The Weather U. I. WHlhtr 4Hriw Fortcctl Sunny, mild Pagt t) Home Edition Hawks Hail Choice - ¥ PONTIAC PRESS fyr McNamara Post PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. SATUKDAY, JANUARY 20. 11)158 VOL. 12.1 - NO. 208 ★ ★ ★ “40 PAGES lOc Teachers Ratify '68 Wage Pact Lawman Killed Chasing Kansas Bank Robbers in Birmingham Birmingham teachers last night approved a wage contract for the 1967-68 school ^ear by a 5-1 margin. i The ratification by the teachers and the expected ratification by the board of education at a special board meeting Monday pight would end a contract dispute which began last March. Teachers in the school district were ordered back to their schools by court injunction Sept. 18. They have been teaching under that injunction since. (BEA) and the board of education bad reached agreement Tuesday after a 12-hour bargaining session. * * ★ According to Walter Piel, administrative assistant to the superintendent, the contract will give teachers an across the board increase of $480 per year. The salary increases will cost the district about $442,000 with another $58,000 to he spent on additional fringe benefits and supplemental pay, Piel said. The vote last night was 576 to 110 for approving the contract. Negotiators of the Birmingham Education Association The contract calls for new negotiations on the salary schedule for the 1968-69 school year.y Fringes and supplemental pay will not be negotiable for that period, however, Piel said. KANSAS CITY (AP)—A man charged with bank robbery and the murder of a Kansas highway patrolman was under guard in a hospital today while officers pressed a search for a second gunman. Sgt. Eldon Miller, 48, the first Kansas patrolman to die by gunfire, was killed by a carbine bullet that crashed through the win d-shield of his patrol I car and struck him I between the eyes MILLER yesterday during a gun battle. Cooking School idbit: Fashion A tentative contract had been reached bv negotiators in November but teachers turned down that 2-year contract 550-120. ★ ★ ★ It would have made the second year salary contingent- on results of a millage election. Henry Floyd Brown, 88. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was wounded in the 15-minute battle at a two-story apartment building an hour after the Metcalf State Bank in suburban Overland Park was robbed by two men. Police surrounded the building and fired back from two sides, after taking a woman and her child from an apartment across the hall. Four fashion shows by local stores will be given at intermission time during the ninth annual Pontiac Press cooking school Jan. 22-25. Between the cooking demonstrations, the following stores will present the latest styles: R-B Shops, Monday evening; Alvin’s at both shows on Tuesday and Bloomfield Fashion Shop Thursday evening. At present, there are no fashion shows Wednesday. PAY SCHEDULE Police recovered $13,100 from Brown’s apartment. Those who plan to attend are reminded to use the east entrance of Pontiac Central High School, Doors open at 12:30 and 6:30 p.m. The schedule calls for a BA minimum of $6,300 and a maximum of $10,375; an MA minimum of $6,800 and a maximum $11,500. A PhD degree calls for $7,600 starting pay and a maximum of $12,550. ★ ★ * ’The contract calls for both bargaining parties to withdraw pending legal and quasi-legal actions, including an unfair labor practice suit by the BEA, the seeking of sanctions by the BEA against the school district and a court action sought by the board against the teachers. PAIR CHARGED James W. Bouska, Johnson County attorney, filed bank^ robbery and murder charges against Brown and a man identified as Bud Jackson, 45. There are no more tickets for any session. ; * * ★ Any seats vacant five minutes before the shows begin will be given to those who come without tickets. They will have the same opportunity to win prizes as those with tickets. No employe of The Pontiac Press or member of an employe’s family is eligible to win a prize. Winners must be 18 years of age. Sara Bayard and Harriet Stinson of Consumers Power Company will be presenting the food demonstrations. X Kuhn to Offer Tax Revision LANSING (AP) — State Sen. George Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield Township, said yesterday he will introduce legislation to boost the city income tax limit by 1 per cent and eliminate such taxes on nonresidents. * * ★ * Kuhn make the comment in a letter to Detroit Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, who asked the Legislature for additional financial resources for his city. ‘WOULD RESPOND’ Envoy Vies in Texas AUS'HN, Tex. (41-Eugene M. Locke, deputy ambassador to South Vietnam, announced today as a Democratic candidate for nomination as Texas Governor. The White House formally announced this morning that Locke had resigned his Vietnam post. “Specifically,” Kubn said, “I am proposing that the city income tax limitation be raised from 1 per cent to 2 per ceiH as a maximum ceiling. “However, to increase this tax by either or 1 per cent up to the 2 per cent ceiling would require approval by a majority of the voters at any regular or special election,” he added Job Outlook Favorable in State LANSING — A forecast of the employment future for Michigan to 1980 has been completed by the Michigan Department of Commerce. The forecasts cover the 32 major industry classifications and are based on 12 multicodnty economic and planning regions in the state. cast to rise from 2.7 million in 1960 to 3.% million in 1980, an employment growth of 44 pef cent. The over-all employment picture for Michigan through 1980 is fhvorable although the report does illuminate several problem areas. 'The report anticipates that the historical trend of faster economic and employment growth in the southern half of Michigan’s lower peninsula will continue through 1980. This configuration of growth is expected to continue over the 20 year period 1960 to 1980. TO EXCEED AVERAGE Total employment in Michigan is fore- The four regions where employment Big Growth Seen for County Total employment in Economic Region I (the 7-county Detroit metropolitan area), which includes Oakland Copnty, is expected to increase from 1.48 niillion in 1960 to 2.17 million in 1980 ... an employment growth of 689,785 or 47 per ceni, slightly faster than state average. Within this region, the most'explosive employment growth is expected to develop in Washtenaw, Macomb, Monroe and Oakland counties. The employmeitt forecasts for the greater Detroit area clearly illustrate the expected future service orientation of Detroit’s employnlent. The most rapidly expanding industry sector in the Detroit region, according to the ^ study, will be Medical and other professional services. This sector is expected to increase in the Detroit region by 147 per cent between 1960 and 1980 . . . frpm j77,232 in 1960 to 439,000 in 1980, a gain of 260,000. ‘ Growth in the professional sector of the economy will also present a challenge to our instruments of social change, such as education and other advanced training facilities. Other industry sectors that can expect above-average employment gains during this period in the Detroit region are: contract construction, 31,000 or 51 per cent; wholesale trade, 26,000 or 57 per cent; other retail trade, 78,000 or 57 per cent; finance, insurance, arid real estate, 43,000 or 79 per cent; business and repair services, 21,000 or 55 per cent and public administration, 47,000 or 88 per cent. WASHINGTON (AP) — leading congressional hawks have cheered President Johnson’s choice of Clark M. Clifford, long-time White House adviser and highpowered Washington lawyer, to become secretary of defense. I.eading doves also were friendly or noncommittal, at least until Clifford’s' views on-prosecuting the Vietnam wiar come into sharper focus. This may develop at Senate confirmation hearings, expected soon. Johnson announced yesterday h i s nomination of the 61-year-old Clifford — “a very wise and prudent counselor to many presidents” — to replace Robert S. McNaniara as head of the enormous Defense Department. March 1. Then McNamara, the record holder in time served with .seven years asi defense chief, will move on to become president of the World Bank — a move announced about two months ago. Meeting newsmen a few hours after Johnson’s action, Clifford refused to place himself on either the hawk or dove side of the Vietnam question. “I am not conscious of falling under any of those ornithological divisions,” said the tall, hand.some Clifford to reporters probing for his [wsition. Assuming Senate approval, Clifford will take over from McNamara before However, Clifford is regarded in knowledgeable quarters as a hard-liner on the war. Some sources said he has opposed any extended bombing pauses as a means of encouraging the North Vietnamese to talk peace. His advice to John.son is believed to have weighed at least as heavily as McNamara's in some of the major decisions of the war; sources said. The President said Clifford "has been a counselor on most of the important decisions made in the international fields, from defense strength, to weapons. to actions . . .’’ Clifford I has served Johnson as chairman 0 f t h e Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board, the Foreign Relations Advisory Board, and on special missions such as a tour of Southeast Asian and Pacific nations last summer to try and drum up more allied trcwp support for the war. That mission was rated a partial success. Before Johnson, Clifford served Presidents F'ranklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman and John F. Kennedy in varying capacities. Police said Jackson escaped on foot from the scene of the shooting. “If the financial need is realistic and sound, I am confident that the citizens of your city or any other city would respond favorably to such requests,” he told Cavanagh. The Uniform City Income Tax Act of 1963 presently limits city income taxes to 1 per cent on residents and Vz per cent on nonresidents. ★ * * Kuhn is a former chairman of the Vigilance Tax Committee, a group of suburban Detroit officials opposing Detroit’s city income tax. '"DWoiK'S President Comers With Defense Post Appointee Clark Clifford Two robbers, with theatrical make-up on their faces and carrying carbines, entered the bank, walked down a corridor to 4he drive-in window and forced two-^ men in the cage to hand over the money. 40,000 to Get Southwest Jolted Serum in Sicily PALERMO, Sicily (AP)—Driving ram, hail, snow and spreading diseases kept Sicily in a nightmarish state today as more than 40,000 refugees huddled in soggy tent camps or waited in the hills for rescuers. by Buried N-Test Kuhn said he intends to “attempt to meet the financial needs of local governments subject to voter approval of any tax increases.” An emergency program of antityphoid injections was begun, and other innocu-lations were stepped up amid outbreaks of scarlet fever, chicken pox, whooping cough, bronchitis, dysentery and pneumonia. Two deaths were reported from exposure. Trudging through the debris of what was the town of Gibellina, Italian Premier Aido Moro told hungry, bedraggled refugees: “My poor people, whatever we can do will be done.” HOT CREEK VALLEY, Nev. (Jf) -The apparently unexpected force of an underground nuclear test explosion yesterday hit college seismographs 1,700 miles away with the intensity of an earthquake. The blast registered 6.25 on the Richter scale. Of equal to a fairly strong earthquake, on seismographs at Spring Hill College, in Mobile, Ala., 1,700 miles away. Creek Valley in central Nevada in an experiment to see if even more powerful tests could be conducted in the area. Italian newspapers wrote bitter editorials to deplore what they termed the government’s chronic inability to manage relief work efficiently. TTiey reported chaotic tieups of relief supplies because of bungling and red tape. Already dispirited and depressed, the refugees were battered by violent thundershowers driven by strong winds. The rain drenched loaves of bread going to seven giant tent camps. Howling winds turned back helicopters trying to fly in rations, medicine and blood plasma. Flashes of lightning lit the sky, and the sea crashed against jetties and docks with a storm force of seven on a nine-point scale. In Eureka, Calif., about 700 miles away, residents reported “a gentle ground roll” was felt. The explosion, unleashing energy equivalent to nearly a million tons of TNT, was touched off 3,200 feet beneath the surface of Hot An announcement Jan. 8 said “ground motion will probably be felt at least as far as 75 to 100 miles from the detonation.” ★ ★ An inspection by helicopter of Moore’s Station, 5 miles from ground zero, revealed no visible damage yesterday. But the AEC said it was investigating reports that windows in the Ely High School building 90 miles away were cracked by the tremor, and that plaster in the old Brown Hotel at Eureka, Nev., 70 miles away, had been cracked. Heart Transfer Patient 'Grave' PAVEMENT CRACKS . Miitor cracks were found in the pavement on bridges on U.S. 6 within 12 miles of the blast. growth is expected to exceed the state average during this period are Region 6 (Lansing metropolitan area) 64 per cent; Region 3 (Kalamazoo area) 56 per cent; Region 2 (Jackson area) 51 per cent; and Region 1 (7-county De-roit metropolitan area) 47 per cent. According to the study, the emergence of the-“human resources era” In Michigan and the nation will have a profound effect on Michigan’s future industrial composition. 15,000 LEAVING An estimated 15,000 persons streamed out of Sicily to Italy. While the hunt for survivors was over, the search for the dead went on. The number of bodies so far recovered totalled 190, with only a fraction of the ruins sifted. Officials fear the final death toll will be close to 400. STANFORD, Calif: (APi - Mike Kasperak, the heart transplant patient who has undergone a third intestinal operation in less than a week, is in “extremely grave” condition today, doctors say. Doctors at Stanford University Medical Center expressed concern about the possibility of “infectious influences” attacking the weakened system of the world’s fourth human heart transplant patient. 'The AEC exploded the dei'Ice, as part of a program to find an area in which to conduct nuclear detonations more powerful than can be conducted on its permanent Nevada test site near Las Vegas. Seismic and technical data from yesterday’s blast will be studied, the AEC said, to see whether the Hot Creek VaP ley is the area it is looking for. Professional services, public administration, finance, recreation, trade and business services will be the rapidly growing fields of ecohomic opportunity over the next two decades. V\^ee/cenc/ Outlook Is Sunny and Mild A medical bulletin last night, four hours after the removal of the 54-year-old retired steelworker’s spleen, said the heart transplanted Jan. 6 was functioning normally despite the stress of disease and multiple surgery in other areas. In Tcxiay's Press The study indichtes that despite the expected rapid growth of employment opportunity in the service industries, manufacturing will remain the fundamental bdse of the economic structure in the state. However, while manufacturing employment is estimated to increase from 1.03 million in 1960 to 1.15 million in 1980, within manufacturing, the motor vehicle industry will remain Michigan’s leading industry. Old Man Winter will be on vacation' over the weekend, while sunshine and temperatures — just like .spring — take The U.S. Weather Bureau reporjts th^ following day-by-day forecast for the Fontlac-Oakland County area: The patient’s bUxid pressure was reported to be. stable and doctors said the operation slopped bleeding from an ulcer high in the stomach ^ * * * In a .series of operations stemming from liver disea.se and internal hemorrhaging, Kasperak's gall bladder was removed last Sunday. On 'I'hursday, a resumption of gastrointestinal bleeding required another operation CLIMB PREDICTED National motor vehicle production is predicted to climb to 14.6 million units in 1980 or 85 per cent above the 7.9 million produced in 1960. * * * TODAY—Sunny and mild. High 40 to 45. Mostly fair and continued rather mild tonight. Low 25 to 30. Southwest to west winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour. A * * TOMORROW—Mostly fair and continued rather mild. LIVER MALFJUNCTION Interruption of the liver functions occurred again yesterday along with additional heavy loss of blood. 'rhe spleen was removed to head off a decrease fn the platelets, a blood clotting factor, and prevent further bleeding. » Michigan’s employment in this industry is projected to riie from 377,000 in 1960 to 474,000 in 1980 of 26 per cent. X"' i V MONDAY—Continued sunny and mild. * Precipitation probabilities in per cent are. near zero today, tonight and tomorrow 10^ A brisk 28 was the low recording in downtown Pontiac pripr to 8 a m. The mercury had climbed to 42 by 2 00 p.m. With each operation, the heart patient received massive blood transfusion^ one^ Virtually changing his entire supply in an effort to remove impurities. Or it if In Pittsburgh, the Westerq Pennsylvania Heart Association began signing up persons who would be willing to donate their hearts. Cage Scene Orchard Lake St. Mary’s victory over Pontiac Catholic highlights prep results - PAGES B-1, B-2. Auto Show Mall exhibit has .something for everyone — PAGE B-8. Sen. McCarthy Negroes are victims of colonialism in U.t>., says presidential candidate PAGE A-3. Astrology ............... B-4 Bridge ......../. B-4 Church News B-5—B-7 Crossword Puzzle D-7 Comics . „...... B-4 Cowboy Story C-12 Editorials A-4 Home See n. C-i-C-4, C-9, C-10 Markets .................C-II Obituaries A4 Picture Page B-8 Sports ............. B-1—B-3 liieaters .............: C-l$ ' TV-RadIo Programs C-5—C-8, b-7 Wilson, Earl .............D-7 Women’s Pages .... A-lf, A-11 .i V C -V. V A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS,_J>ATl RDAV. JANUARV 2o. TOOS Wash-Up Time Issue Threatens GM With a National Shutdown DETROIT (AP) — The'United nize a union demand for six Auto Workers union says strikes minutes of wash-up time, at three General Motors found- Bogged-down local negotia-ries could lead to a national lions have resulted in strikes at shutdowin of the top U.S. auto a general foundry at Defiance, maker within a week or 10 days Ohio, and Chevrolet foundries at because GM refuses to recog- Saginaw. Mich., and Tonawan-' da. N.Y., which have 11,200 workers. Blast, Fire Kill 2 of Holland Oil Refinery DR. DONAL WHITE Student Dies Saving Friend in School Fire Leonard Woodcock, UAW vice president and director of the union's GM department, said the major drawback in reaching at-the-plant agreements has been the company’s refusal to grant a six-minute, prelunch wash-up period at foundries. ROTTERDAM. Netherlands agreements supple- (AP) — An explosion set off a orient the national contract rati- fire that spread over 15 acres at 355,000 workers hoRSHAM. England (APi — the Shell Oil Co. refinery here ‘ An Indian schoolboy died help- today, killing two persons and ing a friend to safety today in a injuring about 60. One other per-ne« at Sa^naw Danville 111 son was reported missing. ih" wash 1 de" school in the Sussex The blast at 4:30 a.m. ^ "P countryside, smashed widows in thousands of . Police said all but one of 67 homes in nearby Hoogvliet,‘PARTS SHORTAGES’ boys sleeping in school dormito- where thousands of refinery Parts shortages from the Sag- ries were saved. Five firemen workers live, and in Vlaardin- inaw foundry were blamed by were injured fighting the six-gen across the Rotterdam wat- the company for the layoff of hour blaze, erway. pipping in ‘he new 5,800 workers at two Chevrolet ..-The heroic Indian boy was c^nnel betw^ the North Sea engine plants in Flint, helping his friend to escape hnn« ‘old newsmen simi-^^^en suddenly the floor col- halted for two hours. lar company-paid wash-up pe- L j under him and he disap- finds have been granted at non-i ,> „„„ 'piL About six hours after the ex-;foundry facilities run by GM. pe fireman said. The plosion firemen had the fire un-i .*ir ,u:_ —,..-j „ l young victims name was with- Loses 2nd Official Another leading figure in the Oakland County health program has announced his resignation—the second since the year began. Dr. Donal L. White, assistant psychiatric director, told the Mental Health Services board yesterday he was quitting to take a post in Tuscon, Ariz. On Jan. 2, Dr. Robert E. Walden, director of county programs, quit after a long controversy. Dr. White and John Madole, administrative board officer, had been coleaders of the program in the absence of a director. The board announced that a search is being carried on to fill both positions. * *• * The board also is lacking a director for the Oakland Training Institute (OTI) in Berkley, once the center of considerable conflict. TURNED IN RESIGNATIONS Last December 10 out of 12 of the staff members turned-, in resignations claiming pixir leadership and lack of communications. They have since been mollified by changes in board policy and participants in yesterday’s mcfeting reported all is going well there. The board adopted a motion to appoint a program coordinator instead of a new director at OTI. « ★ * ★ \ The institute trains some 40 mentally retarded children. In the same building, a mental health program of the Oakland County Schools is ^|j.^fect, with about 90 pupils attending. News Briefs From Wires Birmingham Area News BIRMINGHAM - Robert A. ANN ARBOR — University of Michigan regents voted yesterday to let residence halls set their own ptolicies on visits Bog3ri jr., executive director of by members of the opposite sex tj,e Community House, 380 S. in dormitory rooms Besides Bates, has been appointed Oak-adopting a “hands-off” policy on bounty chairman for the dormitory vis ts between op-j^j^^igan Week celebration, posite sexes, the regents also Announcement of the appoint-voted to allow women students ^^de by state Michi- living in residence halls to beiga^ Chairman Win Shie- free of curfew rules if they have |gp Regional Chairman written permission from their Bruce Tope of Detroit, parents to be out late. The Bogan, who chaired Birmlng-regents made no mention of any ham’s program last year, will method to determine whether coordinate activities in the counstudents were submitting notes jy during the week, slated this actually signed by their par- year for May 19-25. ents. Head of Michigan Week for County Is Appointed Senator Suffers Seizure WASHINGTON OPi-Sen. John A. Pastore, D-R. I., remained in Bethesda Naval Hospital today for treatment of what members of his staff described as a mild heart attack. riods have been granted at non foundry facilities run by GM. der control and reported there is not resolved," he held while police traced* his fats rJ^ig^ofrapf^^^^^^^^^ ‘her, living overseas. Flames shot up 300 feet from be Lsentially paratyzed,” with 15 oil tanks and a number of ■mall buildings. A spokesman for Shell said damage would run into many millions of guilders. The U.S. dollar is worth 3.60 guilders. About 600 men were at work at the refinery when the explosion occurred in jone of the processing plants. some 300,000 workers on streets in seven to 10 days. the fire escapes after the blaze began raging through Newells Preparatory School near this market town. It apparently started in a basement, police Said. Home Looted in Shelby Twp.^ Judge Nixes Higher BondiJgn„|j|Ygg|. in Kidnaping Halt in Bombing Is Urged by 15 Yan ks Visit! ng Viet Referendum Legality Hit In commenting on his appointment, Bogan stated, “I am depending on the cooperation of each of our Oakland County municipalities to make this 15th annual Michigan Week celebration the best ever in Oakland County, and to help accomplish the three basic goals of Michigan Week, namely to give the citizens of Michigan greater knowledge and appreciation of their state: to promote the state’s assets and resources for industry, business, education and recreation; and to foster a spirit of fellowship and coopera-among all people and com- munities in our state. SELMA, Ala. (APj - An all- Oakland County Prsoecutor S. Jerome Bronson lost his bid yesterday to raise the bond of a Berkley man charged with kid- white jury has sentenced a 22-' naping, molesting and assault- year-old Selma white man to 12 ing two children a week ago. months\in jail for the killing of a Shelby Township police are * ★ ★ Negro farm worker, looking for thieves who brokel Circuit Judge Farrell E. Rob-1 A Circuit Court jury found into a home last night and cart- erts rejected Bronson’s petition Bernard Steward, a heavy-equip- ed off several thousand dollars for a $23,000 increase in the ment operator, guilty Friday of worth of furs, diamonds and;bond set for Byron Lee Hoff-[second degree manslaughter in other goods. Imeister by Berkley Municipal i the killing of John Arthur Lang- ★ ★ ★ ! Judge Theodore F. Hughes. don Officers believe the home of| Hoffmeister, 20, is free on Uangdon, died after being shot Alexander Paradzinski of 51028 |2,ooo bond pending his prelim- once with a .22-caliber magnum Baltree was broken into shortly luary examination Thursday. rifle on a dirt road south of Sel- before 8:30 p.m. i mu u . r !ma last Nov. 5. . The charges stem from the The Paradzinskis were out a(.(.o<;ting of a 6-year-old Berk-earli^ in the evening and ar- ]ey girl and her 8-year-old broth-rived home about 8:30 to find the er. bouse ransacked. ★ a ★ Officers said the burglars In testifying at the hearing on fore convicting him on the less-forced open a sliding-glass patio Bronson’s petition, Hughes said charge, door. [the only purpose of bond is to' The trials of Donald E ★ * A [guarantee that the defendant Meeks, 22, and James J. Missing are a full-length mink would appear in court. Reeves, 26, were not scheduled coat, a diamond cross pin and a Hughes said thpt $2,000 bond for this term of Circuit Court, full diamond lady’s wristwatch, was adequate in Hoffmeister's Steward testified during the plus several smaller diamonds, I case and that the $25,000 bond two-day trial that the shooting assorted furs, sweaters, shirts,'requested by Bronson would was accidental. He said Lang- Steward was one of three white men charged with murder in the killing. The jury deliberated for more than 13 hours be- SAIGON (AP) - Fifteen prominent Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish religious leaders, here to survey the Vietnam war, today urged President Johnson to halt the bombing of North Vietnam and de-escalate the ground war in the South The group also said Americans could not in good c o n-science “promote justice at home and help to preserve quasi feudalism or the rule and wealth of the few abroad,” apparently a reference to the South Vietnamese government. The lay and clerical leaders are spending four days in South Vietnam as a stop on a world tour following the First Interreligious Symposium on Peace at New Delhi. Among the signeis of the group-statement were former Gov. Harold E. Stassen of Pennsylvania, a frequent contender for the Republican presidential nomination; the Rev. Ralph Abernathy of the Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence, Atlanta, Ga.; Rabbi Maurice Eisendrath of New York, president of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations; and Bishop John Wesley Lord, Methodist bishop of Washington, D.C. ★ ★ ★ FLINT — A civil rights group yesterday challenged the legality of a referendum on an open-housing ordinance in Flint, saying such an election would amount to a vote on whether the city wants discrimination. Officials of the Flint chapter of be continually open to negotia- National Association for the tions, including the use of the Advancement of Colored People /if n secretary-general of the Unitedat a hearing in Gene- /f KOtTmey A bloodmobile will be at the Masonic Temple, 357 Woodward, Jan. 30 from 3-9 p.m. The Southeastern Michigan Red Cross Blood Center needs 350-400 pints daily for minimum requirements of local hospitals. Blood may be credited to the account 9! the donor’s choice. ROBERT A. BOGAN JR. Quits, Rocky Might Run' Nations, and to encourage see County Circuit Court on strongly the non-Communist na-[their lawsuit to prevent the ref-tionalist elements in South Viet- erendum. Judge Anthony Man-nam seeking social reform and sour took the statements under self-determination not in our advisement. The NAACP of-way but in theirs.” ficials said that because discri- mination is illegal a vote on whether to allow discrimination DENVER, Colo. (AP) — The would be unconstitutional. brother of Nelson Rockefeller _____ says the New York governor may change his mind and de-Colonel Is 'Admonished' Republican presidential nomination, WASHINGTON «^-The Army‘ SAIGON (AP) - “If the Com- ^ Id Mhlf Winthrop Rockefeller, was in munists want a bombing pause, ® ^ involved in a re- a meeting Friday they must first stop their infil- J ‘ “ lobbyists and whole- Gertrudis Breed traUon and all aggressive ac- s^'ers for free liquorto be used international, of which he tions,” President Nguyen Van ® ohanty ball. The request president. Thieu was quoted today by the ‘or 372 fifths of liquor violated Arkansas covernor noted «cial Vietnam Prej. aalTyeS: Viemarn Ptess sal. Tnieu de- »as wl«„™. T n e ~Ve:rRrnl “,'nd fined aggressive actions as in- Army released a letter written gjjpj. ^ ^ eluding attacks on military by Col. J. B. Conmy, a battalion ^ posts and units, assassinations, commander at nearby Ft. Mey- ^ P kidnapings and other terrorist er. Va., which had been Bomb Halt Line Drawn by Thieu out, maybe Nelson will change acts. Thieu spoke Friday at a out to the lobbyists and wh" e-l^htS a camera and bottles of liquor, have been unreasonable. The Weather don staggOred in front of the pick-up truck in which the three were riding, then attempted to force his way into the truck. reception at Independence Pa- salers. lace. ■i‘“ls”S: Seie\:.S fl"” Honored liaceSndS^’’^ American scOTT AIR FORCE BASS. III. i, i, i, (AP) — A 26-year-old parares- He added: “President John-specialist who volunteered The 15 said they “respectfully[son’s stand on a halt In the lowered into and urgently” asked President;bombing of North Vietnam in ‘P® hostile jungles of Vietnam Johnson “to reevaluate present U S. policy: to give serious consideration to an immediate halt, on moral and political if not military grounds, in the bombing of North Vietnam; to de-escalate the level of military action without immediate withdrawal; to 1)R. CHARLES R. SEMPERE City Hospital Names Director The immediate past chief of staff. Dr. Charles R. Sempere, has been appointed medical director of Pontiac General Hospital. " Salary for the part-time position is $15,000 annually. Sempere was appointed by ......... the Pontiac General Hospital didn t change his mind. Board of Trustees. He succeeds When asked how his brother 41,^ late Dr. Clifford T. Eke-might be influenced to run. Win- |Q„d The has been vacant throp commented, "Writing let-1since Dr. Ekelund’s death Oct. ters could be very effective.” his State of the Union message search for downed airmen delivered last Jan. 18 was cate- nam^ the Military Airlift gorical and clear. President s 1967 ‘Airman of the Johnson does not want the Com-iyf®*! yesterday Sgt. Duane D. munists to take advantage of i of Mr. and Mrs Theater Review Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report s, PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Sunny and mUd today. High 40 to 45. o»d continued rather mild tonight and Sun- day. Low tonight 25 to 30. Monday’s outlook: continued sunny and mild. Southwest to west winds 10 to 20 miles per hour. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: near zero today, 10 tonight and Sunday. Rights Play at Oil Is a Shocker Tiday In Pontiac Lowe&t ttmperature preceding 8 a r At 8 a.m.: Wind velocity tO m.p rection; Southwest. Sun sets Saturday at 5:32 p.m Sun rises Sunday at 7:56 a.m Moon sets Sunday at U;09 a m Moon rises Saturday at 11:18 p.m Dewntown Tamparatures 4 a.m. 29 n a.m. One Year Ago in Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature Weather; Sunny Friday's Tamparatura Chart 36 Alpena Escanaba Flint Gd. Rapids Hougtiton 10 I 31 Friday in Pontiac (as recorded downtown) Highest temperature Lowest temperaturl Moan temperature Weather: Sunny, beautiful. Houghton L. j® Jackson Lansing Marquette Muskegon Oscoda Pellstpn H Traverse C. } Albuquerque I Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago Cincinnati 6 In 1943 Denver 38 26 34 23 38 26 36 30 36 26 43 26 36 24 37 21 35 22 37 23 46 26 61 35 3/ 21 -SO 36 45 25 45 25 57 29 37 23 60 51 72 43 46 26 72 66 Detroit Duluth Fort Worth Jacksonville 39 23 4.0s Angeles 35 24 Miami Bch. Milwaukee New Orleans 70 4i New York 49 35 Omaha 48 31 Phoenix 67 39 Pittsburgh 37 27 St. Louis 50 37 Tampa 72 58 S. Lake City 33 9 S. Francisco 62 44 S. S. Marie 35 26 Seattle 52 50 Tucson 63 40 Washington 57 30 NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain and showers are forecast tonight for the Pacific Northwest inland to Montana and in •outhem Texas. It will be colder in the New England states, milder in the mid-Atlantic states and milder in the Dakotas. , V , V ' W.-V':: By DON BRAUNAGEL The Meadow Brook Theatre troupe plunged into chilling contemporary drama last night, and the audience felt the cold shock. Previous productions paled as the John Fernald Company etched the vivid drama, “And People All Around,” loosely based on the 1964 murders of three civil rights workers near Philadelphia, Miss George Sklar’s play, produced only once before—in London, is gutsy, especially in its dialogue, and Meadow Brook codirectors John Broome and George Guidall have strengthened it by adding music and a min-strel-typc chorus, narrating, interpreting and joining in the action. These, combined with forceful lighting effects, intensify the message of the play, destined to linger with audiences long after the production’s four-week run here. / ★ it / it , Credit for the music, lyrics and arrangements belongs to Booker T. Bradshaw ,ir., in his first appearance this season. FINE VOICE Singing in a fine voice and playing with a, “knife guitar” technique (using a sharp edge on the neck of the instrument to get a mournful echo), he enhanced the irony of his lyrics, as in the opening number when “Three cheers for the red, white and blue” evolved into ‘Three cheers for the white.” Also returning to the troupe this seaxon is Josh Bryant, who excellently portrayed the southerner with a conscience. As a witness to the murders, he is torn A / Seti. Hill Will Retire - Paper BIRMINGHAM, Ala. UP) -the'bombing'pausrto”S'rate ^ Hackney of Flint. The Birmingham News reported, weapons and personnel into the ’ recently returned from today in a Washington dispatch South’- Vietnam to receive the Air that Sen. Lister Hill, D-Ala., is -------------- Force Cross in a ceremony at retiring from the Senate when MAC headquarters at Scott his current term expires. AF'B. Hackney was the first Air Hill’s career in Washington Force enlisted man awarded has spanned almost 50 years, the nation’s second-highest dec- He has been a senator since 1938 oration to live to receive it. and is chairman of the Labor _____ and Public Welfare Committee. I * * * Clams Inundate Beaches The 73-year-old senator authored much of the public ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) health legislation that is now — Bulldozers, tractors and 'aw. He perhaps is best known trucks worked from sunrise to nationally for his work in the sunset yesterday to remove mil- health field, particularly as colions ol dead clams from a 22- author of the Hill-Burton Act mile stretch of southern New which provides funds for con-J^rsey beaches. Strou|k under- struction of hospitals and water currents caused by chum- clinics. Ing northeast seas and high tides “When mv present term ex-uprooted the clams from their Pires in January 1969,” Hill beds several miles oKshore and will have served in the washed them ashore earlier this Senate for 31 years and in the week. In some spots the clams House for 15 years. This makes were piled as high as two feet, a total of 46 years. I will be 74 There are acres of them out years of age. It is with a deep there for as far as the eye can sense of appreciation to my ! see,” said one worker. friends and supporters who _____ have made this long service possible that 1 beg to say I will British Laborites Oust 25 a candidate for reelec- tion.” i22. f I An obstetrician with offices at 35 S. Johnson, Sempere is a [university of Michigan graduate. He was chief of staff at Pon-jtiac General during 1967. Hi.s 'residence is 1940 S. Hammond Lake, Rloomfield Township. by a moral dilemma: Try to forget the whole thing and settle back into a comfortable life or tell what he’s seen and aid these “outside troublemakers” against his home town. * ★ ★ Codirector Guidall and Victor Holchak, as corrupt law officers, and Curt Dawson, as a sneering red neck, sometimes seemed to be caricatures of evil, but the knowledge of what really happened in Mississippi ip 1964 lends a. terrible reality to their roles. FRIGHTENINGLY REAL Henry Thomas, in his Meadow Brook debut as head of a Klanlike group, was frighteningly real delivering a diatribe against integration. Newcomer Pam Guest added beauty to the play, but as' the wile ol one 6l the murder victims, she tailed to handle a cruejal scene in which she is notilied ol her husband’s death. Patricia Carson, an Oakland University freshman from Pontiac in her first professional role, showed poise as a chorus member. A ★ ★ If Sklar's play has a weakness, it is . that it is almost dated. The focus of the rights revolution has shifted from the marches of the South to the violence in the North. But the me.ssage is clear for North and South. Josh Bryant represents all men of conscience. Do we ignore the battle for equality, now swirling around us, or do we get involved? The answer is the key to this country’s future. I LONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Harold Wilson’s Labor pap ty today expelled — at least temporarily — 25 members who j rebelled by abstaining in a crucial vote of confidence in the Peking Says, U.S. Plane Shot Down Lunar Launch Set Monday Despite Snafu CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) — After some confusion resulting from a failure in a computer pojver supply, the space agency says if still hopes to launch its first Lunar Module Monday. The confusion occurred Friday night when power in the ground-based computer failed just 20 minutes before the end of a two-day countdown rehearsal. Officials first said the launching of the Saturn 1 booster rocket would be postponed at least 48 hours, depending on correction of the problem and determination of how much of the practice countdown would have to be repeated. * * ★ Later,, the National Aeronautics and’Space Administration said it would eliminate the remainder of the rehearsal and aim to pick up^the 28-hour final count sometime Sunday. The computer involved monitors systems^ and sepds commands to the rocket. ,, , ^ TOKYO (AP) - Radio Peking House of Commons. quaUfled ,„rce shot NO REPETmON , The space agency said that no part of the rehearsal neede^ to sources reported. Even wthout pnoUess“ul.'reconnarsll^ repeated because of confi- the rebels, votes, the Latorites ^ Yunnan ‘funchlng ear- easily won the motion Thurs-„ . ^ which borders North!*'®'’ day night, approving Wilson’s successful, proposals for cuts in social wel-| j . The Saturn 1 is to drill the Lu- fare* spending. The vote was A ^n^-language broadcastModule Into earth orbit. 304-9 with the opposition Con-®**“‘*J* *”8 *'rereft Dt,|.|ng a planned 6W hour servatives abstaining en masse. '*'** resolute punishment mgpi ti,p engines of the un-But the explusion underlined agalnsl fbe U.S. imperialist act manned craft will be fired to Wilson's determination to try to war, provocation and a neces-reassert his weakened author- sary warning against their plot ity over party followers. 'of expanding the Vietnam war,” test their ability to land two astronauts on the moon and take them off. \ V THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, .lANUARV 20, 1008 McCarthy Says Negro Is Victim of Colonialism in U.S. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) —;U.S, Negroes as people caught With scores of Negro open-hous-;in a “colonial nation living Ing marchers looking on, Sen.jamong us." Eugene McCarthy has described | Members of the Milwaukee IMSKETIMU. - TONICHT! 2 KIDS FREE! Two Children Admitted Free With Each Paid Adult Admiseion! At PONTIAC TOMAHAWKS "KlPDIE NIGHT" North American Basketball Presents Pontiac Chicago TOMAHAWKS vs. BOMBERS TONIGHT-JAN. 20th 8 P.M. PONTIAC NORTHERN HIGH SCHOOL Adults *2 STUDENTS *1 (TM;I Ad CDurtsty ol Oimun’t) Advoncu Sol* At Otmun's youth Council of the National tion of abandoning traditionali The Milwaukee demonstra- HOBHOHiCOME IN TODAYHBHM irs OLD FASHIONED TO STRUGGLE WITH YOUR INCOME m Leave those tax worries to us. Our service is prompt^ accurate and complete . and we usually save you more than the nominal charge! BOTH FEDERAL AND STATE W* guoronla* accurot* praporotion of ovary lax ralurn. If wo moko ony arrert that cost you ony panalty or intoraxt, wo will pay tha p«nolfy or intorost. _______ «[3Qi3®[ir«- America's Largest Tax Service with Over 2000 Offices [ 20 E. HURON PONTIAC I 4410 DIXIE HWY. DRAyTON PLAINS Weekdays: 9 a.m.-9 p.m.-Sat. and Sun. 9-5-FE 4-9225 INQ APPOINTMENT NEOESSARYI Association for the Advance ment of Colored People listened quietly as the Minnesota Democrat spoke Friday night to an overflow crowd at the Universi ty of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. McCarthy’s speech climaxed his first full day of formal cam paigning for the Wisconsin pres idential primary April 2. He is opposing President Johnson’s Vietrtam policies and has chal lenged him for the Democratic nomination. Milwaukee Youth Council members have in the past often chanted Black Power slogans and disrupted meetings when they disagreed with what was being said or going on. “These are people with us,” said McCarthy of the nation’s Negro population.' “Geographically and naturally, they are part of the United States and we who carry the burden of guilt for our ancestors and have every obligation to respond to the needs and demands of these people. “If we are to set priorities and Vietnam is one, then it seems to me ti^re is no queS' tion what is the priority at home.’* McCarthy said, “The President has said we could wage two was and win them both. 11110 fact is we’re not waging two wars; we’re waging one and iwe’re not winning any.” I The youth council has been demonstrating for 145 consecutive days in demand of an all-I inclusive open-housing ordi-I nance for Milwaukee. Tensions irai^ed by the marches have led I to spqratic violence. I “A colonial nation is living among us,” said McCarthy. He I referred to what he called Ne-grcTexploitation as evidenced by the traditional occupations that fall to Negroes in the United States. These, he said, were the same as those that fell to natives in colonial lands. More than 1,000 persons jammed a ballroom (or McCarthy’s talk in which McCarthy accused the Johnson administra- Democratic approaches in favor I lions, which started la.st of policies laid down by the late Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, a Republican. “The dead hand of John Foster Dulles is being moved by a Democratic president,” McCarthy said. “This kind of history we should not write.” mer, have included treks to the city’s all-white South Side where demonstrators were greeted by thousands of whiles throwing rocks and bottles. Police have used tear gas to break up .some crowds. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. TONITE MONDAY Hours 9a.m.to9p.iei. 3,545 AMC Cars Are Bought by GSA DETROIT (AP)-The General Services Administration has signed a contract to purchase 3,545 cars from American Motors Corp., the company reported Friday. William V. Luneburg, president olf American Motors, said this was the second major government contract in the last nine months. Last May, AMC received a contract for 3,118 sedans for use by the Post Office Department. BEGKWITH-EVANS Annual January Carpet Cleoronco Beckwitti-Evans Continues Its Yearly Policy of Offering Finest Carpeting During the January Clearance Sale. Come in and See This Remarkable Carpeting and Save! Complete Carpet-Pad-Inttallalion Special selected groups of NYLON PILE CARPETS. Scroll patterns and plushes with luxury oppeol. COMPLETE Includes: Carpet-Rubbercroft Pod-inilallotion FILAMENT NYLON \ PILE LOOP Q59 12 roll npociol grouping good gwelily ftlomont nyloni. 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With warm Orion Acrylic pile lining, self belt that closes with O-rings and heavy fluty zipper in front. Sizes 8 to 12 only. Clothing — Main Floor Copper Clad Stainless Steel Revere Double Boiler Handy 1 Vi-qt. size famous Revere double boiler with copper bottoms that spread heat rapidly ond evenly over stainless steel that cleans so easily. Foods cook better and faster. With cool bakelite 'sure-grip' handles. Ideal for heating baby foods, too. —2nd Floor aaaaeaaaoaaaaaaaaoooaaaaaoooooooooo'ootuooooooo Adjustable and Ventilated Top. proc7or Ironing Board All metal ironing board wifh ventilated top.that speeds ironing and adjustable to comfortable sit down or stand up ironing. Hi-low back saver model comes complete with pad and cover. —2nd Floor OIM Super 89 Model Adjustable 0 000 Cut WabI Electric Clipper You can beat the high cost of hair cuts by doing If yourself at home, with this Wahl adjustable cut 0-000. $16.50 list price on this Super 89 toper clipper that you con get at Simms for only............................ Sundries — Main Floor 1088 Triple Floating Head NORELCO Elect. Shaver Model 35T gives faster ond 35% closer shaves with 3 Microgroova floating heads. Never a nick or cut. Complete with pop-up trimmer tor sideburns on/oft switch ond snaj>- off cleaning. It's at Simms for only Sundries — Main Floor 21“ Famous Gillette Hen-Greasy Heads-Up Hair Groom $1.00 value, 4’/2-oz. Combs right in so you can't tell its there. Gives natural hair control all day, also helps to check loose dandruff. Not drying and non-greasy and at Simms you pay only.................... Drugs — Main Floor 49 Geriatric Vitamin and Mineral Formula Davis Geriplex Kapseals $7.50 value pkg. of 100, Parke Davis Geriplex Kapseals are a geriatric vitamin and mineral forinula for adult and middle aged individuals. Also contains the starch digestin enzyme 'Taka- Diastase'l And at Simmj you pay only.............. Drugs — AAain Floor 3” BROTHERS PDntiBD’B Nd.1 DiBDontBr TT 01231275 THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Hur