iv ^ n , ^ / ’ / ✓ i ,i '«! / th« Wtafhfr Ut. WMthn •«r«M rmweait ('lOlM}'. MiU. Mi r>t« t> noth Y^AR' THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ Edition ★ ★ ★ ★ I’ONTIAC. MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1. H)Hi-44 PAGES $375,000 From Mason Institution Plane Engine a Molteii Mass ’f Europe Beckons Trip Deadline The deadline >to make a date with Europe Isn't far off. Applications for the 31-day Pontiac press European Tour must be made by March 15. Flee conntries are en the Itinerary^nfland, Germany, Switierland, IU)y and France. The cost of the trip Is 1885 per person. Among the world capitals you'll visit will be London, Paris and Rome. The Pontiac-Press tour travelers will cross t^e At-lan^c on a Pan American jet clliH;>er, leaving May 19 and returning June 10. ★ ★ ★ Make sure you’re idioard that plane. Fill out the coupon on page two for the adventure of your life'. to Meet JFK, Nikita Decides More ConvenlionalArms Asked by Defense Dept. WASHINGTON OFl—President Kennedy said today the Defense Department has recommended an increase in conventional weapons strength. The President also told a news conference that the administration has reached no decision on whether ... there should be any stjsp-iip From Our Npwfi Wlrro MOSCOW — Against background of mounting Soviet hostility toward the Kennedy administration, Premier' Khrushchev has decided to stay away front the stfurt of UJJ. General Assembly session next Tuesday. He will send Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko to head the Soviet del^a-tion. Moscow radio announced the niakeup bf the delegation Tuesday night. Khrushchev wai not on the list. , ' Kennedy Backs Soapy's Actions in nuclear weajiens capa* bUity. As to the Pentsgon recomtnen-datioll for am increase in conven-UpMl 1^-eapons power. Kennedy 4said He wit] take about tWo weeka before making any judgment bn ft. ^olly Satisfied' With His Mission in Afrira, JFK Telts Newsmen WASHINGTON (B - Here is a partial transcript of ' Kenner’s press conference today on the question of 'former Michigan Gov. G. Mennen Williams’ African tour- Q. Mr. President, your roving ambassador to Africa has been widely criticisni. for some of the statemeBts he. has made. ... Do you find any validity in this criticism?” At the start of the Kennedy made these men^ before opening the aessioii to qiiesthms: 1. Fer the first fime staee last July.^then wu n of gold from the Kennedy commented that signifies that "confidence h> Uw dollar throughout the world is being restored.” j A. No, I don't — I think Got. Williams has done vmry well. 1 am wholly satisfied witii- hia mission. It js a very difficult one. Africa te not an easy matter to —the problems of Africa are not easy. ,Thcr^ arc a good many con-flictliqt forces 'that are looee Africa as well as all parts of the world. The statement of “Africa for the Africans” does not seem to me to be a very unreasonable stateiq^t. Germany's Chancellor Konrad Adenaqer will vWt Wash-Ingtoni^ April 12-13 at Kenedy’s invitatioa. The President said he is looking' forward to meeting Adenauer and having of views. He made It clear" that he talking about all thoee who felt they wore African*, wdntever their cololr might be,, whatever thfeir race aright be. l do not know who (rii»-Alritai shotrid be # March Arrives Like a Lamb; to Stay Gentle March gamboled In this morning docile as a lamb with the sun shining and breezes blowing at only 5 miles per hour. TThe Weatherman says skies wlU be partijT elptidy and the low temperature ab^ 32 tonight. Fer the aekt flbe »*«•• pejcgtiine fill average 4 to « of » aiM Mrmil low of S. Onbr minor day-to-doy temperwlnre oMMctedL lor the Prodprtation w U total less than fiveientbs of an/inch in Tain w ahowers, mainly, ov« tj« waA* end. Thhrty was the lowest res in downtown Pohtiac preceding • sum. The merowy had climbed-to 45 at 2 p.m. To Shift PO Einpha|i$ w4shINGTON (f» - The Kennedy admlnlstrirtiwi plans to shift emphaafe In nadearch by the Port ' Ofltee pepiritment from long-range davetopment to pro|ect| k pean^ faster mall df^ ery to ftittw. TW* 1*1 t oonftoence, e '-^aflhbunce- X The PresMent aaaoaneed bo Kennedy called this appropriate because of Eisenhower's outstanding military record and his kmg public service to the country in e and-war. Ejsenhower resigned from the (Continued on Page 2, Ori. €) Soviet Premier Sending Gromyko and Sobofev to U. N. .Tuesday This doused speewlatim that KbrurtMeev Would go to V.ti. headquarters a prelude to b talks with Praoldent DipiomaU felt that Khrushchev decided not to attend the assembly—at least at the atari- FBI Reveals Check Scheme Hit $1 Million former Director o Accountant Arraign< on. Charges LANSING A former director of a bank his family founded and an accountant were ■ arrested today *on charges of misapplying more than $375,000 in a check kiting operation which the FBI said involved at it$ peak, more than $1 million. James A. Dart, 49, a former director of the Dart National Bank at nearby Mason, and Paul CPiien, of East Lansing, former lieutenant colonel in the Chinese Natiqnal Army, Satte a& Taigned on the charges before U.S. Commis-sioner James Davis here.' PAtL P. cwran They were relrased on U.COO ' bond each pending appearance in l'.S. District Court at Grand Rapids. Chien, a native of Hong Kong, who has been in the United States since 1948, is author of a book e n till e d “Financial. Jungle U.S.A." He is a former controller of Dart's plumbing, heating and air I conditioning firm. causa, the time is not yet right meeting with the new Pre«l-. - dent, who ip still woricing out his[ Makes Sui I Flight toPioricia In action to G^toiyko, fiepri^ in Itotoyko, Foreign Minister Aricady former chief Soviet U, N. o gate, will be in the delegation. ibunshchev had indicated for several weeks that he might lead delegation, particularly there, was a chance for his first meeting with Kennedy since the administration took over in Washington. ^ Observers ssid Khrushchev ap-parsMIy has decided that Km-nedy Is opposed to a meeting for They pointed out also that the premier is busy with internal affairs'right now. He currently is in Sverdlovsk for the beginning of metensive tour of the S^iet, N) to visit agricultural areas and spur farpi output. MOSCOW DISPLEASED 'Afi^'-«rticle in the government newspaper Izvesfla indicated that the Kennedy administration Comes up with its own policies, they are not to Moscow’s liking. id It had sensed hints of a. “thorough cleaning of (Osfilinued on Page 2, Got. 5) WASHINfi’TON (UPl) - Mrs. John F K^e^ flew to Palm Beach, Fla., today wkere, the White House said, she hopes to of tnwumtis. clear up a case o Glowing in an outfit of pink, the First Lady left Washington aboard a commercial airliner on the unannounced trip. She was alone, her two children, 3-yearold Canrilne and JoKh Jr., remaining in the care of their nurses at the White House. Pamela Tumure, Mrs. Kennedy's press secretary, was quesMon^ at the White House and saM that Mm- Kennedy uus beaded for the Palm Reach home of Mrs. t'bsrles Wri^lsman, an ollwl^alttiy A gran^ Jury indictment said Dart imd Chien misapplied bank funds in a check kiting scheme in-vohmig the Dart NationaL Bajik at Mason, the Michigan National Bank bt Lenifing. and the Batik Lansing. lAlSSES RECOVFRF.D At Grand Rapids. U.S. District Attorney Robert J. Danhof said alt losses had been recovered by the Dart National Bank and there no impairment of its finam'ial | structure. He said there was no loss to the two banks in I.ansing, The FBI said restitution w.as made by the Dart family to the. Dart National Bank. It has federal deposit insurance. (Tieckg Involved In the kiting, the FBI said, were drawn on accounts of companies owned er controlled by Dart. Oiie was the J. A. Dart Co., which has made plumbing Installations at THE E.ND — A twisted mass of molten steel (top) is. all that remains of one the four ei®nes of the^propdrivra Air tanker plane that crashed early last night near Mount Clemens. All five crewmen perished. A house on the west side hf GniUot Avdnue near 22-Mile-'fload was lavalsd ao-^-llto'Wnitog plaito finally nosed into the ground. Lockiiy, no one was home. The building next door (^itotom), j^ch, fotiMrly -was real e.state rifice. wa.s gritted by fire from the flaming wreckage that - spewed hundreds of yards in all directions. The . Family Tavern farther on up the road was scared and windows were bnAeivfrom the intense heat. ^Across (Wfef, ftotiies charred the si^p; of Ihe windmill at Kabel’s Little Holland Nariery. 'The press slide said Mrs. Kennedy .( • " ■ expected to remaiti there about a week in hopes of clearing up what she described as a case «f bronchitis whk^has developed the aftermath of a cold. J in Mount Clemens 1 gan * . Qie< k kiting js the manipulation of funds! tn checking accounts in different bank&Xttecks are written against accounts'on which other checks are outstanding. The FBI saW the manipulations of Dart and Chien were discovered by bank officials last September when checks totaling biore than |1 million were involved. The FBI said an officer of the Michigan (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1 'When Do We Get Safety Gates Here?' nnptocr rabukoar eBosaiifa - Clyde chrtotton. (right), supeftotendeot af thg etty’a Department of Public Wsria, points aot a- detail for stole and fttoal offid^ durtag ta' Inripectkm Raflitoril, Tito clly Mr aaked th* PitoBc fcevtoe bemmtortow protective gates at the crossing, Jn the party (from left) ari Palnier Slack, representative of the State ifighway .Departieent; Roy Ifetheringtari, superintendent of the eity’s depaitmant] and trta repreeentatlwes of the Pttolio IXpaU W. Hughes and Walter R. RtiaselL By WHITEY SAWYER MOUNT CLEMENS (AP) - Air Force officials questioned witnesses and examined wreckage today in an effort to determine what caused a loaded tanker plane to crash lafe Tuesday, killing all five ergw members. News Flashes WASHINGTON (f)-Mk-higan'« 11 Republican member* of the House united today In a request for speedy repeal of the IB per cent federal tax on automobiles. Repeal of the tax, imposed In the Korean War, would stimulate tile automobile. Indnstiy and revive other businesses in tiira, they said. CAPE CANAVERAL (CPI)— Tim Navy totoiy fired an ad- WASHINGTON .(CPI) — The two RB47 hlers returned to the Culled States by Russia In January will be available to reporters for Interviews Friday at Topeka, Kan., the Defense Depnrt-ment said today.' By LEE WINBORN T was the only woman at the si-ene of tragedy yesterday. There for only one reason—to take pictures of one dt the starkest dramas of death to occur in or near Mount Clemens in many months —the Air Force tanker plane crash that claimed five lives. And being a woman with a camera and a job to do is not easy when you arvr met at every few steps by an armed Air Force guard challenging your right to be anywhere in the cordoned-off area, nnally WASHINGTON (CPI) — ^he Senate AgricuUttre Committee today approved, 15-2, a sharply amended version qf the administration's emergency bill to cut lrii>1!toer feed grains. , LONDON (tJPI) —Radio Mos> cow announced today that Premier Nikita Khrushchev now elalrns Russia Invented the hy- In Today's Press A/ rv': ' Income Tox .............34 Lenten Guideposts 5 Comlca ................ S4 Oouftty News ........... t* Edifoilals a Mallufta ................ M Obituaries.... ... U Pet Doctor ...............M 'Sports ........ ...... u-n Theaters ............... Z* TV k Radio Programs .... 4S WifoM, Eari ..A.U W*BBM’aF»tw U-lLT The plane smashed in a flaming busy highway, destroying two buildings while narrowly missing a tavern and tulip farm-home.Jiear Mount Clem- gallons of jet fuel and 3|500 gallons of' her own fuel, away from a crowded housing project. The pilot, 1st Lt. John C. Bib-e, 24, Urbana, 111., and the The pilot had just veered his stricken ship, loaded with 6,000 ■A -A ★ She Wins Her Way-Gets Photos thrir liven. No one on the ground was killed. A housewife, Mrs. Ruth King, 32,' said the four-engine prop-driven.KC97 from nearby SelMdge Air Force Base struck "in a great big billow of flame and smoke.” DEBRIS CLOGS C.S.-tS The big iwt-bellicd ship, crashing moments after take-olf, left a wake of burning wreckage. Pieces hung from overhead power lines atld also clogged commuter-laden U.S. 25, leading from Detroit. The nhip .smashed dne home but the woman vrtio lived there was away. Her dog was killed. Sprouting'flames, burned out a vacant, real estate office. The barn, A tool shed and a windmill of the tulip farm were damaged by flames and flying wreckage. The ship skidded within yards of the tavern §nd the tulip form home. te word got around, press photographer. Then how far can you go up near the wreckage? Innocently, I went right up beside the foam-ooyered spot whei* bodies of crewinen were being pulled out of the wreckage.. tlon t gw near there. No flash jiamecas. There's gas around here, ’ an officer warned. HASTY REtREAT I retreated hastily, deciding to the buildings were afire or by the flambs. And mayfie tbere'd be a portion of the fiiaetoge nearer the highway tto»t 'wbuld make > dramatic picture. clear pew. You lip I went again pud watched as the fifth body wah removed — deftly, methodically, mid with extreme care and resp^.^ "No pictures of this,." I was wanAd again. . Back I (vent. The hwse, that formerly was a real e^te office, had caught fire again. Firemen made slxnt work of bringing it under control. One onlooker marveled, “I cant killed, ” as he looked at the hornet ajid ibiMtoetaea to ' to the accident. . ■' < I POWER FAILURE An Air Force spokesman said the ship was on a routine refuel- , ing mission when it appafently Mfered a power failure on take-The ship veered away from a Selfridge base housing project of 380 units and staggered along at treetop level as Lt. Bibble sought an eqipty place to put it down. It climbed a-^trec, and part of tifo tail was knocked hff. ' Killed with LL Nibble were Opt Lydell M. Haygood, 29. Hawthorne. CaStf.. aircraft commander; T. Sgt. Robert E. Derby, 38. Thcxmia. Wash., flight engineer; $. Sgt. Ern-Mt J. Lemoine III, 29, Houston, boom operator, and jst Lt. Robert L.” Lewis,. 24, -Mancherier,-Conn., navigator.^, " Hnriy Wilson of New Brtti more said he wpe driving down nenrfaVltoSdrbinh Road when toe plane flew acroee la front el Mm. When J first a low that J knew it must be. to >. 11^ I saw part of the tiil troulMe. 1 portion bad already been knocked “ ' have alraady hit sometiiing. It went, on acroaa hi front of me . . . 1 heard it crash aind ^ could see ftw smoke ifec," WBsob said. IN Front OF GA* The plane bounced across i Ifetd flames, stopping just ( “ u:$. 2S. It pusa^ feat to froid if understand why mar* wmnt an auto, wMeh «Mtiw ihixwgh the James BrazelMR S. (Coottoued oo 1%) \Ch. 41 f TWO Police Guard^^ Confessed Killer THR PONtlAC Pag$S,^DNlljiI)AY, MARCH 1, 1^1 : “T Zi NIW yowc tuki-Cenlimd Iv fUnte I ■mmmi lifllur frrf noowm it elitfvirf with hami^ l4K|f ta ttit n«* ilqte H f}wr> mm (OMfit) Kmmtm, --------------------- ^ How Did It Happen? g Soo Pogo 4 ft Bay prttBiwr itaM Om urm of OMff* MmmIQ', IIib »«Mi "md Wmm,“ in MST. pxMHlB hnd K»thM«d hfnr in Nw jM«ty dvurtiiv lor Mb (' ‘ ' VM M«*ni ****^ M M Mur pHwi •• Jwt liy tlw aty CMnmiiiiMn MM Mmo iwnM Mfimtil the apmpMi tlv* atuBiion it d««r. CMy Mf ttr WtIltr K. 1 2 Mm Arrested'' in Bairidng Freud (Oantiiiiw! Fiwn Png* (Mt) It wu ttMi dMtrmintd, ttm VBf tdi. tlmt tMi Mm* ii«i iwMv«4' chwMi nimwnting to UOmO coStMiNi fMMt M Dwt’t ncoouD^ A1TBMD fTATK wmOUt Chein, who came to Out « try in IMS. «at nhicated Shanghai University. Ow UnhnT' Btyjrf Detraft tad MMMgw> Mnto University. He was wMl tamwB U a speak- at FM Kappa Delta. aatisaM tisrasy m Is amiftMi ' Dirt, fnm a socially praoiinait Mason Mnfly, is manriod a«l has ttiTM daughtm. His father, R- C Dart, foundsd Hm part Nattmial Bank. Dnil't firm et meehanieal eon- tracts in the Mason area, at Mkhigan State University and the Uptoanlty of MieMgan. It WIB kNindsd hi US3 and City Attomsy WiUMm A. BwHt OMbisd ihs legality of ai“*^ gfgniMw to (is amMflance ad snforee their piunnent, a| is M ease with lasicMM. * ♦ * CominiBBionsrs indkated they wtv-wiUiBg, at yrsaenti to hold H M anthManns. at Meat twtil Ulnan returns tooin a twtMoeok vacatian March 3D. ^ 2 Groups Urge Help for Clinic Rirminghom ond County TtochorifHood Commlwion WoHi The shortage resulted from the decision laM week of Superior Am-buMnee SeiVice not to accept any more emergency calls from the police depsfWnt uitfess the C»ty fthiMiiPa it! losses on service unpaid by emergeney port of dw OaUand ChUd CMdance OiMe IVmday. A ehiisn’s eommittse, formsd MM waMi at a maetjug M Mr mMgham, nppaaMd to tha Potr tlac CMy CommisstoR last idght. CarKer la aftoraaaa. the OtfcMad Opunty AeeeeMttoa of VMhto Teachm hsM a amet-h« to dto^ the cUnle's «• em«gen^ caU« > all the efflOgehiry calls since^ last October, when funeral homes dropped out of toe business. Next Monday Is Deadline to Register April » electloe. Tito flly etofk'o e«toe In CMy ■a w« to epsa for ngtotia-ttoas • ajn. to i pjn. threngh rriday aad fiaw • a«. to I pjn. ■ trattoastave Ito Nevembe lag to Mrs. Olga BailHley, dsp- t the a ehiage e( ad- The Weather PuU vs. Wcatbar Bnraan Rapart PONTIAC ANP VICINITT — CenMdcrahM etoudtoaaa today, high JA, Partly otonSy a»fl e««no^.mWd tonight and TkiriHlay. law tonight tt. High Tbarsday 47. Winds toaaintng santharty I to If mlMa tiiia aftamaan and santh' treat to vaat i to U wIMs tonight. om sm* as* ta rMUiM tssuwrttur* ......... ts WednM4*r St t:n I Kw!* >;'> TtMserUar* Ckart MIkml . ____ .. « fcSS. il Si irMr»Ul« ri if N*« yjrfc M i , K2S‘ a B ■ SSF-He." NATIONAL. WKATReR It will to warmer tflidrtd from the Ohto val^ into wastom New Verit. M the CaraUnai and in UtofleeDltf aad aouthew Plains: cooler in the northern Raddes. la dm neitoweM, auartor of tto oouMry thsrs will to raM M saMlil anas with snaa.MMad. «0Mra wflt to gtotonl M tha sooihsaM except Aar nsriia aad parts of Tsato and the aeninl Tli^Pay in BiminiNip Woman's^ Club fa Hear_ Dr. Metketon Tuesday BIRMlIDaHAM - Or. ftoto^RAaiie Rye IncIMate arid thriver title reMl relatione for Parke Davie A Co.. wiU. to'*! Ttteaday ft a ntarting of the BIr aub. TbdatoetMgwBtohaldatdto YMCA bOMIhg togiiming with a From WHehmfl to WorM Health'* la the topic tMie ef Dr. Merfcer’s talk. Dr. Merker'a name has long been atoirtatodL with the Detroit Inetihiia of eSanoar Rtotonh,toi of Mrs. Nelle Ussiter and Gordon Ths attractive 3Eye«M»id widow and Watson. 4D, are acmieed in the April f. m. Maying of Mrs. Ua-siter’s husband Parvln “Bill’ LasMler, wealthy Royal Oak car toler. The CMy Cbmtnissioiiers. asked last night to take k stand in favor ef the guidance clinic, held off any order to the rily’s representativw on the board of supervisom until Mayer PMUp M RowMon reeMvss ■ 11 report bnai David Levinson, . irmsh of the supervisors’ Wayi and Means Committee, on the history’of relations between the cdun-ty aiM the clinic. ♦ * * Mrs, Charles Nsaetrom of 502 J Mahsfiield Ave., a member of the citimns committee to save the Birmingham dlMc, called on the city to beck tto imwe for flnaneial partaer. plotted UeMtar'e kllltag. The prosecution called the case I "sexHuid-greed” murder. Mn. Lassiter and Watson wert ordered bald lor trial on charges of first-degree murder aixl cotM ■piracy to murder fotlowUig a aen> sational examination nearly a year ago in Deartmrn Township Justice Court. At thto time, t read into the record a atatament by Mrs. Laeetter admitting t h at ^ bad had an affair srih wataon, s> now livee in Lea Angalaa. A beerlag hi espeetei within part Irem tto Troy elten how close he had eeme to being a pari ef that intome. ^ he got in hie ov agd drove i H-Bomb Explosion Planned by France FAB« (vn) rMRoe iw euleda a hydrogen ben* i Ibiitm, in tha MMdIa lahaM givan Oft torihae atirols Isil ag> *^'^*^ *■ 4 ■ There wM he one hseie at BehMHto, the Mte of ftoaoeto pieslensb Sa eaM Mbs one fNh' abtp w« to hi April. It wM to the tost to to held at Raggoee. lOO^Or^Tffa ACdbA, Ghana thdn lOOADO Atrieena, aeifta parchad in trsas, groetad PertodHR THa M VuftMavM as ha roda wtth PNa! dmd Kwane Nkrunah f*------ te dsoorstad atraaM ef 'HMsday ntght.' Ihs praaocutton has charged that «M need to te ■ •tty cf Michigan activitMA A A * Recently he , was nanad “Firat Citizen of Detroit’’ by (he Detroit City OouncU (or his inaqp activk Mentera of te modem living’ group «f te dhib will be (or the day. Mn. John R. Olaon is chairnum. at first on a basis. Kennedy said, but he atop asking Congress te enact legiMation In wspsAsi to gerollSBs, Ksn-aedy said to Shertty topes te Is- psrtoMtlro to aad ••( sf gevsro- Rush Stilt On for 1961 Tabs _ !lal« Mdim DRodNn# Off 14,000 from Loft Year In Although the deadltot^r drl^ without 1961 Ucmise pMte tahi was mlMiilbL te MHMtaqr of sto^s office in Pwtiao MPoriMl« Airty ■Mcidw n* today bar Who tolled to fM thsM uftdsv te lnR' Willis M. Brewar, broneh manager, estimated sales at 1981 tabs St 40,000, appKHdmstely 14^ ^ than at daadllnt time last year. _ tbrie daily winners (Or flower arrangement at the Detroit Hokne and Garden $how beii« held in Detroit. W .W A She now beeoines eligible to eom-ete Friday with 13 other winners ir a hPip to London, RhcMad and the Chelsea Flower Show. The award went to Mrs. Vander FLfor her arrsngament of daf-idils, blue Ms and iiUBBy willow- ServioA for Mn. Anthony (Flor-snee) Krause, », at 711 BW ' will be 1 p.m. Fiktoy at the i My Bailey Funeral Home. B« WiU to in RoasMnd Park Ci tary. Berktey. Mm Krtoias died yesterday fol-Mwte a lot* UhKSS. A Birmingham residei 1K9. te waa a member of the Ihiitcd, Brethren Church. te is survived by one hmter- dittoas rsspsnsihiA far this year’s sslw MwpsM end else tor te MigeM Into n* la years. . The Pontiaa ttte* ** M Bt. was open witU *10 PJn., aad '» WatMted offlto paM I pjn. Vkdatton tickets wfll be handed out by state polkw, sherUTs depte driving without 1961 I ■ lbs. HIM Pontiao metoriM M receive a ettstion for drivtog with old taba wu wniie Devis, to. 151 Bnmcb Hi WM ticketed et 1:15 a.m. n Waa and Walnut stroats. Steal $14P,0(K) in Cwnt LONDON (AP) -- Itair man bivka Mto a diamood maKhant's London offlee TPetey hlpto. ororpowered two members of te Maff and escaped with cut gema vrtaed at mm. _____________ !T f undftrgtand that th« gtnding of thh coupon ebnstitutes q def initf request for q reservation on Thf Pontioc Prt« Europfon tour Moy 1 ?th- He made that announcement i Jury! 10th, 1961.1 underrtorid further thot full wton asked how be feels about a I payment under Rlon A QT Plon B must be ’’’Jf'fcSJlj completfd by Moreh i»h, 1961. Thot no concfllotion, except fa emergency, moy be mode after April 1 St, 1961. Rirtits Commissign th funds bo wtthhrid mm public cM-Mgee and universities tiiat dis-emninate on grounds of race, religion or national origin. (ration's rilgrts in the Mvii rights fMId will to ooiMsntratod first in te fisid of amploytent. Hs indicated action may be takan later ^ te areas of education and I •te- . I fifth Ktonady news ewte ■ I dark gray . »»1 “vy blue tie—WM calmly matter-of-tect thnwgliout te entiro 90-minute tesrion. The questions Plon A: Down poyment ot not lets then $685 { j per person 'with coupon. Finol payment of J ‘ balance on or before March 15th, i education te OoMHtattoa fltouly proMUto J IlMi at todual aM tor od- ~ to private and peraehtal tost iuproue (tori da-^ made thto very M He made that nmauA | ler aay aid te roeh scheeis. Plon B: Full payment of $985 with coupon reseryotioii, ^ There are a limited number of m«srvatlaro avaiiable. They will to sllo(^tto, in order of reservation coupons received. NUMBBI OF KSERVATIONS. n separate teat end * I I lUJ. ThewpsBR. who arrived in Mmwow Monday night from WashMlton a measage frdfi Presiteit Kemwdy. Thompaon bad been ckperied here Friday, but a stoppver M London delayed his return- Only ot SIMMS Complf tf Wotcli ovEhNAgi pi»v Needed Sens for 7»9* m'\ Campirta « li^ and Forta fapr WATOi vm lai .• Cidftfwd dftd QfM • Wpm pr •nkan ~ Rtplacad Witii 111 Ftoflrif • Watch Ad{vit«d iMM . __TIeitoli IfvfvPQ • Fvit Yadr AwFaiitag Oft Uahif Ripafr 5W*Onlr7..Tfi*f limme Mw price af IT.!! includes nsedsd psris hmh Now Nbre Than Your Money Back! Try fait MW MiMh for 14 fait IwNseeat grtowilRS Mt fawtl ALL NEW S^SPEED 1066 SCHICK Wf iDAka thii tUring offar bacAUH we’re so sura thia new Sohiejk will outshave your praaant ragort You’ll get faster, cloMr, more cmnfortablt sbAve»... thanks to tha world’i mifhtioit ahaving head, wi0i 1,0A0 whlsktr-cutting slots... lha moat powdrful motor in ihftviBf history ,.. S gppeds, that At the shpva to your (tee ... and tha adjaatabla hood, that letp you ilutva cIon m you wftflt without irritetinf 1 If fat IsOOl aotn't Mtfbivt ytw ' fnm4nm,»,foop4jm bMk->is4 tf ttoiit fat gitoafav ^ ^ tt kttf I At tt Uw A Mttl SOHIGK GUSTOXATIG 8ftmt adjaitftbla htftd 2i tin ftnfaii lApopd Mi ydo fit th# ihtvt to *yoRf htftrt ABd pkfn. ShaVaMlottoi , yon wiiit—without irritfttloiL IlMdaome toitdilieAttad trival cam. Rajukr $22.50Value 11« a? yiiMTMrJilM Irim r THi; PONTIAC PBESS, WEDNESDAY, MARC^ 1, 1961 THREE ^ AntuLumumba Men Join in Shaky Alliance By PHIL NEWSOM UH Pbrelgn Newi Analyal Bitter necessfty hai ainti-Lumumba forpei in the Congo into S ihaky aljlance. Unfortunately, the alliance itaell raiaei important' new queitfami and leaves both the future of the Congo and the United Natioiis ’ effort there as cloudy as ever. appointed heir to the nnntMWl Patrice Lumumba. Joseph Kasavnk by the West as presMent of <^e, eoatrols ai army of 1,SM roea. Some esti-mates place It at amro than In theory the agreement announced Tuesday by leaders of the Central Congo. Katanga and South ?=KasaI Province should align the strongest possible forces against the Communist-suppqjrted forces led by Antoine QUenga, self- Albert Kalonjl, president ^ the secessionist South Kasai, private army estimated at 1,000 men. Molse Tshombe^r^dent of secessionist Katanga PfDv a force of 5,000 Belgian-officered njen. ONLY 7,0N MEN Against this force of at least the fact that iOksavubu’s central government found it necessary to enter Into such an alliance means that Kasavubu and his Premier Joseph Ileo are admitting that central control no longer exists and in effect arp recognizing the independent nature of both * the Kasai and Katanga governments. * * it effect, it gives legal status I both, a situation bound>to plagbe later efforts to unify the country. Pot^tially, it also poses great problems for the reduced U.N. forces, now numbering only about 14,000 men to police an ^rea one-third the size of the United States. As the military slteatlon sww stands, Gtsenga forces control ■early half the Congo, Including Orleptd Province, Kira and parts of Kasai and Katanga Anti-Gizenga forces h(dd most of Equator Province, all of Leopoldville and the remaining portions of Katanga and Kasai. ♦ ★ . ★ Standing as a thin line between the two forces, with'authority to to avoid a civil war, are the .troops of the United Nations. linfortunately for the new alliance, Congo agreements have a way of evaporating depending on the whims of the various leaders. And the (.ef'ror that spread throusdi, Leopoldville with reports tlu^ttie Gizenga-Lumumba fwces jyere adv^ing on the cslpital proves ^at Lumufnba dead is nearly ail potent a force as Lu-mumlMi ellve. The United Nattona command hopes fervently It will not be necessary to Are on Congolese but that day may be approac.blng. How the Gizenga forces are be- ing paid or how they are receiving their arms remains an unansw question. Them have been iin'coh-firmed rapbrts of Soviet air drops and some aid reportedly has come from the United Arab Republic. Unfortunately, too, if any of thd Con^ forces can be said to be disciplined, most of that discipline seems to rest with Gizenga. New but False CHATTANOOGA, (AP)-A young bandit forced a filling station attendant to fork over (5 in a holdup here. Police said the robber was armed with a table fork. Alrrfost every mineral from bestos to uranium can be found dn the jungles and plains, (llanos) of Venezuela. SELime 0UY.^STK iEDUCnONSI vnmnsitl UMOLEOn ' uso“ini 29«' *4« ■«(. SS.SS PAIIIT JUSri flst, >U Mtora INLAID mi 6c Ea. VINYL ASSIITOI SVdc Eo. $195 GaL SMITH’S TILE OUTLET n..,. T..ruir 257 -S. Sofliiiaw 736 W«st Hutm - FI2-7W5 FEM266 Os» M». *bS rri. OSM Mra., Tksn., *t» S rrt. ’Ml S EltiMtM SB ElStrt iBiUlUtiBB Bl risen BBS Wsllt HHIlMHII.1U!KtJlltCTt fbe OrigiauJ Waihahl* 49c Yard 37' Many decorator uses ... ■rails, table tope, drawers, etc. Assorted patterns and colors. IB-lnch width. —SaS rissr imm Accordion Typo PlASHC rOLDRIG DOORS 299 $5.95 Value Fits 33xM>inch doorways, conmlete with hardware, ready to put up. No special tools needed. White or beige. -sbs pimc miiiitaaiM ffalionalfy Adrorlisod LILT Permaaeiit $2.00 Seller 1" permanents — ________lt speed - bath permanents for all types of hair styles. Limit 2. Famous 'Roll-On' 1- IlN DeodoiAnt Large - 98c Size - - For women's and men s use-^M> fuss no muss antl-persplratlon p r o t e c tlon Limit a per person. —MilBFIasr Regular or pinochle decks -‘-e cards with Limit 2 decks —MbIb riMr~- LadioS'—Misses'—Girls* riattiei SHOES •|00 $3.00 Values Final sale of one lot of popular flats. Your choice of remaining stock at this one lo% price. DOOR-BUSTER SPECIAL' USA: Mad*. Leather BOYS' SHOES Yalues to 200 . $5.95 Lace oxfords and Velcro fastener styles—black and brown uppers. Sizes 214-6-6H-6. Endicott-Johnson. liTiiiiawiiMiiagip S»aml0MM Nyl^n UODS' HOSIEBT 2 ''•1'* 400 needle seamless nylons in beige, tan and taupe also mesh at.vlea Included. Sizes 8V4 to 11. —MbIb riBtr TOMORROW (THURSDAYo"=.lll00N ’til 9 p-« Be Here When Doors Open at 12 ^oon • 9-Bargaia Fatkad Sbopiuag Heart • eiii LOOK For The Speciol '9-HOUR' Cut-Price Togs In Evtry Dept. Through All 3 Floors Here ore just a few more SUPER DISCOUNTS that make SIMMS 9-HOUR Sole one of Pixitioc's leading sole events. YOU can see for yourself now much YOU SAVE when you shop here ot SIMMS . . . shop with the family; Every item GUARANTEED UNDERPRICED Plus the certainty of satisfaction regardless of how much you save. Sorry — no moil or phone orders during this sole. — Rigliti RaMrvad to Limit Quantitias, So Moro May SAVE — MAIN FLOOR SPECIALS Fubou 'TiflMx' Wrist Watch 99 SHOURBS/m S«tof3AllNyloB Guides SI.49 Value —Sow il9 i I trimmer guide. Tin. 2 and No. 3 r-butch attachments. Flta moat Barber clippers. lajnluB EImMc | Alarm Clock i 39 y ‘Sportster’ model with radiolite dial, sweep second hand, leather band. Plus 10% fed. tax. 3.95 Value T 'Princess’ model electric alarm, i clock is self-starting. Factory guaranteed. Plus 10% tax. Good ior 1000 Lights Book Matches 50-7' I Carton of 60 book matche« — ! a regular 25c value. Limit 2 i cartons per person. DRUG DEP'T. SPECIALS Pacb of 20 Double Edge Gillette Blades Reg. eCC . z Ob Famous Gillette 'Blue Blades’ for all double-edge safety razors. Ferns or Modeii Brud Sanitary tlipkins $7.,45 4 09 Paefc 1 40’s, 1 Sanitary napkins for feminine hvgiane. Choice of either brand. UmR 2. hU VtBiui Sin Saeeharia TahMa - s 9Q' 1,000 Full pack of 1000 tablets for people on dieU, diabeUcs,. etc. yGilit 2. XiUoiaUy Advertised Toothpastes ' io® Tube ^ All eOc size tubes Including Ck>l-gat^ Crest. Oleem, Pepsodent, etc. Limit 2. H PHOTO DEPT. VALUES ■ .MZaiUlsin n—fiashhulhs^ Regular 81A6 carton of 12 flash-bi^ Ftesh stock. Limit 6 car- t(H)S. Ini-Uf* 2-VUt Battery Compare, to$U5 ^ J Imported hl-power battery for most transistor radios. Ouam-' teed fresh. Limit e. riU l-Tuasifltf Traitister Radio Compm, ^ 099 10 AU transistor radio ease, eOrpboof and frew 9-vott Kattary. Ligblvtigbt ^Femer Bioeenlars Worth 4 99 $6.95" 1 ' f-SoU) '' 0 Center focus field tUaaes wlto bu^ln cfimpfias PIgakla leath- j:-Fe, Woil ELECrniC Barber Set m.95 Value . 388 'StBrllnt' dBlaXB bamB hair ci Unr nutm ''Pull 13-bIbcb BBt Famouf 'Rilfmore* Pocket Walek $2.98 Value AceurmtB and dcpeodsbla watch. Non-brcakablB cryatal. M-day tacu>ry guaraotac. KKt ta». * Fot Nifty Rindurs Filter Paper/ Reg. 50c nta Nifty Magnetic Binders — top bole punched. No ll^lt at thii low price. —Mala riaof 32' Electric Sharing Powder Stick Reg. 98c 33' Remington powder atick for batter electrle Pro/eef Book and 72 “Cnyola" Crayons $2.00 Value Boi of n crayoni with p 1» Agforled 'lELir BIRD' tSMEy Em* 17' 29c Lb. Full pound Jeliy bird candy aggi In aaaorted narori. Limit Aspirin Tablets 3N-29' Ragaltr lie ralua — (uU pack )M aaplrtn Ubiet. UJJ>. S-gr. •trmigiSi. , UmH 1. . New 'Sufceam' Electric Skgyilg Naais 39® Owlet of Frwiltoctile nr ARar BlMtite Ibava LoUeet. Umlt * f FUar Chorfee Aatei #9 Hair ConaitiMM Reg. 1.90 Famaot Chailta Antal *t 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS 2 GalloBs lOOVe hue Motor Oil Reg. 1.95 Can 99° SAE 10-20-30 grades — Sealed --lim 9xl2-rt. Plaitic Drop Oloth Reg. 79c Value r«ll 9xl0-lBch ShceU Sandpaper 15-*19' Eagle Pin Tumbler Door Nile Lock [77 M® ^ %% ' i Vw I Clear, transparent plastic cloth Protects against paint splatter, imit 2. 4 to 10-Cbp Automatic Electric Percolator Reg. 13.95 Value . f- 'Easy to Install on any door — »no special tools needed. With 2 keys. Umit 2 locks; Enameled Hardwood Toilet Seats 29 5^9 A \ Value m ' - -Now Jjp cally. With cord. Sturdy Cotton Braided Westclox Electric Clotheslines 50"33°l S 4 Wall Clocks 99 Ironing Board Pad a Cover Set / Famous Jehnson'i P BlauJaiim Spray Wox a fift'j ft CO' Value- -f raim ‘Fruit-of-the-Lo(Hn’ set, hylon i Pledge spray wax for 'waxed reinforced pad. and silicone i beauty instantly as you dust. 7-cover. .Fits 64 ■ boards. i ounce cdn. ^ ♦ Polisbo/ Alumtuum ’ Geuniue 'Beuuty Ware' 14-oz. Tumblers . Wastebaskets 6”'68° ot toilet tank. She-tkmal divided for toUetrtea and Uasae boK. 3-Way^$tyle ipetal T:::; Dispenser Value 1 Dispenser bolds toll, wax paper and paper towels. Handy fpr kitchen nae. . /. Pack el 400 Skeets Cleansing Tissnei 2 »«*■ 37® Regular 23e packi of claaniing Unuea tn full 4M thaet packi. Limit ] pack!. ■' Genvlae 'Woodbury' Lanolin Lotion Reg. 1.00 Lanolin rich lotion for bandi and body. Soothing lotion by Woodbury: Limit 2. —Malm near 36' Famouf 'Soif Foueb' Hair Spray » Rpg- 1.75 KMiunca ipray can i Touch'. Limit 2 cani. Fro* 30e Sifo Wllk Brack Shampoo 44' Reg. 90c 'BLACE < DECEER' Vo" Electric Drill For Oitk Draiobri—Fomoui Silverware Caps 4® Reg. 69c . Provldn aitra tpaca (or drying allverwarc, cutlery, etc. Rubbermaid brand. —2nd Plaar Eugtith Slainloti 3-Pe. Kiife Set Reg. 1.00 Bet. hBi Chef’I Knife. Utility Knife and Psrlng Knife. Super •harp waee-crea e|lge«. —2ad Flaer 3-Pioco Sonring Soi Kitchen Sceop Set $1.00 - Value Bet baa lea eraam^oop and lAiwa apoMAeoeop. Bkavy dolg. Uiblt 1 eat. —2bB Flaae Ekeo Paro AlumiaBm 9” Foil Pan 8 for Regular ll.M let of rautsblai paeia baki— v. BARGAIN BASEMENT 1st Qulity—80x95" Sheet Blanket Reg. 2.49 Value Soft, fleecy sheet blanket, i bound edge. Choice of 2 colors, i Limit 2 blankets. s Fitted Style—Plastic Chair Covers c i Coverlet Style^Plastic Bedspread 199 139 $2.49 W Value I Reg. 1.98 Value Full doable bed size plastic bedspreads — coverlet style. Assorted pastels. Variety oi Plastic Cottage Sets c {in'' QA ilV j -u wO Pitted to standard wide arm s square cushior chairs. All sales f Boys' Quilt Lined Parka Jackets Value ^^97 $8.95 . ^ Lovely plastic cottage seta Including kitchen designa and others. Assorted colors. Durable Cerdnroy Boys’ Pants $3.95 499 Value I NOW I Durable Blue Cbambray Mans’ Work Shirts 09 Cbildren's Blue Dgnim Boxer Jeans Reg. 1.49 Value Washable blue chambray shirts with long sleeves. Sizes 14% to 17. Limit 2. 1" I i’£ AQ' ' I ' . I —iVow i Elastic waist boxer jeans in i sturdy blue denim. Sizes 1-2-3-i 4. Limit 2-pair. SPECIALS for WOMEN Ladiet' Summer Slacks & Pushers 67 1st Qnality-U.S.A. Made Ladies! Skirts Reg. $3.98 Value 197 Values 4 to $4 I ■ I —Now I 100% cottons, wash *n wears, e styles. Side zipper, belt to match, 2 pockets. Sizes 10 to 18. Ladies' and Girls' Car-Coats Values ff^99 to $10' —Now What’s left from winter stock-girls' sizes 6X to 12 and ladies’ a to 12. _______ i Wools, rayons, nylons, wash *B ' wear cottons, flannels, tweeds. Sizes 8 to 38. T All New Styles Girjs’ Dresses Values Q* 198 SPECIALS for CHILDREN Baby Flannel Receiving Blanket 32° ■ Value to 69c Kleenwinb Sauletized Fitted Crib Sheet $1.19 Value —NoW w soft flannel blankets In 24x30 | 160% cotton, no (roning. Ouar-incb-Bizet Choice of pastel col- | anteed fast colors. White, pastel ora. ' and roaebud. . CMU'i tray Slam I 1007. Cattaai—SnaiM POLO SHIRTS I Childs’Aakhti 3-1 00 »xia ,aiw»a OAdfCm aaiCTMiuM *a%i larg^. 8trh>es and wmte colors. 10° R^g^^ 19e^ Pair stripes, fancy cuffs, plains, cfe. Slsea 3% to 8 for boys and gfrla. 98 N. Saginaw St. FOUR THE PONTIAC PRESS. WRPyESDAY. MARCH V 1961 How Maiihtmt Nottcd Murderer of Little (Soogie End of Slayer's Slimy Trail Ky HCNMUTTA LEITH MeW YORK (AP) - It WM Wuhii^on's Birthday. In Brock-lyn. widowed Edith Kiecortus de-oided to holiday with bar brother, ow the rh-er to Manhattan. She was tafch« ateif her mother and her little girl, also named Edith' but called I Googie. » • From New Jersey Tuesday night, police made a trip over ajjr-other river to Manhattan. ^ it was no hcriiday outing. were bhni^ back a 59^)»af-old handyman. run to jarth on a New Jersey chick*j>^krm after- one of New York taty s greatest man-huhtjy, They said he-was the man w>o raped little Edith and beat ^''i$er to death against a srall — on Wa^totlbh’s Birthday . ) TRIP OPENED WfXL Little Edith’s journey to Man-| hattan was tmeventful. Her,moth-, er dressed her to s green diets UTS HE DID rr — These ar« three atudiet of Fred Thotnpabn. 59. who admitted luring Edith IlKi‘'l^e""siK^t.‘‘Si '"gay’I Kiecorius to hit Manhattan tenement at- pretty 4-year-old was wearing ttoyJ .. . girid rings in her olitcountry-might have taken the Uttle girl Back on 3)th Street, police were Manuel, style pierced ears. She and ba'|home with them for a meal or aigetting fingerprints from the pile|Said^ jnother and grandmother Francesjwarm place, to sleep, thinking diejof beer caiw ‘hat^hf^ shf*;^ t>^|HORRIFlED BY SELF Duglet took the long aubway ride, was lost or nM properly cared They arrived at the home of Un-jfor. ^t the printed and broad-de Manuel Duclet. on Eighth Av-1 caai appeals lor her return enue near 18th Street, to the de-ihrougfat no results, and by Thurs-terioratiiM Oieto«i neighborhood, day police abandoned thta idea. * * * I The search went on. Helicopten (Just five days bdore, a sUght.jflcw over *or a cloae knk at all seecty but well-spoken man ap-|the rooftops. The Hudson River ' 1 for the vacant^ at a room- was dragged. OUar by t^Uar. ing house at 90T West 30lh Street, less than three blocks from Uncis Manud's home. The landlady was away, and her friend, a barmaid, showed him the room. It was small and ^ain. with just a bed, dresser and chair. The man. who said he was Fred Thompson, paid backyard by backyanl, room by rocm, police searched the nsigb- HE WAS THE MAN (Twn railea away on site side of Manhattan, there were many men with haunted eyes the bannaid $8 for a week’s rent.) huddled in cheap Bowery rooms. iwtrr I'WA'rrirvnrn to drive away their imvate left UNATTENDED ghosts with wine or beer. There . In the afternoon httle Edith putiwas one who was more soddenly en her purple snowyiit andj«^MMe eyes were more Went out to play in front of Unclcjhaunted than the others.) Manuel’s home while her motlwrj, g y^re were and grandmotter than 40Q police in the hunt, with talk inside Liide Manuel was j^ures of the litUe girl stuck in with litUe Edith's body for four days. A police artist was making a sketch of the man .who ■ rented the room, from de-scHptku ol those who had seen him. Dozens of middJe-v«i men with no teeth, and the slightest, resemblance to the descriptions of the roomer, were picked up and questioned. On Monday the detectives had found the doorman's cabaret card Conrad Flies to Wake onRoimdrWorldTrip HONOLULU (UPD-Max Oomd fiew toward Wake Island today on the third leg of bis attempt to set a new) rotmd-the-woikl qieed record for a piston plane. The M-year-eW pUet stepped oaly h»w and oae haK hears to Hoaolalu Toesdsy, sfter a >,8M-mile hop fram L^ Beach, OMU. He hegaa tha flight Moaday at Mtomi, Fla. After a brief stop lor refueling at Wake. Conrad plans to make his longekt hop. f 3.028-mile flight to Manila. He is scheduled to receive s ^0 u s i n g welcome from Filipino airmen when ho’ arrives 1 Thursl^'. Conrad hopes to make the round-the-world flight in nine days, after flying 2S.457 miles. House, Senators May Throw JFK Curve on Roads WASHINGTON (UPD-President Kennedy faced a congressional road of deep ruts and sharp curves, today In his proposed-tax program to speed construction of interstate highways. (In New Jersey someone elsej Even key Democrats saw little was telling- police that Thompson chance for passage al the measure ar rsMsiix tacking her ai»d beating her to death against a wall. He has been booked on a homicide charge. T feel better now,’’ he Yellowknife in Canada’s District of Mackenxle to a booming gold mine town with an tocraasing population. The Rockefeller foundation hadi .^tas Dumont airport hw to its ortgto to 1M3 and began with one of the busiest Ifi ^ mLimetit ot nbtoit tW tall- pra^ to a eountey of fstt dtor- I , ■ . Itances. ' "■* should go t6 the electric, chair— or at least to prison tor life. Thst, said police, was the vndict of Fred Thompaon, alias John Andrews, when he finally admitted what he had (tone to little Edith.) ♦ ♦ ♦ (On the drive back to Manhat- its present form. Kennedy asked Congress to cancel uled one-cent cut to the gapritoe tax and boost taxes on trucks, diesel fuel, tires and other highway used items. Democrats and Republicans alike outside, keeping an eye on her: ton be needed a pack of cigarettes and walked around the cor-r»er. (The smiting man came up to the little glri and spoke to her idndly: ‘T > little girl like you. but she’s sick at home. Would you like to come and visit Iwr?” The frierKily child walked off with the nice man.) ami matijtod its . those on the beer cansT'^t. Now they had a photograph in-jead of an artist’ and began preparing a vast distribution. I iThe man in the Bowery room! had scibered up. On Monday he! went to a bus terminal and: caught a bus to Philadelphia. He^ went to an employment agency. They steered him to a man on| chicken farm in Manetjesterj Township. N.J., who wanf^ handyman. (’The chicken fanner hired John! tan—his eyes not so haunted now agreed the proposal would have — he toid a police inspector, "considerable difficulty’’ even get-thoughtfully: “It was the worstjting through the House Ways and Grime I have ever known. And. Ij M* ea n s Committee, much toss | '''•®|(»mmitted it. their caps, and soundtracks were blaring all over a wide area on the West Side, describing the missing child. I Reconls were pored ovw for|^^ ^ ^ ^ a ctoe-^nt deaths of cjul^i^rtt Tuesday. Uter the farm-! about Goofoes age. The ^er|^j. „„ made public appeals; “Only mother can umtorstand the way ■ketch of the hunted man ahdi thought it lo^ed something like Andrews. When he read that| Thompson,'^ like Andrews had British accrot, he became more suH>icious. Tuesday Andrews reported tori WQlfc. By 0Kn, pesko had seen: In another newspaper the cabaret! card photograph of TiHimpson and: he was sure. He called the state: police). Brooklyn, Mrs. Keicoriusi Over the weekend the search " , " ' " . went on without a letup. Police (toogie vasn t in s^t i^en.l n- jn,ocked on neighbo'rhood de Manuel came tac* a few min-^ ^ ^^re still utes later. He lotted behind but couldn’f find her. Worrie|. heL^n,. told the women inside, and every-] _____ body began lookiii^. ’The longer HE WANTED TO LEAVE they looked, the more worried! (On the Boweo'. the men with they got. 'the red-rimmed sad eyes were Finally they told the police, who sleeping it off, or surtiiw all over ; «mbed the neighborhood ami again. One of them began to try:was preparing for a Maw of the queationed everyone who had to sober up. He had to get sober!Angels for little Edith at St. Rose been around when Googie disap-enough to get out of town.) I-una Roman Catholic church, peared. That night, after hours Sunday morning, police began tad gone by w'ith no trace of her, ! making knother round of neigh-to>Iice aiutounced that a little girilborhood rooms. It seethed hope-' was missing. jless,^ but something had to be HE WAS WILD EYED to keep the search alive. . ... They were on their way to a (About that time a wTld-eyed^^^ ^ „„ 20th Street, man w locking the door had both- second-flo(»‘ blwkijgj,^ jhem. At that house, a room- gway. He h^ the key toatj dto^yed there was something ^ unlock that if, , ri,e„, second-floor *ipl.cate he had given to the,^ jhe landlady. They tondl^wasn t s^pbcateat aU.|^ “» 0P*n the door At fiiut. police thought someonel ^ ★ ★ ★ crashed in. 'They found a little girl’s bruised b^ on the bed, and they found a purple snow- The smallest Hearing Aid ever from Zenith! Jmsgins ■ hearing aid with all the clarity and rsslism you'd expset from Zenith-yet so smsU, so stonder, ■ ring will easily fit around it. A msrv^ in miniature-the new Zenith is worn inconspicuously behind the ear yet lets you hear the voices you’ve bsen missinf! . 'The new Signet includes all thsM quality features to bring you Zenith “Living Soand" perfonnsnoA-miniaturised trag-■istor circuit, volume control and separate on-off switch. When the word of capture camej from Toms River, N.J., it spread] quick{y. Within a couple of hours! there were hundreds of angry people outside the police .Ration. A relative of little Edith and another woman carried signs demanding the electric chair for Thomp-In the crowd was Uncle OtUfOHt HEARING AID CENTER 11 W. Lowranca S»., PonHoc FE 8-2733 SALE! OSMUN'S DOWNTOWN STORE 0)ILY FAtL—WINTER—SPRING JACKETS NOW 1/2 OFF Formerly $10.95 to $39.95 Both long and short stylas ovoilobla, mony with all wool quilt linings. Sizes 36 to 48. mmsarnml FAMOUS NAME DRESS SHIRTS NOW l/i Off Formerly $4.00 to $8.95 ^ Handsome whites and colors In discontinued coller styles. Regular or French cuHr Sizes l4Va to 18 with sleeve lengths 32 to 35. LONG SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS NOW y2 Off Formerly $3.98 to $12.95 Plaids, checks, solids, wool ble’ndC by famous makers. All are com-plefsly waslwble and unconditionally guaranteed to satisfy. Sizes S, M, L and XL. FAMOUS MAKE HATS NOW ^2 > Fermerlr S10.95 lo S20A0 An unusually fine assortment of better felt hats at trenoendous values. S(X*s6% to7'j. / bOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Monday ond Fridoy 'til 9 P. M. Killer Thompspn May Escape* Electric Chair isult. GRANNY HCREAMED : At the police station only half a block awaj. Edith Kiecorius was talking to police for what NEW YORK (UPD-What will Oie hundredth time, , happen to Fred Jackson Thpmp-i‘0^f think of s^thing ttat V the almlei« drifter who con-lj^W »*.• fes^ the sex-killing of 4-yearK.W mother to the police staUon ^ Edith Kiecorius? and. m another room, the if it it grandmother the news. They' • Premeditated'murder in New fouWft’t stop her Rcreamtog. and ’ Vork calls for death by electro- could krop Mrs. Kieconus , ration, and ITiompsoii' hai eon-:^" .. •-^RWed In detarTo With h»'r. pubUc feeling as it is now. tta;. Treff Thompson had had many i district attorney is expected to )<>*» •“«« ^e walked away Irom , iawcute for the death sentence, his- famUy 15 years ago. but in 1933 he worked as a nightclub : prose very dilfi-^ doorman. <(> he had to have a po- ^ cult to send Thompson to fhoiiice cabaret card, with a photo-]!';; eloctHc chair. graph .and fingerprints.^ Later he]: One New York attorney pointed gravitated towajd the summer “ ' ' uut Thompson has laid the groundwork for being ruled incompetent or not within his own control when the crime was comltted. ■orU in the Chtsldll Mountains, i working at any old job Until he Wh! would get too drank to work and “ would get fired.) KEEP UP YOUR SPEED RENT A TYPEWRITER 123 N«HLSi|iiiiwSi:Jf>^rU4^ THB T^ONTIAC PRES^, WKDXKSDAV. MARCH 1. Iixtl FIVE Another Lalt Stand TULSA. , OWa. (AP)^-Cu*terJntt lost another one to the Indiana. Jack Ciuter told police an Indian gunman robbed hla aervice ata-tk>n of |30: Aldteens Search hr Guidefx^sts fo Life With Alcoholic Parents The hii^eat natural elevation c Manhattan laland is 260 (eet. He's Kling of the Clink It Waa the regular Wedneaday night meeting ot bur A La t e e n group. The 14-year^d talking waa, attending for her third tinie, a a k I n g pretty much thQ. thinga we had all aaked, d e 8^ r i bing the feelinga we had aU felt. “I gueaa you know It already,” Gare waa saying, “or I wouldn’t be here.” She took a dwp breath nnlINW¥ "For a long time f didn’t know what the tixtubie waa. I’d coine home from school and Mom would be 'acting funny. It scared me. I couldn’t understand. When I did, I waa so embarrassed 1 wantt^ to die. Now it’s gone on so long, 1— I don’t even ttink I like her any more. "Why does she have to sopil (everything?" * There It waa, the M4 qu^tlon we had aH a«fced. Why? Why did drunken |>arent have to "Spoil told her. ”Boy. it was ai relief lo look at lAy father and know he wasn’t a bum, just a guy sick.’’ Tlf/Irf'/7\ ex-erything” lor «i PiMision Witch Bcpaii ALL WORK OUARANTEED-PROMPT SERVICE - WATCH bands, watches. RINOS, OIPTS ES Mabb. StBBBt There was silence in the room, i lamlly? And xvhat could We all knew how she felt. The first; It? time .you say those words, youj We tried to answer Gare’t think the floor will open and 8wal-j/"why" with the information doc tow you up. After yeats of trying tors hav^ given us: today, trained NEISNEI'S Witch lepiir 42 N. Saginaw FE I-3SI3 | !to hide it, the truth gets hard to specialists know that the alcotudic it not a "bad" person, only « uck Clare looked defensively at the p dozen teen-agers in the church so- A rial room. But in our eyes there "Sick Oare shook her bend, people don’t hit you with a lamp. ’They stay In bed and lake medl-olm>. What hind of a disease makes you scream and bit peo-pter- Just a disease, we said, that' extra hard to treat. But once you Know, there are things you^can do to help. 'Like w’hat?" asked Qare. Is that these things make it easier lo live xvith an alcoholic, a:pd easier for him to live, with us. We haven’t come together dilefly to help others,, but^ to help our * selves. And believe us. we need it, children of altd4xolies! ReTcti May Face Hike in Taxes In the firgi place, we need to be able to love and respect our parents—all kida-need that. Most of have grown up feeling pretty much the opposite. In Alaieen we study alcoholism, we read about it and invite members of Alcoholics Anonymous ((AA’s) to speak at meetings. Understanding the nature of the illness gives us back our parents as 'pbople we again. Secondly we need help in solving some very practical problems. What do you do when you come h«me and find your mother passed Yeorl^uf ’he kitchen floor? Call the ... ij 11 I i c’ doctor? Call your Dad at the pf- Would Help to l*inance|fice? try, to get her into bed .vour-‘self? Leave and pretend you ni'ver I light dark roafl. but glimpsing t the other end. THlIR8DAY-«erth|a Donaldson, a modern pioneer wife, tells how faith has sustkincMl her and husband during their trying days on the"Ala8kan frontier. ELKADLR, Iowa (APl-^What’s ^ ill a name? The man who pag - throw you lii(D the rlinlt.ln Elkaddr la Gayton County .Sheriff Mlllt* Klink. .1 Connecticut was first visited In 1614 by a Dutch expedition. A Dutch trading post was established at Hartford in 1624. "Getout of the house when she's! Election not herself.”‘w'e answelred. Don’t aiguec'-^‘Don't bring it all up' - - a‘J fS i again the next day.” One by ogo againi Too many_________ change>of>lifel Instead of en-loyinff middle-age, they spend those years In muery... nervous as a cat, smothered by *■' " “give In" to those awful hot flashes, pres- half-alive! Result? 'They’re too ^ too tense to give their mds real companionship. let it happen to youl Today, most women “smiling through” those t^g years—with Pfnkham Tablets! This clinic-tested combination -----1 combination J (Including Iron), was spci^lly -develop^ for ttw ailments loomen alone tvjfer. with Pinkham Tablets alcma— no expensive shots! So don’t let change-of-lifo iHdng tragedy to your home. Oet Lydia E. Pinkham Tablets from druggists. Take them dally, Uka vitamins. See If tension and physical distress aren’t both relieved! See If you don’t And new peace-of-mlnd tool No Costly Shelsl In doctor's tests, woman after woman, found new relief from IP YOU PRVfg A IIOUID all druggists Also have Xsmous Lydls 1. Plnkhsm^ ^ VegetAbls Compound. ' There can be. ho slate expenditure. P:tzel meaningly pointed •Hit, without-slate Income.- "An effort in one dirertion,” he said, "must of necessity be a bur-] den in another.” JiKt xx’ho will have lo bear 'biggest burden of a tax Jjs unclear. 55 PCT. LCVIIT The dimit on income lax is pres-, ,ently, .55 per cent. It is unlikely that this ceiling will be pushed: higher. There is a greater move- ment to bring it down to 50. per West Germany, unlike many other countries, knows of no super lax whereby a person with a "super’’ income may have to pay up to 90 per cent or more In iM'onie tax. Undoubtedly there will be a' tightening on expense allowances. The government already has taken Steps in this direction. Drury, Shirer Books iTop Best Sellers (Compiled by I’uhllshers' Weekly) , nCTlON ADVISE AND CONSENT. Dniry. HAWAII. Michener. THE LAST OF THE JUST, Schwarz-Bart. SERMONS AND SODA WATER, O’Hara. TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, Lee. . NONFICTION THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH, Shirer. WHO KILLED SOCIETY? Am- ory. THE WASTE MAKERS, Packard. ? ■niE SNAKE HAS ALL THE LINES. Ken-. ■ BORN FREE, Adam.son. 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All combed cotton, wrinkle-resistant little, or no iron. 37/38" wide. : "Pcitina" print minicore fabric with Evergloze soil oixl wrinkle-resistant fkerrnanent finish. 36" wide. ' j 10 East" prjnts with the look ond feel of reol silk. Mode from the new /'’Estron 55" ocefote. 45" wide, pure luxury prints. Fabrics... Fooffb Floor 79c 98c 98c 98c $129 $]49 CJfooaa roar ftteFlieifF er MeColFs Httamu ml VelM ^7^ .0%. THE PONTIAC PRESS Wnt Hopw Street ^ TttOm ■ ^ . . WEPNESOAY. WARCH 1.1S61— ^^ »»«•(> ■ rrmmak a. JMra aajrasir: . t Mll«r e.tt Why Not Use County Lot for Downtown Shoppers? Since public parking spaces are at a premium, particularly clo^ in to the downtown area we would like tq i offer a suggestion that might bear jwme study. The county owned parking lot INI the comer of West Huron slid Wayne Street night ponibly be leased on anne sort ot tenpcury. nrrangMnent by the City of FUn* tiac fren Oakland Covnty. ★ ★ ★ We would not intend that em- iffe would bring retaliation and things would probably get worse. Many idlU renenbtr the reialts of the Smoot'Hawley, tariff act when our foreign markets collapsed overnight. ★ ★ . ★ ' In an effort to improve our trade positUm the Kennedy Administration announced its intention to modify Ux laws to provide adddtioi^ in> centives for investment in U.S. plants and equipment. Pr^ent Kinneoy is preparing to ask Congress for a change in tax laws on foreign subsidiaries’ profits which are untaxed ploye. poking ttere now te fre«n ““‘'y- out completely. Perhaps the city could, arrange 4orhllocate the same ’ number of spaces In a city-owned lot not quite so adjacent to the downtown area. A short walk of a few blocks should not be considered a . hardship (or free all-day parking. it if The whde arrangement would have to be tcmpmwry. since final disposition of" the property in qnoBtion is not known at this time. Who would stand to gain? Area citizens by some 35 parking spaces in the heart of the shopping area. We feel sure that if an amicable arrangement could be worked out it would be a definite community benefit. tlTiat do you think? ★ ★ ★ Natumlly, this had tended to expand the foreign plants with UA tax free profits. Such a strong incontivf had encouraged UA expanaion abroad which now totals S30 billion. Any diaeuasion of foreign competition must rcc-pgniie that much of it is created by American owned plants. / Voice of the People: Praises Seapy WiWiaiM far Actions irL Africa In The PiwM editWn of Feb. SB hmdUnw ** the b«ve 0. Mehnen WiUiemi in Afti^ nervativm. I prelee WlUtami for ‘ iwwlng Ni( the Wue ead lit ^ dm laU where they rosy." ________ nuh It WM not tow eso the ijewspeperi wwe tdm tto Ame^ puh-llc that Mtlvee o( South AWce were betag ehot down in tto their owe dooryerde tor rdueing to work in the minee d the BrtUeh ISUHlUerRoed / ‘Stations Overcharge for Road Service^ Before Celebration do sae .1.^. ..to .dva. t«gi> o( road wrvice insurance, participate in the centennial In the I had a flat tire perhaps 75 feet (beard.) on June I, from . su Mation in a small town just at the heginniip of the celebiw-north of Pontiac on M24. The at- flons, I will shave ofl Aw roon^s the front of my car apd-ehansed ^ i have lived in sU my We. my tire. It took perhaps ten min- ,u ••Brothers the utes and be ebargog me l?.30. BnisH" to do Utowtae. When he aaw I waa auipriaed he _____________ said, ••Road service wtU take eare of it.” Dtifwtod nth Oaa The Almanac T*k^—; “Get Ready — Get Set Wait” I David Lawrence Says: High Court Must Allow Probes ‘Conwrn for Others Is Important^ Also’ Old people are trying to be self-aupportiqg in thehr old By Ualled Prom IntermUenal Today ii Wedneeday. March 1. the 60th day nd not au- MM. dlMnopli. or tr«o{jq«it, wU) b« •nawerod by Ur. WUa wnt Important titan it Because it calls for m^ny tasks ... And ceaadess sin^ry rounds . .. Acroak each dJ!y there are demands . . . Frem/hlroost every door . . . Oono(x^;ig novel ways and means . chore . . He heeds a pair of ^ jo mailmen hi an sturdy legs . . . On which around oMahona town have been nipped to run . . am often has to ^y The dogs must know on late . . . With others having / km. mo fun . .. No-matter how hia beaws/ ^ feel . . He ^ t^ 'J Burning candles at both ends And even they ^ never seems to make the outloqk wrong . . . He has to hold them And though he may not earn the firm ... A Cent fo any day . . . Without hia aid /executives ... Would never Wuike it Any mother with a few young sons has darn hard work and hard dam work. (OapyrigkL IMl) THOUGHTS FOR TODAY I dtolre tkeai that hi every plaee the men ahaaSd pmy, lift-lisly hands withoat anger er qtoiTClhig.— I Ttmathy S:8. Most wives will listen to. reason. but they (toiY Uka hearing the sama one too efton. don’t thing some men about mai^age. One of tha best alarm clocks * * ' * Is baooo and eggi cooking on the I was never deeply intenctod kitchen stove, in any object, I never prayed sin- . ^ • ceraly and earnestly tar anything but it came at some time. No matter how distant the day, aome-how, in some shape, probably the last I should bavn adviisod, it eama. — Adoniram Juddon. Golfing on a courso In Texas, Arthur Triype of Waterford found tite ground froien so hard that the ball bounded out of all proportion. Returning home, he played on an Oakland County course, with no more bounding than in summer. there are a lot o folks who have bean women so long they ctinl h^ being a littla contrary. That cloae weather watcher, Harry Qnade of Drayton Plains, ealli'attention to the With Soapy speaking officially for fact that we*ve had more sunshine thU KkNNEDT th^ KHijuto dangerous since M***! we bad in aU of last sum- other Congo-like upheavals are pos- '_____ • . aible. ^ The three-ycar-old beagle hound of It would seem reasonable to believe Perry Pinmer that^r spokesman in Africa should of Rochester jumped from the family car •be seeking peace rather than un- the other day. and could not the h braiding more tempers. u—It there, quite footsore and weary, but still able to briskly wag its tail. This doctrine would make it possible for any citizen to decline to tell an investigatii^ committee about rackets, monopoliea. payola or any Irregularities in human behavior on which it might be desir^le to pass remedial laws. The witness could merely c^m Case Records of a Psychologist: riwkee or aaythkig.' I waa la Hobbies Are Splendid Mental Tonic that the was "harasiing” him tor his critl- operation. I swore - aliAP i#'? Iiarmei t*il aomoumo* dnleus maa- cisma ot the committee and n trying to punish him for i laSNUMtlau ou wtoeh to bare imd that If I lived I’d never take other drink. After the operation the doctors to|d me I had enlarged liver, caused by drtoc. I prom-' God and myself that if I made it out. I’d never take a drink again. 1 have kept this penniae and will k^ it the rest g| my BY GC»ROE W. CRANK CASE IMZt: Andrea M-, aged . 41, Is a jittery housewife. I tar exee«d the "Dr. Crane,” she In the latest opinton—4fie case of Flunk WIkinson, who refused to his ptoceof residence to life. Economists to Examine Foreign Trade Problem I wish eveiy alcohrtic would read your coiaain, and have the __________ ^ ______________ ____ *dll. as I did, to turn himself or be found here. Giving the dog up as lost, American A«tivitkMH4he majority .|*«xelf in for medical rare. To Mr. Plumer returned home, and found of the justtopi repeated a etatemeot “ “*T ..“Jf a previous decision which medical staff I said: The EoontHnic Inatitute meeting in . Washington tmder the ausf^ces of the U^. Chaniber of Commerce will .disetM our balance of payments position and the possibility of increasing exports. Just becawM we have a little cold weather dees not mean that tlw ioa oa ev iaina Is akfa agnla. It was howeyemhad by fhe llwws, and eenslderahle freeiinr weather Is naeeaary to make tt safe. .Mt'STNT BUND SELF ’’To suggest that because the Communist party may also sponsor and I need help.’ for life, family or will swallow this pride tor the help you need. 'Don’t 11s-your drigjtjng friends. And at Spartansburg, /S. C., too much time -Judge WUliam Daveiqxnt has foub-on my hands so aUy the longest file of these pra-I im becoming a tical caaea, for he has clipped nervous wreck. them for 35 years. "Qui you sug- pgiZK OONTEmNO geRw outlet tor you will find yeureell in the same boat with mil-Kora uf Americans irito lave Writ-prefer something ^ ^ tering is negligible, for all that la required is generally a soap wrapper, box cap or other proof of purchase of some worthwhile ty^ whets Irmf wUsi )w« to read a BWe la that would help and me together, for I leel we are beginniiig to drift A card drifts Iti from Oeatge H. Morgan of 88$ Tyrone Bt.. that spring surely has peaceable political re forma the Above all, you muat constituttanal lifuea before us danger that lurks-in'Just <»e mon riiouid now be judged as if that ' little drink.’ pkity were Just an ordtoasy poUti- (Signld) Mary Jana >->-—> cal party from the standpoint of Mary Jane does not say predae- national aecurity is, to. ask this ly what made her turn heraell in court to blind itself to world affairs and acknowledge >titat riie la an which have deteraiined the whole alcoholic. Rerhaps God answered -------- ——---------------— ------ her-prayer for help. When men and womrii pass the age of 4B, they should he sure to this column. For Aaiiea, IS ]Htoiy;in 'Dear Dr. ’ Crane. I wish you’d copy of Oaee 0^371, that ran In our newspaper some years sgo, otc„ etc.” Wei, I kavo no extra copies to tend, N Is eraari W keep your own israphaoh tor yew wiQ often Wtsh to «f np qmdflo former eases (hat fit yew’ preaeat like roost women, pnri because oho vaguely Imts the dreaded. a(Fi^ of ii whan ebe thiain rim wMI Manufacturers and labor leaders arrived, aa he saw a man paltjUng his alike have expresaed conceth over house. the continuing rise of imports fropi Suiope and A»ia. Ust year Under Orcluds tO” aeciRtory DnxoK warnedJhR^^^ /f ciuiu viuuuo ipe (all nationsj movB-Rhf^ tef get rki autmoded fan|de reatrictions or toe can expect a resurgence of' pro-tectioDian and restrictive action.” "k 'k 'A' • " Foreign competition has be-eoBM increasingly sharp. Rome Anerkdn made goods have been priced ORt of worid aad domestic BMrinla. However, man , tiro iaipert fMiiRs aBd hitler tar- Mrs. Jessie T. Zahn of 82 PakotR Dj^ve; Mth birthday. Mtos Minnie Traax of 54 Seneca Sh; 88th birthday; .Dlya^ R of Bloomfield HUla; 84th birt Mn. Buelah Ehan of Waterford; 82nd birthday. Rawley neisher or Rochester; 84th birthday. Mrs. of LMtocr; 82nd birthday. -L- u •*> I •*«' h> cultivate two She does not nmtiM Atooohoto lugiaies that are voiy helpitti and Anonymous. A who oedo iMBtally stimuktiog. In addition to the acraphook hobby. I also urged Andrea to coax her husband to join her io entering. price coritesta. It is estimatod that nearly $30 fth^to yew mtai I yedf cMWiea, toa, are al schoal age. So send tor my booklet *‘How to help from Al«hoUci---------------- muat acktibiWledgc, ^aa all members do: <- In cash or march^ * prizes are awarded annually. . ?!’* I Ajy AN ALCOMQUa fhan. even R he ar she, wHh hdp of the 'otoer asemhers, gees for a iinoth, r year or^M years wtHMOt a driak, ha er siM usari atifi aekaewtadge. I AN AN ALCOHOLIC. Firat, 1 Buowtod she maike a ■erapbook of theaa daily ooluinm on dinical ptocholety., for I eoeer a dooen ceiliep oowaae fci dm contentojof (hia niuRPtow fah* They go to people who 25-word or Bfoword letiwe lining tirhy they liko a eoriaki cetopieting the last line of a Bt- men have their sdcretartea mdh-tain a continuing acra|toook and index them under the various suh- I risk ef haiing Jmt a I She waan’t htiihbaBa t a*. Ot posed to MCktalle, quick ones for the 'three months ■he waa in the hwpttsl, But R taken greater strength «( chnno- psychoeomatic tnadieine, personality davelopmeiti, and bosinen or profewional pey-chok«y, hr it may deal with nam , product or a pony‘or a Hdg, etc. Prise rahteathii glvea evevy-htoly a etouwe, tor R imCt a eaL Irge diptoma that emwte bat tha Ytw can print ymr aitty ty R am iM CCNt Of / y r THE PQXTIAC PRESS, WEPyESDAY, MARCH 1. 1961 MIAMI BEACH, Ha. (AP)» Tlw AFL^O b tapping Its rwd-ban for an cxtn M-3 nHUon to eountcr* A dofldt mmi by • «• P«tly (Me to tin chti«- *P riMtatot STEPS UP - Eduardo Victor iiacdo, 59, bccomca chief executive of Uruguay today under, the countiy’a yearly pnaidential changOt Htedo lucceoda Benito 'Hm bod loek M the unemploy-mant attuatlOb. In flva yean the AflrCSO haa loit a miUlon mem-many of them made job-leas in the lau recession and current one with consequent dues payment toes, pardons in the rotating diair-ouujahip } o( the ninsHnan, ruling Slate May Store Atomic Waste Msu Prof con,id.„sss!T2S 5 r«sr Possibility of Putting It in Salt Beds east LANSING (UPIV-Michl-gan siU stop o( what might someday be huge storage tanks for radioactive wastes. Dr. Shoeei Serata. aulstant prcv fessor of ehril engineering at Michigan Slate University, is ex-perimentiBg to determine the feasibiUty of - using Mtchigsn’i huge .salt bod storage of radioactive waftek. MlridgM Is iHteai pi POjl SEVEN 7- Labor Heads in Trouble: . iiarly Bermuda aatUcrs calMi ...................... .__________________________ _________ the island chain Hrgtnols to al^|trces from lightning by turhi^|tmbedding it alx to eight feet|fnore than |400 million worth of Tree owners can protect their I mesh .^able, down the trunk andl Mlnnaaoto metal mints praduosd ■ an MOO million wort" -end other mineral their doae cennectioo with tha al4lhem into liviffg II_______ _ fairs o< the VlrgMa bolenr. lit is done by, extending popper>branch spread. Unions Need Membersi By NOBMAN WAUCEB and job sscurlty matters that •rr largely dealt decided on a saooaasful formula to handle it The AllrCIO leaders were due to wind IV their whiter sea ' today. They had a renewed hassle fact that tha an of tnamial labor la last dlsappsariag and that tha day has more highly skilled and leas sue-ceptiWe to becoming union bers. The labor leadepi are aware of ter of civil rights. Om wing el the ancutive oomi-cD gro^ la fanpatlant over con-thMil^ rnfllal barriers In some unteOB against Negroes. But the majority, led by AFL-ao President George Meany, contend that federation unions are making steady progress touerd. _ellminat' FRlTTER~GO^NE"^LDr* ’228 000 OVER INVENTORY SURPLUS STOCK The bad work comes from _ lack of successful organising. The federation’s unions have lost either their technique. or zeal or both in enlisting new members. These are the nasons behii a dacision made Monday by the Council, high command of the labor Uhloa fednatklB, to levy if special aasMsment on the organ-tzatkm's 12.5 million members. The spedal dose payment w be llaree dants- a month per met her on top of the tegular five cents a month dues payment. This makes a total of ew cents a ifhis change but as yet haven't ing racial segregation. Roberts Would Require Brackets for Safety Belts Thia is a tenvorsiy evodient to mset a financial crisis. ATL-CIO s in DseembsT thty sxpaet to propose, and get, s permanent two-cent hike in monthly per esp-ito duel. All this underlines the fact clearly shown teTha llMlsy winter meeting of AFLOO chiefs, nearing a close, that union la-‘ I main organUatkm is currently wobbly both In word and Pronouncements from the AFlr APPLIAHCE SALE For Foreign Cars, Too I THIS WEEK ONLY! I I I Sen. Farrell E. Hoborts, R-Oak. land County, raid he will Introduce a bill which would require all can sold in Michigan after Jan. 1, iMS to have brackets lor safety belts. Roberts itresasd that fills would alpo mssn foreign ears SI ' legialativo ,committee on motor aalety in New Ycrit, While he was a state reprsaetea-five, Roberts Introduced a bill in Juno 1968 designed to mahs It ' y for, all auteiBobUe urars in MlcUgsa after Jan. 1 of fills year to build the bradeeti. It paaood the Houso but fsUad In tho Sonate. The prepeoed bHl would be stmi* ilar to one offered bl New York by State Sen. Edward J. Speno. visitod Detroit a del(te»* 17-Inch SUM UNE TV With Dual Antnnng *97 Now FnittniN Mflii STEREO *127 RCA 21" COLOR TV ’358 19 Cii. Ft. FREEZER Jet Freese SbclWs, Roll-Out gasket. Lock In' Door ’236 60 I FAMOUS RCA VICTOR LOWBOY TV I tho eoapendlen of the tion from his state. Spam heads a Actual instaliatian of the' belte would be up to the mu' owner. Like Spem, Roberta believes in the statistics which show that daattw can bo reduced 80 per cent and sorious injuries 80 per ceid by using the seat belts. “Different methods of treating high-level radloacfive waric I ...................age i|i un been tested, and starags i|i uncle^ gro'jnd salt formafiom appeatlKte' ....................Eg aMutten, The MSU said using Michim's salt is still, an idea in the experimental atage, not yet a fact. He said ctenbination of poaitlvf | results from both laboratory and I field experiments would be needed < to determine whether the state ' would be used for storing the Reception Planned for Congress niiw teceptkm fta* members of fisTr - - ------- > STOi Congress on ’niesday, April II. The Pnsidfnt end Mrs. Ken- ne«hr have invited all the senators and representatives and their wives to a 10 p.m. to midnight reception at the White House. Tho flnw Is later than usual ealeadar by the Ebenhowera ia the last part af thrir ad- In past years, formal White at 9 p.m. White House Press Secretary Pieno Salinger said invitationa will >0 out from tha White Houee social office in the next few weeks to oil members of both Vioe Preeldcnt and Mrs. U«-don Johnson srs expseted > receivu tha guests with the Kennedy!, hs nU. Tha President, stoo has oc-ceptad an invitation to « dinner of the White House News Photog-raphera Association on May 19- t of Maho's SINVS tONGESTIOg TIIMACTmETS 'SLiamus: nimimMiBiMisl WAstesrafHdfaMM dhwpwnsiitelkiti . rursM&s"** DOWNTOWN ONLY THURSDAY WaOteSfiO 13% 01 DENIM SANFORIZED WESTERN JEANS Sturdy heavyweight 13% oz. striped denim . . . snug vv«»tem styling . . . perfect quality... sizes'4 to 12. • Supsr-SsusMvs "New Viate" Tuner • New Feil^Fictute Tube • Stereo Jack #ad AlIrRanfs • listers IteWlissr arcukt • Twu Speaker -------------------- *............ ■ • fun- ■edlWellte PM leund o New Hlpli-aein < 0*-OH, fte^let VeleiM Central • AN-A $182 1 Per Week FAMOUS RCA VICTOR PORTABLE TV TM TROUPiR Medtl 171-A-05 A fijfi_a.R^ 9 ▼••WwWW rIVivfV Only • BviHJn Ti • New High-Efficisney Cbinde • New ROl lang-Ronfs Twwr • RCA Security Staled Qrciiiti 30 Doy\ fichonge ■GENEROUS TRADE* FAST 24-HOUR ■ Cou.l.-ous Aifrr H (i^o MONMf DOWN r, TO FAY I If Not Folly Satisfied ■ AllOWANff | DfllVERY | the Sale Serviie _ qN ANV PUiUHASE Fratteris Ciriied Discemt Muhn Nm Bi| DWerence-frm it !• YuarteH • Service CemM Flnt Reimdlun tf Friw I FRETTER APPLIANCE MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER S. TELEGRAPH at SQUARE LAKE ROAD Open Doily 10 A.M. 'til 9 P.M. - FE 3-7051 - Sunrfoy 10 A M. 'HI 7 PJ^ o ALL FIRST QUALITY... ALL PRIC||), THIS LpW BECAUSE WE BOUGHT IN SUCH BIG/QUANTITIES • 100^ WOOL! popular BLENDS! 100% NYLON! 100% VISCOSE RAYON! • 9 0Y12! • 9 BY 15! • 12 SY 12! • FIGURE WHAT THESE WOULD ORDINARILY COST .AS WALL-TO-WALL BROADLOOM! Here are the solids I-tweeds 1 nubbieet you've been looking for! Hero arf siBes big enough' to give you that wali-to-waU look without YOUR costing you a small fortune Put them to every room... ettt them to suit /* your spacer Every one is first quality broa^oom in wonderful Idom- CHOICE tufted construction backed with long-wearing foam rubber ... latex TOMORROW » . . . double ju^e. And see the color!! But, act fast... we expect to be Stormed when w« ®P®n our doors! PENNEY’S MIRACLE MILE STORE Open Every Mondoy throvgll Sciturdey 10:00 A.M. To 9 PM. r I ^ KIGIIT TUK POXTIAC PRESS. WEPyESDAY. MARCH 1. mi ‘Needn’t Prove Injuries Against Each iOaklands GOP f\ ^ AII II* '* jBcfclcs Coupon, Can Sue All Drivers jn Cham Collision^storts program LANSING — Vkrtitns at moT- wamlBfiwMly afflnnA M l< tipl«-car (cddMits %{n henceforth re«ity ClrraM . CMUt have an easier tiiw*, recooering danuiges. thanks to ^ precedent-settii^ dedsion by the State So-preme Court. Though splittii^ sharply, the court ruled Tuesday that an accident victira may sue any or all the drivers who contribute to his in-; The pollry-makhig body o( the istate both made clalri, to real estate she owned. ^” . - "y'* i Th* remanded for further! tkf!^ia> tdee. ever the stale In rlahnlaf prop- iproceedhtga the suit brought by JT*"*----- •rty ewned by a weUarr redptaH Arietta X Grist against the Upjohn who died. Co. of Kalamazoo and four of its ^ w w employes. She sued them for JSO.- 000 after she was fired in 1967. accusing the employes of "destroying her good name.’’ The high court reversed an order lassistance as well. The county and di^ssing Upjohn as a defendant. Mrs. Rhoda Arm Goodwin Iboapitalized at the expense of the juries in a multiple-veWde A eoavsutlM la "taadamealal fatare pregsaas al the Father Confesses Previously, they w^erc rey maln^ Chairman Richard B. Russell. D-j g25,a0 damages from Bryie. ®*2*“*U^ n^wet “;ca.i of the Senate Armed Services !Virginia. Her body was found, Omdl Judge WUHam 4. Beer g i„ southern Vir-! ICommittee recommending restora-j Coaaly *»rolssed Igijua, wrapped *“* blanket a tattered boh of the raoik. Disappointed? Discouraged? Disgusted? , tf yaa h TV Petersburg Progress-Index Normon A. Rowe Hurt ___ tahlatt ar vHwadas, aad bava tboae af U. wile aad daughter oa jsakl ,oday g7a"ve of w uniden- ' '''V''“V 7’ .^n *,**?jt*** the groaad ihal Bryle's share ol tyi^ nttie ^rl in Prescott. Ariz . SeriQUSiy in Cat Crosh T the respoadbUlty rauM aat be mav Ic.id investigators to the first! NOW. MIM^t "*««• of the four missing children. A Bloomfield, ‘•^Jj****^, ^ ^ ^ ^ . _______________ Hills man is in crifical conditioni lITTIM braofbt tbaa tba gaad Justice Talbot Smith writmg the Beaumont Hospital with' rawHs tbay saarebad far. la tba majonty opinion hi the 5-3 deci- 0,600*Mn6 Airlift Fails ;multiple fractures received when! past 44 yaart, 0-Jlb-Wa bat Sov. Medical Worker »«roi a»di p— traffic chain collision is denied any recovery whatsoever/; The oth« driv-ers, ‘fie sattf^jjdxHild t escape liability tmause of the TOKTO (ITD—Uda Boyce, n-yrar-oM worker who wa* itrickea by a brhJa twwor trtlille she waa awv- ihifa tree on Lahaer Road just! raaiady aad taalc that attea | south of 12-Mile Road.. |, brlogt raialts that atbart aaly i Normdn A. Rowe. 48. of 1iiity'.. Ii«ht use. Coioitui canvas, vuiyi. 109” Camera, film, wink tight and cose. Nov4 baby's snapshot in 10 seconds. Novsfty coramic knick-knacks Animols, floral centor-i pieces, dolh. All colorful, fer «oom 'dressHip'. THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEONESDAY, MARCH 1, 1961 An Early Shower of Savings in Every department Thursday, Friday, Saturday! Just Say 'Charge It' 3 MY SALE OPEN EVEKY NIGHT TO 9 /AoikIo/ of the 24 divisionst. member of Unit 1. whicl|. i"-T^wa^ iS^^ W >«.r It was also the Mebest mark units. Center. WASHINGTON tUPIl-Crinie In the United States leaped liy 12 per rent ifi 19QD, acconding to the Jua-tlce Departinept. ral Plr^or J. Edgar Hoover said It'w iPhocking situation.” in riiiiip i. .Monaghan, vice presi- — dent, maaniarlaring stafl, Gen /iC6 ttHieTOeS In addition, the Pontiac division; •«* Moti»rs Carp., .who was anil p ^ coJlected IM per cent of its orig-, ‘^•™*aa. i lOTTl ^GClUSlOH ^ TnX'hr Photo Session ” chaiman Wilfred D. MacDonnell.l Carole Talks Today at Murder Trial ipresident of Great Lakes Steel PALM SPRINGS. Cslif. (UPD-Icbrp Former President Elsenhower ' ah'the money collected here wlU fm^rged briefly Tuesday from his ibe used to further the Pontiac ‘o *«■ Pictures IjA Business Onter. !*'••' •“^*1 Cross officials. 'It was the first time the fbriner LOS ANGOjES A WEUXIME-HOMK Hl»G - Marsha Barr. 2. te happy to have her baby brother Jimmy Jr., 9 months, home from the hospital, again. Mrs. James Henry ^rr of Cleveland, 20, has not told Marsha her baby brother is given only four to six months to live. He is a victim of cancer. relatiouft with the Castto regime, making that country the seventh of Latin America’s ?0 nations to , withdraw its diplo-from Havana. ered eatt-Caatro leafiets and I elty of Oardenea Monday ht. Rcridcnta ewigM picking wUh forced labor In Chiba’s cane tie Ids. On one side, the leaflets carried pictures of Russians putting wreaths on a Hungarian monument in 1953 alopgside pictures of Soviet tanks crushing the Hungarian revolt in 1956. On the other side was a picture of the Sovirt ambassador putting a wrdkth on a monument here .last year with a blank space beside it captioned ‘Havana,, 196-.’’ The program specifically can's for a wide range of publicity, le-search and industrial developmenf activities designed to promote Midiigan's economic devdopipent. Tbe commission also will c6n- Soviet wreaths or the funeral of liberty?" asked the headline. Reports from central Cubn snid Cnpt. Bernardo Arina, DIER (secret polire) chief Iff tffs Villas Province, was shot and killed Sunday while searching n farm-booM- near SaactI Spiritus (or s.vmpathisers of the antt rastro the Esesmbray In Havana, a member of Cns-o's militia was killed with his TO tommy gun by three suspects he had arrested in suburban Mari--Another tnilitiaman was wounded by gunmen firing from a car near Havana University. No one was arrested in any of the three sheetings. Adopt Blan\l to Sell J Michigan ^ DETRpiX (UPI) — A pfe^ram aimed at discouraging flmu from leaving Michigan and at attracting neyf Induitry to the state wm adopted Tuesday by the Michigan Eeonon^c Development Commis- present MleMgan In Its true perspective both within and outside Proposed research projects Include studies of what Industries best suited to Michigan, the state’s water transport and port potentials, and a system of reporting Industrial relocations. The publicity irfiaae of the program palls ior period^ reports to the governor on the progress of Michigan economy and a national information' service for news ma- dia. Local industrial development projects include coordination and asjiistance to lopal community efforts. ' Trains t6 Protect Canal BALBOA. C. Z. (UPD - Morg urn 3.000 troops and 150 aircroR om the United States and Latin America today began war games designed to prevent the capture ({ the Panama Canal "by CominUi nist-insplrcd ftggresaor forces." - VT W k< , \. .SAGIWW. Ii:»-7III Mli(. >. .SAtilww. ri:»-7iii CLOSED TODAY FOR INVENTORY WHILE THEY LAST THURS. and FRI. 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. OPEN THURSDAY tor WkC's Mightiest Inventory Sale of ODDMENTS! NO MONEY DOWN! Many Months To Pay AS LITTLE AS Fifty Cents on the Dollar txamplot in this ad. Did you ever move? Surprised, weren't yoa how mutii you had that you had forgotten... We found a 3-year-old vrrapped brand new 2 -pie(» Living Room Suite with rubber emshions ... we don't want it, (»me and get it for *58 . . . We discovered 25 room-size roll-ends of Broadloom Carpet from 9x12 to 12xl5-out they go, regardless, for *48 .. . Some odd bedroom piecos proved to be 3-piece Matched Suites—you can steal 'em for *58... We uncovered new 1958 Dinettes, price no object—*25-*34, or what you can afford... There was a 5-piece Sectional Living Room about a year old, just a little dirty—you take it for *148.80-^thers *168 and *188... The roof leaked on one comer of a 2-piece Sofa Bed Suite —doesn't show much — first one gets it for *84. All this plus 100 partially distressed Lamps, Chests, Dressers, Wardrobes, Kitchen Cabinets . . . and just 6 of our *24.00 Mattresses, a bit'dirty for *13.99 ! Read on for more surprises... we dusted off an unopened crate and found a sparkling, new Portable TV Set inside—you can have it for *89 if you come and pick it up.. ;. And what do you think was staring out of a dark comer—2 hew 23-inch movie-size Console TVs, take 'em away for *174... oh, yes, they're crated in beautiful m^ogany wood, too I . . . (Speaking of TV, how would you lik^to buy a 21" reconditioned TV for only *48?). .. Do you want a last year's model refrigerator?... Well, you're going to save as much as *170.00 on a Philco, Frigidaire or Admiral!... We found 2 new 13 ca ft. double-door Adthiral Refrigerators!. . . we'll deliver 'em for *2^!—and fiiey're automatic, too!... Think of this— 3 Columbus Gas Ranges, ^-indies | wide, compact and slightly maned for *68!. if you'd rather have electric—we've got2for *98 ! . . if wp told you it's real value, you'd hardly believe it iWere ashamed to tell you how many Speed Queen and Maytag Washers and Dryers we have left over. . . some are mis-mates, or bruised from floor traffic-but you can cart'em away for as little as half price!.. . How would you like a new Automatic Washer for only *118... or ,a new Wringer Washer for only *K . . . a mis-mate E^er for *118?... they're yours for the asking! ^ (Oh, yes, we've got famous-brand reconifitioned Washers for *38 . '. they're young, tender wadiers and work like new.. guaranteed? Yes!) —^ Treasures from ^Jewelry Department way back in the cupboartis we found 13 Decorated Melmac Dinnerware Sets— 45-pieces, service for 8!—you can have 'em for *17.88 a set—and we will even dust them off for you!. . . If you like to take home movies you can have a 1960 model Keystone Movie Outfit for only *68.00... projector, camera, saeen and appp^jories . . . | We're giving away 8 Elgin Watches we found under the showcase for *24.88... they're 17-jewel masterpiece—ladie' and gents' Mdsell-vrinding, too!. . . This one will kill us—4 Remington Portable Typewriters, complete with carrying cases, left over from ChristaaS, will go at *52.88... and 7 GE Steam and Dry Irons will go at *8.88! Remember, don't worry about money... . we'll make the terms exactly the way you want them! AT MK4. IO» \. S\C;iA\U. 11:1-7111 QQ «K«. 1091 A. S\4;iA\M. Royal. Oak's Plans for Mall Get Boost THh rUKHS. Wi^DkESDAY, MARCH h 1901 y KLKVKA LANUNO y ow Hlgb Court ‘nieidqr okand iwiy q iMjor konrifr,lo oile of fl.l ati- UOQ ii WWW Ml to flMDM (^onWmottWi of toM poili^ ■ md a liidocaped mill. w iw • . . nM «Wt tkO|( MHt bo MMMWa otof ai IM biato of boMflti Hwy wOl reooive, Prtmtiy. the yrMido half of the ooto icoorditiq jo tik vahto of each piece of proMlir. ao ft nrai Otooawd In llfiir Ud Itolf Moording to beai' «■ llto owBor Winds to noWt irhen the profact to oomptotod. ★ ♦ ★ Rep. WUUam Hayward, R-Royal Oak, who doubtoo ao Royal Oak mypt, said tho niltog will delay by tqo or throe monthi ptom to itart aewtnictton hy June L The pwjeet. he oaM. wW mhe Keni Oak the OiW eity .....................'med- to a Ike'devetopment will cover » square Mocks and will provldh n squaiw Mocks tH tm parking Ingo Eyes Rule as Tax Escape^ AAioy Clolm tlbiVal Pre^uioh' Status to Avoid Poying 1600,000 ■i: NEW YORK (AP)-^ ex.«rarid heavyweight champion Irigemar Jehanason angagad in a “Uberal professloor’ Johansson apparently thinks lO and indications today wara that > the rule to evotd , , . United Itatee more then a halt.milUon dedars in to Ibflfooil-M iftarlie,SiiffeR ibeasf Madder ! Uswhs estine or drmkini may be a aaires ot miW, but tanoyini bladder fStocM nighta, with nagging backuhe, iffditini or Auiciilar acbei and pains iiw to brsMScn^ nrain or ^ I Doan’s Tills act 3 ways for ip^ Uief. 1 - Ilwy hays a aootbini effect ^ H * --- Ja Madder kritstiont. 2 - A fait pi^ 1^ 'sShr kidney ________-----------« happy "'“f •illioas have eqjoiwd hO fears. Large, •coaemy size TsViili for about S.OOO cars, ^aifdng meters throughout the area wi be removed, Hayward' said. Plans call for a landscaped mall and shrubbery, trees, fBuMtalm, shelters and benches throAdtout tha am. The I _____ .. Tuesday took action to tie lip In' fo'e pime to Ms third title fight with rioyd Patterson in Mtoml ■each on March IS. Johanaaen's arfument to that be to a resident of Swltoerland snd to emplpyed as a huafneas agent for a Swiss corporation callad leanart, S. A. TAX EXEMPTf He says neither he nor Scan-art owes taxes because of a cov> enant between the United States Switzerland whWh provides tax exemption tor ineenw^produc' tog actMties not Involvliig peiv manent trade or business. AW * The Internal Revenue ; claims Johansson owes , the gov-eminent to peraonel to- come tex for his two title figMs with Patterson here in ISS# and 1960. ^n twin court suits T\ieBday, here and in Miami, the gavern- son from transferring any mon^ outside the country. Hearings are scheduled for March 2- in Miamti and March 7 here. Dramatic Role WiUBeTned by Dinah Shore HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Otosh tore will go dramatic for her March 26 NBC-TV show. Instead of her usual singing and dane^. Dinah end Ratob BeL tomy will enact Noel Coward’s “Brief. Encounter" for the full hour. Dinah, who has no English accent, said she would change tha locale of the stoly ftwn euburbsn ■ V ‘ i r ' Reported Eying Troop Increase Say JFK Will Request Hike In U-S.^Fprcei for .Small-Scale War WASHINN (AP)-Tlie Kennedy administration is rqwrted e«nsldoring taeoBunendtog to to U.8. military foroea eapable of .. .. . by . ■-Kay Lynn Hessler., Uk, Shouts back to her own way to a coi^ie of bleatiflg lamha being shown to her by Edgar Lang at the "food for Life" exhibit in Chicago. Rleon^ PewtII Return Drawl Ovation in Vegai VEQAI, Nav. AP) > ~ ' 41, once rated the GOP Denies Slowdown but Would Amend Bills ikytim daaoaie, reoolvad a standing ovntien Tuesday niaht when ska mtumsd to show busineas after an abaance of 14 ynera. A' A A On hand to applaud her revue at the Sahera Hotel were visit-iqg nawsman and scores of the-irleal Mends. Miss Powell, backed up by four ] ngsle dancers, tapped out'waits mnnben, fox trots, a Qamenco, marches and even a matador sequence. She made five costume changes from a wardrobe that s n^esman aald would cost ST5,-000 to replace. SmIc Doedoyo V«tt Hie 06th Infantry (DMuiaye) Di-vtaion Association is planning to hold its fourth reunion, and to seeking members of the dlvtokn jvho served during World War IL For-obtained orders from two mar memben are askad to ootv federal judges restraining Johans- tact Richard Klassen, Route f, Kankakee, 111. A fire claimed the life ol person in the United States every 40 minutes during 19S9. WASHlNGTCHf AP) - £ Styles Hridgw, R,N.H., said day Republicana are trying amwid—but not stall — Prcsldeirt Kennsdy'a New Frontier legisla-Uve program. Bridges, who beads the Senate Republicin Policy Oommittee, denied that in demanding additiontd and to engaging to lengthy qurstibning GOP tocm-bers are using ddaytog tactics against key Kennedy proposals. A A A 'All we art trying to do is correct aoraa basic sraaknesses in the legialation the Preakimt has proposed," he said in an inters law. Bridges d«tied specifically tha suggestion by Sen. Paul M. Doug, toa, D-IU., that by long questioning of wknessas on the admkiis-tiwon's depressad areas bill and by demanding that additional per- amendment into the depressed areas bill—one wWeh would bar the use of federal funds to lure industry from one section of the country to another, In the minimum wage field, he said the RepubUean objective is to make certain that small, loeal retailers are not included in legie-lation that will lift the preient $1 an hour minimum to a $1J6. tegiaUtion the Republieans were trying to slow down craigresstonal etton. Inetoad, Bridges said, ^he Republicans are working to get satisfactory "anti - pirating" other poeaible: new defease pro-poeals are to be made by' PrWi-dent Kennedy. 3EUEP KNOWN. Kennedy’s general belief that the United States naeNKSDAY. MARCH 1. mi iFord Average Weekly Pay in W at $126 Plus ■ DETROIT W — The'Fiord Motor Co. said Tuesday that average H-eeidy aimlw of its bouri)' rated rnn|>ki>‘es readied a /ecord S1J6 . last year. TMs was la addMaa to fih|ga Cs^. vire preaidewt iar pie- |J{gtj|ian M«n H«np«C^dMl > bu> Tlniy Don't Know It LONIXW (ITD - Two British leriW their Wei|tem stolen, but they give the otdi^ Just the same. The two women based tbdi claims on obaervationi made dur< Former Wanted, at Detroit House' next three yean. The company ttonwide payroU biUion. This was than in 1968 and 91306 bit said Us total na> in 1968 sras IlM 943 million higher second only to the ^on paid in 196T Sturgeon are n In some Russian a Arbitrate Fishing War Mis. ^y »)ut^ aw Min: lonDON Uh-A compnimtoe ha. Rosma Wlnslade, both rese«rch|j^j n, ^ to the ttohi,. panics, said Monday Soviet career ;*»tween Britain and Iceland, len lack the "hard aggressive-(Britain agreed to'accept the U-that is supppeed to duuac-lmile mtohing limit aroiiW the ie- roAlirGomiadgd CHATtANOOGA (luRj?^ During iuieral services for vdteran humane officer John Henry, who spent moot of his adult life helping neglected or abused Children, buiglus looted his home—taking the gold badge he wode 'tor M years with the Humane tional Society^ of Correction Farmiitg is not on^ ot tho actM-tlee usual]/ thought of in connac-tioo>with municipal government: but the city Detroit to currently expending consideraBle effort to hire a farmer, an ordiard farmer to be exact. ariaes from the need to find an o^ chard sopervtoor for the farm at, the' Detroit House of Correction. The farm, toeated near North-ilUe, Inctadea W acres ot cherry, peach, pear and apple orchards. rectlon of the orchard supervisor,, the poalHoa Detroit’s person^ recruiters are now irytiig to till. They are looking for someone at least 36 yean of age with ,the equivalent of a high school educa- tion and adequate 'eXpeiicnce in orchard operalloi]. * At>pliranU must pass a writterf and oral examination, and the man who to hired will receive an annual salary ranging from 19313 to 9968Q plus the City’s regular fringe bene-flu, ; Orchard men can obtain further information from the Detroit Civil Service Gommtoshm, 612 Cltyi County Building, Detroit 36. j ----------------------*: There are about W.000 motela in the United States. E l_ - HURON Easl’er is coining soon, shop ot Tel-Huron Center for the latest in fashion wear. 17 stores to serve your every need. Tel-Huron is open Monday -Thursdoy-Fridoy — Saturday'til 9 p. m. Free Parking.for Over 1000 Cars! TEL-HURON SPECIALS Plota Cuts SPARERIBS Lki COUNTRY STYLE S.tM-ta Mb. OH IMPORTED A $<100 SARDINES D- I iMBau SPECIAL m ■ P ■ . ■ > 2 Del Crest J | I INSTART COFFEE I ■ I 6 0z. 1O Oi.Sj|09 I Colifornio Novel ORANGES Dol diets Tumi Tima, torga Chunk Kraft Dinner TUNA Macaroni ^ ond Cheese 6Vi Oi. V/a Ox. ikg. 4'“89' 4i“ New Toxos CABBAGES BIG, BOLD PRINT Prints'wfcre never more b^u-tiful . . . colors rrvnre brilliant for Spring. This graceful Simplicity style with new wider sleeve . . . belling skirt, looks stunning in our dramatic fruit or flower prints. Come see our ' inspiring collections. Printed Solfeens, Sheers, Piques directly from Sunny Spike! Excitingly different-creose resistant, completely wQshoble! JeciM Sbetn $2.M yd Sedtoem Md Piques $4.91 yd. fram $149 yd. aad up SEW ’n SAVE Zr, TfL HURON SHOPPING CtNTER r Tel-Huron Store Only ! - CORDniOY SUITS wllh Rmnibis 5/ Veih Regiilor t39«> Now Colors: NofiiraL Olivo ond Block Rogulor ond Longs 36 to 46 'In Ivy^ Slylot A good looking and weoring suit suitoble for wear ^ytime of the year. Limited quonti^ so hurry to TEL-HURON STORE ONLY! - each MAN'S SUIT Pressed ond Dry Cloonod ot Our Regular Price of $1.50* Dry Utuneri end Shirt LsMmdtrsn Lecetioii»-^Tel-.HufOfi end 2S 1. I Clearance starts Hiursdoy 9:30 shorp! Shop eorly! Sovo! I aU occasion ^ dresses j j formerly $10.98 to $14.98 on thfir Twii Girls Bora Feb.'27th Toni Lym 4-lbs./13-on. Shorn Mario 6-lbs., 12-ozs. Grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Frod Gaff and Ji. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smith TWIN.SURANCE Rian for'which Mrs. Gaff registered at Kresge's paid aff in complete duplicate clothing purchased ot Kresge's. Attention expectant mothers, register now for our TWINSURANCE PLAN. For further information, visit Ti^l-Huron Kresge's store soon. "cmm/r M kresge’ mm dHOfS' formerly $14.98 to $19.98 Tremendous savings for juniors and misses! Save on dressy and casual s%Jes you want in wools and other fabrics in solids and prints! skirts .3a* formerly $5.98 to $14.98 dressmaker 4^^ tap«»«d pants formerly $3.98 to $7.98 Jumpinf-Jackg eoaw in fgdik>D-rifht gtyki to Attv«ryoocMioii.Aiiddunpiiig.JgckiooiMwItii ogduaiva “siiuf huf” bool and oxtra widths to aiM to At ovary diild. SHOEBOX TEL-HURON STORE OPEN Thurt., Fri^, Sot., Men. 'til 9 M. Tal-Haraa Sbapatol CaMar FE 4-0259 W H\K(,r \((01M 50%*®75% motoir coats b W- ■ V • i formerly $14.98 to $19.yS^ ^ r»10** if formerly $19.98 to $25.0Q shop to 9 paJTi. mondoy, ^ thursdqy, fridoy, Saturday TEL-HURON $HOfFING CENTER I THE PONTIAC PRESS ONECOUIR WfePNESDAY, MARCH 1. 1961 PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. THIRTKKN '‘'.A Tired of New TV, People Turn to, Art NEW YORK (UP»-The nation is having a boom in art which one gallery owner described as "like a wa(fb which hit us.” usiness is so good, quipped Martha Jadanm, "that we sometimes find we've sold a painting twice.” ~lrs. Jac^n cited three major reasons for the (Mdlec-''lion fever infecting a cross sec-tiodMilfthe country from the young thfkiineds to tt^ wealthy business e:' "Popular dons giving more space to contemporary artists,’’ she said. "The economy is such that many more prople can afford original art, and more leisure hours give thqm time to shop. "And, there comes a time when, we . must satisfy our aesthetic needs . , . People have been able to buy the cars and tdevision sets, but find they tied to be interested' in something beyond the mechanical and material. ^ novelty A|l of which is a healthy trendy, Mrs. - JacRson finds. "Shopping for art trains your taste in all walks of life," she said in an interview. "You will buy better loo>king clothes . . . select an architect for a more beautiful home.” rOR THE children "I think every home should have some original work or srorks for the children’s sake,” sne (‘ontinued, "Children brought up on art turn out to be better people.” Her advice to the beginning coHectOf: TJoh’f Select a painting strictly because you like it. "It may be a pretty scene, and still nof be worth anything as art,” she said. Do comb the reliable galleries. whose experts already have weeded out the bad. And don’t worry about whether the painting fits the living rootn decor. "The true collector pays no attention to where the pi& ture will be hung,” she safl, ”I once saw\a Gaugin hanging roopj.” / in a bathrootn All .miles are these auxiliary members of VFW 4156. Their plans are complete for a gala card party Saturday evening at 8 at their Union Lake Road quarters. Reviewing their list 6f table and door prizes are (from left) chairman Mrs. James Howley of Mil-ford.'president Mrs. Joseph Waring of Summit Street and cochairman Mrs. James Conway of Dan forth Street. ^ Degenerates Here, There, Everywhere Warn Your Child, Cries the FBI By GAY PAUJ:y Vn Women’s Editor NEW YORK (UPIjl - "lt seems unbelievable,” said a neighlxa' of 4-year-(dd Edith (Googie) Kierco-rius, "that on a day when nobody was working he could have walked down the street and in there with her and nobody notice.” Police on Sunday found the battered, sexually assaulted body of the bkmde tot in a rooming house on Manhattan's West Side. She had disappeared on Washington’s Birthday from'*the sidewalk in front of hei^home. Such crimes seem, as the neighbor, Mrs. Beatrice Bicke, had said, ’unbelievable.” Yet they happen-and the Uadc headlines tell the grim story of the children who are what New YotIc’s Police Commissioner Michael J. Murphy calls victims of the “vicious degenerate.” J. Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI, calls these criminals “human vultifres.” And their threat "hangs over Pvery community in our land,” Says Hoover, in a recent j jpublicatiqn called "The Menace of the Child Molesters.” At what rate they p Police authorities believe t type of crime will be reduced wiped out only as panhts and school authorities educate their children sufficiently to the dangers of association with strangers. the lesson of tumitig down rides by strangers, of refusing gifts such as candy. Of the need to bg home after dark unless with s«ne n ber of the family. The FBI said more than three million of the books had been distributed. The FBI began one suqh campaign four years ago with coloring books, distributed through elementary schools. The sketches taught New York Oily's PMice Depart- Gets Irked by Paper atTable By The EmUy Post Institute Q: Isn’t it bad manners to read a newspaper at table-, especially when dining out (h a resUurant? ily husband does this quite frequently and thinks It Is perfectly all rig^t so lon£ as there are no guests present. -, I think he is being very discourteous to me. Will you .please settle this question? A: If he were alone-at the table be could read his newspaper to his heart’s content but certainly not when you or anyone else is with him. Q: I have been invited to a kilver wedding anniversary party and intend to send a present. I would like to know if it is necessary to send something that both can use, or would it be proper to send aomething fee the wife’s own ' A; It la preferable to give them aomething for their hopse that both can use, but It is not improper to send something for thb wife’s own use. ■ Q: When a man telephones a young woman at her house and she is not at home, is it proper to- leave a message for her to call him when she comes in. or should he cali her again? A: He can leave a message ter ber to call him If he needs a definite .answer to somethlmi right away: otherwise he H)ould say ffiat he will call ber again and ask when she is expected. * Q; Because of my husband’s job we moved Into a com-,|Mely strange town about five months ago. S1d«:I that dime, not even one neighbor haa been over to viait us. I am terribly lonsaome as we are several hondred miles from hoHM and I don't kn-iw a soul here. Would it be permissibte for me to tidcp the fottlative and go and viait aanw of the neighbor or might they coarider A: It wiU really wiU nor he proper for you to visit these to cajme to see them. You might get to Unw them -by j(!iiiing ar working for charities or hy taking part kt other actlvltiea in aiMdi they safety in its "Pamphlet for Women," a pabHcallon of the public informaHon office. Called ’’Children Need Protection.” its message cannot be repeated too often to parents lytt drilled too thoroughly into childrrii. Remember, these things can happen to anyone.” said Sgt. John Mr. and Mis. Olivet V. Wright of Clarhston announce the engagement of her daughter SharonEvans of State Street to Floyd A. ”■ Menzies, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald 0. Menzies of Clarkston.A June wedding is planned. Cojlins of the polire department, Collins, who has thra youngsters ages 16, 11 and 8,* said' “safety begins at home.” The publication’s message: —Know the length of time it takes your child to walk to and from school and check if there is any delay in his or her arrival or return. —Know the safpst route to school, stow it to the child, and instruct him to ■If a child is to arrive home after dark, an^ge to meet him. -Know your child's playmates. —Instruct Hie child to report orattepiptoof SHARON EVANS or te^ acquainted. —Don’t let the child acc^ rides or gifts unless you know the who offers. —Train your child to report to jfou anywhere he is going. ‘ Visit the school and become acquainted with the teachers and ottor school officials, idid trtxsrt to them if yog see, or your child sere, any suspicious character Ranging around. Womens Section Let ’Em Be, Says Abby: His Need Is HER Need By ABIGAIL VAN BtTKEN DEAR ABBY: What do you think of/a sou, age<74, who is atm biunming a living off his mbtherj who is 92? This poor old woman gets n little income from a rooming house. She has wofked hard all her Her 74-year-u 1 d "baby" hasn’t done a Ud( of woric in 40 years, but be is her only child and can do no wrong in her eyes. . We sire trying to gdi her to put a little something away in daw liw geto too old -to work, but she can’t do itfWlth a laay. ABBY __________ off her. ^ get her to throw him «d? SHIRTTAIL RELATIVE DEAR SHIRTTAIL: You can’^ so don’t try. True, hd if. a lasy, shiftless, free-loading lout, but he needs someone to work for him, and apparently his mother needs aoiiwone to work for. Maybe that's the reaaod she's sUll going strong at 92! DEAR ABBY: A buddy of mine asked me to take out his sister. So I did. She is a very plain girt who is built straight up and down and is nothing to look at. She has a very q^ personality—imdl you get'her alone. To make k kmg story Htort, she is the fastest thing I've ever dated. She made all sorts of advances to me and asked to kiss her. ShC even'toW would be naham«fto^ iSy buddy (and he is a wnf guy) keeps^nting to me how much his fister liked me. I feel like a heel because I don’t Intend to take her out again. Does a guy tell his buddy the truth about his sister or does he keep his^ mouth shut? -r '’FEELS LIKE A HEEL ” -DEAR “FEELS”: He keeps his mouth shut: Just because a girl ia buil^ straight and narrow doesn’t mean she be-havre that way, but hi tto 'instance it’s not your proUem. DEAR ABBY: My husband fhiidck that when a person says, '‘Cbme over Sometime,” it is a real invitatian and be is all set to go. I say when someone calls up aiftl asks yoii for a certain day and time, THAT it an invHation. Who ia right? ^ ■ ' A FAN i t>EAR FAN; Y«t are. with Lanazur absorbs in seconds,.. protects for hours! Never before a hand cream like fragrant, fluffy, heavenly-blue Dream Touch I It looks different ... is different... and fast-acfing LANAZUR makes the difference! This esdusive-new ingredient helps Dream Touch penetrate deep, deep to soothe, soften and moisturize your skin — instantly ! Only ap invisible, completely greaseless veil of protection remains to lovingly shield your hands from water, wind and ' ' weather — for hours on end I Money-back guaranteed-if you’re not convinced new blue Dream Touch with LANAZUR is the loveliest, most effective hand cream you’ve ever used I Only 33^, 59^ and 98<. DREAm TOUCH.. . from'the makers of famous Jergens Lotion , - i ...A: ■V-^' '-V-'- THB PONTIAC PRESS, TODtfESDAY, MARCH 1, W1 Final/Winter Qearance It CAN Be Done Pull YoureelH)uPof-T Save on AU . . . Men\ Women’s, Children’s Winter Merchandise!' By MMOEPBINB LOWMAM I am giviu a lew. daya tUa edc tQ tneA. God lOeM then! loal of thtra mrit under pre»> aura. The pace la buitnaai and many ol •» profeaatons is not leisunly, and the coonetltkn la reat Ahotd «n»4hlrd el all of the naacrtpOons written art for tian-nidiaen. Men uae them nuch nra than women do. Of oourae it la eaater aaid than dona—foUowteg tha advice which the aatparta hand out to ua. BVr II i» paaMHa it eftaat* haa aerious potentialitiea, ha con-duets Ua life In aucfa a way aa to aurvive. The aad fact in if he OP ALL Winter Merchandise! Nothing Held Back Women’s—Skirts, Sweaters, Dreises, Purses, Jewelry, etc. Men’s—Slacks, Jackets, Sweaters, Shirts, etc. Children’s—SnowsoJts, Dresses Suits, etc. SALE STARTS THURSDAY AT 10 AJd. / HOURS: Daily 10 til 8 bt **trapp9^ by tki §am of §olf. If you a nag *** " **"**** ** diorocter, find another in- had ’done eo before he was sc^ terest. Onco you know that you cannot afford to in- into it, his present trouble might dulgo in temper^ a whole new world of living opene I ^ yott will laet a lot longer^________________________ Men are under terrifle pemaure becauae Of their feeling of raapon-sibility for the welfare of FrU Sat* > 10 ’tu 9 OPEN SUN. 10:30 ’til 2:80 R&M store 1555 Union Lak# Rd. Union Lake Village EM 3-3912 . . e you know ttiat yon eannot afford to indidfo in tamper , mat you muet lean to take whole new tmfd of vifamnt I opau up, and you wUllaat a lot You are advieed atraaBly to de-riop at hiaal om hobby which ia intaraattog and atlmutatiiii to you and which haa nothing to da '' )*on art advtoed to dawalop a Mae of humor. You are not a aandidate tor a credr^m if you have a amae of humeral Yao an aivtead to i eC OnU *ifa^‘' If you are to a Ui^iy . five career and do not have the for 1 Dyed to ^Match SWEATER DRESS Ensemble Sparkte'Sprlnkto trim and romantic gkr* ootare form a ' 1 oooaplraey to make thaee the moet verwtile ■ of yoUr spring tote auauner wardrobe. Rteh ^ rayoD memhs. under dyed to match orton j eardltima. Both to mitem* and half -n A. Buttorny-Ulao. Brige, Blue. Gray. ■ X i. Cirele-Blue. tillae. , Join Us In A Cup of Ckiffee — A Purchase la Not Necessary CAPLAN^S, 24 E. HURON, PONTUC I I NAME ......ADDEB88 ..........|- CITY ............,v.i...................STATE ........................ | he^ state am«>d eho^. la Mlch^ add ^ »a«. Can Collect MB. No Charge for Dritvary In Mich. □ C.OJ). o Cheek Membei Bowntown PARK and SHOP . FB 34159 FREE DELIVERY a ^Pootiae Hold Stork Shower for PontibirWoman iba. Laalar Morrow waa guaat -f-honorat a W«k ahower Thui* Ww to tha Chadw^ Drive homo Mn. Bohan C Borne. Co-BOS Ufss Mn. lYudarick 0. Rtohsid Hanks, Mn. Bichard Jonas, Mn. htotteid Lundgnm, be dme U a | wanli to efeaige ar i Win MastErpoint mm tabtae wan to pisy Bat-urday enntog for Pontlao Banna> yfUr DopUoaw Bridge Club’s Mas-tarpotot QSnw at Hotel WaUra«. ' Wtonan were Karl Waterman sad J. F. MeUan, Dr. and Mrf. Ranld W. Bamm, Mr. and Mn. - pBUin Edwin V. Ctorite and y 0. Hadan, Mn. SamtMi . jaas and Fnd MpmaiaroUi, Nsnoy Rumpal and Edward laa-tondar, Mr. and Mn. David Utley, * Dr. and Mrs. Edward CoUtos. IIICI I* laiinaiyPitead RCA Vlater Celw TaUa tV t atwM Mte tall $49500 Im tiMla STEPANSKI TV list W. Hama It. n 2-SMT i They de ate feel that Mlf eaa taMge to Hw aadefr ««Ma af aim to laaa « baaawaa Dull, Unhappy Son Bred by Mismatch By BVIM Mnum ■alerpetei Ai itli« latter 1 wed(’a mailbag: My father ia a rip^oartog, bril-nt bostoeaa executive who is crodfytog me becauae I aUe to foUow his royal : through his tough coDege majOT and into his business world, which is rough even for an old salt like > al golf I If overweight is endangering your Ule, why not ioae those extra pounds? It you would like to have my Tubby Hubby Reducing Diet " *i givea you a kMs of firom _____i to it pounds in 12 days’ time, send Ui cents and stamped, aelf.«ddre8aed envelopa with your St for it to me to care of this new^tePer. Treat Spots Swiftly (UPI) — Remove apote on walls _l they appear. For pencil marks and Hght smudtes on paper walls, art gum. Crayon marks can be ngad lightiy with cleaning fluid a soft cloth. Tmnotioli«toliARBYhar. Fm He was a successful young ty-n who married a ‘pretty bit 61 Jt becaum her childlike pral-Ue relaxed add entertained Mm. Her innocent, fittle girl chatter appealed to his puucuilnity. They have gotten ak^ without arguments beemise she can’t bSst him to an argument and ao always from Hi msOwr lastoai af Ms Hat it I dared remind him of Uds „t would floor all six feet of me for being disrespectful oSher. '*1 wouldn't be writing this to you if this were Just my problem (betog the dlaappdntlng son of an totelligmit, sueceaaful father), but I look around me and see fliat the same kind of thing ia f to happen avtt and over. iriFLAYnsiNo •"nie moto inteHigeiit ef St the uMvwraUy I am about to flurik out of date the of these beautifiil but din^ dolls ukes them fed lilM tatdlBetuals. When I pdnt out what life would be like with a dumb wtfa they say: may ga marry toeaa gMi ad thee before a year Is ap they "They et. Wan Thg Officlol Watch of th« eXyntpio Gomwa OMEGA haven’t aetn anything yet. Walt until they tiy to educate the eons who happen to get their brains from their mothers! Then they will be yelling. f "If I can I bitend to marry a girt with some bratos and Ixme that my sons WILL take after their mother. Then maybe my faflier one of ^ aons to fill Fm not bright enough to fin. And I expect Fll have a better marriage, too. I certabdy won’t be bored to deadi. ’nVhy don’t pari sprite aMM-toh« about tbte dhmilMt WlMm •ver tt la mihtliaifl, tho aafy print made to tiMt an latoMgMri Bum won’t lM« ba aatWted with a Mfd-bfala far a wife. "What to nevtr pointed out fa tha plight of the poor sons who dtaappoint thrir totriUgent fathan because they got their brains from their beautiful but not-so-hright mothers. "Briieve me, it iaa’t any fun to be such a diaappointment to one’a SCamtuAti To Bi appolBted oOdal dmepiece of tea Oiyrapia h both aa haaor aad a lamteHihility. Naaily astiy atejor tlBte record, ioclnding the biitory-msldnf l:SM milo-iua by Banaister, has beca BManiad by Om^ Yku esa ttml Am mes dM Olympics to ae- mts in yoar life. We recoounead this Tests havje shown that automobile tires wear out twice as fast when a car is driven 10 mfles 1 when it fa driven dO REDMOND’S iowriofs - II N, gagtamw gtraet Homemade Candies 857 West Huron St. Try a box of Crocker's Candy today, .......it's Quality Best! COMFORTABLE CASUALS Delidoualy oomfort-fiblB f ishipn that IbIm to your foot naturally. Caaual. in guch a smart way. BY NATURAL BRIDGI OPtN MON. aiHl rRI. NIGHTS TIL 9 •‘Skot$ M Ike Sntirf Fonilr”' 20 wm H.i«i ». —r: n 2-lilf STAPP'S The Easter Shoe Store for Young Folks . "Beware the Ides of March" EASTER COMES EARLY! PaW Block Patent Swing Strop FAILLE TRIMMED PUMP Shiner hiack patent loo for Catter finar afoot. Ivery ftffia lady wsMi « ItaastH-IX B-l ........$1.10 lisss 1SH-I. t-0 ...... r $l.$9 lisss eVk-1. AA-0.......$•.•9 SisssijiA^a, $ widths B-D Sasa dH-l, 8” STAPP'S Yg«! Wf poy for ycBir paAifig, but ridi or parking fe#. JUVENILE B0OTER1E 28 E. Lnwianes St« Downtown ^ , (Open PH. and . Men. to 91 FAMILY SHOE STORE 92$ W. Hurm at Triagraph iOpan frt. and4at M 9) T^c t(^l THE PONTIAC PRBSS, WRDXKSDAY. jlARCH 1. 1961- an BaH to'Bfenefit Children Memberi o( the Wotnen’i Dlvl-«lon ot the Greater Detroit Chapter of the Michigan Association for Ernotl«\ally DisturUed Children met yestet^y to hear a panel discussion on mentally ill children, and announce plans for a fund-raising invitational ball. * * h Mrs. Roy A. Fruehauf, of Middle Belt Road, West Bloomfield Township, president, introduced t^e panel which was made up of Dr. William C. Morse, professor of Elduca-tional Psychology at the University of Michigan; Dr. Ralph Rabino-vltch, Director of Hawthorn Center, at NorthviHe; Dr. Stewart Finch, director of Children's Psychiatric Hospital, University of Michigan, and Dr. Douglas A. Sargent, psychiatric director. Clinic for Child Study, >Vayne County Juvenile Court ★ W A Members of the women’s division will raise funds by selling ads in a program for the Carousel Ball to.be held June 3 at the SSieraton Cadillac Hotclj To be featured are Guy Lombardo, his tfehd, Sam Lev-enspn and Allan Jones. Wiliiain J. Scripps of Bepnington Drive, Bloomfield Hills, Ls chairman of the project evaluati