Northern Sinks Waterford—See Gridiron Green / The Weather Full V. S. WMllMr Buruu Rtpsrt Rain, Cooler THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 125 — NO. 215 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1967 —44 PAGES gNiTBo“lgiss?N°TESioNAL 10c Ford-UAW Talks Yield 2 Proposals DETROIT (JPl — Negotiators for the strikebound Ford Motor Co. and the United Auto Workers union had two new contract proposals on the bargaining table today, the first solid sign of possible accord in three months of talks. ★ ★ ★ The proposals, one by Ford and a counterproposal by the union, were announced Friday night in terse statements after negotiators emerged from their selfimposed news blackout. Then the two sides withdrew into the blackout again. Neither side would elaborate about either proposal, but late night talks recessed with bargainers seeming cheerful and as untalkative as at any Hm^ since the blackout was imposed at 9 p.m. Tuesday. New negotiations wer^ set for later today, with UAW President Walter P. Reuther and Ford’s top bargainers considering the new situation, although no one would say whether there will be any face-to-face meetings. The proposals also were the first im- N, Viefs Repelled After Furious Battle SAIGON (AP) —- The battered U.S.' Marine outpost at Con Thien was hit by a mistaken bombing from an American plane late Friday, killing two Marines and wounding 21, the U.S. command in Saigon disclosed. SAIGON no — The war just below the demilitarized zone mounted furiously today as U.S. Marine infantrymen, artillery and planes beat off an attempt by 500 North Vietnamese regulars to storm the perimeter of a Leatherneck base. After nearly three weeks of only minor attacks, the Communists around the DMZ battered the outpost of Con Thien yesterday with almost 400 artillery, shells. Early today, after another 130-roiind mortar barrage, the North Vietnamese attacked a Marine battalion’s position south of Con Thien, using tear gas and advancing behind smoke grenades. Torch Lightings Will Open Drive The simultaneous lighting of torches at City Hall and the PonUac Mall Monday night will launch the 1967 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign. This year’s goal-$l,130,000-is nearly $100,000 higher than in 1966. The 12-foot torches, designed and built by Consumers Power, will be ignited at 7:30 p.m. after a countdown via Red Cross mobile radios to coordinate the ceremony. Frederick Poole, chairman of the drive, and Bruce Annett, president of the Pontiac area United Fund, will be the torch lighters. * * * The public is invited to attend the dual ceremony, which officially opens the 1967 drive, at both locations. The campaign will run through Nov. 10. For the next three hours the battle raged a mile below Con Thien, with American flare ships overhead to light the battlefield and spray the Communist jump-off points with fiery Gatling gun rounds. ■* * * It is rare for the North Vietnamese to use tear gas or smoke grenades, and this was evidently a well-equipped unit. At dawn it broke off the fight and slipped off to the southwest, with the Marines trying- to get in ahead of it. Initial battle reports did not give enemy losses. The U.S.. Conunand said 21 Marines were killed, and 20 wounded were taken out by helicopter, with others who were lightly wounded remaining at their posts. In the Red shell-fire yesterday against Con Thien, three Marines were killed and 15 were wounded. The Red attack emphasized that the recent slackening in Communist pressure on the Marines was only a temporary respite and not an end to the threat to the forward posts guarding the most direct route to South Vietnam’s five northern provinces. * * * In the northern air war, American pilots flew, 154 missions yesterday through heavy antiaircraft fire, barrages of surface-to-air missiles and harassment from red MIGs. The U.S, pilots bombed MIG fields at Kep, Hoa Lac and Kien An, all inside the heavily defended Hanoi-Haiphong defense zone. The U.S. Command announced the loss of an Air Force F4 Phantom jet yesterday, with the two-man crew missing. It was the 698th announced U.S. combat loss over the North. In Today's ^ Press Yom Kippur Peace of Holy Day marred by new fighting between Israel I and Jordan — PAGE A-9. Dead Sea Scrolls Expert raps remarks about ^ Christianity and drug-taking f cult -r PA^E A-15. f Romney Ineligible for presidency, says | Constitutional expert — PAGE | C-7. Astrology ................ C4 Bridge C-6 Church News ........A-11—A-13 Crossword Puzzle .....;...C-15 Comics .....................C4 ^horials ................; A-4 Hoihe Section .........C-1-C4 Markets ................. C-8 Ohitnaries ............... A-8 Si^s .................. B-1-B4 Tlieaters ... . .,........C-7 TV-Radio Programs .......:C-15 Wilson, Earl ............ C-15 Women’s Page ............ A-M ............... ' ' Damp Weekend Is in Store for Area It looks, like Pontiac area residents are in fdr a wet weekend. The U.S. Weather Bureau reports the following day by day forecast: TODAY — Sunny and a little warnier, high 65. Partly cloudy tonight, low 47. Winds southwesterly 5 to 15 miles today and tonight. TOMORROW—Cloudy with rain likely and a little cooler. MONDAY — Partly cloudy and cooler. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are; Five today, 20 tonight, and 50 tomorrow. The thermometer recorded a low of 51 prior to 8 a.m. By 1 p.m. the mercury had moved up to 57. For the next five days temperatures are expected to average new the normal high of 61 to 65 and normal low of 39 to 44. Showers are expected to total one half to one inch today through Tuesday. portant movement in negotiations since Sept. 6, when the old three-year contract ended and 160,000 Ford workers began the strike, now fifth longest in auto industry history. PATTERN-SETTING PACT Similar pacts also expired at General Motors and Chcysler, but the UAW named Ford as target for what it hopes will be a pattern-setting agreement and continued to work, without a formal contract, at GM and Chrysler. Not since Aug. 29, when it made its only other contract proposal, had Ford made a formal offer on anything significant. Ford’s original contract proposal offered an immediate wage increase of 13 cents an hour, plus 2.8 per cent increases in the following'two years, plus an additional wage increase to be negotiated for skilled tradesmen. ★ ★ ★ The average hourly straight time wage in the auto industry is $3.41. OFFER INADEQUATE The UAW rejected Ford’s first contract offer, calling it inadequate. In its Friday night statement, the UAW said Ford’s second proposal represented “some movement and progress’’ but “does not provide Ford workers and their families the measure of equity to which they are entitled.” The Ford statement said only that its offer was made “in an effort to move these negotiations toward a successful conclusion.” ★ ★ ★ When the strike began, bargainers said not one item bad been agreed upon in the contract talks, and, as recently as this week, sources said the only progress being made was in the relatively minor area of apprenticeship programs. Court Studies Probe Request CONDUCTING A TIRADE—Cuban Foreign Minister Paul ap wirwowio Roa uses the gestures of an orchestra conductor in giving a Latin America” as he speaks in the United Nations General tirade against “U.S. economic exploitation and imperialism in Assembly in New York yesterday. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- May Affect Romney's '68 Bid Open Housing Battle Looms DETROIT (iPI - The State Court of Appeals agreed yesterday to accept a petition seeking an investigation of the .State Highway Department, but revealed no details of the document pending a Supreme Court ruling on the appelate court’s authority to conduct a one-man grand jury. TTie unanimous decision by the appelate court, sitting with all nine judges for the first time, means only that the court has agreed to review the petition. Any decision on empaneling a grand juror would be made later. Gov. George Romney and Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley requested the probe. The court suppressed all papers filed in the case. The papers were locked in a safe deposit box in a Detroit bank. ★ ★ * “The court has not gone into the merits of the petition nor seen the substance of the petition,” said chief Judge T. John Lesinski. “The court is addressing itself to jurisdiction — to its authority to appoint a one-man grand juror. There is feeling both ways on our court!” NO PRECEDENT If the Supreme Court rules the appelate court may empanel a grand juror from among its own ranks, it would mark the first time in Michigan history such an investigation was conducted. ★ ★ * Previous grand jurors have been selected at the circuit court level, but Romney and Kelley chose to go to the appeals court rather than to the Ingham (Lansing) County Circuit Court because the allegations involved concern a state agency and cover several counties. LANSING (AP) - Gov. George Romney today stood pledged to campaign for statewide open occupancy legislation, despite predictions of a long battle which could affect the governor’s unannounced bid for the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. * * ★ Romney added the question of open housing, as well as tenants’ rights and housing code enforcement, to the agenda ' for the current special legislative session. The governor planned to be out of state all next week, attending a National Governors’ Conference held on a cruise ship sailing from New York to the Virgin Islands. “I expect to see us get it at this session,” the governor told a news conference yesterday. "If we don’t, it’ll be right back at the next session. We’ve got to get it before the snow’s off the ground — and the sooner the better.” OUTLINED PROPOSALS In his open housing message to the Legislature, Romney outlined specific housing proposals and at the same time called for more effective and complete work by government “to secure the public safety whether an individual criminal act is involved or a wholesale riot.” “We must attack the full causes of our slums and ghettos which in turn breed joblessness, lawlessness and poverty,” Romney said. “To help accomplish this government and tenants alike require more effective remedies to violations of basic housing standards.” Romney previously had maintained Michigan’s Constitution provided for open housing enforcement through the State Civil Rights Commission. 'Police Problems Ignored' A Republican state senator from Oakland County has criticized Gov. Romney for not asking the special session of the Legislature to give top priority to the pressing problems of law enforcement. ★ * ★ Sen. L. Harvey Lodge of Waterford Township yesterday made public, during a speaking engagement in Pontiac, a letter demanding that the governor re- SEN. LODGE Area Kidnap Suspect Jailed vise the legislative agenda to include topics concerning the public’s safety. Lodge, addressing members of the Pontiac Exchange Club, said he had been contacted by the governor about the letter, but that he has received no formal reply. “A large segment of citizenry in the suburban and rural areas has lost confidence in your Administration and is disturbed by the direction of some suggested legislation,” Lodge wrote. ★ ★ * “The main concern of the people is their safety on the street and in their home, and this should have been the prime direction of your special session, together with the new court system,” he added. ★ * ★ Lodge said that it is the Negroes who need the most protection because their areas “have been infiltrated with vice, prostitutiqn, gambling and illegal afterhour establishments. “They are in dire fear of reprisal from what are called militant groups who aspire to obtain their objectives through arson, fear, murder and vandalism,” said Lodge. Because of what Lodge terms Romney’s “failure” to recognize what the ordinary citizen thinks and fears. Lodge said the governor is faced with a complete revolt of the Legislature toward his recommended programs. A Detroit man accused of 1 a 19-year-old girl in Oakland County last August and driving her to Bowling Green, Ohio, was arrested in Texas late yesterday. Paul A. Stoddard, special agent in charge of the Detroit area division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation an-' nouocedk the arrest of Frank M. Patterson, 40, in LaTuna. He said Patterson was taken into ens-' /■/. .■ ■ ^ tody by FBI agents on a warrant charging him with nnlawfnlly and willfully transporting in Interstate commerce Diane C. Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Brown of 1970 North-over, Bloomfield Township, Ang. 19. Miss Brown, according to police, was stopped on 1-75 as she drove home from the Oakland Mall in TYoy where she worked during the summer. Patterson, who was employed by a > tv- , ■ Detroit private detective agency, allegedly got in her car under the guise of placing her under arrest. He then drove her to Bowling Green, police said, where she managed to escape unharm^ at a roadside restaurant, w ★ ★ He reportedly fled in her car. An FBI spokesman said Patterson is in custody in the El Paso, Tex., County Jail in lieu 6f $25,000 bond. Bricks Hit Bus; 17 Hurt DETROIT (AP) — Seventeen persons were injured when three bricks thrown from an 1-75 overpass shattered the the windshield of a Greyhound bus and sent the vehicle careening into a wooded area south of Detroit shortly before midnight last night. Four of the injured were admitted to suburban Seaway Hospital. They included the driver, Fred Cooper of Lincoln Park, who was reported critically hurt. Fair housing advocates in turn accused Romney of shying away from the controversial topic because of national political ambitions. DENIES REPERCUSSIONS Asked yesterday if he feared national political repercussions, Romney said, “No, I don’t.” The governor noted in his message to the Legislature that pending court challenges of the commission’s authority have left “nagging doubts as to the true nature of the fulfillment of human rights in our state.” Romney’s proposals, for which he said he had “general support” of legislative leaders, closely followed those of the ‘ New Detroit Committee, formed to help rebuild Detroit in the aftermath of the July riots. ★ * * Proposed legislation would empower the Civil Rights Commission to impose fines on commercial and private owners who discriminate in the sale or rental of property. EXEMPTIONS Exempted would be owners of “tight living” dwellings — one-family homes in which a room was rented or one half of a duplex. Romney also would exempt the private home owner “who does not in any way offer his home for public sale.” Included in Romney’s message were proposals to: • Revoke or suspend licenses of brokers who discriminate. • Empower local governments to create agencies with powers identical to those of the State Civil Rights Commission. ¥ Give tenants the right to bring suit to enforce provisions of housing codes. • Require registration of every owner or person with a financial interest in a dwelling offered for rent. * ★ ★ ' • Grant the state power to secure full compliance with minimum standards if the local agency is either unwilling or unable to proceed effectively. • Protect tenants against retaliation for complaints of violations. 25 Gills Brought Fast P-|!eezer Sale “Really wonderful results from our Press Want Ad and. so fast” Mrs. R. R. AMANA FREEZER, KVVPTv right, uxcullunt condWIwi._ PRESS WANT JtDS Don’t ever “freeze” prospects for what you have to sell but “beat” them up for fact action and quick profit. Put one to work. Edal 332-8181 or 334-4981 / A—2 THE PONTIAC fheSS. SATURDAY, OCTOBER U, 1967 End Wildcat Strike, AMC Asks Reuther : DiETROIT Hauler Talks Resume PITTSBURGH (AP) - A multistate mediatiim panel is re-u r n i n g to Pittsburgh to try again , to end the violmt steel haulers strike. Standing in the way of a settlement to the two-month-long rebellion is a dispute over how l(»ig drivers must spend at loading docks in steel mills before tiiey start getting paid. Governor’s representatives from seven states recom-{ mended a two-hour period in a settlement plan drafted Tuesday. Some trudking firms said, ‘It’s four or nothing.” Gov. Raymond P. Shafer of Pennsylvania called the panel back to Pittsburgh to seek a compromise. Woman's Body Found HOUGHTON LAKE (UPI) -Police today found a body in a wooded area near here, and were investigating the possibility that the woman had been murdered. The woman, Mrs. Bernita A r n s k a, 48, of Lansing, was found shot to death, Houston Lake State PMice said. Police said lUfrs. Aruska had left her home to go squirrel hunting yesterday. Her husband reported her missing when she did not return. Cavanagh Talk Set Oct. 25 BIRMINGHAM - DtetrMt’s Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh will speak before the ‘ ‘ Juniw League Oct. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Little ’Theater of Seaholm H|gh School on “Major Problems of the. Metropolitan Complex.” This is to be one of the few public speeches the mayor has the Detroit riots laat said Junior . league Public Relations Chairmim Mrs: Jerry Sutter. She added thpt the mayor’s topic is also th League’s tiieme for the year. LBJ Aide Denies Security Rejection WASHINGTON (AP) - Walt W. Rostow, special assistant to President Johnson, denies assertions he was three times rejected for security clearance during President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s administration. A brief filed in a Ovil Service case at the State D^artment makes the charges. It was filed with a department hearings officer last month on behalf of Otto F. Otepka, who is fighting dis-' as the department’s chief security evaluations offi- Detroit Negro Gets No. 3 Police Post DETROIT tfl - A Negro Friday became the third-highest police offtcial in Detroit’s Police Department. Stanley C. Rich, 47, was named second deputy commissioner by Police Ctomr ' Ray Girardin. was actually the former top aide of Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro, and whether he was murdered after his capture stead of fatally wounded Defense Takes Stand MERIDIAN, Miss. (APj-The defense is calling the bulk of its ' ' in an attempt Rich will direct police business activities, a role not directly related to on-the-street law enforcement activities. He will, however, supervise all civilian employes of the de-) and be responsible matters as the return of conflscated or strien property to the owners. Waterford Is Expected to Let Overpass Contract The Watetfod Township Board is expected to award a contract for construction of a pedestrian overpass at its 7:30 meeting Monday night. Two firms submitted proposals at last Monday’s bid' opening for the Pontiac Lake Road-Elira structure. and Thomas Contracting Co. with a quotation of $15,791. The other |fr«|NMal totaled $22,iM. Tie overpass will serve pupils aftmdfaig^Uggett School, 3621 * * * In oOier business, the board will consider separate proposals from paoprietors of four bowling —Mtstaumts for special li-« to serve alcriwlic bev-6|^goo on allay concourses. >- The licenses an for the Huron Bowl beth Lake; the 360 Bowl, 100 S. Lanes, 4825 130 S. Cent Lake; Airway Lan M89; and Savoy Lanes, Telegraph. Also up for board action are four rezonlng requests. The proposed zoning changes are from: ilr Single - family residential (RIB) to multiple dwelling (G2) iroperty on Vooriieiis Just south of M50 for 41 apartment units. ^^e - family residential (RIA) to R2 property at 3820 Pontiac Lake for apartinents. • RIA to small farm (AG2) Argentina Probes Death LA PAZ, BoUvia (AP) -fact-finding commission fro Ernesto (Che) Guevara’s native Argentina has arrived in Bolivia seeking clarification of the growing confusion over reports of the guerrilla leader’s death in a battle with army units this week. One Bolivian official said the commission has asked to study the dead man’s diary and fingerprints and may inspect a finger Which President Rene Barrientos said was removed from the body. A welter of conflicting reports since the announcement of ~ vara’s death has raised two Whether man killed in No Garrison Case Planned -Justice Dept CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va, ») - U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark was quoted as saying here Friday night be “might have to prosecute Jim Garrison,” the coitroversial district attwney of New Orleans. However, a spricesman for the Justice Department in Washington said the department has no plans for bringing a case against Garrison at this time. *. w * The spokesman further denied that Clark had accused Garrison of ruining prominent New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw. Shaw is one of several persons Garrism i« prosecuting for alleged participation in a 1963 conspiracy to assassinate President Jrtin F. Kennedy. NEWS QUOTE Clark had been quoted Friday night by a reporter for the Charlottesville Daily Progress as saying Garrison “took a perfectly fine man. Clay l^aw, and ruined him just for personal aggrandizement.” Tie spokesman said the attorney general was discussing the matter hypothetically and stated no conclusion about the Garrison case against Shaw. to punch holes in the Justice lent’s case against 18 white men charged with conspiracy in the deaths of three civil rights workers. U.S. District Judge Harold Cox ordered a rare Saturday session to expedite the trial. Defeuse lawyers said the case would probably go to the aO-white Jury of seven women and five men by the middle of next Space Data Processed MOSCOW (AP) - Tie Soviet Union rocketed a vertical space probe up 2,730 miles Tbursday to sound upper layers of the earth’s atmosphere and Information from it is being processer, Tass announced yesterday. the principal purpose tain data on distribution of diar-acteristics of the ionosidiere according to altitude. Data sought included tratlon and temperature of electrons, tbe general Intensity of cosmic rays, dudes of radtation in radiation belts and the density of neutral hydregdB, Tass 4 to Die for Rape MANILA (AP) - A suburto court today sentenced four young men to die in the electric chair for kidnaping and raping a pretty movie star last June. The fictime was Maggie de le Riva,25. The foifr men, 21 to 26 years Redmond for rabbit raising. * * 'it • Restricted oftice (ROl) to local business (C-1) pnqierty at 3784 Elizabeth Lake to eliminate a nonconforming use classlOca- old, wept as they beard die «w-diet “From 1651 onward,” Rostow told a reporter when asked Friday about the brief’s allegations, “I had continuous security clearance from various agencies of the federal government.” Eisenhower took office in 1953. The State Department said only: “There will be no com-from the Department of State on any matter involving the Otepka case while that case is being heard.” NOT PUBLIC While the brief has never been made public and Otepka’s ney, Roger Robb, declined to discuss it, a person who has seen it gave a newsman some details. This informant, who would not permit use of his name, confirmed the brief makes, the reported statement about'Rostow and the Eisenhower administration. * * ★ The informant said, however, that he understood the rejections of Rostow for certain assignments at that time were not based on security reasons but because Rostow’s particular talents did not meet the requirements. ♦ * * Rostow, 51, has long had a reputation for scholarly achievement in international studies and has been a prolific writer in this field. This current White House post is that of chief adviser on International matters. He is widely regarded as one of the strong voices In the adininistration for U.S. firmness in Vietnam. ★ ★ * The late President John F. Kennedy brought Rostow into the government from Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he was a professor of economics. BLOOMFIELD 'TOWNSHIP -A prominent attorney, Frederick G. Buesser Jr. has bwn named secretary to the State Bar of Michigan. The meeting is Open to league members, husbands and guests. George A. Schmidt, Birmingham Board of Education member, will talk about “Bii;^ng-ham Schools Today” at the October meeting of the Pierce Elementary School P.T.A. Wednesday $ p.m. in, t h e school’s auditorium. Schmidt, an attorney and three-year board member, will coveq the current status of the Bifiningham school program in terms of finances, building and curriculum. Grant isarber. Pierce principal, is also scheduled to speak at the meeting. grandson of the late Michigan Supreme Court Justice William L. Carpenter, is a past president of the Detroit Bar Association a lawyer in the Detroit area for the past 17 years. A member of the Detroit law rm Buesser. Buesser, Snyder id Blank, he lives at 2450 Bradway, with his wife and three children. and Bail Is Put at $1 Million for 3 Thieves LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three men were in Los Angeles city jail today in lieu of $1 million bail each. Detective Lee Eggleston said they are suspects in “most of the major jewelry store burglaries in the area over the past three years.” * * * Booked Friday on burglary [id kidnaping charges were Roger Allan Wkridge, 33, and his brother Lawrence Edward Lockridge, 37, both of Glendale, Calif., and Frank Terno, 46, of Los Angeles. Each was arrested at his home. Police said the bail was set high enough to cover the value of property missing from the jewel thefts. Observed Eggleston, “Everything’s going up these days.” FuunuRE MmnK SALE DELUXE ELECTRI-aEAN OVEN GOES FROM DIRTY TO CLEAN AUTOMAHCAaVI fr Just set 2 controls to clean oven, oven racks-^even surface unjt drip bowls! it Like having a maidl Cook-Master oven control cooks oven meals while you're away, fr Plus Automatic Appliance 3.40 PER WEEK Short on iTozen food storagospaco? • 479-lb. size Frigidaire Freezer gives you frozen food storage space to sparel • Fast-Freeze shelf wraps foods In cold. • Slide-Aside basket for often-used foods. • New Power Capsule-True Food Security! MMltlCF-UK. 18.7ee.tt. *179 FE 44171 IRPOmUO INC. I" aururn HEiOHn OPIN MONDAY AND FRIDAY IVININOS I I' THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1967 A—3 L Junior Editors Quiz on— WHALES LBJ Aide Raps f^mney on Viet Whales' WINOOSKI, Vt. (AP) -^ Postmaster General Lawrence F. O’Brien Friday night called on Michigan Gov. George Romney to clarify his position on Viet-am. In prepared remarks to a Denaocratic fund-raising dinner at St. Michael’s College, O’Brien told the Democrats he was confused with what he called Romney’s various stands on Vietnam. He said Romney supported the President in a speech in Hartford, then said the war was a tragic mistake, favored expaml-ing the bombing, then badced the doves’ call to negotiate at all costs^ ★ ★ ★ O’Brien then said he felt the President was following the road of responsibility in Vietnam. Romney is scheduled to appear in Vermont Oct. 28 at a Republican fund-raising dinner I Burlington. O’Brien jabbed at Romney for * his as yet unannounced intention to seek the presidency. * ★ * “The Michigan governor once said he was courting the presi- < dehcy,” O’Brien said. “Well, I am happy to tell him, it’s already engaged.” Simms Bros.-98 H. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontia OPEN 'ill D^- MORMTHnr: TONITi III VN. ••-"■♦••mi. Com* to Simms and ti QUESTION: Are whale babies bom in the water or on land? ANSWER: Whales look so much like fish that it seems unbelievable their ancestors once lived on land. Just what these prewhales looked like we don’t know; our artist’s sketch on top is only a guess. We do know, however, that they had four legs, some hair on their bodies and a tail. They were warm-blooded animals who gave milk to their young. Once established in the sea, their forelegs turned into fins, they lost their hind legs and acquired paddles set crossways on the tail. Present-day whales, however, remain warmblooded and are able to give milk to their young. If a modern whale mother tried to climb on land to have her baby, the weight of her huge body would crush her. In the sea, this great weight is supported by the water. Whales, therefore, must bear their babies in the sea. This does not prevent them from feeding milk to their young unUl the bttle whales are ready to shift to a sea food diet. U.S. Permits Japanese to Build 2 Missile Types WASHINGTON - (iP) The United States agreed today to allow Japan to produce U.S. Nike Hercules and Hawk antiaircraft missiles under rules designed to safeguard secrecy of ftiissile technology. The |2M million to |300 million agreeiment provides for production of both types of missiles in Japan but with around 40 per cent of the money being spent in the United States for missile support and auxiliary equipment. ★ * * The pact signed in Tokyo would improve the shield against intruding aircraft that Japan is creating, officials said. The Nike Hercules is a med- 20 Servicemen Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The Department of Defense has released the names of 20 more U.S. servicemen killed in action in Vietnam. Killed in action; A*MY CALIFORNIA - Sot. Ron«ld L. An-Irtwi, Pico RIvtra. KENTUCKY _ Spot. 4 Mitchell L. (emp, Hickman. MASSACHUSETTS - Pic. John E. MOdlgan Jr., Chalsaa. PENNSYLVANIA - Pic. John k. "■--- ^nazefli P»c. Joiaph W. - CpI. Robart L. Duncan, Dyaraburg. WEST VIRGINIA - StkII Sgt. Jaka H. Van Malar Jr., Slalyfork. ASARINI CORPS ARKANSAS - Lanca CpI. Thomat E. Springflald, Marianna. GEORGIA - CpI. Danny E. Raid, Macon. Mariai'** ~ 8f. INDlikNA - CpI. Mark A. RIggla, Oa- lOWA - Lanca CpI. William B. Raaa, Anampaa. LpulSIANA - Lanca CpI. Harold C. .......... I Warlman, La Vak. MASSACHUSETTS-Lanca CpI. Wallar W. Morgan, Boaton. MONTANA - lat LI. L Cardinar. NEW MEXICO - PIc. David R, Ma-llna, Laa Crucaa. NEW YORK - PIc. Jamaa T. tana, Nla^ra Falla; Pvl. John F. Da Wald, SOUTH CAROLINA - CpI. Marlon ium-range surface-to-air missile capable of knocking out invading bombers as far as 90 miles away. LOW DEFENDER The Hawk Is mainly a 1 altitude surface-to-air defender I and is particularly effective I against craft flying under 5,000 I feet. I The Pentagon said the agree- I ment provides for production in I Japan of three battalions of I Hawk missiles and equipment I and the production in Japan of I Nike Hercules missiles. In Tokyo an announcement said! enough Hercules would be produced for two to three battalions. The Pentagon said support I and auxiliary equipment for two battalions of Nike Hercules missiles would be procured in the United States. It added another battalion of Hercules equipment will be bought from the United States in 1972. The value of the commercial fishing catch in American waters in 1966 was nearly 21 per cent higher than the average for the previous 10 years. lopklnt. Died of wounds; OHIO — 2nd Lt. MkhMl $., Go Akron. Missing to dead—hostile; ARMY MARYLAND - PIc. ChorlOi E. F Missing iq action; ARMY Sgl. Johnnlo R. McMurroy. Died not as a re^t of hostile action; ARMY r~ *“ NEW JERSEY - tpK. 1 Wllllt P. Orton, Ntwtrk. TEXAS - Sgt. Chtrlti E. Ltwit, , WASHINGTON - CpI. Gtry L. Holi, Abbum. NEW YORI^-’*LtreS"cpl. RobtH V. Slpt, PItlliburgli. Missing to dead—nonhosUle: ARMY OHIO - wo Robtrl O. Porta, Youngi-town. NAVY OREGON - .Signalman 3.C Lailla H. Funk Jr,, Rtai^n. Missing, not as a result of hostile action: ARMY Ipac. 4 Tairanca H. Larton. Spac. 4 Jotaph P. Rowity. Nothill But Borgaiisot the Noose of Borgoios- SIMMS-for Saturday and Monday j----iT*:..* ~L~ ***• **®*Woins - 3 floors of bargains for your saloction. Nam* brand and auolity morchandiso purchased at lower pricos to wo can past th* tavinas on to you. S** th*s* oight spocials and all tho unadv*rtis«d Spocials. Park FREE in Simms lot kitty-com*r from tho County Jail. Rights rotervod to limit quontitios. Specials for Saturday and Monday-Only at Simms Ladies' Assorted Slippers Sava Vi — regular $3.99 volues, 4 styles to choose from: Bootle style with matching robbit fur, cotton lined. Ski-look slipper of Dynel® pile with flannel lining. Lome scuff of Mylar® with composition sole. Split side marshmallow® vinyl bootie, with fleece lining. Sizes 5 to 10. Bas*m*nt |94 Men’s Melton Pea Coats Double breasted men's looks like the traditional U. S. Navy pea coot. Heavy wool melton cloth with quilted lining in body and sleeves. Gold color