NICOSIA* Cyprus (AP) - Rescuers collected 126 burned, broken bodies today on the slopes of a hillock where a chartered Swiss airliner crashed during a thunderstorm. Tig airline said two of four survivors died'in a hospital, bringing the total dead to 128. In one of the worst crashes in aviatiori history, the four-engine turboprop Bristol Brittannia airliner crashed near Nicosia during the night as it attempted to land. There wisre reports the plane had been hit by lightning. Most of the dead were German and Swiss tourists returntog'frdm a trip to the FarJSast. The plahfe’gjgrew included four Britons, all killed, f “This is the most terrible sight I’ve ever seen,” said one of the first persons on the scene. “There are bodies all over the place, some of them hi pieces.” The survivors were hi the plane’s tpflp section, the only part which remained somewhat intact. 1 “We kept looking buf all we could find apart from those lucky few in the tail were dead people,”’ fhe rescuer said. WORKED IN DOWNPOUR Grade and Cypriot policemen and soldiers, British airmen and U.N. Peace Force members worked in a downpour under spotlights beamed down by hovering U.N. helicopters. The plane was flying fromifeombay, India, ’to Chfaw, Egypt,.hat Was diverted to Nicosia because of bad weather. The owner, Globeair of Switzerland, said it heard hem the air control tower in Nicosia that the plane was struck by lightning and burst into flames. Evidence at the scene indicated ^ihe plane hit a bump hi the ground, then bounced a few hundred yards into the slope of a hillock less than 100 feet high-SUDDEN FLASH , ,1 . ~li\ G “I was watching the plane flying low with lights in all its windows,” an airport employe said. “Then suddenly there was a flag) and 1 could not see the plane any more. “I thought It was another flash of lightning bat it could have been the plane hitting the grand.” A helicopter took eff and directed fire engines and ambulances to the feeae. Rescuers had to toil through muddy fields in the darkness to read) toe site?, where pieces of the wings and engines lay scattered hi a square-mile area around (he main sections of toe broken fuselage. Comics ..... Editorials ... Food Section Markets ...... Obituaries ... Sports....... .....C-U Q-l, C-3 D-7 ..... D-6 D-l-W ,014 ns.D-15 ...D-1S B-l-B-7 Press Set to Tee Watch for the-preview of Michigan’s 1W7 golfing season coming in tomorrow’s Pontiac Press. The preview la a-30-page section giving you the names of who's playing when and where among the professionals and amateurs. .... Indebtedness On OU'* Hill House Be Canceled By . Gift U.S. Weather Bureau Forecast Chance of Showers Tonight (Oetailt an Pete t> THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1967 ' VOL. 125 - NO. 63 ★ ★ ★ ★ ^,T®^SSafr4s. —64 PAGES I0e UAW Confab Hears Reuther City-HUD Talks 'Encouraging' BODIES BEING REMOVED — Rescue workers carry the Cyprus. It was one of the worst crashes in aviation history, body of a plane crash victim past wreckage of a chartered leaving 128 dead. Two persons, seated in the plane’s tail sec-Swiss airliner that went down near toe airport at Nicosia, tion, survived the tragedy. Stress Wages DETROIT (JPI - United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther told his union’s goal-setting convention today that it should give “toe highest priority and the greatest of urgency to a substantial wage increase”-in 1967 contract bargaining. “I emphasize this as a matter of high-' est urgency in terfns of economic necessity,” Reuther said in giving a wage increase priority over a guaranteed annual income. The UAW chief previously had said, however, he will sign no contract without a guaranteed annual income, which would entitle a worker to know at the beginning of toe year what his income will be for the next 12 months, regardless of any layoffs. Reuther also told delegates he expected the union to seek an increase in pensions, to lower the retirement age, . and fie pensions to toe cost of living. ★ ★ ★ An endeavor also will be made to have companies pay Medicare payments for retirees. ■ He said a study also is being made of the possibility of bargaining for company-paid' auto insurance and he expected to demand a bonus for workers on vacation. Reuther said the union would permit “no tampering” with either its contract cost-of-Hving escalators or toe annual improvement factor. He estimated that since they became effective in 1948 General Motors workers have received $34,000 each because of these provisions. In staking out a substantial wage increase as the ffi>. 1 goal for his 1.4 million-member union, Reuther mentioned no cents-per-hour or percentage increase, but he emphasized the world “substantial.” * ‘ A second meeting with Housing and Urban Development (HUD) officials in Washington produced “encouragement, but we’ve still got a lot of work to do,” Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. said today. Taylor, James L. Bates, director of planning and urban renewal, and Roy B. McAfee, housing director, flew to Washington yesterday in another attempt to obtain federal approval of a proposed high-rise housing project on Pontiac’s East Side. HOWARD HILL Highway Chief for State Quits LAPSING- (AP)-^State Highway Director Howard Hill announced his resignation yesterday and said the decision had nothing to do with an investigation of alleged irregularities in* the highway department. ★ * ,. ★ HUD officials have withheld approval on the project because of what they feel to be an excessive per-unit cost placed on toe apartments by developer Charles L. Langs. The most recent proposals sdhmlftod to HUD by Langs estimated cost per unit at about $16,650. “The people we talked to yesterday cited other projects in toe country costing between $15,200 and $15,700,” Tayto^ said: “I think we can probably reach agreement with them if we're able to cut back our costs closer to those figures.” Taylor said HUD officials suggested trimming what were termed “luxury items” from Langs plans. Hill, 60, has been chief of the state’s largest department since 1965. He previously had been managing director of the department for seven years and deputy director for engineering for one year. Investigators from the attorney general’s office have been looking into charges cf overpayments on some contracts, favoritism for some contractors, and other allegations. , ★ ★ ★ \y- Reached in Washington, where he is/ conferring with officials of \ihe Bureau of Public Roads, Hill told the, Associated Press his resignation was not prompted <(by the current probe. \ Chance of Showers Today’s sunny skies will become overcast tonight, and there’s a chance of scattered showers. Windy- and mild with showers and occasional thundershowers likely is tomorrow’s forecast. Variable cloudiness and cooler is the outlook for Saturday. Temperatures will' register a low of 42 to 48 tonight and climb into the high 50s tomorrow.___ A brisk 34 was the . low reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p m. the temperature had warmed up to 59. About $10 million will go for new outside plant facilities, such us exchange and long distance cable, and other equipment, and about $1.4 million will be spent fo^new buildings and altera-tions to house some of the added equipment. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) Dog Quarantine Imposed in Area After Skunk Bites $825,000 Gift Left Oil by Director Michigan Bell Tells Story Sun Glare B,urs ID -J n .1 • nL Surveyor Photos of Rapid Growth in County 0f Moon Surface The picture of rapid telephone growth to Oakland County was put into sharper light today when the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. detailed construction expenditures it has made and has yet to make before (he end of this year. To meet demand for new telephone service and a rate of telephone usage that has reached landslide proportions, Michigaii Bell trill have spent more than $51 million to the larger communities of Oakland County, by the end of 1967, according to compatiy officials. Charles B. Woodhead, public relations manager for the Pontiac district of Michigan Bell, said the two-year outlay for the county is well above 10 per cent of the total Michigan Bell will have spent to its entire territory, indicating the “phenomenal proportions of growth in this area.” The company recently revised its statewide construction program for 1967, boosting it to a record $194 million, j(bout $7 million more than was spent in 1966, putting two record years back-to-back to meet demand. Woodhead said Michigan Bell will spend $27 million in Oakland County this year following a 1966 outlay of $24 million for a two-year total of $51 million. PASADENA, Calif. • W — Surveyor 3’s first glare-blurred pictures hint it may be resting in a lunar crater after a gentle touchdown in an area., astronauts someday may explore. * * ★ While the three-legged craft kept its moon-scratching claw retracted, space-chf ft controllers at Jet Propulsion Laboratory said photographs radioed during 10 hours after the landing yesterday showed less detail than those from Surveyor l\ last June. But they theorized this was 'due to sunlight reflected into the camera* ACCELERATED GROWTH In the,four most populated communities to the county — Pontiac, Royal Oak, Birmingham and Southfield — Woodhead said Michigan Bell added about 28,000 telephones, an accelerated rate of gain such ns the company has never before experienced. Central office equipment to be added this year to serve Oakland County telephones will require an outlay of -more than $8 million. A spokesman said the horizon around the vehicle was about five degrees higher than it would be if Surveyor 3 had landed on a flat plain. Diameter of the Crater and the height of its rim were not known. First operation of a scoop designed to extend from the spacecraft and dig to the lunar soil was scheduled^ for late tonight or early Friday." V In Today's Press Two bites by skunks found to be rabid have resulted to a temporary dog quarantine in the townships of. Shelby and Washington and in the city of Utica. -Dr. Oscar Stryker, Macomb County health officer, said the quarantine would stay in effect “until we feel the situation is under control.” Prompted by a Romeo woman suffering a skunk bite Tuesday, the ban followed an earlier Shelby Township incident to which a dog was reportedly the victim. Stryker said Mrs. Jessie Schmidt, 47, of 187 W. LaFayette, Romeo, is undergoing a series bf 14 to 21 “very painful’* shots as an immunity against rabies: (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) Train Ride Two views qf.. trip, from Pontiac to Durand — PAGE C-16. . 1 Gr and J ur y State Supreme Court upholds - one-man system Trial Data Editors’ panel points to setbacks - PAGE A-4. Area News ..t..rT...;<*!.. Astrology ....... ..,y m. ,C4t An $825,000 gift in bonds to Oakland University from the.fote. Chrmond E. Hunt of, General Motors Corp. was expected^to be accepted today for QU by the Mich- igan State University Board of Trustees in East Landing. The” donor’s bequest will cancel the indebtedness on the 0U’s Hill House, a six-story women’s dormitory which was opened for 200 coeds in the fall of 1964. Hill House was (he first of OU’s six dormitories, all of which were built through self-liquidating revenue bond issues. Hunt,, a Bloomfield Hills piooeer automotive engineer who died Jan. 3 at age 83, purchased OU dormitory revenue bonds to the amount of $825,000 to 1964. The, money pas used to finance the construction of I Hill House on the OU campus’. & : *■ : ★. ★ In his will, Hunt stipulated that upon his death- the bonds would be given to MSU’s trustees, the governing body of OU. He had received, interest-on the bonds. ’GREAT FRIEND* “Ormond Hunt was a great friend of young people in general apd Oakland University in particular,” Chancellor D. B. Varner said. “On many occasions he expressed the view that Oakland University provided an opportunity-for citizens of this community to joto bands in fhe building of a distinguished educational institution in their own area. “We are deeply indebted to Ormond Hunt, not only for his generous financial bequest, but for his continuing counsel and support during these formative years.”- ★ ★ A Hunt, a member of GM’s board of directors, was a charier member of Oakland U&iyersity Foundation’s Chancellor’s Club Committee until his death. A leading developer of technical facilities at General Motors, he was executive vice president of GM at the time ai Ms retirement in 104*.,, . A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1067 Dems Trying to Sedt Powell Admit Facing Uphill Battle WASHINGTON (AP) - Proponents of seating Adam Clayton Powell admit they’ll face an uphill fight if the controversial Harlem Democrat comes to claim the seat to which he was overwhelmingly reelected last week. Although any new showdown In toe three-month-old wrangle will not come before next week at toe earliest, 11 liberal Democrats made public Wednesday a behind-the-scenes drive to seat Powell. But their appeal to fellow would have to be held for his New York 18th District seat. New -York election officials said, meanwhile, that it might be a week or longer before toe Certification of Powell's election could be on its way to the House clerk. >- and the letter of the Consfitu-r- tom” was coupled with an ad-that few votes have il switched since the House voted o March 1 to exclude the flamboy-is ant preacher-politician. “It appears that a majority of the House is prepared to n elude once again,” they $aid. £ VOTE SAME / Head counts made by a num-a her of House leaders, in order to it detect changes since March 1, have repealed /Boat most members would Vote now as they w! voted then/ This would mean House members “to resolve this Powell again would be exclud-i fight for his admiMinq matte' In accord with the spirit led, amfanother new election! Powell Bahamian fislitng retreat of Bimini, keeping largely to hint self and weighing possible courses. PRAISES STAND The statement by toe 11 congressmen praised “the vigorous and courageous stand of the __ . , \ „ , , House Democratic leadership in What happens then has notfaVor of honoring the April 11 >r hoori noninon DntDoiHa a#. i .. .. . * ... yet been decided. Powell^ attorneys are reported split — some favoring delaying his appearance here until the courts rule finally on his suit to over-torn the exclusion, and .others wanting Powell to return here to remams on his election” and called on Republican leaders to continue toe support they gave last month to a select committee’s recommendation that Powell be seated but censured, along with, loss of seniority and withholding of $40,000 of his future House ry. \ Naming of Babies Simple as A-B—Z By JOE MULLEN What’s in a name? The answer^ is “pot v e ry much” as far as a new mother at Botsford General Hospital in ..Farmington Township ig concerned because she would like to give her first born child 26 names, one for every letter' erf the alphabet. In relation to the birth weight of the boy born to Mrs. William (Carolyn) Ryan 2nd Incumbent in School Race BROWN A second incumbent, L. Brown, will run in the Pontiac Board of Education election BJune 12. drown, 87, I has file’ i nom-linating petition Ifor a second ■four-year term, IVehKHt L. Schil-ller, schools busi-■ness manager, Isaid. Monroe M. ■Osmun will also seek reelection. Four years ago, Brown unseated incumbent Rev. J. Allen Parker in toyachool board - election.' Brawn 'is now the board’s Wee president. A soeial studies and mathematics teacher at Bloomfield Hills Junior High School, he has more than 30 years of experience in education. ★ : A At one time he was a junior high, school principal I Ctair County, Brown lives at 483 Lynch. H ! , . . & of Dearborn Heights, toe foil alphabet of names would be five per pound. The little 8-pound 2-ounce Ryan baby was born Sunday his 26 names ranging from Abraham to Zachriak already were determined by his mother. ★ * In fact, Mrs, Ryan had another list of 26 names ready in case the baby was a girl. PROBLEM EXISTS But a problem exists. The Oakland County cleric’s office advised Mrs. Rayn that a maximum of three names is allowed on the birth registration. She tentatively has settled on Timothy William Hugh but plans to see her attorney torn o r r o w when she arrives home from the hospital to find out what can be done to of: Really use all 26 names. “I do a great deaj of reading and just love all people,” Mrs. Ryan explained. “This is why familiar with so many SEATOBacks U.S. VietStand WASHINGTON (AP) - The SEATO Foreign Ministers Council today supported the U.S. refusal to end toe bombing of North Vietnam unless there is also a scaling down of military action by toe Communist-side in "te Vietnamese war. A communique issued by toe council, concluding its 12th annual medfihg, declared that “reciprocity is an essential element of any acceptatteproposalfor reduction in toe fighting.” ★ * * ■ The seven-nation group — making up SEATO — the Southeast Asia Treaty' Organization — France boycotted the conference — also issued a new warning, against Communist dangers in the general area of Southeast Asia, saying: “Communist aggression, both overt and by subversion, infiltration and terrorism, accompanied by vicious propaganda, remains a major threat to the peace and security of the area.” names and want to use them all." An honor graduate of Southwestern High School in Detroit, Mrs. Ryan worked as a bookkeeper prior to her first visit to toe hospital for maternity. BIBILICAL SOURCE “Most of the boy’s names selected have a biblical source,’ she said and the girl’s names ranging from Arry to Zinnia relate mainly to flowers. “1 love gardening, too," Mrs.....Ryan. explained. The 25-year-old mother would like to have four children, which would mean 104 names if . her lawyer Is successful in carrying out her wishes. -He Weather Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Sunny and warmer today. High •0 to 66. Increasing cloudiness and not so cool tonight with a chance of scattered showers. Low 42 to 48. Friday, variable cloudiness, windy and mild with showers and occasional thundershowers likely. Turning cooler with showers ending Friday night. Winds becoming southeasterly 10. to 18 miles this afternoon and tonight. Outlook for Saturday; Variable cloudiness and cooler. Direction: Southeast Sun sets Thursday at 7:20 Sun rises Friday — Velocity M m.p.h. Lowest temperature ...................SO Mean temperature V . .............. : Morning, tog; night, .1 Michigan Bell Tells Rapid Growth Story (Continued From Page One) We than $7 million will be expended on station equipment — toe purchase of telephone in-struments and the costs to install them. LARGEST EXPENDITURES Woodhead said the largest expenditures for central office expansion will be made in Pontiac, Royal Oak, Birmingham, Southfield and Farmington where about $3 million will be spent. This is for central office Woodhead em- Fire at Home Does $12 in Darriage Fire struck a Waterford Township home yesterday, causing an estimated $12,300 damage. Using four pieces of equipment to battle the blaze at the J. W. Ford house, 2115 Watkins Lake, township firemen had (he fire under control in about one-half hour. However, they remained at ‘tiuTicene from 12:50 to 2:18 p. m. Damage to toe $13,000 one-story home was listed at $7,500. The contents, valued at $4,800, were destroyed, firemen, said. Nobody was at home at toe outlet of (lie fire. None of the fire fighters were injured. Firemen believe the blaze iftj have started in or near a hi-fi set in the living room. A neighbor first noticed the fire and promptly summoned toe fire department. U.S., British in Hassle on Sale to LONDON (Aj*) The United States and Britain were reported in dispute today over sale to Red-China of two British computers worth $M million. - sj HP .......- Uto Americans have 2 2 fMSS » *}• plained they see the «i< I LM Angtln l Louisville phasized, as another $5 million or more will be required for ■ sociated outside plant equipment. . The $4.4-million construction expenditure to be made in Pontiac alone, more than half the total for the four communities, Woodhead said, is based on forecasts of a continuation ; of high demand and usage.1 More than 1,700 telephones were added in Pontiac in 1966, bringing the total to more than 43,000 customers served by the Pontiac “Federal”, and “West’ central offices. ★ * j* J - Part of the heavy demand placed on telephone facilities, Woodhead said, sterns from the increasing number of customers requesting better grades service and Using their telephones more, f ONE-PARTY LINES He said that nearly 83 per »nt of the-Poptiac subscribers have one-party lines compared with the statewide average of 15 per cent. , “Jwat three vear« ago.” Woodhead said, “oaly 73 per cent of Pontiac’s customers had one-party lines.” He attributed most, of the increased usage to new service offerings, such as Metro-Calling and Econo-Unit service, coupled with reduced prices and expand-i calling privileges. * Woodhead said toe calling burden on toe Federal central ’office.will be lightened this year with a transfer of some subscribers - to toe new Pontiac North office. Another transfer to reduce overloading will place some Federal customers in toe West office. The first Roman Catholic priest to Serve in Congress was Gabriel Richard, who served as a delegate from Michigan in toe 18th Congress from 1823 to BIRMINGHAM — Redistrict-1 Some 75 parents were present ing of elementary schools, to re-jat a recent board meeting to lieve overcrowding at five of discuss transferring of their THEODORE B. BLbOM GM Chairman for UF Named lndu$tcial Unit Is Top Fund Raiser in Drive them, is under consideration by toe school board. Next consideration of the plan will be at a board meeting May M at 8 p.m., which is an altered meeting date. A recent report showed enrollment at 17,258, a 3,000 increase in three years. The total is now 2,201 above projected figures made in an Ohio State University study in 1161. . Schools listed as overcrowded are Evergreen, Frannh, Harlan, Meadow Lake and Valley Woods. | Frederick J. Poole, general chairman of the 1967 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign, today announced the appointment of Theodore B. Bloom as GM industrial chairman of the largest fund-raising division of toe campaign. Bloom, director of personnel, Pontiac Motor Division, since 1959, was also chairman of the GM campaign in 1962. The Industrial Division includes employe solicitation of Pontiac Motor and General Motors TTOck and Coach divisions, Fisher Body plant and Buick warehouse. The combined total of employe and GM corporate gift last year reached $762,483 of the $1,642,107 raised during the drive. The annual fund-raising effort which provides for operating expenses of the 55 agency affiliates is scheduled to begin in October and includes youth, family, child care, as well as health and services. working on toe drive each year, an additional 4,000 GM.' employed assist wjto in-plant solicitation, efforts. |£ In addition to campaign work,Bloom is a member of PAUF Planning Committee and served as chairman of toe recent subcommittee on job classification and salary plan, a director of toe United Fund supported Michigan Cancer Foundation and Urban League of Pontiac. He is a director and pasl Pontiac Committee on Alcohol- College Fund. . Bloom, who has been s dated-with GM since 1942, is a I native of Missouri and a gradu-1 ate of the University of Mis- | souri. Bloom and his wife reside in | Orchard. Lake and have I married daughter and a grand-1 Child. Birmingham Area News School Redisfricting Weighed children to different schools and several voiced objections^, BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Dr. Pan! L. Connolly of 4347 Karen is the ’recipient. toe Alberti Fitch lalumnus the-year award] granted by top Pennsylva n i a] College of Optometry Alumni] Association. The award is1 in recognition of CONNOLLY ‘outstanding service and dis- tinguished achievements in optometry.” ’ • J Dr . Connolly specializes in the study of sight in relatlonshipto automotive design and safety. He is a consultant to General Motors Cup. on visual design problems. BIRMINGHAM - An eight-mimite power failure early this morning affected about 758 residences. According to Detroit Edison officials the area between East Maple, Coolidge, Holland and Woodward was without power between 7:35 and %43. Cause of the failure was a mishap duriifg maintenance work switching. 1 Infants’ Fabric Shoes ■ American made, fabric dk ■ top oxfords, rubber 1 soles, plaids and colors. eBaVV | Sizes 2 to 8. Men’s Tennis Shoes All-Court duck oxford with blue A toe stripe, smooth sole for the M tennis court. Cushion arch ond /■ sole. Sizes 6 Vi to 13. First ’ • 1 quolity, similar to $7.95 shoe. 1 Ladies’ Italian Sandal ■ .Popular l-toe strop, back' ■ strop and instep sjfap. All ■ leather soles. Sizes >5'/g-. I 6 and 6% only. Italian t . M made. ■ JB ls; [99 Ladies’ Canvas Shoe Assortment of styles, colors 1 in smart sportswear foot-' wear for the ladies. Regular B or wide widrhs in all sizes. S [47 Men’s Oxfords md Slip-Ons Solid color fabric uppers 'V'Mk Mk with gummed rubber non- 1 BBBB skid soles. Ouhion Innersole 1 tr CP and arch. Sizes' 6 to 12 H . Beys’ and Girls' Shoe Canyos oxfords with non- * w skid soles. American made first quality. Variety of colors. Sizes 4 to 12. J s 15 Deluxe Oxford—Slip-Bn Variety of styles and colors. Stylish canvas E||l| - uppers. Non-skid rubber .soles. Sizes 6Vh to 12. ■' Track Shoe or Oxford Little boys’ 8% to 12 canvas oxfords or lace-tp^ toe track shoes. APchi top-port, cushion innersole. J |47 s i m m s 3EE Dog Quarantine Imposed in Area (Continued From Page One) j She was bitten on the left heel while visiting in the village of Washington. The- quarantine, he said, means that dogs must be confined or on a leash at all times. He said that other dogs, if bitten, could become carriers of rabies. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. SIMMS Is Oakland County*s Headquarters For Electric \ Razor Parts So You Can Make Minor Repairs For Any Make Electric Razor Yourself and Save Money Too! Electric Razor, Parts Sales RONSON Screen and Cutter NORELCO Razor Head s, $3.50 275 Fits #30 Norelco Floating Head 4" RONSON Scree* and Cutter SUNBEAM Headand Blade/1 Fit! Ronton» 400 razor* - 099 5-blods model CB 7000 razor. >109 $3.75 lift #85904 ... AW 35.95IW........ • ,'** - RONSON Screen and Cutter SUNBEAM Head end Blades . Fin Ronton 300 razor* $6.75 099 $6.95 IW Do modoi CB $000 Sf 50 Mf n^*4dede.-.,.w.>/-'/; „t9 . . j HU. #85804, NORELCO Razor Head 350 SUNBEAM Hud and Made 3" modal. 6-blada... SUNBEAM Need end Blade tiMH Fit* CB 553 modal. 400 REMINGTON Head $9.75 IW. Fits modal 300, $6- ^30 25, oulo-homa, q... * — • »■: 1 of toe totted system “ “ —■ - - a » for preventing goods with a mi}-j jt temperature _____t temperature Mean temperature « 45 St."Lo5*h “ J* Temp* .. _ m sett Lake c. ss, si n S. Francisco S3 4t I 50 S7 NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers and thundershowers aralbrecast tonight In portiops of the Great Lakes, the upper flftlrtttlppi Valley and the west Gulf Coast region. Snow is Pd to da Dakotas and in portions of the Plateaus. It cooler irodi toe northern Rockies into tod Flams. itary potential reaching Com- j munist countries. British Foreign Office Board of Trade officials, however, defend the transaction on the ground the computers have only a civilian value for the Chinese. The two computers, manufactured by International Computers and Tabulators, already have been supplied. Informahts raid, the U.S. government, through its embassy In London, had tong exchanges with the British in an attempt to block the sale. Thepe followed successful American pi^ssure last year Which prevented export of a computer buHt by English Electric to a Chinese scientific research center in Peking. fh* American argument on Quit occasion -wqs that’ the English , Electric computer, bigger and more advanced than the K!T machines, could have been used to speed Chinese develop-jment of an H-bethb. ~ Sfafvdiioto'Army Leader *} Elected Rotary Chief Conie In and Ask Us About Parts.Not Listed Above . 18 North Saginaw SIMMSJS. Razor Pairts —Main Floor Ernest Alder, brigadier of the 1 Salvation Arm, was elected I president of the Pontiac Rtoary I Chib today. Abe Cohen of Standard Elec-1 ■trie was named first vice pres-1 Went and Frauds F. Miller of f toe Pontiac Credit Bureau was | returned as treasurer. Thomas J. Schultz of Auto . Electric Shop, Iqc., continues as I secretary. John W. Fitzgerald, I editor of The Pontiac Press, I add Roderic V. Wiley, national I business manager of Pontiac I Motor Division, were selected f as directors. , Outgoing president Dr. Dana I P. Whitmer, superintendent of f Pontiac schoob, automatically I becomes a member of the board I of directors. Officers will take | office in July. while 100 remain in stock hunpainted bar - kitchen stools! • Vsualv^SelWfh^J^ii O perfect \ for kitchen and hptfwbars* iturdHy constructed ^/farge roomy sedt • use It like it is • or point to match your own decor • , seat may be padded for extra coiwlort • limit - 4 per person while 100 lost. V- THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1987 A—3 How to Succeed hi Saving Money Without Really . . . Shop SIMMS 3-Diy Mmey Saving Shew Tonite-Friday and Saturday Money Saving Sh