Th# W9athT U.l. WMMtMr MoNUy Cloudy (D«uii> wi p«a« II THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOI.. r<4}» NO. 0(t ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATUHDAY. MAY 5il>. imW-H2 PACJHS l()o Space Gun Will Propel Astronaut CAI'IC KKNNI«1)Y, I'lii. (AC) When iiHtronmil Kdwnrd II. Wlillc II fUiHlH nwny Irom lh« (Joinlnl 4 H|)m'oent nK-ket, It will lie the woiid'H (liHt rendezvouH In Hpm e. The dramutlc uddltloiiH to the flight plun of the Gemini 4 lollowing (pil(‘kly the onnounee iiient that White will leave Ida craft were announced ycater- diiy by a panel of apace agency offlciala. "If we are aiicceNaful," aiihl l>r. George I'). Mueller, acting director of the Genihd pro-grain, "we will have done aoniethhig the llUNNluna liuve not tried, although I am aure they have the capahlllty.” At I’ad Ml in the (lape Kennedy coniph‘x, technlcian.s unaeat eoster, six mintites after laupch, command pilot McDlvltt will hold a tight formation with the s|HUit HK-ket, trailing it by about :i00 feet. During first orbit, the astronauts will depressurize the ca-l)ln while pressurizing their space stilts. McDlvltt will maneuver the V,(iO()-|M)Und spacecraft to within ‘if) feet of the burned-out rocket. White will open his cabin hatch iumI stand. Then as the (Continued on I’age 2, Col. 5) City Coed Dies in Fiery Crash An 18-year-old Pontiac girl was one of four Michigan State University students who died in East Lansing early today when their small foreign car “virtually exploded” after a collision with a larger vehicle. Killed in the fiery crash were: Nancy J. Ward, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ward, 285 Starr; Lars W. Johnson, 21, of Grand Rapids, the driver; Richard McCleary, 20 of Webster, N. Y.; and Eileen Nelson, 19, of Flint. Tile crash raised Michigan’s highway death toll to nine early in the Memorial Day Weekend, Michigan State Police said following the collision, the small car flipped over on its top and skidded 110 feet along the highway, bursting into flumes. Ingham (.'ounty Coroner Dorr lloffmcycr said all four victims died of burns. The car had turned left onto M78, a four-lane highway, and into the path of a larger auto, officers siad. Route Scouted for Moon Trip by Space Lab Satellite Is Orbited to Collect Data for U.S. Manned Flight MODKLING SCIT NASA engineer Wlllire liee.son mod-cl.s (he extravehicular space suit to be used hi the Gemini 4 walk in space by astronaut Kdward II. White. CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (/I’l — An interplanetary laboratory named Imp 3 raced deep .into space today to scout .scientific secrets and chart radiation hazards along the astronauts’ pathway to the moon. 'riic i:i0-pound "flying physics lab" shot away from Cape Ken- All Trapped Miners Feared Dead in India ? A SPACE ‘FIIIST’ - - This drawing depicts a scene as it may take place on next week’s flight of the (iemini 4 when a rendezvous will be attempted by U.S. astronauts with the booster that put them into orbit. At left is the Gemini capsule which has been slowed to let the spent boster (right) Caleb up. The astronaut maiiuevers with one hand on his lifeline, the other holding a pressure gun that helps control his space movements. NANCY J. WARD Cloudy, 1, Mild Over Weekend Miss Ward was a 1964 graduate of Pontiac Central High School, where she was active Jn the girl's’ choir, the Future Teachers’ Association and cheerleading. SOROniTY PLEDGE House Approves Tax Measure NEW DELHI, India M')-~A government spokesman said today there is little hope of anyone escaping alive from the shattered Bhori coal mine in eastern nedy at 7 a m"! atop a towering India where an explosion killed an estimated 250 to Delta rocket. 400 men. The booster’s three stages Mine officials sealed somc air intakes in an effort fired with didll-llkc precisiop ^ ^last had and hurled the satellite into . . , , , , space at moi^c than 23,000 ripped through three_____________________________ miles an hour. levels of the mine before The National Aeronautics and dawn yesterday. Space Administration an- Flames and gases drove res-nounced more than two hours cue teams back to the surface, after launching that Imp 3 wai many exits covered up by in orbit and gave it the official pre fighters, any survivors have designation of Explorer 28. LANSING (AP) - The House She was a member of the lo- yesterday to raise taxes cal chapter of the National Hon- uuslness lower it on beer or Society, and as a freshman "" business, lower it on Deer at MSU, had just pledged Delta and ‘mpose a new levy On real Gamma sorority. estate transactions. reform’’ package—was passed 74-19. Imposing a $1.10 levy on each $1,000 involved in real estate transfers, it would produce an estimated $2 million for the state and $2 million for counties. from $6.61 to $4.10 passed 1 a nonparty line 56-30 vote. NOT DEAD YET I The payload was aimed at a great elliptical course Intended to take it 130,000 miles from earth before it swings back as Fiscal reform may not be close as 120 miles at the Ipw dead yet, said Montgomery — point of its four-day orbit. Memorial Day weekend weather will feature mostly cloudy skies and slightly warmer temperatures, with highs in ™ the 60s , u „ „ Edmon Jester, 64, of Detroit There s also a chance that we ^y may have showers, but only ^ pp.run driver while walking Sunday morning. in DeHoit. Clouds will cover the skies ★ ★ * tonight, while the mercury rests in the 40s. Other traffic victims thus ★ ★ ★ far this weekend: It approved the first slate jn- Thelma Wells, 52, of Hazel come tax — a five per cent cratic program Park was killed today when her levy on net business income. utility pole in Red- ..^nd we still came up $33-ford Township, Wayne County. nue we wilj need in the next two years,said Rep. George Montgomery, D-Detroit, at the end of a scrambling, i m -promptu "fiscal reform” session in which an $83-million Mse tax on services was buried and ah attempt to re-^ Vive a statewide personal and corporate income tax failed, the action came as the dead- the man considered generally SEVERAL DAYS little chance of escaping, a government spokesman said. The official acknowledged he was “taking the low figure’’ in estimating that 250 men were dead. Labor union leaders put it at 400. The blast came at shift changing time and officials could not say exactly how many men responsible for the Democratic A key element in the Demo- program. A Republican Leg- NASA said it might require ^ .......^ _ _ a four per jgiator. Rep. James Folks of several days to determine exact Horton, has served notice he orbital figures. g,. many of the relief will try next week to discharge Although this distance is had entered, See Stories, Pages 2 anij 11 from committee of a resolution which suspends the deadlines for tax and spending bills. Dale Emon Simmons, 16, of Fulton County, Ohio, died yes-Mohday’s weather picture is terday when his car hit a tree partly cloudy with only minor in Morenci, Mich. State police changes in temperatures fore- said Simmons attempted to turn seen a corner at high speed and lost ir -k -k control of his auto. Winds today are from the Clarence Wilson, 45, of Gar- line for passage of bills in the west and northwest at 8 to 15 den City was killed late yes- house of origin approached, miles an hour. They will become terday when his car hit a tree k k k southwesterly tonight, then in Plymouth Township, Wayne ^ Democratic-sponsored bill northwesterly at 10 to 18 miles ^sitsworth 19 to replace the business activites an hour by tomorrow afternoon. Everette uieen oiibwoim, cent use tax on , "If that resolution gets out 1 services but next week — or if we have a only half way to the moon, Bindheswary Dubey, member Imp 3’s sensitive instruments of the legislature in Bihar State, were to peer millions of miles where the mine is located, told into space to gather informa- Indian newsmen he believed tion. every miner underground and mu «• . 1 ra o" thosc workittg OH thc surface The flight control center re- hospital bills — Was shelved in (all session — we may find the ported tracking stations were the hectic session. courage to raise taxes to fi- receiving clear signals from the Reduction of the beer tax approved," he said. nance the^ spending we have high-flying satellite. FORCE OF BLAST John Waddell Dies at Age 62 ★ ★ ★ House Scratches Dog Racing Preminent Realtor Was a City Official This mornin7in 42 of Decatur, was killed yester- tax with a net income tax was „g33g^3t Lansing. Dog racing got left at the starting gate yesterday in the was the low mercury reading, day when he was hit by a ve- approved 76-9 and sent to the The recording at 2 b.m. was 52. hide while riding his bicycle on ^senate while most Republicans M40 near Paw Paw. k.. In Today's Press Death Tax state Senate defeats I measure — PAGE 2. stood by and watched, NOT ADEQUATE They praised it as a partial— but not adequate — solution to the state’s tax problems, Twenty-one of thq 37 Republicans refrained from voting on the tax- fiVSii reacMI« iee'-yi'Js, off North Viet U. S. Planes Bomb Island tion and magnetic field data in support of the U.S. Apollo project to land men on the moon Mayor Wagner i Skepticism greets talk „ i about not seeking leelec-! tion — PAGE 3. h. SAIGQN, South Viet Nam (ffV-U. S. war planes dumped 12 tons of bombs today on Hon Nieu Island- 130 miles north of the 17th ^ Parallel destroying an antiair-Germans ^ craft battery, two buildings and Seeking rights to full ( a radar tower, a U. S. military sovereignty from Allies— f spokesman said. The strike force of six Air Thunderchiefs and The real estate transfer tax — the second element in the Democratic "start on fiscal Even additional rabbits failed to make a race of it. Proponent Arthur J. Law, Pontiac’s Democrat representative, offered the inducements of reduced tolls on the Mackinaw Bridge and a 100,000-seat Olympic stadium near Detroit. , The odds didn’t change, and Law mustered only 31 votes, to in this decade. , , ,u ing his bill before the House. He needed 56. A major-- assignment of the ® k-. k k Imp series i^ to determine if Law estimated the state’s revenue from the races would satellite instruments can be used to predict when great ^ ^ ^ flares will erupt on the sun’s Under his proposal, 45 per cent'of the track take would be surface, dumping clouds of cos- used to cut the bridge tolls, 40 per cent would go to the stadium mic rays with their dangerous fund, and 15 per cent would go to the counties in which the dog highly charged protons into tracks were built. space. The only difficulty appeared one mangibd body was flung to be that the payload angle to 40 feet by the explosion and it the sun was slightly off. Offi- reported that a workman dais said this could affect data sleeping a mile away was killed from some of the radiation ex- j,y j, stone hurled from the mine periments, But the problem was not considered serious. jf g government is correct in THIRD OF SEVEN its estimate that at least 250 Imp 3, which stands for Inter- men are dead, the Bhori colliery q Waddell, 99 Cherokee, planetary Monitoring Platform, explosion would be the worst yesterday b Ihe Ihird of seven similar sat- mine disaster In India’s history, ^ ^ ^ elutes planned to gather rad,a- ------------ Sparks,<)riinn Fu. Prohiinent Pontiac realtor Brazil Chief neral Home, with private burial Tuesday at Oak Hill Cemetery. Waddell, 62, has served on # _ , . the city’s tax board of review for Dominicon a«d the PonUac General Hos-I 111111 • V. vf ^ Trustees. He Peace Force SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic (AP) — The in- #us also a member of the board of directors of the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland. A 1925 graduate of the Uni- Parade to Honor War Dead Astrology .. . 10 Bridge ... 10 Church News .13-15 Comics .... 10 Editorials .... 6 Home Section 17-20 Markets ...... .... 23 Obituaries ... 7 1 Sports .. 21-22 1 Theaters ... 30 1 TV & Radio Programs 31 5 WBson, Earl .... 24 1 Women’s Page ... ■f i ‘ 1 ''K Force F105 ' Pontiac’s traditional Memori- be nearly all local veteraii Boy Scouts. During.the parade supporting jets ran into heavy j p „ parade will step out groups, school bands, area mill- each boy will, carry in his left introduced by the Association groundfire during the 20-minute ^ " . f ’----------------------------------------------------u—i . it will retain tactical control. ★ ★ ★ Gen. Hugo Panasco Alvom ^ ^ arnves^ay to becom^e chief of club; Pontiac City Club, “ the 21,000 U.S. troops, 1,170 Bra- pj„g "cake Country Club, Pon-City officials on hand will be S!!"!: tjac Chamber of Commerce, 250 Hondurans arid 159 Nicara- Lodgg gf Gardner, : groundfire during the 20-minute gj jq g Monday to Tary reserve units, law enforce- shirt pocket, over his heart, the nregldent David MacGillis of ^ ^ . !, ^ : honor the city’s war dead. ment agencies, churches, chil- name of_ a man who gave his , cAumh\u _ e all returned safely. ' honor the city’ The 50-unit procession will fol- dren’s' organizations, Scouts and life for his country. At the city W. Columbia. \ ine ov-uni Earlier U.S. Navy planes low a route which starts at Hu- many other groups, hit bridges and barges about rpn and Saginaw, goes south to Veterans’ groups will be vy- 160 miles south of Hanoi. Water, east on Water to Wide^ ing for the “Floyd Cremer Eight aircraft from the car- Track and then south to Auburn. “Memorial Trophy," to be pre- rier Oriskany severely damaged At Auburn, the parade will s e n t e d to marchers in the a wooden highway bridge and a make a U-Turn and return to parade-barge and then struck at two . the front of city hall where a MARCHING UNO highway bridges under con- ceremony will be held. Included among the marching {Co»tiau©d^a4^l^e-3^iEdr^l> a church choir will sing several selections, the Pontiac Northern High School band will play "Taps” and the Rev. Theodore R. AUebach, Oak-1 a .Church, will present the Me- and the Detroit ConsistOTy and Moslem Shrine. k' ★ ★ Mr. Waddell was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church and Delta Upsilon fraternity. Represented in the march will units will be Troop 7" of the morial Day address. commander of U.S. forces here, said yesterday he ex- A i*ort seMce wllf be at the Perry Mount Park Ceme- ^ Z tery following the ceremony at fl.e’^o^jant zation of American States. Residents are asked not to .. . . ^ uac; a uau^uitci, awo. awmuiu d Avenue Presbyterian park in the city lots off of La- . said m an interview p Packer of Ann Arbor; one fayette prior to the parade as he will receive instructions from grandson;asister; andabroth-the procession will forfn there. Surviving are his wife, An- • nette; a son, Robert of Pontiac; a dau^iter, Mrs. Roland t'. '■■'I j (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) .r I- ywb r111’: PONTIAC KAn^ mat idoa U S. Craft Hit Island oft N. Viet (Contlnuad Krom Fnije One) dttinngini; them Ntructlon, Nllghtly. OVKIl TAlUiKT , Military H(H>keanu>n Hald the plancM were over the target area for al)Out 35 minutes and dropped almost throe tons of boml»fi. Iliey also used their rockets and cannons. All the alrcialt returned safely to the carrier, ttic siKikesman said. Viet ('oiig attacks spread through the northernmost 1st Army ('orps Uulay amid fears that a major Communist ot-tensive alme^i at putting that region In two may start smin. A -US. Army officer was killed and an estimated 30 government troops were slain or wounded in an attptk three miles east of the Cfliang Tri 1‘mvince capitaf during the night. Quang 1YI, South Viet Nam’s northernmost province, borders on North Viet Nam. Viet Cong troops attacked and overran the Quang Tri outpost and poured in fire from 57rpm reooillcss rifles and 81mm mor-lariji. Aerial reconnaissance found the post deserted and apparently sucked today. CONG ATTACKS The Viet Cong attacks Canged from the North Vietnamese border to Quan Ngai Province, 180 miles to the south. More than 10 hard-core Viet Cong battalionsii were reported in Quang Nam and Quan Tin Province on the southern perimeter of the region. Highway 1, the major north-south artery, was cut on both sides of Tam Ky, the capital of Quang Tip l*rovincc, which is 45 miles south of the Da Nang air base. More than seven Viet Cong battalions were reported within striking distance of Tam Ky. So far none of the Viet Cong attacks has been in force and there was speculation that the guerrillas were attempting to confuse the Saigon forces as to where the main blow will fall. Government troops are heavily committed in the field in five provinces in the 1st Army Corps area and oniy one Vietnamese nuirine battalion is bejhig held in reserve. Speculation mounted that U.S. Marines would be thrown into the fight ^ Uie Communists start a major push toward the coast. A platoon of American Marines from Chi Lai beachhead, 52 miles south of Da Nang, was sent to reinforce troops in Ly Tinh following a major attack yesterday on the town between Chu Lai and Tam Ky. Astronaut Will Use Space Gun ((.'ontliiued From Page One) Hpacecrufl, now Ip its second orbit, begins Its first pass «»ver the United Btutes, he will float free at the end of a golden uin-bilical cord. Using u lluek Uogers-llke space gun Hint fires jets of oxygen. White will move to within ZO feet of the slowly tuinhiing rocket, but no closer, ■'ll wouldn’t be tpuluUon arc so illiterate lliey l)avc difficulty reading a newspajR'r “Or, thut 11.5 iiiilllun adults roughly one In 10 — have less than a sixth grade education; 23 million never completed grudo school; and 2.7 million have never been to sehtml til all.” He told the graduates they have a responsibility to ‘‘.strike out into the cultural desert in seardi of Ute Iteimien, ratlier than banging ar^jjd^lhe oasis.” “Will you be welcome?” he asked. “Certainly not. Tlicre is no recorded instance of Hie native ever .sending for missionaries." ACCEPTANCE Jones warned that for Crea- Marchers Reach Town as Armed Police Watch BRANDON, Miss. (AP) -Marching Negroes reached Brandon shoHly before noon today after a 14-mile hike along a state road littered with pamphlets urging property owners to leave trespassers alone or “shoot them if you have to... ” Helmetcd and armed police lined the town’s streets as the marchers, in columns of twos, paraded around the statue of a rebel soldier and sang “freedom” songs. A delegation went into the county courthouse to present a list of grievances. Meanwhile, the only fwo cafes in Brandon were dosed and other businesses had “closed” isigns on the front door. 14-MILE HIKE The marchers started the 14-mile hike to Brandon where they hoped to reach the vote registrar’s office; before the noon dosing time. The marchers broke camp and had to push several vehicles to start them after the cars had ringed the campsite through the night with lights on, apparently as a precaution. 'i'he mission is to register Ne- groes in this central Mississippi county near Jackson, the state capital. A Justice Department .suit ■ ............. it filed recently said 94 of 6, 944 voting age Negroes were registered Across the border in Louisiana, civil righLs pickets resumed their slow pace outside stores in Bogalusa where Negroes are asking equal job opportunities. A white man and a Negro picket were arrested Friday after they scuffled briefly. In other racial developments: Demonstrators marched around the county court house in Crawfordville, Ga., protesting the school board’s decision not to renew yearly contracts of six Negro teachers who had participated in a vote drive. In another Crawfordville incident, police arrested 12 Negroes for trying to use a coin-operated laundry. Chicago civil rights groups called for a week-long public boycott by 600,000 pupils to protest rehiring of School Supt. Benjamin C. Willis. Under Willis, most pupils attend schools closest to their homes. Negroes claim this fosters de facto segregation. tlva ftaople this Is the “Aga «)f limlai)( lleeognitlon” of aaay aeeaplance. Monetary HUccesN comcM eas-lar and eurllar to lha urtlnl today than It did In Hie iiaNl, he said, but It may aliMi place the 'Umax III Hie beginning of a U.S. Envoys Called Spies Officials Are Accused by Moscow Weekly MOSCOW (AP) -- A Soviet newspa[>er today aceiisa1 ' !i --> i. .NU'-w/iri . (i A number of international meetings this summer — the second Bandung conference of Asian ^rican nations, a Moscow-sponsored world youth festival and a world peace council meeting — would provide tempting forums for such a debate. EARLIER HINT A Hungarian Politburo official hinted earlier this week that if agreement is reached on Viet Nam policy, the Russians and their supporters might renew the call for a showdown conference of world Ckimmunist parties which was shelved earlier this year because of China’s refusal to attend. Whatever the disruptive effects of the latest Soviet-Cbinese argument on the rest of the Communist movement, observers doubt^ the Russians would back out of their pledges ofjoiil-itary aid'to North Viet Nam. It was believed the Russians would continue the arms deliveries — possibly including Soviet antiaircraft missiles — for at least two reasons: —To increase North Viet Nam’s dependence on Moscow for military support that could become an effective lever for Sqviet influence over the Hanoi leadership. —To demonstrate the Soviet .Union’s good faith to the revolutionary elements in Africa, Asia, and Latin America that Peking is trying to woo. i I.. f ■^7' TUK. I’ONTIAC VHV,HS. ,SA'rUI{])/\V, MA^ 20. I0(i.-i TmiKR WHO GETS PAID THIS WEEK? i)o you ||o tltfoufth (Mi mliaty ovoty wook? Too buiy io hondio your bull prOpotly? Nol anouah monay Io maal your cradilori damand? Than laa O profaiilonol cradit counialor and anjoy paoca of m(nd and lacurily knowing your occounti ara baing handlad with aipart l)now-how. ONE PLACE TO PAY Payment* Are Arranged On Your Ability To Pay SEE Michigan Credit Counsellors 702 Ponliao Stale Bank Bide--Phone FE 8-0456 (htr lOlh Year Ponlinc't Old.it and laig.il D.bl Manng.m.nl Company M.mb.r ■ Am.rkon Aiioclallon Cradtl Couni.lloti - Michigan Aiiociiillon of Cradll Cauniallori John M. Hanton, DIticlor - Locally Owned ond Oporalcd Livingston Dem Confab Illegal HOW K 1.1. (At*) l‘:(lwHKl Kidlliittcr btlll In chairniHii of UvliigNloii ( TMinty 'n Oiunoi tiiIn, Olmill Jiiili^p I,no IIi'Ihwiii mind Kridiiy, bill llic St^pl. 12, IIHH foiivi'iillon lliHl (decU'd him whm llIfKal. The county convention ended in tisticuffa and reanlled in anoliiei convention called by ItrtuM l.nvun, who was elecled cliairman. .lodge Heheati ruled Ihe Hccond ('onvention Illegal on gnmiidH It WHH nol calliid by llellinger, the only duly elecled ( hallIlian, aiid‘Hellingei did nol picfilde. violated alale law at Hie Coli i I.avail called hla aiippoi’lere venllon, diNiegardIng Hie cmiiily into convention Hie foilowing clerk’a certified Ihit of elecled night and wiih elected chalr-delegalea and giving ceillllca nwin Hon power to a ciedenllalfi | a * a coninilltee. That coninilllee I l.avan’H failin'. Marlin, wan eliminated «0 of the 119 dele (lusle'd from hia |hihI a.s county gates certified by Ihe clerk, 1 chairman in a campaign precipitating a near riot against Heltinger in 1962, lleheau ordered a new con venllon callnl within MItiO days with llvoae delegaleH cnTIfled Io Ihe SepI 12, 1961, convenllon iMiing seaH'd .lodge Hehemi held Itelllnger give her a convertible Lightning Hurts troops IHOCXHlATtON.S .Soldiers of the ;ird Infantry Itegimeiit place flag.s on each of the 130,IMK( graves in Arlington National Ceinetaiy across Ihe Potomac froi Memorial Day. Washington for Kupliirr H ith a Fabulous Flair Exquisite in a setting of great flair. RAPTURE—imperially styled with a slender, open network design that embraces a lovely solitaire. Make her dreams come true—this spring. From 11,'->0.00 Terms Arranged Registered Jewelers American Gem Society im\S. TtKgriph l*E M3»l 0pm Evn. ‘til t Skepticism Meets Wagner in Threat to Quit NY Race (liinicH iiccoiml lor nhoiil Hi |ier cciil ol lh(' toy sales in HiD coiiniry, KT .JACKSON, S C. i/ll Twenty 1‘T .lack.soii soldiers arc uiuh'i observation al Ihc post h(iH|iilat ntler lighlning sinick ! Ihc giandsliiiid wlicre they were giilh(T(*(l yesterday Three of Hi(‘ group, iiiclnding (N>l I'ldwlo .1 Cnivcl, a liiiiiiliig l)i'igii(lc coiimiaiidn , snitcred iiiiimr In I liirics. ...a LABY ■UXT©il Convertible Convertible ... hecaiiso the photo caae removes completely for separate uae. A "Flidchar’’ lots her add extra windows if she wants I Convenient... because of the “Magic Purse’* that lets her drop in coins without unsnapping. Choice of NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor | Robert E. Wagner says he is j seriously considering not running for an unprei'edented fourth term next November because of personal rcrasons. A willulrawal likely would have national political repercussions. The disclosure by Ihe Democratic mayor Eridny niglit, however, was seen by some as a | move to rally di.ssident or indif-ferent Democrats around him, j and that he had no intention of pulling out. I.T with Ihe etilry of Rep .lolin V. Lindsay, East Side Manhattan Republican considered by some ns possible presidential material. Lindsay, a proven vote gelter in a prislominanlly Democratic dlslricl, viewed his entry at Ihe time as a step toward Hie revival of (lie Republican parly. The Brooklyn Democratic organization Is bitterly divided over the county leadership of Assemblyman Stanley Steipgut, whom Wagner has been trying to de|M)se. Political-observers said if Wagner pulled out, it would greatly aid Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in gaining control of the Democratic party In New York. Wagner, 55, denied his statements were aimed at rallying dissident or lukewarm Democrats. MORE TIME “I find 1 can’t spend as much time as a father should with his boys,” he said, referring ,to his two sons, Robert Jr., 21, and Duncan, 18. He said he also was considering how much his health might be strained by four more years. He said he would announce his decision “in a week or two.’’ The mayoral race took on added national significance May Robert I’rice, Lindsay’s cam paign manager, said the congressman would have no immediate commenl. It was learned that the Lindsay camp feels at least right now that Wagner has no in tendon of pulling out. WAIT AND SEE “We want to .sec whether it's real or not,” said one aide, who did not want to be identified. Even some Democrats, who also did not want to be Identified by name, said they found It hard to believe the mayor would not run In a city where Democrats hold a better than 3-to-l edge in voter registration. The mayor emphasized that he had been considering not running long before Lindsay threw his hat into the ring^ There was some speculaticjn Wagner might be concerned about losing to Lindsay, evqn though be was favored because of the Democrats’ huge registration margin. New Letter Form Dedicated to JFK YOU DON’T NEED A FIRE AND A BLANKET . . . , BOSTON (AP) — A new air mail letter form dedicated to >4 I the late President John F. Kennedy goes on sale today, the day '' '4 the president would have cele- It was dedicated at Faneuil Hall Friday by Postmaster General John Gronouski with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., representing the family. Methods of communication have been changing every year since old Chief Pontiac left these parts. Business and professional men are constantly working to improve methods of communication in our Greater Pontiac Area. They are at work on communications between each other, and within their own industries and professions. brated his 48th birthday. The single sheet of lightweight paper, bearing John Kenriedy’s likeness, can be folded to form an envelope. It costs U cents. AUTO-TOURISTS! TAKE LAKE MICHIOAM SHORT CUT Milwaukee, Wit-Mutkegon, Mith. Save 77S Milei of Driving Around tlio Lako SEASON OPENS JUNE 11th .Through your Chamber of Commerce you can exchange ideas on mutual problems, get facts and figures to help you in day to day operations, or get a complete picture of the great future in store for the Pontiac Area. Resolve now to jbin the Chamber ; Morning, Afternoon, Night Sailings 1 Combine a Lake Trip With Your [ Motor Tour. Enjoy CLIPPER hospitality — spacious decks, beautiful lounges. Outside staterooms, .toilets, berths, children’s playroom, free movies, 'TV, dancing, fine food and refresh -ments at reasonable prices. Send for brochure showing rates, schedules. . AUTO—One way $9.25. PASSENGER-One way $6.25. CHILDREN-5 to 11 Half Fare, Under 5 Free. WISCONSIN * MICHIGAN Stdamihip Co. Dolroit Ticket OHIca PONTIAC AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Tal. It3/M2-4»11 A'. ir I ^ I IIK l»()N'H;\( l*HKSS. SATrUDAV. MAY wm Russia: Canada Witch Hunting’ M()fKX)W (AIM - Th« ,Sovl<*( Union anniiKNl CmiadN UMiuy