The Weather it Bur»u Fsracut Chance of showers THE PONTIAC PRe!8S PAfi£S VOL. %2i — NO. 158 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1966 —64 PAGES 10c Airline Arbitration Plan Sought Two Yank Jets Riddle Labor Leader S. Viet Village; 15 Die Doubts Men m • X£i SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Fifteen South Vietnamese civilians were killed and 182 wounded when two U.S. Air Force jets bombed and strafed Full Rights Bill Passes House Key Housing Bias Ban Survives GOP Efforts Pontiac Pmt PI $50 WORTH OF FRECKLES—Timqjhy Clifton, 10-year-Old son of Mrs. Mary Clifton of 592 Freckle Contest at the Oakland County 4-H Fair. Valencia, and Peggy Braniff, 13-year-old daughter They will each receive a $25 savings bond. Thirty of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Braniff of 496 Tanview, Ox- youngsters, the largest group in recent years, en- ford, were the winners in last night’s Pontiac Press tered the contest. Standing Room Only 4-H Fair Opens to Biggest Crowd WASHINGTON (AP) - The fight over a federal open housing law shifted, to the Senate today after House passage of the 1966 civil rights bill with the controversial provision intact. The bill, which would arm the federal government with broad new powers to protect Negroes’ rights, was passed 259 to 15? last night but it was a fight to the finish for the housing provision. The Oakland County 4-H Fair got off to a running start last night with what veteran fair officials described as the largest crowd eyer in its history. There was standing room only in the grandstand and on the hillside beside the horse arena for the evening program, which Detroit Scene of Race Brawl included the crowning of the king and queen, The Pontiac Press freckle contest, judging of the best-costumed riders in three categories and presentation of parade awards. Today Is kiddies day at the fair with prices reduced on die amusement rides until 5 p.m. This evening’s program, beginning at 7 p.m., will feature Milky, the Magic Gown. Also on tonight’s program will be the senior beef showmanship contest, a pie-eating contest, the Moore Studio Singers of Orton-ville and a tractor, operating pressed to find room lor all die exhibits this year as the fair continues to grow. An extra horse tent was set up and additional stalls had to be built to provide housing for Republican leaders made a last ditch effort to kill the proposed ban on racial discrimination by anyone in the housing business, but failed by a vote of 222 to 190. Related Story and Photos, Page A-4 nearly* 200 horses which have been entered. DETROIT (AP) - Three Negroes brawled wtih police, unleashing a 90-minute stream of rock throwing and window breaking here last night in a racially mixed, east side neighborhood. A 46-year-old white man was beaten in the street by Negroes as hundreds of residents flocked to sidewalks in a 16-block area around the fight scene. PoMee ordered 150 officers into area, including 17 cars with' riot-trained members of ' the crack Tactical Mobile Unit. Rocks and bricks shattered car and store windows. ★ ★ ★ A passing motorist, Albert Gibbs, 46, was beaten after he (Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) «<.<- JUil Mty. lw“Jwjhrffi‘Tiliiiiii nnwftT-j^min UWnnwwiiMiMiijuiAii 1 In Today's 1 Press I City Affairs j Pedestrian bridge con- 1 | tract approved; parking 1 1 lot remodeling authorized 1 J — PAGE B-4. I Communism | JU.S. envoy to Japan I says menace “shrinking” 1 ■ — PAGE A-7. I Yugoslavia | 1 | Jailing of writer hurting I 1 nation’s image — PAGE V j A-9. I Area News .............A-4 Astrology ..........C-8 Bridge .............C-8 i Crossword Puzzle .. D-U Comics ............ C4 i Editorials .............A4 | Food Section ....C-8-C4 rkets ...........D-4 ituaries ...... A-19 Sports ......... . .D-l—D-3 saters ........ C-5 TV-Radio Programs D-U | Wilson, Earl .....IM1 [ Women’s Pages B-J--B-3 r at Western halter class riderq will take the arena at 9 a.m. tomorrow and sheep judging is scheduled for 9:30. LIVESTOCK AUCTION Dog obedience classes wifi perform in competition at 1 p.m. A dog obedience demonstration, supervised by Reginald Armstrong, K-9 4-H Club leader, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. tomorrow. The fair will continue through Saturday night this year instead of closing at Saturday noon as in past years. The fairgrounds is located on North Perry between Pontiac Road and Walton Boulevard. Parking space was adequate last night despite the unusually large crowd. Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen has called the provision totally unacceptable to him. There are grave doubts it can pass Hie Senate without his support. Despite this, the bill’s House backers and civil rights groups expressed cautious optimism that it would win final approval and become law. SENATE’S MONKEY “If it is killed, it will be by the LI’L ONES Annual highlight of the fair, the auction sale of prize-winning livestock, will begin at * 8 p.m. Tomorrow night’s entertain-meni will also include the prize-winning Jackie Rae Dance Studio drill team. Fair officials were hard Ell “I’d have been elected president of my dub on write-ins, but none of my friends can write.” Republicans,” said Rep. Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., chairman of the House Judiciary Committee and the bill’s chief sponsor. “I don’t see how, in an election year, the Republicans can afford to let that happen. In any case the monkey is now on the Senate’s back.” The House-passed bill would put the government into new areas in the civil rights struggle. Besides seeking to improve housing opportunities for Negroes it would classify as federal crimes a new series of offenses involving racial violence. On one side, the federal government eouM move against anyone who used force or violence against a Negro or civil rljdits worker lawfully engaged in any activity sane-timed by federal law. On the other hand, it also would be a federal crime for anyone to go from one state into another for the purpose of leading, encouraging or taking part ~nnrmt. ms amirniprovisioB'" was added after the series of i auai riuis HrlPVTO nuirntriT cities this summer. —That amendment waaytHotr-separate roll call vote Tuesday and won approval by a thundering 389-25 margin. Rep. William "Cr tTramer,'Tf-Fla., "Us author, assured the House it would' not prevent anyone from taking part in a peaceful demonstration. Light Showers Likely to End by Tomorrow Cloudy skies and some light showers may be expected through tonight with rain ending tomorrow morning. The weatherman reports temperatures will continue about the same, lows tonight registering 56 to 62. Highs will aim for 72 to 79 tomorrow. 4-H ROYALTY — Beryl Austin, 15, of 8660 Kier, Groveland Township, and BUI Rathburg, 18, of 1871 8. Lapeer, Oxford Township, were crowned king and queen of the Oakland County 4-H Fair last night. They were chosen on the basis of their contributions to 4-H ggd their community. - W' ■' Y -it Partly cloudy and a little wanner is Friday’s prediction. About .1 of an inch in rain fell on the Pontiac downtown area yesterday. A low of 58 was recorded prior to 8 a.m. today. At 1 p.m., the mercury had rffichedjSji, a village in the Mekong Delta, an Air Force spokesman announced today. He attributed the error to the local Vietnamese province chief who picked the target. The attack took place last night eight miles from Can Tho, the largest town in the Mekong Delta. The F100 Super Sabre Jets hit the village with bombs and 20mm cannon fire. him on the ground but helicopters were unable to pick him up. He was presumed captured, although officially listed as missing. Will Okay Idea Hope Settlement to End Long Strike of Five Major Carriers The error was not discovered for 14 hours. Then help was rushed to the scene and the injured were taken to the U.S. hospital in Can Tho. In the Central Highlands, an outnumbered 'company of the Korean Tiger Division decimated a North Vietnamese battalion of about 600 men in a bitter all-night battle lit by flares from circling American planes. HOLD GROUND The Koreans killed 170 Red soldiers and held the jungle battlefield when dawn came, raking in an unusually high total of 78 Communist weapons-The battle flared west of Pleiku seven miles from the Cambodian border in an area where three North Vietnamese regiments are reported by intelligence. While the Koreans held the field, American warplanes swept in with rockets and bombs. MAJ. KASLER WASHINGTON UP) — Representatives of the grounded airlines and their striking mechanics agreed today to try to set up an arbitration plan for ending the air travel tie-up, but the chief labor spokesman said he doubts His members will agree. Members of the International Association of Machinists employed by the five trunk lines would have to vote on whether •to submit unresolved issues to arbitration and go back to work in the meanwhile, union presi- dent P.L. Siemiller said. Congressmen Asked to Eye City Program And, he said in an interview, “If you ask me whether they will agree. I wonld say A membership vote killed one effort at settlement 10 days ago after negotiators had agreed to it. In both North and South Viet Nam, U.S. planes made hundreds of strikes, including a B52 raid on a suspected troop hideout 40 miles northwest of the South Vietnamese coastal town of Qui Nhon. PILOT DOWN For the first time in two days, the U.S. command announced no aircraft losses in the Communist North. But the Air Force disclosed that the top pilot of the war, Maj. James H. Kasler, 40, Indianapolis, was shot down in his F105 Thunderchief 70 miles northwest of Hanoi on Monday. Three members of Congress will be asked to investigate why Housing and Urban Development (HUD) authorities have not recertified Pontiac’s workable program for community improvement. The decision to ask for the top-level inquiry followed discussion last night by the City Commission of a 99-acre housing project — including public housing for the elderly — on Auburn west of the osteopathic college site. Other airmen saw Kasler bail out and made radio contact with The commission is to invite a HUD representative here to explain details of a housing project proposal presented informally to the commission project proposal presented informally to the commission Monday night by Developer Charles L. Langs of Waterford Township. Meantime, recertification of (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) BULLETIN DETROIT (if)—Peppery Charlie Dressen, manager of two pennant-winning baseball teams and a deft handler of young pitching talent, died today in a Detroit hospital. He is survived by his widow, Ruth. Dressen, 67, was somewhat quiet as manager of the Detroit Tigers—his last job—than he was during his playing days and early managerial assignments, but had been m good sBirita despite turn heart attacks in a span ofl4 months. / However, Siemiller said he would advise the union membership that the alternative to the arbitration plan is legislation by Congress. OPTIMISM Some optimism bad been generated in Congress by the agreement to try to set up the arbitration plans. Sen. Peter H. Dominick, R-Colo., called it encouraging, and said in a statement: “Perhaps this voluntary method of settlement will establish a pattern for similar disputes where essential public services are deeply involved.’’ Siemiller estimated it will take 3% days to get the men’s verdict. Speaking for the carriers, Wil- ■ liam J. Curtin accepted the idea in principle. LEGISLATION The agreement was reached as the committee moved toward action on back-to-work legislation after failure of a new negotiating effort last night. Hie hearing went ahead. The strikers overwhelmingly rejeeted earlier an actual settlement agreement approved by their negotiators. The dispute ceriters on wages, with particular emphasis by the union on a demand for a cost-of-living escalator clause. Under the arbitration plan the procedure would be for the negotiators to get together and see how many items in a possible settlement they could agree on and how many would be left binding arbitration. GMC Truck Cites Record Production GMC Truck & Coach Divisiori production for 1965-66 has set an all-time record for a model year, it was announced today. Calvin J. Werner, a vice president of General Motors and general manager of GMC Truck & Coach Division, said the production figure of 134,735 vehicles also ircluded record highs for five individual months. Hie output of commercial trucks and buses was nearly 6 per cent above the previous production mark of 127,176 vehicles established in 1964-65. The record months and their production totals for 1965: • September, 11,288; • October, 12,189; • November, 12,531 fjri C- The record months for 1966 were: • June, 12,375; • July, 11,210. Production, which ended Friday for the previous model year at the division, is scheduled to resume Aug. 22. A GMC spokesman said some 8,600 employes will return to work on a gradual basis. Assembly operations at Pontiac Motor Division are slated to resume the following Monday, one week after GMC Truck & Coach Division returns to production. Fisher Body Plant employes are expected to be called back sometime later this month after closing out 196566 production last milk. fry THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1966 egregationist Wins LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) — (York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefell-Jim Johnson, a segregationist er, planned to open his cam- and unrelenting critic of the federal government, won the Democratic nomination for governor of Arkansas Tuesday in a runoff primary. ★ * * I Hie 41-year-old former state Supreme Court justice, who compares his conservative views to those of Alabama Gov. paign headquarters today while Johnson was still sagging from an exhausting two-month primary race. ★ * * The unofficial vote count in 2,-528 of 2,661 precincts showed: Johnson 198,494, Holt 179,981. ★ ★ * David Pryor, 31, a lawyer-leg- of Rep. Oren Harris, who resigned in February to become a federal judge. He will meet Lowe again in November for a full two-year term. Holt, a former colleague of Johnson on the Supreme Court, denied Johnson’s charges that he was sponsored by the politi- George Wallace, defeated Frank islator from Camden, won the cal organization that backed Holt, 55, in a campaign in which the federal-state relationship was a prime issue. nomination for Congress in the 4th District in a runoff against Richard Arnold, 30, a Texarkana attorney. The unofficial count in 629 of >8 precincts showed: Pryor 70,-027. Arnold-38,655. Johnson is still a long step away from the governor’s chair, however. Ready to challenge him in November is Republican! w breatiled newWeS hJparty' Pryor also won a speciaI P"* Faubus pledged to help the d^u^tiie last six years. ^ for,the right winner against Rocke* ^ • publican Lynn Lowe of Texar- feller. TO OPEN HEADQUARTERS kana in a special election next Rockefeller, brother of New month to fill the unexpired term! Johnson aimed his campaign I five rules of the Arkansas party. Gov. Orval Faubus for years. FAUBUS NEUTRAL Faubus, retiring after 12 years in office, did not back either candidate although Johnson criticized his administration while Holt did not. at the federal government from the start. He called on voters to tell Washington, by supporting him, that they were tired of a no-win war in Viet Nam, federal controls, desegregation guidelines, foreign aid and protection for civil rights demonstrators. ★ * ★ He led a preferential primary ticket by 13,000 votes two weeks ago when the field was cut from seven to two candidates. Johnson called his showing “a crack in the invincible armor of Lyndon B. Johnson that will be seen around the world.’& ★ ★ ★ Johnson bolted the Democratic party two years ago to support Barry Goldwater, Republican presidential candidate, against President Johnson. He said he did so because the President would not qualify as a Democrat under the conserva- ‘WE WON’ — Jim Johnson, victor in the Democratic gubernatorial runoff election in Arkansas, gets a joyful hug from his wife, Virginia, as they enter their car to leave campaign headquarters in Little Rock. Johnson, from Conway, Ark., won out over Frank Holt of Little Rock. Area Retirees Support Election Proposal to Hear Talk by Milliken Officials Firm on Park Millage Oakland County officials yes- Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken;terday refused to withdraw sup-is scheduled to be the featured -port they voiced a week ago speaker at a Retirees Day Pic- for an election proposal Nov. 8 nic at Hawthorne Park Satur- 'calling for Vt mill ovWID years day. jto finance county park develop- The picnic will be preceded moot, by a 100-car parade up Saginaw, Members of the ways and slated to begin about 10 a.m. means committee of the County Milliken is expected to of Supervisors stood firm speak around 1 p.m. sition cost with the state funding the other quarter of the cost. The recommendation by ways and means to place the millage proposal on the Nov. 8 ballot must be approved by the full board of supervisors when it meets next Wednesday. __ on their recommended election by son that the recommendation be Oakland County Retirees ciation (OCRA), will celebrate Gov. Romney’s forthcoming proclamation declaring an annual Retirees Day every second Saturday in August. Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor; Max Adams manager of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce; Bruce Annett, president of the Pontiac *Area United Fund Board of Trustees; and AFL-CIO labor staff representative Arthur Heaton will also be guests for the day. 10 A.M. PARADE The parade will begin at Saginaw near Whittemore about 10 a.m. Taylor and OCRA president Fresh Schram will be in the lead cars. withdrawn. Levinson, who was absent from last week’s committee meeting, argued that a land study should be completed before the millage issue is put to the voters.. “I’m not opposed to parks,” Levinson said, “but we would'necessary before any federal be irresponsible making it an programs can be undertaken, is election issue without first mak- an obstacle to doing any devel- Waterford Planner Reelected Leader City As for Probe on Program (Continued From Page One) the workable program, which is Riot Area in Lansing Said Calm Carlos Richardson of 2326 Carlos was reelected chairman of the Waterford Township Planning Commission last night. Also reelected to office for 1966-67 was Vice Chairman William Shunck. William Dean was elected secretary by the planners. ing a complete study available to the public.” A study is in progress by the supervisors’ parks and recreation committee which originally suggested a V4-mill levy to extend five years to acquire from 15 to 20 parks. RECOMMENDATION At its meeting last week, the ways and means committee recommended that V4 mill over 10 years be presented the voters to build 45 to 50 parks in all areas of the county. Total cost of this extensive park land acquisition is estimated at $30 million with the county contributing $7.5 million, one quarter of the total. Federal funds are expected to be available for half the acqui- The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report HfNItAC an® ncwirr^-MMy ctoudy today and tonight with a chance of some light showers today and tonight with showers ending Thursday morning and becoming partly cloudy. Not much change in temperature. Highs today and Thursday 72 to 79. Lows tonight 56 to 62. Winds variable 5 to 12 miles becoming east to northeast 5 to 15 miles this afternoon and tonight. Friday’s outlook: partly cloudy, a little warmer. Precipitation probabilities: 30 per cent tonight; 30 per cent Thursday. opment, as Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. last bight reminded the commission. * i Commissioner Leslie H. Hudson said Sen. Philip Hart, Congressman Billie S. Famum and Sen. Robert Griffin should be asked to investigate why the workable program hasn’t been recertified. GAVE INFORMATION Hudson said the city had complied with HUD requests for information on the workable program. City Manager Joseph A. Warren said calls on the workable program to the Chicago regional HUD office were met with the reply: “It’s in process.” Taylor said many developers are sitting and waiting for recertification of the workable program. The annual certification expired April 1. ★ ★ ★ The invitation to a HUD representative to come here would be for the purpose of explaining Lansing (ap) - Relative calm prevailed today in Lansing as leaders in the predominantly Negro West Side took over the job of patroling the area where racial violence had flared for two days. '’The situation has eased, said1 Police Chief Charles Stra-gier, who had ordered a' 20-square block area within walking distance of the state Capitol sealed off from dusk to dawn. ★ * * Police barricades were erected around the perimeter of the troubled area, and all nonresidents were kept out—including newsmen. One incident, involving the tossing of a Molotov cocktail fire bomb, was reported by police as they kept vigil throughout the night. But newsmen were uable to confirm the report firsthand or to check out other rumors that cropped up about roving snipers. FULFILL PLEDGE Stragier said that except for some plainclothesmen patroling through the area, Negro leaders had fulfilled their pledge to keep a lid on teen-agers who for two nights had tossed fire bombs, bricks and pop bottles at passing motorists. it * * Four persons were shot, several others injured and more than a score arrested in the racial violence which police said involved mainly roving gangs of both white and Negro youths. lurchers in Mississippi Met With Rocks, Bottles GRENADA, Miss. (^-Several Negroes were injured, none seriously, when a crowd of whites threw rocks, bottles and firecrackers last night into a group of Negroes staging civil rights demonstration in the Town Square. Police kept the two groups apart, standing with rifles at the ready to block the whites from the street where the Negroes were gathered. But the presence of the officers did not stop the barrage of missiles or shouts of “White power!” The battle over civil rights for Negroes, including the right to live in any neighborhood, moves to the Senate today. A last-ditch effort by Republican leaders to strike tthe controversial housing proposal failed and the 1966- civil rights bill was passed by the House Tuesday night 259 to 157. The bill, expected to face rough going in the Senate, would put the government into new areas of the civil rights struggle. It makes the use of force or threats against civil rights workers a federal crime, provides for a uniform jyror selection system for federal courts and authorizes the government to begin court action to eliminate racial discrimination in state court juries. Other proposals to correct conditions which President Johnson blames for racial rioting are getting sliced deeply in Congress. These include proposals for rent supplements, Teach-Corps and demonstration cities — where slum areas would be cleared. However, the President told a newd conference Tuesday he would have new recommendations for the next Congress. In Chicago, a leader in the drive started by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. for open housing announced today postponement of a planned march into an all-white southwest side area. The spokesman, A1 Raby, said a demonstration would be held in some other section and that the marchers might return to the Bogan area “Friday, over the weekend or a month from BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -The township library’s summer safari” for children recently came to an Mid. ★ * ★ Fifty-six township children from grades two through six were enrolled in the Children’s Summer Reading Club. The youngsters were required to read one boqk a week for five weeks and make oral reports on them. Rebecca Lamb, the children’s librarian, and Howard C. Wes-sells, pf 1864 Lone Pine, worked together on the theme of the summer session, “On Safari.’ ★ ★ ★ The children were ndt required to read books pertaining to the theme pf the prgram, however. They were encouraged to read any books which interested them. OTHER FACTORS Although the program was designed for recreational reading, Rose Vainstein, director of the library, explained that the program helps children who don’t enjoy reading to retain their reading skills. * * ★ The program also encourages the children to continue their personal reading' throughout the summer months. Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, meanwhile, said, “There must be some way of resolving this question of integrated housing without the marches.” The American Civil Liberties Union asked a federal court to prevent the Chicago Housing Authority from placing any more public housing facilities in I all-Negro neighborhoods. Main Areas of Rights Bill WASHINGTON (AP) - Here |______P| ^ are the major provisions of the .the ‘:hjrnkey”‘ raelhod of devek1966 civil ri«hts bill passed by 1_............. ' TiUPMdti cant In oping housing. JOINT MEETING The HUD official would meet jointly with the City Commission, City Planning Commission and the Public Housing Commission. Langs, who now is building his second housing project in the£ity,Juuproposedac(ua^ mercial-residential-3 develop- NATIONAL WEATHER - Tonight’s weather will be rainy over parts of the Gulf and Atlantic coasts, central Plains, mid-Mississippi Valley and lower Great Lakes. Temperatures will be continued cool in the Great Lakes and upper Mississippi Valley and continued warm throughout moft oj^tiie South and East. the south side of Auburn, mediately west of the osteo-pathic college site. He has suggested building a six-acre shopping center and 900 apartment unTtsIfl several buildings, including two high-rise structures of public ousing for the elderly Langs also proposes two-story ’ housing for the elderly under another federal program that permits slightly higher income. The balance of the development is to be townhouse-type units. WERE IMPRESEED City Commissioners indicated last night that they had been impressed with (he Langs proposal and wanted to hear more about it. Langs suggested a “turnkey” met od might be employed. This is a federally supervised program whereby a developer is told to go ahead with a set of plans approved by the Public Housing Commission. After it is constructed, the public housing would be turned over the commission to operate. The federal government pays 100 per cent of the cost of con-jsjfucting public housing, [fie Mise Tuesday and sent to the Senate: Title I — Would provide a uniform juror selection system for the federal courts, assuring that juries will be drawn from a broad cross-section of the community. Present qualifications for jury service would be retained. * * * ^tlFIt^^ouTJ'aulhdrlze W h federal court action to el discrimination in state court jiiriesrir "would also bar -state laws that exempt women from jury service. Title III — Would, give the attorney general broad asthor-ity to seek a civil injunction Birmingham Area News Children's Book 'Safari' Ends in Bloomfield Twp. held at 4 p.m. Wednesdays, and at 2:98 p.m. aw) 3:30 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. At tiie Cranbrook Academy or Art Galleries, the annual summer student s h o w,, featuring works by students of all eight departments of the Art Academy, is in progress through Sept 11. ■*V* * On d i s p I a y are paintings, sculptures, designs, graphics, ceramics, weaving, metalsmithing and architecture. Land-Building Swap Is Urged County Needs Space; Schools Need Site Extra demonstrations will be held on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at J p.m. at the Cranbrook Institute’s planetarium throughout August. Regular demonstrations on “Our Galaxy and Beyond” are Party Lines Followed in House Vote WASHINGTON (UPI)-Mich-igan congressmen voted mainly along party lines yesterday when the House, on a 190 to 222 roll call, defeated a motion to strike an open housing provision from President Johnson’s civil rights bill, The bill later was passed. Voting against the motion were 12 Michigan Democrats and one Republican congressman. Five Republicans voted for elimination of the open housing provision. Democrats aglinst: Clevenger, Conyers, Diggs, Dingell, Famum, William Ford, Griffiths, Mackie, Nedzi, O’Hara, Todd and Vivian. Republicans against: Harvey. Republicans for: Broomfield, Cederberg, Chamberlain, Gerald Ford and Hutchinson. against anyone who deprives another person of any federally-protected rights because of his race. Title IV — Would prohibit racial discrimination in housing transactions by anyone in the housing business. It would not cover individual homeowners unless they engaged in three or more real estate transactions in 12 months, and it would not cov-owners who occupy smt apartments and' boarding houses with four family units or less. About 40 per cent of the nation’s housing units, mainly in larg^ apartments and new developments, would be affected by the ban on discrimination. * * ★ Title V — Would make it a federal crime to use force or threats against a Negro or civil rights worker who is lawfully engaged in a federally-protected activity. It also would make it crime lor anyone to cross a state line to lew] or take part in a riot. * t Southern Christian Conference worker Mildred Smith of Montgomery, is assisted bv a friend after her nose was ripped apart by a metal object-thrown by whites tfuring denwnstraticBl tn Grenada, Miss., last night. Several hundred Negro marchers were pelted with rocks and bottles during the march to the town square. Detroit Police Pelted (Continued From I halted his car to retrieve a hub- flareup of trouble in a racially tense area in recent years. The neighborhood is an older section Area Student Receives Honor Michael Mobey of 8300 Pop-tiee-fcake, White Lake Township recently received honors for journalism proficiency at the 19th annual High School Communication Arts Institute at Michigan State University. ★ ★ ★ A recipient of one of The Pontiac Press scholarships to the summer journalism workshop, Oakland County officials recommended yesterday that 20 acres of land in the county serv-iceWnter be leased to Oakland County schools in exchange for the present school system headquarters building. \ ★ ★ ★ The recommendation approved by the Ways and means committee of tiie County Board of Supervisors, will be up for final action by\ the full board at its Aug. 17 meeting. It calls for a 99-year lease of the land\ on the northwest corner of Pontiac Lake and Telegraph roads at $1 per year in exchange for the take over by the county\of the present 32,000-square-foot school system building for needed office space. Independent appraisers retained by the County Board of Auditors and County Board of Education valued the 20 acres at $300,000 and the existing building constructed\by the school system at $468,000. ★ it ■ School officials had men eyeing the 20-acre site for some time as the need to expqnd to meet tiie demand of a growing population has become acute.. NEW BUILDING County School Supt. William J. Emerson said that a building of from 70,000 to 80,000 square feet would be constructed on the site at a cost of from $2.5\ to $3 million. \ it it it \ A building this size would meet projected requirements in the next five to 10 years, Dr. Emerson said. Additions to the original facility could be added later. Construction bidding on the new school facility is slated for early next year with completion earmarked by Jan. 1, 1969. • Emerson praised the committee’s recommendation, stating that the lease agreement will put both the 20 acres and existing. school system. MMing to Objecting to the recommendation was ways and means member Harry W. Horton of Royal Oak. He felt the appraised value was excessive since the existing yhnfll hnilriing waj hnilt nn cap knocked off in the stoning. MOTORIST BEATEN Gibbs was taken to a hospital. Doctors said he suffered a cut forehead, injured right shoulder and foot and had several teeth knocked out. The three men in the melee-one was injured—were charged with inciting to riot. , They were identified by Police Commissioner Ray Girardin as Wilvera McClendon, 25; James Robertson, 24, and Clarence Reed,' 32, all of Detroit. Reed was treated at a hospital for minor injuries suffered in tiie scrap, police said. It was Detroit’s first serious of apartments and multifamily dwellings. Girardin said “As far as we’re concerned it was neither blade nor white. 'Rocks were thrown indiscriminately.” CHILDREN, ADULTS He said children aged 10 to 19 hurled most of the stones. Officers on the scene said many adults also were Involved. Two stones cracked the wind- ah troi shield of an unmarked police 1 er. . cruiser. Others hit passing cars with squads of police armtid with riot guns who turned „ traffic away from tiie disturb-] ance. t " PANASONIC Transistorized •ndsflTERY Tape Reconler $59.95 seller - Model RQ102 sure power recorder which allow* batteries to take over automatically If power should fail — no interruption of recording or playback. All transistor Capstan drive record-self-contained parrying i. UL listed. S4» Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1 Test Sled g§ Mi f.. Kills Two Ford Men BRAVERY IS REWARDED - Brig. Gen. William J. Dur-renberger (left), deputy commanding general at the U.S. Army Tank Automotive Center in Warren, awards Wilfred Mazur of 2454 Ivanhoe, West Bloomfield Township. A medal for meritorious civilian bravery. Mazur 'recently rescued a .fellow employe whose truck sank in 14 feet of water during a test. Area Resident Honored for His Bravery White socks might not be fashoinable but they were the only thing visible on a drowning man in a pit full of murky water recently, according to Wilfred Mazur of 2454 Ivanhoe, West Bloomfield Township. Mazur, deputy chief of the combat vehicle branch at U.S. Army Tank Automation Center Research and Engineering Directorate in Warren, received . a medal for meritorious civilian [ service for bravery and $100 | check for saving Otis Bannister, a combat vehicle mechanic, [ from drowning. He pulled Bannister from the bottom of a 14-foot fording pit after a cargo truck Bannister was operating sank during tests. “Bannister had planned to wear brown socks that day but couldn’t find the pair he wanted” related Mazur. Fire Calls Rise in Waterford Waterford Township fi responded to 75 fire cal month, 14 more than the ous July and 20 more tl June. increases in car and grass fires accounted for the difference, according to the report. Included among the last month were 42 of FOR EVERY DOLLAR YOU SAVE WITH US (up to *10,000.00) YOU RECEIVE ANOTHER DOLLAR'S WORTH OF accidental LIFE INSURANCE Urge Confabs to Aid Youth brush and grass variety, 20 ires Youth Day the imnmvp nnr vehicle fires and nine blazes. 1116 seven-month fire ti year is 346 against 335 same period last year. ■ direct fire damage is through July this year $161,715 for the first months in 1965. Township f i swered 100 alarms last raise the 1966 total to pared with 500 for the riod last year. 514 com- the young people of the state The I RATE OF RETURN paid on regular INSURED PASSBOOK SAVINGS in Oakland County 18? 88 II 1 li i I 88 i p nmnetfi ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m ■ SUMMER WHITE GOODS EVENTI THROUGH SATURDAY ONLY! 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Rcischauer said today he regards communism as a “shrinking danger” in Japan and believes the younger generation is swinging from Marxist concepts to “a more realistic approach.” I am not basically worried" about communism in Japan, said Reischauer who after five years as envoy to Tokyo is returning to Harvard to teach Japanese history. Reischauer, 55, said in an interview the nationalism that plunged Japan into World War II lingers among older Japanese “particularly those who have hot participated so much in the forward rush of recent events.” But he said there has been a fundamental change in the young people — greater respect for the rights of the indi- g0 their activities,” he said. But EDWIN 0. REISCHAUER vidua I.” I he added that they would he a I “Given the surrounding reali-, minority since feeling over the ties of the modern world, they issue has been subsiding, have recognized that the prewar I Reischauer said he supports type of nationalism is econom-ju.S. policy in Viet Nam but ically, politically and militarily] feels the situation there is “not not feasible,” he said. ia satisfactory one." One of the most popular en- The United States, he said, voys the United States has sent must find a better way to han-to Japan, Reischauer’s depar- die the Vietnamese problem ture has been top news here based on local nationalism and since he announced his resigna- “very much broader inlerna-jfton two weeks ago. He has been tional support than we are able interviewed daily by newspaper, to muster today." radio, television and magazine [ reporters and his comments! have been given wide prominence. An indication of the esteem in | which he js held was given , HojZ-CDSIIM WOFA—* {33j GUIS SHOWN ARE STYLES FOR COLONIAL PATTERN SLIPCOVERS $ealf of Quality twin or full - automatic blankets “Shalimar” or “Moderne” 72x90” thermal blanket SPECIAL Big 27x48” rayon viscose area rugs Automatic blankets provide all-night tontfuil with dtoi-a* heat control; just set dial for fnewWToSwir*™ Solid color virgin acrylic; 7Strri1rrThiffnat^mavB:-72x 90" size ... or postel plaid viscose rayon na^eTtnemw Heavy duty, washable TBySFVIHeiFfflFrap7 with a non skid latex Full sizo dual control^...$16 blend with nylon bindings. bocking. Choose irons new decorator colors. BLANKET SALE BUY NOW FOR THE COLD NlGHYf AHEAD White 21x27" pillow is firm enough for a healthful sleep yet soft enough for comfort. Machine wash, cotton tkk- - 23x29" pillow filled with Vir-tron white polyester fiber. 20x27" latex pillow. Extra firmr washable cotton tick. Quality, rayon print comforts 7.99 Filled with white Estron'* acetate. 72x84" full size. Full, twin plastic mattress covers 1.29 Hygienic, with zipper ends. Protfcts mattresses fully. Twin, full cotton chenille bedspread Row after row of closely tufted cotton chenille with heavy shag cuff. Washable, pre-shrunk, never need Ironing. Full color range. Zippered plastic pillow protectors i-r Non ollorgenic, dust proof and hygienicatly treated. Vn-inch oval vinyl cafe curtains, now 99* *sr 40x34" site .2.44 pi. Matching valances, Me aa. ' OCT* ftscwi S a>„ I*, HEW m. * * 1001T 1 cuts, nosaoioo moor moduct or«u OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Drayton open Sunday noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS warn aww THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, I960 Remodeling of Parking Lot Authorized Contract for 2nd Pedestrian Bridge OK d A contract for a second pedestrian bridge and plans for remodeling die parking lot behind City Hall were among the items approved last night by the City Commission. Planned for Kennett in front of Alcott Elementary School, the pedestrian bridge is to cost $15,-645. The contract went to Hill and Thomas Contracting Co. of Lansing. Construction is to take four months. The city has erected one overhead walkway across West Huron in front of Webster School. The civic center parking lot | is to be revamped to eliminate | nicipal Airport to Oakland County. Hus was the second consecutive week that the commission had failed to consider putting the city’s offer for the transfer in writing as requested by a special county airport committee. rJ Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said only that the items were deferred to permit further study by the commission. CHARGES WITHDRAWN In still other business, the commission received word that unfair labor practice charges filed by two employe groups had been withdrawn. The charges were filed by the Pontiac Fire Fighters As- sociation and the Pontiac Police Officers Association, Commission action was tabled on a request from the Matador Lounge, 16-20 E. Pike, for a dance permit. The question was tabled until ownership of the lounge can be determined in court. Also last night, Mayor Taylor disclosed that city records indicate that the Downtown Pontiac Business Association owes the city some $11,750 from 1963-65. ANNUAL AUDIT City auditors uncovered the debt in their annual audit of the city’s books. A public hearing was held last night on closing Wrenn at Flldew.to eliminate traffic to the Miracle JHlle shopping center from the residential streets. Permanent barricades are to be erected there. A petition for a water main on Princeton from Jaytee Park to Highwood was referred to the water department, while requested rezoning for an 85-acre parcel at Opdyke and Square Lake Road was sent to the city planning commission. The latter petition was for residential-3 and commercial rezoning for a multiple housing (304 units) and shopping center development proposed for the extreme southeast comer of the city €)ly traffic congestion at a total cost of $13,600. Room for 10 cars is to be added to present lot. City workers plan to redesign the parking facilities. CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT Monies for both projects are to come from the 1966 capital improvement fund. In other business, the commission deferred action on formal approval of proposals for the transfer of Pontiac Mu- Commission Holds Public Hearings Will Sell Station MARVIN M. ALWARD Resignation Submitted by Finance Chief Several public hearings were held and still more city planning commission recommendations were received at last night’s City Commission meeting. One disputed rezoning to permit a service garage for the post office on West Huron was denied by the City Commission after the request had been withdrawn. A hearing on necessity for paving Stephens, Perry to Moreland, was held with the | special assessment roll to be | presented next week. Assessments for sidewalk construction on the east side of Telegraph from Ruth to the Cliiito River are also to be presented next week. WASHINGTON (AP) - The H* vacation, proposed for , Despite a loud protest an alley southwest and adja- the property owners, the com- the sale of station WTAC, Flint, cent to 71 Elm, was denied mission denied personal service Mich., for $900,000 to Natco along with the petition for rezoning request for two lots on Communications, Inc., which is manufacturing for the proper- jthe northwest comer of Orchard controlled by Fuqua Industries, ty at 71 Elm. I Lake Avenue and Seminole. I Inc. Migrant Worker Faces Murder Charge LELAND (AP) - Migrant worker Jesse James Jackson (of Memphis, Tenn., waived examination on an open charge Jackson was brought before Justice of the Peace Clyde Hazzard for examination. He was bound over to Circuit Court tor arraignment in the murder of murder Tuesday, Leelenaw ^ another migrant worker, County Sheriff Richard Steffens,Rufus Robinson, 49, of Washing-reported. jtomD. C. Winnie the Whale Wings to the Zoo MALTON, England (UPI> Here’s a tale about Winnie the Whale, who flew to the zoo. Yes, flew. Winnie made whale history yesterday when she became the first whale to be flown into Er land without dying en route. She arrived at the Flamingo Park Zoo here after a four-hour flight from the Faroe Islands. Part of the laurels must go to her two keepers on the air trip, who kept the 200-pound, seven-foot-long whale cool by sponging her down. Hiey admitted it was a whale of a job. City finance director for neareight years, Marvin M. Al-ward, 58, of 69 Osceola, unexpectedly submitted his resignation last night to the City Commission. Alward said he plans to retire effective Oct. 31, 1967. He said he would be on the job until May 15 and then take accumulated vacation and sick day benefits. Alward suggested that his replacement be hired by Jan. 1 to enable him to train him. Appointed by the City Commission, Alward becomes eligible for early retirement at ) in October of next year. His letter of resignation gave no other reason for resigning. GIVEN POST He joined the city in March 1929 as a clerk in the treasurer’: office. He was named finance I director in November 1958. We Design • We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee r PIONEER P PURE GRANULATED 700 AUBURN ST. P/.M.'lillOr.M. OITN SUNDAY MB ORCHARD LAKE AVL Op«n? 6 DAYS A WEEK OPEN SUNDAY 8275 Cooley Lake Rd. Union Loki Village (521 Sashabaw Road Pina Knob I'lasa Cor nor May boo ltd* OPEN SUNDAYS I SUNDAYS LEAN, MEATY, CENTER CUT PORK SUGAR VALUABLE ft-. Peschke & POLISH I SAUSAGE Hygrade BALL PARK FRANKS With This Coupon and$&G&Ru»&|’eas| j^sdce tp™, The steel price ----- -* M Stocks fell 1.1 to A recovery by du Pont, which j western, off 2 at 108 on 10,( , gained about 2, helped the av-jand American Telephone, off Vk erages. jat 53V< on 6,200. IN DEMAND Sperry Rand, by far .Dellana wants to know if Whitman, who killed 16 persons tipoff to busi- Over three million families sojfor stocks of the struck lines. | Polaroid lost about 2, Zenith now own motor boats in United States. The New York Stock Exchange . . thinking. lies ™rden)US ™mpage Aug| Steel executives ________________________ thp!1’Jhad,takeu, amph!f,amme (de*' the price increase wUl stick be-edrine) tablets while atop the cauSe business will be brisk. University of Texas tower. Their thinking on this is quite independent from the challenge of the government price guidelines. A number of the tablets were found by Whitman’s body. But he had also taken some food with him, indicating that he expected a long stay. , Cb-1 Amphetamine tablets are fre-+ quently known as “pep pills.” They help keep people awake. Whitman’s father, Charles A. Whitman Jr. of Lake Worth, Fla., yesterday went to the apartment of his estranged wife —* one of his son’s first victims. WANTED INFORMATION He wanted to see the room where she lived, whether she ever talked about him, when was the last time I’d seen her and what she’d said,” apartment house manager Margaret Ellers said. In Houston, the second of a series of meetings of medical experts was scheduled today. They started yesterday to find out why Whitman did what he did. . Lee Clark, director! and surgeon-in-chief of M. D. ’ ■ - ini'j Anderson Hospital and Tumor 2s 53% 53w 53% + % Institute, said the meeting last-’ “J'jed most of the morning. TUMOR FOUND ^ ' Whitman’s brain was brought to the hospital for study. An % | autopsy revealed a pecan-size 4b1 tumor in the brain but patholo-1 gists did not believe it caused Ljj Whitman’s outburst. N, Preliminary studies will run Hi from 10 days to about two weeks 'land then an in-depth study will i begin The Labor Department’s em-j Housing starts still remain the ployment figures for July spell weakest segment of the econo-but the mildness of this sum- my. Here the villain isn’t a mer’s slump and the prospects summer siesta but tight money, of a further expansion in the But the government is trying for fall. (ways to increase the supply of The decline in the number of funds available for mortgages, workers on nonfarm payrolls awf even the building industry was 150,000 less than normal for is hopeful for better days ahead, the season. And much of this . * * * summer’s drop was due to an Business expansion plans con-earlier than usual shutdown of fiRue strong in spite of tight auto plants for model change- J money and climbing interest overs. I rates. Where spending has been GAINS RECORDED ! postponed £ has been due more _ , to slow deliveries of materials Payroll gains were recorded!or a tight labor market than to in machinery, primary ^ metals, J costly financing or nervousness , ... fabricated metals and electricaliabout the economy’s future, are betting that equipment. | Many economists think the Nonfactory payrolls increased;big test in the durability of the enough to bring total employ-; long upswing in business will ment up 680,000 in the month to come next year. But few indeed Woman Found Slain in N.J. To make a price hike stick—! with the government on the sidelines—there must be a rising demand for steel, meaning that customers will pay the higher price. And vine reason they will do so is that they in turn are betting on increasing sales of their own products—and' maybe higher prices. ORDERS RISING Steel companies report that orders are rising again. Production of the pills increased sharply last week, after six weeks of declines. A further advance in output this week easily could marie a definite end to the traditional summer slump. One of steel’s big customers, the auto industry, is coming back into the picture. The news for weeks now has been of declining car production and closing down of 1966 model production lines. From now on the news will be of 1967 model lines opening up. ★ ★ . ★ Even with auto buying of steel in a slump, the other customers of the mills have been unusually active for the normally slow period. record 76.4 million. Unemployment dropped 645,000 from June to 3,225,000, or 3.9 per cent of the labor force. think that this summer’s slump carries much meaning or that the prospects for fall are less than rosy. * v* % ' Successful investing 9 % 9 * 'Controlled Qush' for Cars Is Analyzed by GM Expert ASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP) -A 45-year-old mother of four was found beaten to death today in nearby Howell Township the fifth woman brutally murdered along the Jersey shore in the past year. She was identified by state ■■police as Dorothy Louise Mc-+ v! Kenzie of nearby Toms River. A) S e 1 e c t ed life insurance stocks have paid off handsomely when held for at least ten years. When in high favor, their prices have risen dramatically. Yet at other times they have proved desultory and discouraging. The iri H , Mrs. McKenzie was found in a P°Hcy of paying Ire; stantial creases the initial cost of the shares and capital gains eventually spiral from such profit-sharing. Nevertheless, I do not recommend putting alj. long-term investment funds lnto a single segment of the market. I would hold a well-managed mutual -Jl~n^i»r'«d'o'r paicjin mil j companies, such as Franklin, IW' AifMEan"STWW'WW. i*wi!"wuiiuiiui, mm iw i'no tional, or Travelers, and pick yof^trpt ^='iwuwtnjr iTT gomeoftheattractive growth selected stack transactions — tan Stock Exchange with was covered by a blood-staTned /) j blanket. Her body was discovered by ^Ithe night manager of the diner. ■BROUGHT BLOODHOUNDS Police brought bloodhounds quarterly by helicopter from Newton, By ROGER E. SPEAR Q) “I’ve read of the fine performance of life insurance stocks. In planning a ten-year investment, shall I switch into these from a mutual fund? What is your opinion of No. American Life & Casualty of Minnesota? What dividends were p a i d in 1965-66?” J. K„ K.K. Louis C. Lundstrom, director of automotive safety engineering at the General Motors Corp. proving grounds' near Milford, this week analyzed the potential of “controlled crush” front ends on passenger cars as means of reducing injuries and saving lives. Lundstrom, GM’s top automotive safety engineer, told the West Coast meeting of the Society of Automotive Engineers that the problem of developing controlled crush front ends is extremely complex. To clarify the actual role of front structures in occupant injury studies, careful analysis of the events that happen during a frontal collision is necessary, he emphasized. “When you observe a barrier collision with your own eyes, you perceive the awesome sight of 4,000 pounds of vehicle and occupants stopping from 30 mph in approximately two feet,” he said. “The time duration is so short I that it is easy to think of the impact as a single event. CHAIN OF EVENTS ‘When it is recognized that barrier crash, and most other accident impacts, is truly chain of events, many areas of vehicle safety design can be placed in proper perspective,” Lundstrom said. For example, it has been shown that regardless of a car’s front-end construction, the unbelted occupant in a conventional car body in a 30 mph barrier impact receives no benefit from energy absorption of the front structure. (A 30 mph barrier impact is equivalent to striking a parked car at 60 mph). crush characteristics, the passengers must be fastened to the frame of the car through a restraining system. Summarizing General Motors development and test work in this area, he noted that “additional test data are being accumulated and further analytical studies are being conducted that will yield better information required for design purposes.” NOT APPARENT “However,” he said, “a breakthrough in this area of front crush control which might change traffic accident injury statistics significantly is not apparent now.” As two of the more promising avenues for reducing crash injuries, Lundstrom advocated development of improved occupant restraint systems — along with gaining the necessary public acceptance of these — and interior designs providing maximum possible protection for those who wear lap-belts or no restraint at all. tbe reason for this, he pointed out, is that wltfi~cohventTofiaT (Ml.) High Low Loif Chg. 3 24% 243* 24%+ *, ,10g 3 ‘ E stocks recommended here over the past six months. I No. American Life does a good ^18*t%puslnesS, pushing up tts net j| (I share year by year. Now trading around its 1966 low of 11, it sold as high as 26V4 in 1965. Cash dividends of five cents a share were paid in 1965 and 1966 with a stock dividend of 33-1-3 per cent in 1965. A moderate commitment at current levels shoulc in time reward patient holders. Officials Get Word: Clean Erie or Else CLEVELAND UPI)^ Clean up Lake Erie, and the streams which feed it, or the state and federal governments may take control of the situation, industrial and municipal officials were warned yesterday. “If we do not act now, the federal government will and we’ll lose control of our desti-inies, said R~ L. Ireland, chairman of the Lake Erie Watershed-Foundation. He spoke before Hi representatives of industry and municipalities who are meeting here to plan for a public hearing Nov. 30 aimed at setting water quality standards for Lake Erie. “We’ve got to submit intelligent plans to the meeting on to pr WP may find nur-rate se*veS contorted by an arbitra- ir---WriM1i iMiBWailiW i fitiijj iirfriflfaj m or Washington,” Ireland said. crush dimensions, the car is essentially stopped by the time the unbelted occupant reaches the forward interior of the car. ★ ★ ★ Since he is hitting the interior of the car after it has stopped, it doesn’t matter how the front l!ruHuiT“misRed — relatively slowly, rapidly, or at SAME VELOCITY________ The unrestrained occupant'aF impact velocity wUl be the same in any case. The totally restrained occu- T Waterford Township poT&e News in Brief pant benefit’s most from structure crush properties, noted. To take advantage of the are investigating a burglary today at G & W Pure Service, 2977 Dixie, in which a portable television set and two cigarette Ighters, total value of $96, were CHICAOO grain CHICAGO (AP)—Grain Ooen Today: Whtaf - Sept. 1J43M4; Dec. 1.9134-V,;. March l.»5Vi-95, May July 3.77. Corn — Sept. 1.42Vi; Dec. 1.43%-44; Gam Sko 1. March tMay lJOW-%; July GenAnilF . 1.S1W. Gen Clg 1. Oati — Sept. 72; Dec. 75W-W; March GenDynam rm-m May 78V,-79. Gen Elec 2 Rye - sept 1.28V,; Dec. 1.34%; March!Gen Fdl 2 > TM 72(4 7234 — Q) “Should we continue to hold Goldfield or seU at a joss?” M.B. A) As you do not mention what you paid for this loser, it is not easy to advise you. However, company operations have become so splintered as management has tried to build up earnings in non-mining situations that, in my judgment, it would be well to get your money into something else. S i n c e the peak price during the past 30 years was $4 a share and Goldfield trades now between $2 and $3, your loss should not be a staggering one. (Copyright, 1166) Ex-Paint Firm Changes Name, Handling Autos Custom Color, 238 W. Montcalm, has changed its name to Bert’s House of Champions and added a line of Toyota cars from Japan. Owners Frederick mid Delores Steiner said the name of the firm was changed when it' became a local dealership for Toyota cars and Suzuki and Kawasaki motorcycles. , * * .★ Previously, the establishment only handled automotive paint and related accessories. stolen. MOM’s Rummage: Thursday 9 to 12. Indianwood and Bald--Adv. Business Notes Arch H. Copeland Jr. of 1820 Chesterfield, Birmingham, has been appointed manager of the Detroit district sales office of Revere Copper and Brass, Iffec. Copeland, had been technical adviser since 1951. DOW—JONES AVERAGES 'STOCKS 30 Indus .................. 849.05 ... 20 Rails ..................218.84+0.12 15 Utils .................. 131.42+0.55 65 Stocks .............. .298.60+0.24 BONDS 40 Gonds 82 12—001 10 MUtor orada rails .... .. 75.90+£l5 10 Second grade rettl ...... 83.26-TU5 10 Public Utilities ........ ... 62.01—0.02 10 industrials ............ 17.31—0.02