OU May-Be Site for Theatnca The area’s < widaied ^ipredably today" with the announcem^t that Oakland University may necome the site of a ma)or theatrical center headed by a famoite ' lilranutist. !■ / Jcdning the university would 'be John Femald, former head or the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in England. Michigan’s first professional resident reportory company and a drama school would be the result. If piaas are eompleted as caat^plated, the first pradec-tioa would be this peMmber M campus. The drama school Mmld eventaally accommodate IM stadeats, aad per-formaaces would be preseated for seatiag of 1,IN to i;tN persons. Financing of the performing .1’ arts center is expected to be from foundations, interested individuals and federal assistance, according to (HJ CSianceHw Dur-ward B. Varner. ITk Meadow Brook Music Festival was the first phase of a pm^orming arts center, Varner explained. Expanding the fe^val, and then starting a sununer music school were logical developments. “Our board of trustees authorised the creation of a school of performing arts about years ago,” Varner said. Early plans included eventual courses in the dance, music and opera also, he added. ‘ “We have been movihg on schedule toward this goal since Meadow Brook started,” he said, “and perhaps we are a little ahead of our schedule because of the generous re-spouse the public has given to ter will be on the Oakland campus, with possible spring and fall sessims in Richmond. ed, *Tm con- Fernald hopes to bring six of his staff fnmt the Royal Academy for a center here, if all arrangements can be made. He is considering a site in Richmond, Va., as an alternate to OU, but there is a good chance the performing arts cen- ‘5*40 CHANCE’ Varner said Fernald was extremely enthusiastic about coming to OU, and had visited the campus twice earlier this year while the subject was under discussion. Varner viewed the odds on getting the center at OU as Accwding to Varner, offices of the center would be in Wilaon Hall, with the little theater there used temporarily. Establishment of the center, which would be of national scope and importance, would be a major development for Oakland University and Michigan. Fernald was born in Cali-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) The Weather U.S. WMtiMr Smtm* PancMi Tbuadershowers THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 124 — NO. 133 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ n: mm ' McNamara Reports On Viet Nam ’Reefs Infiltrate Despite Strikes WASHINGTON (if) — Secretary of Deffense Robert S. McNamara says air strikes against North Vietnamese oil storage depots have had no noticeable effect thus far on Communist infiltration into the South. And He warned the Communists that stepped-up infiltration could bring an Heat in St. Louis Causes Power Cut ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - A blistering heat wave and the resulting demand for air conditioning caused electric power interruptions in St. Louis and in areas of central and eastern Nebraska. In St. Louis, the Union Electric Co. declared an emergency yesterday and cut off power to wide areas of the city and its suburbs for up to two hours. increase in U.S. air raids. At a news conference yesterday, McNamara said it is too early to determine if U.S. bombings of oil storage facilities near Hanoi and Haiphong have reduced the movement of men and equipment into South Viet Nam. “We have not been able to notice any effect on movement so far,” he added. On ’ June^tf, the day of the initial strikes against the depots, McNamara had said “there is no question but what these attacks will make it far more difficult and far more costly for the North to continue the infiltration.” A spokesman said the company feared a massive power'failure IS consumption reached a reconl 3,230,000 kllomatts In 106-degree heat. In Today's Press Waterford Board acts on two issues benefiting school — PAGE C-7. In answer to a question yesterday, the secretary said “I don’t believe we have approached a limit tq the use of airpower over North Viet Nam. As they increase the movement or as tliey attempt to increase the movement of men and ma terial it may be necessary for us to further increase our air ^ effort there.” McNamara' said, without mentioning a specific figure that he expects an increase on the 200,000-man U.S. force in Viet Nam before the end of the year. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. TUESDAY. JULY 12. 196fi —3« PAGES City Hospital to Expand Yank Fliers -Pound N. Viet, Engage MIGs Missile, Radar, Fuel. Sites Hit; 2 Planes Down, 1 Pilot Saved SAIGON. South Viet Nam (iP) — U.S. fliers tangled with two MIG-21s and eluded a barrage of missiles over North Viet Nam during bombing raids on missile, radar and fuel sites, the U.S. command reported today. In a day of furious air activity yesterday, one missle site was destroyed and two oil installations and a radar site bombed, a spokesman said. Carrier planes pounced on some 200 barges and junks and pilots reported destroying or damaging SO of them. The U.S. command announced the loss of an F105 Thunderchief to Communist groundfire yesterday. The pilot bailed out but he could not be rescued because of heavy antiaircraft fire and is listed as missing, a spokesman said. U. S. headquarters also announced that a Navy F8 Crusader went down 40 miles northeas of Haiphong today and that the pilot was rescued. It was not known whether the plane crashed because of mechanical failure or was shot down, a spokesman said. A military spokesman said that 286 U.S. planes had been lost to enemy action over North Viet Nam through last Thursday. With at least four more planes lost since then, the unofficial total now stands at 290 since the bombing began Feb. 7, 1965. Disclosing U.S. helicopters losses for the first time, the American command said 179 had been victims of enemy fire, inciudini mreifm Nbrth Vint Nam. These three preenmably were on missions to rescue downed American airmen. A UA spokesman said the loss figure did not include helicopters and planes destroyed on (Continued on Page 2, Col. jl) UP SHE GOES-Phillip Kunz of Ann Arbor and his son. Jay, show the apparatus they u.sed to send a kite five miles into the sky—considered a world's record. Fishing line was wound on a homemade reel and attached to a 29-cent drugstore kite with Kunz’ handkerchief as a kite tail. Fall From Milk Truck Is Fatal Pontiac Area Hit by Morning Storm A Pontiac man who suffered head injuries in a fall from a milk truck died last night at Pontiac General Hospital, nearly six days after the accident. Dead is William Schatz, 50, Oakland Highway Toll in ’66 75 of 220 Going, who was admitted to the hospital Friday after first refus-i n g treatment following the accident Wednes- Near darkness enveloped the Pontiac area about 10:30 this morning, the prelude to a storm that tore down power lines and trees and caused flooding conditions. Weather officials at Pontiac Municipal Airport said heavy thunderstorms accompanied by wind gusts up to 60 miles per hour were Surveyor I Resumes Sending Sharp Photos day morning. Schatz was injured when knocked from the doorway of the truck by a ibifUng load of milk cases shortly before I a.m. Wednesday. He was taken to the hoapital immediately following the accident, but refused medical atten- PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -Surveyor I resumed early today sending sharply focused pictures of its lunar surroundings, but the spacecraft’s sick battery inite tion. The driver of the truck, Donald M. Trent of 21 (Dornell was uninjured in the accident, which occurred at the intersection of Claremont and Lexington. A spokesman at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said Surveyor’s battery was operating well during the short picture-taking sessions but “we’re feeling our way along.” MUNI’nONS CUTBACK And he said the United States is producing air munitions at such a rapid pace that he is ordering a $1 billion cutback in production. He also traced again the previously announced reduction of |4-5 billion in the cost of operating jhe nation’s military services during fiscal 1966. Lucy Honeymoon for 3 forecast for all of Southern Lower Michigan until noon. However, no tornado warnings were posted although officials cautioned that there’s always the chance of a few tornadoes striking. Oakland County Sheriff's Department received reports of power wires being down inj^ Rochestor nroa. Stroot flooding conditions were reported for both Oxford and Orion Township. Other destruction was observed in Avon Township on Dutton Road near Adams where two trees had fallen. BRANCHES Pontiac police reported that a few tree braenhes were strewn along streets. State Police said they were investigating reports of a fallen power wire in the Woodhull Lake area of Independence Township. "My mother ig airing out the house and I am no longer a junior chemist." WASHINGTON (UPI)-For Luci Baines Johnson, it'will be a honeymoon for three. A Secret Service agent will be tagging along. The law says the “Secret Service is to protect the President and his immediate family,” and ^ the way the agency sees it, ; Luci’s marriage to Patrick | J. Nugent on Aug. 6 “doesn’t change that status.” Loci’! persoaal preference would be for more privacy, according to a White Honse aide, hot she will not have a lay In the Lua The President’s youi^r ( ■he plans to live in ■ unafi apartment some- where in Washington when she returns from {at f still undisclosed locntioii. She said she will definitely not live in the White House. Wherever she and Nugent reside, big brothers from the Secret Service will be watching. BEGINNING Luci came under Secret Service care on the afternoon of Nov. 22, 1963, immediately after President Kennedy was slain. Agents came to the National Cathedral School for Girls where Luct was a student, to take up their guard. Though she has had nearly three years to get used to it, the 19-year-old Luci still has her moments of wanting to escape. ★ ★ ★ The agents assigned to young Luci are all married, she p^ts out, and she has developed warm friendships with their Two Phases Set in Pontiac General Plan $2.1 Million Slated for Mental Health, Emergency Patients Pontiac General Hospital will undertake a two-phase construction program expected to cost at least $2.1 million, primarily for expansion of its emergency and mental health facilities. The hospital board of trustees last night received informal authorization from the City Commission to apply for federal assistance for the first phase of the building program — an annex to be ^ilt south of the hospital. Expansion plans were discussed at a joint meeting of the board and City Commission. City Manager Joseph A. Warren and Hospital Administrator Harold B. Euler also were told to investigate the possibility of combining the two ^ases. As proposed by the hospital board, the program initially would entail construction of an annex behind the hospital by March 1968. BUILDING COST The one-story building with basement would cost between $600,000 and $700,000, architects estimate. The entire street-level floor of about 8,500 - square - feet would be used as an emergency facility. Expansion would provide for the treatment of 50,000 to 60,000 emergency patients a year. In 1965, the hospital treated 39,195 persons on an emergency basis and the figure is expected to go to 41,000 this year. BENEATH AREA Beneath the emergency area in the proposed unit would be pt^ical thn-apy and outpatient clinical facilities. To be erected on property now incorporated In the hos-(Conlmued on Page 2, Cel. 6) Tigers Lead Way for AL in 37fh All-Star Game More Showers to Fall Tonight Pontiac area residents will get a drenching again tonight. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts thundershowers and continued warm with lows 70 to 76. Thnndershowers are expected to end tomorrow no^ng with temperatnres hitting in the Ugh 86s. nnrwlay witi be pleasant. The bnrean predicts partly sunny, llie low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 74 The mercury stood at 71 at 1 p jn. ST. LOUIS (41 - The Detroit Tigers lead the way today at the 37th Major League All-Star Game at the new Busch Memorial Stadium. Leading off for the visiting American League, now trailing 18-17-1 in the annual spectacle, is the Tigers’ shortstop Dick McAuliffe, and Detroiter A1 Ka-llne is batting second. When the junior circuit stars take the field, the opening battery is pitcher Den^ McLain and catcher Bill Freehan, both Bengals. A fifth Tiger is reserve first baseman Norm Cash, giving Detroit the most representation of any American Leagua The Natiopal League haa Sandy Koufax. the Los Ai^Uas Dadgers’ ace left4uuMler, for its starting hurlar. THE POKTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 1% 1060 ___ ddndhi ReacHes Moscow MOSCOW (AP) - Prime Minister Indira Gandhi of India catne to Moscow today to discuss Vietnamese peace pr^s-als with Premier Alexei N. Kosygin. it * * Her plan includes the convening by the Soviet Union and Britain of a Geneva conference on Viet Nam. The .Soviet Union has rejected repeated urgings to call a conference, and her prospects are not good. Communist China already has rejected the proposals made public by Mrs. Gandhi before .she began a trip that took her to Egypt and Yugoslavia. She will spend four days here. ENDED WAR The 1954 Geneva conference ended the French Indochina war. Agreements reached at the conference are in theory still in force, and the Soviet Union and Britain remain conference chairmen. British Prime Minister Harold Wilson visited Moscow in February in an unsuccessful effort to get the conference back in session. He is due back Saturday for another try as Mrs. Gandhi leaves, but there has been no public indication that the Soviet leaders have changed their position. NO ROLE The Soviets in the past have taken the attitude that they are not a direct party to the conflict and therefore have no direct role to play in the settlement. Diplomats believe this cautious Soviet approach is based partly on reluctance to try pub- licly to influence the North Vietnamese government for fear of failing. It is also believed based on sensitiveness to Peking’s charges that the Soviet leaders are selling out the Communist cause in Viet Nam to arrange joint Soviet-American rule of the world. ★ * ★ The Soviet Union has met this charge with renewed vows of aid to the Vietnamese Communists and support for Hanoi’s peace terms, which include American withdrawal from Viet Nam before any negotiations. Speaker Class Set Tonight An adult public speaking class wUl be held at the McConneU Community Sdraol beginning at 7 this evening. / * it it The four-week course is designed for those adults with I little or no experience in the area of public copmunications. ★ A ★ TTie course objective is the development of speaking poise and of verbal expression through voice analysis, the study of speech theory, and practical experience on a daily level. House Probes Trading Stamps Citizens' Complaints! Prompt Investigation LANSING (UPI) - A two-day state House committee investigation into the business j practices of trading stamp com-j panics was scheduled to begin Thursday in Detroit. Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, committee chairman, said the probe was prompted by many complaints from citizens of trading stamp practices, “There is presently no law regulating these companies. One became bankrupt three years ago in Detroit, leaving thousands of peopie holding unredeemed books of stamps and nothing could be done,’’ Montgomery said. He said other hearings were planned throughout the state. ♦ ★ * First to appear at the hearings will be representatives from various stamp companies, food marketing, industries and gasoline retailers. A consumer protection spokesman and assistant Attorney General Irving Peldnun also are scheduled to testify. Airlines Hit on Settlement Figure I King Orders 'War' on Chicago, Daley Equipment Stolen An estimated (1,062 in tools and equipment was taken yesterday from a construction site on the city’s south side, Pontiac police said. * it * The Cummings Construction Co., presently erecting an apartment building at 900 E. I^th Blvd., reported the items were missing after a break-locker room near the new building Entry had been gained to the locker room by prying open window, police were told. DR. KING CHICAGO (AP) - Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has declared a nonviolent war on Chicago and Mayor Richard Daley. King announ-h1 a “nonviolent assault” on the city and Daley after a two-hour meeting with Daley Monday. The meeting was disappointing.” said King, chairman of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. “We are demanding, not begging,” he told newsmen. ‘Our (the Negro) vote can and will be the balknce of power. “I do not think that the mayor understands the depth or dimension of the problem. If nothing done, we are inviting a social di.saster.” NO SOLUTION’ Daley told newsmen: “We asked them for their solution. They did not have any. All they could do was recite problems. ‘ But another civil rights leader said King and Daley were “closer than ever before because of the meeting.” Dr. Edwin Berry, director of the Chicago Urban League, said the meeting “is the beginning of a concerted campaign.” ‘The mayor called on us to help him make Chicago an open city after Dr. King had called the mayor for an open city,” he said in an interview. ‘The mayor said he could' agree with the demands we made almost unanimously. The mayor didn’t agree with everything, however. 'There were no (formal) agreements. But Dr. King impressed the mayor very much. “Mayor Daley said he would work hard on the employment problems. The difference is how long it takes and how satisfied we are expected to be with small gains at a slow pace.” SPECIFIC DEMANDS King said the specific demands he made were for a civilian review board to hear citizen complaints against policemen and immediate action to eliminate slums. Daley refused to consider a civilian review .board. King said, because Police Supt. 0. W. Wilson is against It. ★ ★ ★ In response to the slum elimination demand. King quoted Daley as saying, “There are things already going on. ' Daley told newsmen the city already has extensive antislum programs and that he expects to eliminate all slums in Chicago by the end of 1967. After a massive rally in Soldier Field Sunday, King led a march to City Hall where he taped a list of demands on the door. Police estimated more than 50,000 persons, most of them Negro, heard King’s speech the rally. Overpass Bids Heard Tonight AP WirMhota PLEASED PRESIDENT — President Johnson wears a smile last night at the breakup of a White House meeting with members of Congress who called to report on their visits to Viet Nam. Arising with the chief executive in the cabinet room is Rep. John M. Murphy, I>N.Y. Behind the President is Vice President Hubert Humphrey (left). Rep. John B. Anderson, R-IIl!, is in right background. Militant Negroes Eye I Drive in Grenada, Miss. 'Overvalued by(25Million' No Compromise Seen by Chief Negotiator Birmingham krea News .. ^■ ‘ City Considers Using Disposable Trash Bags The Weather Full U. S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly sunny and hot with a chance of thundershowers today. Highs 90 to 98. Thundershowers likely tonight and continued warm iow 70 to 71. Thundershowers ending Wednesday turning cooier in afternoon highs 85 to (2. Winds mostly southwest 5 to 15 miles today briefly higher in thundershowers. Thursday’s outlook: Partly sunny and pleasant. I OiN VMr As* )S PMItWC • Hlg)i*it ttmpertlur* p ), |low»I t*mp*ralurr ............... ! Wt*lh»r: Sunny M*nd*y'i T*m**r*lw« Ch*rt tAtpww *4 *4 Port worlh fj ;]jEsc*n«b« *4 ** Jtckionvlll* ♦] 71 Gr R*ptd> M 74 KonMi City W 711 Houghton 17 *4 Lot Angottt S3 Bids for the construction of the city’s third pedestrian overpass will be considered by the City Commission tonight. The overpass will be located on Kennett in front of Alcott Elementary School. The commission this year has ordered two other bridges —one over East Wide ’Track at Whittemore and one over West Huron in front of Webster Elementary School. In other action at its 8 p m. meeting, the commission will consider bids for asphalt paving and will receive a petition backing the granting of a li-Icense for a billard parlor at 326 Ie. Wilson. j * * * Mack Downey, owner of the billard parlor, will present a pe tition bearing the signatures of some 120 persons and requesting that the license be granted. B denied three GRENADA, Miss. (AP) — A1 wasn’t involved with the SCLC nonviolent push. 6y Negroes to in the “open city” drive. The make Grenada “an open city” two groups disagree on strate-shaped up today with the mili-lgy. tant faction watching scornfully,! * * poised to take over if the drive SNCC has become one of the falters. most militant of the numerous The Rev. Ho.sea Williams, a civil rights groups. Its espotisal leader in Dr. Martin Luther of “black power” has caused WASHINGTON (AP) - The AFL-CIO International Associa-of Machinists today accused the five airlines shut down by a strike of overestimating by at least $25 million the cost to them of a settlement on terms proposed by the union. Joseph W. Ramsey, lAM vice president and chief negotiator for the union, said there was no indication of any “give” in the management’s stand at this time. * it it He added that the union was ready to make compromises proposals but would not take one cent less than its previous request. “We have stated our minimum and plan to make no departure from it,” he said. WAmNG OFFER “The management rejected it without compromise. Now we are waiting for an offer from jthem. They have failed to give ius a statistical breakdown of ,their estimates.” ! Ramsey’s reference to a com-I promise offer had to do with the union’s proposal 4hat employes required to have licenses be given a premium of 10 cents an hour for each license. AL’TERNA’nVE Ramsey said the union had offered the airlines the alternative of a premium paid only to line maintenance mechanics or higher classes of licensed work- BIRMINGHAM - The may be on its way to usfaig plastic or paper bags for rul^ ' ish. City commissioners last night instructed the city manager’s office to review the pros and cons of each type of sack and return with a report'. Interest in the disposable bags was brought aboto with the adoption of an amendment to the rubbish ordinance -to provide better cidlection service. The amendment requires at least two standard containers for each residence. It permits the use of a throwaway container only after the capacity of the trash cans is exceeded. A suggestion from Thomas C. Brien, department of public works superinteiident, that the city offer the bags for sale was opposed by City Manager Robert S. Kenning. MERCHANTS Kenning said local merchants could more easily handle the sale’of the bags. The bags are intended only to hold leaves, grass clippings and other trash that is now placed in grocery sacks, wastebaskets and cardboard boxes, and not for unwrapped garbage, according to Brien. Kenning said, however, that if the throwaway bags prove successful on a limited scale. It could lead to their use for all garbage. Plastic bags were first consid- ered by tbe commission because of their success in an experiment in Femdale, where more than 80,to0 have been sold to the public by the city for $4.65 per hundred. PLASTIC MELTS The possibility of using paper was brought to the attention of the commission by a spokesman for a papar bag company who said that when the plastic melts it clogs incinerators. Paper bags he said cost about twice as much as plastic, but warned of the danger to children placing the plastic bags over their head and suffocating. He said that the plastic bags have been banned in Boston and New York because of the haz- In another action, the commission approved raising the maximum age limit for police and fire department recruits from 29 to 31. G. L. Rickey, personnel director, recommended the change because of the tight labor market. King’s Southern Christian l.«ad-ership Conference, told a rally Monday night: “Get on your going-to-jail .shoes. We are going to keep the streets of Grenada. Miss., hot " “We’ll wait until they get Williams said tactics would!tired of marching,” Carmichael include a boycott of white mer- said. ‘"Then we will come in. chants downtown and numerous civil rights suits. As Williams spoke inside a hot and crowded Negro church, Stokely Carmichael, head of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, stayed outside with .several of his workers. MANY WORKERS Carmichael said SNCC had| many workers in the area but^ MMiAiy In Pwillac High«*> t*mp*r*tur* Botton Chicago Cincinnall Danvar Datrolt n Salt Lak* C. *4 consternation among other groups such as King’s SCLC, which believes in working with whites where possible. Grenada’s 12-man police department, beefed up with four auxiliary officers and 10 highway patrolmen, placed roadblocks on streets leading past the church during the rally and patrolled the area. The licen.se weeks ago on position voiced by neighbors to the billiard parlor and the PTA of the nearby Wilson Elementary School. Arts Center Eyed at Oil Alumni Council Talk by Johnson Tonight WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson will fly to White Sulphur Springs, W.Va , tonight to address the American Alumni Council. The negotiations recessed Monday afternoon to permit the unions, at the request of Asst. Secretary of Labor James J. ! Reynolds, to provide statistical data as to the cost to the airlines of the wkm’s minimum request for higher wages and various working benefits. $25 MILLION TOO HIGH Ramsey, on returning to the negotiating rooms today, said that the union statistics cated that the airline estimate of $114 million was at least $25 million too high. Ramsey noted that the airlines had .said they probably would be unable to reach an nt this week because of ttie union stand 4ko k„..: t „ ... ^ Johnson is scheduled to speak "P: artment should proceed with building the nuclear frigate. # Congress authorised such ship earlier but it was never built. Key Sites Hit in North Viet (Continued From Page One) the ground when the Communists shelled airfields. Ground action in South Viet Nam continued in a lull. A U S. military spokesman described the situation as “very quiet in the last 24-hour period.” SAIGON SWEEP South Vietnamese army headquarters reported a sweep in the environs of Saigon by 1,000 rangers and regional forces yesterday killed at least 40 Viet Cong. Another 40 to 5# enemy bodies may have been carried away by the retreating enemy forces, a spokesman said. The seven-hour clearing action took place in swamplands within five miles of the capital and was aimed at forestalling a reprisal attack on South Viet Nam’s major oil depot. vvuiHf* auaiAu NATIONAL WEATHER — Tonight’s weather will include scatterad abowers and thundershowers over parts of the Lakes, the Miasiasippi Valley, Florida, the Rockies and the Caacadel. It will be warm and humid east of the Mississippi aM to tbe south and central Plains. It will be cooler in the northern RocUae and southern Plains. Schools to Consider Relations Policy Creation of a district educational program for intergroup relations will be considered at the Pontiac Board of Education meeting tomorrow night. The fwlicy guide proposed by the administrative staff was developed during the 1965-66 school year. It includes a broad outline of objectives to be used as a standard by those developing inter-group programs at the indivil-ual schools in the district. ★ * * Also to be considered at the school IxMijnl’s 7:30 p m. meeting are changes in the board’s policy concerning suspension of a student and the closing of classes to him. “I have realized from ex- * perieiice with American students of (he theater in England,” Fernald said, “that there is a wealth of American talent crying out to be professionally trained. “'The Performing Arts Center, like the Royal Academy in Lon-will provide training in classical theater to students who qualify through national competitions, and furnish . . . season-long professional theater, running the gamut from the classics to Albee, from tragedy to farce, performed by the professional company, some members of the teaching staff of the academy and visiting theater luminaries.” it it it Varner said he hoped to make some definite propoul to the MSU Board of Trustees at a meeting July 21. $100 Million in Heroin Five Convicted in Narcotics Case NEW YORK (UPI) - Five men, one a retired Army major, were convicted last night of conspiring to smuggle $100 million worth pf heroin into the United States from France last December. •The nine-man, three-woman federal court jury deliberated for slightly more than seven hours before finding the five guilty of shipping 209 pounds of pure heroin, iforth $i00 million retail to addicts, concealed in a food freezer. The freezer, Included In an Army warrant officer’s household effects, was seized in a Colnmhus, Ga., trailer camp. During the three-week trial, federal narcotics agents told of eavesdropping on the conspirators at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel And in a Manhattan restaurant. They then trailed them to an airliner and to Georgia. n When the trial began, the accused warrant officer, Herman Conder, 35, turned government witness was granted a separate trial, yet to be held. CONVICTED Convicted and held without bail were: Samuel Disist, 42, a retired Army major from Orleans, France; Frank Dloguardi, alias Franky Dio, 49, of North Miami Beach, Fla., a brother of Cosa Nostra leader John (Johnny Dio) Dioguardi; Jacques Louis Douherets, alias Jean aaude Ie Frank, 59, of Rouen, France; Jean Nebbia, 52, of Paris, France, a restaurant manager; and Anthony Sutera, 96, of North Miami Bead), Frank Dtoguardi’s brother-in-law. All face maximum 19-year prison sentences and fines up to 920,000. Sentencing was tentatively set for Aug. 90. Pontiac General Slates 2-Phase Growth Project (Continued From Page One) piUTs parking lot, the building would be connected to the main structure by an underground tunnel. Hospital officials said a separate unit would be easier and less costly to construct than an addition to the present building, w w w It also would allow use of the present emergency facility during construction. FUNDS ON HAND Trustees noted they have funds on hand for the hospital’s share of the cost, which could run up to $400,000. Federal Hill-Burton funds cmU Haaace about 45 per rent of the cost of all on^-tient areas if a grant is approved. “All indications are that these funds are available,” Euler said. ★ ★ 0 While hospital trustees had reconunended that the second construction phase be completed in about three years, they received encouragement from city loners last night to tackle the whole project at one if possible. 40-BED UNIT 'The second project would involve a 40-b^ mental heaNh unit carrying a $1.5-million estimated cost. CouatrucUon of this facility would relcve space pressure * on the main building, giving the hospital 29 beds to use for" surgical patients. Hospital trustees had set a later date for completion of this unit because of indications that federal assistance could be acquired in two or three years. * it it Pontiac General Hospital is designated as a potential location for a comprehensive mental health unit in the kfidiigan Department of Mental Health’s plan, but it stands about sixth in priority for federal support, Euler said. t ' V r-w 03273763 ,4 rf THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY. JULY 12. 1966 MMF flVFlj p^fiK A-*8 No Adding Problom ST. JOSEPH, Mo. on U A woman who filed a petition here in a suit for divorce states that her husband’s salary is $400 a month. She asked $M0 a month for child support and $100 a month for her alimony. NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE NOTICE IS HEEEBY GIVEN b unMraIgtitd that an July IS, INS. . . e'clecfc A.M. at ISIS S. Wathinglon, Royal Oak, Oakland County, Michigan, public tale of a 1|M, ChavraW, Tractor L *Jor*cMThTthf^NnS^biddart ASSOCIATES DISCOUNT CORPORATION jm> Woodward Ave., Forndalc, Michigan By B. Kalth July 1J and 13 ■ ■ NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notlca l> hereby given, by the i ■igned that on July 2S, IMS. at a m. at ISO W. Huron Pontiac. Oakland County, Michigan, public sale of i Mercury Comet bearing serial ni 4HOIT SM asa will be held for ci County. Michigan, the place of storage. Dated: July t1, HM PONTIAC CO^)P FEDERAL CREDIT UNION , ISO W. Huron, Pontiac THROWN FOR A LOOP - Husky 200-pound Sgt. Fred Bizet of the Miami Beach Police Department didn’t believe it when 109-pound Joyce Leysner, Miss Surinam in AP Wlrophoto the Miss Universe contest, told him she could throw him to the ground. Some people just have to be shown. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING: I Planning Commission at th lownanip Mall On July 11, IWO at p.m. to consider the following changes I the Zoning Map. From Non-Contorming to Commercli 1 District: ' J7S ft. to NW Cor Cor Lot IS, Th W 275 ft., Th N 0"I0"W 132 ft. to Beginning. This Persons Intvested are requested to present. A Copy of the Zoning Map . gather with a list of the proposed changes Is on file at the office of the Township W.S37 - The P STATE OF MICHIGAN Court for the County of Oakland Estate of Albert C. School, Deceased. It is Ordered that on August t, 19M, at t a.m.. In the Probate Courtroom Pontiac, Michigan a hearing be held on tha petition of Amanda School tor the appointment of an administrator of said estate and to determine who are or were at the time of death the heirs at law of said deceased. Publication and sarvice shall be made as provided by Statute and Court Rule. Roscoe R. Martin, Attorney im E. Fourth Street Rochester, Michigan July S, 12 ai NEW SERVKE HOURS Wadfiaiday—10 fo 11:30 12:00 to 3:00 REMINGTON SERVICE SIMMS.H UBCtrie Sbavars -SlmimfUmr Trio Survives I Soapy fo 'Run Scared' Night on Lake! but Ignores Cavanagh Podiatric Bill Killed by Veto LANSING (AP)-^v. George Romney vetoed'* bill Monday that Would have put podiatrists and podiatric hospitals on an equal footing with other hospitals, ipedical doctors and osteopaths, as far as Blue Cross hospital insurance is concerned. The bill would have, in effect, prevented Blue Cross from establishing hospital standards for the protection of the general public, Romney indicated in his veto message. And by implying equal status for podiatrists (doctors of the foot) Romney added, the bill “is contrary to recent legislation and court decisions.” The measure Would have provided that podiatric hospitals could participate under the Blue Cross plan. It also would have prohibited Blue Cross from imposing “un-i lawful or discriminatory rules, I regulations or restrictions on I types of hospitals” to which it ■will extend coverage. It also pro-1 hibits Blue Cross from interfer-! ing with a hospital’s granting of staff and other privileges to all Juvenile, Pollution, License Bills Signed LANSING (AP)-Bills to separate convicted juvenile offenders from adult convicts, make first-year drivers’ licenses probationary and give property tax breaks on water pollution control equipment were signed Monday by Gov. George Romney. The juvenile delinquency bill calls for the establishment of regional juvenile detention facilities. It authorizes the Department of Social-Services to operate these facilities for diagnosing and detaining children committed to it by the probate courts. One of the basic purposes of the bill is to provide separate j i^^c ^issuance of a regular The water pollution control bill is intended to encourage manufacturers to install control devices by exempting them from personal property taxes. Romney also signed a bill to remove the dollar ceiling from old age assistance paid to needy elderly citizens. By eliminating the artitrary maximum one person can receive in a year, the state becomes eligible for $1.3 million a year in federal money. Another sets detailed regulations on installment sales contracts. Police Can Make Car Safety Checks MELDRUM BAY, Ont. (AP)-The vision of two airborne Provincial Police officers ended a night of terror for three children adrift in a small open boat Lake Huron waters swept by 60-mile an-hour winds. The children, Anne Illcth, 13, and her two sisters, Teresa, 5, and San, 3, were spotted early Sunday by Constables Bruce Godby and Dennis McLaughlin, who borrowed a small plane to hunt for them after their parents reported them missing. The children, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ilicth Dearborn Heights, Mich., set out from this Manitoulin Island holiday resort for a row in a 12-foot homemade punt Saturday afternoon afte dtheir arrival at camp. High winds prevented the small boat from returning shore and it was blown out of the protection of Meldrum Bay into the North Channel of Lake Huron. ’The parents became alarmed and began a set with the help of Provincial lice. At dawn Sunday, Godby and! McLaughlin began the search^ again and at 5:45 a.m. spotted the boat aground off Cape Robert. It had drifted 16 miles northeast of Melbrum Bay. They landed their seaplane and taxied to the boat. Anne told them the three spent the night asleep in the bottom of the boat. I They were cold and hungry bu unhurt. By The Associated Press ’ G. Mennen Williams, facing intensified political attacks by his .foe for the Democratic U.S. Cavanagh told a group o f suburban Detroit women at a coffee hour that Williams “is out of touch with conditions as Senate nomination, says he isithey exist, confident of winning “But I’m' “He says he’s been where the going to run scared for the next j action is,” Cavanagh added. “I three weeks.” • say it’s not been in Africa but The former governor made in the cities and towns of Ameri-the comment even as Detroit lea.” Williams was assistant Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh secretary of state for African Monday stepped up his assault I affairs from 1961 until this on Williams. ' spring. facilities for juvenile offenders. The county of committment will ■ pay 50 per cent of the cost of the care of the child. The state: LANSING i)Pi—Police will will pick up the other half of! be able to stop cars on the the cost. highway for safety inspections * * * 1 under terms of a bill signed - The probationary license bill 1 into law by Gov. George Rom- types of physicians—including I provides thai the license mayj ney. PO‘^'a‘rists. be suspended if the driver is| Bills to require motorcycle ^ convicted of a moving violation drivers to wear crash helmets MpAcIpC llTUniinitV I'" ° misdemeanor 1 IUUjICj IllilllUllliy MONTHS to fail to stop when so ordered Required for Pupilsi r.'" completion of one year without a | Saturday and announced yes- Living Up to Her Name. Cavanagh said he will increase his attacks on Williams' knowledge of the issues and hisi GABLES, Fla. Of) - John f'*owers of Gaines-through 1960. yjJIg IJygj yp SLAPS AT GRIFFIN won a tricolor award at the But Williams continued tolFlorida State Flower show here Ball lightning is refuted by some scientists, but two others recently say they have proven the existence of ball lightning, even though they have never seen it or reporduced it in the laboratory. ignore Cavanagh, instead slapping out at the voting record of Republican Sen. Robert P. Griffin on a proposed consumer protection bill Williams, campaigning in Port Huron, said “Michigan’s interim Republican senator cast his first significant vote since his appointment when he voted for an amendment to the Truth in Packaging bill.” “This amendment would have eliminated from the bill t h provisions permitting the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission to take action to avoid the confusion often caused by an excessive number of odd package sizes,” Williams said. He said he agreed with Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., sponsor of the measure, “that housewives and other consumers can’t make effective price parisons if they are confronted with dozens of sizes and shapes and odd fractons of pounds and ounces.” with an arrangement of white gladioli. LANSING (AP) - A child| enrolling in any Michigan! school for the first time after Jan. 1 will have to show proof j that he has been immunized against measles. | Gov. George Romney announced Monday that he has signed a bill adding measles to the list of immunizations required by the state school code. Others are smallpox, diptheria, tetanus and pertussis—as well as tuberculin testing. The new law, believed to be the first in the nation, was introduced by Rep. Joseph Snyder, D-St. Clair Shores. violation would result i bill permits State Police to establish temj>orary vehicle Philippines Reject inspection lanes throughout the state — as well as au-Red Chinese Rice Ofterj thorlzing local police to oper-... ' ate such check lanes with the MANILA (UPl) — A Philip-j permission of State Police. pine government official said; _____________ today ’this country recently ; turned down an offer from Com- Sonduskv Bov Drowns munist China of all the rice it| wated to buy at a price 20 to PORT SANILAC (AP)—Doug-30 per cent below current world j las Kotzke, 14, of Sandusky, market prices. Philippine policy drowned in Lake Huron Monday forbids any trade with the Red while swimming off a breakwa-Chinese. | ter here. YEAR-ROUND AIR CONDITIONING Herr, in one compact package, I efficient central ayatem that provides comforting warmth in winter, refreshing cooling in summer. It makes living a year-round pleasure. Call ut for a cost estimate. HEI6HT’S SUPPLY 2685 Lapeer Road rjs-ss- FE 4-5431 OUR 28th YEAR OF BEHER PHOTOGRAPHY Formerly Located in Rochester, Mich., NOW: THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR JUDICIAL EXPERIENCE! Support- Vote For- ELEa JUDGE Cecil McCallum CIRCUIT JUDGE How Do You Prepare To Be A Circuit Judge? • Judge Cecil McCallum practiced law 21 years. • Judge Cecil McCallum served 12 years at Municipal Judge, City of Pontioc. • Judge Cecil McCallum attended traffic school at Yale University, U. Southern California, Michigan State University and Seminars at North American Judges Atsociation. • Judge Cecil McCallum hat attended yearly seminars on criminal sentencing, court procedure and traffic court problems. • Judge Cecil McCallum hondlod 2449 criminal cosot in 1965. Thoso criminol cotos includo murdor, rapo, monslaughtor, conspiracios, otc. o Judgo Cocil McCallum presidod ovor both of tho rocont Fostor murdor coses. • Judge Cocil McCallum hot sorvod os Municipol Judgo in a monnor which worrontg hit promcition to tho circuit court bonch. Ho has tomporod fustico with morcy and has holpod many poopio with thoir froublot. Tho akeve quaMlaationt thow that jBdgt eseil MoCalluai it dtsarviRg of ysur suppoif and voIb ... CoBipara, and y««, taa, will sayi Judge Cecil McCallum is judicially Expenenced and Best Oualified to Serve Oakland Ceunty as Circuit Judge. He Deserves Promotion... Give Him One of Your Three Votes Tuesday, Aivust 2nd. This "fish story” is true! Coosumeni Power Company’s primary function is producing and distributing dependable electricity and natural gas at the lowest possible rates. But our interest in Michigan’s conservation and recreation programs covers many years. At our Tippy and Hodenpyl Dams on the Manistee and Muskegon rivers, are 10 recTeational areas that we make available to the public. And in the Croton and Hardy Dams area near Newaygo, Consumers Power provides a recreational location which also is open for public use. Company land along the Au Sable river likewise has been carefully preserved, so that its natural beauty may be enjoyed by thousands of sportsmen and others who love the outdoors. Consumers Power Company and its employees — all 10,000 of them — are working constantly to keep Michigan the best NATURALLYI CinsumeR Puwer When**C.P.'*stands for Cootinuinff Progrsss # # THB PQNTIAC PRESS^^T^yj In Other Words; Do Their BMpWhIle Riding 'Ole Poinf ./ k Montanans 'Riding Big During First Nath^ 0-Mok-See BILUNG$, Mont. (AP) ]Ever tryi Uking your ^Iqthes off and putting^ tl^eto op agaii|i while riding a gallopbg horsed Shirt, pants, boots and hat go on over a swimming suit. Drop anything and you’re disqualified. It’s one of 37 events in a wild sport called o-mok-see, almost unknown outside the Rocky Mountains 15 years ago. Now growing in popularity each ytear, the first natinai o-mokv see starts Wednesday and runs through Saturday at the Billings Fairgrounds. * ★ ★ O-mok-see means Riding Big in the language of the Blackfeet Indians. Another Indian word used by some saddle clubs is Gymkhana. . Indians were playirtg sonie of \ these games 200 years ago. When professionals began to dominate rodeos, making them a big money sport, westerners revived some of the old contests, keeping the emphasis on high speed horsemanship. The national o-mok-see will have divisions for men, for Women, for children 12-15 and for children under 12. To keep it on an amateur basis, there are no cash prizes, only ribbons and trophies. FIRST NATIONAL More than 1,500 entries have come in for this first national competition and the list may go over 2,000. One of the wildest events is the OevU’s CoWMde. The rider rajces to his partner and grabs the loose end ot a rope, 30i95 feet long, tied to a cowhide. As the rider secures the rope to his saddle, the partner sits on the cowhide. ' * # ★ Horse and rider complete the turn at high speed. If the pas- senger survives the jerk whep the slack in the ^pe is tajcen up, he usually nukes it to the finish llMflOS feet away. ★ ★ ★ In the egg race, riders must carry a fresh egg in a spoon. In pole bending they weave in and out between six poles. In the potato race they carry potatoes on a spear. In the .trailer rpce, they have to back tbeir Wse up and lead the animal into a horse trailer. Keith W. Herrin, a Helena, Mont., rancher, is presidoit of the qwnsoring National Saddle Clubs Association. He says rules drawn up by Montana saddle clubs now have been adopted by other states. e v»v ■ i Temperature Has Netters, Gridders Mumbling Clay Courts Baked in National Meet - A drenching overnight rain a j took a little life out of the MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) The heat was enough to make tennis player start talking toi courts, which are not clay at all. himself. j They are surfaced with a gray- And that was what many a j green granular substance con-player was doing Monday as the j taining quartz. 1966 National Clay Courts Ten- Top-se^ed foreign entry, nis Championships opened in 90-'Tony Roche of Australia, dedegree temperature. feated Roy Barth of San Diego, Calif., 6-1, 6-4. CENTER OF ATTEN-nON - Goaltender Mazurkieviez (1) of Uruguay draws a lot of attention from his English opposition while making a save during his team’s surprising scoreless tie with the favored host squad during the World Cup play’s opening game Monday at Wembley, England. No Scoring in World Soccer Matches By RONALD THOMSON LONDON (AP) — 'The soccer stars of England and Uruguay have set the pattern for a World (hip Tournament that could prwiuce new records for lack of goals. If the other 14 national teams play the same safe defensive tactics, it’s a glum lookout for thousands of addicts hoping for a supreme spectacle of soccer over the next three weeks. England and Uruguay played | to a scortless tie Monday night|’*"“^ “Also they knew they couldL:„„ Hennk Ral in mnldijo, ii,. maich on inlevi, and^;:" “o^JnlTatd W a“uJS World Cup finals at Wembley ►'=>''* ••■cir o' Stadium. It was a safety-first game that sparked little excitement and left 75,(N)0 fans booing with a prediction of some “fine football’’ to come, looked as bored as most of the other spectators. BIG MYSTERY One British soccer official said: “I wake up screaming a nightmare that the World Cup may produce no goals at all. Nobody wins and nobody loses. One big mystery surrounded the England-Uruguay match what happened to 25,000 people Wembley Stadium officials announced at first that a sellout crowd of 100,000 paid to see the game. Afterwards they checked the gates and found that vmly 7 000 went through the turnstiles. ★ ★ * I can only assume that thousands who bought tickets didn’t trouble to use them because they were deterred by traffic hold-ups on the road to the stadium,’’ said a ticket office! inspector. But not Clark Graebner of Beechwood, Ohio, who scored a convincing 6-3, 6-1 victory over Australia’s Gary Hockey in the first round. The fifth-seeded Graebner is trying to erase the temperamental label. It’s not really being temperamental anyway,’’ said the former Big Ten champion out of Northwestern. “It is temperamental only to the extent that you get mad at yourself when you miss the shots you feel you should make. “Anyway I’m trying hard not to get mad at myself. You shouldn’t get mad, or so I’m told by everybody. So I’m trying hard.” OPENS BID Graebner had the highest seeding of any player to perform Monday. Defending cham- In other opening round match-sixth-seeded Mike Belkin gained a 6-4, 7-5 victory over Jaime Subirats, Mexico and eighth-seeded Frank Froehling, Coral Gables, Fla., topped Jorge Mendoza, Mexico, 6-0, 6-2. Nancy Richey, top-seeded women’s entry, makes her tournament debut todhy. Stephanie De Fina, Hollywood, Fla., the second-seed, triouned Ellen Friedlander, Milwaukee, 6-2 ,6-4. Queen Elizabeth II, who had declared the championship open Report Heavy Demand for Irish Grid Ducats SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP)-The heaviest advance ticket sale in Notre Dame football his- Memorial Tourney Won by Skinner Split Verdict tor Detroiter John Poyrell Winner in Cobo Hall Bout may have decided not to risk a!DETROIT (UPI) - John fruitless journey to Wembley. Jjoday. |Powell kept punching away and - !■ 4'f Ae WIrwHiMt LEADS FOREIGN NETTERS—Tony Roche of Australia is the leading seeded foreign entry in the 1966 National Clay Ckxirt tennis championships in Milwaukee this week. He defeated his first round opponent Roy Barth of San Diego, 6-1, 6-4. In tonight’s matches. West Germany plays Switzerland, Bulgaria meets Brazil, the defending champion, and the So-Chuck Skinner won the Dixie] viet Union plays North Korea. Howell Memorial Handicap golf tournament over the weekend at | Waterford Hills (Country Club, j Hie tournament was sponsored by VFW Post 1370 in honor of Howell, one of Pon-i tiac’s most outstanding athletes. ' Skinner fired a 72 and with Tiger Hurler Gets Nod to Start for AL Also making their first ap- his efforts proved decisive as he pearance in the tournament will scored an 8-round split decision tory was reported by ticketihis three stroke handicap he manager Bob Cahill Monday, j won the event with a 69. Ticket supplies for Notre' Low gross honors and handi- Dame’s home games with Purdue Sept. 24 and Army Oct. 8 have been sold out. Public sale for other games will not begin until Aug. 1. cap runnerup was Ron Roth-barth with a 70, while Raul Bada posted a net 71 for third place. The tournament will be an annual affair. be second-seeded Cliff Richey, who conquered Ralston in the Western Open; third-seeded Charles Parassell, and fourth-seeded Martin Riessen. While Graebner was holding his temper and winning, Peter Fishbach of Great Neck, N.Y., was ietting his go and losing, 6-4, 6-4, to seventh-seeded Stan Smith of Pasadena, Calif. “They’re the slowest clay (Continued from Page C-1) f'ishbach, Jimmy is so young, but when!"*- .«* *'™self as Smith’s . , ", ^ clnnnoH iinHxsr kie ro/»lr Jimmy found out that Denny; Major League Why do knowledgeable / o people stay with Imperial? Someday, someone may make a better whiskey. As of today, nobody has. service skipped under his rack-was pitching he wanted to come. ‘ BASEBALL CARD “Jimmy’s never seen h i m| pitch either. He just has his picture on a baseball card.” The McLains recently moved ■-----------1 into a house in Livonia, a suburb northwest of Delroit, but, Am«rtcin l# m decorating the new home hasn’t!^, batting “ b«T,***"*sny(i»i kept Sharyn from watching her ' husband in action. “I try to go every time he pitches when they’re home,’’ Revitalized A s Talk of Sport favored fellow Detroiter Ted Wright in the feature middle-weight bout at Cobo Hall Monday night. Powell cut over the right eye in the fourth round, drew a go-ahead from the ringside physician. He then rallied and finally knocked his heavier opponent down with solid rights to the head in the final round. KANSAS CITY (fl - The Kansas City Athletics, transformed and revitalized by Manager Alvin Dark, are the talk of baseball at the All-Star break, after a six-week surge from last to sixth. The amazing A’s have done it largely on the road and mostly at the expense of the top four ,,, ... J. . . VI I cubs m the American League. Wright managed to get to his , , ^ • “It’s all because of Alvin Dark,” is the answer you hear from player after player. It al- At the start of the season, the consensus opinion was that Dark would be Manager-of-the-year if the A’s finished ninth. TAis isn’t the same club that statted the season, thanks to the trades and changes engineered by Dark. He has acquired some hungry players — men who apparently only needed a chance to play. .3IJ; Silnion. CltvflancT ___ RUNS .- F. Robinion. Baltimore. M; Aparicio, Baltimore. Age*. Chicago, 60; B Robinton, Baltimerr, 5S; Kallne, Dalroll, M RUNS BATTED I feet after the mandatory eight count but was staggered by IPowell again seconds before thA ibell. 1 Wright weighted in at 161'A poundk while Powell was in at ISIYa. The five-card show, billed as the return of big-time professional boxing in Detroit, drew more than 2,000 spectators. In the semifinal bout, Caral Jordan of Pittsburgh, at 153 pounds, won a 6-round split decision over Dennis Stiletto of Detroit at 151 pounds. terribly nervous while watching him pilch, but I’m getting better, I gue.ss.” I doubles * land OII«. MInnaiola, Everyone in the family was excited when they learned McLain would be the AL’s starter. "Sharyn called and told us Mrs. Boudreau said. “We’re so pleased. It kinda gives you goose bumps.” Added Sharyn, a petite brunette brightly dressed in a yellow and white blouse and yellow slacks: “We had talked about the pos-|Mrnn»'Ii’’N siblity, and I had hoped he] would be selected. When he batting called Sunday morning and* told me, I was just thrilled to death. It’s a big moment in both our lives.” It’s a big moment for Jimmy, too. Asked which he’d rather do, go to the game or the zoo, he mumbled: Go to the game. doubles - c»iiiton, _______________________M»yt. S«n FrBfKliCQ, 1 PIftBbor W^nrip HoOstc TRIPLES - McCarvtf, Roblnun, BallItTwra Papilona. New York. 1 Dalroll, 107; Ball. burgh, }53; Alou, Plltiburgh, .331; Slar-pall. Plltsburgh, .337; Clamania, Pltt|. burgh, .Bt; Allan, PhllaBalphla. .Bl. RUNS — Aaron, Atlanta, Ui Alou. Atlanta, and Allan. Phlladal( most becomes a chorus. How did he doit? They reply: Dark has built up my confidence. 1 know what I can do now. The club’s high spirit would make an old-time football coach envious. Dark won’t take any credit for his club's surge. He just smiles, runs his fingers through his hair and says “You’ve just got to realize these men have ability and de- jihe said. J'l’ve gone to all 1 Heavyweight Alvin Lewis .oflaita.. They can hiu they can .^vril lofty p’aiin.inrihiari a MH- of hi# gamM. I usad to balK^L ^ scored the only knock-j field, they can play. Look at«ur fgur starts. out of the card by flooring Gene Hunt of Akron, Ohio, in the second round of a scheduled four-round bout. speed, our balance. Just go down the line. Tliey’re pretty darn good ballplayers, that's The figures for Dark’s trade acquisitions don’t teli the whole story. Danny Cater is hitting .279 with fair power, Roger Re-poz is at .215 and Jim (Josger .182 with the A’s. Repoz and Gosger hit leftrhanded and Cater can play both third base and the outfield adding flexibility. More dramatic is the improvement by players on the roster from the start. Jack Aker, 6-1 with 13 saves, has been the best relief man in baseball. Camps Begin in Sweltering Temperatures Coaches in NFL-AFL Put 'Off-Limit' Sign on Quarterbacks - -e By The Associated Press Are you feeling the heat today? It could be a lot worse. Suppose you were jogging around in football clothes? In July? Most of the teams in the National and American Football Leagues open training this week with some veterans joining rookies for the early workouts. ★ -A ★ With the regular season still six weeks away, the word around the camps was take it easy, especially on those valuable commodities, the quarterbacks. John Rauch, coach of the Oakland Raiders, dressed signal callers Cotton Davidson, Tom Flores and Charlie Green in red jerseys and made them off-limits to ambitious linemen. Davidson suffered a shoulder injury in an early workout last year and missed virtually the entire AFL season. At St. Petersburg, Fla., Coach George Wilson sent the Miami Dolphins’ quarterbacks through drill on passing tactics. The top student was Rick Norton, the No. 1 draft choice from the University of Kentucky. Norton has been held out of contact work so far and probably will miss It for another two weeks. He is recupterating from a knee.operation. BACK INJURY Another highly touted rookie quarterback, Randy Johnson of the Atlanta Falcons, impressed his coaches with a brisk work-Johnson had suffered a back injury in last Saturday's Coaches All America game at Atlanta. Otto Graham, starting his first season as a pro coach, greeted 42 rookies and 15 veterans at Washington’s training camp in Carlisle, Pa. Graham sent the Redskins through their first workout today. Lew KraUsse has a 5-1 record and a 2.56 famed run average. ERA for his last four starts. Both were In the bullpen before Roland Sheldun, 3.1S, and Fred Talbot, 4.74, were traded away. Big Jim Nash, up from the minors, is 24) and 2.M..... SWEET SWINGER.........by Pap’ Mphl*. 36; I. Un Fr»n. KO, 53. RUNS BATTED IN - Aaron, Allania, Stargall, PItliburgA, 63; Allan. Phlla tlphla. S3; Mayi, San Francisco, 57, lamMia Plltiburgh. 56. Alou, Atlanta, 116; Cleihante, . , 106; WMIIami, Chicago amt Cincinnati, »5; Jackson, Houston, HITS - Plan Tiger Game Bus Several seats still remain for the bus excursion to Tiger Stadium for the Tiger-Baltimore game Friday night. Sponsored by VFW Post 1370, VFW members and their guests are welcome to make the trip. Total cost is $6.00, which includes ticket, food and transportation. Re.servations can made at FE 5-4201. AkHi. Pittsburgh and Brock, St Louli Clamanta and Clandanon, Pittsburgh hAorgan, Houston, 6. HOME RUNS - Aaron. Atlanta, 36,- Slargall, gh. 33: Torra, Atlanta ........ Phlladalphia, 31; Hart and 7 'ranclico and Alou, Atlanta, II STOLEN BASEl - Brack, SI. Louis, 1; Wills, Las Angalas, 30i Jackaon, ..ouston. 36; Phillips, Chicago, 30; Alou, Pittsburgh. 13. PITCHING (savan dacislonsi - Parry, San Francisco. 13-1. .ft3j CutHar, Haus-M, .133; Koulan, Loa Anr ‘ " ' MarIChal, San FranclKO. , Pittsburgh, 7-3, .771. V aiKlltfOOTS - Xau-beltt iiadolphla. ill Since June 1, Ed Charles is hitting .343, Mike Hershberger .292 and fleet Campy Campan-eris .282, with 20 stolen bases in his last 21 attempts. Dick Green, named captain when Wayne Causey was traded for Cater, is .315 the last month. Catcher Phil Roof capitalized on his chance and has “glued this club together,” Dark said. Leading Pro Top Net Seed BROOKLINE, Mass. (AP) -Ken Rosewall, 31-year-old Australian who leads the pro tai^ tour, has been top-seeded tor the tJ.S. Championships that begin Wednesday night at the Lpngwood (Yicket Gub. h it * Seeded behind Rosewall in the champion Rod Laver of lia, Andres Gimeno of 1 and Butch Buchholz of St. 1 Buchhols won the title in II Play will end Sunday noon. Most of the pro clubs welcomed back rookies who had played in the Atlanta game but p they’ll he on hand only fora day^. or so before departing again, this time to work out for the College All-Star Game in Giica-go against the Green Bay Packers Aug. 5. -- The New York Giants had three rookies in the revolving door, all of them tackles. Francis Peay of Missouri, Don Davis of Los Angeles State, and Charley Harper of Oklahoma State, all played at Atlanta, reported to the Giants’ camp at Fairfield, Conn., and will check out for All-Star Game workouts Thursday. UTTLE HEAVY Davis shook Giant coaches by weighing in at 319 pounds, about 39 pounds ove his normal playing weight. “I’m a little heavy,” he admitted, “But I’ll get jwn.” Coach Allie Sherman said his training camp “is not a reducing salon,” and put Davis on an all-meat,no-bread diet. h it it Meanwhile, at Kingston, R.I., coach Bill Austin of the Pittsburgh Steelers, cracked down on one of his overweight players with a $250 flne. Dick Leftbridge', the Steelers’ No. 1 draft choice, was hit with the fine. Leftridge, a rookie full-hMk from West Vlrgiaia, was ' to report at 239 pounds or face a fine of ISO for every over that. He came ia at Tte following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In ediolesale package lots. Quotations are furnisbed by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Mqrt Eases in Moderate Trade Produce raum -----------iu. Red, bo. Apples, Northern Spy, bo. ^tes, Norlbem Spy, C.A., bo. . 4.S0 VIOBTABLIS Broc^l, dz. bu............. CebSoge, bo............... Cabbegc, Red, bu........... Cabbage, st. bo............ Caulifla«yar, dz........... Celery, Pascal, dz. sths. Celery, white, crt......... Cucuntber, sHces bu........ Chives, Bz. bch............ I, dz. bch. ............ NEW YORK ort - Tlie slock market eased in moderate trading early today. Key stocks declined from fractions to a point or so. Ihe market was feeling its way along cautiously. Trading was dampened by ctmtinued evidence of advancing interest rates, fear that the Federal Reserve Board may raise the discount rate again and Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s statements saying a quick end of the'Viet Nam war is unlikely and his announcement of a cutback in air munitions. Most airline were losers as the airline strike continued. Down about a point were New York Central, Pennsylvania Railroad and Union Carbide. Rubbers were generally higher. U.S. Rubber gained about a point, others fractions. Tobaccos also moved irregularly higher. Drugs and building materials were mixed. Du Pont interrupted its latest uptrend, losing nearly a point. EASIER TREND A slightly easier trend existed among steels, autos, oils and electronics, although many is- sues in these groups were unchanged. Polaroid gained 1, IBM fraction. Chromalloy ex dividend was admitted to trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker symbol “CRO.” It opened at 40 on 1,000 shares. It closed at 39W Monday on the American Stock Exchange. Monday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks fell .3 to 323.5. Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. Kohlrabi, b Paritay, Curly, dz. I P»ifc*gr^''b* Potatoaa, SO Iba! The New York Stock Delay Hearing Quiz of Katzenbach Put Off as Dirksen WASHINGTON (AP) - At the request of Sen. Everett M. Dirksen, R-Ill, a Senate hearing to question Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach about the administration’s open housing proposal was postponed today. Aides said Dirksen, the Senate Republican leader, was not feeling well. They said he had spent a restless, sleepless night and was not expected at the Capitol until later in the day. Big Firms Get Bigger By SAM DAWSON AP Bosineu News Analyst NEW YORK - Just how big the nation's big business has really grown can be seen in this: The 500 largest Indus-r i a 1 corporations represent only a fourth of one per cent of a 11 industrial companies, but| account for per cent of total! industrial sales and 70 per cent I of the profits. grown faster than their sales in per cent increase over 1964. recent years. The number of their employes has grown faster than total U.S. industrial employment. But assets and also sales have grown faster than the number of the top 500s' employes. Also, the 50 largest companies tend to dwarf the other 450 of this select ^^list by claiming a giant share of the sales and profits and assets. LAND OF ‘BIG’ In business, the United States is truly a land of the big. And the big have been getting bigger by year in the Soaring Six- third of this |20 billion was accounted for by the top 10 companies. Sixty companies had sales of more than $1 billion each, five more than in 1964. The $2W billion total for the 500 was up 11.8 per cent. SALES RETURN Thus, profits were growing faster than sales in 1965, widening the profit margins. The return on sales went to 5.5 per Small business has been pros-And once-small “! companies continue to climb | cent, from 5 per cent in 1964 and 4.3 per cent in 1963. Profits per dollar of invested capital also grew. The median gain for the 500 was 11.8 per cent in 1965, compared with 10.5 per cent in 1964 DAWSON And how fast big business hasj[j^“‘ *' grown can be sfeen in this: The 500s’ combined sales last year|__ : , of $298 billion and profits of $20,^ ....... ......... _ , , btlhon were larger than the ^3^^, Assets climbed to $251,7 1 tals for all U.S. industry only 10 yggj. displace lion, a jump of 12 per cent, com- ^ ^ ^ years ago. former occupants of the circle'pared with a 7.7 per cent rise in Dirksen too rankine GOP' ★ ♦ * of the leaders. 1964. But half of this total was member of the Senate JudiciaryL'T^"'^" figures, compiled by * * * held by just 41 of the 500 compa- Of President Johnson’s proposal | to ban racial or religious discrimination in the sale and ren-| tal of all housing wanted to be|! on hand for the questioning Katzenbach. DELAYED A WEEK Sen. Sam J. Ervin, Jr., N.C., chairman of the constitutional rights subcommittee and also a stem critic of the open housing provision in the administration’s civil rights bill, announced postponement of the hearing for a week. Questioning of Katzenbach about the proposed discrimination ban was deferred when he spent three days before the subcommittee early last Month. His previous testimony dealt with other sections on jury selection, school desegregation and racial violence. Since then the House Judiciary Committee has modified sharply Johnson’s original proposal, voting to exempt individual home owners and owner-occupants of apartments with no more than three other rental units. Thus the effect of the amendment, sponsored by Rep. Charles M. Mathias, R-Md., would be to limit coverage primarily to large apartments and new housing developments. MAJOR STEP’ Katzenbach said the Mathias amendment would mark a major step forward even though it was not all he hoped for. But Dirksen said it looked like a majestic piece of opportunism,” and Ervin called it “a prostitution of principle.” Both senators, representing forces that could block Senate passage, contend the legislation would strip away the right to control or dispose of property in violation of the due process clau.se of the Constitution. that profits of the biggest have'the top 500 last year was a 16.1: Total invested capital for the 500 rose 8.2 per cent to $154 billion, with more than half of the ' -0 <1 ^ owned by the l»p 37 com- Successk/hlnvesting' By ROGER E. SPEAK panics and more than a fourth ■ the total by just 8. EMPLOYMENT The biggest 500 industrials employed 11,279,085 persons i Although not a member of Ervin’s subcommittee, Dirksen is on the parent judiciary committee and made arrangements to participate in the hearings. He said the amendment adopted by the House committee appears to be "a partial liquidation of t hat due process guarantee and as such simply fails on the ground of basic principle.” Ervin said it was “an attempt to let the camel get its nose under the door” with a view to passage of legislation later that would deprive home owners of e tltey jtleaw*. (Q) “The rising cost of education and increasing inflation have caused me concern as to my ability to provide my children with a college education. I have put aside money in the savings bank, but I b^ lieve that if dollar devaluation continues, this money will be reduced in purchasing power over the next ten years. Could you recommend good growth stocks to help me insure my sons’ education, ten years hence?” G.S. pound interest. It is equally true "I’^r^'zns in , , .. , , a gam of 7.8 per cent in the that or a long time past, stroll ^ ^ growth stocks have ‘ncreas^' 3,, steadily in earnings, dividends^ j and price faster than dollar de- 0j2 000 valuation. present and growth stocks should be considered as inflation protection only from a long-term point of view—a position you are able to assume. I suggest that you buy Owens-’ Illinois; Merck & Co.; Corn (A) It is quite true that money in the savings bank cannot grow—except through com- Car Production Takes a Drop Week's Dip Attributed to Changeover, Strike DETROIT (AP) - With more factories closing for the 1967 modeT changeover and a Ford plant strike, automobile production last week fell to its lowest point in nearly nine months. The Fourth of July hoUday also contributed to the volume cut. Total car output was 125, 052. This compared with 177,028 the previous week. ... ,, The median assets per em- The market is rather uncer- ^ ^ from the $16,957 of 1964. So assets were growing faster than total emplqyment. Median sales per employe went to $24,141, compared with $23,162 in 1964. Products. (Q) “I am in my seventies and need more income. I was told to buy U.S. Rubber; Armour; and General Motors. I will appreciate your opinion.” H.B. (A) With the sole exception of General Motors, I believe you can do better with other securities. U.S. Rubber is an excellent company but like all the tire companies, it is subject to cyclical changes. The yield at present is below three per cent. For this issue I would substitute Norfolk & Western, which gives a current return of 5.8 per cent. Armour & Company is also cyclical and yields only 4.2 per cent at current market. I would prefer — in its place — $1,000 Appalachian Power Company six per cent debenture due 1996, offered to yield 5.72 per cent. Bond prices may move lower but they now offer the most attractive returns we have seen in many years. (Copyright, 1966) j But while big business did well in 1965, that doesn’t r that all companies prospered, nor that all grew at even comparable rate$. Of the 500 listed as 1964’s top industrials, 26 names don’t appear in the 1965 list. Nine were merged into other companies on the list, and the other 17 either had decreasing sales or sales that didn’t gain enough to keep up with the competitors. And still other companies not on the list are currently crying: Wait until next year. Steel Firm Growth Set at $100 Million DETROIT (AP) - Directors of McLouth Steel Corp. Friday approved in principal a $100,-million expansion program. The firm said the expansion, to take place over the next two and a half years, will include installation of new casting facilities at its plant in Trenton. A strike at Ford’s foundry and two engine plants at Cleveland] led to layoff of more than 30,000; workers in 13 dependent factor-Michigan, Ohio, Georgia, Illinois, California and Canada. About 8,600 United Auto Workers walked out last Wednesday! over an issue of working conditions. CAUSED LOSS More Nurses Said Set to Join Walkoyl^ A spokesman for McLouth said it was not immediately known whether there would be an increase in employment. He said all steel products at the Trenton plant eventually would processed by means of the [aew continuous wide slab cast-facilities. The strike caused a loss of an estimated 5,2(X) cars from production schedules. Ford, Chrysler and General Motors plan to close several SAN FRANCISCO (UPt) -iState conciliators worked today] to set up negotiations throughout the San Francisco Bay area in an effort to avert the mass re-1 signations of hundred of nurses! demanding better pay. ■ Jl_. Bank Reports Earnings Up changeover to the 1967 model cars. Car production for the calendar year was estimated by the uar year was eaiiiiiaicu uy me . . „ . * ti i WMe paper Antomottve News at at Edm Hospital 5,»79,m as compared with 5,395,999 at the same date last News in Brief •pokeHnan for the California Nurses Association said mure than 1,000 registered nurses were ready to join the 91 nurses who walked off their Fredrick R. Giddings, 44, «f ]1343 Giddings reported to Pon-tJfliLjpfilist yfsterd,8j the theft. of mo in a break-in at his home. Township police are investigating a burglary at Pontiac Transmission Co., 3525 Elizabeth Lake, yesterday in which $S in change and a radtq and tools worth $595 were taken’; year. I Total U.S. car and truck out-Birmingham Bloomfield Bank put totaled 6,100,084 as corn-announced today net eamings| pared with 6,372,282 a year earli-for the six months ended Juneier. 30, of $246,125, compared to $38,- ------------ 750 for the first six months of] the previous year. Total resources on June 30, 1966 were $52,178,734, in comparison to $15,225„702 as of June 30,1965. 3 Tols Suffocate Alone in Vehicle in Castro Valley. Conciliators viewed t h e I area wide bargaining as a pos- Rummage; Howarth Methodist sible solution to the Eden I Church, E. Silverbell Bald Mt. walkout — believed to be the |Rd. July 14-15, 9 a.m.-l p.m. nation’s flrst en masse resig- —Adv. nation of hospital nurses — ] __________ „ _ and as a means of preventing ]„ Rummage: Thursday similar action threatened for and Bald- Frlday throughout the Bay I"''"- —Adv. area. In commenting on the outstanding increases in both earnings and resources, Thomas H. Wagner, chairman of the board said: “The public’s acceptance of our program and four new offices opened during the past year has been very gratifying. We are looking forward to further increases during the balance of the year. ” The mediators met yesterday; with Eden Hospital officials and^ representatives of the CNA buti reported little progress. Business Notes MIAMI (UPI) - Mrs. Geraldine Luke left three of her children waiting in her car yesterday when she visited a medical supply house to give a pint of blood for which she was paid $10. DOW-JONBt AVEBAUBS STOCKS 30 Indutt .............. M Roll* ................ tSKJSffir*. s 8 Thomas W. Eicher, 3341 Kern-A team of labor rclaUons Bloomfield Township, has specialists representing 11 San FYancisco private hospitals opened talks today with the association. Three hours later when she returned to the car, her children—Japnes 4, Barbara 3, and Joseph IV^were dead. Police said the children died of either suffocation or heat stroke in the cloaed cir. A medical examuu that in the OMegree heat, perature in the car reach^ im * Treasury Position been appointed to the account-service staff of McCann-Erick-son, Inc., in Detroit as director of the Opel Kadett account. He was formerly a senior account on the Plymouth national advertising account at N.W. Ayer. WASHINGTON (, Jmiy 4* July ...... OtgMHl FIkaI Yur l,IUU4;,7ttA3 WHMrawili Fiical Yaar- z-rTalal Dabl- Jaly «, ms l2.MS,3t4,3Z7.! 1.01I.I37.35/.I 3lf,MMS3.1N.M l)7mmmj WINBRI W llglBMrv ----- anuH.siAA* 1 BOND AWBRaeBl , CamglM kv Tka\AiatclBM N n w !• II li ftj h Si ti 'Ui Ta m