Th0 WmathBr PvOjrCaoady, Cooler THE PONTIAC PRESS Hpme Edition VOL. 123 NO. 288 ir ir icir PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1965 —48 PAGES Say Dems Stall on Redistricting LANSING (S) — Charging Democrats with a deliberate stall, the Republican members of the Legislative Apportionment Commission planned to report for duty by themselves today. They will be a full week ahead of the Democratic half of the eight-member commission, “but we’re going to keep our originally appointed meeting with ‘MUST CONTINUE’—French President Charles de Ganlle Is shown during his speech to his nation over television and radio from Paris last night. He said he is convinced he must continue to serve and therefore will run for a new seven-year term in the Dec. 5 election. De Gaulle to NATO Crisis-US. Spark DA Says Keep Ruby Alive Would Recommend Commuting Sentence By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON — Charles de^ Gaulle’s announcement that he will stand for reelection as president of France is regarded by U. S. officials as assuring a severe crisis in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. These officials believe a major foreign policy objective of the 74-year-old French leader in a new term as president would* be to reduce progressively U.S. military and po- litical influence in Europe. They expect him to attempt this primarily through a radical recasting of the alliance. Hie belief here is that he French propoaals lor reorganizing the NATO miUUry itmc-tnre in such a way as to do away with the integration of allied forces under a top American commander. U.S. strategy and tactics fw dealing with de Gaulle’s anticipated move are stilt undetermined. Conferences on this country’s European policy are under way. In general, the dominant view of administration officials is that if worst came to worst the United States would work with other European allies to maintain a military system within the alliance and without France, if necessary. spelled out before West German Chancellor Ludwig Erhard arrives for talks with President Johnson before the end of the year. Washington considers integration of NATO military forces under a supreme commander — now U.S. Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitier — an essential arrangement for the defense of the West against Communist power. In the American view, which has wide allied support outside France. destruction of the integrated system would weaken the West. , FIRST OBJECTIVE ’The Immediate objective ^of Washington policy makers is to get pr i n c i p a i lines of action In Today's Press Waterford Board Approves purchase of $80,000 school site-PAGE Jobless Rate Dips to eight-year low In October - PAGE B-4. Viet Support College students launch programs to aid GIs — PAGE C-1. Ana News ............ B4 Astrology W Bridge.................W Crossword Pussle . . .D-ll Comics ...... . -......W lb ............A4 .......B-I .......C4 .......04 ...D-1-D4 ....04-C-7 TV-Radb Programs D-II WOsoB, Earl........D-ll Women’s PagM DALLAS (UPI) - Jack Ruby, condemned to death for slaying Lee Harvey Oswald, assassin of President Kennedy, should be kept alive, bist. Atty. Henry Wade said yesterday. He said he was willing to recommend the death sentence be commuted to life. If he got a commutation, Ruby would be eligible for parole with 15 years’ prison time credit, Wade said. ’That might he in as few as eight years behind bars. Ruby shot and killed Oswald as millions watched on national television Nov. 24, 1963. He has been ip the Dallas County Jail since while his case was being appealed. Wade said if Ruby were an exemplary convict, he could get 15 years’ credit in eight or nine years actually spent in prison with time off for good conduct or other reasons. But Ruby's lawyers do not want a commutation. They have the case in the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and are holding out for a maximum five-year sentence for murder without malice. Wade said yesterday at a news conference that there were several reasons he has changed his mind about wanting Ruby electrocuted. the secretary, of state,’’ said Republican Cochairman Wilber Brucker. The commission is under orders from the Michigan Supreme Court to try again to redistrict the Legislature. ’The court gave the commission 60 days to complete the job. Secretary of State James Hare, who just obtained jurisdiction over the commission under governmental reorganization last month, originally had scheduled ito first meeting bst Friday. It was postponed a week when Grand Rapids Attorney A. Robert Kleiner, “speaking for the four Democrats, told me the advance notice was too short and that all of them have interfering commitments of some moment,’’ Hare said. If the secretary of state wants to buy their story he can go ahead, but we don’t like the delay,’’ Brucker said. “The brushwood should be cleared out we should get down to Two Surgeons Successfully Remove Bomb American Physicians Operate Behind Wall of Sandbags in Shed PERFORM DEUCATE FEAT - U.S. surgeons Col. Daniel Campbell (left) and Maj. Gen. James W. Humphreys Jr. appear elated today in Saigon after successfully removing a live grenade from the back of a Vietnamese farmer. ’They display the probe and scalpel affixed to 6-foot-long poles they used in working through a small hole in a wall of sandbags in the operation behind a Saigon hospital. The operation took less than four minutes. Col. Campbell is fr^ Inlet Beach, Fla., and Gen. Humphrej^s from Richmond, Va. Both are chest surgeons. De Gaulle told a news conference Sept. 9 that so far as France is concerned integration will have to come to an end by 1969 at the latest. WASHINGTON VIEW In official Washington’s view de Gaulle, If elected as expect-, would pursue the following major foreign policy objectives, practically all of which run counter to long established U.S. purposes: • Rearrangement of French international commitments to give the French government full freedom of acUon. It is be-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) OTHER CASES “One reason is that we have )lenty,else (cases) to work on,’ Wade said. “Another reason is that we have spent |75,000-$100, 000 on the case already and Jack (Continued on Page 2, Col. 1) Skies wiil become partly overcast with temperatures a little cooler tonight and tomorrow. Temperatures will fall into the low 30s tonight and rise to 48 to 55 tomorrow. Variable cloudi-i a little cooler is Sunday’s forecast. CMC truck Has Biggest October Ever Domestic retail deliveries of trucks and buses built by GMC Truck and Coach Division totaled 10,124 units in October, according to Calvin J. Werner, vice president of General Motors and division general manager. Werner said that the figure is the highest for any Oct^r tai the division’s history. He added that It topped by tt.7 per cent the 6,947 onito aold the previous October when the division was hampered by a strike. The division has delivered domestically a record 102,384 vehicles the first 10 months this This is 16.4 per cent higher than the same period last yaw when >7,962 units were do- PHONY CHARGES In a recorded comment on radio program today, Kleiner called the Republican charges ‘phony.’’ He said “ . . . the RepubU-cans know ttat we have Mt yet had a chance to digest the Supreme Court opinions . . . but if we ever hope to get together on plans that all the commissioners can agree on, long distance political charges of this type wiil not help us in the sUghtesL” Kleiner also said he felt “the Republicans were going to be In Lansing for a caucus anyway and would drop up to Hare’s office just to make the Democrats lo(A bad.’’ ’The High Court’s opinion did not strike down the state’s present districting — drawn up by Kleiner and Detroit accountant Richard Austin. Weekend to Be Nice but Nippy Today’s southeasterly winds at 8 miles per hour will become southwest at 10 to 20 miles tonight, then shift to northwest to north at 12 to 22 miles tomorrow. A frosty 32 was the recording at 6 a.m. today. The mercury had climbed to 53 by 2 p.m. Meg Eager to See All U.S. Classes Tirrell Overruled SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP) — Working through a small hole in a wall of sandbags, two U.S. surgeons successfully removed a live grenade from a Vietnamese farmer’s back today. “It’s in the box,” Maj. Gen. James W. Humphreys Jr. shouted as he released the grenade into a wooden case half filled with sand after pulling it from the back of frail, Nguyen Van Chinh, 52. The operation in a shed behind a Saigon hospital took less than four minutes. Chinh became a walking explosive Sunday when a Viet Cong fired the 40mm grenade into his back. Tlie missile, 6 inches long and 2 inches wide, lodged in his lower back beneath the 12th rib. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Britain’s Princess Margaret, a rith a n^ of her own, makes it clear she intends to see alt of it - the United States —not just the high-society side. “I’ve longed to come to this country for ages,’’ she said on her arrival from London Thursday, “and I’m so glad it’s become a reality.’’ Accompanied by her husband, the Earl of Snowdon, she said at her first news conference: “We both look forward to seeing as much as we can of the United States and meeting all people in gll walks Members of the Oakland Community College Board of Trustees last night rejected two major pn^rty acquisitions recommended by OCC President John E. ’Tirrell. Rejected were a 15-acre site near Opdyke and Hickory Grove, eyed as a continuing education center ^and a 20-acre parcel in Royal Oak with an exist- of life.’’ Her husband, photographer Antony Armstrong - Jones before their marriage, stood in the background at the conference in the San Francisco Press Club. A London-style peasoup fog id socked in San Francisco International Airport bu cleared before their arrival. 'The royai pair had a glittering view of hilly San Francisco by night. The princess, sixth in line to Britain’s throne, made a full about-face to pose. She wore the same beige tweed wool coat and yellow silk dress in which she traveled and her only jewelry was a double row of pearls, matching earrings and a gold brooch pinned to a shoulder. SmUNQ PRINCES8—Princess Margaret smiles at her husband, Lord Snowdon, ft the San Francisco Press Club last idght. The Princess was waiting to be presented with AS etmhItH the Black Cat, symbol of the Press Club. In foreground is a lArge replica of the cat, which only VIPs receive. OCClafld Deals Rejected ing building considered for a full-scale campus. Now, after nearly two months of constant negotiations for facilities needed by next fall, the search will begin anew — from scratch. The rejeetion of the continuing education site, the lesser of the two under consideration, led ’Tirrell to subtly question whether citizen pressure had influenced the board’s decision. DR. WILUAM H. MARBACH Located mainly in Bloomfield Hills and partially in Bloomfield Township, the property contained an 11-year-old vacant building formerly used by the Palmer-Bee Co. Death Takes Noted Cleric Served as Pastoi 30 Years in City Dr. William fl. Marbach, pastor of First Presbyterian Church for 30 years, died yesterday in Gottlieb Memorial Hospital, Melrose Park, III. Service will be 1 p m. Monday at the Drake & Son Funeral Home, 5303 N. W e s t e r n, Chicago, III. with burial there in the Montrose Cemetery. Dr. Marbach leaves his wife Harriet; two sons, William A. of Elmhurst, III., and Robert C. of Columbia, Mo.; five grandchildren; and several brothers and sisters. It was on the first Sunday in February 1931 that Dr. Marbach preached his first sermon as p a s 10 r of First Presbyterian Church. After his retirement in February 1961, Dr. and Mrs. Marbach moveid to Bensenville, 111. to be near their family. During his Pontiac ministry, he took part in community affairs and helped organize The Presbytery of Detroit. He was also instrumental in establishing the University Presbyterian Church near Rochester. THREE TERMS In the work of the General Assembly of the United Presbyterian Church, Dr. Marbach| (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) FASHIONABLE AREA Residents of the fashionable area ’Tuesday night had registered strong protest to the college’s purchase of the property at a Bloomfield Hills Planning Commission meeting. They had even threatened legal action to halt or at least delay establishment of a college branch. TTie property had been on the market for $480,000 and OCC had offered $325,000. Negotiations had placed the price at $375,000 when the question was put to the board last night and unanimously rejected. Trustees David W. Hackett and Frederick A. CTiapman cited what they felt was an excessive cost as the main reasons for their negative votes. Board Chairman George Mo-(Continued on Page 2, Col. 5) Humrtireys, a chest surgeon from Richmond, Va., was assisted by another chest surgeon, Air Force Col. Daniel Campbell of Inlet Beach, Fla. a British anesthetist. Dr. Tony Brown, gave CSiinh a local anesthetic. Irown is attached to the U.S. aid mission. BEHIND SAND BAGS The doctors, who volunteered for the job, operated from behind a 10-foot high stadc of sandbags. TTiey were about four feet away from the patient. Inserting their instruments through an opening below a large pane of bulletproof glass, they made an incision with a scalpel attached to a 6-foot-long steel arm. TTien Humphreys picked out the grenade with a 6-foot pair of tweezers and placed it gently in the box of sand. It was about 2 feet from the wound to the box. “If I had dropped it, the whole show would have been over," Humphreys said. ' A U.S. army demolition expert, Maj. Daniel Doty of N|arina, Calif., carried the box sandbagged jeep. It was to be detonated outside Saigon. The grenade can kill at five yards and cause serious injury far beyond that distance. Chinh sat up and smiled as he was helped to a stretcher. Blood was running down his back from the long incision: $2.25 for Want Ad produced 50 calls and fast sale, reports Mr. A. P. Rusk Cites Viet Progress —Cautiously WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk said today the U.S. struggle against Communist conquest of Viet Nam “has been progressing well" but “severe fitting" still lies ahead. Rusk told a news conference “we do not yet see," In the behavior of the Communist North Vietnamese, evidence “of the crucial point that they are rewiy for peace." On the contrary. Rusk noted they said yesterday - that a pause in the bombing of North Viet Nam would not bring peace talks. He also said Communists recruiting of guerrilla fighters in South Viet Nam and heavy infiltration of troops from North Viet Nam con- Press Want Ads Sell-Sell-Sell Little Cost, Fast Action -’They’ll do it for you. Dial 332^181 'Our efforts there have been progressing well,” Rusk declared, reflecting the official view that the massive buildup of American forces is turning the tide against the Communists. “ITiey will not succeed, but there wUl be difficult tiiUM I ahead. Severe fighting lies in I front of ua.’’ i J A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1965 Alcoa Joins Price Boosts Acts Despite Likely Johnson Displeasure - Alumi- UF OSCAR—Pontiac Area United Fund volunteers were honored yesterday at a giant victory luncheon. Campaign Chairman Calvin j. Werner (right), who presented UF Indian Oscar Awards to the drive's leaders, receives his Oscar from Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. Million Dollars Worth Good News of UF Fete NEW YORK (AP) -Tium Co. of America, U.S. aluminum producer, joined other major companies today in raising prices The action came in the face of what some industry observers Interpreted as displeasure by President Johnson over the ^ce boosts. le increases were initiated a (ago by Olin Mathieson Co. on ingot — or basic metal — and fahOcated metal. Reynolds Metals Oo. and Kaiser Alumi-UM^cal Corp..,Jollowedi on ingots. . \ Alcoa increased the price bake ingots behalf a cent \ pound to 25 contend the price of fabricated metalSby an average of 'a cent a pouno^ The company descri^ its raise as “selective price^^djust-mants.” However, it was a'ppar-ent that few items were excluded. V FOLLOWS SUIT Reynolds followed suit today when it announced at Richmond it will raise prices of many of fabricated products an average of about 1 cent a pound effective Nov. 8. physicians will participate tomorrow in the first Michigan Cardiovascular Conference at Mercy College, Detroit. Dr. Sidney E. Chapin, Dearborn, chairman of the conference committee, said 24 leading Michigan physicians, half of them from Oakland ^nty, will discuss and explaJn the eight most important factors of cardiovascular disease. Good news — a million lars worth — was given United Fund volunteers and guests yesterday at a victory luncheon cd- Keep Ruby Alive, Says Dallas DA (Continued From Page One) ebrating the conclusion of the 1965 Pontiac Area United Fund campaign. Calvin J. Werner, 'campaign chairman, tallied final figures reported by UF division chairmen and told those assembled at the Elks Temple that a record $1,000,107 was contributed! this year. The 22-day campaign exceeded its goal — highest in local UF history - by $125,- Orders booked prior to Nov. 8 and shipped prior to Dec. 9 will be filled at the old prices. In Washington, a General The Watei^ ) w n s h 1 p Board of Edi last night approved a pi >e financed by a $122,983 I grant un- Services Administration spokes-der the elementary man said the agency had no comment on the Alcoa price action. dary education act. Ruby is not worth that muchj INW or 14 per cent. I Late UF contributions may “Not all the questions about j push the total even higher, the assassination have been still asking abont it and I think it better to have him available. “Finally, although he is sane, there is no question that Ruby has some neurotic tendencies General Motors Corp. and its employes paced contributions, accounting for nearly 70 per cent of the funds collected. Earlier this week the GSA called representatives of Alcoa, Olin Mathieson, Reynolds and Kaiser to a meeting in Washington to discuss additional sales of aluminum from the government stocjtpile. Industry circles viewed this as an indication that the government might take steps to overthrow the price increases. CORPORATE GIFT The GM corporate glit toUM . , . , . $165,000, while GM employes do- that can be treated in the pem-'nated $526 934 tentiary." ! . ' Wade said he did not mean he Sponsored by GM in behalf of Pontiac Motor Division, GMC Truck and Coach Division and the Pontiac Fisher Body Plant, the victory luncheon was attend-e2ily i m.p.h. LowmI » DIrtcllon: Seum**it iM*»n !»». SXn Mit Fridtv •( S.IJ p m w**)h*< Sun rlMi Stturdiy *1 7:11 * m Tkprtdcy’t Ttmpdratur* Ch«1 guage arts. The program is designed to help the 511 students who show the greatest educational, ! physiological, sociological and psychological needs in accordance with the funding of the Title I program. Available funds for the program are based on the I960 (»n-sus when 516 school cblldreh In the township wet'e from families with annual incomes of less than $2,000. I Equipment Is oa the job sites and work will begin immediately Alexander said. Completion is expected by June 1 next year. The water system, which will feed Detroit water into the township, will include about 125,000 First attention would be given feet of water main varying in to sixth grade pupils more than size from six to 16 inches. lone full year :below their ^ade (instruction contracts for thejlevel, as well as to deficient project were awarded last July, 'children in other grades. I ()CC Land Deals Rejected (Continued From Page One) part of the county," said. He sugge.sted the board bepn working with planning commissions of communities further south to find a better location. Mrs. Johnson favored the p chase. Board Treasurer Mrs. Lila R. Johnson, who offered the motion to reject the owner’s counteroffer, said she felt use of the property was limited. Before the vote, several resists of the area repeated their objections to having upwards of idents “practically in our back ^rds.” Woolfenden, attorney for th^ee site, termed the opposition o^residents emotional. “From a nmhborhood standpoint, college of the property would be idh^l," he said. BEE PROPOSAL After defeating the Rm property proposalf the boarSd^began deliberating on the purchase of 20-acre site in Royal Oj an existing M8,200-square-fout building as a full-scale campus to serve the south end of the county. Trustee Earl M. Anderson Immediately called lor rejection of a negotiated price of $1.7 million for the Morley Brothers property. “Being located on 14 Mile, it isn't suitable to serve the great population mass in the southern Hackett also favored the acquisition to assure that no students will be turned away next fall. At this point Tirrell turned over the president’s chair to administrative aide Dr. Alfred A. Canfield and sat at the meeting as a citizen of Oakland Ck>unty. Apparently referring to residents of the area near the Bee property, he speculated how the “little people” near the Morley property might feel about a college in their back yards. “As a citizen, I suggest you be consistent and reject the Morley proposal and spend kiuch more for a new facility,” hfr\ -- purchase proposal lost. De Gaulle May Spark Crisis Ex-Cemetery Exec Tells How Fake Burials Held DETROIT (AP)-The former the cemetery with as many as 18 infants in them,” Grode said. Grode testified he was a part-time gravedigger before his hiring as superintendent of the cemetery last,March. 'dummy set-up” often wu used by cemetery employes “to lead people to believe there was grave dug when there waa ne,'’ he testified. n IM1 Fort woflh superintendent 5? a suburban Livonia cemetery told a public hearing Thursday how he buried 222 caskets in unmarked graves. Saying he was reluctant to testify because “I know I’m go-4) 35 Phoenijt M SO mg to hurt 8 lot Of people,' M « 2|Harvey Grode, 41, said he buried S ” .•''FrVii.^ w bodies of 35 infants at onej M 37 » $ M«ri* 31 Mitime in three communal graves. 31 S«aMI* MW, ” *3 37 - The 222 caskets, including This consisted of a wooden I those of the 35 babies, had beenlframe built above the ground stored in a shed at Brookdale and covered with greenery, Memorial Park Cemetery for as|which a casket would be long-as five months, Grode toldilowered by a lowering device, the .State .Senate Orporationsihe said. Committee. After mourners had left, the When Grode told of buryingCaket would be taken to a shed! caskets which had been battered for later burial, he said. I land broken, two women »pecta-! I tors fled the hearing room in OWNS STOCK i I tears ; Grode uid he was hired aS{ j "It’s a di.sgrace,” one of them Jiverintendent by Sydmy List, shouted. (Continued From Page One) lieved here this means reducing the Atlantic alliance to the status of a traditional allied relationship in which countries promise aid to each other in event of war but do not coordinate forces or strategies beforehand. • Whittling down American influence In Europe while increasing French influence. In this connection de Gaulle is considered to regard France’s independent nuclear force, which soon will be operational, as evidence of France’s status as a first class power on the continent west of Russia. • Denial to Britain of an effective role in continental politics. Several years ago de Gaulle blocked Britain’s U.S.-supported bid for membership in the E u r 0 p e a n Common Market and made clear that-If Britain ever joined in the future it would have to be pretty much on French terms. • Denial to West Germany of any participation in any kind of NATO nuclear force such as the United States has urged on the European allies for several years. Cranbrook Foundation Plans More Integration . . At the annual meeting of the Ust is president of Brookdale Cranbrook Foundation Thurs- NATIONAL WEATHER — Rain is forecast from the (Bill Coast region into the Tennessee Valley and the Caro-linas tonight. Periods of rain or snow are expected in the northern Rockies while showers will occur along the. northern Pacific Coast. Oilder air will cover the area from the northern Rockies to the upper Mississippi Valley. * Inc., holding company which A committee staff member owns the stock of Brookdale identified the women as having U«'n«tery Association, complained of inability to find; The cemetery has been under the graves of their parents, receivership since 1958. The committee has been In- The committee chairman, 8en-jvestigating qperation of the Li-'ate majority leader Raymond vonia cemetery after scores of person.^ complained they could not locate the graves of relatives. Dzendzel, D-D e t r o i t, changes in state laws governing cemetery operations may result from the twtKlay hearing into “There are some graves Inithe Brookdale Park operations. day, plans were laid for a much more complete integration the Brookside, Cranbrook and Kingswood schools, and the Art Academy and the Institute of Science. The following officers were continued for the ensuing year: Chairman Henry 8. Booth; Vice chairman Harold A. Fitzgerald; Treasurer Warren 8. Booth; Secretary Arthur B. Wfttliff. “The need is urgent and we can accommodate from 2,000 to 2,500 students at half the cost of buying a new facility,” she said. Birmingham Area News 7 Physicians to Attend Cardiovascular Confab BIRMINGHAM - Seven area by the Michigan Heart Associ- ation, a United Fund Agency, the Michigan State Medical Society'and the Michigan Department of Health. Free screening tests for high blood pressure and for blood sugar and cholesterol levels will be offered to the public by the Heart Association and Michigan Dialtotes Association. These include rheumatic fever, surgery, hi^ blood pressure, strokes, heart attacks, community service for orgau transplants electronic instrnmenta- The doctors, said Chapin, include researchers, teachers and private practitioners. They were selected for outstanding achievements in their field. The speakers will be divided into three-man panels which will talk 45 minutes. There will be separate programs, a technical one for physicians, another for the general public. AREA DOCTORS The panelists from the Birmingham area and the topics they will cover are doctors Edward L. Quinn, rheumatic fever; John R. Caldweli, hypertension; Herbert Robb and James B. Blodgett, surgery; Joseph Schaeffer, stroke; Richard J. Bing, organ transplants: and Thomas Ouce, electronic instrumentation in cardiology. The program will be held in the Student Center, South-field and West Outer Drive, from 9 a.m. to 5:36 p.m. The conference is sponsored BLOOMFIELD HHJLS - College night at Bloomfield Hills High School will be held Monday from 8-10 p.m. in the Little Theater,, All parents Ih the ichddl district are invited to meet admissions officers from five universities who will tell about their schools and answer 4|ues-tions concerning preparation for college admission. Schools represented will be DePauw, Denison, Kalamazoo, Northwestern and George Washington. Exams Asked in Vandalism 3 Accused of Thefts, Damage at Seaholm Three Birmingham teen-agers demanded a preliminary court examination when they were arraigned yesterday on charges of breaking and entering the press box at Seaholm High School. i^;*aid:“' = The pur Dowser Queen of Befg/u>n Felled by Heart Attack BRUSSELS (AP) - Dowager Queen Elisabeth of Belgium suffered a serious heart attack Thursday, the royal palace announced, The 89-year-old queen is the grandmother of King Baudouin Dr. Marbach Dies; Ex-Pontiac Pastor The boys, all Seaholm pupils, arf accused by Birmingham police of stealing $750 worth of electronic equipment, and then setting fire to the press box, causing an estimated $700 dam- (Continued From Page One) served three terms, for a period of nine years, on the Board of Foreign Missions. He received his theological training at McCormick Theo- gmdnato work ni ItoctliWMt-em University and the University of Chicago. His first pastorate was at Marshall, Mo. where he also assisted in teaching at Missouri Valley (Allege. During World War I, he served as chaplain with the U S. Army. In the fall of 1926, Dr. Marbach was installed as pastor of River Forest Presbyterian (Church near Chicago where he served until his call to Pontiac. During this period, he was honored with the degree of doctor of d i v i n i t y ^ his alma mater, Lake Forest College. Released on $566 bond each by Municipal Judge Edward Emery were William McMil-len, 18, of 1125 Birmingham; Ronald Graine, 18, and his brother, Donald, 17, both o( 457 Catalpa. The three had been taken into custody by police Wednesday at their homes following a monthlong investigation into the Oct. 1 incident. w?rilnvt‘‘rfam^^^^^ Kentucky Town Using Water Bucket, Dipper A medical bulletin signed by four doctors said the queen’s condition was stationary and they could not predict the outcome of her illness. Reliable sources said King Baudouin and ()ueen Fabiola would interrupt their tour of Latin America and fly to the queen’s bedside. PINEVILLE, Ky. (AP) bucket and dipper became handy utensils in Kneville today. This eastern Kentucky town of 4,000 turned to wells and tnicked-ln supplies of drinking water after an oil-base substance contaminated the city water system. Police said that a search of the Graine home turned up more than 260 books taken by Ronald Graine from Seaholm over a three-year period. VALUE PLACED A value of $1,500-$2,000 was placed on the books, most of which were found hidden in the attic, police said. The examination is scheduled lor Nov. 21. Police said that a 15-year-old juvenile was also involved but was released to his parents pending action by juvenile court authorities. The arrests, according to p