'•athor Partly Sunny, Mild TmmON' VOL. 128 NO. 207 * * * ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. \VI School Unit Bill Up for Debate Preliminary Senate debate waa to begin today on a revised bill to create an osteopathic college author-ity for Michigan. Two State Senate committees .— appropriations and corporations — voted yesterday to bring {he bill 'out of committee and re- 'State Must OK New Colleges' Kelley Ruling Affects Osteopathic School LANSING (AP) — Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley declared the State Board of Education must approve establishment of new colleges or universities and department additions to existing schools. His statement in a letter to Sen. Edward Robinson, D-Dear-born, made public today, set the stage for • Senate fight todays or Thursday on a bill to create a Michigan Osteopathic College Authority. Oa a breeder basis, k could lead to aew disputes to the port to the floor of the Senate. Ip revising the bill, the cem- aome institutions of higher Avon Man Dies After Beating . First-Degree Murder Charged to Suspect The osteopathic college MB had Man approved Tueeday by the Stale Appropriations and Corporations committees with an eye toward expediting construction end operaticn of an osteopathic college proposed for which would have required the state to appropriate enough money each year to construct, operate and expand such a college. The appropriations committee, which killed the bill in the spring session or the legislature, noted that the current measure would carry no financial implications for the state this year. 0-> dr ♦ The original bill had sought state funds to operate and maintain the projected Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine to be located in Pontiac.. PUNNING FUNDS Dr. B. V. Dickinson, president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians end Surgeons, said that the Mil was revived because the toipepaihe were included In e capital outlay measure for planning funds. lie osteopathic college is eavght ta the adddie of an A 38-year-old Avon Township carpenter who told Oakland County shealff’s deputies he was kicked and beaten in a scuffle Monday night, died en route Ut Pontiac General Hospital last night. The victim was identified by deputies as John Arnett Of 3471 Dunning. Charged with first-degree murder in Arnett’s death is Herbert Harris, 88, ef 8844 Eastwood, Avon Township, ab-cording to deputies. Harris demanded examination when brought before Pontiac Township Justice R. Grant Graham early this morning. He was returned to , the Oakland County ARNETT Jail without bond to await his pretrial examination scheduled by Graham for Oct .18. iT-**” Meanwhile, an autopsy was to be performed on Hie victim at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today to determine the exact causa of sath. Sheriff’s deputies said Arnett Humphrey Is Ready to Take O WASHINGTON W-A to agreement provides that President Hubert H. act for President if need be during the hospitalisation for rsmaenl af his gall bladder. ‘' f| In Us letter to Robinson, Kelley traced much of the debate concerning article 8, section 3, of the Michigan Constitution, which sets forth these duties of the State Board of Education: “The debates are persuasive that the State Board of Education was empowered not only to, determine the location of colleges and universities, but cerdtag to Dr. Dfcktassa. The Pontiac surgeon said today that opposition to the creation of a college authority to govern the projected medical school seems to come at the state level, specifically the newly formed State Board of Education. He said that the state,board apparently feels that any educational program should go through the board. Creation of thejBfteopathic college authority would automatically bypass the board. NOT THE AIM This ik not the aim of osteo-ttetodkim or*Srtmerts‘to|Prt,“- «cording to Dr. Dickin-existing colleges and urtvend- *“J> *eid that the profes-ties on both the undergraduate!**0" ^Ureulti in and graduate level.” I (Continued on Page t, Col. 4) terday by the President II announcing the forthcoataf HP eration. However, he said ha dews «8 “anticipate the ,need far proto dential decision, sr actions. toto ing the short time that I tip not be available for tat pur-jose.” Johnson and' Humpbrof have had aa agreement i tin case of President would — if so inform the vice Snn Stories, Pago C-2 charged Harris wife kicking him repeatedly la the chest The beating reportedly took place in front of a house in the 2800 block of Woodeim, in Avon Township, about two miles from Arnett’s home. * •, Arnett, however, refused to sip a complaint. Last night he began to get sick, according to relatives of the victim. He was taken to Avon Center H&pital in Avon Township by a toother, Elmer. Hospital authorities called the sheriffV department and reported thaf Arnett was ta and the latter would acting president, erne duties of the office untl bilfty ended. * * * nip the event an taiM prevented the PreaMpg toatoj communicating, with Ota oW president, the tatter, altar PH consultation as hs deenmd MM propriate, would decide wlwl to take over the powaii el office and swva as acting | dent until the inability eal • In either event, tat I dent would decide when fli biltty had ended ami at time would reoume tan M erclae of his powers Mtta led of >prcsldanttal 1 Deputies who assisted in transferring the victim to Pontiac General Hospital said both his eyes were blackened and he was twisting in pain. passed by CongnH ta J is now befo “ of the required S • tures have ratified R. I acted only yesterday. Others are with Hemptoey is toe a that betweea farmer dent Dwight D. Eiaw and farmer Viet Hi Richard M. Nixea, l Pinned for 24 Hours MEDINA, Ohio (AP) - A 15-year-old boy was inched free today from the vieelike trap where he was pinned 84 hours in -ta Today's-Press birlisen Calls rights leader’s suggestion on crime juris-diriion astounding—PAGE C4. 7 Indonesia Revolt now centers in central Java -- PAGE D-MT ' A Busy Man American salesman pictured iaflrst ofthree-part series — PAGE B4. Ann News B1 Astrology ...*....M Mdge . F4 Crossword Pxssie ... P4 temr^rr.-. Editortals ......A-4 Pood Sectkm D-t, D-8, D4 Motets OMtaaries Mom .......... E-l—E-4 Thoeteri ....... TV-RadJo Programs F-li five slaves. He was taken from tile cave to a hospital. The 110-pound boy, Morris Baetzhold, looked he was carried stretcher from Me cave, i cjve once used to hide fugi-iriodteally, reported him in good condition. “I’ve never seen ■ bey With, so muck guts in my life,” laid anotfisr worker, Jim Lea, -88-“He hasn’t complained. I’v< (Continued eh Page 8, Col. 1> mmsmegt meet**** Mm, finally managed to get a strap sroond Ms slender body and slowly lifted him eat of the slanted sandstone passageway when he hag been Morris was taken immediately toe hospital from Me cave where, hn was caught about U i.m. yesterday while on an opting with youngsters from the children's home where h| lives. He bed PM eaten since he wps Wisconsin, Pennsylvania aa4f Kentucky. SETS PROCEDURE The proposed amend* ut this procedure In president becomes : 'itated: • If e president nMM , gross of hie disability, til president would take man acting president. He iUMi Me his powers, a If a | (Continued eg Page t, i LITTLE SLEEP Neither had he been able to •leap touch in 4he cramped confines of Eta foot-wide tunnel. trying toTtag Wm loose er Just cheer Mm up. IteaugtaxA Wordeel, Itoffis was reported in good condition “He’s not toying much except that hu wants to let pto,” re* ported Curtif Pick of Ataito -coming out pf the cave, I you,can hardly blame Mm tor Mat.” - ' ,, Dr. AntonwC. Karson of MS-' ina, who checked the boy pa- BEFORE RESCUE-Evelyn Pettit, an to a Hinckley, Ohio, Hreoum after tot« rescuing w 15-year-oM boy trapped to a cave near Hinckley. The hay, Morris I after this picture wds token. •A The. Weather Partly Sunny, Mild THE PONTIAC "PRESS Home Edition VOL. 128 NO. 207 ★ ★ *★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER fl, 1985 -SPACES unitedSVress8intebnaSiio IOC School Unit Bill tip for Debate Preliminary Senate debate was Ur begin today on a revised bill to create an osteopathic college authority for Michigan. Two State Senate committees — appropriations and corporations —• voted yesterday to bring the bill ' out of committee and re- 'State Must OK New Colleges' Kelley Ruling Affects Osteopathic School port to the floor of the Senate. ». la revising the bill, the committees trimmed provisions which would have required the state to appropriate enough money each year to construct, operate and expand snch a LANSING (AP) - Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley declared the State Board of Education must approve establishment of colleges or universities and department additions to existing schools. His statement in a letter to Sen. Edward Robinson, D-Dear-born, made public today, set the stage for a Senate fight today or Thursday on a bill to create a Michigan Osteopathic College Authority. On a broader bash, it could lead to new disputes la the continuing brushfire between some institutions of higher The appropriations committee, which killed the bill in the spring session of the legislature, noted that the current measure would carry no financial implications for the state this year. The osteopathic college hill bad been approved Tuesday by the State Appropriations and Corporations committees with an eye toward expediting construction and operation of an osteopathic college proposed for Pontiac, in Us totterro Kelley traced much of the debate concerning article 8, section 3, of the Michigan Constitution, which sots forth these duties of the State Board of Education “Tha debates are persuasive that the State Board of Education was empowered not only to determine the location of colleges and universities, but the additions of departments to existing colleges and universities on both the undergraduate and graduate level.” A 38-year-old Avon Township carpenter who told Oakland County sheriffs deputies he was kicked and beaten in a scuffle Monday night, died en route to’ Pontiac General Hospital last night. The victim was Identified by deputies as John Arnett of 347k Dunning. Charged with first-degree murder iu Arnett’s death is Herbert Harris, 28, of 3044 Eastwood, Avon Township, so- The original bill had sought state funds to operate and maintain the projected Michigan College of Osteopathic Medicine to be located in Pontiac. PLANNING FUNDS Dr. B. V. Dickinson, president of the Michigan Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons, said that the bill waa revivad because the osteopaths were included in a capital outlay measure for planning funds. Ibe osteopathic esBsge is light in the middle of an cording to Dr. Dickinson. The Pontiac surgeon said today that opposition to top creation of a college authority to govern the projected medical school seems to come at the state level, specifically the newly formed State Board of Education. He said that toe state.board apparently feels that any educational program should go through toe board. Creation of the esteopathic college authority wmjbl -automatically bypass the board. NOT THE AIM This Is Hot the aim of osteon paths, according to Dr. Dickinson, who said that the profes* ion is only interested in (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) Avon Man Dies First-Degree Murder Charged to Suspect cording to deputies. WASHINGTON Oh-A specific agreement provides that Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey will act for President Johnson if neqd be during the latter’s spiUwzation for removal of his gallbladder. This was emphasized yesterday by the President in announcing toe.forthcoming operation. However, he said be does not 'anticipate toe need for presidential decision, or actions., dur-ing the short time that I wifi not be available for the pur- 1 pose.” Harris demanded examination w h e brought before Pontiac Township Justice R. Grant Graham early this morning. He was returned „ j§____H Oakland County ARNETT Jail without bond to await his pretrial examination scheduled by Graham for Oct. 18. Meanwhile, an autopsy was to be performed on the victim at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today to determine the exact cause of death. Sheriffs deputies Mid Arnett called them Monday sight aad charged Harris with kicking him repeatedly In the chest and stomach. , The beating reportedly took place in front of a house in the block pf Woodeim, in Avon Township, about two miles from Arnett’s home. Humphrey Is Ready Jo Take Over 'it it if Humphrey have had aa agreement since shortly after their election, providing: • In case of inability,'the President would — if possible — so inform the vice president, Recuperation Slated to lake 10 to 14 Days Mayo Dpctor Says Operation Is Major but Risk 'Very Low' See Stories, Page C-2 CHAIN OF COMMAND. HANDSHAKE -President Johnson, with the first lady looking on, shakes hands today with Vice President Humphrey — the man who will take any needed action if the chief executive at any . * { - ---------TSP> Photofax time is unable to do so. President Johnson used this setting to sign into law a major attack against heart dijfesse, cancer and stroke. Gall hladder operations were not mentioned. and the latter would serve as acting president, exercising the duties of toe office until the inability ended. Arnett, however, refused to sign a complaint. Last night he began to get sick, according to relatives of the victim. He was taken to Avon Center Hospital in Avon Township by a brother, Elmer. Hospital aaOorMes called the sheriff’s department and reported that Arnett was in critical condition. Deputies who sssisteiT'in transferring the victim to Pontiac General Hospital said both his eyes were blackened and he was’twisting in pain. - • In the event an taxability prevented the President from communicating with the vice president, the latter, after such consultation as he deemed appropriate, would decide whether to take over the powers of the office and serve as acting president uptil the Inability ended. • In either event, the President would decide when the inability had ended and at that time would resume the full exercise of his powers and duties. Johnson said the agreement with Hnmphrey is the same as that between former President Dwight D. Eisenhower and former Vice President Richard M. Nixon, and between toe late president John F. Kennedy and Johnson when he was vice president. A proposed constitutional amendment covering - the subject of'presidential inability was passed by Congress in-July and is now before the states. Eight of the required 38 state legislatures have ratified it. Michigan acted only yesterday. Others are Arizona, Okla-ima, Nebraska, Massachusetts, Pinned for 24 Hours Boy Freed From Viselike Trap in Cave MEDINA, Ohio (AP) — A 15-year-old boy was inched free today from tha viselike trap where he was pinned 24 hours to In Today's Press Dirksen Calis rights leader’s suggestion pn crime jurisdiction astounding—PAGE C4. Indonesia Revolt now captersN central Java ■— PAGE' D-ie. A Busy Man American aaleunan pictured in ftret of three-part series — PAGE M. Arne Near* ......... M Astrology .......§•' Bridge . §§ Passimd Pfffto ■•■ *4 r—ilri rr.M. Editorials ...- Feed Section D-2, D-3, D4 Markets $05^ owtaaries . ICrt TV-Radie Pregrams J-U Wflsea, Ear! —W* 9 a cave once used to hide fugitive slaves. He was taken from the cave to a hospital. The 118-pound boy. Morris aetzhokl, looked exhausted when he was carriad on stretcher from the cave., Rescuers, who bad struggled through tile sight to free him, finally managed to get a strap around his slender body and ninety lifted him out ef totlH" MBm riodically, reported him to good condition. “I’ve never seen a buy with so much guts to my fife,” laid another worker, Jim Lm,. 23. “He hasn’t complained. I’ve (Continued on Page 8* Opi. 1), LANSING (AP)-- Michigan became the eighth state in the union yesterday to approve the Presidential Disability Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The House approved the amendment 81-15. The amendment must be approval by 38 ef the 58 state legislatures within seven’ years of its passage by Congress. Colorado is the only state to consider the measure so far and not approve it. The measure, which Jiad the endorsement of Gov. George Romney, passed the Senate earlier this year. Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Kentucky.... SETS PROCEDURE The proposed amendment sets out this procedure in case a president becomes incapacitated: • If a president notifies Congress of his disability, the vice president Would take over as acting * president. He would serve until the president proclaimed himself able to resume his powers. • If a president were unable (Continued on Page 2, Col. 4) way where he b pinned face down. Morris waa taken lmmediate-|y to a haspitaj from the cave when he was esuriit about 11 a.m. yesterday while on ah out-tog With youngsters from the children’s home where M lives. He hadJtot eaten since be was WfRtl trying to tag him k diserbtPMP- 1 Throughout the ordeal, was reported to good condition He’s not saying much except jt he wautr to Jet otit,” reported Curtis Fade of Akron if ter coming out of toe cave, you can hardly blame him for that.” Dr. Andrew, C. Karate of Medina, who checked the boy pA Amendment on Disability OK'd by State Three of the opposing votes were cast by* Democrats. The other 12 came from Republicans, although Minority leader Rep. Robert Waldron, R-Grosse Pointe, said the Republican opposition did not represent a party or caucus position. GOP OBJECTS A number of Republican legislators had objected to the measure in an hour of debate Monday night. They complained of vague language and a lack of safeguards against usurpation of presidential powera. Red Chinese Rip U. S.; Air Violation Is Alleged WASHINGTON (AP)— President Johnson is facing surgery Friday for removal of his gall bladder, then 10 to 14 days in the hospital and several weeks more on a reduced schedule. The President, *57, a rather forlorn-looking man seated all alone at. the huge, octagonal table in the White House Cabinet room, announced the forth-coming operation to newsmen last night at the close of a day of suspense. The phvsician who will perform theroperation, Dr. George A. Hallenbeck of the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn.? said it -f will be major surgery but “the risk to a normal person of the President’s age is very low indeed’’—' TOKYO -Uft — Communist China hurled new defiance at the United States today after claiming to have downed one of four U.S. planes it said violated Chinese air spate. There was no Conffiieflt on the Chinese claim flrom U.S. officials in Washington er Saigon. A spokesman for Peking’s defense ministry termed the alleged aerial intrusion “a planned and premeditated action, part of the U.S. imperialists’ efforts to expand their war aggression in Asia.” “If the U.8. imperialists insist on imposing war upon the Chinese people and engaging in a trial of military strength, we say to them, you are welcome,” he continued. prevtoce adjoining Communist North Viet Nam. The broadcast said file three other American planes “fled in dismay when they found; the situation unfavorable.” No further details were given and the fate of the pilot was not disclosed. “If you dare to come, we will dare to hit back. We will fight whenever you come, and wherever you. appear- We will wipe you out whether you come singly or to pairs.” WORDS SIMILAR The amendment is designed install the vice president acting president if the president is too sick or injured to perform his duties. His words were similar to those of Foreign Minister. Chen Yi, who last week challenged the United States, Soviet Union, India and Britain to invade China “and be wiped out.” Radio Peking reported that Chinese fliers downed an American fighter yesterday ever Kwpngsi, Hurst said Johnson has had no heart difficulty tor 10 years.: 'T would place him in a group of risks similar to any other patient who has not Had a heart attack.” Johnson will check to at.the U.S. Naval Hospital in Suburban Bethesda, Md., tomorrow. A Navy commander for a time to World War II, Johnson was ■ taken to this hospital after his hemt attack. And he was there for 3f% days last January with a sore throat and heavy cold. MINIMUM TIME He reported last night that ‘the doctors expect (here will Blue Skies Wilt Dazzle Area for Next Few Days October’s bright blue skies iat poets write about will be with us for the next few days. The weatherman said tomorrow will be partly sunny and mild and mostly fair and mild* is the forecast tor Friday. Temperatures will fall into the high 48s tonight and rise to the 66s tomorrow. Southwesterly winds will increase to 15 to' 25 miles per hour late today. A low of 41 was the 7 a.m. reading today. At 2 p.m. tl mercury had slipped up to 63. Ace Right-Handers Start Series for Dodgers, Twins And the man w|io handled Johnson’s severe heart attack in 1355, Dr. J. Willis Horst, chairman of the medical de- -pertinent at EmeiFy Univer-. shy in Atlanta, Ga., said, ‘We do not anticipate difficulty. Obviously we intend to< be as carctal and cautions aa will not be conducting business And he sounded assurances that should presidential action or decision be needed and he was unable to provide them, standing arrangements are In. effect for Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey to act to his place. . Johnson met with Humphrey and the Cabinet just before he read his announcement to news- men. He said he had discussed his case also with congressional : leaders and former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. — He had gone through a flurry of appointments, with newsmen and photographers calldd to to observe part of .the process. But the White House press corps had had advance indications of something more momentous — ‘thing whose nature waia-- carefully guarded secret to the; last moment ~ MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL (UPD—The Lot Angeles Dodgers, coming off a hot streak, and the Minnesota Twins, who ted to the American League pennant,- started World-Series play today with their ace rigit-handers oo the pitch tngmound. For tbe Dodgers, who won IS of their last 16 games to beat out top San Francisco Giants for the National League petinant, it waa hta Pod Drtadale start-ir— rr~i" t a side-wheeling snedaHat J *“»! ** uu OryBBr Z 7 . v >1! . ^ liar Alia* mAiMAitiiim otui T ikinlr UfTIOlrff Dodgers were 11-10 favorites to win the first game and 7 to 5 choices to take the series. Both managers. Waiter Alston of the Dodgers and Sam Melc of the Twins, admitted they had problems, although both were confident. ; ‘ Tt*p natural,” Alston ex-itoed, “to have a letdown after tee way we bad to win and .did win — in. coming from behind to take the pen- i lost a Series velyn Pettit, an Akron nuros, talks to a Hinckley, Ohio, fireman after she was unsuccessful in rescuing a 15-year-old boy trapped in a rock crcvlca in a. cava near Hinckley. the bey, Morris Baetsoid, waa freed after this picture wH*1' For tee Twins, it was Jim (Mudcat) Grant, with aseasea record et 21 victories against 7 Meats. He sever has pitched la a Series game. With sunny weather and the ttmitoraturea to the 60s, the , Although the Twins won four of the six games they played after clinching the pennant the players naturally re-j laxed and took tt easy. up our momentum, and I think we wifi." Mela's problem was just the opposite — to gat bis team back MOMENT CAME " The moment came after tee Cabinet had left. A trace of a smile flitted across Johnson's face when cameramen and newsmen started piling into the Cabinet room. He .began reading his (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Series Facts-Figures LOS ANOSLSS Battty QuUlkl 1- —ttnwrw - __ _____ (Amtrlcan Tony Vwuon (National fin* kata; John Flaharty (American) sacono Mat; Tony Rodgers Twins Dpiamaiin QOBGiaHHI “Smooth Sailing" When you use a Press Want Ad Mr, E. F. reported that this ajl brought results the nrai saafe-4 prospsets to choose from. u> pedp yam. m h.p.” motor .Dial 332-8181 Ask for M Ad-Vtone j£-4 THE PQfmAC PRBS3Wfo3I Wednesday at SiW *.m Sun riffs Thursday at «;37.e.m. Moon tats Thursday at fall a Jn Oaa Year Age In Paatter ' Milwaukee 55 41 TMaday hi Paatiac U ! Cincinnati presidential chair, managed a bit ef a smile again, aad walked rapidly toward the dear. Be seemed leached by a chant of “Goad lack, Mr. President,” from the press earps. Humphrey told newsmen that Johnson had discussed the situation tolly with him and the Cabinet, “and we are clear as to the procedures to be followed during his short absence if necessity arises.” ■w ‘ ♦. . Humphrey added that he would remain in Washington and be available at alt times during Johnson’s hospitalization. - IKE’S OPERATION Not since Eisenhower underwent an ileitis operation in 1166 a president in office required surgery. Jehasoa himself had had a kidney stone removes by sar* gery back in 1956, before Ms heart attack. And hi IMS eae was eliminated by auutipela-tiea. This was recalled by Dr: Cain after BUI D. Moyers, White House press secretary, brought in most of the team of doctors handling the Johnson case for a question and answer session. * * * It includes Halienbeck, Hurst, Burkley, Cam, and four others; Dr. David Paul Osborne, chief surgeon at the naval hospital, the Anesthesiologist, Dr. Edward P. Didier from Mayo Clinic, Dr. Donald C. Mellrath, head of a Mayo section of surgery Navy Capt. James Young the assistant White House As to how reawval of the gill bladder will affect the President, HaOeabecfc said its function “seems to be seme-thing one can do without completely.” \ He said ordinarily it takes one to two hours for the operation, made through an incision in the upper abdomen on the right side. While be is at it, he said, there will be the customary ex- of other organs that area. Moyers said there are plaps at this point for the period after the President leaves the hospital — no decisions whether Johnson might go to the LBJ Ranch in Texas for recuperation. But be arid he assumed the President would be at the White House. OFFICE CENTER For the time being, the hospital will be the White House. Moyers will set up the press office there, and an official announcements will be channeled through it. The President will occupy a third Omt suite, 14 flights below the quarters in the boo-phal tower he used last January- Mrs. Johnson plans to go to the hospital tonight and remain near her husband through and after the operation. Debate Bill oh School _• I t (Continued From Page One) providing mare physicians for Michigan residents. “We have no intention ef bypassing the board. la fact, nan charter was issued through die-board under the oH constitution,” be explained. ACCEPT AID A 10-member osteopathic college authority would he created to supervise the projected MCOM and,. would be authorised to accept ahy public or private donations or financial aid. Sen. Raymond Dzendzel, D-Detroit, prime supporter of the bill, said osteopaths themselves have pledged in the neighborhood of H million toward the Pontiac medical school. Federal aid is also being sought from a 6105-million fund set aside'to assist healing arts institutions. Atty. Gen. Frank Kelley has declared the State Board of Education must approve establish- I. she will have to do n>cnt new coBefes or \miver- the honors at a White House dinner tomorrow honoring senators, representatives and their wives. The President planned a speech for the occasion. Some other presidential plans, unannounced but in the cards, Humphrey Set to Be Stand-In It was Halienbeck who estt- ’ ----------------4 (Continued From Page One) or unwilling to declare his disability, the vice president would become acting president tf he and a majority «if the Cabinet — or a majority of such other body as Congress may provide in this future — sent a declaration to Congress that the president was unable to discharge his duties. • A president could regain his powers by advising Congress that his inability no longer exists, unless this is challenged i four days by the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet, orauch other body as Congress provides in the future. •Any dispute over the inability of the president to resume Mi powers would be settled by Congress, which would be required to convene within 41 boors after such a dispute aroaa, if not already in melon, • If within 21 day* Congress determined by twotfaMa majority vote in both chnmhere that the president waa maple to targe Me duties, ttr vice dent would continue at acting president. Otherwise the president would resume powers and duties. Under the proposed an merit, if (he vice prattdsncy became vacant, the p would nominate a at who would take office ai firmattai by • majesty vote of both Senate and Howl. ■ * fly on from there to Hawaii or Alaska Or both . His daughter, Luci, probably will be in to;see him Friday morning. And daughter Lynda, who is attending the University of Texas at -Austin, probably will fly to "Washington that night si ties and department additions to existing schools. * ★ Dr. Dickinson, said that the osteopaths, when they learned of the attorney general’s ruling, sent a letter last April to the state board,, asking for an interview to explain the situation. NO REPLY Until recently Dr. Dickinson said there had been no reply. set for kov. 4 with the state board, ■ * V * I think we’re caught in the middle of an internal fight,”1 said the osteopathic association 3 (is. Planes M Center to present Jeti Are Missing; rWomen PfflteWork f■ Parachutt* Sighted ■ BIRMINGHAM - The work „l... ,nom of Indies who have a way with a SAIGON, South Viet ^ ^ ^hibitod The Phantom wal lost on > nine-plane strikeVob the Lang Hep ntomunttiopjkgOt 40 miles northeast of Hanoi) the spokesman said. Ten other Phantoms scheduled for the same target were diverted to fly rescue cover after the plane went down. The Thunderchiefs were part of a '20-plane raid on Lang Met bridge 45 miles northeast of Hanoi. Heavy flak was observed over the area, the spokesman said. pnMF'fariuh will thisffnonth at the Birmingham Artlhttr. ~ Arriving this weekend will be tiie 'fraveling exhibition from thq yfenial shows of the Notional Association of Women Artists; which is headquartered in New York, N.Y. The show will include some 47 pieces by talented member* of the group. Predominantly dll paintings, die work also includes some mixed media representatives. W •'# Sr Many of the paintings have won’prises in recent shows. OPEN SUNDAY The local exhibition will open Sunday with a reception from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Birmingham Art Center, 1516 5.; Cranbrook. The paintings will remain on display through Oct. 26. Bloomfield Art Association gallery hours are 2 to 5 p.m. daily except Monday. There is oo admission charge. ances is • p.m. in the Hoiy Name Auditorium, 630 Harmon. Ticket* Ofn be obtained from any club member or at the door;---. The Pulitzer Prize-winning film, “Hops in Peru,” will be shown Oct. 13 at tha Community Home. Sponsored by the Birmingham Rebekah Lodge, the program is scheduled for 7:46 p m. A doctor will explain the wink of the hospital ship S. S. Hope. HANOI CLAIMS Radio Hanoi claimed Tuesday its gunners had shot down 10 U.S. planes. Hand declared last week feat U.S. pilots shot down in North Viet Nam would be treated as war criminals and face trials. * ,* In the ground war, a U.S. military spokesman said the Vietnamese army claimed Its forces killed 200 Viet Cong this week in major operations in the central highlands and the Mekong Delta. The casualty claims were not confirmed by U.S. body counts. CLAIM 221 KILLED The Vietnamese claimed 220 guerrillas dead following heavy fighting Monday during a government sweep in the southernmost province of An Xuyen. They said another 40 Viet Cong were killed and 21 captured in an action in Binh Dinh Province. Light losses were reported. The operation in Binh Dinh, 305 miles northeast of Saigon, reopened a portion of strategic Highway No. 1 which the Communists had cut, the spokesman sakl. U.S. authorities said 1,067 Viet Cong, 229 government troops and 17 Americans were killed to action last week. Air strikes accounted for most of the Viet, Cong losses. Vietnamese officials Tuesday put the Viet Cong dead for the week St 1,767. But this included an estimate of 700 enemy dead in heavy fighting near the Phu Cu Pass, in Dinh Province. •C ZONE In the air war, U.S. B52 bombers attacked the Viet Cong’s “C” Zone ih their 39th strike of the war. The eight-engine jets bombed an area about 75 miles northwest of Saigpn The Holy Name Teen Club will present “You Can’t Take It With You” Friday, Saturday Slid Sunday. The piny to be staged by the teen-agers is a comedy by Mm Hart and George Kaufman. It deals with the activities of a zany New York family during the 1130’s. Curtain time for all perform- County Raps Welfare Plan Officials Ar* Against Statn-Locol Merger Oakland County officials today took a stand against (he pending bill to merge state and local welfare departments.-------- The legislative committee of te County Board of Supervisors cited five points of opposition to substitute Senate Bill 216, which may be up for discussion in the state legislature this afternoon. The first objection to that SB 216 does not conform to the policy as previously approved by the board of supervisors in that it does not la- Doctor Raps Rejection for Viet Service PONTIAC (AP) - A Pontiac physician says “Washington bureauorifa” rejected Maxtor to treat Viet Nam civilians without pay, because he to an osteopath and not a medical doctor. Dr. Jerome J. Robb lives at 2575 Hiller, West Bloomfield Township, and practiced in Pontiac since 1942. He termed the rejection an “apparent injustice" and said he has ap-pdlfcd by letter camp was belitved to be It was the fifth B52 attack on “C” Zone to Id days. Other U.S. and Vietnamese pilots pounded Viet Cong targets in South Viet Nam in more than 200 sorties. ‘‘‘The one — and only—reason for turning me down to that " am an osteopathic doctor, rather than a medical doctor, Robb said. “The people of Viet Nam are dying in droves for lack of any kind of owe, but those of us who want to help them are being rejected simply because we don’t have the right degree.” SERVED IN HAITI Robb, 52, said he served as a volunteer physician for the World Health Organization Haiti. after a hurricane took hundreds of lives there two He srid he volunteered this unmer when Presidential Press Secretary Bill D. Moyers callad tor physicians to go to Viet Nam for at least two months to care for wounded and ailing civilians. Secondljrf that the bill as drafted is ambiguous, patched up and contains many provisions in conflict with each other. Thirdly, it places contra! of the welfare policies undsr a commission which to nonexistent and for which no authority is given for its creation. REMOVES LOCAL'CONTROL Further, the gist of the bill is to remove from local control all policy and specific decisions oa , welfare matters' contrary to sound policy of welfare philosophy and thit the local community is better suited to know t its own problems, as witness the Economical Opportunity Act of 1964. Finally, that fte merger provision takes away ton given toag aad devoted qervica to Ike county, benefits which have been earned by them aad places their positions, com- The legislative committee fyir-ther recommended that Oakland County, recognizing that remedial legislation to needed, assist studyjng this problem to depth arid work toward a sound bill for the sokition to the problem. George H. Williams, director of the county’s department of social welfare, and his assistant, Douglas Hoard, left for Lansing following the legislative committee meeting this morning to distribute to legislators copies of the county stand on the wet fare issue. . ' Substitute Senate Bill 216 is a revision of the original Senate bill bearing that number and Houae Bill 2963. Cadillac Adds New With one added model - the Fleetwood Brougham — Cadillac Motor Division today introduced the 1966 Cadillac, available to three aeriee and 12 body styles. Chief new featdre to variable ratio steering, said by Cadillac engineers to' five the 1916 model improved driving ease and traffic maneuverability. The 1966 Cadillac goes aa ■ale to the feflowtog area dealer ihiwraame Oct. 1<|; ' Lee Osborn iiales Co., tlTE. Liberty, Milfdffi; Wilson Pon-tiac-Cadlllac, 1350 N. Woodward, Birmingham; and Jerome Motor Sales, 1980 W. Wide Track, a * * The Fleetwood Seventy-Five sedan and limousine are restyled from bumper to bumper and comprise the first major body change to these limi production models since 1969. ^Cadillac Unvtils It* 1966 Modtl* Two comfort and convenience options are now standard on tha Seventy-Fives — automatic dual heating agd air conditioning and an automatic load leveler, introduced last year. A aew safety option to a traffic hasard warning light with a (oar-way flasher. Standard features include retractable rear seat belts and padded sun visors. y ; *. . ;.t( _ Mato difference to the front appearance of Cadillac is a bolder and broader^ looking grille, with particular attention given to lighting detail and reduction of chroma on headlamp aadfemtora. ' "$ LID REDESIGNED ^ The deck lid has been tide-signed and tito rear bumper — split vertically bp a heavy chrome bar-featur* new lighting. Additional etyHag fontorii Include Aua|p||Mi9d padded reef and g tjfitad glass rear window. - THE PONTIAC PRESS/ WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965 JL-~$ Htiitint Cone to SIMMS^for FREE TENETS to win o now 1966 PONTIAC TEMPEST'Car. This gala event starts tomorrow in Downtown Pontiac. Tho Downtown Morchants Association and Simms aro giving away absalutoly fros a brand now 1966 Pontiac no pvrchaso is nocossaty - just ask for froo tickots in Simms and othor participating storos. Como downtown and soo tho Mock long Pontiac Motor Tont with all tho .now Pontiacs and Tom post cars, Uvo ontortainmont and music too. Hurry,, hurry, 3 big TIGER DAY Salos days. All items on solo Thurs., Fri., Sot. and subject to stocks on hcnd-Wo rocorvo tho right tg limit, quantities. Men’s Work Pants SANFORIZED Broken sizes In novy blue herring ponit with button fly and fully K ized for washability. famous Finch Brand included. Regular $3.49 value. Men’s Work Shirts P II Long Sleeve Navy blue herringbone work shirts In sizes 16 to 17 Value! to $2.69 h j o j.gg now juti —Basement g Size 36 Only Fall ond winter jacheti 1 with warm pile or quill lining. AN firtt quality. I 11 %-oz. Blue Denim rooting blue denim ponts zipper fly, tonforized Slight irregular! Sizes 38 • 40 42 only — Saeement ‘Sudden Beiety’ Hair Spray Large 13-oz. size [ 88c value. Genuine. 'Sudden | Beauty' hair, tpray for styling , d extra holding power l -Main Fleer ‘Weodbarys’ Skin Lotion Rich in Lanolin $1,00 volue. New pink 'Wood ^ burys' skin lotion, ipothe( a smoothes your skin —Main Floor Surcoats and Jackets 3M Ian’s Dungarees I?7 | zos.es ‘Gillette’ Adjustable Razor with otoinleoo oteel blades $1.50 volue, genuine 'Gillette' I adjustable razor with pockoge j of 2 stainless steel blades. -1 —Main Floor * ‘Woodburyt’m,. i $1.00 Value } Cooling, soothing, refresh* ing after shove lotion _ . —Main Floor " Simms Low Price— Sturdy wooden sfcplodder that folds easily ond compact for storage. Hondy point pail shelf for convanienee. limit 1 —2nd Floor Gas-Unc Anti-Freeze 12-ounce size Stops stalling by preventing — condensation in gas tank, pre* ® vents gas lino freeze up. Id —foctory seoled ea^s.limit 8 - 2nd Floor »$Siit Boys’ Corduroy Pants 67 100% Cotton Continental styles 100% cotton washable corduroy pants in popular loden green color. Sizes 8 10.1? *18 only — Basement 1 I Boys’Washable Rants Assorted Group ■ Assorted group of boys' ponts in * various colors. Sizes 6 lo 14 Not every color in every style jOO Jumbo Garment Beg 88e 54 Indie* Long $149 volue. ttroWdyour doth-ing tn'o crystal clear garment bag Quilted reinforcements -Main Floor Final Cluorancu Entiru Stock Quilted Bedspreads 194 Deluxe quality tho* slight Irregulars, Heavy quMsd bedspreads In twin ond full size. Assorted solid colors In twin size, white only In fuH size r Bo somont ‘Puff Facial Tissues . 29c value [Cosmeticolly soft, yet A AH strong, they come in £ ol white or colors. .. for -Main Floor ‘Griffin’ Liquid Shoe Polish 29c valuo Famous Griffin' shoe polish I in the self-applicator bottle.' ChoOtie from oil colors ond white — -Morn Floor Shampoo or Bath Oil $2.00 Valuo jam Your choice of bubbling bath ^ oN or lotion shampoo ih 'Woodbury*' Lilac Bouquet Kent —Main Floor Shalers ‘RISLONE’ The Oil Alloy . Frees sticky valves, restored lost compression. Your en- M m gine rum smoothly, quietly limit ? -2nd Floor Rafloctor on Aluminum Stako Driveway Markers Avoid Occidents with o re- Mb Hector drivewoy marker Atu- ^L^P O# minum spiral stoke. -2nd Floor ‘Prestons’ "KST Sofvent C $SMS Reminrten LV Cordlsss - Nsw........ $11 Ji Reufnitsn #M4 HI.IS lady Flsminiten... ... II $5.00 holds any Shaver in Our Free Layaway until Christmas ’Wahl’ Barber Ktt 13 Pieces $ 13.75 value. Genuine 'Wahl' kit includes adjustable clipper, 04)00 :ut, 4 attachments, combs, shears, barber comb, neck cape, 944 'Preston* Solvent added K water prevents washer freeze-up* Be sure your washers work ‘General Electric’ Automatic Toaster For toast as you liko it Simms Low Price Gleaming chrome finish, easy read shade control, crumb troy. 2-slits model. ‘ _ —2nd Floor Wahl’ Clipper Guides < s Set of 3 P* 98c value, #1 2-3 attach- ments, combs for butch cuts. tfSsR Fits most clippers. ______ -AAoln Floor BE S Electric Clcck $4.98 Valuo Trim case in antique white, sweep second hand ond alarm -Main Floor 966i e\5• J it# GE‘Cuette’Electric Clock lighted Dial $5.98 value, easy-to-read dial, antique white case, sweep second hand ond alarm —Main Floor 2" ’Ingraham’ Stop Watch Subring 500 I Accurate Stop Watch for timing ff sporting events and races. Will time event up to a full hour's duration with one-second accuracy. Bright red sweep second hand, black minute hand -Main Floor | \ 21-Inch Plush Tiger s» ‘Eversharp’ Pinking Shears Inch Sice 3*8 TO PONTIAC PRESS 4 America Pays Homage to Apostle of Peace History was written Monday when for the first time the reigning head of the Roman Catholic Church left his papal sanctuary for a whirlwind visit to America. —Pope Paul VI in a 4,280-mile round trip spent an unprecedented 14-hour-long day in Hew York where, it is estimated he was seal by four million people, many of them awestruck and sober in their respect for his supreme office. ★ Hie 68-year-old pontiff-spent — an hour with President Johnson discussing world problems prior to an afternoon address before the United Nations General Assembly. POPE PAUL ter at a cost of between 20 and SO cents per 1,000 gallons. * * Nor is it only traditionally arid areas which could profit from desalination plants. Water-short New York City, in cooperation with the Federal government, is looking into the possibility of building a desalting plant that might cost as much as $500 million. City officials are thinking in terms of a plant that could produce from ISO million to 250 million gallons of water a day. ★ ★ ★ In any ease, the $20 million now being spent this year by the Federal government on desalination research may be one of the best investments in the history of mankind. Mars seems to be very much like the moon, only larger.1 It could be that when we've seen one outer space body, we’ve seen them all. "Relief Pitcher! David Lawrenc^ Says: ‘Suggest Annual Testing fot Drivers Over Fifty* Some people complain about teen*#?® drivers and the traffic problems. In my seven years of driving without incident, I have observed that the worst offenders are people over 50 years. Ma Ar * . * ★ t . • , i . I think anyone over 50 Should be jlven a test, eyo examination and schooling On rules, of ^ driving once a year. It might make people remember U} drive better. 43-YEAR-OLD HOUSEWIFE Suggests Cure for Shopping Cart Problem One approach to the shopping ^ ^ej^ aro^ town would be ta give a ticket to each ^ pushing a cart retrieved from theming would V his name on the ticket, and drop in a boafrom which weekly drawings would be made and prises awarded. ''' GEORGE McCART DM LINDEN Comments on City Annexation of Property The Pontiac City Commission is continuing to i neighbor” policy toward the surrounding of 212 acres of land, from Pontiac Township, for ^proposed use of a garbage dump and junk yard to an example. Could this be retaliationror its failure to levy an income tax on the non- Suburbia Next Pope’s Plea Aimed at Reds, Too ★ ★ ★ The City went to court seeking relief from tlm aotoo end dirt of the metal crushing machine. Do they tWnk It wD operate quieter in the suburbs? I wish the best of luck in the lawsuit to nullify tigs annexation. I request that my name not be used. WATERFORD SYMPATHIZER In the evening he celebrated Mass for 90,000 worshipers jammed into Yankee Stadium. At its conclusion, His Holiness made a stem at the World’s Fair before boarding a plane for return to Rome. Peace was the undeviating theme of Pop e Paul's utterances, the keynote of which was “Mankind must put an end to war—or war will put an end to mankind.” ★ ★ ★ He touched implicitly on two global questions, the tenor of his beliefs aomeWhat at variance with official sentiment In the United States. / vj , ★ ★ ★ One was that America, in the interest of peace, "should swallow her pride” and support * Red China’s admission to the / . United Nations organization. • The other, tantamount to s reaffirmation of the Church’s opposition to birth control, was that the world should cope with the expected birth explosion and correlative threat of famine by . "multiplying bread, not by curbing births.” With the world seene marred by conflict and a spirit of militancy motivating many peoples, Pope Paul's memorable visit to America and his plea for “Eternal peace and coexistence for mankind” are of utmost timeliness and significance. Hopes of Arid Areas ____Watered by, Research Scientists are on the threshold of discovering a cheap way to desalt sea water. Progress in this momentous research effort will be studied at an international symposium now under way in Washington. Fifty-four nations are represented, among them Israel and five Arab nations that have en-—gaged in &’ bitter conflict over the use of water from the Jordan River. As President Jorkson stated recently,- "It would be difficult to exaggerate the power for good, the palliative effect on age-old animosities and problems, that would result from providing an abundance of water in lands which, for countless generations, have known only shortage.” ★ ★ * ' The present cost of desalted i water is , around $1 per 1,000 gallons — about flye to ten thn— the cost of naturally fresh -water in this country. But fur-thsr technical advances arc certain 1* fewer casts. One possibility lies in the use of nuclear energy to generate elec-tajcfojr and t|W diverting the excess jMpsr to dfolilfetion of sea water? According to an# study, this might tastolorni am water into fresh wa- Political Power? By RAYMOND J. CROWLEY WASHINGTON UPt — WiH suburbia become the political power center of the future? The answer seems likely to be “yes” unless, which deems improbable, rural America can halt a political revolution now under way. He name if the revolution to a soporific phrase, “reappoijhaneat of state legislatures.” But no matter how much it tends to put some citizens to sleep, Stay win wake up some day to its profound Import ★ ■ it it And suburbanites — from the man in the -gray flannel suit to tiw blue collar workehyscem destined to flex much more poUtiaw^ausdettanjnuthe^ past______ ■flail arises from the 1M4 Supreme Court /decision that both houses of state legislatures must be based on population. This dealt a terrific blow to farmers and residents of small towns, long to control of moot legislatures. In the ensuing furor — marked by hundreds of lawsuits, hot debates in legislatures, warnings by courts to reapportion “or. else”— the fight has been widely billed as one between city dwellers and farmers. ★ ★ it This to misleading, for this reason: '** Many big cities have been declining in population, either .relatively or absolutely. It is the suburbs which have burgeoned at a rate that to a wonder of the world. BIGGEST INCREASE They stand to get the biggest proportionate increase in power. William J. D. Boyd, senior associate of tiw National Municipal Lengae, says la a pamphlet that the MM census ■hewed the great migration from farm to city had eaded. But while the suburbs grew spectacu-tsflyriaany critka bf^sriepditive setups complained that the relative value oT a suburbanite’s vote declined. ^ £ -jf: - Two University of Virginia specialists on apportionment. Profs. Paul T. David and Ralph Etoenberg have studied the subject TRY COMPARISON Taking the figure 1M as representing “perfect apportionment,” they tried to figure out bow cities and suburbs fared between 1PM and I960. A few examples: New York City nee from 71 to M, while suburban Suffolk COnaty declined from 111 to 07. Philadelphia west from M to II but Bucks County from Ml to «. Cook County (Chicago) rose from 17 to It, but suburban Lake County declined from 107 to H. WASHINGTON — The mission tion between peoples have not But the big question to wheth- IT n . . r _ .rri, •_ rtilldswim Of Pm* Paul VI to the united i*« effect*, to^ovonito, the „ » rff be pebble to convince Urgw Parent, to Consider Their Children Nations was a plea not just to rise o{ ^Hicote regimes which ^ p^pj^g 0f Red China and To the poor, divorced Waterford mother and the barteaed the free peoples of the world to "*k wor“.conq“est . the Soviet Union that they must divorced father, I say “what a pity.” The mother teMfld fog establish neace —: * * * t,»e governments whose the cure,of the children twenty-four hours s day whither stiu establish peace, The visit-of Pope Paul VI dra- gj* ra£h! married or divorced, and the dad would still be paying tor the matized the issue of peace at b^helSS 3d children’, support, an opportune moment in world trustedbyUierestoltheworld. * * * Parents should censtoet----------------_zs- leve, forgive and remember the parent that toa’t around. ■ it ir ★ Parents, wipe the hate out of your hearts, pick up the pieces, and join the rest of the world again. Life isn’t perfect, you know. ANOTHER TIME AROUNDER was directed as well to 14B Controversy Evolved From Fight Over ’47 Law fat regimes which Mve threatened the peace of man kind and eon tinue to threat enit. Whether the LAWRENCE plea will be persuasive depends By LYLE WILSON on the peoples of the Soviet United Press International rJXjS? The purpose of this essay will WHOLLY PERMISSIVE whfcfhare Stoned themselves ** to 5Uggest ■« good-men -That imposes nothing oh or-should know precisely what to ganized labor. Section 14B to with Cooununist imperialism. ta 14B of the Wholly permissive. It permits The Pope did net esk only Taft-Hartley Act. the people of any state or forri- foe United States a* Ms allies To begin at the beginning, the tory to decide for themselves W throw their arms away, bet Taft-Hartley Act more properly whether they shall or shall not also asked the Cemauaist to called the Labor Management permit contracts requiring corn- prohibited by Mate or territorial law.” tiens to do the same thing, Relations Act of 1947. lest the latter perpetuate the need for armament by other ‘ countries as an instrument of In passages of transcendent It was enacted la that year by the 99th Congress which Harry 8. Truman ridiculed as tile went of ail time. pulsory unionism. f r A dr- w,........—W - Compulsion to the opposite of liberty and liberty to one of the unalienable rights noted in the Declaration of Independence. It significance; the Pope drew a -rjfLSftPu- to too soon for that document to dtotinctkm between offensive HrJSLKfiLgo out of style. and defensive ahnament. years when the Republican 80th Congress was elected in November 1946. Tsft had sentortty Mrf-Tbe Pope has recognized what fident to make him eligible for the peace-loving peoples of the chairmanship of any committee West have known for years - 0f which he was a member. His that disarmament cannot be uni- three major committees were lateral and that, as long as the labor, banking and finance. Communist regimes insist on * * * their own way in the world, The'finance enmmitt— chairrefusing to h o no r agreements mannhip j| & position of such and rejecting all proposals for power and prestige that sens- Tbs only people who can live mutual inspection of military fa- tors urgently seek It. Taft chose, Wee millionaires thete days are dlities, there will always be instead, to be chairman of the billionaires. armament for defense. Senate Committee on Education ■ GAVE HINT and Labor above others because J —i . The Pope gave a hint of a «g«^tbe e^ng federal Defeated Theory! Possible way- of -bringing a^n^. fo^|^tfo|toL ^-^7*-------------The Balt Lake Trims change in the world. shambles oftfiw. This was'the « ......... Wagner Labor Relations Act of To make up for the lack of He spake of The brotherly the first Roosevelt administra- Mexican bracere labor in pick- nf nconles.” and ___ • ._____________. .___... :__ ‘Our Schools Are Inadequate for Retarded* It to a shame that a mother had to be driven to such a desperate measure as in the Thorne case to get help for her child. Only parenb who have traveled the same road pomibly appreciate the amount of worry and frustration involved and how very difficult it to to get help for this type,of child in our ana. ★ ★ ★ Our schools are inadequate. There are so few dosses for this type of child and they only serve children up to the age of M. Because of their individual problems, such as poor coordination, severe speech problems, etc., these children need extra help. Many are just beginning to learn at this age. it ir it It should be every child’s right to attend school, at least to a reasonable age, in order to profit and develop to his fullest A WORRIED MOTHER Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Only Kind... The Princeton Tiger has successfully achieved s cease-fire between India and Pakistan, a triumph for an organization sadly in need of one However, unless it mom immediately to confront the root problem, Kashmir, its triumph qtey be very short-lived. The status quo to totally unstable. eoUabsmtien of peoples,’ "ib, of course, meats themselves. The Pope also ealled for “personal Chairman of the 90th Congress Howe Committee on Education and Labor Was Rep. Fred A. Hartley cf New Jer- m- tog the California tomato crop, just being harvested, the federal government launched a tomato picker training program at^ ihe Davis campus of the U n i v e r s i t y of California, ik— Ugrti.,, Trainees were fefd odder the "Today, as never before, in J uL Ifll manpower development and room era so marked by human training aCt for taking the twiK progress, there to need for an to^retotionsact while organ- ^ appeal to the moral conscience *»* labor cried out to protest. ± | t of man. For the danger comes, Less than half tfe antidpat- M from progrtM. oor l,om SSfuif. - —hr Kashmir to more important far What It represents to the* combatants than H Is as veal estate or people. Pakistan, for examfk, is a'reHgtoas state wfcaaa reason for existence to that it to Moslem. Kashmir’s popilatiSH to largely Moslem toe; Why titan, goes Pakistani ronaaatof* shenM the two net other forms of aid. Even though we cut off all military support when fighting broke out, there has been no move to Mock economic aid. Neither India nor Pakistan to interested in being a puppet of the Chinese Communists. But if the , UA. shows itself sympathetic to a fair, carefully phased settlement in Kashmir, perhaps involving both partition of certain arena and plehbcitea In especially critical ones, tan would go along i leaving China muffling mountain snows. agerly, in the marge? hand, to And India? The remit would be distasteful because Pakte- ^ ft would be slave labor the science - toteST* pro^iy utilized, these couldi rather toy became flte tow. resolve many o^ the grave prob-OVER VETO iems that assail manldnd. So it was that Taft-Hartley * * * was enacted over Harry Tru- “No, the real danger comes run’s veto. Since 1947 organized labor tie ‘ work recently, M percent refused to it it The figures indicate how much political power suburbs stand to gain if the “one man, one vote” principle is made to stick. The fight is far from one. —M- . , _______ -•_______ . w , Most legislatures have been reappor- * ** m *°™,t obtain repeal ef Taft-Hartley. oeed tioned hut most stiff fall short, to greater conquests. or less degree, of s population bates. - LONG REMEMBERED more powerful arms, which can Jta employed equally well for against a waH to an effort to California employment department officials are invests1 gating reason for failure of the 9125^00 experiment. They do to investigate the bead of 11* Council Verbal Orchidg to- Mr*. Alice Pepper of 54 Seneca; 02nd birthday. Mr. and Mrs. LaMar Otirer of Milford; Slat wedding anniversary. wiff tong be remembjradHsto campaip promise exacted by one of the greet popes to fate- organized labor for its support C"H"U tory. last year of the Johnaon-Hum- I™ t he raealtod ifet Bet It l utoiffiTlMWlirite ‘ I to foe Of all that is contained in the of 349 Auburn; 1 of Rochester; ; ,-tab*,- mn. mam neons of North Bradfoy; 92nd birthday. Never-Lasting.. __The Wall Street Journal **’ , «•* ccctton Feminine faehions; In ^ . year and md the ether. “Nothing to^foto act shall be . ~ . \ H coostntod as suthorizing the ex- T. f Yet war* come, and tetort to- Motion of agreements requiring Tltne Will Telll torvab of peace are enjoyed membership in s labor organ!- _________ only to be marred by threats zstion as a condition of employ- l et mete wara, prtmrtfo ferarni meat in any state or Wmmj The U.N/HHfh, for once, the .suiiuutlcetioo end eofiebora- to which aoch (roqniroBMat) to UJ. end oXH. in accord) Pope Phi XU made Mi veto to April 1919 — just four mouths before Wsrid War n broke set to a secular state cam-posed ef maey tribee, castes and faiths—including 47 mll-Iton Moslems. New Delia’s fear is that this eeflertton ef may fly apart Into ntonomous wilts. If Katemlr is permitted to bold a gfoMtodte and veto itself • port ef Pakistan, what to there to prevent foe Sikhs (or feUk or Panto) from pulling out toe? Both China and the United States have from time to time joined the Indo-Paktotani interplay. We helped era Pakistan during the 1960s as port of our policy of containing Communist China «nd foe U.SA.R., but when foe Chinese attacked Indie in 1(02 and we went to India’s aid our relations with Pakistan soured. The Pakistanis then cozied up to Peking. Burin* the current fighting CMnt alone Mood cheering In the wingd end even staged e dl-versionary provocation on In-dto's Himalayan frontier. # b :♦* - ■ Aside from military sssto-tanee, the VMtlmt underwritten •f the plebiscites. We sheuld guarantee to help defend her egahut any future Chinese aggression. Par the time befog foe UJ. can press tor inch a settlement within the framework ef foe UN. Collective prasmre Is bound'to be mere palatable end, if we keep pnmfof, ef- The Word The Walla Wails (Waeh.) New We will know when our mm have reached Mare—we wU gat word that that fogpapeJtos been sent to Venus. j THE PQNT1AC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1965 A—5 a real snaggy 'bear* story... in frosted pile jackets just grrrreat! Bogus boar sport jackets... a frestod blond of oHon acrylic and modacylic pile, with coxy linings — or find whito fang — a shaggier version of 70% acrylic and 30% verol. They both add Up to your own climate control) PENNEY'S MIRACLE MILE _ *25 STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to t P.M. Heart,'Cancer, Stroke New Ldwto Fight 3 Diseases WASHINGTON (A- President Johnson signed into law today a bill to launch a major attack against heart disease, cancer and stroke — without ever mentioning that he faces a gall Madder operation himself Friday.—SS,-------------~| *. * + Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey was there too, and he and Johnson traded warm words, handclasps and smiles. The President gave a friendly pat on the shoulder to the man who will take any needed action if the President himself at any time is unable to do so. The bill authorizes a three-year, $848 million program to launch a campaign against what the President called three murderous diseases that wfB claim seven of every 18 Americans who lose their lives this year. “Now,” he said, “these are not dry statistics; these are deadly facts whose anguish touches every single family in this land of ours.” ★ w ★ The goal of the ’ new law is simple, Johnson said: ‘To speed the miracles of medical research from the laboratory the bedside.” REGIONAL GRANTS The measure provides for grants to establish regional programs among medical schools and'clinical research institutes. There are provisions for improving the training of specialists and obtaining better medical facilities and equipment to help victims of the three great killer diseases. The way Johnson talked of the bill, without mention of his scheduled surgery, touched the emotional chords of the members of Congress and distinguished doctors in the group which watched the signing. Yet the president did show feeling and a tinge of emotion when lauding the work of commission appointed, under D Michael Debakey of Houston, Tex., whole recommendations was to see the tremendous mo- ' Picked On' Pupil Starts 9th Grade After Suit Filed DETROIT (AP) — Fifteen-year-old Bruce Andrews start in the ninth grade today but only after-his mother filed suit to get him there. Mrs. Lucy B. Andrews agreed Tuesday to withdraw her federal court suit after school- officials said they would transfer Bruce to grade 9-B in McMi-chads Junior High School. Mrs. Andrews asked for an tow Junction last month to force school officials tQ let Bruce into ninth grade. She said teachers at Bruce’s previous s< Hutchins Junior High School, were picking on her son. Teachers at Hutchins said Bruce hqd flunked five of his six subjects. Thirty-five per cent of a large group of American families interviewed reported th'at they had no savings, investments or Fiierve funds in thelonn of bank deposits, bonds or stocks. led to the new law. PRAISES CONGRESS He was equally expressive In raising what he called the [fabulops 80th Congress which he _________ demuMfratfri there is no partisanship in matters of health and education. He said that i thas been] | written that: “Men who are occupied la the restoration of health other men anr above all the great of the earth. They even partake of divinity, since to preserve and reneew is almost as noble as' toereate.” Johnson said that Is true of great doctors but equally true | of citizens who worked for the new- law and particularly true |of ‘‘the fabulous 89th Congress." “You have given us more than I leadership,”’Johnson said, “You I have given our people a gift of hope for long and happy life.” (SURPRISE REPORT * Johnson had a bit of a surprise for his audience. He called I on Dr. Howard Rusk, director of | the! Institute of Physical Medicine and rehabilitation of the I New York University Medical I Center, to report on a mission | [to Viet Nam. While Johnson got busy with pens for signing the bill, Rusk announced that Johnson is sending a plane to airlift to the United States for treatment and rehabilitation 10 paralyzed Vietnamese servicemen he said were doomed to rot to death otherwise. Rusk said the paraplegics will be sent back home to help train hundreds of others who have lost the use of their legs through severance of the spinal cord. Rusk said the most exciting] tiling about his trip to Viet Nam rale among American troops. *' * #- “They know why they are there,” he said. “They are going about winning the war and they are going about winning the peace too. They feel for the ; JUNK CARS WANTED USED AUTO PARTS FOR SALE ■ I PONTIAC SCRAP | Watch this one lead the pack! It’s our bold new Cardigan Shirt with kicky new style fun: mitered panels, chain front, cuffed pockets, 2-tone collar. Bond-priced $4.98 O.FALSE TEETH Roclc, Slide or Slip? rASTXKTH, H Improved powder to be eprtnkled on upper or lower plbtee, bolds felse teeth more firmly in piece. Do not elide, ellp or rock. No rummy, gooey, petty teste ox-feeling. PASTEETHU alkaline (non-scld). Does not sour. Checks plot# Oder breeth". Get FASTEETnet drug oounters everywhere. [ This shirt is all action! Great at the discotheque... only great when you make the campus scere. See its zingy good looks in full-bodied cotton knit. Color combinations: Burgundy body/black panel/burgundy chain . gold/black/gold... blue/black/blue... black/gold/black. " Pontiac Mall Shopping Center PREVIEW 1966 PONTIACS. Ill TIE NEW I mi WPkmmmmmmmiM ■,i§! PF TIGER DAYS v DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ___Ocfeber //8>9 ; (n Conjunction With Waite's Annual -GREAT FALL SALE- : ipHpHWKA-j October;/ thru 16th. Tsee OUR .ADVERTISEMENTS IN THURSDAYS PAPER PICK UP YOUR FREE TICKETS TO THE 1966 PONTIAC fO BE GIVEN AWAY-TICKETS ^AVAILABLE IN ALL ,DEPTS. Shop1 Waite's Mon.,-Wed., Thurs., Frl. and Sat. 1 fashions for fall! Warner's combines Stretch with taffeta for great fit under knits THE ROAD TO AUTUMN BY PURITAN FOREVER YOUNG Now York, London, Paris, Rome or Timbuktu . . . best route to style it a two piste (a'la Courreges) houndstooth check of bonded cotton knit backed with Acetate. Royal/ Greed, Blacfc/Camel. Sires 10-20, l2Vb-22Vi. Charge R. % (36m^LyK wviftoh or PWfTANpittioM corporation Dresses .., Third Floor Know how taffeta stipe are sometimes hard to fit? They ding or twist or ride up? Worner%Hbffeta halfslip gives you 0 beautifully uncluttered lin^ And,1 just a bit of stretch does HI In white, block, beige, navyi Betti dips sizes S-M-L $404 Lingerli Second floor I fr| yotf&ffier Pdhtiad 1966 GTO CONVERTIBLE V-8's? Up to 360 hp in thb GTO. alt the '66 tigers in tiger country. Better yet twist ihp key pn one. Ahd have a tiger by the tail, Wide-Track Pontiac/’66 , Come to tiger See all the Wide-Track tigers at your Pontiac dealers in metropolitan Pontiac. • j KE60SAt£S*S£RVItt,«IC. MSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES, INC. 3080 Orchard Lake Road 89M24 Keego Harbor, Mich. ", J Lake Orion, Midi. j PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION-RETAIL STORE Genera) Motors Corporation 65 Mt Clemdns, Pontiac. Mich. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES. INC. N. Mam St. Clarkson. Mich. HOME HIGHT MOTORS. INC. 1160 $. Washington ‘Oxford. Mich. TOE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER & m& ITS QBiPPLETSj By Science Service * Besides hit work with the NEW YORK - Science's new- Rockefeller Foundation, Dr. eat award, carrying a cadi prize Weaver in consultant and trustee of |S,000, will 4ft presented to of1 the Alfred P. Sloan Founda-fir. Wat i cm Weave on Oct. S tkw for cancer research. r~-in Seattle;^ # WAS TEACHER h, mot to CaU- Norm Howie Would Lilt* to Givo You Your flrat Path At Oof Mow Arrival*. ..v CHEVROLET -CORVAIR-GQRVETTE CHEVELLE-CHEVY II On Display Thursday October 7th at amjme Matthews-Horgreaves Chsvy-Lsnd/EgJ the greep’s first chairman. He was instrumental in the development of the unique Columbia University advanced science writing program, and his leadership in helping to found the National Association of Science Writers was recognised One of his most popular publications is “Lady Luc* — the f* ftwihrfyiky *»---—_ Since the IMO’s, Dr. Weaver has worked to increase science understanding through radio and television, as an author, educator land administrator. HANDLED1 GRANTS During S years with the Rockefeller Foundation, Dr. Weaver has distributed A* million in research grants, much of it going to scientists who later received the Nobel Prise. One of his more important activities has been to promote the application of mathemat-v ics, physics and chemistry to down by the Reds in Viet Nam. The plane reportedly was shot down Aug. a by the Nghe An army in the Thanh Chuong district of North Viet Nam. ‘DOWNED YANK PLANE’—This picture, mode available by Communist sources and distributed by Eastfoto, is described as the wreckage of fhe 500th U.S. aircraft shot Weaver an honorary membership. He also played a key role in the formation of the Council for Advancement of Science Writ- Center litre to Got Marines Hold School Renewal Grant, Loan WASHINGTON (AP) - A 467,457 grant and a $3,532,927 loan U> Center line, Mlrh, were announced Thursday by the Urban Renewal Administration. schoolhouse. His battalion only recently had moved into the Hoa-Thai village complex just south of Da Nang. Speaking proudly ef the Marines’ determination to hold the battered schoolhouse, Tun- - the Viet Cong’s list for assess-: ination. t The schoolhouse is about 75 feet long and has five small i rooms. The Marines have estab-I fished defensive positions inside; sandbags have been placed in some of the doorways i and open windows, i During the day, the school-; bouse serves as a medical aid ! station for villagers, treated by a Navy medic, Dennis Neu, 20, Santa Crux, Calif. The villagers and Marines plan to rebuild the schoolhouse and start classes again. HUTS BURNED. It was at Cam Ne that the' Marines burned several huts last August after being fired at by the Viet Cong concealed inside the huts. Luong said he thinks his people understand: “It is war and CAM NE, South Viet , Nam (API In the midst of this hamlet sits a run-down, bullet-riddled schoolhouse that has become a symbol in the Vietnamese war. Sixteen U.S. Marines guard it around the dock. The Viet Cong fire at it by night In 1955, Dr. Weaver headed a 1 committee appointed by the Na-1 tional Academy of Sciences to I study the problem of radiation and inform the public on Its 4 “It is a symbol of American help (to the South Vietnamese People),” says Lt. Col. Robert Tunnftfi, Fall brook, Calif. He commanded the 3rd Battalion of tile 9th Marine Regiment until Friday, when he lost his right leg. He stepped on a pound Mock of dynamite planted -by the Viet Gong, and set off hy * homemade pressure fuse. While helping to evacuate him, Sgt. Adolf Hartschiag, Vis- < ta, Calif., stepped on a similar mine and lost Ms left leg. , Tunnell said that a year ago Cam Ne was “a pure Communist town.” v Today, according to Nguyen Luong, 51, the village chief, there are 600 families in the Hoa-Thai village complex, which includes the hamlet of Cam Ne. Of time 000, he says, 101 are Viet Cong sympathisers. MARINE GUARD Forstmann’s Worsted Teardrop, 3 button closing coat Jumbo Male Mink halo col. bur. Sixes 8 to 20. « Blaek/Randh TanpefSilrer Bio* Bioti/AiIuhi Hw Foreign News Commentary ism,” with Red China claiming 4he lead because of her ' uncompromising policy of anti-Americanism and of “revolutionary liberation.” The Chinese are believed to be hopeful that the extension of the Afro-Asian Peoples’ Solidarity Organization would give into Latin America where their influence has so far been comparatively small. Russia, worried about the unrelenting Communist Chinese push info the unaligned world. This year’s student body at Lumumba University in Moscow includes a large proportion of students from Latin America. The rest come from Africa, Southeast Aim and the Middle Ours exclusively! Monogrammed gimes through propaganda, subversion and reportedly also through the use of force. WIDER EFWORTS The move coincides with wider efforts now under way Latin America which, after Africa, is considered also by Peking most ripe for sweeping revolution. Behind the stepped-up ef- j The desire to move into Latin America more forcefully than hitherto and on a more organized basis has prompted the Afro-Asia Peoples’ Solidarity Organization to arrange an Afro-AMan-Latin American confer-: ence in Havana early in the new j Nylon Taffeta Skirt Liner ...andtook who makat 'am/i fresh jam.New Hath Pawn*treaty/ A preliminary meeting look place IB Cairo last month to beds planning for the projected Havana conference not Janu- kimsymUm to mokf fMff »*, skirts or k*K* look their beet. In white, toast, red or beige. Sixes 22 to 30, short and avenge pins Junior sixes 9 to 13. V ' Use A Convenient lion Charge Pirn CHEVROLET ■ mam SHEET SALE «»»r Six* ,75c 72x101' 40x81" sheer panels, year 'round beauty 24x48" 1.9f 30x50" 4.99 33“ round....3.99 24*88 solid maple ■ Colonial maple or captain's chair, modem walnut extra big, sturdy big 7-drawer desk Full wood frame door mirror is easy to install Novelty print 18x23” New vibrant colon! safety back ba h mats Cordetta pillow covers Bigl Ruggedl Superbly finished In hand-rubbed Salem maplel Authentically Alway* a favorltel Knee- Our lowest price everl Fully framed natural wood door mirror. Now priced to you can hang arte In every room fn your homel Savel Rockert, dinette, choir, detk, mirror not oi Drayton Plaint THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1965 SALE! Mon-sized, foam-filled swivel rocker, 3-position recliner 88 Just look at oil you *get for this one low price! Luxurious pillow bock styling, extra wide seats! Deep urethane foam fill for true comforH The hediner locks in any of 3 positions for Tv viewing, redding, relaxing; rocker swivels 6 full circlet You'll be getting the buy of the year. YOUR CHOICE Today's favorite! Patchwork rocker 5888 High back colorful patchwork rock-er blends with Colonial decor — adds a touch of brightness to casual! Removable urethane foam cushion reverses to brown tweed. Solid maple dinette has 42" round table *97 Vest SoRd hardrock maple 42* round table that extends with one leaf to seat six or eight is surrounded by four extra size mates' chajrsl All crafted in New England. Sheer, white raybn knit pan. els let In light for gloomy winter days —provide the privacy you want. Buy now. Lady Peppered white muslin sheets 1.7.9. Lady Pepperell's finest quality muslin . . . now at stock-up pricesl Bleached white cotton muslin with wide, wide hbms, reinforced sides. _____ 72x1 OS", twin 1.99 tlilM", tutt........2.19 42i36" pillow cum.... 49c '— Crisp and modern ... 'Solo Stripes' 2.69 Durable, decorative cotton muslin sheets to brighten your bedrooms. The colorful stripos are woven to keep their bright color for the long lift of the sheet. Solid color hems. 31*103", full......2.99 42x36" ceie.... BEDSPREADS Bright, tailored corduroy spreads 7.99 Durable cotton corduroy bedspreads in high fashion colors . . . enhance any decor! Jumbo welt seaming lends a smart finishing touch. Machine washable in lukewarm water. Savel Cefe curtain with velence............6.99 set e . Super size hobnail bedspread 3.99 Smartly styled twin and full site spreads in easy-care fabrics. Completely washable and pre-shrunk for long wear. And you'll never need to iron. Choose these expertly crafted spreads in a full range of decorator colors. Textures, white, washable! Traverse styled draperies 2.99 SWx36" pair You get a custom look . . . pay a low ready-made pricel Dramatic textured white on white draperies are pinch pleated and finely tailored! . . . Easy-care, too. Perfect beauty for every decor in sizes for every window! See these! IWhx36" 4.99 pr. Whx63" 5.99 pr.< Dwx36" . . 6.99 pr. Dwx63" .. 8.99 pr. ;Swx45" .. 3.29 pr. .Twx63".. ....13.99 pr. Whx 45" ......5.49 pr. SwxS4" .. 3.99 pr. Swx63" ., ,^..J.79prT Dwx84" .. ....10.99 pr! Twx$4"......15.99 pr. VALANCES: Sj|rxl4" ....'....2.49 m. ^Vinyf motchsfick cafe tier curtains 77*- 48x24". Looks like bamboo but cleans with damp cloth. White, vertical stripes. 60*36", 1.37 pr. Vnlnnc* 77c ta. V New! Square, round corduroy sofa pillows 99* Polyfoam filled pillows covered h. cotton cordgfoy. Red, green, beige, gold, melon. 11 ^ square or round. :New! Knotted fringed oval, round, area rugs 2.99 Practical! Decorative! Wash-able rayon pile, non-skid back. Seven colors. 24x36". Gay prints on dazzling whit* grounds. Colton lorry and polyfoam backed. Mako any bed pillow into a TV pillow by adding a cotton cordette cover, colors. Whitt steel blinds, 23 to 36 inches wide 2**5 Strong steel blinds with baked on white enamel finish. Cotton cords. 64" long. Cotton flannel beck vinyl damask cloth 1.99 New prints or solid color damask pattern. 52x52-in. 52*70".2.99 60x»0"3.99 Reg. 4.99 Fiborwoven 72x90” long blankets 1-7” Warmed, Stronger! Hew woven process blanket*. AS winter weight. Many colors. OPEN EVERY NIGHT TO 9 Drayton open Sub. noon to 6 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Caavealeat VamUa-Klyki Shopping TUI 9tN Monday tkronyk Saturday •. • Plenty at Free Park toy THE PONTIAC PBiKSS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER e, 19(15 Thty ^ndw Moft THon Eroplo^^Syip+d . 1 ■ ' /' • $} „.,. .„.., Queen Bee SectetdrfesKeep Off ice Zoo HIS BOYLE ■y HAL BOYLE T^IMPtr.r tta businesi office Secretaries. Wy ii'iBii.ii is j£«Breta> rial group that keeps th* hive | realty buzzing. They know Where all the skeletons ere1 buried, too. The board of directors of any organization could improve the firm if they just had at hand the information readily dispensed, after the first round of daiquiris, by the office secretaries at their chatty weekly Friday luncheons. Secretaries come in all shapes and sizes, all ranges between homeliness and beauty, and all degree* of readability. But they 1)1 have one thing in common -3 they all know more than their employers suspect. 8LCRETARIAL TYPES % you look around your own office, you’ll probably find some ejl the following types familiar: IeW1 bead office boy, At announces, “Tw place is toil oTthtya/* Than she quits and moves bn to 0001 ' where she hopes tor better luck. ‘r'JTi ’ ™ ’The kdejper of'IS Isn’t tor her. She is looking tor* man to earn her a hvtoig, After trying her wiles on everybody from the board chaimpm^to the ination aba is a real power be. heart to Mm. He beeomea her Any salesman who wants to get In to see the1 boss learns early that he’d better bribe this greedy Uttle lass. If be doesn’t bring her flowers, take her to dinner, and send her half a dozen pairs of .Stockings on her birthday, hall spend endless hours cool ing his heels waiting for a chance to get through tbe magic door and deliver his sales tom ige to the right ears. “Goldilocks7’ — It is bar first job since leaving secretarial school, and she thinks every executive in the office wants to make love to her. Whenever she is asked to stay an hour lata, she phones her mother and big brother and asks them to come and wait for her in the reception the ttNBto^ghs .. most of hi* dsnconspiring to win promotion for some slavish hmlor executive who has sought her favpr, or conspiring to somtoda tor h anded If stands him, and makes herself a l^_THSnto-Ml the' ,______ secretaries. It does no good tor thfm to tell her that most exec-“The idolator” —No matter! utives have heads that match which executive she is assigned I their fast of day. She has to LOWS EFFICIENT *The actress” — Nobody looks more effident than she, bat every other secretary hates her because they have to do her work. She pute a one-page letter secretarial in her typewriter in the room* , tag, , and at quitting time ap-"The huntress” — Working peato to be atilt busily pounding gray at it. But she has her boss cenmtetely fooled. He thinks she tjpbs hardest-working girl in thepfBqa. plotter” — In her knag* office god, she quotas tois fV*ry love her boas or lifs loses all) Yanks Helping Latin Nations Set Up Bureau of Standards “Old faithful” - She knows, everything, can do anything. much seniority that, the other girls stand aside for her when she enters the Wash-] room. In a tight spot the boas relies more on her judgment than he does that of the senior vice president. Hie firm could not run without her. "The helpless neophyte” — She can’t take dictation or even get a message over the phone right. She spells sour apples “sauer appuls." But what exec*| utive In his right mind is going] to fire a gbi who has tbs best ' legs in (he office? By getonee Service WASHINGTON - Tbe United Stated has completed the first step toward helping Latin American countries set up national standards tor weights and measures. At i new center in Colombia, built by the U.S. at the National University-in Bogota, officials of at tout three countries, Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela,; will be trained in standardized weights and meas-urU. nrovldsdby tbe U.S. Bureau of Standard*. bureau bu recently returned from Colombia where they set up tbe initial training pro- IT’S QUINTUPLETS! Bill Sodl.r Would Like to Give You Your Firet Poek At pwr New Arrivals. CHEVNOLn-CORVAIR-CORVETTE OHEVEUE-OHEVY II0* Display Thursday Ootohsr 7tti at Matthsws-Hargreaves Ohavy-Lan Vkfg WitollSHMiNTS SiRVED Matthewt-Ha;gis*tf»« Ohavy-Lant—| yfltoiptllMiMTX SERVED Ml Oakland at Oast FE 04181 The Bogota center iz wdy a modest begfaming toward staad-ards in Colombia and neighboring countries, said H. F. Wollin, one of the team members. Ecuador has almost nothing with which to set absolute measurements. Panama has nothing. Venezuela, however, Is working on an institution teat ‘Could be classified as a national bureau of standards,” Wollin skid. ; Latin American countries not only use two systems, metric and English, as does tht United States, but they have a plethora of local scales derived from ancient Indian weight and meas-Wollin aspects that the entire continent will eventually adopt the metric system used in most ports of the world. There is much talk but that the United States thonM give up Its cumbersome FigBab system, feet, inches, gtsmlif gallons, etc., in favor of the simple metric scale af meters, and liters. Both systems will be taught at the Bogota center, metric scales form the basic standard, esplained Wollin. Pounds and gallons have been included because they are used in day-today commercial exchange. ,7 The same situation is true in this country. Congress adopted the metric scale at the turn of the century. National custom holds to tiie English system. Savings EARN National [ Bank MtMin Federal Devout Insurance Corporation MUN’S pfVSK htien ■ ■ ■ . you won’t find a Eagle sylt at Osmun’s. No, Not a single one. you’ll nee dozens of Eagle suits, aooret of Eagle suits, hundreds of Eagle kuits. The kind of complete selec-' tkm you expdet tit Osmun’s. Complete with Eagle’s dashing new colors end patterns for Fall and Winter. Charred Crystal, Charoon, - Platina Grey, to spice up your wardrobe. Plus pindots, dashes, and stripes in silk sharkskins and luxurious mohairs.' ... v You fan also enjoy the atmosphere at Osmun's... our soft-spoken people see to it that the atmosphere is always relaxed. So come to Gubun’s soon. Try to find just one Eagle suit you like. _ V » EAGLE SILK SHARKSKIN SUITS $110. •T0*th_WOH MSN * YOU NO MtN- FREE PACKING at ALL 8T0RE9 ■ Downtown Pontiac Opsn Fri. A'Mon. *«• 0 Tel-Huron Center in Pontiac Open every Night ’tH 9 ■ Tech Plaza Center in Warren Open Every Night ’t» 9 1 g sjg&si PETROCELLI turns its Black on Burgundy. What merges is a shade that's pure punch dark, dramatic? dashing, IPs beautifully ■ TOotI yT, VfF^fr >.»"•. • ■- , ; abetted by silken worsted, crisply defiled, smoothly textured. Small utimder PetroceUi wed it fir one if their great models: a Black Burgundy fits it liie a glove. 119.50 ■fl1 ’ , AND PRL TO 9; SAT. 10 ItM I.it 0j THE PONTIAC PRESS W^tMfS^DAt, oc¥d^R ^ iw Land Is Bought fjew 4«/y Agent by Shelby Twp. , »% 14^ in County Post Cfe/J Cowf Hear? Lake Rehdbilik Controversy Today for Offices in Future One of two vacant 4-H agent posts in the Oakland County Cooperative Extension Servlpe office was filled this week by Emil Fimbinger, 41. SHELBY TOWNSHIP - The Township Board last night purchased S7 acres of land at a c ->;•* — Beneath that distinctive coupe roof^ne: deep-tufted ja^iVi»r1»r1n|y^i|p!l^ foam cushioning, lush carpeting underfoot ifld inlays Qn the doors and on the padded ■f. zM *1Y: ■ • l r .•instrument panel with the customized look of hand-rubbed walnut; • There's a liquid smooth ride from its super-soft coil springs and shock absorbers at every wheel hushed by generous insulation. You can. Order power that's just as smooth as the ride. A $96-cubic-inch Turbo-Jet V8 at 325 hp. And there are even 427-cubic-indj Turbo-Jets available at 390 and 425 hp. Special sport interior you can get for the coupe. Elegant custom touches you can add in air models. Such as an AM-FM stereo radio and new Comfortron automatic air conditioning. ' -These are new standards in ride, in power, in comfort in styling, in elegance. Caprice costs; a bit more than other Cnevrolets, as ydU might 7 expect “But knowing Caprice is madebyChevrolet, you know irtsiausw what a beautiful value it must be. .* V More to come. Much more. Just SEE THE NfW 1966 CAPRICE ► CHEVROLET« •'4 • ■■ jt ’"7 \ • CHEVELtE • CHEVY 0* CORVAIR •CORVETTE NOW AT NOWI'66 Tfl& PONTIAC PRESS, WBtlNlCStlAY, A ISOS fcfr Wm ■vi 1w New Super Sport 396 Coupe—new recessed rear window, special styling all around to go with its NEWI CHEVELLE SUPER SPORT 396 So close to a sports car you can feel it. 396 cubic inches of Turbo-Jet V8. And you get it in a brand-new kind of Chevelle called Super Sport 3961 New 300's. New 300 Deluxe models. New Malibus. And for '66—Super Sport 396 Coupe and Convertible—with engines that tell you exactly what land of Chevelles they ere. Both come with 396-cubic-inchTurbo-JetV8's at | 325 hp, or there's another version you can order: 360 hp. And both have a fully synchronized 3-speed V 1 gearbox and floor-mounted shifter: our handling package (special springs, shocks, stabilizer bar); airscoop-styled hood; a black grille; red stripe tires. Twelve beautiful new models in all for '66—and all as fresh and new inside as they are outside from their headlamps to taillights. Chevelle—never looked or felt better. We'Ve lowered the roof, raised the horsepower available, said goodbye to the low-price look. It's so different, we should call it the Chevy HL You hardly know Chevy EL New swept-back roof on the coupes. New fenders, grille, hood, taillights and bumpers on all seven models. New interiors, too (very rich). New Strato-bucket seats in the Super Sport Coupe (very comfortable). And wait till you feel how Chevy H acts with the new 350-hp V8 you can order. Front Seat headrests also available. Mag-styled wheel covers. What's the economical, dependable, salt-of-the-earth Chevy, n coming to? You ana a let Of other smart car buyers, the way we figure It , America's only engine-in-back, no-radiator, no-antifreeze car. And there isn't any other, we think, a? much fun to ^rhE^ Come see ail that's new, tod. * Still America's one |nd only. Apd with its roadv gripping ride and special steering and suspdntlqh features you can add for even crisper hindtpi^pd won’t find a fetter May to rid yourself of prematurely graydrWtng. ILotSneW. Corvair, llkealt tHS Ctttr- ? iilets, hasapaejded instrumentpanfl SndaMPvfofc Seat belts front and back. Back-uplights. windshield fvmftito. outside resr-Vie^ mrrtt. nized 3-speed shift. All standard. Monzas. Corset Sob's. Come get one. Stay young; ' ‘^ H SEE THE NEW 1986 CAPRICE»CHEVROLET . CHEVELLE » CHEVY I» CORVAIR » CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER** 21-6912 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES. INC OCTOBER 6, 1965 ONE COLOR B=—5 Impala Super Sport Coupe—wraparound taillights, smooth new deck, even Jet-smoother riding fori 966 The smoothest riding models we've ever built. And available with Chevrolet's new Turbo-Jet 396 and 427 V8's! No Chevrolet has ever had a ride like this one. ItV smoother, quieter. It helps transform even rush-hour traffic into a reasonably relaxing experience. In all the new Jmpala Super Sports. Impalas, Bel Airs and Biscaynes, we've, again tailored those fat coil springs for each different body style. We've put in new softer shock absorbers, a little more of everything to smooth and soften the road below. Advanced, smooth new engines, too. All-new V8'5, from the Turbo-Jet 396 at 325 hp on up to a 427-cu.-in. Turbo-Jet at 425 hp.. And we'll bet you thought Chevrolet wouldn't change much. Wait till you se6! NEW CHEVROLET IMPALA NEW196fl CAPRICE - CHEVROLET » CHEVELIE ■ CHEVY B » CORVAIR- CORVETTE NOW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER'S 21-6912 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC Greeting one another before the first con- Lake Angelas; Mrs. Clifford Ekelund, Ottawa Mr. and Mrs. Jack Habel, Miami hibit set up by members of the cert of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra Tuesday Drive; Mrs. Critchfield, and the M. A. Calbis, Road, admire a painting in the ex- Pontiac Society of Artists, evening were (from left? Robert Critchfield, Linden Street.. _ ...______'" ”,.; ■ ,v.;,■ ;■> “Beauty knows do age. Yo^ have only yourself to Hunt if you are beautiful at to* . , “Success in ttae United river fron its source deep in the Bohemian wood to Prague itoeif, capturing a taste of the life and the moods of . the country and its people, and provided a fit' ting dimax to the conceal "Hello, Dolly," with, words vied to fit the locbl scene was sung by Mrs. LaVon Ryden, i Pioneer Street. Her song touched off 0 fast• paced program. UF Volunteers Get Encouraging Words Suggest Doctor to Husband Needs Professional Help Carole Beckett, Pensacola Avenue, takes tickets from Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hough, Scott Lake Road. Symphony Presents Familiar Numbers By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Yesterday I ran into the husband of a woman who teaches school ' where my husband toadies. He asked me why I wasn’t friendly with Us wife any more, and told me how hurt and upset she was because I had been avoiding her. I made up some excuse, said I was rushing to an appointment, and ran. Do I dare toll this man that his wife started coming to our borne, uninvited,' telling my husband and me bow “starved” she was for affection and a taste of normal home life? That her husband was cruel, cold and JmJous? She told us intimate tales of her marital life that we neither believed nor cared —to bear. It got so bad we finally asked her not to come over any more.» Then she started calling ua on the phone until we had to have ow number dunged. The last straw came when she sated my husband to drive her home from a DEAR ON: YOU corner HIM, and tell him you’ve been avoiding his wife because in your opinion she needs psychiatric treatment Personals The Edward Maters of Illinois Avenue with their daughter, Mrs. William Bonner, and guests, the John P. Niggemans, will breakfast at Pine Late Country Club Saturday and Join the club’s chartered bus patrons to the U of M-MSU game at Ann Arbor. FoBowing ^br ri! • day event, this group will dine and dance at the club. ~Ar ' to ★ A picnic luncheon to Ann Altar before foebig game Saturday will bring together the following area couples: the Charles Allens, Jack Straits, James Nyes, John Madoies sod Ad d i s o n K. Oakleys. -Still others will be Chancellor and Mrs.D. B. Varner, Dr..and Mrs. Jerome Fink, Dr', and Mrs. Charles Hacker, Dr. and Mrs. Janml Jenkins, fos Dale Chnwys,. Mrs, Ruth Scribner, Dm Hoffman, the Ralph NorveBs and Dr. and Mm. Robert Lyons. ■ * . #. * \........y Mr. and Mrs. Oenld Irish of Highland Road have ra-turned from t firs week trip*to Burope. They use* tearing soon to spend the ' wirier to Phoenix, Arts. and you didn’t know bow to cope with her. To sweep the entire mess under the carpet may delay the treatment tibia poor woman so desperately needs. As a teacher she influences the lives of young people, so I urge you to act stance. DEAR ABBY: I attended a dinner party recently given by a good friend of mint. Bar boss was peasant, and all (fairing the meal this guest kept making hsulflng remarks about my sister, whom she knows quite wefl. I know my sister isAl perfect, but I didn’Uhink it was to very good taste for this person to say them things to front of me. I didn’t stand up for my sister becanm l didn’t want to get my friend to bad with her boss. Was I wrong not to bavs srid something? “GUILTY CONSCIENCE OVER UNSPOKEN WORDS* DEAR GUILTY: YAur answer is mar signature. Yes, you should have said somafttog It’s possible to “titftd up" for someone without becoming belligerent or rude. Your problem is familiar to aB M us. We 20-J0 tend- m.' ,-..............„. By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Wemen’s Editor Between 400 and 500 women came to the E3ks Temple Tuesday afternoon for their United Campaign Rally. It was a final meeting of volunteer workers before the fund drive open Oct. It. * ★ * Mrs. LaVon Ryden set the theme of the meeting with her spirited singing of “Hallo Dolly” using fords appropriate to foe occasion. * * -*. Calvin J. Werner, 1M5 United Fund chairman, reminded foe gronp that “each gift works many wonders.” * * ★ Arthur Brooks, well-known lecturer, was foe featured speaker. He spofe < rapidly and waa in almost constant motion as ba teased, flattered, gently criticized and encouraged Ms They listened,intently at the Women’s division United Campaign Rally Tuesday afternoon at the Elks Temple. Arthur Brooks of Wayne State, University gave pointers on how to be more beautiful and more charming-all for the purpose of improving their personal lines and making this year's United Fund campaign a success. ' 1 \\ Mrs. William Wright, Hammond Lake, (left) women’s campaign chairman, and Mrs. Roosevelt Walker, Elm Street, a district chairman, take time out to compare a few notes. Fund campaign must be to your own mtod first Walk tafl, sit tan and think tall.” ★ * \ + He broke down the word “Charm” into its Important parts — consideration; health; appreciation; reciprocity and manners. it it * Brooks closed with a definition of “triumph.” It’s "Umph ptes try.” .♦ # ★ Mm. Marvin Barnett commented on fall and winter fashions as Peggys, Bloomfield Miracle Mile, presented a showing of new clothes. Reports Given at Opti-Mrs. Mrs. Robert Bradley of Garland Avenue was hostess at a cooperative dinner for members of the Pontiac Opti-Mrs. club on Tuesday Mrs. Girard Stark gave, a report on foe recent purchase of layettes for tha Michigan Children’s Aid Society. * it h Another report by Mrs. DeLisle Wilson told of foe club’s summer projects with Camp Oakland. Colored slides of foe past five years’ activities of foe Optimist and Opti-Mrs. Clubs were shown by Mrs. Ray Lewis. Mrs. Donald BeUehumer, Rohr Road, and Mrs, George Lumbard, Baldwin Road, both of Orion Township, had coffee together before tha meeting began, B—7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1W W«IJ-Chosen Gift If you are going away for Camp Fire Hold Annual Council Fire Fresher Stain Easier Cleaned on clothing, the better the chances of removing it from washable cottons, the Cleanliness Bureau reports. Wash the stained area in are Mrs. Boon Baldwin and Mrs. Eldon Gardner. The council fire is the beginning activity of the year for the Pontiac Area Council, a member agency of the Pontiac Area United Fund, serving girls 7-If ip the :30 p.m. in Ken-HkhSchpoL donhetl JENDALE ... Photographer$ Mm„ Tftart. n to liM M 45 W. Huron St. =• *f1 ** Phone for Appointment, FE 5-3280, FE MHS THIS OFFER ENDS IN 15 DATS MosaicTile Makes WaU Masterpiece well and let it dry. Mid- November vows are planned by Julia Norene Giglio, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Gigho of Lincoln Avehue and Trevor Weston Reyher, son of the Robert ReybOrs of Lake, Mich. He is a graduate of North wood Institute. The Irven M. Strongs of North Oxford Road, Oxford Township, announce the engagement of their daughter Catherine to Gerald Paslean, son of the Earl Pasleans of Metamora. An early 1966 loedding is being ,planned. Bud Misfoldt Would Likn to Givo You Your First Poole At Our Now Arrivals . V CHEVROLET-CORVAIR-CORVETTE CHEYELLE-CHEYY II On Display Thursday October 7th at Matthiws-Hirgriavss Chevy-Land ___ FREE REFRESHMENTS SERVED many ways. living in Tucson, Arts., is in town for a 10-day visit She is dividing her time between pie homes of Dr. and Mrs. Peter Hoogerhyde, Chippewa Road, and the Aaron Hikers of Orchard Lake. Bottle Cap Molds Can Fade Keep that empty copper-tone 682-0420 sidered institutional, murals of ceramic mosiac tile are becoming increasingly popular for home use. There are no holds barred on colors, design or theme, and you can be your own artist. Besides adding Out distinguishing “something different’’, the mual of cenupic mosaic tile puts the nix on maintenance. An occasional wiping with a damp doth is au that is necessary. The colors won’t fade apd thus never require painting. PERMANENT And a mural is one picture that will never need framing or straightening. Domestic ceramic tile manufacturers saw the possibilities of murals and have added several stock designs to their inventories of the more conventional wall and floor tile. Tile showrooms, display the designs and color themes available. Tile contractors also can tell you how you can become your own mural At least some of Mother’s worries will be eased if the newest safety bottle cap is adopted by drug manufacturers. The tamperproof cap will lessen the danger of children opening containers of aspirin, sleeping pills, poisons and other potentially dangerous products. The closure device, Modem Packaging'explains consists of an inner cap consists of an inner cap and a free-turning outer cap with a /‘key”' that must be used to open the bottle. To open, you twist die outer cap until slots in the tyro caps are aligned. Then you press the key into the slots, which allows you to unscrew the cap. Sounds rather com-plicated, doesn’t it? It should certainly keep the children out of danger. Let’s hope you can remember how it works when you go to get an aspirin for your headache. By Eunice Farmer rut n» HEARING CENTER Is the MALL • rerrs • aids • battsribs « with Pontiac Mall Optical Cmttr) Me