn to, Abby. I am 19 and am in love with a boy who is 20. We aren’t engaged yet and here's the problem. My parents like him all rigid, but my two older sisters are married to his two older brothers. My parents say that it would be too much of a mix-up will) all the double cousins. Ills family feels the sj^ime way alioul it. They say tilut two from the same family is enough. We love eac"ii other, Abby, and it doesn’t make any dif-ferem-e lo us that we are al-ri'ady related through marriage. There isn’t a law against our marrying, is there? Please help us. 'I’WO IN LOVE DEAR TWO: There’s no law against your marrying and I cun’k sec why you shouldn’t be married jf you love each ottier. AAA DEAlt ABBY: 1 would like lo reply to the man who signed himself “VET OF TWO WARS.” He disapproved of hunting animals for sport, and in his letter 'ne stated: “If you want lo kill don’t be a piker . go after the big game. Join the Army and ask for front line duly in Viet Nam” It’s people like Mr, “VET OF TWO WARS" - who place human life on Hie same level wifi) animal life who are responsible for Hie rising crime and murder rale in this country today. We have many soldiers in Vietnam, Many of them are volunteers, risking their lives not because tliey like to kill, but because tliey believe in our country, its ideals and tlie cry principles on which founded. Sign America nic . . LT. ROB FORT IJ-]E, VA. Problems? Write lo ABBY, in care of 'Hie Pontiac Press. I-'or a personal reply, enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hale to write tetters? Send one dollar lo Abby, in care of Tlie Pontiac Press, for Abby’s booklet, “HOW TO WRITE LE'ITERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS.” MRS. KKUJ'JIt A/lrs. Keller Is Chairman Mrs. Merrcll I). Petrie, Women’s Division cliairman of the Pontiac Dnited Fund, has named Mrs, William J, Keller of 1-edgestone Drive, cliairman of the Motor Aide Corps of that organization. Mrs. Keller joined the program as n volunteer driver after moving into the area a year ago. AAA Her duties will include directing JJ(ie activities of the trans|Kirlation program for blind and handicapped to treatment and training centers, The Kellers have three ehil-dren and 10 grandchildren. She Gives Newlyweds Good Start By CAY PAULEY . DPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK - Lore Moser has helped to arrange more than 4,000 weddings and hasn't lost a bride to nerves yet. Hut one bridegroom got away. Miss Moser, a trim and attractive brunette in her .tO’s, is in the midst of her busiest season of helping to send couples (iff on what she called a “Joyful” lifetime together. May, June and September are her busiest months, with the other summer months close behind. Right now, she is averaging 100-weddings a month. FEW NERVES “I don’t find, the mother of the bride or the bride much addicted to nerves,” said Lore (pronounced Loh-Ree). I Cheryl Bryan, 13, of Kohler Street (left) and Mary Ellen Keefer^ 12, Poplfir Street, were a hit shy about posing. But they’re not at all shy about appearing in the world’s largest piano recital. They are among the more than 800 pianists who wilT per form in the 22nd annual Michigan Music Festival Sunday at Coho Arena. They are students'Of Mrs. Carl Clifford. “I think the bride is so worn out with preparation and parties she doesn’t have any energy left for fretting. “The father of the bride impresses me as being the least relaxed of the wedding party. 1 don’t know why unless he’s worried about how the family will look to others.” A A A ' Mi.ss Moser for 15 years has been tuned to the wedding march, as manager of the banquet department for the Tavern on the Green, the 100-year-old restaurant in Central Park. She’s helped plan the menus, the flowers, the other decor, the liquid refreshments, music, gratuities, seating arrangements, wedding cakes and other details for families from nearly every state including Alaska and Hawaii. For the comfort of couples about to take the vows, Miss Moser said that most weddings go off without a hitch. Brides don’t faint, best men remember wedding ringS, bridegrooms do show up. But then there was one bridegroom . . . The bribe’s parents had invited 300 guests, the restaur rant staff had done all the decor, the pastry chef had baked the cake. , HE WENT THATAWAY The night before the wed-' ding was scheduled, a distraught father called the restaurant’s then 'doiowner, Julius Berman. Cancel t h e works. The bridegroom, said Miss Moser,had “taken a powder.” She ,§aid Berman, who, has three daughters, tried ttfcaliPj the broken-up father, saying there would be no charge other than the initial deposit arid adding, “you tell your daughter how lucky she is. He wasn’t worthy of her.” , Why did the brWegroom ”ab-. scond? Miss Moser said thdy never found out; he wasn’t heard from again. The banquet boss, born in ciiIIh lier “The greatf^st pur suin' (it an idini I (uiow.” Itorn in dmigliii' siomiry cmni' imek .SliiH'S Hiret and Hanlon, Cldna, Hie a mi'dieal inis sueg('on, mIic 0 the United iiMmllis lietiire Pearl llarixii I'risdlla, a graduate Ot Oherlin College, was married while she was still a sliideiit and “sellhnl down” to raise a family. In Hie .Spring of liXid, she chaired an aren meeting of the League of Women Voters at Oakland University. She had approached Dr. f.owell F.kluiid of the D(‘p(l one of tlie most successful teeliniques of adult education; slie askiKt the people most involved to help her plan eonferenees. ASKED FOR HELP Early in 19(i3, she called in iiliout a dozen women from the metropolitan area to talk over the possibility of a conference on women. Would it liave any value'.' Were there any problems? Would women come to talk about Ihcm.selves? It would 'ITiere were. And tliey came, 300 strong, lo the first conference in May 1903, “Woman's Place in This I’er-plexing Century.” They came back a year later for a second, conference, “Women's Choices in This, Confusing Century.” After the 1964 conference, Mi'.s. Jackson and Dr. Ekiund liegan to formulate platiN tor a permanent center tor womiui on tlie (HI eainpiis It was obvious that Ihi' prohli'ins of nuKh'in wotru'ii were here lo slay. FOREKDNNFIt A pilol course in lesliiig and coiiiiselliig last tall allracled 112 women. This proved Hie two were on (he righi track Priscilla iire.seiiH'd her plans lo Hie Kellogg Fouiida lion which just a tew weeks ago gave its approval. Formal announcement of the grant was made last Thursday. A A A Priscilla is firm in her con viclion lliat the peculiar iia lure of Oakliind Uiiiversily is respon.sihle for wind she lias lieeii able lo do The fact that it is a .small, new scliool (levoled to pioneer projects in education Is ini portiini, she says. Thai slie is tin oiilsHuiding .siicc('ss is evidenced by Hie IrilaiH' paid lier by l.owell Ekiund: “Mrs. .Jackson personities that significant dimension of our society - Hie great reservoir of talent and versatility of our mature women who are interested in returning to a previous, or undertaking a new career. “She w!is a most fortuitous di.seovery for the universily in adult education. She coni-I hined a comprehensive knowl-' edge of the eonimunlly with wliich she is working, iin oul-slaiuling ability to evoke interest and enthusiasm on the part of those with whom she works and perhaps, uppermost, an almost infuilive in-lelleel that enables ’her to grasp Hie subllelies and artistry of planning and developing learning experience for adults. “I liiive wjilehed dozens of conference developers or ‘engineers' as we sometimes call Hiem, and I tiave seen none, even Hiose who have advanced degrees in the field, who can do as competent and as high quality a job as does Priscilla.’’ Neuwied, Germany, near Cologne, came to the United States with her parents before World War If “By Hitler’s choice” A A A. In private life, she is Mrs. Charles Brenauer, wife of an insurance broker. She studied hotel and restaurant work formally at Cornell University, informally during the summer working as waitress, hostess, switchboard operator. ALL KINDS She estimated that she’s helped arrange 25,000 parties, and those 4,000 weddings, some so elaborately staged the father of the bride can foot a bill for $90 per guest. That figure means gourmet foods, the best of champagnes, reception, dinner, or-chestry, dancing and other trimmings. A more average figure would be $11 per person, she said. A A ★ Miss Moser said headaches in the business are rare — “Most people are genuinely nice.” But she still remembers the case of the bride with the most unusual request for a wedding cake. The bride arrived at the office carrying a briefcase which turned out to hold pho-tostatlc copies of pictures of the Parthenon. The girl was ot Ureek stock and she wanted her cake shaped like the many-columned relic of Athens. TRUTH IN ADS “I told her,” said Miss Moser, “that our man was a pastry chef, not an architect. ’ ’ The bride pointed to a section in a restaurant brochure that said cakes would be baked to a bride’s specification. Miss Moser tried to explain that the speipifications dealt with color, filling, the decoration atop the cake. The bride was adamant. 'A A ★ “We baked the Parthenon,’’ said Miss MoseT. “I jnusttsay it turned out beautifully.” Are You Bril a $0)0,001) grant from the Kellogg Fimndii lion Mrs. Jackson, who is d/rector of conferences at OD and assistant director of the Molt Center, eiiiiineereil llie idea for the Continnnin Center far Women lohich the grant imit help establish. Craribrook Garedeners Fete Their Husbaruds Th(' Holicrt M, N(‘l.Hon.s will open Hu'ir Bloomfield Hills liome on Sundiiy lo members of Cranhrook brunch, Woman’s National Farm ami Garden AsscM’ialion and llieir liusbands. Following a buffet sui)|)er, Hie luistiands will be clial-lengc'd lo demonslriile Hieir Musicians Can Study Pontiac students from Hie sixth through the 12th grade will have an opportunity this summer lo participate in an enriclimenl and musical development program. Daily se.ssions will' ho lield at Madison Junior High School from June 28 through August 6. There will be a minimum of 18 hour-long lessons in each division. There will be' classes for individual instruments, including the harp and piano and ensemble and band work. Pontiac school music in-struct()rs will do the teaching. More information may be had from the music office in the Board of Education Building. skill in d(‘signing cliapeaux for Hieir wives. UnlrimriK'd liats and an as-■sorlment of flowi'is will lie provided. WILL SHE WEAR I'l? 'I'o Hie designer of Hic lUost artful creation will go a prize. 'I’lie real clialletige, liowever, is Whether the wife will wear the hat designi'd liy her hu.s-hand. (’ o rn p leting arrangements are Mrs. Waller F. Kuckle-man, Mrs. George II. Glover, Mrs. Donald K. 'I'yler, Mrs. .lames M. 'I’enney, Mrs. Norman C. Fry and Mrs. Earle S. Macl’hgrson. Mrs. 1.ester W. Childs was cliairman of the recent scholarship liridge luncheon in Hie Orcliard laike Country Cliih. Mrs. Dean K. Jolinson planned table decor and .prizes. A • A A Winners of this year's tournament were Mrs. Laurence T. Herman and Mrs. Tenney. Plan Awareds Tea The Women’s Division of the Pontiac Area United Fund will hold its annual “Awards Tea” at 1:15 p.m. Wednesday at Pine Knob Resort. - H ■ ''t, ^01^ kr At the annual honors convocation of Olivet College, Mary Suzanne Maddle, daughter of Cie John E. Madoles of L ac o t a Road, received the Pontiac alumni award^ for academic achievement. She is a fr^hman. MSU Alpha Alpha chapter of Kappa Delta sorority has recently initiated Sue Ann Lundgren, a sophomore in social science, at Michigan State University. She is the daughter of the John W. Lundgrens of Delaware Drive and was voted ‘outstanding pledge’ by t h e chapter. , CLARK UNIVERSITY Arnold J. Wilson of Denby Street of the Pontiac Nort’i-erq. High School staff is one of 50 secondary teachers ad-, rriitted to an eight-week National Defense Education Act Summer Institute in.American History. It is to be held at Clark University, Worcester, Mass., June 28-30. One-hundred and forty gaily embroidered, brightly printed and frosty-white Swiss lace handkerchiefs animate and shape a ball-dress created by Couture Marianne of St. Gall, Switzerland.. From a low decolletage and high waist, the flared skirt sweeps wide and low at the back, 'then rises beautifully ex.posing the leg. This Swiss Handkerchief Dress^ will be displayed in major department stores throughout the United States during the 1965 secfson. ^ ' - ■ 1 I (M it I hKN 'IIIK KONi'i/u; niKss, ■ , ' i, r MUNDAV. MAY «I. luoft Procficol Knowledge Good Skills Are Essential Ky DIt. (;K0K(;E w. ckank CASE V-48fl Al W., aged 34. is the efficient manager of a hig radio station, ■Di Cl lie liegaii, ■ li a V e a gii|i which I lliink III I K i> I lie f) e II e I i t ager.s. "So I woiiile If vmi'd |in scnl my |.rol) im. C.t/INK. Inn to your news|m|)iT ‘ad R«guardl«ti ol oultide weatli«r condilloni, our modorn, tcionlific ttoraga vault atture* you guardniaad worry-n protnction againit motht, theft and other lunsmer haiardi Every garment receivet the fineit in individual e plut the natural protection of Artie cold lor longer life and luiter, And loo, aik about our ikilled cleaning, : glaiing and other ipecial tervket. 719 WEST HURON FE 4-1536 ■|''or exani|)le, we nei'dcd a collide of secrelaiies, to do lypliig and oilier office roii "So we hired two girls wlio looked attractive. "Ifiit they can hardly bent me at llieir typing speed though 1 use only one finger on each hand! "And their spelling Is atrocious I’m not kldiling! They don't even know how lo use a diclioiuiry! So they can’t even check on their own errors! "They don’t have a fifth grader’s knowledge of English wonis, yet they passed themselves off as experuniced office secrelarii's” PANTIE GIRDLES SIZES 30 TO 44 BY VANITY Inches vanish fhanks to long-leg panties^ by Vanity Now you can enjoy complete freedom and control without heavy boning Power net, four-section panties pare inches from hips, tummy, and derriere. Front arid, back is seamless otie-piece of satin latex. Designed to assure ultimate comfort and fit control. White only 8 50 fVf«r f ASH ION NEEDS tTS OWN’ EC OWN’ fDAT/ON: Itf irrtclly lor iw tosfiionr. y JHOP TUESDAY’ NIGHT 'TIL 9 (Closed today to observe Memorial Day) 'f JOB INSIJKANEI-; I’rohiihly the'very best ONE YEAH of education you can (d)tain is in a first rate Business Cidlege, Even if you plan to become a teacher, preacher, lawyer, d(K‘lor or engineer, you will |)rofit remarkably from first receiving a oinvyear or two-year diploma from a Busine.ss College. And I’m not joking, for I have had experience al va-riou.s Liberal Arts colleges, such as Yale, Norlhwe.stern, .Hmilh College, (ieorge Washington University and a YMCA School of Commerce. Ill Busine.ss College you gain s|)ecific, practical t r a i n i n g that will equip you for a gocKl job after you get your diploma. In fact, the usual Business (.'ollege can’t supply the demand for secretaries (legal, medical, engineering as well as business types). It also is swamped with re- qucsts for occountants, bookkeepers, etc. For a Business College will offer students ifot only short hand and typing, Init Biislness Law, Public Speaking, Applied Psychology, Accounting, B(X)k-keeping and even C h a r m Courses for office hostesses or airplane .stewardesses. After that diploma from a Business (lollege, you can himl a giMxl job al once illCIIEK EDIK’A’HON ’I’hen you can finance your laler Liberal Arts <‘ducalion Old of your own pay check,s, as by working by day and taking half lime courses in the Exlension University of your stale. Mr,s. CraiU' look a one year diploma cour.se in a Busine.sfi Women Let AAen Choose Hi-Fi Set lenl. LEAVE IT TO TO PLAN A CLEVER CUTAWAY I The wanted look for summer. . . snowy white smooth leather cleverly cut to reveal the afeminine foot. FRESH, a high heel deftly scalloped to leave free spaces. GODDESS, a mid heel, bowed on crossstraps. Make your cutaways Petite Debs! $10.99 Where Fashion Is A . f Look, Not A Price f 1Use Your Alberts Charge Account College and she ha.s boon of far more value to me for the superb practical training she obtained there, than from all her otl»or courses al North woatorli. Indiana UnlvorsUy and New York Unlvoraity. 'I’lio more I have oljfierved Liberal Arts sludenlH, Ibe more positive I am that they would derive far metre benefits from such campus courses If they bad first obtained a Business College diplomii Since miiny sludetds luwetr flnlsli the four yenrs al l.ili eral Arts, anyway, Itnt drop Old after a year or two, they have little "leverage’’ for prying loo.se n good job. For their smattering of liis> lory, f o r e i g n language and sociology lias sllglil practical Value. Ill high school, therefore, you students better pay (more heed to your English courses, since correct grammar, s|>ell-ing and typing are great assets, wlietlicr In medicine, law or business! M HI m ijood! Taminy O'llari/ (ids (I taste of thinys to come at the Uella Lutes School fair Saturday from 2 to 7 pjii. Her mother, Mrs. .lames L. O'lterry of Itriscoe Boule- vard holds the cake while Mrs. Richard lilanchard of Lrwindale and her daughter, Danielle, watch with amusement. Men wear the pants in the family when it comes lo selecting hi-fi and stereo equip- So send for my "Vocationul Cuidnnee ” booklet, enclosing a long slampcd. return envelope, plus 20 cents. .Sausage should be part of your snlnd savvy. 'I'o your fn vorilc • salad, add lifllc According lo Karl .Icn.scn,’ prcslilcnl of .Icn.scn Indus tries, leading phonograph needle manufacturer, men select i more than HO per e(mt of plumograpb (‘(julpmenl, excluding the records lliern-selves. wieners. The.se fully-eiwked sAu-siiges are liaeked with flavor — and one seven ounce |)aeknge will turn your salad into a | luncheon eoiirsc find will servi' a family of foul. (^adiOy FinEO ARTIFICIAL LIMBS i.rt tifivd by the imvriran Ihnirtl of i'.rriij'ivalion We Manufacture \« I ALL TYPES OF LIMBS- FITTED BY PRESCRIPTION T>u|hl by XtilliWMltrii Urtvattily "Many people think that llie woman plays n big part in .selecting hi-fi,” Jensen says, “but it just i.sn’l true. Of course, she’ll want a say in the style and color of the cabinets, record racks and the like, but that is usually where lier opinion ends. "After that, slie’s content lo let her liusband. do the elioosing of components because slie feels he knows more about the, technical aspects of hi-fi. “'I’he average woman just doesn’t comprehend all the equipinenl that goes into a stereo set, and she really doesn’t want lo take the time to understand it, either. She feels that hi-fi is her husband’s department, as it were. Jor L. (d,shins, VroH. ( .I\ Dial 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC 1066 WEST HURON STREET - PONTIAC FREE Area-Wide DELIVERY SERVICE RENT or SELL ^ Moipa«I^Bed.^^ ^ Fil^atiiieiu pharmacy, inc 880 WOODWARD-Medical Building Enjoy the Hospitality ''' of the The Paris Fashion news this season includes the Coat-Dress, the low placed pockets, and the pleats. Here is the “coolest” item, brought to you by Suzy Perette from Balanciaga’s Paris Collection. The yoke front and patch pockets placed at the new level off-set the two rows of buttons beautifully, and give this design perfect balance. The back interest is typical of Balenciaga in that it has a low placed martingale topping soft pleats. The pleats have a beautiful swing to them and are wonderful in motion. This pattern is carefully cut to keep all the subtle shaping of the original. A perfect coat dress to see you through this summer any mijny more, make it in linen like the original and you’ll stand out in the crowd. Spadea’s exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. Misses Size 12 requires 3’h yds. of 42” fabric for Dress. To order Pattern No. NS-404, state size; send $2.00. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book with 55 designs is available for $1.00. Address SPADE A,, Box 535, G. P. 0. Dept. P-6, New York, N. Y. 10001. . everybody's singing the praises of the... DYNAVOICE AUTOMATIC PIANO PLAYER! And well they should. This beautiful, light-weight portable “piano player’’ is so versatile, so fool-proof, it plays my 88 note pi&no automatically, with just the flick of a switch. What more would you ask of a piano player except a full one year Dynavoice warranty, choice of rich harmonious Dynavoice colors and surprisingly low Dynavoice price. * Call for a demonstration (at your home if you wish)' and learn more about the remarkable new Dynavoice Auto-■ matle Piano Player. Plenty of Free Parking MORRIS MUSIC 34 South Telegraph FE 2-0567 Across From Tel-Huron Shopping Center ^ / h'amou.s lor Our Fine Buffet ' I / llreaklasl • Ijindi • llinnor /-t . Ala Carle Menu .Service SOON A DlFFKREN'l' CONCEri’ IN BUFFET SERVINC; EACH DAY A SPE-CfAEI'Y ITEM Wil l, BE FEA'riJREI) AND ANNOUNCED DAII.Y. • BA.NQlJIvI S • MEE l lNGS • lIEt Eri HINS >^^Cornerjn>^^ ALL PERMANENTS 395 INCLUDES ALL THISi 1 New Lustre Shampoo 2 ElatUrring Hair Cut 3 Lanolin Neutralizing 4 Sm^ Style Setting HOLLYWOOD BEjIIJTY Open Morningt'ai 8 4.M- 78 N. Sagiiiaw Over Bhzley Mkt. RENT, LEASE, SELL. BUY HOMES, i PROPERTY, COTTAGES, CARS, GOLF CLUBS . use Pontiac Press Classified Ads. To place yours call 332-8181. 1,1* ^ I WMiam J. lU’Unaou, .son of Mr. arui Mr.s. Wil-lioad received a barli-liam l^elerson, Wnlnul (dor of arts dei/ree from Alma Colleoe SiUurday. A bachelor of arts de-(jree was conferred on James S. Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs. James G. Jioss of Orchard Lake in COmmencement exercises Saturday at Alma College. He plans to do U r a d u a t e work at Wayne State Unwersity. Make Sandwiches in Large Supply K^ieiirndde Sheer STRETCH Nylons for that perfect fit that feels so wonderful \ \ and looks so beautiful! f \ In plain weave or micro. 88* 82 N. Soginaw St. McLeod Carpet Sgle FE 3-7087 8 LB. WASHERS 20c 12 LB. WASHERS 25c 20 LB. WASHERS 35c ECON-O-WASH nii!^ c()N ^ wav ;u. iimi;^ i;i ri'K.KN R&aders Develop Many Pet Economies l»y MAIIY I' KICUCY CoiiNuliaiit In Money Mmiiigemeiit Tm couvlueed tliere'N u lillle' of the squirrel in ull of us. We say chaerfully that we’re just born extra guilt and can't Hoem to so dime, Hut willi or without en (jouragemo ii l| we Uiiiik up the h« ^eai tioii. I figure Uiere’a IhiuihI to tt few dropn left In the , UR they’re pretty buay taking care of the cuatonierR and you can’t sit around all day while the cun drains coni’ pletely. 'I'bra when I gel iiome, I ii|»’emi Hie i^uUR lain a linrrel I keep in iny garage. This way I get nil the oil I pay for." "I decided to atop putting out froni fit to $5 each time I need to have iny hair tlnterl. Now 1 do it inyHelf mid save that mon a huHic protective lii»tiiict. May he the way we go ahoiil suvlug doesn't actually add up to mud) at tlio cud of tho year. Nevertheless, we try. We save .string, pa|)er cups, olil lea hag.s, and sometimes even ninii(‘y. It’ a commcndalile instinct and I go on record us encouraging it. I must say, however, that some of the wtiys readers approach halancliig lli<^ budget conics as a suriu ise. And I’m an old liand at culling corners So Just in case you're mi.s.Hing out oil a good thing, I |>ass along the foliowing quotes. Just keep in mind tliat every single contributor is sincere in Hie convi(;lion that his or lier pet economy is .significant! “I always bring home (he oil cans after I have oil put In my ear at the service stu- "Wheii iny social siH-urlly de (lucllon Is tinislicd for the year after I've eariuHl $4«IK) I go h) thu bank eacli payday and put the same amount into a savings nmiuiit. I've lieeii doing tills for years, and it's growing." "I cut down on liors d'lMuivies every lime iny hushaud Is out of work, lie loves tli«m before dhiiier, and we \ usually liave tlioin. But I always slop solving tlicm the minute wo have to economize." ‘‘My brother is a great lea drinker diinks it ull day long. Itiit lie's econoinl/.ing now and saves Ids ten hugs, lie lifts eueli one out of llife cup, lays it on linpcr, mid uses It over anil over. It works” “A friend of mine was leU a willow with not much of an liieotiie to live on. She always liked to eiiteiinlii a tot, hiil tier friends were always using the (eleplioiie. Now she has Ihstiilleil » puyphoiie In (he foyer, and her phone hills are pruetieally nothing. She figures she snves quite a hit every inoiilli this way.” 'Tin iil.wny.s taking my car Polly's Pointers Stive Batter lo Hie gnrage, hTslteep II in Up lop cotidllloii My hushand (H num|)( rs To make things less hectic in the morning, try turning the making of school lunch sandwiches into a once every two weeks operation. -Make a large supply, then freeze them. DKAIl I'OI.LY My I’oiiilcr Kiives both I he gnrage wall and the auto, Wlicn we built a second garage I placed a 3 hy-fi Inch plank, fl feet long, on the floor I wo feel from the front of flic garage. Tlic length of fills lieiivy plank prevenfs menihers of the family from driving too close to the front wall of the garage.- I'Tom .shirt pocket to Slay dry hut easily available—ANN on the iiiasculln eside, M. Q. E. KlUENDS The other day I pus.sed an open garage that had two automobile tires fastened flat against the end garage wall to serve as a cushion if one drove in too far. 1 think lliesc arc botl) good ideas.—POLLY BEAR POLLY - A plastic rug protccUir, cut lo s I /, c, | make.s excellent shelving for your kitchen cabinet. 1 use the rough side up so tluit damp things put on the shelf do not slick. This i.s a real time saver and so handy and eciF nomical as it seems to never need changing, just wiping off. MARJORY DEAR POLLY - Remove the cartridge from tin old ballpoinl pen and save the pen for your husband to use ns a holder for his fishing license. Roll it up Jiul slick ill the pen case which can be clipped to a DEAR POLLY When aller-ing a garment you (ire making, pill it on wrong side out mid all till' pins will not have lo b<‘ moved wlien changes arc made ill its lit If cliulk is ii.scil, Ihc marks can he easily seen and you do iiol run the risk of marking a permanent lln/i! on the right side of the garment. If this ideu Is used and I receive a Polly Dollar It will he I r II III e d as a eonversatlon piece. It would be liitcresling to know how others have ilis-plavcd their dollars. — BARBARA One of our readers sent us her picture wearing a locket her liiisband had made fiom her dollar.—Polly says I spend a lot of money this way. Hut I could prove tliat taking cure of 11 has saved us plenty.” "I always save the plastic flags tilings come In from the dry cleaner, you know, niul file ( LEAN-TENDER MEATY flf ^ CENTER CUT FROSTING 7V2 oz. Pkg. PORK CHOPS iMMgiSig; s'ff 1 X, SALES DAYS! TUES. and WED. June 1st and 2nd Only! PESCHKE'S SLICED BACON.. M pH FJll fJI "fl'uMr ,(7117 ■ ' EQC tender MQC ji 99»> CHUCK STEAKS. ,49ib. | CAC boneless BEEF AAq 99ib. CHUC^K ROASTS. .09y i,ij^i4U^i PESCHKE'S POLISH SAUSAGE LEAN-, l-MEATY COUNTRY STYLE SPARE RIBS 397 MEL-O-CRUST BREAD YOURaHOICE MHAFN^ • WHITE Tib. 4 OZ. loaf lUI C AT" • WHEAT or CRACKED WHEAT 1 lb. loaf ^ LwINI\n lvflE#%l » HAMBURGER or HOT DOG BUNS 8 Count Pke. ^ SP WS‘ S© flfil tHE POKTI AC PRESS MONDAY. MAY ni, itma rlAC, MICHIGAN ‘“SKVBNTiiBN One-Hitter, 12-Inning Duel Saturday Prep Nines Play Quarfer-Fmdl Tourney Tilts Today By JKIIE CHAKi Although Ihn woiithor wuh c(H)l, lliero wna nothing chilly iilxHit the brnnd of biiHobnll dln-phiywl by 14 prep leninH SlUur-(liiy fiN the o|)«nlng roiiiui of (ho a a II11 a I IViiitiac Invllatloiml High ScIkkiI, Toiirnalncnl won com|)letcd at Jayctie Ibirk. 4 .SpCidators saw three Hhutoiil pitching performances, Including n one-hit i>eauty by Pontiac (,'entral’s Gary Richardson against l-ofieer, plus the long- est game in kHininiiient liia-tory. Madison and Kotl^ing battled tliroiigli 12 Innings before tile lOagles nlppe^l tlie game Walerftird schmil, 4 3. The (,'np-laliiM, lost the clminplonsliip game last year, 4 3, In 10 In-,nlngs. The fourth unnuid competition has Its quarter - final round toarry Mclnally of I, a p e e r, Kelly Oerllnger scored ImtIi runs for I’Cll, one on a wild pitch and the other on a|i outfield error, \1'he Chiefs never befoVe had bet^ahle to survive the first r 0 of play; hut they showed^Olse and goiul plteh-Ing In duhnpbig the line Trl-Coiihty l/«ui^e ^^championship Dressen Returns as Manager of ligers Bengals Play Doubleheader at New York Colavito Leads Tribe to 10-2 Triumph Over Detroit Sunday NEW YORK (AP) - Charlie Dressen, a wee bit softer s|)oken but as perky as ever, was to resume his managerial duties today when the Detroit Tigers met the New York Yankees here in a holiday doubleheader. Dressen has been out of action since March 8 when he suffered n minor heart attack at the Tigers' spring training camp in Lakeland, Ela. CoaCTi Rob Swift took charge and returned command of the club to Dressen with a 24-18 record and tha TiklMtiJn third lericanLcai place in. the American League. Swift will remain in the dug-out and act as Dressen’s legman. “Swift will talk to the players and deliver my messages for me,’’ Dressen said. “I’ll take the walks to the pitching mound and call in the relief pitchers myself.” BACK TO BULLPEN Pitching Coach Stubby Overmire, who had been on the bench with Swift, will return to the bullpen. This is one of the few immediate changes under Dressen. Another will have Mike Roarke, a second string catcher last season and a coach this year, warm up the starting pitchers. Jackie Moore has been catching the pre-game warm- “Mike knows the pitchers a , little better and they’ll listen to his advice,” Dressen added. TIGHT FINISH Jim Ryun, 18. of East High in Wichita, Kan., barely nips John Garrison (left), in this dose finish to the nitl'e riin in Saturday’s Modesto, Calif., Relays. Ryun r*'’ Garrison were both timed in 3:58.1. At the right Is Jim Grelle who finished third in 3:58.2. Annual Net Tourney Planned for July The sixth annual Oakland County Open Tennis Tournament, cosponsored by The Press and Pontiac Parks and Recreation Department will be July 17, 18, 24, 25. All competition again will be on the Oakland University Courts and will be limited to men and boys. Four titles will be determined: mpn’s singles and doubles, and junior singles and doubles. Swift’s last day as manager was a bad one Sunday. Rocky Colavito pounded four hits, including a homer, to spark Cleveland to a 10-2 triumph. Willie Horton hit a two-run homer for the Tigers in the second inning. That was all Tiger fans had to shout about as Indians pitcher Sam McDowell gave up singles to ’George Thomas and Horton the rest of the way. LEAGUE LEADER McDowell, the league leader in strikeouts, fanned 13 Tigers to bring his total for the season to 84. Lee Wagner added a pair of singles and a jriple to Cleveland’s le^hit attack. He also scored, yiree runs. The loss snapped a five-game Detroit winning streak. rhbl ______ „ , 1 3 1 Wood !b ' 3*00 Whitfteld lb S 1 2 I Wert 3b i 0 * “ Wagtwr If 4 3 3 0 Demeter 1b 3 0 _ . Colavito rf 5 14 5 Kallne 4 110 Alvit 3b 5 111 Horton If 312 3 Oavallflo cf 5 10 0 Thomas rt 3 0 10 Aicuf c 5 0 12........................... Oyler ph . . - . Northrop ph 0 0 0 0 Lumpe ph 1 0 C O Totals 41 1015)10. Totals 30 2 4 2 ClevaloiNI 000 430 120-10 DttrOH 020 000 - Sherry . - . . . - — -tttm -taeed -4 enen In 4th. HBP-By McDowell, Northrop. WP-Mc- Dowell, Hamilton. *-------- T-2;44. A-17,5: The entry fee will be 50 cents per person per event. Trophies will be awarded all winners and runners-up. Entries are being accepted now at The Press sports department and the recreation department at City Hall. The deadline is Thursday, July 15. RULES The tournament is open to all male tennis players who live in the county and haven’t com- 'Slowman Posts Third 'Shutout' team, 2-0. pen’s opponent mdoy. South- field, wns lmprefrHive% ousting ClarkHlon, )-0, Diilo Hayes fiiuned eight and Haittered five hits (all by two (!larkston play-em). Dennis (iadwa’s two-nin Hingl)‘ In Ihe IhinI capped a lliree run ' Jilly lliat decldqd the oiiteo Tim Rndakhm htroketj f I v * lilts. Including a two-ruh single by winning hurler Dave Molliin-en. Ill the rplly, Thu little rlghl-haiidei 's curve hall priHlucfxl 14 strikeouts and llmlttw I'ln South-eaHteiTi Michigan Association champions to four lilts. Milford pulled the major toiiriiuiiient surprise by scoring seven times In the first inning off Hazel Park’s highly regardetl Gary Eddlngs for a 7-2 triumph. By The Aisoelated l*ress Stu Miller, JlulUmore’s Abominable Slowman, finally has completed his Ciird consecutive shutout. It took 14 apfxiarunces by the 37-year-old right-hander, but Miller fini.shcd the job Sunday when he came on In Hie seventlp] inning and got the final two outs to cut off a Los Angeles rally before the Orioles pushed across the winning run in their haif of the inning for d 4-3 victory. Orsino was snerifieed to second, Boog Powell was walked intentionally and then Adair stroked a game-winning single to left field. Tony Conlgllaro pulled Uie Red 5?ox into a 2-2 tic witli the in the ninth with his lOth homer.-Then in the 11th Radatz eontrlbiited Hie only hit (o Boston’s winning rally, stroking a single tollowing a two-out walk to Ed Bressaud. i Walletl Lake's Don ItiekanI was In charge against Avondale and his two-liit hnrling fealnnsl a 4-2 victory for tlie Vikings. Ered h'crgn.son drove In a inn wilh a triple and seore<| In a two mil tonrili tliat (iroved the margin of vil'tory. Waterford Townslilp couldn't handle tlic sliiiils of Kimball’s Bol) W I 0 d e k and suffered a Ihice . Iiil, 5 0 blanking in its dcinil in the Parks and Rec-realion Dcpartnu'iil - Press co-sponsored meet, Bill Itobeit,-; of I'ae Knights slammed a homer and h a d Ilircc rlii’s to lead Ihc winners. They play Borneo, a loam wliich - (Cunlitiued on Page 1!)) PresK^ffers Anxious^See That Big Bo^ WHO TOUCHED FIILST? - Milford runner Randy Clin-nrd was out on this second inning play Saturday at Jaycee Park, allhongh Hazel Park first baseman Miles Thompson had to come otf Hie base to catch the wide throw from sliorlslop The fielder jiist managed to tag Hie liag ahead of Ihe long-stnding liedskln. Milford won the game, 7-2. Miller, w^o started Ills siring, on April 29. when he was smarting with a 7.88 earned run average, now has baffled American League batters with his assortment ot slow stuff for 27 sj|aighl scoreless innings. During that stretch he has struck out 27 and allowed just eight hits while trimming his ERA to an eye-popping 1.80. peted professionally. Junior division entrants must be 17-or-under. Each player or doubles team will provide one new ball for each match until reaching the quarter-finals. The tourrtament sponsors will then provide the balls. Matches must be played at assigned times on the Oakland University courts. Additional information available at the recreation department and Press sports department. Miller replaced starter Wally Bunker with two on and one out in the seventh after Jim Ftegosi 'had doubled home the tying run. Miller filled the bases by walking wpiie Smith intentionally, then retired Costen Shockley ^ a foul pop and Bob Rodgers on a liner to second baseman Jerry Adair. Tryouts Set for Boys The Pontiac Boys’ Club will have tryouts at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow on the Pontiac Northern diamond for positions on its Class D city recreation baseball team. All-boys 18 and under are eligible to play. 4TH STRAIGHT Miller’s fireballing colleague in relief, Boston’s Dick Radatz, made his fourth straight appearance in the Red Sox’s 3-2, 11-inning victory over Kansas City, pitched 1 2-3 scoreless innings and struck out three for a total of 16 in his last seven innings of work. The Minnesota Twins, meanwhile, moved into first place by beating Washington 6-0 behind Camilo Pascual’s four-hitter while the New York Yankees dropped Chicago to second by edging the White Sox 3-2 in 12 iAnings. Bears Trade Casares to Washington WASHINGTON (AP) - The Washington Redskins hope they’ve found the fullback they need in Chicago’s Rick Casares, a 10-year football veteran who’ll turn 34 on July 4. “I feel he can help us,” said Coach Bill McPcak after announcement of a four player swap between the Redskins and Bears Sunday. “He’s a big leader and has lots of heart. And he is a good work-horse.” The Bears got center Ered Hagernan and tackle Riley ■ TODAY’S AMERICAN LBAOUe Brooks Robinson kn^ked in two Oriole runs with a pair of singles in the third and sixth inning before Johnny Orsino, who homered earlier started the winning seventh-inning rally with a single off Ron Piche. .20 19 .513 5'/4 . 20 20 .500 5 .23 23 .500 5 Raceis in Earth-Bound Showdown INDIANAPOLIS (JV-In this space age day, more than 250,000 persons jammed the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to Watch an earth-bound speed showdown in the 49th Memorial Day 500-mile auto race. Even astronaut Virgil Grissom was on hand as 33 landlocked capsules on wheels began orbiting speedway’s jiVk* mile oval at 11 a.m., EST, in d 3V^-bour attack on big I n d y records and a $600,000 mirse. But.space shots never packed them ‘^in like the moling mob lured by a new-breed uprising of eight-cylindered, rear-engine cars, h e a d e d by def^dOig c h a m p i 0 n A. J. Foyt in a ground-hugging Lotus-Ford. ‘ With alFthe talk of the demise of the old Indy King, ttie Offen-hauser front-engined roadster; several million, dollars of engi-^ neering skill and apparatus faced a deadly challenge of searing friction and human error in the blurring charge of 27 rear - engine Johnny-come-latelys^, Only 12 cars were running at the end of last year’s record-smashing, but tragic race which killed Eddie Sachs and Dave MacDonald in a funeral pyre crackup on the second lap. Foyt set a record 147.350 m.p.h. pace in what now is regraded the obsolete Offy road-. ster, four of w4iich made an apparent requiem run today. Foyt-sped off in the pole position driving his red «jd blue trimmed white car which set a 10-mile qualifying record of, 161.233 m.p.h. May 14. * A wild, unpredictable race loomed between Foyt, also the 1961 winner; Scotland’s Jimmy Clark and Dan Gurney, rounding out the first thr-ee-car row; and 1963 champion Parnelli Jones and rookies Mario Andretti and Billy Foster, seepnd row starters. Except Canhdiaii Foster — driving a rear-engined Offy, the tQ|r qualifiers all were wheeling rear-engined Fords, powered by eight cylinders compared with the Offy four. Attendance ^at the Speedway Memon^ Day spectacle never is announced, but owner Tony Hulman concedes t h e r e are reserved seats for more than 160,000 spectators and that another 100,000 c£Hi be packed along with 25,000 cars — wit^ the huge racing oval. 10 27 .270 14Vi Cloveland 10, I Minnesota 5, Washington 0 Beltimora 4, Los Angeles 3 Boston 3, Kansas City 2, 11 Innings Today's Games Boston (Wilson .os Angeles (Chance 3-4 and May 2-4 at Boston (Wilson 3-2 and Bennett (Ml), Chicago (Buzhardt 4-1 and Pizarro 0-r Howard 3-2) at Cleveland (Slebert 5- Mattson for Casares and,j3|ace kicker Bob Jencks. The National League's sixth leading ground gainer, Casares wiped out Bronko Nagurski’s club nishing record in his decade with the Bears. Tlie Redskins hope Casares, an aggressive blocker, can help spring their Rookie-of-thc-Ycar halfback Charley Taylor loose on wide runs, get short yardage when the going’s tough and pose a threat as a pass receiver. Those anglers anxious to tell someone early tomorrow (before 7:30 a. ni.) iHioiit the big black bass they’ve caught already opening day will find a ready ear at Hie Press sports department. Outdoor Editor Don Vogel and sports'wriler .lere Craig will be on duty at 6 a m. looking for a winner in the new opening day fisliing contest sponsored by 'file Press. * A $50 savings bond will go to the county resident eutching the heaviest large- or small-mouth black buss brought into them before 7:30 a.m. ■ The fish must be caught between midnight and 7 a.m. in an Oakland County Lake. In tlddiUon, The Press , awards $50 bonds to the * fishermen catching the :! : heaviest black bass by Sept. 7 and the heaviest ■ muskellunge, northern or walleye pike by that same dale. PONTIAC’S NEWEST AND URGEST TILE CENTERL OPPOSITE PONTIAC MALL FRONT DOOR PARKING 2256 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. 'Stor* Hour> - Mon., Thun , Fri, 9 to 9 Tum., Wo4., Wot. 9 to 61 - Kansas City (O'Oonoghua 2-5 and Segul 3-4) at Washington (Richert 1-4 and Ko-plllz 1-0), “ _ Baltimore (Roberts < 0), 2 Detroit (McLain 1-2 and Sparma 3-2) i New York (Blance 0-0 and Ford 35 o Bouton 3-5), 2 Tuesday's Gama Los Angeles at Boston Only game scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE won Lost Pet. Behind Angeles Frencisco 25 20 .555 3'/i Cincinnati ....... 23 19 .548 4 Milwaukee ...... 2-1 18 .538 ('ft St. Louts ......- 23 20 .535 4W Houston n 25 .458 7'/i Chicago .......... 20 23 455 7'/4 Philadelphia . . . . 20 23 MS Vh Pittsburgh ....... 19 24 442 tVt New York 15 29 J55 12H Chicago 5, Philadelphia 1 Milwaukee 5, Houston 5 Los Angeles 12, ClhclnneH S San Francisco 3, St. Louis 2, It Innings Pittsburgh 9-12, New York 1-0 New York (Fisher Chicago (Koonce 3-S . Philadelphia (Short (Cardwell 1-2) Milwaukee, (Cloninger 5-3) at I 4-5) pt PjjlArgh New York a) Chicago .St,. Louis at San Francisco Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, night Mllwa.ukea at Houston, night Only games scheduled. Enough Tile For Room for $24.00 Genuine Inlaid Linoleum Tile Q $5.60 Ctn. Light Colors WantI Enough Tile For Complete 9 x 10 Room for $9.60 Long Lasting, Easy to Clean and Easy to Install! Ligh AH Y< Enough Tile For . A Complete Room! $2400 Solid Vinyl TILE 19 SOLID VINYL SLATE tile; 2T Sq. Ft. Carlons $^g9S CORK TILE t7 PLASTIC WALL TILE CERAMIC TILE 35' Sq. Ft. LINOLEUM WALL TILE 39^ REAL - SUTE r TILE CEILING TILE Low Cost -Slight Irregular 16x32 Copper • Steel TILE Bruthed Alunninum 69<^ Sq. El. IMPORTED INLAID TILE 5 SAVINGS SELECTION ORIENTAL GENUINE MOSAIC TILE 55; ASPHALT TILE Random Colors 4 ^ J U .'1, I 'KKillTKKN t\iK I’ON'Ii'IAt' 1‘HKSS. MONDAY. MAY JM. \\m Pirates Win 10th Straight lly 'llic ANNorliilrd 1 (‘Iriiictllc lliou){lil (lill(T<'Mllv I Hoborlo Ch'mciilo hiiH swilcht'd fr(tm pop oil pills (o pop up pills, Tlio PiUsl)ui(i|i I’iiHlos have Hwih.liet), loo They’ve ahaii (loned (he Niillonal l.eiigiie’r-. Hullle ol llie Itollom (md itifilea all.a an eiplil Kaine liislnp, slrint,;, e(|Uals Ipe lonpesi in Ihe inaiors this season lionslon also won 10 III a row l‘illshnr;^li, now in ninlli, is no lonper ill null'll ol a hallle lor Iasi place, niovinp lour panics ahead of llie Mel.s 'wilh a sweep ol Iheir lotir-panie snies, Al Ihe sat'he lone, Ihe I’irale.s nickeled lo within one paine ol .sixth place, < iiAN(;i:s tum; Manaper llarr\ Walker aliri hull's Ihe sudden suipe lo se\er. al laclors, (Ti'inente aiiioiip Ihem II was only earlier this inonlh “llial llie league's deli'iid inp liallinp cliainpmn was ipiol-ed as sa.N'inp "I wani lo he irnded from lliis ('lull, and I don I waul lo play lor this nianaper anv more lie's also lakinp a lol of pep pills lo conihal the .weakne.ss llial renutiiiH Iroin llie malaria allack he liullered duiinp the wilder 1'lie illnefi.M kepi him away Irom mnsi ol .sprlnp train Inp and sllll has him of lea.s than playinp weiphi The pills aiipaienlly are work |np Diirinp Ihe vvinninp streak, Ihe ltd \eai'old nphl li('ld('r is hillinp kill and luei raised'his season's avciiipe (i:. points lo OOll In Ihe New \di k series he rapped II liils in III trips lo the Sandy Koiifax hrnuphi hi.s reeoi'd lo 7 3, liolilinp Ihe Iteds lo live hila and sli iklnp ou| hi John Itosehoro dro\<- in lliree IhHiper runs wilh Ihree HinpleH while Maury WiHh, Hon Fairly, Dick Traei'wskI and We.s Parker each eonlrlhuled a pidr ol runs hidled in. I'T.sewhere ni Ihe Nl., I,os An poles clpliheied ( incinnidi I','r>, Chlcapo delealed Plladelphia •1 I, Sail I'lancisco edped SI, laiuis 11-2 in III lni,flnpa and Milwaukee nipiied Ihtusldn C-fi. ( ims iti.ANKi';i> The Cuh'i downed Ihe Phillies hehind the hillinp ol Friiie Haiik'i and (he pllchinp ol link Fllnwinlh Hanks collecled Ihree hlls, inchidmp his lOlh homer, apd di'ovt' in I wo runs Kllsworih scallered .seven hits, In nipinp his recoid lo II It, Hoh Fi'iend .slo|iped Ihe Met,s on live hils in Ihe opener, relir-inp Ihe first 12 men he faced. The Pirales hi'oke a I I He in lh(‘ sixth inninp, seorinp two runs wilh Ihe aid of two diTors hy shorislop Hoy McMillan and one hy center fielder .lohnny \'ernon Law pitched a six-hit shuloiil in the .second game, lie I'cceived homi' run support from Jim FTipliaroni wilh two on, Conditioning Problems? 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' ■ Milwaukee alopped lloirsloti M four game winnlnp .streak as Hank Aaron slammed a two-nm homer and Felipe Alou and Mack Junes added ba,ses-emply hlaws Tlie iiomer harrape over rmle ii lionslon ritlly in Hie toio'lh Intilnp when .lot' (liUne.s .sinpit'tl, and Hleo (’ally's erroi' on Ihe play permlllt'd three runs lo score. UOCKY TIMF 5 Cleveland's Hoeky Colavilo spriuls for home idler hemp frappt'd off lliiiil Imse ill Ihe Itiiirlli inniiip of the paint' a| Dt'lroif yeslerday. Third hasi'inaii Don Wel l of the Tiger.s throws to pift'her Jack llamillon who made Ihe tap. (folavito paced file Trihe to a 10 2 viefory willi four liifs, In-cliidinp a llirt'e rui) homer. Tlie Cianl.s edpt'tl Ihe (3irdi iials on Hoh Skinner'.'! hases-londi'd error in Ihe lOlh. Willie Mays, out of Ijie line-up with a heavy cold, halli'tl for .lim Hart with Iwy out and lolli'd a liipli fly lo Skinner, wlio d>'o|>P*'<' ''H"s wi'ie unearned, litin ha.si'hall (Jass A l.t'apiie' * A * .sea.sons Iasi n I p h I al Javree ' ‘C ,, I , , , ,, ' , in lilt' ftii) tif Hit' seveiilh aidt'tl lark and eonl.nued the ! ,,y wildnes.s of Ihe Clippers’ Ht'iison hrand of loosi'ly played i piiciicr, Davi* Simmons ended hall di.splayed hy Hie other cn-j n„. .sinigple wilh a one - out, ...... ' ha.si'S loiiilei/ sliiplt'. M. 0. COLLISION Iranis. The Clippt'ps, a perennial eontender, had lo score nine runs in the last two liinhigs for an II - 10 deelsion over M. which hud organl/rd its forces only three days hence. The winners pounded out l.t hits and overcame an 8-2 deficit with eipht runs in the .sixth iiij, ninp alter two were out. Hud ThoiniLsoii’s ha.ses-loaded Pritchett Wins Shot KALAMAZOO - Hradell l»ril-chett of Pontiac won the shot put event in the Miehipan Federation 'lYiick and F'ield meet lu'ie Saturday with a toss of .'ll I Me Or Ay'^l> tm I IhorriAaon lb Sullon (.1 SitebndAr rt Robfrls ?l) CrAmlAll ph f Alrl» (»• • Hollomrtn m > Oaap JI> 100 1 I—n II. : Doublet -- Smillw McCrag. Tripla — Mlholak.' Runs BaMrI In — MIholeck 2, Olecit, Crouch, Kind, Foster, Smith) ThomAson i, DouqIas 3, Simmons, Sleph-nns, Blllesdon. Pitching MIholek 9 H, ? SO, 3 W, Hlllon S H, 1 W) Taylor 2 H, 2 W, HlllASdon 4 H, e SO, Lampbere 5 W. WIntror I Amphere, Loser . - Hlllon. I t rot s ■ l ohler, Oleck, Moltinger, Hll-SJiUhens, TwyloT, McCrag. Second Oeme 5 0 10 M'MglPn ^ 5 0 0 0 King rf ^111 Howard If 0 0 0 0 Held cf 3310 Chance Ih S 0 3 0 Zimmer ph ■k p 0 0 0 0! ‘ 010 30 DP -Wai^hlngtc #s. H*R "ver^AMes IM, Klllr Paicual. SF- Nossek M> H R BR BB SO PesCUAl W, « 0 9 A 0 0 3 4 M'CormIck L, 2 3 S 9 4 4 3 2 NArum , 2 2 I I I 0 nidllk 2 2 110 2 T-,.2:21. A—9.510, NBW YORK CHICAGO 1 Allriy, Clendenon. SIaioHI. Lownn SI'atuoll noi, Alloy 12), PAgllnronl BoIIav (3), SB llAlfAy IP M R BR OH SO w, 2 $ 9 A 0 0 (I ; ^0?! j CHICAGO t 0 0 0 ' Stawarl cf 1 0 0 0 WllliamH If 1 0 McCrnw t 45 3 13 3 Totalf 44 1 8 3 000 110 000 001-3 000 100 010.00P-3 Slofticmyer, Popltonp PHILADELPHIA >1 ab r h bl 0 Taylor ?b I 0 0 0 Rnlati (f 4 0 7 0 0 Crtlllson rf .10 0 1 I Johnhon If 1 Thomaj )l> 0 Trlandoi, c TotaU 33 4 11 4 Total! 34 W 1 Chicago 010 003 000 4 Philadolphta “"'-v 001 OOO 000 I F Ranks, Be^kerl, DP Chicago I, Philadelphia 4. I OB Chicago 3, Phlladel- Baldschitn Wagner Flint Cyclist Tops in State Title Races 7 1 Ferrara If IONIA (AI’)-Bart Markel of Flint won both the expert class 5- and 10-mile events in the Michigan Statq Motorcycle Championships Sunday at the Ionia Free Fair track. The races, run on a half mile flat track were marked by tragedy when Charles Atherton, 25, of White Pigeon was thrown from his bike and killed in a novice class qualifying heat. Officials said Atherton’s motorcycle apparently collided with another on the west turn. Markell won the five-mile event in 4:33.3 and took the 10-mile in 9:08.6. Jacl< Warren of Clio won the novice five-mile in i:kl.7 followed by Larry Darr and Den-pis Bullock, both of Mansfield, Ohio. Start at Yes, it's true. The Bridgestone surpasses every other machine in its class —'■ and we mean every machine. Along with overall superior construction, the "Bridgestone" boasts highest horsepower, greatest torque, best acceleration, largest brakes, up' to 200 miles per gallon, and many more features that give you much more for your money. Want proof? Come in ahd drive' one. We sure you, too will find it ■will outperform any other, regardless if you pay a lot more WITH ONLY $25.00 DOWN Paul A. Young Inc. 4030 Dixie Highway Droyton Plains ' OR 4-d4l|- tolalj 34 5 5 5 Totals 39 12 13 11 Cincinnati oil) 004 000— 5 Loi Angelos 204 110 02x—12 E Harppr, Poro), Cardonas 2, I n-frbvro LOR -Cincinnati 4, Los Angcifs Ellis L, 7-2 O'Toole ' Cralq ab r h bl , 5 0 3 1 Scholield ss ,4010 M.Alou cl I Gabr'Ison If 2 0 0 0 Gibson p Totals ^ San Francisco ----- . San Francisco 8. 2B-,-McCoveyi Groat SB -Lanler, J Al-u, Flood. S—J.Alou, Herbel. SF-McCar- Kuenn Swapped os SF Giants Keep Dealing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The San Francisco Giants are continuing their horse-trading tactics. In their fifth swap since winter, the Giants have made a three-for-two trade with the Chicago Cubs and called up a right-handed pitcher from their Tacoma farm club. Manager Herman Franks broke the news Saturday. The Giapts traded catcher Ed Bailey, left-handed pitcher Bob Hendley and veteran outfielder Harvey Kuenn for catcher Dick Bertell and outfielder Len Ga-brielson. • Giants’ Vice President Chub Feeney also announced that San Francisco was moving pitcher Bill Hands up from the-TaeonKr->^ Giants of the Pacific Coast League. U-D Nine ETimlnated ATHENS, Ohio — The Unive sity of Detroit was •elinlinati from NCAA district basebi tournament play here Saturda 10:7, by Ohio State. The Buc eyes now move to the Collei A^rld Series in Omaha June -,1 tUl niin'ON riA( PHKSS. MONDAV. ISIAV ,71. lon.l NINKTK.KN Nloklawi^ GOtF }^ 6»krp (& ^}p.^ h.. 0OTM l IP& APfc! WKflNO, t3>»vv\p. /«V J- ppp Rjn- /vvr/M, mt-r Noi \zi6t- l iki.^, rr^' AOfc»UI^P A f^MOCP'lll/lJVtKl Ofc»Ul^l ....... . ■'fS^OKl# ANP CON-tAC/f. MO^r IMPOC-t'AN'T 'fHlHC? -TO PPAApM^eP "THAT A CHIP Mu&T ^UlPl^y, ■TWI6 CAHMOf giP A^COMPH^HPP Wl fH A f CbPIP AMP A CMPPPy ^vVlNC^ OP A 1X>0€»P OPIP AMP A FI.OPPP A\o'noH- • Crampfon Wins Third Tourney INDIANAPOLIS (AV) -- Australian Bruco Oampton, only Uiroe-tlmo winner on the PGA circuit this season, headed today for Gcund Blanc, where dou-ble-winners Jack Nicklaus and Doug Simders will he awaiting him in the Buick Open. Crampton moved close to pace-s(!tting Nicklaus and ahead of Glanders in 1965 inotK'y winnings as he wlged Lionel Hebert and Jacky ('upit by one stroke Sunday to win the “500” Festival Open Golf Tournament. * * * The victory was worth $15,200 to Crampton and boosted his season’s winnings to $43,095.17'. Nicklaus,* who did not play here, leads at $47,900. Sanders, who withdrew because of an injury during the first round, is third at $37,166.11. A A ★ The handsome Aussie shot 71-70-67-71—279 over Greentree Country Club’s 7,002-yard par 71 course. His third round gave him a two-stroke lead going into' the final 18, and he stood off the challenges of Hebert and Cupit in a spectacular finish. ■k -k * Sixteen players were under par for the final round. Best was Don January, who shot 33-32—65 and set a course record. ^ O 10 VIRION For Your GTO and SAVE at... RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 M-24, Lake Orion 693-6268 He finished even with par at 284. Ilruco Crumpton, |1S,}00 l.lonol HnlKirt, »it,635 JnckI# Cupll, M,(125 Junn Hoa Hie Hill aiiiiiial Buick Open more al Iractive, at lea,hi In tlic lotiriiig profeaaionala, la llic size of llic piirae $I(H),(HKI a ticfly jump from lieil year's $66 IM)(I money Itiig And there's also soincllilng for the golf funs. Included in llic 1471111111 field will he die nalion’s soealled 'Big l'’oin‘ along will) tlie seven past cliainploiiii of Ihe Biili k Open. Heading the 'Big Four’ is champagne Toiiy Lema, also Hie defending champion, followed by Masters titleists Jack Nicklaus; FGA king Boliliy Nichols and ailing Ken Vcniiiii, Hie II S Open champ AIINIK IIFUi: Not among iJic Big Four’ hut one who'll probably walk off with a hig sliare of the prize money is Arnold Palmer, the Latrobe, Pa , slugger ^ho.se ap pearnnee tiere is almost certain to 1)1 iiig fans oul In lecord tium hers. Tlie otlici six former Buick Z'' ' hampions in Ihe field are Billy Ca.sper (19581. Art Wall (1959), Mike Souchak (19601, Jack Burke Ji (1961), Bill Gollins (HNt'J.) anil .liilliis Boros (HHilD. H'ho sd llic course record ot 7.74 lor 7'.! hole.s In Ihe '63 ouling The Held will he (’onipleted tomorrow following the qiiull-fyliig rimiiil, which Is xclied iileil tor the 6,633 vanl I'lint <;olf Coiirke. Swilcliing ot Hie (piallfyliig Area Racer Wins al Waterford Hills Ken NlcLson ol Glaw.soii and lloheri Acloii of Livonlii, won feature races yesterday at Wa-lerfoid Hills Hoad Uaclng Gour.se, NIel.son look flisl place In Hie all formula will) a Lotus 7.0 and Aclon wa.s tlisl over all in .small pi'oilnclioii Bo|) GlenienM of De Iroil, In a Triiimpli Spilflie, set a course rccoid in this class by turning a la|i in 1:28. 1) e unis Waszkicwskl of St. Glair capliired large pioduclion and modified over-all lealiii-e honors in n Sting Hay. The ii(‘Xl eveni al Walcrioi'd Hills will lie SGGA sanclloiied riices June 26-27. loiinil fidiii Wiirwlck’s 7,280 yards of turf to the Flint course was made because of a PGA rule reijuiring Hie lournameni (oiirbe III he availahle tor two full (Inyb' practice A A A Players exempt from (piallfy Ing were louring Hie coiii,se to day A pro am Is slated fi»r Wednciiday and Hic 72 hole hai lie lor llic Buick Open I llic oficilSy on ThtirKilay wlHi III linic who has never won llic Imirney jiiil hift) finislied second Hiree limeS; Anolher veleran reluming is Gary Midiltecotl Wlio sel louriiamcnl tei-iird lor III holes willi a 85 during Hie I959 event Tickets are on Hal(> nt mimt area Buick dealers and most golf courses (or $l eacli Tickets arc $2 al Hic gale Parking Is I I CC UNITED TIRE SERVICE I001 BAldwIn Ave. I Min. risin Oewnlown Mentine OTHFIl IIODNItS Oilier rounds will he played I'rlday, Saliiiilav and Sunday , Vniliiri, suftcring from lical cxhmislioii, slifred Hie sport,s world la.sl .summer will) Ills dramatic victory In Die 1) S, Open al Hie Goiigrcssiniial Goun try Glut) In Maryland A cimiluHon iiilment In Ids liaiids foreed him to leave (he (our last winter, hut his re-ciiperalioii has lieen successful enough that he decide«l to try (he Buick ttpcii before dcfeiid-liig Ids D.S. Open UHe June 17 20 al Bellerive Gouitlry ( lull ill SI. Louis, Mo. 'I’wo oilier name.s familiar in the golf world will al.so he on hand 53-year old Slaiiimln’ S.'iminy Snead, wlio has won every major Iniiriinmcnl Ind Hie IIS Open, and Dow l''inslcr wald, a Buick Open pereimial DON NICHOLIE TIHE ^HOME- -BUSINESS- .iiifit hiHiiraiirr Vor .in yonv S3V2 West Huron FE 5-8183 You Gan Count on Us...Quality Costs No More at Sears Thorp* 5 H, 3-2 R-ER, 3 SO, 3 W; ■w 2 H, 1-0 R-ER, 4 SO, 2 W. R»n»h*w Winner—Rickard. Loier-lnori —Rickard, Lewis; Renshaw, VI SOUTHFIELD (I CLARKSTON (( ab Paladino cl 3 Samalls 2b 0 0 0 ' Schluchier Haley I 3 0 0 Scholl c I I I Seaman lb 3 I I Barncll II 4 0 2 R. Allan rl-3b 33 2 10 Total! HARNESSi RACING TONITE 8:30 P.M. Ntw Twin Douhlt Wolverine Rdeeway at the DETROIT RACE COURSE SCHOOLCRAFT and MIDDLEBEL"T Mrs. Hagge Putts toZaharias Crown BEAUMONT, Tex. (AP) -The girls griped about pin placements in the final round of the $8,500 Babe ^aharias Open Sunday btit 'they must not have ] bothered Marlene Hagge very 1 much — she won the golf tour-1 nament with some great put-| ting. ' j Marlene, capturing her first i tournament of the year, was { able to find the pin for a, 30-foot! birdie putt on the 18th green that gave her a tie with Carol Mann and Clifford Ann Creed for first place at 215 for 54 | holes. I She also located the pin very well on the third hole of a sudden death playoff, because,.her 40-fbot putt there gave her another birdie and the championship. Marlene Hagge, (1,275 .- 70-73-72-215 ' Clifford Ann Creed, (942 . . 72-70.73-2I5 Cerol Mann, (942 73-67-75-215 Kathy Whitworth, (625 ..... 73 72-71—216 Mary Mills, $625 72-72-72-216 , Sandra McCIInton, (485 ... 7I-75-72-21B Mickey Wright, $367 ...... 69-77-73-219 ' Betsy Rawls, $367 72-73-74-219 Peggy Wilson, $367 72-73-74-219 ■ Marllynn Smith, (28S 74-74-23-221 ■ Beth Stone, $240 73-73-76- 222 Judy Kimball, (240 73 72-77-222 1 Barbara RomacK, $197 73-72-78-223 ! i Margie Masters, $197 75-73-75-223 i Totals j Southfield . .. 002 004 1- 7 1 0 « I Clarkslon 000 000 0- 0 5 3 I Triples-Simmons, Haley. Runs Batted In-Gadwa 2, Haley 2, Deschamp, Slrltl-matter. Pitching—Hayes 5 H, 8 SO; TiiOHclay and Wc^diiesday Only! IMAGINE 3 Tubeless Sizes and WOW What Prices Ur Yo J-50 Ch qice *13 Xt4 Jhuvs if"'''”' Yuli Yit "'7 .S,, ,^«V J'fy, (h, Mi Full 4-Ply Nylon ALLSTATE SP 350 G-SOxlS, 7.50x14, 6.70x15 Tul.clcss Bliickwalls Remodel Your Horne T\VK.N'I’V rilK. Habits Carry Over nA( I'HKSS I'*<>N|)AY.J1[AY }|;i. HMJ/J IIKN CAHKY Home Training Prepares Child for School tty LKHIJK J. NASON, lld.l). Tw'ynflclh century living cun muke home just u place In which Id sleep, eal and change clolhing, mbieud of u plai'c foi (he cxei lioii ol fitinlly influence Fuinily Inthieine has heeti ul „ reinesentu Ihe KMil o( our social syslein live mcmher o( Ills lamlly, and In Ntih Ihe inoNi im|Nitlaiil a * * Itti'loi in the li aining ol ypimg '|lie Iniiiily as a iinil gives l**'*M'l*‘ oppoi limilles loi iralning llial AsNiiriMl Hint they are loved > are diflicull to achieve on jin null iiccepled as ineinliers of Individual liasis Ihe family, children are free The Huwc l.iiiiily in.ikes ck and uniifniid (o meet (he new I cellent use j|f Ihis principle. Mr. | All in all it is obvious that siluullons which each schiwl | detennined H'l'y “I'l* implirtant members of day presonis. ||„,jp p.|,iidreh will gain early j a family. A youngster’s behavior many of Ihe soi’lul cusloms and i ‘'nd Mi s Rowe lake ev-ul school la parlially conirolled graces ihey ai hleved only aflei <*i’V nppoi lunily lo Irain I h e i r by what he reali/.ea he sliindd, marriage. When guests are enler4aliied (hey may he greeted at (he floor liy Ihe l2-yeur-olil daughter. .She already has aequireik tile kiiaek of making guests Jacoby on Bridge ♦ K 10 a ♦ . JhWiotiii Jh ■ sorTu A A Q J 8 2 V A !) ♦ g ti 5 4.8 7 2 niul We..il vnlnenihle South West Kant J'li OjM'ning lend V Q. By JACOBY & SON 'I'his week's columns will deal spec! wilh the jump lo game and Us ; >•'"* P*' .significance. - formation I w'ani lo play in game so I am bidding it. If I were doubtful about playing game I would only have bid Ibree spades II 1 were hileresi ed III a slam I would have ellber bid .some olliei siill ol gone pasl game inyHelf " Wonlil anyone get higher.’ y es. Sfuiie North players (not e\|H‘rts) would jump from one spade lo three spades where-ii|>t>n some Soul h players woiild move to five or even six. Or some Norlli plaver (mi an expert) might revalue his hand stfler the jump to game and bid again. lie sboiildn't. This parlieular jum|) to gam(‘ by South ab.so-lulely iirecludes any slam in-tercst>i at all. North .should re-Iner’s judgement cbibiren are iiichided in llic acllville.s. During (he meal they lake part in serving, table clearing and looking after the guests. They arc included from time lo time in lb(‘ conver.sulion, Their sir-ce.ss III ,s c li 0 0 I uiul ■ projects abdUl Ilic liomc ri'cclves men- JA( OBY You. South, hold: 4KQJ2 VAI01 432 4A 6 & 4 What do you do'.’ ' A—Bid four would likr to mskr a slifhtly stronerr hid if you could do no without coinc post TODAY’S QIIK.STION Your portiuT bids five di mond.s. What do you do Answer Tomorrow llexlblc, lo GIVE ______________ In coopcralt6| lul tacts. Take c responsibllitiy ai _ ______ SCORPIO (Oct. 23 ti what you start. Be a lent Ion. SAGITTARIUS I r Imagination i: make known your sent Ideas, formats, campaigns, must exude confidence and Twlay’s band would be bid a.s shown in the Ixix by almost any group lour liridge players a n d [ilayed j ti s 11 about the samej way by all declarers, .Sout'i would win tlie opening hearl and draw trumps with three leads. Then he would go after clubs and when the suit failed to I break he would make his contract on the mrse provided that | West did not foul up the defense and let him gather in ar overtrick. Why would thc’^ bidding be (he same by almos( everyone? Because this parUcular jump (o game has (he same meaning in all bridge circles. It says, “Partner you have tijld me that you have a minium type opening bid with le support. Based on that in- By s]^1^NEY OMARR Tuesday 'The wise niHe .controls h . . Astrology W ARIES (Mar. » to Apr, 19): Tima past plans If , to fulfill Itoromlses. lo delay, I ba costly. Exp)a. TAURUS (Apr. k - ... - - — -------- ■- “ Is Indicated. Jormalily. ----- ... -----------,...... associates. GEMINI (May 21 lo J ting conditions at horn only temporary React a lain steady pace. Avoir . . . stick wilh the tcied-anu CANCER (June 21 ,*fo July 22): Cycle moves up. Benefit indicated through new contacts. Welcome 'rvVK,NTV ONK • Full and Part Tima • Day and Ivaning laitloni • Tbitlon la Low • Pay at you Oo H.ECTRONICS CUSSFS NOW FOAMING Sn^il Ntt c NAMi.............. ADDRESS.......... PMONi............ CITY............. ELECTRONIC INSTITUTE TECHNOLOGY 2457 WOODWARD AVE. DETROIT 1 WO 2-5660 TritdlMK hoiilfi ifi cfiMy wilh u HotiUuo |*n!HH (-'laMsifled Ad. Juki phone XI2-81BI. Art of Espionage—1 Moderi) Spying Has More Drudgery Thajt Glamor ke vj|IRlllll«' pliiiK- (KDlTOirS NOT IS: Con- trary to popular notion, the art of spying is short on glamor and long on drudgery. ‘‘Nothing could have been more dreari,” said one .Hoviet agent, Ul'lvalional reinirler Harry l>’erguson explores the emit l»» (I IhnwiHirt seriesj ily IIArtllY F'KIUaiSON WASIIINCTON (Ill’ll AlmoKi all of the gliiinoi' Iiuk ^one out of Ihe eniff of Npying. T best Ki he turned lo Fiiislein's Ireatl.ses opean resliiiiranis. All he did on relativily. He knew enough was lo lake an exceptional air- Moseow obviously held Abel in high regard and Just the Ollier day it was uaaoiiaeed he hud been awarded a Died The tidl extent of Ihe damage he did to the iiatloiial seeurily of Ihe United States proltuhly will never he known to anybody except Abel and his su|>erlors in Moscow. (iary I’owers, loo. Is lypleiil of (he new .selenlifie, meehan l/.ed l(H'hnl(|ue ol spving plane high Into Ihe Hiisslan skies. The only Ihing ho ever shot was plelurcH. Pliofo reeonnnissanee Is one of (he major weapons of iihmI era espionage, and that was what Towers was engaged in when he was shot down. CameraN have Imeii developed llial eiiii iierlouii ineredihle leals lidiii idmosl iiiipossihle dislimccs. l‘;Kpei'ls can ill Hie pleliiies (ogellier like a child king a jigsaw pii/./.lc and dcscrlhc iclory milllaiy lirslalliilliin In dclail wind II Imiiscs or prodiiccn, how mnny people work In II imd wind Ihe weekly pi(sliielloii rale Is likely lo he II was pieliires lalu-ii fi iilr Hnd spoiled lliis.sla's |i|i to Inslall roekels in Cuba. Ihe .lames Hoiul, ageni 007 of Ian I'leming's novels, doiihlle.ss would consider I’owers Ht he ;i doll fi'llow Who led .a lioring And It Is safe lo say llial somewhere in Hie seerel files of (he Cenlral Inlelligenee Agency Iheri* Is a deliiiled. illu.siraled deseripllon of Ited China's mi clciir iii!,l; r.'iUoii We know all i'hoiil II ami Hie Chinese know we know (HIUHMKT MUAIS I’owers iK'ver gol a CUlj.'S PONTmC Rockcote PAINT STORE ROCKCOTE PAINTS WALLPAPERS 2 South C«M 332-4643 ttSBOOOOaO{ASOIIIU(loeaeOI)A(UtMAA(iaSOSSA006SBBSOSSSfiBI>SB60flOBII fl BB BBBtmnnnnfTtnnr IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 4 COMPLETE FLOORS OF HOME FURNISHINGS Elevator Service lo All Moors 17-19 S. SAGINAW ST. • IVovmrinl • Coloninl • Trodilioiuil • Mcnlnn All l.y Amoi Ld's lemlimi Munufciclui KROEH LER fatwy-free “AVANT" designs AT MORE REASONABLE PRICES 4-PC. CORRELATED GROUP All pieces completely SCOTCHGARDED for added protectioo^ luxurious 7-ft. Sofa and mr. & mrs. Chair Group REG. 399v no MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY EXCITING DECORATOR FABRICS and COLOR! Look at this sofa and chairs from any angle. They're handsome furniture, pure contemporary with the graceful, curving lines to prove it. Note the trim Lawson backs wdh a low-set row of buttons and the gentle sweep of the arms. The Mr. Chair has an extra’^high 36" back. Seat cushions are super qomfortabte, foam, zippered and reversible. You have a choice of ■ beautiful tdxtures or’tweecf covers that really sing with color and are preformance-tested to. assyreTOtHongeivweeir-ancfservice. ----“ free delivery OPEN Thurs., Fri. 'Til 9 P.M. OPEN Thurs. and Fri. p.m. ‘‘you must be satisfied—this we guarantee^* FE 2-4231 ^ 5 8 8 B J 8 « # J 4 tVaaC a 8888atl8a8BB9OOOOB 0 0 0 0 0t00B0B0 909888 9 0 9g888 B8B88a888RA8888Ba8 88 8 8 a88Baa8a8B»a88P 008 888 8 8 888 8888 8888 08889 88 888 11° ONLY A FULL-SERVICE TTTTTT HAS ALL OF THESE SERVICES FOR YOU IT'S PONTIAC STATE BANK WHEN YOU WANT Complete Financial Services Checking accounts Bank-by-mail Save-by-mail ' 4% savings accounts ' Safe deposit boxes ' Night depository ► Travelers checks ► Personal money orders ► Drive-in windows * Christmas clubs ► U. S. savings bonds ► Contract Collections ► Foreign remittances ► Checkcashing ► Financial counseling loans • Car loans • Truck loans • Business loans • Boat loans • Trailer loans • Appliance loans • Mortgage loans • Collateral loans • Home improvements loans • Personal loans • Life insurance loans These bills may be paid here • Detroit Edison • Mich. Bell Telephone • Consumer's Power Main Office: SAGINAW at UWRENCE STREET DOWNtOWN PONTIAC 8 Convenient BRANCH OFFICES Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. : 4- At: m LEST WE FORGET who |i »iy ♦, t»W. "Iiorti Mom, loMy mul MARKS ^ I T II J MorK*. who »w»y, M»ri.h (>rt«n In not Ihouvliliit Alwayii In out hoitrhi. itaillr ml«i«tl h^ •Itlir, fhyllla |£;: ::::::■ i?E!:r' Tt'2,r= tB;?"”'""" Msss' =#;==:;= ' I o Ihr CoXrlor aloml h» l,,r '“vr, “s££Triz°'“"i“:r--™;^ 4rTS"""’“ »™’’ ' ..•' "• rfsi'iir' |pg=,s=: llflf5:' >is::v“,r=s:;E, ojir'rrE £ .:* .... iisTf,;1;,;^,,—”'- ‘Srj~is.z. >:rud"r'„:Z 1 li" 0 ’ft. !?"••■ "‘£“ST.3r;r"U-";: vmm §rSndchMd“e^f llEr £if";^i;r',sn^ice. fh. fFH”: & Am, ■ ':F- i 'ini'; l>(>NTIAC I’llKSS, MONDAY. »IAV ill. lIHUl Death Notices I WKNTY'rniiK i(i;AirnKi]|, look I Downey (tell) of Co in« Miss U.S.A. Hobbi . t rei({n- represent Ibe United .Slates in I,be Miss Uni- April Road Deaths ■ ind AIM talt™ Is Quite a'Tale' 'iim 'H'ui J\»M i.,.r::L z Ill More tain 1964 I::.':." KA.ST l.ANSINi! i/ll April Kill an iner lities over bi ) atler five Tbe 148 Iraffie deatbs in April Ibis year were four rnori* Ilian for tbe montti a ytuir ago. The April fidality fiKiire rep c on the I S Is bxst or eed $2 mil- Ex-Alabama Chief Dies MOJVTCOMKHY. Ala. (Al>) , be put 1 jy 17. Dur-rdry ami Ih,. basis of' SOUTIIKNI), KiiKlaiul i/l-) I AiiKlers easliiiK I'"' fi-sb 10 miles lisiuK bingo on Mo .sea li- ' today by C. H Warren and fel-Iris whieb came to shore after * * and Tina, were rescued as they drifted in a box off Soutbeiui. In tbe box was a letter saying p|g#f Albert Dal-1 Al present, Warren is looking | p”Tn i';:ii: n,:^Mi"'t;.ii;i'":,^i r"tii, wmm M»,y Cnwcll 101 or OPRI ON A f-i Al ATTINTION S' Sturt Iminodinte AUTO si'Hvici; Z.XTon Mrm..... GAS STATION ATTENDANT, EX* =j53 Ml (HANKS IKON I INI) pRIIl MIN E?EEE^i!?EFi:'iii:r itox At to a.111. today Ibere were replies at The 5, (i, 14, 2,1, 24, «:i. (i,S, «!), 70, 7.1, 77. 8.S, 1)7, 101, SIAl COVIR INSTAlirRS OINIRAl SIRVKf iPillii vl"ll«lllm'"".MMy 0.1111'” l!!,u'ooT.l.'ll (OAIS „.Avio^’;:?^i;:i "-’^%|, 4 DM I). ] !. Pursloy 0 III. 011(1 9:00 p ill. Monlcjoinoi y Ward HM.M ‘it llOOl (graduate APPI V ( Mill' So'rel'.'"'t"l. licX.l !E:rE''£S HUNTOCdN SPARKS GRIFtIN iiioi'’si'^vif^'"'’*^^( e Bioiia VOORHlESSItnfc p^^rL,iiii:\i'i,r::: r:' ;iii: •IMliM@RIIAL DATC rv,.,^rr.v g:?, TIT o'lT I, £3STr-;;i... ....Tr;*’"”" CARPENTER HELPERS CARKTAKFR U) 'MANAGE LARGE sr;,'l;srLS‘"" NIOR.AWNSri MEN WAN I ED III 10 III I OR II ""TorTT.lT Ima'roliriOna'Ind ll"l I .ssx’.V, .llllljp’# PERMANENT PART-TIME OR : Phphe 3(^^8181 P.etNTIAC Pt^SS ^CASSIFIED SERVICE FULL f TRADE-IN PROGRAM! Taylor Agency OR. 40306 Salesmen 1, for ex- ZZoZTiT: Montgomery Ward Jul rwKN rv rW)im ■sps'S SCRJW MACHINF 0PIRA10R SCRIW MAOIINI OPFRATOR TtDS WANTED S?-';u”rrF)?r "EjsJE, LS:/I;rEr v,r7"'’ lORCH PARIS MAN ' ,Mi!mI^' l^^,;'"' \ A,':"WHdir I.t,.'',"s. ,NM''''man' ,«i:r\irp:,,"r;,-'ZJ-::: ^«,,> ami Z, 4Ts'wX"- rnK roNriAc i‘hks!^. m()m)AV. may ai. iojti BEAUTY OPERATOR EXPERIENCED $100 A WEEK i: I ' pm.u'r:„^y Cornplomeler Of)o razors i:;iy tAi WOMAN H‘)N 3 TO 6 MONTHS ASSIGNMENT Royo, ook cNKi Ponlm.; Aiiui '-.a;., ivlilon dadlo Strvict 24 sias^ •gS-S'ss “rfr...s:r,/?s«' “l-lSri./Kf.!”'"' ' ..,'v: Jurat's;' $1,000 DOWN wm girl service THOMPSON AND SHERIDAN PRESS OPIRATORS PLACE A . PRESS WANT AD SEE THINGS HAPPEN! M/HB OiRi n FDR NtDHT SHIFT «E‘.....!‘'v!”!“ «..................' H.»SwaHF* wni 1,. .. » '''•■"■’■ ..i... win, n.»k. I io» ...liA BEL VIS IA APTS. , Mon .ml blood donors :;m:;lVlon"'V'.’'D’"lllm,.oI.'il"' R«.r ..kaNd'" N^W*"oNb''bRDROOM URGENTLY NEEDED "“S!,, „M;,Er.r.s4'" '^w.(l'!"i"pn> «>. ' "b'.i.Chi"’1. MIKNTlON 1.01 I FOB AND IIIOH 5 AMO Wanted Children to Board 28 , U:llivlv fCOTCrfl^llCff Bli$|IIE$$ ani> SEBVIOI QIRidiTOBY =■ =,r-rE '" I'llnTwInl lltllVnn^^ Dinincg Room Waitresses ::r ....... F,r w^MUD. wAiTRBssFs,|''/v^;' r'.r! :;;::rn'^^yi:;i,j:;;r rHr’l?%r HrS^o::^ wim ,o. ,i,An,,l $9,990 ‘ YOUNG BIlV'hOMI S R.?^stVr\T,r:N^J?J,’r.llllr!rN $Ui!)0n B«l AL MARTIN, Realtor ATerrific'Boy MODEL 49 Wo/oo Stars Galore! l#‘...... “'.“prr HC)R ABA mi: 1 ;:,:'.;r mu,. p^rrii^nDrr'/n "z:zj ' suburbs -" !=£?or,S sms WILLIS M. NjCHOLIE Sir TUK. MONTIM' IMU1S8. MOIVDAV. MAY .ti; \\\m "SMITH" ^ WATKINS HILLS MP - 'tXr'M. M.n MILLER l;v.. (all I 6 a iW or I f } /J/J h"'" le 2 0262 "^MPSEN ’"r,r,iTv;;,r“ '"lilly jCREAOrNOW "£r\S' TvvK.N'rv.KiyK FINANCIAL WORRIES? BUCi^NER FINANCE COMPANY '="£”£S'S5,ei loans ' wl;'-'-'"-I" LOANS ( I’ANGDS, KIAl I OK ''”S‘fA5I :;£rS“r ^ ^ ... ISO II, IKONW^GL -F~-- Al PAUIy' Rfinllor WILLIS M. BRFWLR oi< i miio ' i.yo. REAL ESTATE WATERFORD TWP. .. EE 4 1538-9 LOANS TO $1,000 CANAI lOTS OAKLAND LOAN CO. I YOU I S’liiiSsH ivi°evei ....... " "■'” rjrSliown by 'appoint LOW COST LAKE FRONT lohn K. Irwin i's^gji O'NEIL IS TERRIFIC KINZLER THINKING OF SELLING? WANT CASH? Br'a'Slav'^ REAL IY 1 CLARKSION AREA oA.yAw COUNTRY HOMESItES .,UN.OM.AKP O. V(, .....^i^ RiiMf. Mann $25 TO $1,000 ■ '^^STATE^TNANa !f ................................. """ 6J BATEMAN IlI'S'H'Sis ^yr.,i.T=', AUTO PARTS STORE ;i2s // 'BUD" rmoil^suH /s'xwo' pmuAKn! Young Refiroes CASS LAKE lilt:?'-" EJ"'- iTmL;"",,. l OrMUAI PHONE 682-2211 BesI Buys Tociay :r=£EL“£:“::L'^:x£-~ ^ c:.rL“2;=,rL;r hmofo^ ...... mmm lo(l(lP ami Ilya Yircam, lilaal lor rr ap77n nb cc Cion ■ ■ ' Ml* 65 TVVKJNTYSIX li!lS ^r»b.r;rt!.... ....... . ASM ANI-. ( A«»V i . «T,l„ct”'. ,«l'lH.y'.... i:",; VM \..............'.i^ '>^11:1.1 v............... THK. PONTI/VC I'HKHS. jMONDAV. MAV ;il. nm.\^ 79CAUNIVAI. I»y lilfk IWr ■ -J ...............i ........ ,';rNAN.'fc .> u, f r. i.^E I ...... ...... ",■.IV*.‘H',l"'■''‘^'' V ( ;. I NirW kini>.h'in tlH ItlK (>l/i ...... (ODNIKV (I Ho 'r"viiv' ir5;'H"i::r"r: :'/,,;:;nvr.r -....- - ................ ™“,r;r'‘'’ ;;■;;;.......«....,i~k..::r:::. “SSir'ff .':iJ.'“« 3ApsrrA.;"f;; ..........j:;;:”::r,i, ... R'»8*& ac.jrs ••«• ««!»>« “,4r' *•"• ......... i|:ir:;; lack Haaan z:^zz GAfMGf DOOKS . MIU’. i( ’ ( VmI l(fvriJr.r™v MllriiJi BOOni CAMPfR "■ ............'».. „v;r.nV;.......... Ap,;;:' .„!7„““r,„ ,..........A,..“i,.ir»r::;'■•>• ,, campin. sPKiAi 'crTsi...,;: ,':;»i,, A, n„A:;.ii’rmi‘;,'ii„i i.r,:r,..r,' ;gay^.%jg'S: Yo»r M Buys Ari> ,1 VIII.V.. Ml * W41 «1 ASSIK0N„MP(* I UNt STAH 73a OAKLAND / '£i,I,r"S f-.ioT^Ai IIMIUIIM "'li'r'iS'iTS;. swineK n ^'ifiRst 'siilKlfiiiii.s U (dill AHIMIKNAIM HliNA .yif" ''’!l^iAUp''\l«I(f'FM %il(l Id' I IHRBC.I AS (HUI('•« ,,„i «S".ru‘.T?K. r%£f"£■:i : £rfwr''"°I^Trailers oTVm'Ib: : ATTENTION ' i CENTURY TRAVELMASTER LUMBER ‘SsE'SHL= Your Bust Buys A ASS,KmrMH*u.Nu 391 S, ! '■'mTm motor' SALES ' ’”'oS'v;.r ' Did You Know? ’ VIUAGE RAMIUER AVERILL'S SPECIAL PRICE PAID POR I95VI9A3 CARS VAN'S AUTO SALES 4S« DIHI. 'Z.,A "lOP DOIIAR PAID" GLENN'S 9SJ \A/Pnt Huron 51. f-6 47371 HU 41797 Ellsworth AUTO SALES ^ WANTED Ttj 1^60 VW .,rarrr-;r,.., lloiiior llighj. oy.«r"M'ti\.i«“'"’‘‘"'"''r7A‘'in« SKS" B Autobahn Motors. Inc. VILLAGE RAMBLER ITS 19 w 1 2 Mon 43 E. Wollon FE « fiiSi Burmeister's “E.V:rs.F—" Giar--— j£;r[p:'^.5S'o.............. PIO,^. S.C„. „O.N lr?CVi“'‘ TOM STACHLER AUTO & MOBILE SALES Pontiac's Only Mercury WE NEED CARSI Aolthew Hargreaves 43, OAK. AND AVENUE 101 A BUICKS GALORE! JOHNSON MOTORS r/oT S“ :i FISCHER BUICK .S-'.™T.s „.i,: '■rs'tJjL's.sr ™" ) tCJUlHAAtNI A25U11 ...^ **Mi>L.....^ mmM" |H:£i£sS kx,rs. E i "vrAr„n“c"sss i=."j„s f.™ pr.d.« PUMPS - AIR - ONE TENT PLUS SOME CAMPING I t PLAYMATE “ ^^‘'gir4,^^4s;? ; P^^Zr'S- Ts- TmAO.. H pTe's,S79ran^% .0. .2 22 yy.ru: ./ ..l.«n:s_..... ni'jCFoof'^oounmTiirrT H OLIVER BUICK BUICKS RENAULTS OPELS Double-Checked USED CARS —4rUy- .hyi-, 1 i I , $99 Cadillacs 1962s, '63s und '64s. Al, |. As low I li- WILSON PONTIAC-CADIUAC ..r:''-".. i Ctrt W'N»A. King Aulo TtVioer '’&S'|pSrr!« PATTERSON (HRYS "MAY ESTATE STORAGE 109 s, IrasI Olvil. l»*,V UIBVY ;i4tl (UHK INCH, INI DOWrr,. OR S im. SHARP »,n. BILL SMITH'S CHEVROLETS Sr-£r="~€ S)Oe This One Boforo It s Too Into! 1963 CorvellQ Sling Ray BILL SPENCE Chrysler Plymouth AlWAYS A TOP SeiECTION gooowilPused cars Haupl Ponliac 1963 CORVETTE Turner Ford Repossession TIIK. roN'l’IAC riilCSH. MONDAY. MAY JH. 10 New ttn4 Ut«d Cur* 106 M AUM A 1)1 IK 10 j $99 iSr& KESSLiER'S DODGE OA»l4«fl ‘4 on I he Floor 1964 Dodge Poloro 500 Sport Coupe $2195 BEATTIE 'SHflSTw? $99 . Down BOB BORST Oldsiriobiles "Wliv CANT Ihcy conU‘ in. Moinii ThevTo mjy RKST FRIKNDS!" N.W J n»< c... lOi FSSSS: rWKNTV-SKVKN wi^ riNAN( n .King Aulo ■’'rFBT'oM' l»M PON MAC hONNPVIIIP, 4 il.lm ( minry yalliiw I nnll>.>l In ICl", P'Ln«lA»i'm"' BOB 1K)BST A an ot I '|irS TtS-'™-” ».w .»d u..d C... .061«.»„„d u..d 1.,. ,06 'i'rrcSr \ HILLTOP auto SAIES, INC. :.r,£ r.s .....IdL,.. $99 'bob'borst iw»P pJ Visto cruiser with lull pow I noT' '■*”P “’’'J "" VILLAGE ...j RAMBLER •ES"i . “ mT .. 1961 PONIIAC WAGON RIPOSSTSION '’A;:;p,i.„i?i::rT;:SyT’" •’ 965 oTo (ONvruTimi:, * < h;:v,. " I06S nOMnAC^ICMPCST y-.it Ml: I HO, NfW llRES, oo ...Dohi SMAiFad'BIG I or VILLAGE RAMBLER rioluFiow m?l»ow *1965*inZ biers' (It Rose Rombler. Our' |)nssn(l and wq con sell for '"'"rose RAMBLER ... $99 Sri--EvHAi'’H; i.rvr'„.:rs,T;~' " "‘ir rTrs. 962 OAKIAND FE 8-9291 Kituj Aulo riE'iEEH'sT «S'iS.S£!5; PMI .IISON CHEVBOm CO, i llOd S. W„.„lwaM, Av. Ml dJ/H 196? PONTIAC $99 3 on the > '1~Tree l»S« rORD COUNTRY^^^^ I9S9 . TH,d° alN,;o”vIl,5 v/ry i l.ar, 1^64 FOrd H.«„ndi)ie,'oR asm.' ' Goloxie 5 Hardtop A! ESES--' ESTATE -ssmss. i“=== ~;£E-Er££ Ippiliili bob'borst ...E'S=5; RP' 6/7 S. LAPflR RD. m7'?'2041 $99 LLOYD'S rSliiLL STORAGE 109 S. East nivd. 333-7161 gHS,SSi§ s:““—« 1964 Chevy Impolo 4-Door Hardtop s:£|5;« $2395 BEATTIE SSSr 1964 CHEVROLET ,-ooor-s. BEATTIE 1964 FALCON ■’iV's^j..sr sws WE FINANCE S‘S'Sr-IS S™EL3;:ys ^:Tis:rxr£:.’£. g„ra£s.“y;:.g . Patterson Chevrolet Co. s. v«««™ «' < »3S ffgpss VILLAGE RAMBLER Turner Ford 6I2-3400 F'ryoSor'n LLOYD'S All mtr CRESr - Waiianty ; S. W,5aTr““"’M, 737,d $895 00'*''“'''^''^"'' I T’akp'^ovl!5'.«ymJnT$V’n 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863FAon®1lOFe5°7°7?7 BOB BORST ei„vi.:sasaayv.. "vsk,. ’.rr., xfs. m !, •»«"■•••,„3, PONTIAC’ " “""keeg6'’pontiac . LLOYD'S •wfSuNr r^,rs:;,.?r,i;£“£ BOB BORST 1962 Mercury FE 8-7137 LLOYD'S Z£U:'JS°.£S,Z;.%’ ""”P959 PONTIAC VILLAGE Ramrlor Ml 6-3900 I,L.OYD'S "P96? GRAND PRIX' 1111 down. Financitta no problom. Full $1,695 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 T;r„wy?:ir =£Glil“““ 1963^ TEMPEST 2-DOOR 'SPORTS REPOSSESSION VILLAGE RAMBLER .6 S. Ml 6-3900 visii nil ' USED CAR LOT OF Pontiac Rotoil Sf'ora AAM.,aa..n.S,raPl 1963 RAMBLER Amhossodor 990 4 -door, VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK 1963 RAMBLER American 440, has twin stick shift, 1 owner, radio, VILLAGE RAMBLER Ml 6-3900 __ Turner Ford LLOYD'S '"'’"”"1963 PONTIAC 'Ll" "”'333-7863 DO YOU NEED A - QUALITY USED CAR? 1 FULL BLOCK of Pontiac^ - Chevys Fords - Cadillacs Ramblers - Volkswagens and Simcas OVER 40 To Choose From — From $50 Up — -------^_1._ RUSS JOHNSON Pontiac - Rambler On M24 in Lake Orion . ' MY 3-6266 ■60 S. Telegrapli AWO ' FE 8-9661-2 Across -from Tel-Huroni Shopping Center TWK^^TV^ICMT iffr. Tbm ACADEM\ I AWARDS! ‘‘ZOKBA 'niic |•<)N'^A(' l\IU;SS,JlONl)AV, MAY III, \\m i; rei^:k” ANTHONY QUINN ^ ALAN BATES" IRENE PAPAS FEATURES V 1:00-9:30 m OYNM TMw. paNavision* I OYNAMATtON" 11 lUMCOlO*>U ^KEECO I Bachelors Cool to Cook School Without Coeds i’ K K T t) in A. Soulli Alrioi (An I'retoria Technical Col-i lege huH given up its crash pro-; gram of frying to teach hache-J loi !) l)ow lo C(>ok. Wori’led hy ii null (lloimll.il'n nd I vice Ihul Ilia iiiuiiy haclieliiiN In j Ihe lown were eating their way out of baked bean cans Into an ulcer ridden middle agi*, Ibe c(ll lege slarled a a|M'clal ciMikliig I course Tbe first one was most successful, say V. .Serfoiileln, head of adnil edncallmi at tbe college, AAA I Tbe sisoiid floppisl for lack of support, however. The problem of bachelors llv-' lag Old of cans is being laken seriously in Ihi.s adniinisirallve capll.d of .Soiilli Africa. To get Ibe iiieii iiileresled, Serfonleiii has propo.sed Hint the college .sliould slarl cocdiicallonal cooking cour,se,s, Stratford Actors Win Big Increase in Pay TOItONTO (AP) Actors at the Stratford Shakespi'ure Pes tival have won pay raises totaling 60 per cent over the next four years. This year they’ll get a 2ri per cent increase, boosting mini-! mum salarie.s from $60 weekly j to $100 During the n<‘xt three 1 years the minimum will go up 1 $10 each year. SI’Ain TIMI'l PIKUl'irT The amphlbi-Mis plane Koberl Otio ba.s been working on for bree \ears Is nearing complelion. Otto, 4S, ^ '.Imwn working on the plane in the shipping For Modern Facility room of a ('hicago firm he owns, A licensed pilot for many years, be works on the project in bis free time MGM Studying Studio Plan By BOB THOMAS Al’ Movie-Televisimi Writer IIODDYWOOI) The will-o-I the wisp of a truly mmlern movie studio for llollywimd has not \(‘t gone a glimmering. Last year the town was startled by a hold p r 0 p 0 sal: brand new studio complex to be built in the Malibu Mount tains and operated jointly by MOM, 20th Ccntury-Kox and Columbia. The reasoning behind Ibo plan seeimsT simple enough: the stu dios’ physical plants were aging: a complelely new studio could introduce more modern methods of filmmaking with conscrpient savings; Ibe present^ studios occupy highly taxable | THOMAS land within tbe city; combining facilities would cut down overhead and eliminate slack peri-(kIs. Not the least consideration was Ihat Ibe new studio would be outside Los Angeles’ smog bell. Hut IlollywomI wasn’t ready for a revolution, and the tristudio plan died in company committees' DID SriMULA’IK Tbe profiosal did stimulate the thinking of M(!M executives on iiKKlerni/.ation matters, and the company is now toying with the idea of going it alone with a new studio. MGM has acquinxl from Ihe .lanss Corp, a two-year option on Ihe purchase of a l,f>00-acre plot at 'riiousand Oaks, 30 miles norlhwesi of Hollywood. The (’onejo Valley property affords ideal conditions for film making. The climate is mild. Ibougb a bit warmish in sum I mer. 'I’bere is plenty of flat land for offices, stages and street ' sets, plus rolling hills and wooded canyons for oulibior loca-! lions. The studio woidd be easily reached via freeways. MOM is moving ahead with its study. A feasibility survey will be banded over lo planners [ who will create designs for the new studio and estimate costs. ! Their findings will be presented to the board of directors in late fall. ’Pbe esiimale for new con struction is hopefully s<‘t at $30 million; if (be plannn's’ figures go too far beyond that mark, the project might be abandoned. Most of the studios of Hollywood, meaning Culver City, Westwood, the San F'ernando Valley as well, date back to the early H)20s or before. Some of the stages were built in that era, nllhough most went up during (he talkies boom of the early 1930s. Collegians Aid Patients in Project CAMIIIIIDC.K, Muss. IJf>^ On a (|uiel street near Hui'vard is a crowded house called Wellmet. iCiglil ndlege students live there with eight menial patients. Some imtlenlH, says Dave Kanlor, Wellmet Project pre.sl-denl, are "the people everybisly has given up on ’’ Wellmet is a place lo live for (hose who have no place else except the wanks GEORGE MAHARIS ■ ' I8THEHI8E %ny Curtis Natalie WMd^^ Henry Fonda Lauren Bacall » Mel Ferrer ^ ! Klom Wellm;q, Hie palienl;. go oul lo look for jobs aiul III begin their reltirii | c "Iicie: "T1 I 1 * 1 A siiy.s Dr Vh 1 r (i . '!!> a , Ma-, ‘iacliii.sel •; (1 re i - • of i(- Ml'. in (Iriig iidijiclKiii and Wellriu vice lire,- (L'lil mu, tr ' s II'" * *- A ' Wellmet l>ro,(‘('t r II II s 1 li e bouse with a .siiuill lu ard el ui rectors, a iisyclil; iitrisi and a staff of oiKV BLGAN in I9(M» Sponsored by .iH..Ai. UNITED ARTISTt iiMn«i PLiiisiov MimiiiScii YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 As a step toward final passage, tbe Senate limited debate on the voting rights bill, limitation of Senate debate. a-always occurs before a final vote b-ls a common happening c-ls a very rare event 2 For the first time In history, the American Republics have a.. a-Joint space project b-peace-keeping army c-Washingtdn, D.C., headquarters 3 The “space stroll” attempt by Astronaut Edward White II will be a second goal of the Gemini 4 mission. The main goal of the flight Is to. a-land on ground Instead of the water b-practlce joining a second spacecraft c-find how a four-day space trip affects humans 4 Congressmen are receiving heavy mall from Americans about Senator Thomas J. Dodd’s proposed laws concerning. a-mail-order purchase of weapons ^boxing rules c-taxes on cigarettes 5 Queen Elizabeth, on her visit to West Germany, spoke of the “ties that bind us to this land.” i^e meant that..... \ a-Germany once, ruled Britain b-her ancestors were German c-Iarge German conymunltles exist In Britain PART II-WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. The Pontiac Press Monday, Moy 31, 196.') BN Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. 1.. A (a) governmen t changed Its decision to make new ones at this time (b) Franz Jonas be-' comes President (c) too many Ameri-c a n 8 failed the 2..... driving test 1.. ...cloture 2...deceased 3.. ..11revamp i-repalr, give a hew ' form , b-protection, refuge " c-noisy disturbance 4 ...anotory 5 ..row e-dead PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names you can correctly match with the clues. 1..Marian Anderson a-a singer (d) opened new mem- v-. • ’ bershlp'drive \ .camiooia..,' (e) U.S. closed Its Embassy here (f) an Indianapolis 3 .. event SATURN (g) helped In an art 4 .. sale for London and New York custo- 9. mers (h) placed Pegasus n into orbit (1) tin miners a political force here Tbe MGM lot came into existence in 1919, when the founder j of Culver City offered 40 free I aere.s to any movie makers who ' would establish studios there, (^anny Sam (Joldw>n knew a bargain when , be saw onej he put up his studio there. I MGM flourished for the next ' 2.') years, adding back lots that j brought its total property to 187 acres. The last six of the 32 ' stages were built in 19.38. SAME EQUIPMENT I Technology has advanced, yet ' movies are still made with the same bulky equipment of 30-odd years ago. Introduction of new methods was delayed in the past 15 years as the film industry fought for its very survival. Now, it appears, Ihe film companies will make it. But will j they akso adopt modern meth-1 ods? 3’he surveys now being made at Thousand Oaks may well determine that; Former Portuguese filagship to Be Sold ' BOMBAY, India (AP)t — The forM^ flagship of the Portuguese navy in India is to be auc-tioneq Inext month after lying at ! anchor here for three years. ! Tie / frigate Alfonso Albugu-■ erque /was run aground by the I Indiari navy in 1961 during the takeover of the Portuguese en-j clave of Goa. Later it was re-' floated and taken to Bombay. | priKluctive members in the popular son.se: most hold jobs' such as file clerk, stock boy, aide in a nursing home. Some simply live off pensions. -* A * "We feel,’’ says Dr. Gelineaii,^ “that tbe community should have more give. That it should | be willing to keep people who^ are not bot-shotS at producljvi-ty. The whole idea is to have ‘ one community, not one community of sick people and i other of well people” KNOB I Mil* s. COMMERCE DRIVE-IN Theatre UNION LK. at HAGGERTY RD. EM 3 0661 BRINGS THE BEAT ^ TO THE BEACH! METROCOLOR EUliS OVER HiS heap in love, GIRLS, J HAP^ I = CO-FEATURE = FIRST SHOW 1:00 P.M. Italy Peace Corps? ROME (AP) -L Twenty-five Christian Democrat members of Parliament have asked the government to set up an Italian peace corps. Their plan would exempt corps volunteers from ^ military service. STEVEv McQueeni The Love Story of A Born Loser! LEE REMICK-DON MURRAY WMi- I nii k Dri' Fine. Foods — -Liquor ni.S an«l HER Couples Niftht-IVIONU \\ S Special — 1 Full Price, 1 Hrilf-Price HI SINESSMEN S LUNCH SPECIAL PRICES-COCKTAILS 4 to 6 DAILY . (j) third longesi total y >—eclipse this cen-tiiry -‘’=0 AUSTRIA # i NOW! G^T FI?EK PLAV6KOL)HD --+1 TWO foRTHE SEESil STARTS SUNDAY!^ Robert Carroll Mitchuin Baker 'lUR'IIOiilB' I DRIVE-11 J ITHEATER ^ I JiJaJoa. •*” ftliONY Sean ^ Goimeiy 'Dr.No' V eOLOR mKmm CLEMENS K[ §!| -PLUS-KIRK DOUGLAS JAMES MASON ' nw. lOMs • mn loiM 2Q000Leagues SHOWN LAsf AT THE WATERFORD THEATRE ! ^FLUFFY" and "THE SWORD OF ALI BABA» THE PONTIAC rilESS. MONDAY. MAY in, lOUA rWl<’.NTY-NmK ' —Television Programs— Programs fumishsd by stationt liatad In this column ara subloot to chang* without notion. Chonn»Ui 2- WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CkLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS MONDAY ISVENING «:(MI (2) (4) News, Wealher, .Spoils (7) Movie: ■J'l’iirple lloHlt Diary" (III (irogiesH) (0) Miiglllit (ioi'llln (!M)) People Al l! Fuimy (Ml) (,’reallve Person «;30 (7) (Color) News. Weulh- (1)1 Hal Mastersoii (!>()) Comedy Carnival (:>ll) World of Mimic 11 (2) Dohie (dills Maynanl’s commanding officer orders him to cii off heard. ) (Color) (icorge I’ier- rot (7) Ensign O’Toole (D) Movie: "The Informer" (1935) Victor McLaglen, Preston l'’oster (50) l.iltle llascals (5(i) International Magazine 7:30 (2) To Tell the Trulh (4) Karen Suddenly Karen is very unpopular and can’t figure out why. (7) Voyage Scaview picks up a defector to the West. (!>()) I.loyd ’I’liaxlon 8:00 (2) I’ve Cot A Secret (4) Miin I-'rom U.N.C.l.E. (.')(!) Silver Wings 8;:t() (2i Andy Criffilh Opie finds a purse witli $:>() in it. (7) No Time for Sergeants Caiitain and Sergeant figure to make money betting against Will in shooting match. (50) Fastball 9:00 (2) Lucille Ball (4) (Color) Wendy .and Me (9) Ferment (See 'I’V Features ) 9:30 (2) Danny Thomas (7) Bing Crosby (9) Don Messer's .Iiibilee 10:00 (2) (SfMicial) News (See TV Features) (4) Alfred Hitchcock (7) Ben Casey (9) Show of the Week (See TV Features) (Alfred Hitchcock (7) Ben Casey (9) Show of the Week (Sec TV Features) (.50) All Star Golf 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports "‘(SO) Horse Kacing 11:15 (7) Nightlife TV Features Role of Church Aired ANDY WII.I.IAMS. 0:(M) p m (4) Art Ca guest on colOi' show. ‘ FKIIMFNT, 9 (H) p in. (9) First of lour discussions about Christian church, its future and Its role in battles for civil rights and against proverty and violence. "WHAT WENT WIIONG IN SANTO DOMINGO?” 10 ()() |).m. (2) One hour examination and evaluation of event.s and policies that led to present crisis in Dominican Itepublic. snow OF THE WEEK, 10:00 p.ni .Schuster variety show of the sea.son. (9) Last Wayne and 11:30 (2) Movie: "Viva Zapala" (1952) Marlon Brando, Anthony (juinn, .lean Peters. (4) ((.’olor) .lohnny (-’ar.Hon (9) Movie: (9) Movie: "Highly Dangerous" (English, 1951) Dane Clark, Margaret Ixickwoml 1:00 (4) Lawman (7) After Hours I’UESDAY MOIINING 6:10 (2) On The Farm Front 6:15 (2) News 6:20 (2) Operation Alphabet 6:30 14) (Classroom (7) Funews 6:50 (2) News, Editorial 7:00 (2) Happy land (4) Twlay (7) .lohnny Ginger 8:00 (2) Captain KangaroQ (7) Big Theater 8:30 (7) Movie: "Coney Island” (1943) Betty Grablc, George Montgomery 8:45 (.56) English Vi 8:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-lloUnd 9:00 (2) Mike Douglas (4) Living (9) llompcr Room 9:15 (56) Come, Let’s Head 9:30 ( 56) American History . 9:55 (4) News (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 ( 56) Our Scientific World 10:30 (2) I Love Lucy (4) What’s'Hiis Song? (9) William Tell 10:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 19:55 (4) News 11:00 (2) Andy Griffith (4) Concentration (7) GirlTalk (9) Long John Silver Eorl Finds U. Sj, Burgers Beefed Up by turopeans . just between us BY EARL WILSON COPENHAGEN - This is a secret . Americans... O.K.? . . . Though the Europeans pretend to scorn our cuisine, and insist that French cooking is superior to everything in the world, they really, down deep in their stomachs, believe that American food is the best . . . why el?e do they try so hard to imitate it? I was studying a menu here on the broad, sometimes sunny, sometimes chilly, terrace of the Anglcterre Hotel and was struck by the magic words: "American Hamburger.” WILSON I was enchanted by the foreign atmosphere. There was a New Jersey accent at the next table, then there was my own Ohio dialect, and behind me I heard a Texan saying: "Ah think we’ll have foah Bloody Marys to staht with, and a little ole refill after than, then we’ll orduh somethin’ to drank, and then we’ll get around to the maynew ...” ' So I ordered the American Hamburger, and at length the waiter man brought me a hamburger which America should have but doesn’t, at least not in the part of America I frequent. It was beautiful, it was actistic, it was a joy, and it was also delicious. R was a creation. It had obviously been “fashioned” by a soda fountain wizard who’d got bored with making sundaes and had been let loose with the chopped meat. How tall the hamburger! Probably eight inches, topped by a- mushroom, the whole creation pierced and held together by an elongated plastic stiletto much more elegant than the toolhplchr we ^ hamburger rolls were bur- 5s=«ished-gd*~4ii"-e6lm^^^ the ^eraT la TeiT^Thirr" peeped Into, I discovered peppers, tomato, mustard, butter patties, relishes, pickles, and, I think, an anchovy . . . and, of ' course, minutely diced onion. Have I been going to the wrong places in America that I haven’t eaten an American Hamburger in America? Wandering away from this eating revelry, I encountered twd-girls from New Jersey who exclaimed: “Oh, we jusPhad the best American hot dogs down the street!” “What made them so good?” I wasn’t interested too much* in food at this instant. “French fried onion rings!” one gal said. American hot dogs, American hamburgers, you’re really becoming works of art... in Europe. Congratulations! WISH I’D SAID ’THAT: “A small town is a place wdiere, when you get a wrong number, you only chat for about.an hour”—Joey Adams. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “An” expert is an ordinary man a hundred miles from home.” i EARL.’S PEARI^: When a woman says she wonT be a minute. She’s usuiflly right. “Just'take a look at y(W wife’s purse (says the English Digest) if you want proof that moneyl^’t everything” . . . That’s earl, brother. Il:’20 (.56) What’.s New 11:30 (2) McCoys (4) Jeopardy (7) I’ricel.s Highl (9) lluwkcyc 11:50 (56) Heading for Teachers TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) 1.0VC Of Life (4) (Color) Call My Bluff (7) Donna Heed (9) Bingo 12:’20 (56) Science Is Fun 12:25 (2) News l2:.'i0 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) ((’olor) I’ll Bet (7) Father Knows Best 12:35 (56) Spanish Lesson 12:45 (2) Guiding Light 12:50 (56) Come, Let’s Head 12:55 (4) News 1:00 (2) Jack Benny (4) News (7) Rebus (9) Movie: “Jol(nny Come Lately” (194:J) James Cagney, Grpbe George 1:10 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (56) Children’s Hour 1:15 (4) Topics for Today l:‘25 (.56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turn.s (4) (Color) Let’s Make A Deal (7) One Step Beyond 1:55 (4) News (56) American History 2:00 (2) Password (4) Moment of Truth (7) Flame in the Wind 2:2; (56) Safety Circle 2:25 (56) Profile of a Lady 2:30 (2) House Party (4) Doctors (7) Day in Court 2:50 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News 3:00 (2) To Tell the Truth (4) Another World (7) General Hospital 3:15 (9) News 3:25 (2) News 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) (Color) You Don’t Say (7) Young Marrieds (9) Take 30 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Match Game (7) Trailmaster (9) Razzle Dazzle 4:25 (4) News 4:30 (2) Movie: “The White Goddess” (1953) Jon Hall, Ray Montgomery (4) Mickey Mouse Club (9) Adventures in Para- C Junior Editors Quix on- RECORDINGS QUESTION: How can sound be pul on a record and then come out of it? A A A ANSWER: Sounds start by vlhiations or sound waves In the air. We don’t .see smimi waves, l)ul onr artist has .syin-Iwlized them by lines (2) being puslied away from the moulb of a singer (1). As lhe.se travel into a microphone (3), lliey are eoii-veried into cleelrical vibrations or signals, wbieii can llien move along a wire, 'nirougli tlie use of an amplifying tube (4), these signals arc made much stronger. They move lo a small magnet which sets a niHIng needle vibrating (5). As a wax disk revolves below the needle point, the needle eats grooves Into the wax. The various back-and-lorlb or up-atul-e (Egypt) 13 MeUaly (4 Homan theaters 15 Money and hot — 17 Crafts 18 Account of goods shipped (ah.) 19 Atlantic (ah ) 20 limcrllMKl 21 HoverUh zodiac sign (|)l ) 23 Seasoning (pi.) 24 Within (eomh. form) 25 Reduce 27 Sudden outburst 29 Hot mulled 30 pbigle (comb, form) 32 Oeeaim 36 Longing 40 Island oH .Siimalifi 42 Anylaaly 43 Gulp down 45 Earn 46 lUnekbird of ciU'k(H) family 47 Compass point 411 (>1(1 ’i'estammil prophet 49 ()1 marriage 52 Tinge 53 Arlkarah Indian 54 Him 55 Frappe.s 56 I’o.s.sess(,xl V Ob.serve.s IM)WN 1 Wet l)v .spla.sbing 2 Barrier 3 In.surance (ah.) 4 Hogues 5 Saluted 6 River island 7 Married lady’s title (ab ) i r r r- r 6 r r" 1A IT 12 13 14 lb ' lA L rr Ifl ■ IS 21 24 2t 30 ^2 b sr 55^ 42 4& 46 46 - p 41 63 54 6& 56 FT 91 These pulsations arc turned into clcelric signals, amplified (7) and made lo vibrate a loud s|)cakcr (8). Sound waves resulting from this (9) reach your ears and duplicate the singer’s voice. ★ ★ A FOR YOU TO DO: Find out about the high fidelity system, or Hi-Fi, in which there arc two speakers, one of which (the woofer) reproduces low tones and another (the tweeter) Hie high ones. Tlien learn what stereophonic recording means. II l)ni(‘liii('(l 9 Dexleroiis 10 Caldron 11 Relieves 16 Feminine uppellalion 20 Hart of Great Britain 22 Ileal unit (ab ) '23 Bii'lhplace (ab ) 26 (smsmnes 26 (!onlamliuile 31 llelore 33 Dicomodves 34 Dl.slre.ss 35 Eggs and eoimlry 36 Bloodless 37 Norlbern Ireland coiinly 38 Lilts 39 YolosI II Greek gnivesloiie.s 42 Itiire violin 41 Mmliier's direclion 49 Title lor a (|iieeii (ali.) .50 Aftirmallve vote 51 City in the Netlierlanils Answer to I’revioiis I’uzzle Retired Generol Dies; Veteran of 3 Wars PROVIDENCE, HI (AIM R(‘tired Maj, Gen, Harold Richards Raker, 73, veteran of three wars who entered the Army as a buck private in tlie Mexican border conflict, died Sunday. He commanded the 43rd Artillery Division in World War H and flew 73 combat rcconnais.sancC missions, earning two Silver Stars, a Bronze Star, the Air Medal and l.«gion of Merit. A bank executive in private life, he retired nine years ago. Highways Are Museums 5:00 (4) (Color) George Pierrot “Touring Russia” (7) Movie: “The Fast and the Furi-dus” (1954) John Ireland, DorothyMalone (50) Movie (56) Art and Artists 5:30 (9) Rocky and His Friends (56) What’sNew? 5:45 (9) Bugs Bunny 5:55 (2) Sports (4) Here’s Carol Duvall Won't Have to Hump DUDLEY, England (UPI) -George the Camel, who has provided rides for almost 100,dOO children at the local zoo, is being retired to plush paddock at Look of Billboards as Pop Art By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPII A few years ago. Sen. Carl T, Curtis proposed that paintings be hung along the walls subway so that p a s s e n g ers c 0 u 1 d V i e w them as they rode by in the I little electric cars. Turning the tunnel into an under ground art gallery would “enhance the utilitarian purpose of this corridor, and make it a delight for those who WEST Knife'Horseplay' Results in Death SOUTH BEND, Ind. (A.P) -The teenaged son of a University of Notre Dame professor died Sunday . of stab, wounds suffered in what police termed horseplay. Authorities said Paul Christin, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Christin Jr., was„stabbed in the chest with his own pocketknife Saturday night while playing in a .basement bedroom with classmate. Police said thy knife was swung playfully by Thomas Csenar, 15, South Bend, accidentally striking the Christin boy. Roman Cathq|ifiS.-s(8n'’Taiwan Flamingo PaflTlZbo near Mai- out of a-total population of about 12 million. come to .see our National Capitol," the Nebraska Republican said. the aUraclion. I can hear them now: Nothing ever came of the proposal, but it docs serve as a sort of precedent for a suggestion I am about to make. President Johnson, as you know, has asked Congress for legislation to provide better control of billboards along the federal highway .system. ’ The request was an o(utgrowth of the White House conference on natural beauty, which seem^ to feel that outdoor advertising is an eyesore which should be eliminated. ALTERNATE PLAN Borrowing from Curtis’ idea of viewing paintings from a moving vehicle, I would like to offer an alternate plan that could be used in case Congress fails to enact the legislation. The thing to do in that event is to make the billboards a part of the program aimed at attracting more foreign tourists to this country. , The U. S. Travel Service could institute a campaign to convince foreigners that the billboards actually dre a part of a gigantic nationwide outdoor art exhibit. “What did you like best about America, the majestic mountains, the miijcstic forests, the .majestic rivers or the majestic plains?” “I didn’t notice any of those things. I was too busy looking at the majestic paintings.” “You spent all your vacation visiting art gall^ics?” “I didn’t have to. The whole country is just one big museum. You look at the paintings while driving along in an automobile.’ “Were there any particular artists who impressed you?” “Yes. America has a very unusual artist named Esso who paints tigers. One named Howard Johnson paints buildings with orange roofs. But the work I admired the most was done by an artist named Motel.” “1 did not realize America was such a cultural-minded country. I must go there on my next vacation.” Cigarette Advertising Draws Ethiopian Ban A lot of foreigners can’t read English and a number of modern artists use bits of advertising slogans in their paintings. So it should be fairly easy to pass the billboai^jsoff” of artj^bfa^^fpop art.” THE WORD Foreign tourists returning to their homelands undoubtedly would spread the word about ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) -r- To the consternation of Ethiopia’s state-owned tobacco monopoly, the Health Ministry has banned all newspaper, cinema, radio and poster advertis-ing of cj '.S. and British cigarette makers who have paid in advance for advertising. Must Vacate Plush Hotel NEW YORK (AIM A judge IS ruled that Mrs. Harry A. I'cl) must vacate a $l.750-a-month hotel suite providing her miilionairc husband ailows her $350 monthly extra for oilier quarters. The couple was married last June at El Morocco nightclub amid great publicity, and later look some of (he wedding guests along on their European honeymoon. State Supreme (,'ourl .iustiee Thomas A. Aurello noted recently that Lech now is giving his estranged wife $750 in monthly support payments. He ruled Mrs. Leeb imisl leave the suite by today is slie is to gel the extra $350. Leeb wants her out because he Is footing the hotel bill. Leeb is seeking an annulment on grounds that an Alabama divorce previou.sly obtained by his wile is illegal. Mrs. Leeb, in a countersuit for separation, accuses Leeb of abandonment and cruel and inhuman treatment. NOTICE Get your excise tax refund right now, with the purchase of any Whirlpool Appliance. HAMPTON ELECTRIC CO. 125 W. Huron FE 4.2525 CLEARANCE -DRUM SETS ORETSCH LUDWIQ ROOERS SLINOERUNO dwa/idi 6 N. Saginaw KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $OCQ00 COMPLETE 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQC100 COMPLETE INCLUDES. Upper an(d Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Foucets, ★ ADDITIONS ★ FAMILY ROOMS ALUMINUM SIDING REC. ROOMS ROOFING—SIDING WOODFIELO CONSTRUCTION Radio Programs— WJR(760) WXYZd 270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARG 130) WPONQ 460) WJBK(1500) WHFI-FM(94.7) TONIOrtT *:Wr-WJR, New* WXYZ, News CKLW. News WJBK, News, Robert E. Le« WCAR, News, Joe Bacarells WPON, News, Sports by Candlelight f:15-CKLW, FultoiiLewls Jr. «:3a-WXYZ, Alex Order WJR, Business CKLW, Tom Shannon WJR, Lowell Thomas r.l^-WWJ, News Emphasis WXYZ, Ed AAorpan I WCAR, Bwa Calender WJBK, Music WJR, News, Sports WPON, News, B(>b|; Green WHFI, Curtain Time » TilS-WXYZ, Lee Alan, Music WWJ, Phone Opinion 7;30-WJR, News, Music IrOft-WHFI, News, Montage I.-30-WWJ, Sportslihe »:M-WWJ, News, Sports WJR, Jr. Town Meeting f.-30-WJR, Continental Holi- day WPO^'Sewi WJRTNi :3»-WJR, News, MusiC I1:0»-WJR. News, Spor^ ll:IO-WCAR, This Week n^tS-WCAR, Boyd Carender Midnight CKLW, Music til Dawn I1:3»^WJR, Music Before WXYZ; Fred W WCAR, News, Delzeil «:3li-WJR, Music Hall WWJ. Roberts ^KLW, Eye Opener, Davies S;0»-WJR, News, Guest WHFI, News, Almanac l;30-WJR, Music Hall WCAR, iWJR, S wwj news, R®iie5?*'’ t:IS-WJR, Open House tc3fr-WJR, Lee Murray VHFI, News, McKenneY 1(:00-WJR, News, Haas WWJ, News. Ask Neighbor WXYZ, BrMkfast Club WJBK, News, R«M . WPON, Newt, Ron Knight CKLW, Newt, Joe Van r .II, TUESDAY AFTERNOON I3:00-^WJR, Newt, Farm WWJ, r -------- WPON, SrIeV :yz, Marc Avery ,Music WCAR, News, Tom Kdnins WHFI, News, Encore ■S-WJR, Focus 1:I»-WJR, News Art Link-reKLW, News, Joe Van * I:30-WJR, Woman's World 2:0»-WJR, News, Elliott WJBK, 3:0»-WCAR, News, Bacarella TUK PON'I IAC I'Hli'iHS. M()NI)AV>MAY til, MMJfl ^<>11 ('ail ('oiinl on l's...(^nali(> ('os(s No Moi'i^al Sc'ais Save $8 on Colorful Webbed Chaise Lounge Van Priced at $19.99 Choice of two colors | . Just say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears' Big-Capacity Coldspot Air Conditioners lightweight chaise with stiiong green or pumpkin webbing and linch aluminum tubing Adjust^ to 5 relaxing positions. Fokb up for easy storage. Hurry in Tuesday, save! l«Paaaenger Glider, Was at «19.99...................9.88 Tuesday Only Special 8,500 BTU capacijty NO MONEY DO^^/on SearsTEasy^aynient Plan Orvin Watches in Dress & Sport Styles l 099 1 *>99 I " W. Movement 1 17-Jewcl Movement •Plus 10% Federal Tax , Just say, “CHARGE IT” at Sears Save *5P^ on Modem Button B^ck Rechner *88 Regularly at $139.95 Choice of 4 colors Coldspot' brings you super cooling capacity plus 3-speCd~fan with ultra-quiet low speed. Air temperature is thermostatically controlled^ air flow easily directed.-Cofivenient slide-out’chassis. Priced to sav^> you even more Tuesday! See the stunning styles for men, women, teens:.. and what a grand gift for a special occasion! Yellow or white gold with regular or ex-(pansiun bands. All watches are shock resistant. Save handsomely on your choic; tomorrow! Furniture Department, Second Floor Appliance Dept., itfain Dasement Watch & Jewelry Repair, Main Floor >t?NO MONEY DOWi( on Sears lEasy Payment Plan Three-polftioii recliner. adjusts for lounging, for TV viewinf and for full recliniug. Has Serofoam and cotton padding for extra deep down comfort, super-soft plastic cover foi casy-care. Choice of brown, beige, green and black. Furniture Department, Second Floor . , ■ 'faction guaranleed or your money back’ ; SEARS 1 )ovv!ilr»wn iar Fliom^ FK 3- i-i', M I' THE PONTIAC PRESS AY 65 I LM E D B V ELL COMPANY ' ^ A 1.— k V i V / « I ^ I ■':. • % ^ \ / ijifv’.f'. * 5>sin-i».»««.' kv-'.'* 8 V L. i-„. ^ O / Tfi§^ W9ath§r ; ^ ’ I . 'L«. t THE PONTIIA.C VOL, 123 NO. 07 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ..MIChMaN. M()NDAYriSY''aCi(»»3...............-SrjSft^KS UNiraif''^«i|i*NTSlN&ATinNAI MEMORIAL DAY, 1965 Traffic Count Official Denies Report Moving Closer Chinese Leader III to J^ord Toll Highway Fat^litle 40 Per Cent Ahead of 1964 Holiday By The Associated Press Deaths in groups of five and even six were rocketing the Memorial Day weekend auto accident toll toward a grim record at the beginning of the last day of^ the threerday holiday period. Lives were being snuffed out at the average rate of more than six anltour before the after midnight lull. Howard Pyle, president of the National Safety Conncil, said: “It Is conceivable that it could be the '^worst Memorial Day weekend on record unless mottorists change their drlvlpg pattern.” With fatalities running 40 per cent ahead of Jast year's pace, Pyle 'said, “the toll looks cer-. tain to be on the upper end of our estimate." TOKYO (Si — A Ited Chinese official In Peking today denied reports that Mao TJse-tung is seriously III., ^'Chairman Mao Is in excellent lusalth. I just saw him yesterday,” Liao Cheng-chih, a memlMjr of the Chinese Communist party’s Central Committee, told a corresiamdent of tile Japanese news agency Kyodo. The Kyodo correspondent repented that other authoritative sources in the Chinese capital said Mao Ai in good health and attended a high party meeting yesterday, — Mao, 71, has not l)een seen in public since April 13 when he received Wing Cmdr, All Sabry, an associate of President Oamal Abdel Na.sser of Kgypl. The British government said yesterday It has recelv««l reports from Peking that the Chinese Communist leader may have suffered a Stroke. Tlie British statement, however. a^ stroke. The British statement, however, stressed that tlie reports were s|)eculatlve and were Imlng treated as such. 500 Casualties' Claimed Over Outpost Cl^sh Two Americani Uft«d Among Dead; Plan** Hammer Enemy Units Oakland Schools to Seek Half-MillTaxHikeJunel4 Hif-Ron Car By JOE MULLEN . Oakland Schools,will seek a half-mill tax'increase for special education' on the .June 14 school election .. ^ Bloomfield ballot. lownshlp man was In critical f i, ... . condition this morning after be- One major reason for the millage hike, according i„g ,truck by a hlt-aSd-run ear to Oakland Schools officials, is a pressing need to while he was changing a flat I ' The council had estimated traffic deaths for the 78-hour weekend, 6 p.m, local time Friday to midnight tonight at 4^0 to 510. At 9 a.m. EST today the nationwide total was 369. Port tiuron Drops Out of Airline Baffle expand its perceptual de- tire, velopment and adjusted ^ *,**«,„ studv nrocrams uoy program.^. c„rd, was being treated at St. Ihe county school system’s Jo.scph Mercy Hospital for sc-spccial educaUon program was vere chest, buck and alxiominal .forced to abolish expansion ^ ^ ^ plans in February, 1964 due to a lack of funds. MANY TRAGEDIES Among the more spectacular tragedies; North Central Airlines (NCA), which kas sought to drop service to three Michigan Communities, has won one battle. Since this curtailment date, school superintendents In the county have requested that 17 more perceptual devetopment and nine nd-J^sle'd study classes be established as soon as funds are available. Bloomfield Township police said Landry was changing SA^GQN, South Viet Nam 1/1^ U.S. Air Force and Marinp (k)rps jeta struck at Communist posi-tion.s in Quang Ngai Province today after three days of hard fighting in which an estimated 500 govern- -ment troop.s were killed, wounded or missing. HnoffiCtuI reports said two"* U.S, Army mc^were killed in the action west of the provincial capital, and that a U.S. airman was wounded. U,S. officials also reported ISS other government cnsual-tlcs — 3$ killed, i$ wonnded and too missing — at the Khe TrI outpost near the border with North Viet Nam. The Viet Coag overran the post Friday night. A government relief, force retook it Saturday. The Viet Cong struck back, dispersed Uie relief force and escaped before a second relief force arrived. In Quang Ngdl, 65 miles .Houthehst of the big Da Nang sir left rear tire on, the shoulder of base, U.S. officials saiddhe Viet West Maple cast of Franklin Cong appeared to be when another vehicle swerved back, off the road and crushed him ' w w w against his car. The government rushed in * a" head-on colUakm on a dea- has won one battle. classes De established as soon . . . reinforccments.butacoupterat- Vrt hiehwav near Needles Calif Port Huron has given up try- ** funds are available. The five per^ns In Landry s tack was delayed, apilMrently -‘“V The wp„« «, .'Jr. -«u»>o,h.dw"• only survivor was a 12-year-old ®^0cla s there have said flUng these phases ^ special educa- tinued east on Maple after the *^ATTAUONS * ‘H* ‘"u^trated ,.56 a.m^Lldent.""*’ ------------ Much of Holiday Affenfion Is on Arlington Ceremonies ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) — At mortal Day, “Arlington, Mon- its sprawling acres and he set each of the 130,000 graves in ument to Heroes,” recites the out to make uninhabitable the girl. An amost identical crash in the High Sierra foothills near Lone Pine, Calif. kUled five persons, among them the parents of the only survivor, an>year-old girl. A colMon on a freeway north of San Jose, Calif, killed three men and two women. I review tion ‘'■“‘=‘"8 the experiences of (CAB) ruUng would be too ei- « fictional first grader. H i s pensive. (.^ui j 5^ gjny Pontiac and CadiUac-Reed City, however,^ have filed lor a court'review of the Feb. 15 CAB order that would permit NCA to drop service to these cities. School loan OK'd forClarenceville Another head-on smashup , neat: Abbeville, La. yesterday *"8 Billy is not ibarnlng letter soupds at the pace of the other first graders and, while even the poor readers in his class have gone through several jf hearing is good ancPlus against anticipated state aid. noon. Stopsjiad generated suf- vision is satisfactory, but some- ★ ♦ * , . thing is wrsiil- Similar authorization also was . Initial reports said the heav- - ... ; ... niven to several nthpp nphiuti Icst losses were suffered by the Meantime,. Pontiac has '.sec- ’r"‘ m lUinfer B.lt.llon O. Senior U.S. milltory sources said they had confirmed the presence of two battalions of North Vietnbmese troops in the area 15 miles west of Qu«ng Ngal. They said they were believed'to have taken part in an attack on a special forces camp at Ha Tranh. No details were Immediately available. r An estimated two regiments of Communist fighters battled the government fprees before breaking off the action at Arlington National Cemetery, a names and deeds of many of house where Lee had lived, tiny specially placed American *n®sl illustrious dead. And Meigs ordered its rose garden flag flutters for Memorial Day. ^ 8lves in up-to-dat4 detail the turned into a burial ground for I*’® *”®^ P .teen-agers Aople come by the hun- history of the hallowed ceme- soldiers. and critically injured two other trSiTc to justify contin- 27" dreds to lay wreathjs - at the .^"8 the reader on a REMINDER persons. uance of NCA service. ^ grave of relative, a friend or •‘Ind <5f walking tour. , row of graves ® SOUTHS DIE \ . Meantime,. Pontiac has a sec- ? ®®nference with the an admired hero most among RETIRED COLONEL ^eigs ordered still remains. So F'lve boys of high-school age ond petition before the CA6 for principal, Billy’s teacher re- Vietnamese Marine Battal- groups taking turns conducting The book is by John V. Hink- do two other Meigs creations— were kill^ inxa rolli^n ou^-southbound air service to Chi- I®” I**® l*®y>f®'’ pxychdogl- i,. iisoooo fnr Artrinn ion. The marine unit was said to Washington and the tomh of the unknown dead side Gallatin, TeW.-^ ^ ^ cago and Cleveland. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Schools. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) retired Army Reserve colonel of the War Between the States Three 16-year-^ bovs and ThXrf ® n a Pk ■ azi-year-old truck drivirdlcd' the lore of the city. identified Union soldiers and the j,, , crash at an intersection This Memorial Day will at- near GrandJsland, Neb. tract visitors to the grave of . .President John F. Kennedy. bojf wore killed yester- And Hinkel has a special chap- Meigs himself is burled at >ferre Hai^te, Ind. ter on this most recent major Arlington. ... to the cemetery. He The ^overnm^nt had seizi^ i the daily line of mansion hnd its grounds B Unknowns. So it has been on Memorial Day year after year, in some- fashion since 18ii8^ Observances are held ht the nation’s otheir 84 national cemeteriesTbUt the Memorial Day focus is on Arlington. That’s because its rolling hills contain the bodies pf more noted Americans than any other. They lie among the thousands who - flow past “like' won no acclaim nor medals. A book published on this Me- I I buried in Arlington. “reverent jyhich river.’ Not far away is the grave of $26,80() because neither Lee nor car. his wife could come forth to pay hurt, the taxes on it personally as Escape Artist Finally Captured inrf their mother Prison farm escapee Clifford ry says West pulled a gun and sought to disarm West. Neither man was seriously injured. by another holding a state trooper captive mother was seriously while fleeing piolicedemonstrat- ENDS IN CRASH n * t V j "UK j required by law. The Supreme A young couple engaged to be ^tiac in White Lake .'Ij ?.• .*'®"P®®y' ®'®® Court 20’years later voided this married next month were Township May 7. UrSt /Pnntimio/I nn P^ocva 0 r*nl ftl at* i . rv s* . tj^ his 4|dll to escape from the The chase ended in a crash Sient he walked away from at Fremont, Ohio, as Perry tent to mnrder. We«t i. hHii in lUn I***Ty said she f ir|l West Is held in lien of $25,- ^ ^er» husband’s n x- MM mm awaiting exam- perience when a fellow officei 8 on charges of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) V In Today's Press Racial Scene 13 arrested in Georgia community — PAGE 1 Spying Modern espionage is long on drudgery, short on glamour PAGE 21. 4 Hinkel Writes it is ironic that I this most ievered of cemeteries ^ for Ame/ican fighting men be-,,, came amunal place because of. an act spite. MANSION INVbLVED It i n V 01 v e d the Custis-Lee mansion- which overlooks President Kennedy’s grave. That Im- Baseball PCH reaches quarterfinals in tournament at Jaycee Park - PAGE 17. Astrology /1.........20 Bridge . . .".V.f....*8 de .....29 .■..4;.,..'2i|l' ......17-11 .......28 tv 6 Radio Programs 21 WUsou, Earl.... 29 (Continui^ on Page 2, Col. 8) among five persons killed Satur- P®Hce figured Wfest, 19, - day night in a collision near Up- ®I Monroe, had stolen three per Sandusky, Ohio. The couple I r?* was John HaVman, 20, of Carey, ^®'" ®"‘y Ohio, and Judith Lucius, 18, of Tiffin, Ohio. The two-wheel bike was re- the record number of traffic ported stolen near Lapeer deaths for a three-day Me- where police found Thundershowers Will Accompany \A/ntmar \A/anikar mortal. Day weekend Was 431 set *““**'*‘*■"8 they snspect-YYOrmer wearner last year. The lowest total was ed the fugitive had stolen. 204 in 1948. The record high^ West was captured Saturday DosinV home an~d land Georce The weatherman reports scat- any threcrday holiday pei^ after a wild, 50-mlie police Chington once owned >as ‘®*’®^ thundershowers are head- was 609 during the 1955 ^ist- chase in Michigan and Ohio, built in 1802 by his adepts son, *<1 this way, due to arrive to- mas season. Meantime, the wife of Rich- George Washington Parke Cus- morrow afternoon or night with RECORD NUMBER I®"fl®8 the *^®*'®®- e r s may ne. expect highway fatalities during 6 p.m. trooner-husband was held can- Mary Aane Cuslls, his ^ ^ , daughter, married Rol^ E. tne weekend. Hionddy, May 17, tallied M7. In mg the hi^-spe^ chase. Lee and lived with hlm'mere Lows will be near to 54 the first three months of 1965, riiANrir» until Lee went off to com- tonight. High temperatures to' traffic deaths averaged about mand the Confederate forces morrow will range from 72 to 100 a day. ‘ I guess 1 never had a chance In,the Civil War. 80; _______________ to be worried,” aaW the 29-year- . Thl. light ant yari- , "“fr Np Rpporh of Injuries Ifer hiubmpd a l«r-mwiag haw in the fnwt seat of a itoleii ear; At the whdei was ll-yeaiooU West. Yhe Army quartermaster general in 18^ was Montges^' Meigs, a former Southerner easterly at S to 12 miles this who, Hinkel writes, “kept Ihls afternoon increasing to 8 to 18 ' TOKYO (UPI) — A sharp most violent diatribes for his m.p.h. tonight. earthquake rocked Tokyo this own previous commander— w ★ w afternoon. There were no im- ftobert E. L^.” , -Fjorty-eigbt-waa toj^s low* mediate ,tiq;wrt8 of injuries or . “ recording prior to 8 'A.m. hi damage. Meitt mranged for the Army downtown Pontiac. At 11 a.m. i The quake hit at ;8:39 p.m. to tol^oyer the manakm.and the reading was 69. '(4;28ajn.EDT). r'v' ^ ^ ’'T " ^—V-. — RELIEVED TO SEE HUSBAND - MrsT Barbara Perry displays her relief as she is When Perry stopped West’s , car near Monroe S^My, Per- ship prison farm escepee. Petty ip««Ni h«^:. rav^^hourjQ _the frimt slat e|,A'|te<9r'}^ trooper Richard Perry, who was reportedly kidnaped at gunpoint by,a White Lake town- as GUftord West. 19, of MomnwiM i '■'.’■A. ...i.L, MNTA MONICA, Cullf. (API -A J«l traniport. loaded with delicath Inatrumenlfl and raelng with ttie moon ai^rosa the South Pacific, hoH given Hclenllsla the longest probe In man's history into the conditions of a solar eclipse. The moon won the race, but (Hiring the I) minutes and 42 se<> nnds the iilrplunc was cloaked in oul 2,110 miles southeast of Hilo. The plane met the eclipse right on the dot^of 17 seconds past 11:17 a.m.’Dr. Michael Bader, director of NASA's Ames Research Center at Mountain View, Calif., and leader of the expedition, termed the maneuver an uncqualed example of precision flying and navigation. Then the jet went in pursuit of the eclipse. Aided by tailwind.s, the jet flew at 587 miles per hour, managing to stay in the oval shadow of the moon for nearly 10 minutes as the eclipse swept eastward at 1,700 m p h. The observation period was more than twice that of any previous eclipse tracking flight. CLEAR VIEW The plane flew at an altitude of 39,500 feet—above five-sixths of the earth’s atmosphere— where the view was extraordinarily clear. Obvious visible phenomena, a spokesman said, were large trominenccs on the sun; bril-iantly shining Jupiter on the sun’s corona; long, flashing corona streamers and the core’s great vale of gas, extending millions of miles from the sun's surface. As the eclipse flualiy *«atdis-tanced the jet, the, plane wheeled about and made for a refueling stop at Tahiti before returning to Hilo and its laboratories, where scientists said they would spend months in assessing the scores of observations captured on their instruments. The mission was part of the International Quiet l^n Year, a worldwide cooperative study during the low, point of the slin’s 11-year cycle of sunspot activity. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) •Prepiinitlons moved forward today for tile nation’s most ambitious space flight after l(x;hnl> clans ran down and corrected a water leakage problem -In tlxr luulnl i spacecraft. The leak, discovered early Sunday, had threatened to delay the scheduled launch Tlmrsday of astronauts James A. McDi-vltt and Edward H. White II on tlielr four-day space journey. The National Aeronautics and Spi|ce Administration sold that a life supphrt system package damaged by the leaking water had been replaced. The package is used to remove carbon dioxide from the capsttle. ...... Nine miles south o f the Bahamian island of|;|San .Salvador, tlie tiny t-ahle ship Omega waited for high winds ond seas to subside so It can grapple for the broken ends of an undersea cable used In the Gemini program. The cable run.s 1.500 miles from Cape Kennedy to Antigua, and has several Bahamian tracking stations connected to It, ‘ VITAL FUNCTION Space agency officials said they hoped It could be repaired in time for the landing of Gemi nl 4-the point where It .serves Its most vital function. But If It hasn’t, they added, radio communications could be used. Between Saturday night and Sunday morning, 32 pounds of water leaked into the spacecraft’s lithium hydroxide container. The device, in addition to removing carbon dioxide from the spacecraft, also supplies drinking water for the astronauts, and provides a cool- jl , ' Birmingham Area Newt Romney Will Address Cranbrook Graduates BLOOMFIELD IIIBI.JI - Oov. George Romney and Mr«. Elizabeth n. tlall, director of a new SIris’ school-ln Massachtisetis, eve been named comnience-ment speakers for Cranbrook Losses Heavy iry^Viet Clash (Continued From Page One) hove suffered at least 80 casualties, Including 20 dead. SsSTIlONAUTS A-DK - Despite troubles with their Gemini 4 spacecraft, astronauts Edward Wlilte (left) and James McDivIll managed broad smiles as they |m)suc*u suits yesterday. Ttiey are continuing |)roparaUons at Ca|)e Kennedy for their scheduled four-day orbital flight. Humphrey to Deliver Talk at A^U Tuesday EAST LANSING (AP)/^ Vice President Hubert Humphrey is expected MOspeak iritesday Michigan State University Peo-ple-to-Peo^le group: Carl Rowan, director of the U.S. Information Agency, also is scheduled to speak.y The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report ^ PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Partly cloudy with a warmer trend ^today, tonight and Tuesday and scattered thundershowers likely 'Tuesday afternoon or night. Highs today 68 to 76. Uws tonight 56 to 55. Highs Tuesday 72 to 80. Winds light and variable this morning becoming southeasterly 5 to 12 miles this afternoon increasing to 8 to 16 miles tonight. Wednes(lay outlook: Showers and thundershowers and little McDlvilt and White scheduled for the longest flight yet in the U.S. space efforWa 62^)rbit, 97-hour, 50-minute global whirl designed to te^ the effects on man of prolong^ posure to space. They will attempt the world’s first space rendezvous effort. White plans to venture out of the spacecraft, held to the caafl by a 2S-foat tether. He will approach another orbiting satellite the second stage of the Titan 2 rocket which is to boost the two Air Force majors into space. Police Arrest 13 Persons in Georgia Protest Marches By The Assoeiated Press Authorities arrested 13 persons at Crawfordville, Ga. over the weekend as Negroes attempted unsuccessfully to integrate two white Baptist churches and held another series of protest marches. Negroes then marched around the courthouse in protest to the arrests and later about 200 held rally there. The Negroes also pickefbd the residence of Lola H. Williams, county school superintendent, until they were told that a resident was ill and ordered to leave. The picketing was-in pmtest to the failure of the sd^l board Finally Caught (Continued From Page One) “I want you to know, first of all, that he is all right,” the officer said. "Before I say a n y-thing else, I want you to understand that.” WASN’T SURE’ But she wasn’t sure until her husband came home from his job that night. “Thank God, thank God,” she murmurred as her sons pressed noses against tbe front window. Perry took his wife and sons, Douglas, 5, and David, 3, to Monroe’s St. Paul’s Methodist Church Sunday. The Rev. Charles Beynon talked about how happy he was to see the Perrys there, together. "You try not to wonji^ said Mrs. Perry. "But the thought is always there. If you keep linking about it, you become A ner^ vous wreck.” to renew contracts of six Negro teachers, an action which touched off the demonstrations last Wednesday. FIELD WORKER Willie Bolden, a field worker foP the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said refusal of school authorities' to renew the contracts meant that “wt are going for everything, including the public accommodations and the churches.’’ Elsewhere, tivif rights workers at Bogalusa, La. called off plans for a march on city hall and-sajd they wijj go to court to seek adequate protection for picketeers and civil rights demonstrators. ★ ★ ★ > Ronnie Moore, a field secretary for the Congress of Racial Equality, said picketing of downtown stores Would continue while a suit is filed in U.S. District Court seeking to have city, parish and state law enforcement officers protect demonstrators. He said leaders also- would seek a ruling on the constitutionality of a Bogalusa ordinance requiring a 48-hour notice prior to a parade. TEMPERS FLARE Tempers flared Sunday night 5 two spe^ators were ejected from a Ku Klux Klan rally on a _4_ Wall 0|)ened to W. Berliners U.S. Treasurer Still 'Serious' NATIONAL FORECAST — Weathermen predict showery id thundershowers tonight over the upper and middle Mifr DARBY, Pa. (UPD The Treasurer of the United States, Mrs. Kathryn O’Hay Granahan, remained in serious conditirthwe8t ondwatn^ in the upper Mississippi The hospital repoi'ted Mrs. Granahan was showing lome improvement but her conditkm remained serious beci^ d tbe severity of the operation. BERLIN WV-The East German Communists opened/ the Berlin wail for the second time this year to allow West Berliners to visit relatives in the other half of the divided city. ■ The Communists have issued passes to 643,209 West Berliners for the two-week period. The occasion is the annual Whitsun holiday, June 6-7. , About l;000 persons had crossed over to East Berlin today a few hoars after the wall was opened. ^ Each West Berliner with close relatives in East Berlin is limited to one visit. A pass is valid from 7 a.m. until midnight. (arm near Lebanon, Ohio, for allegedly making pro-Negro remarks during a speech favoring white supremacy. Both were hustled to their car. When the auto wa.s caught In a traffid'jam, many of the 300 spectators gathered around it, cursing, kicking and shaking their fists. Music, Impromptu speeches and chatting under the maple trees had highlighted the day’s program In the four-day rally which winds up today. At Tuscaloosa, Ala., Vivian J. Malone made history when she became the first Negro ever to graduate from the University of Alabama. “It feels great, it really does,” she said. PICKET CATHEDRAL An integrated group of about 30 clergymen and others picketed the Episcopal Cathedral of St. Philip in Atlanta, Ga., where a segregated private school held baccalaureate cxercitos. Two years ago. the .school rofused to enroll the son of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The pickets, organized by the Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity, protested use of the church for the school and called on the church to desegregate the school. School officials say the church and school severed their ties more than a year ago. The ranger battalion, whjeh 'as moved In yestorday As a relief force, was reportea rounded and cut into three sections. Two of them wore virtually willed out. HEAVY LOSSES " Spokesmen saM only 80 men from the 260-man battalion had been accounted for. A Vietnamese lieutenant who wat^ with the battalion said the rangers made four attempts to break out of the eq-circlemenL He said the guerrillas attacked the battalion’s headquarters element with mortars, roekets and machine guns. Other reports said the 1 overrun. School and Kingswood School Cranbrook. Gov. Itomnoy’s son Mitt is one of 70 boys graudating this year from Crapbrook School. Former headmistress of Concord Academy, Concord, Mass,, Mrs. Hall Is director of Simon’s Rock, which will opqn next year In Great Barrington, Mass. She is a member of thp board of trustoes of Miss Holl's School Pittsfield, Mass.; a past prcH-ident of the Ileatimlslrosses Association ot the East; and a meimber of the execu^ve ls)ards of the National Council of hr dependent Schools and the New England Association of Colleges and-Secondary Schools, Cranbrook School's commencement exercises are scheduled for tl a.m. ami Kings-wchkI’s at 3 p m. June 12 in Christ Church Cranbnsik. The Birmingham Board of Education will hold a special meeting tomorrow night to discuss the status of current building programs. Heading the agenda, will bi* reports on plans for Covington Junior High School and a new administration building. Curriculum reports Also will be presented during the 8 p.m. session. At New Orleans, more than 100 Citizens Council backers picketed a small Roman Catholic college in a fashionable residential district while labor leader Walter Reuther spoke at commencement. A blracial group of counter pickets: arrived and police quickly mingled among the pickets to prevent any en< ters. Seek Half-Mill Tax Boost (Continued From Page One) cjrt testing since he seems mentally handicapped. Perhaps placement in a special education room wcmjRP^ best for him. Smaller classcB, lessons paced more slowly and special planning might help him make up for his own inadequacies. FLYING COLORS So, Billy is tested. He comes out with flying xolors. There is no mental' retardation. “We used to think this is where the problem ended,’' said Dr. Leon Hall, coordinator of psychological services for Oakland Schools. “We sent boys like, Billy back to his classroom stanip^ normal and concentrated on the children who actually were found to be mentally handicapped in testing.” hav| trouble in understanding sound of a word comes first, whether reading is done from the left or right and in distinguishing foreground from background. Their classrooms are divided by screens into cubicles so each child can work on individually planned lessons with a minimum of distraction. Dr. Hall pointed but that after years of experience with special education, it has be6n determined that children like Billy, ' despite normal intelli-1 !, behave as if mentally handicapped. GENERALPROGRAM "We are not teaching, these children through general education programs,” Hall said. He cited the adjusted study program and the perceptual development progpram, the most recent additions to Oakland Schools’ specidl educu- The child placed in adjusted study classes is usually driven by emotional turmoil ihto a behavior problem while- the perceptual development, child is usually handicapped by a minimal ISiain-disorder that keeps him from organizing his w o r k as other children do. * A' A- • ■ , Presently the sOhool system has 13 adjusted study classes restricted to 10 children, and eight perceptual development classes with a limitation of eight youngsters. Neither program is permanent as the objective of both is to equip children to eventually retui:jn to regulardasses. The-visiting period is Uie last of four agr^ on last fall by the West Berlin and East German governments. The other wail openings were last October - November, over ClhrUtmas and during the Easter h(|Udays.. After two years as an experimental program, the adjusted study classes were granted, state recogniUon and. became entitled to state subsidy three years ago. The perceptual development program was started four years ago and is classed experimental. The two programs are similar ^ ^ that children must be of npr-^'^mal intelligence, but lagging behind tiieir classmates to qualify. The child who simply can’t stay in his seat long enough to learn is found in both classes. X3iildren .phutod |n pert^ ’.................clas s a s Major Issues The Viet Cong kept up their pressure on the outpost of Ba Gla, about 10 miles west of the provincial capital of Quang Ngai, and the scene of some of the heaviest fighting. They hit | the post with mortars and used | loudspeakers in an effort to In-1 timidate the defenders. j jfje Ceremonies at Arlington in Spotlight (Continued From Page One) * * * and Custis gave title to the Air support was called in but | government for $150,000. the weather in the area detcrlo- w * ^ rated, making bombing and | >ninkcl notes another irony of strafing difficult. CAPTURE JUNK To the nortl\, in Quang Trl Province bordering Nprth Viet Nam,“government forces cag-tured a Viet Cong junk, killed six guerrillas and captured five, military spokesmen said. Four platoons of U.S. Marines were airlifted to an island off the coast of Quang Tin Province, Just north of Quang Ngai, on a search operation. They killed five Viet Cong, wounded one and picked up six suspects, spokesmen sUid. On the political front, a stalemate over a«^feshuffle in Premier Phan Huy Quat’s Cabinet went into its second week. Quat planned to replace Economics Minister Nguyen Van Vlnh and Interior Minister Nguyen Hoa Hiep, but the two men have refused to resign. - Chief of State Phan Khac Suu has refused to confirm their replacements until Vinh and Hoa resign, saying Quat does have the right to fire them Suu has confirmed the nominations of four other men to Quat’s Cabinet. WASHINGTON (AP) ^ Congress comes to grips this week with majo.- domestic and foreign issues in a swift step-up of activity. REPLACEMENTS (juat ‘ named Nguyen Trung Trinh to take over the economics portfolio and Trap Van Thoan to take charge of the interior ministry. They have been Opposed by several political factions, including the Vietoamese Nationalist party. U.S. Ai^ssador Maxwell D. Taylor^as postponed a routine tirip to Washington until the situation clears up. He was scheduled to leave last Friday. In the air war against North Viet Nam, U.S. Air Force jets yesterday^ made their closest strike yet’to the North Vietnamese capital. They hit an ammunition depot. 4s miles south of Hanoi. The pilots reported 60 per cent of the target area was destroyed and othOr parts moderately damagied. The $3.37-biIIion foreign aid authorization measure passed by the House last week faces a stiff test in the Senate late in the yre^. The Senate Fofeign Relations Committee . has produced a measure calling for complete overhaul in two yeari-of the foreign aid pro^ gram by a special commission. For the next year, it wpuld provide somewhat less funding — $3,352 billion. The House takes up Wednesday legislation for a $4.8-bptni .qut in4oderal'«xcise taxes, wiping out most of tSie8e.|A major item is the eUmlnadon In ......‘' m from now to 196$ of,toe 10, automoMles., cent tax on a Arlington history: On the first Memorial Day in 1808 — it was called Decoration Day — Southern women were curtly refused permission to place flowers on Confederate graves. Union graves were cov-ere(i with flowers. BLUSTERY WIND "That night there was a blustery wmd—and in the report, as report has it," Hinkel wrote, "the sentries found the Confederate graves buried under flowers blown from the U n i o a graves.” Hinkel recounts in capsule the deeds of many of the noted men and women who lie among (he ’’serries ranks on the quiet green slopes of Ar- He said in addition to the unknowns at the tomb, there arc nearly 15,000 other unknowns buried in Arlington. The roll call of famous gener- ‘ als and admirals who lie in Arlington stretches back through all of America’s wars to Revolutionary days, and several generations of some noted Army and Navy families rest together. There are such names as: Gen. H. H. (Hap) Arnold, Gen. Clair L. Chennault, Field Marshal Sir Jehn Dill, Maj. Gen. W. J. (Wild Bill) Donovan, Maj. Gen. Merritt A. Edson, Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger, Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, Adm. W11-liam F. Halsey, Adm. William Leahy, Lt. Gen. John A. Lejeune Gen. Payton C. March. Adm. David Nixon Porter, Gm. Philip Sheridan, Gen, Walter Bedell smith, Gen. Jonathan M. Wain-wright and Gen. John J. Pershing, commander of American Expeditionary Forces In World War I, who at his own request got “a plain GI headstone.” Big Push for Mining MEXICO CITY (AP) - Mexico is considering a variety of measures to stimulate its mining industry, including possible tax breaks, according to Jose A-Garcia, president of the Mexican mining chamber. I (\ll This Week at Simms Complete WATCH OVERHAUL With PARTS ond LABOR -at this price ... your watch will be disassembled, cleaned and oiled, > ■r*' adjusted and timed electronically, genuine faefory parts used ohd you get full yeor guarantee on lobor. Parts include stems,; crown, moinspring or balance' Moff at this price. , J *Badly ru^, watches, automatics, chi^nes and broken crystals:Ot smolfoxtra cost.................. OKERNAUL AND WATDH GtEANIMQ Only : . . sx .SlMMSfl: w THM 1*6W;MAC PhlliS8..*l&NlfAV, MAYJl^W BEAUTIFUL LOOK ALIKEH - Miss Sue Ann rXiwney (left) of CAIumbus, Ohio, nnd the 190& Miss Ohio In the U.S.A. Beauty Pageant is practically the double of the current reigning Miss U.S.A. BobbI Johnson of Washing- ton, D.C. The now queen will be crowned Friday In Miami Beach, Fla., nnd will represent the United Slates In the Miss Universe Pageant in July. IS More Than in 1964 Commercial Bingo Banned in Ireland EAST LANSING ilPh- April >rought aa increase In highway utallties over last year, the first ump after five straight months ■ reductions from n year ago, tate police report. The 148 traffic death.s in April ils year were four more than the month a year ago. The April fatality figure reptile first monthly In-since last November, to November, the death int had Increased In 20 of 22 iths. licit charges made on the 1.5 Hon credit cards lost or en each year exceed |2 mll-annuiilly, according to the nal of American Insurance. DUBLIN. Ireland (AP) - A bun on commercialized bingo throughout Ireland has been announced by Justice Minister Brian Umlhaii on the ba.sls of court rulings. Charity , fund-raising bingo may continue under court II-censO, he said, but prizes, must be limited and there can be no bingo advertising. Ex-Alabama Chief Dies MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Former Alabama Gov. Gordon Person^ 63. died Sunday after a strdke May 17. During His 1951-1955 tenure as governor, he put Phenix City and Russell County under martial law following the 1954 slaying of anti-vice crusader Albert Patterson. This Fish Story I Is Quite a'Tale' SOUTHEND, England Uh Anglers casting for fish 10 miles out to sea caught two monkeys. This latest fish story was told today by G, B. Warren and fellow anglers aboard the Lady Iris which came to shore after several days at sea. The monkeys, named Bongo and Tina, were rescued as Hiey drifted in a box off Southend. In the box was a letter saying Bongo and Tina should be taken to the I.ondon Zoo “where they would make the kids laugh.” At present, Warren is hwking after the monkeys at his home. Death Hotices MAY n, I B«nk ofaciitInB. Intarin«nl l|< f»r-ti Mm*nt P«rk Mr. Al- urt will II* In •lAi* «i ID* 0 a. eurtwy ewrwral Morn*, ivuliiny CMIIO, MAV lt«». OOUQI AS J„ NOf Plymowin l.tn*. Okidwtn* icily, DkUhomn, lotiiMrly ol Poii. ____ ..ji ni b«l»y*^ w Ihy (Tl«lb*rl| i Phyllli I Tom I oaral (Earn V MB. PHAN lllr««l/ *||e Conklin -‘-0 lur.i il alulil anu aiuni yrcai urMiiKhmittn. Pu n«r*l *rranu«m*nli ar* , pamllnu Irom IH* D B Purilay hunaral Homa, wSara Mr*. Davit will Ha In tl^e.. |Vlilllno hour. 9:30 a.*n. DAVIS, MAY », I9BJ, NORA A„ 41 e, . I.ongltllow Avenuoi •go 4li de»|' mollwr ol Mri, Roxl* II ,T.) BfirTnoor, and Jam«i A„ Ainoid^ Mortholl, MHlOfl b* hald Wadnaaday, Jun* 2, i Norih Puntr*l Homa, Uav >i.,n.vHv,v. ifnnaai**. inlarm*nt In HurrIoM C*m*l»ry, Laud«rd«l* County, Alobomo. Mrt, Oovli v -lokimlo Lowronetburg, l A. J. (M*ry Lou) Soniwn daar brolhar ol Mrt. Ocorg* l«goi alto turvlvarl by lour o iblldran. Roiliallon ol Hi* Cemelary, Ypilian,,. wr,- powier will II* In tlol* «i H,« Dobolion / Johni Pun«r*l Morn*. (BugAile TWIM *g* II Malan i.litnari ---------- -------- Mrt. Manry Uiinari dtor lalliar ol l>«vld A., RobprI ■. *nd Prad arick 0. Uiinari d**r lirolhat or Mrt. Paul KruMr, Punaral tat. vie* will b* b*ld Tunday. Jun* I. a| I p.m. at Hr* Lawit B. WInl Hunaral Homa, Clarktion, Irllar-mani In I akavlaw C*m*t#ry, Cl»rk Jli* Inlar-Vartlly Wayn* Univartlly Tlirltllan Pallowihlp H u 11 il I n u ., .m!i I anglHIi'.' W*llar Phoabo. oacRTs In loving memory, ol William Rob-wlBio^who psiiad geay January ''You lea IMi world ol sorrow, And n^- rest In poaco and In th*;ablliiaSavlor't arrhs." •diy misted by Garnelt A. and QCHON . Ji loving memory of Wlillem F. iKhon, who peoMd away Nov. s. , -. tlw on* who one* sal there." Sadly mitied by grandchlldri Ceroio and Cerl^^Mtlehel er ago, January II, lOSO. Jytt a token of tovo'i Bavollan, TMt our hearti tllll long for you. daughtart Marilyn SARKI In loving memory of Evsrelt SarkI who patted away 10 years ago, May 10, 104S. Thoughts role patl, Sadly milted b scHwei¥ZiiT$wiffEW~" ” In loving memory ol our lather,' •Jacob ,B. •SehwoHjar, who patted March 21, 1033, brothor Ug Switier, May 14, law, Mrs. Llo SwI IS, 1042. Tha world may change, Frem year to year; And.lrlandt irom day to Sadly mittad by Ban, Alice, Balhel SHEPHERD In loving memory ol Karon Kay Shepherd, who patted away Da-cambar 24, 1042. •- "Your memory It a kaaptaka. with which we'll never part; Thougl^ God hat you In Hit \ We tllll Ti'ave you In our hearlt." SHMTT In loving memory ol Daisy P. Shull, who patttd away March to, - To know her wat to lov* h Both for family and Irland; And tha twaelnatt of her Time can neither dim or a In laving memory of Arlene Mae Skelton, Who patted away February 11, 1042. God took the purotl of the Lily, Soflnett of the cloudi above; The tlranglh from l)i* mighty Sadly mlaaad by deugnter Caiol. SLATER in loving memory ml my daughter Thelma M. Slater who patted . avtay March 27, 1040. No one knows the silent heart-achat. Only those who iwve loved. can IH!..":"' >r the oM w ly miiiaa by 1 tllenca. Taka her In thin* i Between our hearts ai In memory at my dei Thelma (CopOnhavar) $n lea ui February 1, too. I ao vary muci ; hav* lM*n n of . griaf Shtcf you hav* gone awpy, W* canneT undaratand why, you hpd So leave ut-Sut God alon* knpwit why. . Sadly misted by Gadrudg Raclrn. SPADAFORE y ol Louli Spada-lora, who patted away January 21, lost and Rot* Spadalore, who patted away December • 17, Your ^^wjTWry ‘ --- wSC................... f Tony and Esther '*10”%; Lombardo. SPENCER In loving memory o( Sgl. Richard Kelley Spencer, who wat killed In action on April 14, 1045. Your memory It a kaepstka. though Ood hat yi^ in mitted by sittert; Jana, r May 24ih, losi. Ypur lace we cannot tea; But let this IIHIa token Tell that we still remember thee. Sadly missed by husband, children and grandchlldran.*' STAFFORD ' In loving memory ol 1 ton and broHwr James E who loft ut March 30. 1043 To know him was to 1 ) memory ol Ruby Slew- And whitperod, 'Coma to Rest'; Orancia and family. nia Stinson, who patted 1 gull 14, 1043.’ Hit lov* left a beautiful memory. And sorrow to gfeat to bo told; Stocker, ' bar, 1048. "We cannot cl ir face we cannot ti and grandchildren. by wl'e, children % pasted I Your face Vila cannot M ig memory of a levtng and husband, Joseph Silas who patted away June 3, Often a lonalv haartache. And many a sllanP tear. But always a basutiful mem Of the one we loy^ so daar. Sadly mittad by your loving w Swa^y, fond and tn Thera la ndt a day, and Fathar, haarfi your mamory true; . That w* do not mtnk of you. 5sur' lingers, veatly, lor TAYLOR In loving mamory ol Spc. 4lh David E. Taylor, who was drownecL. In Germany June 10, 1042. Three years hat patted tinea I our hearts he I THEIS'~....... ...... In loving memory of Mrt. Anna Jhalt, who patted away Dec. 21, *l»42. "They say lima heals all sorrow. And holps ut to forget, A lime hat only proven How much we mitt hef yet;" Sadly mitted by her husband, Stephan Thalt, tons and daughter. todoroff” In loving memory ol George Todorolf, who pasted sway June IS, 1955 and Josephine Todorolf, who passed awav Nov. 23, 1952. Tha fondatt dearest, bast ol a At peaceful rest Is laid; But In God's garden fraa fro Where grow hit fairest flowers; we know that again; This lalrett bloom of 1 Sadly r'—" ■— ----------- Theto are tbings death cannot Age, t^rs, pain nOr cruel car.*, . Can harm her or enter memory's hall, ^ From life's dangers now secure Is the, Lovely the wat, lovely she shall Sadly 'missed by Mother and Dad, VANDERWORP In loving memory of Edmund J Vandarworp, who passed away July 3, 19-.. The spliiDg stream of lift on, But still the vacant chair; Recalls the love, the vole Ot the One who onci Sadly missed by son, di . grandchlldran, . VANbERWoaF 1' loving memory of E -andarworp, who pas July 3, 1941. ly heart and Thee. VSnGORDON t of Lloyd Van-id away April IS, 01M\ a lohaly heart ac^a and In loving rnempry of F. B. N Woart, wtw‘JMnad away Janu Treasured tHbughfa of One Tlwi^ts return to scenes long Tim* rglls on, but mamory lasts. Sadly miwad by wife and family. WALKER ^ - T".. In loving memory of MIloo Walk- mr ueketi MM**a4 mtaamu e«k«iamWap auT^nco fh.. .. WALLACE In tovlng tnemory of Raym^d A^ brother, William E. Webber. ir mamory Is a kaaptaka. From our happ; circle^ “1 has taken 1 Borne awaytrL... ...._______ To a betfer home above. Sadly misted by his wife family. WEST In loving memory- of Logie Edsel West, who patted away May 24, Your memory ,1s * kaaptaka. With which we'll never p/rt; ^ . Though God ■ has you ' In His sisters and brother. And the heartaches. Known to Ood alone, sadly mitted by wife, Esther, 1 I loving memory of Ruth Eileen Wheeler, who passed away August 9, 1943. Your memory Is a keepsake. With which we'll never part; keeping. We still hav* you In our hearts. Sadly mitted by Louis Wheeler and family._________________________ memory ot Sherman ' Sadly i» family. WHITTAKER In loving Whlftaka? V away ; Your mamory It a kaaptaka Wth Which we'll navw part, •«.---.. yljy MPents, Fannie and William .0. lOright, who died Oct. 7, 1954 and August 5, 1943. ’’Thalr c"------ Are a ptoasur* to recall, Thay had p, kindly word for . AM ttM^'iad beloved by atl.v Mdly mhuMd by aona and daugh- '' Ill IH MHMOflY Of l-iltli i. H|CH< Loving mamerlas never dl* At years roll on sna days pass Vmir* lovinu lihihlian 1 IN LOViNG memory OF VliiU lAM J. Clandanin. who pataad away. August 29, J9M. Ssdi&^nilitM by BEGINNING JUNE 7 THRU SEP iwr, nan powall dftposal sarv will Hill tuiniiMr telMiiuleui J Pir.kupt par W*I*. Phkuu day* will lie t*»l* at l*«i year. Slgnad, GIT OUT Op 6e»T dM A Pi,AM You Can Allerd MIOIIOAN CREDIT (OUH»|lO‘‘* PnnHac'i oNlatt anil largest budgal atsiilanra Company. 1OSE ^'MRIOHT H ' ^ Ranch horses BOX IlFPLIEH At to a.m. tiHlay them were re|ilieii al the j Frenii Offlee In the fol lowing boxea; 5, 6, 14, 23, 24, 63, 65, I 69, 70, 73, 77, 85, 97, 101, j 102. 104, 106, 106. fuliaral Dlraetdri • 4 C. J aODHARDT PUNBRAL HOMB COATS D. E. Pursley PUNBRAL HOME PB 41211 DONEISON JOHNS PUNBRAL HOMB "Oailgnad I ' HUNTOON 7f 0«kl«nd A SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOMB "Thoughllui Sarvlca" PE t-9244 VOORHEES-SiPLE PUNBRAL MOMS PB 2 S37S Camatery Loti 4-A FE 2- )N WHITE CHAPEL CEME-tery. FE 4 0519 altar 5:30 p.m. a GRAVE LOTS IN OAkLANb Hills, Call alter 4 p.m. FE 4-1447. Partonoh 4-B 4 PIECE COMBO DAiNfviiiArirfupaL ii'*~ 739 Manomlnaa FE 5-7i MONDAY FUN FOR THE WHOLE family. Vlill * real old tashlonad farm. Over 100 new-born aninlals milked. Children will pal and toad baby animals. Sheep shearing at 2:30 p.m. Pony rides, horsa-drawn hay rides, picnic grounds, dinners, and snacks. Monday 11 to 4 p.m. 25c par parson gives ------ ‘ Rd. I or call FE 5-4473. ... asked. License GB 5143. 1957. Light paint. Only cr LOST; 1 MALE BRITTANY. VICIN-Ity ot Waterford. OR 4-0584. LOST - BROWNISH RED IRISH Terrier, wearing a chain and lock. Reward. OR 3-5905,_ _ LOST; SiLViR~GRAY WnTATURI poodla, slight limp In left '' ‘ lag. Reward. Call Ml 4-3340. LOST; SABLE AND WHITE COL- 22, vicinity of Davltburg. Reward. LOST; LIGHT BLUE WALLET, BE-Iween Community National Bank end Sears. Important papers. Re-' ward. Call alter 5 jl.m., FE 8-1254. MSia EXPERIENCED BODY MEN, benefits, W of I 'A of uniforms paio, ou per imisslon on all lator, ited, 1 body shop helper, Oak-I Chrysler-Plymouth, 724 Oek- .2 MEN " HIRING PART-TIME New factory branch Is taking applications for Immediate evening . work, must be 2t to 45 years of age and • atmAHw «isn day lob. ------ ...0 to 10;30. -----------J salary, Rtus share ol profits, earn S50 to $100 weekly. Call b 1 4-T P-M. ( 5 MEN PART-TIME EVENINGS il factory branch ils operations ... Immediately, clean j> 6;30 to............. ..... .... belter with expert- !. Salary guaranteed. Must be ■ *’ ........... ■-— - Qopd K, Tecord. For Interview ( A TOP MAN ]. One of Oakland Il you have been at least moderately successful but feel your progress Is limited bn your present fob, the time'may be right to consider changing. "------‘ County's leading sa organizations mr you on the le beginning all ( bottom ol the proach sounds ____________ .. . and It you had participated in some management training or have a sincere desire to learn, call Mr. Fllbrook, 474-2231, 4 p.m.-8 p.m. to arrange a frank «nn confidential^'--..... cad, but willing to lei irk long hours. Prefer i—......... I In vicinity of' Ortonville, Ox- drlch area. Draw - . Isstons. C. Pangus, 0 S. Ortonvilt* Rdi, Oilon- s, call collect, 427-2811 pit mm of I rippItCantS Stiuviu , awfiu Hydraulic or alactrlcal equipnwnt experience. The work is imerdsP Ing, varied and provides good on the lob training. Individual must' Phone 332-8181 FdR IMMEDIATE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED SERVICE rWNfibi^ Start ImmEciiatBly Michonicolly Inclintd Men NEW CAR FU^ISHED MuS'bi IJSi *tralt'"yii. MiiS'b.’ .-bi. gal -along an S4*4 par nmnav-to start, lOD Is Parmanant. Call VR 4 2231 jo A M. To 12 NOON TuSi- ” AUTO SERVICE We need men with same experience for full-time and part-time positions in the following clossi-ficotionsi . MECHANICS FRONTENUa- MEN TIRE MOUNTERS SEAT COVER INSTALLERS GENERAL SERVICE MEN Good compensation, ex-^ cellent employe benefits. Apply personnel depurt-• meni doily between 9;30 a.m. und 9i00 p.m. MontOomery Wared PONTIAC I ACCOUNTANT CITY OF TROY S5,20a-S5,eoo. Young man Inleresled In Municipal Finance. Minimum aga 20. 2 years business school or aquivalent axparlenc* In llaM ol accounting ramprad. Conlacl Clly Manager's OllUa, 60 W Waddles Hd.. Troy. Mich. MU BARBRR to rent chair, oB- slrabla location, alr-corHlIlloned. Tony's. RIkar Bldg. PB 3-71*4, BARBER Booth and Richies' Barber Shop. * W. l awranc* 338-935I BRAKE AND WHEEL ALIGNMENT mechanic. Bxperlancad. Excellent Marlln^sajary. Plus commiti I haspltalliatlor nc*. hald vacal CARBTAkSR, COUPLB; SGnElt, JurillS' In Pontiac, MA 4-1195. CARPENTER'S. HELPER. EXPBRI-anc* prefarred. 544-7501. CAMliTki'a to MANTAtf^LARGE apartment bldg. Pull time lob. Must hay* malntanatK* exp. Ral-arancas required. Salary..j;lus apt. 945-2131. 'V CHeFnMA$4fiB.''~iTEAb'r^^ Apply In parson. Rotunda Country Inn, 3230 Pin* Lake Rd. COOK - BROILER ANb' 0 A I lT. Steady, also part-tim*. .Moray's Golf and Country Club, 22S0 Unhxri • -- oil Commarca Rd, -COONTiR HELP P5R~*JfLF-tarv* restaurant. Apply ~ ' ~ 441 etiialiaih Lake ROad CREDIT-tdLLECTfON MANAGER . Excellent position available for inagar oL^rodlt and collecllon parlment 711 general hosplial. ■write or visit — Personnel C $1. Joseph AAercy Hospital, Woodward Av*., Pontiac, f -----e 335-9111, E ■ ■ ■ CREW LEADERS ANb LOCKE mower operators, end landscape help, 18 or over, EM 3-28*5. CHRISTIAN MAN NCEDEb. fUlL ciujirsn mrsn nsscucu. rwi-i. .. pert-time — lifetime-security,' Experience Sunday School, minis- ' try helpful. Earn $100 weekly and up. No compellllon. Writ* John Rudin Co., 22 West Madison St., Chicago 2, DEPENDABLE MAN FpR GOOD DO YOU NEED MOltEY? 1 NEED helpl Both full and part time. briver-Solesman SAliARY-COMMISSION-SbNUS welPestabllshedA route, must live In Pontiac or vicinity, married, physically fit and bondabte, ages 25-50, ---- ----- -------- keep at^ . See I DRIVING / )■ CLERICAL WORK, live on grounds. WVlfp Pontiac Press Box 78 giving age, phone number and 2 references. ELDERLY /WAN FOR yArD WORk Board and room. More'for home ■■ FE 44»iW. EXPERIENCED LOCKE MOWER operator. OR 3-1179. - . Co., 455 Cady, Northvllle,__________ EXPERIENCED WELDERS AND welder lay - out, » hour week, ......... Murray-Way Corporation, EXPERIENCED, DEPENDABLE men both mason and carpenter work, Clarkston-waterford area. References, 534-9335. EXPERIENCED GRILL MAN f .....-Tk. Apply Red Barn, 5 Lake Rd. day work. Elfzabeth L, Framing Corpenters availahle for competent Contact Carl Jacksgn. Custom Homes, Inc. Can c Flint CE 54S5S or CE 8-2S94. week. Phone 545^222 tor Interview FULL TIME AND PART TIME service station attendants, uniforms .l!S8l*,*'*S;"^y Super too, 944 Oaki a*; FENCE INSTALLERS, EXPERI-ancad. with aquipmant and truck. *H the work you can handle, tap FitrlEis'FOR c^vgyoa work. mwIm and blucprinis.’ <^ ‘447-4QH. W #.n^ to 5 O.W* -■'H. , r«.^ -a...... dAi iln]| •hllH, AIM 4 weekend^ work^^ fop^ am a, 11*1(1 vaiaihwi. Apply In P"' ,u„> 1 an,I 5 p.m. *1 lijppP^ OUAHOS^ d*haallh* CaII*Ann Arbor O DBLIVBR AND INStAI I intaa Over 25 and be alila pplj; local ralaraAcat Bxparl- Crump Electric, 1445 Aiiborn. 540 South Talagraph. MAN FOR LAWN SERVICE PB S-2245 MAN WITH iXPERiRNCi f machiNiST'anO S --------T UP MAN TO electric welding dapl., lo gal ahaad. Ml Vsiip ”b^*V MEN WANTED II fo 10 FOR FJ i)*rgl*> boat building, day aAl allarnoon shitls, lull benellli. Ap\ Ply Saa Ray Boats, 925 N. Lapeer^^-'' Rd., Oxford. MACHINiSf; ■ OPPORTDNITV TO work Into tool repairing and tool making. Apply in parson *1 217 Canjral Avtnua, near Saginaw SI. MATERIAL ANB iTOCK~HAN-(Hen. inlacllon, molding plant, Apply 477 S. Eton, Rlrmlngham. MAN OVER 35 iMUSt kFOW SOME arllhmallc - call 335-1212 Irom MIN for LAnDscaITno. 69ER 21 PB I4>|9. MEN Vo WORK IN LUMBER ’ Apply at 7940 Coolty Lak* MTu'wErTi Tr^^ws^ram a 8t*p Co., I MUSIC INSTRUMENT ACCESSOlV Apply Brln- NEw ‘oIalershIp 0 p ¥¥TRi'g, young aggratslv* salesman In-larastad In sailing new and sports cars. Good IncitotTva, must b* able to itorl In wooks notice. Call Mr. Robertson. PB 5-9421. NEED PUCrTIME iXPlRTtNCtb TV sarvlca man. Oalby TV, Ft 4-9502. ■'•''■■ ■NX:R:'NilM~...' SALES REPRESENTATIVES Applicants must b* 22-30 ytars aga. high school graduato and or lerably nave background In rats selling. It quollllad contact w call 33a-020S t ilary commeniur... ............ E NATIONAL CASH RfeGISTER COMPANY We Ar* An Equal Opportunity appoIntnH wM abll RE6ISTE PERMANENT PARt-TiME OR SUMMER WORK Taachers, married students and employed married man ar* baat prospects, car and piMn* nee**- n. Call Mr. Bryan, OR 34545 rrang* Intervlaw. i:n*a. Stainway - Knoha — tiook. Crthnall. Apply Orli PROCTOR & GAMBLE YOUNG MEN $70 PER WEEK Interesting < Ihg and'sales jiromotlon. In'a acTty that bftors unlimited adva To Willy tor t______ must be physically In am tally alert. College tralnUM la lul but not a requiramanf. N parlance Is necessary, aa tlw Wall qualltlad men wfw ar to travol extansivoly will b Salary paid weekly. fraiWirt provided. f ft you ar* rmbroslod, la* * Mr. D. L. HonW or Mr. J. at Jiw WaNron 1^1 a retired (WAN t .............. drug stom. General clerk. Relar-ancos. 402-3444, RpIRRD MAN TO WORK IN REAL ESTATE _ an. (tf stf esi^^ . sales experience or sales a •mple floor time, broker assii.- dgpot overitaHod. John Kiniltr, salbr, 5219 Dixie - - - REAL ESTATE S A L tt $ M wanted, full time, work tor a broker and builder. Fla; Realty, 520 Commas Road, U I, Michigan. 34S494I. SALESPEOPLE FOR NEW HOMES MODELS TO SELL FROM! JIULL FLOOR TIME-^ RADE-IN PROGRAMI Toylor Agency OR 4-0306 Salesmen TV a STEREO BUILDING /MATERIALS These are fuinime, permanent positions, for experienced salesmen, who need to earn good compensation ond wont-Q secure future. Our company benefits include: Group ij^rance, profit shoring'ond mtirement. Apply personnel joffico nr write Personnel mom MontQomery ‘. Waid 409 N. ^ '