4 School Districts to Divide$154,138 in OEO Funds A federal grant of $154,138 for r educational programs administered by tile Oakland County Commission on Economic Opportunity was announced today by Congressman Billie S. Tar-num. The grant will be divided among lour school districts, \ '\ schools and two junior high Pontiac, Ferndale, Hazel Park U schools. and Oak Park. In the Pontiac district a total of 138,789 is earmarked for operation and administration of a school community program at three elementary This program will provide remedial Instruction, skills classes, job ‘training sessions and recreational ami nursery facilities." Also specified for Pontiac is $16,083 for a remedial reading instruction prograin at four elementary schools and one jufiior. high school. Emphasis of this program will be on prevention through early work for those who indicate reading problems. A grant of $27,812 Is earmarked for Ferndale for a counseling muT study center which will provide tutoring and remedial reading for 250 elementary and secondary pupils. The Hazel Park district will receive $15,693 for the implementation of a community action proposal for 1,000 children and adults in the district. Also earmarked for Hazel Park is $11,232 for 10 evening tutorial study centers serving more than 500 elementary and secondary school pupils and $>,-203 for remedial rending. ' * . ★ * Two other smaller graiits are authorized for Hazel Park, and Oak Park will receive four grants totaling $29,000. The Weather Mostly Fair (Dttail, M Pag* I) VOL. 124 NO. 193 THE PONTIAC PRESS ★ ★ if- ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1966 —30 PAGES UNITE^P^M^NTERnIt.IONAI Home Editioh By County Supervisors Merger of the Oakland County Social Welfare Department and the Bureau of Social Aid was approved y e s t e r d a y by the Board of Supervisors. Hie move is expected to save the county at least $89,333 the - balance of this year and $200,-000 in 1967. The merger becomes effective last Jnly 1, or the beginning of the present quarter. A working integration of the two agencies, however, is expected to take up to one. year. Included in the merger resolution adopted by the board was the* intent to assist employes of the County Department of Social Services who, might suffer a financial loss in the transfer to the state agency. The county agency has 74 employes and 102 are employed by the state agency based in Oakland County. The mechanics of naming a person to head the merged departments will begin tomorrow when the County Social Welfare Board meets. It will recommend a department head to R. Bernard Houston, director of the State Department of Social Services. 1 Houston will determine if the county boards selection meets state service! requirements. He New Safely Law: 'Carrol or Club' Theory The federal government can be expected, to use a' “carrot and dub” approach in implementing the recently passed" Highway Safety Act of 1666. some 130 law enforcement of- Ford Planning '67Tests on Electric Car DETROIT UR - Ford Motor Co. will test a prototype electric-powered car in England next year and later introduce it in the United States. Company confirmation of this came today in the wake of speculation last week that Ford had made a major breakthrough toward a battery-powered car capable of meeting today’s traffic requirements. Ford is experimenting with a lightweight, sodium sulfide battery and said a car powered by it might prove more economical to operate than a gasoline-powered automobile. Ford spokesmen declined to be drawn into speculation when a battery-powered car might become competitive or how far one battery charge would take it. Other sources, however, speculated one charge might give the range of. a tank full of gasoline and that the car might be competitive with today’s gasoline powered vehicles within five years. General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Corp., Ford’s major competitors, are known to be experimenting with both batteries and fuel cells, among Other possible new power plants. | In Today's Press OU Courses Continuing education : classes listed.—PAGE B-6. * Waterford Affairs 40 lots in subdivision are rezoned. — PAGE B-$. Klan Threat March on Grenada vowed if King remains, -f- PAGE C-12. Area News.........A4 Astrology . .. B4 . C-U .. ... C-4 ...... C4 . C-l—C-3 TV-Radio Programs C-U WDsoa, Earl .....C-U Weoea’s Pages. ficers and public officials were told yesterday at Oakland University. James Lake, a representative of the Automotive Safety Foundation Washington, D.C., of--fered the interpretation at the first of Gov. George Romney s regional traffic safety confer-' ences for 1966. Lake spelled out to conferees the implications of the “carrot and club” approach. “The bill offers federal matching funds to the states for improvement in their traffic safety programs, but it also threatens penalties for non-compliance with yet-to-be determined safety standards.”" Each state, Lake said, would be required by the act to have a highway safety program approved by the Secretary of Commerce. The "club” factor in implementation of the act, Lake said, is a provision to "deny federal assistance to any state -tfi a t . cuts back on its own outlay for traffic safety and attempts to use federal funds to make up the difference.” The act authorizes $67 million for the purpose of enabling states to meet federal standards in the fiscal year ending next June 30. During each of the following two years, the appropriation is $100 million. Based on a population-and-need formula, Lake told his audience, Michigan’s apportionment will be “in. the neighborhood” of $2.1 million for 1966-67 and $3.14 million during each of the following two years. Romney, who kicked off the conference with a personal appearance shortly after 9 a m., told workshop leaders and panel members that the state Legislature may still, enact a mandatory motor vehicle inspection law. The governor said the measure — which has met opposition from Democratic leaders — is currently in committee. Ford Prices Raised DETROIT (ft - Ford Motor Co. said today its 1967 model prices will be higher, but will average only $25 more per vehicle, or less than 1 per cent. is expected to make the appointment in 30 days. A salary .for the job will be set, in the meantiine, by‘state officials. EXTENDED LEAVE Presently, the Oakland County welfare agency budgets $16,000 for a director but the man who holds this position is on an extended leave of absence. The county director, George (Continued on Page 2, Col. 7) Moon Probe Shot Seems Near-Perfect CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — America’s Surveyor 2 spacecraft rocketed with apparent bull’s-eye accuracy toward the moon today, aiming to soft-land on the lunar surface Thursday and take pictures of a crater-pocked plain where U.S. astronauts may walk within three years. Initial tracking data indicates Surveyor 2’s pate "is at least as accurate a launch as Surveyor 1 and. is well within tee capability of a midcourse motor to bring it within Jhe landing point,” tee flight control center reported three hours after launching. Surveyor 1, a twin to Surveyor 2, rocketed with pinpoint precision -in June and achieved America’s first soft-landing on the lunar surface. Officials cautioned, however, that several hours of additional tracking would be necessary to confirm initial reports. A powerful Atlas-Centaur rocket raced against the clock and thundered away from Cape Kennedy at 7:32 a.m. EST to start Surveyor 2 on a 63-hour voyage which project officials predict will be “a cliff-hanger all the way.” If all goes well, Surveyor 2 will reach the moon about 10:28 p. m. Thursday, and will settle gently onto the Sinus Medii-r Central Bay. GOING HOME - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Perpy leave the funeral home ip Wilmette, 111., last night where visitation was held for their stein daughter, In Rochester Cilyhood Voting 'Steady' Residents of Rochester began going to the polls at 7 a.m. today to determine the future of the community. At stake is the question of cityhood for the 1.6 square miles comprising the present village limits. Village Clerk Maxine Ross said at 11 a.m. today voters had been appearing steadily since the polls opened at 7 a.m. She anticipates a Valerie, 21. She was killed early Sunday by an intruder in their home on Lake Michigan in the Chicago suburb of Kenilworth. Police Feel Killer Percy Home Today's Rain Won't Remain Skies are expected to clear tonight and continue mostly fair through Thursday, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau. Temperatures registering 52 to 58 tonight will climb to 70 to 78 tomorrow. Fair and pleasant is Thursday’s forecast. East to northeasterly morning winds at 10 to 20 mites per hour will be gusty throughout today. The low recording s d o' w n-town Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 54. By 2 p.m. the mercury had moved lyMo^ei. Mrs. Griffin SupportsY Mrs. Robert Griffin, wife of workers to “secure as many Sen. Griffin, R-Michigan, chal- memberships as possible and lenged YMCA membership drive ' make the drive a success” at yesterday’s opening campaign luncheon at the YMCA. Sen. Griffin, the original OPENS CAMPAIGN — Mrs. Robert Griffin, m* A** wife of Sen. Griffin, R-Mich., chats with YMCA committee and member of the board of directors; membership drive leaders at yesterday's member- Dr. Irving Gordon, general campaign chairman; ship campaign luncheon at the YMCA. From left and Robert Critchfield, president of tee board of are James Jenkins, chairman of the membership directors. speaker, was unable to appear because he was needed in Washington, according9 to his wife, who gave an informal talk in his place’. She reminded 98 listeners at the luncheon, served by the Blue Star mothers, teat YMCA work with youth was worthwhile and. necessary in to-day’s world. The Griffin family belongs to the Traverse City YMCA. ★ * ♦, The membership drive, which runs through Sept. 29, is an effort to secure adult and family memberships. FEES, TO INCREASE Interested persons .and those with expired memberships are Urged i to join now, as fees WiU , increase Oct. I, according to ' Dr. Irving Gordon, general cam-paign chairman. * * it Non self - supporting youth activities are financed by adult fees. For additional information contact the YMCA, 131 Mount Clemens. Y $ * * : The first progress report meeting will be Thursday at 8 p.m. at the YMCA. heavier vote than usual. Two previous attempts to ini porporate, both involving' tend outside of village boundaries were defeated. In 1958, a heated preelection campaign produced a vote of 1,346 to 531 against incorporation. The margin was similar in a less-spirited attempt in 1963. Electors voted “no” by a count of 1,306 to 342. This particular move to incorporate had its * beginnings test fall when Avon Township was involved with the County Department of Public Works plan to build the Clinton-Oak-land Sewer Interceptor, which would drain the sewage of six municipalities Into the Detroit Sewer System. Since Rochester already has its own sewer system, village residents became apprehensive that, under state law as applies to villages, they might have to help Avon Township finance its share of the,sewer. The township is also investigating the construction of a tnwnshipwide water-system, but the village already has its own. water system, too. QUIET, ORDERLY Preelection activity was quiet and orderly up to test week. . At a special meeting called by four members of the* township board, a list of objections to cityhood was formulated and subsequently published. Protests came from three township trustees who said they had not been informed of the meeting. They said, however, that 4hey agreed in the main with the objections set forth. * * * Also on the ballot today is a list of 13 names, nine of whom will be named to a City Charley Commission. If the yote to incorporate is favorable, these nine will be responsible for drafting and obtaining approval of a new city charter. , * it it Only after such a charter is accepted, bote by the people and tee staje. will Rochester assume city status. - Commissioners will have two years in which to do the job. KENILWORTH, j|E (AP) -Investigators added evidence today to their theory that pretty Valerie Percy was bludgeoned and stabbed to death early Sunday by someone familiar with the Percy residence. ★ ★ , ★ A spokesman for Police Chief Robert M. Daley said it has been established that a piano bench was scarcely a foot from a French door through which the killer entered before going to Valerie’s second-floor bedroom. The spokesman said that in the darkness of tee ground floor music room, a thrusting open of the Preach door would have banged it against., the piano bench, probably causing sufficient noise to arouse the sleeping family. He said the killer must have opened it carefully and eased through the narrow slit. Proceeding on this theory investigators are questioning all persons known to be familiar with the interior of tee house,' including friends and acquaintances of tee family -and employes. ADDED STRENGTO Meanwhile, a dozen state's attorney’s policemen were assigned to assist the 11-man Kenilworth police force and sheriff’s police in investigating the case. Also assigned to the case were two agents, of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and detectives of tee Chicago homicide and burglary divisions. ★ ★ ★ The state attorney's men established a command post to the Kenilworth police station and were assigned 32 leads to investigate. The FBI was expected to follow up leads involving out-of-state suspects. LI’L ONES “WeU, it was worth it! They never thought of looking for me in that garbage can.” THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, I960 U S. Warplanes Batter Viet Buffer Zone Marines Say USi 53 Reds Killed in Village Fight MERCURY LEADER - Top-of-the-line Mercury for 1967 is*this four-door Brougham introduced today by Lincoln-Mercufy Division. The car features a retractable back window. The Brougham fnd Marquis are cited by company engineers as emphasizing Mercury’s “premium” approach this year. Civil Rights Bill Revival Rests on November Vole WASHINGTON (#> - The possible revival of the administration’s civil rights bill, born and buried in controversy, seems to rest on any verdict the voters give in November on open housing. The fatal symptoms of some members’ reluctance minted on the housing section combined with doubts about its constitutionality to kill the House-passed measure on a 41 Senate vote Monday. TTiis was 10 short of the two-thirds majority of those voting required to invoke the Senate’s cloture rule to limit debate on a motion by Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., to bring the measure up officially. After the cloture effoil failed, Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield shelved the bill. The vote on a similar move last Wednesday was 54 to 42. But Monday’s result was by no means a reliable indication that .the bill — with its provision outlawing racial discrimination in about 40 per cent of the nation’s housing — could have commanded a majority vote for final passage. Mansfield told his colleagues that a vote against cloture was a vote against the bill. None disputed that. But when Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., tried to turn this around, Mansfield balked. Javits asked the Democratic leader if he didn’t believe a vote for cloture could be interpreted as a vote for the bill. "I do not,” Mansfield replied vigorously. CLIMBED ON FENCE This seemed to represent the privately acknowledged fact that some senators unwilling to support open housing climbed on the fence by voting for cloture to demonstrate their political attachment to civil rights in general. Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen, who opposed the housing provision and led the fight against cloture, said there was no justification for limiting debate. He said there had been no real debate on a measure he described as “full of mischief.” In seven working days since Hart first made his motion to take up the bill Sept. 7, opponents had talked a total of 12 hours, 55 minutes before Monday’s vote. This scarcely added up to more than an easy-breathing warmup as filibusters go. There were some dire predictions about the impact of the bill’s defeat on the turbulent civil rights front. - ‘| I SAIGON, South Viet Nam (fl The U S. Air Force pounded the demilitarized zone with day and night raids yesterday, while a few miles to the south U.S. Marines reported killing 53 North Vietnamese troops in an assault on a fortified village. The Leathernecks also reported killing 10 more North Vietnamese while defending forward positions near the. Marine mountain bastion called the Rockpile. Air Force fighter - bombers hammered at North Vietnamese troops in the six-mile-wide buffer zone with 11 raids. Giant B52 bombers followed these blows with a heavy night bombing. Over North Viet Nam, Air Force F105 Thunderchief pilots claimed they knocked out a whole train 55 miles northeast of Hanoi on one of the main Waterford Boy, 7, Injured by Bicycle On Losing Side WASHINGTON (AP)-Michi-gan’s Sens. Robert P. Griffin, a Republican, and Philip A. Hart, a Democrat, voted with other supporters who failfed Monday to muster the necessary two-thirds majority to invoke cloture to limit debate and force Senate action on the House-passed Civil Rights Bill. The vote was 52 to 41. seven-year-old Waterford boy was injured yesterday afternoon when he was struck by a bicycle riden by another boy. Listed in satisfactory condition in Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital is Randy Breeding, son of Mr. and Mrs. Connie Breeding of 1138 Airway. The Breeding boy was walking along Pontiac Lake Road near Airport when the accident occurred about 3:30 p.m. Waterford police said the impact knocked the boy unconscious, Commission Due Official Program OK The Pontiac City Commission tonight is to receive official recertification and comments on its workable program for com-j munity improvement. | ★ * * Hie certification document was picked up Friday by city lines leading to officials who were m Chicago for a conference with Housing and Urban Development representatives on the Taubman proposal for downtown redevelopment. ' . -' Recertification of the workable program by the federal department is necessary for various forms of federal aid. Included with the certificate is a report containing comments suggestions of Housing anc Urban Development personnel who reviewed Pontiac’s, program. ★ The commission at its 8 p.m. meeting also is scheduled to consider a request from the board of education to endorse the concept of building a human resources center in the southeast quadrant of the city. PENSION SYSTEM Commissioners will receive a report on the possibility of including part-time employes in the city’s pension system. Also to be presented are an easement for a sftiall piece of property for the base of a pedestrian bridge at East Wide Track and Whittemore and a license agreement with Pontiac Motor division for contruction of a pedestrian bridge across Columbia west of Highwood. DEAD COMRADE — Soldiers of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division carry the body of a dead, comrade through the jungle about 15 miles northwest of Bong Son in the central coast, area of South Viet Nam. He was killed by a sniper as his unit searched for Viet Cong in a village. The Air Force did not give the number of boxcars in the train, but Maj. Neil Eddins, 34, of Las Vegas, Nev., described the destruction as “total, with all -cars exploding, on fire and derailed” ★ ★ ★ Eddins, who led the raid, said the area was “a complete holocaust.’* MISSILE SITE Other Thunderchief pilots reported hitting a surface-to-air missile site 40 miles northeast of Hanoi, while carrier-1 Navy fliers claimed direct hits on two missile sites 30 miles from Thanh Hoa. ★ ★ * The raids yesterday over the north, totalling 116 missions, cost one U.S. plane. An Air Force Thunderchief was sh pt down and the pilot is missing. It was the 377th U.S. plane reported lost in the air war against the north. U.S. fliers also reported damage or destruction to 11 bridges, 35 barges, 16 military supply buildings and several oil storage depots in North Viet Nam. QU,to Get $388,000 for Biology Institute A 3388,000 federal grant for medical science that has to do biological research facilities has with the eye. Birmingham Area News Country Club Detours on Road Controversy BIRMINGHAM - An attempt letter to club members incor- rectly stated that the route of the 14 Mile Road extension would cut into the 14th, 15th and 16th tees and affect the 14th, 15th and 5th greens at the Country Club. Club members, according to Kenning, should not be concerned because the existing tees and greens will be preserved under the county road commission plan which shifts the cen-er line of the proposed roadway by the City Commission to have the Birmingham Country Club become involved in the controversial proposed opening of 14 Mile Road has failed. The commission received letter last night’from the club president, Lyle E. Frobberg, stating that the directors had decided to “refrain from participating in any wpy in the decision of whether 14 Mile Road should be extended." Hie pro- - - posed extension borders the j 3® feet tothe south, south property line of the coun-try club. The letter, was in response to a request frbm the commission to correct a bulletin sent to members more than two years ago, which according to city officials, contained misinformation about the proposed improvement. The Jan. 8, 1964 letter, signed by then club president, Woody Miller, urged the defeat of the proposal. on the new center are to be opened Thursday with the board of trustees of the University acting on them at its Oct. 3 meeting. ★ ★ ★ If bids are accepted, construction could begin next month, with occupancy ready spring of 1968. * * * The grant was announced today by Congressman Bpe S. Farnum, D-19th District. Boy's Body Found Below Area Tower Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy, windy with chance of some rain mostly in extreme southern portions today. Highs 68 to 75. Clearing tonight. Lows 52 to 5$. Wednesday mostly fair little warmer. Highs 70 to 78. Thursday’s outlook: fair and1 pleasant. East to northeast winds 10 to 20 miles and gusty today. Precipitation probabilities: today 30 per cent, tonight 20 per cent; Wednesday 10 per cent. At f Sm- Wind Velocity 10 n Direction: Edit Sun sets Tuesday at 6:35 p.m. Sun rises Wednesday at 4:17 a.m. Highest temperature wean temperature I Alpena . Escanaba 5* Gr. Rapids —” Houghton » Lansing • 611 Marquette ; Muskegon Pel Iston iTravane C. 44 Albuquerque I Atlanta .74.5; Bismarck Chicago tl 49 Milwaukee' 47 » 77 IS New Orleans IS 45; 47 31 New York 77 9P| The unidentified body of a boy about 14 years old who apparently jumped or fell from a water tower at Maple and Lahser, Bloomfield Township was found this morning by township po-' lice. They said the boy’s body was discovered by Patrolman Gilbert Fowler about 6:45 a.m. as he was driving past the tower. WWW Fowler noticed the boy’s JW-cycle parked near the tower. When he went to investigate he discovered the body. Police said the boy Was wearing a yellow shirt, a green pullover sweater, brown pants and brown loafers. He was about five feet tall arnj weighed about 150 pounds, they said. Pontiac Man Killed as Car Leaves Road A 76-year-old Pontiac man was killed yesterday when his car ran off Telegraph and hit a house trailer in the Square Lake Trailer Park at Fairfax, Bloomfield Township. Township Traffic Sergeant Richard Reu-ther said Donald M. Kirby af 9 Spokane apparently died of injuries received when his car went off the road about 2:58 p. m. ■ w w w He said Kirby’s car hit two trees in addition to the house trailer. Kirby was pronounced dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. it Temperatures 77 47 Tampa TO ,73 60 54 Salt Lake C. 83 57 41 43 S. Francisco 70 “ 70 42 1 $. Marla 71 43 j 74 41 Seattle* M U 73 57 Washington Peking, Hanoi Said Split i Over Peace Talks in Viet NATIONAL WEATHER - Tonight’s weather will be rainy in parte of the Atlantic coastal states, the lower Great Lakes, the Ohio Valley, Tennessee and Colorado. It will be warmer on the north Pacific Coast and in northern New England and colder in the Great Basin and Tennessee. PARIS (UPD — Communist China is trying to prevent the North Vietnamese government from arranging peace talks with the United States, it was learned today. Infoqnatipn reaching Paris; said the leaders in Hanoi and Peking are sharply split over the question of opening $iet Nam peace talks. Sources dose to French President Charles de Gaulle laid tee Hanoi government informed the United States as long as 15 months ago it would not insist that U. S. withdrawal take place before any peace talks, bat that Washington most set a date for a military pullout in advance. . f The sources said the . North Vietnamese would be willing to go to the conference table if the United States named a 'specific date and firm pledge of its intentions. But the Peking government, informants said, has vetoed peace talks under any circumstances. The Communists were said to feel that continuation of the can-1 flict in Southeast Ada would cause the United States to “lose face” in the Far East — to the advantage of Peking. been approved for Oakland University, it was announced today. h it -k. The grant will .be used to’finance in part the construction of a new engineering and biological center on campus. The building, estimated to Cost nearly $5 million, will be located east of the present science facility and southwest of the Kresge Library, according to a university spokesman. Stfte" appropriations totaling $3.5 million h a v e been marked for the structure, with the remainder coming from federal grants. ★ . £ ★ Specifically the grant will go toward establishing an Institute !of Biological Science which will have emphasis in the field of ophthalmology, the branch of men> accused of shooting a pistol at another man ahd threatening to kill him last night, face arraignment today on charges of felonious assault. Held at the Oakland County Jail are Seigal Hounshell, 51, and Blackburn Haddix, 29, both of 15186 Worden. Two Men Face Arraignment on Assault Charges Two Groveland Township School District Sets UF Goal First Educational Unit to Open Campaign The Pontiac School District became the first educational unit to kick off Pontiac Area 1966 United Fund campaign efforts yesterday with an announced goal of $20,774 to be reused by Oct. 26. *. * * William Lacy, Pontiac district schools assistant superintendent instruction and personnel services and UF chairman of Pontiac schools, met with some 70 school administrators ap-1 pointed as local school chairmen. The total UF goal, $1,642,-K)0, is to be collected by Nov. The total educational goal of $36,976 will come from the Pontiac schools and the school districts of Waterford, Independence, .Orion, Oxford and Brandon townships. ★ * ~TF~ Coordinators assisting Lacy are Gerald White, director of elementary education; Victor Lindquist, director of secondary education; Arnold Embree, di-recto* of guidance and pupil personnel services; and Cloyd Houts, director of maintenence and operations. OTHER COORDINATORS Others are Lewis Crew, director of instructional personnel ; and Lee Haslinger, city director of physical education, athletics and recreation. They ware arrested by Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies after Jessie J. Miller of 2405 Worden, Groveland Township, testified the two had fired a 357-caliber pistol at him in his home about 5 p.m. yesterday. ★ ■ ★ * The shots, Miller told deputies, passed on either side of him and struck a wall. Thais End Tiff BANGKOK, Thailand -The Thai government announced today it is ready to resume diplomatic relations with Cambodia without advance conditions. The two neighbors broke diplomatic relations in October 1961 oyer a border dispute. Birmingham has tried for nearly 20 years to open the section of 14 Mile Road between Southfield ahd Cranbrook,-a n d in 1964 entered into an agree-, ment with the Oakland County Road Commission on the extension. NOT FINAL The agreement only becomes final when the village of Beverly Hills, bordering on the south, also approves it. To date, village officials have not acted on the agreement. Under the agreement, neither Beverly Hills nor abutting, property owners would be assessed for the project. Birmingham would pay an estimated $68,000 as its share, with the county, assuming the remainder. City Manager Robert Kenning told commissioners that the 1964 County Board Ups Own Ray Per Diem Hike Goes Into Effect On Jan. 1 Merger OK'd by Supervisors (Continued From Page One) H. Williams, has taken a hospital administration job outside the county and has indicated he will not return to the welfare post when his leave expires at the end of this month. . Heading the state welfare unit In Oakland County is Ora L. Hinckley who has held this position for 14 years. Her salary is $12,000. ★ ★ ★ Douglas H. Hoard is assistant director of the county welfare department and, in William’s absence, has been acting director. His salary is also $12,000. AN ATTORNEY An attorney. Hoard became assistant director of the county agency three years ago after retiring as a U.S. Navy officer. Yesterday’s merger action by' 58 to 14 vote of the supervisors made Oakland the last of the state’s counties to consolidate welfare agencies. 9 The merger proposal came before the board last June 27 but action was tabled. Members of the Oakland County Board Qf Supervisors yesterday voted themselves a 33 per cent pay raise effective Jan. ij 1967. A two-thirds majority was required to boost per diem compensation from $15 to $20 for supervisors. The pr o p o s a 1 passed 56 to 8 in a roll call vote. Also included in the propos-i al was a per diem hike of $5 for the board chairman, from $25 to $30. Cost of the pay increase for tile 86 supervisors is estimated at $12,000 next year. ■ * ' ★ ★ The boost will be included in the proposed 1967 county budget which the board Will consider next month. EIGHT YEARS AGO The last per diem increase for supervisors was voted eight years ago when the rate went from $10 to $15. ★ ★ ★ The' chief argument offered with a ways and means committee recommendation for the increase was that county employes have averaged a 51 per cent wage hike in the past eight years. ★ ★ ★ Another was that supervisors in Macomb and Monroe counties receive per diem of $25 for attending committee and board meetings. Romney Trails LBJ by Only 2 Pet, in Poll WASHINGTON (ABi — The Louis Harris poll sgys Republican Gov. Georg? Romney of Michigan would'trail President Johnson by juft two percentage points if tire 1968 presidential election were held now. The pdll, published yesterday shington Post, said Johnson now holds a 51-4® per-Irage lead over Romney long voters questioned. The President led Romney by 56-44 per cent six weeks ago, Harris said. The poll also said Romney was the first-choice of Republican voters questioned as their |flf presidential nominee. Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby was Charles Woodhead, chairman CAMPAIGN KICKOFF — William Lacy the first head of the Depart- of the UF commercial division (right), United Fund ^»An of Pontiac flHtot of Health, Education andjand speaker at the kickoff, ask schools, explains the soliciting procedure to Welfare. She was sworn in on I worker to lend “enthusiastic Ralph Rbted deft), Pontiac Central High April 11, 1953. {leadership” to the campaign. School UF unit chairman. Charles Woodhead, commercial division chairman, was also presentat yesterday’s Pontiac school district Campaign kickoff at the Board of Education 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1960 A-0 New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair HOUSTON, Texes E If you don’t suffer from male pattern baldness, you <*»in now stop your hair loss ... and grow more hair. 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Receivealso, as special bonus: 1. Complete plans for your own 41 round eottage—strong end attractive, easy and economical to build. 2 Full .......... i..j 3. Complete homesteading info. 4. Howl- 4 1 ill leasing govt. ■ To: CANADIAN INFORMATION BUREAU, ■ 135 Elmhurst Ave.,Willowdale, Ontario, Canada ■ Yes! Please rush me___^Government Land Kit(s) by return ■ i mall. Enclosed is $3.00 (plus 20c for checks) for each ki.t. £ ■ NAME FAMOUS GUILD-CRAFTED "CAVALIER” SLIP-ONS ’Bring a friend ONE WEEK ONIYI Premium upper leather* featured If you can’t *n 8^oes u high as $12.95. Other parts man-made.. Padre a. Black •mmm H da. Ai p-12.. /■ 11 Pontine Moll Shopping Center THE PONTIAC PRESS 41 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 4805$ TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1966 Johnson on Spot on Right-to-Work Direction from Washington seems to be lacking in a great many areas. This view is universally expressed by both Democrats and Republicans. President Johnson, who found the strike of the airlines mechanics to be An embarrassment to his administration, is on the spot in another, part of the labor management field. ★ ★ ★ He must decide whether to Veto or permit to become law a right to work bill for the territory of- Guam. This gives the President a clear cut choice of declaring himself for or against compulsory unionisrti and the monopoly power it fosters. True to form it would appear at this writing that the President is sitting on his hands. He is in no hurry to act on the measure. • . ★ ★ The hill went to the President's desk after his own appointee, Manuel Guerrero, . territorial governor of Guam, had Vetoed the measure and the Guam legislature had overridden the veto. Under federal law, when a territorial governor’s veto is overridden, the bill is forwarded to the President, who can sign the bill into law, veto it or permit it to become law without -his signature by failing to act within 90 days. Patterned after the Arizona right to work law; the Guam measure provides that agreements barring employment because of non-membership in a labor organization are prohibited. The right of each individual to decide 'fdt.^idcuKlf whether or not to belong tp a union is recognized. The President must remember that last year Congress refused -to bow to pressure from big labor for repeal of Section 14(b) of the Taft Hartley Act. We feel along with many others thud the President must assume the responsibility and start making decisions rather than straddling the fence. Ike Admits Some Success in Peace Efforts Dwight Eisenhower confesses that the greatest disappointment of his career as president was the fail-tire of his quest for s a f e g u a r d s against war. - ★ ★ ★ In an interview in the Saturday Review, however, the former chief executive says his administration did achieve Some success in dispelling tension between the United States and the Soviet Union, He cites: v ‘ ' • His “atoms for peace’’ plan for an international pool of fissionable material to be used for peaceful purposes. Out of this was born the International Atomic Energy Commission. • Initiating the U.S.-U.S.S.R. co-operation in International . Geophysical Year. • His proposal for an Antarctic treaty—-later signed by 12 nations—exempting that continent from national claim-staking and preserving it for peaceful, scientific uses. • His invitation to -Nikita Khrushchev to visit the United States in 1959. ★ ★ ★ But none of these, he says, reached anything like the fullness of -American purposes he had hoped for. If Mr. Eisenhower feels that he was a failure in this respect, we don’t presume to argue with him. We only hope all our presidents fail as splendidly. Deadline Eyes Contest Laggards If those who have not yet entered The * Press Annual Football Contest that awards the winner a $500 U.S. Savings Bond feel they’re in' a draft, it wouldn’t be surprising. It is the Friday noon deadline breathing down’ their necks. Contest judges have no choice but to disqualify entries fluttering in after the stroke of twelve. The death sentence can’t be suspended on the late bloomers, as the rules state, even though they were postmarked prior to the deadline. The reason for this is that postmarks, in case you haven’t noticed, are no longer timed. ( Without the time, the validity of an entry could not be established. Don’t ask us why the post office took time out of the postmark. Our guess is that some functionary thought it was time for a change. But regardless of .whether you post your entry or drop it in The Press’ Huron Street drop box, the important thing is to get it into our hands while there is still life and hope. As that great Chinese philosopher, Confucius, reportedly said, “One who wins football contest must get on ball.’’ •For the last-minute entrants Who just can’t make up their minds about some of the contest games, we suggest that they resort to the old hat trick. You put the names of the teams in a hat and hopefully draw the right ones. But keep this under your hat—we wouldn’t Want it to get out that we have tipped it to you. to families, each member of which may participate. 2. To enter; you simply check your prediction of the winner of each of the 15 games below (to indicate a tie, leave both boxes blank), sign entry form (or facsimile) with name and address and dispatch to Football Contest, The Pontiac Press. 3. Please do not enclose entries in » envelopes. Attach them to post cards or cards of similar size and mail to Press or deposit in its Huron Street drop box. 4. The entrant who correctly predicts the consecutive outcome of the most games will be awarded a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. A bonus bond of $50 will be added if the Vinner’s entry is submitted in the manner suggested. 5. Contest deadline is Friday noon, Sept. 23, and entries must be on hand at The Press by that time. Those arriving later, even though postmarked prior, will not be considered. 6. Judges’ decisions on all. questions relating to contest will be final. * Sept, 24 □ Notre Dame vs. Sept. 28 P Pont. Arrows vs. Oct. 1 □ Mississippi vs. Oct. 8 Mich. State vs. Oct. IS ’p Texas vs.. Oct. 22 □ Washington vs. Oct. 29 □ Nebraska vs. Oct 31 Q Chicago Bears vs, St. L. Cards □ Purdug p Flint Q Alabama fj Michigan Q Arkansas Q Oregon [j Missouri q iv. S □ Waterford □ Yale So-o-o, once again, we urge you to check the entry form (or facsimile) with your picks, check thi’ rules to be sure you’re pure, and dispatch it forthwith—if not sootier. * ; ★' ★ ★ CONTEST RULES i. Every man, woman and child is eligi- NAME Me to enter contest (except Press employes and close Velatives) but are limited to one entry each. This limitation * also applied ADDRB vs- * Princeton n Nov. 18 □ Pont. Central vs. Pont. North, n Nov. 19 □ UCLA vs. Southern Cal. □ nov. 24 Q Detroit Lions vs. S, Fmn. 49ers n Nov. 28 □ Army vs. Navy Q Voice of the People: ‘ Fighting for Sovereignty of Our Allies We are not fighting the War in Viet Nam just to force a democratic government on South Viet Nam or furnish opposition to communism. We are fighting to maintain the independent sovereignty of our SEATO allies of which South Viet Nam happens to be one/ • ★ ★ ★ If we were to quit this war oh Communist terms and forfeit our obligations to these nations, we would serve notice to all the world that we ■ lack the resoluteness and moral courage to fulfill our commitments. Guerrilla warfare and harass-metat would have proved to be the superior weapon. Ho Chi Minh counts on a dissenting minority in this country to weaken our government’s war effort until we eventually will have to withdraw. If that day Tomes, those with little faith and vision will find out whether weakness is a blessing or running away the proper procedure. VIRGIL A. ALLISON 1: 149 OLIVER Plaudits lo The Press for Football Kick-Off Romance, Ltd. Congratulations op the fine special “Kick-Off’’ by thA Pontiac Press. It was by far the best of its kind that Pve evAf ieen. David Lawrence Says: ED FERKANY ASSOCIATE FOOTBALL COACH WESTERN MICHIGAN U. H Decision on VP Unusually Early We appreciate the fine evening you gave the coaches of this area at your annua! Pontiac Press dinner. Your edition of the “Kick-Off" for 1966 is excellent. ■*. C. H. JONES, ATHLETIC DIRECTOR CLARENCE M. KIMBALL H.S. ROYAL OAK WASHINGTON - President „ Johnson has served notice on Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and anybody who may want to become the Dem-£ cratic vice pre sidential nominee in 1968 that Hubert Humphrey has t h e full support of] the man in the] White House] today. What is LAWRENCE most significant, however, is why Mr. Johnson felt it necessary to makg such a comment a year and 10 months before the next nominating convention. The way the vice president himself dealt with his own prospective renomination is rather unusual. He expressed his vjewpoint in a television interview last Saturday at St. Louis. The vice president recalled that on Aug. 31 at a White House dinner — attended by 300 top labor leaders; including President George Meany of the AFL-CIO — President Joh-son put his arm around him and quipped, “We’r,e , married to each other." must appreciate the flexibility which Humphrey has given him. The *big question, however, is: Why was it deemed important to say anything publicly abbut the renomination of a vice president so far in advance of a national party convention? it is natural for the political worjd to assume he would like to get there as soon as possible. . Approves of U. Si Objectives in Viet Nam The answer is that Sen. Bobby Kennedy has been making a vigorous campaign for political attention not only inside his own party but with the American people generally. It is rightly assumed that he wants to be president of the United States someday. So- He could have 1968 in mind for the vice presidential nomination and then 1972 for the presidential nomination, since at the time Mr. Johnson will not, under the Constitution, be eligible’for another term. The New York senator knows he couldn’t displace Mr. Johnson to head the ticket in 1968, but he would, of course, be happy to be selected as the vice presidential nominee. (CMVrifM, 1144, in Ntwipapcr Syndic*!*.) Bob Considine Says: Saigon's Daily Double: Horse Racing, Politics “Mrs. Steiger, do you know there is civil strife all over the United States right now? Don’t hesitate to believe the Communists are helping it along; helping the Negro believe in “black power” and not eqyal rights, and encouraging our young men to believe they shouldn’t fight'when the Viet Cong are killing their fellow Americans. ★ ★ ★ , , Die Communists believe by getting Americans to picket the Viet Nam war, there will be an end to it and they will have a free hand in that country. Don’t be fooled, Americans. Die U.S. is fighting in Viet Nath to defend an enslaved people. Freemen should be allowed to live anywhere and aggression anywhere has been opposed as promised by the U.S. at the United Nations. ★ ★ ★ Gpd needs our help to fight for right as Jesus had his disciples to help Him teach that God’s love is for all people. One of our U.S. soldiers, home after a’ year in Korea, tells me the Communists are infiltrating there heavily again, too. What country will be next? Laos? Thailand? The United States? MRS. WILFRED CASWELL SR. HIGHLAND SAIGON - Ip New York It’s not particularly easy to vote and attend a racetrack later tti Mr. Johnson added: “As long as I’m president or running for president, I want, him (Humphrey) by my side.” At a news conference, however, two weeks after the episode at the dinner, President Johnson chose not to answer a direct question as to whether he favored Vice President Humphrey for repomination. This produced speculation and may have prompted a deci-’ sion to reiterate the President's position. In the television interview, Hu m p h r e y was asked whether “by my side” meant that the President was leaving the door open to appointment of Humphrey to a Cabinet post. Humphrey replied: “That’s not the way * I understood it.” same day, though there are reports that many have successfully parlayed, the two solemn rituals. In Saigon on election day the offi- CONSIDINE rials made it simple. They Mocked off a big section of Phu Tho Racetrack — the only wheel in town — and made it a polling place. Thus the Vietnamese bettors were given the opportunity to back two wingers (or losers) simultaneously, on the same premises. appeared into an office, came out and gave me 550 piastres. I blew. It's the first time I’ve left a track with track money since I was a boy. Mr. Liem said he* wished I’d stay. I told him I Was sorry but he was now strictly on his own. Question and Answer Do more people listen to radio or watch television? # NEWSPAPER READER REPLY In 1963 there were ill million home and 47 million car radios, compared to 61.5 million television sets. While these figures have changed some since then and they don’t give the actual audience for each, it seems safe to concede that more people listen to radio. Ill Washington: LBJ Torn as Image Crumbles The war has not put a crimp in the racing game here, naturally. Bjut the vice president made it clear that in politics people . can, if the occasion requires it, reverse their decisions. This is in accord with the techniques of modern politics, and certainly the President Verbal Orchids □ Lock Haven vs. Slippery Rock Q Nhv. II [ ■ , j-: i vs. Kettering jj >v. 12 Mr. and Mrs. L Wudarrki of Groveland Township; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Itoggow Sr. ’ of Rochester; 53rd wedding anniversary. Horse players make friends easily, and soon I had a new one, a Mr. Liem, who had bet on Phuong Khanh, the second horse. He carried a fistful of selections which he probably had doped out all through the preceding night. We went down to the sellers. I said I wanted to bet 100 piastres on No. 4 in the fourth race. Mr. Liem burst out laughing. His figures showed No. 4 was a pig. Then he stopped laughing. „ “I will bet on No. four ; myself,” he said. I pleaded with him not to, that I didn’t know /No; 4 from No. 404. But he raced off to another Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Petty of Lake Orion; 57th wedding anniversary, Mr/and Mrs. J. M. Beauchamp of Walled Lake; 55th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Julia Hopkins 251 Judson; 85th birthday. Mrs. Ezilda de Gaije of Milford; 93rd birthday. 1 went back upstairs to take a. movie of the field as it came up to the finish line. I focused on the horse that was winning by 10 lengths, activated toe camera’s zoom lens, and toe number “4” smacked me in the eye like a pie. It took 20* minutes for the payoff Window to open, and then somebody forgot to sup-ply it with money. A pretty . little girl in the exquisite native dress left her cage. Dis- By BRUCE BIOSSAT WASHINGTON (NEA) — Some critics are saying that President Johnson’s moves to curb inflation and ease credit are more political than economic. They argue further that he is hitting at the surface of these p r o b-lems and not their substance and, thus fostering an i 11 u s among thej A meric people that] things m a y I soon be better BIOSSAT than they have any real hope of being. Actually* there can hardly be surprise in any president acting from political motives -in a campaign year. Nor is it unique for a president to offer illusion in place of reality- ' But Lyndon Baines' Johnson seems at this moment to be more dependent than some of his recent predecessors upon the maintenance of certain illusions. When he took office in late 1963, he learned quickly and painfully that he could not compete with the glowing image left by the glamorous, martyred John F. Kennedy, whose assassination had thrust him into toe White House.** But almost as swiftly, he found compensations. He won great praise for accomplishing a smooth, effec- tive transition in a shock and tragedy. In 1964 he whipped through Congress two major items of Kennedy’s unfinished business — a tax reduction bill and the most sweeping civil rights proposals in U.S. history. He • went on to win election in hjs own right by a staggering 16-million-vote margin. In 1965 he drove to passage another milestone civil rights act and a veritable avalanche of “great Society” legislation embracing medical care, education, housing and other fields. Through all this time he presided over one of the long-’ est and most impressive economic booms ever recorded. The notion grew that in many “problem areas’’ of Americsn life Jolpsoa was operating with consummate mastery. The accolades to his skill were balm to the soul of a man who has found he is not widely loved- and who finds reward only in work. - „ Yet, even as toe signs of kisi mastery were multiplying, the untidiness of history was beginning to entrap jilm. Negro riots roiled several northern cities in 1964, struck Watts in Los Angeles with huge force in 1965, and in the summer just concluding have spilled all over the place. U.S. endeavors in Viet NanP have been grimly transformed from a “military advisers’ war” into a Korean-style conflict — costly in'men and money, plaguing in its uncertainties. As if this were not enough the booming economy burdened with too many tasks, began to overheat. * i Suddenly all the great problems have an unmanageable look. The economy is misbehaving. The War drags on without clear motion. Cities suffering poverty, racial strife and general chaos seem hardly touched by massive federal effort. \ The President discovers that his touted “biggest and best” in Medicare, education, housing and civil rights is at once not enough and too much. What he considers Ms prudent caution in war suffers toe same range of judgment from hawk to dove/ Spoiled by toe happy conjunction of earlier events, accustomed to the more controllable, closed world of hid Senate days, needing toe solace of huge achievement, the President can find only great pain in realities which mar his image as master because they defy his efforts to lash them into subservience. THff PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1960 China Notable's Home Invaded HONG KONG (AP)-Arrivala from Red China reported today that Red Guards ransacked the | Shanghai house of Mme. Sun || jYat-sen, widow of the founder |H of modern China, and de-c' jmanded that she hand over all her property.. posters accused Mme. Sun, who is a vice president of the Communist Chinese regime, of leading a luxurious life in contrast to that of fanners and workers. The travelers did not know whether Mme. Sun was in her Shanghai house when the militant young Chinese invaded It The t r a v e 1 e r s said wall or whether anything was taken. Nor-'did they know. when the invasion occurred. Mme. Sun, the former Soong Ching-ling, is a sister of Mme. Chiang Kai-shek, the wife of Nationalist China's president. A U)cuff I Shop Mon./ Thors.,! Fri. and Sat. 'til 91 Some species of deer, such as the musk deer and the Chinese rivw deer, lack antlers.' 100% Human Hair SHORTIE WIG Complete with Cas$ and Head AN ASPHALT TUMBLE - A truckload , ap wire*.:, asphalt got a premature dumping yester- an intersection. The truck roiled over after day morning in Kalamazoo when, according hitting two cars, with four persons in the to the driver, Hie vehicle’s brakes failed at autos suffering minor injuries. Gift- and set in a. r coif. Ready for you to put on and walk.rtght out, wearing it. Soft and lustrous, as freshly shampooed hair, yet it has lasting body and can be brushed into ' many -styles. Charge your* at Waite's. 'U.S. Jet Violations Possible Air Attack on Chinese Village Denied WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States has admitted that Its warplanes accidentally may have violated Red China’s air space twice recently, but they attacked a Chinese Village. State Department spokesman Robert J. McCioskey said yesterday that on Sept. 9 and Sept. 17 U.S. planes may have entered Chinese air space during battles with Communist MIG jet V ers and that shells from the dogfights may have landed on Chinese soil. Bat,- said McCioskey, there was no truth to a Peking charge that in one instance, the American planes attacked a Chinese village. In the two dogfights, McCioskey said, “there is a possibility that some inadvertent intrusions of Communist China may have taken place during the break-off of air engagements over North Viet Nam.” On both occasions, he said, American pilots fought aerial battles with MIGs whose “nationality was unidentified.” So far as he knew, McCioskey said, the fact that the United States “regretted” the possible violations was not being communicated to Peking in any official manner. McCioskey Mid that if U.S. planes had attacked a Chinese village, .it would have been :f against the pilots’ orders. He •aid American pilots had instructions not to cross the Chinese border. When asked if this conflicted with U.S. assertions that the Chinese could count on no “sanctuary’ ’if "they became involved WOULD VOUl LIKE TO IDEET U1TERESTII1CI PEOPLE? Com puts Date's extensive testing and computer techniques are the most effective way SINGLE ADULTS of all ages meet compatible people of the opposite sex. You are invited id examine this low-cost program. Send for FREE information booklet— “PUT MORE LIFE IN YOUR FUN-MEET NEW PEOPLE.” No. salesmen .will cell. No obligation. WRITE OR CALL REGARDING THIS PROGRAM NOW! in the Viet Nam war, McClos-lon-the-record acknowledgement! key declined to duscuss the sub-by the State Department that ject further. ' American planes had possibly It appeared to be the first!violated Chinese air sovereignty. Great taste and aroma. Pipe tobacco in afilter cigarette. txr.tk AMERICAN TESTING ASSN. •MHbrMf. mml YOU’LL FIND HUNDREDS OF OTHER SENSATIONAL BUYS NOT LISTED IN THIS AD! OUR WHOLESALE BUYING POWER SAVES YOU MONEY - up to 24 Remember.. We Service | What We Sell and We Sell What W« Advertise Quality Is Our Motto Your Satisfaction It Our Aim £krr\jflauvt HOME FURNISHINGS INC. Division 1 Of I Lakeland | Sates SJcrrCS'noxxw, Distributing Co. DOWNTOWN FURNITURE MONTHS TO PAY NO MONEY DOWN 1108 W. HURON ST. FE 2-8204 JSSSSSLLl 25 *• SAGINAW (neat ft Felice Quality Market) CLOSED SUNDAYS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FREE PARKING1 FE $-1411 Whin You Shop Carries the Fall '66 Message in'Easy-Going Jersey of 65% Arnel, 35% Nylon A girl simply can't have too many of these carefree gaddbouts. Designed with easy-on zip front,, new longer sleeves, new * scarf-tie collars, you'll find they move about effortlessly-^never show d trace of a wrinkle. Wear it from scene to scene, wash and wear again with no time needed for ironing. Happy Stroliingl Colors: Blue, Red, Green Sizes: 10 1214 to 2414 Come in or Call.. .• > Phone FE 4-25)1.... . . I Dresses... Third Heor *15°° THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, I960 Incorporation Move Stalled Novi Council Delaysj to Await Cpurt Ruling j NOVI — The Village Council last'night postponed action until Opt. 17 on petitions seeking an incorporation vote. Action was put off until after a court ruling on incorporation Is made on Monday. The matter was taken to conrt after Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore ruled last year that incorporation petitions were illegal because the village did not meet the 500 persons per square mile statute {provision. A group known as the Committee for the City of Novi is! hoping to obtain a ruling thati an incorporated entity, such as Noyi, is Okempt from this pro- Pontiac Priii Photo New Phone System If- the attempt to incorporate _ &... „ is approved in. cdurt, the coun-. JJ^EP®NDEN<^ J ° W N-cil would then be .free to set ar^^ ^ new $L5-million dial date for a vote. telephone system to provide im- ' , proved service for the growing REJECT ZONING Clarkston community will be In other action last night, thejpiaced in operation at 12:01 a.m. a a._ _ -----------------* Oct. 2. council turned down a request to rezone 45 acres of land on Novi Road near the Chesapeake Railroad from small farms to heavy industry. k k k The council followed the recommendation of the planning board in turning down the request. Dedication of Catholic Facilities Set FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP-Religious Sisters of Mercy of the Detroit Province will hold a two-day dedication of their new headquarters at 11 Mile Middle Belt this weekend. A Solemn High Mass will be celebrated by the Most Rev. John F. Dearden, Archbishop of Detroit, at 11 a.m. Saturday. The Most Rev. Charles A. Salatka, Auxiliary Bishop of Grand Rapids; will give the homily. * Dinner will follow for 600 state and county officials, clergy, Sisters of Mercy and professional associates. The three buildings which make up the complex, the Prov-incialate, Mother of Mercy Novitiate and Our Lady of Mercy High School, will be open to the public from 2 to 6 p.m. Sunday. ★, ★, ★ All of the buildings are singlestory except the Novitiate chapel which dominates the complex. A raised copper roof on the chapel symbolizes extended hands. * * * The buildings were designed for simplicity, according to architects Giffels and Rossetti. Charles B. Woodhead, area manager for the Michigan Bell Telephone Cp., said the modem dial switching equipment, housed in a new building at US10 and Maybee Road, will replace older speed,” Woodhead said. “With push-button phones, callers can tap out numbers in two to five seconds. Normal dialing time requires eight to 14 seconds.” ___ When dialing message unit or long distance calls, Clarkston customers with 'one and two-party service will no longer give their phone number to an operator. District Agent > Is Given Award ROCHESTER - John H. Pe-terSon, district agent for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., has recently been awarded the Chartered Life Underwriter designation at ceremonies in Boston, Mass. Peterson is a past president of Rochester Rotary, the Selfridge Field Chapter of the Reserve Officers Association, and the‘Michigan Reserve Officers Association. facilities at 1014 South‘Main, Clarkston. , The new dial system will enable the company to offer Touch-Tone push-button phone service to Clarkston customers. Woodhead said the changeover will require several changes in dialing procedures and number changes for nearly 1,300 of Clarks ton’s 3,000 customers. ★ *. M In addition, all Clarkston customers will receive all-numeral phone numbers beginning'with the prefix 625. NEW DIRECTORIES New directories for Clarkston, Oxford-Leonard and Lake Orion, containing the new numbers and dialing instructions, will be mailed to customers. A special Clarkston alphabetical directory also will be furnished to Commerce, Drayton Plains and Pontiac customers. Beginning at one minute after midnight on Oct. 2. Clarkston phone users no longer will dial the numeral 1 first when making message unit calls to Auburn Heights, Rochester and Walled 'Lake. ★ ★ ★ Clarkston phone users, however, will continue to dial the numeral 1 first when making long distance calls. NUMBER FOR INFORMATION After the changeover, the number fob Information will be 411 instead of 33-411. The new number for repair service will be 611 instead of 33-611. A new dial tone, somewhat lower in pitch than the present signal, will be put in service at the same time. The new tone can accommodate both the conventional dial signals and the musical tones of Touch-Tone phones. ★ * ★ Callers can hear the new dial tone by dialing 625-2679. AVAILABLE TO ALL TouchrTone service, enabling callers to tap out numbers on pushbuttons faster than twirling traditional dials will be available to all Clarkston customers. “The principal advantage of tile new optional service is Nearly 5.000 in Troy Schools TROY — Nearly 5,000 students are e nro11e d to Troy public schools this year, according to l .an- initial attendance report. ★ " Enrollment figures show 2,675 children in the elementary schools, 767 to the junior high school, and L425 to the senior high school for a total of 4,867. Dr. Rex Smith, superintendent, says the total represents 372 students more than last year, but 157 less than expected. In an effort to accommodate the i ni 1 o w, the Troy School Board has approved the transfer of some first and sixth graders from Colerain to Union and some kindergarten children from Poppleton to Morse. Approval was recently given by the board of education to borrow $22,200 from the School Bond Loan Fund in order to meet Nov. 1 interest payments on the 1965 issue of $4 million. ★ ★ ★ Smith said the district has had no time to build up a reserve, and that the interest on the bonds falls due before the taxes are collected. COMPLETE DISCOUNT PRESCRIPTION SERVICE For prompt, accurate filling of your next prescription-visit our trained pharmacists. They will prepare your prescription not only accurately, but at a noticeable savings! WE FIT TRUSSES, TOO ... Privota FlHingRo^l With Work Begins on Restaurant WALLED LAKE ^ Groundbreaking ceremonies were held yesterday for a Big Boy Restaurant at the comer of Maple and Pontiac Trail. Owners Nicholas Leoftier and James Schultz say a grand opening is planned for February. ★ k k' In keeping with the lakes in the area, the restaurant will be furnished^ to a nautical theme. It will feature a meeting room with a fireplace which is to be separate from the dining room. Women Voters Discuss Taxes WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - “Who’s Afraid of the Tax Assessor” and other issues will be discussed at tonight’s general meeting of the West Bloomfield League of Women Voters! Following a luncheon at the main library on Orchard Lake Road, Herman Stephens of the Oakland County Department of Equalization will discuss tax assessment. PONTIAC'S Portable Typewriter Center The new switching equipment will record all details of the call automatically. RURAL CUSTOMERS Rural , customers will continue to give their phone number to Coin telephones to the Clarkston exchange will be converted from a postpay to a prepay basis, requiring the dropping of 10 cents to obtain the dial time, tone. Touch-Tone Dialing System Ready To Serve Clarkston Area Customers For Clarkston Area 2 Bills Offered by Slingerlend AVON TOWNSHIP ter Village Council and the Township Board at a joint meeting last night agreed to create a mutual authority for construction of toe Paint Cteek arm of the Rochester sewer system. The sewer arm would service the Rochester unit of the Crit-tenton Hospital, due to be to operation at toe start of next year. - It would also serve residential areas to the northwest of the village including the proposed McGregor farm residential and shopping development. The arm would extend into ah area where Avon Township had originally sought to install its Sargent Creek arm sewer feeding into a' township sewage disposal plant located On Avon VFW in Wixom to View Benefits WIXOM - The Rehabilitation Service, Department of Michigan, Veterans of Foreign Wars, conduct an information meeting at 8 tonight at toe Wix-om-Walled Lake Post No. 3952, 2652 Loon Lake. * * * Federal aid and state benefits for veterans and their dependents will be covered with emphasis focused on the post-Korean benefits. ture. The other is a concurrent resolution directing the Water Resources Commission to include state equalized valuations as a factor in determining relative priorities for grants-in-aid for water pollution projects. “Lake Orion has been under court order for iwo years to remedy its water pollution problems, but the community is far down on the priority list because the total valuation is less than the prospective cost of the project. •k k k “If we are to attack toe pollution problem in this or other areas where similar conditions exist, we must eliminate barriers which now appear to be insurmountable,” Slingerlend said. 'It is for this reason that I am calling upon the Water Resources Commission to include to its point rating system toe awarding of one point for each $250 that the municipalities’ state equalized valuation per capita falls below $2,500,” he continued. Rep. Slingerlend said the bill he has introduced carries an appropriation of $2.5 million, or as much thereof as may be needed, to political subdivisions of the state to add to and improve state parks and recreation facilities,' as approved in-his bill No. 3204 which went to the governor last June. These'funds will become state grants to be used with available federal did in placing our* recreation program in step with demonstrated public demand,” Rep. Slingerlend said. Avon, Rochester Okay Sewer Unit Miller says, “I think it’s the only thing we can do, It should have happened a long time ago.” Department of Pdbjic Works proposal for a Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor, _ Cost has been the major factor — $8,370,433 to be born by Avon Township alone. Another obstacle in* the path of acceptance has been the fact that toe village of Rochester already. has a working, sizable disposal plant and its own sew-j worked out yet,’’ he said. age system. ’ I -r—----------- Sewer, service has been provided outside toe village at a rate-and-a-half cost to Subscribers. - FIRST ATTEMPT Village Manager William Sinclair, while not so optimistic, says he thinks it’s a step to the right direction. ■■ “There are many details to be LAKE ORION - State Rep. Robert Ji Slingerlend, D- Lake Orion, has introduced Iwo new measures to the House of Representatives. Ode would implement toe out- door recreation program al- - > •_*.* t **“*“• ready approved by theLegisla- Jto£-to®nshto--boanLlWQ_KffitsL^--Township Supervisor Cyril later before engineers oatfepro-j ceed with capacity and cost! studies. The township has been toe last holdout to the Oakland County ■ The attempt at an authority is Ratification of the authority j jjfgj C00perative attempt be-must come from the council I jween y,e jwo governmental next Monday nighf and fromLnite Trooper Posts LANSING (AP)-The Department of State Police said Monday its new posts at Hart, Sault Ste. Marie and Lapeer are expected to be ready for occupancy and equipment installation within four weeks. Troy to Take Water Line j Project Bids TROY — The City Commission, meeting last night to its new city hall, voted to accept | bids on the estimated $200,000 project to bring a water line i along John R between Square1 Lake Road and South Boulevard and to the. John Arbor subdivision. . Some 150 families live in the area and have had to haul weter over a period of several months since Oakland County Health Department inspectors f o u h d traces of nitrate in the well water. The nitrate was believed coming from decomposition of material at a nearby damp. In other business the commission signed an agreement with the Wayne County Library System whereby the Wayne unit will provide consultation services and lend collections of j books, educational films and! tape recordings. * ★ ★ The Wayne library will also make available lists of periodicals and pamphlets. Cataloguing and preparation of materill will be handled by the metropolitan unit. Shake hands with LS.Green L.S/M.FT I/lucky! I STRIKE I "A MENTHOL j Lucky Strike Green. The fine tobacco cigarette with menthol. AWurf qf uftCtm ©a. f- c«. Look . . . Compare All Models . . . ... All Makes ... In One Stop.. . at. .. MIDWEST TYPEWRITER MART FEWW It It. Saginaw St. Next to Sim|nu NewllWli Stereo Radio-Phonograph in Choice of 4 Decorator Styles » French Prowincid Cherry This amazingly compact, space saving Magnavox combines superb stereo phonograph with exciting stereo FM and_Monaural FM-AM radio. Power-ful Solid State stereo amplifier «pnoduces 15 watts of undistorted music power — so dependable that Solid State Components are guaranteed for 5 years. Advanced Acoustical System projects sound from front and sides of cabinet., * 4 speakers • Micromatic Record Player with Diamond Stylus guaranteed 10 years. Choice of 4 beautiful styles. Warranty: 1 year on parts, 90 days service. ";/> -GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Mall, 682-0422 ' \ Downtown Pontiac, 27 S, Saginaw St;, ^ 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same«is cash) or Budget Plan , r-J YOUR CHOICE 198* m w . X'V THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1966 m House OKs Pension Hike for Some Vets \ WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House passed and sent to the Senate yesterday legislation that would boost nonservice - connected veterans pension costs by $101 million a year against administraikin wishes. The Senate may raise the cost further. He bill would, for toe first time, waive all test of disability for men IS or over. They would be presumed to be disabled'and could qualify for ANNUITIES GROUP - INDIVIDUAL PENSIONS _____________ J. C. Metty INDIVIDUAL - GROUP 0. E. LaBarge” FE 4-0580 CALL FE 2-1453 pensions if unemployed and below income limits, of $1,800 if single1 and $3,000 if married. Cost-of-living increases averaging 5.4 per cent would also be provided f The Camaro will be an extremely sporty car with a long sleek hood, short rear deck. And a wheel stance almost as wide as the full-size Chevrolet for remarkable handling ease and cornering stability. Available in Sport Coupe and Convertible in-many distinct forms, the Camaro can be fitted out with a number of different extra-cost packages. You can buy one for very little, or you can spend a little more. It’s up to you. Engine choices? Depending on model, Camaro starts with a 140-hp Six or a big-car V8, 210 hp. Arid there are another Six and two more V8b you can order. * ' While we’re op the .subject of sporty ,ears, the Corvette Sting Ray for 1967 will again find itself America’s only true sports car. And Corvair, with its air-cooled rear engine, will again reach out to those who have a special appreciation of Corvair's rear-engine handling, balance and traction. Hie big Chevrolet for 1967 will be noticed,-first of all, as a major styling achievement. And best of all, as the car with the new road-feel, loads of interior roominess and all of .the personal pleasures you could ask for. For ’67 there’s a brand-spanking-new version of the ImpaJa Super Sport: the SS 427 that comes equipped with special suspension, 427-cubic-inch Y8 and other niceties. There are 19 full-size Chevrolet models for 1967. Chevelle will carry on as a youthful fun-loving vehicle with the SS 396 the spearhead of its growing appeal. The success of the sports-minded SS 396 should not, however, obscure the availability of other Chevelle ’models, particularly .a brand new Concours Custom Wagon with the look of fine wood paneling, inside and out. Chevy ETC For *67 it will continue to offer the combination of good looks and economical features that built ito solid reputation as a rugged, steady perforator. And ever-improving dependability is highlighted by new quick-response starter motors. New safety, too. On all the 1967 Chevrolet^, the standard safety features introduced with the 1966 models have been substantially increased with the addition .of the GM-engineered energy-absorbing steering column, the dual master cylinder brake system with wam-ing light, the four-way hazard warning flasher —and many other safety ad- 1 vancements and , refinements. Now, a few words about something else that Chevrolet is up to for 1967—custom touches. To name just a few of the more luxurious items you Dual master cylinder adjustable steering wheels and rear window defrosters. ( There’s a lot more to the Chevrolet Way for 1967. But for all the details, plan to visit your Chevrolet dealer’s showroom on Announcement Day. Coming Thursday, September 29, at your Chevrolet dealer's SENSATIONAL WKC J VALUES! HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 Automatic Portable Stereo The young crowd will love this attractive stereo phono with 4-speed automatic record changer. Completely portable, it has two speakers — (one in detachable lid) for true stereo tone. Use it anywhere — recreation room, family room, bedroom or dorm. Compactly styled case in black or white. ONLY 39 |95 PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment e 90 Days Same as Cash e Up to 36