The Weather | | eee U.S. Weather _— Forecast ss Cold and Cloudy (Details Pane 2) nih YEAR * . * es PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 195736 PAGES GM Check Boosts UF Total _ Crash Kills ~ i i | Knudsen, right, Pontiac Press Photo of Gaterel Motors itself, with its local employes WELCOME GIFT — S. E. ~general manager of Pontiac Motors Division, gives a check for $115,000 to Dr. Dana P. Whit- mer, chairman of the 1957 Pontiac Area United Fund _Sameniae. The check: _Tepre: sents the gift ’ the 30 per cent mark. The goal is $612,000 with two inhcooadl to go. To Break Ground Tuesday Tomorrdw,. builders of Pontiac's Heron between Genesee first main post office will reetive) and Chippewa road. the official go ahead sign. * * i. Acting Postmaster Leslie H. aexaner Dean Sr. will turn the sod during Mayor W the groundbreaking ceremony set the Rev, Theodore R. Allebach,| The building is expected to be for 3 p.m. zs Oakland Avenue United ° Pres- ready for business by April 1, byterian Church, will deliver the Dean said, He explained that since; the present_main post office is; located in the Federal Building} jon East Huron, the new building! $850,000, is te be rec ge by will actually be Pontiac's first! They both worked in Washing. | aia cary Mergen nn at ranarsy jmain post office ! ton to secure a new post office | The bwners of the company now | | The post office's annual cost dur-| ing the original lease term for the property and building will be) bee?! 200 according to Dean. * * * avenue of cetfemonies will iliam W. Donaldson and Retired Congressman George A. Dondero (R-Royaj Oak) and the: present representative, Wil- liam 8S. Broomfield (R-Royal Oak) will witness the occasion. iivocation The building, estimated te cost j for Pontiac. | own the site a se the | ; j aecmreieage tala Cane © Gierer = To Fete Wilson ae Statler Hotel “a | Night Parade to Highlight eet Veterans Day in Detroit | of Veterans’ Day; Auto | Heads Give Welcome . Reports of the sighting rekindled ihopes for at least some of the 44 | persons aboard the Clipper. | search craft, But the destroyer | | | | *investigate. | giving separately, The gift boosted the drive over Navy Constellations reported see-| ‘ing two flares at different points | |—one 540 miles west of the plane's ———| position when it radioed routinely Friday night -before disappearing. |' The second was slightly west of | imminent. Postmaster Dean to Turn Sod for New Building rs Pie F mt res Spur Hunt Airliner Hunt Continues | for Lost Airliner HONOLULU (® — The Coast Guard reported three flare sightings on the dark Pacific last night but de- clined to speclulate whether they were connected with the Pan Américan stratocruiser. The search area was enlarged to 172,440 Bo ciao miles: and an increase of 22, 440° square miles was in the re-| = the flares were Sputnik No. qe Expected Soon London Paper Reports: That Next Red Satellite May Weigh Ton The Coast Guard said the flares could have been from a | escort Epperson was ordered to | Long-range radar - equipped - LONDON (INS) — The London} Daily Express said tonight that} ithe launching of Sputnik No. 3 was *. * * * * In a dispatch from Moscow; the} An Air Force plane sighted a|Express said Sputnik No. 3 was be-| third flare some 30 miles west Of lieved to weigh as much as 1 ton.| ithe Pan American airliners’ last | , reported position. It was described; Sputwik H's transmitters are | las white. | dead, and, presumably, so is | CRISS-CROSS AREA | Laika, the first living animal | Surface craft criss-crossed the | yecketed from earth into space. search area, now broken into two | Russia announced yesterday that’ the deck of the carrier Philippine rectangular areas under the New the gatellite’s radios had stopped; area where a Pan American str pattern. One is 460 miles long and | 1115 miles wide and the other is 1695 miles long and 172 miles wide. |the program has *® * * Both straddle the path the lost | me ae eas wan Gusteidiar. | But there was no official word functioning as planned “because | copters. Ca Collision North of Lapeer Takes 3 Lives 4 Others Hospitalized After Puzzling Accident on M90 Saturday - Three teenagers were dead and three others re- mained in critical condi- tion today following a puzzling two-car collision occurring as they drove to a dance in North Brahch, north of Lapeer, Saturday night. Dead are 17-year-old twins Marilyn and Marilee Phelps ef Mayville and Jens P. Eriksen, 18, of Imlay City. AP Wirephote JOINING SEARCH — A Navy patrol plane swings away from | Sea and jveads for the vast Pacific | atocruiser with 44 persons aboard | is being hunted. The search now covers 172,440 square miles of been fulfilled”| °C®an area. A Pan American spokesman says the search now in- cludes 25 aircraft, three submarines, eight Coast Guard vessels and | the carrier, with 13 radar-tracking planes and sub-hunting heli- At Lapeer County General Hos- |pital are Earl H. Greenwald, 16, iof Imlay City, Delores Smith, 17, ‘of Mayville and the driver, Charles |D’Arcy, 16, of Silverwood. Lapeer deputies said they | would try te question D’Arcy and | the other driver, Cario Fantin, | 22, of Silverwood, about the ac- | cident today. Fantin is listed in | fair condition at the hospital. : All told, Michigan counted 25 ac icidental deaths over the weekend, 114 of them on the highway and six jin house fires. - * * The teenagers were headed east ‘on M90 (North Branch road), dep- luties believed, en route to ‘an 8 Stix iunb ted Gichiced sede Laika, the sad-eyed little pooch | carliér, hope ickered a faded with a report of the sight- which was fired into space inside) ing of a yellow dye marker, “a |the second Soviet earth satellite on flare and something red” at a spot Nov. 3. 425 miles west of. the airliner’s) LAST NOTED FRIDAY “ some es *-- last time = —_ Rar lriouncement mentio Hours elapsed before two ships | | conditi ari —ovh él ireported that nothing could be ihg. my. Yas eemty Frieey “moet NI e in q in 0) icer found at that spot. A Coast Guard | (The silence of the radio trans-| \spokesman said ee a of|mitters was confirmed by moni- the sighting—reported by a lone oping stations around the world. )| airman—indicated it could have been a school of whales instead of The cessation of radio contact » . 2 means that Yo all intents and ‘a marker, or possibly other fish. Another hopeful report—that of, P@tpeses Sputnik I has been BALDWIN, “Mich. = chicago police today were ex-| |pected to question Elijah White, 35, in the slaying of a % the seriousness of their injuries, |\Chicago policeman and the wounding of another. jp.m. dise jockey dance when the | accident occurred. TOP SHEARED OFF ica 0) 0 ice 0) UeS 10 | Deputies found D’Acry’s car, in orn the other teenagers were ——e in a ditch with the top sheared off and the body all but | cut in two. Fantin’s car was still on the — they said. * w | Deputies ae they had been un- ‘able to talk to the drivers because The Phelps twins were the only children of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- DETROIT (INS)— A giant parade down Woodward ~ avenue tonight witt highlight” Detroit’s—patticipation' DETROIT (INS)—Auto industry) checked by surface craft, ;and civic leaders joined today in lan oil slick—was being thoroughly ‘The airliner—Romance of the White was arrested while hitchhiking south of this) tard Phelps, The girls -were sen- abandoned to space. If it has, In all likelihood so lias Talika, dead or yet to die, Western Michigan community last night. Lake County) lors at Mayville High School where they played in the school Sheriff Jesse MacDougall said White offered no 1esist-| basil, Masti alnp was a in the Veterans Day celebration. welcoming former Secretary of De-'$ On the quiet side of the observance, thousands will fense Charles E. Wilson upon his, pay their tribute in churches and in visits to — return to Detroit. i cemeteries. ”~ * & The parade is scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. at Kirby. | Wilson will be feted at a testi- Marchers will proceed south on Woodward to Corgress, |moniab dtfiner tonight in the Stat- then west to the release point at Griswold. Many vet- ed Hotel, climaxing Veterans’ Day; erans’ organizations, mili-* ‘meizer: tary reserve units and oth-: |. Peet ony — Poa er civic and LP aeutr groups Fait nd War [ | ty Bere ' Sree : will take part. a me | PRN ge uments: po The nation’s military dead from) W h F nelude Colbert, head ul wars are honored today at he WEAENEL FOFECASE | caryser Corp. and tactow Cu Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in| tice, president of General Mo- Washington where next year three | The weatherman promises fair | tors, Wilson was boss of GM be- unknowns from as many confli¢ts ‘and warmer weather for the Pon. tre joining President Eisenhow- will lie. | er’s cabinet. Gov. S00 Hien ot eit: Datesta, ne Ce EN aa hill tao 10v. Joe Foss of ! ota, : 3 . ‘ ormer a Marine. flying ace in World |TGht will - bog yor ‘chief of staff of the armed serv- War Il and an Air Force officer ‘ices, will be a special guest at the during the Korean conflict, was | Partly cloudy and mild is the’ ‘event. Army Secretary Wilber M. the principal speaker for Veter- | prediction for tomorrow. ; [Brucker will present a certificate ans Day ceremonies timed to | Although the snowfall was rather ‘of appreciation of service to Wil- | mark the anniversary of the son, . i ave dlie led World | ‘light in the Pontiac area, Sawyer . ‘ ‘ War I. reported snow amounting to five’ Attending the function from the When next Veterans Day comes inches while Marquette and Pell-, ‘Pontiac area will be three GM there will be three Unknown Sol-/Ston both reported three inches of | [vice presidents and their wives, diers—symbols of all the unknowns | snow, Semon E. Knudsen, Philip J. Mon- who died-in twe world wars and! ° => Sh US laghan, and Roger M. Kyes, and Korea. The unknowns of World| The lowest recorded tempera-/Raiph ©. Moore, administrative War II and Korea will be placed|ture in downtown Pontiac preced-jassistant to the general sales in crypts at the tomb on Memorial /ing 8 a.m. was 24. At 1p. m. the manager of GM Truck & Coach, | Day, May 30, 1958. | mercury aa risen to 40. land Mrs. Moore. ie Near abe cts ait my Soy Sw Gah OR a Seay Reports Uncertain Little Space Pioneer Put to Sleep Could We Mourn ieee Death? Ma deesstpt sit ee eS tablish how a living creature reacts in trip into . space and accumulate necessary know!l- MOSCOW (INS) — It’s not often that a dog gets an obituary. ~ especially when her official death notice hasn't even been published. But in case the worst has happened to the plucky canine space pioneer Laika, : following are some meager facts that ~~ would make up her obituary. | An Italian Communist newspaper said today space dog Laika was poisoned by - |. her last morsel of food in Sputnik 1 — e but then quickly backed down from the conditions, that “everyone in Moscow is a little sad because: pf it. But it was essential to Her character was placid and resigned. sen etic WRN M0 ce _ When, she went aloft — it was her first ,e imory. f = th it Cg 8. ERT IS LOPES TANS eS ( i. \ 5) s\ I . ; ; ‘ AY he rE Annes ; wu : ; i = \ ‘Health, New York, State Department of Health, told the) A NE ACCRA S eS space — the Sputnik carried a special menu. Since her stomach probably wouldn't function normally under space but not described type of food. The feeding may have included an arrangement for intravenous drip-feed- ing of a glucose and vitamin solntion. The Russians didn’t identify the dog by name until several. days after she be- came headlines around the world. That indicates Laika went up anony- "Whatever, her fate, the name Laika ts 'Skies—carried 36 passengers and} The continued official silence in- 'a créw of eight from San Francis-| ‘creased belief the dog already has co toward. Honolulu, At 5:04 a.m. given her life in the cause of Sovi- Friday it routinely radioed its po- et science. (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) * * * Ne hall The silence has prompted in some the theory that the sealed lew Toot in Whiteha ean aa sey WHITEHALL, N. Y. ® — For has been catapulted from the satel- 30 years the fire horn in this [lite and has returned, or is still village near the Vermont line |returning, to earth. emitted a grunt instead of a But. even a successful ejection howl-until a fireman discovered jof the flying doghouse wouldn't scareh recently that the wires in the [mean its successful recovery. It) aategin was horn had been installed back- could drop into the, séas, which/| wards. Now the horn produces a icover two-thirds of the. earth, or, sharp, shrill blast, ance and was not armed. one was shot. Two Chicago officers were dis-' following the arrest. covering Western ordered Saturday | when relatives of White said he even a Siberian snowbank. | brother in Muskegon, but left | when the brother was not home. Willie Green, a companion of | White’s was captured earlier last night af a road block about a mile, north of South Haven. Police said) he was driving a panel truck that fitted the description of one White! was believed to have driven to By FRANK CAREY Muskegon. Police said Green had denied AP Science Reporter he nowing White's whereabouts al-| CLEVELAND ‘#—A large proportion of the nation’ S| thou eh tute trooper (Charles | iti | people are “dental cripples” despite enormous expendi-|man said Green's mother, Mrs.! tures for dental care, a New York state dental official Sarah Mae Guy of Branch, told) ithem White and her son had been) said today. \to her home and left in the truck | “This is the extent of the dental caries decay prob- shortly before police arrived yes- lem,” Dr. David B. Ast, director of the Bureau of Dental|terday. A check with White's re- latives in Muskegon led police to iMrs. Guy’s home. ‘ Sheriff MacDougall said White at first gave his name as James Lee, but later admitted his iden. tity. Muskegon County Sheriff Arthur ‘Dental Cripples’ Predominate in U. S. Fluoridation Urged a opening session of the the American Public Health| ae ’s 85th annual meet- = WV. Davis said White's brother Vaul, said White visited his home| that Vaul White * & He said the American public| , said W y tal a 5 & spent $1,600,000,000 in 1955 for|Saturday and ntal care. | telephoned police. lic drinking water supplies, he ‘said studiés of this technique in the United States and Canada have. demonstrated its capabili- _ ties of reducing tooth decay by 60 per cent. | Tooth decay, he said, “atfects| a vrocting carly ta Me’ ant’ de axistraits Bridge Passes | nual increments of defects occur, Test of High Winds ' at a faster rate than the correc- > tions which can be made by den-| ST. IGNACE (® — The new ga Mackinac Straits Bridge has liam MeDonagh, 52. McDonagh was shot after he ar- she was given a particular, 3 rested White on a bad check nearby traffic post. : story. oratory control letter, and the official £ = 2 weathered its first storm with fly A photograph of Laika, or another, of : ee steam ecemae deen! dees ck her. breed, almost a quarter of ‘the : when it was realized what impact duced materially by .cuttirz down Gusts df winds up to 70 miles front page, and the a¢companying story — - little dog had made on world opinion. 3 on’ sweets and by brushing the) per hour that buffeted the span said she “was poisoned with the last _ The last “word” received from Laika jj teeth immediately after eating or) over Friday night had “no effect ” Laika weighed only 124% pounds. Her - _ drinking any food at any time. at all” on the structure, the mouthful” of food so she “would not have in the form of a radioed electrocardiogram ~~ . to suffer slow agony.” gy erste a Mt showed she faced the future with og Resilar and periodic care by Mackinac Bride Authority re. the. appearance instinctive v-% : family dentist heces- The story grew a bit melancholy, noting foreknowledge of her fate. Philosophie resignation and her little heart & sary prevent the incidence of den-|- The storm, with: winds within / very well. prevent the gross e- recorded over the Straits, ~ struction of tooth structure and no noticeable sway in t taped lig aiemmpeay yg lA apenas amcompar te’ “ tant Jen authority spokesman added scuffle with Chicago po-+ lice Friday and that shots had been fired, but that White denied xnowing any- showed up at the home of a | | From now on, more and more | ! The dead Chicago policeman was) Advocating fluoridation of pub- ‘Bernie Poe, 23, Wounded was Wil-| charge and was waiting for a pat-| rol wagon. Poe was shot when he | iran to McDonagh’s aid from a/ tal caries,” he said, “but it could|eight miles an hour of the highest|- majorette, The Sheriff quoted White as saying he had been in a| Double funeral services for them Rush Beginning for Big $1,000 patched to Baldwin immediately in Pot-O-Gold Now the fun begins. Mot-O-Gold' funeral. Home, | were scheduled for 2 p.m. tomor- jrow in Mayville Baptist Church, i with burial to follow in Rich Town- |ship Cemetery. ; | * * * 2 CAR | Services for Eriksen, a senior ‘at North Branch High School, will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Marsh Marlette. Burial is worth $1,000 starting today, and will be in Marlette Cemetery. ithat means the rush is on. people wil] send entries, and everyone will be trying harder than usual to get at the prize money before someone else | | walks off with Jt. sf t) *) * | If you'd like to be among the| \contestants, turn to page 29 and see what you can do with the: words and clues, Be sure to read the rules care- |fully, too, because what could be) ‘worse than to turn in a winning | entry, only to have it disqualified) ‘becalise of a rule infraction? Paris Marks Armistice PARIS @® — Forty-two hun- dred troops paraded past large but silent crowds along the Champs Elysees today to mark the 39th anniversary of the Arm- istice, ‘Germans Quiet Today ; U. 8. forces in Germany quietly observed today the 39th anniver- sary of Germany's World War I surrender, Winner Pontiac — Photo MARY ANN BAER She made the best prediction of 3,814 contestants,, (Particulars | in Man About Town cqumn on page 6.) | | FRANKFURT, Germany ® — | (OTHER ACCIDENTS In other accidents, Kenneth L. iHatt, 20-year-old Fenton construc- ition worker, was killed yesterday iwhen a bulldozer he was operating joverturned on him. He was driving ithe bulldozer up a ramp at a lconstruction site when the ramp itoppled, police said. * x * | A 74-year-old New Hudson man, ‘David S. Taylor, was killed Fri- iday night in New Hudson when ihe walked into the side of a car and then was hit by a truck. | Thomas A. Loding, 16, of Utica was killed Friday night when a ear in which he was riding (Continued on Page 2, Col. 2) UF Workers to Get Reports at Luncheon Pontiac Area United Fund work ers will gather for a report lunch- eon tomorrow noon at the Elks Temple. They will be the guests of Pon- tiac firms Consumers Power Co., Detroit Edison Co., S. S. Kresge, Michigan Bell Telephone Co.; Sears, Roebuck and Co., Simm's Brothers and WKC, Inc. * * * Between reports on how the cur- irent PAUF drive is progressing, a variety of entertainment: will be iprovided. The luncheon marks the half. jway point in the campaign which iends Nov. 26 with a victory lunch- jenn |e ieee western gs wee In Today Ss Press ew eee | a Sige ee 4 Te nr cae nin Sear RT i. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, NOVEMBER ll, 128 : es Refuses to Tildcoe Break With Rossellini LONDON @ — Ingrid Bergman arrived in London last night to Bergman Starts N ew Film children by Rossellini would re- main in Rome until she finds an apartment in London. She said (Freezer Traps 2 Little Sisters Family in Mississippi (The Day in Birmingham ce Zoning Ordinance to Get, Fourth Informal Hearing Funeral Home. Funeral service!; ork on a new fi fused peck ona new fim ong. re | BIRMINGHAM — Biriningham’s she expected to remain in the km zoning ordinance will British capita] at least six months but “I'll go back to Italy now and then . . . on and off.” She Finds the Children Dead From Suffocation - REMINGTON ‘tele eal te nes ie. jration last week from the Italian director, the actress said: “There has been too much re- action to our decision,” * * * The reaction, she added, was “not much more considerate than it had been before,” apparently a reference to the publicity which accompanied her affair with Ros- tion with the shooting of a garage mechanic, who apparently thwar- ted a service station robbery. Mechanic Abe Carruthers, $2- year-old father of three daugh- ters, was shot five times in the while she was stil] married to Dr, Heights Chief Alex J. Bell said|P¢te® Lindstrom, Carruthers reportedly walked sev- sellini nearly eight years ago Miss Bergman said her three 4 added she has no plans to go to Hollywood. Miss Bergman also de- nied a Stockholm report that she plans to ‘marry Lars Schmidt, a wealthy Swedish impresario. The actress was met at the airport by. Cary Grarit, her costar in the coming film comedy ‘Kind: Sir.” * * * * In Stockholm, the newspaper Expressen said Schmidt declined to deny reports of a romance with} Miss Bergman. “I feel flattered at being men- oned in connection with one of eral blocks from the station to his home, seeking help after he was shot. Walter Kelley, 34, owner of the Muskegon Heights Service Station, said he was in the station when the youth, “about 18 or 19,” drove up in a 1954 green -Chevrolet. Hunt Stratocruiser Lost With 44 Aboard (Continued From Page One) isition 1,028 miles east of Honolulu. The pilot was supposed to make another routine report at 6 p. m. He didn't. The plane abruptly, and silently, disappeared. * * * That set off the biggest peace- “T got a call about 8:15 a.m: at home that there had been a shoot- “lit prompted speculation—but de- scribed as “pure speculation’ — that, something sudden and terrify- ing had happened, Pan American officials refused to speculate. They said emphatically that no- body knew or could guess what had happened to the four-engine, luxuriously equipped plane. A Pan American spokesman Bell said the road blocks. were manned by city police, sheriff's men and state police. Urban Renewal to Be Reviewed This Evening Philippine Sea with 13 Gruman radar-tracking Planes and sub- hunting helicopters. One search plane picked up dis- tress signals early yesterday. They were too weak to fix a loca- and ition from, ° viewed tonight at a joint meeting] of members of the Downtown Pon- tiac Assn. and city commissioners, Crash Near Lapeer time search in the Pacific And. said the search now included 25) aircraft, 3 submarines, 8 Coast) Guard vessels« and the carrier the world’s most beautiful women and a great actress like Ingrid ‘Bergman, the paper quoted Schmidt as saying when asked about reports linking his name romantically with that of the actress. : x * * It also quoted Miss Bergman as saying: “The allegations that we should marry are absolutely ridiculous.” President Gets : on Health Today WASHINGTON & — President Eisenhower gets a doctors’ report today on the state of his health a year after election to a second term. * * * The President—who has. called it a year of constant dealing with crises—entered Walter Reed Army Hospital yesterday afternoon for his first head-to-toe physical 12 months. The White House called the ex- amination routine, an annual pre- caution. Eisenhower arranged to check-out of his third-floor hospital suite. before nightfall, The sub- stance of the report he receives from his physicians probably will icials. be made public. aera eae Kills 3 and Injures 4 | sas se coe ke tks since te Officials of Geer Associates of Birmingham and Gorge: Barton ‘(Continued From Page One) progress reports on rehabilitation) missed a curve and struck a of certain areas in the city and/ tree three miles west of Mount President’s heart attack in Sep- tember 1955 that anywhere near as much as a year has elapsed between his full-scale medical Doctors’ Report | examination, in a bit more than) VICKSBURG, Miss. «®—~Double funeral services are planned to- morrow for two school-age sisters who suffocated yesterday inside a large home freezer on the back porch of their home. * * * The. victims were Janice Louise, 7, and Anita Marie, 6, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver O. Vande- vender. The girls were gathering pecans in the yard and their older broth- er, 14, was watching television when the parents left to visit relatives. * * * Unable to find the girls when they returned, the parents called ice. Almost before the search- ing party was well under way, of- ficer Ed Reed saw the freezer, walked over, and opened it. Anita. Marie was dead, Janice Louise was prono dead on arrival at a hospital. The freezer had been emptied, defrosted, and left open and dis- eonnected to air. The lid cannot be opened from. the inside. * x * A coroner’s jury returned a ver- dict of “accidental suffocation” in the freezer. Besides the parerits, survivors include , two brothers and two sisters, checkups. He had three last year, studies of the city's future trans-| Clemens, portation needs. A house fire of unknown origin| The DPA is financing the Barton'took the lives of three children study as part of its overall aim near Monroe yesterday. Dead are of revitalizing the downtown area.|Larry Lee. Quick. ~ noe Tt is expected to be completed/7, and Harold Quick, 1 ~ early next year. r Two other ll st EY Geer announced that the start)apartment house fire Saturday in of the city's first land rehabilitation Saginaw. The victims were Bar- and his last complete examination was Oct. 27-28, 1956. The doctors reported then he gave “every ap- pearance of being in excellent health.” This latest examination comes as he faces a new speedup in a working pace already at a more q\ taxing clip than at any time since DR. GERALD HOOPER Kiwanis Club Offers an ‘Italian Interlude’ The Pontiac Kiwanis Club's jan area will see Maurice R. Hoop- be those areas devoted to parking, business and industrial districts, defined as P, B-4 and I. Residents whose property falls under these jurisdictions are being notified so they may attend ses- sion. Commissioners are seeking public opinion in these informal hearings so that applicable legal adoption of the ordinance, At next week's hearing the bal- ance of the business district, B-1, B-2 and B-3, will be considered. |\City Planner Herbert Herzberg will ‘again lead the discussion. Mrs. F. P. Harrington will be hostess at an 8 p.m. meeting to- morrow of the Alum- nae Chapter of Delta Gamma. She will be assisted by Mrs. David A. Taylor, Mrs. Stuart T, Ross and Mrs. Lowell Sutton. After the regular monthly busi- show films of her vacation in Aus- tralia, : The meeting will home, 3768 Lincoln Ave. CHI OMEGAS MEET Chi Omegas of the north suburb- er demonstrate Christmas gift wrappings at their Nov, 14 meet- ing. Mr. Hooper is coming through changes may be made before the |... 4 ness meeting, Mrs. Harrington will be at her E James V, skelley “Rosary service for Jamés Vin- cent Skelley, 11, of 1175 Shipman Blvd, will be at 8:30 p.m. tomor- neral Service will be at 9 a.m. Wednes- day from te Lady Queen - Martyrs Church row from the Manley Bailey Fu-|belonged to the Home, ley cu one son, Duane Jr. of Birmingham; RECONDITIONED Only at : Simms the courtesy of LaBelle’s Gift | Shop. ; Mrs. Adoph Neeme, 32215 Au-. burn Rd., will be hostess at the 12:30 p.m. luncheon. Reservations may be made through Mrs. Eugene) Hannum or Mrs. Clinton Newman, both ot — Mrs, Elizabeth Baumann Rosary service for Mrs. Eliza-| beth Baumann, 89, will be at 8: 15) tonight from the Manley Bailey! VWv¥YrrryrVvYT rr NEW, CLEAR | E Browne Mowiz, camera $29.95 Value ] 9” : 2.7 Lens Makes movies as simple as snaps! $ Take wonderful color movies—indoors & outdoors. Use layaway. $2 holds. li | ‘iy For All TDC 35mm Projectors ' SPECIAL PURCHASE SALE for | TONITE & TUESDAY Only! CLOTH With BOW TIE & CUFF LINK SET $1.98 V. ~~ hy | a Size 3 to Sariforized shirt hes. in-or-out bottom, tong ‘sleeves — french cuffed — pocket. Complete ink st clip-on avon BOW TIE and ‘jeweled’ ink set. ng Sleeve ‘Fench Cuf i Plaid » BOYS’ me SHIRTS: - Senforized Cotton Flannel Boys’ Ivy League Shirts Regular $2.49 Value 1 99 Button dewn with center button collar. White pearlized buttons. In-out bottom. Salid red or red and black stripes. to 16 in two styles. 2 for $2.50 TDG Slide Trays 3“ 99° Pits Toe aide. » sertoctors, Latte »NE E slides. owell = — : poe Rg po ag for each tray, Tailored Rayon-Nylon Gabardine i Boys” sec PANTS $249 Value WEG6 Sizes 3 to 7 Machine washable pants—crease-resistant and shrink controlled. Zipper fly, cuffed, buckle ivy style back, elastic inserts, “— Fang belt. Navy or brown colors, program will center eround albara Jean and Billy Presley, 155-acre parcel in the vicinity of|yearold twins. 2' his heart attack. New York State Travel and Adventure series will present Dr. Gerald Hoeper and his “Italian Interlude” Tuesday night. ‘Lined Pants Matches SHIRT! ° 2 hunter was killed when a shotgun discharged ai Bi reacts ¢ | \Tieup of Shipping wen om ion Lakes Possible Why is it that the days are now| Tas 'Ploughs Through 15 Inches of Snow BUFFALO, N. Y. Clearing skies and warmer temperatures re-| turned to New York state today after a pre-winter storm dumped up to 15 inches of snow in Western iNew York. becoming relatively longer in the. ommata art of ard Unless States?) tie-up of Great Lakes shipping was' This is because the southern part/|threatened last night by President | of the United States is in position| Guy Chartier of a striking St. to receive the sun's rays, as the! Lawrence River Pilots Union. sun moves southward and the Win- ter Solstice (December 2ist) ap- proaches. The days are getting shorter, and will continue to do so, in all the States, until December 2ist. How-. ever they are growing shorter) and will continue to do so, in all the states, until December Zist. However, they are growing shorter faster in the states in the northern’ areas. By December 21st, the sun’ will rise at 7:26 and set at 4:31 in New England, New York, Mich- . igan, Wisconsin, the Dakotas, The Canadian pilots struck last) Washington and Oregon. ‘Tuesday demanding compulsory | In the southern part of the coun- use of pilots when the opening of | try,, from Charleston to Southern the st. Lawrence Seaway makes California, the sun will rise at intand navigation easier, and| 6:58 and set at 4:58 — about an more pilots in the pool to avoid hour's difference. |seasonal overwork: The Weather ‘Combing River Mouth Fall U.S. Weather Bureaa Report for Man and His Son PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Mostly | MONROE \® — Search parties tonight with the | on the Bee Party pared t -. ternational Airport fer the reunion : —s ; f \ t : \y, oe! ae Ye i = eee : Pope ees : oS = \ 3 \ Cites Mutual ignorance of Asian, U.S. Desires as Basic Problem SAN FRANCISCO (p—The gaps between Asia and America re- main wide, but America's largest conference. on Asia detailed ways to close them. Abe sixth National Conference for UNESCO ended Saturday with a warning by India’s First Lady, Mme. . Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, that “half the world cannot move around in oxcars While the other half rides in Cadillacs.” * * -® Closing the oxcart-Cadillac gap was only one smail phase of the’ conference, where 1,500 Ameri- cans attacked the problem: “Asia and: the United States—What the American citizens can do to pro- mote. mutual understanding and: cooperation.” Greetings from President Eisen- hower, Japanese: Prime Minister Nobusuke Kishi, Philippines Pres- ident Carlos Garcia and other chiefs of state underlined the ur- gency of the conference, * * * Mme.~Pandit, India’s high com- missioner to the United Kingdom, cited these reasons for lack of Asian-American understanding: 1. American ignorance of Asia. Asians also don't know what America is al] about, she said. 2. Racial prejudice in the. Unit- ed States, which she conceded hits Asians with “‘disproportionate im- pact.” ft * * * 3. Resentment of Asian national experiments in socialism, “We in Asia . . . must develop our de- mocracies according to our own conditioning and our own needs." 4. The oxcart-Cadillac gap which she called “an inbalance (of) . . . far greater danger. to the world than the deadliest weap- ons of destruction.” * * * One panel group suggested dou- bling U, S. aid to the United Na- tions Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization every two years for a decade. Delegates agreed economic aid * must continue and $be expanded) . but with more attention to Asia's real needs than to what Ameri- cans think Asia needs. Also that more and better news, both ways, is needed: so are more movies, books, art forms and per- sonal contacts, they said, Girl, 3, Smuggled From China Gets to Boston Home BOSTON (®—A new life in a new freedom-loving country be- gan today for a 9-year-old Chinese girl who Was smuggled out of Red Chinato be reunited with her par- ents here after a separation of 8% years. . * * * Aurora Way flew in yesterday and was smothered in the arms of her mother Mrs. John Way. The tot’s beaming father pre- sented his daughter with a toy poodle and a stack of comic books. Aurora was left with her grand- i | h mother in Shanghai in 1949 ‘be-|- cause she was too ill at the time to accompany her parents when| they came to Boston for a visit. *x* * * Shortly after the Ways depart- ed, the city was captured by the Communists. They declined to- al- _ low the child to join her parents. Last winter Aurora was smuggled out of the,country in the hold of a Chinese’ Junk, She was taken to Hong Kong where immigration laws barred entrance to this coun- try. : * * * Later Sen. Leverett -Saltonstall (R-Mass) was able to persuade authorities to allow her- to come ‘to America, Yesterday she flew from San Francisco to Boston's Logan In- on. ’ Mirror .... + “THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1957 a * the brilliant your Accent~ DINING ROOM Breakfast China ....$159.00 Buffet 0.2. $119.00 Dining Table ...... $ 79.50 Arm Chair:........ $ 21.50 Side Choir .....--. $ 19.50 YOuR Accent- BEDROOM Triple Dresser with Landscape ose... . $165.00 Panel Bed ......... $ 54.50 5-Drawer, Chest ....$ 89.50 Night Table .......$ 44.50 ) exclusive at who Go Places ...at home! Feel smart, because you look smart in re gorments gently, i thoroughly, dry. cleaned here. CALL TODAY Pick-Up & Delivery FE 5-6107 GENEY _ DRY CLEANERS 12 West Pike. Part Near Our Deer. 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Es .* NEG FON - OPEN ‘til ~ 7 Tonight South Saginaw Street at Corner of Orchard Loke Aye. = (| i 7 . : is Vole eo fee aa : + - / ay, ee | ae ¥ ' Mut at oon THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 19 57 “Tou Little Calls ’ em — { In these twice weekly articles, realizing that this is a big country and that the stories appear from coast to coast, we have purpesely not stressed too much the Ivy League. However, as things have developed in the last few weexs, culminating with last Saturday's great day of football,’ per- haps it’s about time to devote a couple of paragraphs te this group of the nation’s oldest institutions and the game te play. ‘Whe four contests in this group Saturday may not have produced the most powerful football in the country, but no section saw better competition, as underdogs came up to outscore or to press to the limit their favored foes. A Penn team that has refused to quit under discouraging circumstances was stirred to ah inspiring victory over Yale,) helped by. the return of a good back, Riepl. * *~* * Harvard scoring three touchdowns against a strong Prince-| ton team that outmanned the Crimson, turned in an equally! creditable showing. Columbia did well against unbeaten Dartmouth in a | one-touchdown defeat, while Cornelt deserves great credit. | for upsetting Brown. i i ! | | Nowhere in the country could you find, better balanced,|_™ harder competition and conditions under whiclf the game of college football is likely to drive in more healthy fashion in the future. Around the country there has been a disposition to see, in the-Ivy League what some have termed “de-emphasis.” Time, I think, will prove this is not true, If competitive. desire, along with good coaching instruction and the aill-! around development of young men are the basis for college football, as I think they are, these schools—with, of course; a number of others—are doing a fine job for tne game, though | they may seldom land their entries in the nation’s top ten. In the Western Conference, the stage is set for the im- portant game of the late-season when unbea Iowa meets Ohio State, unbeaten in Big Ten play. Iowa can't go to the Rose Bow!. Ohio State and Michigan State can. The Spartans, favorites this one. _ Ohio State, gaining its winning lead over. Purdue in the first half on powerful running and smart, sparing use of the pass, was hobbled by Purdue's ball control in the last two periods as Iowa scouts watched to see how it was done. week over Minnesota have Icst | The bowl incentive will be strong for the Buckeyes this week and they may need it if Clark, a valuable back who was hurt Saturday, cannot play. In any event it appears likely either Ohio State or Michigan State will be too strong for the coast entry at Pasadena, a fact emphasized now by Oregon’s defea‘ at hes the hands of Rocky on Goodwill Trip to S. America MIAMI, Fla. (INS) — Former heavyweight boxing champion ‘Rocky Marciano takes off from Miami tomorrow for a 20-day! goodwill visit to several South | American eountries. Marciano, who now lives in installation Miami with his family, will fly to ’ Quito, Ecuador, where. he will $3 15 tour a: youth center for, under- © priviledged children. glass packed Mass ie. formez_, Broc ktor slugger next will go to oad as as a guest of the government and. ithen to Caracas, Venezuela for five days. MOTOR MART AUTO PARTS _* ten but once tied | against two Josses, For Villanova '. games and their mest decisive _ defeat of the season, The safety was Detroit's first score. Dromgold, a former Marine ought’ Stil P ALL ALONE — The little black disc lays all alone as Boston and Detroit skaters race toward it. Gaalie Don Simmons of the Bruins points to it and teammate Real Chevrefils (left) skates after it with Bill Dea game sie night. the play t vy Doug. ‘x-Marine Helps Titans Win lague | : | for Last Place | ? | | itactics | | AP Wirephote (right) of the Wings in their Bill Dineen (12) is kept-out of Le US): Bruins won, 4-2. Tackle Sparks U-D | “Tit ins applied the clincher Ie DE TI 20IT w—it's s seldom th ata The shows up in the statistics column midway in the fourth quarter when tg ingle lmeman’s performance quarterback Loy Faoro combined like the University .of Detroit's with Billy Russell on a 50-yard Vi ‘Emerson Dromgold di d Saturda tyY-! pass play for a touchdown. Faoro Dromgold, a sophomore ee kle, heaved the ball 20 yards to Russell © and guard Dick Kennedy caught an near the sidelines” and Russell t opposing ball carrier behind the eluded the only tackler blocking his goal and scored a ‘safety and path to the goal rines in Detroit Saturday after- peried, Dromgold pouced on a fumble The teams were closer in statis. 2°" Rookie Wings forward Dor Poile Dromgold pounced on a fumble tics. than they were in score. Vil * * * narrowed the margin to 3-2 at the that stopped an opposition drive on : The Pennsylvanian was one of start of the final period. the Detroit four the outstanding linemen for Quan-| Bronco Horvath, who leads Bos- : « ~ A ltico two years ago during his serv- ton in scoring, clinched the contest That. plus a 60 - yard scoring ice stay He was sought by many for the Bruins with 10 minute s drive and a sensational pass play. colle ges) beloved gh but left The goal was his ninth of netted a 16-7 victory for the Titan ex-Titan great Andy Farkas, who|the season and his fifth against over Villanova once was assistant coach at Quan-) Detroit . : heo, assisted in bringing the big The Wings carried an edge of It was Detroit's fifth victory tackle to Detroit, 38-35 in the shots at the net but the loss was the sixth in eight and Kennedy grabbed Villanova quarterback Bill Magee back of the goal dine in the second quarter. istra} In Team, Individual Play the + Tempe inova Jed in first downs 16-14 anc in passing yardage 103-90. Detroit uined 179 yards rushing to 160 for ilanova Dromgold. a muscled 230-pound- r, will have a homecoming cele- ration of his own this week when Tilans meet the Quantico, Ma- Perfect Record List Cut to 23 ght victéries while Oklahoma, Auburn, and Arizona State of have seven in a row this Sseasor 'Bruin guns in a smooth ibefore a ‘at Boston Garden | The loss put Detroit in a tie | for last place with the Toronto | | Maple Leafs in National Hockey | | League standings. in fourth place with a 6-8 record. | Boston Pushes | Detroit to Tie Toppazzini and Mackell. Combination Leads in 4-2 Victory BOSTON WW — Whe win-thirsty ‘Detroit Red Wings invaded Boston | Bruins ieame away still thirsty territory last night and sorbing a 4-2 defeat, fheir istraight. The scoring of Jerry Toppazzini sellout eee and Mackell a goal and got two assists while Toppazzini twice stole pucks a Alex scoring pl ays. * * * Mackell scored a goal early the first period but the Wings’ Bill scored ; Dineen fh tied it minutes later, put- ting the score at 1] midway in the Stanza. Toppazzini gave the Bruins an- other in the second period and Don McKenney added another for Beston while Detroit was short-handed near the end of the ran into goalie Don Simmons who was having one of his best nights of the season. Simmons shut out Detroit, 4-0, just a week ago. Cranes Blank Gilmour, Plan coming af . * The unb ans a U.S. Leading Horse Show ,° ~*~ FE 4.8230 ° ° p an el 1 EIGHT GAMES Te as A& - 154 31 a ; | NEW YORK: (®—The United/win the three event test with only Boirs wher ue Fog ~ #1 iStates equestrian team finally|eight faults W Chest Pa. 4 40 GOT A GAS rea} liooks: like the ones to beat today * * * i o COMPANY PERMIT? le) a [ater lagxing | tirough’ the first In the” evening- $1,000 interna ppb is Mt 7) 68 Yi 4i3 | week of the National Horse Show tional jumping stake he beat 11 a 20 «48 THEN THIS IS : aeee jat Madison Square Garden opponents in a yt f af Steer re 2 M FOR you! HOL® youn F is US. team moved into- the time v Ber 4 ; 204 SPoT- ad for the team and individual! took 0 { 22277 IT 1S THE KEY Hampionships yesterday as Hugh the seven-obstacle cours: P iss 30 poorer Wile y turned in near-perfect per- secaitts esses M7 a2 'formances The US. team now has 91 FIVE -GAMES iar | * « * |points for a team total, to 84 for Ped Wiley, the leading rider in the runner-up Britain. Steinkraus and Pp Se ecw aa in 4 GAS HEAT show with 50 points, starred in Britain’s Ted Williams trail for ‘Flori da ABM ocicerenees 1. 2284 A il two events that thrust the home|individual honors with 34 points, -*~°"“*? <— _ ahJfs best—with forces to the lead. In the after- apiece Since 1950, when MichiganeState é STRIKES AND SPARES jnoon event in- the international! In the five gaited he addle horse becarhe a member of the Western By Joe Wilman jumping - challenge trophy class amateur championship, Miss Joan C qnierence, Spartan teams have 7 competition,“ he teamed with Bill Robinson Hill's Belinda took top won eight league titles and shared If you're a once-a-week bowler, Steinkraus and Frank Chapot to honors two others in the Big Ten. all your bowling is done in the | quam <0 — = isame establishment. So, you get ito know the alleys pretty well. ‘On each alley, you know just about | where your starting spot should ibe, Yet, when you roll a couple of balls that don't get up high enough into the pocket, you're) tempted to change your sa There is a size and sp. “ : - Take old Professor Wilman’ s| type to meet your advite and wait before changing needs and budget your starting spot. That may not. be the trouble at all! Perhaps your timing was off, and you | didn't get enough stuff on the’ ball. Maybe your finger lift or Heating, Air Conditioning Sales & Service iwrist turn was faulty, It may have ‘been your starting angle which was 177 Edison, Pontiac Business FE 4-3811 wrong, or perhaps the ball missed Nite Service FE 4-0445 your spot out on the alley. Per- haps you're not warmed up enough, At any rate, there are plenty) of reasons for a. poor delivery. | ‘Before you change your starting) spot, make certain the error ‘doesn't lie elsewhere: I'd suggest | ‘you change your starting position last; try some other adjustment i first. (Coy opyright 196 1967, ohn F, Dalle C nd nese annie cin cinema oer canctastinian ee nent “When You Need “GLASS You Naturally, Think of ‘ PON TIAC GLASS - LOWEST PRICES ON WINDOW GLASS We Repair All Types of Aluminum Storm Sash PONTIAC GLASS. CO. 23 W. Lawrence St. FE 5-6444 “Your Glass Man Sinve 1900” Brand New Tires for the Price of Recaps Mud and Snow Tires At Pre-season. Discounts These tires are NOT Recaps . . . NOT Seconds . . - NOT Take-offs .. . NOT Factory Adjust- ments ... BUT Brand New, Factory Fresh, First Quality, All Rayon Cord, All Cold Rubber Con- struction Tires. Silént Sure Traction for fong wearing, self- cleaning treads. '6.00x16....$12.55 6.70xI5_.. $12.95 7.10x15... $13.95 7.60x15... $16.87 All prices plus tax and recoppable tire. If no exchange, add $3.00 plus: tax 51223. Guaranteed in Writing for One Full Year Against » Any Detect in Workmanship or Materials! 7 Ww. Huron St. Open 9to 9 | | i: \ i oft a ee pee rae > FE 8-0424 Dashed bd The red Bae for Homecoming i oot chp . = r THE on” a rr at 457 Woeedward (Denevan Bldg.) Detroit stretched its lead to 9-0 By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘Electronics Institute @ uasechs cocina laf reece hanes: later in the second quarter with lan . : ; on). Kerean Veteran Approved. 11-11 coring dri that 1 60 Seven college football teams fell Gilmour Academy of Cleveland € f Wing “ve iat cevered “& “ . é - ’ co parse rey 13 t lays: “vi “H Stone from the perfect record class W@S no match for Cranbrook's Stu 8S i habia He ™?: ~ s . . a” ' ce is in pint and plunge. TOUGH — Former Marine ‘over the week end chopping the Clark and Tom Noteware, Satur- Name . Phone . = ‘ ¥ . one “a, } i ‘ =< ; a oan Emerson Dromgold. a 230 pound: | unbeaten, untied list to 23 includ- 44. when the Cranes rolled to ™ ® 2 g Villanova got its only touch- | tackle, was the line smasher for inz just four major sehooals (their 3rd Inter-state league victory 5 - dewn early in the fourth quarter the Titans Saturday in the 16-7 * * ru 21-0, Clark. accounted for two TDs, an re on a 17-yard pass from Jim Gra- win over Villanova for Detroit's a on runs of 27 and 41 yards, while ‘Call Bud for a wp ‘. gione to Tony Varrichione 5th win in seven games Among the major ranks, Texas Joteware drove over from the nine —— eamet , . OO ee ai ____ A&M feats the tuartet with eich, . HUNTING a to start scoring. at Gilmour. Clark counted in the 2nd and 4th peri- ods. Jack Fletcher kicked all con- Versions. Cranes. naw have a 3-3 season's mark. Gilmour's only invasion of Crane territory was in the 2nd period when they got to the 10. Cranes threw the game's only aerial, a 2nd period, 20-yard, toss from Clark to Pete. Turner. Cranbrook will hold its “home- ‘and final game Saturdayc at 2 p.m. against Western Reserve of Cleveland three-day low © score competition | after ab-| sixth ' and puck-stealing | and | | Fleming Mackell were the main attack: crowd of 13,909, Boston is in | each: Delvecchio to set up in Puts U.S. Ahead | NEW YORK (INS)—The United | States,.paced by Hugh Wiley’s perfect ride Sunday, has won the * The U.S. finished the three days-. of jumping yesterday at Madison Square Garden with a total of eight faults. All were scored by jin the international jumping at the |Wiley and teammates Bi na National Horse Show. behets ond Frau 4 Cha pot all ha The vietory gives the U.S. the lfaultless rides, SERVICE Complete Service on — All Types Transmission All Work Guaranteed Free Check-Up Service 47 N. 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Saginaw Family-Size Motoring Small-Car Economy HEINKEL Cruiser “999 Come In and Drive One Today ELEGANT DESIGN—The HEINKEL ig a car you'll be proud to own. airplane and as smart as a new point! The lar ge window area gives you an excellent view of the road. and enables your passengers to enjoy the scenery to the full. Driving is no strain in the HEINKEL. Gears change effortlessly, and the sturdy 4-stroke overhead valve engine pro- vides ample power for even = ectie hills. SEE THE HEINKEL FOR YOURSELF! MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Chevrolet USED CAR DEPARTMENTS THE NEW For Business For Pleasure DELIVERED COMPLETE { is as streamlined as an 4 FE 5-461 631 Oakland at Cass a ee eS we Se ee a. @ s\4 02.6 & @ ee 6.5 2 RS ~ fo pTA CS $ 1): 8 @ «© @ @ se se ek oe me fe ee Se ee ee Oe cA: ee ae \ THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1957 MSU Makes Biggest Haul of ’57 Freshmen. College Recruiting Now Called ‘Science’ By BRUNO L, KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press It’s an established fact a collegiate athletic program is only as good as its recruiting. This was an interesting topic among writers and some coaches recently. » The word recruiting was at one time almost taboo to be used by @ coach publicly. Today it has become a science, with a great portion of every school's athletic budget going toward recruiting. x *« * How does boys from California, Pennsylvania, Washington, Louisiana get to Michigan State, Notre Dame or even a little school like Hillsdale or some other campus, —— of miles from his home? Family ties, prep coaches, alumni and newspaper all- star team clippings are the wheels which sets forth the mo- tion toward getting the best recruit to that school. The coach and his assistants do the rest. When the sea- son ends they go on a banquet circult that carries them from one end of the country to the other, Between meais the hand- shaking takes place with that all-state end and his dad. | * * * Most coaches don’t dare go too much further than this, so| the alumnus takes over again, and the next step is to visit the campus. ' When football brochures come out of the colleges every year, a glahee down the rosters tell an interesting story on é Michigan State has 16 states represented. MSU has 34 from’ Michigan, 13 from Pennsylvania, nine from Illinois, eight from Massachusetts, two from New York and California and one each from Texas, West Virginia, Minnesota, Ala- bama, Arizona, Ohie, Indians, Florida, South Carolina, and Honolulu. * * * Since 1947 the outstate total has always been aie than’! the home state list, but the 1958 MSU squad may have the first. ‘|Michigan majority in over 10 years. This year there were 45, from other 15 states. U. of D., aiming at big time football, made the fatal mis- take about four years ago of attempting to put all of its effort in state recruiting, but U. of M. held the aces and MSU the kings. Two years ago, the Titans laid down their “scientific recruiting” plan like MSU did in 1947. The finger pointed out- state and in the direction of Pennsylvania. This year, the first varsity team of that plan showed 13) states represented. Michigan has 26, Pennsylvania 10, Ohio: {five, New York and Hlinois 4, Maryland two and Missouri, New for A&M and Tulsa for a long time. Jersey, Indiana, Minnesota, California, Washington and On-| ‘tario one each. This gives 32 outstaters. * * * Realizing that its future hope does noi lie in what is left after Michigan and Michigan State’s haul. U.of D. has pene-| a ~ LADIES — BOWL HOUSE : Pudney's © 25 11 Townsend 19 17 Ramblers 25 Petunias bh] Frank's 23 12 O'Brien 16 20 Orange Bios, 23° Daisies 15 M&M 23 13 Racco's 15 20 sien 9 21 Pour Roses “4 Nicholie Ins. 23 13 Great hakes 13 23 De 20 Geraniums 4 People’s Mkt. 22 14 Lakeland 11 23! Peinsitihne 18 Peontes 2 Dowdy 2214 Variety Ag. 3. 23 | Daffodils 16 Camellias 1. Season highs: Individual, J. Berzon, Orchids 15 Gardenias it WT; team, Pudneys, 962. Individual! (3 (Carnations 15 Pg a 8 games) K, Kircher, 647; team Nicholle| Belles—Val Coxen 203-5 Ins., 2764. Beaux—Ed. Haglund + 563. ‘trated into 17 other states besides Michigan for its apenas i squad. Notre Dame and Oklahoma have entirely different recruit-| jing layouts. The Irish hardly draw from the state of Indiana, while | the Sooners are strictly Oklahoma area products. si, gos ey Notre Dame has 25 states represented on its 1957 roster. ‘Pennsylvania leads with 12, Ohio has 11, Illinois eight, Michi-| gan and Louisiana five. Only four Indiana boys are listed end) the rest are one and two from 18 other states. Oklahoma meanwhile has boys from only five states, of iwhich 42 are Oklahomans and 19 are Texans. Wyoming,| ‘Kansas, and Colorado have only one each. The grip and little competition within its ewn boun- | daries* accounts for Oklahoma's recruiting success. Now Oklahoma State (formerly A&M) has into Michigan State's | Pm" GEORGE MILLER, pinchiesh ae BODY SERVICE FE 2-5921 154 Orchard Lake Road BUMPING — PAINTING ARC and CAS WELDING FRONT END ALIGN- MENT — FRAME STRAIGHTENING —ALL OVER PAINT JOBS, | All Work Guaranteed See Geo. Miller 1947 position. The Aggies are “Big Eight” brothers of the | + Sooners, and the recruiting here is also following the trend | from the outstate outline, to the homegrown eventual punch. Tulsa is the other Oklahoma school hoping to make a move. | WE_ARE NOW = ead Illinois and Kansas have been favorite hunting eunte Factory Authorized i Recruiting is always an interesting topic, usually in foot- to Service j ball circles and one of the questions which always comes up is, : ‘Could you imagine what would happen if all the Pennsylvania | $ ‘ af DODGE football players, played their _eoliege football in the state of pocesed Pennsylvania? | See and Dodge Truck the school’s fécruiting rejations. | Some colleges grow jnto football powers by strictly home, recruiting. Some do it by concentrating on certain sections “T - the country and others set up a nation wide plan. , * * * In most instances where one major college controls the! wealth of talent within its state and the nearby area, com-, petitive colleges very often attempt to start building ‘heir pro-, grams with the nationwide scale. In Michigan, the University of Michigan has always held | the upper hand in getting the state’s talent. Michigan State always got second best and the rest of the state colleges divided the leftovers. ikes Score St. Mike-St. James — « ;{fensive game piling up 189 yards’ First GOWNS §....e-seeveees 8 a ) Nubia peresns. ie mien the ground to the Dales’ 125 [Peon yardage .......... 0 83 * * * Passes 0-5 1-2 . [ee intercepted bad ae es 7 So Jim Fox and Chuck Steinhelper| Fumbles lost .............. 0 © scored the St. Michael touchdowns | Penalties . 85 6 SCORING SUMMARY after short drives. Fox went over, It, James 3 $$ $"} trem 18 yards out in the 1st.quarter Sometimes it happened that some of the leftovers proved, to be better.than the second best. This happened in the period| between 1926 and 1936 when U. of D. grabbed off the best of the “leftovers”. Such names as Lloyd Brazil, Andy Farkas,) Tom Connell, Doug Nott and Vince Banonis led the Titans to| their greatest years in football of which included a winning, streak of 21 games plus several! victories over State. * * * In the mid-forties, Michigan State laid its biggest plans for recruiting. The Spartans went prospecting to Pennsylvania, | the state which has built many national grid powers outside! its borders. Teams like Maryland and Miami (Fla.) started | building their powers about the same time and they succeeded with a roster full of Pennsylvanians. New Kensington, Pa., was Michigan State's favorite spot. | Har-Brack area was true to Maryland and McKeesport was lt Miami's baby. Michigan State continued to build its fortune tn the East, especially in Western Pennsylvania. About 1952, MSU strength' around Massachusetts started producing and this year eight of that state’s best are listed on the Spartan roster. Illinois was, MSU’s Midwest center even today. . * * * With strong drawing power in its ledger in Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Massachusetts, MSU made another outstate move. This time to Ohio, and much to the dismay of the rest of the state colleges, the Spartans have made probably one of, the| biggest hauls of Michigan prepsters-in its histery, The best quarterback from Ohio plus another half dozen top players from the Buckeye state are now on the MSU - freshman roster. Many great homegrown players have starred in recent years for Michigan State, but as it appears for the first time, the bigger portion of the most sought- after players in Michigan make up the Spartan freshman lfensive play into a 136 victory | | edge of 13-0 after only 1414 St. Michael scoring: Towchéewns — and Steinhelper plunged into the Pox (18, run); Steinhelper (2, plunge) | Conversion—Ohngren “4 piung®)-/end zone from the two in the 2nd/ ~~ period. The drives covered only 22 ames scoring: punnieliff (2, plunge). St. Michael Lineup } Ends — Call, DeMilner, Pruente, J. Mineweaser. ' Tackles — F. Lauinger, Onngren, Gal-| Sonnenberg. ards— E. Lapinger. Birchmeir. conser — T. Lauinger. ; Backs — Fiynn, B. Mineweaser, Pox T. Chapdelaine, Gange, Dabbs, Touchdown 4 bare Steinhelper, Campbell St. James Lineup Ends — Warren, Bayle, Griffin. Tackles — Gagne, Danaher, V. agner, | Beyma uards — Rudzewicz, Podzikowski, Le-| Claire. Geroux Planigan Centers. — McGowan, Lohmet er Backs — Grasel, Tunnicliff, Stockel, Yezak, M. Wilson, “Hanson, P. Mullen, By CHUCK ABAIR St. Michael parlayed two- early! ouchdowns and some alert de-| over Ferndale St. James in a battle! ifor 3rd place between the Suburban! |Catholic rivals at Wisner Stadium! yesterday. The victory, 4th straight for the) Shamrocks, clinched at least a tie! for 3rd for the locals. A pair of short punts helped the Mikemen off to their early | min- utes of play. The defense did |- s “re . , ' | SM SCORER — Chuck Stein- paola gman. va appa | helper’ put the game on ice for — eo na’ mm | St. Michael yesterday when he utes. | plunged over from the two-yard St. Michael coach Bob Mine-| line for the 2nd Shamrock TD weaser is known for his outstand- | is a 13-6 triumph over St. James. ing defenses but his Shamrocks! It was St. also came up with a _Strong of-| triumph. 7 | Roller skater's at Rolladium took G4 "ec C, Joan Allen. Mike's 4th straight | 127, Argentina, Grew, } ~ ae © Warranty Work Also... Plymouth - Chrysler 3-6 Victory and 24 yards but on both occasions | ithe locals had to come up with a’ i big play after being set back by ja penalty. Imperial eight to the Shamrock 22 before | a pass interception in the end | zone. Another march ended at | the 26 after a touchdown run by | | quarterback Jerry Grasel was nullified by a penalty. Those pass interceptions ruined | two early long drives towards paydirt in the Ist half and pre- | ! vented any chances of any the final four minutes but two of further threats in the late stages. | ithree passes were snared by ‘the Bill Tunnicliff, 195-pound full-| hustling St. _paicenet backs. * * experience mechanic. The losers had the ball twice in back, was the whole show for the : ivisitors but he couldn't do it alone.| The trium iph gave the Lewis J ,*,°,*, * }He went over for his team’s only Street school a 5-2 season record | ***’e*s TD on the opening play of the with the big clash with St. j4th quarter following a 73-yard erick two weeks away. 724 Oakland Fred- | 332 Now with R&R Motors, Inc. wes Walt Havrane with 15 years as a factory - trained oz . Re = = = =. es Z Oo : Chrysler — Plymouth — ” Imperial WALT HAVRANE » R. FE 8-6801 4 march. a a : = The senior star did the bulk of the Ferndale running, caught seven} passes and did an excellent job! jon defense. His 46-yard punt return | ‘was the longest run of the day. JUST SAY al FEDERAL’ = dames drove trom howl own Rolladium Conducts | Ath Elimination Tests | ipart in the rink’s fourth elimina- ition tests Saturday, with six com-| jpetitors getting by for he fourth | iperiod, as follows: | Girls — Class A, Ann ete der; Class B, Cynthia Dalton, and| Boys — Class A, Edward Smith; | ‘Class B, Arnold Osta, and Class C, | Raymond Pickrell. | | Beckie Forsier—won the diaper) | division event, , WEEKEND FIGHTS By The Associated Press HOLLYWOOD, Calif. — Frankie Beims. | 145 Wilmington, Calif, knocked out Joey Doranto. 146. Los Angeles BUENOS AIRES—Manuel Garcia Del- jn 126%_, Spain, a Alvarez, team. A glance at the 1956 prep all-state teams can be checked out at East Lansing. Looking at 1957 brochure rosters of several schools, the: breakdown of homegrown and outstate personnel is mere) ing. — Michigan still showing: state recruiting strength, has only | seven states represented on its squad. This inciudes 36 from | Michigan, four from Indiana, nine from Ohio, 12 from Illinois, three from Pennsylvania, two from Arkansas and one from| Missouri. The outstate total of 31. . i | Notice to hunters Fs We carry Duofold LQlayer insulated underwear Kills that chill | like nothing else will 7} If you like the great out- doors, you'll love the extra cold-and-chill protection of Duofold’s 2 insulating layers. We have it in a wide range of warmths and styles, but order now, | while selections are still | complete. sqis Each Long Sleeve Shirt Ankle Length Orewers We also carry ALLEN-A, WEATHER-ALLS gists as underwear ¥ 24 E. Lawrence St. Open Monday and Friday Evenings Z i a Es DEER HUNTER SPECIALS 17.98 Coat 7.50- 4” Winter Treads 00 DOWN 1.25 A WEEK ——— Ladies’ red Coat 12% Large size 14 Men’s hunting caps .................... 13.98 Large size Zip-up belted coat. Both with quilted lin- ing, poplin shell. Sizes 24 to 32. T-ahot carbine. Walnut. 76.95 Marlin Carbine in 3 models. 134.50 Remington Auto. loading rifle. OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL Mon, thry Set. 9:30 o.m. to 9 p.m. Setisfection qguerenteed er your money beck HUNTERS’ OUTFITS SALE! Men’s togs 12.98 Pants 15% 7188 85% wool, 15° nylon. Red-black plaid. Kasha-lined coat, 38-46. Pants, 30-40. 1.44 poplins Pants 9% 10.98 5988 Nae I $ 9.95.........6.70-15.... 10.95.........7.10-15.... 12.70.........8.00-14.... 13.70.........8.50-14.... 11.95.........7.60-15.... Trailmaker Tread 512.95 15.25 eee. 12-g@, micro ..... 15.45 y sees 16.45 5.98 Gui Case od ave 16.25 . Lined plasti¢ with full zippe _Without: "Trede-in for Smal Additione Pius Tax and Recappable Tire—Can Be Bought | Charge NO. CHARGE FOR MOUNTING | Will not matt. . ; \ 7 : . * ; | eae / ¥ | j i i i ‘ sea ae Ss oe Se ee Se ee eee Je 112.45 Remington ee ection rifle. aes 44 Marlin choke. 444 3.25 cleaning kit for Heh caliper ee 2.66 - . Men's s warm 98 Insulated h 6” unting shirt underwear 3 97% roo - 4 al % wool p' shirt in Down filled. Comfort black and red. Patra warm] range from 0° to 60°. Sizes 14 to 17. Ba ry now! TTT a WARREN, PONTIAC r. ; \ a9 ~~ gervices and never hesitated to — 0 * a in Train-Car Crash Lanham (D-Ga), 69, a veteran of ii years in Congress, was killed yesterday when his car and a train collided at a Rome. crossing. * * * He was a member of the House Appropriations committee. Friends said he vigorously op- posed reductions in the armed speak out when he thought it; necessary. , Police said he was driving alone on the way to address a Parent- Teacher Assn. meeting at nearby Garden Lakes school. County policeman Bill Hart said a Central .of Georgia switch en- gime struck his car broadside,/ knocking it into a ditch. The con- gressman was found lying beside THE PONTIAC PRESS, ae i oa. is by Franklin Folger|". THE JACKSON TWINS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1957 the vehicle and was pronounced “Dr, Johnson said some mild form of exercise." dead at the scene. : BOARDING HOUSE a INE BEEN CURIOUS TO SEE You ~YOU MUST BE COUSIN DAISY ATAEC CITY eX KIO SOMEBODY SAID LOOKED LiKE Mt NO CICLIAN SUIGSELL NZ, MY HUSBAND HARVEY! WHY DO Wer GOAT ThOUGIN SZ “| CERTAIN OLD MEANIES HANE To WY 7 mi pad -GO AROUND TRYING O HURT NICE BS TOGO TOR PEOPLE'S » FEELINGS 2—~ SELF IN HA . , AT THE Zoos < al oh. a 29). START OFA Tat tng OS Pee. On. « SEAUDTIFUL 1957 by HA Ste, a FRIENDSHIP = OUT OUR WAY | er. YOU DOGGONE PUDD'N HEAD’ You : SAWDUST DUMMY! DIDN! SHE SMILE - AT YA? WHUT MORE DO YA WANT # WHY DION’ YA SAY, “MAY I CARRY YOUR BUNDLES ?* ER DO SUMP’N VAL vu) LUE been eee ar Hy i “= ss a bl i Bisis NANCY ae OH, BOY--- A LOT OF OUR RELATIVES ARE COMING TO VISIT US TONIGHT Ue (3% a ay, : ee ae di TO oe eee ed a Od Ba = 2 fren Tam ¢ ba 2 THEY I CAN USE USUALLY DROP SOMETHING IN THIS OLD TIN MY LI'L BANK -"s all ciel aieal [eae oe Semel | meal s menal se — — Cel Sell ‘ Rat LA’ “4 BANKS BT La r) By Leslie Turner MOMENTS WE'D LIKE TO LIVE OVER STIDDA STANNIN’ LIKE A BiG . YAWP! AAH~- YA BIG CLAM/ THINK ©’ NOTHIN’ ‘T'SAY! I COULD PUNCH YA RIGHT IN ‘TH’ SNOOT, IF IT Ay » 7] WASN’ KINDA CRAZY i; Mime, T’PUNCH YERSELF/ gy) I MIGHT YIT/ p) TM. Reg. US. Pat. OFF. GITT'N RED ALL OVER AN!’ CAN'T NO...NOBODY KNOWS I CAME HERE! MR. WILFONG, MY WIFE || IT TO COMPLETE (iF YOU MUST HAVE YO WHY YOU LITTLE PIPSQUEAK! JBUV McKEE'S PLANT SITE, OK TATE TERMS AND TWO YEARS’ WORK INTO | | THEN PAY US ENOUGH TO IMPROVING OUR PLACE! BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES— I'VE GOT PAYMENT DUE TOMORROW, / FAIR DEAL ETRE BUSMAIALIE? Wi, YOUR MORTGAGE! \ NO, YOU WON'T! I IF YOU DON'T MAKE THE |} HOPED TO GET A By-Edgar Martin 4 || LATELY. TOO BUSY WHO? JACK BRNAVT, PUG'S NEW FRIENDZ Wed, SAE WASN'T MENTIONED Hits TRawiLuaAms © 1957 by NEA Service, ine, 11-10 DIXIE DUGAN By McEvoy and Strieber oF HER LATER at, xB 2 » SE] | SAEED QOUNG FOURS § SOD SINTCHED ANT] | AOE TALIA, THEN RE BO WO EAS! SAV] | EXTRER GETTING MOTH | AEN LOTTA CURDER ABOUT] | OR WO TROUBLE END WIG. TA WORRIET. y, | | Bose Bossa ; PUSS TRADE, | ; FQ S Astesw &£ ty ~@ aia | : Swern &- Qwo oF au F exec Ff THINGS, HER! — aia Neel LLL LLL v % . MAWOGSS OF ee oy 32 WEL, VETS SEE.SO | @ GREAT. RQ a KS FAR PAS FOUND | ACTRESS. > “ff WER BOSS, WATRILSY, 3 VIS GW OF x P\AGIARISC. Uhliiam Ce; , Ay © 1957 by NEA Service, ne. TM. Rog. U.S. Pat. Of. By Dick Cavalli A 7 & 1987 by NEA Bervies, ina, TM. Reg, U8 Fat. OF. By Charles Kuhn John Morris Yr" hii, Toaight! Enjoy some pleasant chewing and relaxation - +» with delicious OPPORTUNITIES Every Day in the Pontiac " Press Want Ad Section Take advantage of this easy way | to solve all your buying and seil- Ing problems. a. fay To Place Your 3 al WANT AD} | DIAL FE 2-8181 |) Wrigley’s Spearmint. _ You'll Find : 2 THE STAG AFFAIR AT Wis PROFITABLE | orev or Take some BUT LT JUST DETEST His ARE YOU LETTING CHUB GO Y GOING "ID THOSE STAG X PARTIES... HE ALWAYS p ; HIMSELF so! HERE I BAKE ALLO’ THESE KS/ I CAKES, AN' TH CLUB. DATE.MARKED | [ISN'T TILL WEEK AFTER i NEXT...¢ | : : a ° ae Lee) fo ay ee oe Mg eet ae Sg Ea Wi Fenn} 3 e Money in Pot | Again agaist 2a: ees Mark “SOLUTION CLUES A. Gay colored dr do wonders to a pet Sage a) SRIGHTEN: (2) LIGHTEN. B. A baseball is more likely to succeed if he's this. ts) PLUCGER, Ya) SLUGGER. Cc. careful eming, a with appropriate Br, tine in’the usclal secia’ (5) EFFORTS; (6) ESCORTS. D. A boss might get with a secretary who is always doing so. (7) ; (8) SHIRKING. E. Junior may want a space ef a commercial helmet because fo oak Spates ——_ 0 eae i ene should drive a car when he is this. fin BOO. BOOZY;, (i) woozy. - A timid little woman is very 'y to the opinions of. her husband. (13) aerlect: Ta) RESPECT. The crook with an ingenious racket could often make ver se Led ey mye ry om inte an honest business. (15) CHEATING; (16) CREATING. A badly defeated candidate will have much of this for a Beilient future in politics. (17) SCOPE, (18) HOPE. The firm's treasurer may be fired-it he ———-—=> ¢ meney too footy to favored oulsamen., Tal) DISPERSES: (22) DISBURSES. It's natural for a mousy little man to get an inferiority fooling when with « trend whe is thls. (23) TALLER; (24) TALKER. / aay Wiypagporte dg motive for a crime. 5 senna, (0° Dee seer cee he etislcbag’ seman prevents guests from leaving. (27) HOSTEL: tit) HOSTESS. Special training is necessary for someone with responsi- for : sectet messages. (28) DECIDING; cee f husband may well pvtaat Mt Mie lle is eenatubtly delay ‘on (31) MOPPING: (32) MOPING. feel pag ows een el ee ed has some te incriminating poo ong (33) TAMPERING: (94) ‘TEMPERING. - Of a mercenary beauty, can sometimes make her lose a good matrimonial catch. (35) CUPIDITY: (36) STUPIDITY. Sir-aritog ls lngesnsive tc_comeans whe has sever sees words the sky. (37) STREAKING; (38) STREAMING. | Sometimes a man succeeds eventually in a “lest causo” because of such devotion from his wife. eae (40) INSPIRING. OFFICIAL CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone ts eligible to gates the POT-O-GOLD contest with the exception of Pontiac Press moet or their immedi- ate families. 2. Entries must be on official entry blanks printed in this newspaper. 3. So submit an entry the contestant must print his num- bers in the a spaces, cut out the area enclosed dotted lines and atta | will be acce if they are in envelopes. No. 76 must a Seem. Nov. 19 entries received after that-time whet + by hand, will be declared eligible. The Press is not responsi- ble for entries lost or delayed in the mail. 4. Sorry, — calls or mail concerning details of the answered ledged. S| . | : PUZZLE NO. 76 ' m . 5 * D 1 ] z | ‘ 5 | 4 mo ‘ 5 - IH a 4 a | 1 5 ‘ : 1 ‘ L ° ' 1 , ‘ . ' 5 + | oa € | : Lie ' o. Ee 1 : Ses r] : r ~ Q R Ss Le | 1 : a ae ' i Suen cin | a a a a BOONAME 0... veseseees Booceoceeeon 5 | ~ STREET ADDRESS ..............c.scececcecseeseeece ‘ 2 a H CITy . ceseveseee PHONE NO. .........0.00058 0 § benneeesnsenunpsensanneenenenne’ Opening blocks included: Ana- iil; 58 8 é z g ¥ 5 a ca ay SFiek xe = 8 |. Friday the market declined ‘sharply after a brief rally by rock- et fuel shares. The Associated Press average of 60+stocks fell ful-70: to 3136-28. tune SSPSho ok SUIlSzB ret Z 7 Last year gift sales accounted |; n wholesale package lots. - Now York Stocks for three million cases of decan- tions are awahed by r= soa Edward Liveracis, 06, of 01% Alr Red ...... $, 8 sa Bt ters and 500,000 cases of regular|Rureay of Markets, as of Friday.|illow Rd., was found guilty of Ailied Stts'"".. 404 Jonco afnn. ", 569|bottles in prewraps, Ohlandt says AE drunk driving by a Municipal Court Allie Chal .... 3.3 genes 3 L - S2igift sales this year will rise to| appies ST netonsenah! $3 00 Jury. He will be sentenced Wednes- Alcoa ...... *-: 66.4 Kresge, 88 .. 25.3|four million cases, evenly divided Sooten Zenethess. be. caveveseccces 380 day by Judge Maurice E. Finne- Am Airlin ..... 163 Eroas’ war '.: g*|between the fancy glassware and Abbie Cider, teneee'e gk 77227222) Fhe gan. ro Cyan 38 z * wy, ; $3.6 the fancy wrappings. Feara. Bosc. DE weieeccnens gesiweese $.09| “ axe =f Am « ees Loe n ‘ i) eo | Se er ery eeeeeenesee Beer tore. Baldwin. Am M& Pay. 315 Loew's oo a) ~_ * * "Vegetables Now carries ‘light-hard ware, AmN Ges... $2 vorlilerd ..... 94.7; His company is dropping decan-|peets. top gee ec eseeeetaees 1.25| household varieties & toys : Am Rad ...... 213 Mack T7k .... a4 ters altogether and going in for = Coa en = weekdays 11-11. Weekends & am git." i04 May D Gite «. bay | See tex nonin %% million Carrots. Tevese. — EET 238 38 idays yl a.m. - Aay. Am 6 +a.+ 38 mary ars materials. aulifiower, dos. Se eT Ee ett ae a BME a FB ante Calendar Jam Viecose .... HH Monsen ca 323 B Forman Distillers of Konirabt ibe ie $0) Regular meeting of Pon Armee SU .... 63 Murray Cp ... 24 |Louisville, Ky., challenges Nation-|Q00ms- Dry, 80-Ib sis... - +++. - 190\day, November 13th at 8:00, at prmeyl g = is nat ont, R {2 \al’s view that customers are tri- Parsley — ec ao 190 Roosevelt Temple. 22 State Street. Atchiso ee 6 Nat Dairy 34 ~ Parsnipe, = = COO a po Bernice Coover scribe. Refin --... 31.4 Net Lead 06.4 ° Potatoes, fancy. B0-Ib...)..... 160! Aveo Mig ...., tf ee -Congral LT ee * ae See irene) ac = oo io: ) 5 R ? ped os) Reca'te Be Transmission Strike sss" «1s Dance Step Rusty! .. 4 or . “ ‘3 303 Nor Sta Pw ted d . | : T Ci (| t Airlin 114 | it Se Ends in Settlement sx: az Try City's Classes ee ise wees s. Kale wo 1.36 1g) Penh El. 31! YPSILANTI UM — A 33-day (31 Y ININUENINTIN 8 Is your fox trot getting a little Sy ._ a 18 at the ral — ovis ae DU. ..ceecccercerseeee oe rusty? Are you tired of being a 82 om re) — ‘ , ———e Mon ; od Ftoe DECI SESCOCCO CEE wallflower? Well, the Pontiac : $34 Phelps D Be yesterday when members of. Lettuce & Salad Greens parks and Recreation Dept. has. Sor Eni Pet, 283) United Auto Workers Local 735 Celery Cobbe Po es isthe answer for you. : - ee Proct & .: e4 ratified a settlement reached by Bocarcle test. ae aAsacaanacdse ws Te) It will conduct an eight-ses- Cola ..:100 Pure Ol ..... 304) negotiators Friday. — moartinseasecrecse sion ballroom dance class for oe ele Repub, 1 + * * . adults beginning in January. | 41 Reyn Met... Dave 1 135 . B N f Registrations (preferred to be Tob B .. 622 Mann, Loca presi “- os Royal Dut. - 84 dent, said the pact contained a usiness 0 es made by couples, but not neces- > E23 st Jos Lesa": 33.4) Rew sentority agreement and | Attending the annual convention) 'S taken now at the department 31 Soot Mr. a54| Provided for improved working |in Miami Beach Jan. 11-15 of the| “arlly married couples) are be- | "Ete Sead Al RR . 22.3) conditions. National Automobile Dealers Assn.| fice im the City Hall or by call- i . ae Litas oe ee oe 7 when jwill be Mr. and Mrs. Carl G.| ® FEderal 3-7131. a ere oar local’s 6,200 members walked |Ruebelman of Lake Orion. Ruebel-| Instructions will center on the, CATE Sperry Rds. 10.7 oat over prseearegercn od ran is owner and president of the waltz, two-step, fox trot and pol-|,, aia : {73) Amees and a dispute over work- [Central Lincoln Mercury Sales,|kas. Some Cuban and Latin Amer- Std Ot Cal .. $°2) ing conditions, - ad ae 2 2 fc) : $ 10.1. Tex G Sul 2 $6.5 cee so O04 zeome Pe ... 472 Timk -» 56.4 ~~ a | : ira .. 365 Transamer 31 / 215 Unlerwd ..... 16 . 39.1 Un Pac 24.7 - 28.2 Unit Air Lin . 23.5 . 326 Unit Frutt 38.7 + 1 Un Cas Cp .. 303 .- 814 US Rud ..... 45 +. 35.3 US Bteel .... 54 143 ssceee S98 «All Warn B Pic 19.7 .. 92 West Un Tel . 155 - 36.2 Westg A Bk . 204 812 Wests 58.2 . Woolworth 3B 122.3 Yale & Tow .. 242 296 «= Young S&W . 27.7 . 30.1 Yngst, ShaT . 7 nbece 76.2 ith, Rad ..115 . 88 Gardner Den . 37.4 -% © Prod . 47 waters of Erie controlled by the |Irish National Electricity Co., and | sidiary—Wylax (Ireland) Ltd.— | which has sole rights to fishing 6,200 square miles of Ireland's very abundant inland waters. That’s half the area of Holland. x * ; an In addition the Dutch company has obtained the exclusive right sale of its entire fresh-watert! in operating river fisheries. industry today is widely divided as to the sales merits of the de- canters which cost them so much. in for fancier decanters than ever. * * *. of their year’s business between now and New Years, The Depart- ment of Commerce says sales in November and December last year came to one billion dollars, with the U.S. Treasury pocketing 100 million in excise taxes. estimated to have carried 60 dif- ferent brands of whisky in de- canters last year. B, C. Ohlandt, vice president of National Distil- lers Products Co., says dealers were left with 800,000 cases of un- sold decanters, tying up 40 mil- lion dollars. * * * The. vote yesterday showed workers in favor of the settle- meat and 581 against. ss nS Still No Taverns Named” ‘After Prince Charles ‘LONDON (INS)—A good many years may pass before young Frince Charles achieves the dis- tinction of having a tavern named after him. s. good many British “pubs” bear na:nes such as “The King Charles” or “The Duke of York.” would just as soon pass up this one sign Charles” reading “The Prince was ~hastily repainted. Eggplant and Squash | Send Roots 7 Feet DES MOINES—Many home gar- , deners don’t realize the depths to which some vegetables’ root sys- tems go. Eggplant and squash, for instance, send their roots down 7 -\feet and their lateral root spread varies from 2 to 20 feet. Here are some other root-system figures: Irish potatoes and cab- bage, 3 feet down and 3 feet lat- corn and tomatoes, 6 feet deep and spread 36 and 30 inches, respec- | tively. | Santa Fe, New Mexico, saad founded in 1610. Liquor firms do nearly a third|” The average package store is, But the Queen let it be known she! honor for her son, and at least; erally; bush beans’ roots descend | 5 feet and spread 30 inches; sweet | three bottle combinations. The company bought 11,000 iles of multi-colored ribbon and million square feet of alumi- num foil. 7 x * ®. ee ee omer ot package ‘their wines and cham- picture of their monastery and some wine bottles have pine cones and holiday balls attached to the necks. Paul Masson Vineyards of Cali- fornia put their wines, pagnes and brand-y into pre- wrapped packages ‘along with drinking glasses to fit the liquid contents. * * * Importers are taking up the pre- zap idea for the American mar- ket. Now it's up to the dealers to find “display space and the cus- Wines are in on the act, too. Christian Brothers of California: tomers to decide how generous to be. ‘ MARKETS Produce The following are top prices cov- ering sales of locally grown pro- duce brought to che Farmer’s Mar- kets by growers and sold by them Inc., at 40 W. Pike St., Pontiac. Los Angeles to Open | LOS ANGELES (®—Los Angeles Soon will be operating a munici- pally owned wedding chapel. Of- ficials explained it this way: The city acquired the three- acre Harbor View Cemetery in |San Pedro when the latter com- leanity was annexed in 1909. Re- cently moved to the cemetery is the 73-year-old St. Peter's Memor- ial Church, first erected by Epis- copalians and the first Protestant church in San Pedro. The City Recreation and Park Department is rehabilitating the church as an historical monu- ment. Thereafter it will be made available for meetings, funerals and weddings. Mercury Line Prices Increased 2.7 Per Cent DEARBORN (INS) — An over- all price increase’ of 2.7 per cent for the Mercury line was an- ;nounced today by the Lincoln- Mercury division of Ford Motor Co, Suggested 1958 factory list prices range from $2,422 for the Mon- terey two-door sedan to $3,788 for the convertible in the new upper- medium price Park Lane series. | Wife, 2 Children Escape Siberia CHICAGO (--A reunited fami- ly today marked the end to ll years of separation, 11 years spent by the American father in seek- ing to free his Lithuanian wife and two children from a Commu- nist labor camp in Siberia. William Gaveus, 47, a natural- ized American, greeted his happy family at Midway Airport yester- contest canot be be after decimal aos are — §. The Pontiae Press will award a ot $100 a Platen Siectric & Equip. Co. * .2.6 . week to the winner of each weekly boro. LD contest. It mie! Petr OO. ..-.-+: a es more than one g answer is received the prize will be t Lakes Of & Chem. ....* 15 2 divided equally among the winners. Ii any week or weeks [/ Howell Electric Motor Co. * 5.3 54 should pass without any winners, the prize will be added- tng 112 Ser weekly until a winning solution is submitted. anufactaring Co. a3 RS) 1 6. Winners will be awarded an extra cash bonus of $25 Ga Products. ¢ oat 82 each if they are Pontiac Press su of second on the Eay : winners are anoun Only one such bonus can be aw peubaens = — oa no matter how many weekly prizes Gupemes Wee tanned Pea : , oe % 38 15 60 7. Each’ week's puzzle will be published Monday, Seeeet, Rote Cul. Steaks Ww and ntll thie contest’s end. Either or al Bi HT ma ims will be considered as entry blanks. fae aan 8 13 mi ims 8. Winners and correct. solutions . tees 2260 872 66.2. 1509 bogey of me ae = individual contests. hog wy eae ei eG land County. Only the General , Originators of : oF the puzzles, will know the solutions until alter each, contest cigcaog ana is over. Answers will be delivered to the Press judges by bh a) Opening Mr. Ziem after the final deadline. 4 ; angen ar -geegdieemeny "@. There is only one cortect solution to the POT-O-GOLD $3" May vcs oe puzzle, and only that correct answer can win. The decision ol “ is Lam the judges is final and all contestants agree to abide by the. ou Bee sci RS judged decision. All entries becoming the property of The ay Pontiac Press and-none can be returned. : . eH 130% | Nor omen oS 10. i : i to POT. i | . Jan, Sete : POST BOX 58, Pontiac, Michigan. Winners will be constitution. was ‘notified either by telephone or in the mails. —. first in the United States requiring oi heiaikaneins establi nt of public libraries. , - menakt | Babi i . \ i rs \ ? . | + . * 2 a i ‘ 1]-Year Separation Ended™ hind when he returned to the Unit- ed States in 1946, he said. He be- gan then to plead with officialdom to bring the "family together on American soil. Three years after they separat- ed, the wife and children were sent to a collective farm in Si- beria. Gavcus intensified his ap- peals, He asked an attorney from New York, Marshall MacDuffie, | to help. tt x« MacDuffie, a former United Na- City-Owned Chapel 4 He’s Enterprising at 84 | PLYMOUTH, England @ — ‘At |i first in 1899 but it was destroyed News in Brief George 0, McGinnis, 21 of 258 Orchard Lake Ave., guilty of. reckless driving by Mu- nicipal Judge Cecil B. McCallum. He was given three months proba- tion and paid $30 in court costs and $10 probation fee. it$4% Million Suit: cham-/Cireuit Judge Edward. T. Kane was found) Jewish charity kindergarten. Briggs Reports Loss UAW Police Charged With False Prosecution in ‘48 Reuther Shooting ring loss of $131,029 for the nine months ended Sept. 30, This compares with a profit of $1,333,428 over the same DETROIT (INS) — Port Huron said he will arrive in Detroit Wednesday to start the politically) 1956 month, when net income was explosive $4.5 million damage suit! equaj to $1.24 per share of common trial stemming from the 1948 Wal-| stock ter Reuther shooting. No Contract Carl Renda, a scrap metal deal- er, filed the suit in June, 1954, as an outgrowth of his arrest on a charge of conspiracy in the shoot- ing. The charge was later dropped. However, Renda alleges false ar- rest and malicious prosecution. ao =e age brad = N ecessar y oa meathar is a cdlieak five Call Today of the UAW's officers and ployes, and six saauhare'e of re Detroit and State Police. Circuit Judge Joseph G. Rashid is named as one of six co-conspir- ators. Court observers said it was an especially interesting case because Judge Rashid will testify before a fellow judge. They also believe the case may take two or three months to be heard. Renda was one of four men: named in a 1954 warrant charging them with the conspiracy and at- tempted murder of Reuther. | Renda’s father- in-law, Santo Perone, Clarence Jacobs and Pe- ter Lombardo were aiso named, Charges were dropped against| Gregory Oil Co. 94 East Walton Blvd. Phone FE 5-6141 Car salesman who is willing to work and has proven record. Excellent pay ican steps will also be included. There will be a $2 per couple) {charge for Pontiac residents and) $4 charge for out-of-town residents. | | jac | Canadian, whose first story led to , Two Waterford Stores the four when Donald Ritchie, a! ‘the warrant, admitted he lied. | Renda’s suit said the UAW de- iposited $25,000 with the Crown iTrust Co. in Windsor to ‘be paid Ritchie for making accusations and charges against Renda.” Arthur Hudson Named set-up for such a man. See Mr. Har- denburg or Mr. Mil- fer at Jerome Olds- Cadillac, 280 South Saginaw St. Chrysler Marine Head | Arthur S. Hudson, of 286 Pleas- ‘ant St., Birmingham, has been) ‘appointed president of the Marine! ‘and Industrial Engine Division of | Chrysler Corp., it was announced. today. Hudson, who joined the corpora-| jtion in 1943, had been assistant comptroller since 1952. | ‘Civic Employes One Up DETROIT {INS) o— City and| county employes in Detroit had a) lday off today—Veterans Day— |while most everyone else worked. | |v eterans Day is one of eight legal, holidays given city employes each paar County workers do even bet- |ter—they get two additional holi- days annually. 1 by City House Blaze * Pontiac firemen fought a $1,000 iblaze at the home of Eli Cook, 120) Jackson St., Sunday night, for about 45 minutes before bringing the flames under control. No one was injured. Damage to the two-story frame house was esti- mated at $800 with an additional $200 damage to the contents. Firemen said the fire was be- lieved caused by careless smoking ‘Alarm Was False; Punishment Real LORAIN, Ohio (INS)—Fire Chiet| Alfred Nickley has devised an. unique punishment for people who! turn in false alarms. Three teenage boys were re-| cently captured by firemen after turning in one of the false runs. Chief Nickley ‘said the boys ‘will show up at No. 1 fire fa- tion for four Saturday mornings. | The boys will receive .ntensive training on just how a fire de- partment works. In addition the boys will be taught the fire department's obli-. gation to the public and the pub-; lie’s obligation to the fire depart- ment, The unusual punishment was agreed upon by the boys’ parents after a conference with Chief Nickley. t Club Grows Lacking Fees, Dues, Meetings The oldest social club in North Time, formed in Port Royal 351 has no meetings, fees, and no dues. no initiation can be found on walls all over the world. In 1606 it had 15 mem- bers; now its international mem- bership runs in the hundreds of thousands. shop,.. He opened his in an air raid jn 1941. \ LUNCHEONS Sealtest Ice Cream “lettes was stolen, police said. lbreakin last night at the Kroger PORT ROYAL, Nova Scotia—||# America, The Order of The Good Ei years ago by French colonists,!/2 But certificates of membership : Report Break-In Losses Two Waterford Township busi- ness places were broken into over ithe weekend, according to Water- ford Township Police. * * * Entrance was gained Saturday night at the Clintonville Supermar- ket, 3385 Mann Rd., after breaking | a rear window, Change amounting, to $48 was taken from the cash register and an undetermined amount of beer, meat and cigar- * * * Police are still investigating a iStore, Elizabeth Lake and Tele- graph roads. A rear window was also broken at this — store. The Another Wayne Cook Auction 17,000 Acres Timber ioe ot £. A, Stewert Lumber Ce., Inc, Texerkena, Texes Timber Hardwood tinting and Pine), Plant, Dimes Rag yy nae tal ending Ba oe er By Equipt., Boi nd, Buildies i and other —< and Machisers heaving « total valuation exceeding $3,000,000.00. isle 1 December 10, 1957 Begins Tuesday, 2 eondageam par end cont Bidder Negistration begins Monday, December 8. 7. Auction will be F, aitortam” with all ing sold ders must make oot ie Age ay of er Eeepoctton will begin November 18 and continue until time of Sale, Complete catalogs will be avail- able at site during inspection. re eA Lexi 4 — Co., .. Texarka’ exas, is quitting on Hardwood “hikes pee | They have at public section the modern, shing *p roximately 17,000 acres Ky land in River Tones, and a large amount a t and . Every- thing will be sold to the highest ae waded without minimum or For B Brochure, wt = — listing and-terms of sale. Wayne Se Associates, Inc. “The Nation's Leading Avetioneers™ amount of goods stolen was not! yet determined this morning. To BUY or SELL REAL ESTATE Representing Bateman & Kampsen Realty - FE 4-0528 OR 3-5021 Most People Plan for the Future ing a current rate of and 4% These investors have plans, _ Why not come in and inquire about our. Savings investments backed by 67 years of conservative‘ management and over in Reserves and Undivided Profits as an added safety. Capitol Savings & Loan Assoe. $4,000,000 We have a great number of investors who save regularly in our savings shares pay- mind, such as home ownership, education for the children, and many other worthy dividends of 314% a definite plan hs Pei Wea; We ere yes ee oe eee if i RIKER FOUNTAIN 75 W.Huton, Pontiae ==, FE 4.0561 al Ae en eee we AN OW Eo ee A i ee ee Vig ie oe eee ns PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, NOVEMBER M1, 1937 * s. Gurney Returns to Telev ee * i, * , — Climbers Met Death This Year France 42, Austria 109 and Italy 80. The total was almost 50 per cent greater than 1953 the worst pre- vious year, when 269 perished in the Alps. =| Veteran Alpinists said ‘most of this year’s dead were amateur climbers who ventured into the mountains without proper equip- ment er professional advice. 11 Die in Bus Plunge ISTANBUL, Turkey (@-—Eleven persons were killed yesterday and ‘19 others injured when a bus missed a sharp turn and plunged! _over a precipice near Bolu, 140 “miles southeast of Istanbul. Ten of the injured were in a serious condition, -- Today's Radio Programs - - WJBK, — Bellboy Patrick wwii Tee Hour CELW, Knowles WJBK, dated Bellboy WCAR, Ni 9 WIR, —_—- WwxYZ, wear. News, Shook 16: 30—WW J, a Star WXYZ, News, Surrell WWJ, Guest Star WJBK, WJBK, News, Reid WJBK,. News, Reid $:00—WJR, News, WWJ, News, Roberts WIR, (268) CKLW, (eee) WwW, (950) WOCAR, (1190) WXYZ, (1270) WPON, (1460) WJBK, (1490) ROME ® ~— Europe . rugged TONIGHT CKLW, News, Sports WCAR, News, Martyn 1:30-——WJR, Dr. Malone Alps, an eternal challenge 10) go, _ we news WJBK. News, Casey WPON. News C. Lewis WWJ, Harris, Maxwell ’ ie me “ deal ‘ WCAR, New : CKL’’, Heater, Davies man’s spirit of adventure, dealt) ww). News wron wows o_Svorts out death to 385 climbers'this year.) WX¥% eWttrick, McKenzie] ,, 30—-WIR, M oe ee ee 2:00-WJR, Ma Perkins “It was the mast tragic m¢ untain arts ieee y Son "\acleod <4. ae ee WXYZ, Jim Bachus Ww > is 2 ¥ ad ews. TUESD. IN y eering season ever recorded 2 at wonwme 10:00—WJR, Arthur Godtrey | Paw News, Davies ig s * 6:00—WIR, News, bene iad WWJ, News, True Story Ww . George ¢:38—WJR, Dinner Date :. WJBK, News, T. ‘4 x» & ww. Boe Maxwell Wate re 1 ped wxra Herb Anderson ts : a ews, Homec : An Associated Press survey, KLM Res . sag case CKLW. Rooster Club WIBK. Neve Geer %:90—WJR, ind. Mrs, Burton made as November snows ended Ro Page's Party WJBK, Clark Reid WCAR, News, M.D, Beall chon’ hb Mo ao ae ea wron Musie with Mason | WCAR, News, Sheridan WPON, America to Knees —— the Alpine climbing season, WPON. Country Roundup ‘ sm: Pas at ; »hv. 7: FIR, ouse 706— WIR, uttram showed this country by ergy WXYZ, E. P. Morgan €:30-WJIR, Voice of agrieit. | WORT y i. NEC, Bandstand! “Ww, News, Matinee toll: Germany 43, Switzerland 111,! cKLW Ff. Lewis it CKLW, Guy Nunn WPON, PHS Workshop WXYZ, Ed McKensie wcaR WCAR, News 7 WCAR, News, Page ase) bake bem WPON: Spits, Mackinnon | 11:00—WW4J, News, Wood 4 WXYZ, M Griffin WXYZ, Paul Winter | 3:30—WJR, House Party CKLW. ue Time 7:00—WJIR, Dan Kirby KLW, News, Davies WWJ, Woman in House WWJ, News, it Roberts WJBK, News, Reid WXYZ, News, McKenzie ewe re ee wxve News, weit wane ow a —— CKLW, News, Chase » News, Toby . Don MacKinnon we. Mart: Spi Bare i, oar i pepenliog . : A. 30 ft 4:00—WJIR, Parade of Bands WJBK. News, Bellboy WRON. Esriy Bird Cub | USE— WIR, Time for Music | 4:00 wat eoalons $:30—WWJ, Night Line =i ee WXYZ, Wattrick, McKenzie CELW, Harry Lime 7 Wate me - oar CEKLW, News, ews, WJBK, News, McLeod 0:00—WJR, Weather CKLW. Sports, David TUESDAY AFTERNOON WCAR. News, Page 12:00—WJR, Jim B, Guest News, Wolf ww, Night line WPON, News, MacKinnon JBK, Sound wan ae oe WJBK, News Tom George | 5.4 wyn phitip Lenhart 1:06-—-WJIR, New Symphony WPON, News, MacKinnon WWJ, News, Deland WWJ, News Life and World 12:30—WJR, Time Out, Music| wxyz, Wattrick, Re tte WXYZ, News, Shorr $:36—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ, News, Winter CELW, Spts, Chase WJBK, News, Bellboy CKLW, News, David CKLW, News, Davies WJBK, News, McLeod oes a Wendy we. WCAR, Ne . WWJ, News, Maxwell ® WIR, Wm. WXYZ, Jim’ Reeves ily oo—WJR, wang Reynolds | WWJ, Minute Parade CKLW, News, Davies WWJ, Bandstand" WXYZ, Breakfast Club WJBK, News, News, George Vinall WWJ, News, F. Elizabeth CxLW, Grant, Livestock WCAR, News, Thomas W.' BK, News, McLeod 4:36—WJR, Muste Hall WWJ, Jim Deland CKLW, News, Chase WXYZ, News, McKenzie WCAR, Arthur Segre th Mason Warren WPON, Music W 5:36-—WJR, Music Hall WXYZ, News, McKenale CKLW, News, Chase . You Can Charge It! Member of Electrenics Assn. TONIGHT’S TV HIGHLIGHTS 6:00—-(7) Mr. Danger. (9) Popeye. (4) News; Sports. (2) Racket C & V ELECTRO MART Sash Me toe, Ft. bt oe eu 9108 ‘You Can Charge It! Assn. aeager yes FE 4-1515 Cc & V ELECTRO MART Beot Winter—Order Now ALSmaRSE hari 495 VALLELY’S DOWN —P ot e Save Money— * Save Time at Your Exclusive Avto Exhaust System Center miDAS MUFFLER SHOPS MUFFLERS INSTALLED FREE! 15 Minute Service While You Wait Your Life Can Depend On The Muffler In Your Cor! Protect lt With A Safe, SILENT THIDAS MUFFLER . The Sate, Silent, Gelden Co- ored Midas Muffler has All Welded Construction for ange | Life . Drive In Today \ No Appointment Necessary MIDAS \ MUFPFLER SHOP GUARANTEED ACAINST RUST-OUT, BURN-OUT, AND BLOW-OUT KING’S Midas Muffler Service 256 South Saginaw (Nest te Jerome Olds} FE 2-1010 Open Monday thru Thursday "til 5:30; Fri. ‘til 8; Saturday ‘til 5 iors aormise mr ne va cat eine ter Woe) he) au af Seles and Service wie RADIO-TV ad FE 4.1133 & Fei 8:00—(7) Guy Mitchell. Dolores $:30—(7) Bold Journey. Search | i i | i i Studio one. | | | _ = «4 Ww Squad. 16:15—(4) Weather: Eliot. '@:20—(4) Four Four. 6:30—(7) 3 Musketeers, (2) For- eign Legion. (4) Big 10 High- lights. (2) News. 6:40—(2) Weather: Phelps, 6:45—(2) News: Edwards. | 7:00—(7) Sports Focus. (9) I Led 3 Lives. (4) Death Valley. West-| ern. (2) Playhouse. ‘‘A Very Big Man.” 7:10—(7) Sports: Wattrick. :15—(7) News: Daly. 7:30—(7) Public Defender. (9) Million Dollar Movie. William Powell, “Song of the Thin Man.” (4) Price Is Right, (color). (2) -- Today's Television Programs - - Channel 2—WJBK-TV Channel 4—WWJ-TV Channel 1~WXYZ-TV 7:00—(2) Jimmy Dean. (4) Today.; 7:45—(2) News. 8:00—(2) Captain Kangaroo. (7 Cartoon Carnival. 8:30—(7) Big Show. \8:45—(2) Cartoon Classroom. 9:00—(4) Romper Room. 9:25—(2) News, ) 9:55—(9) Billboard. 9:30—(2) Ladies Day. (4) Amos ‘n’ Andy. (7) Our Friend Harry. 10:00—(2) Garry Moore. (4) Ar- lene Francis. (9) Movie, 10:30—(2) Arthur Godfrey. Treasure Hunt. 11:00—(4) Price Is Right. 11:2%5—(7) News. 11:30—(2) Strike It Rich. (4) Truth or Consequences, (7) Robin ard (4) Robin Hood. Hawkins. (4) Restless Gun. (2) Burns and Alien. for Aquarunas. (4) Wells Fargo. 11:45—(7) Noontime Comics. ~ (2) Talent Scouts.” ‘9:00—(7) Voice. Met Opera tenor Richard Tucker. (9) Town Mayor. (4) Twenty One. Paul Bain, Dave Mayer, (2) Danny Thomas. Ricky. (9) Howdy Doody, TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00—(2) Hotel Cosmopolitan. (4) 1:00—(2) Douglas Fairbanks. 2:00—(2) Our Miss Brooks. (7) My 2:30—(2) House Party. (4) Bride 2:50—(9) News. 3:00—(2) My Hero. $:30—(2) Verdict Is Yours. 4:00—(2) Brighter Day, (4) Queen 4:45—(4) Modern Romances. 5:00—(2) Susie. §:30—(2) Beat the Clock. (4) Ray WCAR, Sports Channel 9—CKLW-TV 12:45—(2) Guiding Light. (4) Tex and Jinx. (7) Charm The- ater. (9) Movie, 1:30—(2) As The World Turns. (4) (Color). Howard Miller Show. Little Margie. and Groom, (7) Topper. (4) (Color) Matinee Theater. (7) American Bandstand. (9) Corliss Archer. (9) Movie. for a Day. 4:15—(2) Secret Storm. 4:30—(2) Edge of Night. You Trust Your Wife? (7) Do (4) Charles Far- rell. (7) Sir Lancelot. (9) Danep Party, Milland. (7) Miekey Mouse Club. c Dough. (3) Earth an It's People. ~ 12:15—(2) Love of Life. 12:30—(2) Search for Tomorrow. (4) It Could Be You. (7) The! |9:30—(7) Lawrence Welk. (9) Run-| Cesar Romero,|. “Situation Wanted.” (4) Turn of | yon Theater. Fate. (2) December Bride. 10:0¢0—(9) Lone Wolf. (4) Sus- picion, David Wayne in Hitch- cock drama, ‘‘Heartbeat.” Drama: Political prisoner awaits axecution in ‘24 Hours ‘Til Dawn," Jason Rob- ards Jr. 10:30—(7) Capt. City Detective. /11:00—(7) Soupy’s On. (9) Nation-| al News. (4) News: W’Kamp.| (2) News (color). David Grief. (9) /11:10—(9) Weather, (11:15 — (9) Theater. Maureen O'Hara in “‘Never to Love.” (4) Weather: Eliot. (2) Miss Weath- er (color). 11:20—(4) | Sports: Sports Final (color), (2) Erwins. (9) Mary Morgan. Young Dems Blast Any Discrimination RENO, Nev. @—The nation’s Young Democrats ended their con- vention early yesterday with the election of Nelson Lancione of Co- lumbus, Ohio, as the new presi- dent. ; One of several resolutions adopt- jed called for ‘‘vigorous enforce- iment” of laws governing civil rights, saying that racial discrim- ination is ‘!a disgrace’ whether in Little Rock, Ark., or Levittown, Pa. Chicagoan Richard Crawford, Parker. (2) first Negro ever to hold office in| ithe organization, was elected vice! | president. Rejected was a resolution call-: ling for