lx'.' '■a- .Th« Weather 'W3I. WmUmt BarMB Fmm*H .v' THE PONTIAC PRESS OK tIUI Hoxm Edition VOL. Il9 NO. 101 POtiTlAC, aflCHljj^AN, MONDAY. JUNE 5, 1061^ PAGES JFK, MqcmtHan Wind Up THANKg LADY MACMILLAN Kennedy shakes hands with Lady Doi^y Mac-niUlm, wife of Britain’s prime minister, on the steps of the home of Prince Radziwili in London’s Buckingham Palace Sunday night. The Presi. dent thanked her and Prime Minister Harold ar PbaUtax Macmillan (left) for their welcome to London. The Macmillans met the Kennedy pla’he at London’s airport and rode with them to the Radziwili homp where the Kennedys stayed overnight. Princess Radzwill is ttic sister of Mrs. Kennedy. .See Eye lo Eye on Top World Policies ^ DETROIT (ifl -- tSordon Wat^ was found iriiicfcent today of fir|t-degrec murder and (onspiracy to mpr-der in the 1959 slaying of wealthy auto desJer, Parvin (Biil) Lassiter. | Watson wept ^ the Circuit -Court jury of [nine women and three men returned its verdict. The jury received the case Saturday and resumed deliberations today after a weekend recess. It debated‘thecase for hours; LONDON (AP)—President Ken- Kennedy and ^lacmillan also nedy and Prime Minister Macmillan today weighed Weat- 4)oune^ they see' eye in pursuing cornmon policies th^xighout the world. Kennedy at thi?' smpA^^e was beginning to shapr'lSp a hatf-hoiir report l)e wJlHnake the people of thctx'’fmed States ‘TuMay ^ radio and lek^ision. ’I'oday the President mat for the necessity of maintaining the. rights and obligations'’ British «pd Pi«nd>. govenpheiits in Berlin. lunch and in private coti^ tion. This ^ Die windup ol a sort of foUr-fN^r sunutiit conuf'-•nee by sta^. V PWst kraaedy speat tkiM* days with PresideBt CksBes de sNtli Soviet Premier Jiknishchev for two days' roaveriMitions ia ^That meeting ended Sunday night with ty stateipefit raising . hopes of peace in Ldos but itfport-" Ing.Uttle concrcjc progress jh otfw areas. ■ / osT'ciease i-n^E A statement issdid after the co|iferCnce said the two . leaders noted with satisfaction, the Vienna agreement for ah effective cease fire in Laos. They expressed belief this should lead to progress at the 14-^Sfttion Geneva conference on Laos, ^but such proitress was not evident in today’s meeting at Geneva. Communist delegates there continued to brush aside any talk of cease fire violations by the Communist side. VIENNA i^VrrPremler Khrushchev stuck to the hard lines of his anti-Western policies during his talks with President Kennedy. But U.S. officials hope that as a result of the Vienna conference, the Soviet leader may yet modify his course. Kennedy is reported to "have told the Soviet leader emphatically that if . he forces a showdown over West Berlin, the allied powers^ will defend the city. He warned Khrushchev against miscalculating Western intentions. More broadly-KenH^ sought to get across to the Soviet leader that in spite of the recent setbacks in Laos and Cuba, the United States intends to fulfill its defense commitments to other nations around the world. The President left - Burglars Get $10,000 BAD AXE UB-^An estimated $10,000 in cash and checks was Uken from the Lerash Country Market in Bad Axe by burglars over the ’ weekend. The butglan ' fdroed a door to gain entrance to market ailo tlvm smast^ open « safe to get the loot. The estimate of the loss was made by Frank Lera'sh, market owner. In Today's Press Choic9 Successful C0n..0i)n requires tjediegted delegates-PAGE 7^ {Booster What do« Soviet lead to bopsters mean to U.S.? — Galore VP termed Ideal place for pulp mill»-PAOp! 4. Secrecy ^ Defense Del>t. won’t tell which strat^c goods go to Red Iw^PAOE tt. Area New* .......,..'.‘.,.,,17 TV M Badto Pregransa ■. BaH .............sol Pagisd ......1*151 “full agreement' on Thia waa wle of maktr la-aaea dtocusaed la .Vfeaaa by the PnwideBt tod Rovbtt premier. The communique said the two men reviewed the world situation in the li^t of Kennedy's talks with both be Gaulle and Khnish-chfV. "The President . and Mr.: ^C-^ iniilan were thus §ble tp epntinue thie cloae personal conthet begun in Wpshln^on two mdnths .agq," it added. Hdpe K's Course mil Be Modified The most, clearly discouraging outcome of the conference, from the U. S point of view, from a discussion of disarmament, inchtong the .nuclear test ban conference at Geneva, j Vienna nourishing the hope that Khrushchev will weigh his words seriously. by piaae saytag he hoped I ■la’s aim of ending the cold war through aaderstandlag and roop- 'The breakup of the inform^ summit meeting left without answer this overriding question: What kind of an impact did Kennedy, 44, a newcomer to bigtlfne diplopwcy, make oA the touto* minded G&year-old Khrushchev? ' The answer probably, win develop in coming weeks in what Khrushchev actually dAes such cf^ issues fs Lsm, B< and disarmament negotiations. dPK encouraged Kennedy Vbs reported to be ett-oouraged by the fact that IQku-tochev discussed his alms for Berlin without tryti« to impn«i the President with tutor urgency. He did not'give ai]ty ultimatum, it was said, about withdrawal of U. S., BritUh and French forpto from the city by a specific date. Weot Germany ta tha elty which lo tn maea htode East Ger-maay. Jf Oe Bast Gomsaas tried to eafone their treaty righto to Whether the Sttoie*. leader will _ wifiL Us pe and riak tniching ofl a tw-t^ear conflict to stiU not cevUuil. ★ ★ JFK to Repqrt jONDON If) — Prea^nt K iy will make a his^-koar h Kennedy will go en the air at > p.m. (Poatlae ttabe) from Us office at’the White Hooae. ^ addrmo wUt , be carried live by the a»)sr televtaiea net-werks aad on radto by the Mutual Broadcasting System.' A Repeat Performance Plans to RatoriT'Wast; Wifa Raady With Kiss; Nalla's Casa Uhcartain Give Goldline Year and a Day, fil0,000fine Three men admitted the actual slaying, interrupting jiheir lint-degree trials a year aAo to plead guilty to second-degree murder and implicate Mn. Lassiter, of 19690 Beyerly ROad. Beverly Hills, and Watson in what they said waiS a ktll-for-pay plot: ' ‘ AR three .drew maximum life terms, sad two ot. them now have fifed/motions to w1thdro«v their guUty plens. They claim Watson hrokif down and criCijl upon hearing thie verdict of acquittal. He had byen calm and conti-dent during the trial but he complained, of upset stomach this mofniUg when the jury resumed .deiiberationsuafier'a weekend recess: The Case’ went to the juo at 10:50 s.m. Saturday. . -KISSED HIM , Watson’s wife Nell ‘also broke .into lean and feahed over,.the railing in the courtroom to hug and kiss her husband. Watson said be and his wife-wlU return at once lo t'olver < CMy, Calif., where Is is em-(ConUnued on Page 7) .' HOME FOR CKlJSBRA’nON — Mrs. Ron-■nd L. Hudson of 304 W. Third St.. Rochester, was hostess at a b^ted birthday party for three of her children SaturdajT. She had missed thcii? birthdays May 27 becau^ ahe was In the hospital having "Franky. " also on the same day. Tlhe celebrants (from left) arc Cindy, 3| Teddy. I; Ricky, 4;.-Mrs. Hudson with Franklin; and 'banny, 2. Ricky misaed.the Joint, birthday by being born on May‘8.' BOSTON, iAl — U.S. Dist. . Judge Owrge C. Sweeney today sentenced industrial-*lst Bernard Ooldfine to a year and a day in prison ..]tod lined him $110,009 Income tax evasion. He was placed on probation for five years. - f ' The judge put Miss Mildred Paperman, OOidflnc's secretary, on proteitionv for three years on a’ similar charge. . v ^ As a term of their probation, Juge Sweeney ordered Goldfine, 'a’[i4 Mim Bapermun to discIoK. “a 1,1 injpiroation of whatever ' character’" on casHT transactions of Goldfine’s Strathmore Wool^ -Co. and his other lexUfe ^rms: Ceii4 Diaz ■ Shot Down in Gun Battle ”T y. Kill Alleged Slayer of CIUDAD TRUJllJjPi Domlnic;.n Republic'(H — Soldiers and pdljcc shot down Gen. Jiian Tonuis Diag the accused chiefj. asi^ssin of'dictator Rateel Trupillo, - m a gun' battle Sunday' night ,in the heart of this city. An alleged ac-conijiXice was liain with him. r/ Diaz; 52. whs ripped by machine-gun fire'and died on the'street.-His ' b,v a e’nmmlllee of the Organiialinn of American Stales (OAS) Into condittona In that Caribbean nation. The offejTAjame from Dominican Foreign Minister PorfiricK Herrera Baez at a meeting of a special, seven-natioh. committee of the.OAS which discussed the situation behind closed ddoors. No final adion . was taken 'by tthe cdlmmiftec. Ambassador Atigiisto Arango of Panama, OAS Ambassadbr Arturo Morales Carrion, and Uruguayan Ambassador CarlOs Clulow were named to confer privately jvith the Oominiv'an foreign minister on T Ubor Delegates ta Push Slate ' w BY D1CK:HANS0N Reappoctionment of the state legislatui'e according to population Is the one major issue Michigan’s labor unions will be striving for at the constitutional con-ventioh- > This certainly was driven hOme by union represehta-Itlves fTom Oakland, Macomb, St. Clair, Lapeer, Sanilac, sptolal plan of operations.for committee .which would to the Do-minipan Republic. TO REPORT ■ This grcAp is tg report back to the full committee late ttxlay formal action is expeetbd designating the special- commission to (he Oominiegn Republic. ’ The Dominican Republic Indl-ratrdd an urgent desire to cooperate with the committee by to Washington day night. The United States proposed such a study mission in the wake of the assassination of Dictator Trujillo. While pursuing diplomatic aimi. the United States ateo was quietly naval forces in tense Carihifean area. Communist Party Must Register as Arm of Russia ' WASHINGTON-I4v-The Supreme Coqrf today upheld the govern-' ment’s Jong, effort to compel the Communist party to register as an rm of the. SwiH Union. A' „* ♦ Such regiktration was ortiefcd under the Subversive Aptivitleg Control. )|)pt of 1950, but the case has been tied up for ^most, 10 years in the c-ourts. The high iri- Tuscola, Huron and^onroe counties when they metjbonai heard arguments on two ^Saturday in Pontiac to discuss con-con. And the unions 3rT‘of ‘^Sr*^deblTe“’*"w^^^^ are determined to achie'^e reapportionment by backing their chosen delegate-candidates in the upcoming primary and general elections. ^ If the unjons are successful, seats in both houses of the legislature will be shuffled so that heavier population areas will gain a larger voice In the government. reaching tgdpy's decision. Justice Frankfurter delivered today’s 5-4 ruling. Sunday Riders Die; Fail to Hear Train ' “Unless we get fair apportionment in both houses, «on-€on will have been a failure," asserted Ed Purdy, an assistant director of the Urdted Auto Workers InternatijmaL SUWANEE, Ga, tAP)-The conditioned car’s, windows were closed to keep out the Sunday afternoon heat. They also kept out the blasts- of a passenger train's whistle as it approached a crossing. OON-OON AND UNIONfl lliat was the . -' ' ! , ’ ’ VfsUM rr»«i rs»to direictor lor Region One and keynote |peaker( His statement summed up feelings' voiced unanimously during the aH-day session on con-c6h held in the UAW Local 596 Hall ort Baldwin AVenue. Thus labor renewed. It* marriage vow* to the Democratic Party Mi Michigan whicth long ba* been *martlng under tbe present apportionment of the Mate ieglalatarr, Inslatiag that tbe majority should rale, and not aren interrota. We are an inijustrial -stale governed by a Kninority in the rural direwor for Region une ana jwynoie spe«cr. .p, pio fo^ at an alMay coaterenoe hgre Saturdv of Arthia: Heaton. ipe^Ung toaintiro dnd chairiwan scholle Of Rtoyto t counBes. Frtm of the UAferoO Council EMocation Gommlssion; Also Placed on 5-Yeor Probation for Evasion of' Income'Taxes tokea.Ia cash or cheeks « to cairii from GoMflae’o lirms “aad It In the Intent of this coito to compel diacloanre of Where thla money Is aad where U went’’ Ooldfine wa* indicted evasion of nearly $800,000 in ^rsoiial InT rorporafe income, taxes. He pleaded guiliv May 1.5, The Judge today refused to allow withdrawal pf that plea and tp order a new Mfl'lty hearing. ’ - * ♦ .A.' Miss Paperman had- pleaded gOilty to evasion, of $340,000 in / ’ corporate income taxes, as chief . accounting officer- of Strathmore Woolen. She had been firted •500 for evading personal inconie taxes. - The Judge sentenced (ioldliho on four counta of tbe tax evasion Indictment, and lined him flS.M> ■ on each of those four. On seven pthcr counts he iiR-posed the 18 months/prison sentence and $10,000 |nes. Thd'floes are. to* be i^id, JudJfe . Sweeney !°said. The 18 njbnths sentence was suspended. • Goldfthe’s counsel asked the Judge to, allow bail pending appeal o| his request for a new sanity htoruiB. The Judge refused. He also refused a defqpse requeet to postpone imposition of the sentence. Weather Will Cool With Chance ol Rain Tonight will be partly ctou% and a little cooler with a chance' for a light' shpyi'er, according to the weatherman. Tonight's low will • ,be 55, .. . ' ' 'V. Tuesday , will be fafr and cooler with a high'of 74 expected. Morning .southwesterly winds at 6 miles per hour wilt shift late tonighit to northerly. ’. For the next live day* fem' perature* will average acar the normal high of 7t and normal low ol M. Wednesday will be rather cool with gradual warming through Satuirday. Precipitation WjU total about one-quarter inch in: a few shower* Monday night and again about Friday.. The lowest temperature recorded in downtown Pontiac preening a.m. was 60. At 2 p.m.' the temperature stood at 85. The train rammed the car, state troopers said,' and dragged It about 60 feet down the track. The four passengers were killed instantly. J ' * * ♦ ■ The vlctiths, all Atlantans out for a pleasure ride, were -kfetlti-fied ps: Barroil U. Wiggins, 42; his wife, Irene, 40; Cboper Cecil Welch, 52; and his wife, Wanslie. 49. lieft.arr. Mn. diarlea Nfeldrett Jr., Lacal 7T1 /’ai^ fVed V. Ragiard, AtoUent df theP^klind medtfa«. "I waul my vote delegate; Kto Monis^ United Auto Wtoketa on- - QMinty AlLoCFCMilicil and feetb^ bdto (Ctotiimed oil Pa^ 2, Col. 3) ' '-I ' lY h"'- ■ 1 ^ X tosrrST'k BM*tf A*M ta bklr-eolorlDf^kOS DiKrWu*gif Bd Uud<^ *t OMaMtolotT »£• tornto rmtiM. Ver ferUito lateriStto wit ranttki 4-«eii. / I y TgB 1»0ST1AC ra»8& MPyPAT, JITOIt fc'WI uiluUp Rocket |Opens New Era for U.S. SAOiKUmpi. am. ^ Marahall Space Flight coi-Aar «id It hopaa te praaant a unotleal aohition to NASA haad-quaitwa Waahingtaa by Thaa- r dpn't knSr lUrA aila a patient, aaya a Pittabuigh phyakdan. Dr. Carop-beU Mbaat. writing In the current pubikmtion of the AUegt^ Counr ty Madical Sociaty.^ Dr. Moeea aald the'moat diflk cpit wolda for acnne doctora to ■ aay are-'l dqat know," r“* warned that the«re«iH can be ineomct Aagnoais and aerk Youth DIslocqtw Hip Whon Gar Turns Ovor A 20-yearold Rocheater youth Mtffered a dlalocated hip early today when the car In which he waa riding went out of eontnd and turned over when tte driver waa blinded by the U^ta of an approaching car.. - Chariea Tyrrfl. 432 Second St. waa to Pontlae General Howdtal In aattafactory condition after Marvin L. Garnett, 87, of ' Renahaw St.; Rocheater, lost ci»-Jjaol a Od. RtpMa ' iossife, gif a HiusTrri.' gissjy" « S’ tac: . STuST* 8 8 '« ‘■T/T , •, ar rsaMat' ~ icottswd* ahoWers ore expected la dM Oiinf^ Plains and in loutbem Mkhigaiv It wilHw Grant Lakes area ‘and in the North AfiaMlC states. Iron curtain, but Aerojet General Corp. which produced the segmented missile, have calculated that the Soviet rocket, which put Maj. Yuri Gagarin into orbit may have been an assembly of six rocket motors dtveloping total thraal of about 1.8 mlilioa Pushed by Labor bUbthat is now before Gov. Swain- ASKSQUBmON ‘'This bill, if { wipe out the H83 mlUkm debt owed by indusby today to the un- clalma' this would stabilize |h» -fund." he said, addliig, "It same-body owee me H.OOO and I tail them not to pay it back,‘'becaiiaa I want to stablUae my pocketbook, make aenset'* In attacking Romney aa a con- Lnw expressed anofiier'hm>0'that new constitution woild douUe the length of terms of those Sleeted ) state "If tpriha of office were lohgcf ’ we would be able to concentrate legislation uninterrypt^ by —Tying „for ink (publkity in hometown newspapers)," hp saM. R^laalied ReAiAllcan for tall, lag to take tke iniliativo ia' meetlag'responsibility of raising bodget fands, aenulgg titem of paariiW the laiek baek to. poapla la. tha form «f rsferaa- ad by the-paopio to handle aUeb Law also said he wbuld like to cmstlt(|tion Ing tnandatoiy lor all thoac eligi- Poptlsc becauae 6t apathy at the poUa." he said. Don Stevens; Michigan AFL-CfO education .dlri^w, remained ^t this apathy is tli^ result of too many elections In his opinkm. 'Wifii alectiaas aS many as a doe-m timss a. yuar, we have less democracy becausd people jdst will not come out that often." Purdy in hif talk noted some of the . obstacles ( a d 1 d g oomcoh. "Fl^,".'he said," "the' legislature failed to proVifta . sufficient funds for con-con tlut were requested GoV. Swainson."^ ‘A 'Second; there has. not been endqgh preparfttion lor con-con; a sltn hasn't dven been chosen yet." PBrdy.Dtmocrat; District 8 — 1 RepubUead and 3 Democrats! Uth Senatorial District—1 ,RapubUesa. of his boprd of tnistsas since 1857, Cote- He changed dins for hts flight to Wsriilnglon airi ordered that his plane stop over, ft, Qooee ^ ^ ________________^ ^ Bay. Labrador, for about six trying for f con-con hour* instead M tte scheduled 40^after an unsuccessful primary bM 'tailnutes for refueling. ■for a state representative seat last The change wtti give hhi> a year. He is a teacher of economics and Amarira|i ^enunent. better night's Sleep aboenf The big jet' and put him In WTsahlng-toD\ln tiaylilAt. ' His new time of ..adrews Air IfWrce Bass Washington, ia 8:30 a.m. arrival at I' Howard i», a kwnoar Royal Oak Township jiwtice of tho peace has practiced lew in Detroit 4or to Diploma Marked by Babies Field Rehearsals for Pontiac Story Starting Today gratalaled tor working at Poatlae Motor Oi{. dorlaa: tho day. drtv-lag nillefl to oolloio claaoeo la SoothfieM at Bight (wd ralaliM six cMMren In tba nMUttnM. Mrs. Weiahaar said her Mt: The sun iras shining brightly today as tho rahearsals for -tho centennial Speotacla inaytal Into WisneV Stadium Anr the firet time. Field rehearsals for ‘‘The Pontiac Story" will' continue, there Tiud's okay‘With Mrs. Waialiur and aha'a happy about It. 't forget,"- she said, "I. wfs ths on# who raised the fsmUy. Mliybe AbW he can stay honhs and get acquainted." Weiahaar to oho of Ml who reoolvod degrtao at Ufs fWh ,A|I high school gfrts were ait to begin today's rehearsals at 3:43 p.m. Ths Indian scene wss to follow at 7 p.m. and square dancers at 8:30 p.m. Tomorrow's schedule inclpdee the QvU War and Early Settlor scenes, with principals, it 7 p,m. and a full rehearsal pf principals in the Roaring 30s sequence at 8:30 p,nl. The historic chant of the Iduez-sins at some mosques in Cairo can now be hefrd on tapa-rooord-ora over loudspeakers in the minarets. Two Detroit, induatriisj leede^ wciwewerdsd henurery doctor of eniyieering 6tsgrms, which Adlai Discussing Basic Economics With Venezuela CARACAS (UPI) - Afflbeasador Adlei Stevenson began a bedrock discussion. «f economics today involving President Kennedy's alU-anos for progress program with top Vsnasualan officials. Stevenson began the firet day qf his lO^cbuntry three-watk South American tour with an early moni-tng off-the-record briefing at the American Efnbaaayv. Later be lohehed with American Ambassador Thaodors Moaooao, Venssuelah FoiriRn-Mintster Maioos - Falcpc and (^Aer cabinet members'at tw It WU understood that the conference centered on dJ J. plans fdr seonomie aid tn Lathi America and Venaiuria’B interest in Ids pro-In thin eonnectiqH .H the to build up its aoonomy and industrias and is auking long tarn financial aid from abi^. CriticizM High Caurt BERRIEN SPRINGS (fl-Eldcr Reuben R. Figuhr, president of the general confarence of Sevmtii Day Adilentiata, criticiaad in an interview Sunday the Supi Court's recent |deeiaU«i ttphokUng lawa. conferrtd by LIT President George Lawrence, They were Wilfred D, MacDon-nell, president of Great Lakes Steel Oorp., who was the commencement speaker; and Charles H. Patterson, viro president of Ford Motor Co. aa Oakland OMmty «asl af M8t. Ii ashadnlad to ptay rix nIgMs hi tke ■todlBm,.8BBe 11-84, m the MghUgM of the Greater Pontlae Commissioners to Review 1961-62 Budget Tonight BIRMINGHAM — City comml»j1he convention wltH Mke. Clark A. awrde-Ipw, 19. of . 844 Benningtaa Rond. BIoomfMd HUta. win be 10 a.m. tomoenw at the Bell IChapel of the wmiarn R. HamfikmOo, ial wffilw Wedmwiay W 3 pjnt hi the Centerville Oametflty. CUn-terviUe, Ohio. Mr. Shardelow died Saturday In WtUlaip Beaumont Ho^ritri. Royal Osk, frdlowlng a brief iUneee.. ■e WM dlstitet managu el the Drirolt oOoe el *e lapriMto Stoal Oisp. Be had fonaeily been Seven alternate propo(Mls were ■et up fay the city to that bids could be euhmitted on aiw one or oty crinbinatlon of the three struc-■ pee. \ William T. KlUaea, dty aa-‘ a oentraet ba awarded to R-O. Oo. of Cantor Line tor the eon-etnwtton el the two bridges on Oak Street sad Northlawn Drive. ■ubmlttll a low bid a inembar d tiiel.... terian Church d BBtofaighaiti, the Detroit Atfalettc Qub, Receea dub, Bloomfield Hills Oountiy dub aad Open Hunt dub and the Mystic Tie Lodie, FAAM, bidlanapoUB, The Ann of 177.887 for the two \pra^. that the It aleo is reeomi WUIlts Strest culvert contract be awarded .v*.r» Plosal, Ina, Detroit, for tte low bid of 196.384. Nine construction firms submitted bids tor ths projets. Surviving ire his wUs, Jeannette; a dauihter, Mrs.*WUUam H. Jarrstt Jr. of Indianapolis; a son WUUam D. d Glendale. Ohio: a lister and plx srondchU- orial fund, St. Andrew Praayter-ian Ch^h, IndtanapoUa. ^ Mrs. Jotei M. dark of 1346 wUl entertain Thurs-preconvention party for D^it area Kappa Delta. Alumnae who plan to attend tha 34th annual convention of the sorority in Roanoke, Va.. June 22-36. Those from the area attending Learned Lesson, Says GE Head Jury Frees Watson in Lassiter Murder (Continued From Page Ckie) ployed by ladnetital Utbognipb. laov as a ealeeman. The Watsons sMd they were anxious to be with their daughter, Mrs. Anne Bradan, who ia expecting a baby aoon. Just how Watson’s acquittal wUI aftoct the caise against Mrs. Lassiter was not immediately termined. As^tant Prosecutor George W. ^t said, "We’U have to sh back and wpratoe.tbe afruatlon .Lassiter Mrs. .Lassiter is declared cured (of emotional exhaustion)." Kent said there were many OUUMBD DfNOCBN( Ail along, both Watetm and Mrs. Lassiter had protested their bmo- WataM laid today u tba jury drimtod his esso. "As God la my makar I had uthlng to'do with tkM caaa ia any way, shape, Jennings Memcrisl Hospital, to which Mrs. Lassiter is coofimd, refused to teU newsmen how she had rs«cted at news of the verdict. Thr hobpltfl also barred anyone from seeing her. Bur a spokesman aald attempts ere beii« made to reach Mrs. Lasiiter's doctor to see if he vTOuld ipprove visits by anyone. Louiasll, her attorney, said that,Dr. Ralph Johnson. Mrs. Laasitef's doctor, had advised him she vyu able to go home and he hoped to effect her return there can get some needed rest.” ___be Mrs. Edwin F. Lau and Mrs. Donald L. Wekton, both of Bloomfield HiDa. laabto bu Oorp- WU vice pim^t d the bbunorial tribatu may be made 0 ^ WUUam H. Jarrett Mem- Cardiner Calls Price Scandal a 'Humbling Experience' WASHINGTON UD-Ralph J. Cbr- . diner, preeident and board (Aalr-man of tha General Electric Co.,' today dmeribed the price-fixing coBipirapies in which his firm wu involved as "a humb^ expert- He and others lexmed a lesion front it, Cordiner told the Senate Antitrost and Monopoly wboom-mittec. I ntiwpaet, ha aaM It wu What he and all other GE executives and employes have learned, Cordiner said, is this: 'This great country’s competitive enterprise system wiU remain free and compeWlve only so tong " u the citizens, and particularly thoae ot us with ^sponsibUlties in burinen Ufa, are Cnp|Me (d (he sslf-diecipUnt raqulred lu)d are wUling to exccrcise it.” •GOVERNMENT WILL SUB* if we are not," he said, "the power of government wUl lnersas-<> ingly be' invok^ as a substitute, ' to compenute tef our failuru. beneMher free "Thus, aeli-dlsCipUne is the key to a free, vigorous, and competitive economy." ConHner, who had oaked'that'he be permitted to testify, gave his views u the subcommittee neared . the end of a flve-wuk inquiry into antitrust cases brought -by the government against GE and other major elactrica) manufacturers. BEGIN CREDIT UNION HOME r vislt^ dtsAt union officinls haadia the silver shovels it frMindbre|ldi«, Saturday for. the new headquarters of Uie QMIC Empioyis Federal Opdit U^. on WtwdUFard Avanue, epporite fit. Joseph Mercy Hbaidtal; fviin left are Hany J. Woodaua. maaaiger; Joaeph Rkxngren, deputy director d the Fedaral Bvaaiji / df Orsdft Uaions; Kenneth J. Marin, president d the MtoUgan Qwdit Union Laagues and Mayor PMUp E. Rowston: THE PONTIAC PRESS, 5IO:^DAY, J;HXE 5, 11^61 THREE Chmeh |,yy PBIfft Ob MM'S oatf lAOIir WATCHES Our Prices Are So Low We Cer^'t. -Mentiort the Famous BRAND NAMES . . Compare Our EVER DAY PRICES. , »l«%’L«.29»s teXi” ' 325P wlrroiBi. »w47so 3»TSiyf.«.«Oo6 N«w«(t modcli of Amortea'i 5?f*L Double OUARANTX|;o bf makere auMf mMk. WATCHES Railroads Plan WhistlestopTrip today on a nlne^ity . tour to peek paUic aupport tor taoUtlon and regidation moK ipecial to Ask Support m Taxation, Regulation ovorable to Trains VFour Freedoms Special.' train operated hy Grand iRapids, Jackson, Creek, kalamazop, Pontiac, Flint and Huron in addition to Detroit, I It left, this mondBK on tke Ckeaapai4ke'* OIrio tracka for Tuesday, the special wiU travel t)ie New York Central tracks to Jackson, Battle Creek and Kalama- Open House to Mark Culligan's 25th Year The threeJjday toUr ends Wednesday whert \the tsain moves to Gnmd Trunk Western tracks to visit Pontiac\ Flint and Port Hu- A firm which pioneered in the Aoft .water service industry here will note a milestone Saturday when "it celebrates the ^h anniversary of the CUlIigan system. Spokesmen \troih at least 4ight railroads wl|l\be abhard the spe; They include David E. Sn}ucker, president of Detroit, Toledo and Ironton Railroad; E. C.. Johnson, vice president of New York Coi-tral; Harry A. Sanders of Bloomfield Township, vice president and general manager of Grand Trunk is Western; H. W. Larse, vice pres-ident si Pemiaylvania; Mjrau B-Phipps, preiident of the Detroit A Toledo Shore Lhw, and cmcotive vice president of Nickel Plate; W. K. Weaver Jr., general manager of Chmpeake A Ohio, and James B. Leamy, general manager of Detroit Terminal. Severe Forest Fires, Feared in the West ayreas^too much rain haa'cnaedj ilarm. Qffidals ahy Sjtaitbern CaliA>rtila| —hi.spite of all It cap do— lirill Ipse the most to Brea. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)-An px-plosive situation is building up in the West. rain has been pienUtuI through the winter, officials say will dry Hdnored Socond Time SYBACUSE. N. Y. (UPI)-Syra- I cuse University haa had 14 football All-Americans but only one, i Joe Alexander, was so honored 1 twice. He was named in 1918 and | 1919. The railroad executlvea said .the four freedoms they are seeking are tlon, freedom from excessive tax- compefitian, and freedom to owr and operate other fonns of trans portation." Their W^mlle political whistle-stop tours started by Abraham Un-' ■ yearn ago and by most presidential candidates siiice Lincoln’s times. From the RPbky Mountains the Pacific Oceans from San Diego _ ,, , to SeatUe, forest and brush fires Bar NegrOOS at Church wipe out giant portions of timber lands, stock ranges and vacatiota places this summer, state and fecund foresters predict. Feeertry oflleials dCMribe the SALISBURY. Southeni Rhodesia (APi—A group ol Negroes who] have been trying to break down local . color bars by sit-ins Therfvf»sttrT?siiffi^^ permission to wtMehip at thej Pplch Refonped Church Sunday! The Negroes call . themselves j “Freedom Sitters.” An open house In the plarit of Ctdiijan Soft Water Service, Orchard Lake Ave., will commemorate the event. The public has been luvlted to view die water condlttoiiiug fa-diUdes mad to see the actml re-geueradoB «f water ' eoneners aad niters. Refreshments wUI be A grand prize drawii^ for a sterling silvMware service, tor six with cheat, wiU be held. Fondac Culligan . Soft Water Service started in 1945. It has 24 empl^ and six tnlcks. The local firm has softened an estimated one billiori gallons of water on - service basis in 16 years,' Paris Police Search for Algerian Gunmen PARIS (AP) — Police threw a dragnet over three boroughs of Paris tWay in an effort to trhce Algeria!^ whtr took part in a shooting! affray which claimed at least 11 \ lives this morning. Police \ said li Algerians had been kltUd, four of them Soldiers serving i^th the French .army. Four otb^ Algerians and five Paris policemen were wounded.’ ' W ■ ■ Eighty Algerians were ques- tioned by police, thm taken fo a special detention cefter set at Vincennest\ LOWEST PRICES EVER! 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Im-pSDvo* tone end volume eeeeeeeeeoeeeeereaeaa FATHER'S DAY GIFT SAlf 7x35 BINOCULARS Bast for GaaeraJ (/toa 7x35 ZfiBs Typ« C.% . • lotMt aUdi eone day may ^ MPdaoe • aolutta to «ie of jtlHilr oteBomic pnUamt. ‘\lT>t.U»er PadnnM h«» *> tMM M varitUea aad ' I «Mt the product la fotaif Fs; a aliM thero la a Aa a reaMt) the eaatem countia jaad p^jrdedtarty the Saalt area JcouU jcomfortablj on Expres^ay Jl jcomfortably aupport a wood «ulp ^t whfch could produce aoo of pulp per. day. JurniLD BE nuwvcnvE • R woidd be a larve plant coatinK JbetpecB IS and }30 miUkai to axnatnict. «nd would be one of the bnoat prod^ive In the Upper Pentnaula. 3 Ml a plaM la eaflrely paa-I aMa, aeeardtav to the three pro-I featoMol Iweatry roea wbe have ' Theae men are Harold C. Nygren ol Eacaaaba. foreat auperviaor of ;Upper Mldiifan^ national foreaU; Menford Garland, director of the Foreat Producta Reaearch Divkjkto M Michigan ObMcge of Mining and IVchixdogy, Houghton, and Walter k Koepp of HooiditaB, chemical li Division. OAVT PAPER ^Prof. Koepp has diaelooad thbt tato Foiwat Producta Reaearch DIM* IntQ the possiUllty of a hnft p . t lor this area. The knft piper uMch could be utiUaed tor paper m am w swwro ffWi ft VMft Ira# temm ftfti telMr typid at mn ha has hi Mini Tbe Federal Regprvc Bank ro> ports that there are aome 5,000 be derived from the nathm’s fereats. and Gariand, aa a result of their of long fiber, and Ueached kraft DCTROrr (AP) - A wket-shaped auto, described as u experimental "space-age car." went on its first outing Sunday— whiz-rin^ periormaaoe that startled Sunday drivers on the John l«9dge Exprefasway. The car, which baa seven fine aito twin bebbto eaaoplea. Is the PlrsMiB m naade by Gpaend MetoM carp. CM says the gas taiMne powerei oar la «‘the most la the worid.'* The Firebird has no steering wheel, gas pedal or brake^pedal. Theae at« combined in a single, four-inch t^trol stick next to the \ ■ More than 1.5 miilioa Americans live In trailers today, most of M th^Rirest Productrfj^ ^ the 7,500 trailer paries which provida tor parking space, electric connecUons and sanitary fatiUtlea. Tonnenting Rectm Itch Stopped ln‘ Minutes SdoBoe FiMla Nnw Healag ScAatauien UmI Pronptfjr Shape hhUag Mid Phb «f Pilea ment” was reported and verified by • doctor's observatiehs. Tbia improveasent was main-tainad in caaaa wbtra a doctor’a ebeervetlone wen coatinued over a period of mdatha 1 Among . Raw YSfh, H T. (Speslel) • Ont of the most eommea sflle-tioaa is a coaditien knewn aa "itekiag piles.’* It la mast emberreroiaf for the vletiBi ; during the day --------"'ng at t night. Bswa. Far the flnt time,* •t mVenaed -h«^ ^ ettime,eeleDee ____________ir baeuBg euh- •toiwe with the nateAhing ability to promptly stop the burniu itch end pain. It aetn^ ellyrtrinks keteorrhoide— ,s!sr............. In one iwarnnheM cam eftsr ; aas«ber"very striking iBvrove. variety ef hemorrhoid eondf ttohe, some of 10 to SO years’ duration. Tha saerat la this nser bsaling (Bio-Dyne^ 7 dis-aprld^fanitf cevery of e wprld^--------- rsaoerch Inititntion. this sub-•tanee la now obtalnaUo to etoir ippooitoro/sfmknowa * rotton B*. Ask for Proparatloa B Suppoattoriaa (coBveniaBt to carry if away from home) w Preperetien H Ointment spoeial applicator. Available at all drug on UP Beach Pair Who Pbn to Sait Attontie tn A^tdrboot Must Wait Repairs HOUGHTON (AP) - "You don’t .nit Just because you have a ' ' bed luck," said one of the two frying to sail a 24-foot motor-boat from Mimwapta to Germany. With that, Xt. Ool. Laonaril Flo ihade it clear that he and ftobert KiUennan of San Frandaco intend to rOsume the 5,000-nalle trip a* aoon aa their damaged ship is repaired. was berlcd eido a reeky Upper MIchlgaa beach by high wliids Flo, a car. aaid »We tatond tat|gct gotag He sald tbe craR developod trouble with ita driving mechanism and without pow. er. Bad weather caused the ship NHice like a cork on the dmp-py water until a distress call brought hrip-from the Cbaat Guard. . , Marilu III was towed from two miles southwest of Eagle River to Houghton. Flo end KlQerman said they would know today what repairs the. craft requires. Ho, the deputy conunander for material at Bl^ Air Force Base at El Paso, Tax., nUd the hull did not appear dai^agcdi ’Tm aot dtoimuaged." Fla Mde^’It IMi .bed to heppea. nri e«t at • Flo and HniermaA left Duluth, Uim-.-Satur^. Ibny plan to sail u^aih tw Great Lakiee and tha t. Lawromse Seaway to Atlaatie Ocean. ^ ■ lands, Shetland Mands j roaaarch, list ilx products which A dear public understanding of land in Ibe Upper PeniiiMla hold * n be produced from Upper Ificb- the proUenu is urged by Geriand. He aeys that "in order to solve the area’s forest problenu, as well u other economic probtoms, it is pulp for oelhdoee scetste and via-coeenydni (oeDopiiene, textile and make a special effort to service this area to oveiconM fito tond-3cy to imegino that the !■ Mce remote then It really la. "Hie area wffsrt from n ro-moteness that It pertly paydio- freight ntoe to I NEW toreet, prceenfing 1 That one of the enlarging problems of today’s forest is under coneumpthm. of the cubic foot wood yWd. E That tie devetopmeat M awr The following truths, Garlind clsima, need to be brought to public attention; 1. That the put forest history beard very little relationehlp to the present forest problems, t. That the torori to a givw-«, Itotag thiag V 3. That the 10 milUon acres of toMTcwserratlaa aad E That the preservation ol large l( reu of timber in the form of parks is less than total const tkin and detracts from the general economic welfare of the ptate and 7. That the orderly harvesting of Umber Is ^uitc compsUble with other mult^ uses including recreation, game production and water conaervation. 78 N. lACilNAW mUT TUESDAY ONLY Sbtoa STKIAU BMBS fiali BUTTER 49t * dmi owdiatmrUy , Mim tecAr 'i t..ftftert «ir 3 lepawrie ttmml . A \ PLUS Mew Bammed’MtaefBmg tOTCMHATIC MOOa PZIm* 15 immiarmt m$.ghiM tawpHemi iKover I N.P. aMMV.pewartobeNMaa» l^fwKriltoMCL. g/.CBpwaTariel ftow laerMMo Rag Naaria wMi Op«n Monday and Friday Nights 'til 9 F.M. CLOSiO WfD. ^IRNOONt^ JUNf« JjULY/AUGUST ^ '*Ymr Appliance Specidias” 12r North Soginow Stmaf ft 5-6199 ■’.L .ft People’s - Food Town FOOD FESTIVAL YW'mrrrr Sensationsl Sale Days Monday June 5,1961 thni Wadnasday, Jwia 7,1961 U.S. Chpice SIRLOIN STEAK lb. 7P • - ■ ■ a .Hygradg’i. • • Fresh, Lean * Peter's or Pressels a Hygrode’s or Peter’s ; SUCED : GROUND : LUNCH i LIVER : BACON i S’' #' BEEF MEAT \ SAUSAGE '«^:49'j m i V 1 i 39^. SAVE 16< iUY NOW WILDROOT CREAM OIL HAIR DRiSflNO 735 CAMPBELL’S * PORK & BEANS . ECONOMiCAt ./ Tall . / No. 300 g/' Can "■ 10' REG. SIZE FAB........25 10' 11' ORCHARD « APPLE SAUCE ...... STOKELY’S — AAEDIUM * WHOLE BEETS............. WHITE OR ASST. CaORS * Blue Ribbon NAPKINS FRANK’S — PURE * BLACK PEPPER. BANQUET ^ FRESH FROZEN Tall No. 303 Can Toll No. 303 V Can 60 Ct. Pkg. If a • • • • 1 oz. Tin ■ftJftV IftllBftlb • * CHICKEN * POT PIES • BEEP Pkg. PILLSBURY OR BALLARD ★ LODUIRI Vl\ BISCUITS. 3 tubes 15' 2» FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS M na Noi miiwtr I iiiiamuMit. ■ im iJUHnrwi. M:; -I..- - THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 3. mi ntE f(Be(Mde ^Unpopular r Ntgro iMde^ Pfan td |A|^I Qrctor Halting * Action in Alobama Saw Nazi CqLtnp Kill Million Jews ■y IMM Frap latWMllMMl Nefro iMkden today planned to JERUSALEM (AB) ^ A oool little man adtfa « tight voice told the Eichmann trial court today that he aaw thn. Nazi death mill "freedom ridee” In „,*_at SoUbor UU an eettanated i 11^ . U. ________ lien Jew* ih 17 mgatha. Dov Freibecg. 34. now in In* duatrial apart in laraM, took the U.8. Middle lliitricVjHg« Johnaon Jr. aaid SundSyln Frank ghmery; Ala., hia order "ia directed only to and againat tboae or-gahiatlona ... who aponaor auch groupa" u the “fraedbm ridera.' The federal fadgo made K eiear lhaao whe wkA tadividaelly to Oul/ 15 it the time, Freiberg aurvived by work and'wits and at laat ran away with about 300 in a mass break in 1943. He hid I the forests tor a year. As the prosecution went i nal week of Its, case against hi 'Atlanta, meanwhile, t h e Southern Christian Laadarship Gonlerenoe (SCLC) and OBi«reas of Racial Equality (OORE) aaid in a Joint statemehf ''freedom ■BAB SURVIVORS At^. Gen. Gideon Hauaner pre- sent^ three survivors of the in the deep south. “The principle and objectives of the 'freedom ridm’ is thoroughly American and conaiat the oerdae of constitutional privilege . .. The rldm will continDe.” death camps during the session, but Frei|«rg was the principal Fndberg reached Sobibor May 17, 1942, and escaped in October 1943. He estimated the death toll in that time u one million, pieced together from postwar bdcula- The two antiaegregation orguii- ers” would not be eent to Alabama until a court appeal of Johnson’ Friday ruling can be made. But the statement indicated more riders would be sent to Mississippi . from Tennessee across the state’ 'U.S. to Benefit' From Aid Plan Dillon Says Big P of Foroign Budgot to Bo Spent for U.S. Goods WASHINGTON («>-Secr«tary of the Treasury C. Douglu Dillon promised today that 80 per cent of the economic portion of President Kennedy’s $4.8-billion foreign aid prograni next year will be spent for U.S. goods and services. Instead of the program having an adverse impact on the United States balance of payments situation, DiUoh told the Senate Foreign Relatiom Committee, this policy will have “an increasingly favoi^ able effect on it. DUIsn gave taD baeklag to Keaady*s five-yoar. SM-btlion abroad a aa "esssatlal tear of lag by barrsmiaga from The development loan program is a key feature of the foreign aid bill- ' Kennedy is asking authority to ury tor the epor wants authority to r^^ an additional S300 mQHon'from repey- Piaise V1 g e r' in Montreal is named after Jacques Viger, antiquarian who wM majcfr.of Moat-raal from 1853-58 and died in 1858. Yo*ls.Hosi«alMJsat:,t!l£S Following Collision Jer^ bands compelled to play incessant marching music as the lines of naked walked to their Nightly “concerts" in which the Jews were forced to sing anti- I the I visor of the “Nazi extermination program, Freiberg hdd a tale of tor the helpless. One SS officer named his dog 'mensch’’ (man) and taught the animal t» "bite the dogs'' which were the Jews. If the bite was savage enough, the victim was ruled upjit tor work ahd promptly executed. A 20-year-oId youth was reported in aatisfaQtory conditkMi ^n St. Joseph Mercy HoapUal today after ring injured in auto accident. Dan)d R. Piece, 756-E. Columbia Ave., suffered a scalp laceration and brain concussion in the accident involving three cars Three burglaries were rqxnded to Pontiac police over the week- "“'Retirement Plans at 830 stolen from her home. Ppntac AAan Uninjured as Copter Faff 40 Feet Juanita O'Camb, 308 S. Blast Blvd., reported a purse containing $1 and miscellaneous change stolen from her home. From Will's Smoke. .Shop, 561 in UK acoocm uivuivuig wree CBrs.g cj, ... Iram • jute box wd plntol’ina. and South Parke streeto. ■e waa A pasMBger la a car drlva by Gerald D. ReynoMa, chnea and two cases told PsBilae poUee be failed to am stop siga at the Iqtersectloa. His car.oollided broadside wltlr, a car driven by Norman L. Hickey. 22, ' of 5T3 California Ave., then hit another car parked nearby. Hickey was treated for minor in-'juries at the hospital and released. “Dath became a way of life gre,", he aaid. “We got ac-fo It." • He said he saw; , Women and diUdren wpdrated from the men on arrival and immediately sent to the gas chambers. J preacher'' hoodwinking everyone on arrival with tain of "work in the Ukraine," so convincing most walked into the "shower bath’’—the gas chamber —naked and probably still hope- ACT UKE DOGS . guards fcurcing Jews to run aibund on all lours, barking like a dog 1^ biting other Jews. Premier Chang Partiallyln Plot South Korean Planned Coup but Purposely Not Told Dote SEOUL, South Korea (*»—A top planner of last month’s army coup said today Lt. Gen. Chang Do-Young, now premier of the nation’s new military regime, fiuly supported the plot but nevc^ was told the tar^ date in advance. . U. Osl. Kim Choiv-PIl. 18-yor-eM latelllgeMW Ahlef la the glvw aa amblgnsae, rale la the eonspbacy to pratoet Mm If H tolled. It alsd allowed Mm to tool UJ8. effleors' aWheagb aot deliberately. Kim hwisted. Kim’s story, outlined in an interview and later news conference, tended to support the thesis that Chang Was a front for ambitious ycN^ colonels.- His was the first account of the plan- ning behind the coup. I SPARKLING FLOORS affoitUtsly! ^tShetlancL : FLOOR PdUSHER SHETLAND FLOOR AND RUO CONDITIONING IINOHCIT For only $5.00 (when purchased with Polisher) you get famous Shetland Rug. Shampoo unit and enough Vanishing Foam Shampoo for taro 9 X 12 nigs — snap-on pads that apply ically with a year’s supply of wax for average room — reversible wool felt buffing pads to give your floori high lustre. Open Slock Value of J[655 Kit - $11.66. SsSrSSS SsaSH^- KOOI fOllSHIk liiqMMbiS jrwi w»*, COMPLETE with AU-Pimnw IrvUYCt. Wool-Ftll auWiM Ptih. KmiTWm Pwb. hup (lupins Unit Md AttUMMlic LMuM Dite MAMT. Snmpin k«| Sbampoo. The Big Difference tiiaik Whot wondarful groduotion ond Father's Day gifts! Is . . . 4 h CURRINT DIVIDEND PAID Smi-Aiiially Hr 71 YEARS u 142 BapHolSaviics IlMiAssi. ... \ tUaklkM II 75 W. Hwi# FB 4.0561 IN MAR OP SUILMNe takes a iicicing ond keeps 6n ticking! < • Sliock-Smietont • Anf i>Mogn«»ic # Unbroakoble Moinepringe A. TIMIX SILF-WIND The completely c u 10 m s 11 c watch that wirvh irseH with the netursi movement* of ths wriit. An appreciated gift! 14.95 i. TIMIX WATIMkOOF The thin, hsrKhonfe watch with one-piece esse usually found in nrorc expanstvo watches. As the learning experience is a policy fervently embraced by MSUO. ★ ★ ★' ^____________________________ “The alumni university concept, crude form, would offer systematic ^J||« |lra7V finrinO* educational experiences -- both prd* * ^ V r & fessional and cultural — not just for four years but for 40 or 60 years, if. tpe need be present,” says Varner. . “It looks upon undergraduate days as but a phase of the total progr|Eun of educatioi^ and it wUl grow arid expand on the assumption that educa-. Readers Report Some Odd , Happenings About Season Voice ot the People: Forfner PotUiac Reaniei^' injirmvi ZnjouThe frmi ; I want to teir you how Very much we appreciate tbs wonderful world and local coverage we get in The Pontiac Press, We appreciate it ao much more because we are so ter from hopie, end'k htteiga ua cteoer to the town we love ao much. We aiw firem aodouc iandUes end maiw i^ w w We have espeetoly sulapei tee a •ewtoL In teet, wo aie ee eeteesei a* phB enr iNhV leem ie eMRi ekte wite tee Ug eeleteatisp. of advice. You can omit his and Da-Ions.' U we have to get black- vid Lawrence columns any dme. mailed, why don’t we taka the ra(t Nat latorested on our own terms? ' —. watertwd wifo Says Tractor Beal ‘Opera Stars Sinsr A***"»t U-S- Hiatory All Tynes of Songs* Remember that greet American * who laid: •'Millloiis tor defense J. StuligroBS sharply ; criticized but i rplj^ crmcizea but not one cent tor tributf"? the Publishw of The .Pi^tiac Ptais Eleanor Roosevelt, MUto.i Dsen- ★ ★ ★ Varner said that the MSUO facalty to indoctriiiaUng uader-gradnates toward this concept, so they do not leave convinced that Ihcy have at tost become educated aad that fonn>l learning efforts nuiy now be put aside. Such a program would not replace of 2295 Hedge Road reporhl a white' blue jay arewid hte premises. A large rhubarb leaf in the garden of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Kibber of Xeego Hhrbor has caught the centen- WASHINfjVON—President Ken- interpreters^is alien to the tra- records can be tmpertant In carry-nedy got wbdt’ he wanted—Inter- dition bf democracy. . ing on future negotiations.. Wtot c» thb BIODMIOW. \ Ud^ «t h^. and a IM-ha^ SwW dictator never hcl. well, if not briter, through the nor« ‘ itaiea to disregard hia own sig- study of the personality of the world's most powerful dictator. nlal spirit. It W h yellow ■"(?'' on Jt,-, cjduut m®l chamwls ot diplomacy? ‘At nature'on A treaty or agreement— no special halo aliund Min NJs- Khrusn- there would be'«written rec- for he does'not recognize good son. He refrained ;!^ mentionir^ Early green.com stalks are repio^d by Jack- Meledy thd graduate education program but pf Rochester with such large tasseU that of chev got Vhat he wanfSd—worid-' wide attention aa ftC man who holds in his hand the .fate of many nations, publicity at home 'ai the champion of the alleged superiority t is said by gov. ,laith as such and believes that that she’s a for saying Birgit Niltoon should ^Kwer and Walter Reuther read lose 25 pounds. 'Ibe .Press writer the wrong history books or they was kindness Itself fqi she ought to didn’t read them at all. lose a good, fat ftliy. I’ve heard ] opera stars called iffat and o\er- y----- all my and thefe’s YOUf PardOIl ■ aMKiiKl »*’“ d ijTOm rr emments to each other, and such the end justifies the means. supplement it, by making courses available which graduates didn’t have time for or interest In the first time around. ★ ★ ★ . We have reafon to. believe, that despite the
ired command-I era in .Laos Were ^vtol^l'lng the "cease fire” and TaWrEJ^^tr'o m inuhisf agents were active in Cuba—in- fact, in countries on evely continent. . "Knee high by the Fourth of July,” that emny old adage Is bepten by a mbntl^ For wbat. Indeed, has the 8o-^ Viet premier to. fear from such ronfereneet? It U he who holds by some com In the 'gafrien of itera Rritodtes I to otrlko "the Ant of l^yton Plains, which alrctedy Is away In the numner which has made past that height. MSUO famoiis in a short thine VAensr profession in nize most ca larly fai eldo-ly adults. He deris froin' strength against . has examined a subject, cludlcnged the traditional thoughts on It, rind Introduced some good Ideas. We heartily agree that education is not for the young alone, and we're happy to see MSUO continuing to widen its horlsms, and consequently, the horizons of the community. Raiding a nest of young ntelns, the family cat of ‘ ' Mr. and Mri. Ferry Ftende^ of Blnuingham had both eyes pecked out by the old birds—who sav^ their brood. After his bees had been acting queeriy, Fidel’s Tractor Trade Unpopular Worldwide PoUs Are sometimes imrcliable and of Watei-ford Investigated, and found a rattlesnake among the hives; wMch caused a neighbor to pull that old, two-cent pun: maybe the snake had the hives. Speaking of rattlesnakes, Gene Fkl|iworth of Bloomljeld takes exception to our state- fallacious, but It’s Interesting to note ment that they are good sports and al- they report that trading people and yy» gi]N «**',*^,*!j[**'*‘ , . ^ , , He fTcetitly killed one that might have trwtora with the Cuban Communlata ^ , is unpopular worldwide. Even sup- warning, its UU, including the ratUes, t from Russia and her slave coun- had been chopped off. port tries les la surprisingly meager. The impish suggestion that the United States swap Eleanor Roosevelt, Milton Eisenhower and Walter Reuther to Cuba along with the tractors sprang up independently all over. Certainly the President has done himself a lot of no good in this connection. ★ ★ ★ A thermometer at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. PressWell of Lake Orion, which had been quite reliable for over 25 years, both In Florida and Mlchlgsh, has, gone berserk, and cannot be depended upon — probably on account of our crazy weather. town this opei We are greatly Yet we ful that i-heumatic fever or something, of the .wrt mayf develop fnm tee t o q s i.i 8 ak they aw.’.*' (R.L.M<) Children 2 to 10 years of age have one or________ tacks of sore throat or tonsiUitte a Western alliance wesAen^ by* in tbe^cowae o( the coddling sea-confliWirtg purport of the leaders son (winitw and spring) whether and-also by the steady erosion'of tbelr tonsils have been hacked out' the spirit of restetanee. or apt, In some'instances, children ^ ^ Was the Kenpedy-Khrvishchev who have been subjected to the w.muw ^ meeting worth VriUle? It could re* atrocity known as "tonsiUectomy ” PrelTRou... suit In more harm than good in have only mild or no sore world affairs. For Khrushchev II t*»rp^ afterward; but toss many revealed as the man . of streiwth. pr moi« instances, they conUnue. wjiUf the Western leadership is fecur^t attacks of .sore portrayed both by the Communist «■ toratlUtis. prew and . by newspapers in "iteu- a a ★ - tral’’ countries as cringing and The truth is that Uie enlarged fawning. / (hypertrophied) fohaila of ch^dren nWiv n.TO are usually not "diseased" at all. ONLY GAIN merely, enlarged. Hits en- About the only' gain that can be largement to o manifestation of chalked up now tor Mri. Kennedy health. It is nature’s way of pno-is on the political side within the tecting the child from infection. IMted States. He had been re- particularly from the C RI — com-garded aa -youthful, Inexperienced, mon respiratory infections — which immature, if not brash and per- < account for moot "diseases of childhood,” including poliomyelitis. Children shonid have enlarged toMils at Oils Ume ef the year. Only when there is obstracUon of brenthing er impairment ot hear. Ing by the enlarged tsoails Is soigeiy advisable, aad then only miner surgery, net the msjor operation called tonsUlectomy. / What the child needs is tonsik^' lotomy, which is instantaneous, af safe as extraction of as effective the dangerous to general fails to reoog-cases of teUmy, particu- .We have followed your advice on many things and with the happiest results. Our prayer* ... we feel now that Hie is worth living . . . (Mrs..C.MHA Portraits JOHN C. METCALFE to him when he speaks ., . Fop'jteur doctor 1# your friend .. . A^ remember that your health' .0. On his warning may depend Today jg Monday, June 5. the 156th day of the year with 209 more to 1961. The moon is In its last quartet) ■The morning stars are Jupiter, Saturn isa Venus, The evehtog a and Mars. ( stars are Mercury On this day in history: Your kind , words touch onqe ... As on them you can d^ me almost as deeply as the words pend . . . CMt your weight aS he i . TlUce htb kindly good adviqa Scottish economist Adam . For ywir doctor is your friend Smith was born. f. . Have jMwscrlptions filled at i. wg, the b^n "On^id, Outoliaa Roldlen'* « alx^hls daugh- f. .uggests ... For your doctor is *" ’’ He saye yogr fj-iend . . . And the number of yoor yeara ... On his treat- the firet ttmo at a pnitoh feottval la Borhery, KagtmS. In 1898, Madame Chlang Kai-Sbek I'JP merit may d^nd . . . Have no Shanghai, .1^ 'fear when to his hands . . . For In 1933, Presiden 'fear when to his hands . . . For your doctor is your frirod . . Bq. assured to lurgery ... On hit skill Pay him promptly for his help . . . For In 1933. President Franklin Rooeevelt signed a bill abrogating the gold standard. In 1947, speaking at Harvard University commencement exgrctoei. your doctor ie your friend . . . And Secretary of State George Marriiall like all of US he must ... On r ^ outlined hia plan tor the recovery livelihood depend. of Europe’s economy. Case Record^f■ a Psycholoyrist: > Hara^ed Wives Desem a Break haps impulsive. \E W. CRANE parents must just count on the fact You parents should thus n ___t J.. aged 2I\ has riiat your domestic fife wifi simply ber to take on gss in fiftOon lott, ? aged 3 and 2, with • succession of bottles, diapers, so you will need to stop every hour on the way. Mths and walks to the iwrk. And thus give the kite a break. "Oh. Drf Crane,” she tearfully kids COME FIRST exclaimc^pn the phone, "I It was'Important teom his standpoint to dispel such impressions. What better way than to a “sum-imt’’ conference in which no other Western leader participated and to whiph Mr. Kennedy was pictured before the voters of his own country-through television and the newspapef*-^ the sole spoke.t-man of the free world? ) was when a ‘ This column to 5»uite jn agreement with a statement iri a letter from Mrs. Rodney Ellsworth ,. ■ , of Chicago, formerly of our city, who aays Ahyone disposed to Ibok upon the that some of the ^uff wo.read in the situation dispassionately must admit histories of Chief Fcmtlac would make that the humanitarian angle has had Wm turn over in hto grave, wherever it Is. strong support. And yet, it’s equally mlalstcr .of Oiwat Britain and the president of the prime minister of France and whea the, chaaceilor of West Germany was Bonihy to be consulted. The spectacle of one man talking toe the West—and, indeed, rhich is instantaneous, af ‘xtraqtkm of a tooth, api ive to every respeewas rroius tonsillectomy. / WWW / DR. CRANE No man should Jeopardize ' a »“PPy hom« because of ANY Ji»b . "»y h®***- for the Iddt should . h*® primary concern, rieeptog s^ . U you can’t handle your com- ‘*®**®» ®* ■ reasonably -------------............ I*’ P*®®*** *“**»*■ and a good worker *>ever and placid type of example, the the trftlce, then change your ^^■towssMtoms *** ®R‘®* job so you are under less dldnt stop cry. Ing mtU 4 a.m. ..^hat shall it profit a man,’’ J I.*’ ^‘y" **’* Bible, "if he gain the my hiMb^ bu ^ut lose his own bm ^ awake ,oul?" Or hia own son or daughter, untti he is grow- play games te t s(t stdl And learn route, tor children ^’t ,__________ more than an hour, even wite. plenty of comic botes for ammn-Bition. > Fortunately, Mrs. Cnas was a irig so grouchy, we quarrel every day. He has an wxecotlvo job with a lot of respmisibillty, so be says he simply MUST have a go^ Bteht’a «teep. ho went over to E Doonthtokla drmi, olooo togother |a aga Alta I waa hooso mtol of tko , avadod freely y Despite the strain of newspaper ao she carried about 75 per coat . of the load to thooe early years. Send for my .botelet, ^ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lefnrgy of 123 Augusta St.; 53rd wedding annl- difficult to send men into open war- V0|*|)^| Qrchlds fare whm certain death awaits -ghastly niimlier. ★ ★ ★ Do vri follow tha Natipii’a Ufe* lino admonitloB of “milUoBs for defense bat not one cent for trib* filer , Newspapers Silenced Mr. and Mrs. Ssifey Rosen of 705 Lakeside Drive; Slot wedteng anni-; yersarjr. , Mis. Angela Opper « . of Drayton Flains; 82nd birthday; Mr. and Mrs. Aniiow Emory of Rochester; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. HaUto Parmale^ " Tonsillotomy, a minor opmtion, may be done in the doctor’s office, with or without anethesia. It consists to placing the ring of ibo tonsUlotome (a giiUlottoa-Uko gad- .. ^ ....____________________ _____ get) around the portion of tonsfi niother’s, just to got sotne sound during oertalri periods of the con? to Ito rilced off, pulling the jiumbef. But I am even more to ferenoe Messrs, Kennedy a n d trigger, and the, «^ratk» Is over. ^ ^ ^ tesn ho te hut I don’t Khrushchev were alone except for GIVE REPRIEVE know what to do. I ted as 4f I aifi ' R4-.M.I should give her little going,to haVe-a notvous break- fc«t raise a man’s blood pressure. boya repH^. Therelsnoiirge^^ • • such as speeches arid key Inter- murri •fivdope. plus 20 o — unless the doctor becomes im- mjgBANINi, BEWARE views, I still remained reasonably n tri helri routestora sd rid. dLuv'SriTtvlV A lot of Jittery bosbsuite to these «ln»-eveu though Pm a nervous, pent up .Sergy. Sfv S circumstances also criticize thdr type of male! . ably take It without difficulty H and te- WWW Men. get hep to reaBly! If your indtena sunmter homa wite ftoo wtle IMS two or tnora younaurs ypumnters to tfao to fsed odsehodulo, dtepei^ nn^ iiai*.. seat, wnuld I grow so hrit thtl^ tor Wt*"***** to stop tea car, re- them to the ^ groceries, my bdt arid strap tee ot The Country Parson lor eUUhei," oneiodiik t^BWtad. i0etete.Use, It’ganoW, familiar stoiy: first the - rtvoltttl*. th« »ppr«lon « »h. Mr. and MrR Wlfitom A. Harris s dteis do not maiiitost any repugnance to It. If he win not taka |t etralgM.. ono of the nilxtans ef oed liver a itowwt epoorifnl a day, may nswspijjers. This tinw lt*|i-in South ot CqlumbiaviUe; golden wedding. d’why ioma folks teia. wowi advtoo so badly glv^ Jt sway wo fiiooiJ-’' Have been feedtog ray daughter calcium wafers, ewr .though the •doctor laughed and udd Om pains in her Jegsjne just gr^tog pains. Now, thanks to your pamphlet , she qever luMfit so good. (CM.) __ Ans. - After all, jt la sffly to Imagine it hurts to grow. Send ■tei^pM, acUteldrieiBed envelope During tee yeere until the tod-dlen get . Into grndn ridwei. you Usually, nty threat waa enough. I don’t think I ever had jo whip any of them mote riwa once or twice to thooe crucial etoly years-’ Bm to help brook the tedtam Of limt a-how mp, we’d stop t«d tat tea ■JSAjnrt htj! sasf - SBW JT Si TVMtrt ,’K:.5is!sb.;? ; ffwa ■S2!: i ■ry. '-■I'---- I 7" \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOKPAV. JUNE 3. 1961 SE\ RX School's Staff Delegates Key to a Good Con^Con to Fete Teachers Itftiring Members of “Crofoot Faculty to Be, LANSING (UPI)-Jbt chief gredient for a aucceaaful convtni-tkm for revising Michigan’ ♦ho will be elected to I delegate positions. tually lead to a constitutional convention in Lansing this fall. BUNS AS REPUBLICAN Romney will ^ as a Republican for the seat in the 12th Sen- The Crofoot Elementary School ttafi will honor Ita two retiring Wtchen «t the ammal staff dhmer tonight at Aunt Faimy’i ReMaiir-! ant In Royal Oak. With the deadline for fil%ig nominating petitions due to fall llies-day, nationally prominc'nt figures and r^tlve unknowns — even in their home areas <- have taken the Mg step. Mrs. Ervin H. Davis of TfK Edgefield Drive, Waterford Township, and Ethelyn Ashley of 20 Thorpe St., are retiring at the end of this semester. ' I Mrs. Davis, fourth grade teacher. has fought 14 years, the las« three in the Pontiac School Sys^ A flood of pettUoM Is esRoetod at tho Sooietaty of State’s office la XaaalBg and at various coua-ty eleife offlces before the dead- Miss Ashley, sixth grade teacher. has been teachlag for 4S years. She has heen at CrsfOot sehool for tho past St years. Probably the best - publicized delegate candidate who has filed petitions so far is George Romney, American Motors Gorp. president, who u head of Citizens for Michigan was active in helping to push-through the steps whi^ will even- arfap will make the best possible coiivcntion delegates. FAMnUAR NAMES But included in the lists hun*»fe.9L£l But the filing of aomlnalfog petitions — for Romney or aay-oao else — Is still far from elee-ties as a delegate to the eoa- repiwntathre seats and 34 senatorial positions are a number of persons, moot of them Republicans, who have already filedjie-lUtiau, that are more or teas familiar to students nomioate the' candidates will be held throughout Michigan, on July In this election, voters from each party will choose pne candidate for eadi state ^ator and each state representative. The party candidates clash Sept. 12 In a general ele<-llon lo determine the line-up for the eonvention. which merls Oct. S In the capital city. Nobody but the voters-can miy Some of them are: D. Hale Brake, Sfoatoa, a —^ d ward Hutchinson,' Fenn-villc, a former state seiMtor whd unsuccessfullly (of lieutenant governor in the Republican pri-. mary last year, who is seeking the 8th Senatorial District ^at. —Former Grand Rapids -Superior Court Judge Thaddeus B. Tay^ Mrs. Lawrence Mclntoah, first grade teachtf, fo chairman of the She has announced that guests will Include formep CrOfoot Principal Lewis A, Ckw and his wife; Margaret Scott, .audio-visual director f^ Pontiac schools; and . Gerty Korody, speech correction- Gifts will be presented to both teachers, and alao to Mrs. Maxine Gleawn, Margaret Scott,'llier^ Brookins, and Sam Yaiger who will be leaving the Crofoot staff at the end of this achoo! year. Claims Seaway Tolls Are Fair; Traffic to Jump WASHINGTON UJ - M. W. Oet-tershagen, administrator of the St. Lawrence Seaway Development^ Corporation, says the toll rates tor vesaels utipg the jseaway are fair. (estimony made pubUr. Sunday that the toll rate* will be review^ la live years bat he does not antielpete that they will be Increased at that time. Although seaway traffic was less than anticipated during the first two years of its operations in 1959 and 1960. Oettershagen said, “we, look forward to greatly Increased sea^ tr^fficiin tlie future." Drunken Ship Pilot Sends Fal^ Report DETROIT » — AuthorillM say the promise of a drunken ship pilot led to confusion, and reports M s possible mutiny on a-Greek freighter anchored in the Detrbit River. The Coast Guard received, a radio message Saturday night the pilot, who told of a stabbing and a possibly mutiny by the 25 crew membefb of the Eftychia, a ghip from Port Chioi Island, Greece. A Osast Guard boat and two hariMnnaster polioe boats sped to the Eftychia. only to bo " by the oUp’o eapfoln that eyiry-fhii« was all rt^t. -Patrolman John' Mahinski said the. pilot began drinking early and promised the crewmen -be wtmld :’get a boat to take them'ashore fof a Saturday night leave. Ma?, hinskl said flie crew grumbled so , loud that the pilot became frightened and sent the radio met to the Coast Guard. The Eftychia had loaded aOrap metal at Saginaw, and was awaiting dock spaoe to take on more ■crap here. Foreign Longuage Study Gains Ordered by Russ MOSOdW W - The Soviet gov-iemment |ms directed that Itiatrfto^ tion^ In foreign languages,. pailL rularly those