The Weather M. Wwthtr Bur»«u ftin Warmer (DMallt p«f* j) vol. m THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition NO. 204 ★ ★★ ★ ■ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1966 —40 PAGES Leaves Work Jte Over Fund ilth Insurance Construction projects throughout Oakland County and five other southeast Michigan counties were hampered today as 16,000 cgrpenters in Showers Predicted for Later in the Day This morning’s clear October skies may change to showers by the afternoon or evening. tft ONES The weatherman has predicted that although today wifl be wanner with highs in the 70s, the Indian Summer type of day will change to showers later on. ■ # .. j* S# Tomorrow afaidd torn cool “When , 'fe get a little older we’ll be able to appreciate the tic our parents hate.” Construction Jobs Many Projects Eventually Be Held Up Union in Dispute for Health the Metropolitan Detroit area went on strike. Lucian M. Weir, secretary of the Carpenters District Council in Detroit, estimated that at least 5,000 carpenters had been working on projects in Oakland County Slone. Facing a slowdown were building projects, at Oakland University, the Orchard Ridge campus of Oakland Community College, the expansion of Hudson at the Pontiac Mall, and ' all residential development. Members of die carpenters union stayed off the job in a dispute over a workers’ health insurance fund financed by qon-tractor-employers. ★ * ★ The carpenters withdrew from die plan in an effort to establish their own program. FUND ADDITION To do this the carpenters are demanding that contractors contribute 12 per cent of a worker^ hourly pay to the fund, or 40 V4 cents over die IS cents now provided by the employers. The strike does aot Immedi-ately, halt construction projects since other craft trades will continue to work until they catch up to the work done by the carpenters. Weir saidJthat in some projects this may be as long as four weeks. In others, construe- < tion could end in less than two weeks. * ★ ★ “We have no intention of picketing or interfering with the other trades,” said Weir, “unless it comes to the ppint where they begin to do our work. Hen we’ll have to protect ourselves.'’ Weir said four contractor - groups have already refused to allow the carpenters to substitute their plan for the existing fund, while four others have refused to meet. “We’ll conduct this strike until they’re ready to meet,” said Weir. He said the carpenters can do better with their own insurance program. ★ ★ ★ ................. “We’re getting as much benefit from' die fund as anyone else, but jve’re not getting enough,” Weir said. WITHDRAWAL The carpenters withdrew from t^e Detroit & Vicinity Construction Workers Insurance Fund. ' The employers groups have (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) In Today's Press- Percy Slaying Police still sift clues in hint for killer — PAGE A-7. New Tiger Mayo Smith given 2-year contract to manage Bengals — PAGE D-I. Rusk-U.N. Secretary slgtes talks with foreign ministers, Gromyko — PAGE B-3. Area News .........B4 Astrology . . . .. 04 Bridge.............04 Crossword Pusde .. D-ll Comics ............CM Editorials ....... A4 Markets ^....0-7 Obituaries ....... —W Shipping Tie-Up Snags U.S, Supplies SAIGON, South Viet Nam ' (AP) — A shipping backlog, cut to near zero only a few months ago, has again become so serious that more than 60 freighters are waiting to be unloaded at this key port, U.S. officials and shipping sources said today . These experts blamed the sitr largely qn feuding between the Army, the Agency for International Development and mismanagement. The situation can be cured only by firm action at a high level in Washington to make the Army and AID .work together, said the sources, who asked .to remain anonymous. The shipping experts urged, .Among, ether things, that U.S. contractors with proven performance in the field be given the job of supervising the unloading of vessels bearing war goods and aid material. Additional port facilities are' being built along the river near. Saigon, but the new berths may not be ready for months. Other U.S. authorities ac- '■ knowledge a bottleneck but attribute it chiefly to the South Vietnamese government’s drastic economic reforms. They say this resulted in jammed warehouses. The government and shipping sources said there was practically no backlog of ships in June. Now," they said,. there are about 50 freighters moored off Vung Tau, near the mouth of the Saigon River, and another Inez Brushes Florida, Traffic Toll 24 Roars In to Bahamas Over Weekend SHELL IN SOLDIER—This X-ray picture shows a live tiffrnilli-meter mortar shell lodged just above the hipbone of South Vietnamese soldier Nguyen Long, 22. A team of U.S. Navy doctors at Da .Nang Naval Hospital removed the shell and report that the soldier is in excellent condition. , ■ Unions Shun LBJ Plea at 2 GE Plants WASHINGTON (AP) -lent 14,400 union employes of General Electric Corp. ignored President Johnson’s contention. that a shrike would damage the Viet Nhm war effort and walked off the job early today at two GE plants. # . ★ -M •• The remaining 165,600 union employes of the huge defense supplier apparently were honoring Johnson’s plea for a two-week reprieve from a nationwide walkout scheduled for 12:01 a.m. today, when their contracts expired. < About 13,200 workers walked off the job at GE’s Schenectady, N.T., plant and another 1,000 workers struck the firm’s Carboloy Products. Division at Warren, Mich. •Three Cabinet members, including Secretary of Defense . Robert S McNamara, are joining negotiations that shift today to Washington after stalemating yesterday in New York. ★ * ★ A nationwide strike had appeared imminent when the AFL-CIO International Union of Electrical Workers rejected the key defense supplier’s latest" offer yesteday. FOLLOW LEADER Ten other unions representing 40,000 GE employes had been expected to follow the lead of the 80,000 IUE workers. ★ ;* ' ■* But Johnson asked toe company and unions to continue plant operations. The Carboloy plant, sole producer of manmade diamonds in the United States and a maker of tungsten carbide cutting tools, was struck by members of the United Auto Workers Lo- • cal 771 whose contract expired at toe same time lu IUE’s. The plant employs 2,000 work- Mob Repulsed in Indonesia Students Am Beaten, Bayoneted by Troops JAKARTA, ,Indonesia (AP)— .At least eight students were bayoneted and scores were clubbed to the ground today as troops drove back 5,000 young Indonesians frying to storm President Sukarno’s palace. Shouting that Sukarno was a Communist leader and should be brought to trial, the students broke through a cordon of troops and raced along the shaded ave-, hue toward the palace. ^ With flags and banners streaming as they surged toward tiie palace guards, the students at first were laughing and singing, apparently thinking toe palace guard would fall back. But the combat troops in jungle camouflage charged the oncoming .students, clubbing them with rifle butts and jabbing with bayonets until toe youths turned and fled. One youth was chased bade and forth until he'1 was run through from behind. He collapsed with blood gushing from his mouth and toe center of his back. Ford Battery Could Return Electric Auto MIAMI, Fla; GD—Hurricane Inez, a brawling killer of the tropics, brushed harmlessly past the southeast Florida coast today and roared on with-growing new fury into the Resort islands of the British Bahamas. Gale warnings came down in Miami as Inez roared past to eastward’ flicking the city with gusty winds and f squalls, but a tornado snaking out of the storm’s ~—-------r----- leading edge brought death to the Bahamas. The* twister lashed a group of shacks occupied by field hands outside the Bahamian capital of Nassau, killing a 16-months old child. Three other persons are missing. laex was 80 miles west of Nassau, but water already has risen two' feet deep in some streets and flattened palm trees blocked roads. A gust of 100 miles an hour battered the airport area. The 2.5 million people of the southeast Florida - coast from Palm Beach to Miami spent an uneasy Sunday as Inez sent occasional squalls whistling into the are,a; whipping the palm fronds. ’ But; as her winds built back oip toward 100 miles an hour after a weakening battle with the mountains of Cuba, Inez veered slightly to the east onva new track that appeared to take' the lower Florida coast out of danger. WINDS HIT MIAMI Gusts up to 50 miles an hour blustered into Miami, but in a . city where the building code requires structures that will stand up to 125-mfle-an-hour winds, it was no worse than a summer thunderstorm out of the.Everglades. ' DETROIT (AP) - Ford Motor Co. repented today it has achieved a major breakthrough by developing, a new type battery; Which could pave the way . for return of. the electric-powered auto to U.S. highways. Michael Ference Jr., Ford vice president for scientific re* search, said the new battery ’■* could store up io 15 times its Jr-much energy as present lead-Acid storage batteries. The firm disclosed Sept 15 that it Was working on the electric car project. Ference said in a prepared statement that Ford Motor Co. and' Ford of England have ! Joined forces to build two prototype models of toe proposed electric caF. • -k it h The two companies described the new product, toe first experimental model of which is being built in England now, as ‘‘a low-cost, subcompact limited performance ‘city car’ to carry two adults and two passengers.” dozen anchored and waiting in toq river near Saigon. Other ships are being held as far away as Manila and Yokohama. They estimated the : waiting period at about 30 days days. Whfle waiting, crewmen of toe * merchant ships draw double pay, nearly $800 a month for an average seaman. Hut one U.S. government maritime official said it has become difficult to recruit enough men for ships bound for Viet Nam. State Deaths Highest Since Labor Day By the Associated Press Twenty-four persons died iin accidents on Michigan highways. during the weekend, the highest death toll for toe period since the Labor Day weekend when 35 were killed In toe worst mishaps, three 18-year-old ybuths were killed Saturday in a crash in Bay County and three New York State men aged Id and 20 died when their car hit a tree "Saturday in Kalamazoo Cburtty. . The victims: Linda Lon Abies, 49, of Blissfield, when her car ran off a road yesterday in Lenawee County. Mae Shearer, 70, of Detroit, when toe vehicle in which she was riding fan off a Detroit street yesterday and hit a tree. ★ ★ A. Darlene || Kraus of Mount Clemens, who was fatally injured when her car was hit broadside -by a vehicle at a Roseville intersection yesterday. Police said the other driver fled the scene of the accident. THROWN FROM VEHICLE Doris A Herman, 59, of Flint, when thrown from a vehicle that ran off a road in Gladwin County Saturday. Robert Tracy Few, 18, of Bancroft, when his Car went out of .control bn a road in Shiawasisee County Saturday and overturned. Essie Pauline Bufchner, 56, of Morley, When toe car }n which she was riding collided with (Continued on Page 2, Col. 3) Long Illness Claims Noted City Resident Harry O. Whitfield, 96-year-old patriarch of a loading Pontiac family, died Saturday after a long illness. Service wifl be 2 p.m.’ tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial following in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Surviving are two sons, Mac T. and Stuart E., and a daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Golden, all of Pontiac; 11 grandchi^ dren; and 23 great-grandchildren. . Whitfield, 22 Waldo, operated a wholesale grocery business for more than two decades before his retirement in 1941. Born in Waterford Township, Whitfield1 was the son of Jane Windiate and Thomas Whitfield, members of pioneer Oakland County families. HAS OWN FIRM In 1893, he began working for a drug-grocery business anil, three * years lata*, established his own firm. From 1017 to Jill, he was vice president of toe Oakland County Savings Bank. Whitfield organized the wholesale grocery firm of Whitfield, Walter and Marcotte in 1010. The last of the three names soon was replaced by Dawson. The nonagenarian was the last surviving charter member of toe Pontiac Rotary Club. -CHARTER MEMBER He also was a charter member of the Wednesday Dancing Club, a 52-year member of the-Knights of Pythias, a member of the Indian Club and a file member of the Pioneer Society ' -* now the Oakland County HOe-torical Society. Contributions may be made to the Michigan Cancer Foundation, Inc. and thousands injured. Newsmen flew over the island on the v end to estimate the damage. r A—a THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1966 U.S. Copter Units Catch Reds, Kill 117 • SAIGON, South Viet Nam ?AP) — Helicopter-hopping U.S. troops pounced an a fleeing Communist force today and reported killing 117 more of the Mterny in mountains near South Viet Nam’s central coast. The added dead raised to 227 the two-day toll taken by units of the 1st air Cavalry, Airmobile, Division which fought a furious battle Sunday with the Communists and reported 110 tidied. . Reports from the battle area 10 miles north of the coastal city, bf Qui Nhon said the number of Communist dead was still climbing. MIXED FORCE The Communist unit was mixed force of North Vietnamese regulars and Viet Cong. Official U.S. sources said casualties among the chopper-lifted cavalrymen were light. “They’ve really got them on the run,” said a spokesman. * * * The battle began after the enemy shot down three U.S. hel-icopters, prompting the cavalrymen to charge the force of more than 300 Viet Cong and North Reds Bracing for Showdown MOSCOW (UPI) — Russia and Its East European Allies appeared today nearing a final showdown with Communist China over Peking’s self-imposed isolationism and maverick Jcies that have splintered the world Communist movement. ★ ★ ★ Until now, Moscow and other European Communist capitals have been'generally restrained Jn their criticism of Red China; But in the wake of Peking’s growing attacks on all Communists who fall to follow the lead of Mao Tee-tang, the Soviet Mec may unite for the first time in a common condemnation of cadna’s policies. The increasing outspokenness |n the Sino-Soviet split was indicated yesterday* by an article m Pravada, the official soviet party newspaper. \ ' ★ * * : - In li,4he Kremlin announced Shat recent summit talks with pther European Communist leaders have focused on their “Serious concern” over the events in Red China. The appointment of Rod W. Tolman of Clawson as executive director of the Oakland County Republican Committee was announced today by county GOP chairman Joseph R. Farnham. ★ * ★ Tolman, 24, of 131 W. Maple succeeds Richard Raison, who resigned to enter the Detroit College of Law. 3 Bandits Get $400 at Service Station A Pontiac service station em- Ke was robbed last night of by three men who came Into the station just before 9 p.m., Pontiac police were told. » « • ★ w * I Charles Potvin, 28, an attendant at the Progressive Oil Co., 477 S. Saginaw said one of the inen held in his pocket what '’appeared to be” a gun. ’ - ★ * ★ I Potvin said he was forced to turn over the money after the three had first asked for one dollar’s worth of gas. The trio fled after taking the money, Potvin said. County GOP Exec Named by Chairman He has been an administrative assistant in the committee since Jane, a month after his graduation from Brigham Young University at Provo, Utah. A political science major, Tolman served as a Mormon missionary in the Brazilian cities of Sao Paulo, Rio De Janeiro and Recife from September 1961. to March 1964. ★ * * He is a member of the Pontiac ward • of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Bloomfield Hills. ★ ★ ★ A native of Los Angeles, Calif., Tolman has been a Michigan resident since 1956. Married, he and his Wife Pauline are expecting their first child. ★ ★ * As director, Tolman heads the operations of the party headquarters at 245 S. Woodward, Birmingham. U.S. planes flew 113 bombing missions against North Viet Nam Sunday, and pilots claimed damage or destniction of 46 buildings, 13 trucks, and 10 bridges, and numerous hits on oil depots. Navy planes from the aircraft carrier Oriskany returned for a second day to the important Phu Ly railroad yard and transshipment point 35 miles south of Hanoi. Two waves of A4 Skyhawks hit the complex in a campaign to cut movement of supplies and men. Previous such raids had hit hard at the Ninh Binh and > -Thanh Hoa military complexes, also south of Hanoi along the main rail line leading to South VietNam. Strike Called by Carpenters (Continued From Page One) asked for a ruling in Federal Court on whether the carpenters can quit the pact. A hearing on the matter was scheduled for 11 h.m. today. ■ 'it ★ ★ In addition to Oakland, (he other counties affected by tne strike are Wayne, Macomb, St. Clair and Monroe. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Conskierable sunshine and warmer today- Highs 70 to 7$. Chance of. showers tonight. Lows 56 to 55. Tuesdays cloudy and turning cooler with rain or showers likely: Highs in the 60s. Becoming rather cloudy this afternoon through Tuesday. Winds sontherly 15 to 30 miles, this afternoon, shifting to northwesterly Tuesday. Wednesday’s outlook: Partly cloudy and cool. NATIONAL WEATHER—A band of rain and showers Is expected from the south-central states to the Great Lakes tonight. It will now In the central Rockiea with rain to the south. Showers and squalls, are expected in Florida. It wffl be cooler in the Plates and wanner in the East and Vietnamese troops. The helicopters were recovered. The new fighting along the central coast shifted attention away from the prolonged fight by the U.S. Marines just south of the demilitarized zone separating' North and South Viet Nam. U.S. B52 bombers struck a little below the buffer zone today for the fourth straight day of raids inside or close to the zone. The bombers rained explosives on Nortii Vietnamese troop concentrations and infiltration routes 20 miles west of the Marines’ forward headquarters at Dong Ha. NEW ACTION The Marines reported one new small action Sunday. A unit of the 9th Leatherneck Regiment spotted 20 North Vietnamese near the “Rockpiie” and reported killing six of teem with mortar fire and air strikes. In the two months of fighting against the rebuilt 324B North Vietnamese division below the demilitarized zone, tee Marines have reported killing 955 North Vietnamese and capturing four apd seizing 17 weapons, some Leatherneck units have been hard hit Traffic Toll 24 OverWeekend (Continued From Page One) an auto Saturday in Mecosta County’*-Deerfield Township. Gary Oscar Weiss, 19, -of Freeland, when the car In which he was riding ran off a road in Saginaw County Saturday hit a tree. STRUCK BY CAR Sarah Barbara Dreyfus, 72, of Livonia, when struck by «a car Saturday while crossing a street in Livonia. Anderson Byrd, 15, of Detroit, when struck by a hearse Saturday in Detroit. Elsie Johanna Wallen, - 40, - of Hastings, when her car ran off road in Barry County Saturday and hit a tree. George Demeulemester Jr., 23, of Merrill, when his car ran off a highway and overturned Saturday near Merrill in Saginaw CoUnty.™ 3-DEATH ACCIDENTS Dale Crosby, James Keinbaum and Robert Dewyse, all 18 and of Essexville, when their car struck a truck backing from a driveway Saturday in Bay County. ^ Michale Kocinsld, 19, of Rochester, N.Y.; Frank Sav-icki, 20, ofjCUnton, N.Y. and Thomas McGonegal, 20, of Oneoita, N.Y., when their car ran off-a road in Kalamazoo County Saturday and rammed a tree. Kathleen Marshall, 21, of Detroit, who whs fatally injured when the car in which she was riding collided with another in Dearborn Heights Friday. Gary Burd, 18, of Dearborn Heights, when his motorcycle was struck by a truck Saturday in Taylor Township. RUNS OFF ROAD Charles Shevasky, 76, of Warren, who was fatally injured when struck by a car Friday in Detroit. Wesley Jones, 4S, of Eaton Rapids, when his track ran off a road in Ingham Comity Friday and (track a tree. Alexander Andrew, 85, of injuries suffered Friday in a two car accident rear Houghton. Robert Nelson Scott, 41, of Heflin, Ala., when his car at a Kent County intersection near Sparta. Frances Strickland, 46, of Port Horan Friday when her car overturned on UJS27, 12 miles north of Houghton Lake. AP wirtphoto WAR DOG’S REWARD—Scout dog Tux gets his ears rubbed by his handler, Pfc. Jack E. Krismer of San Antonio, Tex., on duty along the central coast of South Viet Nam last week. Tux helped to lead American troops to bunkers and holes in which Viet Cong troops were hiding. Ex-AF Chief LeMay Attacks U.S. Policy on Viet Fighting WASHINGTON (UPI) -SB mer Air Force Chief of Staff Curtis E. LeMay today de- Viet Poli Backers Win Hawaii Vote HONOLULU (AP)—Hawaiian Democrats voted big pluralities Sunday for two incumbent U.S. representatives who have supported the federal administration’s Viet Nam policy. With results ip from 245 of 246 precincts, Rep. Patsy T. Mink led tee ticket with 91,109 votes. Rep. Spark Matsunaga was second with 90,137. It was the nation’s final primary. ★ ★ Mrs. Mink, seeking her second term, and Matsunaga, seeking his third term, defeated two candidates who criticized- tee administration’s Viet Nam policy. They are Francis A. Aki, 18,-209 votes, and Joseph* Petrow-ski, 8,062. ★ * Unopposed in the Republican primary were John S. Carroll, an attorney, and James R. Kealoha, who was in charge of the state’s exhibit at the New York World’s Tair. other Votes GOv. John A. Burns, incumbent democrat, got 76,307 votes in his reelection drive. George Fontes, a teacher who'filed just before tee deadline, got 20,437 ballots. Kenneth Brown, an architect-businessman whom Burns endorsed for lieutenant governor, lost' to former U.S. Rep. Thomas P. Gill, by about 50,000 votes. Detroiters Held in Swindle Try Two Detroit men are held in the Oakland County Jail in bond of 830,000 each following their arraignment on charges of larceny by impersonation. , Felix Walls, 24, a construction worker and William C. Yorke, 35, a self-employed interior decorator, are accused by Pontiac police of stealing a television nounced U S. Viet Nam strategy as the ‘‘ultimate in military blindness” and called for stepped-up bombing of .the Norte. it ★ ** ‘‘The only way to win a war is to escalate it one way or another above what the enemy can take,” the retired general said in a copyright article for U.$. News & World Report. As to tee “outside risk” teat escalation would bring Communist China into the war, LeMay declared that South Korea and Nationalist China i- with U.S. air, naval and logistical support — “should provide more than enough to bring, an unstable R e d China to her knees.” LeMay, who'retired in February, 1965, with four stars and a glowing tribute' from President Johnson, has long argued that the United States is doing ‘too little too late” with air-powfr in the Viet Nam war. ★ ★ ★ But his criticism today was among sogne of hte harshest sounded by military men who have openly attacked the Johnson administratioh’s strategy- MIRED DOWN Another former Air Force chief of staffs Gen. Nathan F: Twining, said in a book published last week that while the Johnson administration was ‘bolder” in Viet Nam than the Kennedy administration, it “continues to operate ^der self-imposed, restrictions and seems to be getting mired down in man-to-man war of attrition-on the Asian land mass.’’ ★ ★ ★ LeMay said^ “the popular philosophy that we can, by Cautious and timid military tactics, keep the war fro escalating info a larger conflict la- the ultimate in military blindness ... if we can’t win without unacceptable ride, have no business fighting in tee first place.” from a city store. Detective Dallas J. Flesher said the pair was apprehended in Port Hnron and then linked to the Pontiac larceny when identified by three employe* of WRC, Inc., 108 N. Saginaw. Flesher said Walls and Yorke were originally sought after a Pontiac man testified he had been induced by the pair to purchase the goods on credit in return for promised payment in cash., The victim told police be collided with another Saturday Bought the goods on a time pay- ment plan, then turned them over to Yorke and Walls. Police said, however, the two men paid their victim only $100 of the sura before disappearing with foe television set and rings. Birmingham Area News Hunter Traffic BIRMINGHAM - The dtyj Traffic consultants ReM and- They point out that they “very *,i~i Cool have recommended In their strongly" favor one-way traffic Commission tonight is scheduled to receive a»ffeport from its traffic engineering consultants on the use of Hunter as the for the east leg, that tee ring road operate two-way during east leg of the proposed ring completion of ring construction, road and on one-way versus two-fay traffic on the road. ★ * ★ The commission has received numerous letters from residents and merchants objecting, to the use of Hunter as the east leg. They all support the Birm-ingham-Bloorafield Chamber of Commerce contention that Hunter as the east leg and a one-way traffic flow would “irreparably harm tee'bust-ness district and not accomplish tee (intended) object lives,” and that on conclusion, it foust operate as one-way to induce traffic to leave Maple. They explain that at tee time it was decided to use Hunter as tee east leg of the ring, tee whole project was in tee thinking stage and that “it may now be well fo make an in-depth study of tee east leg, setting forth the pros and cops of tee various proposals.”1' Suspect Police Station After A Pontiac police early today apprehended two men after brieak-in at a city market, but one of the suspects broke from custody at the police station and is still sought. At large is Larry E. Stephens, 23, who gave his address as 109 Henry Clay. Held at the Oakland County Jail and facing arraignment is Clarence E. Douglas, 23, of 4(9 S, Edith. The two were arrested shortly after 4 a.m. when police were tipped to a burglary in profess at People’s Market, 100 Bagley. Stephens was apprehended by Patrolmen Thomas H. Crandall not far from tee market on the basis of a description given police by a witness. Douglas was arrested by Patrolmen Norman R. Kilmer and Richard W. Blower, who said they found'bottles of liquor reported stolen from the market in the suspect’s car. DETENTION ROOM Police said Stephens escaped frotn a detention room at the police station where he had been locked following his arrest. Police believe the prisoner successfully tripped the bolt lock and walked out of the station through a rear door. 3 Firemen Injured Fighting Blaze in West Bloomfield Three Walled Lake firemen were injured last night while fighting a fire at a vacant house at 33400 Fourteen Mile near Farmington Road in Wes Bloomfield Township. Fire ’ Chief Bazil Stoddard sprained his arm and ankle, Delbert Stanfield received a slight sprain -.of his hand and Richard Trammer broke an arm. ★ it ★ Chief Stoddard and Stanfield were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. Tremper due to be released today. Arson is suspected in the fire which broke out about 11:26 p.m. West Bloomfield Fire Department was assisted by Walled Lake, Farmington Township, Franklin and Union Lake. They fought the fire for more than two hours. Man Charged as in Money-Switch Trick A young plant worker is cred- it and rings valued at $1,500 ited with a key role in the apprehension Saturday of a man Pontiac police believe to be a key figure in a “pigeon drop" operation. Facing arraignment today on a charge of larceny by trick is Homo* Rogers, 38, of Detroit. Rogers was1 arrested by Patrolmen R. Keaaete Davidsoa and William D. Boride on a downtown street about a o o a Saturday. He to accased of frying to swindle a victim by making Mm believe money had been tied into a handkerchief. The two patrolmen had been alerted by James W. McMorris, 25, a Fisher Body Plant employe. McMorris said he was ap-troached on South Saginaw Street shortly before noon Sat- urday by a “well-dressed” man who flashed a large roll of bills and promised McMorris $25 for i ride to p city address. GOT IN CAR Rogers then walked up, joined in the conversation, McMorris said, and the three men got into McMorris’ car. The intended victim said at that prim he was offered a large sum of money if he would put up Cash of Ms own as “neenrify.” McMorris Said he teen ordered the men from his car and flagged down Davidson ind Bookie in a patrol car nearby. : “ • * * ★ ~ Minutes later Rogers was spotted and arrested not far town where McMorris had I approached. The second suspect is atilt being sought report teat an in-depth study be for the westerly three legs of made of the various proposals the road because it will induce significant traffic volumes to leave Maple, intersectipns will be less congested and safer and crossing the ring road will be easier for pedestrians a h d motorists. 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Major Credit Cards Honored 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1966 QMSS SCENE—A two-window section q{ fuselage is the largest piece of wreckage remaining of a West Coast Airlines DOB which crashed in the rugged Cascade Mountains south til Portland, Ore., Saturday night killing 18. The twin-engine jet’s wreckage was discovered yesterday. The plane was put into operation last Monday and was on a 100-mile flight between Eugene, Ore., and Portland. Hundreds of Nigerians Are Reported Massacred s LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) Hundreds of Ibo tribesmen from Nigeria’s eastern region have been reported massacred in northern Nigeria over the weekend by hostile Hahsa tribesmen native to the north. Reports reaching Lagos indicated more than 300 Ibos were slain in Kano by northern soldiers and civilians Saturday night. About 100 of them were killed as they tried to board an airplane to flee toe city. Army troops were moved into Kano from the northern capital, Kaduna, to stop toe massacre. Tpe city was put under a dusk tor dawn curfew. The outbreak at Kano was one of several attacks against the Ibos in toe past week. Lt Col. Odumegwu Ojukwu, governor of the eastern region, has estimated 3,000 Ibos have been slain. AIRPORT IS SCENE Reports to Lagos indicated the fighting began at Kano* International Airport when northern soldiers apparently fired on a group of Ibo refugees waiting to board a plane for Lagos. Civilians joined toe soldiers and toe crowd swept through nearby Sabon Gari, a section that formerly housed thousands of easterners., They also attacked Ibos waiting at the railroad station. military rivalries. The largely Moslem Hausa northerners accuse toe Ibos of economic domination. The Ibos, generally better educated than the northerners, migrated from their region mid took skilled jobs in the north. . The northerners also were angered at a coup led mostly by eastern officers, last January in which Prime Minister Sir Abu-bakar Tafawa Balewa, a northerner, was killed. An easterner, Maj. Gen. Johnson T. U. Aguiyi-Ironsi, took power. Eastern tribesmen belieye they were targets for revenge fit a July 29 mutiny which ever^ threw Aguiyi-Ironsi. Lt *7' Yakuba Gowon, a northerner, took over. * The deep-seated hostility between toe Ibos and Hausas stems from both economic and i toi return, , lee I ••let hefinnlnf Octe- H & R Block Go. Income Tax School 20 l Huron 334-9225 JOBS WAITING SZ. with Job Security, Rapid Advancement, Prefescienri Status LEARN DATA PROCESSING- • IBM KEY PUNCH • TYPING • IBM TABULATING-W1RING • IBM COMPUTER PROGRAMMING , AND SYSTEMS AND PROCEDURES, FOR MEN & WOMEN PLANNING TO EARN $7,000 ta $15,000 APPROVED FOR V.A. G.l. "COLD WAR BILL" of Accounting Machine* and c tor .tudent.' w*. • Each oomputar train** Individually a d Is trained ta program tl t of equal theory and th* grasp of the latest Tech- sntlon At Its Bast. Oats sin maintained 1-14 studant ______ p are assured amid* personal instruction, counsel and supervision. • instructional staff saiacted ter/ professional competence and personal accomplishment In the Data Processing Field. • Full Tim* Placement Department In Detroit'and over SO malar cltlat. u — morning, afternoon AUTOMATION INSTITUTE. DuwtuwJtotruR 150 MKHWAN AVt 962-3480 22700 WOODWARD 542-9236 Griffin Tops Soapy in the Ice Cream Poll .. By the Associated Press .. G. Mennen Williams gotta 9 few last licks in toe Ice Cream Poll, but he didn't top Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mlch., his opponent for fall election to the U. s. Senate. Democratic former Gov. Williams and Griffin visited toeTee Cream Poll booth at toe Uni-versity of Detroit Fail Carnival over the weekend. Patrons of the booth sponsored by Delta Zeta sorority were asked to indicate their favorite senatorial candidate by buying a “Soapy Special*’ or “Jumbo Bob’’ foe cream sundae. The final score: Griffin, SB per cent; Williams 37 per cent; undecided, 4 per cent. Those undecided bought a “neutral” Griffin, who visited toe carnival first, said he wanted “to get there early to cast my vote” in the best American tradition. Williams came later and said, “I had two, but they told me was trailing a bit behind and didn’t think I could make up the difference all by myself.’* The Soapy Special was chocolate toe cream, marshmallow sauce, whipped cream and a cherry. The Jumbo Bob was vanilla ic ecream and tutti-frutti. Some observers said all the poll indicated was “mine people like tutti-fruRti.” j z it • * - Meanwhile, Gov. George Romney had not-so-sweet words for national atrip State financial structures in an interview with Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. You Will Always Find Better Than Ever Values When You Sfiop 3MMS Those specials for Mon., Tuts., Wed. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Wool or Nylon Carpet Runners 333^7?9xss:96# American made belter quality carpeting. Your choice of wool or nylon runners, plush piles, scrolls or loops in a variety of popular colors. Heavy backing. Extra Heavy 6x9-Ft Fringed Area Rugs Made from extra heavy .wool or nylon carpeting with hsnvy jute back. Cut. (rile or loops in scrolls. Just 24 loftat this price. Special Group of Remaining Duck Hunting Pants Simms Price (99 Water repellent duck hunting ' pants with snug knit bottom, Boys' size 10 and men's' size 4f46*50 only. „ lire, of‘CANNON’ Bath Towels 31880 Slight ineguiors of famous Cannon both towels. 3 inch size, in bright assorted stripe terrydoth. Main Floor CLOTHING DEPT. 72x90-lnch First Quality ‘BEACON' Ray?n Blankets Aeiylio $5.95 Value 299 Sopor lofted blankets wflh wide acetate binding. 72x90 inch size fits full or twin size beds, fully washable. Pastel pink only. f. i First Quality—American Yard Goods Detroit Free Press editors aqd newsmen*/ “Unless there is some change In financing policy, unless there is national fiscal reform.... tom I see no alternative but tax,, reform,” he said. Romney said that tax reform meant eliminating the “inadequacy of our present tax struc- ture” and toe need for a state income tax. “We are going to take care of those inadequacies in our tax structure to meet future revenue requirements. Then you have to have a large new revenue source and I don’t know of any other than the Income tax,’ he said. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Boy Any Item in SIMMS Camera ¥ Electronic Dept Now.. But the Guarantee Will Start at Christinas! —YouTI Get an Extra 3 Months of Malm's and Simms Wananty warranty by the maker and Simms. Use credit card or $1 holds in ^ ‘ nfreolayaway. POLAROID 'SWINGER' Camera and Flash This is the amazing camera that talks to you—it says 'Yes' when the exposure is perfect and you'll get perfect black and white snaps in 10 seconds. Only $1 holds'in free layaway. 1789 Dehorn 'SWINGER'Gift Set Regular $3X49 a*tl*r—you gat the Swinger Camara, deluxe com, 1 roll, of film and 12 A©- flashbulbs. Save $5 now. Only $t«hood* In 'layaway. 224» Swinger* Type 20 Film—Roll Type 20 block end white film for too swinger camera Take 8 snapshots per roll. Limit 5. ‘REALTONE’ 6-Transistor Pocket Radio Jade model 162 is a powerful 6-transistor radio which will pick up oil local AM stations. Included .FREE are and battery. Only $1 s in free layaway. i-Corona’ Jectric Adding Machine Ragular $90 value- latest 1967 World’s Finest and Newest Style ‘SMITH-CORONA’ Portable Electric Typewriter Foil 88 character keyboard, electric shift keys, five automatic repeat oettone, fait length tabulator, key OSH and dears, personal touch selector, quick-set visible margins, exclusive copy ief dial. Complete with case. As shown 'Coronet' model — Use your crodtt card or $ 1 holds m layaway. -CAMfltAS end (UCTRONICS-MaJ* flaw 11#“ Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Late Shoppers, Look! SIMMS b Open TonHa hi 10* TUBS. andWEDS. HOURS: 9 i.w. to i p.m. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. The Better Bargain* SAre Still Here At SIMMS! We kike the prize averytime for better bargain*.. . not one or two days a weak but everyday. You'll find advertised specials plus many unadvertised bargaine in Simms. Hera's mar* proof—today, Tuesday and Wednesday specials. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS 20-GAL Galvanized Garbage Cans With Cover 188 Approved size far city and township pick-ups . . . side drop handles, tite-fit cover. Galvanized to resist rust. Limit 2 per person. Wave Ail That Lifting and Dragging Garbage Can Tote Carts As shown—all metal rolling tote cart holds 2 garbage cons far easy rolling to toe curb* . .no lifting o ‘ saves wear and tear bn t yourself. (Cans not included.) 777 W K.D. . Sale of Lightweight, But Strong,/ Aluminum Extension Ladders 16-FOOT 1AQ* Length III?" .-now ,20-FT. Length Hop* end pull*y.,...... 24-Ft. Length top* and pulley...... '28-Ft. Length 9097 Hop.ondjJull*, .....ted 169T . 19»T rust, chip or peel. Rungs (Rope-and pulley not on 16-ft. ladder.) Sturdy lightweight aluminum extension ladders are easier to handle, easier to set up on the Job . *. Impervious to the weather — won't ribbed to make footing safer. Cagvas Tarpaulins foxo8t 499 7x9Ft.... 688 8x10Ft.... 849 19x12 Ft...II48 Heavy 10-ounce canvas tarpaulins have many usesi Strong canvas with gromets for easy tie down. . Ssisct thtelz* far your particular job. White Outside Paint K 137 CAN M. Inexpensive paint for fences, bams, boat docks, .etc. Limit 4 gallons. UsB It on Exterior or Interior Surfaces (gsri ‘FORMULA 99” Mender Paint chip or peel. You cm White and colors. Paint Thinner Factoiy Seal GALLON Oan Point thinner is Idaot (or « thinning points and B ^ 6#‘ (Bg! SIMMS"!, % THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1066 Proposed Limits oh Crime News Hit WASHINGTON (AP) — Three leading press spokesmen have roundly criticized proposals fay an American Bar Association study group that limits he pul on what police and lawyers may say publicly about pending criminal cases. Tbe report, prepared by 10 prominent judges and lawyers, “represents a serious; if unintentional assault on freedom of tbe press, and also the constitutional guarantee of free speech,” said Robert C. Notson and J. Edward Murray of the American Society Of Newspaper Editors. Notson, Portland, Ore., executive editor of tbe Oregonian, is president of tbe society. Murray, Phoenix, Alia, managing editor of tbe Arizona Republic, is chairman of the society’s Freedom of Information and Bar-Press Committee. OTHER OBJECTIONS Objections also were raised try D. Tennant Bryan, chairman of tiie Committeroo Free Press and Fair IVtol of the American Newspaper Publishers Association. * “An over-zealous concern fir tiie rights of defendants in aim-bid cases outfit not to be allowed to deprive the public of truthful tafOriuhtion which public needs pertaining crimes and/Criminals in dety to (the light of problems of law tiie local, state and nat el,” Bryan said. LY&f' * * * i and Murray lent Issued in . publisher of tbe Richmond (Va.) Times Dispatch and Newsreader, issued bis statement in Richmond. TTM A final report will be submitted to the ABA’s Special Committee on Minimum Standards far Criminal Justice for Presentation to the ABA Board of Governors and House of Delegates. X ★ . *■ * The" study group, headed by Justice Paul C. Reardon of tie Supreme Judicial Court Of Massachusetts, said the canons of legal ethics should be revised'to limit what prosecutors and defense lawyers may say publicly about a suspect, witnesses and evidence from tbe time of arrest until completion of trial. RULES RECOMMENDED Similarly, it recommended that all criminal courts adopt rules tolimit release of information by police and law enforcement agencies. The study group recommended that violators be made subject to contempt of court procedures and, to the case of towyers, “to more serious cases,” to disbarment , On tiie whole, the judges and lawyers rejected restricting crime news coverage by new laws or through expanded use of tiie courts' contempt powers. ★ 1 w". # But they said that in rare to-stances of detibfratety trying to affect tiie outcome of atrial in progress, “limited use” of contempt powers should be directed against “a person responsible foy dissemination of potentially prejudicial material’’ However, tiie panel said to a preamble to its 228-page report, “We submit that tbe primary burden for ensuring fair trial tiie agencies which serve and rests on the legal branch and minister to it” At the same time tbe study group called on the news media to voluntarily exercise restraint to the reporting of criminal matters. CWA, Bell Talk; Strike Vote Near 4 DETROIT (AP)—While union urged workers to sup-it a strike vote, negotiators the Communications Workers of American (CWA) and representatives of Michigan Beli Telephone Co. continued to bargain on a new contract Sunday. A spokesman for Detroit Local 4000 said that aU union leaders had recommended approval of a strike vote. The balloting is to take place Wednesday at the Dairy Workers Hall to atfxuban Highland Part BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) H Saudi Arabia has set up 37 British Tbundobird missiles and a sqtutfrM of W jet fitflters with British pilots to a nob defense program against tiie threat of attack by President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s Egypt, international aircraft sources and a rdto-ble Arab news digest said today. The reports said the emergency program is separate from the ffOOmffiton arms agreement signed by Saudi Arabia, Britain and the United States last year. Tbe extra British equipment ’ was rushed to after a Saudi request to speed up installation of American Hawk rateriles was rejected on -technical grounds, the sources said. A ft Ar*_ The Jjkobile British missiles arrived in Jeddah Aug. 27 and were flown to a new air base at Khemis Mishayt, 80 miles north of Yemen, and the Lightning interceptor sad Hawk hunter jets are based at the. capital, Riyadh, tbe reports said. DETROIT (AP)—Four executives have been named to top posts to the 1906 Torch Drive, Which has a goal of $24.95 million. Appointed to tiie unit eo-liciting industrial service firms are Frank Riley, general manager of Ternstedt Division of General Motors; William G. Meier, vice president of Parke, Davis & Co.; Arnold W. Hartig, Vice president of Chrysler Carp., and Eugene S. Knutson, director of purchasing, policy and planning at Ford Motor Co. TEMCO PRE-VENT is itanerica's most beautiful beating unit 4 Execs Named for Torch Drive and it can solve your heating problemsl • A Sealed Combustion thru-thfrwaSpwtfmacet t • Especially practical where floor space Wat a premiumL | tipcontron • Year choice of 10X100. 20,000, 30,000 BTU models. Sw u* pr phot* todbjr. Free Estimates FHA Terms CHANDLER HEATIR6 CO. to Mile last of Pontiac Airport OR 3*5632,674-3411 What else is new inWide-Track Country? We’re just getting wanned up. Because this is the year we’re offering you more Pontiac for your money than ever before. We’ve got brave new 400 and 428 cubic inch V-8s. Bold new interiors of fabric and expanded Monokide. Bright new colors from Silverglaze to Signet Gold. A host of brand new standard safety features such as folding front seat .back latches on aU two* y Wt, ps i rap The Wide-track Winning Streak starts at your authorized Pontiap dealer's. doors, a dual master cylinder brake system with warning light, the energy absorbing steering column developed by General Motors ancj a four-way hazard warning flasher. Options? If we haven’t got it, you wouldn't want it There’s our new eight-track stereo tape system, as only Pontiac can make it Our new front-whedl disc brakes. And our three-speed Turbo Hydra-Matic is now available on the GTO for the first time. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE GENERAL MOTORS CORPORATION 65 MT. CLEMENS, PONTIAC 15, MICH. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, INC. N. MAIN STREET, CLARKSTON, MICH. VICE, INC. ROAD KEEGO HARIOR, MICH. Hideaway headlights, disappearing windshield wipers, a 350*hp An elegant way. A—5 THE PONtlAC gRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1066 'Must Drop Goldwater Line7 Javifc GOP Can Beat Johnson NEW YORK (AP)—Sen Jacob Javib(, R-N.Y., said Sunday he thought the Republicans had a chance } of beating President Johnson in the 1968 election, but only if die party got rid of “the Goldwater Hue.” He said hi a radio interview that ‘‘rigid now” the leading contender for the Republican presidential nomination appears to be Michigan Gov. George Romney., Javits said, however, that he would not discount former Vic* President Richard M. Nixon although “we'd be better off with a new face and a new conception for the American people.” NEW PERSONALITIES “I think our future will be much more auspicious if IMS demonstrates that the over whelming sentiment of the country is to back progressive Republicans rather than ultra-conservative Republicans,” be said. Javits said “Ogre ark many new personalities in the election of '66 right from Massachusetts to Oregon” flat it is impossible to limit the field of possibilities. Counterfeiters Have Busy Year WASHINGTON (AP) — Counterfeiters turned out record amounts of phony money last fiscal year and apparently die beaded for even higher production marks. Reporting this today, the Secret Service said in its annual report that it seized a record $9 million in counterfeit money during the Sand year which ended last June IK It said about 90 per cent of file bogus bills were caught before they got hito circulation. Wilson Security Is Tightened BRIGHTON, England (UPI) — Police tightened security measures around Prime Minister Harold Wilson and other Labor party leaders today in face of threatened new demonstrations by angry workers against the government’s price-wage frees*. St Wilson, who came here this weekend for the opening of a week-long conference of the rul-Labor party and trade unions, was shouted down yesterday by demonstrators attacking his support of U.S. Viet Nam policy as t)e tried to read the Bible lesson at a Labor Party church service. " 1 Police pulled 29 shouting demonstrators from the service and carted them off to a station house. Nine of them, including three girls, were charged with creating a demonstration in church. Later police broke up more anti-Wilson and anti-Viet Nam demonstrations outside the prime minister’s hotel and on Hghton's sea ftjont. This afternoon more than thousand workers from Brit-ain's auto industry, the hardest-hit by layoffs resulting from Wilson’s economy freeze, planned to descend on Brighton by train protest the economic policies ~T. It isn’t enough that we give you ouWrevolutionary Overhead Cam Six in a beautifully refined new Pontiac Tempest and LeMans for’67. We go ahead and Improve the ride, handling and comfort, too A brash way. If we have to tell you about The Great One (otherwise known as the'Pontiac GTO), maybe you just don’t like cars. A new 335-hp, 400 cubic tech V-8 is standard. Or you can order it in 255- and 360-hp versions. Andaway that just woift quit. You can choose one of our famous all-synchro floor-mounted stick shifts. Or the self- a typically Pontiac power plant under the hood, will tell you more than ten thousand indulging luxury of bi-level Automatic Temperature Control air conditioning for split- choice four syllable words. You say we’ve said enough and you’re already on your way level heating and Cooling at the same time. We could go on. to your Pontiac dealer’s? Well hurry. So are a lot of other excited Wide-Track lovers . And, )df course, all Pontiacs boast the road-hugging security of Wide-Track ride „ , and handling. But we need not describe it here. A few moments behind the wheel, with POfltl&G 67/RidG tfl6 WidcTPSCk Winning StPGSlk RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 (M-24) LAKE ORION, MICH. The Wide-Track Winning Streak starts, at your authorized Pontiac dealer’s. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. WASHINGTON, OXFORD, MICH. that already have forced key factory shutdowns and thrown thousands out of jobs. The prime minister was 'scheduled to deliver Utter today the1 main address to tile 1,209 delegates attending the annual conference. The conference will debate, economic policies Wednesday, foreign and defense policies Thursday and wind tip Friday. Although resolutions tabled by various rebel groups lambasted the government on subjects from Viet Nam to Rhodesian policy, the conference ; was dominated by the bitter controversy over toe Wilted government’s prices and incomes policy that has torn toe party and the labor unions wide open. The government last August, in a move to fight inflation and bolster the pound sterling, rammed through parliament a bill providing at least a six-month wage and price freeze. The measure asked that the I freeze be adhered to by labor and industry voluntarily, but empowered the government to make it mandatory — through a special provision in the legislation — if the voluntary restraints failed. PRICES CLIMB Since then prices have continued to' climb while wages remained frozen, though many militant unions protested and sought to defy the freeze. Serious cracks opened up in toe dike last week when a London court ruled that a company could not refuse to pay previously agreed oh wage raises and when to* Newspaper Proprietors’ Association announced soon afterwards it would, go ahead and pay a small cost of living bonus already pledged to 25,000 printers. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. •SS S. ROCHESTER RD., ROCHESTER, MICH. Petnaping Bili Benefits Both Sides By Science Service WASHINGTON - Medical research can “live with” toe pet-naping bill that finally became law after months , of dispute between humane groups and scientists. Though inspection and registration of research facilities were included jn the final draft, the new law contains enough safeguards to protect medical experimentation, believes the National Society for Medical Research, which has. represented scientific interests throughout the conflict. Ostensibly intended as a curb on toe theft of family pets and their use as laboratory animals, toe legislation was aimed at a larger area-humane care of animal* by dealers and laboratories «like. This has been accomplished, says the NSMR, while preserving the integrity of medical research. Instead of licensing laboratories, as humane groups wanted And medical interests feared, the law provides for a system of registration. It opens laboratories to inspection and sets down penalties for substandard ani-I care as determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, But, most important to medical research, toe licensing clause was Btruck and violation of standards does not mean withdrawal of Government money. Medical research has blossomed so fast in the past decade that laboratory animal facilities have -been somewnat shortchanged, and most medical authorities believe a licensing provision would have crippled the nation’s, research effort. WHEN STANDING IS PAINFUL AND SITTING EVEN WORSE tsk your druggist hrtmnqw Now you an relievo tho Private Pain of hemorrhoid* and other ano-rectal discomforts quiddy and i safely with trtnquo, the hospital-type mediation. Trtnquo puts safe. "pRln-taming” power to work in seconds be. I cause it contains [ 12*/t Benzocaine, the I superio(, popular an-I esthetic. *y: frequent I use of trtnquo, Pri-vate Pain ceases to I be a problem. another fine product of dSMAlO LABORATORIES Votes, auNois ; THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 Wtest Hurdb Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1966 Buou A. hmiu Howii, a. ntaiuu, n Chairman ol (ha Board Praaldent and Pnbllther _ John IB. RMuu Executive Vice Praaldent and Editor Haaiv J. Ran Managing Editor Jon A. Rii.it Secretary and Advertising Director Ricrai M. Pmoaaaia Treasurer and Plnanca Officer Circulation Manager a. Marshall Jorban Local Advertising Manager It Seems to Me.,. Taubman Plan Acceptance Will Eradicate Desolation Pontiac’s modernization moves forward. Our City Commission voted to replace desolation in downtown Pontiac with a fine, modem setting. She of the Commissioners deserve wann applause and p r a i s e. As Mayor Tatu>h explained, seven or eight good piecemeal plans had been offered, but the Taubman version encompassed; an entire area. ★ ★ ★ The University of Detroit layout can still be utilized for areas aside from downtown. ★ ★ ★ Hie Tuesday evening audience was stacked with opposition, including a respectable and ever startling number of outsiders. Hence, the Commission deserves especial commendation. Those that rushed to microphones were militant foes of the Taubman plan. Their intercessions overlapped. In the meantime, those favoring the Taubmim plan sat on their hands, blinked at the lights and looked around. Commissioners commented on this regretfully. Communities aren’t built, improved and bettered by silent acquiescence in the face of spirited opposition. • Fufher, I commend the Commls- Our ‘Supreme1 In a fit of anger, a Brooklyn woman admitted she killed her four-year-old son, but was acquitted in court. She “thanked" the Judge. ★ ' ★ ★ And this is what he said: “Don’t thank me. Thank the • United States Supreme Court. . You ought to go to jail, but there is 'insufficient evidence’ because of a Supreme Court decision, so that’s that." -sion for preserving dignity and a gentlemanly bearing in the light of several unjustified interruptions from excited opponents. - ★ ★ it Let’s all applaud the statements of Kenneth Morris in r e g a r d to housing. This wasn’t precisely the springboard designed to launch the move, for downtown Pontiac was the avowed object. However, t b e general idea should find widespread acceptance. He declares we need two basic things: Many more houses .'Hundreds of replacements ★ ★ ★ For one, I’m willing to accept the verdict 100%. I told him this several weeks ago when he came to discuss it at The Press. Further, we welcome the time, efforts and money which he promises from themnions. Absolutely no one1 has a bigger stake than union members. This step requires the cooperation of |very segment It can’t be done rapidly enough or well enough by a partisan group. There should be an immediate meeting, and The Press volunteers to play host at the first luncheon. Let’s unite. ““ Let’s get under way. Court . .k, . The woman confessed the crime but there Was no otper evidence and that “great" tribunal in Washington has paved the way for this result—and more of it. Where—Where—are we headed? 1 ★ ★ ‘ ★ Perhaps a case like this should be carried through, a verdict of "guilty" reached and the matter sent again to Washington in the hope that some of the quaint new “rules” can be reversed. Crowns of Glory . . . . Brunettes, arise and shine. Our current Miss America is the nMth consecutive dark-hailed girl to win the coveted title. The whole world recalls the relatively ancient adage proclaiming: “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” ' But then recall the subsequent corollary: “But they marry brunettes.” ★ ★ ★ Personally, I cast a loud and strident vote for the redheads. Remember the ancient sign on the rear of a track: “We stdp for all railroad crossings, blondes and brunettes. And we bade up half a mils for a * redhead." — ■ - ; ■ a ..■■ - And in Conclusion .* ... right around where people live. ......... Fall sees an increase Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Canada and the United States are reaping a harvest of discon-: tented British doctors who disavow high taxes and low salaries . .. . . ... . . Overheard; “They’re going to open some of the freeways so they can repair the detours.” ..... . . . . . Texan Hunt, reputedly one of the two wealthiest men in the world, carries his own lunch everyday . . ........ Tammy Grimes is the first of the new TV shows to feel the official axe. Milton Berle and Jean Arthur are dangling and Garry Moore is losing ground. ★ ★ ★ «Trustsd scouts advise me Gai! Griffin deserves mention as one of ; the area’s attractive young ladies....... . . Brooklyn i has juft kflM two diamond buck rattlers in that horrible postal blight — the junk mail. Does anyone open any? ..........GeorgeJessel, | top authority, says no speech should be less than 15 minutes or more than 36. Someone ought to ease the word to Dr.*Ylvi-saker. ★ ★ ★ Insider’s Newsletter says 120,000 deer were slain on highways last year, a 33 per cent increase over the year before* Drivers are warned to blink lights repeatedly and sound the hom when one is sighted ..... . . Joe Don Looney is aptly named .......... Overheard : “An elephant is simply a mouse built to government specifications." . . Five of the leading hitters In baseball average 34 points better in the day than they do at night.......... Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: The C% — Lawrence Wslk and his long record of enjoyable TV music; the J’s—‘Fumble-itis’ of both U. of M. and Detroit Lions. , —Harold A. Fitzgerald Voice of the People: 'Go Away, Boy, You Bother Me!' David Lawrence Says: LBJ May Tap Son of Top Judge ‘Grateful for Assistance of Fine Police Of Hem' I wish to commend the efficiency of Chief of Police Hanger and tee officers of his department. ■ * * ★ We are very grateful for assistance recently rendered in tee locating and returning home of a young friend who had wandered away in a confused and weak mental and physical condition, dr- * ★ ; , She was found unconscious in a field and we know they saved her life as she is subject to attacks of bronchial pneumonia and could not have survived exposure'throughout the night. MRS. RAYMOND MUDGE 194 SEMINOLE ‘Did Commissioners Study Revised Plan?’ About thirty members of our class attended the meetings on ttie Taubman proposal. We feel that the main issue should have been given priority and-considered separately by the Commission. It appears that the commissioners had their minds already made up and were not op&i to any alternate plan. . I,f ■■ * * W * J- *' We wore reassured by the lively civic spirit displayed by the large number of citizens who actively participated ia the meeting. 5 ; f* W 'd W , ' . We wonder if the commissioners who voted “yes” had had a chance to study the hours-old revised Taubman contract! SENIOR GOVERNMENT CLASS ST. MICHAEL HIGH SCHOOL Asks Why Cats Are Allowed to Run Loose I understand there is an ordinance in Waterford Township -that requires that dogs be caged or tied up. If so, please tell me , why cats are allowed to run jtoose. They cause just as much damage. ' , : DOG LOVER By DAVID LAWRENCE WASHINGTON - President Johnson has under consideration the appointment of Ramsey dark to be head of the Department of Justice. At present the Texas lawyer, 38-year-old son i of Justice 1 Tom Clark of the Supreme Court of tile LAWRENCE United States, Is serving as acting attorney general. This is logical because since 1985 he has been the No. 2 man in the department with the title of deputy attorney general. * Jt ,* Me was cboaen to take ova1 the duties of Atty. Gen. Kat-zenbaeh because the latter has just been transferred to the . post of undersecretary of state. If Ramsey Clark is nominated for attorney geaeral, however, it is to be expected , that his father would retire from the Supreme Court, - Approximately 95 per cent , of the cases that come before the high court are argued by Department of Justice lawyers under the direction of the attorney general. ★ ★ ★ It has been assumed that no member of the Supreme Court Would wish to pass judgment - on cases in which a blood relative had participated. ‘CONFLICT OF INTEREST’ A “conflict of interest,” as it is usually called, could cause Justice Clark, aged 67, to leave the bench, and it is surmised that he probably would be glad to do so, since it would mean a promotion to the Cabinet for his son. What would President Johnson do about a vacancy in the Supreme Court in the immediate future? there is considerable speculation that be might appbint Thurgood Marshall, who is at present solicitor general of the Department of Justice, a post to which he was appointed by President Johnson last year. *** ■■ Marshall had previously served as a judge on the U,S. Circuit Court of Appeals, to which he was named by President Kennedy in 1961. NAAjCP COUNSEL Prior to that time he "was the special counsel of the National Association for the Ad- Verbal Orchids j*. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Borst of 340 Nelson; 61st wedding anniversary. Mrs. Sadie Patten „ of 41 Augusta; 85th birthday. Mrs. A. J. Baker of 532 Orchard Lake Ave.; 96th birthday. F. W. Etter of Riverside, Calif., formerly of Pontiac; 65th birthday. . , A. R. Downey of 70 Mariva; 89th birthday. vancement of Colored People and argued the desegregation cases before the high court. If Thurgood Marshall were nominated for* the Supreme Court, he would be the first Negro ever to serve on the highest court of the land. A Negro has been appointed to the President’s cabinet already, and there are Ne-gro judges on the lower , courts. Whether Thurgood Marshall is the man best qualified to be appointed to the Supreme Cotirt of the United States when the next vacancy occurs will: be argued with considerable vehemence by many. ... .... , . , A 5-Year-Old Picket Touched This Heart high court, it is not expected until after the election, so it' During the Michigan Bell strike, a 5-year-old son of a Bell ‘ m’t likely that any develop- employe made himself a poster. It read “I walk for Mommy.” meat such as the choice of a Negro for the high court would happen during the congressional campaign. TALK OF ‘BACKLASH’ With all the talk of a “backlash” vote and the growing food on trains investigated, controversy over the interpretations of the Constitution be- KEEGO ‘Need to Investigate Food Prices on Trains’ T have thought for a long time that prices in the restaurant at Metropolitan Airport ware too high: I would like to see prices If a vacancy occurs on the ing rendered by the high court, if seems improbable an unnecessary issue at' this time would be injected into the campaign. : Sr. * * It is natural, therefore, for such a nomination to. be postponed fix several weeks. IWfc ■ Newspaper Syndicate) We took a trip out west this summer. We woe charged 82.7$ in tiie dining car for two cans of hew and two eras of pop. The. prices,on the menu were H emits for beer and 35‘tents for pop. When we ordered another round, my husband handed the porter a dollar less and he took it without a word. But it was almost impossible to get Mm to* wait (mb us afterwards. ♦ * The porters’ rudeness was discussed often on the trip among Many of the passengers. . INTERESTED idi^B I Bob Considine Says: Critics of Johnson Role in Manila Talks Are Daft Air Commuter Servlets to Metro Praised ,f I can’t say enou#i for the new air service that Standard iAJrways is providing between Pontiac and Detroit Metropolitan mart. :fl Recently, I was delayed on a flight to Metro from Boston, and, much to my surprise, found that the Standard plane had Waited for me much past their scheduled takeoff for Pontiac. I surely did appreciate that. TED A. PANARETOS * ' PONTIAC STATE HOSPITAL. CONSIDINE NEW YORK—I can’t under-stand t h e knocks on LBJ’s trip to Manila for a halfway-up the-summit meeting with leaders of South Viet Nam, the P h i lippines, Thailand, Australia and N6w Zealand. We’re the biggest Pacific p o w e r, have the most invested in .the only* on in that part of the earth, and our chief executives have neglected personal contact with such allies for too many administrations. Nobody who is still on his rocker expects a miracle to emerge from Manila. But to doubt the wisdom ef toe President’s attendance tome is daft The man is working f or peace, traditionally a terminal reached by all kinds of meandering paths, none of them to be ignored. We're not as alone in Viet Nam as some lead you to believe. Aid, some of ft admittedly tokenish, is being given to the U. S.-South Viet side by Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, C a n a d a, Nationalist China, Costa Rica, Demnaric, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, France (!), Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, India, Iran, Ire- 1, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Laos, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Netherland, New Zealand, Nicaragua, Pakistan, Philippines, S p a i n, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom, Uruguay and Venezuela. It takea many forms. Assistance is as bewilder-ingly varied as crack Australian, Korean and Philippine troops and Brasil’s coffee shipments, France’s 417 teachers and 111 million francs in iow-intereat credits and Israel’s fS,Mt worth of pharmaceutical products, Japan’s $1.5 million worth of ambulances and Nationalist China’s warehouses, transport vessels, half a million textbooks for elementary school children, and 100 tons of fertilizer. . Thailand, already risking its neck by providing airfields from which hosts of strikes at North Viet Nam are launched, has also come through with flying instructors for South Viet Nam’s transport pitots, cement, zinc roofing and tons of rice. . ★ * * . There will be more. Question and Answer Can yon tell me where I can take practical nurse training during toe day? I’m 49. LADY OF THE LAKE REPLY Pontiac Practical N^rse Center tells us you’re within the age limit. Apply at Michigan Employment Security Commission, 242. Oakland Ave. If you 'pass first testing there, you’ll be sent to Die Center for more testing, if you pass, you’ll be interviewed and your application sent for final approval to the Admittance Committee (made up Of hospital, ME SC, and Center representatives) . Classes are? in the Hubbard Building 8-4:30 theftrst 24 weeks; the last 24 weeks ore spent in a hospital 7-3:30. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Hardship, If66 Railway Clerk Father: "I’m tony, son, but tomorrow I have to uae the chauffeur and the Rolls Royce for business” Fifth gradfr: "But how iriff f girt to school?” Father: , “You’B get .to . school like every ether kid in America gets to school— you’ll take a cab!" A Motor Speaks Arteona State Highway b' ' ’ Magazine , I am a motor vehicle and I resent some of the things people are saying about me. Take that headline in the paper which read “Automobiles Killed 49,000-Plus in 1965.” Then there’s the legislator who is introducing a bill to outlaw me because of all the destruction I cause. You know what I’m going to do? Plead not guilty, drift's what And I’m asking you to be the judge. Here’s my case. I am the pride of my antecedents became Pm so ranch softer than they were. I have the safest tires ever made, safety padding on my dauMiaard and power brakes as an added safety measure. I will respond to my accelerator to avoid danger quicker than they could, and I come epfipped with nh> ty belts. I have directional signals to guide o&era. My windshield wipers are toe brat ever mads and my headlights are the "most.” I travel on highways that are the safest ever built * ★ * Now take the fellow who controls me. He’s an upstanding citizen, good to his family, polite, and gives me • bath as often as he tales one. He’s one swell fellow — that is, until Jie gets behind' my wheel. Just touching it suddenly transforms him into a number one heel. He immediately begias to abuse my safety features by taking reddens chances and relying on my extra power to get him out of jams. He gets Ms biggest kick out of “beating” toe other gay. h inflates his ego. I don’t know why, really. He didn’t create me, oo why should he fed so cocky about my performance? Bat it delights him to prove and reprove that be is heavy in toe foot and light in toe head. So, on he goes — breaking the rules — speeding up to beat traffic lights, following too close mid over-driving his, beatoights until some day my shiny fenders may be marred and twisted mid my slick pah* job stained with red. Will it by my fault? Bud’s for you to judge. Before you do, I wish to say there's only one thing, wrong with automobiles. It’s* toe people who drive them. The defeme rests. — A. Motor Carr No Staying Power! The Chicago Tribune l could get in the last word when l argue with my wife —only l can’t stay up that late. -in-' THE PONTIAC PRESS, .MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1966 A—7 Police Still Sifting Clues in Slaying Valerie Percy (EDITOR'S NfiTE —■ Moreishocked the nation. Here is a than two weeks have passed report on the massfee investiga-since Valerie, Percy, honey-\tion to track down W killer.) blonde dasmter of Republicanl . leader Charles H, Percy, tons KENILWORTH, ffl. (AP ‘ murdered ■ in d criw thcilOn the chilly manning of Sept AIVANCE AND BEREC0GH1ZED M ’67 MONACO Jem the DODGE , REBELLION 1901 Dodge Core arid Trucks. On Display Thursday Sopt. 29th LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND 624-1572 ■Ml W. Cek U, WaM Ub 18, the stillness that surrounded the mansion where Valerie Fancy, 21, lay murdered was disturbed by the movements of ur men. They carried cameras, fingerprinting equipment and a vacu- House Handles Packaging Bill WASHINGTON (AP) -The House takes up today a weakened verdoo of the Senate-passed “truth In packaging” and a measure to expand the federal program against air pollution as Oongtas heads into what members hope will be its last two weeks. Both bills were to be brought up in the House under q procedure limiting debate and requiring a two-thirds vote for approval- . V urn cleaner. They moved quickly from the bedroom where the daughter of Charles H. Percy was beaten and stabbed, to file patio, where her killer entered the home. They lifted fingerprints from every surface, they photographed footprints on neacby beach. 'vriV: * They were specialists from the Chicago Crime Laboratory. Aflat two weeks of research, inspection ai41 interrogation, their it bags of physical evidence contain the only hides to theMentity of the murderer. The laboratory director, CapL Daniel Dragd, said the complete report on the evidence would be ready this week. TALKS TO FAMILY The bulk of physical evidence waa taken to the crime laboratory where the tedious task of analysis began. The chore of sorting out more than 300 leads faced Daley. ••v * * . * After thorough interrogation, fingerprinting of 220 persona and canvassing of hardware shires to determine Jfiny of the kilter’s tools were recently purchased, Daley said: “We have no suspects.” ■*' * , The Wednesday following the murder, a scuba diver found a bayotirt In four feet of water, 800 feet south of the Petey mansion. “This could be the murder weapon,” Daley Skid. It was —*3? SI turned over to the crime labora- WWte Dragel’s men scoured ^ traces of blood In 1950, a Japanese‘ jockey, riding a 14-year-old horse, finished in second place in a race outside Tokyo; file jockey was 72 years old. Cameroon, called the “hinge” of Africa, is situated on the Golf of Guinea about' midway between Senegal and the Republic of; South Africa. It doesn’t rain much in Bahrain, an archipelago in the Persian Gulf, where rainfall averages less than four inches per year. the Percy home and grounds, Robert M. Daley, police chief of Kenilworth, 2 Chicago suburb, interviewed file Percy family. The Percys went into seclusion but plan...................M week. Daley, a 34-year veteran of the force and its chief for seven years, was in file first hours of tm investigation that differed immeasurably from his normal routme of traffic accidents and found. The Senate plans to put aside file antipoverty bill temporarily (o act on a ^.4-billion federal health aid program asked by President Johnson last winter. However, no House action on w , I ■ . , the measure is in sight this Petectiyesfrom ?e.. s^c* | attorney’s office and the U.S. y Rep. Harley O. Staggers, D-:Coast Guard joined the inves- The dime laboratory compared the fingerprints from the .home with those of friends, em-return home tta pioyes and guests. By the fourth day of the investigation every fingerprint or palmprint but eight had been mulched. W. Va., chairman of the House Commerce Committee, said be is confident the packaging bill will be approved with hardly any votes against it PACKAGE RULES Hie Commerce Committee eliminated provisions for mandatary federal packaging standards while accepting sections covering labeling and. tight federal restrictions of such , things as “cents off** promotions, designation of packages as “giant economy sire” And the amount ‘ in a serving; tigatkm. Among file was a man’s found 30 feet froi of evidence woolen glove the home. Ten days after the murder, Dragei reported the woolen glove bad bloodstains and that its fibers matched strands of wool found on the. cut screen and in Valerie’s bedroom. Hie population of Latin America'is expected to increase from 200 million to 600 atillion by the year 2000. NOTICE! To Pontiac Township Residents The Pontia* Township officey 2060 Opdyke Road will be open to register, qualified voters of Pontiac Township, Oakland County for the coining General Election on the following day* and hours: C Daily Hours: 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Wednesday nights, September 21, September 28, October 5,1966 until 8:00 P.M. Saturdays, September 17, September 24, October 1, and October 8,1966 from 9:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. My office will also bo open from 8:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M, Monday, October 10, 1966 the last day on which you may register. Qualified voters of Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan may also register at any time, day or night, when I am not in my office by calling UL 2-1087 for an appointment. Greta V. Block Township Clerk FRETTER TAKES THE WORRY OUT OF DISCOUNT BUYING! NEXT 3 DAYS ONLY! Today, Tuesday and Wednesday Tremendous Bargains in Every Department! Come See and Save Today! [DANISH LO-BOY CONSOLE COLOR TV ^Supeib wood 'walnut conieolo lo-boy cotor TV. Big 265 »q. in. roctangular Kroon, with 25,000 volt* of pidute power. High gain 3 IF amplifier, famou* handcrafted chassis, automatic color eketfier.and color demodulator, and SALE PRICED NOW At FRETTER'S—SEE IT TODAYI ■AUi 20,000 Veit Port. M-sheaesI MF/VNF TMssr Ho Fitese Look CireoH IF amplifior Oilif Molded Cabinet $128" FRETTER'S PONTIAC Hi TELEGRAPH RD. ft MILES. ORCHARD LAKE RD. 1 Mile North of Miracle Mile 1 Open Daily 10-9—Open Sunday 10-7—FE‘3-7051 I NO MONEY DOWN-If TO 31MONTHIT# MY | A nnmnn ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY m Great buys! Penncrest® Appliances ... reduced thru WEDNESDAY! Ntfularly 15.11 11.91 Charge it! Teflon® iron... spray, steamy dry Now no-stick soleplate. 'Select-O-Gulde' sate fabric tamp. Pump s Chevy H. Lot’s new. New grille and front fender styling. New colors and interiors. Energy-absorbing instrument panel with a new thicker foam edge. Seven models to pick from. New and different, except for one thing. We haven’t changed the economy. Slip into Corvair Monza’s new dim-line bucket seats and prepare to' get a whole new outlook on driving. Rear: engine traction. Four-wheel independent suspension. Loads of new safety features. Some car! i Eveiything new’s happening noff..4jonr Chendet dealer’s Authorised Chevrolet Dealer in Pontiac MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. SI1 MMAWi 135-4161 HASKINS CHEVROLET, INC. C751 DM* Hwy. Oxford 'j \ HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 1 62S-252S •*» 5?4 sJVi mi 309 ti felt M*4 take Orion AL HANOUTE, INC 21-S912 692-2411 CRISSMAN CHEVROLET COMPANY 1 THE PONTTAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1966 B—i Pontiac Symphony Season A trio of young artists will appear as guest soloists this season with the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. The opening concert on Oct. 11 wiD feature soprano, Dora-lCne McNelly Davis. Paul Scho-enfield, pianist, will play on Nov. 29 an# Sergiu Luca, Israeli violinist, concludes tee season on May 2. A graduate of BME Capital University, Columbus, Ohio, she continued her studies at tee University